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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
Have You Forgot <lb/>
What <lb/>
THAT I AM STILL CARRYING <lb/>
UP-TO DATE LINE <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Shoes <lb/>
Hats, Shirts, Pants, Hardware <lb/>
Tinware, <lb/>
AND A OF THING <lb/>
WHICH AM UNABLE TO MENTION <lb/>
tor your next BuM or Pork. <lb/>
I ; Tours to please- <lb/>
las. B. White. <lb/>
AFTER HAVE BEEN PAID IN THE <lb/>
benefit lift mm. lit <lb/>
OF NEWARK, N. J., POLISH HAS <lb/>
up Insurance, <lb/>
Insurance that works automatically, <lb/>
Is <lb/>
Will re-instated if arrears lie paid month while you <lb/>
are living, or years after lapse, upon satisfactory evidence <lb/>
of and of arrears with interest. <lb/>
second No Restrictions. <lb/>
are payable at the beginning of the second and f each <lb/>
provided the premium for the current year be paid. <lb/>
may be To reduce Premium, or <lb/>
or <lb/>
during the lifetime <lb/>
of insured. <lb/>
L. SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville. X. C. <lb/>
BOW <lb/>
None genuine unless <lb/>
Red Cross is on label <lb/>
Don't take a Substitute <lb/>
WE CHALLENGE THE WORLD <lb/>
TO PRODUCE EQUAL OF <lb/>
for Chills. Fevers, <lb/>
Night Sweats and Grippe, and <lb/>
all forms of Malaria. <lb/>
DON'T WAIT TO DIE <lb/>
SPEND CENTS AND BF CURED <lb/>
CURES ROBERTS- TONIC FAMOUS <lb/>
TRY IT. J. NO CURE NO PAY. 20.-. PER <lb/>
DELIGHTFUL TO TAKE. <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
STATE AND COLLEGE <lb/>
Classical, Scientific. Industrial. Pedagogical. Misled. <lb/>
Annual t. C r Stale Faculty of <lb/>
raid School pupil. board in <lb/>
tho nil free should be mail- lath. <lb/>
opens lath. <lb/>
Invited from impotent and stenographers. <lb/>
other Information ml <lb/>
President <lb/>
Greensboro, N C <lb/>
TO THE COTTON AND GIN <lb/>
NEW OF NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
In accordance with a resolution <lb/>
at the recent meeting State <lb/>
Alliance authorizing the <lb/>
appointment of a committee to is- <lb/>
sue an address, to the cotton <lb/>
and others interested <lb/>
better prices for cotton <lb/>
teed, this committee met Tuesday <lb/>
the city of and author- <lb/>
the following <lb/>
N. C, Aug. 1901. <lb/>
To the Cotton Farmers and <lb/>
North Carolina, <lb/>
letter is is- <lb/>
sued for the purpose of <lb/>
in you an interest in and <lb/>
of the value or the cotton <lb/>
seed crop this coming season. <lb/>
As is well known, the corn crop <lb/>
the aura growing States is <lb/>
in fact, it is short in most sections <lb/>
of the States. We all <lb/>
know that a short crop means <lb/>
higher priced corn, which turn <lb/>
means higher priced hogs, cattle, <lb/>
, and for their products. As <lb/>
these products price, <lb/>
such as compound lard <lb/>
etc., <lb/>
take their places. These <lb/>
substitutes contain cotton seed oil, <lb/>
hence the demand for that will <lb/>
probably be greater than ever be <lb/>
fore, higher prices. <lb/>
feeders of the West will <lb/>
have to some other feed <lb/>
for corn, us cotton seed meal <lb/>
has proven to lie than corn <lb/>
for this purpose, it is but natural <lb/>
that they will largely substitute <lb/>
cotton seed meal for corn <lb/>
season. consequence <lb/>
of these demands cotton seed meal <lb/>
oil will both bring higher <lb/>
prices than heretofore. This being <lb/>
true cotton seed also should <lb/>
higher prices than they have been <lb/>
selling for. <lb/>
Wit bin the past few months a <lb/>
syndicate has been taking options <lb/>
mi oil mills, and now. it is report <lb/>
. they own more than per cent j <lb/>
of the mills in the South, or its <lb/>
equivalent in out-put. The <lb/>
Oil Company. is <lb/>
claimed, owns forty per so <lb/>
less per <lb/>
out put. according to <lb/>
are independent mills. <lb/>
From recent occurrences it is <lb/>
probable oil com <lb/>
panics, controlling over per <lb/>
cent, of the cotton seed oil products <lb/>
of South, may combine or have <lb/>
an understanding as prices <lb/>
lo lie paid for cotton seed. The <lb/>
situation is such that, in our <lb/>
ion, the farmers should take some <lb/>
action to protect themselves and <lb/>
have some voice in naming the <lb/>
own products will sell <lb/>
for. This can lies lie done by co- <lb/>
operation in selling, which can be <lb/>
accomplished. The cotton seed <lb/>
crop of Carolina will pro- <lb/>
at estimate, <lb/>
bushels. Of crop <lb/>
bushels will probably lie sold. <lb/>
If by of the farmers <lb/>
Hie price can be advanced cents <lb/>
M bushel, it will give to the <lb/>
cut ton farmers of the <lb/>
more for crop they <lb/>
other-wise would get, but concert <lb/>
of action will be necessary to ob- <lb/>
n the desired results. It is to <lb/>
be Imped that the farmers in all <lb/>
the cotton growing Stales will take <lb/>
similar action. To that end this <lb/>
Idler will be sent to every South- <lb/>
State, success may <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
We deem of enough <lb/>
of <lb/>
, Raleigh, N. C, Sept. <lb/>
The sensation of the week was <lb/>
the serving of papers on the <lb/>
Commission for a writ of <lb/>
mandamus, to be heard before <lb/>
Judge here on <lb/>
23rd, to compel the <lb/>
to the tangible and <lb/>
intangible property railroads <lb/>
for taxation during present <lb/>
year. The act ion is brought by <lb/>
Senator Ward of Washington <lb/>
made some reputation in <lb/>
the last Legislature by bis activity <lb/>
along the same lines, as <lb/>
for Sheriff of that county. <lb/>
THE N. C. <lb/>
The appearance of an advertise- <lb/>
in a State paper offering the <lb/>
Western X. C. for sale at <lb/>
auction on October under ex- <lb/>
from Superior <lb/>
Court, was another sensation <lb/>
week. The sale is advertised by <lb/>
Overman, Long and Avery, <lb/>
counsel for the widows of engineer <lb/>
James and Howard, who <lb/>
were killed in a railroad <lb/>
and who obtained judgments sonic <lb/>
time ago aggregating <lb/>
against the Western K. C. <lb/>
Southern Railway, which <lb/>
holds a lease the road. <lb/>
Counsel for the <lb/>
latter will ignore proceeding <lb/>
because the sale would not lie valid, <lb/>
but the counsel declare <lb/>
it will be regular and <lb/>
they will find a purchaser. <lb/>
AWAY WITH <lb/>
The shooting of President <lb/>
by a red-month anarchist <lb/>
of the same stripe as him who re- <lb/>
murdered King of Italy <lb/>
was received with greatest in- <lb/>
here, at the same <lb/>
with the sincere sympathy of <lb/>
all classes and conditions of people <lb/>
So Tired <lb/>
It may be from overwork, bat <lb/>
the chance are Ha from la <lb/>
active , <lb/>
With a well conducted LIVER <lb/>
one can do mountain of labor <lb/>
without <lb/>
It adds a hundred per cant to <lb/>
earning capacity. <lb/>
it can be kept la action <lb/>
by, and only by <lb/>
Tuft's Pills <lb/>
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. <lb/>
bond issue voted on last month to <lb/>
be defeated, by remaining away <lb/>
from, the being necessary <lb/>
for bonds to receive an actual <lb/>
majority of all names on <lb/>
registration books. Therefore, <lb/>
while nearly voted for the <lb/>
bonds and less than white men <lb/>
against them, over voter did <lb/>
not vote at all and the bonds lack- <lb/>
ed of polling a majority of all <lb/>
the votes that could bare been <lb/>
cast. <lb/>
OTHER MAT IT. us or <lb/>
Trouble with the school-book <lb/>
continues on at- <lb/>
of the lack of <lb/>
they are required lo <lb/>
in many counties the <lb/>
costing more than <lb/>
ever because postage has to be paid <lb/>
on them from a distance. Super- <lb/>
Toon is trying to remedy <lb/>
Atlanta. Ga. Nor. Is, <lb/>
We bare handled Dr. <lb/>
ever since first in- <lb/>
to public and trade a <lb/>
and our trade In it has <lb/>
increased from year lo year <lb/>
our orders now amount to two or three <lb/>
hundred groat per year, which a very <lb/>
cm of merit and the <lb/>
faction it i- riving to mothers of the <lb/>
country, for they that nothing so effect- <lb/>
counteract the effect of the <lb/>
hot son or overcomes so quickly the <lb/>
Incident to <lb/>
DRUG CO. <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
If yon have tour stomach, biliousness, constipation, bad <lb/>
breath, inactive liver, heartburn, kidney troubles, backache, <lb/>
of appetite, insomnia, lack of energy, bad blood, blotched or muddy akin, <lb/>
any symptoms and disorders which tell story of bad bowels and an <lb/>
impairs. digestive system, Will Cure Von. <lb/>
will dean out the stimulate tho liver and kidneys, strengthen <lb/>
the mucous membranes of the purify your blood and put you <lb/>
ken your again. Your appetite will your bowel move <lb/>
your liver and kidneys cease to trouble you, your akin will clear and <lb/>
and yon will feel the old time energy and buoyancy. <lb/>
, Mother to giro their tor <lb/>
and similar troubles, will Meal far ,,,,,,. Y.- . <lb/>
a or <lb/>
I corn crop and high <lb/>
prices have <lb/>
for and bis family <lb/>
nowhere in all country is the <lb/>
outrage more genuinely <lb/>
deplored in the South. It <lb/>
high lime Ibis steps <lb/>
lo suppress or deport every <lb/>
in United States, <lb/>
murderous <lb/>
of the Golden <lb/>
ind like, allowed to <lb/>
hold open meetings at Patterson, <lb/>
health of the <lb/>
shot President <lb/>
was in <lb/>
meeting hour or two after the <lb/>
awful Chicago and else- <lb/>
where, should be effectively reach- <lb/>
ed by the arm of the law, and <lb/>
without delay. Liberty That is <lb/>
not It is license, and <lb/>
to minder the <lb/>
chosen head of our county by for- <lb/>
to that farmers <lb/>
meet respective counties at <lb/>
the court house on Saturday, <lb/>
and select delegates lo <lb/>
attend a Stale meeting to lie held <lb/>
city of M <lb/>
September SB. If it is deemed <lb/>
advisable township meetings can <lb/>
lie held earlier than September <lb/>
each township or neighborhood can <lb/>
aids tho <lb/>
i y <lb/>
II U and ink for it <lb/>
For Salt by <lb/>
mot only of f <lb/>
i-m. at . <lb/>
III to arty i ,<lb/>
It, -MM It <lb/>
mm. f-r <lb/>
t . of your <lb/>
op r. . I p.- <lb/>
I along <lb/>
fountain <lb/>
Writ <lb/>
made ibis a for <lb/>
it is for <lb/>
In say whether I hey will take <lb/>
advantage of it or leave nil the <lb/>
lions ti the seed oil mills. <lb/>
may that they <lb/>
will not them down. In <lb/>
lo your own interests yon <lb/>
should forward offer to <lb/>
share profits with the mill <lb/>
men. <lb/>
This is to every <lb/>
cotton farmer in the <lb/>
Stale, from least largest. <lb/>
Let them nil co operate. Let no <lb/>
excuse keep you <lb/>
from the meetings. <lb/>
T. B. B. A. <lb/>
interlopers who have little <lb/>
j in lens appreciation <lb/>
of our in of government, <lb/>
would not anywhere <lb/>
else on the face of civilized <lb/>
globe.<lb/>
A people in <lb/>
appear ha on or re- <lb/>
now are regret- <lb/>
ting action allowing <lb/>
RHEUMATISM <lb/>
TO aw CURE. <lb/>
I M WONDER OB I <lb/>
A remedy that <lb/>
cures recast and long stand- <lb/>
log cases. The greatest blood <lb/>
purifier known. the hearty <lb/>
endorsement of <lb/>
thorough Cures per <lb/>
cent, of the cases treated. Price <lb/>
I per tattle. <lb/>
Sell a, NICHOLS <lb/>
the trouble and have the books de- <lb/>
posited in every county for sale. <lb/>
Col. John pres- <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
co Association, calls a <lb/>
meeting of be <lb/>
held in during Fair week <lb/>
about the or 24th of October. <lb/>
As many tobacco growers as <lb/>
can should attend. Col. <lb/>
himself is largest to- <lb/>
grower in United States <lb/>
and is deeply interested in the <lb/>
fare of interested in the same <lb/>
business. <lb/>
Ex-Treasurer Worth's trustee <lb/>
has made payment of all of the <lb/>
stolen by his clerk Martin <lb/>
except The latter sum <lb/>
will soon be turned over to Treas- <lb/>
Lacy. It has been a great <lb/>
hardship to this honest old man <lb/>
and every hopes he will yet <lb/>
