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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>
mm ,. m <lb/>
Have You Forgot <lb/>
What <lb/>
THAT I AM STILL CARRY <lb/>
DATE LINK OF <lb/>
Pry broods. Dress Goods, Shoes <lb/>
Hats, Shirts, Pants, Hardware <lb/>
Tinware, <lb/>
TAXES AND TAXES. <lb/>
The Aldermen Make a Bus- <lb/>
of the Board. <lb/>
The Hoard of Aldermen held <lb/>
their regular monthly meeting <lb/>
Thursday night with all the <lb/>
present at the beginning of <lb/>
the session, but they continued <lb/>
at work until midnight J three ask- <lb/>
ed to be excused the <lb/>
came, tolling only a quorum to<lb/>
I. Sugg, Alderman <lb/>
AND A <lb/>
WHICH I TO <lb/>
to sec me for your next Barrel Floor or Pork. <lb/>
Yours to <lb/>
Jas. B. White. <lb/>
AFTER TWO YEARS PREMIUMS HAVE BEEN <lb/>
PAID IN <lb/>
III III III <lb/>
NEWARK. N. J. POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value. <lb/>
Cash Value. <lb/>
Paid-up Insurance. <lb/>
Extended that works automatically. <lb/>
r. Is <lb/>
t. Will be If arrears be paid within on mouth while yon <lb/>
are living, or within three years after lapse, upon satisfactory evidence <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 a an during the lifetime <lb/>
of insured. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
Three Times The Value <lb/>
OF ANY <lb/>
Aim <lb/>
ONE <lb/>
elect for <lb/>
the Fifth ward, took the oath and <lb/>
entered upon the duties of the <lb/>
office. <lb/>
The election of an assistant <lb/>
police was taken up as <lb/>
i business. One ballot was taken <lb/>
i resulting in a tie between A. A. <lb/>
I Forbes, Jr., and K. B. Dudley, <lb/>
each receiving lour votes, when <lb/>
the matter was again postponed <lb/>
until the next regular meeting <lb/>
The of Police was granted <lb/>
ten days further time to <lb/>
I the Inventory of property belong <lb/>
log to the <lb/>
The election Chief and Assist- <lb/>
j out Chief of the Fire Department <lb/>
I until next meeting. <lb/>
Petitions from C. <lb/>
Co. and W. W. Thomas to be <lb/>
lowed to carry on a market <lb/>
places outside of the <lb/>
market house, to the <lb/>
Market Committee for report at <lb/>
next meeting. <lb/>
The Tax Collector, Chief, As- <lb/>
and Special Police made <lb/>
their reports of collections during <lb/>
the past month. <lb/>
The Tax Collector presented a <lb/>
lit of persons who had failed to <lb/>
list their taxes, and he was <lb/>
to list all delinquents <lb/>
upon their paying him the usual <lb/>
fee therefor. <lb/>
N. Hart, Treasurer-elect, was <lb/>
given until next meeting to Hie his <lb/>
official bond. <lb/>
The Tax Collector was Instructed <lb/>
to orders issued at this <lb/>
out of funds in his hands, <lb/>
Agents warned in all unoccupied that persons holding the <lb/>
Every cotton planter should <lb/>
write illustrated <lb/>
pamphlet, Cotton <lb/>
It is sent free. <lb/>
N i H I If, M <lb/>
GERMAN KALI WORKS. St, N. V. <lb/>
Found his Home in <lb/>
Laving, who lives about <lb/>
live miles on the <lb/>
rill's FOrd road, lost his house and <lb/>
all its by tire sometime <lb/>
Saturday afternoon. He and all <lb/>
his family were at work in the field <lb/>
some distance from, his dwelling <lb/>
When they returned home at night <lb/>
they found their home and all its <lb/>
ashes. They had <lb/>
left but the clothes they wore. <lb/>
It is supposed the fire was caused <lb/>
by that left from cooking dinner. <lb/>
Lincoln Journal. <lb/>
,, <lb/>
EASIER. <lb/>
THIRD FASTER <lb/>
territory. <lb/>
ft <lb/>
Manufacturing Company, <lb/>
Gil. <lb/>
Tor sale <lb/>
S. T WHITE, <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
TONIC LAXATIVE <lb/>
you have sour stomach, indigestion, biliousness, constipation. <lb/>
inactive troubles, too. <lb/>
cl insomnia, energy, bad blood, blotched or skin, <lb/>
or any symptoms and disorders which tell story of bad bowels and an <lb/>
impaired digestive system, will Cure Von. <lb/>
It will clean out bowels, stimulate the liver and kidneys, strengthen <lb/>
the mucous membranes of the stomach, purify your blood and put you <lb/>
on your again. Your appetite will return, your bowels move <lb/>
your liver and kidneys cease to trouble you, your wilt clear and <lb/>
freshen and you will feel the old time energy and buoyancy. <lb/>
tho to f.-. lb.- little one for <lb/>
will Dad Ideal <lb/>
It their bowels --ocular without pals of <lb/>
aMs <lb/>
U and ink far it. <lb/>
For Sale by <lb/>
is only the most efficient -I the <lb/>
M mi . M <lb/>
I AX A KOLA CO . I V. MS, <lb/>
We will to any on M p <lb/>
Urge family vie bottle of r <lb/>
or. n . a, i <lb/>
V- <lb/>
M, l j i . J, <lb/>
Fountain <lb/>
would not have to wait until the <lb/>
When the levying of taxes was <lb/>
taken up there was warm <lb/>
but it was mainly <lb/>
at least one against the house, as <lb/>
Alderman Hooker stood alone for a <lb/>
red notion. The levy was made is <lb/>
general cents <lb/>
Ion the WOO valuation and 11.8001 <lb/>
the poll. <lb/>
For interest on cents <lb/>
. on the WOO valuation and <lb/>
the poll. <lb/>
graded cents on <lb/>
the and cents on the poll. <lb/>
makes n total of 11.19 <lb/>
on the WOO valuation and <lb/>
the poll. <lb/>
machines were permitted to <lb/>
I c placed in the town a license <lb/>
lax on u machine was levied at <lb/>
per year or pail of a <lb/>
year. <lb/>
lie per head hereto- <lb/>
j levied dogs was <lb/>
toll. <lb/>
Alderman who had per <lb/>
milted his team to do some <lb/>
hauling, was excused from <lb/>
log any dray license tax. <lb/>
The Street Committee was in- <lb/>
i to investigate <lb/>
j of a railroad side track being put <lb/>
in street, permission for <lb/>
which the Board gave Its Hist <lb/>
meeting. <lb/>
B. W. C. Hines. <lb/>
. Stanley Hopkins <lb/>
and J, K. <lb/>
Application of U. K. for <lb/>
restaurant license was <lb/>
A J. Griffin tendered his <lb/>
nation us Chief of the Fire Depart- <lb/>
which was accepted. <lb/>
Accounts were allowed amount- <lb/>
to 1309.94. <lb/>
The Board then adjourned to <lb/>
bold a special mooting on Thurs- <lb/>
day, August Sin, I p. m. <lb/>
in i it. <lb/>
Austin, Nov. <lb/>
I have found <lb/>
and aid my <lb/>
When my oldest boy was s <lb/>
child, day <lb/>
ed us that we would Inevitably lose him, I <lb/>
and at <lb/>
once it and <lb/>
was in and <lb/>
from that day lie <lb/>
constantly kept it and it with <lb/>
and have tab n in <lb/>
sounding it all mothers of young <lb/>
found it invaluable even after <lb/>
the teething was passed. <lb/>
II. <lb/>
as Reminders. <lb/>
Only the business man of long <lb/>
experience is able to how <lb/>
prone the people arc to <lb/>
in the matter of <lb/>
making purchases. Their <lb/>
must be railed again and again <lb/>
to own obvious needs, and <lb/>
they must lie spurred tip to buy- <lb/>
now what they have resolved but <lb/>
have neglected to buy. One <lb/>
part of the purpose of ad- <lb/>
is to remind people that <lb/>
they need certain <lb/>
Stale Auditor Dixon to day <lb/>
Wrote all the in the State a <lb/>
very important letter, telling them <lb/>
that the new revenue law requires <lb/>
that on the first day of each month <lb/>
they shall to the State Audi- <lb/>
tor a of all the State <lb/>
taxes during the <lb/>
ceding mouth that they shall <lb/>
by the 10th of the month send such <lb/>
taxes to the State This <lb/>
does not mean merely privilege <lb/>
taxes, says the Auditor. It mean <lb/>
all State taxes. Some have <lb/>
construed it to mean merely <lb/>
taxes, while others have made <lb/>
the payments to the county com- <lb/>
missioners, but payments must be <lb/>
made directly to the Slate <lb/>
Not half a sheriffs have <lb/>
so far complied with this law. <lb/>
Raleigh Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
Trinity College <lb/>
one hundred and twenty-Are <lb/>
ate and undergraduate course of <lb/>
Twenty-three teachers in academic <lb/>
laboratories equipped with modern <lb/>
library Beat <lb/>
gymnasium and in <lb/>
Hie stale. Scholarships Fun-. <lb/>
nearly within the <lb/>
years. very low. The <lb/>
best is the one that offers a student <lb/>
the best advantage Send for<lb/>
Governor says he will <lb/>
urge the next legislature to make <lb/>
provisions for the of <lb/>
troops while in camp, lie thinks <lb/>
this is due the troops as they are <lb/>
always ready to obey the call to <lb/>
and never move on <lb/>
the part of the governor will cause <lb/>
general rejoicing throughout the <lb/>
slate militia. It is nothing but <lb/>
light that the state should foot the <lb/>
expense account for food while in <lb/>
camp Wilmington Dispatch. <lb/>
HEALTH <lb/>
INSURANCE <lb/>
The man who Insures his life is <lb/>
wise for bis family. <lb/>
The man who Insures his health <lb/>
is wise both for his family and <lb/>
himself. <lb/>
may Insure hearth by guard- <lb/>
it. It is worth guarding. <lb/>
At the tint attack of disease, <lb/>
which generally approaches <lb/>
through the LIVER and <lb/>
Itself in innumerable ways <lb/>
TAKE <lb/>
Practical Education <lb/>
In engineering, mechanic <lb/>
cotton manufacturing; a <lb/>
of theory and practice, <lb/>
of study and manual training. <lb/>
a year. Total in- <lb/>
clothing and board, <lb/>
Thirty teachers. student a. Next <lb/>
session begins <lb/>
For address T Win- <lb/>
President <lb/>
IV. O. <lb/>
AGRICULTURE MECHANIC ARTS, <lb/>
A queer will case has just been <lb/>
decided by the Courts In <lb/>
The witnesses to the <lb/>
had stepped through n door- <lb/>
way a room adjoining that in <lb/>
which the testator lay at the time <lb/>
the signing of the will, had <lb/>
their signatures at a table <lb/>
about ten feet from the testator, <lb/>
but just out of his sight. It was <lb/>
testified, however that he was sit- <lb/>
ting on the side of his bed at the <lb/>
time, and could have seen the wit- <lb/>
by stepping forward two or <lb/>
three feet. The attestation <lb/>
subscription the will under these <lb/>
circumstances were sustained. <lb/>
Three Panes, One Year for <lb/>
Times <lb/>
VA., <lb/>
Now Only a Year, <lb/>
and includes absolutely free The <lb/>
Paragon Monthly, New The <lb/>
Farm Journal, Philadelphia. <lb/>
THE AND SUNDAY TIMES, <lb/>
Including Farm Journal and Para- <lb/>
Monthly, now only per <lb/>
year; per mouth by mail. <lb/>
Address TIMES, <lb/>
Richmond, Va. <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE <lb/>
Steamer Myron leave <lb/>
ton daily at A. M. for Green- <lb/>
ville, leave Greenville daily <lb/>
M. for Washington. <lb/>
Steamer Edgecombe leaves <lb/>
Greenville Mondays, Wednesday <lb/>
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 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. <lb/>
Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
Tint's Pills <lb/>
And save your health. <lb/>
1.900 Per Cent. Dividend. <lb/>
New York, July 81.-The Keen- <lb/>
CURES <lb/>
RHEUMATISM <lb/>
TO CURED. <lb/>
Century. <lb/>
A vegetable that <lb/>
cures recent and long i <lb/>
canal The creates blood <lb/>
known. Has tin- hearty <lb/>
endorsement of leading <lb/>
after thorough trial, lures per <lb/>
cent, the Price <lb/>
SI per bottle. <lb/>
Sold by BRYAN NICHOLS. <lb/>
BALK. <lb/>
SALE OF TOWN LOT <lb/>
By virtue of B of the Superior <lb/>
Court of Pill County made in a certain <lb/>
Special Proceeding therein pending, <lb/>
Cannon, Public Administrator, <lb/>
estate Of W. If. <lb/>
deceased, VS. Bonnie B. and <lb/>
I will on Monday. September 1901, <lb/>
before tin Court House door in Greenville, <lb/>
sell at sale to the highest bidder, for <lb/>
cash, a lot or parcel land in the <lb/>
town of Ayden. Pitt known lot <lb/>
o in block I. in the plan of said town, <lb/>
including the saw and grist mill thereon <lb/>
situate. This the day of August, 1901. <lb/>
JESSE CANNON, <lb/>
Public Administrator, administering the <lb/>
estate of W. II. deceased. <lb/>
Pitt county, the <lb/>
