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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
Have You Forgot <lb/>
I AM AN <lb/>
UP-TO LINK OF <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Shoes <lb/>
Hats, Shirts, Pants, Hardware <lb/>
Tinware, <lb/>
AND A NUMBER OF THINGS <lb/>
WHICH I aH USABLE TO MENTION <lb/>
Come to see me for your next Barrel of Flour or <lb/>
Yours to please- <lb/>
B. hue.<lb/>
ROBERTS <lb/>
None genuine <lb/>
Red Cross is on label <lb/>
take a Substitute <lb/>
CHALLENGE THE WOULD <lb/>
TO PRODUCE EQUAL OF <lb/>
for Chills. Fevers, <lb/>
Night Sweats Grippe. and <lb/>
all forms of <lb/>
WAIT TO Dig. <lb/>
SPEND CENTS AND M CURED I <lb/>
CURES FUNDS I <lb/>
TRY IT. NO CURE NO PER <lb/>
MM, DELIGHTFUL TO <lb/>
HAS <lb/>
AFTER TWO YEARS HAVE BEEN PAID THE <lb/>
in on u in <lb/>
OF NEWARK. N. J., YOUR <lb/>
Loan Value. <lb/>
Cash Value, <lb/>
S. Paid up Insurance, <lb/>
Extended that works automatically, <lb/>
Is Non , . ., <lb/>
ti Will be reinstated if arrears be paid mourn while you <lb/>
are living, or within three year after lapse, upon evidence <lb/>
of and payment of arrears with interest. <lb/>
A after second No Restrictions. <lb/>
Dividends are payable at the beginning of the second an. . i <lb/>
succeeding year, provided the premium for the current year pant. <lb/>
They may be To reduce Premiums, or <lb/>
To Increase the Insurance, or <lb/>
To make policy payable as an the lifetime <lb/>
of insured. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
r . -II . <lb/>
Considering importance of <lb/>
the weather as a topic of <lb/>
and also as a source of per- <lb/>
comfort or distress H <lb/>
of the of <lb/>
on it Is more than <lb/>
strange that in the of <lb/>
so little should have <lb/>
to uncover its many <lb/>
Men with bulging brows have <lb/>
traveled of miles, at a <lb/>
cost of of dollars, to <lb/>
earth the decayed tooth of an ex- <lb/>
creature of <lb/>
name, tad have devoted years to <lb/>
the study whether the extinct <lb/>
creature tailless, but they <lb/>
have done very little the way of <lb/>
weather feet that <lb/>
no scientist will Commit himself <lb/>
positively on the question whether <lb/>
US equinoctial storms. As <lb/>
n science knows the <lb/>
i whither it and its <lb/>
ways arc capricious. The <lb/>
scientists did not have <lb/>
assurance enough to advise the <lb/>
late Rush <lb/>
spending large for <lb/>
and bombs with which to produce <lb/>
i raid Texas. <lb/>
It la particular exasperating <lb/>
that science cannot tell us why the <lb/>
heat of this July has beta <lb/>
so much bolter and so much more <lb/>
enduring than any hot spell re <lb/>
in history. There must <lb/>
a reason why this summer <lb/>
of the Century wave <lb/>
alter w of fiery air should <lb/>
sweep across this Continent, across <lb/>
Europe far away into Russia and <lb/>
Asia. There is only one poor sat- <lb/>
the Those <lb/>
us who shall survive the heat <lb/>
laud slid retain our memories may <lb/>
j become old inhabitants a a story <lb/>
of summer heat to tell that <lb/>
be matched by any experience of <lb/>
the succeeding <lb/>
Record. <lb/>
Tc produce the best results <lb/>
in fruit, vegetable or grain, the <lb/>
fertilizer used must contain <lb/>
enough Potash, <lb/>
sec our pamphlets. We <lb/>
send them free. <lb/>
works, <lb/>
l, <lb/>
L. H. Pander, <lb/>
V. <lb/>
Tobacco Flues. Tin Hoofing, am. <lb/>
Expert Gunsmith employed. All <lb/>
kinds and Locksmith work <lb/>
first class. of gnus a <lb/>
specialty. <lb/>
Agent for The Oliver Typewriter <lb/>
Paper Hanging. <lb/>
I prepared to fill orders for Wall Pa <lb/>
per and can hang it if Full <lb/>
sample beat to <lb/>
I am also prepared do Brick <lb/>
and abort notice <lb/>
Orders wall paper left at the store of <lb/>
Mrs. M D. will receive prompt at- <lb/>
J H. BUNN, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Trinity College <lb/>
one hundred twenty-five <lb/>
and undergraduate courses of study. <lb/>
three in academic courses. <lb/>
laboratories equipped with modern <lb/>
apparatus. Large library Best <lb/>
gymnasium athletic appointment, in <lb/>
state. Scholarships ant <lb/>
Attendance within the <lb/>
past tens very low. The <lb/>
best college the one that a <lb/>
the host advantages, for <lb/>
Durham, N. <lb/>
IN 1806. <lb/>
J. W. PERRY CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Factors and handlers of <lb/>
Bagging, Ties Bags. <lb/>
and shipments <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE <lb/>
On Abroad Much. <lb/>
Greenville, K. C.<lb/>
Three Times The Vital <lb/>
OTHER <lb/>
EASIER. <lb/>
ONE THIRD FA <lb/>
all <lb/>
ft <lb/>
Manufacturing Company, <lb/>
i, <lb/>
for sale l <lb/>
tin <lb/>
It is noticeable lately that near <lb/>
or all of the professors recently <lb/>
elected to chairs in North Carolina <lb/>
institutions are from other States <lb/>
or other countries. Why is this <lb/>
we suppose, I lie North <lb/>
Carolinians are not qualified t- <lb/>
till the That is not a g <lb/>
of the of <lb/>
North Carolina alumni. It is all <lb/>
right to go where you can get the <lb/>
best. Hut other things equal <lb/>
is not fair and proper the <lb/>
native educated men a <lb/>
first showing By this tune it <lb/>
would really look as if North Car- <lb/>
boded nested enough <lb/>
teachers to meet the demand. <lb/>
TI. Hal <lb/>
Is mil we lake It, for there <lb/>
would he neither wisdom nor <lb/>
in ignoring thoroughly coin <lb/>
t professors. So is high <lb/>
time ii were <lb/>
are fully . I <lb/>
teach in me <lb/>
in college, and the <lb/>
university. <lb/>
to lie able accomplish <lb/>
But until end is reach- <lb/>
ed let other States furnish teach- <lb/>
Let there be no narrowness <lb/>
or Mes- <lb/>
Where Is II <lb/>
hear now then of <lb/>
but it is next to <lb/>
possible to come in contact with it, <lb/>
especially you are a consumer <lb/>
have to buy any the follow- <lb/>
Just read and <lb/>
for <lb/>
It require M per cent more <lb/>
Wheat to buy a stove than it did in <lb/>
It requires bushels more com <lb/>
to buy a wagon than 1890. <lb/>
It requires per cent, more <lb/>
corn or wheat lo buy a copper <lb/>
kettle than <lb/>
It twice much coin <lb/>
to buy a coil rope M in 1890. <lb/>
It requires to per more <lb/>
to buy a plow than in <lb/>
t requires TS per neat, more <lb/>
grain to buy a hoe. a rake or a <lb/>
shovel than 1890. <lb/>
A set of common wheels that <lb/>
cost now cost <lb/>
The price cultivators <lb/>
farm has gone up pro- <lb/>
barbed wire costs <lb/>
from to more <lb/>
than in 1880. <lb/>
It requires per cent, more <lb/>
corn or cotton to buy a pound of <lb/>
sugar than <lb/>
have to pay per cent, <lb/>
more for glass that In 1890. <lb/>
Perry Go., <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANTS, <lb/>
Norfolk. Va. <lb/>
Hear you Nova <lb/>
Land Plaster, the following prices <lb/>
for June and July <lb/>
tons <lb/>
Car Load Lot. 6-26 <lb/>
ton Iota 5.00 <lb/>
tea Ma <lb/>
, Please us have your order soon as <lb/>
possible, so as to avoid in Shipment. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
J. W. PERRY COMPANY. <lb/>
Three One for <lb/>
. Times <lb/>
RICHMOND, VA., <lb/>
Now Only SO Cents a Year, <lb/>
and includes absolutely free The <lb/>
Paragon Monthly, New The <lb/>
Farm Journal, Philadelphia. <lb/>
THE SUNDAY <lb/>
Including Farm Journal and Para- <lb/>
Monthly, now only per <lb/>
year; per mouth by mail. <lb/>
Address THE TIMES, <lb/>
Richmond, Va. <lb/>
KB SERVICE <lb/>
Steamer leave Washing- <lb/>
ton daily at A. M. for Green- <lb/>
ville, leave Greenville daily at <lb/>
M. for Washington. <lb/>
Steamer <lb/>
Greenville Mondays. Wednesday <lb/>
Fridays it A. M. <lb/>
leave Tarboro for Greenville <lb/>
Tuesdays, and Saturdays <lb/>
at A. M. carries height only. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington <lb/>
Steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore, <lb/>
New York and <lb/>
ton, and for all points for the West <lb/>
with railroads at Norfolk. <lb/>
Shippers should order freight by <lb/>
the Old Dominion Co. from <lb/>
New York; Clyde Line from <lb/>
Bay Line from Baltimore, <lb/>
and Line from <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. SON, <lb/>
Washington, N. C <lb/>
CHERRY, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Practical Education <lb/>
arts, and cotton manufacturing; a <lb/>
Combination Of theory and practice, <lb/>
of study and manual training. <lb/>
a roar. Total expense, w- <lb/>
eluding clothing and board. <lb/>
Thirty teachers, MM Next <lb/>
session begins September <lb/>
For address T <lb/>
President <lb/>
IV <lb/>
AGRICULTURE MECHANIC ARTS, <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Having duly before the <lb/>
. Court I a of Pitt county in <lb/>
of the MUMS of Jacob Drunks, <lb/>
notice Is hereby given to all persons <lb/>
Indebted In the estate to make immediate <lb/>
lo the undersigned. And all per- <lb/>
having claims against said estate are <lb/>
to present the same to the under- <lb/>
signed for payment on or before 4th <lb/>
of June. 1902, or this notice will be <lb/>
in bur of recovery. This June 4th. MM. <lb/>
L. J. CHAPMAN, <lb/>
Administrator of Jacob Brooks. <lb/>
UNIVERSITY <lb/>
of North Carolina. <lb/>
THE THE STATES <lb/>
SYSTEM. <lb/>
or D- B. of state, t <lb/>
Nov. 1900. <lb/>
have found a <lb/>
remedy and aid for my teething <lb/>
children. When bay was a <lb/>
teething child, every day warn- <lb/>
d us we would lose him. <lb/>
happened upon and <lb/>
once it to him, and his <lb/>
was marked in hours, <lb/>
day on he recuperated. I have <lb/>
kept it and used it since with <lb/>
children, and have taken in <lb/>
its lo all mothers of young <lb/>
children. I it invaluable c veil after <lb/>
the was <lb/>
A nice buy ride was given las. <lb/>
nigh by young men honor <lb/>
of His. who is <lb/>
visiting Hiss Gladys Mitchell. <lb/>
Bile the wen- <lb/>
a part of their but <lb/>
ride were served. <lb/>
Mi.-i and Bessie Mitchell <lb/>
were the <lb/>
Press, 24th. <lb/>
ACADEMIC <lb/>
LAW, PHARMACY <lb/>
Eighty-live scholarships. Free <lb/>
tuition to teachers and <lb/>
sons. Loam for the needy. <lb/>
Students. Instructors. <lb/>
New Dormitories, Water Works, <lb/>
Central Heating system. <lb/>
spent in Improvements In woo <lb/>
and 1901. Fall term begins <lb/>
1901. Address, <lb/>
H. P. Pres., <lb/>
Chapel Hill, <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
By vim-of a decree of the Superior <lb/>
Court of c case of Jesse <lb/>
of Teel vs Jacky <lb/>
Teel, petition to sell land the <lb/>
administrator will sell for cash <lb/>
before the Court House door in Greenville <lb/>
on Monday August 1901 the following <lb/>
described parcel of land, situated in the <lb/>
town of Greenville on the West side <lb/>
being front and feet <lb/>
known as a rt of the old Livery <lb/>
Hotel said lot <lb/>
accurately described in s deed from H. V <lb/>
Daniel to Teel in Book <lb/>
II. page M, containing t of acre more <lb/>
less. CANNON, <lb/>
Atty. <lb/>
, THE GREAT <lb/>
If you have sour stomach, indigestion, bad <lb/>
liver, heartburn, kidney troubles, backache, <lb/>
of appetite. Insomnia, tack of energy, bad blood, blotched or muddy akin. <lb/>
o. any and disorders which tell the story of bad and an <lb/>
impaired Will Cure You. <lb/>
It will out the stimulate the liver and kidneys, strengthen <lb/>
lb. mucous membranes the stomach, purify your blood and put you <lb/>
your again. Your appetite will return, your bowel, move <lb/>
your liver and kidney, cease to trouble you, your skin will and <lb/>
freshen you will feel the old time energy buoyancy. <lb/>
Mai lo <lb/>
ate ti ti. <lb/>
pals or lo.,., <lb/>
and wakes . <lb/>
site U Ml at <lb/>
STAY <lb/>
A that <lb/>
ti.-c re ml and lung wad. <lb/>
. The greatest <lb/>
known, the <lb/>
if hinting <lb/>
idler trial. Curia per . <lb/>
of the Mated. <lb/>
ill bottle. <lb/>
Sold by BRYAN <lb/>
Jr <lb/>
For Sale by <lb/>
I , t. d la <lb/>
of <lb/>
and c <lb/>
CO . Ml, N V . i<lb/>
Ai <lb/>
the i <lb/>
i v m <lb/>
lo Um. <lb/>
ST. <lb/>
The Telegraph <lb/>
this <lb/>
for Spanish- <lb/>
Ann war pensions <lb/>
by the <lb/>
growth I In- civil war pension <lb/>
list, Ibis <lb/>
In live years will <lb/>
expanded <lb/>