get most of it back out of <lb/>
company that bonded Martin, <lb/>
and which has refused to pay a <lb/>
dollar, so far. <lb/>
The State Board is now <lb/>
purging the pension lists <lb/>
in by the various counties. In <lb/>
some counties from one third to <lb/>
one half the names have <lb/>
en out many eliminated in <lb/>
most of the counties. Still <lb/>
number of will be <lb/>
this year than ever. <lb/>
In speaking about compulsory <lb/>
education Stale Labor Commission- <lb/>
Varner the development <lb/>
the movement is remarkable, as <lb/>
replies from In.- report show. <lb/>
lie expects it in five years. It <lb/>
in the than in <lb/>
the east. He says this is, lion ever, <lb/>
because a majority of the white <lb/>
people in of Start <lb/>
where are numerous do <lb/>
not want e.-roes educated at <lb/>
all. In the western counties where <lb/>
are few, this attracts no <lb/>
Ledger. <lb/>
in <lb/>
J. W. ft CD. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Factors and handlers of <lb/>
Tics Bags. <lb/>
and shipments <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
--------BUT A K t <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Wholesale retail Grocer and <lb/>
Furniture Dealer. Cash paid for <lb/>
Hides, Far, Cotton Seed, Oil Bar- <lb/>
Turkeys, Egg, etc. Bed- <lb/>
Mattresses, Oak Suits, Ba <lb/>
by Carriages, Carts, Parlor <lb/>
soils, Tables, Lounges, Safes, P. <lb/>
Lam I lard and Gail Ax <lb/>
Meat Tobacco, Key West Cheroots, <lb/>
American Beauty Can- <lb/>
Cherries, Peaches, Apples, <lb/>
Pine Apples, Syrup, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour Sugar, Coffee, Bleat, Soap, <lb/>
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, <lb/>
Cotton Heed Meal and Hulls, Oar- <lb/>
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples, Nuts, <lb/>
Dried Apple, Peaches, <lb/>
Prunes, Currents, <lb/>
and China Ware, Tin and Wooden <lb/>
Ware, Oaken and Crackers, Macs <lb/>
Beat Butter, Stand- <lb/>
ard Sewing Machines, and nu- <lb/>
other goods. Quality and <lb/>
Quantity. Cheap for Com <lb/>
m m <lb/>
CANDY <lb/>
I hare jolt three sooth of <lb/>
Post Office, and the of all <lb/>
guaranteed pore. Hew styles <lb/>
of every week. <lb/>
CHRISTIAN <lb/>
Photographer, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
The leader in good wort and low <lb/>
Nice sir Una. <lb/>
Half Cabinets dozen <lb/>
All other lines very Crayon Portraits <lb/>
made any small Mice <lb/>
Frames on hand all the time. Come and <lb/>
examine my work. No trouble lo show <lb/>
samples and answer questions. <lb/>
best work guaranteed to Office hours <lb/>
a to a. m, to fin. -a. Yours to please, <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
The undersigned having duly qualified <lb/>
before the court dart of Pitt <lb/>
county administrator of the estate of <lb/>
Sarah L. notice la hereby <lb/>
given to all persons indebted to the, estate <lb/>
to make immediate to under- <lb/>
signed, sad all claims <lb/>
against the estate an notified to the <lb/>
same to the undersigned payment <lb/>
within twelve months from the date of this <lb/>
notice, or it will plead bar of recovery <lb/>
This 4th day of September, 1901. <lb/>
SMITH, <lb/>
the Estate of Sarah L. <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
leave <lb/>
ton daily at A. M. for Green- <lb/>
ville, Greenville daily at IS <lb/>
M. for Washington. <lb/>
Steamer <lb/>
Greenville Mondays, Wednesday <lb/>
and Fridays at A. M. for Tar- <lb/>
leave Tarboro for Greenville <lb/>
and <lb/>
at A. M. carries freight only. <lb/>
at Washington with <lb/>
Steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore, <lb/>
New York and Boa- <lb/>
ton, and for all points for the <lb/>
with railroads at Norfolk. <lb/>
Shippers should order freight by <lb/>
the Old Dominion S. Co. from <lb/>
New York; Clyde Line from <lb/>
Bay Line from <lb/>
and Line from <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. SON, <lb/>
Washington, B. C <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, <lb/>
Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
The Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt <lb/>
county, Issued Letters of <lb/>
lo me, undersigned, on the <lb/>
day of September, 1901, on the estate of <lb/>
A. Dupree, deceased, notice is here- <lb/>
by given to all persons Indebted to the <lb/>
estate to make immediate payment to the <lb/>
undersigned, sad to all creditors of said <lb/>
estate to present their claims, properly <lb/>
to the undersigned, within <lb/>
twelve months alter dale of this notice, <lb/>
or this notice will be plead bar of their <lb/>
y. Tina the 2nd day of Sept, 1901. <lb/>
JUDITH II. <lb/>
on estate of JOSEPH A. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt <lb/>
county having Issued Letters of <lb/>
to me, the undersigned on the 9th <lb/>
August, 1901, on the estate of Lynn <lb/>
Tripp, deceased, notice hereby given to <lb/>
all persons indebted to the estate to make <lb/>
immediate payment to the undersigned, and <lb/>
to all creditor of said estate to present <lb/>
their el mi properly authenticated, to the <lb/>
undersigned, within months after <lb/>
the date of notice, or I his notice will be <lb/>
plead in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
This the 9th day of 1901. <lb/>
TRIPP, <lb/>
Administrator of estate of Tripp <lb/>
0.1.<lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
The having been notified <lb/>
by Judge Henry Bryan that he will not <lb/>
be able to hold September term of <lb/>
county Superior court, 1901, all jurors who <lb/>
bar el-en for the first <lb/>
second weeks of said term art hereby <lb/>
not to attend, bat all witnesses who <lb/>
hare been summoned and all parties who <lb/>
have been been bound over to laid <lb/>
term are hereby notified and required <lb/>
to attend the special term of said court o <lb/>
September, 1801. A new <lb/>
jury will be drawn and summoned for d <lb/>
special term. This Aug. lath, 1901. <lb/>
U. W. HARRINGTON, <lb/>
D. C Moo HE, Clerk court. <lb/>
GREENVILLE ft. C. <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and Pies <lb/>
on has t <lb/>
Fresh goods kept constantly <lb/>
hand. Country produce and <lb/>
sold. A trial will convince yon. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Buyers and Brokers in <lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
ions. Private Wires to New York, <lb/>
Chicago and Near Orleans. <lb/>
Pitt county la <lb/>
our t before the clerk. <lb/>
Hill AN <lb/>
and others, <lb/>
VI. <lb/>
The above named defendant cheater D i van <lb/>
will take notice that an action entitled <lb/>
above has been commenced in the Superior <lb/>
court of Pitt county, to a certain lot <lb/>
the Town of Bethel for partition. And <lb/>
will further lake notice <lb/>
that be Is r-quired to appear at office of <lb/>
the clerk of the Superior court of Pitt county <lb/>
on Friday Sept. 20th, 1901, and answer or <lb/>
lemur lo said action, or <lb/>
the plaintiff will apply U court for the <lb/>
relief In lbs complaint. <lb/>
This August 1901. C. <lb/>
clerk Superior court. <lb/>
F O. JAMBS, <lb/>
SALE OF TOWN LOT. <lb/>
By virtue of decree of Superior <lb/>
Court of county, made on 2nd day <lb/>
of September 1901, in a certain special pro- <lb/>
therein pending, entitled F. O. <lb/>
James retails Beverly Brothers guardian <lb/>
and others, I Monday October <lb/>
1901, before the court house door In <lb/>
ville, sell at public to highest bid- <lb/>
for cash, the certain lot or parcel of <lb/>
land situated In the town <lb/>
described as in plot <lb/>
if said as part of lot hounded on <lb/>
the North by second street, on East by <lb/>
Green on the the lot form- <lb/>
owned and used Baptist parsonage <lb/>
and or. the West by the lot, and <lb/>
being the place late <lb/>
Williamson, containing one fourth of an <lb/>
acre mere or leas. <lb/>
This the 4th day of September, 1901. <lb/>
ALEX. <lb/>
Phone <lb/>
notice to <lb/>
ATTENTION AGENTS <lb/>
Mr. John General Agent for <lb/>
north Carolina Virginia, of that Well <lb/>
Known and Popular Company, <lb/>
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT <lb/>
Life Insurance Co., of <lb/>
Desires to to Its large number of <lb/>
policy and In public <lb/>
generally of North this com- <lb/>
will now Business la this <lb/>
state and from this dale will issue <lb/>
splendid and desirable policies, to all de- <lb/>
siring very bast insurance the beat <lb/>
Insurance company in world. <lb/>
If the agent la your town has not <lb/>
yet completed arrangements, <lb/>
JOHN C. <lb/>
Stale Agent, Raleigh, N. <lb/>
Assets <lb/>
Paid policy 82,509,189.05 <lb/>
Live, reliable energetic agents wanted at <lb/>
once lo work for the <lb/>
j. a. <lb/>
------DEALER IN------ <lb/>
sinus <lb/>
--r- <lb/>
A GENERAL LINE OF <lb/>
Also a nice Line of Hardware. <lb/>
COME TO SEE MB. <lb/>
J. B. <lb/>
W. R. NO., <lb/>
IS <lb/>
Whichard, N. C. <lb/>
The Stock complete in every de <lb/>
and prices a low tho <lb/>
lowest. Highest market prices <lb/>
paid for country produce. <lb/>
The Commoner <lb/>
WILLIAM J. <lb/>
Editor A Publisher, <lb/>
Lincoln, <lb/>
in Advance. <lb/>
One Year Biz Months <lb/>
Three Months Copy <lb/>
No traveling canvassers are em- <lb/>
ployed. Subscriptions taken at <lb/>
office. The Semi- <lb/>
Weekly and <lb/>
will be together <lb/>
one year for or The Daily <lb/>
and <lb/>
one year for 13.00 payable In ad- <lb/>
The Eastern <lb/>
D. J. EDITOR <lb/>
TO <lb/>
ELECTOR <lb/>
VOL. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER <lb/>
NO <lb/>
-AT- <lb/>
la <lb/>
WE <lb/>
ARE KNOCKING <lb/>
THEM <lb/>
OS<lb/>
in <lb/>
Dangerous. <lb/>
A girl charge of two <lb/>
small white bud them In a <lb/>
baggy driving through Evans <lb/>
street Thursday afternoon. The <lb/>
street was crowded with vehicles <lb/>
and the girl drove into and locked <lb/>
wheels with it wagon. She seemed <lb/>
ed to have idea about <lb/>
and was noticed trying to back the <lb/>
horse and clucking the animal <lb/>
forward at the same time. The re- <lb/>
was quite a mix up and a <lb/>
row escape from accident. <lb/>
Our Mew <lb/>
Fall stock <lb/>
For Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Hats. Caps, Shoes, Trunks, <lb/>
Boys and Clothing, Gents Furnishings; Gloves, <lb/>
and a big line of Baby Caps. Cloaks, Mitts and Bootees. <lb/>
Come to see us. Every day a bargain day and everything a <lb/>
bargain. Your friends, <lb/>
W. T. LEE CO. <lb/>
The <lb/>
UNEQUALED DIVIDEND RECORD IS THE RESULT <lb/>
Securing the highest rate of interest consistent with safety. <lb/>
Rigid economy of management. <lb/>
Low resulting from a careful selection of risks <lb/>
limiting business to the United States. <lb/>
It will be to your interest to see what we can do for yon before <lb/>
placing your life insurance. <lb/>
Good territory open for Agents in North Carolina. <lb/>
T. ARCHIBALD GARY, General <lb/>
For Virginia and North Carolina, <lb/>
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, <lb/>
1201 E. Main Street, Richmond, Va. <lb/>
The Profit is Yours <lb/>
We call alt cut ion to the highly <lb/>
showing made by Pres <lb/>
Powell, of <lb/>
Park <lb/>
read in the of the <lb/>
Asheville yesterday <lb/>
published in the Asheville <lb/>
correspondence of The Observer <lb/>
this morning. It shows a really <lb/>
amazing amount of work done to- <lb/>
ward the of the <lb/>
purposes of the park <lb/>
Such bard work has been done <lb/>
still deserves The <lb/>
association is now in need of funds <lb/>
prosecute work and its call <lb/>
for financial help should meet with <lb/>
a liberal from all who are <lb/>
interested having beautiful <lb/>
mountain section of North Car- <lb/>
South Carolina, Tennessee <lb/>
and Georgia set off into a national <lb/>
forest <lb/>
Sheriff Wallace, <lb/>
burg, who has a good share <lb/>
of hanging to do, does not mind <lb/>
the job. He looks upon it as a <lb/>
simple duty and he does it as such. <lb/>
It the true idea. Every witness, <lb/>
every solicitor, every juror has a <lb/>
