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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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DEPARTMENT <lb/>
In Charge of F. A. EDMONDSON <lb/>
Agent of The Eastern Reflector and Vicinity- Advertising Rate Application <lb/>
The Pitt County School <lb/>
WOODLAND ITEMS. <lb/>
We have needles, bobbins and. <lb/>
manufactured by The A. G. Cox shuttles, for any sewing machine <lb/>
Manufacturing Company are in the country. Also needle Woodland, N. C, June <lb/>
comfortable, neat and threaders, the very thing for J Mrs. G- W. of Ayden, spent <lb/>
durable. Terms en liberal, affected eyes or dark days- <lb/>
in the market come to see Harrington, Barber <lb/>
us. we hive the for you. We have put in an assortment <lb/>
W. went to Ayden of patterns for all styles. <lb/>
Wednesday. I Barber Co. <lb/>
We are carrying a nice line of How is your soul Let <lb/>
Coffin and Caskets. Prices are show you our new lot of <lb/>
right and can hearse j shoes. Harrington. Bart Co <lb/>
service, A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. A nice six key soda fountain <lb/>
B. J. EL B. for sale. R. D. <lb/>
We have purchased the <lb/>
as the <lb/>
Lawhorn and F A. E <lb/>
went to yesterday. <lb/>
For spring arts goods, <lb/>
and laces see us- <lb/>
New lot just in. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co- <lb/>
Annie Bell, a well trained <lb/>
nurse of came in a <lb/>
few days ago to take charge of <lb/>
the little son of Cox, who <lb/>
For fresh fish see R. D. <lb/>
on Tuesdays, Thursdays, <lb/>
and Saturdays. <lb/>
M. B. went to Green- <lb/>
ville Thursday. <lb/>
For cold drinks of all kinds call <lb/>
at B. L fountain. <lb/>
Wanted- At once seven tons <lb/>
of beeswax at cents per <lb/>
pound. M. G- Bryan, <lb/>
N. C. dames E. F. <lb/>
J. L. Jackson, of Greenville, i Elliott <lb/>
to see <lb/>
has been sick <lb/>
came in last <lb/>
brother, who <lb/>
several day. <lb/>
Just received, a nice lot <lb/>
shoes. <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 Cc. <lb/>
We are now in to do <lb/>
grinding every day general <lb/>
repair work promptly. <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
New Jot of dry goods and no- <lb/>
just in. Better while <lb/>
they ate cheap. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. James H. <lb/>
and mother, of Oxford, <lb/>
came in Saturday and spent <lb/>
Sunday and Monday with Mes- <lb/>
Tucker and L. F. <lb/>
left Tuesday for <lb/>
the Rain. <lb/>
This rain is some kind of a <lb/>
nuisance anyway it is looked at <lb/>
It is ruining the crops, muddy- <lb/>
the river so that the Pitt <lb/>
county of <lb/>
will be sadly handicapped to <lb/>
subject matter for yarns. <lb/>
It has made workmen let up on <lb/>
Saturday, night and Sunday at <lb/>
J. L. <lb/>
Rev. R. R. Joyner, of Ayden, gins to answer for, including <lb/>
spent Friday night at I caused. <lb/>
Lucy of Ayden, might have to hire a carriage to <lb/>
take his partner to the reception <lb/>
Finer sad Mil <lb/>
Mr. I have as com <lb/>
arranged flour and corn mill <lb/>
as twenty years experience in the <lb/>
business would assist me in <lb/>
building. I bought the very <lb/>
latest improved and the very <lb/>
best machinery to be had. I am <lb/>
making as fine as any mill <lb/>
in that makes a pure <lb/>
If you have any <lb/>
you want turned <lb/>
who has been spending a few <lb/>
days with Miss Nobles, <lb/>
returned yesterday. <lb/>
Mr. Stanley and Miss Lissie <lb/>
Garris celebrated their, birthday <lb/>
birthday Saturday with an ice <lb/>
cream supper. They had a large <lb/>
crowd and a good time. <lb/>
Miss Lela is spend- <lb/>
a few days with her aunt, <lb/>
Mrs. Frank <lb/>
Miss Abram is spending <lb/>
a few days with Mrs. A- W. <lb/>
Barber. <lb/>
We are sorry to hear of the <lb/>
illness of Mrs. C. T. Kittrell. <lb/>
the various new buildings being <lb/>
erected in town and is trying to straight flour. <lb/>
take some of the glamor off wheat that <lb/>
some of our June weddings., into flour, I will be pleased to <lb/>
It has various and you. Yours truly, <lb/>
Jonathan Havens, <lb/>
anxiety caused a young Washington, N. <lb/>
man in town who feared that he . <lb/>
to Select <lb/>
Some of <lb/>
the county are taking advantage <lb/>
of the opportunity offered by so <lb/>
many teachers being here in the <lb/>
summer school, and re coming <lb/>
HEALTH <lb/>
INSURANCE <lb/>
The mu who insure his Is <lb/>
wise for his family. <lb/>
The mm who insures his health <lb/>
as wise both his family and <lb/>
Norfolk and Washington D. C. <lb/>
for Miss Chapman is spend- <lb/>
a few in the country <lb/>
of visiting Miss Sadie Carroll. <lb/>
J. H. Bryan, of Tarboro, was <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co in town today on business. <lb/>
Miss Pearl Nelson, of J. L. Jackson came in last <lb/>
is visiting Pattie Nelson. night from Greenville to see his <lb/>
The is the Kind brother who has been very sick <lb/>
you need. See us, <lb/>
A W. Ange Co. <lb/>
F. A. Edmundson spent Friday <lb/>
in Greenville. <lb/>
We call your attention to our <lb/>
new line of groceries. <lb/>
K. W. <lb/>
For nice fresh corned herrings <lb/>
see A. W. Ange Co. Winter- <lb/>
ville, N. C. <lb/>
Straw hats are going fist, buy <lb/>
one, don't be W, Ange <lb/>
ft Co. <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. 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/>
gingham calico, <lb/>
wonted 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, shirts. <lb/>
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/>
you. Any size frame. <lb/>
A. W. Ange 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/>
will never regret when <lb/>
you a Hunsucker buggy, <lb/>
by A. G. Cox Man- <lb/>
Co., Winterville. <lb/>
N. C- <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing <lb/>
Co. las sold this season ever <lb/>
cotton planters and <lb/>
guano sewers which would <lb/>
ally indicate a large cotton crop <lb/>
this year. <lb/>
Fresh herrings at <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
for several days, <lb/>
Mr. Underwood, of Durham, <lb/>
was a pleasant visitor in our <lb/>
town Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Lessie King, of Durham, <lb/>
who has been spending some <lb/>
time with Misses Eva and Lucy <lb/>
Bell Langston returned home <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Rev. E. T. Phillips and wife <lb/>
and Miss Alice Baker, of Ayden, <lb/>
came in Sunday. Rev. Mr. Phil- <lb/>
lips tilled his regular appoint- <lb/>
at the Free Will Baptist <lb/>
church. <lb/>
B. G. Taylor and Ola Kittrell, <lb/>
of Ayden, were in town <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Miss Hulda Cox, accompanied <lb/>
by Miss Hughes, of <lb/>
Washington, came in Saturday <lb/>
night and left Monday for <lb/>
Greenville to attend the summer <lb/>
school. <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. Butt and family <lb/>
left today for to <lb/>
spend a few days visiting <lb/>
Eli Ange, of Ayden, came in <lb/>
yesterday left today for <lb/>
where he has accepted <lb/>
a position as bookkeeper. <lb/>
Rev. E. L. St. Claire gave a <lb/>
very able lecture for the benefit <lb/>
of the Masons in the school <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Laura Cox spent <lb/>
day and Sunday visiting relatives <lb/>
near Ayden. <lb/>
BLACK JACK ITEMS. <lb/>
Black Jack, June <lb/>
Dixon and daughter, Miss Lena, <lb/>
went to Greenville Monday. <lb/>
We are glad to say that Mrs. <lb/>
W. L. Clark seems to improve <lb/>
some. <lb/>
Miss Dollie Dixon spent <lb/>
day night and Sunday with Miss <lb/>
Martha Williams. <lb/>
Miss Lucy Arnold the <lb/>
guest of Misses Stella and Bertha <lb/>
Gaskins Saturday night and <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
The Public Library. <lb/>
The public library will be in a <lb/>
position to begin letting out books <lb/>
to the people of Greenville by the <lb/>
end of next week. The ladies <lb/>
of the town under whose super- <lb/>
vision the library was run until <lb/>
their entire equipment was <lb/>
destroyed by the fire in February <lb/>
have set to work with energy <lb/>
only renewed by this temporary <lb/>
reverse and have already secured <lb/>
quarters, which are finished <lb/>
them gratis in the <lb/>
building by the Chapter Masons <lb/>
of the town. Seventy -even <lb/>
dollars has been expended in <lb/>
books and library furniture. The <lb/>
books are expected to be here <lb/>
by Saturday, June The <lb/>
End of the Century and Sin <lb/>
clubs at present have <lb/>
charge. They have invited the <lb/>
two other clubs, The <lb/>
Round Table and Civic League <lb/>
and the Carolina Club <lb/>
ate with them by sending <lb/>
upon a committee <lb/>
which shall have charge of the <lb/>
affairs of the library. <lb/>
The Civic League has donated <lb/>
recently, but as yet no <lb/>
have been made <lb/>
about sending representatives. <lb/>
Mrs. W. A. Bowen. who was <lb/>
librarian of the old library, has <lb/>
charge of the new. She hopes <lb/>
to have the secretary of the <lb/>
Library Commission to pay <lb/>
a visit here soon and help launch <lb/>
the new library. <lb/>
last night. <lb/>
Last and in the opinion of <lb/>
many the gravest fault cf the <lb/>
seven days shower is fact <lb/>
that it has f all efforts <lb/>
of real estate agents to rent the <lb/>
well ventilated Blow house on <lb/>
Third street, which they say is <lb/>
useful only as a good weather <lb/>
residence. <lb/>
River Continues <lb/>
Observer R. M. Hearne has <lb/>
received another warning from <lb/>
Raleigh that the water in Tar <lb/>
river will reach the foot stage <lb/>
before the end of the week; <lb/>
For the hours ending at <lb/>
o'clock this morning the river <lb/>
rose a foot and a half here, and <lb/>
there was an inch more of rain <lb/>
fall in the same time. There is <lb/>
no telling how high the river <lb/>
will go before it stops rising <lb/>
The thing which the farmers <lb/>
fear almost as much as a <lb/>
of these heavy showers h <lb/>
a spell of hot, fair weather <lb/>
Such a period, they say, will <lb/>
work as much havoc with the <lb/>
cotton and corn crops as the <lb/>
present rain. What they think <lb/>
best for the weather man to send <lb/>
them now is a lot of clouds who <lb/>
are only <lb/>
Vow nay Injure health by guard- <lb/>
K- It Is worth guarding. <lb/>
At the attack of <lb/>
which generally approaches <lb/>
he LIVER and <lb/>
fest In Innumerable ways <lb/>
And save your health. <lb/>
This Afternoon. <lb/>
Of the two marriages set for <lb/>
today, one has already taken <lb/>
place. At this afternoon <lb/>
Miss Malissa Brooks was married <lb/>
to Mr. Henry Tyson, of Farm- <lb/>
ville, at the home of Mrs. B. G. <lb/>
on Third street. Rev. <lb/>
Mr. Bland, of Ayden, performed <lb/>
the Reflector, <lb/>
15th. <lb/>
Mr. T. E. Dead. <lb/>
Mr. T. E. Jackson, an excel- <lb/>
lent man and prosperous farmer <lb/>
died at his heme near Winter- <lb/>
ville this morning, after an ill- <lb/>
of nearly two weeks, with <lb/>
typhoid fever. Mr. Jackson <lb/>
was of age and leaves a <lb/>
wife and seven children. Hi is <lb/>
also survived by his mother and <lb/>
six brothers, one of the latter <lb/>
being Mr. J. L. Jackson of is <lb/>
city. The funeral will take <lb/>
place Thursday afternoon. <lb/>
Informal Reception. <lb/>
An informal reception to <lb/>
bridal party and a few relatives <lb/>
and friends at the h me of Mr. <lb/>
E. B. followed the dress <lb/>
rehearsal for the <lb/>
Skinner wedding which took <lb/>
place Tuesday night. A light <lb/>
supper was served at p. m. <lb/>
The marriage will take place in <lb/>
the Episcopal church at o'clock <lb/>
tonight <lb/>
Added <lb/>
J. H. Boyd, Jr., the new furn- <lb/>
man, has added <lb/>
in connection with his <lb/>
He has already received a <lb/>
stock of caskets and coffins and <lb/>
baa placed an order for a hearse. <lb/>
Now Quarter. <lb/>
The new quarters in <lb/>
the Wins-low building are as yet <lb/>
leased by the lodge of Chapter <lb/>
Masons alone. They hope that <lb/>
the Blue Lodge Masons will come <lb/>
in with them into the new <lb/>
quarters at an early date. <lb/>
for Reflector. <lb/>
More Improvements. <lb/>
The building formerly known <lb/>
as has undergone s <lb/>
remodeling. A new front <lb/>
been put in and it is now divided <lb/>
in two apartments, one to be <lb/>
used by Smith as a <lb/>
office, and the other b <lb/>
tailoring establish <lb/>
Congressional Contention. <lb/>
The De congressional <lb/>
convention of the first <lb/>
to engage teachers for their fall district of North Carolina, <lb/>
schools. This is a good idea, is hereby called to meet in Eden- <lb/>
for the by visiting ton. N. a. on July <lb/>
the school can see personally and 6th, 1910. at o'clock p. m., for <lb/>
observe the work of the the purpose of nominating a can- <lb/>
teachers, and with the assistance for congress end transact- <lb/>
of the county superintendent such other business as may <lb/>
and faculty can hardly go wrong Mon the con- <lb/>
in making selections. <lb/>
Chin. Dem. Con. Ex. Com. <lb/>
1st. Diet N. C. <lb/>
D. B. Bradford. S c. <lb/>
Kept the King at Home, <lb/>
For the past year we have kept the <lb/>
King's New <lb/>
Life our home and they have <lb/>
proved a to all our <lb/>
writes Paul of buffalo, N. <lb/>
Y. Easy, but sure remedy for all <lb/>
stomach, liver and kidney troubles. <lb/>
Only at all drug-gists. <lb/>
Miss Abrams left Wed- <lb/>
Fat m ville, where <lb/>
she has accepted a position. <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 hard to come off. Place <lb/>
now with them and you will be <lb/>
pleased. <lb/>
IF 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/>
USED UNIVERSALLY <lb/>
W HEN Metal were first introduced years <lb/>
you had some excuse for being <lb/>
But now <lb/>
If you arc it can only be because you do not know the <lb/>
tacts in the case. <lb/>
They arc used today from the Atlantic to the Pacific for all kinds <lb/>
of buildings, under all conditions. <lb/>
They 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 the foremost college for Women in the South. <lb/>
Course in Liberal Arts covering nine departments, and including elective <lb/>
course in Education and Bible, which count for the A. It. degree, School <lb/>
including Piano. Pin Organ, Violin and Voice Culture. School of Art, <lb/>
including Decoration, Designing and of <lb/>
which prepares students for college courses-Physical Culture under a trained <lb/>
director. Full literary course per year, including literary tuition, board, room, <lb/>
light, heat, physician, nurse, ordinary medicine and all minor fees, <lb/>
in Club, to leas. Next session begins Sept. 1910. Address, <lb/>
R T. VANN, President, <lb/>
North Carolina. <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/>
IO. <lb/>
No. <lb/>
FERGUSON-SKINNER. <lb/>
NEW K. P. COMMITTEEMEN <lb/>
Beautiful it the Episcopal <lb/>
Church. <lb/>
Rains will stop many things. <lb/>
but not a wedding, and the very <lb/>
inclement weather Wednesday <lb/>
night did not prevent St. Paul's <lb/>
Episcopal church from <lb/>
filled to overflowing by those <lb/>
anxious to witness the <lb/>
of Mr. Edward Benjamin <lb/>
son and Miss Margaret Cotten <lb/>
Skinner. <lb/>
For this event the chancel ff <lb/>
the church was attractively <lb/>
decorated with palms and ferns, <lb/>
a wreath of evergreens arched <lb/>
above from the of which <lb/>
was suspended a huge white <lb/>
wedding bell. <lb/>
At o'clock, as the bridal <lb/>
party assembled in the vestibule, <lb/>
Mr. Charles James sang <lb/>
Perfect Then as Miss <lb/>
Helen Forbes played the wedding <lb/>
march the party entered in the <lb/>
following <lb/>
First the ushers, Messrs. Willis <lb/>
Hackney. Joe Eagles and R. C. <lb/>
Welfare, of A. M. <lb/>
Moseley. W. H. Jr., O. C. <lb/>
Gregory, E. B. and C. S. <lb/>
Carr. of Greenville; C. C. Skin <lb/>
and Frank Skinner, of New <lb/>
York. <lb/>
Then the two dames of honor, <lb/>
Mesdames E. B. and L <lb/>
C. Skinner. Mrs. wore <lb/>
white satin and Mrs. Skinner <lb/>
white Duchess satin, and both <lb/>
carried white carnations. <lb/>
Next the girls, little <lb/>
Misses Ada James and Margaret <lb/>
Fleming, each dressed in while <lb/>
and carrying a basket of flowers. <lb/>
Following these came Miss <lb/>
Ethel Skinner, maid of honor, <lb/>
dressed white crepe de <lb/>
with pearl trimmings, and carry- <lb/>
white carnations. <lb/>
The bride entered with her <lb/>
brother, Dr. L. C. Skinner, who <lb/>
gave her away, and as they <lb/>
neared the chancel the <lb/>
came from the vestry room <lb/>
his best man, Mr. George Hack <lb/>
Jr., of Washington, and <lb/>
met them. The costume <lb/>
was crepe de media with pearl <lb/>
trimmings, and she carried a <lb/>
shower bouquet of bride roses <lb/>
and lilies of the valley. <lb/>
The ceremony was performed <lb/>
by Rev. B. F. Huske. the <lb/>
ring ceremony being used. <lb/>
As the wedded couple <lb/>
about to descend from the <lb/>
eel the attendants pulled ribbons <lb/>
attached to the wedding bell and <lb/>
a shower of rose leaves fell upon <lb/>
them. <lb/>
Following the marriage the <lb/>
bridal party was entertained by <lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Skinner. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson left on <lb/>
the midnight train for a bridal <lb/>
tour to several northern cities. <lb/>
The popularity of the couple <lb/>
was shown in the large number <lb/>
of wedding presents from <lb/>
friends. <lb/>
There were many out of town <lb/>
visitors in attendance whose <lb/>
names have already been pub <lb/>
PARENTS REUNITED. <lb/>
REMODELED MARKET HOUSE. <lb/>
After of Newly Baby Leads Mr. and Mrs. Walter Now Has One W Cod as <lb/>
Elected Officers. to Their Difference. Any u the State. <lb/>
The Grand Lodge Nights off A happy climax of the legal That Greenville now has as <lb/>
Pythias of North between Mrs. Lelia a market house as car. be <lb/>
dosed fortieth annual and Walter Whisnant <lb/>
he 20-months-old baby L For something like a year <lb/>
aldermen had the matter <lb/>
ed by A. E. Grand, <lb/>
and C. C. <lb/>
vice-Grand Chancellor, <lb/>
Asheville as th place f meeting <lb/>
for the 1911 gathering, n <lb/>
of Mrs. A S. Bernard, <lb/>
and heard appointment of <lb/>
the Grand Chancellor of <lb/>
standing committees and district <lb/>
deputies for the n-w <lb/>
year. The new orphanage at <lb/>
was further <lb/>
and a rising vote of thanks ex <lb/>
tended to Rev. Dr. P. R. Law, <lb/>
when an amicable <lb/>
D. <lb/>
settlement <lb/>
under consideration of improving <lb/>
the market house, and a few <lb/>
was reached between the two months ago the committee w <lb/>
parties. The parents will live instructed to proceed with th <lb/>
together again and their j <lb/>
which they fought I At an expenditure of <lb/>
and each will contribute to the committee had th. <lb/>
training to useful citizenship. <lb/>
Their love for the little child <lb/>
reunited them and they agreed <lb/>
to go back home and forget all <lb/>
enmity which at one existed <lb/>
between them. It was through <lb/>
Judge tint they <lb/>
IMPORTANCE OF FINE FISHING <lb/>
k Crop Every Farmer Should Plant Season There a Most One <lb/>
Liberally. Atlantic Hotel. <lb/>
we desire to remind City. Juno 20.-On <lb/>
farm in of the importance of Saturday Mr. no I R. P. <lb/>
planting available and had splendid <lb/>
rated acre fishing. They -pant most <lb/>
are valuable for the day. both filing in the <lb/>
following j found and t owling and brought <lb/>
,. ,, into the hotel two hundred fish. <lb/>
They are a good human j and <lb/>
, J l. M. Marks party <lb/>
They ens of our In . <lb/>
nutritious Is for stock. trout and blue fish on <lb/>
They shade the soil during the . , o-u. <lb/>
hottest part of the summer, thus <lb/>
from <lb/>
catch <lb/>
, were back together. <lb/>
chairman the orphanage com- . <lb/>
also further <lb/>
discussion of the of <lb/>
colored lodge making use of the <lb/>
name, and the supreme <lb/>
lodge will probably be <lb/>
or other steps taken for <lb/>
the desired relief. <lb/>
The Grand Chancellor an- <lb/>
the following appoint- <lb/>
entire interior of the market <lb/>
house remodeled and <lb/>
on thorough sanitary principles <lb/>
All wood partitions and floats <lb/>
and everything that could in any <lb/>
way germs, were <lb/>
ed. A was lair <lb/>
with complete system <lb/>
underneath. The stalls are <lb/>
with metal railings with <lb/>
proceeding instituted by Mrs. top counters across tit <lb/>
Whisnant for the possession A receptacles <lb/>
her child on Monday of last week j for are sanitary, and fish <lb/>
The case is remembered be Kept in <lb/>
of the most sensational of another part of the <lb/>
removed from the <lb/>
kind in this county in recent <lb/>
years. A breach had occurred in <lb/>
the family and this grew to such <lb/>
an extent that Mrs Whisnant at <lb/>
of Wind . L. , ; <lb/>
Tribunal C. R. Barker. <lb/>
bury; Dr. D- J. Hill, <lb/>
J C. Clifford. <lb/>
Judiciary <lb/>
Taylor, Wilmington M. W. Bell, <lb/>
Murphy; A. A. <lb/>
Hickory. <lb/>
Finance Commute J. H- Huff- <lb/>
man. Statesville; F. L. Hunt, <lb/>
Asheville; A. B <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
State cf the Order Committee <lb/>
A. H. Holland. Winston <lb/>
tempted to take her and live <lb/>
with her relatives at Oxford. <lb/>
While at tho station ready to <lb/>
board the train her husband rush- <lb/>
ed up in an automobile, snatch <lb/>
ed the child from its mother's <lb/>
arms and dashed Mrs. <lb/>
Whisnant was left screaming in <lb/>
the waiting room. She indicted <lb/>
her husband for an assault to <lb/>
which he submitted and paid a <lb/>
The next step was a <lb/>
