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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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				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
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<p>
mm. <lb/>
Have You Forgot <lb/>
. q THAT I AM AN <lb/>
Pry Dress Goods, Shoes <lb/>
Hats, Shirts, Pants, Hardware <lb/>
. AND A OF <lb/>
i am unable to mention <lb/>
Come to sec me for your next Barrel of Flour or Pork. <lb/>
Yours to please- <lb/>
las. White. <lb/>
AFTER TWO HAVE BEEN PAID IN THE <lb/>
BENEFIT lilt I <lb/>
N. J., POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value, <lb/>
a. Cash Value, <lb/>
Paid p Insurance. <lb/>
t. Extended insurance that works automatically, <lb/>
;. is <lb/>
i. Will be reinstated If arrears be paid within mouth <lb/>
are living, or within three years after lapse, upon <lb/>
of and payment of arrears with interest. <lb/>
second No Restrictions. <lb/>
Dividends are payable lbs beginning of second and i <lb/>
succeeding year, provided Hie for the yaw <lb/>
be To reduce Premiums, or <lb/>
To Increase <lb/>
;. To policy payable as an during Hie I <lb/>
of insured. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
lie you <lb/>
l each <lb/>
paid. <lb/>
OCEAN HOTELS. <lb/>
ORIGINAL OBSERVATIONS <lb/>
Made By The Virginia. Observer <lb/>
Tor the ct statistics for <lb/>
their own lake, for <lb/>
the man who likes to eat well, the <lb/>
list of the content of <lb/>
larder reading. <lb/>
Here, for instance, is the <lb/>
average aboard the <lb/>
at beginning of every <lb/>
age between New York and Hem- <lb/>
burg, and of course all the other <lb/>
bis are provisioned about <lb/>
the same way. <lb/>
In the first place, there arc <lb/>
tons of ice to keep things eatable <lb/>
and drinkable, and these arc things <lb/>
that were on the ice on a recent trip <lb/>
Fourteen beeves, calves, <lb/>
lambs, hogs, 1,500 <lb/>
chickens, geese and game birds, <lb/>
1,700 pounds of fish, -100 pounds of <lb/>
tongues and sweetbreads, 1,700 <lb/>
dozen of eggs. barrels of oysters <lb/>
clams, barrels of potatoes, <lb/>
barrels of other vegetables, <lb/>
crates of tomatoes and celery, <lb/>
dozen head of lettuce, barrels of <lb/>
flour, COO pounds of oatmeal and <lb/>
hominy, 1,300 pounds of <lb/>
quarts of milk. quarts of <lb/>
cream, big molds of cream, <lb/>
of fruit, 12.000 quarts of , Gibing should no <lb/>
wine and liquor, quarts of ins counteracts and the effect of <lb/>
beer and tons of drinking keeps <lb/>
. unit the <lb/>
water. out. <lb/>
Of course all of this is not used <lb/>
on each trip, but enough is carried <lb/>
a liberal <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
Flattery and falsehood arc <lb/>
of kin. <lb/>
Many a is often <lb/>
sold. <lb/>
The world laughs at our vice, <lb/>
but blindfolds itself to our <lb/>
As the cold weather is approach- <lb/>
ins. I be foot of the mountain will <lb/>
soon need a shoe. <lb/>
Formerly the foolish virgins had <lb/>
no oil; now the foolish are <lb/>
too free ii n the kerosene. <lb/>
There are people in this town <lb/>
so mean that they would argue the <lb/>
right of way with a blind man. <lb/>
Possums and persimmons are <lb/>
getting ripe, happy days will soon <lb/>
be here; give your sweetheart a <lb/>
friendly us all have good <lb/>
cheer. <lb/>
Mothers who have always so dreaded the <lb/>
approach of hot mother when they haves <lb/>
them in <lb/>
la casts only per at <lb/>
nail to C. M <lb/>
None genuine <lb/>
Red Cross is on <lb/>
Don't . a <lb/>
WE CHALLENGE THE WORLD <lb/>
TO THE EQUAL or <lb/>
for <lb/>
Night Sweats and Grippe, and <lb/>
all forms of Malaria. <lb/>
DON'T WAIT TO DIE <lb/>
SPEND CENTS AND BE CURED <lb/>
CURES MIKE IONIC FAMOUS I <lb/>
TRY IT. NO PAY. i . PER <lb/>
TO TAKE. <lb/>
A Universal Horse Scare. <lb/>
Isn't said an old horse- , <lb/>
man. a piece of white paper <lb/>
l wing and r a feet will <lb/>
him when nothing else under I <lb/>
the sun will make him bat an eve. I <lb/>
are old horses in this , <lb/>
loan that would go on eating out of learnings of the States Steel <lb/>
a nose bag if the crack of doom Corporation dining the past six <lb/>
months amounted to <lb/>
organized lost a for- <lb/>
tune in its battle with the Steel <lb/>
Trust. Mr. has <lb/>
not Buffered materially, if reports <lb/>
from the lets of that con <lb/>
Cent arc to relied upon. It is <lb/>
genii staled that the net <lb/>
Our colored friends have been <lb/>
disposed to make I great deal of <lb/>
the part played by a Parker, a <lb/>
of their race, <lb/>
resulted in President Me- <lb/>
death. they <lb/>
met, throughout the length and <lb/>
breadth of the land, to adopt <lb/>
of respect and sympathy, <lb/>
the bare almost <lb/>
naturally, inserted a <lb/>
paragraph eulogistic of Parker. <lb/>
Ar d yet when sat at <lb/>
to try Parker was <lb/>
called as a and, when <lb/>
on the stand were <lb/>
they had no of <lb/>
the hero. The Atlanta Con- <lb/>
pertinently asks whether <lb/>
this was due to a conspiracy on the <lb/>
white people of against the <lb/>
the colored man or whether Parker <lb/>
had been playing a false role and <lb/>
claiming honors not due him. It <lb/>
would be interesting to know <lb/>
about this. Why this sudden pass- <lb/>
of Why has he so <lb/>
suddenly dropped out of the game <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
in 1864. <lb/>
J. ff. Cl. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Factors and handlers of <lb/>
Bagging, Ties and Bags. <lb/>
Correspondence and shipments <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
OLD DOMINION <lb/>
Steamer leave Washing <lb/>
ton daily at A. M. for Greet <lb/>
ville, leave Greenville daily at <lb/>
M. for Washington. <lb/>
Steamer leaves <lb/>
Greenville Mondays, Wednesday <lb/>
Tin- undersigned having duly qualified <lb/>
before the Superior court clerk of Pill <lb/>
county u administrator of the of and at A. M. for <lb/>
notice is hereby <lb/>
given to all persona indebted to the <lb/>
to make immediate payment to the under- <lb/>
signed, and all having <lb/>
against the rotate are notified to present the <lb/>
Mime to undersigned payment <lb/>
within twelve months from date of <lb/>
notice, or it will he plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
This 4th day of 1901. <lb/>
JAMES L. SMITH, <lb/>
Sarah I. <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
should sound In the reel. There <lb/>
are hundreds of them that would <lb/>
wink if n circus procession <lb/>
Boron Lands came by. A tugboat <lb/>
might blow up in the river not <lb/>
feet away and they wouldn't fry <lb/>
to dodge the boiler plate. <lb/>
you can't trust one team In <lb/>
a thousand to stand for the half of <lb/>
a newspaper come blowing under <lb/>
feet. <lb/>
I don't know. If a <lb/>
horse hot any left in him, he j <lb/>
will goal that. The automobile and I <lb/>
mid that a dividend will soon <lb/>
lie declared on both classes of stock <lb/>
issued by the company. a <lb/>
trust grown to powerful that <lb/>
it can indict nu almost fatal blow <lb/>
upon a great branch of union labor <lb/>
and make half a hundred millions <lb/>
at same time, the situation has <lb/>
become serious and Americans <lb/>
will appreciate the gravity of the <lb/>
political problem involving this <lb/>
of capitalistic economy. <lb/>
ASTHMA CURE FREE. <lb/>
Relief Permanent Cure in all Cases <lb/>
SENT ABSOLUTELY ON OF POSTAL. <lb/>
There ll nothing like Ii brings <lb/>
instant relief, even in the cures when <lb/>
all else tails. <lb/>
The Rev. C. Wells. Villa. Ridge, III., says. <lb/>
Your bottle of received in good <lb/>
I cannot tell you how thankful I feel for the <lb/>
good derived it I was n slave, with <lb/>
putrid for ten years. I de <lb/>
of ever being cured. I saw advertise <lb/>
the cure of this dreadful and <lb/>
asthma, thought you had <lb/>
but t to give it a trial. To my <lb/>
astonishment, the acted like a charm. Semi me <lb/>
a full <lb/>
We want to send sufferer a treatment of <lb/>
to the one that cured Mr. Wells. We'll send ii mall <lb/>
paid, absolutely Fee of Charge, to . lie,, i ho will write for it, <lb/>
even on a postal. Sever mind, mare despairing, however <lb/>
bid case. will relieve cure. The worse <lb/>
case, the more glad we arc it. delay, once, art- <lb/>
dressing Dr. Taft Bros Medicine Co. St., N. Y. City. <lb/>
Sold by all <lb/>
I he that arc new to him,, <lb/>
don't him, but the scrap <lb/>
paper, which has been with us for decisive steps arc taken to reg- <lb/>
will frighten him Into evil, the octopus will <lb/>
l Tribune. have, within the decade, so <lb/>
The Very Man. involved the working classes <lb/>
When Leicester was far reaching that the <lb/>
making his in feudal system will teem a veritable <lb/>
before recent British by comparison <lb/>
election, he ran across n red- <lb/>
headed who felt lore against <lb/>
politicians in general. As Mr. <lb/>
approached ho waved <lb/>
him off. come here, <lb/>
he said, and. to discourage an <lb/>
attempt, added, kind of man <lb/>
we want in is a <lb/>
rascal, one that dims care i, <lb/>
rap for God or Nothing, <lb/>
daunted, Mr. held <lb/>
bravely to his mission soon <lb/>
i I in Interesting the seaming <lb/>
i om liable So indeed did <lb/>
III irk his man that in the end the <lb/>
crofter, glowing with satisfaction <lb/>
and desiring to make an <lb/>
his first deliverance, seized Mr. <lb/>
band exclaimed, <lb/>
Sir, the very man for <lb/>
AN OLD ADAGE <lb/>
A light purse Is a heavy <lb/>
Sickness makes s light purse. <lb/>
The LIVER Is the seat of nine <lb/>
tenths of disease. <lb/>
s Pills <lb/>
go to the root of the whole mat- <lb/>
thoroughly, quickly safely <lb/>
and restore the action of the <lb/>
LIVER to normal condition. <lb/>
Give tone to the system and <lb/>
solid flesh to the body. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
The Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt <lb/>
county, having Issued Letters of <lb/>
to the undersigned, on the 2nd <lb/>
day 1901, on the of <lb/>
A. Dupree, deceased, notice is here- <lb/>
by given to all person indebted to the <lb/>
estate to make immediate payment to the <lb/>
and to all creditors of laid <lb/>
estate to present their claims, properly <lb/>
to the within <lb/>
twelve months alter the date of Ibis notice, <lb/>
or this notice will be plead in bar of their <lb/>
Tins the 2nd of Sept, 1901. <lb/>
A. <lb/>
leave Tarboro for Greenville <lb/>
Tuesdays, and Saturdays <lb/>
at A. M. curries freight only. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
Steamers for Baltimore, <lb/>
New York and <lb/>
ton, and for all points for the West <lb/>
with railroads at <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. <lb/>
Washington, N. C <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, Act., <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
The Clerk of Court of <lb/>
having Letters cf <lb/>
to me, the undersigned on the <lb/>
lay of 1901, on the estate of Lynn <lb/>
Tripp, is hereby given to <lb/>
all u-ii indebted to the to make <lb/>
to the <lb/>
In all creditors of said estate to present <lb/>
their claims properly to <lb/>
undersigned, within twelve months alter <lb/>
the dale of this notice, or this notice will be <lb/>
lead in of their recovery. <lb/>