duty to perform and feel <lb/>
the responsibility as much as the <lb/>
sheriff. The whole matter is one <lb/>
of duty to lie modified by <lb/>
whim, by hate or timidity. <lb/>
a man so conducts that the <lb/>
laws the laud say that he <lb/>
fit to live and his removal is es- <lb/>
to life, liberty <lb/>
others there should lie no <lb/>
shrinking from the duty of <lb/>
Standard. <lb/>
is coming our store is a of goods. <lb/>
and Your <lb/>
Daughter <lb/>
and all the <lb/>
Ladies that <lb/>
N T <lb/>
is now in Northern Markets <lb/>
purchasing <lb/>
NEW <lb/>
Mi.-i .-. <lb/>
bring back prettiest stock ever seen <lb/>
My stock of Dry Goods also <lb/>
many attractions for <lb/>
The shortening season again shortens prices. <lb/>
gladly sacrifice the profits <lb/>
An interesting case, which At- <lb/>
General says is ab- <lb/>
novel in Carolina, <lb/>
comes before the Supreme Court to <lb/>
morrow. It is from Pitt <lb/>
and involves the question whether <lb/>
the evidence of a blood-hound <lb/>
good legal evidence. Blood-hounds <lb/>
there tracked a criminal. He was <lb/>
convicted the Superior Quail <lb/>
appealed on the ground that a <lb/>
evidence was worthless. Able <lb/>
is full with Skirts, Jackets, <lb/>
Our Stock of Shoes <lb/>
is complete in every way. can suit your feet, <lb/>
your head, your purse. Come lo see us. <lb/>
Your Friends, <lb/>
BETHEL ITEMS. <lb/>
T. G, and Julius Brown <lb/>
left lure a few days ago for <lb/>
Pi at Chapel Hill. <lb/>
Miss left <lb/>
I day for Baptist University at <lb/>
ASTHMA CUBE TREE. <lb/>
Brines Relief a Permanent Cure In all Cases <lb/>
SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE ON OP I. <lb/>
i lawyers, among ex-Governor <lb/>
say stand by the dog's <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
ILL <lb/>
The chance i. only yours if you will make an <lb/>
early investigation. Those goods be <lb/>
pushed out to make room for our large fall <lb/>
stock which is coming in. <lb/>
for Standard Patterns. <lb/>
The death penalty for murder <lb/>
has been restored Colorado and <lb/>
Iowa Stales the <lb/>
for life experiment <lb/>
in a largely list of <lb/>
homicides. There are now only <lb/>
four States in which the death <lb/>
penalty is <lb/>
Michigan, Maine <lb/>
Island. <lb/>
KICKS WILKINSON. <lb/>
Some newspaper man Hays <lb/>
Carrie Nation does nut wear a <lb/>
set. How did be <lb/>
tn fuel A that would <lb/>
put his arm around her waist would <lb/>
make a due chap to go in the lion's <lb/>
cage at a Rec- <lb/>
aimless wonder of museum <lb/>
fume bas lie handy with <lb/>
feet. <lb/>
It takes a pretty sharp fellow to <lb/>
successfully. . <lb/>
There is nothing like It brings <lb/>
instant relief, even in Worst cases. It when <lb/>
all else tails. <lb/>
The F. Wells, of Villa, Ridge, III., <lb/>
of received in good <lb/>
cannot you how thankful. I feel for <lb/>
good derived from it. I was a slave, chained with <lb/>
putrid sore and for years. I de <lb/>
of ever being cured. I saw your advertise- <lb/>
the cute of this dreadful and tormenting <lb/>
disease, asthma, and had <lb/>
yourselves, bill resolved lo give it a trial. To my <lb/>
astonishment, the trial acted like a charm. Send me <lb/>
a full-size <lb/>
want to send to every sufferer a trial treatment of <lb/>
similar to the one cured Mr. Wells. We'll send by mail p. st <lb/>
paid, Free of Charge, any who write for <lb/>
even a postal. Never mind, though you are despairing, <lb/>
bad your will relieve and elite. your <lb/>
case, the more glad we arc lo Do delay, write mice, ad- <lb/>
dressing Dr. Bros Medicine Co., 180th SI., X. Y. . <lb/>
Sold by all Druggists, <lb/>
GRIFTON ITEMS. <lb/>
N. Sept. 1901. <lb/>
Miss Mattie of Kinston, <lb/>
after a few days here re- <lb/>
turned borne Monday. <lb/>
L. Keene, Jr., wool on a bus- <lb/>
lo Norfolk Monday. <lb/>
Ben of Ayden, is here I T. L. Britton left here Tuesday <lb/>
and went to Vanceboro with to spend a few with relatives <lb/>
boys lo play ball which Vance- in Meant, <lb/>
toys say be did without K. II. Keel, of Bath, is at his <lb/>
doubt, home for quite <lb/>
Gardner has gone lo the Roland James, of <lb/>
drug-tore and taken charge, lie has been visiting her for <lb/>
purchased an Interest in several days. <lb/>
has accepted a V. E. Tuesday <lb/>
position with J. until Washington, <lb/>
Vance Wall ictus us from his home B. Cooper, of Hawaii, was in <lb/>
up iii Randolph. town Wednesday on business. <lb/>
Mi-s Mildred of Mr. and Mrs. spent <lb/>
mouth, Va., is visiting the Misses Monday and Tuesday in Scotland <lb/>
Dawson near Neck. <lb/>
There will be a couple games I J. O. Andrews and family have <lb/>
of ball here between colored moved to <lb/>
of place and Ayden and Miss Madge Peal, of place, <lb/>
Hugo Friday. left Tuesday for Mt. Olive to be- <lb/>
It. Harvey and Mrs. i gin school to Prof. <lb/>
from Asheville Saturday f tor. <lb/>
evening. Prof. Z. O. family <lb/>
Forbes returned to Green i left Saturday to make future <lb/>
line home in Mt. Olive. <lb/>
towards game, Miss of Baltimore, is <lb/>
with Bro. this season. <lb/>
ball club went H. Young, of this place, <lb/>
Tuesday to play Saturday and Sunday in <lb/>
second game ball with dial team Goldsboro. <lb/>
which was won by the A very sad occurred in <lb/>
seven six in Saturday The <lb/>
Ion. Hopkins and battery little year old sou of Mr. <lb/>
for Woolen and i . Andrews passed away <lb/>
Harper battery Mr. I of darkness into light, where <lb/>
Hopkins of the best pitchers ho will ever be blessed won- <lb/>
of the Carolina league the past happiness. Every one <lb/>
season. lie was on i with family, <lb/>
ton and is Rev. J. W. returned home <lb/>
crack catcher of Durham. Saturday held service Sunday <lb/>
also of Now Bern, is a professional and Sunday night in the <lb/>
of tho Now team. I church. <lb/>
Lloyd Woolen in the box and Misses Whichard and <lb/>
Bill Harper the bat j Elena Smith left here Saturday <lb/>
line work towards winning the for Ml. lo school to <lb/>
game for There one l. <lb/>
bagger off of Wooten and two <lb/>
two baggers off Hopkins. He Knows too Much. <lb/>
boys feel very highly elated <lb/>
over inning a game had <lb/>
league players to en tend with <lb/>
Three Times The Vital <lb/>
OP ANY OTHER. <lb/>
ONE EASIER. <lb/>
ONE THIRD PASTER. <lb/>
Agents Wanted ill all unoccupied <lb/>
territory, <lb/>
WHEELED <lb/>
Ma mi fact tiring Company, <lb/>
Fur sale by <lb/>
S. T WHITE, <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Rev. Dr. of Atlanta, <lb/>
has Just returned from Eu- <lb/>
rope, headquarters i f hell <lb/>
are located France. This doesn't <lb/>
agree with Rev. Sam Jones, who <lb/>
located Institution within <lb/>
II mile of several Southern <lb/>
Star, <lb/>
can a circus as far <lb/>
as we can see says <lb/>
tor of The Globe. <lb/>
has a sort of careless that can- <lb/>
not be mistaken. We can also tell <lb/>
married women from <lb/>
women we don't know why, but <lb/>
we can do it. Put one married <lb/>
woman in a crowd of a hundred <lb/>
girls, and we can pick her out. <lb/>
Or put one girl with a crowd of a <lb/>
hundred married women, all <lb/>
I about the same age, and we <lb/>
pick her out. We'll bet on it. <lb/>
A new species of owls has been Another thing we can do. <lb/>
In New Jersey, can tell the time hour <lb/>
a farmer last week captured three I day or night j ii we awaken at <lb/>
of them. hove the body and night, we can tell exactly what <lb/>
wings of owl, with bead and time it Is, We don't know why <lb/>
face of monkey. They can do hut we <lb/>
eighteen high, wings <lb/>
Bring three feel fl i tip to tip, It doesn't lake an agriculturalist <lb/>
I but they raise a row.<lb/>
. .-<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018548_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Ed. Owner <lb/>
Entered at the Post Office at <lb/>
Greenville. N. as Second-Class <lb/>
Mail Matter. <lb/>
TUESDAY. IT, 1901. <lb/>
Charlotte Observer learns <lb/>
that it is pronounced <lb/>
or Either of these <lb/>
is as bad as the original, <lb/>
will just have to call it what <lb/>
yon please and throw a brick at it. <lb/>
A man in Wyoming who was <lb/>
said to have expressed sympathy <lb/>
for the assassin was <lb/>
tarred and feathered and ridden <lb/>
out of town on a rail, with the in- <lb/>
junction that If he returned he <lb/>
be lynched. <lb/>
The Free Press is <lb/>
Its voice against dogs that bark <lb/>
at night and disturb the repose of <lb/>
the neighborhood and wants the <lb/>
city fathers to tax them to death. <lb/>
Why not include crowing roosters <lb/>
in the same list with barking dogs I <lb/>
United States Senator Welling- <lb/>
ton, of Maryland, who because of <lb/>
a personal dislike for President <lb/>
made disparaging <lb/>
marks about bis attempted <lb/>
has been expelled from <lb/>
the Union League of Maryland of <lb/>
which he was a member. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
Several anarchists, Emma Gold- <lb/>
man among them, have been <lb/>
rested on of being <lb/>
sited in a plot to assassinate the <lb/>
President. The man who <lb/>
did the shooting has implicated no <lb/>
one yet, but the matter will be fer- <lb/>
to the bottom. The sooner <lb/>
this country rids its borders of <lb/>
better. <lb/>
What will be the outcome the <lb/>
injunction started against the <lb/>
officials of the town to prevent <lb/>
sale of bonds fr improve <lb/>
of cannot be <lb/>
yet. It will stop the matter where <lb/>
it is until the injunction is settled. <lb/>
This may be at the hearing before <lb/>
Judge Bryan on the or it may <lb/>
take a long litigation through the <lb/>
I-. If town shall lose the <lb/>
contemplated it will <lb/>
be a set back to her progress that <lb/>
is to be regretted. Greenville <lb/>
water works, electric lights <lb/>
and sewerage and cannot get <lb/>
any too soon. <lb/>
A Sad Death. <lb/>
Mr. J. P. Manning, who was <lb/>
accidentally hurt while in bathing <lb/>
n creek on Aug. <lb/>
1901, from which he became para- <lb/>
died Sept. 5th the hos- <lb/>
at Tarboro. Ivor thing t hat <lb/>
was possible was for by <lb/>
the physicians of this section. He <lb/>
was taken to John Hopkins Hos- <lb/>
in Baltimore where it was <lb/>
found no relief could be given <lb/>
him, he was brought back <lb/>
home and placed in the hospital <lb/>
Tarboro. His father attended bin <lb/>
faithfully there until end. <lb/>
Few young men raised in Pill <lb/>
THE END. <lb/>
PRESIDENT DEAD. <lb/>
Passed Away at This Morning. <lb/>
From the nature of the news <lb/>
from Buffalo Friday and at night, <lb/>
every one expected to hear the <lb/>
worst from President <lb/>
this morning, as all hope seem- <lb/>
ed given and their fears were <lb/>
realized, for the cud at <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
When the President was pro- <lb/>
last night a <lb/>
company of the Lath Infantry <lb/>
rived at the house <lb/>
drove the crowds back. The <lb/>
telegraph office louts were <lb/>
guarded. A regiment of the <lb/>
guards under arms <lb/>
to the Chief of Police and <lb/>
were placed charge of the <lb/>
exposition grounds, virtually <lb/>
city under martial law. <lb/>
Members of the Cabinet <lb/>
others left the death chamber after <lb/>
taking a farewell look at the Pres- <lb/>
who had sometime <lb/>
unconscious. Senator Hanna was <lb/>
Under more favorable conditions than ever before in its <lb/>
past history. We have larger and batter facilities for handling <lb/>
tobacco than ever before and a larger number of good buyers <lb/>
who have orders for every grade f tobacco grown. Greenville <lb/>
is your market and the <lb/>
Farmers Warehouse Headquarters <lb/>
for highest market prices at all times, and clever, courteous <lb/>
treatment at the hands of every one connected with the Farm- <lb/>
Warehouse- <lb/>
KIM pi <lb/>
I am in to do business than ever before, and if <lb/>
work and the best prices will get it I am going to have your <lb/>
tobacco. I Appeal to no passion or prejudice but <lb/>