court. <lb/>
Elizabeth Hooker <lb/>
J. II. administrator <lb/>
C. B. Cherry, <lb/>
William <lb/>
I. Executor of <lb/>
II. A. <lb/>
U. individually. <lb/>
The J B <lb/>
and administrator of <lb/>
and as Executor of II A will <lb/>
take notice that no entitled as above <lb/>
has been commenced in Superior court. <lb/>
of Pitt county, to bare tract of land <lb/>
known as Alpine, of which E c <lb/>
died wild by <lb/>
of the court to pay a debt due phi <lb/>
from said K o and also In <lb/>
II cherry from making sale laid land <lb/>
under a mortgage from K and <lb/>
relief demanded in the <lb/>
and the said defendant will further take <lb/>
nonce that be required to appear at the <lb/>
next term of Superior court raid county <lb/>
to be held on the 1st Monday in September, <lb/>
1901, at of said county in <lb/>
Greenville, answer or demur to <lb/>
the complaint laid action or the plaintiff <lb/>
Will apply tn the court the relief <lb/>
in said complaint. <lb/>
This 17th day <lb/>
D. C. <lb/>
Superior coin t <lb/>
a Decree of the Superior <lb/>
court <lb/>
led lien S. ll-l, W ii L. and Million <lb/>
t. the undersigned Com- <lb/>
will sell for cash the court <lb/>
house door in Greenville oh Monday <lb/>
2nd of 1901 the following <lb/>
tract of land on North side of <lb/>
. and South side of Green- <lb/>
a of <lb/>
corner, thence <lb/>
to said William's <lb/>
thence South Wort <lb/>
inc j <lb/>
National before taking j Booth East poles, thence Booth <lb/>
poles to s stats In MM line, <lb/>
Boat M to Main Road, <lb/>
rule Road, Beg <lb/>
said road Frank <lb/>
log Post that extra South E. <lb/>
,.,,,, . . ., other corner, <lb/>
recently <lb/>
over the National Bank of the <lb/>
was per cent, the <lb/>
old capital stock of This <lb/>
dividend was more than large <lb/>
enough to enable the stockholders <lb/>
to pay for their share of the new <lb/>
took to be Issued the increase <lb/>
of the bank's capital to <lb/>
without the outlay of other <lb/>
with Main Road Io the beginning. <lb/>
acres, more or <lb/>
This August 1901- <lb/>
JAMES, <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
The Reflector Office Can't Be Beat. <lb/>
A French insurance company <lb/>
has put operation the <lb/>
novel idea of insuring candidates <lb/>
for parliamentary honors against <lb/>
defeat at the polls. The rates <lb/>
vary, of course, with the risk <lb/>
involved in different cases, the <lb/>
popularity of the candidate <lb/>
a prominent factor <lb/>
amount of premium to <lb/>
paid by This of <lb/>
the <lb/>
and has boon <lb/>
till <lb/>
III <lb/>
S M. <lb/>
Chill cure chills and all <lb/>
malarial Thai is what they were <lb/>
other fail <lb/>
No cure, per tie <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and lies <lb/>
-on ban <lb/>
Fresh goods kept constantly en <lb/>
hand. Country produce and <lb/>
sold. A trial will convince you. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
W, R, WHICHARD <lb/>
DEALERS IN <lb/>
Whichard, N. C. <lb/>
The Stock complete in every de <lb/>
payment and prices as low as the <lb/>
lowest. Highest market prices <lb/>
paid for country produce. <lb/>
B. Williams, of Wake county, <lb/>
says he is culling his third set of <lb/>
teeth. I- old and has <lb/>
been i for fifteen rears. <lb/>
Isn't <lb/>
overtime. <lb/>
Borne low shoes era. the <lb/>
price. <lb/>
i man work <lb/>
highest <lb/>
IX 1800. <lb/>
J. W. PERRY CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
handlers of <lb/>
Bagging, Tics and Bags.<lb/>
i f- S <lb/>
W and retail Grocer and I <lb/>
Furniture Dealer. Cash paid for <lb/>
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed, Oil Bar <lb/>
Turkeys, Egg, etc. Bed- <lb/>
steads, Mattresses, Oak Ba- <lb/>
by Carriages, Go Parlor <lb/>
i Tables, Lounges, Safes, P. <lb/>
i i and Gail As <lb/>
Meat Tobacco, Key West Cheroots, <lb/>
American Beauty Can- <lb/>
Cherries, Apples, <lb/>
Pine Apples, Syrup, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour, Sugar, Coffee, Meat, Soap, <lb/>
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar- <lb/>
den Oranges, Apples, Nuts, <lb/>
Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Prunes, Currents, Glass <lb/>
and China Ware, Tin and Wooden <lb/>
Ware, Cakes and Crackers, Mara <lb/>
Cheese, Best Butter, Stand- <lb/>
ard Sewing Mac and mi <lb/>
other goods. and <lb/>
Quantity. Cheap for Com <lb/>
to see me. <lb/>
UNIVERSITY <lb/>
of North Carolina. <lb/>
TUB HEAD OF THE STATE'S <lb/>
EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM. <lb/>
ACADEMIC H EM <lb/>
LAW, MEDICINE, PHARMACY <lb/>
Eighty-live scholarships. Free <lb/>
tuition to teachers and <lb/>
sons. Loans for the needy. <lb/>
students Instructor. <lb/>
Sew Dormitories, Water Works, <lb/>
Central Heating system. <lb/>
spent in improvements in 1900 <lb/>
and 1901. Fall term begins <lb/>
1901. Address, <lb/>
E. P. VINA mi;, <lb/>
Chapel Hill, N. C. <lb/>
-DEALER IN- <lb/>
v, <lb/>
A GENERAL LINE OF <lb/>
Hardware. <lb/>
COME TO SEE ME. <lb/>
J. R. COREY. <lb/>
HI <lb/>
notice to I fie <lb/>
ATTENTION AGENTS <lb/>
Mr. General Agent for <lb/>
North Carolina and Virginia, of that Well- <lb/>
Known and Popular Company, <lb/>
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT <lb/>
Life Insurance of <lb/>
Desires o announce to Its large number of <lb/>
policy holders, and to the insurable public <lb/>
generally, of North <lb/>
will now In this <lb/>
and from this date will issue its <lb/>
policies, to all de- <lb/>
siring the very lies insurance in the best <lb/>
life insurance company in the world. <lb/>
If the local agent In your town has not <lb/>
yet arrangements, address <lb/>
JOHN O. DREWRY, <lb/>
mo. N. <lb/>
Afloat <lb/>
Paid policy <lb/>
energetic <lb/>
--C <lb/>
Old <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/>
WEEKLY. <lb/>
WILLIAM J. BRYAN, <lb/>
Editor Publisher, <lb/>
Lincoln, <lb/>
TERMS Payable in Advance. <lb/>
One Year II, Six Months <lb/>
Three Mouths Sing. Copy <lb/>
No traveling canvassers em- <lb/>
ployed. taken at <lb/>
TilE Reflector office. <lb/>
Weekly and <lb/>
will be sent together <lb/>
year for or The Daily <lb/>
Reflector and <lb/>
one year for payable in ad- <lb/>
No Ally's <lb/>
Lawman. WASH<lb/>
FOR <lb/>
III <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
D. J. EDITOR <lb/>
TO <lb/>
VOL. XX. <lb/>
PITT COUNTY, FRIDAY, AUGUST g <lb/>
NO <lb/>
Tobacco Market <lb/>
opened, prices <lb/>
EVERYBODY PLEASED. <lb/>
ON DRY GOODS, <lb/>
SHOES, HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS, <lb/>
WILL YOU LAUGH AND <lb/>
GROW FAT. COME TO SEE US. <lb/>
W. T. LEE CO. <lb/>
Exposition. <lb/>
I to accommodate about Pan-Am <lb/>
with board room with all modern <lb/>
Fine view of Luke Erie from the <lb/>
Niagara Falls car passes door every minutes. SO min <lb/>
walk to exposition grounds. Take Niagara street car 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/>
-AT <lb/>
FIRST CLASS SCHOOL IN EASTERN N. <lb/>
School, <lb/>
. LaGrange, N. C. <lb/>
MILITARY, LITERARY, SCIENTIFIC COMMERCIAL SCHOOL. <lb/>
Fifty-three Boarding Pupils, Twelve Counties two Slates <lb/>
represented past session. School Buildings. Barracks <lb/>
for Sixty Cadets. <lb/>
The school aims by developing latent <lb/>
and power. The individual needs of the students are considered. <lb/>
The literary training strengthens the manly traits, gives a sound <lb/>
and clear Class room methods cultivate <lb/>
grasp. Athletics encouraged. <lb/>
Expenses per half term, including board, tuition, fuel, lights and <lb/>
room, No School opens September <lb/>
Write for <lb/>
J. E. DEBNAM, Slit. <lb/>
Cash is King. <lb/>
For cash ire will make the sharpest, swiftest most <lb/>
sweeping, price ever known in mid summer. <lb/>
the<lb/>
price <lb/>
is cut just half on nil Lawns. Dimities, Silks, <lb/>
White Hosiery, Laces, Hamburg., <lb/>
Underwear, Shirts, Slippers, Um- <lb/>
and all furnishing goods. These <lb/>
goods must be pushed out to make room for <lb/>
goods. <lb/>
RICKS WILKINSON. <lb/>
BLOOD HOUNDS. <lb/>
Some Interesting Facts Worthy <lb/>
N. C, Aug. <lb/>
For many Pitt county has <lb/>
been the scene of much crime, and <lb/>
it is not uncommon when away <lb/>
from the comity to be by <lb/>
strangers, there been another <lb/>
minder, or burglary in Pitt <lb/>
this week This has been com. <lb/>
talk. If any one will care- <lb/>
fully inquire the facts, it will <lb/>
be found that during the last <lb/>
months of 1900 there were sixteen <lb/>
burglaries, live and <lb/>
many petty thefts and smaller <lb/>
crimes committed Pitt county. <lb/>
Since January 1st, 1901, there has <lb/>
no homicide and but one <lb/>
burglary committed, to at <lb/>
Grifton, and by the use of blood <lb/>
from my kennels these <lb/>
panics were caught, convicted and <lb/>
are now serving sentence in the <lb/>
State prison. <lb/>
There were no blood hounds in <lb/>
Pitt county last year except three <lb/>
small puppies owned by me, and <lb/>
they were too young for service. <lb/>
There can be no dispute but <lb/>
what the fact having these dogs <lb/>
easy reach where can be <lb/>
soon placed on the trail of the <lb/>
lawless has had a splendidly <lb/>
effect on that class of <lb/>
criminals who have <lb/>
upon the lives and property of the <lb/>
people of Pitt county. <lb/>
This comparison is worthy of all <lb/>
who are interested in the main- <lb/>
of law order. <lb/>
I have splendid stock of <lb/>
can blood hounds on bind ready to <lb/>
do service when the occasion re. <lb/>
quires. In my opinion the kennel <lb/>
of dogs I have today are a great j <lb/>
protection against lawlessness. <lb/>
These dogs are full blood are <lb/>
in the Rational <lb/>
of blood and it has <lb/>
been long established that <lb/>
American dogs arc superior trail- <lb/>
to the or other dogs. <lb/>
I am prepared to supply dogs of <lb/>
the very best quality to those <lb/>
ranting them. <lb/>
The following letter sufficiently <lb/>
explains <lb/>
H. . July 1901. <lb/>
it may <lb/>
is to certify that I bought <lb/>
blood of Mr. W. C. Hines, <lb/>
Greenville, N. which gave en <lb/>
tire satisfaction. Having, with <lb/>
these dogs, run down secured <lb/>
the conviction seven criminals <lb/>
in the space of six mouths and the <lb/>
wannest trail that I had was a <lb/>
hour trail. Very respectfully, <lb/>
Policeman N. <lb/>
Pitt County should possess her <lb/>
own dogs and have them kept by <lb/>
the Sheriff of the county. <lb/>
Very respectfully, <lb/>
TO THE FRIENDS CUSTOMERS OP <lb/>
PUT AND ADJOINING COUNTIES. <lb/>
we are still the forefront of after your <lb/>
We oiler you the best selected line of <lb/>
General Merchandise <lb/>
to lie found any store Pitt County. Well bought choice <lb/>
selections, the creations of tHe best manufacturers of America <lb/>
and Europe, Seasonable ail the year Spring, Summer <lb/>
Winter. We are at work for yours and our mutual ml <lb/>
vantage. It is our pleasure to show you what you want and to <lb/>
sell you if we can. We offer you the very best 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 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/>
Eats and Caps, Silks and Satins, <lb/>
Jackets Capes, Carpels, Mattings and Oil Cloths. <lb/>
Shoes. <lb/>
Men's, Women's and <lb/>
Harness, Horse Blankets and Dusters. <lb/>
Groceries. <lb/>
Flour, Meat, Sugar Coffee, Is, <lb/>
Hardware, <lb/>
Plows, Castings and Plow Fixtures, and Rope. <lb/>
Furniture. <lb/>
Headquarters for Furniture and in line. <lb/>
We buy strictly Cash, but sell for Either Cash or on Approved <lb/>
Credit Our motto is Honesty, Merit and Square Dealing. <lb/>
Your Friends, <lb/>
Just Received. <lb/>
A large line of Baby Caps, <lb/>
Belts, Laces and <lb/>
Embroideries. Ladies Col- <lb/>
and Guffs all Sizes <lb/>
I HAVE THE AND HANDSOMEST LINE OF <lb/>
BROUGHT TO <lb/>
Mrs. M. T. is in charge of my millinery department and <lb/>