This tin- 9th day of August, 1901. <lb/>
What a Wonderful Discovery is <lb/>
Perry ll not only <lb/>
the human family, hut is <lb/>
i the remedy for horses and cattle. <lb/>
It has never been known to fall in a of <lb/>
the worst cases colic; and for sprains, <lb/>
it never it once. <lb/>
each Avoid <lb/>
there is bill one Pain Killer, <lb/>
and an.-. <lb/>
The Haughty Butler. <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
TONIC LAXATIVE <lb/>
II you sour stomach, indigestion, biliousness, constipation, bad <lb/>
dimness, inactive liver, heartburn, kidney troubles, loss <lb/>
of appetite, Insomnia, lack of energy, bad blood, blotched or muddy skin, <lb/>
or any symptoms and disorders which tell story of bad bowels and an <lb/>
impaired digestive system, Will Cure You. <lb/>
It will out bowels, stimulate the liver and strengthen <lb/>
the mucous the stomach, purify your blood and put you <lb/>
your Your appetite wilt return, your bowels move <lb/>
your liver and kidneys cease to trouble you, your will clear and <lb/>
and you will feet the old time energy and buoyancy. <lb/>
proper l. It Male i Ma<lb/>
it their bowels or a, <lb/>
aids i-n . <lb/>
i Sad <lb/>
u H <lb/>
For Salt by <lb/>
. IS. mo. the mm. <lb/>
. Ai Ire. <lb/>
I lit I CO , Nov.,, V , uS . d. <lb/>
. on M <lb/>
Hi. Mile s <lb/>
p. H <lb/>
Mr. Sim, the major of <lb/>
ford House, the residence of <lb/>
Duke of Sutherland, is <lb/>
among the most <lb/>
major and <lb/>
rs of tho highest circles. It is <lb/>
said that the own servants <lb/>
look ii him as tho lender of their <lb/>
--ion. The seal is set upon his <lb/>
aristocratic fume by a remark which <lb/>
is a billed to him. They say that <lb/>
he once went tn see Tree <lb/>
piny Asked afterward <lb/>
what he thought of it, he is reported <lb/>
loftily to have r. marked, it's <lb/>
extraordinary various ways the <lb/>
lower orders have of getting their <lb/>
Reed and a Quorum. <lb/>
El-Speaker Heed was in the <lb/>
court at Washington recent- <lb/>
when justices were slow in as- <lb/>
Mr. wailed with <lb/>
an elephantine patience. Presently <lb/>
n friend of his leaned over to him <lb/>
whispered, Speaker, can't <lb/>
. n <lb/>
A look grave reproach .-. r- <lb/>
tin statesman's <lb/>
said b a lone dignity, <lb/>
forget when I counted a <lb/>
Si there was s QUO <lb/>
i rum <lb/>
II was I birthday, and he was <lb/>
I years old lbs evening bis <lb/>
Fred, Who was a soldier, up Into <lb/>
I lb.- lo play with and Hob- <lb/>
i k lunch <lb/>
I,, he a soldier one said i <lb/>
Jackie during lbs name. <lb/>
i my a lot of <lb/>
lessons of replied <lb/>
It- I. a a smile. <lb/>
Jack, <lb/>
-I i. <lb/>
I not coming said <lb/>
Jackie, crossly, you see I'm I <lb/>
knew, my boy. that the first <lb/>
I a has to is to I <lb/>
Uncle <lb/>
Jackie a and then, I <lb/>
I like a lie put away <lb/>
Thus fur Mr. Roosevelt ll <lb/>
tin <lb/>
i. the leaders of I lie party <lb/>
tends <lb/>
the last <lb/>
convention. It is expected <lb/>
however, that within coming <lb/>
two months, the new President will <lb/>
lie compelled to declare himself on <lb/>
the lending issues of the hour. <lb/>
Whether he will prove to be more <lb/>
subservient even Mr. Manna <lb/>
had hoped for is a matter of <lb/>
speculation at tho present <lb/>
time. <lb/>
A man in treat- <lb/>
ed the police to a performance a <lb/>
few days ago that took the <lb/>
breath away from them. He per- <lb/>
them to shackle his wrists, <lb/>
his feet and bis arms with <lb/>
best shackles, lock them put <lb/>
the keys in their pockets. They <lb/>
shut the door, left him alone and <lb/>
inside of a be walked out <lb/>
amongst and left the hand- <lb/>
cuffs and shackles lying the <lb/>
floor. Now they are trying to <lb/>
out how he did it, but he will not <lb/>
tell. <lb/>
A bird in baud is all right if <lb/>
you ha, o no knife and fork. <lb/>
If the average girl knew which <lb/>
side her butter bread was <lb/>
she would shorten her matrimonial <lb/>
career by prolonging her court- <lb/>
News. <lb/>
The musical is always <lb/>
ready lotion turn. <lb/>
Death loves a mark. So <lb/>
does the chronic borrower. <lb/>
The straw hat still lingers in the <lb/>
lap of adversity. <lb/>
Even the new woman out <lb/>
ii ice cream soda. <lb/>
Ever In hot weather a locomotive <lb/>
can't run unless it <lb/>
GREENVILLE S. C. <lb/>
Cotton Ragging and Ties always <lb/>
on baa . <lb/>
goods kept so <lb/>
hand. Country produce and <lb/>
sold. A trial will convince you. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
county in Superior <lb/>
court before the clerk.<lb/>
other, <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
Tin above named defendant Chester <lb/>
take notice an action entitled at <lb/>
above commenced in the Superior <lb/>
court of county, to sell a certain lot in <lb/>
of Bethel for partition. And <lb/>
lbs will further lake <lb/>
that he is to appear at the office of <lb/>
the clerk of the Superior court of Pi ll county <lb/>
Friday Sept and answer or <lb/>
to the complaint said action, or <lb/>
the plaintiff will apply to the court for <lb/>
relief demanded In the complaint. <lb/>
This August C. <lb/>
clerk Superior court, <lb/>
F tor <lb/>
SALE OF TOWN LOT. <lb/>
By virtue of decree of the Superior <lb/>
Court of county, made on the 2nd day <lb/>
of 1901, in a certain pro- <lb/>
therein entitled F. O. <lb/>
James Beverly Brothers guardian <lb/>
and others, I Monday October <lb/>
1901, before court door in <lb/>
at public sale to the bid- <lb/>
for cash, the certain lot or parcel of <lb/>
land situated in the town of and <lb/>
described as In plot <lb/>
of said town as part of lot on <lb/>
the North by second street, on the East by <lb/>
Green the the lot form- <lb/>
owned used as Baptist parsonage <lb/>
and on the Writ by lot, and <lb/>
being the home of tho lute Jesse <lb/>
Williamson, containing one fourth of an <lb/>
acre more or less. <lb/>
This the 4th day of September. 1901. <lb/>
ALEX. L. BLOW, <lb/>
W. R. WHICHARD <lb/>
Whichard, N. C. <lb/>
The Stock complete in every de <lb/>
and prices as low as the <lb/>
lowest. Highest market prices <lb/>
paid for country produce. <lb/>
Karl I i has once <lb/>
more Now that there is <lb/>
a growing prospect of comparative <lb/>
relations between China <lb/>
and I tie powers, he feels <lb/>
convalescent. When matters look <lb/>
dark the <lb/>
wan scarcely expected to recover. <lb/>
I Brat knew bis individual <lb/>
when he while ways that <lb/>
are dark tricks that vain, <lb/>
I lie heathen is <lb/>
I in a diplomat, but <lb/>
he has all Die of bis <lb/>
race, nevi Unless. <lb/>
The flower of the family is often <lb/>
Hie latest u i -e. <lb/>
Rodolph <lb/>
Photographer, <lb/>
O. <lb/>
The leader in good work and low prices <lb/>
Nice Photograph tor per dozen. <lb/>
Halt Cabinets par dozen. <lb/>
All oilier lines very Crayon Portraits <lb/>
made any small picture Nice <lb/>
baud all the lime. Come and <lb/>
examine my work. No trouble to show <lb/>
The very <lb/>
guaranteed to <lb/>
In a in., I. to S p. in. Yours to please. <lb/>
CU El <lb/>
RHEUMATISM <lb/>
CURE. <lb/>
M Hill At. <lb/>
Century. <lb/>
A remedy <lb/>
and long stand- <lb/>
greatest <lb/>
plinth i known. Has the hearty <lb/>
endorsement of leading physicians <lb/>
after thorough trial. Cures r <lb/>
cent, treated. Price <lb/>
ii per bottle. <lb/>
laid by h NICHOLS. <lb/>
. M. <lb/>
Wholesale retail and <lb/>
Km Dealer, paid <lb/>
II idea, For, Cotton Meet I, Oil Bar <lb/>
Turkeys, Egg, etc. Red- <lb/>
steads, Oak Suits, Ila <lb/>
by Carriages, Go Curls, <lb/>
suits, Tables, P. <lb/>
and Gail A x <lb/>
Meat i. Key West Cheroots, <lb/>
iii.-i ii nu Beauty Can <lb/>
Peaches, Apples, <lb/>
Pine Apples, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour Coffee, <lb/>
, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar- <lb/>
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples, Nut, <lb/>
Candles, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Prunes, Glass <lb/>
and China Ware, and Wooden <lb/>
Ware, Cakes and Crackers, <lb/>
e.-e. Best Butter, Stand <lb/>
M a c h i u e s , and nu <lb/>
moron.- other goods. Quality <lb/>
Quantity, for cash. Com <lb/>
to see me. <lb/>
MM IN <lb/>
North Pitt Greenville <lb/>
to <lb/>
Oscar Hooker <lb/>
X. Co and <lb/>
Southern Express Co. J <lb/>
The defendant, D. N. Co., will <lb/>
take notice that a summons in the above <lb/>
entitled was against mid de- <lb/>
tho day of September, 1901, <lb/>
by C. a Justice of the Peace <lb/>
Pitt county, North for the sum <lb/>
plaintiff by contract <lb/>
which summons is returnable before <lb/>
Justice his at linen ville In said <lb/>
county on the day November, <lb/>
The said defendant will also lake <lb/>
a warrant attachment was issued <lb/>
by said Justice on the 18th day <lb/>
lier, against certain properly of <lb/>
defendant i; iii the hands of <lb/>
Southern Express Co., SC. <lb/>
Which warrant is returnable before the <lb/>
said Just ire at the time and above <lb/>
named for the return of summons, <lb/>
when where the said defendant is re- <lb/>
lo appear and answer or demur lo <lb/>
demanded will <lb/>
C. D. <lb/>
This Bass. ;. <lb/>
j. i ere, <lb/>
-----DEALER IN----- <lb/>
A GENERAL LINE OF <lb/>
Also a nice Hardware. <lb/>
COME TO SEE KB. <lb/>
J. R. COREY. <lb/>
notice to <lb/>
Public. <lb/>
ATTENTION AGENTS <lb/>
Mr. John C. Agent for <lb/>
North Carolina and Virginia, of <lb/>
Known sod Popular Company, <lb/>
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT <lb/>
Life Insurance Co., of <lb/>
Desires to announce to Its large number of <lb/>
policy and lo the public <lb/>
generally, of North this com- <lb/>
will now In this <lb/>
stole and from Ibis date will issue Its <lb/>
splendid and desirable policies, to all <lb/>
the very la beat <lb/>
life i ii -or company in the world. <lb/>
If Ike agent In your town baa nut <lb/>
yet. arrangements, address <lb/>
JOHN C. <lb/>
Agent, N. O. <lb/>
Paid policy <lb/>
Live, . tic at <lb/>
. In Hurt lbs <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Buyers and Brokers In <lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
Private Wires to New York, <lb/>
Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
The Commoner <lb/>
WILLIAM J. BRYAN, <lb/>
Editor Publisher, <lb/>
Lincoln, <lb/>
Payable in Advance. <lb/>
One Year Six Mouths <lb/>
Three Copy <lb/>
No traveling canvassers are em- <lb/>
ployed. Subscriptions taken at <lb/>
Th k office. The Semi- <lb/>
Weekly and <lb/>
will be sent together <lb/>
one year for or Tin. Daily <lb/>
and <lb/>
one year for 13.60 payable In ad- <lb/>
PATENT <lb/>
PATENTS K <lb/>
a, <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
III II <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector <lb/>
D. J. EDITOR <lb/>
TRUTH TO <lb/>
FEB. <lb/>
Twice a M <lb/>
-AT <lb/>
VOL. <lb/>
PITT C, TUESDAY, OCTOBER <lb/>
NO <lb/>
ARE KNOCKING <lb/>
THEM <lb/>
t- <lb/>
Ph <lb/>
For Dry Dress Goods, Hats, Caps, Shoes, Trunks, <lb/>
Boys and Mens Clothing, Gents Furnishings, Gloves, <lb/>
and a big line of Baby Caps. Cloaks, Mitts and Bootee. <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 THE RESULT <lb/>
Securing the highest rate of interest with safely. <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 interest to see what we can do for you before <lb/>
placing life <lb/>