the rock of truth and merit I rest my claim your pat- <lb/>
,. ask this to give me a chance and I will <lb/>
complete broken In spirits and I. . . . . , , . , , <lb/>
t J r take care of the balance. have been running a warehouse <lb/>
the Presidents forehead be I w and j j <lb/>
fore being led from the room I tobacco. t nave with me a corps of thoroughly <lb/>
Mrs. was under the tent, reliable and courteous assistants, who will use every <lb/>
care of j honorable means to advance your interest. When you come <lb/>
who stimulants, and to Greenville I ask you especially to come around and see me <lb/>
she bore up bravely through the whether you bring tobacco or not. A hearty, princely welcome <lb/>
trying ordeal of sorrow parting always awaits you at the Farmers, <lb/>
at the bedside. After the end was Sincerely, <lb/>
announced she swooned has <lb/>
O. L. JOYNER, <lb/>
been very weak since. <lb/>
The exact cause of the <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
dent's death is rot fully <lb/>
An autopsy will beheld this .-- <lb/>
afternoon. The undertakers who an explanation of his <lb/>
were summoned to embalm the sinking. His heart was muscular- <lb/>
body were not permitted to do so y weak and the weakening <lb/>
under orders issued for the post- light of what they had <lb/>
examination. from those who had studied the <lb/>
The interment will be at a place President's physique was from the <lb/>
to by the fain use of tobacco, <lb/>
The remains will be taken to . <lb/>
Prop. Warehouse. <lb/>
City and in state <lb/>
and subsequently buried <lb/>
ton, Ohio, the Presidents home. <lb/>
Roosevelt returned to Buffalo <lb/>
today. He may take the <lb/>
office before Justice. Secretary <lb/>
AYDEN NOTES. <lb/>
at <lb/>
Ayden, X. C, Sept. <lb/>
Wednesday, the 11th inst., <lb/>
r a. m., at the home of the <lb/>
brides parents, on Third street, <lb/>
Miss Julia was married to <lb/>
Hay is noting temporarily through Mr <lb/>
until Roosevelt takes the Immediately after the <lb/>
oath as President. the happy couple left for the <lb/>
Hanna is quits ill today, of bridegroom. <lb/>
being much by the death a long and happy life. <lb/>
,.,. II. F. Lambert and L. V. <lb/>
the resident. <lb/>
Department. <lb/>
NEWSY HAPPENINGS AND BUSINESS <lb/>
NOTES. <lb/>
Sept. <lb/>
Mrs. Dr. B. T. Cox and little <lb/>
daughter who have been <lb/>
spending some time visiting rel- <lb/>
Washington, returned <lb/>
home Wednesday evening. <lb/>
Miss O. Wood to <lb/>
Ayden Wednesday evening and re <lb/>
turned Thursday morning. <lb/>
Mr. of Rocky <lb/>
Mount, spent part of Thursday and <lb/>
yesterday here visiting Prof. E. <lb/>
W. sou, Jesse, <lb/>
for past week in <lb/>
the neighborhood, of <lb/>
have come home. <lb/>
B. F. Gray, of has <lb/>
Au <lb/>
m Jean Tobacco were I accepted a with <lb/>
, Wednesday. <lb/>
Last Words. <lb/>
Forrest Taylor, of <lb/>
Buffalo, Sept. II. a. m. spent several days here this week. <lb/>
At this morning the <lb/>
A. Carter stopped town Thurs <lb/>
Smith has been <lb/>
morning me <lb/>
dent breathed his last. Words of Little Larry <lb/>
collation to his wife were the ,, ,. . <lb/>
I It. C. Cannon went to Greenville <lb/>
last that passed lips and then <lb/>
came gently a good-bye to A. H. Brown was here Thurs <lb/>
, , J <lb/>
whom beloved, p. G. to Snow <lb/>
so Well, and of whose manhood he Hill <lb/>
line a type. <lb/>
Will Edwards and father re <lb/>
He will move bis family <lb/>
here in a few days. <lb/>
II. V. Leggett, of was <lb/>
visiting town a short while this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Miss Cox spent <lb/>
day night with Miss Cora Carroll, <lb/>
of Black Jack, and came home <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
Misses Fannie and Roach, <lb/>
of were visiting their <lb/>
relative, Mrs. Dr. Cox, <lb/>
At actual moment of <lb/>
turned from Baltimore Thursday day and Thursday. <lb/>
I be President had long been to all <lb/>
Intents and purposes beyond <lb/>
world. For hours lie Had <lb/>
His living become <lb/>
purely automatic, functions grad- <lb/>
growing weaker weaker <lb/>
until at last ceased altogether. <lb/>
had long since <lb/>
ceased plying any drugs or <lb/>
county started out in life with was work for <lb/>
brighter prospects than the tab <lb/>
of this sketch. He was raised <lb/>
in Bethel township where he lived <lb/>
until the ago of twenty-one when <lb/>
with his older brother, W. J. <lb/>
Manning, he purchased the Edgar <lb/>
Buck farm, three miles from <lb/>
Greenville, and resided there until <lb/>
he met the terrible accident which <lb/>
cost him his life. The death of <lb/>
this young man, who was cut <lb/>
just as he was entering prime <lb/>
of life has cast a gloom over his <lb/>
friends and the community. <lb/>
He was years old a sou <lb/>
of J. L. G. Manning, Esq., of <lb/>
Bethel township. The father, a <lb/>
sister and three survive <lb/>
him, and they have the <lb/>
of <lb/>
in untimely death of their <lb/>
loved one. will be missed by <lb/>
friends and associates as few young <lb/>
a of bis age are misted. J. <lb/>
from the moment <lb/>
developed In all <lb/>
they knew in their <lb/>
he was beyond their aid. Yet, <lb/>
with all the energy and skill they <lb/>
worked on and until the last. <lb/>
It was too clearly only a case of <lb/>
whether the dying moments should <lb/>
or should not be free from what <lb/>
only made them more painful <lb/>
without bops of any benefit. <lb/>
Judge Day out of the Mil- <lb/>
house half an hour be- <lb/>
fore midnight that Mrs. <lb/>
had been told that her <lb/>
had but a few minutes <lb/>
more to live, He added, that <lb/>
physicians, the from <lb/>
peritonitis and poisoning bad <lb/>
Guy Webb spent yesterday in <lb/>
town. <lb/>
W. T. Mason, of was <lb/>
in town Thursday night. <lb/>
Baptist revival closed Wed- <lb/>
night. <lb/>
Mrs. Will yes- <lb/>
from Greene county where <lb/>
she has been visiting. <lb/>
What the South Should Do. <lb/>
II the South would manufacture <lb/>
the bulk of its own cotton and pro- <lb/>
duce its chief food supplies, both i <lb/>
C. A. Fair accepted the <lb/>
agency at this place for the <lb/>
Steam Laundry. <lb/>
Several Masons from this place <lb/>
attended a meeting of their lodge <lb/>
in Thursday night. From <lb/>
what we can they bad some <lb/>
fun. <lb/>
colored Odd Fellows or I bis <lb/>
place celebrated yesterday. They <lb/>
assisted by members of <lb/>
lodge from Greenville, Grifton <lb/>
and Ayden. They were very or- <lb/>
and well <lb/>
Two left A. ;. Cox <lb/>
of which are entirely within the Mfg. factory yesterday for <lb/>
bounds of possibility, it would be i an adjoining county, <lb/>
richest country in the world Harvey Tyson, of was <lb/>
and enjoy a higher state of com during the week. <lb/>
Denial and industrial Willie Powell, of Golds- <lb/>
than any other region of is I re visiting bis aunt, <lb/>
earth. Nature has been very kind I Mrs. J. It Johanna. <lb/>
to the South. Its bounties If there was ever a time for man- <lb/>
are and greater than now. It is <lb/>
the Eastern Stales of North, certainly tiresome picking; dead <lb/>
where there is no great money men's bones. Writing when yon <lb/>
crop like cotton, and where the <lb/>
production food crops has not the <lb/>
possibilities that obtain here. On <lb/>
the energy and enterprise of its <lb/>
people in industry and <lb/>
trade must the future <lb/>
wealth and of the South <lb/>
depend. There is no fault to be <lb/>
round with what nature has done <lb/>
disappeared, were obliged to look for Banner. <lb/>
can't think, thinking when you <lb/>
can't write, Is certainly placing one <lb/>
the I he devil and the deep <lb/>
blue <lb/>
Anyone wishing seed oats, <lb/>
Turf tor fall sowing, purple <lb/>
straw and white wheat and seed <lb/>
rye, W. J. Wyatt can furnish yon <lb/>
prices and save you <lb/>
freight homegrown and good <lb/>
THE BOND INJUNCTION. <lb/>
The Notice and Complaint in the Case. <lb/>
Below The Reflector gives <lb/>
copies the notice and complaint <lb/>
in the injunction proceedings <lb/>
as served on Mayor W. IT. Long. <lb/>
Pitt Superior Court. <lb/>
S. T. Hooker and others <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
The Town of Greenville. <lb/>
This cause coming on to be heard <lb/>
at Chambers His Honor O. <lb/>
II. Allen, Judge, it appearing <lb/>
to the Court the plaintiff <lb/>
to relief. <lb/>
It is considered, ordered ad- <lb/>
judged, that the defendant appear <lb/>
before His Honor H. R. Bryan, <lb/>
Judge of the Third Judicial Dis- <lb/>
in the town of New on <lb/>
Monday, September 1901, <lb/>
and show cause why an injunction <lb/>
should not be granted in this cause <lb/>
as prayed for by the plaintiff. <lb/>
It is further considered and ad <lb/>
judged by the Court that upon the <lb/>
execution of in the sum of <lb/>
two hundred dollars payable to the <lb/>
defendant and to be approved by <lb/>
the Clerk and tiled in cause, <lb/>
and conditioned upon payment <lb/>
to the defendant of all such costs <lb/>
and damages as they may sustain <lb/>
by the wrongful issuance of the <lb/>
restraining order, that Mayor, <lb/>
the Board of Aldermen and all <lb/>
officials of the said town by what <lb/>
soever name called, and each of <lb/>
them, their agents and attorneys <lb/>
are hereby restrained enjoined <lb/>
from issuing, selling, delivering, <lb/>
or in any way disposing of any of <lb/>
the bonds mentioned in the com- <lb/>
plaint filed in this action, or at- <lb/>
tempting to collect the tax levied <lb/>
to pay interest said bonds until <lb/>
the orders of the Court. <lb/>
O. H. Allen, <lb/>
Judge 5th <lb/>
Pitt Superior Court. <lb/>
S. T. Hooker and others <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
The Town of Greenville, <lb/>
The plaintiff complaining of the <lb/>
defendant alleges, <lb/>
That he is a citizen and tax <lb/>
payer of the said town of Green- <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
That by an Act of the <lb/>
of the said Town was <lb/>
authorized and empowered, <lb/>
through its properly constituted <lb/>
authority and upon certain <lb/>
therein required, to issue in- <lb/>
bearing coupon bonds to the <lb/>
amount of provided a <lb/>
majority of the qualified voters of <lb/>
said Town should so vote <lb/>
That he is informed and be- <lb/>
th it at the election called to <lb/>
ascertain the n the <lb/>
voters of said Town that a <lb/>
of the qualified voters of said <lb/>
Town did not vote <lb/>
That he is be- <lb/>
that the new Registration <lb/>
under which said Election was held <lb/>
Was not in with the <lb/>
Election Law of the State govern- <lb/>
Election, nor In accord- <lb/>
with the Act under which <lb/>
said Election nag held. <lb/>
That I here is no provision <lb/>
made said Act for the payment <lb/>
of the principal of said Bonds when <lb/>
mature. <lb/>
That the sale of the said <lb/>
Bonds are not properly guarded <lb/>
said Act, direction as to whom <lb/>
the money derived from the sale <lb/>
of said Bonds shall be paid <lb/>
person legally authorized to <lb/>
the same and in such <lb/>
it would lie dangerous to the <lb/>
interest of the tax payers of said <lb/>
Town to permit their sale. <lb/>
That said Act the <lb/>
of Alderman of said Town, <lb/>
if Graded Schools shall lie <lb/>
said Town, to turn over <lb/>
of proceeds from the <lb/>
sale of said Bonds to the directors <lb/>
of said Graded Schools to lie <lb/>
in the erection of suitable build- <lb/>
for said Schools, grad- <lb/>
ed schools have been established <lb/>
in said Town, but the plaintiff is <lb/>
informed and believes that if a sale <lb/>
of said Bonds is permitted that <lb/>
said Board of Aldermen will turn <lb/>
over said to an illegally <lb/>
constituted Graded School district <lb/>
in disregard of the spirit and <lb/>
in of said Act thus unlawfully <lb/>
divert a part of said <lb/>
Act of the <lb/>
authorizing the issuing of said <lb/>
Bonds requires the Board of Al- <lb/>
each year, at the same time <lb/>
other taxes levied to levy a <lb/>
sufficient the taxable polls, <lb/>