I habeas corpus proceeding for <lb/>
Salem; C. E. Brooks, <lb/>
W. G. Lake. <lb/>
Credentials Committee- <lb/>
George C Goodman, Mooresville; <lb/>
L. J. Kinston; <lb/>
Holt, <lb/>
Uniform Rank <lb/>
C A. S. <lb/>
Bernard, Asheville; W. Y. <lb/>
a n. Raleigh. <lb/>
Fraternal N. <lb/>
B. Alexander, <lb/>
State Deputy Grand Chancel- <lb/>
J. D Hut-. Wilmington <lb/>
The district deputies for the <lb/>
fourteen districts into which I he <lb/>
is divided, and act in <lb/>
their districts the <lb/>
of the Grand Chancellor, <lb/>
were appointed- <lb/>
WHAT NORTH CAROLINA GETS <lb/>
Public Building Bill Reported <lb/>
to e m the List. <lb/>
Washington, D. C, June 18- <lb/>
An omnibus public building till, <lb/>
carrying authorizations for <lb/>
aggregating <lb/>
with additional <lb/>
for continuing contracts stretch <lb/>
over varying periods of <lb/>
years, was reported to the House <lb/>
today. <lb/>
possession of her child and <lb/>
during the hearing Whisnant <lb/>
skipped away between the suns <lb/>
with the child and fled to South <lb/>
Carolina. He was apprehended <lb/>
and back to answer a <lb/>
of contempt of court. <lb/>
For this offense a fine of was <lb/>
imposed. Thinking the breach <lb/>
might be closed and the parents <lb/>
reunited. Judge Pell put the <lb/>
in temporary custody of <lb/>
Mr. with whom Mrs. <lb/>
Whisnant <lb/>
husband the privilege of paying <lb/>
a daily call. This daily call had <lb/>
desired effect and when <lb/>
and mother reported to <lb/>
Judge Pell yesterday, they had <lb/>
agreed on a adjustment <lb/>
by which they will live together <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
meats. <lb/>
The aldermen have adopted <lb/>
regulations governing the mar <lb/>
Every evening the occupants <lb/>
are required to close, the <lb/>
market policeman lakes charge <lb/>
and the and <lb/>
three times a week disinfectant <lb/>
are used in all the s The <lb/>
doors and windows have been <lb/>
doubled screened to keep out <lb/>
flies. L is now an ideal market <lb/>
house and a credit to the town. <lb/>
It is a place to which ladies can <lb/>
afford to go in making <lb/>
purchases, and it will be to their <lb/>
advantage to do so. If at times <lb/>
there is any criticism to make, <lb/>
or anything found about the <lb/>
that correction, the <lb/>
committee will be glad to have <lb/>
suggestions. <lb/>
WITH MISS LILLIAN CARR. <lb/>
Back to Her First Lore. <lb/>
Miss Maud Nixon is back in <lb/>
Greenville, which means that <lb/>
fully live thousand folks are <lb/>
delighted. She arrived <lb/>
day evening from Charlotte and <lb/>
is again in her old position in the <lb/>
insurance office of H. A. White. <lb/>
Miss Nixon lived here for quite a <lb/>
while in the past, but left about <lb/>
two years ago to see if she liked <lb/>
other places better than Green- <lb/>
ville. She found that she didn't <lb/>
and has returned to her first <lb/>
love, hence this rejoicing. <lb/>
Here is a good illustration of <lb/>
how one investment in Green- <lb/>
ville real estate pays. Five years <lb/>
ago Messrs. W. A. and James <lb/>
Darden purchased some vacant <lb/>
property on Dickinson avenue, a <lb/>
portion of it being where the <lb/>
while anticipated Norfolk Southern freight depot is <lb/>
for several months, is unusual now located. The price paid for <lb/>
during a session when a river the property was They <lb/>
and harbor appropriation bill has said a portion of it to the railroad <lb/>
been passed. for and also <lb/>
Following are among the erected three store buildings on <lb/>
items other end of the property <lb/>
vision is made for the construe- from the depot. Last Saturday <lb/>
of new buildings on sold the remaining vacant <lb/>
of the property between the <lb/>
Entertains In Honor f Miss <lb/>
Pierce, of Warsaw. <lb/>
Greenville has no more charm <lb/>
, young lady and delightful <lb/>
boards allowing than y. <lb/>
Carr, and her host of friends <lb/>
have on several occasions enjoyed <lb/>
her hospitality, hence when tiny <lb/>
invitations requested their pres- <lb/>
from 10.80 to today at <lb/>
a porch party, at the home of <lb/>
Mrs. J- L. Wooten, given by Miss <lb/>
Carr in honor of Miss Sallie <lb/>
Pierce, of Warsaw, it is no won <lb/>
that all who received them <lb/>
were eager to respond with their <lb/>
presence. <lb/>
The guests upon arrival were <lb/>
greeted by the hostess and her <lb/>
mother, Mrs. H. L. Carr, and <lb/>
PROFITABLE REAL ESTATE BEAL. <lb/>
Part of Purchase Brings <lb/>
With Some Left. <lb/>
Mrs. Wooten, and then repaired, <lb/>
to the parlor, where punch stock and contented, <lb/>
aiding in the formation of <lb/>
able nitrates, <lb/>
If turned under, the vines add <lb/>
fertility to the land <lb/>
The presence of decaying <lb/>
stubble and vines in the sou <lb/>
helps to convert mineral sub- <lb/>
stances into plant food. <lb/>
If picked, the alone are <lb/>
worth from tight to twelve <lb/>
dollars acre. <lb/>
The vines that on an <lb/>
acre ore worth from six to ten <lb/>
dollars for food. <lb/>
Through roots peal put <lb/>
into the soil from four to six <lb/>
dollars worth of nitrogen per <lb/>
acre. Most of our unprofitable <lb/>
soils are in this sub <lb/>
The vines, roots and stubble <lb/>
help to make the soil loose and <lb/>
cultivated. <lb/>
They absorb and retain <lb/>
moisture will aid the next <lb/>
crop to go through a drought <lb/>
easily. <lb/>
roots of are good <lb/>
go to consider <lb/>
able depth and open up the earth <lb/>
so that air and water can make <lb/>
a deeper soil. <lb/>
Peas get their nitrogen from <lb/>
air, free of cost to the <lb/>
so that very little nitrogen is <lb/>
needed in their fertilizers except <lb/>
for very poor soils. <lb/>
Peas feed strongly upon the <lb/>
supply of potash and phosphoric <lb/>
acid, therefore these substances <lb/>
should be supplied to them. Many <lb/>
crops fail for the lack of acid and <lb/>
potash. <lb/>
The price of peas is high, but <lb/>
this does not Keep the wise <lb/>
farmer from planting them. He <lb/>
is thinking of the ten dollars in <lb/>
value he is to receive later for <lb/>
every dollar invested in <lb/>
now. <lb/>
Let no farmer neglect to plant <lb/>
abundantly of this important <lb/>
crop. Plant some for hay; plant <lb/>
some on poor land for turning <lb/>
under; plant some for grazing by <lb/>
horses, cows, hogs and other <lb/>
farm stock; and by all means <lb/>
plant and cultivate a few acres <lb/>
from which to obtain seed peas <lb/>
for next year's planting. Then <lb/>
you will rejoice if the price is <lb/>
high. <lb/>
Plenty of on the farm <lb/>
make loose, fertile lands, strong <lb/>
pros <lb/>
The party <lb/>
abut two <lb/>
Monday <lb/>
had only been cut <lb/>
hours. <lb/>
Mrs. E. T. Mrs. Lamb, <lb/>
Mist Lamb, Edwin Lamb <lb/>
and Mr. Mays spent the week <lb/>
end at the Atlantic. President <lb/>
Limb party arrived Friday <lb/>
in hit private <lb/>
Mrs f New <lb/>
the Atlantic for a month <lb/>
Mr Mrs S. R Jacques <lb/>
and Miss Constance Jacques, <lb/>
G. today to <lb/>
spend the r st the <lb/>
Mrs. Thompson and <lb/>
son, of Raleigh, will spend a <lb/>
part of the summer also as a <lb/>
guest of Atlantic. <lb/>
Among the recent arrivals <lb/>
Waiter Grimes. Raleigh; Col. and <lb/>
Mrs. J, E. Robinson, Miss Re- <lb/>
W. Powell, <lb/>
Mr- <lb/>
and Mrs. E. N. Dicker -in, Kin- <lb/>
Dr. <lb/>
D. M. Mi Weal L. I. <lb/>
Moore, New Ben; Mrs. John <lb/>
Wiley, will <lb/>
tonight with her two children <lb/>
and <lb/>
W. C Young, of led a <lb/>
beautiful German on <lb/>
night. <lb/>
FIGHT ON EVANS STREET. <lb/>
served by Misses Mildred Carr <lb/>
and Pattie Wooten. <lb/>
The guests then assembled <lb/>
around tables on the porch <lb/>
and played progressive <lb/>
over which they had <lb/>
much merriment Miss Ward <lb/>
Moore made the highest score <lb/>
and was awarded the prize, a <lb/>
cut-glass perfume bottle, which <lb/>
she presented to Miss Pierce, <lb/>
guest of honor. Miss Mattie <lb/>
King made the lowest <lb/>
heretofore acquired as , .,, ,,.,, ,, <lb/>
and Monroe. the depot to received the booby <lb/>
each; Hickory. 60.000; Cobb C. a pack of maids, <lb/>
and Rocky Mount., for Thus on the original After the and <lb/>
farmers. <lb/>
C. R. Hudson, <lb/>
State Agent F. C. D. Work. <lb/>
Subscribe for The Reflector <lb/>
Tarboro, Wilkes- <lb/>
born. <lb/>
For future expenditures <lb/>
were made as fol- <lb/>
lows <lb/>
For North Winston- <lb/>
, ultimate limit, <lb/>
Charlotte, <lb/>
ultimate limit, . <lb/>
purchase of Messrs. <lb/>
Darden sold worth, and <lb/>
till own the portion occupied by <lb/>
the three stores, which is worth <lb/>
more than they paid for the <lb/>
v. hole five years ago. This shows <lb/>
the rapid development Green- <lb/>
ville is making, <lb/>
wafers were served. <lb/>
During the entertainment Mrs. <lb/>
T. E. Hooker sang several solos, <lb/>
and Miss Lillian Burch gave a <lb/>
number instrumental <lb/>
The Reflector does job work. <lb/>
Marriage Licenses <lb/>
Register of Deeds W. M. Moore <lb/>
has issued the following licenses <lb/>
since last report. <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
J. C. Tyson and Loraine Home. <lb/>
E B. Ferguson and Margaret <lb/>
Skinner. <lb/>
Henry E. Tyson and Malissa <lb/>
Brooks. <lb/>
C. E. Davis and Lucinda Man- <lb/>
gum. <lb/>
Claude Green and N. <lb/>
COLORED. <lb/>
Alonzo Cherry and Neva <lb/>
Alonzo Armstrong and Nora <lb/>
Staton. <lb/>
Major Barnhill and Ella Davis. <lb/>
Mesa s S. J. and N. L. <lb/>
Hare Mix Up. <lb/>
Messrs. S. J. and Noah <lb/>
Tripp were <lb/>
pals in a small sized s rap at the <lb/>
corner of and Fourth <lb/>
streets out nine Friday <lb/>
night. Nobles i about fifty <lb/>
or seventy-five F heavier <lb/>
than Mr. Tripp, hut he bears <lb/>
scars of the mix up. He <lb/>
took several on the <lb/>
pavement and stone curb <lb/>
badly up his elbow <lb/>
and shoulder. D. Chas. <lb/>
Laughinghouse who examined <lb/>
him immediately after the men <lb/>
had been parted, found three <lb/>
severe bruises on Mr. <lb/>
face. <lb/>
Mr. Nobles stated to <lb/>
who around to <lb/>
Bee how badly he was injured. <lb/>
that the first blow which Mr. <lb/>
Tripp had hit him had left him <lb/>
almost stunned. To this he <lb/>
attributed the fact that Mr. <lb/>
Tripp had so evidently worsted <lb/>
him in the fight. He denied <lb/>
struck a single blow. <lb/>
The trial which was to have <lb/>
been held this morning, will take <lb/>
place Monday at 10.80 a. in. It <lb/>
could not he held today on <lb/>
account of the of the <lb/>
principal Mr, Abe <lb/>
Mr. Nobles at first wished to <lb/>
get out a warrant against Mr. <lb/>
Tripp for secret assault, but a <lb/>
warrant was finally issued for <lb/>
each, charging disorderly con- <lb/>
duct. <lb/>
Dr. Hyatt Co mini <lb/>
Dr. H. O. Hyatt will be in <lb/>
Greenville at Hotel Bertha, July <lb/>
4th and and Tuesday, <lb/>
for the purpose <lb/>
diseases of the fitting <lb/>
glasses. <lb/>
mm-<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018101_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
Goods, Dress Goods, <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
Anything you need can be found at our store. <lb/>
Call to tee us <lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
ATLANTIC HOTEL <lb/>
MOREHEAD CITY, N. C. <lb/>
Completely Renovated and Many Ne Features. <lb/>
Opens June 1st. <lb/>
Delightful Surf Bathing;, Finest Fishing in America, Dan- <lb/>
Tennis, Motoring, Riding. Extremely low Excursion <lb/>
Rates. Unsurpassed<lb/>
Through Sleeping Car Service, via Golds- <lb/>
and N. C. <lb/>
Write Frank P. Morton, Mgr., Morehead City, N. C. <lb/>
for rates and handsome booklet. <lb/>
NOTES BUSY SHOPPERS <lb/>
C. T. store <lb/>
is where mothers teach their children to for <lb/>
Big Bargains in Clothing, Hats, Shoes, Dry Goods, <lb/>
Dress Goods, Notions and Millinery. That is <lb/>
where everybody goes. <lb/>
He it Try Him <lb/>
Halley's Comet <lb/>
U speeding along it- course the of <lb/>
i la.-i <lb/>
II. mi N. W Ry. <lb/>
I I law I would <lb/>
and the ah if I did not tell <lb/>
you for mo. ll <lb/>
of <lb/>
in twenty and <lb/>
was o pain in <lb/>
three hours. <lb/>
always a with me on my <lb/>
For Indigestion, and <lb/>
there E nothing better than <lb/>
at drug stores, or sent <lb/>
prepaid receipt of price. <lb/>
Manufactured by <lb/>
Leftwich Chemical Co. <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
In West Greenville beautiful <lb/>
residence lots for sale on easy <lb/>
terms. See Higgs Bros <lb/>
S. J. NOBLES <lb/>
MODERN BARBER SHOP. <lb/>
Nicely furnished, every <lb/>
thing clean and <lb/>
working the very <lb/>
best barbers. Second to <lb/>
none in the State. <lb/>
Cosmetics a specialty. <lb/>
Oppose More <lb/>
for <lb/>
will treat you <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb/>
Fruit jar rubbers and tops <lb/>
at S. If. Schultz. <lb/>
wanting me <lb/>
call W. J. Turnage. <lb/>
Just received car of lime and <lb/>
c mer. Cr; Atkins<lb/>
building lots for <lb/>
sale on easy terms, <lb/>
See Higgs Bros. <lb/>
Parker fountain pens, fountain <lb/>
pen ink, and library <lb/>
Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
or doses will cure <lb/>
my case of chills and fever, <lb/>
trice <lb/>
Cut glass suitable for bridal <lb/>
presents. Pharmacy. <lb/>
If. <lb/>
I have a nice lot of dry wood <lb/>
on hand, people wanting will call <lb/>
me up. Phone <lb/>
if W. J. Turnage. <lb/>
Shingle your house while the <lb/>
sun shine. Don't wait till sick- <lb/>
comes in the home, but <lb/>
order your telephone at once, <lb/>
per day. <lb/>
Ice am from Washington <lb/>
City every day. it is delicious <lb/>
Pharmacy. <lb/>
Every be provided <lb/>
with a first aid to the <lb/>
you owe it to yourself and loved <lb/>
ones. Telephone that's all. <lb/>
man who has <lb/>
a thorough college business <lb/>
cation, wants position as book- <lb/>
keeper. Box <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
For Sale or house, <lb/>
ind lot situated in South Green- <lb/>
ville on street between <lb/>
Tenth and Eleventh streets. For <lb/>
further information apply to <lb/>
M. Clark. lit <lb/>
I am unloading solid car best <lb/>
tobacco flue iron today. Skilled <lb/>
n busy making them up. <lb/>
Phone your orders to No. or <lb/>
write me at once. Located at <lb/>
Greenville Supply Co's old stand, <lb/>
near A. C. L. depot. <lb/>
J. J. Jenkins. <lb/>
freight service to all <lb/>
parts of surrounding section puts <lb/>
me in position to deliver <lb/>
flues, in any quantity, right at <lb/>
your farm. Located at Green <lb/>
ville Supply Co's old stand, near <lb/>
A. C. L. depot. Phone <lb/>
J. J. Jenkins. <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION. <lb/>
Called to Meet Saturday. July 2nd <lb/>
Meeting Jane b. <lb/>
A convention of <lb/>
patty, of Pitt county is <lb/>
called to meet in the town of <lb/>
Greenville on Saturday. 2nd, <lb/>
1910, at m. for the <lb/>
purpose i pointing <lb/>
alternate to the State. Con- <lb/>
and Judicial <lb/>
lions when called. <lb/>
Township meeting's be <lb/>
held at the usual place.; In the <lb/>
several township of the Count <lb/>
on Saturday, June 1910. at <lb/>
o'clock p. m. for the purpose <lb/>
of appointing delegates and <lb/>
at alternates, to said eon- <lb/>
and the several town <lb/>
hips will he entitled to appoint <lb/>
the following number of <lb/>
gates and alternates, to <lb/>
By mutual consent G. F. <lb/>
Thigpen and V. A. Ward, at <lb/>
Bethel, dissolved co-partnership <lb/>
the 1st of June, 1910. <lb/>
G. V. Thigpen <lb/>
d w V. A. Ward. <lb/>
Beaver Dam<lb/>
Bethel <lb/>
Carolina F<lb/>
No. <lb/>
la No. <lb/>
Falkland<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Swift Creek <lb/>
By order of the Democratic <lb/>
Committee of Pitt county. <lb/>
This May 23rd, 1910. <lb/>
F. C. Harding, Chairman. <lb/>
W. L. Brown, Secretary, <lb/>
We sell <lb/>
Nothing but <lb/>
SHOES <lb/>
And are in a <lb/>
Position to <lb/>
Show best <lb/>
Quality and <lb/>
Style. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Telephone No. <lb/>
market;. <lb/>
Norfolk Cotton and wired <lb/>
by J. W. Perry Co. Cot on <lb/>
Yesterday <lb/>
Middling <lb/>
Low Middling 7-8 <lb/>
Low Middling 6-S 6-8 <lb/>
Fancy <lb/>
Strictly Prime 1-4 1-4 <lb/>
Prime <lb/>
Low Crude <lb/>
LIVERPOOL <lb/>
FUTURE MARKET <lb/>
by Cobb <lb/>
and Norfolk. <lb/>
July <lb/>
Oct <lb/>
Dec <lb/>
Co. Banker <lb/>
re <lb/>
May 1-8 <lb/>
May Corn 1-S <lb/>
July Km. <lb/>
Sept <lb/>
Lard <lb/>
Sept 1210 <lb/>
I ton .<lb/>
in- 1-4 <lb/>
5-8 <lb/>
1-4 <lb/>
1297 <lb/>
48th Annual Convention E. <lb/>
Boston, Mass. <lb/>
Greatly fares via <lb/>
Norfolk Southern Railroad, June <lb/>
to July 2nd. Travel via Norfolk and <lb/>
St Miner. tea voyage. <lb/>
Tickets include meals ard in, <lb/>
Ix r h while ab steamers. For <lb/>
c information, to D. V. <lb/>
Conn, Agent <lb/>
address H. C s, G. P. A., Nor- <lb/>
k. Va. <lb/>
I Cobb 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/>
end New Orleans.<lb/>
Notice to Contractor. <lb/>
The board of county commission rs <lb/>
and building committee of Pitt <lb/>
N. C . entertain <lb/>
for the erection and completion of <lb/>
the new county court house ard <lb/>
I jail, city of Greenville, in the <lb/>
public square, in accordance with <lb/>
prepared by Mil <lb/>
burn, Heister and Co., Architect , <lb/>
Washington. U. C. A set of pi ins <lb/>
will be on file with the register of <lb/>
deeds and the on <lb/>
and after June 1910. <lb/>
Bids will be d until II <lb/>
a. July 11th. bill must be <lb/>
accompanied by a certified check on <lb/>
some well known bank, made payable <lb/>
to J. P. chairman, in the <lb/>
sum of as evidence of good <lb/>
faith if their bid i accepted they u ill <lb/>
enter into contract at once ard an <lb/>
e company's bond <lb/>
in the sum of fifty per cent, of the <lb/>
contract price the faithful per <lb/>
of the contract. Should <lb/>
tail to enter into contract, the <lb/>
will be forfeited to the county as <lb/>
liquidated damages by reason of <lb/>
bide will be entertained for <lb/>
the court house, the jail, the <lb/>
cells, heating apparatus or for the <lb/>
whole. Each bid must be and <lb/>
ad to the register of deeds of <lb/>
Pitt county and <lb/>
for court route and The <lb/>
reserve the right to reject <lb/>
any and all bids, <lb/>
J. P. <lb/>
Chm. Beard County Commissioner--. <lb/>
Use Hubbard's Top <lb/>
on corn, cotton, pea <lb/>
nuts, potatoes etc., and increase <lb/>
the yield per cent. Car load <lb/>
just received by The Central <lb/>
Co. d w <lb/>
Stray Taken Up. <lb/>
have taken up a light <lb/>
color, weight pounds, marked <lb/>
and square in right ear. own <lb/>
can get same by proving ownership <lb/>
and paying charges. <lb/>
Peter Grimes. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. R. F. D. No. <lb/>
S IS ltd <lb/>
Convection. <lb/>
The Democratic congressional <lb/>
convention of the first <lb/>
district of North Carolina, <lb/>
is hereby called to meet in <lb/>
ton, N. C . on Wednesday. July <lb/>
6th, 1910, at o'clock p. m , for <lb/>
the purpose of nominating a can- <lb/>
for congress and transact <lb/>
such other business as may <lb/>
properly come before the con- <lb/>
A. L Pendleton. <lb/>
Chm. Dem. Con. Ex. Com. <lb/>
1st. N. C. <lb/>
D B. Bradford. Sec. <lb/>
OLD CLIPPER SHIPS. <lb/>
That Wars Mada by <lb/>
Sailing <lb/>
In these record smashing times <lb/>
one is apt to smile when mention is <lb/>
made of sailing ships of other <lb/>
but it is n fact nevertheless <lb/>
that no moan records were achieved <lb/>
by the famous American clippers of <lb/>
the last century, many of which <lb/>
were oven faster than the majority <lb/>
of the steamers today. Today even <lb/>
there are sailing ships that with <lb/>
anything like a fair breeze can out- <lb/>
strip nine out of ten ocean tramps. <lb/>
During the period between <lb/>
and the civil war the Flying Cloud <lb/>
made some neat record in the <lb/>
transatlantic trade, and these stood <lb/>
till the were surpassed by the fa- <lb/>
Guion liner Alaska in <lb/>
The Flying Cloud made one day's <lb/>
run of knots and another of <lb/>
knots, equal to about twenty- <lb/>
one land miles an hour. <lb/>
During the period between <lb/>
1800 there were packet ships <lb/>
that bent the mail steamers across <lb/>
the ocean times. Dick- <lb/>
ens eroded in the old a <lb/>
steamship, but be returned by the <lb/>
packet Washington, which <lb/>
beat the liner home by twenty-nine <lb/>
hours. <lb/>
A small packet boat, the Fidelia, <lb/>
of about tons, accomplished the <lb/>
Atlantic trip in days hours, <lb/>
and the Dreadnought, whose own- <lb/>
boasted that she had never been <lb/>
in a race, averaged on one <lb/>
trip knots hour. <lb/>
There was a British ship, the <lb/>
that made a really <lb/>
wonderful record from Melbourne <lb/>
to days, an average <lb/>
of knots an hour for the voyage. <lb/>
She came home afterward from <lb/>
China in days. The per- <lb/>
of the show- <lb/>
ed a speed greater than that of <lb/>
most freighters of today. <lb/>
It is a fact that with a wind <lb/>
the big five and six masted <lb/>
of today develop a speed that <lb/>
frequently enables their crews to <lb/>
have the pleasure, up the <lb/>
coast deep with cargo, of sailing <lb/>
past some Norwegian or <lb/>
tramp steamer <lb/>
along on its most economical <lb/>
consumption at a rate of or <lb/>
knots an Weekly. <lb/>
intended a successful <lb/>
of performance last <lb/>
lent <lb/>
conjurer a dollar, <lb/>
ha gave back a good one. <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 trade with us we both make money <lb/>
Wiley Brown <lb/>
STOCK <lb/>
Assigned to S. T. Hooker <lb/>
Must be Sold in <lb/>
THIRTY DAYS <lb/>
National Bank has leased the <lb/>