Good territory open for Agents in North Carolina. <lb/>
T. General <lb/>
For Virginia North Carolina, <lb/>
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, <lb/>
1201 E. Main Street, Richmond, Va. <lb/>
FALL SELLING. <lb/>
Putting it Strong. <lb/>
TOWN MATTERS. <lb/>
Proceedings of the Board of Aldermen. <lb/>
The of met Fri- <lb/>
day night in regular <lb/>
the entire Board being pres- <lb/>
and had business to occupy <lb/>
until o'clock. <lb/>
The finance committee reported <lb/>
that a fire engine note and in <lb/>
had paid since last <lb/>
meeting, and that about was <lb/>
left treasury. <lb/>
street committee reported <lb/>
that the streets were in bad <lb/>
and that most of the work <lb/>
had stopped temporarily be- <lb/>
cause of of work. The <lb/>
committee was instructed to con <lb/>
Untie all needed work, even if <lb/>
money bud to be borrowed to meet <lb/>
the bills. <lb/>
The lights and wells committee <lb/>
reported some new lamps <lb/>
were needed to take place of those <lb/>
worn out. will be <lb/>
The committee reported <lb/>
some repairs needed to roof of mar- <lb/>
house which will be looked <lb/>
after soon. <lb/>
The white cemetery committee <lb/>
reported sale of two lots and re- <lb/>
renewed the recommendation that <lb/>
a man be employed regularly to <lb/>
keep the cemetery order. <lb/>
No action taken on the <lb/>
The ordinance committee report- <lb/>
ed that the ordinances bad yet <lb/>
been printed they were in- <lb/>
to cause work to be <lb/>
done at once. <lb/>
J White petitioned that he be <lb/>
released from paying boarding <lb/>
house license tax except for three <lb/>
months, the time be conducted <lb/>
a boarding house, us he has now <lb/>
the business. The <lb/>
petition was grunted. <lb/>
W. II. County Super- <lb/>
of Schools, culled <lb/>
of the Board to the fact that <lb/>
no action had taken the <lb/>
demand made by the Hoard of Edit. <lb/>
cation at a recent meeting for <lb/>
fines due town to <lb/>
public school fund. An order <lb/>
to the effect that the Trees- <lb/>
of the town pay over, as <lb/>
as convenient, to the Treasurer <lb/>
the county the due the <lb/>
school fund for lines collected <lb/>
tween March I and July 1st, <lb/>
1901. <lb/>
The Tax Collector Police of- <lb/>
made their of <lb/>
during the past month. <lb/>
All the of police were de- <lb/>
vacant and the Board went <lb/>
into an election by ballot without <lb/>
The result of <lb/>
DRESS GOODS. <lb/>
Among the anticipated pleasure of the coming <lb/>
season every lady should the <lb/>
delightful experience of a visit lo <lb/>
Our Beautiful Dress Goods <lb/>
and Trimming Department <lb/>
Every made <lb/>
present conditions <lb/>
therein under <lb/>
of price is a <lb/>
PAYING INVESTMENT. <lb/>
We have a cl line of the novelties and <lb/>
latest ideas. In coloring and designs these new <lb/>
styles are models of beauty. We know we never <lb/>
offered more for the money than we do the <lb/>
present lime. <lb/>
Our is Thoroughly up-to- <lb/>
date Qualities and Styles <lb/>
in Every Department. <lb/>
None genuine <lb/>
Red Cross is on label <lb/>
Don't a Substitute <lb/>
we world <lb/>
TO PRODUCE THE EQUAL OF <lb/>
for <lb/>
Night Sweats and Grippe, and <lb/>
all forms of <lb/>
DON'T WAIT TO DIE <lb/>
SPEND CENTS AND BE CURED I <lb/>
CURES TONIC FAMOUS <lb/>
TRY IT. W NO CURE PER <lb/>
DELIGHTFUL TO TAKE. <lb/>
AFTER TWO PREMIUMS HAVE PAID IX THE <lb/>
it <lb/>
OF X. J., POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value, <lb/>
Cash Value, <lb/>
I'll ill up Insurance, <lb/>
Extended Insurance works automatically, <lb/>
Is Non <lb/>
C. Will be be paid on month while you <lb/>
living, or within three after lapse, upon evidence <lb/>
payment of arrears interest. <lb/>
And why not the merchandise and prices will <lb/>
back the statements made concerning them, we <lb/>
hare every right to it There is <lb/>
wrong in emphasizing excellence when the <lb/>
sis is within the bounds of truth, when facts are <lb/>
given without misrepresentation. <lb/>
Our States Facts.<lb/>
Just facts, something well worth remembering. <lb/>
Counters and tables piled high. Stacks and stacks of <lb/>
mens, boys and youths clothing. Every place iamb <lb/>
ed and packed with shoes. We can show you to your <lb/>
entire satisfaction. Counter room needed in our <lb/>
dress goods department. Selling must continue to <lb/>
relieve the pressure Come early before the best <lb/>
things are gone. All the latest styles and weaves in <lb/>
goods. Agents for Standard Patterns. <lb/>
was an T. <lb/>
Smith, Chief Police; W. II. <lb/>
Assistant Police; S. I. <lb/>
Dudley, Police. <lb/>
When they were the <lb/>
I day police officers were order- <lb/>
ed to go on duty each day at sun- <lb/>
rise continue until o'clock, <lb/>
P. M., and the night officer to go <lb/>
On duty o'clock, P. M. and <lb/>
until sunrise next morn- <lb/>
except that on Saturdays and <lb/>
special days the day arc to <lb/>
duly until o'clock, <lb/>
were also in- <lb/>
to wear uniforms. <lb/>
W. II. Harrington called <lb/>
to the dangerous condition of <lb/>
the old stable building black- <lb/>
shop do it where he is put- <lb/>
ting up a new building on his lot <lb/>
fronting the Court House, and a <lb/>
committee was appointed to <lb/>
condition of the build <lb/>
Ion. <lb/>
The Hoard ton in a body <lb/>
on Saturday morning, 5th at <lb/>
at o'clock to inspect the <lb/>
ed new street from in <lb/>
West Greenville, to Dickinson <lb/>
A n to excuse S. Tunstall <lb/>
from paying boarding house <lb/>
boarding teachers was <lb/>
lost. <lb/>
Accounts amounting to <lb/>
were allowed ordered paid. <lb/>
This included the lire note <lb/>
interest to <lb/>
second Restrictions, s. Incontestable. <lb/>
Dividend are payable at the beginning of the second and cf each <lb/>
succeeding provided premium for the current year be paid. <lb/>
They may be To reduce Premiums, or <lb/>
To Increase the Insurance, or <lb/>
To make policy payable as an during the lifetime <lb/>
of insured. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville, X. C. <lb/>
Have You <lb/>
What <lb/>
Daughter <lb/>
and all the <lb/>
Ladies that <lb/>
Our FALL <lb/>
g OPENING of <lb/>
Will take place on <lb/>
Tuesday and Wednesday, <lb/>
October 1st 2nd. <lb/>
HOOKER. <lb/>
Queer Superstition, <lb/>
Pa., Oct. <lb/>
Undertaker Benjamin Hums went <lb/>
Antonio <lb/>
Antonio at yes- <lb/>
afternoon to prepare two <lb/>
for burial, he found a <lb/>
queer state of affairs. Au attempt <lb/>
had been made to restore the two <lb/>
corpses of by burying them. <lb/>
The lads met death by suffocation <lb/>
Sunday In an abandoned well near <lb/>
farm the woods. Per- <lb/>
had dropped a bag of chest <lb/>
nuts in a well and crawled down <lb/>
after them. He was overcome by <lb/>
black damp and his companion <lb/>
Green, who attempted to rescue <lb/>
hi in. was also overcome by the <lb/>
deadly gas. The Italians about <lb/>
here believe In a superstition that <lb/>
if a body meets death <lb/>
location is buried in fresh earth <lb/>
soon after death it will be restored <lb/>
to life. When the undertaker <lb/>
i. Lincoln took poured three hour after the <lb/>
he found both bodies had <lb/>
Children of the While House. <lb/>
President Roosevelt will bring to <lb/>
White House largest <lb/>
of small that ever <lb/>
made its old walls echo with shout <lb/>
and laughter. AH Presidents <lb/>
but one, Buchanan, have been mar- <lb/>
rid men, Washington, Madison, <lb/>
Jackson mid Polk bad no children. <lb/>
The only little folks Ike White <lb/>
House the seven years of <lb/>
government were <lb/>
or other relatives re- <lb/>
moved Hum children, and these <lb/>
Interrupted the quiet of old <lb/>
mansion at rare intervals. The <lb/>
elder Harrison was lather of <lb/>
ten and Tyler <lb/>
in Harrison's case <lb/>
who survived were grown when he <lb/>
became President, The same i.- <lb/>
true of Tyler's children by hi- Die <lb/>
who died while be was In <lb/>
lice. The seven by bis <lb/>
wife were born after Ilia re <lb/>
lo the V <lb/>
been stripped buried <lb/>
six inches of soil the <lb/>
Whom mil <lb/>
had I it He vi laud j. <lb/>
In his second term, but back of their homes. <lb/>
Roosevelt all the records however, refused to have the <lb/>
in this particular, having an bodies dog up, claiming that <lb/>
half dozen of happy, healthy, was yet to return. until <lb/>
loving Louis this morning did give up all <lb/>
Globe Democrat. hope and allow the undertaker to <lb/>
j raise the bodies and bury them in <lb/>
There is nu amazing difference <lb/>
sometimes between the valuation <lb/>
of property when Haled for <lb/>
and when reported to a mer- <lb/>
agency as a basis for credit. <lb/>
The most difference in <lb/>
such valuations recently emu- lo <lb/>
the of Ibis writer. A <lb/>
certain corporation recently organ <lb/>
lo this Stale reported ii- prop- <lb/>
to n mercantile agency as be <lb/>
lug worth <lb/>
property is assessed for tax- <lb/>
a valuation f <lb/>
Chatham Record. <lb/>
Comment is unnecessary. <lb/>
Landmark express <lb/>
opinion all lax returns <lb/>
should I a published. The more <lb/>
i I he cemetery properly. <lb/>
Toe cure of a case of tetanus, or <lb/>
lockjaw, by an anti-toxin is of <lb/>
very great Importance to <lb/>
A Brooklyn boy who had stepped <lb/>
on the proverbial rusty nail was at- <lb/>
lucked this hitherto incurable <lb/>
malady. surgeons injected <lb/>
into brain a which was- <lb/>
intended to destroy the lock jaw <lb/>
in a short time the ilia- <lb/>
leasing symptoms disappeared. <lb/>
There is ever;, reason to hope for <lb/>
complete recovery. Since we have <lb/>
robbed diphtheria of most of its <lb/>
terror lbs use of an anti-toxin, <lb/>
iii been shown that <lb/>
i- also amenable to that <lb/>
treatment we hate the strongest <lb/>
reasons for believing that <lb/>
THAT I AM STILL CARRYING <lb/>
UP-TO DATE OP <lb/>
AN <lb/>
v ill come under similar mastery. <lb/>
Philadelphia Record. <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Shoes <lb/>
Hats, Shirt, Hardware <lb/>
Tinware, <lb/>
we think more we Bit <lb/>
convinced that If law required I <lb/>
tho publication of all tax <lb/>
once n would boa <lb/>
among the ,,., ,,.,.,.,. , <lb/>
who keep back a part. for weakening the <lb/>
The pious who dividing the <lb/>
are worth nothing for the remission of <lb/>
lime, bill who swear <lb/>
A OF OTHER THING <lb/>
WHICH I aM UNABLE TO MENTION <lb/>
Coma to see mo for your next Barrel of Flour or Pork. <lb/>
Yours to please- <lb/>
Jas. B. White. <lb/>
the., worth to obtain <lb/>
good ratings in commercial <lb/>
would expos- <lb/>
Landmark, <lb/>
How Pew Escape <lb/>
Toothache , <lb/>
I'm. Davis <lb/>
ii Instantly n lived or In which <lb/>
hi <lb/>
tort., <lb/>
acts like magic. it moment <lb/>
ant Rt ii At ii twit<lb/>
and Ho, <lb/>
penalties. The Governor of North <lb/>
Carolina has devised a means of <lb/>
making surreptitious mercy <lb/>
cult by <lb/>
ail applications bl pardon con- <lb/>
be duly advertised in <lb/>
advance the newspapers of the <lb/>
it which <lb/>
crime was <lb/>
This is an innovation <lb/>
be advantageously in- <lb/>
In <lb/>
I Record.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018554_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
N. C. <lb/>
D. J. Ed. <lb/>
at the Poet Office at <lb/>
Greenville, N. C, m Second Class <lb/>