taxable property and taxable <lb/>
WE THE WORK. <lb/>
And that is the reason the old Greenville Warehouse is <lb/>
selling so much tobacco. We get the highest price for every <lb/>
bile sold our floor. The see this, and appreciating <lb/>
work we do for them they bring us their tobacco. <lb/>
We treat all alike, get the best price time. Bring your <lb/>
next load to the Greenville Warehouse and we will show you <lb/>
the truth of this. We have every accommodation for you and <lb/>
your team. <lb/>
We are independent of <lb/>
Warehouse Trusts. <lb/>
J. C. <lb/>
R. S. EVANS. <lb/>
D. SPAIN. <lb/>
subjects to pay the interest of said <lb/>
Bonds, the plaintiff is inform- <lb/>
ed believes that no such levy <lb/>
has been made as is required by <lb/>
said Act, and that the levy that <lb/>
was attempted to be made is void. <lb/>
That he is informed and be <lb/>
that the Board of Aldermen <lb/>
of said Town have agreed and con <lb/>
trailed to sell, and are preparing <lb/>
to deliver said Bonds at a price far <lb/>
below their real value, and at a <lb/>
great less to the tax payers of said <lb/>
Town, that said sale was made <lb/>
without proper advertisement. <lb/>
That the plaint has caused <lb/>
a summons to be issued against <lb/>
said defendant returnable to the <lb/>
October Term of Pitt Superior <lb/>
Court. <lb/>
Wherefore plaintiff prays <lb/>
That the Mayor, Board of <lb/>
Aldermen officials of said <lb/>
Town be perpetually enjoined and <lb/>
from issuing, selling or <lb/>
in other wise disposing of said <lb/>
Bonds or part thereof. <lb/>
That the tax collector or <lb/>
office of said Town be enjoined <lb/>
restrained collecting any <lb/>
part of the special tax attempted <lb/>
part to be levied for the purpose of <lb/>
paying the interest on said Bonds. <lb/>
For such other and further <lb/>
relief as plaintiff may be entitled, <lb/>
and for coals. F. G. <lb/>
for plaintiff. <lb/>
S. T. Hooker, plaintiff above <lb/>
named, being duly deposes <lb/>
and says, that the facts set forth <lb/>
the foregoing complaint are <lb/>
of bis own knowledge, except those <lb/>
matters and things on in <lb/>
formation and belief and those he <lb/>
believes true. S. T. <lb/>
Sworn and subscribed to before <lb/>
me this Sept. <lb/>
D. C. Moose, <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court. <lb/>
BLACKJACK ITEMS. <lb/>
Black Jack, n. c Sept. 1901 <lb/>
Miss Annie White who has been <lb/>
sick for some time is able to be out <lb/>
again. <lb/>
Dixon went down in <lb/>
Beaufort Saturday and returned <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Arthur Cooper left Monday for <lb/>
bis home in Roper City. <lb/>
Judie and George Mills re- <lb/>
Monday from Sidney where <lb/>
re- have spending several <lb/>
days visiting Miss Lucy <lb/>
E. S. Dixon left Saturday for <lb/>
wars Mill where he will spend <lb/>
several days with his sou, Ur. W. <lb/>
II. Dixon. <lb/>
Protracted meeting here <lb/>
Sunday <lb/>
Dixon is suffering right <lb/>
bad from n rising on his foot. <lb/>
Edd Clark has been sick for the <lb/>
past few days. <lb/>
Mrs. Sarah Hill and little Miss <lb/>
Bertha Edwards have been visiting <lb/>
here this week. <lb/>
Miss White spent part of <lb/>
last week in Washington. <lb/>
Henry Dixon bas a sick horse <lb/>
with blind staggers. <lb/>
Miss Mary Harper is quite sick. <lb/>
Fob <lb/>
-Nice house and lot. <lb/>
K. <lb/>
It is Important who go <lb/>
on e for or health <lb/>
against the attack <lb/>
of bowel which not only cause <lb/>
inconvenience, hut sometime <lb/>
In their reunite. A bottle of Perry <lb/>
i-, have a <lb/>
moat such <lb/>
Avoid there k but one Pain-1 <lb/>
Killer, Perry Price K <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
Prom On <lb/>
Washington, l. u. Sept. <lb/>
The shooting of President <lb/>
Buffalo has been the all- <lb/>
public topic at the Nation- <lb/>
Capital since Friday last. Hap- <lb/>
at a time political calm <lb/>
and so clearly traceable to the an- <lb/>
infatuation of a shiftless, <lb/>
unknown creature, it allowed no <lb/>
space for feeling. In- <lb/>
stead the great underlying loyalty <lb/>
and honesty of American heart <lb/>
came uppermost at once and from <lb/>
every quarter every shade of <lb/>
true have come like <lb/>
measures of sorrow, affection and <lb/>
indignation as the incidents <lb/>
dastardly deed them. <lb/>
This assault the Chief Mag- <lb/>
has brought forth <lb/>
among people and publicists <lb/>
stern active legislation must <lb/>
be enacted to suppress and prevent <lb/>
anarchism of the destructive school <lb/>
in the States. It is all well <lb/>
enough that men oppressed wrong- <lb/>
fully in other lands should make <lb/>
America their asylum, but they <lb/>
must not also make a slaughter <lb/>
house. We enthrone in our White <lb/>
House no need the <lb/>
and bloody medicine of <lb/>
ringer, dagger, or dynamite. Our <lb/>
atmosphere that of liberty and <lb/>
law must not be made poisonous by <lb/>
breaths of those whose tongues <lb/>
and hands are against God, and <lb/>
government, and public good. <lb/>
The new Congress convening In <lb/>
December promises to be one of <lb/>
liveliest of recent times. The re- <lb/>
publican scant majority of thirty- <lb/>
nine will have to be kept well <lb/>
within the party corral, if the <lb/>
party program is to be carried for- <lb/>
ward with celerity and certainty. <lb/>
Democrats will bare to keep <lb/>
close watch on the majority and get <lb/>
busy at every possible opportunity. <lb/>
At this next session the lines <lb/>
which they will go to the country <lb/>
in 1902 and ask a majority <lb/>
the next House of Representatives. <lb/>
To win that Is now chief aim <lb/>
of the Democratic leaden. With <lb/>
that gained thy can make <lb/>
rough so to speak for <lb/>
the Republicans just ahead of the <lb/>
national campaign of 1904. <lb/>
Democratic from Virgin- <lb/>
visiting Washington report that <lb/>
the new constitution will be sub- <lb/>
in it to an abridged electorate <lb/>
and adopted, that the party <lb/>
ticket will be overwhelmingly el- <lb/>
in November. They regard <lb/>
Col. Hodge's <lb/>
the ticket <lb/>
for the governorship a fair sign <lb/>
the Republican leaders are <lb/>
only dragging brush over the road <lb/>
to raise a dust. Really there is no <lb/>
hope in Hodge. He has neither <lb/>
the wit of Cameron, nor tireless <lb/>
tact of and people of <lb/>
Virginia will be slow to take him <lb/>
seriously. His race is stated from <lb/>
the start to be a rag-time out. <lb/>
125.00 the return <lb/>
of a small directory was stolen <lb/>
from office sometime during the <lb/>
month of August, 1901. Will <lb/>
also pay an additional for con- <lb/>
of the thief. <lb/>
W. T. Co. <lb/>
During lbs Summer <lb/>
cam tie and <lb/>
until the pain la or <lb/>
two of the celebrated core for <lb/>
all from simple cramps <lb/>
to Um aggravated of <lb/>
or No <lb/>
be without tho Avoid <lb/>
lucre but one Pain-Killer, <lb/>
Price<lb/>
BACK FROM THE <lb/>
AND MY NEW GOODS ARE COMING IN. <lb/>
Keep an eye on my store for the newest and best in all of <lb/>
MENS <lb/>
I will lead in the styles. <lb/>
THE KING CLOTHIER. <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
If there is a CROSS MARK <lb/>
in the margin of this paper it <lb/>
so to remind yon that you owe <lb/>
Eastern for <lb/>
subscription and we request <lb/>
you to settle as early as <lb/>
We need what YOU <lb/>
owe and hope you will not <lb/>
keep us waiting for it. <lb/>
is notice is for those who <lb/>
find the cross mark on their <lb/>
paper. <lb/>
LOCAL REFLECTIONS. <lb/>
New cotton comes in every day <lb/>
now. <lb/>
Just received Fruit Jars at <lb/>
M. Schultz. <lb/>
and Testaments at Re- <lb/>
Book Store. <lb/>
Miss Emma Joyner bas taken a <lb/>
position at the of Pulley <lb/>
Bowen. <lb/>
A large tablet and a rubber tip- <lb/>
pencil all for cents at <lb/>
tor Book Store. <lb/>
The Academy boys are divided <lb/>
now and have hose ball and foot <lb/>
ball both. <lb/>
The Reynolds Tobacco Co., of <lb/>
Bristol, Tenn., have put a buyer <lb/>
on the Greenville market. <lb/>
Hunters arc after the nimble <lb/>
squirrel. Mr. R. killed <lb/>
Wednesday morning. <lb/>
Rates to the ex- <lb/>
position at Buffalo are now down <lb/>
to about from this section. <lb/>
Misses Smith and Bessie <lb/>
Harding will be teachers of the <lb/>
public school in this district that <lb/>
begins on the 23rd. <lb/>
Yon can get the best in <lb/>
town for money at Reflector <lb/>
Book Store. We handle Winter- <lb/>
ville cigars and be- <lb/>
sides getting good quality you en- <lb/>
courage home enterprise when you <lb/>
buy them. <lb/>
Rural Delivery at Grifton. <lb/>
Three rural free delivery mail <lb/>
routes have been laid out from <lb/>
Grifton and will begin operation <lb/>
as soon as all arrangements can be <lb/>
made. Two of the routes are in <lb/>
Pitt county and one in Lenoir. <lb/>
Rent and Sale. <lb/>
I will rent my farm, four miles <lb/>
north Greenville and one mile <lb/>
from House station, for the year <lb/>
1902 with privilege of live years. <lb/>
About Nov. let I will sell all the <lb/>
farm implements, gin, engine, <lb/>
thresher, grist mill, carts, wagons, <lb/>
horses, mules, hogs, cattle, corn, <lb/>
fodder and hay on said farm. <lb/>
Parties wishing to examine the <lb/>
farm or can call any <lb/>
time and do so. <lb/>
K Practice Ha Preach. <lb/>
An minister <lb/>
who has doubled the average at- <lb/>
at his church by <lb/>
every day in the newspapers <lb/>
denies that that method is <lb/>
he <lb/>
the proper instrument <lb/>
through which to address the <lb/>
pie on any worthy subject, whether <lb/>
it be business or He <lb/>
thinks he would be remiss if <lb/>
he should fail to use the Immense <lb/>
influence of advertising. <lb/>
New House. <lb/>
Mr. J. L. Fleming is preparing <lb/>
to build a handsome residence on <lb/>
big Clark property. The old build- <lb/>
is being moved near north- <lb/>
west corner on Third street <lb/>
and new building will occupy <lb/>
the Greene street front. <lb/>
Presbyterian Services. <lb/>
Rev. J. B. Morton was too <lb/>
well to come down from Tarboro <lb/>
Friday evening, but will come this <lb/>
evening and preach in the <lb/>
church at the usual hours <lb/>
Sunday morning and evening. A <lb/>
meeting of the session of <lb/>
will lie held at a. m. for re- <lb/>
members into the <lb/>
Goat Runaway <lb/>
There was an amusing run away <lb/>
on Third street, near the Court <lb/>
Thursday afternoon. A <lb/>
small boy had a goat hitched <lb/>
to a cart for some reason left <lb/>
the goat standing on the street. <lb/>
The goat took advantage of <lb/>
situation and let at full speed. <lb/>
No damage was done but the <lb/>
was quite amusing. <lb/>
On Thursday at the home of Mi. <lb/>
Silas Lucas, in Wilson, his <lb/>
Miss Emma, was married to <lb/>
Mr. N. E. Ward, of Greenville. <lb/>
They came here on the <lb/>
train and are making their home <lb/>
at Hotel Bertha. Mr. Wind re <lb/>
came here to go in business. <lb/>
He and his bride are cordially <lb/>
to Greenville. <lb/>
HOWDY DO. <lb/>
Some Speak lo Me. Some to You. <lb/>
Thursday-, <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee went to Snow <lb/>
Hill today. <lb/>
W. A. Stocks left this morning <lb/>
for Raleigh. <lb/>
Mayor W. H. Long went to <lb/>
Mount today. <lb/>
Mrs. M. E. Smith came in this <lb/>
morning from New Bern. <lb/>
B. H. Cozart, of Danville, was <lb/>
on the tobacco market today. <lb/>
J. W. White left this <lb/>
for the A. M. College at Raleigh. <lb/>
Deputy sheriff L. w. <lb/>
went to Kinston Wednesday even- <lb/>
Mrs. Ora Turnage and children, <lb/>
of Craven county, came in this <lb/>
morning to visit Mrs. R. L. Smith. <lb/>
Miss Adelaide White, of Eliza- <lb/>
beth City, who has been visiting her <lb/>
uncle, J. White, returned home <lb/>
today. <lb/>
Miss May who has <lb/>
been visiting her father, N. H. <lb/>
left this morning for <lb/>
Henderson. <lb/>
N. S. Fulford family, of <lb/>
Washington, came in this morning <lb/>
from Beaufort; and stopped over <lb/>
