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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
t-<lb/>
Have You Forgot <lb/>
What <lb/>
THAT AM STILL CARRYING <lb/>
UP-TO DATE LINE OF <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Shoes <lb/>
Hats, Shirts, Pants, Hardware <lb/>
Tinware, <lb/>
AND A OF OTHER THING <lb/>
WHICH I AM TO MENTION <lb/>
Come to see me for your next B of Flour or Pork. <lb/>
Yours to please- <lb/>
Jas. B. White. <lb/>
AFTER TWO YEARS PREMIUMS HAVE BEEN PAID IN THE <lb/>
BENEFIT if If ill <lb/>
OF NEWARK, N. J., YOUR POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value, <lb/>
Cash Value, <lb/>
Paid-up Insurance, <lb/>
i. Extended Insurance that works automatically, <lb/>
Is Non <lb/>
Will be re-instated if arrears be paid within on month while yon <lb/>
are living, or within three years alter lapse, upon satisfactory <lb/>
of and payment of arrears with interest. <lb/>
second No Restrict ions. IS. Incontestable. <lb/>
Dividends are payable at the beginning of the second and cf each <lb/>
year, provided the premium for the year be paid. <lb/>
They may be To reduce Premiums, or <lb/>
To Increase the Insurance, or <lb/>
To make policy payable as an endow daring the lifetime <lb/>
of insured. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
ASTHMA CURE FREE. <lb/>
Bring I Cure in all <lb/>
SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE ON OP POSTAL. <lb/>
There is nothing like It brings <lb/>
instant relief, even in the worst eases. It cures when <lb/>
all else tails. <lb/>
The Rev. C. Wells, of Villa, Ridge, says. <lb/>
bottle of received in <lb/>
cannot tell yon how- thankful I feel for the <lb/>
good derived from it. I was a slave, chained with <lb/>
putrid sore throat and asthma for ten years. I de <lb/>
of ever being ran d. saw you advertise- <lb/>
tor the cure of thin dreadful and tormenting <lb/>
and thought yon <lb/>
resolved to it a trial. T <lb/>
the trial <lb/>
a full-size <lb/>
We want to send to every a <lb/>
similar to the one that cured Mr. Well. <lb/>
BETHEL <lb/>
Bethel, at. C, Nov. 1901 <lb/>
Miss Rose, of this place is <lb/>
visiting friends in Everetts this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Miss Effie Grimes returned from <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Mrs. D. E. House, of Greenville, <lb/>
came up this morning. <lb/>
D. C. Moore and Harry <lb/>
bee spent Tuesday here on <lb/>
Mr. Clark, one of the firm of <lb/>
Clark Son, of Tarboro, spent <lb/>
Tuesday in this place. <lb/>
Misses Rose, M <lb/>
in and Maggie spent Sunday <lb/>
in <lb/>
J. T. Smith and H. L. Taylor <lb/>
spent Sunday in <lb/>
Rev. J. W. Rose returned Mon- <lb/>
day from Everetts where he <lb/>
preached <lb/>
W. G. Keel Tuesday in <lb/>
Tarboro. <lb/>
Miss of Wilson, <lb/>
who has been visiting in <lb/>
this place, left Rocky Mount <lb/>
this morning. <lb/>
T. T. Cherry, of Conetoe, spent <lb/>
Tuesday night here. <lb/>
Mrs. W. J. return- <lb/>
ed from Rocky Mount Sunday. <lb/>
J. M. Whichard, of this place <lb/>
left for Mt. Olive to be by bis <lb/>
daughter's bedside She was at <lb/>
tending Prof. Z. D. <lb/>
school. We wish her rapid <lb/>
John Bryan, Parmele, but <lb/>
once of Cuba, returned to his home <lb/>
Friday night. <lb/>
James Davenport, of Conetoe, <lb/>
in town <lb/>
W. G. Little, one of our county <lb/>
commissioners, spent Tuesday with <lb/>
Robt. Staton. <lb/>
Miss Mattie Rollins, of Green- <lb/>
ville, spent Monday with Miss Pa- <lb/>
Whitehurst, of this place. <lb/>
Mrs. Or. spent Sunday <lb/>
with sister near <lb/>
C. H. James is still having <lb/>
school desks made. He has form- <lb/>
ed a with S. M. <lb/>
Jones and they will the <lb/>
capacity their plant do a <lb/>
general line of manufacturing in <lb/>
wood. <lb/>
AYDEN NOTES. <lb/>
N. C, Nov. 1901. <lb/>
A. C. Wade and wile of Haiti <lb/>
spent in town. <lb/>
Bishop Watson and three of the <lb/>
clergy came down Monday to con- <lb/>
the Episcopal church. <lb/>
There was a crowd present at <lb/>
the consecration and also at the <lb/>
services <lb/>
Miss Nannie came up Sat <lb/>
to attend the Episcopal <lb/>
vices. She returned Monday night <lb/>
to her home in Kinston. <lb/>
Miss Delia Smith is teaching the <lb/>
public school at <lb/>
lour miles from town. <lb/>
Miss Nancy Coward went to <lb/>
Greenville yesterday. <lb/>
J. J. Hines returned from <lb/>
more last night. <lb/>
Brooks came down from <lb/>
Parmele Saturday night and left <lb/>
Monday to visit his in the <lb/>
country. He has many friends <lb/>
here and is always a welcome <lb/>
tor. <lb/>
Miss Annie Joyner, of Kinston, <lb/>
came up on the freight Monday <lb/>
and spent the day in <lb/>
Misses Eula and Clyde Cox spent <lb/>
the day here Monday. <lb/>
was a little excitement <lb/>
about tire here yesterday, but <lb/>
proved to lie some light-wood <lb/>
burning. <lb/>
David Gibb, of Parmele, cam <lb/>
last night. <lb/>
Rev. B. H. Melton, of Wilson, <lb/>
was in town awhile this week. <lb/>
A PROCLAMATION BY THE COVER- <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
Reward. <lb/>
State of I <lb/>
Executive <lb/>
official information <lb/>
has been received at this Depart <lb/>
that at Pitt <lb/>
N. C, on or about December <lb/>
1900, John M. Parker shot and <lb/>
killed Alex Little. <lb/>
Whereas, it appears that <lb/>
the said John H. Parker has fled <lb/>
the stare, or so himself <lb/>
that the ordinary process of law <lb/>
cannot be served upon <lb/>
Now, therefore, I, Charles B. <lb/>
Aycock, Governor of the of <lb/>
North by virtue of an <lb/>
in me vested by law, do <lb/>
issue this my proclamation, <lb/>
a reward of two hundred <lb/>
for the Apprehension and de <lb/>
livery of the said John H. Parker <lb/>
to the Sheriff of Pitt county at the <lb/>
Court house in Greenville and <lb/>
do enjoin all officers of State <lb/>
and all good citizens to assist in <lb/>
bringing said criminal to justice. <lb/>
, Done at our City of <lb/>
, I Raleigh, the 28th day <lb/>
October, in the year <lb/>
of our Lord one thous- <lb/>
and nine hundred and one and in <lb/>
the one hundred and twenty sixth <lb/>
year of our American Independence <lb/>
By the <lb/>
B. Aycock. <lb/>
P. M. Private Sec. <lb/>
H. Parker is <lb/>
nearly six feet high of spare build, <lb/>
weighs about has <lb/>
boyish face, is almost beard <lb/>
less, has blue eyes, light hair, is <lb/>
slightly stooped and is about <lb/>
years old. <lb/>
SPECIAL TERM OF <lb/>
In with order of Ex- <lb/>
B. Aycock, Governor of <lb/>
North Carolina, appointing a special term <lb/>
of Superior court for Pitt county for the <lb/>
of trying civil actions, notice is <lb/>
given that term of court will <lb/>
convene on the 9th day of <lb/>
1901, and continue for two weeks unless <lb/>
of bald court shall be sooner finish- <lb/>
ed. This Nov. 4th. <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS, Chairman, <lb/>
Board of Commissioners Pitt county. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Letters of administration upon the estate <lb/>
of James Tingle having this day <lb/>
been issued to me by the Clerk of the <lb/>
prior Court of Pitt notice is <lb/>
given to all persons holding claims <lb/>
on said estate to present to me for <lb/>
on or before the 24th day of <lb/>
r, 1908, or this notice will be in bar <lb/>
of their recovery. All persons indebted to <lb/>
said estate arc requested to make Immediate <lb/>
settlement of their indebtedness. <lb/>
This the 23rd day of October 1901. <lb/>
Administrator of James Tingle. <lb/>
BLOW, Attorneys. <lb/>
You Know What you are <lb/>
When take Grove's Tasteless Chill <lb/>
Tonic the formula is plainly print, <lb/>
ed n every bottle showing that it is simply <lb/>
and in a tasteless form. Ho <lb/>
Cure, No Pay. <lb/>
Ms Pills <lb/>
. treatment of <lb/>
We'll send it by mail post <lb/>
FOR TORPID LIVER. <lb/>
the whole <lb/>
SICK HEADACHE,. <lb/>
paid, absolutely Free of Charge, to any a ho write it, <lb/>
even on a postal. Never mind though you are despairing, however <lb/>
bad your case. will and cure. The worse <lb/>
ease, the more glad we are it. ad- <lb/>
dressing Dr. Taft Bros Medicine Co. East St., N. Y. City. <lb/>
Sold by all Druggists. <lb/>
TESTS is a. these <lb/>
than DR. <lb/>
LIVES. PILLS, a trial prove. <lb/>
Take No <lb/>
If lo be saved from defeat is the <lb/>
only point to be considered by <lb/>
Democrats the cut to such <lb/>
saving would for all hands to <lb/>
renounce everything that has been, <lb/>
is will be Democratic <lb/>
the Radicals. Fortunately for the <lb/>
country, however, Clay's <lb/>
still is better to be <lb/>
right than lo lie It <lb/>
is better to contend for Democratic <lb/>
principles lose than re <lb/>
those principles and win, <lb/>
and this we may be able to do. At <lb/>
any rate, we believe this is the <lb/>
thing for the party to be found <lb/>
try do, at all times, and nil <lb/>
all <lb/>
Sentinel. <lb/>
For Sale. <lb/>
Farm car Parmele, N C. <lb/>
arcs, in <lb/>
cultivation. Twenty of this is fine <lb/>
tobacco or truck land. Good buildings, to- <lb/>
water, etc. For further <lb/>
address C. T PEAL, <lb/>
Box Berkley, Vs. <lb/>
Photographer, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