the hat is on baud one will be trimmed to suit your <lb/>
tables wait. <lb/>
Hats, Braids, Ornaments, Blowers, Ribbons, and everything <lb/>
i. the milliners line. <lb/>
j. b . . e <lb/>
AYDEN NOTES. <lb/>
N. , Aug. 5th. <lb/>
J. Hart had the misfortune <lb/>
lo lose a tobacco barn by lire <lb/>
Thursday afternoon. The loss is <lb/>
estimated to be one hundred <lb/>
C. of Baltimore, <lb/>
was stopping in town Thursday, <lb/>
R. C and son went t-i <lb/>
Greene Thursday. <lb/>
of Richmond, <lb/>
spent Thursday night here. <lb/>
Misses Lena and <lb/>
came home Wilson Thursday <lb/>
night. <lb/>
Our people are delighted over <lb/>
new schedule. We hope it <lb/>
v, ill he changed again soon. <lb/>
i eon left Saturday to <lb/>
upend .; days m forehead. <lb/>
J. K. of .-top . <lb/>
in town from <lb/>
Miss Lillian Bland Friday <lb/>
evening for Kinston, <lb/>
Little Miss Battle Randolph, of <lb/>
Kinston, is visiting Miss Rosa <lb/>
READ THIS. <lb/>
To Whom it May Concern. <lb/>
Having qualified as cotton weigh <lb/>
for the town of Greenville, by <lb/>
tiling my loud oath with the <lb/>
c Commissioners as required <lb/>
by law, I hereby give that <lb/>
the statute provides, that any per- <lb/>
other than the aforesaid cotton <lb/>
weigher who shall weigh any bale <lb/>
of cotton offered for sale in said <lb/>
town of Greenville, shall be guilty <lb/>
of a misdemeanor and punished <lb/>
within Hie discretion of the court. <lb/>
No yard having been provided, as <lb/>
is usually Hie custom of towns or <lb/>
b lord's of trade in such cases, and <lb/>
devolving upon me to supply <lb/>
one, I hereby designate, appoint, <lb/>
and constitute the platform at the <lb/>
wharf of the Old Dominion <lb/>
Ship Company, the cotton yard for <lb/>
the town of Greenville until one is <lb/>
offered which is the pinion of <lb/>
the weigher more convenient. <lb/>
The law provides that the weigh- <lb/>
I shall receive as compensation <lb/>
Mr. came for <lb/>
from Kinston Saturday I. ,., to be paid <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
Happenings In North Carolina. <lb/>
Near Wilson two had a <lb/>
fuss over a dog and one killed the <lb/>
other. <lb/>
One of the furniture factories <lb/>
at was destroyed by <lb/>
lite Sunday. <lb/>
a young farmer <lb/>
neat Durham, was drowned Hun- <lb/>
day while in swimming. <lb/>
Early Sunday morning the chief <lb/>
of police of Shelby and the night <lb/>
watchman it gambling <lb/>
den. One the shot the <lb/>
chief of through the heart, <lb/>
killing him instantly. A thousand <lb/>
people with blood followed <lb/>
the trail of the who also <lb/>
shot one of the hounds when the <lb/>
dog vat about to catch him. The <lb/>
had not been captured at <lb/>
last account. <lb/>
If yon want stoves or range's constructed upon <lb/>
scientific principles, which are economical, durable, <lb/>
and as Well as beautiful and artistic, look <lb/>
for the <lb/>
trade mark, which is shown upon every genuine <lb/>
Stove or Range, and do not be deceived <lb/>
by worthless imitations and substitutes. <lb/>
lead all others in yearly sales and <lb/>
gold Exclusively by <lb/>
BAKER <lb/>
Building <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Episcopal services W, II, T. <lb/>
an Sunday night. <lb/>
Miss Lulu Smith Friday to <lb/>
visit Rosa near <lb/>
The infant child of Mi. Mrs. <lb/>
Joseph Dixon was <lb/>
buried in the cemetery. <lb/>
The Junior Builders gave an ice <lb/>
cream supper Friday night near <lb/>
Methodist church for the <lb/>
fit of the Christian <lb/>
crowd was entertained with <lb/>
and music, and In- <lb/>
All expressed <lb/>
selves as having spent a pleasant <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
J. II. Standard spent <lb/>
in town. <lb/>
P, and W. A. <lb/>
of Hertford, came In Saturday and <lb/>
returned this morning. <lb/>
Will of Standard, spent <lb/>
in <lb/>
Rev. Mr. Howard Oiled bis reg- <lb/>
appointment in the <lb/>
even <lb/>
by buyer and live by the <lb/>
seller. Each buyer shall retain <lb/>
from the price of said cotton five <lb/>
cents to in-paid to weigher as sell- <lb/>
of due <lb/>
weigher, <lb/>
I have purchased a pair of Fair- <lb/>
banks scales with solid pair brass <lb/>
poises costing and I believe <lb/>
first class respect. <lb/>
shall, so far as in my power, <lb/>
. i do equal justice to all. <lb/>
Very respectfully, <lb/>
W. L. <lb/>
Cotton Weigher for Greenville. <lb/>
Y oar correspondent was given an <lb/>
odd bit of news last night by a gen- <lb/>
this city, who said there <lb/>
was a union or secret <lb/>
Raleigh and that its <lb/>
were under pledge to feed <lb/>
least three people. If this be true <lb/>
it explains many things. It will, if <lb/>
true, also result in the <lb/>
cooks. The only problem will <lb/>
be ho Io get in places. <lb/>
With cooks eliminated would <lb/>
,. . . w bite girls be willing house <lb/>
I lie Episcopalians have Sunday <lb/>
school Will every, <lb/>
Sunday at o'clock p. in <lb/>
John was here<lb/>
It is one of the questions <lb/>
the time. The cook is fast <lb/>
passing, and will pass much faster <lb/>
If there Is- a union. A gentleman <lb/>
who is unite a wag. <lb/>
Miss and brother, , ,, , , . <lb/>
asked In a census taker what was <lb/>
spent <lb/>
in <lb/>
of <lb/>
town. <lb/>
Mrs. O. M. of Norfolk, <lb/>
spent Saturday with Mrs. <lb/>
Bob Smith. <lb/>
Mis May spent Sunday <lb/>
here a friends, <lb/>
bis occupation said a <lb/>
boarding asked <lb/>
what he meant he said he had a <lb/>
wile and a cook and that the latter <lb/>
fed at least B people. A white la- <lb/>
labor agitator, whom Raleigh now <lb/>
knows no more, wanted to <lb/>
. organize the washer-women and <lb/>
cooks, too, and said this would <lb/>
it Is easier to tell fortunes than complete the organization. <lb/>
Io make them. <lb/>
Some lab with a . <lb/>
hook and with bated breath. <lb/>
Stop the <lb/>
la the throat.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018538_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
in <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
D. J. Ed. Owner <lb/>
Entered at the Poet Office at <lb/>
Greenville, N. C., as Second Class <lb/>
Mail Matter. <lb/>
The ordinance committee of the <lb/>
Board of Aldermen are at work <lb/>
upon the code of to govern <lb/>
the town for next year. If a clause <lb/>
is put in that will prevent chick- <lb/>
ens being a neighborhood nuisance <lb/>
there will be cause for thankful- <lb/>
by many suffering citizens. <lb/>
The complaint of scarcity of <lb/>
labor is heard in all directions. <lb/>
Yet with all for labor, <lb/>
and an opportunity for everybody <lb/>
to get employment who wants it. <lb/>
there are plenty of loafers to <lb/>
seen. The ordinary class of labor <lb/>
now will not work unless com- <lb/>
to, and getting such wages <lb/>
as will enable them <lb/>
in one day to live several day l, <lb/>
they loaf a large part of the time. <lb/>
The majority of them take no <lb/>
thought for the future and care <lb/>
nothing about laying up or <lb/>
ululating anything, satisfying the <lb/>
present being as far as <lb/>
goes. <lb/>
to an and <lb/>
Mrs. Smith, Smithville. <lb/>
are both comparatively recent <lb/>
creations, but near <lb/>
by and for all right arc <lb/>
hot from the bargain counter. We <lb/>
are indebted to the year of oar <lb/>
Lord 1901 for them. You mutt <lb/>
have noticed them in the <lb/>
Don't they look pretty ; <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
Will our good brother of the <lb/>
Observer tell us what should be <lb/>
used place cf It <lb/>
may be bad English, but we <lb/>
there is worse. <lb/>
THE INSTITUTE. <lb/>
what it Accomplished and the Results to <lb/>
Follow. <lb/>
X. C. Aug. <lb/>
It is with pleasure that I <lb/>
with those who are giving their <lb/>
opinions of the Institute recently <lb/>
held at Winterville. I I <lb/>
To The Tobacco Farmers of Eastern Carolina. <lb/>
The tenth year of the Greenville tobacco market is rapidly <lb/>
approaching. To those of us who have watched the progress <lb/>
of this market since the 23rd day of September 1891, there have <lb/>
been many wonderful changes. The year there was only <lb/>
one warehouse and a single prize house, and there were sold <lb/>
Two Hundred and Fifty Thousand Pounds of Tobacco. Grad <lb/>
since then our have increased and is <lb/>
numbered among the largest bright tobacco markets of the <lb/>
world. To do this it has required the expenditure of large <lb/>
have attended eve. v institute held j of money, heavy and a great deal of hard work, <lb/>
the county the civil war. am sure the public will bear me out when I assert that <lb/>
and I am sure that this has are responsibilities from the very <lb/>
fitted the teachers, through <lb/>
them the children of the county, <lb/>
beginning. I have been directly connected with the market <lb/>
from the time the order was given for the first load of timber <lb/>
n which to build the first warehouse and I am the only one <lb/>
more all the ones warehouse business now that bad any connection with <lb/>
Everything carried market in Its early history. <lb/>
on in perfect order, without a shall this year no associated with me, as a <lb/>
rough place, from the partner ill tile warehouse business, but I have carefully select- <lb/>
dents down to the kind and order <lb/>
water carrier. <lb/>
The Superintendents have made <lb/>
in this institute a lasting <lb/>
to It will be <lb/>
said, in years to come when this <lb/>
ed as my assistants men of capacity and experience in the to- <lb/>
business. <lb/>
have again seemed services of Mr. J. J. Willis, of <lb/>
Danville, Ya., one of the best judges of tobacco in Virginia or <lb/>
North Carolina. Mr. Willis has had wide experience in the <lb/>
warehouse business. He is clover, courteous and j <lb/>
and will gladly render our patrons any service he can. Be <lb/>
work has grown to vast proper- tobacco on the to a better advantage than <lb/>
that Profs, and man I ever saw. <lb/>
Davis were the founders. Mr. A. an auctioneer of reputation and <lb/>
names will go down in experience, has been secured to do the chin act, <lb/>
The masterly manner in which but he wants it understood that lie is lost nowhere on the ware- <lb/>
they conducted it was floor and be stands ready to do anything that will ad- <lb/>
the interests of our patrons. <lb/>
Mr. A. A. Forbes whom everybody knows and <lb/>
who knows everybody, will be obligingly on hand in every- <lb/>
thing and will do his part in making everybody comfortable. <lb/>
Our office force is clever, competent and settle with <lb/>
you after your tobacco is sold so quick and satisfactorily <lb/>
that you will be sure to come again. I am determined that <lb/>
nothing shall be left undone will advance the interests of <lb/>
my patron- I shall have good stables for your team and clean <lb/>
comfortable quarters you <lb/>
to <lb/>
call carried out by the <lb/>
and they, in turn, were encouraged <lb/>
by the strict attention and earn- <lb/>
est efforts of the teachers <lb/>
learn. <lb/>
I have never more <lb/>
teaching or studying done in any <lb/>
SChOOl. I don't think there could <lb/>
have been made a better election <lb/>
A Sunshiny Woman. <lb/>
What a blessing to a household <lb/>
is a merry, cheerful <lb/>
whose spirits not affected by <lb/>
wet days or little disappointments. <lb/>
or whose ceaseless Kindness does <lb/>
not sour in the sunshine of pros- <lb/>
Such a woman the <lb/>
darkest hours brightens t he house <lb/>
like a piece of sunshiny weather. <lb/>
The magnetism of her smiles and <lb/>
the electrical brightness of her <lb/>
looks <lb/>
one. Her children go to school with <lb/>
a sense of something great to be <lb/>
achieved; her husband goes into <lb/>
the world a conqueror's spirit. <lb/>
matter how people annoy and <lb/>
worry him all day. far off <lb/>
presence shines and he whispers to <lb/>
himself, home I shall <lb/>