building and these Goods must be <lb/>
moved out. To do this quickly all <lb/>
goods are marked down at and <lb/>
below cost. <lb/>
STOCK CONSISTS OF A GENERAL LINE <lb/>
Notions, Shoes, <lb/>
Trunks, Clothing, Etc. <lb/>
Sale Will Begin at a. m. <lb/>
FRIDAY, JUNE <lb/>
Remember the Place and Come for Bargains <lb/>
Wiley Brown <lb/>
ON FIVE POINTS <lb/>
Professional PROBLEMS <lb/>
W. F. EVANS <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
Office opposite R. L. Smith A <lb/>
stables, and next door to John <lb/>
If Co's new building. <lb/>
N. W. OUTLAW <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
Office formerly occupied by J. L. <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. <lb/>
D. . <lb/>
Gems That Are to Be Found In <lb/>
the Old Arithmetics. <lb/>
ALL OF THEM <lb/>
Clark <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
CIVIL ENGINEERS <lb/>
I SURVEYORS <lb/>
N. Carolina <lb/>
S. J. Everett <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
Loans made Real Estate <lb/>
Dr. Older. Greenville, N. <lb/>
L. L MOORE <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Moore and Long <lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW <lb/>
anKH x N <lb/>
DR R. L. <lb/>
Dentist. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C <lb/>
harry Skinner. Skinner, <lb/>
H. . <lb/>
SKINNER WHEDBEE <lb/>
LAWYERS. Greenville N. C <lb/>
When visiting Washington, N. C. <lb/>
Don't forget you have a standing in <lb/>
to visit <lb/>
Baker's Studio <lb/>
Every thing well up to date <lb/>
Kodak work a specialty. <lb/>
Dr. F. Fitts, Osteopath <lb/>
with <lb/>
Dr. A. H. Zea y, at Kinston, <lb/>
the opening an is <lb/>
aver K store <lb/>
Tuesday. and Saturday <lb/>
Office a. m. to p. n. <lb/>
o. <lb/>
OWEN N. <lb/>
W. RODMAN <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/>
Phone NEW BERN, N. C. <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
State Normal and <lb/>
College <lb/>
Maintained by the State for <lb/>
men of North Carolina. Four regular <lb/>
leading to Degrees. Special <lb/>
for Fall Session <lb/>
begins September de- <lb/>
siring to enter should apply as early as <lb/>
possible. For and other In- <lb/>
formation address <lb/>
J. I. FOUST, Pres, Greensboro, N. C. <lb/>
Mexican <lb/>
The finest Hy lire In II <lb/>
a little Mexican named <lb/>
Nat lies gather from oak <lb/>
trees a branch covered with this <lb/>
nests and It up In the house <lb/>
The spiders begin on by whole <lb/>
sale. nests very tidy <lb/>
pretty and old A lot of <lb/>
make home therein with <lb/>
the spiders. The live on fly <lb/>
legs, the crumbs and scraps from tho <lb/>
table, and pay for bed <lb/>
and board by keeping the web <lb/>
perfectly clean refined, eating <lb/>
everything and dropping no Utter In <lb/>
the Mexican professional <lb/>
Mrs. Is a very quiet, <lb/>
orderly lady who never from <lb/>
tier own fireside or strays from her <lb/>
van back yard, but when a fly <lb/>
very busy with her <lb/>
. fork <lb/>
frees. <lb/>
-BIBLE <lb/>
What Did He <lb/>
Mrs. I g u, we <lb/>
owe to nature. does <lb/>
not send out her bills often enough. <lb/>
New York Press. <lb/>
That What Inquisitive Boy's <lb/>
Told Him. and the Lad Start- <lb/>
ad Out to Verify the <lb/>
Examples He Dug Up. <lb/>
Was Ion more a gen- <lb/>
ago. did John's father study <lb/>
his more thoroughly John <lb/>
John la a seventh grade student <lb/>
In public He asked bis <lb/>
father to help following <lb/>
asked how much money be baa <lb/>
In replied. I bud <lb/>
more I would more than <lb/>
half what I now <lb/>
money <lb/>
a fool said the fa- <lb/>
thin learner to ask the <lb/>
cashier. Yon been <lb/>
with problems like that for a week. <lb/>
Suppose your teacher asked you how <lb/>
old you are. you tell her <lb/>
times as old as I am. <lb/>
by forty-two. I would be thirty <lb/>
years older than dud. and If dud were <lb/>
one-fourth as old as he now II be <lb/>
would my What would <lb/>
teacher do If you answered In such a <lb/>
manner In my day we bail practical <lb/>
problems Id our <lb/>
In order to bis father's <lb/>
statement John went to public <lb/>
for an old arithmetic <lb/>
The librarian save him <lb/>
Natural lie turned In Lie <lb/>
pace marked <lb/>
and <lb/>
puts his whole flock of sheep Into <lb/>
three Halt go Into one pas- <lb/>
one-third Into another and <lb/>
two Into a third. How many In the <lb/>
said John. <lb/>
exercises Here Is a man who <lb/>
wains to Mud BOW ninny sheep he Has. <lb/>
He I hem so he will know when <lb/>
he has half of them. This half he <lb/>
puts Into a pasture. T hen he counts <lb/>
nut a third pills It in pen <lb/>
Next he counts what's left and <lb/>
he bus thirty Alter n little <lb/>
he Bods how many In <lb/>
Bock. Very practical, i guess dad <lb/>
didn't study <lb/>
The hook he examined was <lb/>
Inductive arithmetic, edition <lb/>
of In miscellaneous examples he <lb/>
found the <lb/>
Two ladders will together lust reach <lb/>
the lop of a seventy-five feet <lb/>
If the shorter ladder Is two- <lb/>
I birds Hie length the other, what i- <lb/>
length of <lb/>
didn't lie measure each ladder <lb/>
separately John naked himself. <lb/>
problem is not practical. I dad <lb/>
Is older I thought. I an <lb/>
older <lb/>
The written iii was banded <lb/>
to The hook mis evidently <lb/>
the war. for II was HI led <lb/>
with problems dealing with battering <lb/>
down f and the sustenance <lb/>
of soldiers. One problem <lb/>
It twelve t <lb/>
can batter down a for- <lb/>
tress in three hours, now long Will It <lb/>
take for nineteen twenty-four pound <lb/>
to baiter down the <lb/>
line for a John re- <lb/>
find says that I am going <lb/>
to be a captain of <lb/>
Another arithmetic of the same date <lb/>
had famous fish problem with <lb/>
which John's teacher bad troubled <lb/>
for six weeks before he himself finally <lb/>
explained If to the The <lb/>
problem <lb/>
bend of a Is ten Inches <lb/>
long Us mil is as rood as Us head and <lb/>
one-half body. The body is us long <lb/>
as the bend and lull How long Is <lb/>
the <lb/>
Very handy problem for u butcher <lb/>
John turned <lb/>
edition 1808. <lb/>
I'm sure to Slid something he <lb/>
reflected <lb/>
bare starts up twelve rod before a <lb/>
bound, but she is by him <lb/>
till has up one nod <lb/>
minutes She runs the rate of <lb/>
rods a minute, and the hound <lb/>
runs at the rate of forty rods min- <lb/>
long will the nice last, unit <lb/>
will be the distance the hound <lb/>
difference does It make bow <lb/>
far the bound John asked a be <lb/>
turned to Scholar's Arithmetic, <lb/>
edition of The cost <lb/>
of living made the first problem <lb/>
practical for present day purposes. <lb/>
John concluded. The problem us <lb/>
I give eighty bushels of potatoes <lb/>
at cents a bushel f <lb/>
Bax at IS cents u pound for sixty-four <lb/>
bushels of salt, what Is the sail <lb/>
Another problem <lb/>
good mini driving his guest lo <lb/>
market was met by number, who said. <lb/>
Good morrow, muster, with your <lb/>
Says be In reply. have not <lb/>
geese, but If I had half as many <lb/>
I BOW have and two one <lb/>
geese besides the number I have <lb/>
already I should have How <lb/>
geese the <lb/>
long would you permit a man <lb/>
lo live If be made such an answer to <lb/>
you <lb/>
John sighed he Wiped his <lb/>
forehead handed Hie book back lo <lb/>
the librarian. must have skipped <lb/>
these practical Kansas <lb/>
City Star. <lb/>
THE WHEAT AND THE TARES. <lb/>
the at the tun fa Kingdom of their Ft- <lb/>
J. <lb/>
we have Introduced by another parable a great <lb/>
I Our study of u week ago showed various classes of bearers <lb/>
B F the truth. To-day's study ignores all except the <lb/>
bearers, which shows that our Loud foreknew the history of the <lb/>
Age. We are Informed mat he and Ins Apostles sowed none but good seed, <lb/>
hut that after the Apostles had asleep In death, the great Adversary, <lb/>
Satan, over-sowed the wheat hold with tare Reed, We are told that <lb/>
la not uncommon In the Orient. The seed Is very <lb/>
different from the wheat, but the growing stalks look very much alike, and <lb/>
even when beaded the resemblance Is close, except to the expert, until tho <lb/>
beads then the head of the wheat becomes heavy, while the being <lb/>
light stands upright. Only the expert can discern the wheat from the tan's <lb/>
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. <lb/>
SCHEDULES <lb/>
Between Washington, Plymouth, <lb/>
and April 1st, <lb/>
while growing. <lb/>
II <lb/>
in<lb/>
eat I <lb/>
Master gave this parable to Illustrate how error would lie brought <lb/>
Info tho church by Satan, and the children produced by the error would <lb/>
In many respects resemble or counterfeit those produced by the truth. It <lb/>
was impossible for Adversary to corrupt the seed of truth which Jesus <lb/>
and the Apostles neither was ho allowed to Interfere with the sowing <lb/>
of It. but ho was permitted to it the field and. If possible, to choke <lb/>
the wheat, In a general way to deceive the outside world respecting the <lb/>
true character of the children of the Kingdom. <lb/>
We are to In mind the Almighty power of God by which he could <lb/>
binder Satan prevent the bis plans at any and all <lb/>
We are to remember that Divine Plan of the Ages many <lb/>
things which God does not approve, but In his Word condemns. We arc to <lb/>
remember that the Divine Plan spans several aces and that only the finished <lb/>
work will fully display the Divine Wisdom, Justice, Love Power. We <lb/>
are to remember in the present time. God permits the wrath of demons <lb/>
and men to oppose his purposes, but only so fur as be can and eventually will <lb/>
overrule these to bis glory and for the good of all in harmony with him- <lb/>
self. <lb/>
parable represents the as asking whether or not the <lb/>
should be gathered out from the and thus the enemy's work de- <lb/>
answer Is. No. because In so doing there would be such a com- <lb/>
motion In the wheat field as to disturb all of wheat-so intimately were <lb/>
the true and the false roots intertwining in society. Ill the <lb/>
etc. Instead Master declared that should be allowed to grow <lb/>
together throughout age until the time at the end of the age; <lb/>
then the should be Instructed concerning the gathering together and <lb/>
the separating of the two classes. The wheat would then be gathered Into <lb/>
barn and the tares would lie bundled for burning, to the cud that none of <lb/>
Hie bad seed might affect the future crop. <lb/>
At the special request of disciples tho Master interpreted this par- <lb/>
Jesus himself was the sower of the good seed of the kingdom mes- <lb/>
sage. was the sower the crop of seed of false doctrine and <lb/>
The time will be the end of this age. Just before the <lb/>
ration of the new age of Christ's Millennial Kingdom. The wheat class will <lb/>
those counted fit to be associated with the glory of bis Millennial <lb/>
and the gathering into the or garner represents the j <lb/>
We are never so ridiculous Hie <lb/>
we have as by I hose we<lb/>
For farther information, ticket agent, m <lb/>
w. j. p. i. m. t. c. warns. p. a. <lb/>
WILMINGTON, n. ;. <lb/>
Norfolk Southern R. R, <lb/>
NIGHT <lb/>
Pullman Car Service <lb/>
between RALEIGH. N. C. and NOR- <lb/>
FOLK, VA. beginning June 5th. <lb/>
The i . car line between Raleigh and <lb/>
an I n. with <lb/>
Read Town SCHEDULE <lb/>
Daily <lb/>
No. <lb/>
0.- r <lb/>
No <lb/>
via Wilson, <lb/>
Read Up <lb/>
Duly <lb/>
Set <lb/>
N II <lb/>
ti<lb/>
Mil <lb/>
J III <lb/>
Southern <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Hen S A. I- w.,. Ar <lb/>
K. S and P. <lb/>
I,. <lb/>
on a. l . <lb/>
change which this wheat class will experience. The Apostle explains . <lb/>
this, saying. Is sown corruption; It is In It Is sown j <lb/>
In dishonor; It is raised in glory; It Is animal body; it <lb/>
raised a spiritual Tins Is the resurrection of <lb/>
first -IT; <lb/>
The tare class Is represented as being gathered out of the kingdom <lb/>
In the sense that the church at the present is God's kingdom embryo <lb/>
ill a state of progressive development or for glory and wort <lb/>
of the future. All of the kingdom class are fully consecrated to and by <lb/>
begotten or the spirit with a view to their Divine, spirit beings <lb/>
In the resurrection. Others who are not thus spirit-begotten have no right to <lb/>
class themselves with the nor to consider themselves heirs of the <lb/>
kingdom. Their presence In Church Of la nut of order. They have <lb/>
been permitted to commingle with the wheat centuries, but with the end <lb/>
of the age the change will come Incidental to the Inauguration <lb/>
of the <lb/>
It would be mistake to suppose that there are lo be thieves and <lb/>
of the baser sort among these Offenders, but they Include some whom <lb/>
the Apostle describes as works of the and the namely, <lb/>
anger, malice, hatred, envy, Strife. However, many are line people of <lb/>
generous disposition, but not in Jesus. They are <lb/>
blame-worthy not because of not being but because they are <lb/>
in the nominal church and posing as Christians, are offensive this <lb/>
reuse In the sight. Nor are they entirely to be blamed for thinking <lb/>
themselves They Have been so to think act by <lb/>
preachers and teachers, many of whom, like themselves, have no knowledge <lb/>
of the Kingdom nor of the power which Initiates into <lb/>
In it. gathering these Into lodges, societies, <lb/>
Churches, sects, especially be an evidence of lite work <lb/>
in progress. The true are exhorted to Hand fast in the liberty wherewith <lb/>
Christ has made them free, and that they collie not Into to sects and <lb/>
They are to avoid membership In but stand In the full <lb/>
fellowship Of nil who are of the true class. <lb/>
The casting these bundles Into the furnace will mean their destruction; <lb/>
but we are not to understand the furnace to be a literal one, nor the lire <lb/>
which will consume tares to be a literal lire. The lire with which this <lb/>
age will end will a great of foretold in the Scriptures as <lb/>
preceding and the Millennial time of trouble <lb/>
never was since there was a In that time of <lb/>
the delusions which now make the think themselves to be the true <lb/>
will nil be will nil be reduced to their proper piano <lb/>
the earthly recognize themselves as merely of the earth, earthy, <lb/>
and not In any sense members of the spirit-begotten, elect church. <lb/>
Hearken now to the Master's words respecting the Consummation of the <lb/>
Church's In the end of this age lie says. shall the righteous <lb/>
shine forth as the sun In the kingdom of that bath <lb/>
ear to hear, let Not every one bus hearing ear. but this Is <lb/>
Lord's message to those who have the proper attitude of nil who <lb/>
have the ability to understand spiritual things. Let such understand that <lb/>
with the close of fills age the lord's saintly ones. Irrespective of the earthly <lb/>
church systems, will be associated with the Redeemer the glory of his Mil- <lb/>
Kingdom and Will shine forth us the sun for blessing enlighten- <lb/>
uplifting of tho human family. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
lit <lb/>
IS <lb/>
I V <lb/>
At <lb/>
Union Station J <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
vi Ar <lb/>
New via A r <lb/>
Kinston, via Ar <lb/>
via Wilson Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Washington Ar <lb/>
NORFOLK, Avenue<lb/>
II IS<lb/>
it <lb/>
I ,<lb/>
o on p. y <lb/>
via <lb/>
via <lb/>
Ion made at Norfolk with nil lines diverging. <lb/>
I'm so trains operated call between New Bern <lb/>
and except Sunday, between Now Bern <lb/>
Nob V carry Pullman sleeping car- be- <lb/>
tween Raleigh and Nor ilk. Make- close at Wilson L. <lb/>
to and Wilmington. Mount, Ne v D. . <lb/>
connect n at with R. AS S. to aid lorn <lb/>
Kan with Sou. Ry. to from <lb/>
complete information, or f r r of sleeping car y <lb/>
to either ill th following i. T. Can or. agent. K. L. L y. i. <lb/>
Raleigh, N. .; W. J Williams son, N. C; P. N. <lb/>
C; L Ii ville, N. C II. L. Myers. Washington, N. C. I. H. <lb/>
Bennett, New N. C <lb/>
W. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Home if <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb/>
Pun <lb/>
Among <lb/>
of <lb/>
h men <lb/>
A Useful Femur. <lb/>
Excited -Are you aware, <lb/>
my dear sir. Hint <lb/>
yours Is femur <lb/>
Partner I <lb/>
bought It was raid like. <lb/>
don't match Hie other nohow.- <lb/>
Punch, <lb/>
A Strong Cup. <lb/>
Guest cheap Look <lb/>
here, waller. I thought I fold you t <lb/>
tiring me strong cup of coffee <lb/>
Walter-Well, what's <lb/>
with You couldn't break <lb/>
with an as. <lb/>
His Pockets Were Empty. <lb/>
an actor, fought a duel <lb/>
in with an orator named Manuel. <lb/>
The orator the swords- <lb/>
would have run <lb/>
through the body bad not Ids sword <lb/>
n five franc piece which hap- <lb/>
to be In the actor's This <lb/>
drew from notoriously Impecunious <lb/>
Journalist the exclamation. It <lb/>
i been in place It <lb/>
would have been all <lb/>
Yolk <lb/>
trip <lb/>
bus- <lb/>
Feminine Tactics. <lb/>
are you talking insult <lb/>
to It won y <lb/>
baud or <lb/>
so. I expect <lb/>
on n sixty dollar <lb/>
Her <lb/>
your wife lover of <lb/>
so or <lb/>
Joys. <lb/>
came across a bundle of <lb/>
your old love letters today, <lb/>
j Hid you read them over <lb/>
I what was the affect of <lb/>
that wondered which <lb/>
was the bigger fool-you for <lb/>
them or I for marrying you after re- <lb/>
them. <lb/>
house <lb/>
Press <lb/>
ell the <lb/>
The Test. <lb/>
seem be In <lb/>
really believe those two <lb/>
think as much of each oilier as they <lb/>
do of <lb/>
Note. <lb/>
noticed one <lb/>
what Is <lb/>
one gets leaded It's <lb/>
his wife who <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
Pa's Definition. <lb/>
Little what a mat- <lb/>
prize -a matrimonial <lb/>
prize, my son. Is the woman some <lb/>
man News <lb/>
The actions of men are like the In- <lb/>
of a out what Is <lb/>
most remarkable la them. <lb/>
In <lb/>
mode <lb/>
1- the from <lb/>
f the rank are not <lb/>
exempt. It i- very <lb/>
severity, en as lender Hie <lb/>
sufferer a cripple for life. The <lb/>
victim Is thrown upon his face, <lb/>
each foot i passed through loop or <lb/>
strong attached to a pole, which <lb/>
is men. who. <lb/>
twisting II round, lighten the ropes <lb/>
render Hie feet Immovable. Two <lb/>
executioners strike rails alter- <lb/>
with .-if Ills <lb/>
tree well steeped In water to <lb/>
them supple. A -lore of these <lb/>
switches Is generally ready for use In <lb/>
the pond which adjoins the courtyards <lb/>
of the houses of great. The pun <lb/>
frequently lasts for hour <lb/>
or victim faints <lb/>
from <lb/>
Heckling Humor. <lb/>
A parliamentary candidate was hold- <lb/>
a meting at which <lb/>
the heckler was much In and <lb/>
the candidate failed to <lb/>
give s answer which was Judged <lb/>
to lie satisfactory by the audience. To- <lb/>
ward the end of the misting an elector <lb/>
rose and quietly would yon <lb/>
tell us what might be the name your <lb/>
second Initial stands The <lb/>
candidate, greatly puzzled <lb/>
the purport of the question, asked <lb/>
what way the Information could Inter- <lb/>
est the audience. ibis ex- <lb/>
plained the should <lb/>
be o see r you could one <lb/>
In No Hurry. <lb/>
ninny wild a clergy <lb/>
mini, their religion a the <lb/>
little Hie Jam Inset, moth- <lb/>
pounced on him suddenly, lie stood <lb/>
tiptoe, hulling Jam with both hands <lb/>
from the pot to mouth. <lb/>
Ills cried <lb/>
Ami only l-i-l you prayed to be <lb/>
I is face, tin mask of <lb/>
Jam. turned toward her. <lb/>
Yes. put not tut after I'm <lb/>
Announcements <lb/>
For Sheriff. <lb/>
I hereby announce a <lb/>
candidate for sheriff Pitt <lb/>
county, subject to the action of <lb/>
the Democratic primary. <lb/>
J. Cox. <lb/>
For Sh riff. <lb/>
I hereby a <lb/>
for sheriff Pi ft. <lb/>
subject to action of <lb/>
Democratic <lb/>
8.1. <lb/>
I beg to submit my.-, if the <lb/>
discretion of the <lb/>
of Pitt at their <lb/>
coming primaries f r Count <lb/>
V. C. <lb/>
For Sheriff. <lb/>
I announce h <lb/>
for the of sheriff <lb/>
of county, to <lb/>
Democrat c primary. <lb/>
Joseph <lb/>
For <lb/>
I hereby myself as a <lb/>
candidate for county treasurer <lb/>
for Pitt county subject to <lb/>
action of the Democratic primary. <lb/>
B. Wilson. <lb/>
C only <lb/>
hereby announce myself a <lb/>
candidate for the i dice of Treas- <lb/>
of Pitt county, to <lb/>
the action of <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
d w <lb/>
Our Greenville, yours if <lb/>
come. <lb/>
you <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018101_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE EASTERN <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD,<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
Year <lb/>
Six Months <lb/>
Single Copy . <lb/>
rats may be had upon <lb/>
application t the business office in The <lb/>
Reflector corner Evans and <lb/>
Third s <lb/>
Entered in the post office at Greenville <lb/>
N. C. mail matter. <lb/>
FRIDAY JUNE. 1910. <lb/>
Good roads an- the tiling that <lb/>
must come. <lb/>
Get on the good roads wagon <lb/>
i d forward. <lb/>
As I said unto yon, oven mi <lb/>
say roads. <lb/>
The candidate are busy <lb/>
folks are at work- <lb/>
and <lb/>
went out to do some lynching <lb/>
got the wrong The mis <lb/>
take made their crime all the <lb/>
worse. <lb/>
not worry over the <lb/>
governor of California breaking <lb/>
up the light as <lb/>
long as the Wake county scrap <lb/>
is in progress. <lb/>
It is better for that <lb/>
the legislature did not meet <lb/>