The leader in good work and low prices <lb/>
Nice Photographs for Si per dozen. <lb/>
Cabinets per dozen <lb/>
All other lines very cheap. Crayon Portraits <lb/>
made from any small picture cheap. Nice <lb/>
Frames on all the time. Come and <lb/>
examine my work. No trouble to show <lb/>
samples and answer questions. The very <lb/>
best guaranteed to all. hours <lb/>
to a. m, to p. m. Yours to please. <lb/>
RUDOLPH <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINT<lb/>
TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
court Clerk of county as <lb/>
tor the last will and testament of J. P. <lb/>
Manning, deceased, notice Is hereby given <lb/>
to all persons Indebted to the estate to mate <lb/>
immediate payment to the undersigned, <lb/>
and all persons having claims said <lb/>
estate are notified to present the same with- <lb/>
n twelve months from date or this notice <lb/>
will lie plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
This of October, 1901. <lb/>
J. L. O. MANNING, <lb/>
Executor of J. P. Manning. <lb/>
Steamer leave Washing- <lb/>
ton daily at A. M. for Green- <lb/>
ville, leave Greenville daily at <lb/>
H. for Washington. <lb/>
Steamer leaves <lb/>
Greenville Mondays, Wednesday <lb/>
and Fridays at A. M. for Tar- <lb/>
leave Tarboro for Greenville <lb/>
Tuesdays, and Saturdays <lb/>
at A. M. carries freight only. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
Steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore, <lb/>
New York and <lb/>
ton, and for all points for the West <lb/>
with railroads at Norfolk. <lb/>
Shippers should order freight by <lb/>
the Old Dominion S. B. 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, <lb/>
Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Letters testamentary having this day <lb/>
been issued lo me upon the Lewis <lb/>
by the Clerk of the <lb/>
Superior Court of Pitt county, notice is <lb/>
hereby to all persons having <lb/>
against aid estate to present them me <lb/>
for payment on or before the 30th of <lb/>
October 1802, or this notice will be plead in <lb/>
bar of their recovery. All persons indebted <lb/>
to said estate are notified to make <lb/>
payment to me. <lb/>
This the 28th day of 1801. <lb/>
CHARLES <lb/>
Executor of Lewis <lb/>
BLOW, Attorneys. <lb/>
IN <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
LAXATIVE <lb/>
If yea bars stomach, indigestion, biliousness, constipation, bad <lb/>
breath, inactive liver, heartburn, kidney troubles, backache, loss <lb/>
of insomnia, lick energy, bad blood, blotched or muddy akin, <lb/>
or any symptoms which tell the story of bad bowels and an <lb/>
unpaired digestive system, Cure Yon, <lb/>
It will clean eat tot bowels, the liver and kidneys, strengthen <lb/>
lbs stomach, purify your blood an put you <lb/>
year again. Tour appetite will return, your bowel, move <lb/>
yew liver sad kidneys to trouble yon, your skin will clear and <lb/>
and win feel tbs time energy buoyancy. <lb/>
Matter seeking the roper to craw for <lb/>
and will an Ideal for <lb/>
it keeps bowels pain or .-it <lb/>
nature, than coated redacts lever, <lb/>
tsetse restful sleep and stakes them tad bean j. MM <lb/>
kin U i I. <lb/>
For Sale by <lb/>
I mot I In tile lent pf family h-t the <lb/>
ml at or Aid <lb/>
N Y , mention the <lb/>
I of t put note <lb/>
i. .- t <lb/>
lo CO <lb/>
i . i <lb/>
I- mill <lb/>
Uta tut t <lb/>
of your druggist <lb/>
all <lb/>
PRINTING <lb/>
at The Reflect. Office <lb/>
Why Do a Horse Give Up After s Second <lb/>
Attempt; <lb/>
An exchange, whose question <lb/>
h asked why <lb/>
0- i <lb/>
i, v walk inch <lb/>
. string of <lb/>
k Hit- ac to why a <lb/>
horse, mien fail <lb/>
t roll over the second attempt. <lb/>
It -i- it an invariable rule <lb/>
th ii ., i -i mils over at the <lb/>
attempt or quill trying with the <lb/>
third effort. it <lb/>
lull- over time is <lb/>
Hut If does not <lb/>
h invariably makes the at <lb/>
to fail-, i <lb/>
n equally certain lo mute <lb/>
I h ii time he <lb/>
Inn- sin <lb/>
nit If over all <lb/>
ii in-mils third attempt, he <lb/>
Is certain to quit trying for that <lb/>
Journal. <lb/>
Job Phillips sou, <lb/>
Muses, who ere put in for re <lb/>
to pay costs in the <lb/>
made <lb/>
day fur I he payment of the <lb/>
hi were liberated. These parties <lb/>
refused to pay the town dog tax, <lb/>
when tried before the mayor <lb/>
the case went them they <lb/>
appealed from his decision. The <lb/>
superior court unstained the de <lb/>
in ii of the lower and coats <lb/>
tell on Mr. Phillips and bis son. <lb/>
Kinston Free Press. <lb/>
F m <lb/>
OF <lb/>
The following is a statement of the <lb/>
of of the Board of <lb/>
for Put county, number of days <lb/>
each member attended, number of <lb/>
miles traveled amounts allowed for <lb/>
services as Commissioners for the fiscal <lb/>
year ending December 2nd, 1801. <lb/>
or <lb/>
It L Davis days, <lb/>
O XV Harrington hath attended <lb/>
XV Little bath attended days, <lb/>
bath days, <lb/>
J hath attended days, <lb/>
I. J Chapman hath attended days, <lb/>
I. <lb/>
For days as Com. <lb/>
Fur mile traveled Be <lb/>
ST O W <lb/>
For day as Com. <lb/>
For day Committee 8.00 <lb/>
For miles traveled <lb/>
J. W. PERRY CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Factors and of <lb/>
Bags. <lb/>
I ii mile shipments <lb/>
E. E. <lb/>
Practical Maker Hi Jeweler. <lb/>
Opposite P. O., N. C. <lb/>
the <lb/>
find st-k clock, <lb/>
chains, tic, ever <lb/>
to tor <lb/>
and i-i <lb/>
Pit mi if He <lb/>
pair inn o watches done <lb/>
E. E. GRIFFIN. <lb/>
Vs Are oil <lb/>
with Hit deep, Insist bark, called <lb/>
is tot cry of the <lb/>
tortured longs fur mercy. Give mercy <lb/>
in the form of Lung a <lb/>
ii mi fir pulmonary trouble, so highly <lb/>
that it Is even in tbs <lb/>
earlier In later <lb/>
mortal skill It <lb/>
to I cold. <lb/>
Ell 176.------- <lb/>
M. <lb/>
M retail and <lb/>
Furniture Dealer. Cash paid <lb/>
Hides. Fur. Seed, Oil Bar <lb/>
Turkeys, etc. Bed <lb/>
Mattresses, Oak Ba <lb/>
by Carriages, Go-Carts, <lb/>
Lounges, Safes, P. <lb/>
and Gail <lb/>
West Cheroots, <lb/>
a I Can <lb/>
Peaches, Apples, <lb/>
Pine Syrup, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour Sugar, Coffee, Meat, Soap, <lb/>
Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Seed Meal and Hulls, Oar <lb/>
Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Currents, Raisins, <lb/>
and China Ware. Tin and Wooden <lb/>
Ware, Cakes and Crackers, Macs <lb/>
Cheese, Best Butter, Stand <lb/>
ard Sewing Machines, and on <lb/>
other goods. Quality and <lb/>
Quantity. Cheap for cash. Com <lb/>
to see me. <lb/>
Phone H. <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
of a of the <lb/>
Court of Pitt made in a Special <lb/>
Proceeding entitled W. W. House B. <lb/>
A. House vs. Mary A. wife <lb/>
Moses James, and others, the under- <lb/>
signed Commissioner will sod for cash be- <lb/>
fore the Court House door in Greenville, on <lb/>
Monday, December Ml, the follow- <lb/>
tract of land situate in the <lb/>
county of Pitt and in Bethel township, <lb/>
the lands of R. M. S. M. <lb/>
ones. W. I. Whitehurst, the Mary A. <lb/>
Junes land and others, containing <lb/>
acres, more or lets, and known the Ash- <lb/>
House land, and being all the land own- <lb/>
iii by him at the time of hit death. <lb/>
This November 7th, 1901. <lb/>
F. G. Jams, <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
By the power vested by <lb/>
the last ill and of Lewis <lb/>
deceased, I will on Monday, De- <lb/>
2nd, 1901, before the court house <lb/>
in Greenville, sell public sale to the <lb/>
highest bidder for cash that certain tract or <lb/>
parcel of land in township, Pitt <lb/>
county, lying on the South side of <lb/>
branch and adjoining the land of Lewis L. <lb/>
Frederick Will <lb/>
Moore and <lb/>
acres more or lest. It brine the tract of <lb/>
land deeded to Lewis by <lb/>
ant known as a part of <lb/>
tract <lb/>
This the 29th day of <lb/>
CHARLES <lb/>
Executor of Lewis <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and always <lb/>
on hand- <lb/>
Fresh goods kept constantly en <lb/>
band. Country produce and <lb/>
sold. A trial will convince you. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
ALLOWED W G <lb/>
For as Com. <lb/>
For days as <lb/>
For miles traveled <lb/>
ALLOWED JESSE CANNON <lb/>
For as Commissioner <lb/>
CO <lb/>
Fur days a Committee <lb/>
For miles traveled ft. <lb/>
CO <lb/>
For 1.1 days as <lb/>
For miles traveled 10.00 <lb/>
ALLOWED L J <lb/>
For days <lb/>
For traveled Be 21.00 <lb/>
Total amount allowed Board <lb/>
State us <lb/>
Cut sty Pitt. I <lb/>
T R clerk of the <lb/>
Board of fur the county <lb/>
do hereby that the <lb/>
mg is a ii statement as doth appear <lb/>
record In this day Of Ho <lb/>
T It MOORE, <lb/>
Clerk Board Com. Pitt County. <lb/>
THE GREENVILLE <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
Manufacturers of <lb/>
Doors, Sash and Blinds, <lb/>
Interior and Exterior Finishings <lb/>
for Modern Cheap Build- <lb/>
We solicit and <lb/>
guarantee to give satisfaction in <lb/>
prices, styles and work. <lb/>
Please send your orders to <lb/>