So day by day -he literal- <lb/>
renews his and <lb/>
and if you know ii man with beam- <lb/>
face, a kind and a pros- <lb/>
business, in nine <lb/>
often will ti ml that he ha- a <lb/>
wile of this soil Christian Work. <lb/>
of Professors to visit their rooms Now in conclusion let me Bay to you that from the beat <lb/>
during recitation was a treat. information I can gather we have very bright prospects for <lb/>
Coon, with hi- Cure your tobacco well, grade it carefully handle <lb/>
and reading, teaching with <lb/>
be was of, <lb/>
it neatly, and 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/>
acknowledging lit of all past <lb/>
our Hit tire patrons, <lb/>
deep and logical in his favors, am <lb/>
cal statements, always able to give <lb/>
the whys and wherefores, which is Greenville, N. <lb/>
so essential this branch. <lb/>
Prof. was highly <lb/>
entertaining in Iii- talk- on gram- <lb/>
mar, giving them line <lb/>
end diagrams, and would you <lb/>
believe it, some good old fashion <lb/>
parsing, which I enjoyed. <lb/>
Prof. Lineberry success as <lb/>
a teacher d government, and <lb/>
physiology, lie showed by his <lb/>
calm and manner that <lb/>
he knew what lie was talking <lb/>
about, and he that he had the <lb/>
to impart it <lb/>
The high grade certificates <lb/>
given by Prof, to Misses <lb/>
and Ethel Carrol, former <lb/>
of Prof. Lineberry, U a <lb/>
declaration of his a <lb/>
teacher. I consider it the strong- <lb/>
est advertisement that can be <lb/>
ed before the public. I will say to <lb/>
my friends in this county, who <lb/>
would have their children <lb/>
Sincerely your <lb/>
O. L. <lb/>
Prop. Biers. <lb/>
Warehouse. <lb/>
to depend upon. While they were things a county institute can <lb/>
among us during the institute, I ought to do, to increase and <lb/>
found that I had been much mis broaden the knowledge of teachers <lb/>
taken, for we have a great number j relative to the subjects taught <lb/>
of zealous, faithful teachers, and the schools and also to show the <lb/>
think that I can never again feel teachers the best way to teach <lb/>
uncharitable toward them, and those subjects to children. <lb/>
would be glad to beg their par- These were the recent <lb/>
,,,,;. institute and summer school at <lb/>
I e that most of Winterville That it, in some de <lb/>
have their hearts burdened with set forth <lb/>
great work of teaching our is confidently expected, judging <lb/>
children and have endured gnat from the regular attendance of the <lb/>
hard-hips older to prepare teachers of the two counties as well <lb/>
themselves for this great and noble as from their four study, <lb/>
work, j It would, perhaps, not be modest <lb/>
Let say a word just here to for me to refer to my own work, <lb/>
the many we have consisted largely of <lb/>
a true friends of our primary methods, in any <lb/>
and interest. You way than to say that every <lb/>
should use care and judgment in teacher enrolled attended almost <lb/>
a teacher, suitable for even lesson and manifested <lb/>
NEWSY HAPPENINGS AND BUSINESS <lb/>
NOTES. <lb/>
Aug. <lb/>
it. K. Co. have just <lb/>
received a car load of lime. <lb/>
The Carriage Co. <lb/>
have made two shipments of bug- <lb/>
this week. A little tobacco <lb/>
money makes the wheels turn. <lb/>
Our people much elated <lb/>
over the change of schedule of the <lb/>
Weldon and Kinston railroad. To <lb/>
get our mail before night is a <lb/>
we haven't enjoyed for quite <lb/>
a while. <lb/>
Miss Lucy Galloway, of Grimes- <lb/>
laud, spent several days the past <lb/>
week visiting friends here. <lb/>
Miss Cox, who has been <lb/>
visiting her friend, Miss Helen <lb/>
Galloway, near has <lb/>
returned home. <lb/>
A. G. Cox has a seven year old <lb/>
mule for sale at a reasonable price. <lb/>
Misses Mamie Buck Ida <lb/>
Holliday, of Black Jack, were <lb/>
visiting the Misses Wesson <lb/>
day Sunday. <lb/>
I. Hurst Monday <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Parties are already contracting <lb/>
with the . G. Cox Mfg. Co. for <lb/>
cotton planters to delivered <lb/>
January 1st. This la the beat plan <lb/>
and then there will be no trouble <lb/>
about getting planters when they <lb/>
are needed. The wise always <lb/>
pare for the future. <lb/>
Miss who has a <lb/>
position in one of the at <lb/>
Durham, is on a visit to her pa- <lb/>
rents. Everyone is glad to see <lb/>
Miss Lucy, for she is very popular. <lb/>
W. B. of the pro- <lb/>
of the A. G. Cox Mfg. Co., <lb/>
left Monday for Mass., <lb/>
to visit his sister, whom he has <lb/>
not seen tor a number of years. <lb/>
A nice string of wagons coupled <lb/>
together lolled from the shops of <lb/>
the A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. Monday <lb/>
bound for Greene county. <lb/>
Miss Mary Harper, of Black <lb/>
Jack, is the family of her <lb/>
the G. B. <lb/>
Mis. Charles Harper, who came <lb/>
up to see her sister last week, re- <lb/>
turned home Sunday. <lb/>
A. G. Cox wants MO cords of <lb/>
wood cut. <lb/>
W. A. West, of the <lb/>
County Lumber Co., spent Sunday <lb/>
and Monday here. <lb/>
The Winterville Cigar take the <lb/>
lead. They sell right along. <lb/>
Miss Miriam Johnson left yes <lb/>
to visit relatives near Lit- <lb/>
Notice to the <lb/>
You cannot now employ teacher <lb/>
as formerly. The law requires <lb/>
that you advertise at three public <lb/>
places the place and time at which <lb/>
you will elect a teacher. You <lb/>
meet at that time and place <lb/>
wool your teacher and at no other <lb/>
time or place. This i the only <lb/>
method now of employing teachers <lb/>
and you will please it or <lb/>
your contracts with teachers <lb/>
will not lie valid. Teachers also <lb/>
will do well to see that they are <lb/>
thus employed. <lb/>
You will receive blanks in a few <lb/>
days on which to take the census. <lb/>
The law requires that these be re- <lb/>
turned by the first Monday in <lb/>
September. The party the <lb/>
census will receive two cents a <lb/>
name for so doing. <lb/>
W. II. <lb/>
County Supt. of School. <lb/>
teacher, and surrounded <lb/>
good moral influence, send them <lb/>
to Prof. G. E. Lineberry, Win- <lb/>
They will not regret <lb/>
Mr. A. ;. Cos deserves the <lb/>
thanks of every <lb/>
by the institute; for n <lb/>
iii <lb/>
v. district then don't make more interest than I have ever <lb/>
her fuel had by telling her that it seen manifested in any similar <lb/>
is worth no more to teach school school. I have no reason to doubt <lb/>
than to cook or grade tobacco, and that the same was true of the work <lb/>
you wish the public school sys- <lb/>
done away with. Show <lb/>
I disposition <lb/>
to make everything comfortable <lb/>
untiring efforts that II was thus you <lb/>
o pleasant <lb/>
M in. <lb/>
Perhaps the of the <lb/>
ill be ore v. i lily ; by <lb/>
our readers II we call her j <lb/>
most familiar Polly <lb/>
Smith, tier opinion the <lb/>
the trials and <lb/>
of the school room, which <lb/>
you i. if could meet. Sec your <lb/>
neighbors and get to -cud <lb/>
children school, for <lb/>
of all the instructors. <lb/>
I take this opportunity to thank <lb/>
the teachers of the two counties, <lb/>
the people of Winterville, Super- <lb/>
Mavis <lb/>
and many others for making my <lb/>
slay the pleasant and <lb/>
profitable L. Coos. <lb/>
Notice Dissolution of Partnership. <lb/>
Go Your Taxes. <lb/>
Register of Deeds T. K. Moore <lb/>
has a notice to delinquent tax list <lb/>
ere that all who come that <lb/>
head should give heed to, other- <lb/>
wise they may be when <lb/>
court conies. The law <lb/>
against failing to list taxes is strict <lb/>
The of T. Lipscomb <lb/>
leather will be pleased to ,, has formerly been com- <lb/>
i; come and it will be for of W. T. Lipscomb, S. T. <lb/>
Hooker and II. E. has <lb/>
if not out of place, I would say a j, dissolved. The said T. <lb/>
j word also to You may; Lipscomb and S. T. Hooker will <lb/>
have great love for your child and continue the Liberty <lb/>
let it have its way rather than Warehouse under the firm <lb/>
red ii. If so the child may expect w. T. Lipscomb Co., and the <lb/>
the teacher to let it do as you have p and S. T. <lb/>
dote, but don't worry when your j Hooker are now- the owners of all <lb/>
child complains. Never the old firm <lb/>
With yOU teacher because she Co- w <lb/>
you to get a different or ,,, <lb/>
to teach a new method, but w T <lb/>
foal she has been care- S. T. <lb/>
fully trained is ably July . <lb/>
tent of choosing and doing what <lb/>
Announcement. <lb/>
Now we are going to have more The rt W. T. Lipscomb it <lb/>
money to Spend in our public, Co., is mm composed of W. T. <lb/>
sch mis than ever before and and Hooker, they <lb/>
will have better teachers with I having the entire Inter- <lb/>
their hearts lo the work. Let's of is. I. In the business <lb/>
stand by them and make our pub j the desire to <lb/>
lie schools more successful thank our and customers <lb/>
as no one i- more <lb/>
capable of judging. Mi- Smith is <lb/>
more in in eighty years old has <lb/>
her life lo educational <lb/>
Besides rearing and <lb/>
ting a large family of her own, she <lb/>
nearly every one miles <lb/>
around her, and in the southern <lb/>
section of the county more people <lb/>
owe their education to her than to <lb/>
any one <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Reflector. <lb/>
Aug. ti. <lb/>
h has been -aid of the <lb/>
that was held and I <lb/>
the many remarks, made <lb/>
by friends of education, it <lb/>
is not of this would speak <lb/>
now. <lb/>
For more than two years I have <lb/>
had the honored privilege being <lb/>
closely connected with I be public <lb/>
school Intel set Of county, and <lb/>
have tried lo take some humble <lb/>
part building up public <lb/>
so greater benefits <lb/>
might he received. <lb/>
I have realized that the teachers <lb/>
be a great iii thin work <lb/>
have sometimes before been <lb/>
discouraged, because I fell <lb/>
we did not have the right teachers. <lb/>
ever before. A. G. Cox. I for their peat patronage and to <lb/>
Hope the teachers to do <lb/>
friends will Strive to make your business at the Liberty Ware- <lb/>
educational column, which you house where will always lie <lb/>
have -o kindly offered, a great pleased lo serve them. We are <lb/>
Stimulus to the common education, fully prepared to protect the in- <lb/>
Many thanks for the same. taint of all customers and to <lb/>
secure for them highest prices <lb/>
for their tobacco, <lb/>
T. <lb/>
Boons, <lb/>
Ultra arc two very <lb/>
Aug. Mb. <lb/>
LEI Toll <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/>
to merit the same by a close personal attention to business. <lb/>
It is well known, and conceded by all, that the Greenville <lb/>
Warehouse has the best lights under which to show tobacco to <lb/>
advantage. We have had many years experience in the <lb/>
and are thoroughly familiar with the trade in all its <lb/>
branches. We will have comfortable rooms with clean new <lb/>
cots for the use of our 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, LaFayette <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 Lie friends <lb/>
a cordial invitation to sell their tobacco at <lb/>
Greenville Warehouse. <lb/>
Mr. M. Barham, 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/>
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 the are one and the same. <lb/>
3rd. 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 relations with these order and contract <lb/>
buyers are of the most friendly and cordial nature, and we <lb/>
have ample means at our command to push every sale to the <lb/>
full limit of its value. <lb/>
6th. Because, with all the bright tobacco manufacturing <lb/>
concerns of the world, domestic and export speculators, attend- <lb/>
every sale at the old Greenville 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/>