extra session, as there is already <lb/>
enough going on in Wake to <lb/>
keep the people occupied. <lb/>
Don't forget that little matter <lb/>
listing your taxes. You <lb/>
haven't got much, you know, <lb/>
it will be a small and <lb/>
but little of your time. <lb/>
Will Greenville ever have a <lb/>
or place for out door <lb/>
When a man he <lb/>
he fills-in a mud <lb/>
hole. Talk good roads. <lb/>
Both sides of the family in <lb/>
Wake county are saying mighty <lb/>
hard things about each other. <lb/>
One thing about the <lb/>
machine, it can go high enough <lb/>
not to frighten the mule. <lb/>
The aviation dance is the <lb/>
newest Guess some <lb/>
wings will go along with it. <lb/>
Whatsoever a man sows that <lb/>
shall he also the rain <lb/>
does not and wash it away. <lb/>
If they beat the governor <lb/>
California in the light matter, <lb/>
he has certainly given it a big <lb/>
advertisement. <lb/>
The governor of California <lb/>
says the light <lb/>
shall not take place in that <lb/>
State. <lb/>
If North Carolina not get <lb/>
a square deal it v. be the <lb/>
fault of our con- <lb/>
It looks like some Northern <lb/>
papers had lie than tell <lb/>
the truth when printing things <lb/>
concerning the South. <lb/>
Possibly the way they arrived <lb/>
at the correct pronunciation of <lb/>
automobile is that the biggest <lb/>
part of it is the bill. <lb/>
The man whom the Florida <lb/>
mob lynched by mistake cannot <lb/>
express his approval or <lb/>
of the error. <lb/>
So many aviators have come <lb/>
to the front now that you seldom <lb/>
the Wrights mentioned, <lb/>
i et they once seemed to have a <lb/>
monopoly on the flying machine <lb/>
tax penalty prescribed for such the libel law for that there is no <lb/>
failure. You had best get busy justice in the <lb/>
and interview the list taker, i <lb/>
There is just a week left in <lb/>
which to do this. <lb/>
at <lb/>
As long as there is no occasion <lb/>
for any to be offend at present, ed, but if Bro. Cowan don't in- <lb/>
the can be dropped without that libel suit he will <lb/>
fear of getting on have done himself a great in <lb/>
toes, that it is no good ought to be <lb/>
. . , . ., , I preferred against him <lb/>
taste to put cards of thanks in . <lb/>
next Concord <lb/>
the newspapers. Hereafter The <lb/>
Reflector will make a charge of <lb/>
one cent a word cards of You are <lb/>
thanks or resolutions of you haven't got <lb/>
that it prints. If any are sent Cowan., and <lb/>
to the paper for publication the Am you ., <lb/>
made in the appearance of The <lb/>
Reflector until about the first of <lb/>
July, and after that time the <lb/>
paper will speak for itself. <lb/>
This tops it. A man who had <lb/>
existing between the members i jail South- <lb/>
X port prints a card about the ex- <lb/>
received at <lb/>
It would be matter of the <lb/>
deepest regret to have the so- <lb/>
and fraternal good feeling <lb/>
the <lb/>
THE FATS AND THE THINS. <lb/>
Brilliant of Ball for <lb/>
Day. <lb/>
On the next anniversary of <lb/>
our national independence. Mon- <lb/>
day, July 4th, Greenville is to <lb/>
have a game of base ball that is <lb/>
the real article. It will be pure- <lb/>
a local affair between the fats <lb/>
and the thins of the town, and <lb/>
the proceeds of the game, which <lb/>
should be large in contemplation <lb/>
the hands of jailer. <lb/>
He wish to say in be- <lb/>
half of myself, my and Mr. <lb/>
Bullard that Sheriff Knox <lb/>
his jailer and deputies have been of the immense amount of <lb/>
as kind to us as courteous to will be divided between the <lb/>
y. you fellows stop that and as obliging tons as we public library and the <lb/>
could expect to be treated. I Greenville baseball team. <lb/>
make this statement in justice Daily practices among the fats <lb/>
to these officers to contradict a and the thins have already be- <lb/>
report. that I have of be gUn with a view of each side <lb/>
sender should count the between us libel its line up for the <lb/>
and enclose the price according- m Z I There are many on both sides to <lb/>
. talk. At any rate you might ho people of .,. for select from, and those fortunate <lb/>
Wait for Cowan tn n. ,. ,. j. <lb/>
There are people who stand <lb/>
with their shoulder constantly to <lb/>
the doing all they can for <lb/>
advancement and <lb/>
of their community. There are <lb/>
I others who never put forth a <lb/>
Getting close to the time fr hand toward community <lb/>
wait for Cowan to <lb/>
the He is of age, <lb/>
let him for himself. <lb/>
THE COMPANY. <lb/>
primaries and county <lb/>
building, are ever ready to <lb/>
to select delegates to State, f-r their person- <lb/>
congressional judicial con- d what the town and <lb/>
The primaries for community builders do. The <lb/>
county officers will come simply stand by and <lb/>
, i wait for their property to en- <lb/>
In a column dispatch of some I in value from what the <lb/>
of the Tuesday morning papers I others do, Towns <lb/>
about the marriage of Theodore <lb/>
Roosevelt Jr. to Miss Eleanor <lb/>
Alexander, just lines <lb/>
were given to talking about the <lb/>
bridegroom's father. <lb/>
The Vermont Army of <lb/>
the has adopted a res- <lb/>
condemning the action <lb/>
of the Stale of Virginia <lb/>
the statue of Gen- R. K. Lee <lb/>
in statuary hall at Washington. <lb/>
Who cares what Vermont thinks <lb/>
about it <lb/>
grow faster when all are <lb/>
united and work together for <lb/>
progress. Lets all get together <lb/>
to advance and Pitt <lb/>
county. <lb/>
In order to increase facilities <lb/>
and enlarge its sphere of useful- <lb/>
both a newspaper and <lb/>
job printing establishment, <lb/>
Reflector has <lb/>
rated under the name of The <lb/>
Reflector Company. This step <lb/>
places The Reflector in better <lb/>
position to reach its ambition of <lb/>
being the leading paper in the <lb/>
congressional district and of <lb/>
having a job printing plant <lb/>
passed by none in its Held. <lb/>
What we hope to do is have a <lb/>
daily and weekly newspaper <lb/>
kindness shown us while we <lb/>
were Reminds us <lb/>
of some other cards of thanks <lb/>
seen in the <lb/>
Record. <lb/>
It is said that a French work- <lb/>
never goes in debt without <lb/>
first seeing where the money is <lb/>
to come from to get out, in which <lb/>
he is quite different from most <lb/>
men this country. What <lb/>
most of us want is a chance <lb/>
get in debt; getting out is left <lb/>
tO the other <lb/>
Record. <lb/>
It will be time enough for the <lb/>
Democratic party to be looking <lb/>
around for a candidate for <lb/>
dent after it has found out that <lb/>
it is going to be allowed to put <lb/>
up anybody. Durham Herald. <lb/>
A Dreadful Wound. <lb/>
The Greenville <lb/>
The Times here, is agitating a <lb/>
park for We hope <lb/>
The i meeting with <lb/>
more encouragement at Green- <lb/>
ville than The Times. Both of <lb/>
these growing towns need a park <lb/>
and the longer purchase of a <lb/>
lot is deferred Hie greater will <lb/>
be the cost if tie park is to be in <lb/>
from a knife, tin can, rusty nail, <lb/>
representative of tins pro- works or of any other de <lb/>
. , , . , l prompt h Ban. <lb/>
section, lit which to prevent blood <lb/>
p or gangrene. It's the quickest. <lb/>
Why don't you talk more poll. convenient l cation Wilson <lb/>
. , , , . Times. <lb/>
tics a would-be candidate I <lb/>
, ,, . If The Times is meeting with <lb/>
wants to know. Hang politics, <lb/>
. , any encouragement at all on the <lb/>
man, we want roads. <lb/>
the man who wants o go to the <lb/>
legislature better let it be <lb/>
known where lie stands on this <lb/>
question. <lb/>
the people who patronize it can <lb/>
feel a and be glad to call <lb/>
paper. <lb/>
Early in May after it was de <lb/>
finitely decided to incorporate <lb/>
the business, which had been in <lb/>
for sometime, <lb/>
orders were placid for a <lb/>
machine, folding machine, an <lb/>
extra job other equip- <lb/>
for the plant, and the in- <lb/>
of these has since been <lb/>
going mi. Si ill further equip- <lb/>
will be added from time to <lb/>
An exchange says the cam- <lb/>
in Wake county is at <lb/>
fever heat. Something ought to <lb/>
given to reduce the fever. <lb/>
In Virginia a law has just <lb/>
gone into effect which makes <lb/>
a misdemeanor for any person <lb/>
to use profane or Indecent <lb/>
over tin telephone, the <lb/>
penalty upon being <lb/>
not over That is not n <lb/>
bad law. <lb/>
When you see a network of <lb/>
roads all over county <lb/>
you will feel like a different <lb/>
man. They are coming, too. <lb/>
some of these day the people <lb/>
I will realize how unwise they <lb/>
i were in failing to make such <lb/>
provision. <lb/>
One thing can he said for <lb/>
Greenville that deserves notice <lb/>
and that is we have such a de- <lb/>
cent lot of men and boys that a <lb/>
near-beer saloon can't prosper <lb/>
here. Of course there is some <lb/>
of the vile stuff sold, hut it is <lb/>
handled as a side line, not <lb/>
through an imitation saloon, the <lb/>
one that was here Having moved <lb/>
away for the lack of patronage. <lb/>
Raise the license tax and run it <lb/>
all out so that we will continue <lb/>
to have a good moral tone. We <lb/>
wish we could say that blind <lb/>
Justice Brown, of the United couldn't prosper here <lb/>
States Supreme court, believes also, but the old .-oaks will have <lb/>
that the government should dis- it you know. They will die a <lb/>
arm and not be pushing natural death though after a <lb/>
park matter, it is that much <lb/>
ahead of what l he Reflector has <lb/>
found towns do need j us business develop. <lb/>
parks, no doubt about that, and ,,,,. plant may be <lb/>
for its completeness ability <lb/>
The bitter campaign between <lb/>
the ring and anti-ring <lb/>
Wake county over the <lb/>
makes us how the <lb/>
line up is going to be after the <lb/>
nominations are made and the <lb/>
real light comes on between the <lb/>
and the <lb/>
for war. lie is right. All <lb/>
the nations should disarm and <lb/>
there should be universal peace. <lb/>
The promoters ought to have <lb/>
felt of the governor of <lb/>
to learn how he on the <lb/>
Yes. it is dull, but you do not fight before they dropped <lb/>
help things by i the big pavilion that was <lb/>
about it. A better plan is prepared for it. The <lb/>
some bustling and advertise. j and can move <lb/>
but the pavilion cannot <lb/>
T. Roosevelt has expressed the go along with them, <lb/>
desire drop out of public <lb/>
sight for the time being. Didn't <lb/>
know he would ever grow tired <lb/>
of the strenuous life. <lb/>
while and we will be the <lb/>
better for prohibition. Near- <lb/>
beer and blind tigers are two <lb/>
things we will rejoice in seeing <lb/>
pass away. <lb/>
Listen, gentlemen to this ans- <lb/>
by Whichard, of the <lb/>
Greenville Reflector, to a re- <lb/>
quest for a description of Editor <lb/>
Cowan, of the Wilmington Dis- <lb/>
patch might easily be <lb/>
taken for our twin brother. He <lb/>
to turn out the very best work. <lb/>
The present editor, who has <lb/>
conducted The R. for <lb/>
more than a quarter of a <lb/>
is a large shareholder in <lb/>
the enterprise, has been elected <lb/>
president of the company, and <lb/>
asks every patron to lend bis aid <lb/>
in helping to make The <lb/>
tor a useful and creditable news <lb/>
surest healer for w, as <lb/>
also for burns, bus, sores, skin <lb/>
eczema, hands, corns <lb/>
or at all <lb/>
SUCCESS OF TRAINING SCHOOL. <lb/>
Making a Record and <lb/>
Capacity Nearly Twice Overran. <lb/>
It is a requirement in. several <lb/>
counties that public school teach- <lb/>
some summer school <lb/>
for four The <lb/>
weeks of summer term t <lb/>
Carolina Training <lb/>
School ended Saturday, and some <lb/>
forty odd cf the four <lb/>
classes today for their re <lb/>
homes. Many <lb/>
who came with the intention of <lb/>
taking the four course <lb/>
have expressed themselves as so <lb/>
delighted with the teacher train- <lb/>
that the school is giving that <lb/>
they cannot afford to miss it and <lb/>
are going to remain through the <lb/>
full ten summer term. <lb/>
Still others are coming in to take <lb/>
the of those who leave. <lb/>
Up to the present time, since <lb/>
the school opened last October, <lb/>
the individual enrollment, not <lb/>
counting twice those who first <lb/>
enough to get a call <lb/>
must win that honor by their <lb/>
skill with the hickory, twirling <lb/>
the sphere, or dexterous <lb/>
Here are the candidates <lb/>
for <lb/>
Fats- Dr. E. A. R. L. <lb/>
Humber, Hay wood A. M. <lb/>
Moseley, Ernest <lb/>
Simon Charlie Moore, <lb/>
Charlie Forbes, Herbert White, <lb/>
Roy Flanagan, C. W. Wilson, D. <lb/>
C. Moore, Paul Z. T. <lb/>
Broughton, Harry Whedbee. <lb/>
Jimmie Starkey. W. H. Long, <lb/>
Walter <lb/>
White. Stuart <lb/>
Carr, E. H. Taft, Tom Duke. <lb/>
Fred Forbes, Tom Hooker, Kid <lb/>
Skinner, Claude Tunstall, Dolly <lb/>
Overton, James Little, R. H. <lb/>
Wright, T. A. W. A. B. <lb/>
X. Y. Z E. B. <lb/>
Clark, D C. <lb/>
Beach, Frank Wooten, <lb/>
Hooker, Robert Jeffries, W. H. <lb/>
paper. We feel entered for regular term and <lb/>
having associated with us in this <lb/>
work a of men of the high- <lb/>
est integrity and business <lb/>
and who are <lb/>
ill the development of this east <lb/>
em section. <lb/>
The officers of The Reflector <lb/>
Company are as follow <lb/>
President, D. J. <lb/>
Vice President, A O. Cox. <lb/>
Secretary and Treasurer, B. B. <lb/>
Sugg. <lb/>
Assistant Secretary and Treas- <lb/>
C. B. <lb/>
L. Joyner, J. Everett, H. W. <lb/>
Whedbee, R. J. Cobb. C. W. <lb/>
and Dr. Laugh- <lb/>
Others composing the com- <lb/>
are equally well as <lb/>
those mentioned. These gentle- <lb/>
men associated themselves <lb/>
with the enterprise because <lb/>
You may forgot to list your <lb/>
taxes, but the list taker will not <lb/>
forget that you failed to do so, <lb/>
nor will the county commission- <lb/>
is just a little bit larger in size <lb/>
and almost as good looking, but the interest they feel their <lb/>
we him the hair <lb/>
proposition, his top knot only <lb/>
reaching a sandy hue. If so <lb/>
near like us, you know be i <lb/>
bound to be the real article. <lb/>
A Pensacola, Fla mob that erg forget to impose the double If Cowan can't recover <lb/>
section, and they realize that <lb/>
nothing so helps to promote <lb/>
progress as a good strong news <lb/>
paper <lb/>
No special change is to be <lb/>
then re-entered for the summer <lb/>
term, has reached about <lb/>
twice the normal working ca- <lb/>
of the school. For a new <lb/>
institution this is a <lb/>
record and indicates the <lb/>
success of the school. <lb/>
It also bears strong testimony of <lb/>
the thorough work of the school <lb/>
and foretells that the East is <lb/>
destined to have the <lb/>
educational institution North <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
President Wright and his ex- <lb/>
faculty are enthused with <lb/>
their work and are gratified at <lb/>
the success of the school, and <lb/>
everybody rejoices with them in <lb/>
this. <lb/>
Mart Pitt hi Norfolk. <lb/>
The Consolidated Produce Co. <lb/>
is a new concern that opened <lb/>
here June at Roanoke Dock, <lb/>
the place vacated by J. W. Banks <lb/>
Co., who skipped last week. <lb/>
The partners in the Consolidated <lb/>
Produce Co. are J. W- Lee, M. <lb/>
B. Bryan and Kittrell Co., of <lb/>
Winterville. N. C, Messrs. Lee <lb/>
and Bryan are here looking after <lb/>
the receipt of <lb/>
will be the <lb/>
of the company. They expect to <lb/>
do a general commission business <lb/>
in all produce, including poultry, <lb/>
eggs, fruits meats, <lb/>
hides, News. <lb/>
SOUTHERN WRECK. <lb/>
Freight Train Gels Off Track red <lb/>
Delays <lb/>
The Norfolk Southern railway <lb/>
had considerable <lb/>
day night ard in <lb/>
consequence passenger trains, <lb/>
especially on Sunday, were put <lb/>
badly off of time. <lb/>
Owing to softening of the road <lb/>
bed by rains, a freight <lb/>
train in which were several <lb/>
heavy coal cars, trot off the track <lb/>
Saturday evening a miles <lb/>
above Wilson. Until a track <lb/>
could be con strutted around the <lb/>
wreck, passenger trains bad to <lb/>
meet there and transfer. The <lb/>
train from Raleigh due here at <lb/>
Sunday m ruing did not <lb/>
come in until a little over <lb/>
eight hours late- The excursion <lb/>
train to Morehead and Beaufort, <lb/>
due to pass here at a. m. <lb/>
was two hours late, hence very <lb/>
few people went on it. <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/>
away <lb/>
completely, and ma on th versa <lb/>
of the I <lb/>
clans but no permanent roller. <lb/>
I apt o bad I had to live up m <lb/>
taking it. <lb/>
In few <lb/>
I wot, much better, I <lb/>
to Improve until entirely cured. I <lb/>
am In again, and never <lb/>
an opportunity to <lb/>
W. L. <lb/>
Creak. <lb/>
Or. <lb/>
and we authorize him to <lb/>
price of bottle If It <lb/>
to benefit you. <lb/>
Miles Medical Co Elkhart, lad <lb/>
Our Greenville, yours if <lb/>
come. <lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Eastern Reflector for and vicinity. Ad rates furnished <lb/>
We are representing the oldest <lb/>
and strongest Life and Fire <lb/>
Insurance Co. in the world. <lb/>
Call us and let us consult <lb/>
windows, cook <lb/>
screen windows and groceries at <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
J R. Turnage has moved to <lb/>
Ayden Loan Insurance, his new home in Ghent. <lb/>
Co. Phone I II you have news items, <lb/>
Mrs. O C. Nob e and this scribe and help us to make <lb/>
tell <lb/>
are visiting relatives at <lb/>
Mount. <lb/>
If you need a good open or <lb/>
top buggy, wagon or cart call <lb/>
on J. R. Smith Co. Dixon. <lb/>
The National Cash Register <lb/>
representative is in town demon- <lb/>
straying the work of the <lb/>
machines. <lb/>
A nice line of coffins and <lb/>
caskets always on hand with a <lb/>
nice hearse at your service at <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co's. mill. <lb/>
Miss Rowe, the trained nurse <lb/>
that has been attending Mr. <lb/>
G. E. Jackson, returned to her <lb/>
home Tuesday at Rocky Mount. <lb/>
Now is a good time to advertise <lb/>
in the Ayden Department- <lb/>
R. W. Smith. <lb/>
G. E. Jackson, one of Pitt <lb/>
county's most substantial sons. <lb/>
died at his home, near Ayden. <lb/>
on Tuesday June 15th, in his <lb/>
42nd year. <lb/>
He was a man without a single <lb/>
fault and his friends were <lb/>
by his acquaintances. We <lb/>
have known him from boyhood, <lb/>
and have been closely associated <lb/>
with him in many ways and in <lb/>
his exemplary we have <lb/>
never seen, nor have we heard <lb/>
him in any way. He <lb/>
was patient, sober, and <lb/>
His word was his bond, <lb/>
his life was one continued s r- <lb/>
He leaves a wife and five <lb/>
His interment was a <lb/>
pathetic scene, strong men ard <lb/>
women weeping as children. He <lb/>
was buried near the, old home <lb/>
stead, on the road, beside his <lb/>
father, who preceded him only a <lb/>
few years. Rev. T. H. King con <lb/>
ducted the funeral obsequies. <lb/>
Cook stoves and rep lira for <lb/>
same at J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
this column a creditable one. <lb/>
Don't treat him like you do a <lb/>
book agent, and then wonder at <lb/>
the effort he is making. <lb/>
We are not all like Josephus <lb/>
Daniels, we need your co-opera- <lb/>
R- Smith. <lb/>
Miss Lee Nichols returned yes- <lb/>
from a visit in the <lb/>
try. <lb/>
Call us, phone Let us rent <lb/>
play She <lb/>
will visit the exact spot where <lb/>
Mary, queen of was <lb/>
beheaded. She will sail about <lb/>
the first of September on <lb/>
her return to America from <lb/>
by Steamer Chicago. <lb/>
Will be absent near three <lb/>
months. This will be a lovely <lb/>
trip. then we <lb/>
have a woman and <lb/>
bought land <lb/>
Car cement, lime, nails and <lb/>
hay at J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
Corn oats and hay at J. R. <lb/>
you want to buy, <lb/>
HORSE DISPLAYS FINE SENSE. <lb/>
your houses and collect for you. lease, sell or rent houses or land, <lb/>
Will sell your personal property. or want a job or wife, <lb/>
land, stocks, bonds or end you mother of <lb/>
money on reasonable terms- . . , <lb/>
Ayden Loan Insurance Co. want to employ additional help <lb/>
Lime, Lime, 300-barrens just <lb/>
arrived. J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
If you have anything to buy or <lb/>
sell, let us drop it in the Ayden <lb/>
column. <lb/>
Milk churns, preserve jars, <lb/>
milk coolers and Mason's fruit <lb/>
jars at J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
The water in little <lb/>
creek is getting to be serious. <lb/>
Be it remembered, in July 1894, <lb/>
the water washed up several <lb/>
dead bodies in the colored <lb/>
at Little church at <lb/>
Ridge Spring, better known <lb/>
as Scuff non. John Pierce tells <lb/>
us he witnessed the gruesome <lb/>
sight, saw a woman drift- <lb/>
ed around a with <lb/>
lids and wearing apparel, and <lb/>
bones like a floating <lb/>
to and fro. We hope we may <lb/>
not witness a repetition of this. <lb/>
J. F. paints, varnish, <lb/>
cites and at J. <lb/>
R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
Miss Annie daughter <lb/>
of J. J. Edwards, this morn <lb/>
for Norfolk, where she <lb/>
join a European party and sail <lb/>
from there to New York by Old <lb/>
Dominion steamers. party <lb/>
will on the 18th <lb/>
York on Steamer j id <lb/>
can find almost anything land at Scotland, travel <lb/>
you want in hits, dry j through Scotland, England, <lb/>
notions, trunks, Holland, Germany, Bavaria, <lb/>
books, furniture, Italy. and <lb/>