Tie Co. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
As sin now In the hospital in <lb/>
more for the purpose of undergoing an op- <lb/>
have placed my books ac- <lb/>
counts in the hands of my Mr. <lb/>
Wiley Blown, at the store ft <lb/>
Brown, given him full to col- <lb/>
and receipt for same. I ask <lb/>
those indebted to me to call on him and set- <lb/>
as early a <lb/>
ZERO BROWN, M D. <lb/>
Pitt county In Superior court, <lb/>
Mart <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
Tin. D. <lb/>
The defendant, above <lb/>
Stated, will take notice that an action en <lb/>
titled above has been commenced in the <lb/>
Superior court of Pitt conn y for divorce, <lb/>
ard the defendant will further take notice <lb/>
that be is required to be appear at the <lb/>
next regular term of the <lb/>
or held <lb/>
for beheld in the court <lb/>
boost in Greenville, on the Monday be- <lb/>
fore first of March, 1902, it <lb/>
tho 13th day of January, 1902 and then on <lb/>
there answer lo the complaint, which will <lb/>
before said court, or <lb/>
will lie granted accordingly to t <lb/>
prayer of the complaint. <lb/>
This 2nd day of November, <lb/>
MOORE, <lb/>
Clerk of Superior court. <lb/>
notice to <lb/>
Public. <lb/>
ATTENTION AGENTS I <lb/>
Mr. John C. General Agent for <lb/>
North Carolina and Virginia, of that Well <lb/>
Known and Popular Company, <lb/>
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT <lb/>
Life Insurance Co., of <lb/>
Desires to announce to lit large number of <lb/>
policy and to the insurable public <lb/>
generally, of North this com- <lb/>
will now Resume Business In this <lb/>
state and from this date will Its <lb/>
and desirable policies, to all de- <lb/>
siring the very best insurance la the best <lb/>
life insurance company in the world. <lb/>
If the local agent in your town hat not <lb/>
yet completed arrangements, <lb/>
JOHN C. <lb/>
State Agent, Raleigh, N. O. <lb/>
Assets <lb/>
Paid policy <lb/>
Live, reliable energetic agents wanted at <lb/>
once to wort for the <lb/>
W, R, WHICHARD <lb/>
DEALERS IN-- <lb/>
Whichard. N. C. <lb/>
The Stock complete In every de <lb/>
and prices as low the <lb/>
lowest. Highest market price <lb/>
paid for country produce. <lb/>
J. I BELT, <lb/>
-DEALER IN- <lb/>
SADDLES <lb/>
ill <lb/>
A GENERAL LINE OF<lb/>
Also a nice Line of Hardware. <lb/>
COME TO SEE ME. <lb/>
J. R. COBBY. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Buyers and Brokers in <lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
ons. Private Wires to New York, <lb/>
Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
The Commoner <lb/>
WEEKLY. <lb/>
WILLIAM J. BRYAN, <lb/>
Editor Publisher, <lb/>
Lincoln, <lb/>
in Advance. <lb/>
One Year II, Six Months <lb/>
Th Months Sing. Copy <lb/>
No traveling canvassers are em- <lb/>
ployed. Subscriptions taken at <lb/>
The Reflector office. The Semi- <lb/>
Weekly and <lb/>
will be sent together <lb/>
one year for or The Daily <lb/>
Reflector and <lb/>
one year for parable in ad- <lb/>
PATENT<lb/>
Wee <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector <lb/>
D. J. EDITOR <lb/>
TO <lb/>
PEP, <lb/>
VOL XX. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER <lb/>
NO <lb/>
I win <lb/>
-AT- <lb/>
SI II <lb/>
ARE KNOCKING <lb/>
THEM OUT. <lb/>
For Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Hats, Caps, Shoes, Trunks <lb/>
Boys and Mens Clothing, Gents Furnishings, Glove, <lb/>
and a big Gaps. Cloaks, Mitts and Bootees. <lb/>
Come to see us. a bargain day and everything a <lb/>
bargain. friends, <lb/>
W. T. LEE CO- <lb/>
The <lb/>
AXED DIVIDEND RECORD IS THE RESULT <lb/>
Securing the highest rate of Interest consistent with safety. <lb/>
S. Rigid economy of management. <lb/>
Low death rate, resulting from a careful selection of risks and <lb/>
limiting its business to the United States <lb/>
will be to interest to see what we can do for yon before <lb/>
placing life <lb/>
Good territory open for Agents in North Carolina. <lb/>
T. GARY, General Agent. <lb/>
. For Virginia and North Carolina, <lb/>
life Insurance Company, <lb/>
1301 E. Main Street, Richmond, Va. <lb/>
ALL ARGUMENTS HALT WHEN THE <lb/>
PRICE AND MERCHANDISE IS RIGHT. <lb/>
OUR RALEIGH LETTER. <lb/>
Special of Reflector. <lb/>
Raleigh, N. C, Nov. <lb/>
Apparently the city of Raleigh <lb/>
is to have a monument erected Id <lb/>
honor of the Englishman after <lb/>
whom this city was named, and <lb/>
lost his head on the block at the <lb/>
hands of an executioner, later to <lb/>
be honored in the history, as all <lb/>
readers of history know. <lb/>
The news conies from Concord <lb/>
that Rev. L. W. Crawford <lb/>
last Friday to I he em <lb/>
North Carolina then in <lb/>
session at that be had <lb/>
sold bis interest in the North Car- <lb/>
Christian Advocate, pub- <lb/>
at Greensboro; that be <lb/>
would not be a candidate for re <lb/>
election as editor of that and <lb/>
that the Conference could purchase <lb/>
the stock sold by him to Mr. Col- <lb/>
when desired, at the figures <lb/>
he sold, according to the under- <lb/>
standing, etc. <lb/>
It is now said the v. <lb/>
go suit will begin today <lb/>
at Oxford. Shaw is report <lb/>
ed to have declared that the case <lb/>
must be tried this week. It is <lb/>
possible it may consume the <lb/>
balance of the term of the court. <lb/>
The Raleigh A. and M. College <lb/>
foot-ball team defeated the <lb/>
College team last Friday, on <lb/>
the grounds here, by the score of <lb/>
toO. <lb/>
Rev. R. G. Pearson's meetings <lb/>
here during the past week have <lb/>
been largely attended and are in <lb/>
creasing in interest, Mr. Pearson, <lb/>
though weak in physical statue <lb/>
and delicate in physical health, Is <lb/>
evidently a consecrated man a <lb/>
power in the pulpit. <lb/>
Prices Reduced <lb/>
On All Our Stock of <lb/>
FURNITURE, <lb/>
The pleasant days we have been having are now a thing <lb/>
of past, and only the pleasant memories of the same re- <lb/>
Have yourself with all necessary winter <lb/>
When you face facts all arguments halt. We give <lb/>
no bat all winter goods <lb/>
Consisting of handsome Oak Suits. Odd <lb/>
Bed, Wash Stands, Lounges, Couches, Side <lb/>
Boards, Chairs and Rockers, we have greatly <lb/>
reduced the prices and invite all who need <lb/>
to inspect our stock, we can and will save <lb/>
you money. <lb/>
Don't forget that we have a large line of <lb/>
Breech Loading Guns <lb/>
and will sell them at reduced prices, and <lb/>
secure a bargain. <lb/>
Your friends, <lb/>
J. P SO, <lb/>
SOLD. <lb/>
A full and up-to-date Una of Clothing, Shoes, Hate, Dry <lb/>
Rugs, Notions, Dress Goods and Trimmings. Under- <lb/>
wear the cold weather kind. Winter and season right for <lb/>
Blankets and Comforts, yea right too. <lb/>
STANDARD PATTERNS.<lb/>
HICKS WILKINSON. <lb/>
The South Dakota Bond Suits. <lb/>
Silted to the bottom the merits <lb/>
of the South Dakota bond suit <lb/>
against the State of North Carolina <lb/>
appear to be about In <lb/>
1866 the of North <lb/>
Carolina issued certain bonds <lb/>
to prosecute the building of the <lb/>
Western North Carolina Railroad. <lb/>
The bonds were honestly issued <lb/>
and the proceeds honestly applied. <lb/>
Other bonds were issued by the <lb/>
alien and apostate Legislature of <lb/>
1868 and afterwards repudiated, <lb/>
but not so these. Their validity <lb/>
was recognized by the Legislature <lb/>
sf 1879, and they ere embraced <lb/>
in the act to compromise, commute <lb/>
and settle the debt of the <lb/>
State. The holders were offered <lb/>
twenty-five cents on the dollar for <lb/>
that they were not <lb/>
that the State was <lb/>
and that was all that it felt able to <lb/>
pay. It was as when a man fails <lb/>
in business and offers to <lb/>
with his creditors at twenty- <lb/>
live cents on the dollar. The trans- <lb/>
action was entirely honorable to <lb/>
the State. The holders of nearly <lb/>
all of these bonds accepted the <lb/>
offer; the holders of a few of them <lb/>
did not, but held on to them. An <lb/>
individual cannot sue a Slate but <lb/>
one Slate can sue another, and <lb/>
some the holders of these out- <lb/>
standing bonds have transferred <lb/>
some of them to the State of South <lb/>
Dakota, for the purpose, of course, <lb/>
of ascertaining if North Carolina <lb/>
cannot be compelled to pay all of <lb/>
them. This appears to be all there <lb/>
is of it. The Supreme Court per- <lb/>
the case to be and <lb/>
will bear it in the course of time. <lb/>
The Observer repeats its <lb/>
of gratification that North <lb/>
Carolina is to be represented <lb/>
in the litigation by three <lb/>
lawyers of such ability and <lb/>
distinction as ex-Judges Shepherd <lb/>
and and George <lb/>
tree, Observer. <lb/>
The Beat tor Malaria <lb/>
t tills and is a of <lb/>
Chill Tonic. It Is Iron <lb/>
sod quinine In a tastiest form. No eon, <lb/>
no Fay, fries He. <lb/>
WOMEN TELEPHONISTS BEST. <lb/>
In its division to employ girls as <lb/>
telephone operators the British <lb/>
post office has submitted to the in- <lb/>
stales the London Mail. <lb/>
If ever nature created a <lb/>
in a profession, she did so when <lb/>
she endowed girls with the voices <lb/>
they possess. <lb/>