herewith A. L. Blow, father of <lb/>
Mrs. Fulford. <lb/>
1901. <lb/>
Mrs. P. C. is <lb/>
sick. <lb/>
E. W. Pace left Thursday <lb/>
for New <lb/>
Jesse returned Thursday <lb/>
from Wilson. <lb/>
Miss Mary returned Thurs- <lb/>
day evening from Wilson. <lb/>
Harry Skinner returned Thurs <lb/>
day evening from <lb/>
Fred Forbes has returned lo <lb/>
Trinity College at Durham. <lb/>
I. A. Sugg returned Thursday <lb/>
night from court at Snow Hill. <lb/>
W. O. returned Thurs- <lb/>
day evening a trip up the <lb/>
road. <lb/>
M. Schultz left this morning <lb/>
for Rocky Mount to spend new <lb/>
year. <lb/>
T. L. Mayo, of E who <lb/>
has been Mrs. <lb/>
D. E. House, returned home this <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
Miss Harding left this <lb/>
morning for Raleigh to spend a <lb/>
few days with relatives there be <lb/>
fore returning to Normal and <lb/>
Industrial college at Greensboro. <lb/>
J. W. Waters in Friday <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
B. C. of Sanford, came <lb/>
in Friday evening. <lb/>
Ex-Gov. T. J. Jarvis came home <lb/>
Friday evening from Raleigh. <lb/>
Judge A. M. Moore returned <lb/>
Friday evening from Raleigh. <lb/>
Mrs. M. T. returned Fri- <lb/>
day evening from Baltimore where <lb/>
she had been purchasing millinery <lb/>
goods for H. C. Hooker. <lb/>
H. E. Long, of came <lb/>
in Friday to relieve Man- <lb/>
ager D. J. Whichard the Wes- <lb/>
tern Union Telegraph while <lb/>
he is absent on for the <lb/>
company. The latter accompanied <lb/>
by his little sou, D. J. Jr., left <lb/>
this evening for Greensboro. <lb/>
Mill and Factory Sale <lb/>
Factory to Consumer, No middle mans <lb/>
worth choice goods <lb/>
H at factory prices. <lb/>
;. BOUGHT BIG LOTS OF <lb/>
Clotting, Notions, Shoes, Hats, <lb/>
HALF THEIR VALUE. CUSTOMERS WILL GET THE <lb/>
Boys Clothing, Salts, Price i IS -1 Sizes to H i is and Soils, Stanford's Price -2 <lb/>
Odd Coats. and ti Coats and OS and and Knee Pants. and kind, i to s and and add Pants. Pants, now and SO and and <lb/>
These prices for cash buyers <lb/>
No goods charged at these prices. <lb/>
MESS BOYS DRESS SHIRTS Dozen. to Shirts now I to to to to pieces. A full line now going at The biggest value ever UNDERWEAR. Dozen, kind now and and and <lb/>
STEEL BOD CONG CROOKED HANDLED. to kind, Mun ford's price Shoes. Shoes. Mens show now Ladies i pat lips Big hand. must see hats for linen Window Shades. ALL Regular price NOW price <lb/>
Bought Enough Goods For Ten Small Stores. <lb/>
MUST SELL. <lb/>
Malory of Pitt County. <lb/>
Mr. Alex. L. Blow is gathering <lb/>
material for a history of Pitt <lb/>
He has been at work on this <lb/>
already has data <lb/>
prepared the formation of the <lb/>
up to the year 1875. There <lb/>
is man better informed about <lb/>
the history and records of the <lb/>
court than Mr. Blow, and when <lb/>
his history is completed it will be a <lb/>
work of great <lb/>
Elegant Store. <lb/>
Standing on the corner of Evans <lb/>
and Fourth streets in general con- <lb/>
with an observing gen- <lb/>
be said, that an <lb/>
elegant store over there point- <lb/>
towards Frank Wilson's. <lb/>
store would be a credit to a city, <lb/>
both the design and finish of the <lb/>
building, and the selection and <lb/>
arrangement of the stock it con- <lb/>
Mr. and Kit, J. W. Boswell, of <lb/>
Anson county, are parents of <lb/>
a boy that weighed a pound <lb/>
ml a half when one week old. <lb/>
Ibo little fellow enjoys goods <lb/>
health and is perfectly proportion- <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
Clocks and <lb/>
watches now<lb/>
day clock at reasonable pi ices. <lb/>
DRESS GOODS. <lb/>
All shade, all hinds, all quality. <lb/>
at the Immense stock, Come to see bring along <lb/>
neighbors, or tell about us. <lb/>
The cheapest and best line we <lb/>
ever had. Special value, <lb/>
l be ladles from to <lb/>
Will Return to Greenville. <lb/>
The friends of Mr. R. M. <lb/>
Ibis city Greenville, <lb/>
who bas with the <lb/>
O. D. S. S. Co. both in this city <lb/>
and Greenville for a number of <lb/>
years, will regret to hear, ac- <lb/>
count of his health, and <lb/>
able to the onerous duties <lb/>
connected with the position, has <lb/>
tendered his resignation to <lb/>
company to take effect as soon as <lb/>
his place can be supplied. Mr. <lb/>
Hearne is an old confederate sol- <lb/>
was severely wounded in the <lb/>
head by the bursting of a shell, <lb/>
and wears to this day a silver plate <lb/>
the memento of those dark day. <lb/>
He has made his company a good <lb/>
and accommodating official, and <lb/>
the patrons will regret to. see him <lb/>
leave his present <lb/>
Messenger. <lb/>
Chill Fill rare all <lb/>
malarial troubles. That la they ware <lb/>
made for. other remedies fail. <lb/>
No care, no pay. Price bottle. <lb/>
Druggists. , <lb/>
Silks- Yards. <lb/>
, Prom the cheapest to the best. <lb/>
All qualities. Don't fail to get <lb/>
of the choice patterns. <lb/>
goo All Linen Tad. Damask <lb/>
Worth and now <lb/>
Carpets, matting-. Floor Oil Cloth <lb/>
Biggest in town. All kinds. <lb/>
Ladies Muslin Underwear <lb/>
Beady to near. Ask our Saleslady in <lb/>
to show to you. Drawers, <lb/>
at less than cost of material. <lb/>
FURNITURE. <lb/>
Leather Couches, quality <lb/>
quality Oak Is Styles o <lb/>
Hull Racks, Carriages, Get <lb/>
Simpson's Calicoes c. <lb/>
Others sell cheap calico. Watch <lb/>
colors. They will out be- <lb/>
fore you leave town. <lb/>
A Children <lb/>
Al colors and prices, <lb/>
from the mills. This is a rare <lb/>
for ladies to get a <lb/>
good <lb/>
The La <lb/>
Mills, <lb/>
without ticket, yard <lb/>
wide <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
The Big Store <lb/>
Greenville, N C.<lb/>
. .<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018548_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Have You Forgot <lb/>
A. O THAT AM an <lb/>
W J b i UP TO DATE LINE OF <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Shoes <lb/>
Hats, Shirts, Pants, Hardware <lb/>
Tinware A <lb/>
WHICH I AM TO <lb/>
Come to see me for your next Barrel Flour or Pork. <lb/>
Yours to please- <lb/>
ORIGINAL OBSERVATIONS. <lb/>
Made By The Orange. Virginia, Observer <lb/>
Because a man Is seedy is no <lb/>
that be is a <lb/>
Even a very weak man can of- <lb/>
ten a responsibility. <lb/>
The microbe of produces <lb/>
the full grown malady of hatred. <lb/>
Most caused by <lb/>
not letting well enough alone. <lb/>
Some are most interesting <lb/>
when they have nothing to say. <lb/>
The weighs of the transgressor <lb/>
are about ounces to the pound. <lb/>
Summer roses fade and die lie- <lb/>
cause there is no way of <lb/>
them. <lb/>
Some men have such a vast <lb/>
amount of brass that many people <lb/>
mistake it for brains. <lb/>
The men think they can read a <lb/>
woman like a they try <lb/>
to shut her up. <lb/>
This has been a season <lb/>
for the dead beat, for he doesn't <lb/>
require and cultivation. <lb/>
AFTER TWO PREMIUMS HAVE PAID IN THE <lb/>
id mi nit ill <lb/>
OF NEWARK, N. J., YOUR POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value, <lb/>
Cash Value, <lb/>
Paid up Insurance, <lb/>
Extended Insurance that works automatically, <lb/>
Is <lb/>
t. Will be if arrears be paid within on month while yon <lb/>
are living, or within three after lapse, upon satisfactory evidence <lb/>
of and payment of arrears with interest. <lb/>
second No s. Incontestable. <lb/>
arc payable at the beginning of the second and of each ,; , <lb/>
succeeding year, provided the for the current year be paid. <lb/>
They may be To educe Premiums, or <lb/>
a. To Increase the Insurance, or <lb/>
To make policy payable as an the lifetime <lb/>
of insured. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
ma -ow Ad on on n <lb/>
Pus <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
STATE COLLEGE <lb/>
Literary, Classical, Scientific. Commercial, Industrial, Pedagogical, Musical. <lb/>
expense f lot 1.40; for of the Faculty of so <lb/>
members. Practice and Observation of about pupils, To secure in <lb/>
the dormitories nil free-tuition Id mum July I <lb/>
Invited iron, .-i i-. tin , i, . <lb/>
For, oilier Information <lb/>
President A <lb/>
Urn X. <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
TONIC LAXATIVE <lb/>
If you tour stomach, biliousness, constipation, bad <lb/>
breath, inactive liver, heartburn, kidney troubles, backache, loss <lb/>
of appetite, insomnia, lack of energy, bad blood, blotched or muddy skin, <lb/>
or any symptoms and disorders which tell the of bad bowels and an <lb/>
impaired digestive system, V. ill Cure You. <lb/>
It will clean out the bowels, stimulate the liver and kidneys, strengthen <lb/>
the mucous membranes of the stomach, purify your blood and put you <lb/>
your again. Your appetite will return, your bowels move <lb/>
your liver and kidneys cease to trouble you, your skin will clear and <lb/>
freshen and you will feel the old time energy an buoyancy. <lb/>
Mothers seeking the proper medic I no to If one r eon <lb/>
diarrhea, and similar troubles, v. ill <lb/>
It wit limit or griping, Kent-nil <lb/>
aids it , dear <lb/>
rest sleep ; v <lb/>
Me U and for it <lb/>
For Sale by <lb/>
i . i. <lb/>
i vie M and. at i m price, Z- <lb/>
sample I. TUB I TO . H V . i. <lb/>
W will to r. ion .,;,. t. i <lb/>
. I m <lb/>
,. mi it mm H <lb/>
i t i lie <lb/>
m it <lb/>
all<lb/>
Thrifts <lb/>
Reflector <lb/>
New Canning <lb/>
We are glad to see our weekly <lb/>
of <lb/>
that recently <lb/>
been established <lb/>
Hut we have nearly <lb/>
enough such concerns and their <lb/>
Dumber Should be multiplied many <lb/>
limes In the South every <lb/>
year million dollar, worth <lb/>
fruits and vegetables are left to rot, <lb/>
could be <lb/>
and marketed at a fine <lb/>
The South pays many millions of <lb/>
dollars every year for goods can- <lb/>
in the North and West which <lb/>
could be supplied by home enter <lb/>
prise. <lb/>
ought never to have to <lb/>
buy at any point outside of her <lb/>
own borders a single can of <lb/>
toes, corn, pears or any <lb/>
oilier kind of vegetable or fruit <lb/>
jet train loads of such articles <lb/>
imported into Georgia year <lb/>
from States which are no better <lb/>
producers of vegetables fruits <lb/>
than Georgia herself. The <lb/>
concerns which are <lb/>
in this Slate pay well and <lb/>
will pay almost any section f <lb/>
if on business <lb/>
Journal. <lb/>
A writer the Southern Farm <lb/>
Magazine, Dr. J. A. Killebrew, <lb/>
makes some strong points against <lb/>
s shows con- <lb/>
why the farmers of the <lb/>
South arc now prospering more <lb/>
than the farmers the West. He <lb/>
says that immediately after the <lb/>
Civil War farmers ill the West <lb/>
could easily borrow money at <lb/>
and per while the <lb/>
the South were without credit <lb/>
and seemed ruined. The <lb/>
farmers borrowed money re- <lb/>
in luxuries while the South- <lb/>
farmers struggled with <lb/>
the trainers the South were <lb/>
to depend on themselves, <lb/>
being forced to depend on <lb/>
themselves they became <lb/>
dent. As a result Dr. Killebrew <lb/>
The farms in the South <lb/>
are the main free of <lb/>
I he farmers generally out of <lb/>
debt. What they control is their <lb/>
own they are upon <lb/>
or bank to furnish <lb/>
them with the means <lb/>
Neck Com- <lb/>
in n wealth. <lb/>
A ha <lb/>
brought suit live joint- <lb/>
keepers for damages on the <lb/>
ground they sold liquor lo her <lb/>
year old sou against protest. <lb/>
She alleges that during the past <lb/>
three her son was drunk on <lb/>
days so drunk that she had to <lb/>
take care of him. On the remain- <lb/>
days he was only partly <lb/>
sober. The mother demands <lb/>
a her <lb/>
vices in caring for her son <lb/>
days, and lbs remainder of the <lb/>
sued is <lb/>
lion for the loss of her sou's Flip- <lb/>
rt, etc. <lb/>
People who are bragging about <lb/>
the great in our trade <lb/>
never stop to <lb/>
think that the soldiers we have <lb/>
sent over need things from <lb/>