ware, crockery, lime, France, taking in the <lb/>
REPORT THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
AT AYDEN, N. O. <lb/>
At the Close of Business March 29th, 1910. <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
Loans and discounts 108,981.07 <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures <lb/>
Due from 50,902.80 <lb/>
Cash items <lb/>
Gold coin 40.00 <lb/>
Silver coin, including all <lb/>
minor coin cur. 1,238.09 <lb/>
bank and other <lb/>
Notes 3,785.00 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Capital stock 25,000.00 <lb/>
Surplus fund 12,500.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits, less <lb/>
CUT, exp. and taxes pd. 5,421.89 <lb/>
Deposits tub. to cheek 50,180.20 <lb/>
Savings Deposits <lb/>
Cashier's checKs <lb/>
. outstanding <lb/>
Total <lb/>
27,208.90 <lb/>
237.02 <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
COUNTY OP PITT. <lb/>
I, J. R. Smith, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly that <lb/>
above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. <lb/>
J. R. SMITH, Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to <lb/>
before this 4th day April, <lb/>
HODGES. <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
J. R. SMITH. <lb/>
JOSEPH DIXON, <lb/>
R. C. CANNON. <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
no better medium than <lb/>
of Reflector. <lb/>
R. W. Smith. <lb/>
chicken powders kills <lb/>
crows, owls minks, <lb/>
best remedy tor cholera, gapes, <lb/>
indigestion and leg weak- <lb/>
keeps them free from <lb/>
causing them to pro- <lb/>
duce an abundance of eggs. <lb/>
a package at J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
Cir nails, barbed wire, lime <lb/>
and cement at J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
Protect your house against the <lb/>
filthy flies, and mosquitoes by <lb/>
putting in a set of the improved <lb/>
screen windows and doors made <lb/>
by J. R. Smith Mfg. Co. <lb/>
and magazines <lb/>
at Smith Co. <lb/>
and rubber belting, <lb/>
black and galvanized pipe and <lb/>
other mill fittings at J. R. Smith <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
See our and cent bargain <lb/>
counters, J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
cement hair, trowels <lb/>
and Mason jars J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
poultry food and <lb/>
hawk killer at J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
Cm on us for ceiling, <lb/>
and <lb/>
We guarantee <lb/>
faction. <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co's. mill. <lb/>
Screen doors made to order or <lb/>
repaired on short notice at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co's mill. <lb/>
tar, roof paint, at J. <lb/>
R. Smith Co's. <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/>
Grain cradles and cultivator <lb/>
sweeps at J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
Constable. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a <lb/>
candidate for township constable <lb/>
subject to the Democratic <lb/>
of township. <lb/>
Daniel Smith. <lb/>
W. C. has moved t <lb/>
tie E. G. Cox house on East <lb/>
avenue. <lb/>
J. R. Turnage has moved to <lb/>
his new residence on Third <lb/>
street. <lb/>
J. T. Smith and family re- <lb/>
turned from a to More- <lb/>
head Monday. <lb/>
Miss Mary Love Gray, of <lb/>
Hertford, is visiting Miss Olivia <lb/>
Berry. <lb/>
Miss Jimmie Davis has return- <lb/>
ed from Washington. <lb/>
Mrs. C. V. Cannon came home <lb/>
Monday from Grifton. <lb/>
The Junior Builders gave an <lb/>
ice cream supper Thursday <lb/>
After Out Narrow <lb/>
He Backs Off Without Mishap. <lb/>
Waynesville. June 20.-Several <lb/>
people, who were near the Com- <lb/>
bank yesterday, saw the <lb/>
finest display of real horse sense <lb/>
ever seen in Waynesville. but <lb/>
the sight enough to cause <lb/>
cold shivers to run over them. <lb/>
One Colonel fine blood- <lb/>
ed horses, a voyage of dis- <lb/>
walked out upon the <lb/>
ledge between the railing around <lb/>
the court house and Depot street. <lb/>
The ledge at one end where <lb/>
horse went on is about eight feet, <lb/>
wide but gradually narrows <lb/>
toward the other end. The <lb/>
street is some twelve feet below <lb/>
and a perpendicular rock wall is <lb/>
built up from the street to the <lb/>
ledge. <lb/>
Without seeing his danger the <lb/>
horse, a beautiful animal, <lb/>
running loose in the yard <lb/>
back of the court house, walked <lb/>
out upon the ledge and continued <lb/>
to go for some twenty yards <lb/>
until he saw that his path was <lb/>
growing too narrow for bis com <lb/>
advance. Attempting <lb/>
then to turn he saw the extreme <lb/>
danger of failing down the em- <lb/>
which would have <lb/>
meant broken limbs and probable <lb/>
death, the horse displayed real <lb/>
in stopping and <lb/>
considering what was best to be <lb/>
done. <lb/>
After a <lb/>
consideration of the whole <lb/>
the horse began to back at <lb/>
if under the spell of an expert <lb/>
trainer. That he did until a <lb/>
point was reached on the ledge <lb/>
where the turn could be made <lb/>
with safety, when, bringing bit <lb/>
feet together for a pivot he mad <lb/>
the turn successfully and gal- <lb/>
loped off the scene. The noble <lb/>
animal was applauded as he let i <lb/>
the Observer. <lb/>
HANRAHAN ITEMS. <lb/>
Hanrahan, June it <lb/>
was a watery deck that we stood <lb/>
on last week. The rains poured <lb/>
down, yet we did not go. because <lb/>
there was nowhere else that we <lb/>
could hear of that it was not <lb/>
doing the same way, and in <lb/>
Bolivia it was even much <lb/>
to the extent of a cloud burst. <lb/>
So there is something else for us <lb/>
to do that we may yet be a hero. <lb/>
We stood calm and tried to be <lb/>
serene because there was no <lb/>
other alternative. We have even <lb/>
that stood <lb/>
amidst the fire because he feared <lb/>
to disobey the orders of a stern <lb/>
father more thin he dreaded the <lb/>
flames that rolled o'er him, which <lb/>
could last but a moments. I <lb/>
glad that even children are <lb/>
being taught, and that most of <lb/>
them are allowed to think, <lb/>
SYSTEMIC CATARRH. <lb/>
MR. C. A. <lb/>
Mr. C. A. Dos Coal- <lb/>
sufferer for a of lull paid <lb/>
A Good Movement. <lb/>
The work undertaken by <lb/>
board of trade <lb/>
building good roads in adjoining <lb/>
counties is a splendid one and <lb/>
one that will be beneficial in ; <lb/>
number of ways. It will <lb/>
only aid in making Winston <lb/>
Salem's position with <lb/>
to the national auto highway <lb/>
cure, but it will be helpful ii <lb/>
developing closer relations will <lb/>
counties and will be wort <lb/>
it costs and more in a <lb/>
way. It is to be hoped <lb/>
good roads committee's <lb/>
for funds to further this <lb/>
will meet with a liberal response <lb/>
The citizens of <lb/>
I could hardly spend money for <lb/>
purpose that would be product- <lb/>
of more benefit to this <lb/>
city. It is a proposition that <lb/>
cannot fail to appeal to those w <lb/>
are interested in the <lb/>
growth and development of this <lb/>
Sentinel <lb/>
Kept the King at Home, <lb/>
parents or no attention o it, <lb/>
the Lord for this is <lb/>
provoke not your child- j <lb/>
to or command them <lb/>
to do a foolish thing, for this is <lb/>
sin. <lb/>
Miss Mamie Dawson, of <lb/>
ton, is the owner of a chicken j <lb/>
has three well developed <lb/>
legs. All of the legs paint down- <lb/>
ward. We suppose that the <lb/>
mother of that chicken must have <lb/>
been a comet gazer, and as <lb/>
that the tail of the comet pointed. <lb/>
downward, so this extra <lb/>
on of the chicken should point <lb/>
downward. <lb/>
On reaching home Saturday <lb/>
night about o'clock the moon <lb/>
was shining in resplendent, <lb/>
beauty the had <lb/>
cleared away, and all nature <lb/>
seemed to be rejoicing, and cur <lb/>
soul was lifted up in <lb/>
Yes we felt good, and as <lb/>
we alighted at the gate, behold c. <lb/>
stately lady stood there to meet, <lb/>
yes, and to greet us. We em- <lb/>
braced her, yes and many times <lb/>
we kissed her. for we had not <lb/>
her before since she was a <lb/>
little tot, so <lb/>
that it was my <lb/>
it was not. Well, she was a <lb/>
beer me very <lb/>
bad pain In the bead, <lb/>
liver, and various of my <lb/>
body, besides Indigestion that <lb/>
no trouble and anxiety. often . <lb/>
when I retired at I would j <lb/>
n l live through it. i tried <lb/>
bat to no purpose, <lb/>
knowing what my <lb/>
trouble I wrote to of r . <lb/>
reading of his treatment, fur advice, <lb/>
t bin of my <lb/>
he notified me at once bad J <lb/>
catarrh, <lb/>
After using the firm bottle of <lb/>
l relief, so I continued use <lb/>
until had taken four bottles, I <lb/>
felt entirely oared. I II t- <lb/>
believing that will ex- <lb/>
the relief I <lb/>
an a Tonic. <lb/>
Mr. William P. Hawkins, <lb/>
Westerly, It. I., <lb/>
with to give testimony in favor <lb/>
of as a I have used the <lb/>
came fur catarrh, and can <lb/>
it all who me troubled in Unit j <lb/>
Ask your t for a free Peru- <lb/>
Almanac for 1910. <lb/>
Gone Wist Again. <lb/>
Mr. T. F. who has <lb/>
several s crossed the <lb/>
between Greenville and <lb/>
if you supposed hied himself away <lb/>
wife you see that W morning for the far West <lb/>
again. Like on his <lb/>
schoolteacher just on her he will thy until <lb/>
home from the training school, that Pitt county home sick takes <lb/>
ind decided to a few day he <lb/>
with me and mine before she <lb/>
went home. She in loud st without warning <lb/>
of the training hoping it will not i <lb/>
the teachers that the above <lb/>
might describe, if they were in <lb/>
dormitory or at their board- <lb/>
places at p. m. last <lb/>
day can prove an <lb/>
One question we to ask <lb/>
some teachers. Was it the <lb/>
before he comes back h <lb/>
Id a prince of good fellows, <lb/>
may keep on <lb/>
He <lb/>
his trail. <lb/>
A Woman's Idea. <lb/>
is how to make herself attractive. But <lb/>
without health i mi-J for t be <lb/>
, t lovely in the face, form or A <lb/>
late Henry Smith or one his woman will be nervous <lb/>
descendants, who married Mils and and kidney <lb/>
Celia Tucker long before the show pimples akin <lb/>
See last week's Reflector. <lb/>
NOTICE NOTICE <lb/>
We wish to call your attention to our new line of fall goods which j night at the Glenn <lb/>
we now have. We have taken great care in buying this year and we <lb/>
think we can supply your wants in Shoes, Hats, Dress Ginghams, No- <lb/>
Laces and Embroideries and in fact anything that is carried in a <lb/>
Dry Goods Store. <lb/>
Come let us show you. <lb/>
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
We are prepared to furnish you with <lb/>
House and Kitchen Furniture <lb/>
at the very prices. Cash or <lb/>
Cons ti us aid we will convince <lb/>
AYDEN FURNITURE <lb/>
NEXT DOOR TO <lb/>
Rev. C. M. Morton tilled his <lb/>
regular appointment here and at <lb/>
Garris chapel Sunday. <lb/>
Theophilus lost a valuable <lb/>
i of log oxen Wednesday by <lb/>
falling in a ditch, breaking their <lb/>
necks. <lb/>
W. J. Boyd's father died at <lb/>
the Kinston hospital Sunday <lb/>
and was taken to his <lb/>
home Monday, at for <lb/>
burial. <lb/>
the past year we kept th- I <lb/>
King of all King's New <lb/>
Life Plus our home and they have <lb/>
proved a blessing to all our <lb/>
writes Paul of N <lb/>
Y. Easy, but sure remedy for ah <lb/>
liver and kidney trouble. <lb/>
Only at all druggists. <lb/>
A. ft M. College. <lb/>
In the development of North <lb/>
Carolina's industries, the North <lb/>
Carolina College of Agriculture <lb/>
and Mechanic Arts is taking <lb/>
a foremost part. Its students <lb/>
are giving their lives to <lb/>
our farming, our trucking, <lb/>
our dairying and stock-raising. <lb/>
They are rapidly making their <lb/>
into our factories, our <lb/>
our shop. <lb/>
They are helping to build oar <lb/>
roads, our bridges, and our rail- <lb/>
roads. Indeed, they are just the <lb/>
men needed at this stage in the <lb/>
State's growth. We are glad to <lb/>
note that more young men than <lb/>
ever before are seeking, through <lb/>
this institution, a <lb/>
place in our industrial progress. <lb/>
We call attention to the <lb/>
in this issue <lb/>
In Your Homes to Stay <lb/>
The Joy for croup and <lb/>
never fail and the Goose Grease <lb/>
for rheumatism and all aches <lb/>
ind pains, highly p. all over the <lb/>
land by young and old. <lb/>
Sold by Greenville. <lb/>
I N. C, and manufactured by <lb/>
THE GOOSE GREASE COMPANY. <lb/>
Greensboro, N. C. <lb/>
and a wretched ex <lb/>
Bitten <lb/>
Christian <lb/>
Mrs. M. Harriss <lb/>
the honor of your present at <lb/>
marriage of her daughter, Lena <lb/>
Rivers, to Mr. Earl Turner <lb/>
Christian, Wednesday morning, <lb/>
the twenty-ninth of June, nine- <lb/>
teen hundred and ten, at eight <lb/>
o'clock, seven hundred and six- <lb/>
teen, Dickinson avenue, Green- <lb/>
ville, North Carolina. <lb/>
Hut Electric Bitten prove a <lb/>
go .-end to women want health, <lb/>
beauty and friend. T <lb/>
lier aid kidneys, purity the <lb/>
blood; give nerve . bright eye, <lb/>
pure velvety w-in, <lb/>
lovely complexion, good health. <lb/>
th m. c at i II druggists. <lb/>
Attend township Primary. <lb/>
Don't k that your township <lb/>
primary Saturday to select <lb/>
delegates to <lb/>
and judicial conventions, <lb/>
is a of little or <lb/>
I, is if enough <lb/>
to demand y <lb/>
presence. <lb/>
Ill <lb/>
you <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
Flour and Cure Mill. <lb/>
Mr. I have as com <lb/>
arranged flour and corn mill <lb/>
as twenty years experience in the <lb/>
business would assist me in <lb/>
building. I bought the very <lb/>
latest improved and the very <lb/>
machinery to be had. I am <lb/>
making as fine Hour as any mill <lb/>
in makes a pure <lb/>
straight flour. If you have any <lb/>
wheat that you want turned <lb/>
HOTEL <lb/>
PUn. <lb/>
At of the ml <lb/>
MISS C. MEREDITH <lb/>
Graduate Nurse <lb/>
Ayden, North. Carolina. <lb/>
Lily's Oyster <lb/>
Fresh Oysters <lb/>
Coming Every Day <lb/>
Can Serve You Any Way. Try Me <lb/>
into flour, <lb/>
serve you. <lb/>
I will be pleased to <lb/>
Yours truly, <lb/>
Washington, N. I . <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb/>
Rooms n En- <lb/>
With or without laths, II <lb/>
day and Palatial Dining <lb/>
Rooms. Unsurpassed Brow- <lb/>
in free <lb/>
to Quoit. <lb/>
Sill lei <lb/>
PP<lb/>
H ;<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018101_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
mm, <lb/>
Story of <lb/>
By GEORGE BARR <lb/>
1909. b, Bur <lb/>
by Dodd. Md Q -f<lb/>
i he <lb/>
OF <lb/>
Ring unite in <lb/>
capital of <lb/>
mi n i <lb/>
a a <lb/>
ft i yo r <lb/>
r . who i <lb/>
an Ill K <lb/>
o police, inter ls <lb/>
is him . the <lb/>
IV King n tee royal <lb/>
part., meet the prince I presented <lb/>
to r .-ii g Aunt Loraine. <lb/>
committee of t. n, c i <lb/>
the prince, m t in an <lb/>
ch m where t . <lb/>
is ii , i s ii a e who is lo I Prince <lb/>
with a VI- <lb/>
s- <lb/>
m la, who him her hat a <lb/>
am not inns id, Mar- <lb/>
ii mat the prince <lb/>
VII, HI, IX g the <lb/>
e of the w ten of n i cap and <lb/>
me I the fourth Id th re. He <lb/>
a i thrush crack <lb/>
m a and for the <lb/>
he id overpowered hi dragged <lb/>
int a I it. He ii <lb/>
Marians- th. u to the under <lb/>
f tie -f ten. <lb/>
XI Kin. before commit- <lb/>
tee of hist who wish u kill him, <lb/>
is to he de a <lb/>
into same ti won King i <lb/>
XI I King fol a jailer, dona hi clot <lb/>
in- and, carries Lon into <lb/>
a boat at in which the <lb/>
anarchist leader lo t. <lb/>
XIV Ki manages to g-t <lb/>
be loves, a-ho-e, and th y hi e <lb/>
in . car. XV O a waits b <lb/>
a street with a to ill <lb/>
e a- e In a p-rads. <lb/>
K in; i. into <lb/>
the r. n tie car. They start <lb/>
back in an ox and w <lb/>
h n in fr of girl <lb/>
hut <lb/>
prince a c Mar <lb/>
is in control of th city. <lb/>
XVII and <lb/>
It XVIII. <lb/>
l HE <lb/>
t.-is a lefty <lb/>
retail hi Its subdued An <lb/>
lied with <lb/>
a .;. far d---Mi <lb/>
the huge was <lb/>
that first <lb/>
the Ii lire sitting upright In the <lb/>
middle of Ii. <lb/>
An old from th <lb/>
head of the con h and <lb/>
ion in a it. <lb/>
i Ii mored, your <lb/>
the bowing <lb/>
The e's I . Ina <lb/>
the eel . i <lb/>
were . <lb/>
I want u in i . <lb/>
tell him I mean ii hen I I in <lb/>
tailed the I <lb/>
truly lie was <lb/>
In the <lb/>
deliver j <lb/>
said <lb/>
going out to young- <lb/>
do what <lb/>
said the boy, Ills eyes <lb/>
In <lb/>
court <lb/>
I. <lb/>
be be MU <lb/>
Thou bU baud to bis <lb/>
the vain to cover <lb/>
played there. <lb/>
mother used to My that Amer- <lb/>
said the prince, <lb/>
with candor. <lb/>
may glanced <lb/>
at the <lb/>
by and two invisible heads <lb/>
bobbed off In In <lb/>
swift canal Up to chins <lb/>
Swimming would have been <lb/>
on account of the noise. <lb/>
their <lb/>
their bends, with their lo <lb/>
King and the fell <lb/>
way carefully the bed of <lb/>
the stream. <lb/>
A hundred yards from the gate they <lb/>
crawled ashore made way <lb/>
up over the bank Into <lb/>
wild <lb/>
They stealthily stripped themselves <lb/>
of the w. t garments and after no end <lb/>
of trouble succeeded In getting Into <lb/>
dry Then lower- <lb/>
ed the wet bundles into water and <lb/>
quietly stole off through the brush to <lb/>
king's highway, a mile or two <lb/>
above town. <lb/>
this path, for <lb/>
Upper dually said <lb/>
a good two walk up die <lb/>
-o i where w gel lb <lb/>
At o'clock, a the sun In-d <lb/>
up with his long red lingers from he <lb/>
hind the Monastery mountain, <lb/>
Ion King and rude away Ii. <lb/>
high In hill, in <lb/>
freshed of bean. <lb/>
son r. de with them, a sturdy, loyal <lb/>
lad. who had leaped <lb/>
chance to serve his prince. <lb/>
Now let u to John <lb/>
his In the hills, it goes with, in <lb/>
saying that he found m truce of his <lb/>
sister or her abductors. Oil <lb/>
day a large force of <lb/>
soldiers, led by It <lb/>
found fagged, <lb/>
and his half starved men <lb/>
a rocky In the heart of w <lb/>
That same night a <lb/>
the and <lb/>
new of the <lb/>
In ii Hash It occurred to John <lb/>
was n bottom <lb/>
deviltry. Tho abduction L <lb/>
ruin was u of his <lb/>
I a return to <lb/>
City, Ills men were at the <lb/>
of the American. Moreover, the <lb/>
prince himself decided accompany <lb/>
sunrise the command, now <lb/>
live or six hundred sir i n, pi k <lb/>
ii Its way down <lb/>
Mails toward <lb/>
allies below I Mum <lb/>
came me i-i <lb/>
i to . III the rail <lb/>
road imps, which a <lb/>
fun r <lb/>
i sound of In the <lb/>
i . struck ens. Instantly the <lb/>
entire fore was alert. A dozen hi <lb/>
in rapid succession, <lb/>
Ingle reports far ale <lb/>
beat of few tore plan, <lb/>
to attentive romp There n <lb/>
DON'T GET RON DOWN <lb/>
Weak and miserable. If you have <lb/>
kidney it blander dull head <lb/>
, d nervousness, in <lb/>
the I and feel tired all over, get a <lb/>
. f Mother Australian- <lb/>
pi. cure. It never <lb/>
fails. We nave many <lb/>
from grateful people who have used <lb/>
this remedy. As a r <lb/>
it ha no equal. Ask for Mother Gray's <lb/>
Au ; ii I. at druggist or sent <lb/>
mail for cents. <lb/>
Address, The Mother Gray Co. <lb/>
N. Y. <lb/>
the led by <lb/>
King rode tie <lb/>
of the he loved, uttering of<lb/>
has any- <lb/>
thing been heard from naked <lb/>
He had thinking of <lb/>
for days and nights <lb/>
nothing said King <lb/>
WHEN RAILROADS WERE NEW. <lb/>
s, Trip That Along <lb/>
First Trunk Lint. <lb/>
Tin who ever made a <lb/>
honeymoon I rip on a in <lb/>
America more that to ex- <lb/>
building of the world's <lb/>
trunk line, C. F. Car- <lb/>
in Ins book <lb/>
Were I ban ablest states- <lb/>
engineers mid <lb/>
i State boon able to <lb/>
m be <lb/>
in half a dozen <lb/>
bride so much <lb/>
was Mrs. I. of <lb/>
X. V. Mr. Mrs. <lb/>
were in S C. early in <lb/>
mi wedding <lb/>
lour. When Mrs Heard <lb/>
that a team was to <lb/>
make its first trip with h train load <lb/>
of passengers from to <lb/>
Hamburg, six miles was <lb/>
n. <lb/>
C re <lb/>
arm. A <lb/>
ii. <lb/>
n I;. Incisive cull I <lb/>
ti fur net <lb/>
gr ii i . <lb/>
III lug d ii II <lb/>
after <lb/>
Oil Ii W a s <lb/>
beard sen tries <lb/>
v n rill <lb/>
to shoulders <lb/>
. the <lb/>
a; <lb/>
riders <lb/>
a wild, glad <lb/>
s h o 1.1 went up <lb/>
from <lb/>
horseman, lie had <lb/>
his <lb/>
lo its <lb/>
almost the <lb/>
of t e <lb/>
guns. <lb/>
lie <lb/>
shouted, waving <lb/>
bis bat. <lb/>
John ran <lb/>
toward the <lb/>
ed group in the <lb/>
road. lie saw <lb/>
throe men. one of i. n. <lb/>
all p war In his <lb/>
found <lb/>
ADD BLESS <lb/>
SAID <lb/>
so met hi for you to take <lb/>
with you. Mr. King. my lucky <lb/>
atone. It gives good <lb/>
He unclasped hi small linger. In <lb/>
the damp lay one of those <lb/>
milky, transparent <lb/>
common the world over and of <lb/>
value only to mull, impressionable <lb/>
boys. accepted It with pro- <lb/>
found gravity. <lb/>
you come back, Mr <lb/>
King. I'm going to you. I'd do <lb/>
it now. only Aunt you'd <lb/>
be worrying about your title all <lb/>
time and might be from your <lb/>
mission. I'm going to make baron <lb/>
r to lake tin <lb/>
agreed, <lb/>
The two cars <lb/>
t rapt on f <lb/>
they anything <lb/>
train contrived to <lb/>
tire system of sis <lb/>
at n with <lb/>
The bride ran <lb/>
could talk of nothing <lb/>
-he returned to llama <lb/>
her brother-in-law, KI <lb/>
id her<lb/>
Late Shopper Delay Stores at <lb/>
Established Hoar. <lb/>
The kindness of the <lb/>
mi of the town who have . <lb/>
an agreement to permit <lb/>
their clerks to work I <lb/>