In lands as diverse in custom as <lb/>
and America, Italy and <lb/>
England, yield place lo <lb/>
men as telephonists. in the <lb/>
land of the Geisha this natural ad- <lb/>
vantage reveals itself, and the rap- <lb/>
idly growing telephone service of to <lb/>
Japan is staffed entirely by <lb/>
men. Germany has rejected <lb/>
men as telegraphists, but admits <lb/>
their superiority over men as <lb/>
The proprietorship of the <lb/>
Slot Machines Still Running. <lb/>
New Bern, N. C, Nov. <lb/>
slot machine excitement and the <lb/>
indictment of the proprietors turn- <lb/>
ed out to be a The machines <lb/>
are in full blast the nickels <lb/>
pouring into the machines with the <lb/>
result of a few strains of music and <lb/>
occasionally a lucky hit to the <lb/>
players. The were <lb/>
by the jury all <lb/>
light lint no nil inn was taken by <lb/>
the court. Some people consider <lb/>
it very strange that if the machines <lb/>
are a gambling device worthy of <lb/>
being indicted, they should <lb/>
run fur six <lb/>
YOU ARE <lb/>
HUNTING <lb/>
The Place to <lb/>
get the Best <lb/>
Goods for the <lb/>
Least Money <lb/>
then you will <lb/>
go straight to <lb/>
H. O HOOKER. <lb/>
Complete stock of fall and winter goods <lb/>
now ready for your inspection, and our <lb/>
cannot be surpassed anywhere. The <lb/>
ladies should not fail to see our stock. <lb/>
H. C. HOOKER. <lb/>
months longer, until the April <lb/>
term. The solicitor is freely <lb/>
for not pushing the case and <lb/>
some stories are being <lb/>
told. There is no but E. <lb/>
W. Pace, the Greenville promoter <lb/>
is depended mainly upon one of <lb/>
anatomical <lb/>
character, vis, <lb/>
CD <lb/>
the <lb/>
This <lb/>
by their operation. According to <lb/>
length of the vocal , report he ft few <lb/>
prime character is supported and the franchise for <lb/>
re enforced b, a number of M ,,, <lb/>
qualities, but. constitutes <lb/>
in itself the claim fa , m <lb/>
which women have to superiority <lb/>
over men as telephonists. n home of <lb/>
The chords of a women are p of <lb/>
considerable shorter than those of <lb/>
a man. As a result the voice has <lb/>
a higher pitch. The telephone m . <lb/>
responds more accurate to have his attention to bin <lb/>
the higher pitched voice, the mag <lb/>
disturbance are more rapid, <lb/>
and, therefore, more potent, and <lb/>
the currents transmitted to the re- <lb/>
station lose less in trans <lb/>
mission. Until some method is de- <lb/>
vised for equalizing the value of <lb/>
the sonorous waves set up by the <lb/>
longer, slower vibrating chorus of <lb/>
women, this primary <lb/>
renders women's position secure in <lb/>
the profession of telephonist. <lb/>
gossip is the slimy <lb/>
channel through which Hows <lb/>
the foulest and blackest water of <lb/>
meanness and despair. <lb/>
home town first. From the result <lb/>
it seems that there to have <lb/>
no complaint on that score for <lb/>
Solicitor Moore did not worry him <lb/>
-elf in pushing the matter. It is <lb/>
stated that when the permission <lb/>
was given by the city <lb/>
here to put in the machines, two <lb/>
attorneys gave their opinion <lb/>
on account of the music attach- <lb/>
j the law touch <lb/>
on this eminent <lb/>
gal advice the licenses was granted. <lb/>
New Cur. Raleigh <lb/>
Wonder <lb/>
if the tormenting made last win- <lb/>
one long misery will be at hail this <lb/>
year. Certainly not, if you Allen's <lb/>
when and rawness <lb/>
Id the throat announce the of the <lb/>
old enemy. Do not expect the cold to wear <lb/>
Take the right remedy in time. <lb/>
Alien's Lung Balsam It from of deliberative <lb/>
Observations. <lb/>
To interest a woman, arouse <lb/>
curiosity; to interest a man, praise <lb/>
his pet hobby. <lb/>
is love <lb/>
after it has burned itself down to <lb/>
the edge of indifference. <lb/>
A much abused word is <lb/>
It often a multi- <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER.<lb/>
U mi ton. D. U. Nov. <lb/>
It is believed that <lb/>
James D. Richardson will be <lb/>
elected Democratic leader in the <lb/>
next House notwithstanding the <lb/>
opposition that he will incur. In <lb/>
many respects be will make an ad- <lb/>
leader but by his <lb/>
with the publishing house that <lb/>
has been publishing and selling <lb/>
volumes containing the President's <lb/>
messages he has injured his power <lb/>
and laid himself open to <lb/>
can innuendo; however, be is a <lb/>
good and at best <lb/>
his position will not prove an <lb/>
one, so large is the <lb/>
majority. <lb/>
The latest Cabinet rumor is that <lb/>
Secretary of the Interior Hitchcock <lb/>
is very angry with the President <lb/>
for having turned him down in the <lb/>
Missouri contest and yielded to the <lb/>
wishes of <lb/>
and that he proposes to resign in a <lb/>
short time. There are numerous <lb/>
hints dropped by members of Con- <lb/>
as to how this or that <lb/>
Mr. Roosevelt's <lb/>
treatment but with the exception <lb/>
of Gage nothing is positively <lb/>
known. <lb/>
There is likely to be an interest- <lb/>
contest among the Democrats <lb/>
for the in the Committee <lb/>
on Rules caused by the election of <lb/>
Mr. Bailey, of Texas, to the Sen- <lb/>
ate. Mr. De of Missouri, <lb/>
can have the place the asking <lb/>
as be would receive the undivided <lb/>
support of the Democrats, but it is <lb/>
that he will decline as he <lb/>
expects that the next House <lb/>
be and he desires to lie <lb/>
speaker. If he signifies his <lb/>
to take the position Mr. <lb/>
Underwood, of formerly <lb/>
the Democratic whip, will doubt <lb/>
less make a contest it, as will <lb/>
also Mr. Swanson, of <lb/>
This Committee is the most <lb/>
in the House, its powers being <lb/>
almost autocratic. <lb/>
The Secretary of the Interior has <lb/>
today given to the public his an- <lb/>
report. It is a volume of some <lb/>
two hundred and pages <lb/>
and contains much interesting mat <lb/>
some of it food for very serious <lb/>
thought. Some of the pension <lb/>
figures are appalling. The total <lb/>
number pensioners mi the rolls <lb/>
June 80th was an in- <lb/>
crease for the year of which <lb/>
increase the Secretary declares to <lb/>
lie The total <lb/>
amount for pensions <lb/>
the year was <lb/>
THE VOICE OF HUMANITY. <lb/>
To The Observer's Raleigh <lb/>
respondent, Dr. <lb/>
of the Central Hospital <lb/>
there, makes a statement with re- <lb/>
to the lack of room in his In- <lb/>
The situation at Raleigh <lb/>
is as it is at Morganton. Some of <lb/>
the stories told and letters written <lb/>
the of these hospitals by <lb/>
the relatives of insane persons who <lb/>
should be in these institutions <lb/>
for whom there is not room, are <lb/>
sufficient to make a man cry. The <lb/>
hospital authorities are doing the <lb/>
best they and none know <lb/>
so well as they the suffering of the <lb/>
outside insane or how great a bur- <lb/>
den are upon the families <lb/>
which must care for them. There- <lb/>
course is not upon these <lb/>
tic, having discriminated <lb/>
wisely as they can as to the <lb/>
merits the case of <lb/>
cants, and having filled their in- <lb/>
with the cases seeming <lb/>
to be meritorious, have reach- <lb/>
ed the limit their capability <lb/>
nothing can then be done except to <lb/>
discharge insane to make place for <lb/>
other insane and enlightened pol- <lb/>
icy would not justify this course. <lb/>
The remedy is with the people <lb/>
through their Legislature. The <lb/>
most urgent need of North <lb/>
today, greater than the need of <lb/>
public education or anything else, <lb/>
is that of mom in institutions de- <lb/>
signed for their care and treat- <lb/>
for every insane person in <lb/>
the State. If every voter <lb/>
put himself in the place of t <lb/>
member of a family which is keep- <lb/>
insane member home, or <lb/>
which has had to send one to the <lb/>
county jail or the county home, or <lb/>
if lie imagine himself insane <lb/>
and a burden upon his family or <lb/>
In the jail or poor house, it would <lb/>
not be long before the remedial <lb/>
legislation is enacted. It it the <lb/>
voice of Immunity appeals to <lb/>
our people, and are too <lb/>
too humane, too allow it to <lb/>
go <lb/>
People la It. <lb/>
said <lb/>
Can s id by advertising <lb/>
This not so Many have bent <lb/>
but only <lb/>
stood the tut of sixty <lb/>
years popularity <lb/>
I and i s baaed not upon whit any- <lb/>
but upon what the remedy does <lb/>
There it but one Perry Davis <lb/>
You Know What Von art Taking <lb/>
When lake Tasteless <lb/>
Tonic the formula is plainly print- <lb/>
ed n every bottle ah that It Is simply <lb/>
in n form. N <lb/>
Cure, No Pay. <lb/>
Snow is said to offer. <lb/>
resistance to penetration by <lb/>
bullets. made in <lb/>
Norway have a snow <lb/>
wall four feet, thick is <lb/>
proof against the Norwegian army <lb/>
t i weapon of <lb/>
piercing power. <lb/>
i ---l r<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018569_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
O. J. Ed. <lb/>
the Post Office at <lb/>
Greenville, N. M Second-Class <lb/>
Mail Mutter. <lb/>
November 1901. <lb/>
Frank James sated lo <lb/>
paring on the stage. Times <lb/>
hare changed since old days <lb/>