Mall Matter. <lb/>
OCTOBER 1901. <lb/>
OF in <lb/>
BOYHOOD. <lb/>
T. O. <lb/>
Hie sister, an interesting old <lb/>
lady, was the oracle of the neigh- <lb/>
in household affairs, <lb/>
all the medicinal herbs do <lb/>
remedies and could tell you <lb/>
the exact date of every death <lb/>
or marriage that had ever <lb/>
in the circle of her acquaintance. <lb/>
She also a firm believer in <lb/>
signs, omens, and the supernatural <lb/>
generally, and used to relate how <lb/>
going alone through a field of tall <lb/>
rye one day she was suddenly con- <lb/>
fronted by a neighbor who vanish- <lb/>
ed to her astonishment <lb/>
and fright, and on reaching home <lb/>
nervous and excited she was told <lb/>
in reply to her story that the per- <lb/>
son she had seen was and had <lb/>
been confined to his bed over a <lb/>
week. Now from a person of less <lb/>
credulity this would have <lb/>
been received with many grains of <lb/>
allowance. But aunt Bond was a <lb/>
truthful, sensible gen- <lb/>
knew what she was about. <lb/>
Yet after all she may have been <lb/>
mistaken. And it has even been <lb/>
suggested that instead of <lb/>
a neighbor it might have been toe <lb/>
shade of some ancient love, this <lb/>
particular time ard place having <lb/>
been selected to claim a coveted <lb/>
kiss she bad refused in the days of <lb/>
Lang Sync. <lb/>
In the two story house on the lot <lb/>
adjoining Mr. Lawrence, Mis. <lb/>
James Hanrahan, widowed mother <lb/>
of Wat Hanrahan, Jr., and James <lb/>
Hanrahan, lived at one time. It <lb/>
was here her beautiful daughter, <lb/>
Kate, died. As you proceed up <lb/>
Water street on the further corner <lb/>
lot at the cross street stood Mr. <lb/>
Walter store dwell- <lb/>
Gorham and afterwards John Mark- <lb/>
Bond, an older brother of uncle <lb/>
Wilie, did business. And Mr. <lb/>
the other corner had his <lb/>
store and dwelling. The dwelling <lb/>
is the house which it is said <lb/>
Washington was entertained on his <lb/>
tour through the South after his <lb/>
term as Mr. <lb/>
Bernard was a successful business <lb/>
clever and sociable, a <lb/>
most delightful story teller, and <lb/>
with that peculiar <lb/>
and gesture common to <lb/>
the French he was enabled to invest <lb/>
even an ordinary incident with <lb/>
more than ordinary interest. His <lb/>
of bis old friends, <lb/>
and were particular- <lb/>
At the next corner on Water <lb/>
street the street leading to the <lb/>
river stood an old building known <lb/>
as the Whitley store on the <lb/>
opposite side of the street the <lb/>
Whitley dwelling was said <lb/>
to be haunted by foul spirits and <lb/>
long time <lb/>
The gave it wide berth <lb/>
at night and many a wild story <lb/>
was circulated about unusual noises <lb/>
heard between midnight <lb/>
day, but this was exploded <lb/>
by Mr. Thus. B. Nelson who re- <lb/>
paired the building and occupied <lb/>
it with his family. The Whitley <lb/>
store was considered a desirable <lb/>
stand for business before the big <lb/>
bridge was built, which was prob <lb/>
ably about 1890, and the store <lb/>
occasionally occupied when the <lb/>
bridge was repaired, it being <lb/>
the street leading to the let- <lb/>
Sylvester Brown, inn of <lb/>
Jackey, was the last person I <lb/>
remember to have done business <lb/>
there. He lived the building <lb/>
and died there, and also his wife, a <lb/>
sister of Mr. II. of <lb/>
-Sew York. <lb/>
Mr. Price had a store <lb/>
tit the bridge on the street leading <lb/>
to the river, and kept a handsome <lb/>
stoic for that day. He did a large <lb/>
business at one time, particularly <lb/>
with the ladies, with whom he was <lb/>
a great favorite, and his memory <lb/>
is still green with me as a valued <lb/>
friend of my father's His <lb/>
old servants, Isaac <lb/>
were notables. Nearly opposite <lb/>
Mr. Price and nearer the bridge <lb/>
Mr. Henry C. Jordan <lb/>
They are all gone They are all <lb/>
gone <lb/>
t u r I list be Um proud <lb/>
Id bloom, <lb/>
And many be to <lb/>
Have been many a year <lb/>
On the <lb/>
the corner across the street <lb/>
what is now the Episcopal church <lb/>
lot, in a little two room house, <lb/>
Buff, gun smith, as his sign <lb/>
indicated, lived and worked at his <lb/>
trade. But l do not <lb/>
ever to have seen his shop door <lb/>
He had no family <lb/>
bis name expressed character <lb/>
perfectly. the rear of this lot <lb/>
was a public cemetery on one corn- <lb/>
of which stood, and probably <lb/>
still stands, the old Methodist <lb/>
church. The scene of many an <lb/>
old lime revival, none of mod- <lb/>
to make and repair bug <lb/>
Ac. He was a friend <lb/>
of Mr. Buff and famous in all the <lb/>
county around for his skill in cur <lb/>
balking But Pete was <lb/>
a bachelor and being encumbered <lb/>
with debt he left one night to try <lb/>
his fortune in a new field and was <lb/>
never heard of afterwards. <lb/>
At the next street, where Nelson <lb/>
Brothers afterwards had their car <lb/>
factory, Mr. Henry <lb/>
manufactured cotton gins <lb/>
when there were but two other <lb/>
In country. Mr. <lb/>
lived the bill on opposite <lb/>
side of the street. His wife was a <lb/>
daughter of Dr. of Kin- <lb/>
an accomplished lady. She <lb/>
is remembered us is alto her sister, <lb/>
Eliza by all the old <lb/>
, On the lot the factory <lb/>
people arc continually warned <lb/>
bearing date some <lb/>
seventeens, probably <lb/>
The the lot <lb/>
adjoining the Evans place is one of <lb/>
the old and a long time the <lb/>
residence of the venerable Mrs. <lb/>
Sally afterwards of her <lb/>
venerable daughter, Mrs. Hoyt. <lb/>
The house the opposite side <lb/>
of from <lb/>
as you go town is very <lb/>
old. It was here that Mr. Lovejoy, <lb/>
the celebrated teacher, and <lb/>
married bis wife, Miss Virginia <lb/>
Dr. Blow owned and <lb/>
lived in this house at the time of <lb/>
his death. <lb/>
This is the end of the first in- <lb/>
his recollections that <lb/>
Mr. Davis us, but hope to <lb/>
more of <lb/>
against excitement, but always a <lb/>
frequently con- <lb/>
ducted as I remember by a <lb/>
familiar not only <lb/>
Bible the classic poets, but a. <lb/>
. . . ,. , . her sister, of <lb/>
hypnotist with a solemn . , ,; <lb/>
, . . ii Mrs. Annie Evans. The Evans <lb/>
lace and voice. And when heard ., <lb/>
family are probably the oldest <lb/>
Sir. Lewis P. Olds built a hand- <lb/>
some residence which must still lie <lb/>
one of the attractive places of the <lb/>
town. Mr. Olds married Miss <lb/>
Amanda Evans and after her death, <lb/>
Winterville Department. <lb/>
at midnight, into which these <lb/>
meetings always extended, in the <lb/>
weird light of expiring tallow can- <lb/>
dies, midst the mourning, groan <lb/>
log and occasional scream from the <lb/>
half a bundled penitents prone <lb/>
upon the altar rail and <lb/>
benches, he suggested to bis con- <lb/>
are <lb/>
settlers of Greenville and at one <lb/>
time owned nearly all the land upon <lb/>
the town is built. It <lb/>
Alexander Evans, their <lb/>
who gave the ground on <lb/>
of Court is <lb/>
ed, the deed of gift being a square <lb/>
of several acres intended for the <lb/>
the wailing of the tern- <lb/>
pet for the great and they louse and jail, market house <lb/>
separated to their texts <lb/>
a looking old place. <lb/>
The store, a long wooden building He was <lb/>
with double doors at the corner. Fanny, eldest daughter of <lb/>
had been painted red but looked Gorham and <lb/>
old and rusty, and the dwelling <lb/>
also dark and tor bidding was <lb/>
rounded by a high wall so <lb/>
densely shaded in the <lb/>
could scarcely be seen from the <lb/>
street, not more than fifty <lb/>
feet distant. He had a long row <lb/>
of ware houses on the aide of hie <lb/>
lot extending towards the river in <lb/>
which he stored in former <lb/>
days the principle article of pro- <lb/>
dace shipped north. But School- <lb/>
craft traveled through the <lb/>
On the corner lot above Mr. Price, <lb/>
lived, a <lb/>
high so Hearted man, and was said <lb/>
it have been a great wit. <lb/>
Going up bridge street the <lb/>
old landmark is the Masonic <lb/>
in the first story of which the youth <lb/>
town for several generations <lb/>
received their first school lessons, <lb/>
while those more advanced were <lb/>
prepared for the seminary and col- <lb/>
The old building is probably <lb/>
little altered with the lapse of fifty <lb/>
years. Hut the faithful teacher of <lb/>
that day with the blessings her <lb/>
and the plaudits of the <lb/>
community baa long since <lb/>
dark river to the laud of the <lb/>
blessed. <lb/>
And now in soft <lb/>
spring supernal, <lb/>
v. harp in hand <lb/>
T catch notes of Angel Choir, <lb/>
i lining <lb/>
valley published his <lb/>
discoveries, Clark ft Lewis made a <lb/>
report of their survey to Congress, <lb/>
and the Ohio valley and the Erie <lb/>
canal soon changed th granary of <lb/>
the country from the South to <lb/>
West, and old ware houses <lb/>
were left to solitude and decay. <lb/>
What was once a street from <lb/>
Water street to the river had been <lb/>
an impassable gulch for years, bus And who of the pupils could <lb/>
in had gradually moved up answer toll call now I <lb/>
town, and about old Sally Mary E. Hoyt, Sarah <lb/>
and Mr. store Brooks, Untie Hanrahan, Matilda <lb/>
which old man had kept Congleton, Al <lb/>
open from force of habit, the quiet Nobles, John Nobles, <lb/>
disturbed by the butted Noble, Sally Ann Johnston, Mary- <lb/>
breath of his old clerk, Mr. Spain, Ant Carney. William Ann <lb/>
or the customer, was Margaret Hoy Jan. Hoyle, <lb/>
decidedly oppressive. He habit- j Bottle Lawrence, Clarissa Law- <lb/>
remained in bis Nancy it. Lawrence, Manila <lb/>
room as still as a mouse was Nobles, Sue Nobles, Penny Cherry, <lb/>
seldom seen, but the partition Lewis Lawrence, Pater Lawrence, <lb/>
wall there was a little square open Violet Jordan, Davis, Tims. <lb/>
with a slide through which it Davis, Joseph Davis, <lb/>
Is he watched his clerks In j Dick Selby, Henrietta Green, Ann <lb/>
former days. It was in this old , Eliza Baton, Jack John- <lb/>
place he made the largest fortune Brown, Martha Ann <lb/>
ever gathered by man in that j Harrison, Bet tie Sarah <lb/>
day in Eastern Carolina, the found Barker, Barker, <lb/>
of which was laid in Barker, Laura Selby, Nelson, <lb/>
speculation in the war of and Adelaide Clark, Cathrine Moor- <lb/>
He bad been a great traveler Edwin Mooring. <lb/>
in his early days and talked inter- <lb/>
of travels, was ship- <lb/>
wrecked on one occasion and had <lb/>
his feet badly frosted from which <lb/>
he never recovered, and ever after <lb/>
wards avoided the water as much <lb/>
possible and went to New <lb/>
York on horse tack to buy goods. <lb/>
All stores at one time were <lb/>
on Water street tint, was a <lb/>
principal corner. On the opposite <lb/>
are <lb/>
some others whose names me nut <lb/>
II boon sonic bright sum- <lb/>
mer day when air is Idled with <lb/>
the breath of bird notes <lb/>
echo in a cloudless sky, some <lb/>
school girl returning home <lb/>
will mama she saw near <lb/>
old lodge gate a venerable limn <lb/>
leaning on a long staff who looked <lb/>
eagerly into the of all <lb/>
and quotations from <lb/>
Milton and battling in their <lb/>
brains, or with Hymn <lb/>
ringing in their cars. <lb/>