at seven p. m. each week day ex-1 <lb/>
t Saturday is being frustrated <lb/>
by the numerous lady shoppers <lb/>
who happen along a often just <lb/>
Pt closing time. The clerks, <lb/>
especially the lady in the <lb/>
different stores are tired at this <lb/>
time of the day and bate to be <lb/>
deprived of their of <lb/>
leaving at seven <lb/>
have two alternatives open to <lb/>
them. may the iron <lb/>
clad rule in vogue in Mord <lb/>
and other cities and leave in- <lb/>
variably at sever, customers or <lb/>
no customers, or can request <lb/>
th lady shoppers to either come <lb/>
earlier or postpone their shop <lb/>
ping until the following morning. <lb/>
that their wonting <lb/>
should be observed and <lb/>
r quest their in town to <lb/>
help them. <lb/>
A Trick. <lb/>
Discussing some of the curious <lb/>
kinks of salesmanship, a writer <lb/>
in one of the business magazines <lb/>
n in ii ks that if the salesman <lb/>
can only get the he is <lb/>
trying to sell into hands <lb/>
the prospective customer while <lb/>
its merits are being discussed <lb/>
his chances of closing the trans <lb/>
action are greatly improved. <lb/>
Tout may be. but it i still <lb/>
The Bank of Greenville <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Over <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS, President J. A. V President <lb/>
J. L. LITTLE. H D. BATEMAN, Asst Cashier <lb/>
DIRECTORS. <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS, of It. L. Davis Bros. e, N. C. <lb/>
J. A. ANDREWS, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
WE of J. O. Proctor Grimesland, N. C. <lb/>
K. W. KING. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
J. K. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
J. G. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
K. It. N. C. <lb/>
S. T. HOOKER Prop Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
R. A. i AIM. of Fountain Co. Fountain, N. C. <lb/>
B. W. Cotton Buyer In. ville, N. C. <lb/>
W. H. Merchandise Broker Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
JANUS L. LITTLE . Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Business Cordially Solicited <lb/>
eels, better to get info <lb/>
I I Of <lb/>
much <lb/>
hut th <lb/>
over the on- <lb/>
mid <lb/>
speed. <lb/>
She <lb/>
toe. When <lb/>
in he gave <lb/>
Lord, <lb/>
; nil her <lb/>
glowing account of <lb/>
her trip that they were <lb/>
fired The bride <lb/>
groom become almost <lb/>
ardent all lo <lb/>
us his bride <lb/>
Young Mr-<lb/>
Ac it <lb/>
court <lb/>
D. C. Mo ire. <lb/>
Willis F. V. Johnston, J. <lb/>
Johnston and Addie M. Johnston, <lb/>
Ky vii of of the clerk of <lb/>
the i court, made by D C. <lb/>
ii j Moore, clerk, on th. of May, <lb/>
in the above entitled e <lb/>
was <lb/>
mi me <lb/>
lung. <lb/>
God. we've <lb/>
cried die horseman. <lb/>
i a <lb/>
they were clasping <lb/>
has King Where <lb/>
i have yon been We looked for you <lb/>
j after <lb/>
ancient Interrupted <lb/>
the other. arson can you <lb/>
these troop on the march There's <lb/>
not a moment to be <lb/>
glory, man. tell me what It <lb/>
What has The <lb/>
what of cried grasping <lb/>
King's arm In the clutch of a <lb/>
sends his love and rescinds the <lb/>
order of said King, smiling, <lb/>
then ha <lb/>
the city. It was all a game, this gel- <lb/>
ling rid of you. The and the <lb/>
others are besieged In the castle. <lb/>
God. we got to you In time <lb/>
Bark here a couple of miles we cam <lb/>
upon a small gang of rubbers. We <lb/>
a bit of shooting, and. regret to any. <lb/>
no one was <lb/>
la she. <lb/>
tremble like that, old man. <lb/>
She's safe enough In the castle. Oh. <lb/>
It was a One game In <lb/>
hi <lb/>
While the troopers <lb/>
ready for the march King <lb/>
and related their story to <lb/>
eager, horrified groups of officers. <lb/>
Finally the battalion, augmented by <lb/>
th from the d. <lb/>
her opinion steam railroad <lb/>
it to <lb/>
o from Si w in in <lb/>
hours At the <lb/>
turn folks wore lo smile tit <lb/>
this, but they <lb/>
with the value f loco- <lb/>
by this ardent <lb/>
advocate, <lb/>
Mrs, <lb/>
was which <lb/>
of men <lb/>
and led them to stop which <lb/>
resulted in building of <lb/>
what is now known the Erie <lb/>
road, the ocean <lb/>
with the lake the <lb/>
trunk line. <lb/>
No railroad had a more romantic <lb/>
one, which had it <lb/>
inception in en romantic an <lb/>
It required twenty your of <lb/>
toil and anxiety, dis- <lb/>
lo sot the line <lb/>
through, but it was accomplished <lb/>
at lust, the bridegroom and <lb/>
bride were passengers on a <lb/>
trip which will live in history. <lb/>
time tho bride was a hand- <lb/>
some woman of middle but <lb/>
just us of her husband <lb/>
as she was on that Oral trip, for he <lb/>
was vice president of the the <lb/>
line in the <lb/>
world, and the trains did move at a <lb/>
speed that would have carried them <lb/>
from New York to Buffalo in <lb/>
hours, just as she had <lb/>
prophesied two before. <lb/>
the ii silver <lb/>
which will him <lb/>
before <lb/>
it to to his <lb/>
chase the article <lb/>
him in its favor. The certain <lb/>
way to do this is exploit the <lb/>
commodity in the daily news <lb/>
paper. Well-advertised <lb/>
do not have lo be pushed into <lb/>
the hands of customers by sales- <lb/>
men . They sell themselves <lb/>
without any psychological ma <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
The Rural Comes Once a Day <lb/>
The Telephone keeps you in touch with neigh- <lb/>
friends and the city every minute of every <lb/>
day. Progressive farmers throughout the South <lb/>
are install telephones in their homes and <lb/>
our service. <lb/>
The cost is low; the service is satisfactory. <lb/>
Write to our nearest Manager, or <lb/>
Line Department <lb/>
HOME TELEPHONE TELEGRAPH CO. <lb/>
Henderson, N. c <lb/>
FACTS ABOUT PITT COUNTY. <lb/>
SPEED OF WAVES. <lb/>
will, on Sat- <lb/>
the i av of e, 1910, <lb/>
expose to nubile sale before t lie c <lb/>
house door in to the if <lb/>
est bidder for ill-- ti <lb/>
d tract or of land, to <lb/>
on the edge of the h- <lb/>
bank of Tar a. a v. I ere <lb/>
three h tree formerly near <lb/>
the lower the bis; , <lb/>
r-ck and there at right <lb/>
h the river to the big slough, <lb/>
old Parker and Perkins line, thence <lb/>
down slough to Parkers or R. d , <lb/>
banks creek, thence down said <lb/>
to the river, thence up the river to the <lb/>
beginning, containing acre more <lb/>
and being the same tract <lb/>
parcel of land purchased by E. C. <lb/>
low y the administrator of <lb/>
A. deceased, and being the <lb/>
second tract of land described in a deed <lb/>
from K. C. to John- <lb/>
and record <lb/>
ed in the registers office in Pitt county <lb/>
in book Y-8, page This sale is to <lb/>
made for partition, and will be at <lb/>
o'clock m. on the day of June, <lb/>
1910. <lb/>
F. C. Harding. Commissioner. <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/>
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/>
Milt n Hour<lb/>
Interesting about wines were <lb/>
given by Dr. Cornish In one <lb/>
of lecture. In the north Minnie. <lb/>
lie said, waves had been measured, . . . <lb/>
of which WM somewhat more j et q. th will expo, <lb/>
than forty feet high, with ti public sale, th- court house <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
By virtue of the of sale <lb/>
t lined in to deeds of trust <lb/>
and delivered Greenville <lb/>
No. A. F. M. <lb/>
L. J. one <lb/>
dated t, and <lb/>
dated 1st day of September, <lb/>
and respectively recorded in the <lb/>
of office of Pitt county, <lb/>
North Can Una. in book page <lb/>
et and in book page <lb/>
For Slate <lb/>
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work. <lb/>
j. J. JENKINS, <lb/>
mm, if If, H. e. <lb/>
Roofing, Tin Shop Repair Work, and <lb/>
Flues in Season, see <lb/>
from crest to crest of feel. It <lb/>
In southern Indian <lb/>
wire attained their fullest <lb/>
and they bad been measured <lb/>
there with a length of feet. <lb/>
In the Atlantic It had been <lb/>
wave attained a speed of thirty- <lb/>
eight mile n hour In wind about <lb/>
forty-four mile an hour. Sneaking of <lb/>
the swell Id wave that run free- <lb/>
on the of after <lb/>
wind hi ceased. Dr. Cornish said <lb/>
during a storm In be <lb/>
recorded breaker near Bournemouth <lb/>
which t sixty-seven <lb/>
hour and bad length from to <lb/>
crest of 1,900 feet. In <lb/>
he observed breakers on in an <lb/>
shore which bid a speed In deep <lb/>
of not less seventy-eight and <lb/>
a half miles an Family <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
door in Greenville tn highest <lb/>
on May mm, a certain <lb/>
Int or of land lying and being in <lb/>
the county of Pitt and State of North <lb/>
Carolina and in th town of <lb/>
and known a the Masonic Tim <lb/>
property, fronting on Third street <lb/>
feet the south by <lb/>
aid s- on the t lot No. <lb/>
on which the of <lb/>
d, on the north by lot No. <lb/>
and on the wt th lot formerly <lb/>
to Pr. W. J. Blow, except- <lb/>
a part of said let SO feet square <lb/>
heretofore convey I to th town of <lb/>
Greenville and upon which the water <lb/>
stand pipe of laid town Is located. <lb/>
At the him and place we will <lb/>
ell the brick and upon <lb/>
I lot. to satin y said de of tr at. <lb/>
Terms of sale cash. <lb/>
day of April, 1810 <lb/>
James I. Little. <lb/>
Robt. J. Cobb, <lb/>
Trustees. <lb/>
J S. MOORING <lb/>
b Sass Waits Start w Mart Mai i stack. <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
Choice Cut Flowers <lb/>
Roses, Carnations, Violets, <lb/>
It all st tit <lb/>
at It Its <lb/>
artistic start <lb/>
km Ills. Hull <lb/>
Plants <lb/>
Is sill unit <lb/>
Mail. ti <lb/>
by <lb/>
J. L CO., <lb/>
J. C. LANIER <lb/>
in <lb/>
Tomb Stones <lb/>
Iron Fencing <lb/>
As in the Sail Surety <lb/>
and Map. <lb/>
Washington, D. C-. June <lb/>
S. of <lb/>
has just issued the report on <lb/>
the survey of Pitt <lb/>
North Carolina, in co <lb/>
operation with the North Caro- <lb/>
department of agriculture <lb/>
The is accompanied by a <lb/>
map showing the location and <lb/>
extent of the <lb/>
found. The following is a sum- <lb/>
of the <lb/>
C u <lb/>
square miles and lier- in the <lb/>
central eastern part the Stale. <lb/>
With the exception the <lb/>
swamps along the <lb/>
areas of Portsmouth soils, and <lb/>
the the county <lb/>
good natural drainage. The <lb/>
Tar river Bows across the county, <lb/>
and this stream with its <lb/>
and creeks in the <lb/>
southern part of the county furn- <lb/>
outlets for the drainage. <lb/>
The elevation of the county <lb/>
varies from feet don to <lb/>
practically sea level, the average <lb/>
elevation being about feet. <lb/>
county is well supplied <lb/>
with lints of transportation in <lb/>
all directions, most of the towns <lb/>
having good railroad facilities. <lb/>
Greenville, the county seat <lb/>
principal town, is a large tobacco <lb/>
market, ranking third in the <lb/>
State. There are several other <lb/>
thriving towns are mar- <lb/>
for the products of <lb/>
county. <lb/>
white is most- <lb/>
of English descent, and well <lb/>
distributed throughout the <lb/>
There is a considerable <lb/>
population. The county <lb/>
offers inducements to settlers, <lb/>
and particularly invites a more <lb/>
intensive system of agriculture. <lb/>
Some of its most fertile lands <lb/>
have not been reclaimed; these <lb/>
can be drain d, cleared and easily <lb/>
cultivated. For unimproved land <lb/>
the value ranges from to <lb/>
an , and highly improved <lb/>
land to Pitt <lb/>
county could support many times <lb/>
its present population, if all of <lb/>
its arable soil were properly <lb/>
managed. <lb/>
county lies in the coastal <lb/>
plain region. Its soils have been <lb/>
derived from the weathering of <lb/>
the of the Columbia <lb/>
formation. Perhaps no <lb/>
in eastern North Carolina <lb/>
a greater variety of soils or <lb/>
soils suited to a wider diversity <lb/>
of crops. <lb/>
distinct types were <lb/>
recognized and mapped. The <lb/>
soils of the Norfolk series are by <lb/>
far the most important and have <lb/>
been classes s sand, fine sand, <lb/>
sandy loam, fine loam, and <lb/>
very fine sandy loam. these <lb/>
the Norfolk fine sandy is <lb/>
the most extensive and most <lb/>
valuable for farming purposes. <lb/>
It is a mellow soil underlain by a <lb/>
friable sandy clay, and is <lb/>
adapted to the production of <lb/>
bright yellow tobacco. It is also <lb/>
well suited to cotton, peanuts, <lb/>
Irish potatoes various truck <lb/>
and fruit crops. The Norfolk <lb/>
sandy loam is also a valuable soil <lb/>
for tobacco, cotton, truck crops <lb/>
and peanuts. Norfolk fine <lb/>
sandy loam gives fairly good <lb/>
yields of cotton, tobacco, <lb/>
peanuts and oats. <lb/>
is well adapted to early <lb/>
truck crops, grapes, and <lb/>
some other fruit, and <lb/>
ARE YOU SURE <lb/>
Thus Mm y aT u <lb/>
VII I <lb/>
Farmers should eat <lb/>
more oatmeal. <lb/>
Although the farmer today is able <lb/>
to buy almost anything he wants to <lb/>
wear or to cat he t paying enough <lb/>
attention to food values when it come <lb/>
to his own table. <lb/>
II he been watching the <lb/>
researches and experiments on <lb/>
the question the best human food <lb/>
fur muscle and brain be will heed the <lb/>
advice all ides to more <lb/>
Quaker <lb/>
Quaker Oats is mentioned because <lb/>
it is in this country and <lb/>
Europe as the best all oatmeals. <lb/>
Feeding farm hands on Quaker Oats <lb/>
means getting more work out them <lb/>
than you feed them on anything <lb/>
else. <lb/>
It is packed in regular sire pack- <lb/>
ages, and in hermetically sealed tins <lb/>
for hot climates. <lb/>
WHAT A PAPER SHOULD PRINT. <lb/>
Muses <lb/>
folk fie sand, though as <lb/>
productive, has about the same <lb/>
crop The Ports- <lb/>
mouth soils comprise a sandy <lb/>
loam, sandy loam, and a <lb/>
of <lb/>
are still More of <lb/>
the Portsmouth tine Bandy loam <lb/>
Is cultivated than any other soil <lb/>
in this These soils are <lb/>
adapted to corn, oats and <lb/>
Where cultivated, <lb/>
yields of corn are secured. On <lb/>
well drained areas of Portsmouth <lb/>
sandy loam and fine <lb/>
sandy loam cotton and some <lb/>
truck crops do well. <lb/>
There are a bilge number of <lb/>
cops grown in Pitt It <lb/>
i largest producing <lb/>
county in the State, the average <lb/>
annual yield being ab mt <lb/>
pounds. Cotton is a very <lb/>
important crop, more than <lb/>
bales being annually <lb/>
ed. Irish potatoes, and <lb/>
are the tile <lb/>
order or importance. Truck <lb/>
crops are grown to extent. <lb/>
Sweet potatoes, garden <lb/>
tables, melons, and <lb/>
orchard fruits are grown for <lb/>
home and in cases <lb/>
tie local markets. <lb/>
mellow and easily tilled <lb/>
soils of this county, together <lb/>
with the level to gently tolling <lb/>
surface, invite tn use of all <lb/>
kinds of machinery- <lb/>
climate is mild. <lb/>
summers are long and warm and <lb/>
the winters are short and only <lb/>
moderately cold. There is a <lb/>
long-growing season, thus <lb/>
fording opportunity for the pro <lb/>
of a wide range t crops. <lb/>
Two or more crops cm be grown <lb/>
each year on the same land. <lb/>
Both soil and climate favor a <lb/>
highly diversified agriculture. <lb/>
The farmers, as a rule, are <lb/>
an intelligent and in com <lb/>
circumstances. Some <lb/>
of them are very prosperous, as <lb/>
is evidenced by their home <lb/>
and farm improve <lb/>
Was the First Aid Greatest <lb/>
later. <lb/>
There are who <lb/>
hold up their hands in holy <lb/>
when a newspaper prints the <lb/>
story of a tragedy which involves <lb/>
a scandal. The newspaper must <lb/>
be map of bu.-y It <lb/>
must print the doings of the day <lb/>
the good and the bad. In an <lb/>
address at Trinity college some <lb/>
years ago. Dr. Lyman Abbott <lb/>
demanded that the morning <lb/>
newspapers should come to his <lb/>
table with a clear and full story <lb/>
of the th previous <lb/>
day and night. He declared that <lb/>
if the paper printed only the <lb/>
good things, hi would be lulled <lb/>
into it false sense of the world's <lb/>
and make no to <lb/>
redress the evils that should be <lb/>
righted; if it printed only the <lb/>
bad things, he would get a <lb/>
jaundiced view of life and feel <lb/>
the world was so bad it was <lb/>
not worth while to put forth <lb/>
effort to save it. He added that <lb/>
he would trust no man to say <lb/>
what he should know and what <lb/>
he should not know of the <lb/>
world's doings, and <lb/>
Give me no expurgated news- <lb/>
In his admirable address be <lb/>
fore the <lb/>
CATARRH GOES <lb/>
So Does Throat, Bronchitis, <lb/>
Croup and Asthma. <lb/>
You can easily tell by reading the <lb/>
symptoms below, whether you hive <lb/>
catarrh or <lb/>
Offensive breath, <lb/>
discharge from the n stoppage of <lb/>
the of the voice, <lb/>
in throat, pings in a <lb/>
cough, pain in i of h, <lb/>
var of coughing, <lb/>
low spirited m times, of <lb/>
difficulty in breathing. Ml cf <lb/>
force. <lb/>
REPORT THE CONDITION Of <lb/>
The Bethel Banking Trust Co., <lb/>
AT N. <lb/>
At the March <lb/>
Loans and <lb/>
Overdrafts sec. <lb/>
e and Fixture.-, <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
i Silver coin, including nil <lb/>
Coward a ,, <lb/>
remedy back it for <lb/>
catarrh, called d r U. b. <lb/>
High o which is . vaporized . <lb/>
so antis Unit when it is I refilled <lb/>
over the and germ <lb/>
membrane, it kills rm life <lb/>
rel in minutes, and cu es ca- <lb/>
The price, including hard rubber w- <lb/>
is only The hard lubber <lb/>
inhaler will last a lifetime, so <lb/>
that should you need a bottle of <lb/>
you can it for cents <lb/>
I col<lb/>
1-28 <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital Stock. <lb/>
Undivided profits. UNIX. <lb/>
a d taxes i aid <lb/>
Time of <lb/>
Sub. to <lb/>
T- <lb/>
7.500 on <lb/>
1.831 t <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, County f Pitt, <lb/>
I, W. II Cashier of the hank, i <lb/>
swear Unit the above statement is true <lb/>
W II <lb/>
people with the <lb/>
he wielded when portray- . <lb/>
their virtues, bat you and I <lb/>
and every man who rend- it <lb/>
know, that made <lb/>
of Ins people their shame, he <lb/>
made their virtue their glory. <lb/>
heart of faith never rev led, <lb/>
never gloried in the sin and <lb/>
weakness and shame of <lb/>
Raleigh News <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
knowledge belief. <lb/>
bod sworn to lie <lb/>
this 6th day Apr <lb/>
;. T. Carson, <lb/>
Notary Public- <lb/>
is m <lb/>
S M <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Id. I a. <lb/>
Jones, <lb/>
St <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
IF WOMEN <lb/>
Chamberlain's i o d <lb/>
on a that if are not sat- <lb/>
after using two-third of a but <lb/>
Comet Art Wet <lb/>
Mr. J, R. Barnhill says <lb/>
, your mo <lb/>
North Carolina , be It is up to you to <lb/>
Association, President J. At-1 to try. fold b, ail <lb/>
in brief space, told what <lb/>
an or print and the <lb/>
motives that should actuate him, <lb/>
you ever hear a plea that <lb/>
only the good and the sweet and <lb/>
the beautiful should be published <lb/>
in the our <lb/>
with crime, and the <lb/>
are of sin and <lb/>
shame and man's evil doings <lb/>
Therefore a curse upon the loud <lb/>
press, and chastise- <lb/>
forever upon this <lb/>
death, darkness and <lb/>
sirs, the best journalist <lb/>
that <lb/>
his father, who was years of <lb/>
ago when Halley's appear <lb/>
ed years ago, told him that <lb/>
the cornet year a very wet <lb/>
year, and that very old people in <lb/>
his day who th <lb/>
previous comet year, said that <lb/>
was also a wet year. Fol- <lb/>
lowing up if holds <lb/>
true, this year will be a wet one. <lb/>
It is certainly wet s far. <lb/>
What a Heap of Happiness <lb/>
Bring to Greenville Homes <lb/>
his Hard to do <lb/>
B you hours mis r., at leisure <lb/>
at work. <lb/>
If women knew that <lb/>
Backache pains c ma from sick kid- <lb/>
, i <lb/>
save much <lb/>
Kidney Tills cure k kid <lb/>
Many residents o; this i n <lb/>
i hem <lb/>
M-s L. I <lb/>
K n.-ion N then- <lb/>
i fit I from Do n s y <lb/>
Till- justifies me in g <lb/>
them. A dull, K m- <lb/>
by twinges through <lb/>
m- loins me fr long <lb/>
I had but en i y W and <lb/>
caused a <lb/>
kid t-y Kid- <lb/>
n-y Pills to in.-. I pro- <lb/>
cur-d a box. After taking <lb/>
the in my cu and d <lb/>
h the kidney secretion <lb/>
For sale dealers. P W <lb/>
cents Co , <lb/>
New York, agents for <lb/>
States. <lb/>
ember the sand <lb/>
take <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
K iN <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions <lb/>
Cotton and <lb/>
s Oil <lb/>
Fresh kepi won <lb/>
in st. -k. <lb/>
Produce B kin nod <lb/>
And vet ill one Of the h is been <lb/>
Ana yet in tuts r in use for ea <lb/>
Lame is almost <lb/>
c used rheumatism of the muscles <lb/>
i vie as to <lb/>
of Chamberlain's This <lb/>
mens i not only prompt and effectual, <lb/>
but in way disagreeable to <lb/>
Sold by all druggists. <lb/>
New North Carolina <lb/>
The following industries have <lb/>
been established in this state <lb/>
during the past week as reported <lb/>
by The Tradesman's Weekly Re- <lb/>
view, of Chattanooga, <lb/>
lumber com-<lb/>
company. <lb/>
Charlotte-$25,000 mill supply <lb/>
company. <lb/>
Shelby-Creamery. <lb/>
-Steamboat company. <lb/>
light <lb/>
plant <lb/>
I know Mint <lb/>
its <lb/>
in t <lb/>
from <lb/>
ion mill la <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
Is I not <lb/>
AND FREEZE YOUR OWN ICE <lb/>
It MINUTES <lb/>
fOR A PLATE <lb/>
Jell-O ICE Powder <lb/>
It is to stir of <lb/>
on IS. of <lb/>
or lot to- <lb/>
of anything This snakes <lb/>