hen ha used to appear before <lb/>
road stages. <lb/>
It turns out that the up to date <lb/>
translation of the Bible, for pub- <lb/>
which Chicago has <lb/>
abused by the British press, was <lb/>
made in England. <lb/>
There will be no Populists in the <lb/>
Senate. Former ones who are <lb/>
still there have either returned to <lb/>
the Republican party or alto- <lb/>
to the Democrats. <lb/>
Two hundred in <lb/>
took one of their race away <lb/>
from the Sheriff, who bad him <lb/>
custody, and lynched him <lb/>
killed a boy over a debt of <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
A colored man by name of <lb/>
Satan was taken from Lenoir <lb/>
to penitentiary a few days <lb/>
ago. And a Raleigh <lb/>
dent in jocular vein says getting <lb/>
Satan in prison marks begin <lb/>
of the <lb/>
CONDENSED STORIES. <lb/>
Mew Senator Mason Recognized a Mas <lb/>
That Interrupted. <lb/>
Senator William K. Mason of <lb/>
is a good campaigner and a <lb/>
great stump speaker, relates the <lb/>
New York Times, wit and <lb/>
are not of the most refined <lb/>
order, but they are just the thing <lb/>
to catch a Crowd. Mason is <lb/>
at a loss for a retort enjoys be- <lb/>
interrupted in a speech. <lb/>
During of his campaigns Le <lb/>
was getting his usual share of in- <lb/>
in a speech ho was de- <lb/>
livering at Springfield, Ills. Mason <lb/>
was enjoying himself <lb/>
a great hit with the majority <lb/>
the crowd. There was one man, <lb/>
however, who tangled Mason up <lb/>
somewhat. This man had Imbibed <lb/>
more alcohol than was good for him. <lb/>
He was on the outskirts of the <lb/>
crowd, and he was asking Mason <lb/>
questions in a thick voice. The <lb/>
senator could not catch the <lb/>
and as ho did not at first know <lb/>
what was the matter with the <lb/>
low ho stopped and attempted to <lb/>
catch the question each time. lie <lb/>
failed and this led to several <lb/>
awkward pauses. At last Mason be- <lb/>
came irritated. Tho next time <lb/>
interruption came from the <lb/>
one Mason <lb/>
are <lb/>
you know me, <lb/>
came the answer in maudlin and <lb/>
swaying tones. <lb/>
Mason paused. <lb/>
said he in a measured and metallic <lb/>
voice, don't recognize your face, <lb/>
but your breath is <lb/>
and the <lb/>
A good story is told of how San- <lb/>
strength stood him in <lb/>
stead among the bullies who have <lb/>
lately been infesting the de <lb/>
in Paris, relates London <lb/>
M. A. P. Their method of action <lb/>
ts to have one of the gang follow <lb/>
INTERVIEWING <lb/>
Bethel, N. C., Nov. 1901. <lb/>
Misses and Mattie Grimes <lb/>
The reporter who goes to inter- <lb/>
view Richard for the first Saturday and Sunday in <lb/>
time realizes he is confronted with Hamilton. <lb/>
Oklahoma and Indian Territory <lb/>
are asking to be admitted as one <lb/>
tale. Each has nearly <lb/>
in the <lb/>
gate than sixteen <lb/>
Union have today. Why should <lb/>
not their wish be granted. <lb/>
A western husband has sued for <lb/>
divorce because his wile insists on <lb/>
Introducing tame snakes into their <lb/>
bed room. The wife replies that <lb/>
the snakes she has there are not <lb/>
half so bad nor as numerous as <lb/>
those her husband thinks be sees. <lb/>
a serious when Mr. <lb/>
puts tho usual question to <lb/>
should you come to me for <lb/>
this information more than you <lb/>
should ask any other citizen you <lb/>
should <lb/>
When William J. Bryan arrived <lb/>
in New York on his first visit during <lb/>
the last presidential campaign, Mr. <lb/>
and another prominent <lb/>
were on the committee <lb/>
to meet tho Democratic leader at <lb/>
the Grand Central station. There <lb/>
was an enormous crowd present, <lb/>
and tho police had hard work keep- <lb/>
them in order. At time the <lb/>
crowd pressed in on the platform. <lb/>
Mr. and tho other gentleman <lb/>
were seated on a truck well up the <lb/>
platform. <lb/>
A police captain in charge of the <lb/>
mum approached the chieftain and <lb/>
do you want me to <lb/>
keen this crowd back in the <lb/>
Mr. sun-eyed him a mo- <lb/>
with his piercing eyes and an- <lb/>
too that man over there <lb/>
sounding the car wheels You go <lb/>
ask him, and if he don't know, you <lb/>
go down to Mulberry street and ask <lb/>
your York Times. <lb/>
To Avoid Lightning. <lb/>
If out of doors, keep away from <lb/>
trees, haystacks, houses, large sheets <lb/>
of water, river banks, etc. If in <lb/>
the open plain, whore there are no <lb/>
trees or buildings, you are safer <lb/>
lying down than standing up. If <lb/>
near a wood, stay there and do not <lb/>
go nearer. If near a single tall tree, <lb/>
yon are pretty safe yards away. <lb/>
Indoors you are safest of all if you <lb/>
adopt Franklin's plan. Find the <lb/>
geometrical center of the room. <lb/>
Hang up a hammock by silken <lb/>
get in and stay there. Fail- <lb/>
n hammock, sit on chair in <lb/>
the middle of the room with your <lb/>
feet on another, first placing be- <lb/>
neath them a feather bed or hair <lb/>
mattress. But do not sit under the <lb/>
Miss Hose <lb/>
morning from <lb/>
H. H. Taylor spent Sunday night <lb/>
with bis mother <lb/>
and returned this morning. <lb/>
W. G Keel and wife, near this <lb/>
place, spent Saturday and Sunday <lb/>
in Scotland Neck. <lb/>
Prof. C. H. Young left Friday <lb/>
for Petersburg, Va. <lb/>
is visiting relatives here. <lb/>
Kev. J. W. Ban returned from <lb/>
Hamilton this morning where he <lb/>
held services Sunday. <lb/>
Edwin Cherry, of is <lb/>
visiting relatives near here. <lb/>
Will Andrews, of Tarboro, was <lb/>
in town today. <lb/>
Mr. I of is <lb/>
town with his samples. <lb/>
Fred Gardner, of Everett, spent <lb/>
Sunday here. <lb/>
Remember Thursday is Thanks- <lb/>
giving and let every one give a <lb/>
little sum for the orphans. <lb/>
Mr. J. A. Dead. <lb/>
Mr. James Ashley Thigpen died <lb/>
at Sunday morning at his <lb/>
home two miles Greenville, <lb/>
after an illness of several weeks. <lb/>
He was year old, a good <lb/>
and a prosperous farmer. <lb/>
He leaves a wife, three sous and <lb/>
five daughters, three of the latter <lb/>
being married. <lb/>
Mr. served awhile as a <lb/>
Justice of the Pence, aid when In- <lb/>
courts were existence in <lb/>
this county was elected and served <lb/>
one term as one of the Judges of <lb/>
that court. He was also elected <lb/>
County on Populist <lb/>
ticket 1804. but did not <lb/>
Mayor's Court. <lb/>
Mayor W. H. Long has disposed <lb/>
of the following cases in bis court <lb/>
since last <lb/>
Sam Turnage, drunk down, <lb/>
lined l and costs, <lb/>
Annie Smith, failure to list dog <lb/>
taxes, one penny and costs, <lb/>
2.38. <lb/>
Randall, failure to list <lb/>
dog for taxes, lined one <lb/>
costs, 92.30. <lb/>
J. F. King, failure to list dog <lb/>
for taxes, not guilty, case dis- <lb/>
missed. <lb/>
Martha lane Forbes, failure to <lb/>
list dog for taxes, not guilty, case <lb/>
dismissed. <lb/>
T. W. Skinner, disorderly con- <lb/>
duct, lined costs, <lb/>
Joe disorderly conduct, <lb/>
lined i and cost, <lb/>
Charlie James, disorderly con- <lb/>
duct, fined and costs, <lb/>
Thomas Scott, disorderly con- <lb/>
duct, fined and costs, <lb/>
F. D. disorderly conduct, <lb/>
lined and co ts, 92.95 <lb/>
Alex Bailey, Jr., failure to list <lb/>
dog for taxes, not guilty, case dis- <lb/>
missed. <lb/>
B. O. running a dray <lb/>
without license, fined one penny <lb/>
and costs, 93.30, <lb/>
Charles Braxton, and dis- <lb/>
orderly, fined and costs 93.20. <lb/>
William drunk and dis- <lb/>
orderly fined and costs, <lb/>
disorderly <lb/>
duct, fined and costs, 93.95. <lb/>
Made in <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Pattern Hats. Hate, <lb/>
Baby Cloaks and Caps. The very newest <lb/>
and latest styles in everything in my line. <lb/>
Prices lower than ever. Give me a call. <lb/>
urns. m. b. <lb/>
Greenville, N, <lb/>
Old Glory <lb/>
waved in triumph o'er prices at <lb/>
MISSeS ERWIN'S <lb/>
Millinery Store. <lb/>
All kinds of hats at all kinds of prices. Felts, velvets, <lb/>
silks, ribbons, etc., in fact Just anything necessary <lb/>
to make a stylish hat, cheaper than ever before. Call and be <lb/>
convinced that the Reflector advertisements tell the truth. <lb/>
gas chandelier. Whether out of <lb/>
door or indoors, keep away from owing to the County Commission <lb/>
the chimney or from metallic masses not accepting his bond, and <lb/>
Chicago announce <lb/>
that thy have discovered a certain <lb/>
cure for cancer; that have <lb/>
tested it and they <lb/>
have succeeded in effecting a cure <lb/>
in nearly every case. Let US hope <lb/>
that future will lustily their <lb/>
claims. <lb/>
A county officer who <lb/>
allowed a prisoner to escape <lb/>
tried and the judgment <lb/>
passed upon him being a line of <lb/>
costs. It was proven on <lb/>
the trial that officer was very <lb/>
and the Judge gave him <lb/>
the full penalty f law. <lb/>
A crazy man. be had <lb/>
been discharged from an <lb/>
cared, went on a rampage in <lb/>
Eaton, Ohio, Saturday night, ills- <lb/>
pitying a particular fondness I'm <lb/>
smashing windows. Before be was <lb/>
captured be demolished win <lb/>
value which amount- <lb/>
ed to Next morning the <lb/>