Hut it likely such expansion <lb/>
will never again lie permitted At <lb/>
any rule it is encouraging to hear <lb/>
OUt of the only <lb/>
so far been allowed, 7,0.111 <lb/>
been rejected, and me <lb/>
still to be <lb/>
So Tired <lb/>
It may be from overwork, but <lb/>
the chances are from In- <lb/>
active LIVER. <lb/>
With a well conducted LIVER <lb/>
one can do mountains of labor <lb/>
without fatigue. <lb/>
It adds a hundred per cent to <lb/>
ones earning capacity. <lb/>
It can be kept in healthful action <lb/>
by, and only by <lb/>
Tin's Pills <lb/>
TAKE <lb/>
Making Readable. <lb/>
The managing head of a <lb/>
concern Jersey City which <lb/>
advertises i In the news- <lb/>
papers has people are <lb/>
taking to my just <lb/>
et use they in. There is <lb/>
n i mistaking the fact that people <lb/>
lead <lb/>
i man who is thorough- <lb/>
i business but <lb/>
Can tell lb interesting facts <lb/>
about it <lb/>
to <lb/>
insurable Public. <lb/>
AGENTS <lb/>
Mr. John Ag. i <lb/>
Carolina and that c- <lb/>
Ki p Company, <lb/>
THE Ml <lb/>
Life . <lb/>
to lit large <lb/>
holders, and In the <lb/>
of tint com- <lb/>
will now Resume m this <lb/>
and from this date will issue lit <lb/>
splendid and policies, to all de- <lb/>
U I insurance in <lb/>
life insurance world. <lb/>
In not <lb/>
yet completed <lb/>
JOHN C. <lb/>
State Agent, N. C. <lb/>
Assets <lb/>
Paid policy <lb/>
Live, reliable energetic wanted at <lb/>
to for <lb/>
Old mutual Benefit, <lb/>
Pitt county, in the <lb/>
court.<lb/>
J. B. administrator i <lb/>
f K. Yellow-Icy, J. Cherry, I <lb/>
William <lb/>
J. II. Executor of <lb/>
II. A. and <lb/>
B. individually. <lb/>
The J B <lb/>
and as administrator of <lb/>
H A will <lb/>
take notice that w action above <lb/>
mint. <lb/>
of Pitt county, that tract of land <lb/>
known n Alpine, of Which E c <lb/>
died aid possessed, told by <lb/>
of the court to pay a debt due plaintiff <lb/>
said and also to restrain <lb/>
II cherry making sale find laud <lb/>
II and <lb/>
for other relief demanded in the complaint <lb/>
mil will further take <lb/>
notice that lie la lo appear at the <lb/>
next term court county <lb/>
to be held mi the 1st Monday In September, <lb/>
inn house county In <lb/>
tin. answer or demur to <lb/>
the I or the plaintiff <lb/>
will apply tn court for lbs relief de- <lb/>
in said <lb/>
This day of. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
data court <lb/>
N. O. <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and flea always <lb/>
on baa i <lb/>
Fresh goods kept ea <lb/>
band. produce and <lb/>
sold. A trial will convince yon. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
BRO., <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Whichard, N. C. <lb/>
The Stock complete in de <lb/>
payment and prices as low as the <lb/>
lowest. Highest market prices <lb/>
paid for country produce. <lb/>
J. E. <lb/>
------DEALER IN------ <lb/>
MS <lb/>
A GENERAL LINE OF <lb/>
VIA <lb/>
. Of. <lb/>
Hardware. <lb/>
TO SEE ME. <lb/>
J. R. COREY. <lb/>
1538, <lb/>
Female. College <lb/>
Greensboro, N. C. <lb/>
Literary Courses. <lb/>
Schools Art <lb/>
lion. Literary Course and all <lb/>
Living Expenses 9200.00 pet Year. <lb/>
Fall Session begins September <lb/>
1901. on <lb/>
cation. DEED PEACOCK, <lb/>
President. <lb/>
Wholesale Grocer <lb/>
Furniture Dealer. Cash paid for <lb/>
Bides. Fur, Bead, Oil Bar <lb/>
Turkeys. Egg, etc. Bed <lb/>
steads, Mattresses, Oak Suits, Ba- <lb/>
by Carriages, Go Carts, Parlor <lb/>
suits, Tables, Lounges, Safes, P. <lb/>
and Gail Ax <lb/>
Moat Tobacco, Key West Cheroots, <lb/>
American Beauty Can <lb/>
Cherries, Peaches, Apples, <lb/>
Pine Apples, Syrup, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour, Sugar, Coffee, Meat, Soap, <lb/>
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Seed Meal Hulls, Gar <lb/>
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples, Nut, <lb/>
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Pi Cm rents, Raisins, Glass <lb/>
and Ware, and Wooden <lb/>
Ware, Cakes Macs <lb/>
Best Stand- <lb/>
Sewing Machines, and nu- <lb/>
other goods. Duality <lb/>
Quantity- Cheep mi rash. Com <lb/>
to tee me. <lb/>
Phone Of. <lb/>
in <lb/>
Court. <lb/>
I f u, <lb/>
By of an to <lb/>
I Superior Court <lb/>
Pitt county, in the of W. II. James <lb/>
and Joseph James J. W. Carson, <lb/>
will, on Monday the fifth day of August, <lb/>
at It o'clock m. at the court BOOM <lb/>
door in Greenville, sell to the highest bid- <lb/>
for cash, lo satisfy Execution, all <lb/>
right title and interest which the <lb/>
It. J. Carson defendant has the fol- <lb/>
lowing described real lo One <lb/>
lot of land In the town of Bethel, N. <lb/>
C, bounded as follows; at the <lb/>
corner of Main and Tarboro streets <lb/>
course about eighty feet to <lb/>
lino, a Southerly course <lb/>
thirty feet a Westerly <lb/>
with Tarboro St. thence with Main <lb/>
St. a Northerly course to the beginning, <lb/>
containing , on acre which <lb/>
to It. J. W. Carson by Harry <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Buyers and Brokers in <lb/>
Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
ions. Private Wires to New York, <lb/>
Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
Skinner. March 1892, Book Q. <lb/>
page <lb/>
one other tract situated in the town <lb/>
of on I lie East side of James St. <lb/>
bounded as follows on Hie North by <lb/>
East by W. <lb/>
Carson on South by Malissa Ann Bryan <lb/>
and on the West by James and <lb/>
the let whereon H. J. W. formerly <lb/>
resided, a part of the laud conveyed <lb/>
It, J. W. by It. by <lb/>
Deed in Book A. pages and <lb/>
of Put county. <lb/>
Also, all the portion of of land <lb/>
which bf <lb/>
wife, Maggie. In It- J. . by Deed <lb/>
dated and in <lb/>
page of the Pill <lb/>
Pitt <lb/>
much thereof as as- <lb/>
It. J. W. as a <lb/>
stead on rd day of July, I SOL <lb/>
The homestead acres and the <lb/>
will be about <lb/>
lit acres. is to lb <lb/>
for more <lb/>
In allotted. <lb/>
This Mb day of July, 1901. <lb/>
O, W. <lb/>
of Pitt <lb/>
By L. W. <lb/>
The Commoner <lb/>
ISSUED WEEKLY. <lb/>
WILLIAM J. BRYAN, <lb/>
Editor Publisher, <lb/>
Lincoln, <lb/>
TERMS- Payable in Advance. . <lb/>
One Year Six Mouths <lb/>
Three Mouths Sue, Sing. Copy <lb/>
No traveling canvassers cm- <lb/>
ployed. taken at <lb/>
office. The Semi- <lb/>
Weekly <lb/>
will be sent together <lb/>
one year for or The Daily <lb/>
Reflector and <lb/>
one year for 93.50 payable In ad- <lb/>
PATENT <lb/>
ad <lb/>
A CO. <lb/>
Faisal WASH i<lb/>
Tice <lb/>
-a- <lb/>
FOR- <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
D. J. EDITOR <lb/>
TRUTH II TO <lb/>
PER IT <lb/>
VOL. XX. <lb/>
PITT COUNTY, FRIDAY, AUGUST <lb/>
NO <lb/>
Twice a M <lb/>
-AT- <lb/>
II<lb/>
THE RE UNION. <lb/>
customer who takes of OUR BARGAINS, <lb/>
keeps our competitors guessing it is we sell so cheap. <lb/>
OUR WITH HIGH PRICES. <lb/>
W. T. LEE CO. <lb/>
Exposition, <lb/>
I inn to about Am- <lb/>
visitors with board and loom all modern conveniences. <lb/>
Fine of Niagara River and from the house. <lb/>
Niagara car passes door every minutes. SO <lb/>
walk tn exposition ground Take Niagara street car to <lb/>
Auburn Avenue. Moderate rates. All will <lb/>
receive prompt <lb/>
JOSEPH A. MOORE, <lb/>
1285 Niagara Street, Buffalo, N. Y. <lb/>
FIRST CLASS MILITARY SCHOOL IN EASTERN N. <lb/>
School, <lb/>
LaGrange, N. C. <lb/>
MILITARY, LITERARY, SCIENTIFIC COMMERCIAL SCHOOL. <lb/>
Boarding Pupils, Twelve Counties two States <lb/>
represented past session. School Buildings. Barracks <lb/>
for Sixty Cadets. <lb/>
The school aims to by developing latent <lb/>
and power. The individual needs of the students are considered. <lb/>
The literary training the manly traits, gives a sound body <lb/>
clear mind. Class room methods cultivate <lb/>
and mental grasp. Athletics encouraged. <lb/>
Expenses per half term, including board, tuition, fuel, lights and <lb/>
room, 955.00. No incidentals. School September 1901. <lb/>
Write for <lb/>
J- E. DEBNAM, Suit. <lb/>
Cash is King. <lb/>
For cash we will make the sharpest, swiftest most <lb/>
sweeping, price cutting ever known in mid summer. <lb/>
the<lb/>
Headquarters North Di- <lb/>
vision, United Confederate Vet- <lb/>
Durham, N. , July <lb/>
1901. <lb/>
General Orders, No. <lb/>
Paragraph A of the <lb/>
North Carolina Division of the <lb/>
United Confederate Veterans will <lb/>
be held at beginning <lb/>
the afternoon of Wednesday, <lb/>
the 14th day of August, 1901, <lb/>
closing the at which will <lb/>
be held election of <lb/>
vision brigade commanders, <lb/>
a general and four <lb/>
brigadier generals. Only <lb/>
gates from camps which are report- <lb/>
ed by Adjutant <lb/>
as having paid their dues will be <lb/>
received. The of camp <lb/>
is especially called to <lb/>
this, the ; will at see that <lb/>
their camp dues arc paid, as re- <lb/>
quired by the constitution of the <lb/>
United Confederate Veterans. <lb/>
Paragraph Governor Aycock <lb/>
has kindly use of the <lb/>
tents and camp the <lb/>
which <lb/>
will about one thous <lb/>
tent is eight <lb/>
feet square and has a plank floor <lb/>
and two blankets, there are <lb/>
cooking stove utensils <lb/>
Cots may be for the <lb/>
occasion by those desiring them. <lb/>
There arc a number of hotels and <lb/>
boarding houses which offer re- <lb/>
rates for those who may not <lb/>
wish to occupy quarters the <lb/>
camp. Each or delegation, <lb/>
must provide its either by <lb/>
carrying them or them <lb/>
camp. <lb/>
Paragraph All <lb/>
soldiers North Carolina of <lb/>
good are cordially invited <lb/>
to this whether or not <lb/>
they are members of any camp or <lb/>
association. order, however, <lb/>
to exclude unworthy persons, <lb/>
every veteran is required to carry <lb/>
with him a certificate from his <lb/>
camp commander, or from <lb/>
clerk of the Superior Court of his <lb/>
county which there is no camp, <lb/>
certifying that he is a veteran <lb/>
good standing. A strict <lb/>
with this will be required. <lb/>
No veterans without this <lb/>
will be admitted In the privileges <lb/>
of the tamp. <lb/>
Paragraph All the railroads <lb/>
the State have kindly <lb/>
rate of one cent a mile in each <lb/>
for this occasion. Tickets <lb/>
will be on sale the 12th, <lb/>
days of August are <lb/>
good for one continuous passage <lb/>
until the The agent at any <lb/>
station will give the exact price of <lb/>
a ticket from his station on <lb/>
cation. This rate is to all <lb/>
visitors as well us to the <lb/>
Paragraph A lull attendance i <lb/>
is urged us many <lb/>
practicable arc requested to <lb/>
wear their uniforms. This may lie <lb/>
the last to a <lb/>
reunion meet their old com- <lb/>
so tally up <lb/>
All State papers will please pub- <lb/>
By order of J. S. Cum. <lb/>
II. A. London, <lb/>
Adj. Chief of <lb/>
TO <lb/>
THE PEOPLE, AND CUSTOMERS OF <lb/>
PITT AND ADJOINING COUNTIES. <lb/>
We arc still the forefront of the <lb/>
We offer you the best selected line of <lb/>
race after your <lb/>
General Merchandise <lb/>
to be found in any store Pitt County. Well bought choice <lb/>
selections, the creations of the best manufacturers of America <lb/>
Europe. Seasonable all the year round. Spring. Summer <lb/>
and Winter. We are work for yours and our mutual ad <lb/>
vantage. It is our pleasure to show you what you want and to <lb/>
sell you if We oiler you the very beat service, polite <lb/>
attention, and the most liberal terms consistent with a well <lb/>
established business built up strictly on its own merits. <lb/>
When you come to market you will not do yourself j lift ice <lb/>
if you do not see our immense stock before buying elsewhere. <lb/>
us the following lines of general merchandise. <lb/>
Goods and Notions, <lb/>
Bats and Caps. Silks and Sat ins, <lb/>
Jackets and Capes, Carpets, and Oil cloths. <lb/>
Shoes. <lb/>
Men's, Women's and Children's and <lb/>
Harness, Bone Blankets Dusters. <lb/>
Groceries. <lb/>
Flour, Meat, Sugar Coffee, Seed ts, <lb/>
Hardware, <lb/>
Plows, Castings Plow Fixtures, Nails and Rope. <lb/>
Furniture. <lb/>
Headquarters for Furniture that line. <lb/>
We buy strictly for Cash, but sell for Either Cash or on Approved <lb/>
Credit Our motto is Honesty, Merit and Square I baling. <lb/>