It was to these meeting after <lb/>
denouncing revivals and revivalists <lb/>
in unmeasured terms that my <lb/>
venerable uncle would sometimes <lb/>
go when he could no longer restrain <lb/>
his curiosity in the prevailing ex- <lb/>
and once there with the <lb/>
first pathetic appeal his <lb/>
heart would melt with his red <lb/>
bandanna he wiped his eyes and <lb/>
escaped as soon as possible with a <lb/>
vow that he would never enter that <lb/>
church again. <lb/>
How vividly I recall that tall, <lb/>
square figure, smooth face, <lb/>
long neck, with his clean, stiff, <lb/>
high cut, shirt collar. <lb/>
He was always on move, on <lb/>
business, of course, but he could <lb/>
gather more news and later news <lb/>
than anyone else, a faculty much <lb/>
appreciated by his neighbors who, <lb/>
like the citizens of a certain city, <lb/>
spent much of their time hear- <lb/>
and relating what they heard. <lb/>
Be it remembered that our elders <lb/>
bad rail roads, <lb/>
or And <lb/>
and an Episcopal church and grave <lb/>
yard. <lb/>
Mrs. Evans was a good Christian <lb/>
woman and a prominent member <lb/>
of the church and was <lb/>
frequently called on to pray in <lb/>
church. She lived the old <lb/>
Dutch house nearly opposite <lb/>
Mr. Olds at one end of which stood <lb/>
a large wild cherry tree. She had <lb/>
three sous, Augustus, Stephen B. <lb/>
and Julius, the first two named <lb/>
were graduated physicians. The <lb/>
oldest, Augustus, was a fine <lb/>
men of the genus Homo, tall, <lb/>
erect, broad shouldered, black hair <lb/>
and eyes and strong features, just <lb/>
such a man as you do not often see. <lb/>
Stephens B. was not as handsome <lb/>
as his brother, but said to Is <lb/>
his equal in everything else. They <lb/>
married daughters of Mr. <lb/>
Washington, Julius <lb/>
was afflicted with rheumatism <lb/>
married late life. I never knew <lb/>
bis family. My father lived at <lb/>
one time in the house with the <lb/>
brick across the street. <lb/>
He sold it to Mr. Henry Jordan <lb/>
who sold to Dr. who sold <lb/>
Mrs. Barker. <lb/>
There were three of <lb/>
who <lb/>
married a sister of Mrs. Dr. W. J. <lb/>
who <lb/>
their fathers side were of Dutch <lb/>
descent and related to the <lb/>
notwithstanding had a <lb/>
word and a smile for everybody, <lb/>
he was sufficiently dyspeptic to acceded him after his death in his <lb/>
make his humor as variable as the and ho <lb/>
loud sunshine of April, con- Ur- E- H- <lb/>
he might lie seen In front W Han- <lb/>
a store or at Court house county, think married <lb/>
surrounded by a crowd to whom her <lb/>
be denounced amazing terms Col. <lb/>
some unfortunate individual he the revolutionary patriot and on <lb/>
Imagined his enemy, but always <lb/>
with a peculiar humor that <lb/>
pressed those who heard him that <lb/>
bis cooler would exhaust itself In of <lb/>
words, closing these outbreaks as <lb/>
generally did by predicting some came <lb/>
dire calamity on some member of from Tennessee, if I am <lb/>
his own family and always relating having moved <lb/>
one or more of his stock stories <lb/>
which he was hero and came oat of <lb/>
second best. Seating himself one possibly of <lb/>
day at the dinner table he said, Mr- MaJ <lb/>
Now for the Where- old place, w <lb/>
upon he was handed an oyster stone slab <lb/>
patty, or pie, and laying down his <lb/>
knife and fork with air of a HAVE <lb/>
long and much injured <lb/>
man, he looked up at his wife and <lb/>
said, child, why did you <lb/>
have oysters cooked in this <lb/>
Mr. said I <lb/>
she, thought you liked oyster <lb/>
I don't, no I <lb/>
said be, but he anything <lb/>
more a dish of smoking hot stewed <lb/>
oysters were before him, <lb/>
at he was a little disconcert <lb/>
ad, but recovering himself <lb/>
muttering he said, <lb/>
to me that e ran nod but <lb/>
my own folks know that I like my <lb/>
oysters immediately <lb/>
a dish of fried oysters were <lb/>
before whereupon he turned <lb/>
very red, but broke out into <lb/>
a nearly laugh said lo his wile <lb/>
and daughter, give you <lb/>
have beaten me at my own <lb/>
tin the lot adjoining <lb/>
pal church fronting <lb/>
NEWSY HAPPENINGS AND BUSINESS <lb/>
NOTES. <lb/>
Oct. <lb/>
A first class hand mowing <lb/>
machine almost as good as new can <lb/>
be pin chased cheap by applying at <lb/>
office the A. G. Cox Mfg. <lb/>
Co's. <lb/>
Bertha son, of Little- <lb/>
field, came up Wednesday and his <lb/>
since visiting relatives here. <lb/>
She went to yesterday <lb/>
and returned borne last night's <lb/>
train <lb/>
Hogs For G. Cox has <lb/>
or hogs tine condition to fat <lb/>
ten, weighing from to <lb/>
pounds he will dispose <lb/>
of at market value. <lb/>
Bay has gone lo Kinston <lb/>
to live. <lb/>
Rev. J. B. Jackson, of <lb/>
after spending the past week <lb/>
with bis parents, returned home <lb/>
Wednesday. <lb/>
B. H. Hunsucker Thursday <lb/>
an extended trip through the <lb/>
Southern States. He will combine <lb/>
his business with pleasure and be <lb/>
away for some time. <lb/>
Winterville Farm Fence of Wire <lb/>
cents per yard, Winterville Hog <lb/>
Fence of Wire cents per yard. <lb/>
Durables, lasting and cheaper than <lb/>
the cheapest. The beat investment <lb/>
for farmers is in the Winterville <lb/>
Wire Fence. All orders will be <lb/>
promptly filled. <lb/>
M. or Norfolk, was <lb/>
here Thursday. <lb/>
W. B. went a <lb/>
to Oakley, Friday. <lb/>
Miss Lena Dawson, of <lb/>
is Mrs. J. D. Cox. <lb/>
Send orders for Tar Heel <lb/>
and carts. Every wheel <lb/>
guaranteed. Orders can be filled <lb/>
on G. Cox Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Miss Cox, who has been <lb/>
visiting friends and relatives here <lb/>
for several days returned to La <lb/>
her <lb/>
Mrs. John of <lb/>
left for home Thursday <lb/>
spending some time with Mrs. <lb/>
E. Hamilton. <lb/>
The Tar Heel wagon and cart <lb/>
wheels will last twice as long as <lb/>
any other. them. <lb/>
Claude family <lb/>
went to yesterday. <lb/>
A. G. Cox will pay the highest <lb/>
cash prices for cotton seed. <lb/>
Beef, fresh meats, potatoes and <lb/>
all other good things are greatly in <lb/>
demand here. Bring in. <lb/>
B. F. manning ft Co., have just <lb/>
received a car of hay. <lb/>
from t if Norther Wood <lb/>
n la Vi can <lb/>
lust Returned <lb/>
tide Of the Street Mr. Frank him seemed lo Ambrose had a shop in which <lb/>
from the northern markets where have selected <lb/>
a stock of Velvets, Silks, <lb/>
Feathers, Infant Caps, Ac, in fact, <lb/>
we have everything needed lo put up a stylish <lb/>
hat. Call and see our pattern bats. We have <lb/>
the prettiest we have ever had. Hats trimmed <lb/>
while yon wait. Give us a trial, lo please. <lb/>
ERWIN. <lb/>
Why Yon Should Trade With <lb/>
Frank <lb/>
ABLE TO FIT ANY SIZE OB SHAPE MAN <lb/>
BECAUSE <lb/>
WE HAVE ALL SIZES AND IN STOCK. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
If there is a CROSS <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/>
yon to settle as early as pas- <lb/>
We need what YOU <lb/>
owe as and hope you will not <lb/>
keep us waiting for it. <lb/>
This notice is for those who <lb/>
find the cross mark on their <lb/>
paper. <lb/>
LOCAL REFLECTIONS. <lb/>
WE FIT YOU AS WELL AS THE TAILOR <lb/>
TAILORS MAKE OUR SUITS. <lb/>
WE'RE ENTITLED TO YOUR TRADE <lb/>
because <lb/>
WE'RE A FIRST-CLASS HOUSE, <lb/>
AND KEEP FIRST-CLASS GOODS. <lb/>
YOU SHOULD TRADE HERE <lb/>
BECAUSE <lb/>
YOU SAVE ONE HALF OF CUSTOM TAILOR'S <lb/>
PRICE ON AS WELL MADE SUITS. <lb/>
YOU TAKE NO<lb/>
BECAUSE <lb/>
WE WILL REFUND YOUR MONEY <lb/>
IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED.<lb/>
THE <lb/>
WE THE WORK. <lb/>
And that is the reason the old Greenville la <lb/>
selling so much tobacco. We get the highest price for every <lb/>
pile sold on our floor. The farmers see this, and appreciating <lb/>
work do for them they bring their tobacco. <lb/>
We treat all alike, get the best price every 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. <lb/>
D. SPAIN. <lb/>
., <lb/>
John the world's <lb/>
clown, is yet with Robinson's <lb/>
circus. <lb/>
Mr. Alfred Forbes is a <lb/>
brick sidewalk placed in front of <lb/>
his store. <lb/>
received can crabs, lobsters, <lb/>
pigs feet, ham pork at M. <lb/>
There are <lb/>
ons yet, but folks feel <lb/>
the cold shoulder. <lb/>
A little boy went around among <lb/>
the stores inquiring for banana <lb/>
seed. He wanted to plant some. <lb/>
Let cotton keep a and <lb/>
the farmers everybody else <lb/>
this part of the land will be pleas- <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
The Atlantic Line will sell <lb/>
tickets to Norfolk for the fair to <lb/>
held 15th to 18th, at one fare for <lb/>
the round trip. <lb/>
The town loses a canine <lb/>
occasionally. There are more <lb/>
that could be spared and an over <lb/>
abundance still left. <lb/>
Farm For have for <lb/>
sale a two-horse farm, good land, <lb/>
good condition growing any <lb/>
crops. For terms apply to <lb/>
J. II. Mills, Block Jack, <lb/>
Patrons and pupils of the public <lb/>
schools can get readers, geographies <lb/>
and histories by <lb/>
State at our store. We <lb/>
are the depository for Pitt county. <lb/>
Moore <lb/>
Pitt county Superior Court, for <lb/>
civil oases begins on Monday, 14th. <lb/>
We hope many of sub- <lb/>
will come to town that <lb/>
week prepared to settle with The <lb/>
El wood life <lb/>
of Lee and Jackson, Grimm's fairy <lb/>
stories, Johnson's physical culture, <lb/>
speller, primer, <lb/>
copy books, drawing books, tablets, <lb/>
pencils, slates, crayons, in fact <lb/>
most anything in the way of school <lb/>
supplies, at Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
Attention <lb/>
To officers and members of Co. <lb/>
B. 2nd Regiment N. C. O. <lb/>
You are hereby commanded to <lb/>
be present at your armory, in <lb/>
Greenville, N. C, on Friday, Oct. <lb/>
at o'clock p. m. sharp. <lb/>
Important business. <lb/>
By order of Captain J. T. Smith. <lb/>
J. B. ii vis, 1st <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 five years. <lb/>
About Nov. 1st I will sell all the <lb/>
farm implements, gin, <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 equipment can call any <lb/>
time and do so. <lb/>
John <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
To White Teachers. <lb/>
The Public Examination will be <lb/>
held on Friday October 11th. All <lb/>
persons who desire to examined <lb/>
during present year will be <lb/>
examined day. This <lb/>
be the last examination this year. <lb/>
All who attended institute at <lb/>
Winterville bring a <lb/>
doctor's certificate that they were <lb/>
kept from attending by sickness of <lb/>
themselves or may be ex- <lb/>
October 1901. <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Co. Supt. Schools. <lb/>
To Colored <lb/>
Every colored in the <lb/>
who expects to teach on ring <lb/>
the present school year will be ex <lb/>
on Saturday Oct. <lb/>
will be the last opportunity to be <lb/>
examined. All will be ex <lb/>
before they can teach. <lb/>
October <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Co. Schools. <lb/>
V. came in Thursday <lb/>
J. C. went to <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Joel Patrick, <lb/>
Grifton spent today here. <lb/>
H. A. Gilliam, of came <lb/>
down Wednesday evening. <lb/>