town looked like a hurricane had <lb/>
truck it. <lb/>
OnO AS A Or CAT TAILS. <lb/>
the proposed victim. At a given <lb/>
signal severs others approach, and <lb/>
close in on him, rob him, some- <lb/>
times injuring him. An <lb/>
additional police now ride about <lb/>
the Bo s oil and keep a sharp <lb/>
lookout. Hut, despite this extra <lb/>
vigilance, the outrages continue. <lb/>
Cue day walking in a <lb/>
rather remote avenue of the <lb/>
realized that ha was being <lb/>
followed, lie grasped the situation <lb/>
and apparently took no notice. As <lb/>
In had expected, a signal culled two <lb/>
or three fellows from the shrub <lb/>
As the first approached San- <lb/>
looped down as to tie his <lb/>
grasped the robber by tho <lb/>
ankle, and used him as a sort of <lb/>
cat nine tails, lashing bis <lb/>
first and then <lb/>
the other, before they had a <lb/>
even lo think of escaping, slaving <lb/>
the ribs of one, smashing the arm <lb/>
of another, and leaving tho whole <lb/>
went on and remarked to the next <lb/>
policeman ho <lb/>
will find two or three men <lb/>
up there more dead alive. <lb/>
You'd better go and have a look at <lb/>
For first time many <lb/>
United States is importing <lb/>
in tare quantities. Further, <lb/>
the fail of the home crop bids fair <lb/>
to be more than a mere sporadic <lb/>
Instance. Through long <lb/>
by means of <lb/>
have almost ceased to produce <lb/>
seed, like all other <lb/>
similar circumstance. in <lb/>
become weakened and <lb/>
subject to all sorts of disease-. <lb/>
of kind, and possess your souls <lb/>
in Wail. <lb/>
Expensive Liver. <lb/>
Apropos of Pierre re- <lb/>
assertion that no gentleman <lb/>
can well on an income of less <lb/>
than a day and <lb/>
a Union club associate <lb/>
are today in New York at least a <lb/>
dozen men whose living expenses ex- <lb/>
those of Pierre at the <lb/>
time he made the remark, a score of <lb/>
years ago. Europe has had several <lb/>
spendthrifts, not on the <lb/>
or Sugar <lb/>
type, hut of good position, <lb/>
who have thrown away their <lb/>
and income at that rate within <lb/>
tho decade. Now, as if to prove <lb/>
that Mr. was not far out <lb/>
of the way in his estimate, comes <lb/>
tho staid and conservative London <lb/>
Spectator with an article published <lb/>
before poor Pierre's death trying to <lb/>
that a man cannot possibly <lb/>
live well in a good social position <lb/>
on a yearly income of less than <lb/>
pounds. The very wealthy <lb/>
seem to be coming around to <lb/>
lard's estimate, particularly in <lb/>
York Times. <lb/>
elected to the same office <lb/>
in 1890 served two years. <lb/>
funeral took place Monday <lb/>
and was attended by a <lb/>
large number of people. <lb/>
Are Rovers. <lb/>
Speaking of American bridge <lb/>
builders, in an article relating to <lb/>
structural iron workers, a writer in <lb/>
Leslie's Monthly <lb/>
is now here, a thousand miles <lb/>
tomorrow, with these men. <lb/>
Their trade makes them rovers, <lb/>
wherever a great job may <lb/>
Died From Fright <lb/>
Smith, colored, whose <lb/>
is licensed of robbing <lb/>
barns, was visited by an officer <lb/>
to interrogate her about being a <lb/>
witness. She desperately <lb/>
nervous and died night. Dr. <lb/>
J. who attended her, <lb/>
certifies she died from flight. <lb/>
Her husband was found not guilty <lb/>
that afternoon and reached home <lb/>
to bud his wife, who was perfectly <lb/>
well the day dying. Her <lb/>
sixteen year old daughter bad inn <lb/>
away and married Tuesday <lb/>
and this had woman <lb/>
that she was lo <lb/>
death her was <lb/>
rested and in came to ply <lb/>
her with Times. <lb/>
A Chicago has con- <lb/>
the notion of establishing a <lb/>
home for the neglected <lb/>
dated statues which in years past <lb/>
nave crept into Chicago parks and <lb/>
other public places. He proposes <lb/>
to call it Park. <lb/>
mi <lb/>
Win ii Mr, study la Id <lb/>
New York. lie may sometimes us seen <lb/>
In London, relates tin London Doll <lb/>
Mail. Ai oilier times In <lb/>
Paris or, shook the croupier nut have <lb/>
cried in <lb/>
or iii whiter <lb/>
Hie is bail for Ids Chest, <lb/>
he also DO met times in Cairo, <lb/>
Bo is a perfect cosmopolitan, a perfect <lb/>
man of the world the mast eater <lb/>
of <lb/>
lie has n never falling How of <lb/>
moral sentiments, which <lb/>
Well his as- <lb/>
poet. he with a young <lb/>
of mean, no. <lb/>
a disputation concerning lbs <lb/>
of certain word In <lb/>
dictionary. Trent argument they got to <lb/>
betting, and by slakes in <lb/>
heavy petting. When the dictionary <lb/>
was produced Ike decided, <lb/>
Mr. Hie <lb/>
gentleman great surprise, to be the <lb/>
As be pocketed the wad of <lb/>
notes over <lb/>
be Is said to offered bis <lb/>
this piece of philosophic <lb/>
be, all, is <lb/>
not In this world. If la <lb/>
knowledge and now <lb/>
it you did Sot know <lb/>
Times <lb/>
Union grows <lb/>
oranges, I oranges <lb/>
are moving, and good times <lb/>
must come again. Let others take <lb/>
go- their gold from the gloomy depths <lb/>
Florida gathers hers <lb/>
under God's own heaven, and <lb/>
it colored by the loyal sun him <lb/>
self, flavored by the dew and <lb/>
In New York today there u. ,.,. Watch the stands <lb/>
End of the Century Club. <lb/>
The End of the Century Book <lb/>
Club held meeting <lb/>
with that charming hostess, Mrs. <lb/>
Tuesday <lb/>
afternoon. works of Tennyson <lb/>
were still under discussion, but <lb/>
business out of the ordinary line <lb/>
calling tor immediate action, the <lb/>
literary was postponed <lb/>
for a future meeting. <lb/>
prize contest was one of <lb/>
many versatile novelties furnished <lb/>
to club by their very talented <lb/>
interrupted narrative <lb/>
to be tilled in with Tennyson's <lb/>
many of <lb/>
poems. The cards were handsome <lb/>
printed for the Th <lb/>
three highest cards were filled by- <lb/>
Mrs. Mrs. V. Harding <lb/>
Mrs. Arthur, former win- <lb/>
by lot. <lb/>
An elegant collation keeping <lb/>
with the pretty roam and <lb/>
the beautiful hostess was served at <lb/>
the closing hour. <lb/>
At Syracuse, New fork, a few <lb/>
days ago there was the bewilder- <lb/>
spectacle of not less <lb/>
thoroughly drunken men who <lb/>
marched tangled down <lb/>
i pi sheet. no <lb/>
was a new bad a <lb/>
free opening day, and that two <lb/>
hundred barrels of beer were <lb/>
tied by the crowd. Most <lb/>
of the drunken men are said to be <lb/>
sober <lb/>
This suggest are many <lb/>
people in Syracuse who com <lb/>
sober o because it usual <lb/>
costs mom y lo be any other <lb/>
A the rider meets <lb/>
H to with yon <lb/>
accident happen U a of <lb/>
At this moment they are in <lb/>
now in a town on a <lb/>
river, in camp far in thinly <lb/>
maimed and strewn upon the . h southwest, even <lb/>
Then leisurely j<lb/>
gang came back from Egypt a few <lb/>
months having performed a <lb/>
notable exploit in bridging Kile. <lb/>
There are American iron men down <lb/>
in Cuba, and contracts have <lb/>
signed for over a score of bridges <lb/>
in south Africa, all to lie done by <lb/>
to be started when the <lb/>
Boer war has run its <lb/>
Country folk of the <lb/>
opinion that the <lb/>
is an excellent <lb/>
barometer and that it takes <lb/>
only when a season of fair <lb/>
is coming. M. a French <lb/>
naturalist, investigated the <lb/>
question and has come <lb/>
to the this insect is, <lb/>
ill fact, more sensitive than the best <lb/>
barometers and that it ran <lb/>
be tied to prod id weather. <lb/>
It is in electric <lb/>
that the in- t is Whether <lb/>
the American is likely to I <lb/>
useful in weather prediction i.- re <lb/>
referred lo our <lb/>
bureau for . <lb/>
W it i <lb/>
He- I It'll . <lb/>
like gill <lb/>
She r <lb/>
In in . girl <lb/>
nun in <lb/>
I -red. <lb/>
nothing <lb/>
lock and a <lb/>
fer to have a <lb/>
Town <lb/>
lift your <lb/>
pass <lb/>
ever or <lb/>
as freight cars <lb/>
and i In ii wonder whether <lb/>
ever gave such promise of the <lb/>
gladness heaven as these long <lb/>
trams have on the perfume <lb/>
The Charlotte says not <lb/>
generally <lb/>
is S, yet North Carolina <lb/>
not so much feel it, and <lb/>
there Is not out a depression of <lb/>
a limited of <lb/>
money. We don't how it <lb/>
with r . ; we can speak from <lb/>
hat we haven't as much <lb/>
now , as we bad three weeks <lb/>
it , you for <lb/>
of <lb/>
but we have a great deal to be <lb/>
thankful lot, shall not let <lb/>
festival pass by entirely <lb/>
Record. <lb/>
This ts time of the year when <lb/>
overcoat covers a multitude <lb/>
of old clothes. <lb/>
Don't be depressed by <lb/>
tunes. the blackest storm <lb/>
most radiant rain <lb/>
It makes difference at this <lb/>
time, fur <lb/>
war stamp taxes h repeal- <lb/>
ed, but the public like to <lb/>
that now, after it is to late <lb/>
to do anybody any good, the <lb/>
of the Slates <lb/>
has decided express com- <lb/>
and not shipper should <lb/>
have paid for the one stump <lb/>
on each receipt. If this <lb/>
decision bad been rendered about <lb/>
three yea is ago it would have saved <lb/>
the people several <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
The Greenville re- <lb/>
that changes in the Atlantic <lb/>