Your Friends, <lb/>
Just Received. <lb/>
A large line of Baby Caps, <lb/>
Belts, Laces and <lb/>
Embroideries. Ladies Col- <lb/>
and Cuffs all Sizes <lb/>
I HAVE THE LARGEST AND HANDSOMEST LINE OF <lb/>
BROUGHT <lb/>
Mis, M. T. is in charge Of By millinery department and if <lb/>
but ire is not on hand one will lie trimmed to suit your <lb/>
tastes y. u wail. <lb/>
Hats, Bilks, Braids, Ornament-, Flowers, and everything <lb/>
n the milliners line. <lb/>
H. C. HOOKER. <lb/>
Stoves <lb/>
AYDEN NOTES. <lb/>
, July <lb/>
We have hot weather dusty <lb/>
streets. We would gladly welcome <lb/>
a shower. <lb/>
Long and Jennie <lb/>
of Hamilton, are visiting <lb/>
Mis. Noble. <lb/>
Cos <lb/>
Misses and Clyde <lb/>
Minnie Cannon and Delia Smith <lb/>
came up from <lb/>
where they have attending <lb/>
the institute. <lb/>
E. V. and Eugene Cos went to <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
left ibis morning to <lb/>
visit his father, Tyson, near I <lb/>
came <lb/>
and for Greenville ibis morn- <lb/>
Hist Manning, of Grin- <lb/>
came down <lb/>
Saturday to spend <lb/>
Smith Hotel <lb/>
Miss who has <lb/>
been spending some ill Hyde <lb/>
county returned home Friday <lb/>
night. friends <lb/>
elate her again. <lb/>
John and <lb/>
were In town yesterday. <lb/>
Miss Ella Smith ibis morn- <lb/>
Ranges <lb/>
Pensions For Teachers. <lb/>
Three years ago public <lb/>
school teachers of Philadelphia <lb/>
undertook to organize a <lb/>
fund for the benefit of those of their <lb/>
who should by reason of <lb/>
advanced years or break down in <lb/>
health have lo give up work. <lb/>
They labored hard to make their <lb/>
movement but were <lb/>
ally compelled to admit its failure. <lb/>
in the day after this con- <lb/>
was made Mr. Lewis Elkin, <lb/>
of Philadelphia, died. A few days <lb/>
j later, when bis will was probated, <lb/>
it was that he had left <lb/>
the income of which was <lb/>
to De used to pay an annuity of <lb/>
lo every public school teach- <lb/>
Philadelphia who has taught <lb/>
loan and it need of support. <lb/>
This is -i noble benefaction and <lb/>
has endeared the memory- of Mr. <lb/>
tea large and very worthy <lb/>
class of and women. We <lb/>
say women and men, for, <lb/>
Philadelphia, as in every other <lb/>
of this country, a large major- <lb/>
of the public school teachers <lb/>
arc women. <lb/>
The bequest will <lb/>
i pro for many of these <lb/>
i Lev i in DO longer cam a living at <lb/>
lo spend some lime With <lb/>
lives near Falkland. Al I percent it will bring a <lb/>
. . . revenue of a year, which <lb/>
is cut just half on all Lawns, Dimities, Silks, <lb/>
White Goods, Hosiery, Laces, Hamburgs, <lb/>
Underwear, Slippers, Um- <lb/>
and all goods. These <lb/>
goods must be pushed out to make room <lb/>
fall goods. <lb/>
KICKS WILKINSON. <lb/>
If you want stoves or ranges constructed upon <lb/>
principles, which are economical, durable, <lb/>
as as beautiful and artistic, <lb/>
for the <lb/>
May s Court. <lb/>
Mayor W. <lb/>
of the following his <lb/>
since last <lb/>
James A. drunk <lb/>
disorderly and vulgar <lb/>
profane language, lined and <lb/>
93.30. <lb/>
Francis Carter Nora Smith, <lb/>
would give an annuity of to <lb/>
to teachers. Mr. is en <lb/>
titled to lie numbered among the <lb/>
great of our time. <lb/>
Atlanta Journal. <lb/>
number of Charlotte people <lb/>
ere recently taken by a fake <lb/>
young woman of Parsons Id <lb/>
dropped a dime down <lb/>
back of u strange young man when <lb/>
she sought to put it the <lb/>
box church last <lb/>
says The Kansas City Journal. <lb/>
She blushed and apologized, an <lb/>
acquaintance was formed, and in <lb/>
two weeks pair were married. <lb/>
And ibis proves exactly what we <lb/>
have always a woman <lb/>
will go to any length in older lo <lb/>
recover lost <lb/>
disorderly conduct gentleman who proposed to -pull <lb/>
profane . a bone racing event in that <lb/>
penny and each, town. When the fraud d.- <lb/>
Pat White and T. Williams, the take promoter quietly <lb/>
riotous and disorderly and T <lb/>
dry people several dollars to the <lb/>
bad, This moved the bright young <lb/>
using vulgar profane language <lb/>
using deadly weapons were <lb/>
bound over lo September term <lb/>
White, Tom Williams and <lb/>
John W. Alexander, affray. W <lb/>
llama not guilty. White and <lb/>
Alexander lined and cost- <lb/>
thing encouragement in <lb/>
a similar venture. This fact can- <lb/>
trade mark, which is shown upon every genuine <lb/>
Stove or Hang.-, and do no deceived <lb/>
by worthless imitation, and <lb/>
lead all others in yearly and p <lb/>
awn of the Observer who does the <lb/>
of Idle col- <lb/>
to write much of lakes <lb/>
how people in towns are inclined <lb/>
lo run alter the fakir who comes <lb/>
I from elsewhere, home mail <lb/>
the Sonata and honest <lb/>
Sold Exclusively by <lb/>
Some workmen strike while the <lb/>
is hot and others goon strikes <lb/>
BAKER St HART. <lb/>
Building. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
William <lb/>
fined 93.50 and coals, <lb/>
. II, Wilson, assault, lined one <lb/>
penny and mats, <lb/>
The Reference <lb/>
for with all <lb/>
summer time tables. It also con <lb/>
a list of the books <lb/>
the railroad and steamboat lines <lb/>
describing summer resort., a most <lb/>
useful addition for prospective <lb/>
tourist.-, a. it enables to as <lb/>
at once where they can oh <lb/>
lain Information in regard who can put style and make a <lb/>
which they desire to visit, hotels, show of being some pumpkins, <lb/>
etc. is by Knick they will fall over each other to <lb/>
Park bite at his game. <lb/>
I Place, New York, price cents, murk. <lb/>
This fact <lb/>
emphasized much. <lb/>
Town and city generally <lb/>
think they're mighty smart and <lb/>
countrymen who gets <lb/>
fooled by peddlers and the <lb/>
numerous who lie in wait <lb/>
In, the unwary is a standing joke <lb/>
with them. Hut as a matter of <lb/>
fact these same city and town <lb/>
are dead easy for the fakir who <lb/>
knows his business. Let a fellow <lb/>
come along with a slick tongue,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018536_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
D. J. Ed. A Owner <lb/>
Entered at the Poet Office at <lb/>
Greenville. N. C, as Second-Class <lb/>
Mail Matter. <lb/>
1901. <lb/>
There is a wider difference be- <lb/>
tween and than <lb/>
appears on the <lb/>
Va., Free Press. <lb/>
But how about the difference <lb/>
between and <lb/>
The new battleship was <lb/>
successfully <lb/>
Saturday. We hope better <lb/>
things for this new craft than the <lb/>
fate that came to her namesake in <lb/>
Havana harbor. <lb/>
At Nags Head Friday Mr. Ed <lb/>
ward of and <lb/>
Hon. W. of Petersburg, <lb/>
were drowned while trying to <lb/>
a boy in the surf. Two other pea <lb/>
pie narrowly escaped being drown- <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
We are unable lo understand <lb/>
why people living adjacent to <lb/>
Greenville do not engage more <lb/>
largely in trucking business. This <lb/>
section is certainly as good for <lb/>
trucking as around Conetoe, <lb/>
el, Ayden and yet more <lb/>
of It is . raided around any of these <lb/>
other places than around <lb/>
ville. Vegetables melons can <lb/>
be profitably raised for market. <lb/>
Don't be a bum. Subscribe to <lb/>
and stop borrowing <lb/>
somebody paper to read. It <lb/>
is astonishing how people <lb/>
are willing to bum on others in this <lb/>
respect, yet those who contribute <lb/>
nothing to support a paper are <lb/>
ways the to complain when <lb/>
the paper is not as good as they <lb/>
think it ought to be. If every <lb/>
body in Greenville who ought to <lb/>
pay for reading <lb/>
would do so, we would lie able to <lb/>
give the press dispatches. <lb/>
NEW SCHEDULE. <lb/>
Early Trains Begin August <lb/>
LETTER. <lb/>
Special of <lb/>
Raleigh. N. July <lb/>
The furnace like weather <lb/>
of the past week has ban almost <lb/>
hot enough to put newspaper <lb/>
respondents out of it <lb/>
is against the law, you know, to <lb/>
write about the weather little <lb/>
else has <lb/>
The torridity of <lb/>
however, may bin had its <lb/>
upon the bleed end <lb/>
responsible for two the <lb/>
week, wherein two news <lb/>
men two preachers <lb/>
their upon each <lb/>
Brother Bailey of the Biblical <lb/>
To The Tobacco Farmers of Eastern Carolina. <lb/>
The tenth year of the tobacco market is rapidly <lb/>
approaching. To those of us who have watched the progress <lb/>
of this market since the day of September 1891, there have <lb/>
been many wonderful changes. The first year there was only- <lb/>
one warehouse and a single prize house, and there were sold <lb/>
Two Hundred Fifty Thousand Pounds of Tobacco. Grad- <lb/>
since then our sales have increased and now Greenville is <lb/>
numbered among the largest bright tobacco markets of the <lb/>
world. To do this it has required the expenditure of large <lb/>
urns of money, heavy risk and a great deal of hard work, <lb/>
and I am sure the public will bear me out when I assert that <lb/>
bare borne my full share of these responsibilities from the very <lb/>
I bare been directly connected with the market <lb/>
from the time the order was given for the load of timber <lb/>
with which to build the first warehouse and lam the only one <lb/>
in the warehouse business no that had any <lb/>
market in its early history. <lb/>
I this year have no one associated with me, as a <lb/>
partner in the warehouse business, but I hate carefully select- <lb/>
found it necessary, baled as my assistants men of capacity and in the to- <lb/>
says, to accuse Brother business. <lb/>
X. Presbyterian of-pub- again secured the services of Mr. J. J. Willis, of <lb/>
fishing and Va., one of the beet judges f tobacco in Virginia or <lb/>
of the Carolina. Mr. Willis has had wide experience in the <lb/>
warehouse business. He is clever, courteous and <lb/>
Mr. Crawford <lb/>
editor of Christian . <lb/>
. . and will gladly render our patrons any service he can. lie <lb/>
can arrange tobacco oil the floor to a better advantage than <lb/>
any man ever saw. <lb/>
Mr. H. A. an auctioneer of reputation and <lb/>
wide experience, has been secured to do the chin music art, <lb/>
lull he it understood that he is lost nowhere on the ware- <lb/>
house Horn and he stands ready to do anything that will ad- <lb/>
the interests of our patrons. <lb/>
Mr. A. A. , Uncle whom everybody knows <lb/>
who knows everybody, be obligingly on hand in every- <lb/>
thing and will do his part in making everybody comfortable. <lb/>
office force is clever, competent and will settle with <lb/>
you alter your tobacco is sold so quick, and satisfactorily <lb/>
that you will be sure to com- again. am determined that <lb/>
nothing shall be left undone that will advance the interests of <lb/>
my patrons. I shall hate good stables for foot team and clean <lb/>
comfortable quarter for you <lb/>
Now in conclusion let me say to that from the best <lb/>
that the church is in take up the information can gather We have very blight prospects for <lb/>
Crawford attack on Dr. good prices. Cure your tobacco grade it carefully handle <lb/>
make it the basis for an and then bring me one of your first loads and if hard <lb/>
work, good prices, kind, courteous treatment, and the best ac- <lb/>
count for anything, you will be numbered with <lb/>
our future patrons. grateful acknowledgment of all past <lb/>
favors. I am Sincere v your friend. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. Prop. Warehouse. <lb/>
was led lo demean <lb/>
very unwisely by sinking <lb/>
of Trinity College in the lace <lb/>
while the was sealed in a <lb/>
railroad the results. <lb/>
Kev. Dr. E. A. of Durham <lb/>
says, of an attempt nu the part <lb/>
Some of the <lb/>
to its president out of the <lb/>
if this sort of thing <lb/>
the less pious of us will <lb/>
and assist In <lb/>
the hose these two irate <lb/>
gentlemen of the doth. It's ii <lb/>
graceful, and it is now understood <lb/>
THE INSTITUTE <lb/>
What K an-l the Result <lb/>
Mm <lb/>
to <lb/>
is in receipt of <lb/>
a letter from Mr. E. Burden, <lb/>
of Transportation <lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Line, advising <lb/>