home. Journal. <lb/>
A Law Status at <lb/>
lash, <lb/>
A law ought to be passed fixing <lb/>
the status of dead beats. A man <lb/>
who hires another and fails to pay <lb/>
him or purchase goods or anything <lb/>
of value from our merchants or <lb/>
business men without any in- <lb/>
of pays <lb/>
is guilty of fraud. The law treats <lb/>
as a thief the secures <lb/>
money or goods by false pretense <lb/>
or takes them stealth. The <lb/>
dead beat ought to be treated the <lb/>
same way for he in fact belongs to <lb/>
the same class. By the unwritten <lb/>
law of trade and commerce he <lb/>
makes false statements with <lb/>
intent whenever he obtains <lb/>
a credit that is never <lb/>
He is undoubtedly just as guilty <lb/>
as any man who by the same <lb/>
lays himself liable to the law. <lb/>
Any man who is unfortunate ard <lb/>
really unable to keep his contract <lb/>
get all the time he needs by <lb/>
acting in a fair and hon <lb/>
manner. There is more <lb/>
necessity for him to become a dead <lb/>
beat than there is for him to do <lb/>
stealing. A dead beat is simply a <lb/>
thief, and should be so treated by <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
Advice to the Aged. <lb/>
At such u slue- <lb/>
weak kidneys and bUd- <lb/>
TORPID lives. <lb/>
Ton's Pills <lb/>
have a effect on these <lb/>
the bowels, them <lb/>
to perform their natural functions as <lb/>
In youth and <lb/>
IMPARTING VIGOR------ <lb/>
to the bladder and LIVER. <lb/>
arc adapted to old and <lb/>
Hi Name I Pronounced <lb/>
the attempted <lb/>
of President every <lb/>
newspaper reader in the country <lb/>
been trying to learn the pro- <lb/>
per pronunciation of the surname <lb/>
of Leon the man who <lb/>
shot him. Many will recall that <lb/>
was a similar interest <lb/>
the difficulty in <lb/>
the of w ho <lb/>
Garfield. <lb/>
It seems that the letter <lb/>
Polish is pronounced much like <lb/>
for Mr. William H. M. <lb/>
official interpreter of Polish <lb/>
and Bohemian languages in the <lb/>
United States immigration office <lb/>
at Baltimore, and himself a Pole <lb/>
by birth says that the would lie <lb/>
assassin's be <lb/>
word is derived from a <lb/>
Polish laid Mi. <lb/>
means to drag or creep or <lb/>
craw. noun. It means <lb/>
a creeping, thing, such as <lb/>
a snake. In the instance <lb/>
the seems most <lb/>
Charlotte <lb/>
Out of the most hellish evil some <lb/>
good may conic. The <lb/>
grief and the universal <lb/>
that followed swift upon the know- <lb/>
ledge of the attack upon the life of <lb/>
serve alike to <lb/>
show how real are the that <lb/>
bind the these States to- <lb/>
in one Indissoluble <lb/>
the lines that divide us <lb/>
from continental neighbors the <lb/>
seas that keep us apart other <lb/>
great did not for a <lb/>
moment separate from the pro- <lb/>
foamiest expressions <lb/>
of iii pat fur the stricken chief, <lb/>
his noble wife and his <lb/>
countrymen. These <lb/>
of will cannot go <lb/>
or unremembered or <lb/>
our <lb/>
inn- relations. They make for a <lb/>
closer brotherhood among men and <lb/>
serve to -I errand of the <lb/>
assassin's. I diet, however deadly <lb/>
may have been his aim. This is <lb/>
the silver lining to our cloud of <lb/>
suspense and <lb/>
that the insects <lb/>
which pi j up- M crops this <lb/>
country illy about <lb/>
and yet the people go on <lb/>
slaughtering the birds as if there <lb/>
were insects existence, or as <lb/>
If they eat <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
RU Maude, dear; a person id. <lb/>
don gets a fur being a med <lb/>
A woman throw a stone, <lb/>
but she can heave a sigh. <lb/>
The latent census bullet shows <lb/>
that Chicago the <lb/>
large in the number of <lb/>
deaths from railroad Its <lb/>
total for the census year is <lb/>
while the total, for nine <lb/>
other big u <lb/>
The Apple Industry. <lb/>
It is said that a Missouri farmer <lb/>
who has an apple orchard contain- <lb/>
two acres has sold <lb/>
this year's crop on the trees for <lb/>
buyers to take all risks <lb/>
from now on. The orchard prom- <lb/>
a yield of bushels of <lb/>
apples and as the apple crop <lb/>
throughout the country is short, <lb/>
the purchasers expect to make a <lb/>
handsome profit. The apple crop <lb/>
is now an important item the <lb/>
agricultural wealth of <lb/>
and in a good year to <lb/>
something like 150.000,000 bush- <lb/>
els. No State in the can <lb/>
grow apples that the State <lb/>
of Virginia and apple culture in <lb/>
this State has become a most profit- <lb/>
able industry. We have often re- <lb/>
marked that a first-class apple <lb/>
orchard in sections of <lb/>
is worth as much as a <lb/>
responding orange grove Flori- <lb/>
The apple has an advantage <lb/>
over the orange that it is a <lb/>
hardier fruit and is less affected by <lb/>
conditions. Virginia farm- <lb/>
been somewhat slow <lb/>
making the most of this branch of <lb/>
industry, but it is a growing in- <lb/>
and will continue to add <lb/>
wealth to the <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
I bare just opened three door tooth of <lb/>
Post Office, the of all <lb/>
Everything guaranteed pure. New style <lb/>
of candy every <lb/>
CHRISTIAN GEORGE <lb/>
Photographer, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Tin- leader in good work and <lb/>
Nice Photographs for per dozen. <lb/>
Half Cabinets per dozen <lb/>
All oilier lines very cheap. Crayon Portraits <lb/>
nude any small picture cheap. Mice <lb/>
Frames on band all the time. Come and <lb/>
examine my work. No trouble to <lb/>
answer questions. Toe <lb/>
best guaranteed to all. office <lb/>
to a. in , I. to G p. m. Yours to <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
Tin- duly qualified <lb/>
before the Superior court clerk of Pitt <lb/>
county as of estate of <lb/>
deceased, notice is hereby <lb/>
given to alt persons indebted to tut, estate <lb/>
to make immediate payment to under- <lb/>
signed, and all claims <lb/>
against estate ore notified to present the <lb/>
Mime to the undersigned payment <lb/>
twelve months from of this <lb/>
notice, or it will be plead of recovery. <lb/>
Thin 4th day of September, 1901. <lb/>
JAMES I. <lb/>
the Estate of Sarah I,. <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
Steamer leave Washing <lb/>
daily at A. M. for Green <lb/>
ville, leave Greenville daily at <lb/>
M. for Washington. <lb/>
Steamer leaves <lb/>
Greenville Mondays, Wednesday <lb/>
and Fridays at A. M. <lb/>
leave Tarboro for Greenville <lb/>
Tuesdays, and Saturdays <lb/>
at A. M. carries freight only. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
Steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore, <lb/>
New York and <lb/>
ton, and for all points for the West <lb/>
with railroads at Norfolk. <lb/>
Shippers should order freight by <lb/>
the Old Dominion S. S. Co. from <lb/>
New York; Clyde Line from <lb/>
Bay Line from Baltimore, <lb/>
and Line from <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. M SON, <lb/>
Washington, N. C <lb/>
J. J. Aft., <lb/>
Greenville, N. G. <lb/>
Atlanta, Nor. <lb/>
We have handled Dr. <lb/>
ever its first in- <lb/>
to the public and trade as a pro- <lb/>
medicine, and our it has <lb/>
steadily from year to year until <lb/>
our orders now amount I or three <lb/>
hundred kt year, which is a very <lb/>
strong evidence its merit and the <lb/>
faction it is giving to the mothers of the <lb/>
country, for they say that nothing so <lb/>
counteracts <lb/>
hot or overcomes so quickly the <lb/>
Incident to teething. <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
Wholesale <lb/>
There arc some which <lb/>
seem household necessities the <lb/>
United States for which there is no <lb/>
market whatever in France or <lb/>
Europe. One of <lb/>
is the range with a hot water back, <lb/>
another is the and a <lb/>
third is the rocking chair. Amer- <lb/>
living often want <lb/>
these articles so bully they <lb/>
even send home them, <lb/>
among the French there is de- <lb/>
for the <lb/>
American manufacturer only, <lb/>
waste time trying to create a <lb/>
market for them. <lb/>
New York physicians have <lb/>
learned that the epidemic of <lb/>
rial lever in that city is due large- <lb/>
to the bites of ground liens. This <lb/>
at least some of the <lb/>
from the mosquito. <lb/>
I M IN <lb/>
J. W. PERRY <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
handlers of <lb/>
Busing. Tin and lings. <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
The Clerk Superior Court of <lb/>
county, having issued Letters of <lb/>
mo, the on the <lb/>
of September, on the estate of <lb/>
A. deceased, notice is here- <lb/>
by given lo nil persons Indebted to the <lb/>
estate to make to the <lb/>
undersigned, and lo nil creditors of said <lb/>
to present their claims, properly <lb/>
to the undersigned, within <lb/>
twelve month alter the date of this notice, <lb/>
or this notice will lie in bar of their <lb/>
This the 2nd day of 1901. <lb/>
JUDITH U. <lb/>
on the estate of A- DUPREE. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
The Clerk of Court of Pitt <lb/>
county having i Letters of <lb/>
to me, the undersigned on the <lb/>
estate of Lynn <lb/>
deceased, notice is hereby given to <lb/>
all persons indebted to the estate to make <lb/>
immediate nay men t to the <lb/>
to all creditors of said estate to present <lb/>
claims properly authenticated, to the <lb/>
within twelve months after <lb/>
the date of this notice, or this notice will be <lb/>
plead in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
This the 9th of August, 1901. <lb/>
the estate of <lb/>
DEALER <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
The been notified <lb/>
Judge Henry It. Bryan he will not <lb/>
be able to hold i lie September term of Pitt <lb/>
county Superior court, 1901, all jurors <lb/>
hare been summoned for the Brat <lb/>
second weeks of said term are hereby <lb/>
not to attend, but all witnesses <lb/>
bare been summoned and all <lb/>
have been been bound over to said <lb/>
term arc hereby notified and required <lb/>
to attend term of said o <lb/>
Monday, September, 1901. A new <lb/>
jury will be drawn slid fur sad <lb/>
medal term. 1901. <lb/>
O. W. HARRINGTON, <lb/>
C court. <lb/>
inn PUt county In Superior <lb/>
court be-fore the clerk.<lb/>
Bryan <lb/>
other, <lb/>
It. <lb/>
Wyatt <lb/>
The named defendant <lb/>
action entitled as <lb/>
above In the Superior <lb/>
county, to sell a certain Int <lb/>
of for partition. And <lb/>
the said defendant lake notice <lb/>
that he is required to appear at office of <lb/>
t he clerK of the Superior court of Pi <lb/>
on Friday Sept Mil, 1901, and answer or <lb/>
demur to the complaint in said action, or <lb/>
the plaintiff will apply t,. the court for the <lb/>
relief hi I lie <lb/>
This August Hill, n c <lb/>
clerk Superior court. <lb/>
F JAMES, <lb/>
1876.------- <lb/>
i. M. Schultz, <lb/>
Wholesale Grocer and j <lb/>
it me Dealer. Cash pun I for <lb/>
Hide, Fur, Cotton Oil Bar- <lb/>
Turkeys, Ha, etc. Bed- <lb/>
Suits, Ba- <lb/>
by Go Parlor <lb/>
nulls, Tables, Lounges, Safes, P. <lb/>
and Ax <lb/>
Moat Key West <lb/>
American Beauty Cigarettes, Can- <lb/>
Cherries, Peaches, Apples, <lb/>
Pine Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour Coffee, Meat, Soap, <lb/>
Magic Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Cotton Meal and Hulls, Gar- <lb/>
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Candies, Dried Peaches, <lb/>
Prunes, Currents, Glass <lb/>
and China Ware, Tin and Wooden <lb/>
Ware, Cakes and Crackers, <lb/>
Best Butter, Stand- <lb/>
ard Sewing Ma oh and nu- <lb/>
other goods. Quality and <lb/>
Quantity. Cheap for cash. Com <lb/>
to see <lb/>
BALK OF TOWN LOT. <lb/>
By of of tho Superior <lb/>
Court of county, made on the 2nd <lb/>
of 1901, in pro- <lb/>
. i therein F. U <lb/>
Beverly Brothers guardian <lb/>
and others, I Monday October <lb/>
1901, before the house door in Green- <lb/>
ville, sell public sale lo tho <lb/>
for certain lot or parcel of <lb/>
land situated In the town and <lb/>