EVANS GO- <lb/>
J. C. <lb/>
It. S. EVANS. <lb/>
D. S. SPAIN. <lb/>
READ THIS. <lb/>
To Whom it Way Concern. <lb/>
Having qualified as cotton weigh <lb/>
the town of Greenville, by <lb/>
tiling my and oath with the <lb/>
County Commissioners as required <lb/>
by law, I hereby give notice that <lb/>
the statute provides, that any per- <lb/>
son other I ha ii aforesaid cotton <lb/>
weigher who shall weigh any bale <lb/>
of cotton offered for sale In said <lb/>
town of Greenville, shall be guilty <lb/>
of a and punished <lb/>
within the of the court. <lb/>
yard having been provided, as <lb/>
is usually the custom of towns or <lb/>
board's of trade in such cases, and <lb/>
it devolving upon to supply <lb/>
I hereby designate, appoint, <lb/>
and constitute the platform at the <lb/>
wharf of Old Dominion Steam <lb/>
Ship Company, cotton yard for <lb/>
the town of until one is <lb/>
which is the of <lb/>
the weigher more convenient. <lb/>
The law provides that the weigh <lb/>
shall receive as compensation <lb/>
for his services, ten cents for each <lb/>
Dale weighed, live rents to be paid <lb/>
by buyer and five cents by <lb/>
seller. Koch buyer shall retain <lb/>
from the price of said cotton five <lb/>
cent- lo be paid lo weigher as sell- <lb/>
part of compensation due <lb/>
weigher. <lb/>
I have purchased n pair of Fair- <lb/>
banks scales with solid pair brass <lb/>
costing 107.75 and <lb/>
first class in respect. <lb/>
I shall, so far as my power, <lb/>
do justice to all. <lb/>
Very respectfully, <lb/>
L. <lb/>
Cotton Weigher for Greenville. <lb/>
over the line <lb/>
county one shot killed <lb/>
night. <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA EDITOR. <lb/>
To with, what would any <lb/>
town worthy the name be without <lb/>
a newspaper and the factotum of a <lb/>
man who runs more for <lb/>
accommodation than for the <lb/>
and cents realized from its con- <lb/>
Echo answers, What <lb/>
As an individual who has had <lb/>
some experience I state it, and with <lb/>
belief, that the most <lb/>
man in any town is the cussed <lb/>
and discussed newspaper <lb/>
editor. If he runs a nondescript, <lb/>
battered, blurred and blotched ex- <lb/>
for a paper my proposition <lb/>
still holds good, for all that I do <lb/>
not even excuse the minister, the <lb/>
doctor or the banker. To lie sure <lb/>
these men are prime essentials <lb/>
but the newspaper man is not only <lb/>
an essential j in these days, lie is a <lb/>
kind of <lb/>
kind of no , hail fellow <lb/>
well met individual. <lb/>
It has always strange K me <lb/>
it is a newspaper <lb/>
editor is expected to use his time, <lb/>
his press, his short put <lb/>
everything in himself and in bis <lb/>
shop, at the disposal of the men of <lb/>
every attire, class and profession, <lb/>
1.1 lent not only receiving <lb/>
any cash emolument-, but more of- <lb/>
ten not so much us a hearty <lb/>
I say, the part of <lb/>
it to me is why should an editor <lb/>
as a business expected to <lb/>
give of what he is has, when <lb/>
every other business is out for <lb/>
such fun, but fur the ubiquitous <lb/>
dollar Is it his fault or, if not <lb/>
whose i-t it. I have my opinion <lb/>
I prefer some to give <lb/>
an expression of the truth. <lb/>
All is not shadow in a <lb/>
per man's life, for does he not <lb/>
have the glorious privilege for rid- <lb/>
his own sweet will, a <lb/>
piece of card board, otherwise <lb/>
I ended a inn alas <lb/>
this docs not inn his business, or <lb/>
much to the end of <lb/>
his but <lb/>
for all this and all this, he man- <lb/>
ages to be more cussed and discus <lb/>
any man as <lb/>
for he manages to <lb/>
exist i, one issue to another. <lb/>
Let mi whisper this into the car <lb/>
at <lb/>
Barring a very <lb/>
is no more solid, loyal, progressive <lb/>
citizen any town than the fellow <lb/>
who gets out a newspaper. Paste <lb/>
this in your bat, when you are <lb/>
disposed to fall out with him be- <lb/>
cause he does not conduct his pa- <lb/>
per so well as you would take off <lb/>
your bat and read and ruminate. <lb/>
O it is the plain home made <lb/>
varnished truth. I can prove it by <lb/>
several hundreds of unpaid fellows <lb/>
of the craft, who ought to thank <lb/>
me for telling the truth on them, <lb/>
To the North Carolina editors <lb/>
a class, and a lift my <lb/>
I hat. A more loyal sturdy, <lb/>
i progressive set of fellows are not <lb/>
I harbored within the confines of this <lb/>
good State. <lb/>
William M. <lb/>
AFRAID TO RUN FOR THE BOOS. <lb/>
N. C, Aug. <lb/>
The communication W. <lb/>
limes in your issue of Saturday, <lb/>
inst., is worthy of serious <lb/>
I thought and consideration. So <lb/>
great become the feeling against <lb/>
blood bounds that I am informed <lb/>
; that Mr. Hines procure a <lb/>
boy to make a track to <lb/>
bis does trailing. Many <lb/>
boys say they like to <lb/>
make the money offered by Mr. <lb/>
Wines, but they are afraid of <lb/>
violence from the if they <lb/>
furnish tracks for the training of <lb/>
the blood hounds. There is <lb/>
some importance to be at- <lb/>
to having a pack of blood <lb/>
bounds near at baud, by this class. <lb/>
If this is endorsed and approved <lb/>
the generally as class, it <lb/>
is not to their credit. There are <lb/>
many in Pitt county who <lb/>
are good citizens, and who con- <lb/>
crimes and uphold the law, <lb/>
but when it comes lo pass that a <lb/>
boy is threatened because <lb/>
ho fin aid and assistance to <lb/>
prevent crime there is need of <lb/>
every precaution to protect, the <lb/>
community. Every county should <lb/>
have a pack of dogs. Citizen. <lb/>
with much we <lb/>
to our rodent We <lb/>
peak trim n when it <lb/>
. II . Mill; of <lb/>
Urn beat la for II <lb/>
U bad <lb/>
j. none h have <lb/>
without It in Avoid nib- <lb/>
there la but Ferry<lb/>
ALL LINES NOT IN QUANTITY QUALITY, <lb/>
IN PRICE ONLY. <lb/>
Plenty Fine Clothing, Shoes, <lb/>
Hats, Mens Furnishings. <lb/>
KALI, GOODS WILL SOON <lb/>
MIST HAVE BOON SOB THEM. <lb/>
KNOW WHO <lb/>
THE KING <lb/>
He Has Ladies Shoes Too. <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
is a GROSS MARK <lb/>
paper it <lb/>
If I here <lb/>
in the of this , <lb/>
so remind you you owe <lb/>
for <lb/>
subscription and we request <lb/>
you to settle as early as <lb/>
We need what YOU <lb/>
owe us and hope you will <lb/>
keep us wailing for it. <lb/>
This notice is for those who <lb/>
find the cross mark on their <lb/>
paper <lb/>
LOCAL REFLECTIONS. <lb/>
This schedule we have is a <lb/>
winner. <lb/>
Get your books, stationary, inks <lb/>
and tablets at Reflector Rook Store. <lb/>
A telephone pay has <lb/>
been located at <lb/>
drug store. <lb/>
buy or rent a <lb/>
Typewriter Address Box 20-1, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Greene Hooker have taken out <lb/>
the gas engine at their gin <lb/>
mill, and arc a large <lb/>
steam engine. <lb/>
II Sausage Vinegar, <lb/>
Magic Yeast, Hominy, Ad <lb/>
Henry George Cigars <lb/>
at S. M. Schultz. <lb/>
For bis first month In May- <lb/>
or W. H. Long turned over <lb/>
in lines to the County Treasurer for <lb/>
the school <lb/>
forget Hatch Bros, big ex- <lb/>
from Kin-Ion to Norfolk <lb/>
August round trip, tor <lb/>
white people only. <lb/>
SI. T. Spier, of lost <lb/>
a tobacco barn by lire Saturday <lb/>
He was in <lb/>
when the fire occurred. <lb/>
We have received the new en- <lb/>
for our gin mill plant <lb/>
will read for work in a few <lb/>
days. <lb/>
A number of people went to the <lb/>
house of a colored man here, Tues- <lb/>
day, to see him buried, but when <lb/>
they got the man was sitting <lb/>
up. <lb/>
Hatch Bros., of Mount Olive, <lb/>
the excursion managers, <lb/>
will run an excursion from Kin- <lb/>
to Norfolk, August re- <lb/>
turning Midi <lb/>
The Atlantic Coast Line will <lb/>
sell tickets from all points to <lb/>
account of Con- <lb/>
federate Veteran encampment at <lb/>
Wrightsville, one cent per mile. <lb/>
Anyone ran lake advantage this <lb/>
low rate. <lb/>
Don't miss Hatch Bros, grand <lb/>
excursion from Kinston lo Norfolk <lb/>
August returning August <lb/>
Fare for round trip, all points from <lb/>
Kinston to inclusive, only <lb/>
3.00. Children under only <lb/>
11.25. Remember Hatch <lb/>
carry white people only, every car <lb/>
strictly first class. <lb/>
It la Important that who <lb/>
n tor or health should <lb/>
on for or <lb/>
provision the <lb/>
bowel not only <lb/>
are sometimes <lb/>
In results. A bottle of <lb/>
is, we have found, a <lb/>
most against such attacks. <lb/>
but one Pain- <lb/>
Price Me <lb/>
HOWDY DO. <lb/>
Some Speak to Me, Some to You. <lb/>
B. H. Jarvis returned to Norfolk <lb/>
today. <lb/>
I, L. Wooten went to Now Bern <lb/>
Tuesday. <lb/>
Miss Lydia Thigpen is visiting <lb/>
Miss Helen Forbes. <lb/>
G. W. left Tuesday even- <lb/>
for <lb/>
Corey family <lb/>
this morning from Beaufort. <lb/>
Jennie Manning returned <lb/>
from Beaufort. <lb/>
R. Cherry left this <lb/>
morning for New York and Boston. <lb/>
Mrs. Calvin Warren, of <lb/>
arrived Tuesday evening visit <lb/>
Mrs. E. House. <lb/>
Mrs. J. A. Paris, of New <lb/>
arrived Tuesday to visit <lb/>
Sirs. W. H. Parker. <lb/>
Miss Ida Warren, of Conetoe, is <lb/>
visiting her uncle, Warren, <lb/>
at Riverside Nursery. <lb/>
Mrs. E. B. of Washing- <lb/>
ton, is visiting her father, Allen <lb/>
Warren, at Riverside Nursery. <lb/>
Sir. Hatch, of Olive, was <lb/>
here today advertising the Kin- <lb/>
excursion the <lb/>
22nd, <lb/>
E. Sf. Williams, of <lb/>
more, came in Tuesday evening to <lb/>
visit her daughter, W. F. <lb/>
be with her sou, <lb/>
who is sick with fever. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
I have been by the <lb/>
County to list de- <lb/>
taxes. All persons who <lb/>
have listed their taxes for <lb/>
are notified to come do so <lb/>
the month of August, or they <lb/>
may have an interview with the <lb/>
Solicitor at September court. <lb/>
T. R. <lb/>
Register Deed. <lb/>
Never <lb/>
When a proposes to put a <lb/>
saloon a public load, am some <lb/>
one says u neighbor's daughters <lb/>
have to pass in for a <lb/>
sick, old grand-mother, would <lb/>
people count me a gentleman if I <lb/>
should coolly suggest that the girls <lb/>
could walk over a plowed field and <lb/>
go through u pleas of woods, <lb/>
reach the grand-mother's bed side I <lb/>
A. I. <lb/>
Mayor's Court. <lb/>
W. II. Long has disposed <lb/>
Of the following eases la his court <lb/>
since last report <lb/>
pistol in <lb/>
not guilty, case dismissed. <lb/>
Coward, drunk and <lb/>
lined t and costs, 3.20. <lb/>
H. G. drunk and dis- <lb/>
orderly and <lb/>
Ethel I drunk and disorder- <lb/>
M costs, 2.115. <lb/>
James Corbitt, drunk and <lb/>
and costs, <lb/>
Stop Tickling, <lb/>
sad . it, i <lb/>
The Board of <lb/>
met regular <lb/>
the all members being <lb/>
present. <lb/>
The the Treas- <lb/>
for paupers was for <lb/>
Home Supt. of <lb/>
Health for bridges ferries <lb/>
printing, binding <lb/>
stationery for jail for <lb/>
tax listers for tax re- <lb/>
funded for conveying insane <lb/>
fur freight for <lb/>
035.80; Register of <lb/>
Deeds <lb/>
for Swift Creek <lb/>
stock law Pitt county stock <lb/>
law . <lb/>
J. B. Cherry, and C. <lb/>
of Health, their monthly <lb/>
reports which were approved. <lb/>
T. It. Moore. Clerk Board, <lb/>
was authorized to list <lb/>
taxes for <lb/>
O. W. Harrington, Sheriff, <lb/>
ordered to refund to E. W Pace <lb/>
collected of him as <lb/>
tax on slot <lb/>
Valuation laud of B. Moore <lb/>
was reduced from to <lb/>
the difference in taxes ordered <lb/>
refunded. <lb/>
The following w ere added to the <lb/>
pauper list to receive the amount <lb/>
slated per Willis <lb/>
E. Cannon <lb/>
Delia <lb/>
The Sheriff reported a pub <lb/>
lie road township had <lb/>
been laid oil in accordance with <lb/>
previous order of the Board. <lb/>
The of tin- Board was or- <lb/>