that and after <lb/>
5th, train No. will leave Well on <lb/>
at P. M., arriving at Green- <lb/>
ville at M., arrive at Kin <lb/>
at M. <lb/>
Train No. will past Green t ilia <lb/>
the same hour as at present, <lb/>
Train No. will be held at Kin- <lb/>
until after the arrival of the <lb/>
morning from and <lb/>
will reach Greenville <lb/>
These changes in the schedule <lb/>
will be of great advantage to <lb/>
Greenville and other points along <lb/>
this blanch the Coast Line. <lb/>
Passengers and mall can leave <lb/>
here at in the evening, cm- <lb/>
eat with the Atlantic North <lb/>
Carolina train that passes <lb/>
at p. in., and reach Goldsboro <lb/>
in time to connect with the fast <lb/>
tail the north and with the <lb/>
Southern train for and <lb/>
the west. <lb/>
Train No. reaching Greenville <lb/>
by will bring the Raleigh <lb/>
morning papers and will also <lb/>
people to come from <lb/>
and points west of there to Green- <lb/>
ville in the morning. <lb/>
The wants to con <lb/>
the people on these ad- <lb/>
vantages and also thank Mr. <lb/>
en and the officials of the Coast <lb/>
Line for giving to us. <lb/>
lion that <lb/>
which has ct ideally been going on <lb/>
among some of the c and <lb/>
men of the Methodist <lb/>
for several rears. the <lb/>
wound, brethren, and then canter. <lb/>
It <lb/>
BOOM I LI'S <lb/>
i, <lb/>
was announced on <lb/>
that Aycock bad effected <lb/>
an agreement with Superintendent <lb/>
and the Director of <lb/>
Central Hospital for the Ins me. at <lb/>
to not accommodate <lb/>
the future, and to require those <lb/>
now this Institution to clear out <lb/>
Where they <lb/>
can go is not stated. By <lb/>
action it i hoped to make room <lb/>
for a certain pauper lunatic <lb/>
Johnston has tired car <lb/>
for, and some other perhaps. <lb/>
Borne of the craziest <lb/>
dangerous men I ever heard of <lb/>
we're a majority <lb/>
oases good men who <lb/>
stand and arc Crazed it <lb/>
whenever dunk It, By pro <lb/>
treatment at these <lb/>
asylum- main of them have beta <lb/>
from destruction and death. <lb/>
arc now citizens Influence <lb/>
id ; <lb/>
But hereafter logo to <lb/>
the bow-wows, it <lb/>
seems, Governor Aycock <lb/>
has insisted on such a com and <lb/>
the Superintendent has consented <lb/>
to It, both bare mode a mistake, <lb/>
and a cruel and one. It the <lb/>
cause and origin of the id <lb/>
mentality of the insane are to count <lb/>
admission, it should be <lb/>
applied to ail alike. <lb/>
insane man whose mind can be re- <lb/>
stored, and that's the main object <lb/>
of these asylums; they are not <lb/>
prison houses was made so <lb/>
by liquor, makes him no less a <lb/>
proper object of the State's alien <lb/>
Bran the thieves and <lb/>
of the <lb/>
department receive medical care at <lb/>
of the State, The <lb/>
and nut a hospital is III-; place <lb/>
for the of I have <lb/>
named and to because they are <lb/>
J- <lb/>
Greenville, t. <lb/>
compelled lo work at night to <lb/>
up with their work. <lb/>
in <lb/>
. the dosing exercises of the <lb/>
lute last Friday night. They had <lb/>
a treat, too <lb/>
Mist Pearl <lb/>
who has visiting Mrs. Dr. <lb/>
B. T. the closing of the <lb/>
institute returned home Monday, <lb/>
. <lb/>
The A. i. Cox Mfg. Co. are <lb/>
making preparation to build a <lb/>
large annex to their already <lb/>
moth factory. The annex will be <lb/>
feet, two stories high. This <lb/>
will enable the company to more ,,. friends in <lb/>
readily handle the goods they have <lb/>
manufacture and in every way ,,, ., <lb/>
add to the convenience and com- <lb/>
placing and I who has ban <lb/>
The his parents returned to <lb/>
several second hand buggies hi with A. c. I., hut <lb/>
they will sell at a bargain. Call Monday. <lb/>
come <lb/>
many glad <lb/>
at once. <lb/>
The institute is now <lb/>
a thing of the past. All the teach- <lb/>
returned to their homes <lb/>
to <lb/>
learn that each and everyone of <lb/>
then expressed themselves as <lb/>
great pleased with their <lb/>
Its, W can fully attest <lb/>
our pie;, are of presence, for <lb/>
a nicer, more cultivated <lb/>
people never assembled than the <lb/>
teachers of Greene and Pitt <lb/>
ties, who bare bean with us for <lb/>
tin past month, They will long <lb/>
be remembered and we can <lb/>
hope they will do the like again. <lb/>
If you are looking for a good <lb/>
school, prepare to Win <lb/>
Since the teachers have left <lb/>
another baa come among us <lb/>
taken up bit abiding place at the <lb/>
hone of W, II. House. Still we <lb/>
grew <lb/>
The High School <lb/>
Died. <lb/>
The of Mr. Zeb Lancaster, <lb/>
who died at Neck, was <lb/>
brought to Greenville Tuesday <lb/>
night and taken out near Black <lb/>
Jack for interment. Misses Fan- <lb/>
and Maggie sisters <lb/>
deceased, and Mr. J. Wood- <lb/>
ard, the remains. <lb/>
Mr. Lancaster was raised in this <lb/>
county, but bud for sometime had <lb/>
a position in one of factories at <lb/>
Scotland Neck. <lb/>
Notice Dissolution Partnership. <lb/>
The of W. T. <lb/>
Co., which has formerly been coin <lb/>
posed of w. T. H. T. <lb/>
Hooker mid I. B, has <lb/>
been dissolved, The said T. <lb/>
and S. T. I looker will <lb/>
Continue the business at Liberty <lb/>
Warehouse under the name <lb/>
W. T. Lipscomb A Co., and <lb/>
said W. T. and S. T. <lb/>
Hooker are now the owners of all <lb/>
amounts due the old of W. T <lb/>
Lipscomb it Co., and will all <lb/>
outstanding claims the <lb/>
same. W. T. <lb/>
B, T. <lb/>
July W, 1801. <lb/>
Carlos Harris was here a snort <lb/>
while Sunday on his war from-------. <lb/>
Perjury. <lb/>
So hone-l lawyer would <lb/>
age swearing; when a <lb/>
is guilty of encouraging <lb/>
perjury a witness he should lie <lb/>
to the penitentiary along with <lb/>
the perjurer, Morally <lb/>
crime, also i- that lawyer who <lb/>
abuses witnesses, attacks the dead, <lb/>
assails character, makes base <lb/>
appeals to the ignorance, the pas- <lb/>
prejudices of jurors. There <lb/>
appears to be a looseness about <lb/>
law or the courts and the practice <lb/>
that permits crimes and acts <lb/>
justice and decency and <lb/>
truth fairness to be commuted <lb/>
with almost absolute impunity in <lb/>
the very temples of justice. Hare <lb/>
is there a determined attempt <lb/>
to punish the perjurer, who is too <lb/>
Often aided and abetted by those <lb/>
N. C July <lb/>
asked to give my <lb/>
the teacher's held here, <lb/>
I would my first that it was in <lb/>
reality what the <lb/>
dent had it to be. Some- <lb/>
limes plane are theoretical and <lb/>
can't lie carried out, but not so in <lb/>
Mr. i had <lb/>
work done by such institutes in <lb/>
western states and long since Prof. <lb/>
had disgusted <lb/>
with the old bad awaken- <lb/>
ed by <lb/>
the Teachers Assembly a few years <lb/>
ago and even went far as to ask <lb/>
for last year's appropriation for <lb/>
this kind of to be held over <lb/>
for this year. None but those <lb/>
closely associates with him know <lb/>
how glad he was to see his long <lb/>
cherished hope a reality doing <lb/>
fur the teachers of his what <lb/>
they so much them <lb/>
thorough instruction the studies <lb/>
to lie taught showing not tell- <lb/>
them bow to teach others. <lb/>
I well <lb/>
I ever attended. It was con- <lb/>
ducted by one the leading <lb/>
of the state. I a mere <lb/>
boy soon to my school <lb/>
and bow eagerly did I listen to his <lb/>
every word and lake notes, but alas, <lb/>
when went into the school room I <lb/>
searched in vain for one single <lb/>
thing received during the entire <lb/>
institute I could put into <lb/>
I had to formulate my own plans <lb/>
and use my own methods. <lb/>
This the fall of and <lb/>
ever since that time I have <lb/>
convinced that the <lb/>
arc in- <lb/>
deed. <lb/>
In South Carolina a weeks <lb/>
institute is held on the same <lb/>
as the one held here no one <lb/>
who knows the condition of the <lb/>
public schools there can doubt <lb/>
their Their schools arc <lb/>
rapidly improving aid today are <lb/>
under much management <lb/>
than ours. Already many town- <lb/>
ships there have forms <lb/>
of graded which continue <lb/>
eight to ten months in the year. <lb/>
One of the speakers who addressed <lb/>
the teachers here said the <lb/>
spent the Institute would be <lb/>
worth more to the schools of the <lb/>
County than added to the <lb/>
school fund. I can say for <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
We desire to announce to the tobacco growing public that <lb/>
we will run the old Greenville Warehouse the coming tobacco <lb/>
season. We ask a liberal share of your patronage and prom <lb/>
tee to merit the same by a close personal attention to business <lb/>
It is well known, and conceded by all, that the Greenville <lb/>
has the beat lights under which to show tobacco to <lb/>
advantage We have many years experience in the <lb/>
and are thoroughly familiar with the trade in all its <lb/>
branches We will comfortable rooms with clean new <lb/>
cots for the use of customers who remain over night also <lb/>
box stalls for their team, and Col. T. H. Walker, the well <lb/>
known joker, will act as host. Mr. G, <lb/>
Moore, who as a drummer, has built up such an honorable <lb/>
for fair dealing with his customers, will be with us as <lb/>
floor-manager and general assistant, and extends to his friends <lb/>
a cordial invitation to their tobacco at <lb/>
he Greenville Warehouse. <lb/>
Mr. If. Barbara, a gentlemen of culture and an auction- <lb/>
of ability, will be with us, and will be glad to have his <lb/>
friends in the tobacco belt sell with us, where he will work for <lb/>
their interest. We respectfully submit five reasons for earn- <lb/>
soliciting a liberal share of your patronage. <lb/>
1st. Because we are independent, and refused to have <lb/>
anything to do with the Warehouse Combination. <lb/>
Sod. We are conducting strictly a warehouse business, <lb/>
and are not trying to buy cheap tobacco, but use all means in <lb/>
our power to sell tobacco as high as possible, as our interest <lb/>
and farmers are one and the same. <lb/>
Because Greenville with her fourteen prize houses, <lb/>
steam drying and stemming establishments, has ample <lb/>
ties and capital to handle the entire crop of the surrounding <lb/>
section. Her buyers have orders and contracts from every to- <lb/>
manufacturing country on the Globe. <lb/>
4th. Because our relations with these order and contract <lb/>
buyers are of the most friendly and cordial nature, and we <lb/>
have ample means at command to push every sale to the <lb/>
full limit of its value. <lb/>
Because, with all the bright tobacco manufacturing <lb/>
concerns of the world, domestic and export speculators, attend- <lb/>
every the old Warehouse, with our de- <lb/>
termination and the hearty co-operation of every man con- <lb/>
with us, to use every effort in his power in the interest <lb/>
of our patrons, and the hearty support of the buyers, we are <lb/>
in position to sell tobacco as high as the highest. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
J. <lb/>
R. S. EVANS. <lb/>
D. S. SPAIN. <lb/>
an institute will lie held for at <lb/>
least four weeks where teachers <lb/>
will not be abused for not know- <lb/>
what they are teaching, ht <lb/>
be taught those things in which <lb/>
they are where they will <lb/>
not be abused so much for not <lb/>
the instructors in the methods, but be shown <lb/>
, who profess to be honest and re- <lb/>
will its next session Wen . n in. . ,. . <lb/>
. ,.,,., ,, , . The com Is, which <lb/>
leaner 2nd, which time , <lb/>
,. . , ., . the lawyers arc a part, are to blame <lb/>
the handsome new dormitory I fl , ,. , ,. . ,. , <lb/>
, ,.,.,. ,, for much of this. The solemnity <lb/>
be completed. enrollment <lb/>
during the last union was 168.1 <lb/>
A very much larger attendance is <lb/>
expected at its fall term. <lb/>
The large dry kiln for the A. <lb/>
Cos Mfg. is now complete <lb/>
ready for use, <lb/>
Many applications are being <lb/>
homes hen-so as to get the <lb/>
advantage of our temperance <lb/>
good lots The lit <lb/>
have and <lb/>
homes will be result. in <lb/>
The change In the <lb/>
and Kin <lb/>
for much of this, <lb/>
of an oath should be emphasized. <lb/>
The violation of it should lie speed- <lb/>