North roan <lb/>
a enable one to leave <lb/>
in the <lb/>
Lion at Goldsboro <lb/>
west. That railroad is <lb/>
giving the best schedules its <lb/>
history to tho people. <lb/>
News Observer. <lb/>
Mi.-. I Tripp, daughter of <lb/>
Mrs. Susan Robinson, of <lb/>
was brought to a corpse <lb/>
Friday night's train. <lb/>
tending a school at Marion, N. <lb/>
at which place she died. Her <lb/>
disease was typhoid fever. She <lb/>
was buried on last Saturday near <lb/>
Jen Free Will <lb/>
Ulcers or <lb/>
Running Sores i <lb/>
need not become a fixture upon <lb/>
body. If they do it is your fault, for <lb/>
MEXICAN <lb/>
MUSTANG LINIMENT <lb/>
will thoroughly, quickly and <lb/>
cure these afflictions. There <lb/>
is no guess work about it; if this <lb/>
is used a cure will follow. <lb/>
YOU KNOW <lb/>
Mustang Liniment. Ai a It at top. <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
TONIC LAXATIVE <lb/>
tr you have sour stomach, <lb/>
breath, inactive liver, heartburn, kidney trouble, loss <lb/>
f insomnia, lack energy, bad blood, M muddy ., <lb/>
or any and which tell th of bad bowel <lb/>
impaired system, Legato WM You. <lb/>
It -ill clean out the and <lb/>
th mucous membrane of lbs purify your Mood and put ye <lb/>
on again. Your appetite will return, your bow move <lb/>
liver and to trouble you, skis clear sad <lb/>
and you will feel th old lira energy buoyancy. <lb/>
tho proper to their h <lb/>
i i hi ill i rill Had <lb/>
It pats at J <lb/>
tout, term. <lb/>
re and ell, happy CF <lb/>
For Salt k <lb/>
i., i. <lb/>
Id <lb/>
tr at <lb/>
C. <lb/>
t nM Ike mi M om U cm. <lb/>
Our Suits are so good <lb/>
that we say to you, buy one <lb/>
and you will get 118.00 <lb/>
back if yon don't like suit. <lb/>
If we make any sort of mis- <lb/>
take, bring the suit back and <lb/>
let as make it right. <lb/>
Call it our generosity, call it <lb/>
generosity, call it fair- <lb/>
call it anything yon like. <lb/>
But do it. <lb/>
By the way, is the <lb/>
place where we can put the <lb/>
most value into our suits. <lb/>
a long story. <lb/>
The suits tell it. <lb/>
We do what we say we do. <lb/>
Frank Wilson, <lb/>
The King Clothier. <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
If there is a CROSS MARK <lb/>
in the margin of this paper it <lb/>
so to remind yon that you owe <lb/>
Eastern for <lb/>
subscription and we request <lb/>
yon to settle as early as pas- <lb/>
We need what YOU <lb/>
owe as and hope yon will not <lb/>
keep as waiting for it. <lb/>
This notice is for those who <lb/>
And the cross mark on their <lb/>
paper <lb/>
LOCAL REFLECTIONS. <lb/>
Virginia beat North Carolina in <lb/>
the game of foot ball at <lb/>
Mr, J. H. lost bis drive <lb/>
horse Sunday. He the <lb/>
animal bad pneumonia. <lb/>
Is railed lo notice <lb/>
warrant attachment by C. <lb/>
Moore, Superior Court Clerk. <lb/>
Try some our currants, dates, <lb/>
raisins, nuts, apples, oranges, <lb/>
Jelly, apple butter, etc., for <lb/>
Thanksgiving dinner go <lb/>
ales with turkey. <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
Books <lb/>
N. C. History stories <lb/>
Life of Jackson Life of Lee <lb/>
Grimm's Fairy stories <lb/>
Moses In <lb/>
public and private schools. <lb/>
and other books can be bad at Re <lb/>
Book Store. <lb/>
tics, Johnson Physical Culture, <lb/>
slant copy books, Cam- <lb/>
pus tablets, Keystone composition <lb/>
books, penny pencils, slate pencils <lb/>
In wood, slates, pen, ink, crayons, <lb/>
rules, and lots of other things, st <lb/>
Reflector Book Store <lb/>
Don't <lb/>
Book Store has en <lb/>
tire stock of North Slate cigars <lb/>
made by the Cigar Co. <lb/>
These are the good cigars that we <lb/>
have been selling so cheap, and as <lb/>
the factory will not make any more <lb/>
of this kind smokers will do well to <lb/>
lay a supply before they are <lb/>
gone. <lb/>
Land Posted. <lb/>
All person are hereby <lb/>
under penalty of law from en- <lb/>
bunting, Ashing, or any <lb/>
way upon my land <lb/>
known as Braxton place <lb/>
adjoining Fred James <lb/>
Harris and the Blips land. <lb/>
S. Q. <lb/>
Mixed. <lb/>
Young ladles should be careful, <lb/>
writing letters their <lb/>
not to get them to <lb/>
A case of this <lb/>
kind recently occurred, and <lb/>
the thing away <lb/>
by forwarding the totter he <lb/>
ed to Tun But out <lb/>
of compassion for the young lady <lb/>
we do not print It. <lb/>
HOWDY DO. <lb/>
Some Speak to Me, Some to You. <lb/>
November 1901. <lb/>
R. L. Smith went to Norfolk to- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
F. O. Whaley returned to Hali <lb/>
fax today. <lb/>
Victor Italian band came <lb/>
in this morning. <lb/>
Rev. D. W. Davis left morn- <lb/>
for Pantego. <lb/>
Miss Bus Evans went lo Scotland <lb/>
Neck this morning. <lb/>
Adrian Savage left morning <lb/>
for Norfolk and Richmond. <lb/>
Mrs. W. T. Hunter, who has <lb/>
been sick some days, is up again. <lb/>
Mrs. W. H. has been <lb/>
sick some day but has now <lb/>
Misses and Mattie Kittrell <lb/>
returned to Saturday <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
L. H. Rountree went to Ayden <lb/>
Saturday evening returned <lb/>
J. S. and wife and little <lb/>
son, of Baltimore, who have been <lb/>
visiting here, left this morning. <lb/>
W. A. Beavans, former <lb/>
of telephone exchange <lb/>
here, left this morning for bis borne <lb/>
in to try to regain his <lb/>
health. <lb/>
Tuesday. November <lb/>
E. W. Face went to Kinston <lb/>
Monday evening. <lb/>
O. B. W. Hadley left for La- <lb/>
Grange Monday evening. <lb/>
J. Roman left today for Par <lb/>
and Washington. <lb/>
A. M. Ferry returned Monday <lb/>
evening from a trip the road. <lb/>
Misses Maud Lassiter and licit <lb/>
returned to Winter- <lb/>
v Monday evening. <lb/>
Clarence and , George <lb/>
Woodward returned Monday even- <lb/>
from a trip the rand. <lb/>
W. G. private <lb/>
to Congressman John H. <lb/>
Small, came in Monday to spend a <lb/>
day or two here. <lb/>
Wednesday, November <lb/>
Daisy Tucker to Beth- <lb/>
el today. <lb/>
T. M. Hooker left morning <lb/>
for Baltimore. <lb/>
Miss Bruce Forbes left <lb/>
evening for Kinston. <lb/>
J. W. Perkins returned Tuesday <lb/>
evening from <lb/>
Miss Mary Rogers, of Kinston, <lb/>
over today to visit Miss <lb/>
Higgs. <lb/>
Miss Helen Gray, Kinston, <lb/>
came over this morning to attend <lb/>
the dance and spend Thanksgiving <lb/>
with Misses Mary Alice and <lb/>
Mattie Moore. <lb/>
No man who makes a practice of <lb/>
kissing babies be wholly <lb/>
popular. <lb/>
N. C, Nov. <lb/>
Last Saturday Mrs. J. D. Cox <lb/>
made unusual preparation for Sun- <lb/>
day, alter having everything nicely <lb/>
prepared she placed all the good <lb/>
things a she has for the <lb/>
purpose. Sunday morning when <lb/>
she went to make arrangements <lb/>
for dinner lo, and behold some <lb/>
sneaking thief had visited her bus <lb/>
and even now Mrs Cox is not <lb/>
the best pleased person one ever <lb/>
met. <lb/>
A Cure for Di- <lb/>
twelve ounces of <lb/>
dislike, one pound of resolution, <lb/>
two grains of common sense, two <lb/>
ounces of experience, a large sprig <lb/>
of time, three quarts of consolation, <lb/>
set them oven a fire of love, <lb/>
sweetened with the sugar of for- <lb/>
get skim with the spoon <lb/>
of melancholy, when cool put in <lb/>
the bottom of your heart take <lb/>
in small doses when needed. Sat- <lb/>
or money re- <lb/>
has she gone back on you again <lb/>
Ed <lb/>
Misses and Hattie Kittrell <lb/>
went to Greenville Saturday and <lb/>
returned that evening. <lb/>
Miss Clyde of Koch <lb/>
dale, was visiting town <lb/>
day. <lb/>
W, G. Evans went to Kinston <lb/>
Saturday evening and returned <lb/>
Monday morning. <lb/>
Thanksgiving will be observed <lb/>
here Thursday. Religious services <lb/>
will be held in the Missionary <lb/>
tint church. <lb/>
Many changes are taking place <lb/>
here in the way of homes. Up- <lb/>
town people are moving down town <lb/>
and down people are moving up <lb/>
town. <lb/>
The chiming of wedding bells <lb/>
will soon be beard. us. <lb/>
Johnnie Carroll spent last <lb/>
day and Sunday in Kinston. <lb/>
John who has several <lb/>
contracts for building William- <lb/>
left for that place Monday <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
Will Kittrell, of spent <lb/>
part of Monday here. <lb/>
Jerry Nichols has accepted a <lb/>
with the A. Cox Mfg. <lb/>
Co <lb/>
Mrs. G. K. Dixon, who has <lb/>
visiting her sinter near Black Jack, <lb/>
came home yesterday. She says <lb/>
her sister's condition is very <lb/>
Dr. B. T. Cox was Greenville <lb/>
yesterday on business. <lb/>
J. W. Harper visited Blackjack <lb/>
and returned Tuesday. <lb/>
John Peel, of Roxobel, says this <lb/>
year he .-pent five hundred dollars <lb/>
for fertilizers n crop and his re- <lb/>
turns showed seven dollars and <lb/>
fifty cents. Good fanning for Mr. <lb/>
Peel. <lb/>
Yesterday evening at the home <lb/>
of the bride, Mr. Alex Evans <lb/>
united in mania to Miss Annie <lb/>
Smith, Major Smith, J. P. <lb/>
Land <lb/>
term containing acres more or <lb/>
less. Nice tobacco, cotton or corn <lb/>
land, acres cleared. Two good <lb/>
tenant houses and other <lb/>
Adjoins the lands Henry Cory, <lb/>