to certify lo <lb/>
that he i indebted to G. SI. <lb/>
Mooring 188.83 on taxes for which <lb/>
he not been credited. <lb/>
The committee to <lb/>
assist in settlement between G. If. <lb/>
former Sheriff, J. B. <lb/>
Cherry, Treasurer, made re <lb/>
port with statement <lb/>
full. <lb/>
TOO BAD. <lb/>
An Unlucky Thirteen Comes in. <lb/>
Just as Atlantic Coast Line <lb/>
gels schedules arranged by which <lb/>
Greenville can get Raleigh mail <lb/>
via Kinston at o'clock a. m, <lb/>
the Atlantic North Carbon road <lb/>
to work changes <lb/>
schedule on that read so as to <lb/>
miss the connection at by- <lb/>
just minutes That too bad, <lb/>
and the A. N. C. ought <lb/>
to let their morning train leave <lb/>
Goldsboro at the same time as be- <lb/>
fore, so long as A. C. L. has <lb/>
already made a to <lb/>
with them. The thirteen minute <lb/>
gap should be filled up so the <lb/>
trains will Kinston and <lb/>
bring mail and passengers right <lb/>
on Greenville and other inter- <lb/>
mediate points. <lb/>
Owing to our train not leaving <lb/>
Kinston on time morning the <lb/>
connection was made <lb/>
papers and came <lb/>
through all right, but the two <lb/>
trains should have a regular con- <lb/>
at Kinston and depend <lb/>
on chance. <lb/>
Taken To Hospital. <lb/>
Sir. who on <lb/>
Sunday a week ago dislocated his <lb/>
spinal by falling his <lb/>
head while bathing <lb/>
creek, was. taken to <lb/>
for treatment. It is hoped <lb/>
by means of the N Rays to find the <lb/>
cause of his continued paralysis. <lb/>
--------1, <lb/>
FOUR YOUNG MEN AND ONE OLD MAN GUILTY.<lb/>
Two Dead in One House. <lb/>
On Sunday, Aug. <lb/>
wife of Abraham <lb/>
died on farm Matthew <lb/>
James, near Next day <lb/>
their son, Samuel, died. She had <lb/>
been sick only about seven days <lb/>
and he about five. They were <lb/>
buried time She was <lb/>
a good Christian, He was a good <lb/>
little boy. A. D, It kits. <lb/>
The A. T. Co's. New Buyer. <lb/>
gains a valuable ad- <lb/>
in the person of Sir. SI. A. <lb/>
Allen, formerly of who <lb/>
has located on this market as buy <lb/>
for the American Tobacco Co. <lb/>
He is a whom any <lb/>
could proud to number among <lb/>
her The Greenville mar- <lb/>
is fortunate having him here. <lb/>
Mr. Allen's will join him <lb/>
here the fall. <lb/>
that are shipped. The ale <lb/>
hi and making up goods ever for the Bit; <lb/>
Big New Store. <lb/>
r- <lb/>
ti <lb/>
ti <lb/>
ti<lb/>
-4 <lb/>
K. C. <lb/>
pun nip i n-ii <lb/>
I m <lb/>
pan <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018538_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Have Forgot <lb/>
What <lb/>
THAI I AM STILL CARRYING <lb/>
DATE LIVE <lb/>
Pry Goods, Dress Goods, Shoes <lb/>
Hats, Shirts, Pants, Hardware <lb/>
Tinware A or <lb/>
WHICH I AM TO MENTION <lb/>
to me your next Barrel Flour or <lb/>
Yours to <lb/>
Jas. B. White. <lb/>
TWO YEARS HAVE BEES PAID IX THE <lb/>
ill III HE <lb/>
OF NEWARK, X. J. YOUR POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value, <lb/>
Cash Value. <lb/>
Paid up Insurance. <lb/>
Extended Insurance w automatically, <lb/>
r. Is <lb/>
Will be re-instated if paid within on month while you <lb/>
are living, or within three years after lapse, evidence <lb/>
of and payment of arrears with interest <lb/>
second No Restrictions. S. Incontestable. <lb/>
Dividends are payable at the beginning of the second and .; each <lb/>
succeeding year, provided the premium la paid. <lb/>
Kit They may be To reduce Premiums, or <lb/>
To laureate the or <lb/>
To make policy payable as an during lifetime <lb/>
of insured. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville. X. C. <lb/>
ROBERT <lb/>
TO PRODUCE THE OF <lb/>
Night Sweats and Grippe, and <lb/>
an forms of Malaria. <lb/>
DON'T WAIT TO DIE <lb/>
SPEND CENTS AND BE CURED I <lb/>
Mac ROBERTS <lb/>
TRY IT. NO COBS NO SAY PER <lb/>
TO TAKE, ft US IS I <lb/>
None genuine unless <lb/>
Red on label <lb/>
DeVi <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
Intelligent from <lb/>
Cuba report business i bad way <lb/>
all over the island, owing to the <lb/>
uncertainty of the future. Mer- <lb/>
are afraid to invest any <lb/>
capital until they more <lb/>
what the Cuban government <lb/>
i- to be. and they are usually <lb/>
earful goods on credit. <lb/>
The worst part of the business is <lb/>
that there is no hope for any <lb/>
change for the better in the near <lb/>
future, as the shortest estimate of <lb/>
the time that will be required toes- <lb/>
a Cuban is <lb/>
eight mouths from the date upon <lb/>
which Wood issues the orders <lb/>
holding the two elections <lb/>
will necessary, and Wood <lb/>
is no in this or rather <lb/>
in the waters hereto on <lb/>
board a government which <lb/>
be is as his private yacht, <lb/>
and the orders will not based <lb/>
until he returns to Havana, which <lb/>
will in three <lb/>
weeks. <lb/>
Agents of Hawaiian sugar plan- <lb/>
in Washington trying to <lb/>
find out it they can legally import <lb/>
Filipinos or from the Phil- <lb/>
es to work on their <lb/>
They attempted, through <lb/>
third parties, to get an opinion <lb/>
the Commissioner General of <lb/>
Immigration on the matter, he <lb/>
declined to express one, saying <lb/>
that it was not hi business to de- <lb/>
questions until they came be- <lb/>
fore him officially. He did. how- <lb/>
i ever, incidentally express the <lb/>
ion that if the Hawaiian sugar <lb/>
would pay sufficient wages <lb/>
i that they could get all the laborers <lb/>
they wanted, from the Southern <lb/>
laborers who would make <lb/>
hands on sugar plantations. <lb/>
I But that is just what these plan <lb/>
j wish to do. Many of <lb/>
hare grown rich by Import- <lb/>
coolie labor from Japan, a <lb/>
I practice that had to be stopped <lb/>
Hawaii to the <lb/>
II . and it i- that of labor <lb/>
No <lb/>
crop <lb/>
can be <lb/>
grown <lb/>
without <lb/>
Potash. <lb/>
Supply <lb/>
Pot- <lb/>
ash and your <lb/>
profits will be <lb/>
without <lb/>
Potash your <lb/>
crop will be <lb/>
. <lb/>
CANDY I Trinity College <lb/>
i Ur, i . ,,,. , <lb/>
lb i <lb/>
r. Ne <lb/>
of ween. <lb/>
CHRISTIAN GEORGE, <lb/>
GERMAN Kill works; <lb/>
state. At the end of tie <lb/>
deal they it as advantageous <lb/>
Odell, but the men do not <lb/>
take that view of it. They think <lb/>
that they have made a deal <lb/>
that will give them the help of the <lb/>
machine to kill Teddy at <lb/>
home, but do not believe that Odell <lb/>
will show- enough strength outside <lb/>
of Yolk, to give them any <lb/>
trouble when they get ready to <lb/>
spring the name of can- <lb/>
They are all a little bit <lb/>
of the with the <lb/>
i .-publicans associate with Ted <lb/>
name. Captain Parker, one <lb/>
of Admiral who <lb/>
nearly all of last week search- <lb/>
log the the Navy De- <lb/>
and who will resume the <lb/>
work this week. a formal pro <lb/>
test with Acting Secretary <lb/>
the espionage he was <lb/>
subjected lo while doing the work. <lb/>
Mi. Beckett's explanation was that <lb/>
the regulations required <lb/>
IN <lb/>
J. V. PIE CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Factors and handlers of <lb/>
Bagging. Tie am Bags. <lb/>
and shipments <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
one <lb/>
ate coarse, of <lb/>
with <lb/>
large library <lb/>
sad in <lb/>
,. <lb/>
Attendance nearly Ambled within <lb/>
years. very low. The <lb/>
re is th. one that a student <lb/>
for <lb/>
PRESIDENT <lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
Greensboro Female, College <lb/>
Greensboro, N. C. <lb/>
Literary and Business Courses. <lb/>
Schools of Music, Art and <lb/>
Literary Course and all <lb/>
Living Expenses per Year. <lb/>
Fall Session begins September <lb/>
nth, 1901. on <lb/>
cation. HEED <lb/>
President. <lb/>
Optics . I. I. II <lb/>
Nor. XI, f <lb/>
I bare found M. u.- . <lb/>
Dy teething <lb/>
When my was a <lb/>
e child, rt oaf warn- <lb/>
ed u loss <lb/>
happened <lb/>
once to bin, bis <lb/>
. marked <lb/>
day he recuperate,. I have <lb/>
kept ii it dace <lb/>
children, and have taken in <lb/>
its praises to all <lb/>
I it even after <lb/>
Perry Go., <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Dear quest yen Nova Boons <lb/>
Land Plaster, hen. m prices <lb/>
for June and <lb/>
Leas tons <lb/>
Car Load L <lb/>
Ion lots 5.00 <lb/>
St M <lb/>
A Please lit us haw your order an <lb/>
pustule xi in <lb/>
c. <lb/>
W. COMPANY. <lb/>
Practical Education <lb/>
In <lb/>
art-, sad a <lb/>
of sod <lb/>
of study and manual training. <lb/>
a rear. Total in- <lb/>
and <lb/>
Thirty student Next <lb/>
4th. <lb/>
For Quo T <lb/>
AGRICULTURE MECHANIC ARTS, <lb/>
Winterville high School. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
Fall term opens September 2nd and closes December <lb/>
Spring term begins and ends May <lb/>
School, Intermediate and Primary , <lb/>
and Music Delightful location noted forties., <lb/>
by excellent moral and religious <lb/>
enc. For full information address <lb/>
O- E. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Homer Military School, <lb/>
C. <lb/>
heated by the Buffalo <lb/>
wish get the Philip <lb/>
pines, because of its <lb/>
both in wages and keep. j. <lb/>
Hear Admiral officer to be when a person <lb/>
I Chief the Bureau Navigation, m, the service was <lb/>
, popularly known as the allowed examine the official <lb/>
because of Its cords the department, but <lb/>
method of Admiral Parker did not think that the Ta <lb/>
took advantage of bis be- val regulations an officer <lb/>
to be on each him. making <lb/>
of everything he copied from <lb/>
the records, was actually the <lb/>
ease. The train of the matter is <lb/>
gs. healed by the Buffalo fan i. i <lb/>
feet ventilation. Sixteen new for two boys each to he <lb/>
the fall term. should be made early. An <lb/>
up to the full and turned away each <lb/>
room. Best athletic field, with quarter mile track, in the <lb/>
Faculty of specialists with special work. to <lb/>
the best college or education. An atmosphere of high ideals <lb/>
the as preparing hi education <lb/>
are excluded. Fall begins l-i <lb/>
log acting Secretary of the Navy <lb/>
between the departure of Secretary <lb/>
Long and the arrival of <lb/>
Beckett to make a show- <lb/>
of animosity toward j that the which bas been <lb/>
which as small u II was Admiral ever <lb/>
gutting, by an order for- since the war with <lb/>
bidding of the Navy are thoroughly frightened <lb/>
Capt. Parker, I they know that the will <lb/>
i for .-laud for such methods they <lb/>
i- c the records to have been guilty of in their efforts <lb/>
behalf, to to disgrace Admiral and <lb/>
brought I i be of In- fear the expos.,,,. <lb/>
., ,, brought about by the evidence be- <lb/>
Wt combine ,.,,,,, ,, <lb/>
f s .,;,, ,,,,,., <lb/>
is the newest thing in the that c Parker has <lb/>
political held I. was intended to <lb/>
be strictly a affair, but <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
s Decree of the Super <lb/>
Co <lb/>
led S. Best, L. Best arid <lb/>
Bast, the Com <lb/>
will sell for cash the court <lb/>
door in Monday <lb/>
2nd day of Sept. the following <lb/>
d of on North side of <lb/>
i and <lb/>
at a stake side of <lb/>
said r . Prank thence <lb/>
Booth E. poles to I William's <lb/>
other comer, South West <lb/>
to a corner near He ling thence <lb/>
South East South in. <lb/>
to a stake comer in line, <lb/>
Boat West, to Mala Bead, <lb/>
then will. Main Road the <lb/>
or <lb/>
Z 1001- <lb/>
r. JAMES, <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
STATE NORMAL <lb/>
Classical. Scientific. Commercial, Industrial. Pedagogical, <lb/>
Annual I . u i a <lb/>
. , . . , . <lb/>
the dormitories u <lb/>
19th <lb/>
Invited fr . .-,,,.,. .;,. <lb/>
and other Information <lb/>
I. <lb/>
tin N. C. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Masonic Hall School, <lb/>
For Girls Only. <lb/>