punished. swearing is a <lb/>
villainous r . to which many are <lb/>
too easily tempted, it deserves <lb/>
Nashville <lb/>
American, <lb/>
I hate MOO of <lb/>
s nu lo look upon the <lb/>
not in auger. <lb/>
I lake history of one <lb/>
heart has sinned and <lb/>
ton railroad vary encouraging repress to myself <lb/>
our people. The present ,, <lb/>
is a reel bore. ,. <lb/>
The of m <lb/>
have been laying in quit a lot Of hop and fear, the <lb/>
p buggy material. They can I r , of <lb/>
supply yon with nice buggy t, , w- ,,, <lb/>
. j erring soul of my follow man with <lb/>
The tuning arc continually from hot, it <lb/>
purchasing fruit and often are I Longfellow. <lb/>
their financial reward was not <lb/>
great. Some of us at least feel that <lb/>
we arc inure than repaid <lb/>
to ourselves, but if <lb/>
through these teachers we shall be <lb/>
the of touching the boys <lb/>
and girls of the county, giving <lb/>
them better <lb/>
to nobler lives our <lb/>
reward is great. <lb/>
We hear about Car- <lb/>
undeveloped resources. <lb/>
Her forest, her and her soil <lb/>
may remain to In- developed by <lb/>
another hut the brain <lb/>
Of her children treasure <lb/>
must lie developed by the pres- <lb/>
or is lost to the <lb/>
I don't believe harder work was <lb/>
ever done by pupils in any school <lb/>
than was done the institute and <lb/>
surely no teachers ever had such <lb/>
kind an I attentive pupils as the <lb/>
teachers here. <lb/>
Every outline put on the black- <lb/>
board was carefully copied in note <lb/>
hooks for future use. <lb/>
The social feature is important. <lb/>
the past the teachers have <lb/>
a way. <lb/>
The institute <lb/>
has thoroughly <lb/>
ginning, and be it said that the <lb/>
of and Greene <lb/>
ties owe to a debt of <lb/>
On Friday night at the closing <lb/>
entertainment when Prof. Rags- <lb/>
dale in the name <lb/>
school children for the interest we <lb/>
had taken in the institute, I felt <lb/>
that he himself deserved as much <lb/>
convinced me that the teachers as one, for had it not been for <lb/>
want to be thorough their text <lb/>
his careful planning and <lb/>
the institute would have been a <lb/>
failure. His cheering words <lb/>
throughout the institute kept up <lb/>
the courage and the spirit of the <lb/>
books and up-to date in methods. <lb/>
The institute has helped to <lb/>
sec their needs and we may expect <lb/>
permanent improvement. <lb/>
Pitt county owes Prof. teachers to the end. <lb/>
a debt she can never pay for And before I close, one more <lb/>
interest he has taken the school about the little town in which <lb/>
work and for his untiring the institute was held. I will say <lb/>
that she can entertain as royally as <lb/>
a princess. Our stay in Winter- <lb/>
ville has written its name in <lb/>
and the hospitality shown <lb/>
will be long remembered. Sprung <lb/>
up like a castle the night, the <lb/>
little town of Winterville stands <lb/>
today the brightest gem in Pitt <lb/>
county's industrial coronet. <lb/>
means let us have the <lb/>
educational column in The <lb/>
now that the editor has <lb/>
so kindly consented to give us the <lb/>
space. W. F. <lb/>
behalf el the teachers. <lb/>
G, E. <lb/>
M. July <lb/>
Having been my opinion <lb/>
of the institute just held <lb/>
Winterville, I will endeavor, us <lb/>
one who went through all work <lb/>
of the institute, to give It to I be I <lb/>
best of my ability. <lb/>
First of all I wish lo that it <lb/>
was a modern in every <lb/>
respect. Instead of <lb/>
ed to listen to the out- <lb/>
bursts of oratory lecturing of <lb/>
collegiate educators so <lb/>
mint in former institutes, we were <lb/>
known very little of each other or drilled in the methods of teaching <lb/>
of the county Superintendent, but <lb/>
they know personally the Nu- <lb/>
and the other teach- <lb/>
I hope this will enable us to <lb/>
and maintain a good <lb/>
association in <lb/>
that in these meetings we may <lb/>
discuss of vital import- <lb/>
to our schools. Why <lb/>
have an educational column <lb/>
management <lb/>
of or least <lb/>
articles and notes <lb/>
May we not hope that the day <lb/>
is dawning when men will not lie <lb/>
paid by the State, at the <lb/>
of the poor school children, to go <lb/>
to different counties and explode <lb/>
high theories, re hash old <lb/>
lectures that have bored <lb/>
of oilier people with and <lb/>
abuse the poor hard working teach- <lb/>
for not doing work. Let <lb/>
us hope in every county <lb/>
and shown how to do those things <lb/>
which years were preach- <lb/>
ed elocutionary style from the <lb/>
rostrum. other wonts our In- <lb/>
not only preached their <lb/>
methods, but practiced them. <lb/>
Each of us carried our note books <lb/>
to the recitation room where out- <lb/>
lines and instructions were copied <lb/>
from the now <lb/>
have a brief and simple textbook <lb/>
on teaching. <lb/>
From the Instruction at <lb/>
the I feel myself better <lb/>
prepared to take up the duties <lb/>
responsibilities of a teacher, I <lb/>
think this the experience of all the <lb/>
teachers w ho attended. <lb/>
had as good instructors as <lb/>
could have been gotten. Their <lb/>
and enthusiasm was <lb/>
transmitted to th teachers and <lb/>
the last of the wit- <lb/>
the same interest as be-<lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
Happening In North Carolina. <lb/>
The Free Will says <lb/>
den is going to have a new post- <lb/>
master. <lb/>
J. W. Denmark has purchased <lb/>
the Progressive Farmer, of <lb/>
for <lb/>
The Free Press says one <lb/>
and twenty-two crates of can- <lb/>
wore shipped from Kin- <lb/>
Tuesday. <lb/>
The store of Y. Randolph <lb/>
Co., of Tillery, was destroyed Bun- <lb/>
day night by Are The loss is <lb/>
mated at with insurance <lb/>
only <lb/>
It la Important win to <lb/>
on for or should <lb/>
make the <lb/>
of bowel only them <lb/>
great inconvenience, but <lb/>
In t A bottle of Perry <lb/>
la, have found, a <lb/>
moat effectual randy k. <lb/>
Avoid there U but eat Pain- <lb/>
Parry Me and <lb/>
Reductions <lb/>
IN ALL LINES NOT IN QUANTITY OR QUALITY, <lb/>
IN PRICE ONLY <lb/>
Plenty Fine Clothing, Shoes, <lb/>
Bats, Mens Furnishings. <lb/>
FALL GOODS WILL SOON <lb/>
MUST HAVE BOOM FOR THEM. <lb/>
YOU KNOW WHO <lb/>
mm <lb/>
THE KING CLOT HIKE. <lb/>
He Has Ladies Shoes Too. <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR column. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
U there is a MARK <lb/>
in tin- margin of this paper it <lb/>
so to remind you that you owe <lb/>
for <lb/>
subscription and we request <lb/>
you to settle as early as pas- <lb/>
Mr. Percy Manning. Meets a Terrible <lb/>
dent. <lb/>
Some Speak to Me, Some to You. <lb/>
Monday, i y 1901. <lb/>
J. Perkins went to <lb/>
today. <lb/>
F. G. left this <lb/>
for Halifax. <lb/>
J. Gardner left this morning <lb/>
for <lb/>
Marion Tucker, came <lb/>
in Saturday <lb/>
J. L. Little returned Saturday <lb/>
evening from Norfolk. <lb/>
Miss Lucy is visiting <lb/>
relatives in Greene <lb/>
W. A. Fleming and sun <lb/>
of Hassell, were here today. <lb/>
Phillips, <lb/>
is visiting Miss Katie <lb/>
Miss Minnie returned <lb/>
this from a visit to <lb/>
county. <lb/>
Hugh left this morn- <lb/>
to accept a position <lb/>
Miss Mat tic <lb/>
Saturday <lb/>
relatives. <lb/>
King went to <lb/>
Bight to visit <lb/>
On Sunday afternoon several <lb/>
young men were bathing in a swim- <lb/>
ming hole iii Grind creek about <lb/>
eight miles from town. were <lb/>
Bible. We need what YOU themselves by standing on <lb/>
owe us hope you will not I a log and diving off in water, <lb/>
turning a the <lb/>
keep us waiting for it. <lb/>
This notice is for those who <lb/>
find the cross mark on their <lb/>
paper <lb/>
LOCAL REFLECTIONS. <lb/>
In one mouth <lb/>
mail delivery routes <lb/>
from Greenville. <lb/>
cent. When Mr. Manning <lb/>
was making a jump from the log <lb/>
his footing slipped and instead of <lb/>
falling the deep water he fell <lb/>
where it was very shallow. The <lb/>
back neck and shoulders <lb/>
the force of the fall on the <lb/>
rural sand, bis spinal column was <lb/>
will start j the neck. <lb/>
His comrades seeing the accident <lb/>
J. J. Cherry and win and w. <lb/>
It. Parker retained today from <lb/>
Ocracoke. <lb/>
Miss of Baltimore, <lb/>
who has Miss <lb/>
Skinner, left this <lb/>
II. Randolph wife and <lb/>
went over <lb/>
county Sunday on a visit. <lb/>
Misses Fannie and Clara <lb/>
of spent Saturday and <lb/>
Sunday here with their sister, Sirs. <lb/>
Walter <lb/>
Walter Men bus moved his <lb/>
family here from and <lb/>
occupies the Harris house on <lb/>
Dickinson avenue, <lb/>
Mrs. Glasgow Evans child- <lb/>
who have been visiting Mrs, <lb/>
Adrian Savage, left this morning <lb/>
for Scotland Neck. <lb/>
Miss Betsy Gray, of <lb/>
who bus visiting Mrs. W. II. <lb/>
returned home <lb/>
Saturday evening. <lb/>
Mr, and Mrs. J. J. Corey lilt <lb/>
today for Beaufort to take their <lb/>
youngest child who bus quite <lb/>
sick some days. Miss Jennie Man <lb/>
with <lb/>
FOUR YOUNG MEN AND OLD MAN GUILTY <lb/>
that are shipped. arc day making up good, in every line for <lb/>
Big New Store. <lb/>
All our people seem pleased at quickly pulled him out of the <lb/>
i he new train schedule to go into <lb/>
effect next Monday. <lb/>
Mrs. M. M. Nelson, of Scotland <lb/>
Neck, in Tuesday evening to <lb/>
visit Mrs. G. James. <lb/>
prevented his being drown- <lb/>
ed. Mr. Manning was taken to <lb/>
the home of Mr. J. R, <lb/>
mid a physician for. Dr. W. <lb/>
H. Bagwell, who attended him. <lb/>
If the will save hay now says almost his entire body is par- <lb/>
condition is very <lb/>
serious. <lb/>
they may not have to buy , <lb/>
much grown article a <lb/>
later <lb/>
Sausage in Vinegar, <lb/>
Magic Yeast, Pearl Hominy, Ail <lb/>
and Henry George Cigars <lb/>
at s. M. <lb/>
A young man town went lo do <lb/>
some writing the r day, found <lb/>
that the lead in his pencil had <lb/>
melted. That looks like warm <lb/>
weather. <lb/>
Several members of the Green- <lb/>
ville Light Infantry came home <lb/>
Saturday evening from Wrights- <lb/>
ville The boys do give very <lb/>
enthusiastic reports <lb/>
Sunday, June 30th, <lb/>
on road between Sir. Ferd Ward's <lb/>
and Avon farm via Yankee Hall <lb/>
Ferry, a double case gold watch, <lb/>
gentleman's Finder will be <lb/>
liberally rewarded less <lb/>
by returning same. <lb/>
J. E. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
1901. <lb/>
Lang went to <lb/>
has returned <lb/>
Announcement <lb/>
The W. T. Lipscomb <lb/>
Co., is now composed of W. T. <lb/>
Lipscomb and T. Hooker, they <lb/>
having purchased the entire inter- <lb/>
est of II. B. in the business <lb/>
We the undersigned desire to <lb/>
our lends and customers <lb/>
for their past patronage and to <lb/>
state that continue to do <lb/>
business at the Liberty Ware <lb/>
house where will always b <lb/>
pleased lo serve them. We arc <lb/>
fully prepared to protect the in- <lb/>
of all our customers to <lb/>
secure for them the highest prices <lb/>
tobacco. <lb/>
W. T. <lb/>
Hook En. <lb/>
July 30th, <lb/>
J. A. <lb/>
today. <lb/>
H. W. went to Grin- <lb/>
today. <lb/>
c. w. Harvey <lb/>
from <lb/>
Miss Mary A. returned <lb/>
this morning from <lb/>
Miss Dora Hill, of Bethel, is <lb/>
visiting Mrs, W. j. Rollins. <lb/>
B. E. Patrick has taken a <lb/>
with Kicks Wilkinson. <lb/>
Joseph Haw Is returned <lb/>
evening from Virginia <lb/>
Waiter has taken a <lb/>
position with Greene i Brown. <lb/>
W. B. Brown left this morning <lb/>
for New York lo purchase fall <lb/>
stock. <lb/>
Rev. W. Davis returned this <lb/>
o. <lb/>
Letters on the Institute. <lb/>
The publishes <lb/>
a very interesting letter from Prof, j <lb/>
G. E. Principal of Win- <lb/>
High School, giving his <lb/>
views of the recent in- <lb/>
at Winterville. We expect <lb/>
to publish a number of such letters, <lb/>
and invite every teacher who was j morning from where he <lb/>
in attendance, both ladies and <lb/>
gentlemen, to write The <lb/>
Tor a letter expressing their views <lb/>
on the institute. <lb/>
Prof. Lineberry in his letter asks <lb/>
the teachers not have an <lb/>
Column The <lb/>
We will take great <lb/>
pleasure giving the teachers <lb/>