of and <lb/>
A warn ran <lb/>
for a dollar or two which will <lb/>
for year, and will soon lava cost. <lb/>
fr . <lb/>
II <lb/>
t , i, . <lb/>
Bold by all <lb/>
Pun Food Co., ti Ray, R. Y <lb/>
Stomach and Liver <lb/>
Tablets will brace up the , ban- <lb/>
headache, prevent despondency <lb/>
and invigorate the whole <lb/>
by all druggists. <lb/>
editor. <lb/>
five books that Moses edited he <lb/>
gave more criminal news and <lb/>
more graphically, than today's <lb/>
newspaper would attempt or <lb/>
dare, as witness his incomparable <lb/>
description of the disobedience <lb/>
of Adam, the story of Cain, the <lb/>
first murderer, the drunkenness <lb/>
of Noah, the bold the subtle <lb/>
falsehood of father Abraham, <lb/>
the deep dark iniquity of <lb/>
Some of those pages from the <lb/>
meekest of man. reek with <lb/>
crime, cry out, in fact, from the <lb/>
dark of shame and sin <lb/>
and man's woeful degradation. <lb/>
Some of such crimes are <lb/>
with thrilling, chilling dramatic <lb/>
interest. <lb/>
this must stand. <lb/>
Moses, model editor, was <lb/>
a man of faith and through this <lb/>
obtained the promise. He be <lb/>
in the people. He loved <lb/>
with a great heart his fellow- <lb/>
man. He had confidence in <lb/>
their cause, and struck hard <lb/>
for their freedom. Not even <lb/>
the enticement, nor the allure- <lb/>
of a king's court and a <lb/>
life of luxurious and renowned <lb/>
ease could woo from their <lb/>
leadership, separate him from <lb/>
their suffering, sever him from <lb/>
their service. He believed in <lb/>
the folks for whom he lived <lb/>
and wrought and wrote. He <lb/>
held up and heralded forth their <lb/>
crime and sin and shame, not to <lb/>
win and obtain prefer- <lb/>
by it, but that their sense <lb/>
of might correct it, that <lb/>
their heart become sick <lb/>
over it. and so turn from it <lb/>
Moses told of the vices of his <lb/>
or bowel complaint has receive --u h <lb/>
oval. Th- t of the <lb/>
of . t <lb/>
and Remedy is th it cures. <lb/>
by ail druggists. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875- <lb/>
S M SCHULTZ <lb/>
Whole-Op and retail Grocer <lb/>
and But-iii Dealer. Cash <lb/>
FEVER <lb/>
The Leans the Fas lo <lb/>
The baseball is sweeping <lb/>
Greenville more fiercely than the <lb/>
floods are roughing up in <lb/>
Europe The bill p the <lb/>
town lave organized <lb/>
teams of from the nine <lb/>
which J. I. Smith captains to <lb/>
the kid team of Larry James. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
VILLE N <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
Notice to <lb/>
Having qualified before the <lb/>
court c Pitt county a <lb/>
executrix of I <lb/>
of W deceased, <lb/>
notice Is hereby . Wen to all persona <lb/>
hi th.- est t- ti make <lb/>
to ; an I <lb/>
all persons ml against I <lb/>
i to press the <lb/>
to the undersigned on or be ore the <lb/>
h day of May. 1911 or t; i-i notice <lb/>
will be pi ad in bar of it every. <lb/>
This day of May, 1910. <lb/>
Alice V. Martin. <lb/>
of W. Martin. <lb/>
Land S <lb/>
By virtue of power me by a <lb/>
But tWO new factions have mortgage d ed made Washington <lb/>
, t, i . d wife, h <lb/>
arisen, the Fats and the Leans. ,., <lb/>
. has been animated registered m book D <lb/>
and Dealer. tan , Mm a in registry. II to th- <lb/>
for Hides. Fur, Cotton Seed to gather around him a h r at court <lb/>
i,. n. i. form like unto himself who be at noon, on <lb/>
that they can put it all tn. day <lb/>
over any nine men whom ,, <lb/>
Roy Flanagan or <lb/>
Oil Turkeys, Eggs, Oak <lb/>
Mattresses, etc. <lb/>
Suits. Baby Carriages, Go-Carts, <lb/>
Parlor suns Tables, Lounges, <lb/>
Safes, P. and Gail Ax <lb/>
Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key <lb/>
Wat Cheroots, Henry George <lb/>
Canned Cherries, Peach, <lb/>
Apples, Pine Apples, Syrup, <lb/>
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Coffee, <lb/>
soap, Magic Food, Matches, <lb/>
Oil. Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, <lb/>
Garden Seeds, Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Nuts, Candies, Dried <lb/>
Peaches. Currants, <lb/>
Raisins, Glass and <lb/>
Wooden ware, Cakes and Crack- <lb/>
Macaroni. Best But- <lb/>
New Royal Sewing Machines <lb/>
and numerous other goods. <lb/>
Quality and quantity cheap for <lb/>
cash. Come see me. <lb/>
S M <lb/>
can get together. <lb/>
The first game is scheduled <lb/>
for Every man on each <lb/>
team will pitch one inning, the <lb/>
only rule as to the class of ball <lb/>
to be played is that any man <lb/>
who walks over must retire <lb/>
the box. <lb/>
Stand by the boys. <lb/>
If you are not satisfied after using <lb/>
according to directions two-thirds of <lb/>
a bottle of Chamberlain's Stomach and <lb/>
Liver Tab eta, you can have you money <lb/>
back. The tablets cleanse and <lb/>
orate the improve the <lb/>
regulate the Give <lb/>
a. trial and get Sold <lb/>
Executors Notice. <lb/>
Having qualified as executor of J. I. <lb/>
Tucker, deceased, late of Pitt county, <lb/>
N. C-, notify all persons <lb/>
claim against the estate of said <lb/>
deceased, to exhibit them to the under <lb/>
on or June 1911, <lb/>
this notice will be plead in bar of their <lb/>
recovery. All persons indebted to said <lb/>
estate immediate <lb/>
This June 9th, 1910. <lb/>
C J. Tucker. Executor. <lb/>
F. G. James A Son, <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
Survey and Map. <lb/>
The soil survey and map of <lb/>
Pitt county, prepared by the <lb/>
government, is now ready for <lb/>
distribution. It is a very useful <lb/>
publication, giving minutely the <lb/>
soil and topography of the <lb/>
county. Those copies <lb/>
can procure them by addressing <lb/>
Congressman John H. Small. <lb/>
Washington. D. C <lb/>
Marvelous Discoveries <lb/>
mark the progress of the <lb/>
age. Air on heavy machines, <lb/>
telegrams without wires, terrible war <lb/>
inventions to kill men and won- <lb/>
of King's New Dis- <lb/>
save life when threatened <lb/>
by coughs, cold, In grippe. <lb/>
croup, bronchitis, <lb/>
fever and whooping cough or lung <lb/>
For all bronchial affections it has <lb/>
no equal. It relieves instantly. It s <lb/>
the surest cure, M. Black, of <lb/>
Asheville, N. O., R. R. No. writes <lb/>
it cured him of an obstinate couch <lb/>
ail other remedies and <lb/>
II, A trial bottle free. Guaranteed <lb/>
by all druggists. <lb/>
LINIMENT IS <lb/>
World's <lb/>
Greatest <lb/>
Pain <lb/>
For Rheumatism. Sciatica, Lain- Bad. Stiff <lb/>
plain,. Colic <lb/>
and all Bone and <lb/>
and The Ark <lb/>
Ce. Ye. I <lb/>
corner <lb/>
of Joe lot on lilt street <lb/>
extend-d, theme a southerly <lb/>
shout lit y two feet a <lb/>
to a corn- r. in a wests i <lb/>
about two hundred a d <lb/>
feet to tie Williams north <lb/>
we-t con on thence <lb/>
a . inn about fifty two <lb/>
feet to a c c one <lb/>
of an acre, more or <lb/>
This the 14th. day of May, <lb/>
S J. Everett Atty. E. S. Brown, <lb/>
Mortgagee. <lb/>
gists. <lb/>
Give them <lb/>
by all drug- <lb/>
I Not Quite <lb/>
w How often you tan stet a j <lb/>
W thing <lb/>
M nail or screw driver or <lb/>
lacking. Have a good <lb/>
tool box and be prepared for <lb/>
Our line of tool <lb/>
a you could desire, and <lb/>
we will lee that your tool <lb/>
box does not lack a <lb/>
article. <lb/>
Of Course <lb/>
You get <lb/>
Horse Goods i c <lb/>
J. P. <lb/>
Corey <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before th <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county as <lb/>
of the estate of Stephen <lb/>
C. Wooten deceased, is hereby <lb/>
given to all person indebted to <lb/>
to make immediate payment <lb/>
to the nil person <lb/>
having claims against said estate <lb/>
notified to present the same to the <lb/>
undersigned for payment on or before <lb/>
the 2nd day June, or <lb/>
notice will he plead in bar of <lb/>
This day of June. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
of Stephen C. Wooten. <lb/>
Sale of Land. <lb/>
By vi of a decree i f the r <lb/>
court of Pitt in special pro- <lb/>
No. emit ed, J- A <lb/>
wife, against Fanni i Grime <lb/>
Mitchell et the ed com- <lb/>
missioner will sell cash before the <lb/>
court house door in Green- . t noon, <lb/>
on Saturday July 2nd the <lb/>
lowing described, piece or pa eel <lb/>
and. situate in the county of Pitt and <lb/>
in adjoining lands <lb/>
of Pop--. J. Ira <lb/>
and Lewis H. Worth-i BOO- <lb/>
fifteen res arid being a <lb/>
of the Porter land. Said sold for <lb/>
partition. <lb/>
This May 24th, 1910. <lb/>
J. B, James, Commissioner <lb/>
Stays Taken Up. <lb/>
I have take up two spotted pig, one <lb/>
male and one female, weight <lb/>
pounds each, mark d fork in <lb/>
right ear. Owner k-e n by <lb/>
proving ownership n l m <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Greenville, N C, D. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
.-<lb/>
rs<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018101_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
I mm , <lb/>
,,., <lb/>
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT <lb/>
In Charge of F. A. EDMONDSON <lb/>
of The Eastern Reflector tor and Vicinity-Advertising Rates on Application <lb/>
The Pitt County School Desk <lb/>
manufactured by The A. Cox <lb/>
Manufacturing Company are <lb/>
comfortable, neat and <lb/>
durable. Terms are liberal. I Fresh herrings at <lb/>
When in the market come to see Barber Co. <lb/>
us. w hive the desk for you. We have needles, bobbins and <lb/>
M. B Bryan sent to Norfolk shuttles, for any sewing machine <lb/>
in country- Also needle <lb/>
We are carrying a nice line of threaders, the very thing for <lb/>
Coffins Caskets. Prices are affected eyes or dark days <lb/>
right and can hearse Harrington, Barber <lb/>
A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. We have put in an assortment <lb/>
K L cut to Green- of patterns for all styles. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
For spring dress goods. How is your soul <lb/>
cotton planters and Rollins. <lb/>
guano sewers which would Refreshments consisting of <lb/>
ally indicate a large cotton crop cream and cake were served. <lb/>
this year. Several selections of music were <lb/>
rendered before the hour of <lb/>
parting when each declared that <lb/>
embroidery and laces see us- <lb/>
New lot in. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co- <lb/>
R. v. T. H. King, of <lb/>
conduct- the funeral service at <lb/>
the burial of G. E. Jackson. He <lb/>
preached also Thur.-day at the <lb/>
Baptist church. <lb/>
r nice fresh fish see R D. , <lb/>
on Tuesdays, Thursdays, <lb/>
and Saturday. <lb/>
Mr. ltd Mrs. . H. Rouse <lb/>
W. C. of Middlesex; <lb/>
of Carey; C. J. <lb/>
Jackson, of Knoxville, Tenn; and every day land general <lb/>
J. L. Jackson, of Greenville, work <lb/>
tended funeral of G. Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
Jackson. i jot and no- <lb/>
For cold drinks of all kinds call; just in Better while <lb/>
at H. L Johnson's fountain. <lb/>
Let <lb/>
us show you our new lot of <lb/>
shoes. Harrington. Barber Co <lb/>
A nice six key soda fountain <lb/>
for sale. R. D- <lb/>
We have purchased the <lb/>
as the <lb/>
Milling and Mfg. and will <lb/>
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/>
We are now in to do <lb/>
M. G. Bryan want to Grifton <lb/>
today. <lb/>
Just received, a nice lot of <lb/>
ladies and shoes. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co <lb/>
Miss Annie Bell, a trained <lb/>
nurse who had charge of the lit- <lb/>
sick boy of Abram Cox, re- <lb/>
turned to her at Washing- <lb/>
ton today. She won many <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Car load of top dressing for <lb/>
cotton just arrived. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C. <lb/>
Land Plaster for sale. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C. <lb/>
Miss Janie Kittrell returned <lb/>
Sunday from Bethel where she <lb/>
a most delightful evening had <lb/>
been spent. <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
N. C. June 21.- <lb/>
Miss Mattie Little, who had <lb/>
spent more than a week with us, <lb/>
returned to her home at Wilson <lb/>
last Tuesday evening. <lb/>
Miss Ruth Cobb returned from <lb/>
Wilson to Friday, <lb/>
accompanied by Miss Rosa Kin- <lb/>
of Wilson. <lb/>
Miss Bettie of <lb/>
Wilson, is visiting at <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Beaman, of <lb/>
Farmville, were visiting at Ivy <lb/>
Smith's Sunday. <lb/>
Jack Harrington, of Greenville, <lb/>
was visiting in Smithtown Sun- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Miss Flanagan, who <lb/>
is attending the summer school <lb/>
at Greenville, came up Saturday <lb/>
evening and spent until Monday <lb/>
with relatives and <lb/>
J. S. Fulford has been very <lb/>
sick for more than a week, but <lb/>
has taken a slight change for the <lb/>
better. <lb/>
All of the crops that escaped <lb/>
being drowned from the recent <lb/>
heavy rains, as well as oats and <lb/>
wheat, needs the attention of <lb/>
the farmers all at one and the <lb/>
same time. <lb/>
Mrs. C. C. Cobb and Miss <lb/>
Bettie went to Green- <lb/>
ville Monday. <lb/>
FIFTY FIVE THOUSAND. <lb/>
Amount for Public Build- <lb/>
if. <lb/>
On Saturday the omnibus bill <lb/>
in congress which carried with it <lb/>
an appropriation of for <lb/>
the erection of a public building <lb/>
in Greenville on the site already <lb/>
procured by the government, <lb/>
passed the house, <lb/>
bill went over to <lb/>
Married. <lb/>
before o'clock this <lb/>
A little <lb/>
morning a couple with <lb/>
intentions, accompanied <lb/>
by a few few friends, called at <lb/>
the residence of Mrs. Anna Pat- <lb/>
rick, on Greene street, where <lb/>
Rev. E. N. Johnson has a <lb/>
room, and inquired if they could <lb/>
get the services of the min- <lb/>
When the to preform the ceremony. <lb/>
the senate All things being found agree- <lb/>
Monday, through the efforts of the minister united Mr. <lb/>
Senators Simmons and Green, of New Bern, <lb/>
and Congressman Small, and Miss N. Harrell. of <lb/>
was added to Greenville's <lb/>
making the total for <lb/>
building which was con- <lb/>
curred in by the house when the <lb/>
bill went back for ratification. <lb/>
The last congress had already <lb/>
appropriated for a site, <lb/>
which brings the whole up to <lb/>
Our people heartily appreciate <lb/>
the good efforts of Senators Over- <lb/>
man and Simmons and Congress <lb/>
man Small in <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
Eure. The left on the <lb/>
9.20 Norfolk Southern train for <lb/>
the home of the groom in New <lb/>
Bern, first sending a telegram to <lb/>
the parents of the bride at <lb/>
Eure advising them of the <lb/>
Reflector. r. <lb/>
popular remedy never to <lb/>
effectually cure <lb/>
Constipation, Sick <lb/>
Biliousness <lb/>
And ALL DISEASES a <lb/>
Liver and Bad Digestion <lb/>
The natural result la good appetite <lb/>
y and easy to <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
Swain <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chester <lb/>
Beaman request the honor of <lb/>
behalf of Greet at the marriage of <lb/>
Congressman Thomas, of i their sister. Ada Louise Tyson, to <lb/>
the third district, was also very Young Swain, on <lb/>
friendly to Greenville and helped W evening, June twenty <lb/>
much in the matter. This nineteen hundred and <lb/>
means that Green- <lb/>
ville is to have a handsome pub- <lb/>
building. <lb/>
AU ABOARD FOR RALEIGH. <lb/>
friends during her short stay, has been attending a lawn party <lb/>
who regret very much to see her <lb/>
leave. <lb/>
The is the Kind <lb/>
you need. See us. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
O. W. Rollins went to Ayden <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
We call your attention to our <lb/>
new line of groceries. <lb/>
R. W. <lb/>
Miss Janie Kittrell left Thurs- <lb/>
day for Bethel to visit Miss Lillie <lb/>
Bunting. <lb/>
For nice fresh corned herrings <lb/>
see A. W. Ange Co., Winter- <lb/>
ville, 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, for the <lb/>
floor, buy some, cover it over. <lb/>
Harrington. Barber Co. <lb/>
Before buying, see my line of <lb/>
post cards. H. 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/>
gingham 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, 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/>
you. Any size frame. <lb/>
A. Ange 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 Hunsucker buggy, <lb/>
manufactured by A. G. Cox Man- <lb/>
Co., Winterville. <lb/>
N. C- <lb/>
A. G. Cox Manufacturing <lb/>
Co. baa sold this season ever <lb/>
given by Miss Lillie Bunting. <lb/>
Misses Hattie Kittrell, Miriam <lb/>
Johnson and Dollie <lb/>
came in Saturday from Green- <lb/>
ville where they have been at- <lb/>
tending the summer school. <lb/>
Misses Kittrell and Braxton <lb/>
returned Monday to resume their <lb/>
work. <lb/>
J. L. Rollins left yesterday for <lb/>
to visit to his grand- <lb/>
mother. <lb/>
Miss Leasts King, of Durham, <lb/>
came in yesterday from Kinston <lb/>
to Misses Eva and Lucy Bell <lb/>
Miss Crawford spent <lb/>
Sunday in Greenville visiting <lb/>
friends. <lb/>
Miss Hargett, of Richlands. <lb/>
came in a few days ago to visit <lb/>
Misses and i Cox. <lb/>
O. W. Rollins C. Cox <lb/>
went to Ayden Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Maude Louise <lb/>
who has been the guest of Miss <lb/>
Cox. left yesterday for <lb/>
her home at <lb/>
Miss Cox left yesterday <lb/>
for to visit friends <lb/>
W. B. Wingate returned <lb/>
Thursday from a visit to Fair <lb/>
Haven, Mass. <lb/>
W. B. Wingate who has re <lb/>
been appointed assistant <lb/>
rural carrier, began work today. <lb/>
Rev. H. N. Blanchard. of <lb/>
Greensboro, conducted <lb/>
at the Baptist church Sunday <lb/>
morning and night. <lb/>
MISS COX ENTERTAINS. <lb/>
For the last few weeks the <lb/>
home of Dr. B. T. Cox has been <lb/>
the of social life for our <lb/>
little village, Miss Maude Louise <lb/>
of Salem, being the <lb/>
of Miss Cox, who <lb/>
several evening ago, gave a six <lb/>
course luncheon in honor of Miss <lb/>
and on Monday evening <lb/>
June 20th, a delightful party, as <lb/>
a fitting climax of the <lb/>
social functions. <lb/>
After a few minutes spent in <lb/>
very pleasant progressive con- <lb/>
there were various <lb/>
amusements, the most inter- <lb/>
of which was a drawing <lb/>
contest that engrossed the at- <lb/>
of each one for sometime. <lb/>
Miss Cox was the winner <lb/>
of the first picture, and <lb/>
the booby was won by Mr. Jesse <lb/>
BLACK JACK ITEMS. <lb/>
Ed. W. Grimes- <lb/>
land, filled his regular appoint- <lb/>
here Saturday and Sunday. <lb/>
There was a large crowd at all <lb/>
the meetings. W. H. <lb/>
Laughinghouse also was with us. <lb/>
Miss Lula Mills, from near <lb/>
Simpson, was the guest of Misses <lb/>
Stella and Bertha Gaskins <lb/>
day and Sunday. <lb/>
Mrs. A. Clark, of <lb/>
returned home Sunday after <lb/>
spending a few days with friends <lb/>
and relatives here. <lb/>
Miss Ruby Gwaltney, who is <lb/>
attending the E. C. T. T. S. at <lb/>
Greenville, was the guest of Miss <lb/>
Lula Mills Saturday and Sunday. <lb/>
We are sorry to say that the <lb/>
recent rains have damaged crops <lb/>
considerably in this section. To- <lb/>
is one of the principal <lb/>
things damaged. Corn and cot- <lb/>
ton are in the grass, but watch <lb/>
the farmers and they will destroy <lb/>
some of the grass. <lb/>
The Farmers Union will meet <lb/>
again Friday night. <lb/>
There will be preaching here <lb/>
Saturday night and Sunday. <lb/>
Annul Clan of <lb/>
Baptist Sunday School. <lb/>
The class of Memorial <lb/>
Baptist school will run <lb/>
its third annual excursion to the <lb/>
capital city of the State on <lb/>
Thursday, June 30th. Take a <lb/>
day off and go with us to see the <lb/>
many places of interest and <lb/>
sights around Raleigh. We pass <lb/>
through several counties on the <lb/>
route, giving you an opportunity <lb/>
to see the different lands and <lb/>
crops planted along the <lb/>
Norfolk Southern railroad, and <lb/>
also compare your home sec- <lb/>
with others. <lb/>
That afternoon there will be a <lb/>
league game of ball between <lb/>
Raleigh and Wilson which you <lb/>
have time to see before the <lb/>
train leaves. <lb/>
The fare for the round trip is <lb/>
only for adults and for <lb/>
children under years of age. <lb/>
W. S. <lb/>
J. W. Bryan, I <lb/>
J. B. Little, Com. <lb/>
J. F. Stokes, <lb/>
W. P. Edwards, I <lb/>
at o'clock, Christian church. <lb/>
Farmville, North Carolina. <lb/>
There is a nice display of Par- <lb/>
fountain pens at Reflector <lb/>
Book Store, and they are the best <lb/>
made- <lb/>
School Ice Plant. <lb/>
The ice of East Carolina <lb/>
Training school has <lb/>
been completed and the first <lb/>
block of ice was pulled out of <lb/>
the tanks Tuesday. This first <lb/>
block decidedly a novelty <lb/>
and attracted much attention <lb/>
from the and others who <lb/>
were present to see it. Mr. O. E. <lb/>
Warren, the nurseryman, had <lb/>
provided a handsome bouquet of <lb/>
cut which were frozen in <lb/>
the middle of the block and it <lb/>
made a beautiful picture through <lb/>
the clear glistening ice. After <lb/>
being on exhibition a short while <lb/>
this block was sent to ex-Gov. T. <lb/>
J. Jarvis with the compliments <lb/>
of the school and faculty. <lb/>
Stomach and Liver <lb/>
Tablets gently the liver and <lb/>
bowels to expel poisonous matter, <lb/>
cleanse tin- system, cure constipation <lb/>
sick headache. Sold by all drug- <lb/>
gists. <lb/>
Tat Mikado Revival New York. <lb/>
The have put the <lb/>
on at the Casino <lb/>
Broadway, New York, <lb/>