Ex-Gov. T. J. Jarvis returned <lb/>
this morning from Raleigh. <lb/>
H. M. came In <lb/>
day evening from Norfolk. <lb/>
J. J. returned <lb/>
day evening from Parmele. <lb/>
Miss Higgs returned this <lb/>
morning from a visit to Kinston. <lb/>
M. L. Eure, of Nor- <lb/>
folk, has been spending the last <lb/>
few days here. <lb/>
Brown, representing the <lb/>
Oxford Orphan Friend, was here <lb/>
today in the Interest of the paper. <lb/>
Friday, October 1901. <lb/>
Rev. D. left this morn- <lb/>
for Pantego. <lb/>
Edward Mathews left Thursday <lb/>
evening for Kinston. <lb/>
J. Thursday <lb/>
evening from Weldon. <lb/>
J W. Higgs returned this morn- <lb/>
from Seven Springs. <lb/>
Mrs. Ola Forbes returned this <lb/>
morning from n visit to Grifton. <lb/>
Mrs. A. J. Griffin left this morn- <lb/>
for Washington to visit <lb/>
Miss Matilda returned <lb/>
this morning from n visit to Win- <lb/>
Mrs. Nellie of Norfolk, <lb/>
arrived today to visit Mrs. J. B. <lb/>
Cherry. <lb/>
S. B. Wilson and Miss <lb/>
returned Thursday evening <lb/>
from Conetoe. <lb/>
V. J. Lee, of Norfolk, who has <lb/>
been spending some days here, left <lb/>
this morning. <lb/>
Mrs. J. B. Cherry returned <lb/>
Thursday evening from New York, <lb/>
Buffalo and Baltimore. <lb/>
E. S. Phelps and wife left this <lb/>
morning to attend the <lb/>
Association in Washington <lb/>
Ike returned Thursday <lb/>
evening from Baltimore and New <lb/>
York where he has been to <lb/>
chase now goods. <lb/>
Little Miss Myrtle and Susie <lb/>
Warren, came in <lb/>
Thursday evening to visit their <lb/>
grandmother, Mrs. S. B. Wilson <lb/>
William of is <lb/>
here advertising the great carnival <lb/>
that comes off Richmond <lb/>
7th to 12th. It will be a great <lb/>
affair. <lb/>
There is certainly no traveling <lb/>
exhibition America, perhaps in <lb/>
the world, which presents enter- <lb/>
so varied, so attractive <lb/>
so multitudinous as do John <lb/>
Robinson's Ten Combined Great <lb/>
Shows. Hints of a <lb/>
more complete has <lb/>
never been seen. Poetical and en- <lb/>
chanting scenes never before <lb/>
equaled arc witnessed the sub <lb/>
lime h <lb/>
and Queen of Sheba. <lb/>
act the pro- <lb/>
gramme is a revelation to the <lb/>
She finest specimens of horse <lb/>
in world, the highest <lb/>
aerialists in the circus profession, <lb/>
all the champion riders, both mile <lb/>
and female. finest specimens <lb/>
of the cutest ponies in the world. <lb/>
The grandest specialties ever pro <lb/>
The clowns on <lb/>
earth are with the Robinson <lb/>
Shows. to <lb/>
Oct. <lb/>
John Shows. <lb/>
John Robinson not only offers to <lb/>
the best series of circus <lb/>
performances, the finest and most <lb/>
elaborately equipped <lb/>
and the largest and most <lb/>
menagerie, but has added <lb/>
this year to his already superlative <lb/>
series of exhibitions the grand bib- <lb/>
spectacle of Solomon, His <lb/>
Temple the Queen of Sheba, <lb/>
and the finest scenic, <lb/>
and lyric spectacle <lb/>
that has ever invited public pat- <lb/>
Our citizens will soon have the <lb/>
unity witnessing these <lb/>
grand exhibitions, for they are to <lb/>
be in Greenville <lb/>
BUCK JACK ITEMS. <lb/>
N. C, Oct. 1901. <lb/>
Mrs. Mary Ann Cannon and Miss <lb/>
Minnie spent Monday here. <lb/>
The little infant of Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
Galloway was buried Moo <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Little Miss Bases Mills went <lb/>
down in county Sunday to <lb/>
visit her father and returned Sun- <lb/>
day evening. <lb/>
Miss Dixon lust <lb/>
week here visiting her parents. <lb/>
Jodie has been quite sick <lb/>
for the past few days. <lb/>
Mrs. Gusty Mills little Lula <lb/>
left this morning for Clay Root to <lb/>
be at the bedside of Mrs. <lb/>
daughter who is seriously ill with <lb/>
fever. <lb/>
Mrs. L. II. White who has been <lb/>
quite is some better. <lb/>
Mrs. A in am is serious- <lb/>
ill with fever. <lb/>
Mrs. Kiln Mills is a visit to <lb/>
her parents near Greenville. <lb/>
Miss Lucy White is quite sick <lb/>
with <lb/>
From Factory to Consumer, No middle mans <lb/>
Marriage <lb/>
Register of Deeds, T. R. Moore, <lb/>
issued the following marriage <lb/>
since last <lb/>
White <lb/>
C. H. and Nannie <lb/>
Belcher. <lb/>
Colored <lb/>
Ed Gatlin and Eliza Little. <lb/>
John H. Daniel and Lizzie Dix- <lb/>
on. <lb/>
Fred Foreman and Annie <lb/>
William Pitt and Annie Brown. <lb/>
The total number of licenses is- <lb/>
sued during September was of <lb/>
which were for whites and <lb/>
for <lb/>
Rural Free Delivery Routes. <lb/>
Postmaster J. gives <lb/>
the following report for the month <lb/>
of September of the four rural fret- <lb/>
delivery routes supplied from the <lb/>
office, showing <lb/>
of pieces of mail collected and <lb/>
the number delivered on each route <lb/>
during <lb/>
No. delivered <lb/>
1381. No. Si, <lb/>
No. de- <lb/>
livered No. <lb/>
delivered <lb/>
The routes have been in opera- <lb/>
only one month and this is a <lb/>
good record. The people are well <lb/>
pleased with the service of the <lb/>
routes which arc proving a great <lb/>
convenience. <lb/>
O. J. Carroll Dead. <lb/>
Mr. O. J. Carroll died suddenly <lb/>
Friday Horning at Morehead City, <lb/>
while sitting on the porch of the <lb/>
House talking to n <lb/>
of people there. II is thought <lb/>
hi died of heart disease. <lb/>
During Cleveland's second term <lb/>
Mr. Carroll was States <lb/>
Marshall for district of Eastern <lb/>
Carol inn. <lb/>
Mr. Carroll has spent most of his <lb/>
life as traveling salesman for <lb/>
u houses, and had strong <lb/>
friends in every he visited, <lb/>
who will hear of his death with <lb/>
Free Press, <lb/>
II <lb/>
Died. <lb/>
Mrs. M. E. Fort, aged years, <lb/>
died Friday afternoon, at <lb/>
o'clock, of gastritis, at the home <lb/>
of her son, Mr. II. P. Fort, after <lb/>
an nines of about three weeks. <lb/>
Kinston Free Press, 4th. <lb/>
Mis. Fort was the mother of <lb/>
Mrs. J. T. Matthews, of Greenville, <lb/>
who was with her at the time of <lb/>
death. <lb/>
worth choice goods <lb/>
at prices.<lb/>
Clotting, Notions, Shoe <lb/>
AT HALF THEIR K. CUSTOMERS WILL GET THE BENEFITS. <lb/>
SIZES <lb/>
TO YEARS, <lb/>
A Wonderful Sale. <lb/>
On at the Farmers <lb/>
Warehouse Mrs. Edwards <lb/>
sold her crop of tobacco off of <lb/>
half acre and it brought prices that <lb/>
are wonderful. The prices were as <lb/>
pound- at f II; at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at at This <lb/>
was an average of something above <lb/>
and gave Mrs. Edwards a clear <lb/>
check of 9172.80. Just think of <lb/>
that much acre, <lb/>
and it will convince you that it <lb/>
pays to raise good tobacco and sell <lb/>
it at the Farmers Warehouse. <lb/>
September Tobacco Sales. <lb/>
The sales of tobacco the <lb/>
market for the month of <lb/>
September, as reported by Mr. M. <lb/>
A. Allen, Secretary of the Board <lb/>
of Trade, were pounds. <lb/>
For two months August and <lb/>
September, the sales were <lb/>
pounds. <lb/>
and Suits, Price<lb/>
Sizes to Year.-.<lb/>
I I <lb/>
US <lb/>
is <lb/>
Mens Clothing. <lb/>
and Suits,<lb/>
Odd Coats. <lb/>
and Coats <lb/>
and t <lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
-18 <lb/>
Boys Knee Pants. <lb/>
and kind, sixes to <lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
add <lb/>
Mens <lb/>
and H tin l <lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
nod <lb/>
These prices for cash s <lb/>
No goods charged at these prices. <lb/>
MENS A BOYS DRESS <lb/>
Dozen. <lb/>
lo Shirts now <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
pieces. <lb/>
A full line to <lb/>
E i now going at <lb/>
biggest value offered. <lb/>
UNDERWEAR. <lb/>
and kind now <lb/>
and<lb/>
STEEL <lb/>
ED HANDLED. <lb/>
to kind, <lb/>
price <lb/>
.-. shoes. <lb/>
Mens l shoes new <lb/>
l pal lips <lb/>
Big slink on hand. <lb/>
You must see them. <lb/>
Sample <lb/>
hats for <lb/>
ice. <lb/>
All Linen Window <lb/>
ALL <lb/>
Regular price <lb/>
NOW <lb/>
price <lb/>
Bought Enough Goods For Ten Small Stores. <lb/>
COME. <lb/>
El <lb/>
Clocks and Watches. <lb/>
watches now <lb/>
s . ti<lb/>
day clock at prices. <lb/>
DRESS GOODS. <lb/>
All shades, all kinds, nil quality. The <lb/>
at tin- immense stock. Come Me its and <lb/>
your neighbors, or tell them about us. <lb/>
Silks -1007 <lb/>
From the cheapest to the best <lb/>
All qualities. Don't fail to net <lb/>
of choice patterns. <lb/>
Ladies Muslin <lb/>
to wear, Ask our saleslady iii department. <lb/>
to show them to you. Petticoats, Drawers. G <lb/>
at than cost of material. <lb/>
The cheapest and beat line we <lb/>
have ever bad. Special value <lb/>
from to <lb/>
Others sell cheap calico. Watch <lb/>
color. They will run be- <lb/>
All Linen Table <lb/>
Worth now <lb/>
Carpels. Matting. Floor OH Cloth <lb/>
Biggest Hue town. All Kinds. <lb/>
re town. <lb/>
Woman Hosiery. O <lb/>
Al sizes, colors and <lb/>
from the mills. This is a rare <lb/>
opportunity for ladies to get a <lb/>
food bargain. <lb/>
Leather <lb/>
quality <lb/>
Bookers. Hull Backs, Cribs, <lb/>
is quality <lb/>
IS Oak Suits; IS Si pies. <lb/>
Carriages, Gel <lb/>
Bar <lb/>
wide <lb/>
Fruit The <lb/>
tor's Mills, <lb/>
without ticket, yard <lb/>
C. T <lb/>
The Big Store <lb/>
Greenville, N C. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018554_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Tuesday, October 15th. <lb/>
DAILY EXPENSES. NEW INVESTED. <lb/>
Coming in its own palace special trains. 77th year of the oldest, biggest best show <lb/>
on earth. The Pioneers and of Tented Amusement Institutions. <lb/>
JOHN ROBINSON'S <lb/>
Ten Big Shows All United. <lb/>
St <lb/>
Circuses, Menageries, Roman Hippodrome, Combined with the Grand <lb/>
Biblical Production and the Queen <lb/>
OX an impressive and moral and mind elevating scenic <lb/>
with its enchanting ballets, and gorgeous costumes. <lb/>
HI Beautiful Ballet Girls. Men. Women and Horses in the Cast. <lb/>
Carl Herd of Perform- <lb/>
, vii i- x that waits. Elephants that actually play musical <lb/>
instruments. that do everything but talk. <lb/>
Cotton And <lb/>
The Atlanta Constitution calls <lb/>
attention to the fart that when cot- <lb/>
ton was bringing 7-Kc per pound, <lb/>
ribs were selling at 7-8 cents <lb/>
Atlanta, while clear rib sides <lb/>
brought cents and hams 1-4 <lb/>
cents. It <lb/>
a to raise cotton <lb/>
at cents per and trade <lb/>
it a of from to cents <lb/>
per pound for ribs, haul and <lb/>
The best is the old dog- <lb/>
that was vogue in E is tern <lb/>
Carolina years ago. It <lb/>
ran like <lb/>
pound of cotton for a pound <lb/>
of meat is really very dear eat- <lb/>
The man who raises all cotton <lb/>
and no meat <lb/>
Deserves a genteel <lb/>
If it is true that a farmer cannot <lb/>
get along when be gives pound <lb/>
of cotton of it is <lb/>
more than true that he is a bad <lb/>
way he must give <lb/>
more than a of cotton for a <lb/>
pound of meat.- News <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
Mothers who have always so dreaded the <lb/>
approach weather when they hive <lb/>
teething babe, should not forget <lb/>
counteracts of <lb/>
hot weather on children, keeps in <lb/>
healthy condition and make the <lb/>
May, only -V tier at <lb/>
or mall J. M. <lb/>
Loots, Mo. <lb/>
Chill Pills cure dulls and nil <lb/>