has a meeting. <lb/>
Ml. P. M. Johnson and child- <lb/>
left morning for <lb/>
to visit her parents. <lb/>
Dr. James of Ital- <lb/>
who has been spending a day <lb/>
or two here, left this morning, <lb/>
W, B. Vi and two of <lb/>
boys, Frank and <lb/>
his <lb/>
left <lb/>
space for such a department In the Beaufort to spend a week. <lb/>
paper hope they will use it <lb/>
for that purpose. <lb/>
Shot at a Thief. <lb/>
Saturday night some men who <lb/>
were trading town left their <lb/>
buggy in lot the rear of J. <lb/>
L. store. The <lb/>
men suspected some was try- <lb/>
to steal packages from the <lb/>
buggy, and one of them began <lb/>
watching. a short while a <lb/>
slipped up to the buggy and took a <lb/>
bucket of molasses. The <lb/>
started after the hut the <lb/>
latter was the best runner, <lb/>
when a few pistol shots went <lb/>
along to make him the faster. <lb/>
Voluntarily <lb/>
and With much we <lb/>
recommend to oar We <lb/>
from when we that It <lb/>
pain If by magic, and la one of <lb/>
he best In use fur It <lb/>
is both and <lb/>
none who Haul U would <lb/>
be without It home. Avoid <lb/>
then is bin <lb/>
Price I <lb/>
The Advertised Article. <lb/>
That advertising is necessary to <lb/>
success is recognized by retail deal- <lb/>
of whom has expressed <lb/>
himself want to sell ad- <lb/>
articles in my stores and <lb/>
I am out of my way to <lb/>
sell other things at an effort. <lb/>
When a article is <lb/>
people call for it and I am <lb/>
to keep <lb/>
Denmark, of <lb/>
turning home New York, <lb/>
stopped here Monday evening <lb/>
today here. <lb/>
J. It. Moore, J. M. Moore <lb/>
Misses Myra Moore <lb/>
left this morning for <lb/>
Cleveland <lb/>
Wednesday, 1901. <lb/>
F. M. Hodges went to <lb/>
today. <lb/>
Skinner bus returned from <lb/>
Virginia Beach. <lb/>
Miss left this morn- <lb/>
for <lb/>
Mrs. Charles this <lb/>
from Ayden. <lb/>
J, I. Smith returned <lb/>
evening from Norfolk. <lb/>
W. returned from <lb/>
Bethel Tuesday evening. <lb/>
J. L. Carper returned Tuesday <lb/>
from Wadesboro. <lb/>
Mrs. W. Hines child re- <lb/>
turned this from Ayden. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Denmark <lb/>
returned to Tuesday even- <lb/>
J. S Norman came in this morn- <lb/>
weeks trip on the <lb/>
road.<lb/>
s- <lb/>
hi <lb/>
tr <lb/>
re <lb/>
c. <lb/>
. sin<lb/>
i I <lb/>
VII<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018536_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Have You Forgot <lb/>
What <lb/>
THAT I AM <lb/>
DATE LINK OF <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Shoes <lb/>
Hats, Shirts, Pants, Hardware <lb/>
Tinware, <lb/>
AND A OF OTHER THINGS <lb/>
WHICH I AM TO <lb/>
to see me for your next Barrel Flour or Pork. <lb/>
Yours to please- <lb/>
Jas. B. White. <lb/>
None genuine unless <lb/>
Red Cross is on label <lb/>
Don't a <lb/>
WE WORLD <lb/>
TO PRODUCE EQUAL OF <lb/>
for Chills. Fevers, <lb/>
Night Sweats and Grippe, and <lb/>
all forms of <lb/>
WAIT TO <lb/>
SPEND CENTS AND Be CURED I <lb/>
CURES MIKE TONIC <lb/>
TRY IT. NO CURE NO . PER <lb/>
DELIGHTFUL TO TAKE. <lb/>
AFTER TWO YEARS HAVE BEEN PAID IX THE <lb/>
It <lb/>
OF NEWARK. X. J. YOUR POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value. <lb/>
Cash Value. <lb/>
Paid up <lb/>
Extended Insurance works automatically, <lb/>
la Ron <lb/>
i. Will be re-instated if arrears be paid within on month while you <lb/>
are living, or within three years after lapse, upon satisfactory <lb/>
of and of arrears with Interest <lb/>
second No Restrictions. . Incontestable. <lb/>
Dividends are payable at the beginning of the second and of each <lb/>
succeeding year, provided the premium for the current year be paid. <lb/>
They may be To reduce Premiums, or <lb/>
To Increase the Insurance, or <lb/>
To make policy payable as an during the lifetime <lb/>
of insured. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville. N. U. <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
STATE NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE <lb/>
Classical, Scientific, Commercial. Industrial, Pedagogical. Musical. <lb/>
lot Faculty of SO <lb/>
members. and School of pupils. secure I ard in <lb/>
the all should be July <lb/>
opens September 19th. <lb/>
invited Iron, those . h hi r-. <lb/>
For information address <lb/>
President D <lb/>
S. C. <lb/>
Homer Military School, <lb/>
OXFORD, X. U. <lb/>
buildings, heated by the Buffalo fan system, securing per- <lb/>
ventilation. Sixteen new rooms for two boys each to be added <lb/>
the fall term. Engagements should be made early. Annual attendance <lb/>
up to the capacity and many turned away each session for lack of <lb/>
room. Best athletic field, with quarter mile truck, in the <lb/>
Faculty of specialists with special work. Curriculum preparatory to <lb/>
the best college or education, Au atmosphere of ideals <lb/>
surrounds the school, as students not preparing for higher education <lb/>
are excluded. Fall term begins 1st. <lb/>
Prom <lb/>
U. t;. July 20th. <lb/>
Rear Admiral Schley fooled the <lb/>
naval clique, which has done such <lb/>
dirty work to try to discredit him <lb/>
in the eyes of the American people <lb/>
when he called Secretary <lb/>
bluff and demanded a court of in- <lb/>
into bis conduct during the <lb/>
hunt in Cuban waters for <lb/>
Meet. Admiral Schley would <lb/>
have made this demand long ago <lb/>
had his who knew of the <lb/>
intention on the part the clique <lb/>
which has controlled the <lb/>
since the beginning of the <lb/>
administration to pack <lb/>
the court against him if he asked <lb/>
for it, not advised him to wail for <lb/>
a more propitious time. That time <lb/>
arrived when the in the <lb/>
Brooklyn Yard wrote under <lb/>
orders from the clique language <lb/>
concerning Schley that would have <lb/>
disgraced the lowest gutter-snipe <lb/>
publication in the shame- <lb/>
labeled it and <lb/>
sought to have it made a text book <lb/>
at the Academy. The <lb/>
overshot the mark. of <lb/>
injuring Schley. the publication <lb/>
aroused the country's sense of fair- <lb/>
play, and today for an <lb/>
inquiry be conducted by <lb/>
men of honor, not puppets of a <lb/>
clique, is ringing from the <lb/>
tic to the Pacific. It ll now up to <lb/>
Secretary Long. He cm easily <lb/>
name a court of inquiry that will <lb/>
command the reaped of the <lb/>
try that will not base its in- <lb/>
quires on the charge that Schley is <lb/>
a democrat, but an effort to get <lb/>
the truth, the whole truth, of <lb/>
n hat was done ill the <lb/>
an naval campaign, regardless of <lb/>
who is hurl or helped. That much <lb/>
the country demands, audit will <lb/>
take no less. Secretary g has <lb/>
promised such a court shall be <lb/>
named, and if Mr. is as <lb/>
wise a politician as he is credited <lb/>
with being he will see that the <lb/>
promise is kept. political <lb/>
is involved in this inquiry, <lb/>
but any failure to give Schley the <lb/>
justice which every brave officer <lb/>
under accusation is entitled to at <lb/>
the of the powers that will <lb/>
make it a political question of the <lb/>
most dangerous sort. <lb/>
Mr. neglects <lb/>
opportunity to turn a financial <lb/>
trick, at public expense, for a <lb/>
friend. By postponing the accept- <lb/>
of the resignation Al- <lb/>
of and the appoint- <lb/>
of Secretary Hunt as his sue <lb/>
Connor, which has definitely <lb/>
determined until September <lb/>
he enables bis friend Allen to en- <lb/>
joy an extended vacation and con- <lb/>
draw a big salary. Two <lb/>
Presidential proclamations were <lb/>
issued this announcing <lb/>
that a civil govern- <lb/>
which might have <lb/>
made many months ago, but was <lb/>
held back in order to prevent the <lb/>
Rican legislature having the <lb/>
disposal of the revenue collected <lb/>
under the and the <lb/>
proclaiming free trade with <lb/>
Rico. <lb/>
Two hundred bushels of <lb/>
remove <lb/>
of Potash from the <lb/>
, soil. Unless this quantity <lb/>
is returned to the soil, <lb/>
the following crop will <lb/>
materially decrease. <lb/>
W. have K<lb/>
The, arc lire. <lb/>
GERMAN WORKS, <lb/>
St. <lb/>
York. <lb/>
An Independent Political Thinker. <lb/>
We suppose every newspaper <lb/>
has its own definition of what they <lb/>
term independent political think- <lb/>
we no exception. In <lb/>
our a man is <lb/>
dent thinker who forms his <lb/>
ions of questions that may arise <lb/>
without how this or that party <lb/>
stand on and who does not <lb/>
even though he continues <lb/>
to support his party. A man who <lb/>
is a strict partisan surrenders all <lb/>
right to think for himself. We <lb/>
know Republicans who were strong <lb/>
free silver men before the <lb/>
of six years ago but they <lb/>
Stifled their yelled <lb/>
for the gold standard, and it is our <lb/>
belief that if Democratic con- <lb/>
of that time had declared <lb/>
for the gold Standard Southern <lb/>
Democrats would have been as en- <lb/>
for it as they were for <lb/>
free Herald. <lb/>
When The Cosmopolitan, its <lb/>
April number, published essay. <lb/>
at once clever and philosophic, on <lb/>
deal a was <lb/>
created for a paper Ideal <lb/>
by the same author <lb/>
Lavinia Hint. The August Cos- <lb/>
contains an essay on this <lb/>
. . . , i which few people agree <lb/>
and Music. noted . . . , <lb/>
and surrounded by excellent moral and religious -h certain not only to prove <lb/>
For and full Information address <lb/>
G. E. LINEBERRY, Principal, <lb/>
Winterville, N. C. <lb/>
Winterville High School. <lb/>
FOR BOYS. <lb/>
Full term opens September 2nd and doses December 20th. <lb/>
Spring term December and ends May 16th, <lb/>
High School, Academic Intermediate and Primary De- <lb/>
or P- H. <lb/>
Texas, Nov. SI, <lb/>
I Late found Ir. <lb/>
Bud for my talking <lb/>
Children. When my boy was n <lb/>
teething child, mi-feeding tiny warn- <lb/>
ed us that we would inevitably lone him. <lb/>
upon and at <lb/>
It lo him, and his <lb/>
prove was marked boars, <lb/>
from that day he I have <lb/>
constantly kept it it <lb/>
children, and have taken great pleasure in <lb/>
its praises to alt of young <lb/>
children. I round it invaluable even after <lb/>
the i thin period passed. <lb/>
U. II. HARDY. <lb/>
L. Ii. Pender, <lb/>
v i ii N. <lb/>
Tobacco Flues. Tin Hoofing, <lb/>
Expert employed <lb/>
kinds and Locksmith work <lb/>
first class. Re stocking of gnus a <lb/>
specialty. <lb/>
Agent for The Oliver Typewriter<lb/>
Greensboro Female. College <lb/>
Greensboro. N. C. <lb/>
Literary and Business Courses. <lb/>
Schools Music, Art <lb/>
Literary Course and all <lb/>
Living per Year. <lb/>
Fall Session begins September <lb/>
11th, 1901. on <lb/>
PEACOCK, <lb/>
President. <lb/>
Perry Go., <lb/>
MERCHANTS, <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Dear quote you Nova Scotia <lb/>
Plaster, following prices <lb/>
for June duly <lb/>
Less than tons <lb/>
Cur i i Lots 6-26 <lb/>
ton lots 6.00 <lb/>
ton <lb/>
v Please let us have your order as boon as <lb/>
possible, to avoid delay in shipment. <lb/>
J. W. PERRY COMPANY. <lb/>
Practical Education <lb/>
In agriculture, engineering, <lb/>
arts and cotton manufacturing; a <lb/>
combination of theory and practice, <lb/>
manual training. <lb/>
a year. Total expense, in- <lb/>
and <lb/>
Thirty teachers, students- Next <lb/>
session begins <lb/>
For T <lb/>
IV. O. <lb/>
AGRICULTURE MECHANIC ARTS,<lb/>
Trinity College <lb/>
one hundred and twenty-five <lb/>
and of <lb/>
in <lb/>
laboratories equipped with modern <lb/>
apparatus. library facilities. Beat <lb/>
and athletic in <lb/>
and <lb/>
Attendance nearly doubled within <lb/>
peat year. low. <lb/>
best college is one that offers a student <lb/>
best advantages. Send for <lb/>
Durham. N. C. <lb/>
Paper Hanging <lb/>
am prepared to fill Wall Ta- <lb/>
per and hang it if Full line <lb/>
sample; from beet designers to select <lb/>
I am also prepared to do Brick Laying <lb/>
Plastering and on short notice <lb/>
Orders wall paper left at of <lb/>
Mrs. M. D. Higgs will receive prompt at- <lb/>
J H. BUNN, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
1866. <lb/>
J. V. CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Factors and handlers of <lb/>
Bagging, Ties and Bags. <lb/>