with an all-star cast New York <lb/>
is going wild over it, and every- <lb/>
body is whistling it. The New <lb/>
York Sunday World, ever alert <lb/>
to supply its readers with the <lb/>
most popular music, will give <lb/>
two songs from the Mikado. <lb/>
One is Little Maids From <lb/>
School Are and the other <lb/>
is He's Going to Marry <lb/>
Yum Words and music <lb/>
complete. Sunday World June <lb/>
and July <lb/>
Mr. L. C. Kim Dead. <lb/>
Her many friends here ate <lb/>
sorrowed at the death of Mrs. <lb/>
Lou C. King which occurred <lb/>
Tuesday night at her home in <lb/>
Farmville. Mrs. King lived in <lb/>
Greenville for many years and <lb/>
had a host of friends and <lb/>
here She was a daughter <lb/>
of Alice Joyner, and leaves <lb/>
a mother, one sister, two brothers <lb/>
and three children. She was <lb/>
twice married, her first husband <lb/>
being Mr. B. S- Atkinson and <lb/>
her second Mr. John King, <lb/>
Mrs. H. B. Harris, Mrs. B. F. <lb/>
Tyson, Mrs. C. J. Forbes. Mrs. <lb/>
E. A. Jr. Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
Charles Cobb and Mr. J. F. King <lb/>
went to Farmville this afternoon <lb/>
to attend the funeral. <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, 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 hard to come off. Place <lb/>
now with them and you will be <lb/>
pleased. <lb/>
E 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/>
To Palate Growers. <lb/>
We strongly urge, those of our <lb/>
friends who have not as yet dug <lb/>
their potatoes, to dig at once <lb/>
and store away in some cool and <lb/>
well ventilated building, as after <lb/>
so-much rain there is danger of <lb/>
rot should they be allowed to re- <lb/>
main in the ground longer. <lb/>
-It is useless to try to sell or <lb/>
consign with the market in its <lb/>
present condition. <lb/>
The buyers will not now give <lb/>
There are not many more days, u per barrel f. o. b. Greenville, <lb/>
left for tax listing, yet the list as for consigning, it means <lb/>
takers tell us that not many of, present outlook, you <lb/>
the people living in town have get nothing, with perhaps a <lb/>
People Wait<lb/>
USED UNIVERSALLY <lb/>
WHEN Metal were first Introduced years <lb/>
you had some for being <lb/>
Rut now <lb/>
If you are it can only be you do not know the <lb/>
facts in case. <lb/>
They used today from the Atlantic to the Pacific for all kinds <lb/>
of buildings, under all conditions. <lb/>
They are fireproof, never leak and last a long as the <lb/>
building itself without needing repairs. <lb/>
For further detailed information apply to <lb/>
YORK COBB, Agents. <lb/>
listed. Just why they wait to <lb/>
get in the rush of the last few <lb/>
days of listing time is not easily <lb/>
explained, but it seems to be a J <lb/>
habit they have fallen into. <lb/>
When you know a thing must <lb/>
be done, it is just well to <lb/>
along and attend to it <lb/>
bill sent back to you for the <lb/>
freight. <lb/>
Keep your potatoes at home, <lb/>
and you will later get something <lb/>
for them. Moseley Bros. <lb/>
Subscribe to the Reflector. <lb/>
MERIDITH COLLEGE. <lb/>
including elective <lb/>
School <lb/>
Art, <lb/>
Among the for Women in the South. <lb/>
in Liberal covering nine departments, and <lb/>
in Education and Bible, which count for the A. B. degree. <lb/>
Music, including Piano. Pipe Organ, Violin and Voice Culture. School or <lb/>
including and of <lb/>
winch students college Culture under a trained <lb/>
director. Full literary course per year, including literary tuition, board, room, <lb/>
light, heat, t ordinary medicine and all minor <lb/>
In the Club, to less. Next Sept. 1910, Address. <lb/>
R T. VANN, Present, <lb/>
Raleigh, North. Carolina. <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb/>
Truth la Preference to Fiction. <lb/>
One Dollar Fer Year <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, JULY <lb/>
1910. <lb/>
No. <lb/>
SCHOOL <lb/>
TRUSTEES OF TRAINING SCHOOL <lb/>
by Delegate. From <lb/>
Parts of the <lb/>
The Pitt County Sunday School <lb/>
Contention met in Jarvis Memo- <lb/>
rial Methodist church this morn <lb/>
and was called to order at <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
After singing, be <lb/>
Showers of devotion <lb/>
service was conducted by Rev. <lb/>
E. N. Johnson, who a part <lb/>
of the 11th chapter of Numbers <lb/>
and commented thereon, and <lb/>
prayer. <lb/>
The enrollment of delegates <lb/>
showed there were about <lb/>
representing over twenty Sunday <lb/>
schools. <lb/>
Rev. E. N. Johnson was elected <lb/>
temporary chairman and Z. T. <lb/>
Broughton temporary secretary. <lb/>
Mr. J. Van Carter, general <lb/>
secretary of State Sunday School <lb/>
Association the <lb/>
on the work of the county <lb/>
association. <lb/>
A round table was held on the <lb/>
organized Sunday school work in <lb/>
which a large number of <lb/>
gates took part. <lb/>
FRIDAY AFTERNOON SESSION. <lb/>
The afternoon session of the <lb/>
Count Sunday School <lb/>
was opened with prayer by <lb/>
Dr. Peden. <lb/>
attending to some <lb/>
tine business the association <lb/>
listened to one of the finest ad- <lb/>
dresses on the elementary de- <lb/>
of the local school, by <lb/>
Mrs. the <lb/>
East Carolina Teachers Training <lb/>
School, it has ever been our <lb/>
to hear. <lb/>
Following this address one <lb/>
by Dr. J. W. Bryan on the or- <lb/>
adult class, who, like the <lb/>
speaker who preceded him. <lb/>
touched high water mark, show- <lb/>
the improvements in the <lb/>
methods of today in comparison <lb/>
to methods of former days before <lb/>
the advent of the organized adult <lb/>
classes into our schools. <lb/>
Rev. E. Peden, D. D of <lb/>
Ayden, then gave a strong talk <lb/>
on training, giving <lb/>
some ways of doing this much <lb/>
needed work. <lb/>
A abort season of prayer was <lb/>
held, led by D. J. Whichard. <lb/>
The committee on nomination <lb/>
of officers, made the following <lb/>
report which was <lb/>
President, Rev. J. H., Shore. <lb/>
Vice president, H. J. Langston. <lb/>
Secretary and treasurer, Z. T. <lb/>
Broughton. <lb/>
Executive committee, J. H. <lb/>
Shore, H. J. Langston, Z. T. <lb/>
Broughton, Miss Lillian M. <lb/>
Munn, H. C. Ormond. <lb/>
The committee on constitution <lb/>
made their report which was <lb/>
adopted. This report <lb/>
mended that semiannual <lb/>
of this association be held <lb/>
is March and September. <lb/>
committee, on time and <lb/>
place of next reported, <lb/>
naming Sept. as the time <lb/>
and Greenville as the place, <lb/>
adopted. <lb/>
committee on <lb/>
th following report, which <lb/>
Pitt County Sunday School <lb/>
n in its first <lb/>
d b g leave to j. <lb/>
Hear Report for Part <lb/>
Re-elected for Next Year. <lb/>
TOWNSHIP PRIMARIES. <lb/>
Con <lb/>
Greenville next <lb/>
for the past session and make delegates to the <lb/>
arrangements for the next yea. gT Jg <lb/>
Those present at this meeting <lb/>
Y. Joyner, of Raleigh, <lb/>
chairman; T. J. Jarvis. of Green <lb/>
ville; A. of Scotland <lb/>
Neck; Y. T. Ormond, of Kinston; <lb/>
J. C. Parker, of Trenton; and R. <lb/>
B- White, of Franklinton. <lb/>
President Wright made his re <lb/>
port to the trustees, and great sat <lb/>
expressed over <lb/>
year's work. The spirit chat had <lb/>
dominated both the faculty and <lb/>
student body <lb/>
The report showed a total <lb/>
enrollment of for the <lb/>
school year. in the regular <lb/>
session and in the spring and <lb/>
summer school. Five states and <lb/>
thirty nine counties of North <lb/>
Carolina were represented among <lb/>
the students. <lb/>
Three counties adopted the <lb/>
summer school here for their <lb/>
teachers in lieu of holding a <lb/>
county institute of their own. <lb/>
Upon the recommendation of <lb/>
r resident Wright all the regular <lb/>
of the past year were <lb/>
re elected for coming year, <lb/>
as <lb/>
Mrs. Kate R. lady <lb/>
principal. <lb/>
Miss Sallie J. Davis, teacher of <lb/>
history. <lb/>
Miss Mamie E. Jenkins, teach- <lb/>
of English. <lb/>
Miss Fannie M. Bishop, teacher <lb/>
of music. <lb/>
Miss Maria D. Graham, teacher <lb/>
of mathematics. <lb/>
conventions. <lb/>
So far as heard from there was <lb/>
no test of strength for any <lb/>
dates for Supreme court judge <lb/>
or corporation commissioner. <lb/>
township endorsed J. <lb/>
H. Small for congress. <lb/>
Following is a list of the <lb/>
gates from township that <lb/>
have come up to this <lb/>
Township. <lb/>
DEATH OF CAPT <lb/>
of Mart <lb/>
Away- <lb/>
Capt John King died about <lb/>
6.30 o'clock. Saturday afternoon, <lb/>
at his home near Falkland, of <lb/>
pneumonia. The funeral took <lb/>
place Sunday afternoon, con- <lb/>
ducted by Rev. Mr. Morton, of <lb/>
Farmville, and was largely at <lb/>
tended- He was years old <lb/>
last February. <lb/>
In the death of Capt. <lb/>
Pitt county losses one of it <lb/>
and most influential <lb/>
He was a native of the county, <lb/>
and for more than half a <lb/>
after reaching man's estate lived <lb/>
on his farm near Falkland, with <lb/>
ANTHONY. <lb/>
RURAL MEET SOON. <lb/>
to Bo and Wei Pretty Solemnized t<lb/>
Rocky Point. N. C. June A very wedding was <lb/>
The Rural Letter <lb/>
annual convention to o'clock In the R form-d <lb/>
held at Raleigh, July and church at by <lb/>
Delegates. <lb/>
Jonah <lb/>
Claude Jones <lb/>
C. E. Fleming <lb/>
L. P. Dudley <lb/>
Delegates. <lb/>
M. G. <lb/>
C. M. Tucker <lb/>
Allen <lb/>
J. F. Evans <lb/>
J. W. Brooks <lb/>
W. P. Clark <lb/>
R. L. Little <lb/>
Town <lb/>
Delegates. <lb/>
H. A. White <lb/>
E. A. Jr. <lb/>
F. D. Foxhall <lb/>
C. S. Carr <lb/>
G. James <lb/>
S. Carr <lb/>
T. White <lb/>
W. Tucker <lb/>
L. Blow <lb/>
L. Wooten <lb/>
W. King <lb/>
S. Mooring <lb/>
S. <lb/>
Side <lb/>
on near -.-------- <lb/>
the exception of four years <lb/>
5th, promises to be the most in- <lb/>
yet. are a nu-n- <lb/>
of attractive s, chief <lb/>
among them being th presence <lb/>
of Fourth Assistant Postmaster <lb/>
General who will visit <lb/>
the North Carolina session at <lb/>
Raleigh, on and the <lb/>
South Carolina convention at <lb/>
on the 5th. Gen. <lb/>
is at the head of the <lb/>
rural free delivery system and is <lb/>
P. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
s. <lb/>
A. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
W. <lb/>
River. <lb/>
Alternates. <lb/>
V. C. Fleming; <lb/>
J. G. Taylor <lb/>
C. L. <lb/>
Ashley <lb/>
Side Rim. <lb/>
Alternates. <lb/>
B. E. <lb/>
Bryant <lb/>
Jesse <lb/>
W. B. Stocks <lb/>
J. W. Vincent <lb/>
Josephus <lb/>
Joseph <lb/>
of <lb/>
Alternates. <lb/>
J. O. <lb/>
W. D. Pruitt <lb/>
A. M. Moseley <lb/>
J. L. Little <lb/>
F. J. <lb/>
J. I. Smith <lb/>
D. C. Moore <lb/>
D. E. <lb/>
O. W. Harrington <lb/>
Frank Wilson <lb/>
W. H. Long <lb/>
D. L James <lb/>
L. C. Arthur <lb/>
O. L. Joyner <lb/>
Henry Dixon <lb/>
W. L. Smith <lb/>
J. R. Jacobs <lb/>
W. E. Tucker <lb/>
Alston Grimes <lb/>
W. P. Clark <lb/>
J. J. Elks <lb/>
J. Cox <lb/>
W. H. Porter <lb/>
W. L. Wootten <lb/>
H. C. Venters <lb/>
L. Edwards <lb/>
Miss Birdie teacher <lb/>
of Latin. <lb/>
Miss Kate Lewis, teacher of <lb/>
drawing. wan <lb/>
Mrs- J. Ogden, a. stocks <lb/>
teacher of household economics. c. Galloway <lb/>
Miss Emma R. Jones, clerk, <lb/>
Mr. W. H. teacher <lb/>
of school supervision and <lb/>
Mr. Herbert E. Austin, teacher <lb/>
of science. <lb/>
Mr. C. W. Wilson, teacher of <lb/>
pedagogy and bursar. <lb/>
Miss was elect- <lb/>
ed as hospital attendant. <lb/>
Mr. L R Mellows, A. B. of <lb/>
Yale, was elected head of the de- <lb/>
of English. <lb/>
It was decided to create a de- <lb/>
of primary methods, <lb/>
the teacher for to be elected <lb/>
later. <lb/>
Before leaving the trustees <lb/>
carefully inspected the entire <lb/>
school plant, and expressed much <lb/>
pleasure at its <lb/>
Dr. J. E. Nobles <lb/>
Township. <lb/>
Delegates. Alternates. <lb/>
E. Proctor <lb/>
after the war that he engaged in <lb/>
merchandising in Tarboro. He <lb/>
was an even tempered man. <lb/>
firm in his decisions, yet <lb/>
I without harshness, ever <lb/>
the highest to- <lb/>
others. For twenty five year.- <lb/>
be was a magistrate of his town <lb/>
ship, and was looked up to as a <lb/>
leader. He was a staunch Dem- <lb/>
and always took active <lb/>
interest in the conventions and <lb/>
affairs of his party. He <lb/>
this in State <lb/>
senate, and was one of the first <lb/>
judges of the county Inferior <lb/>
court when that court was es- <lb/>
He was a of <lb/>
the Christian church and lived a <lb/>
faithful follower of Christ. <lb/>
Capt. King was thrice married, <lb/>
his wife being Miss <lb/>
Joyner, second Miss Bettie Cobb <lb/>
and third Miss Fannie <lb/>
His last wife died about eight <lb/>
years ago. By his first marriage <lb/>
there survived one daughter. <lb/>
Mrs. B. R King, of Goldsboro; <lb/>
Jesse C. Wilson <lb/>
W. A. White <lb/>
j. A. Smith <lb/>
Dr L. E. Ricks <lb/>
N. H. <lb/>
C. A. Faucett <lb/>
Alex. Gray <lb/>
J. B. Galloway <lb/>
L. A. Arnold <lb/>
Macon Haddock <lb/>
Porter <lb/>
J. A. Mills <lb/>
G. W. Venter <lb/>
J. U. Gray <lb/>
O. J. Galloway <lb/>
carriers. I know each one in our <lb/>
grand old would to <lb/>
shake his hand. <lb/>
Willis G. Briggs, <lb/>
our checks, will make us a talk <lb/>
We'd all like to hi hand. <lb/>
too. Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt ban <lb/>
just written me that h.- will b. <lb/>
there on the fourth and make u. <lb/>
an lecture. You <lb/>
know there is no class of citizens <lb/>
in North Carolina more interest- <lb/>
ed in good roads than the rural <lb/>
carriers. Dr. Pratt is doing <lb/>
great work for his State just <lb/>
now, more than any- <lb/>
other State official. Hon. John <lb/>
H. Small is expected on toe 5th <lb/>
to tell us of his rural parcels post <lb/>
bill that was recently introduced <lb/>
in congress. Clarence H Po. <lb/>
who by pen and speech is <lb/>
so much to el our i be <lb/>
loved State in a mental, moral, <lb/>
physical and will <lb/>
make us a short talk on the 5th. <lb/>
And the Raleigh boys are going <lb/>
to give us a smoker to which <lb/>
number of the editorial <lb/>
marriage are Mr. G. of profession have been invited. <lb/>
I ll sill <lb/>
Delegates. Alternates. <lb/>
R. R. Fleming <lb/>
M. T. Spier <lb/>
W. L. Nobles <lb/>
Carolina <lb/>
Delegates <lb/>
D. A. James <lb/>
I. H. Little <lb/>
G. It, Mooring <lb/>
C. G. Little <lb/>
A. Mooring <lb/>
J. P. Fleming <lb/>
j. p. Davenport <lb/>
G. Z Kicks <lb/>
Township. <lb/>
Alternates <lb/>
S. a <lb/>
L. S. Barnhill <lb/>
B. B. Whichard <lb/>
A. B. <lb/>
A. <lb/>
Washington City, Mr. E C. <lb/>
King, of Falkland, and Mrs J L <lb/>
Fount-in, of Asheville; by hi <lb/>
third marriage Mr. A. B. King, <lb/>
of Goldsboro. Mr. S. V. King, <lb/>
Charleston, Va and Mr. John <lb/>
King, of Falkland. All of hi <lb/>
children were with him during <lb/>
the last few days of his illness <lb/>
and when the end came. He is <lb/>
also survived by one brother, <lb/>
Col. V. M. King, of <lb/>
and two sisters, Mrs. C. V. New <lb/>
ton, of and Mrs. <lb/>
Nannie Moore, of Farmville. <lb/>
body assembled desires to thank <lb/>
the people of the said Methodist <lb/>
church and the said <lb/>
for said kindness, <lb/>
Bo it That this <lb/>
extend to the pastor, <lb/>
stewards and member i i <lb/>
in deepest <lb/>
for of <lb/>
Thai this association also ex <lb/>
hi <lb/>
papers its thanks for the inter, ht <lb/>
i hey have taken aiding the <lb/>
Marriage <lb/>
Register of Deeds W. M. Moore <lb/>
had issued the following licenses <lb/>
since last report. <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
J. S. Smith and Elizabeth <lb/>
Lonnie and Flossie <lb/>
Banks. <lb/>
Louis and Bettie Mills. <lb/>
COLORED. <lb/>
Harper and Pattie Jones. <lb/>
Quiet Hone Tab <lb/>
at <lb/>
A quiet but pretty home mar <lb/>
took place at o'clock this <lb/>
morning at the home of Mrs. <lb/>
Mellie Harriss, on Dickinson <lb/>
avenue, when her daughter, Mies <lb/>
Lena, became the bride of Mr <lb/>
B, P. Christian, of Portsmouth, <lb/>
Va., the ceremony <lb/>
formed by Rev. J. H. Show, P j <lb/>
tor of the Methodist <lb/>
The attired in a j <lb/>
handsome traveling suit of tan <lb/>
cloth with hat to <lb/>
Mr. Christian la a <lb/>
And an old time <lb/>
with Webster's elementary <lb/>
as text book will be <lb/>
a feature of the occasion. Col. <lb/>
Joseph Robinson, of the Golds- <lb/>
Argus, and Mr. Clarence H. <lb/>
Poe, will umpire the game and <lb/>
award prizes to him that <lb/>
down and him that <lb/>
the The <lb/>
railroads will reduced rates <lb/>
for the occasion from the second <lb/>
to the sixth of July. <lb/>
The Capitol Inn will give <lb/>
per day rates, which is about as <lb/>
cheap as you cm stop at <lb/>
so brother carriers don't fail to <lb/>
go to Remember as a <lb/>
body. heave, oh, we <lb/>
have a pull and a long pull, a <lb/>
strong pull and a pull altogether <lb/>
means much. And after hearing <lb/>
Dr. Pratt talk on good roads you <lb/>
will go home and enthuse your <lb/>
people on the subject, talk good <lb/>
roads, act good roads and spend <lb/>
a few dollars showing an example <lb/>
and thus got a little leaven and <lb/>
leaven the whole State. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
Secretary N. C. R. L. C, <lb/>
pastor. Rev. Conner. <lb/>
The contracting being <lb/>
Mi-s Juli Elizabeth <lb/>
daughter of Mr. C. E. of <lb/>
and Mr. Peyton <lb/>
Tunstall Anthony, a prominent <lb/>
wholesale merchant of Green- <lb/>
ville, N. C, of whom are <lb/>
popular in their respective com- <lb/>
Mr. W. S. Rhodes, of Hamilton. <lb/>
N. C, was best and Miss <lb/>
Eva K. sister the <lb/>
bride, was maid of honor. Lit- <lb/>
Miss Letha K. Fir. of <lb/>
Pa., the bride, <lb/>
was flower girl. Messrs, Harry <lb/>
L. Mock, Lindsay Walter <lb/>
Edwards and <lb/>
were <lb/>
The bride was attired in a <lb/>
white satin c trim- <lb/>
med with pearls fringe and <lb/>
carried bridal rises and of <lb/>
the valley. The bridesmaids wore <lb/>
exquisite pink Empire gowns, <lb/>
trimmed with crystals and wore <lb/>
large pink and black hats. Little <lb/>
Miss Letha Fair wore a beautiful <lb/>
pink dress and hat and carried a <lb/>
basket of pink carnations Lo- <lb/>
wedding was <lb/>
b Miss Mary El <lb/>
Padgett <lb/>
Q a number of relatives <lb/>
and friends were present from <lb/>
out of town. After the <lb/>
a reception was at <lb/>
the bride's horn, after which <lb/>
the bridal left on tin <lb/>
train for Washington, D. C, and <lb/>
Virginia on an extended <lb/>
wedding trip. They will reside <lb/>
at Greenville. N C. Their may <lb/>
relatives and friends <lb/>
a long, happy and prosperous <lb/>
POWELL G TS Y A S. <lb/>
Compromise Verdict of Degree <lb/>
la the Fames Case. <lb/>
ton, N. C. June <lb/>
The if State of North Caro- <lb/>
E. E. Powell, for the <lb/>
killing of Chief of Charles <lb/>
W. Dunn, of Scotland Neck on <lb/>
March lust, care to an abrupt <lb/>
this when -x- <lb/>
Charles B Aycock. of <lb/>
counsel for the defendant, an- <lb/>
that after careful con- <lb/>
by and consul- <lb/>
with the family of the de- <lb/>
the defense had decided <lb/>
to accept a verdict of murder in <lb/>
second degree and await the <lb/>
judgment f the curt. Solid- <lb/>
or. John H. Kerr stated that the <lb/>
state was Willing to pt this <lb/>
verdict. <lb/>
Judge G. W. Ward who is <lb/>
presiding, stated that ho approved <lb/>
saying <lb/>
his opinion that the <lb/>
pi s <lb/>
Breaks an Arm <lb/>
Mr. L- H. <lb/>
Willie Fleming and Viola bride <lb/>
popular <lb/>
James Jones and Ida E, Rives, j many <lb/>
A Bright Girl. Th <lb/>
The other day th editor was <lb/>
merchant of Portsmouth, and serious and <lb/>
. <lb/>
bet <lb/>
tin people of in making known <lb/>
the i; rial meeting purposes <lb/>
church, Gr M- C. i w <lb/>
j. the goodness of their <lb/>
Id r t ; u I i W B <lb/>
of th <lb/>
s, R fl o <lb/>
tor aid Ayden freewill <lb/>
so kindly lent to <lb/>
the use of <lb/>
notices, etc., and; <lb/>
Whereas, in its <lb/>
visiting horn i where there <lb/>
Is a cute little girl of about four <lb/>
The statistical woo <lb/>
report that Hi re were d. <lb/>
present, representing <lb/>
i v a <lb/>
it <lb/>
one of Greenville's very j this morning. He v a A t <lb/>
They re- th river <lb/>
, . j bridal of gasoline boat, v . <lb/>
to the m i <lb/>
. .-, A. n the <lb/>
. t <lb/>
Greenville, pa bride I He. r. <lb/>
with . but the good <lb/>
f go with <lb/>
the action <lb/>
i hat it as <lb/>
jury v. <lb/>
of <lb/>
d a <lb/>
and <lb/>
en f <lb/>
ii <lb/>
take to<lb/>
mi <lb/>
ii; <lb/>
I, the<lb/>
me<lb/>
as <lb/>
six thirteen <lb/>
and fourteen <lb/>
Alter a few congratulatory <lb/>
remarks president an I <lb/>
secretary the ass <lb/>
ed with prayer by B. F- have us bettered on<lb/>
of pretty curly auburn hair. <lb/>
little miss took a look over our <lb/>
way. and turning to her moth r. <lb/>
said look at <lb/>
that man's toying, with <lb/>
one of her own pretty by <lb/>
comparison. It was a July <lb/>
compliment, even If she dosing on <lb/>
the hair might well <lb/>
holiday.<lb/>
Banks WOK <lb/>
Bank of <lb/>
Greenville Ba St Co.<lb/>
ville, will nil ob of <lb/>
and will h <lb/>
Dr. Com. <lb/>
it-. H, alt will be iii <lb/>
Heat E July <lb/>
id y d rut <lb/>
for the of rig <lb/>
diseases of the <lb/>
B. <lb/>
c i ; i o a r. <lb/>
The es <lb/>
, . . I i .-. <lb/>
. ;, d thirty <lb/>
. on. <lb/>
, i i n <lb/>
, . but us <lb/>
at this tin <lb/>
; , <lb/>
,,, the i the <lb/>
pi . On of tn sud <lb/>
, illness of a juror y <lb/>
i n c m j I snort <lb/>
until this- <lb/>
before I <lb/>
eye fitting morning. m ill had <lb/>
considerable t bring <lb/>
it <lb/>
The . <lb/>
Z a Our , am If you M. to <lb/>
com f.<lb/>
. ad Oaf <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>