malarial That is what they were <lb/>
made for. Cure after other remedies fail <lb/>
No cure, in pay. H bottle. <lb/>
Under the new pension act the <lb/>
pensions may ex- <lb/>
a year, and the total <lb/>
annual pension to each of the four <lb/>
classes may not exceed the follow- <lb/>
1st class, class <lb/>
3rd class MS; 4th class and <lb/>
widows In the special <lb/>
pension tax does not yield <lb/>
a year, the State treasurer is <lb/>
to make up the deficit from the <lb/>
general fund, lint there are near- <lb/>
pensioners under the new <lb/>
act; so many that the maximum <lb/>
can not be paid out of <lb/>
the Auditor Diana says <lb/>
this year's allowances will be <lb/>
boot as follows, 1st class, <lb/>
about 3rd or <lb/>
Hit and widows about Last <lb/>
year the got only 114.80. <lb/>
The of <lb/>
Baltimore, makes an <lb/>
which ought to be special <lb/>
interest to the people of the South . <lb/>
It <lb/>
twenty years ago the <lb/>
Record was <lb/>
with the view to aiding the <lb/>
material of the South. <lb/>
I What has during <lb/>
twenty years what the future <lb/>
has in store to this section will be <lb/>
broadly comprehensively <lb/>
by the foremost authorities of <lb/>
the world a special edition to be <lb/>
issued by the Re- <lb/>
cord of its <lb/>
birthday. <lb/>
will lie the best and most <lb/>
comprehensive publication ever is- <lb/>
sued behalf of any section. This <lb/>
is strong language, but the <lb/>
Record promises that it <lb/>
will be fulfilled. For all time to <lb/>
come it will be a standard <lb/>
reference for the facts and fig- <lb/>
about the South. It will <lb/>
separate and distinct publication <lb/>
from the regular issue of this pa- <lb/>
per, and while reaching all of the <lb/>
regular subscribers of the <lb/>
plans have been <lb/>
perfected to give it a very large <lb/>
additional circulation throughout <lb/>
this country and <lb/>
Pills <lb/>
TOR TORPID LIVER. <lb/>
A torpid liver the whet <lb/>
and <lb/>
SICK HEADACHE, <lb/>
Dyspepsia, Costiveness, <lb/>
Sallow Skin and Piles. <lb/>
better remedy for <lb/>
common diseases than OR. <lb/>
PILLS, as a trial <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
Photographer, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
The lender in work and low prices <lb/>
Nice tor per dozen. <lb/>
Half Cabinets per dozen. <lb/>
All other lines very cheap. Crayon Portraits <lb/>
made any small picture cheap. Nice <lb/>
Frames on hand all the time. Come and <lb/>
examine my work. No trouble to show <lb/>
samples answer questions. The very <lb/>
guaranteed to all. hours <lb/>
to a. I. to n. m. Yours to please, <lb/>
RUDOLPH <lb/>
THE GREENVILLE <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
of <lb/>
Doors, Sash and Blinds, <lb/>
Interior Exterior <lb/>
for Fine Modern Cheap <lb/>
We solicit your patronage and <lb/>
guarantee to give satisfaction in <lb/>
prices. Styles and work. <lb/>
Please send your orders to <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
N. O. <lb/>
YEARS <lb/>
new and novel nets, rare and hair raising races, drove of camels, whole <lb/>
at M Moms, royal tigers, polar bests, school of sen lions, den of s leopards, den of i <lb/>
hyenas, pair of elands, pair horned horses, every known species of antelope, male bareback riders <lb/>
aerial acts, wire acts, troupe of trained ponies, female equestrians <lb/>
ow, inches high, I baby sea lion, Bale hippodrome races, monkey elephant and camel races, <lb/>
against horse races, two bone tandem high jumping hone races two and four horse chariot <lb/>
s, two and four hone standing races. <lb/>
ASTHMA CUBE <lb/>
Relief c. t Cure In all Cases <lb/>
SENT ON RECEIPT OP POSTAL. <lb/>
There nothing like It brings <lb/>
instant relief, even in the Worst cases. It cures when <lb/>
all else tails. <lb/>
The O. F. Wells, of Villa, Ridge, III., says, <lb/>
your bottle of received in good <lb/>
cannot tell how thankful I feel for the <lb/>
good derived from It. I was a stave, with <lb/>
putrid sore throat and asthma Ian I de <lb/>
of ever being cured, I saw your advertise- <lb/>
tor the cute of this dreadful and tormenting <lb/>
asthma, and thought you had <lb/>
yourselves, but resolved to give it a trial. To my <lb/>
astonishment, the trial acted Send me <lb/>
We want to send to every a trial treatment of <lb/>
similar to the one that cured Mr. Wells. We'll send it by mail post- <lb/>
paid, absolutely Pits of Charge, to any sufferer who will write for it, <lb/>
even mi a ; Never mind, though you despairing, however <lb/>
bad your will relieve and cure. The worse <lb/>
case, the more glad we are to send It. Do not delay, write at once, ad- <lb/>
dressing Dr. Bros Medicine Co., East St., N. Y. City. <lb/>
Bold by all Druggists. <lb/>
IN 1806. <lb/>
J. W. k CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Factors and handlers of <lb/>
Bagging, Ties and Bags. <lb/>
Correspondence and shipments <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE <lb/>
Grand Free Street Parade <lb/>
bands of music <lb/>
life and drum corps, <lb/>
chime of bells, BO cars and glided dens, tableaux traps, horses, no miniature <lb/>
ponies, steam drawn by ponies driven one herds of elephants. Excursions on <lb/>
all lines of travel. <lb/>
Greenville, Tuesday, October 15th. <lb/>
Three Times The Value <lb/>
OF ANY <lb/>
ONE EASIER. <lb/>
ONE <lb/>
Agents wanted in all unoccupied <lb/>
territory. <lb/>
WILSON, <lb/>
Manufacturing Company, <lb/>
Atlanta, Ga. <lb/>
For sale by <lb/>
S. T WHITE, <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
The undersigned having duly qualified <lb/>
before the Superior court clerk of MM I <lb/>
county of the estate of <lb/>
Sarah L. deceased, la hereby I <lb/>
given to all persona Indebted to the j <lb/>
to immediate payment to the under-1 <lb/>
signed, and all having claims <lb/>
against the estate arc to present the <lb/>
same to the undersigned payment; <lb/>
within twelve from the date of thin <lb/>
notice, or it will be plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
Thin 4th day of September, 1901. <lb/>
JAMES L. SMITH, <lb/>
A I in of the Estate of Sarah I . <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
The Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt <lb/>
county, issued Letters of <lb/>
n to me, the undersigned, on tho 2nd <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, and to all creditors of said <lb/>
estate to present their claims, properly <lb/>
to the undersigned, within <lb/>
twelve months alter the date of this notice, <lb/>
or this notice will be plead In bar of their <lb/>
Thia the 2nd day of Sept, 1901. <lb/>
JUDITH <lb/>
on the estate of JOSEPH A. <lb/>
Steamer My res leave <lb/>
ton daily at A. M. for <lb/>
ville, leave Greenville daily at <lb/>
M. for Washington. <lb/>
Steamer leaves <lb/>
Greenville Mondays, Wednesday <lb/>
and Fridays at <lb/>
leave Tarboro for Greenville <lb/>
Tuesdays, and Saturdays <lb/>
at A. M. carries freight only. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
Steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore, <lb/>
New York and <lb/>
ton, and for all points for the West <lb/>
with railroads at Norfolk. <lb/>
Shippers should order freight by <lb/>
the Old Dominion Co. from <lb/>
New York; Clyde Line from <lb/>
Bay Line from Baltimore, <lb/>
and Line from <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. SON, <lb/>
Washington, N. O <lb/>
CHERRY, <lb/>
Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt <lb/>
Count, having issued Letters cf <lb/>
to me, undersigned on the 9th <lb/>
i i . the estate of Lynn <lb/>
Tripp, deceased, notice is hereby given to <lb/>
all persons indebted to the estate to make <lb/>
immediate payment to <lb/>
to all of said estate to present <lb/>
their claims properly authenticated, to the <lb/>
undersigned, within twelve months after <lb/>
the date of this notice, or will be <lb/>
in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
This the 9th day of August, 1901. <lb/>
TRIPP, <lb/>
A of the estate of Tripp <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
SALE OF TOWN LOT. <lb/>
By virtue of decree of the Superior <lb/>
Court of Pitt enmity, made on the 2nd day <lb/>
cf September 1901, m a special pro- <lb/>
pending, entitled F. O. <lb/>
James Beverly guardian <lb/>
and other, Monday October <lb/>
before the court door in Green- <lb/>
ville, at public sale to the bid- <lb/>
for cash, the certain lot or parcel of <lb/>
laud situated in the town of Greenville <lb/>
described us follows; in the plot <lb/>
of town as part of lot bounded on <lb/>
the North second street, on the by <lb/>
Green it reel, on the lot form- <lb/>
owned and used as <lb/>
nil on the WM by the Pearce lot, and <lb/>
the home place of the Isle D. <lb/>
containing one fourth of an <lb/>
sere more or lens. <lb/>
This the 4th day of September, 1901. <lb/>
ALEX. L, BLOW, <lb/>
North Carolina, Pitt county, Greenville <lb/>
to <lb/>
Hooker <lb/>
N. k Co an <lb/>
Express Co. <lb/>
The defendant, D. N. A- Co., will <lb/>
notice that n in the above <lb/>
entitled action was against <lb/>
the r, I <lb/>
by C. a of the Peace <lb/>
of Pitt county, North Carolina, for the sum <lb/>
plaintiff by contract <lb/>
which is returnable before said <lb/>
his at in <lb/>
county on the 7th day of November, 1901. <lb/>
The defendant will also take notice <lb/>
that a warrant of attachment issued <lb/>
by said Justice on the day of <lb/>
1901, certain property of the <lb/>
said now In tho of the <lb/>
which U returnable before the <lb/>
aid Justice at the time and place above <lb/>
named for the of the <lb/>
when and where the said defendant is re- <lb/>
to and answer or demur to <lb/>
the complaint, or the relief demanded will <lb/>
TREK <lb/>
This Sept. SO, <lb/>
S. C. <lb/>
Cotton Ties always <lb/>
on i <lb/>
Fresh goods kepi <lb/>
hand. Country produce <lb/>
sold. A trial will you. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
W, R, WHICHARD <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Whichard, N. C. <lb/>
The Stock complete in every de <lb/>
and prices as low as the <lb/>
lowest. Highest market price <lb/>
paid for country produce. <lb/>
By virtue of h decree of the Superior <lb/>
court, made by His Honor H. Hoke <lb/>
May term, 1901, of Pitt <lb/>
court in the case of and <lb/>
wife i <lb/>
tee of Hickory Hill church, the undersigned <lb/>
before the <lb/>
court door hi Greenville on Monday <lb/>
Hit 4th of November, 1901, the follow- <lb/>
described or lot of laud <lb/>
in Town of Greenville, and <lb/>
known the Hickory Hill colored <lb/>
church o, us n part of lot No. Be- <lb/>
at the corner of and on <lb/>
with the line of <lb/>
loll and Went feet, then North a <lb/>
line parallel with Greene <lb/>
feet, thence a direct line parallel with <lb/>
the first Due with <lb/>
Greene to beginning, containing <lb/>
2-8 <lb/>
This Oct. lat, K. G. <lb/>
notice rue <lb/>
Insurable Public. <lb/>
ATTENTION <lb/>
Mr. John C. General for <lb/>
North Carolina and Virginia, of that <lb/>
Known and Popular Company, <lb/>
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT <lb/>
Life Insurance Co., of <lb/>
Desires to to Its large number <lb/>
policy holders, and to the public <lb/>
of <lb/>
will now II. In <lb/>
mid from this date will issue its <lb/>
and desirable policies, to all <lb/>