Correspondence and shipments <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
Popes, Year Koch, for <lb/>
Times <lb/>
RICHMOND, VA., <lb/>
Now Only a Tear, <lb/>
and includes absolutely free The <lb/>
Paragon New The <lb/>
Farm Journal, Philadelphia. <lb/>
DAILY AND SUNDAY TIMES, <lb/>
Including Farm Journal and Para <lb/>
Monthly, now only per <lb/>
year; month by mail. <lb/>
Address THE TIMES, <lb/>
Richmond, Va. <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE <lb/>
Steamer My re leave Washing <lb/>
ton daily at A. M. for Green- <lb/>
ville, leave Greenville daily at <lb/>
M. for Washington. <lb/>
Steamer leaves <lb/>
Greenville Mondays, Wednesday <lb/>
and Fridays at A. M. <lb/>
leave Tarboro for Greenville <lb/>
Tuesdays, and Saturdays <lb/>
at A. M. carries freight only. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
Steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore, <lb/>
New York and <lb/>
ton, and for all points for the West <lb/>
with railroads at Norfolk. <lb/>
Shippers should order freight by <lb/>
the Old Dominion S. Co. from <lb/>
New York; Clyde Line from <lb/>
Bay Line from Baltimore, <lb/>
and Line from <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. SON, <lb/>
Washington, N. C <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
A Driver. <lb/>
A pile driver accomplishes its <lb/>
work by pounding. That <lb/>
is the way successful business men <lb/>
constant <lb/>
The pile sink a <lb/>
big stick with one or two blows <lb/>
there must be steady, persistent <lb/>
work. No more can the business <lb/>
mat, hope to win a big business by <lb/>
using or two advertisements, <lb/>
lie mil t keep before the <lb/>
public, day after day, after <lb/>
month, year after year. By <lb/>
such a store becomes an es- <lb/>
institution, secure its <lb/>
position, if it keeps up to date in <lb/>
everything. The <lb/>
m effort will be <lb/>
of by shrewd competitors. <lb/>
The worst place to allow exertion <lb/>
lo relax advertising, for that <lb/>
sort of attracts notice of an <lb/>
undesirable <lb/>
Tribune. <lb/>
fountain gen <lb/>
Writ's Right <lb/>
Reflector Rook Store. <lb/>
widely interesting, but lo SUM <lb/>
lively the same <lb/>
number Mrs. VA <lb/>
Granger Gordon; tells the <lb/>
story of the life of the French wife <lb/>
all tragic commonplace <lb/>
narrowness. woman of sum <lb/>
pals up with, and, per- <lb/>
haps, dot much toward maintain <lb/>
present says the <lb/>
author, there are women of <lb/>
brains who die at early am of <lb/>
no disease known to doctors, but <lb/>
simply from utter <lb/>
UNIVERSITY <lb/>
of North Carolina. <lb/>
THE HEAD OF THE STATE'S <lb/>
EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM. <lb/>
ACADEMIC <lb/>
LAW, MEDICINE, PHARMACY <lb/>
Eighty-live scholarships. Free <lb/>
tuition to teachers and <lb/>
sons. Loans for the needy. <lb/>
Students Instructors. <lb/>
New Dormitories, Water Works, <lb/>
Central Heating system. <lb/>
spent improvements in <lb/>
and Fall term begins <lb/>
ft, Address, <lb/>
E. P. <lb/>
Chapel Hill. N. C. <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
a of <lb/>
Court of c in lAM of <lb/>
Cannon of vs <lb/>
petition to land the <lb/>
will sell for cash <lb/>
before the Court House door In Greenville <lb/>
on August bib, following <lb/>
land, in <lb/>
town of Greenville on the West side <lb/>
St. sad OS feet <lb/>
and known as a part of the old <lb/>
stable lot of Hotel Macon, said lot <lb/>
accurately described in a dead from K <lb/>
Daniel lo recorded in Book <lb/>
B. C. page containing i of acre more or <lb/>
JESSE CANNON, <lb/>
Ally. <lb/>
Advice to the Aged. <lb/>
brines as <lb/>
bowels, weak Mad- <lb/>
TORPID LIVER. <lb/>
Pills <lb/>
hare a effect on these organs, <lb/>
stimulating the bowels, them <lb/>
to perform their natural functions as <lb/>
in and <lb/>
IMPARTING VIGOR------ <lb/>
to bladder and Lives. <lb/>
art adapted to old and <lb/>
to <lb/>
ATTENTION AGENTS <lb/>
Mr. John General Agent for <lb/>
North Carolina Virginia, of Well- <lb/>
Known and Popular Company, <lb/>
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT <lb/>
Life Co., of <lb/>
Desires to to large number <lb/>
policy holders, and to insurable public <lb/>
of North <lb/>
will now Resume Business ill this <lb/>
state and from this date will issue its <lb/>
desirable policies, to all de- <lb/>
siring very best insurance in the <lb/>
life insurance in the world. <lb/>
If local your town has not <lb/>
yet completed arrangements, address <lb/>
JOHN C. DREWRY, <lb/>
Slate Agent, Raleigh, N. U. <lb/>
Assets <lb/>
Paid policy <lb/>
Live, reliable energetic agents wanted at <lb/>
once to work for <lb/>
Old Benefit. <lb/>
I . I <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
The Reflector Office Can't Be Beat. <lb/>
In if a woman is left a <lb/>
widow, immediately after her <lb/>
band's she plants a flagstaff <lb/>
at her door, upon which a Hag is <lb/>
Ho us the flag remains <lb/>
by wind the etiquette <lb/>
of Sumatra forbids her to marry, <lb/>
but at the first rent, however tiny, <lb/>
she can lay aside her weeds and <lb/>
accept the first offer she has. <lb/>
Womanhood. <lb/>
George Schaefer, a Brooklyn <lb/>
boy, who was thought to have <lb/>
drowned, was brought to life after <lb/>
respiration had suspended <lb/>
minutes. lie case is attracting <lb/>
much attention. The New York <lb/>
Sun says last some think that <lb/>
human machine is like old <lb/>
will slop in a cold room <lb/>
in wind i. but can be started <lb/>
again, <lb/>
the room i-. healed. Their theory, <lb/>
however, Is attacked by the doctors <lb/>
who hold that respiration may oft- <lb/>
en lie so slight that it can be tie <lb/>
only by the <lb/>
People should learn from <lb/>
this to <lb/>
give hope too soon in instances <lb/>
of apparent <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
Notice <lb/>
Pitt county, in the <lb/>
court. <lb/>
Elizabeth Hooker <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
J. B. administrator <lb/>
C. J. B. Cherry, <lb/>
William <lb/>
J. Yellowley of <lb/>
II. A. Yellowley and <lb/>
J. B. Yellowley individually. <lb/>
The I B Yellowley <lb/>
and as administrator of Yellowley <lb/>
as Executor of B A Yellowley, will <lb/>
take notice action As above <lb/>
has boa commenced in the Superior court, <lb/>
Pitt county, to have that tract of land <lb/>
known us Alpine, of which E Yellowley <lb/>
died seized and possessed, sold by <lb/>
of the court lo pay ft debt due plaintiff <lb/>
from said and also lo restrain <lb/>
J B cherry from making sale of land <lb/>
under a mortgage from J U Yellowley and <lb/>
for other relief demanded in the complaint <lb/>
the said defendant will further take <lb/>
that he Is to appear at Hie <lb/>
next term of Superior court of said <lb/>
to held on the 1st Monday in September, <lb/>
1901, at house of said county in <lb/>
answer or demur to <lb/>
the complaint in said action or plaintiff <lb/>
will apply tn the court for the relief de- <lb/>
in said complaint. <lb/>
This Tin day or July, 1801. <lb/>
D. C. <lb/>
clerk Superior court <lb/>
Most <lb/>
them. <lb/>
promises have strings to <lb/>
Wholesale retail Grocer and <lb/>
Furniture Denier. Cash paid for <lb/>
Hides. Fur, Cotton Seed, Oil Bar- <lb/>
Turkeys, Egg, etc. Bed- <lb/>
steads, Mattresses, Oak Suits, Ba- <lb/>
by Carriages, Parlor <lb/>
suits, Tables, Lounges, Safes, P. <lb/>
Gail <lb/>
Met Tobacco, Key West Cheroots, <lb/>
American Can- <lb/>
Cherries, Peaches, Apples, <lb/>
Pine Apples, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour, Sugar, Coffee, <lb/>
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Cotton Heed Meal and Hulls, Gar- <lb/>
Seeds, Oranges, Apples, Nuts, <lb/>
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Prunes, Raisins, Glass <lb/>
China Ware, in Wooden <lb/>
Ware. Cakes and Crackers, <lb/>
Cheese, Best Mutter, Stand- <lb/>
ard Sewing and nu- <lb/>
other goods. Quality and <lb/>
Quantity. Cheap for cash. Com <lb/>
to see me. <lb/>
North Pitt county in Superior <lb/>
Court. <lb/>
James <lb/>
Joseph j. of g,,,,. <lb/>
K. J. W. j <lb/>
By of an Execution, directed to <lb/>
the undersigned from the Superior Court <lb/>
Pill county, in the case of W. II. James <lb/>
and Joseph James against It-J. W. Carson, <lb/>
I will, on Monday the fifth day of August, <lb/>
1901, at o'clock in at the. court <lb/>
door In Greenville, sell to the highest Mil- <lb/>
for cash, to satisfy said Execution, nil <lb/>
the right title and Interest the said <lb/>
It. J. W. Carson defendant has in fol- <lb/>
lowing described real estate, to One <lb/>
lot of land in the town of Bethel, N <lb/>
C, as Beginning <lb/>
corner of Main Tarboro streets <lb/>
about eighty feet to <lb/>
line, a southerly course <lb/>
thirty feet thence a Westerly course <lb/>
Tarboro St. thence with Main <lb/>
St. a <lb/>
containing one-eighth <lb/>
was lo It. J. W. Carson by Harry <lb/>
Skinner, March 10th, 1892, Book <lb/>
Also one other tract situated in the town <lb/>
Hi on tin- East side of James <lb/>
hounded as follows on North by <lb/>
on the East by W. <lb/>
Carson on South by Malissa Ann <lb/>
and on the West by James St. and lining <lb/>
lot whereon R. J. W. Carson formerly <lb/>
resided, being a part of conveyed <lb/>
lo J. W. Carson by by <lb/>
I ii I Recorded In Book A. <lb/>
of office of Pitt county <lb/>
, . <lb/>
course lo tho beginning, <lb/>
ling lit Ii so sere which <lb/>
II. <lb/>
Also, <lb/>
ill portion of the tract of Ian <lb/>
which by and <lb/>
wife, In ll. J. carton by Deal <lb/>
dated Dec. 1883 and Recorded In book <lb/>
l of the office of Pitt <lb/>
county, situated In Bethel Pitt <lb/>
county, except so much thereof was as- <lb/>
signed to the said it. J. W. canon as a <lb/>
day of July, 1901 <lb/>
homestead containing acre, and the <lb/>
excess, will be containing about <lb/>
acres. Reference is made to In. <lb/>
for more particular <lb/>
to said homestead as allotted. <lb/>
This Mb day of July, 1801. <lb/>
O. W. HARRINGTON, <lb/>
Sheriff of Pitt county <lb/>
By I W. <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and Pies always <lb/>
on has i <lb/>
Fresh goods kept constantly <lb/>
hand. Country produce and <lb/>
sold. A trial will convince you. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
W, R, WHICHARD <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Whichard, N. C. <lb/>
The complete in every <lb/>
and prices as low as the <lb/>
lowest. market prices <lb/>
paid for country produce. <lb/>
Ill <lb/>
IN- <lb/>
II<lb/>
A GENERAL LINE OF <lb/>
Also a nice Line of Hardware. <lb/>
COME TO SEE ME. <lb/>
J. B. COREY. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Buyers and Brokers in <lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
ions. Private Wires to New York, <lb/>
Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
The Commoner <lb/>
WILLIAM J. <lb/>
Editor Publisher, <lb/>
Nebraska. <lb/>
in Advance. <lb/>
One Year i. Six Months <lb/>
Three Sing. Copy <lb/>
No traveling canvassers are cm- <lb/>
ployed. Subscriptions taken at <lb/>
office. The Semi- <lb/>
Weekly and <lb/>
will be together <lb/>
one year for or The <lb/>
Hi and <lb/>
one year for payable in ad-<lb/>
fill <lb/>
-H-. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
D. J. EDITOR <lb/>
TRUTH TO . .<lb/>
VOL XX <lb/>
PITT COUNTY, TUESDAY, AUGUST <lb/>
NO <lb/>
Twice a M <lb/>
-AT- <lb/>
III Ii <lb/>
Tobacco Market <lb/>
opened, prices good, <lb/>
EVERYBODY PLEASED. <lb/>
BUT OUR PRICES ON DRY GOODS, <lb/>
SHOES, HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS, <lb/>
WILL MAKE YOU LAUGH AND <lb/>
GROW PAT. COME TO SEE US. <lb/>
W. T. LEE CO. <lb/>
Exposition. <lb/>
I am prepared about <lb/>
visitors board room with all modern conveniences. <lb/>
Fine view of Niagara Lake Erie from the house, <lb/>
Niagara Falls car passes door every minute min <lb/>
walk to exposition grounds. Take Niagara street ear to <lb/>
Auburn Avenue. Moderate rates. All correspondence will <lb/>
receive prompt attention. <lb/>
JOSEPH A. MOORE, <lb/>
1285 Niagara Street, Buffalo, N. Y. <lb/>
FIRST CLASS MILITARY SCHOOL IN EASTERN N. <lb/>
School, <lb/>
LaGrange, N. C. <lb/>
MILITARY, LITERARY, SCIENTIFIC COMMERCIAL SCHOOL. <lb/>
Boarding Pupils, Twelve Counties two States <lb/>