Masonic Hall school for . Board <lb/>
of Trustees appointed by Greenville Lodge, No. F ft A M <lb/>
will open fall session Sept. 2nd. was last War <lb/>
with great satisfaction to the people, of Greenville. We haw- there- <lb/>
fore employed Misses Lizzie Parker and Leila Thornton to teach <lb/>
this school tins year, and to all who have girls to educate we <lb/>
patronage support in maintaining school. <lb/>
Tuition per Intermediate Higher <lb/>
2.50, Languages each extra, A matriculation will I <lb/>
charged. The school will have no music department this session. <lb/>
Persons in town w ho cat. beard pupils of the school will <lb/>
notify the Secretary. it. L. RB, See, Board Trustees. <lb/>
Parke Fountain <lb/>
fit tore. <lb/>
somebody leaked. The story, as <lb/>
told ill Washington, says that <lb/>
trusted lieutenants of Senators <lb/>
and met a hotel. <lb/>
a thousand miles from Wash- <lb/>
and into a <lb/>
pledging their respective print i- <lb/>
together in taking <lb/>
steps that might be made <lb/>
necessary Western trip <lb/>
to head boom that might <lb/>
be started nomination for <lb/>
President. i men tried to <lb/>
gel men to their <lb/>
chief to the support of Gov. Odell <lb/>
as Mr. <lb/>
that was than the <lb/>
were willing lo l-o. They <lb/>
agreed DO other New York <lb/>
men would be put forward by Dan- <lb/>
a candidate for the <lb/>
nomination, that if <lb/>
could not be kept out of <lb/>
the nomination in soy other way <lb/>
than by <lb/>
would throw his to him. <lb/>
Meanwhile, s men lo <lb/>
boom Odell and insist he will <lb/>
have support of the New <lb/>
delegation to the National <lb/>
Convention and that the name of <lb/>
---------j j no other New York candidate Mill <lb/>
hP Tho u <lb/>
openly Teddy but simply to <lb/>
Ignore candidacy <lb/>
lie may de- <lb/>
t elope elsewhere, by making it <lb/>
parent that lie is not seriously con <lb/>
a candidate his own <lb/>
in the records, which sup- <lb/>
port Admiral Intentions <lb/>
concerning movements, while <lb/>
in command the <lb/>
which was searching f the Span- <lb/>
fleet, and he to <lb/>
more. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
By virtue of in., Ex. to <lb/>
the Ilk Court of <lb/>
County A. F. Young .- Co., <lb/>
against W. and ft K. <lb/>
J. W. ix. I will on Monday <lb/>
Sad day of Sept. IS o'clock H. <lb/>
house Pill County lo <lb/>
for <lb/>
lion all title and which J <lb/>
W. Cos baa in following described <lb/>
Estate One of land Had- <lb/>
dock X Roads, at the <lb/>
of New and Tan road and <lb/>
New to hat <lb/>
with <lb/>
to the Tan Read, will. <lb/>
lo the u.; <lb/>
of <lb/>
X containing acres <lb/>
in a Deed Iran Lewis tux <lb/>
sod wife to John M. cox hi Book <lb/>
I i page of the Register office <lb/>
Also one other piece of land <lb/>
from to John in <lb/>
Hook page r of Pill <lb/>
county. This day 1801. <lb/>
I'm County, <lb/>
Tucker, 0.8 <lb/>
Three One Year Rich, for <lb/>
Times <lb/>
VA., <lb/>
Now Only Cents a Year, <lb/>
and includes absolutely free The <lb/>
Paragon Monthly, New The <lb/>
Farm Journal. Philadelphia. <lb/>
DAILY SUNDAY <lb/>
Farm Journal and Para- <lb/>
Monthly, now only per <lb/>
year; per mouth by mail. <lb/>
Address THE TIMES, <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
SALE OF TOWN LOT <lb/>
By virtue f a decree of the Superior <lb/>
Court of Pitt County made a certain <lb/>
Special then in pending, <lb/>
Public <lb/>
estate II. <lb/>
vs. Bonnie It. sad other. <lb/>
I will on Monday, ISM, <lb/>
sell SI public sale the highest bidder, for <lb/>
cash, a lot panel of land in <lb/>
town Pin known as lot <lb/>
No. in block II. plan of said Iowa, <lb/>
saw sad grist mill <lb/>
Haste, 1st of August, 1901. <lb/>
CANNON, <lb/>
Pill-lie administering <lb/>
estate of W. II. deceased. <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE <lb/>
Steamer leave <lb/>
ton daily ate A. M. for Green <lb/>
Villa, leave Greenville daily at <lb/>
M. for <lb/>
Steamer leaves <lb/>
Mondays, <lb/>
and Fridays at A. M. for Tar <lb/>
leave Tarboro for Greenville <lb/>
Tuesday s, 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 Went <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/>
IBO. SON, <lb/>
Washington, N. C <lb/>
J. J. CHEERY, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
it mm, <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
s. c. <lb/>
always<lb/>
. M. <lb/>
Pills <lb/>
This remedy never falls to <lb/>
Dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick <lb/>
Headache, Biliousness <lb/>
And ALL DISEASES arising from a <lb/>
Torpid Liver and Bad Digestion <lb/>
The result Is good appetite <lb/>
solid Dose small; <lb/>
sugar c sad to swallow. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
Wholesale and retail Grocer and <lb/>
Furniture Dealer. Cash paid for <lb/>
Hides, Fur. Seed, Oil Bar- <lb/>
re's, Turkeys, Egg, etc. Bed- <lb/>
steads, Mattresses, Oak Suits, Ba <lb/>
by Carriages, <lb/>
soils, Table, Lounges, Safes, P. <lb/>
i and Gail Ax <lb/>
Meat Key West Cheroots, <lb/>
American Beauty Can <lb/>
tied Cherries, Peaches, Apples, <lb/>
Pine Apples, Syrup, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour. Sugar, Coffee, <lb/>
Lye, Magic Food, Oil, <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar- <lb/>
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples, Nut, <lb/>
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Pi lines, Currents, Raisins, Glass <lb/>
China Ware, Tin and Wooden <lb/>
Ware. Cakes and Crackers, Mara <lb/>
Butter, Stand-j <lb/>
court. <lb/>
Honker l <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
J. B. <lb/>
f K C. Yellowley, i. <lb/>
William <lb/>
J. II. Yellowley Executor <lb/>
II. A. Yellowley and <lb/>
B. <lb/>
Th, J n lay <lb/>
and as of <lb/>
and as of II A Yellowley, will <lb/>
take notice that an action a-- above <lb/>
has been need in Superior <lb/>
of Pitt to have that tract of bad <lb/>
known as Alpine, of which E C <lb/>
died by <lb/>
of the court to pay a debt due plaintiff <lb/>
from laid Be <lb/>
-t II from nuking rah- raid land <lb/>
mortgage ii and <lb/>
fr other relief demanded in the complaint <lb/>
the said defendant will further take <lb/>
notice that he to appear at the <lb/>
term of e. art said county <lb/>
to 1- a the l-i Monday in September, <lb/>
at boast of said county iii <lb/>
answerer demur to <lb/>
the complaint in said or plaintiff <lb/>
Will apply to Ike for the relief de- <lb/>
in said <lb/>
This of July, 1901. <lb/>
D. C. MOORE, <lb/>
clerk Superior <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and Ties <lb/>
on t <lb/>
Fresh kept constantly on <lb/>
hand. Country produce and <lb/>
A trial will convince you. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
W. R. WHICHARD BRO,, <lb/>
DEALERS IN <lb/>
Whichard, N. C. <lb/>
The Stock complete in every de <lb/>
and prices as low as the <lb/>
lowest. Highest market prices <lb/>
paid for country produce. <lb/>
UNIVERSITY <lb/>
of North Carolina. <lb/>
THE HEAD OF THE STATE'S <lb/>
SYSTEM. <lb/>
DEM <lb/>
LAW, <lb/>
J. i <lb/>
-DEALER IN- <lb/>
II <lb/>
A GENERAL LINE OF <lb/>
Also a nice Line of Hardware. <lb/>
COME TO SEE ME. <lb/>
J. R. COREY. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton and Brokers in <lb/>
Stocks, Grain and <lb/>
ions. Private Wires to New York, <lb/>
Eighty live scholarships. Free <lb/>
tuition to teachers and <lb/>
sous. Loans for the needy. <lb/>
Students Instructors,, <lb/>
New Dormitories, Water Works, j Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
Central Healing system. <lb/>
spent in improvements <lb/>
and 1901, Fall term <lb/>
f, 1901. Address, <lb/>
E. V. , <lb/>
Chapel Hill, X. C. <lb/>
Booth Carolina now ranks second <lb/>
cotton State, <lb/>
o by Massachusetts. <lb/>
The are that as South <lb/>
Carolina re -lied place <lb/>
within years, the next <lb/>
twenty there at least three <lb/>
Southern States which will lead <lb/>
South Carolina, <lb/>
North Carolina and Georgia. <lb/>
Wilmington Star. <lb/>
ard Sewing Much i lies, i in. a f. <lb/>
other goods. Quality and <lb/>
Quantity. Cheap for cash. Com <lb/>
Public. <lb/>
to sec me. <lb/>
SAM M <lb/>
Phone RB <lb/>
The woman who can put a neat <lb/>
patch on a pair of pants is the div <lb/>
mends. <lb/>
Pride of thing, <lb/>
but the pride of an honest, upright <lb/>
is far more <lb/>
The members of the Hyde <lb/>
board of have adopt- <lb/>
ed two rules might he <lb/>
in other counties. To refuse lo <lb/>
appoint anyone a member of a <lb/>
school commit tee whose name <lb/>
pears on the insolvent list, <lb/>
have directed superintendent <lb/>
of schools to notify all the teachers <lb/>
who arc behind payment of <lb/>
taxes of the advisability of paying <lb/>
them before they apply for a teach- <lb/>
Met <lb/>
AGENTS <lb/>
Mr. John Dr. wry. Agent for <lb/>
North Carolina and Virginia, of that Wall- <lb/>
and Popular Company, <lb/>
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT <lb/>
Life Insurance Co., of <lb/>
Bathes to lo large number of <lb/>
policy holders and to lb.- insurable public <lb/>
generally. this com- <lb/>
win now in this <lb/>
state and from Ibis dale will its <lb/>
and desirable policies, to all de- <lb/>
siring the very best insurance in the best <lb/>
life man ram e company the world. <lb/>
If the local agent In your town has not <lb/>
yet completed arrangements, address <lb/>
JOHN C. DREWRY, <lb/>
State. Agent, N. C. <lb/>
Assets <lb/>
Paid policy <lb/>
Live, reliable energetic agents wanted at <lb/>
The Commoner <lb/>
IMBUED <lb/>
WILLIAM J. <lb/>
Editor Publisher, <lb/>
Lincoln, Nebraska. <lb/>
in Advance. <lb/>
One Year fl, Six Months <lb/>
Three Sing. Copy <lb/>
No traveling canvassers arc em- <lb/>
ployed. Subscriptions taken at <lb/>
Tin-; office. The Semi- <lb/>
Weekly <lb/>
will be sent together <lb/>
one year for or The Daily <lb/>
and <lb/>
one year for 18.00 payable in ad- <lb/>
ones to worn j <lb/>
the <lb/>
Old mutual Benefit, <lb/>
PATENT <lb/>
for <lb/>
1811<lb/>
Lawyers. WASH <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
in <lb/>
The Eastern <lb/>
D. J. EDITOR ARD <lb/>
TRUTH TO <lb/>
PER YEAR II <lb/>
VOL. XX. <lb/>
PITT COUNTY, N. C, TUESDAY, AUGUST <lb/>
NO <lb/>
-AT- <lb/>
Tobacco Market <lb/>
opened, prices good. <lb/>
EVERYBODY PLEASED. <lb/>
BUT OUR PRICES ON DRY <lb/>
SHOES, HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS, ate., <lb/>
WILL MAKE YOU LAUGH <lb/>
GROW FAT. COME TO SEE US. <lb/>
W. T. LEE <lb/>
Exposition. <lb/>
I .-1111 to about <lb/>
visitors with board and room with all modem conveniences, <lb/>
Fine view of Niagara River Lake Brie from house. <lb/>
Niagara Falls car door every f minutes. SO mill <lb/>
ates walk to exposition Take Niagara street ear to <lb/>
Auburn Avenue. Moderate rates. All correspondence will <lb/>
receive prompt attention. <lb/>
JOSEPH A. MOORE, <lb/>
Niagara Street, Buffalo, N. Y. <lb/>
TO <lb/>
THE PEOPLE, FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS OF <lb/>
PITT AND ADJOINING COUNTIES. <lb/>
We <lb/>
arc still in the forefront Of the race after your <lb/>
you the selected line of <lb/>
General Merchandise <lb/>
to lie found any store Pitt Comity. Well bought choice <lb/>
selections, the creations of the beat of America <lb/>
Europe. Seasonable all the round. Spring, Sunnier <lb/>
and Winter. We are work for and our mutual ad- <lb/>
vantage. It is our pleasure to show you what you want and to <lb/>
sell you if we can. We offer you the very service, polite <lb/>
attention, and the most liberal terms consistent with a well <lb/>
established business built up strictly on own merits. <lb/>
When you come to market you will not 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/>
Shoes. <lb/>
Hats and Caps, Silks and Sal ins, <lb/>
Jackets and Capos, Carpets, Mattings and oil cloths. <lb/>
FIRST CLASS MILITARY SCHOOL IN EASTERN N. <lb/>
School, <lb/>