described us In Hip plot <lb/>
of said town of lot hounded on <lb/>
North by second street, on the by <lb/>
on the the lot form- <lb/>
owned nod used as parsonage <lb/>
and on the West by lot, and <lb/>
being the home place of the late <lb/>
Williamson, containing one fourth of an <lb/>
acre more or less. <lb/>
fins i In- 4th of September, 1901. <lb/>
ALEX. I,. BLOW, Commissioner. <lb/>
notice to <lb/>
Insurable <lb/>
ATTENTION AGENTS <lb/>
Mr. Drewry, Agent for <lb/>
North and Virginia, of that Well- <lb/>
and Popular Company, <lb/>
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT <lb/>
Life Insurance Co., of <lb/>
Desires to to Its large number of <lb/>
policy holders, and to public <lb/>
generally, of North this com- <lb/>
will now Resume In this <lb/>
slate mid from date will its <lb/>
and policies, to all de- <lb/>
siring very bast insurance in the beat <lb/>
insurance company world. <lb/>
If local agent your town has not <lb/>
yet i arrangements, <lb/>
JOHN C. <lb/>
Agent, Raleigh, N. <lb/>
Assets <lb/>
Paid policy <lb/>
Live, natal <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and flea always <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/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton and Brokers in <lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
ions. Private Wires to New York, <lb/>
Chicago and New <lb/>
j. l on; <lb/>
IN------ <lb/>
--a- <lb/>
A LINE OF <lb/>
ill <lb/>
Also a nice Line of Hardware. <lb/>
COME TO SEE ME. <lb/>
J. B. <lb/>
W. R. <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Whichard, N. C. <lb/>
The complete in every de <lb/>
prices low the <lb/>
lowest. Highest market prices <lb/>
paid for country prod <lb/>
The Commoner <lb/>
WILLIAM J. <lb/>
Editor Publisher, <lb/>
Lincoln, <lb/>
In Advance. <lb/>
One Year Biz Mouths <lb/>
Three Sing. Copy <lb/>
No traveling canvassers are em- <lb/>
ployed. Subscriptions taken at <lb/>
Weekly and <lb/>
will sent together <lb/>
one year for or The Daily <lb/>
and <lb/>
one year for 13.60 payable in ad- <lb/>
PATENT<lb/>
C. AGO. <lb/>
, No <lb/>
Wee <lb/>
FOE <lb/>
II <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
D. J. EDITOR <lb/>
TRUTH TO <lb/>
PER II <lb/>
VOL. XX. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER <lb/>
NO <lb/>
-AT- <lb/>
SI A <lb/>
ARE KNOCKING Educational Department. <lb/>
as <lb/>
THEM <lb/>
aH <lb/>
For Dry Dress Goods, Hate, Caps, Shoes, Trunks, <lb/>
Boys and Mens Clothing, Gents Furnishings, Gloves, <lb/>
and a big line of Baby Caps, Cloaks, Mitts and Booties. <lb/>
Come to see us. Every day a bargain day and everything a <lb/>
bargain. friends, <lb/>
W. T. LEE CO- <lb/>
The North <lb/>
DIVIDEND RECORD IS THE RESULT OF <lb/>
Securing highest rate of interest consistent with safety. <lb/>
Rigid economy of management. <lb/>
Low death rate, resulting from a careful selection of <lb/>
limiting; its business to the United States <lb/>
It will be to your interest to see what we can do for you before <lb/>
placing life insurance. <lb/>
Good territory open for Agents in North Carolina. <lb/>
T. ARCHIBALD GARY, General Agent. <lb/>
For Virginia and North Carolina, <lb/>
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, <lb/>
1301 E. Main Street, Richmond, Va. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
The Profit is Yours <lb/>
The shortening season again shortens <lb/>
We gladly sacrifice the profits <lb/>
The chance is only yours if you will make an <lb/>
early investigation. Those goods must be <lb/>
pushed out room large fall <lb/>
took which is coming in. <lb/>
for Standard Patterns. <lb/>
KICKS <lb/>
As I see no else seems to <lb/>
in a notion to write our column, <lb/>
I will write you a few words com- <lb/>
on the same. So far I <lb/>
have been the only one to write <lb/>
in a few lines under our <lb/>
Department and I want to <lb/>
ask if some of thereat of the teach- <lb/>
will not help us out. <lb/>
The column in your <lb/>
paper will be an aid to education <lb/>
in our county if the teachers will <lb/>
only inn lest enough interest to <lb/>
keep the principle going. <lb/>
To write a few lines for <lb/>
in our column does not require <lb/>
a great effort, and if some of the <lb/>
teachers will take one sixteenth of <lb/>
the interest it that was taken in <lb/>
and at the in <lb/>
the educational column <lb/>
will become very interesting. <lb/>
I know young ladies <lb/>
haven't a great preference for <lb/>
writing letters for public perusal, <lb/>
but it is a well fact that <lb/>
young men have done such things, <lb/>
and it looks to me like some of our <lb/>
male might <lb/>
modify their subjects give us a <lb/>
piece for Educational Depart- <lb/>
I do not mean by the above to <lb/>
exclude ladies by any means. <lb/>
I know the ladies are just as com- <lb/>
to give us interesting <lb/>
as any the male teach- <lb/>
and I think if the will <lb/>
only give us a start ladies will <lb/>
follow, for it is already a <lb/>
tact that a is going to have <lb/>
the last word anyhow. Some may <lb/>
say they not able or <lb/>
write a piece, but there was not a <lb/>
issued to one at all <lb/>
who is not fully competent to give <lb/>
us something interesting on the <lb/>
subject of education. <lb/>
Most of the teachers in this <lb/>
county arc ladies so I must <lb/>
say to them that we cannot get <lb/>
along without them. Let's see <lb/>
who is the first to write us a piece. <lb/>
Don't be timid or bashful, but <lb/>
just take you pen blaze away. <lb/>
I hope none of the male teachers <lb/>
are too timid . to write <lb/>
us a but I guess all <lb/>
right. Such weeds don't grow in <lb/>
a man's crop. <lb/>
We would like very much to <lb/>
hear from Prof, and <lb/>
Prof. and it wouldn't be <lb/>
a miss if some f our County Hoard <lb/>
of Education would favor us like- <lb/>
wise. F. <lb/>
Over in Maryland the <lb/>
cans are really engaging in a for- <lb/>
lorn hope. With Ex Senator <lb/>
once more in full of <lb/>
Democratic forces, and his own <lb/>
for United States <lb/>
Senate involved in the contest, it <lb/>
is realized that only a miracle of <lb/>
politics can day to <lb/>
Republicans. Rut Mr. is <lb/>
something of a magician and <lb/>
himself and his <lb/>
are offering he will <lb/>
be a hands-down winner of <lb/>
November stakes. <lb/>
Tho question of the South <lb/>
is a small matter when compared <lb/>
to the anarchist problem that con- <lb/>
fronts the North. If they conclude <lb/>
to try lynching as an antidote <lb/>
anarchy, no objections will be <lb/>
raised In this neck of the words. <lb/>
Mount Olive Advertiser. <lb/>
At a recent reunion of a family <lb/>
named Chick, in Maine, there were <lb/>
five the oldest of whom <lb/>
was eighty-eight years, young- <lb/>
est seventy. Their combined ages <lb/>
were years. These were <lb/>
spring Chickens. Wilmington <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
Our New <lb/>
Fall Stock <lb/>
is coming our store is a scene of beautiful good. <lb/>
Wade <lb/>
is full with Be Jackets, Waists, <lb/>
Our Stock of <lb/>
is complete in every can suit your feet, <lb/>
your head, your purse. Conn- to see us. <lb/>
Year Friends. <lb/>
and all the <lb/>
Ladies that <lb/>
MM M T C DWELL <lb/>
i now in Markets <lb/>
purchasing <lb/>
NEW <lb/>
will bring back the stock ever seen <lb/>
My Stock of Dry flood also <lb/>
man v attractions for you. <lb/>
Suppressing News. <lb/>
Nine Shots Al a Burglar. <lb/>
.- Neck, N. <lb/>
Tho practice keeping things came from Hobgood yes- <lb/>
oat of the paper makes it the store of Mr. It. J. <lb/>
Scull for a daily newspaper lo do there was robbed night <lb/>
its duly mid give all Wore. Mr. Harris, a clerk, who <lb/>
There ready <lb/>
to throw <lb/>
was sleeping up stairs, was <lb/>
is striking a match <lb/>
BAKER HART, <lb/>
Headquarters <lb/>
STEAM SUPPLY. <lb/>
We have just added Steam Supply to our business and <lb/>
will sell anything in this line very low. Sec us when in want of <lb/>
Globe and Angle Valves, Standard Globe <lb/>
and Angle Valves, Check Valves, Water <lb/>
Oil Cups, Air Cocks, Steam Hancock <lb/>
U, S. Injectors, Cocks, Steam <lb/>
Pipe all sizes, Pipe Fitting all <lb/>
COMPLETE LINE OF Packing, Dolt, <lb/>
Leather Belt, Hell Lacing, Boll Hooks. <lb/>
SOLE A <lb/>
life is said <lb/>
not to exceed <lb/>
Harvesting . Farm Drain Tile <lb/>
Garland Cook Stoves. <lb/>
BAKER HART. <lb/>
Building. <lb/>
N- C. <lb/>
at every important and the store below. He went to a <lb/>
Importune newspapers not to window in a partition, through <lb/>
publish the There is haul which he could sec down into the <lb/>
a week in year when store, and saw some moving <lb/>
in cautiously. He live <lb/>
to and man called out, <lb/>
item, and sometimes several limes any more. You have <lb/>
in a wee;, will even ask j killed me now. I'll give Ur. <lb/>
of news lo when Harris Bred four more and <lb/>
entire i already i the man then escaped through <lb/>
talking about it. Joey will ask He had entered by the <lb/>
the editors nod publishers not door, and had la <lb/>
mention certain wine, tug firs door of safe, but <lb/>
matter of its publication bad not opened any of draw- <lb/>
would harm no one. am. so took no money. Shoes, <lb/>
declines l -leave bats, and the like were <lb/>
item the applicant be-1 missed from the store. Blood- <lb/>
comes very indignant. If it yields hounds were brought from Suffolk, <lb/>
and a contemporary later publishes but they could track the thief no <lb/>
the news it to the further railroad. <lb/>
gentlemen that be has Injured shooting at the occurred <lb/>
legitimate business of a about LI o'clock at night, and the <lb/>
ought to apologize and bounds did not arrive until <lb/>
-1 do more. On when yesterday morning, <lb/>
o local newspaper out an <lb/>
Item appears later In an out <lb/>
of journal, the i It of August a shook.- <lb/>
asked suppression the log crime was committed in this <lb/>
Ant to say, must read such the 18th. of <lb/>
and such papers to get the <lb/>
ever occur to the men who jail. The trial, <lb/>
request a not lo publish com sentence and execution <lb/>
a certain item ii would sentence were all affected by <lb/>
as reasonable to ask a merchant I due process of law. avenging <lb/>
not to a certain sale You one crime no ether was committed <lb/>
asking the newspaper justice be done no law <lb/>
Ha most attractive feature lo abiding men have converted them- <lb/>
tedious, and perhaps lire into law-breakers the blood <lb/>
for your Ibis is upon nobody's <lb/>
you may have el be Is us surely dead as <lb/>
lions tbs newspaper. Thai if bis eyes had been burned out, <lb/>
gives you no right to if bad been drawn and <lb/>
make exactions which amounts lo <lb/>
thing as if someone to tho dogs or burned a log <lb/>
Banded that you dispense with I- ii <lb/>
most desirable pan of your w. The crime, the penalty of <lb/>
In, Ii Is death, has been rewarded <lb/>
The newspapers gel and speedy death, What <lb/>
lick of being importuned to keep history of <lb/>
things out. The reporters got the crime was com- <lb/>
the newspaper renders, Is a wreath for <lb/>
bearing of something which <lb/>
to have been published on line, I <lb/>
make derogatory remarks the <lb/>
Apparent lack of enterprise maul- <lb/>
hated by Journal that been An Bank. <lb/>
and imposed . , .-. , <lb/>
savings bank has in- <lb/>
Ark. , ,,., , . , , . <lb/>
reused Its business enormously by <lb/>
advertising the <lb/>
The manager scoffs at the <lb/>
Up Whipped. is be <lb/>
I lie a <lb/>
tad., Sept. have induced <lb/>
an anarchist, who thousands of careless people to <lb/>
was knocked down a week ago I come savors by daily calling their <lb/>
when he said he was glad to advantages <lb/>
wot Shot, Visit. I tag money laid be says. <lb/>
by a party l men ,.,,,,., be to <lb/>
midnight, taken In a grove through the news- <lb/>
town, stripped, to a tree papers what they should be <lb/>
severely whipped.<lb/>
.-- <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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