represented past session. School Buildings. Barracks <lb/>
for Sixty Cadets. <lb/>
The school aims to strengthen by developing latent <lb/>
and power. The individual needs of the arc <lb/>
The literary training strengthens the manly trails, gives a sound body <lb/>
clear mind. Class room cultivate <lb/>
and mental grasp. Athletics encouraged. <lb/>
Expenses per half term, including board, tuition, fuel, lights and <lb/>
room, 155.00. No incidentals. School opens September 1901. <lb/>
Write for <lb/>
-12 J. E. DEBNAM, BOW. <lb/>
Cash is King. <lb/>
For cash we will make the sharpest, swiftest most <lb/>
sweeping, price cutting ever known in mid summer. <lb/>
the <lb/>
price <lb/>
an <lb/>
Is cut just half on nil Lawns, Dimities, Silks, <lb/>
While Goods, Hosiery, <lb/>
Underwear, slippers, Um- <lb/>
and all furnishing goods. These <lb/>
goods must be pushed out to make room for <lb/>
fall goods. <lb/>
KICKS WILKINSON. <lb/>
AYDEN NOTES. <lb/>
K. C, Aug. 1st. <lb/>
Miss who has <lb/>
been spending a days <lb/>
friends at Smith Hotel returned <lb/>
Monday to her home near Bethel. <lb/>
B. C. a clever salesman <lb/>
from Sanford, spent Monday night <lb/>
in town. <lb/>
Deputy Sheriff Leon Tucker <lb/>
was here Monday. <lb/>
Hooker and T. W. Scott, <lb/>
Jr., of Greenville spent Tuesday <lb/>
in town. <lb/>
Miss Blanche Cannon, after <lb/>
spending a few days the country <lb/>
with Miss Hattie Cannon returned <lb/>
home Tuesday evening. <lb/>
Guy Tripp, of was <lb/>
here <lb/>
Norwood L. of Lynch- <lb/>
burg, Va., spent Tuesday night <lb/>
town. <lb/>
Mrs. left <lb/>
night lo visit <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
CL. Tyson and family who have <lb/>
been visiting relatives near Roch- <lb/>
dale, home Wednesday <lb/>
morning, <lb/>
Frank Hail and wife, <lb/>
and son, Lee, left Monday <lb/>
night for City. <lb/>
Will Edwards family who <lb/>
have been visiting in Greene <lb/>
returned Monday night. <lb/>
Miss Roberta We after <lb/>
spending sometime with Miss Rosa <lb/>
Willoughby near name <lb/>
home Wednesday morning. <lb/>
R. B. Willoughby of <lb/>
spent Wednesday it town. <lb/>
TO THE FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS OF <lb/>
PITT AND ADJOINING COUNTIES. <lb/>
Just Received. <lb/>
A. large line of Baby Caps, <lb/>
Belts, Laces and <lb/>
Embroideries. Ladies Col- <lb/>
and Cuffs all Sizes <lb/>
I HAVE THE LARGEST AND HANDSOMEST LINE OF <lb/>
Shirt Waist On The Bench. <lb/>
Judge M. Reed, who for <lb/>
has been <lb/>
of the First Bristol District Court, j <lb/>
is of the opinion that the dignity <lb/>
of court does not suffer in the <lb/>
least if a man appears in court in <lb/>
a shirt waist hot days. <lb/>
further illustrate his ideas about <lb/>
dignity and comfort his honor held <lb/>
court yesterday without wearing <lb/>
coat. One day during the <lb/>
spell of a fortnight ago he appeared <lb/>
court wearing a pink <lb/>
Colored shirt and belt. When <lb/>
Honed regarding the action of; <lb/>
Judge having a <lb/>
man who appeared in court re- i <lb/>
moved from the room, <lb/>
nonsense. Why <lb/>
a man sit and suffer when he can <lb/>
be Any man to i <lb/>
sit In my court bis shirt sleeves <lb/>
or shirt waist do so, if he <lb/>
look neat and respectable. The <lb/>
cooler a man be these days the <lb/>
more sense he shows. Why should <lb/>
T make a man feel uncomfortable <lb/>
I do not feel that the dignity of the <lb/>
First District Court has suffered <lb/>
in least and so far as I am eon <lb/>
know one man who was <lb/>
comfortable. There is such n <lb/>
thing as too <lb/>
Mass., Dispatch. <lb/>
Associate Justice Brewer, of the <lb/>
United States Court, ex- <lb/>
pressed address <lb/>
at Milwaukee that the day is com <lb/>
when WU will be no more and <lb/>
universal peace will reign <lb/>
as a supreme Being rules <lb/>
over the destinies of <lb/>
This may be so. would like <lb/>
to feel WU. While we <lb/>
sometimes human <lb/>
is black only u few white <lb/>
spots, still fear that is <lb/>
black enough lo prevent the <lb/>
from lying down with tho for <lb/>
sometime to come. Man cannot be <lb/>
depended upon where self interest <lb/>
is involved. When there is <lb/>
to conquer, when men are made <lb/>
over that alter a different <lb/>
model, or perhaps nearer like tho <lb/>
pattern after which we arc now <lb/>
supposed to lie fashioned, that time <lb/>
may come. But as long as we arc, <lb/>
will to be wars <lb/>
rumors of Lund- <lb/>
mark. <lb/>
arc the forefront of the race after your <lb/>
We offer you the best Selected of <lb/>
General Merchandise <lb/>
to be found any Store in Pill County. Well bought choice <lb/>
selections, the creations of the best manufacturers or America <lb/>
and Europe. Seasonable all the year round. Spring, Summer <lb/>
Winter. Wears work for yours and our mutual ad <lb/>
vantage. It is our pleasure to show you what you want and to <lb/>
-sell you we can. We oiler you the very best service, polite <lb/>
attention, and the most liberal terms consistent with a well <lb/>
established business up strictly on own merits. <lb/>
When you come to market you will mil do yourself justice <lb/>
if you do not see our Immense Stock before buying elsewhere. <lb/>
Remember us and the following lines of general merchandise. <lb/>
Goods and Notions, <lb/>
Hats and Cups, Silks Satins, Trimmings <lb/>
Jackets and and Oil Cloths. <lb/>
Shoes. <lb/>
Men's, Women's and Children's and <lb/>
Harness. Horse Blankets and Dusters, <lb/>
Groceries. <lb/>
Flour, Meat, Sugar Coffee, Molasses, I Lard, Bead is, <lb/>
Hardware, <lb/>
Plows, Castings and Plow Fixtures, Nails and Rope. <lb/>
BROUGHT TO GREENVILLE. <lb/>
Mrs. is in charge of my millinery department and if <lb/>
h. i is not on hand one will be trimmed to suit your <lb/>
tastes i run you <lb/>
Hats, Silks. Braids, Ornaments, Flowers, Ribbons, and everything <lb/>
u the milliners line. <lb/>
Furniture. <lb/>
Headquarters for Furniture mid everything in line. <lb/>
We buy strictly for Cash, but sell for Either Cash or on Approved <lb/>
Credit Our motto is Honesty, Merit Square Dealing, <lb/>
Your Friends, <lb/>
Throe Tiny Incendiaries. <lb/>
Bernard <lb/>
and a trio of <lb/>
four-year old young- <lb/>
the record as infantile <lb/>
incendiaries. On Sunday <lb/>
the stable of George <lb/>
Sous, and <lb/>
Jamestown sheets, and, after <lb/>
paper and straw, <lb/>
set lire lo the building. little <lb/>
fella dunes d around blaze In <lb/>
high glee until the smoke drove <lb/>
them from the place. <lb/>
A passer-by discovered the blaze <lb/>
and notified who <lb/>
formed n and ex- <lb/>
the before much <lb/>
The youngsters <lb/>
-aid wanted to see <lb/>
engines water. They <lb/>
were temporarily under arrest, <lb/>
and Mi owing lo age, <lb/>
were home, after n lecture by <lb/>
Magistrate <lb/>
; Record. <lb/>
High School. <lb/>
FOR k BOYS. <lb/>
term opens September and closes December 30th. <lb/>
Spring term begins December 30th and ends May 16th. <lb/>
High School, Academic, Intermediate and Primary <lb/>
Music. Delightful location noted for healthful <lb/>
surrounded by excellent moral and religions <lb/>
enc-. For and full information address <lb/>
Q. E, <lb/>
Winterville, <lb/>
Horner Military School,<lb/>
OXFORD, u. <lb/>
Elegant buildings, healed by Buffalo Ian system, securing per- <lb/>
ventilation. Sixteen new rooms for two boys each to be added lot <lb/>
the fall term. Engagements should be made early. Annual attendance I <lb/>
up to full capacity many turned away each session lack of <lb/>
room. Best athletic field, with quarter mile track, in the South. <lb/>
of specialists with special work. Curriculum preparatory to <lb/>
till college or education. An of high ideals <lb/>
surrounds the school, us Students preparing for higher education <lb/>
are excluded. Fall term begins September l.-t. <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
STATE NORMAL AND <lb/>
Literary. Classical. Scientific, Commercial, Industrial, Pedagogical, Musical. <lb/>
for 11.00. of <lb/>
Practice ml Observation pupils. To board I i <lb/>
ill made re July s <lb/>
September 10th, <lb/>
from those b . <lb/>
for and other in formal Inn <lb/>
president n <lb/>
Jr.- -n-1.-t. c <lb/>
genuine unless <lb/>
Rod Cross en label <lb/>
Don't take a tuts <lb/>
e of <lb/>
for Chills, Fevers, <lb/>
Night Sweats and Grippe, <lb/>
all forms of Malaria. <lb/>
WAIT TO <lb/>
SPEND M CENTS AND CURED I <lb/>
CURES MAKE FAMOUS I <lb/>
TRY IT. V NO CURE MO M . PER <lb/>
delightful to TAKE, <lb/>
Industry. <lb/>
yen t he grow- <lb/>
of cantaloupes regarded as be- <lb/>
brunch of the I in- <lb/>
be developed <lb/>
11.1 an imp in <lb/>
lo the wealth and prosperity this <lb/>
section. <lb/>
wan -ii one for <lb/>
cantaloupes and <lb/>
the handsome returns stimulated <lb/>
our trackers and ibis year tho ac- <lb/>
has been increased fold. <lb/>
The shipments this week have <lb/>
averaged about three car loads per <lb/>
day; inch car containing crates <lb/>
hold live cantaloupes, <lb/>
or a total if over per day. <lb/>
While the season bus been de <lb/>
both as to quality end yield, <lb/>
prices have ruled at ft lo <lb/>
per crate, which even the lower <lb/>
means placing of about <lb/>
per In <lb/>
Advertiser. <lb/>
A Smooth <lb/>
Chief <lb/>
vice, bis discovered a <lb/>
game amounts in some- <lb/>
thing, And did through <lb/>
the of some clever <lb/>
through the carelessness <lb/>
or worse of some of a <lb/>
or the government. , <lb/>
1803 the State Dank of Ken <lb/>
Ki Jersey. wool out of <lb/>
The plates from which <lb/>
the national bank notes were <lb/>
led were supposed ll been <lb/>
the were and <lb/>
counterfeiters have printed from <lb/>
bills of small <lb/>
denominations, these are in <lb/>
use all over country. The <lb/>
notes are handsome and well print- <lb/>
ed, and is estimated that two <lb/>
million dollars null Ii of them, lace <lb/>
value, are in circulation. Most <lb/>
of the counterfeits ate two dollar <lb/>
bills, though and <lb/>
have been printed. <lb/>
GRIFTON ITEMS. <lb/>
N. C. Aug. <lb/>
J. I. went to Snow Hill <lb/>
day. <lb/>
If is. Council returned <lb/>
Seven Spring Wednesday. <lb/>
Will Newborn spent the day <lb/>
here Tuesday. <lb/>
Leon Tucker .-topped over <lb/>
hero with Jacob <lb/>
Rev. W. returned to <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
J. J. Harper returned to <lb/>
Wednesday. <lb/>
It. Harvey and Mrs. Harvey <lb/>
left Monday for Asheville. <lb/>
Tucker, of Norfolk, spent <lb/>
Monday and Tuesday here and left <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
A. If. was here a short <lb/>
while Monday. <lb/>
went to- <lb/>
to sell some tobacco on the <lb/>
opening. <lb/>
Miss Anna is visiting <lb/>
here. <lb/>
Misses May Dunn, of Kinston, <lb/>
and Julia of Ayden, are <lb/>
visiting Miss Susie <lb/>
Laura Spier is visiting <lb/>
Mrs. Alice Spier for few weeks. <lb/>
and W- Co's., mill at <lb/>
Ibis place is down on account <lb/>
scarcity of limber but will <lb/>
start soon, <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. Keene, Si., <lb/>
on ii visit to relatives and <lb/>
friends. <lb/>
BETHEL ITEMS. <lb/>
nil., July 1801. <lb/>
Prof. V. W. J. <lb/>
Carson, Carson, Misses <lb/>
Lissie and <lb/>
Maggie Nelson have just got home <lb/>
the Pitt and Greene <lb/>
held at Winterville. <lb/>
report line lime and think <lb/>
are much <lb/>
We are glad to learn that we, as <lb/>
well a Greenville, will have <lb/>
earlier evening mail after August, <lb/>
The heavy this evening has <lb/>
everything and cooled the <lb/>
air. <lb/>
Boon it will l time for the High <lb/>
School to open here. We expect <lb/>
grand opening. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. R. left <lb/>
morning for Norfolk. <lb/>
Thomas Smith and Herbert <lb/>
two young salesmen of our <lb/>
town, left yesterday for Norfolk. <lb/>
Bliss Pink Manning returned <lb/>
morning from Hamilton where <lb/>
she has been visiting friends. <lb/>
Miss Rose this <lb/>
morning from <lb/>
A barn county that <lb/>
contained bales of cotton and n <lb/>
lot of farming Implement, was <lb/>
track by lightning and all do <lb/>
strayed, <lb/>
r 4.- <lb/>
-v ti. v .<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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