the very best Insurance in the best <lb/>
life company in the world. <lb/>
If the local agent your town not <lb/>
yet completed arrangements, <lb/>
State Agent, N. O. <lb/>
Paid policy <lb/>
Live, reliable energetic wanted at <lb/>
once to work for the <lb/>
Old <lb/>
J. L <lb/>
------DEALER IN------ <lb/>
A GENERAL LINE OF <lb/>
Also a nice Line of Hardware. <lb/>
COME TO BEE ME. <lb/>
J. R. COREY. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Buyers and Brokers in <lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, and <lb/>
Private Wires to New York, <lb/>
Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
The Commoner <lb/>
WILLIAM J. BRYN, <lb/>
Editor Publisher, <lb/>
Lincoln, <lb/>
in Advance. <lb/>
One Year Biz Months <lb/>
Three Sing. Copy <lb/>
No traveling canvassers are em- <lb/>
ployed. Subscriptions taken at <lb/>
The office. The Semi- <lb/>
Weekly and <lb/>
will be together <lb/>
one year for or The Daily <lb/>
and <lb/>
one year for payable ad-<lb/>
Writs A <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector <lb/>
D. J. EDITOR <lb/>
TRUTH TO <lb/>
VOL. <lb/>
IT <lb/>
WE <lb/>
GREENVILLE; PITT COUNTY, OCTOBER <lb/>
Twice a M <lb/>
-AT <lb/>
ARE KNOCKING <lb/>
AYDEN <lb/>
as. <lb/>
THEM <lb/>
For Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Hals, Caps, Shoes, Trunks, <lb/>
Boys and Mens Gents Furnishings, Gloves, <lb/>
a big line of Baby Caps, Cloaks, Mitts and <lb/>
Lome to see us. Every day a bargain day and everything a <lb/>
Your friends, <lb/>
W. T. LEE CO. <lb/>
The <lb/>
RECORD RESULT OF <lb/>
the highest rate of interest consistent with safety. <lb/>
Rigid economy of management. <lb/>
ii . from a selection of risks and <lb/>
limiting its business to the United States <lb/>
It will be to your to see what we do for you before <lb/>
placing life insurance. , <lb/>
Good territory open for in North Carolina. <lb/>
T. ARCHIBALD CARY, General <lb/>
For and North Carolina, <lb/>
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, <lb/>
E. Main Street, Richmond, Va. <lb/>
Ayden, N. C, Oct. <lb/>
Graham Guilford, of <lb/>
was in Wednesday. <lb/>
J. J. came down fro-n <lb/>
Parmele Wednesday night. He <lb/>
took the train Thursday for Green- <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
J. L. Fleming, of Greenville, <lb/>
spent night here. <lb/>
Miss Pearle Callis, the music <lb/>
teacher at the F. W. B. T. Semi <lb/>
nary, went home Friday morning <lb/>
to see her brother who is very ill, <lb/>
N. R. Robinson, Nash, was <lb/>
town Friday. <lb/>
Frank Hart went to <lb/>
Thursday night. <lb/>
H. M. of Norfolk, pass <lb/>
through Friday. <lb/>
Win. of <lb/>
Friday in town. <lb/>
Geo. Bounds, who has been here <lb/>
for the past few weeks, left Friday <lb/>
for Washington. <lb/>
L. II. Cox, of Johnson's Mills, <lb/>
spent Sunday town, <lb/>
M. M. Sauls wife left <lb/>
day for Richmond and <lb/>
Misses Minnie and Esther Can- <lb/>
were in town <lb/>
W. It, Edwards and family spent <lb/>
in county. <lb/>
The revival at C. C. closed <lb/>
day night. There was a large con <lb/>
at every service. <lb/>
person united with the church. <lb/>
Smith, of Greenville, spent <lb/>
town with friends <lb/>
Miss Nancy Coward returned <lb/>
home Sunday evening. <lb/>
Miss Pearle Evans. <lb/>
was in town Saturday <lb/>
I. went up to Green- <lb/>
ville this morning. <lb/>
Rev. Mr. Melton left this morn- <lb/>
for Wilson. <lb/>
Miss Rosa returned <lb/>
to Sunday. <lb/>
C. Bobbins, of Winston, <lb/>
Friday <lb/>
G. J. Cherry, of Parmele, came <lb/>
down Friday <lb/>
Miss Daisy was ml <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Prof. Hodges has been <lb/>
on the tuck list for several days. <lb/>
DRESS GOODS. <lb/>
Among the anticipated pleasures of the coming <lb/>
season every lady should promise herself the <lb/>
delightful experience of a visit i <lb/>
Our Beautiful Dress Goods <lb/>
and Trimming Department <lb/>
Every purchase made therein under <lb/>
present conditions of price is a <lb/>
PAYING INVESTMENT. <lb/>
U e have a line of the newest novelties and <lb/>
latest idea. I coloring and designs these new <lb/>
styles are models of beauty. We know we never <lb/>
offered more for the money than do at the <lb/>
present lime. <lb/>
Our Stock is Thoroughly tip to- <lb/>
and <lb/>
Daughter <lb/>
and all the <lb/>
Ladies that <lb/>
Our FALL <lb/>
V OPENING of <lb/>
w ill take place on <lb/>
Tuesday and Wednesday, <lb/>
date in Qualities and Styles <lb/>
October 1st 2nd. <lb/>
OUR RALEIGH LETTER. <lb/>
in Every Department <lb/>
J. GO, <lb/>
Admit Trade Marks. <lb/>
FALL SELLING. <lb/>
Putting it Strong. <lb/>
And why not When the merchandise and prices will <lb/>
back up the statements made concerning them, we <lb/>
have every right to it There is <lb/>
wrong in excellence when the <lb/>
sis is within the bounds of truth, when are <lb/>
given without misrepresentation. <lb/>
Our States Facts. <lb/>
When Jenny receiving <lb/>
her remarkable American ovation, <lb/>
years ago, it wag mentioned <lb/>
at a table where she was entertain- <lb/>
ed that an enterprising Bah mer- <lb/>
chant had already registered a <lb/>
trade mark I'm Lind her- <lb/>
rings. A young girl at the table <lb/>
promptly is a <lb/>
Every trade-mark is a Mines <lb/>
idea. Certainly there was never <lb/>
before such a trade mark impetus <lb/>
las now exists. Owners of every I <lb/>
kind of movable property, whether <lb/>
i vegetable or mineral, are <lb/>
i and registering trade marks. <lb/>
To supply the for <lb/>
about patenting trade-marks, <lb/>
C. A. Co., of Washington, <lb/>
C, have published for free <lb/>
u small of <lb/>
about explain- <lb/>
what may be patented <lb/>
as a trade mink, with <lb/>
rial illustrations of man trade <lb/>
marks procured for their clients, <lb/>
and in trademark eases. <lb/>
X. <lb/>
None genuine unless <lb/>
Red Cross is an label <lb/>
Don't take a Substitute <lb/>
TO PRODUCE EQUAL OF <lb/>
for <lb/>
Night Sweats and Grippe, and <lb/>
all forms of Malaria. <lb/>
DON'T WAIT TO DIE <lb/>
SPEND CENTS AND BE CURED I <lb/>
CURES RUE TONIC FAMOUS I <lb/>
TRY IT. NO CURE NO pER <lb/>
TO TAKE. <lb/>
HART, <lb/>
Headline <lb/>
abuse head out government <lb/>
and hi- subordinates occupying <lb/>
high in managing the <lb/>
affairs oft be Nation, has and will <lb/>
yet have more effect creating <lb/>
correspondent spent last assassins plan or purpose <lb/>
National Capital, and arrangement, <lb/>
there gathered information of existing form of govern- <lb/>
will serve as for I is than all the <lb/>
several letters J clansmen will <lb/>
will treat of certain Carol- ever manufacture, in this country. <lb/>
tin men measures political-1 in a leas degree, the same is <lb/>
come. i tine Slate politics. <lb/>
I found politicians phi in <lb/>
there, all making love the Bat what I started to say w <lb/>
new President, who seems to be the yellow and <lb/>
entering politicians have not, as yet <lb/>
upon the discharge the name of the <lb/>
duties which lie , Mr. the way <lb/>
and unexpectedly called all that <lb/>
upon to perform less a month could be learned In conversation <lb/>
with many of the Washington<lb/>
have been Informed set of men this <lb/>
during the last half who it is actually possible <lb/>
the and that political boos of <lb/>
were to be more the present <lb/>
or by u be- -and the yellows are <lb/>
bind the u number admit that Mr. <lb/>
have at least enjoyed t i will c President in <lb/>
reputation, though moat cases, persona, while. <lb/>
FOR STEAM SUPPLY. <lb/>
Just facts, something well worth remembering. <lb/>
Counters and tables piled high. Stacks and stacks of <lb/>
mens, boys and youths clothing. Every place <lb/>
and packed with shoes. We can show you to your <lb/>
entire satisfaction. Counter room needed in our <lb/>
goods department. Selling must continue to <lb/>
relieve the pressure. Come early before the best <lb/>
things are gone. All the latest styles weaves in <lb/>
dress goods. Agents for Standard Patterns. <lb/>
KICKS <lb/>
employed by The <lb/>
News have MOW <lb/>
that the exact of population <lb/>
is ten feet <lb/>
north the of Henry <lb/>
in the southeastern corner of <lb/>
Columbus township, <lb/>
county, <lb/>
Parry <lb/>
valuable as a cure for <lb/>
pain cannot tail to be <lb/>
and no family should Tic without it In cue <lb/>
of accident, or attack of dysentery, <lb/>
or cholera Hold every- <lb/>
where. Avoid substitutes, there is but one <lb/>
Perry <lb/>
We have just added Steam Supply to cur and <lb/>
will fell anything in this line very low. Sea us when in want of <lb/>
Globe Angle Valves, Standard Globs <lb/>
Anglo Check Valves, Water Ganges, <lb/>
Oil Cups, Air Cocks, steam Hancock <lb/>
S. Injectors, Cocks. Steam <lb/>
till sizes, Pipe Fitting nil s. <lb/>
LINK OF Packing, Bolt, <lb/>
Bait, Leather Belt, Bait Ac <lb/>
SOLE AGE <lb/>
make no doubt, it rank piece <lb/>
of done tin in. <lb/>
b. up in the Mr, <lb/>
shot some of the <lb/>
journals kept up <lb/>
be will be a <lb/>
candidate to himself and <lb/>
sure to form certain <lb/>
to further the effort to secure <lb/>
the nomination in It is <lb/>
of declaring likely, though, that <lb/>
was the and of of bis own State will given <lb/>
Senator the scat of honor at the table of <lb/>
of and body by j bis political affections. And yet <lb/>
the trusts. Mr. owes <lb/>
you can turn to the dies had be not breed the <lb/>
of at lea-t a few Carolina nomination upon <lb/>
not u old, order to bill Him off as a <lb/>
dud similar assertions against one Presidential candidate, II i <lb/>
of very best men, heel of be would not be today <lb/>
friends to our Southern people, no lime in the future. <lb/>
tilled the Presidential <lb/>
See. And. to personal know- . . . ,, , <lb/>
i i . ., God. to <lb/>
these papers , , ., ,. ,. <lb/>
.,. ,,. ,.,., , which President <lb/>
in his dying hour and <lb/>
which has been on lips of the <lb/>
the week, was <lb/>
written Mrs. Sarah Flower <lb/>
are and most <lb/>
pronounced of those which have <lb/>
lauded the dead President most <lb/>
and paid tributes <lb/>
. , , written Sarah Flower <lb/>
the same time and the ., . <lb/>
, . Adams, who was In 1805, It <lb/>
breath g its . r, , . <lb/>
a record of her own religious <lb/>
or <lb/>
w to t <lb/>
Then- is entirely Inn much of <lb/>
this personal <lb/>
character <lb/>
Harvesting I TIM <lb/>
Garland Cook Stoves. <lb/>
BAKER k M <lb/>
; j <lb/>
experience, and was written as a <lb/>
memorial of answered prayer, <lb/>
probably without any <lb/>
that it would be public service. <lb/>
i was furnished, with thirteen <lb/>
Building, <lb/>
N. <lb/>
, it in i 1.1111 frill in <lb/>
politics, and it ,, . , . , . <lb/>
,,, , ,. , , ,, hymns, to Cunt Fox s <lb/>
to atop, one -hundredth ,.,,,, . , ,, , <lb/>
., , and An- <lb/>
pan tin- ,, . ,, , , <lb/>
,. , hi <lb/>
brought print and on the <lb/>
a-Min-i every tor <lb/>
from Lincoln to <lb/>
was Hue, all of them were , best a <lb/>
grossly of -nice your <lb/>
in <lb/>
long term in h <lb/>
I ,, i. in eta. <lb/>
nary would nave been more m by r tin-stomach <lb/>
keeping with the justly <lb/>
, J arc and should in their <lb/>
due them, apparently. hon- be treated with heat known <lb/>
tally believe the license <lb/>
,, Known and ti <lb/>
etc. Avoid <lb/>
and <lb/>
. I <lb/>
. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>