LaGrange, N. C. <lb/>
MILITARY, LITERARY, SCIENTIFIC A COMMERCIAL SCHOOL. <lb/>
Boarding Pupils, Twelve Counties two Slates <lb/>
represented past session. School Buildings. Barracks <lb/>
for Sixty Cadets. <lb/>
The school aims to by latent <lb/>
and power. The individual needs of the students arc considered- <lb/>
The literary strengthens manly traits, gives a sound body <lb/>
clear mind. Class room methods cultivate <lb/>
lion and menial grasp. Athletics encouraged. <lb/>
Expenses per half term, including board, tuition, fuel, lights <lb/>
room, 955.00. No incidentals. School opens September -tin, 1901. <lb/>
Write for <lb/>
J. E. DEBNAM, Slit. <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/>
is cut just half mi-all Dimities, Si ks, <lb/>
White Hosiery, Laces, Hamburg, <lb/>
Underwear, Shirts, Slippers, Um- <lb/>
and all furnishing goods. These <lb/>
goods must be pushed out lo make room <lb/>
fall goods. <lb/>
KICKS WILKINSON. <lb/>
TO GROW <lb/>
Select a lot that is not too roll <lb/>
so that the water will run off <lb/>
before it soaks in, far enough from <lb/>
the house and ban that <lb/>
will not find it. An orchard will <lb/>
not suit. The plant cm stand <lb/>
shade. <lb/>
Stubble laud, where you have cut <lb/>
wheat will answer, provided you <lb/>
cut bushels per acre. <lb/>
An old garden or Irish potato <lb/>
patch is best. Turn the laud at <lb/>
once, light to kill all grain that <lb/>
may lie on the land, then make <lb/>
a good seed bed twelve to eighteen <lb/>
inches. Alter breaking the land. <lb/>
put on at rate of M wagon loads <lb/>
of stable manure per acre and cut <lb/>
it in with Any clods <lb/>
that may be left can be broken <lb/>
with a drag, stone is be-1. <lb/>
Let the land lie until all seeds from <lb/>
manure come then harrow <lb/>
until all is killed. Take a drill <lb/>
in pounds <lb/>
pounds automated git- <lb/>
Get IS pounds <lb/>
of seed from a reliable seed <lb/>
man. <lb/>
pounds of seed lat year <lb/>
cod 93.95. Sow broadcast evenly <lb/>
best to sow Ways. This <lb/>
mediately after you have put the <lb/>
acid, etc. Cover with drag, re <lb/>
move all stones, and your work is <lb/>
done. The should be done <lb/>
between 20th of August 20th <lb/>
of September, if later it is liable to, <lb/>
be killed with winter. Should <lb/>
this spring on <lb/>
Irish potatoes try it again. <lb/>
acre sown as per <lb/>
direction, will feed eight horses <lb/>
from September all summer, <lb/>
without any corn. it green, <lb/>
cut twice a week in <lb/>
If you wish to make hay, <lb/>
cut after dew is off cock up I <lb/>
as fast as cut, use caps if <lb/>
you have them. A few hours of <lb/>
hot sun burns it brown, then it is <lb/>
not good feed. One sowing will <lb/>
last to years, the thing <lb/>
that will kill it is blue grass or; <lb/>
sedge glass. It will not <lb/>
don't tic your cow <lb/>
unless you wish to ruin Masonic Hall School-A la under control Board <lb/>
it. j of Trustees appointed by Greenville Lodge, A. A. M., <lb/>
When the crown root is Ml session Sept. This sell. was conducted last year <lb/>
it will die. If we, come up in the people of We have there. <lb/>
,. Z . , employed Misses and to leach in <lb/>
spring mow then, oil close always, i,,, ., , <lb/>
mow close, a scythe is better than patronage support maintaining this school. <lb/>
Received. <lb/>
A large line of Caps, <lb/>
Belts, Laces and <lb/>
Embroideries. Ladies Col- <lb/>
and Cuffs all Sizes <lb/>
have largest and handsomest line of <lb/>
EVER brought to <lb/>
well is iii charge of my millinery department and it <lb/>
trimmed to suit <lb/>
Men's. <lb/>
Women's and Children's Shoes <lb/>
Horse Blankets and Dusters. <lb/>
and <lb/>
one Dusters. <lb/>
Groceries. <lb/>
Flour, Meat, Sugar Coffee, Molasses,; Lord, Bead Is, <lb/>
Hardware, <lb/>
Plows, Plow fixtures. Nails and Rope. <lb/>
Furniture. <lb/>
Headquarters Furniture and iii that Hue. <lb/>
We buy strictly for Cash, bat sell for Either Cash or on Approved <lb/>
Credit Our motto is Honesty, Merit and Square Dealing. <lb/>
, Your Friends, <lb/>
J. <lb/>
ft CO. <lb/>
Mr. S <lb/>
the Inn o is not 1-11 hand one will <lb/>
nudes you wait. <lb/>
Hats, Silks, Braids, Ornament <lb/>
the milliners <lb/>
Flowers, Ribbons, and every <lb/>
Bf <lb/>
POETIC JUSTICE. unenviable hero of the <lb/>
; above recorded was subjected to <lb/>
-or test, and apparently he tailed. <lb/>
a Jersey <lb/>
a pleasure drive <lb/>
man who . <lb/>
ilea <lb/>
for his <lb/>
I horns he was showing a manly and <lb/>
. I stern strength of character which <lb/>
is day and generation. I the <lb/>
It a very hot day, and when; have an <lb/>
the drive was about half over the women rather admire <lb/>
those who arc of cruelty. <lb/>
Those men are trying to lit six- <lb/>
ed though lather severe lesson <lb/>
the necessity of being humane <lb/>
Masonic Hall School, <lb/>
For Girls <lb/>
a machine. <lb/>
I have stocks years old <lb/>
just is strong as r. When you <lb/>
wish from any en lies lo change your <lb/>
laud, you will it much <lb/>
proved. I sow ed one acre <lb/>
and from April to this <lb/>
time I have not given my mules <lb/>
buggy horse any corn at <lb/>
all. <lb/>
The their stock <lb/>
and ship their corn down <lb/>
South. f <lb/>
Thus we make cotton to buy <lb/>
Western corn. One acre in <lb/>
is worth as much for feed as ten <lb/>
acres of any other plant, and <lb/>
no expense after sowing. <lb/>
Very respectfully. <lb/>
Win. <lb/>
Croft, N. C. <lb/>
Tuition per 91.50, Intermediate Higher <lb/>
92.50. Languages each extra. A matriculation fee of will be <lb/>
Charged. The school will have no music this session. <lb/>
Persons in can board pupils of the school will please <lb/>
notify the Secretary. L. CAKE, Sec. Hoard Trustees. <lb/>
Attorney decides <lb/>
the ease of <lb/>
the county of education can- <lb/>
not compromise with town author- <lb/>
and remit three lines <lb/>
due public schools. <lb/>
people never really <lb/>
enjoy <lb/>
Even positive man can <lb/>
give a negative answer. <lb/>
Corn the cob makes sonic <lb/>
smile from ear to <lb/>
The wise waiter says a tip in the <lb/>
hands is worth two the races. <lb/>
The email boy's idea of true hap <lb/>
is to lie always sure of a <lb/>
second piece of pie. <lb/>
The oyster is uneasily <lb/>
his bed. <lb/>
Winterville High School. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
Fall term opens September 2nd and s December 20th. <lb/>
Spring term begins December 30th and ends May <lb/>
High School, Intermediate and Primary De- <lb/>
and Music. Delightful location noted for healthful- <lb/>
rounded by excellent moral and religions <lb/>
For and full information address <lb/>
E. <lb/>
Is. C. <lb/>
Homer Military School, <lb/>
OXFORD, a. <lb/>
Elegant buildings, heated by fan system, securing per- <lb/>
ventilation. Sixteen new rooms for two boys each to be added for <lb/>
the fall term. Engagements should be made early. Annual attendance <lb/>
up to foil capacity and many turned away for lack of <lb/>
ion. deal athletic with quarter mile track, iii the South, <lb/>
Faculty of specialists special work. Curriculum preparatory <lb/>
the best college or education. An atmosphere of high Ideals <lb/>
surrounds school, as not preparing for higher education <lb/>
are excluded. Fall term September 1st, <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
STATE NORMAL <lb/>
Classical, Commercial, Pedagogical, Musical. <lb/>
Annual expense to for of the Slate i faculty of <lb/>
To board <lb/>
nil ramie July <lb/>
from <lb/>
For i-x oilier <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
horse became balky. The driver <lb/>
thereupon lost and gave <lb/>
he animal an unmerciful healing. <lb/>
Then I he trouble began. A eon <lb/>
stable saw him and promptly <lb/>
him for cruelty to animals- <lb/>
lie unable to pay money, <lb/>
and his companion settled the <lb/>
homo <lb/>
and wrote him a note, and <lb/>
a bat <lb/>
a man will so brutally <lb/>
neat a horse and easily lose his <lb/>
temper, a man;, lug him <lb/>
would lake the oh nice of the same <lb/>
And rest of note released <lb/>
him the engagement. <lb/>
M.-i people will be of <lb/>
ion that the young lady in <lb/>
lion did exactly n i; was right, <lb/>
and she was in dis- <lb/>
the disposition of her <lb/>
before of <lb/>
marriage. to the <lb/>
pain another N a trail v <lb/>
i- either <lb/>
i century ideas into twentieth <lb/>
century It cannot be <lb/>
done. It is true that women ad- <lb/>
mire a brave man, and the <lb/>
man question is a or a <lb/>
hunter, but there is a very fine <lb/>
distinction between the brave man <lb/>
and the mar who is ever ready to <lb/>
indict pain. What the modern <lb/>
mis lo admire in the soldier is <lb/>
not his willingness to shoot other <lb/>
men, but his readiness to be shot <lb/>
himself; not his <lb/>
pulses, but his sacrifice of personal <lb/>
safely. The of who <lb/>
would like a man better after see- <lb/>
him act cruelly toward a help- <lb/>
; less is not lit for a civilized <lb/>
Need Of Good Mothers. <lb/>
Marriage is becoming a mer- <lb/>
substituted for <lb/>
homes, wives arc- <lb/>
ladies children are unavoidable <lb/>
course, it i t to lie inferred <lb/>
every man who will beat his horse <lb/>
w ill also beat Ins wife, cruelty <lb/>
animals so vitiates moral <lb/>
husband or a wife. While, of nuisances and destruction of a <lb/>
habit. The few who <lb/>
the homes arc turned over to <lb/>
to and nurses in baby. <lb/>
hood to public schools in child- <lb/>
re that perceptions hood, fashionable colleges in youth, <lb/>
which a sense of justice depends are given over to society, dress and <lb/>
are blunted. The Intimacy in young <lb/>
marriage is so close that Instead of reading the Bible and <lb/>
can only ex where is saying their prayers at the <lb/>
forbearance, together with girls plait their hair shucks for <lb/>
certain sensitiveness to the feelings gs and boys plait their toes <lb/>
of others. The man who docs for toothpick shoes and both goto <lb/>
possess this sensitiveness may sleep with a dime novel under <lb/>
be actually cruel to either with or their pillow and head <lb/>
children, so far physical on top of it, <lb/>
treatment concerned, but he ill The old daddy is up to his chin <lb/>
say and do things which are quite I in business and in <lb/>
as brutal a blow with a whip name, up to her eyes society <lb/>
would be. There are a dozen eon- and the children am wallowing in <lb/>
which are likely to idleness and the whole thing is <lb/>
restrain him from wife beating toward the grate where <lb/>
the opinion of his neighbors, humanity runs out. They have <lb/>
torn, tear his wife max invoke not sense enough to be good. The <lb/>
tho law, tear retaliation by her brains have all ran down in <lb/>
i. lath c. or merely feel and hands and all they can do <lb/>
it la not usual fur to play progressive euchre and <lb/>
bands to express their sentiments dance. <lb/>
in way. if Ins nature is A f.-w first class mothers would <lb/>
essentially cruel lie will ways head Off this whole gang and turn <lb/>
lo torture dependent upon all our dudes and into <lb/>
inc. which are worse than physical men and women. I have no <lb/>
pain. The true teal of a man's lo woman suffrage, but the <lb/>
character is not to lie found in his woman who raises four boys for <lb/>
actions When he is restrained by Cod and the right multiplies her <lb/>
public sentiment or fear of vole by four. I am favor of a <lb/>
lie is his real self when woman being anything- she wants <lb/>
he is free lo act, to indulge mean- except the father of a family of <lb/>
or cruelty, toward children, but my judgment is that <lb/>
some creature cannot biggest thing a woman can be <lb/>
and ban means of de j is a class wife and mother. <lb/>
The in who is the <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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