Lewis others <lb/>
may be known as the James <lb/>
II. laud. Apply to A. <lb/>
ti. Cox. <lb/>
Better Coach Soon. <lb/>
A to editor of <lb/>
Reflector, under from <lb/>
Mr. E. of <lb/>
Transportation of the Atlantic <lb/>
Coast Line, says he hopes <lb/>
within the next week or so to put <lb/>
a better first class roach on the <lb/>
passenger train on this brunch of <lb/>
their road. This is in accordance <lb/>
with n promise he made the com- <lb/>
of whom he met <lb/>
here last summer to talk over de- <lb/>
sired improvements. Mr. <lb/>
says the letter be bad not <lb/>
forgotten his promise, but bad been <lb/>
thwarted in his owing to the <lb/>
great amount of work <lb/>
passing through railroad <lb/>
and now he hopes soon to fulfill his <lb/>
promise. Our people will hall the <lb/>
with much <lb/>
pleasure as did the new <lb/>
schedule which Mr. gave <lb/>
us last August. <lb/>
The difference between a new <lb/>
fad and a new is that <lb/>
young have fads and old ones <lb/>
have wrinkles. <lb/>
AND FACTORY SALE <lb/>
Factory to Consumer. No middle mans profit <lb/>
BOUGHT LOTS OF <lb/>
worth choice goods <lb/>
at factory prices. <lb/>
Clothing, Notions, Shoes, Hats, <lb/>
AT HALF VALUE. CUSTOMERS WILL GET THE BENEFITS. <lb/>
Boys clothing, <lb/>
and Salts, Price<lb/>
Sixes to Years.<lb/>
SIZES <lb/>
TO YEARS. <lb/>
Mens Clothing. Suits <lb/>
and Price<lb/>
Odd Coats. <lb/>
and Coats <lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
Boys Knee Pants. <lb/>
II and kind, sizes to <lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
add <lb/>
Mens Pants. <lb/>
and to Pants, now <lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
and . at <lb/>
These prices for cash <lb/>
No goods charged at these prices. <lb/>
MEN'S BOYS DRESS SHIRTS <lb/>
ate <lb/>
to nO Shirts now <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
pieces. <lb/>
A full line from B C now going <lb/>
The biggest value ever offered. <lb/>
STEEL ROD CONG CROOK <lb/>
ED HANDLED, <lb/>
to kind, <lb/>
print Me <lb/>
Mined. Shoes. <lb/>
Men shoe now <lb/>
Ladies pat lips<lb/>
Big stock on baud. <lb/>
Yon sec them. <lb/>
MENS UNDERWEAR. <lb/>
and kind now <lb/>
and<lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
Sample Price. <lb/>
bats<lb/>
All I Inert <lb/>
ALL COLORS. <lb/>
Regular price <lb/>
NOW <lb/>
price <lb/>
Bought Enough Goods For Ten Small Stores. <lb/>
ELL. COME. <lb/>
DRESS GOODS. <lb/>
Clocks and <lb/>
now <lb/>
la J If All shades, all kinds, all quality- The ladies are <lb/>
Bu at the immense stock. Come to see us and bring jug <lb/>
I , . neighbors, or tell them about us. <lb/>
day clock h <lb/>
The cheapest and best line we <lb/>
ever had. Special value. <lb/>
from to <lb/>
S Silks- Yards. <lb/>
the cheapest to the <lb/>
All qualities. Don't fail <lb/>
e of the choice patterns. <lb/>
Ladies Muslin Underwear <lb/>
Heady to wear. Ask our saleslady in department <lb/>
to show them to yon. Petticoats, Drawers, U <lb/>
Ac., at less cost of material. <lb/>
goo All Table <lb/>
Worth now <lb/>
Carpets, Matting, Floor OH Cloth <lb/>
Biggest line in town. All <lb/>
Calicoes <lb/>
Others sell cheap calico. <lb/>
colors. They will run be- <lb/>
fore you leave town. <lb/>
FURNITURE. <lb/>
leather Couches, quality OS; <lb/>
quality Oak Suits; Styles of <lb/>
. Rockers. Hall Racks, Carriages, Get prices. <lb/>
Woman at <lb/>
Al and prices, <lb/>
from mills. is a rare <lb/>
for ladies to get a U <lb/>
good <lb/>
Fruit Loom. <lb/>
Barker's Mills, <lb/>
without ticket, yard <lb/>
wide Jo. <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
The Big Store. <lb/>
Greenville, N C. <lb/>
. <lb/>
.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018569_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Grove's <lb/>
Tasteless Chill Tonic <lb/>
A BY THE <lb/>
NO, <lb/>
Reward. <lb/>
has <lb/>
for <lb/>
st <lb/>
the <lb/>
years. <lb/>
One Million S <lb/>
Hundred Thou <lb/>
sand bottles wet <lb/>
sold last year. <lb/>
Do you think it <lb/>
pays to try others <lb/>
or North <lb/>
Executive <lb/>
official information <lb/>
received at thin Depart <lb/>
Pitt county, <lb/>
N. C, on or about December 22nd, <lb/>
1900, John H. Parker shot and <lb/>
killed Alex Little. <lb/>
it that <lb/>
the said John baa Bed <lb/>
or so <lb/>
that the ordinary process of law <lb/>
cannot be served upon <lb/>
Now, therefore, I, Charles B. <lb/>
Aycock, Governor of the State of <lb/>
North by virtue of <lb/>
thorn v in me vested by law, do <lb/>
issue this my proclamation, offer- <lb/>
a reward of two hundred <lb/>
for the and de <lb/>
livery of the said John H. Parker <lb/>
to the Sheriff of Pitt county at the <lb/>
Court house in Greenville and I <lb/>
do enjoin all of State <lb/>
and all good citizens to assist in <lb/>
said to justice, <lb/>
Done at our City of <lb/>
f i the 28th day <lb/>
seal J October, in the year <lb/>
of our Lord one thous- <lb/>
and nine hundred and one and in <lb/>
the one hundred and twenty sixth <lb/>
year of our American Independence <lb/>
By the <lb/>
Aycock. <lb/>
P. M. Private Sec. <lb/>
H. Parker is <lb/>
nearly six feet high of spare build, <lb/>
weighs about has <lb/>
boyish face, is almost beard <lb/>
less, has blue eyes, light hair, is <lb/>
slightly stooped and is about <lb/>
years old. <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
Utters of the <lb/>
of this day <lb/>
been issued lo roe by the Clerk of the <lb/>
of Pitt notice Is <lb/>
given to all persons holding claims <lb/>
said to present them to me <lb/>
payment on before the 24th day of <lb/>
1902, or this notice will be plead in bar <lb/>
of their recovery. All persons indebted to <lb/>
said estate are requested to Immediate <lb/>
settlement of their indebtedness. <lb/>
This MM of October ML. . <lb/>
WILLIS, <lb/>
Administrator of Junes Tingle. <lb/>
BLOW. <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINT<lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Letters baring this day <lb/>
been issued to me upon the estate Lewis <lb/>
deceased, by the Clerk of the <lb/>
Superior Court of Pitt notice <lb/>
hereby given to all persons baring <lb/>
against aid estate to present to o <lb/>
for on or before the 80th of <lb/>
October or notice will be plead in <lb/>
bar of their recovery. All persona Indebted <lb/>
to estate are notified to make <lb/>
payment to me. <lb/>
This the day of October, ML <lb/>
CHARLES <lb/>
of Lewis t <lb/>
BLOW, <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
Hy virtue of a decree of the Superior <lb/>
Court of Pitt county, a Special <lb/>
W. <lb/>
Proceeding entitled <lb/>
A. House vb. Mary <lb/>
and B. <lb/>
A. James, wife <lb/>
Moses H. and others the under- <lb/>
signed Commissioner will sell for cash be- <lb/>
fore Court House door In Greenville, on <lb/>
Monday, December the follow- <lb/>
described tract of land situate In the <lb/>
county of Pitt and in Bethel township, ad- <lb/>
lands of R, M. Jones, n. <lb/>
ones, W. I. the Mary A. <lb/>
James land and others, containing <lb/>
acres more or leas, and known as the Ash- <lb/>
House land, being all land own- <lb/>
ed by him at the time of his death. <lb/>
This November 7th, 1901. <lb/>
Jams, <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
Steamer leave Washing- <lb/>
ton daily at A. M. tor <lb/>
ville, leave Greenville daily at <lb/>
M. for Washington. <lb/>
Steamer leaves <lb/>
Greenville Mondays. Wednesday <lb/>
and Fridays at I A. M. <lb/>
leave Tarboro for Greenville <lb/>
Tuesdays, <lb/>
at A. M. freight only. <lb/>
Connect at Washington Witt <lb/>
Steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore, <lb/>
New York and Boa- <lb/>
ton, and for all paints for the west <lb/>
with railroads at Norfolk. . <lb/>
Shippers order freight by <lb/>
the Old Dominion B. Co. from <lb/>
New York; Clyde Line <lb/>
Bay Line from Baltimore <lb/>
and Line frost <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. Aft. <lb/>
Washington, <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, Aft., <lb/>
Greenville, N. O.<lb/>
FOR <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector <lb/>
a M <lb/>
D. J. EDITOR <lb/>
TRUTH TO <lb/>
PER YEAR <lb/>
VOL. XX. <lb/>
PITT COUNTY, N. C, TUESDAY, DECEMBER j <lb/>
NO <lb/>
-AT- <lb/>
inn <lb/>
it.<lb/>
Photographer, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
The leader in good work and low prices <lb/>
Nice Photographs tor par <lb/>
Half per <lb/>
All other lines very cheap. Crayon Portraits <lb/>
made from any small picture cheap. Wee <lb/>
Frames on hand all the tune. Come and <lb/>
my work. No trouble to show <lb/>
Ton Forgot <lb/>
What <lb/>
THAT I AM STILL CARRYING <lb/>
UP TO DATE OF <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Shoes <lb/>
Hats, Shirts, Pants, Hardware <lb/>
Tinware, <lb/>
AND A NUMBER OF OTHER THING <lb/>
WHICH I AM UNABLE TO MENTION <lb/>
Come to see me for your next Barrel of Flour or Pork. <lb/>
JUST <lb/>
ONE <lb/>
LAND BALE. <lb/>
By virtue of the power in me vested by <lb/>
the fast will and testament of Lewis <lb/>
deceased, I will on Monday, <lb/>
1801, before the court house <lb/>
in Greenville, sell at public sale to <lb/>
bidder for cash tractor <lb/>
parcel of land in I ill <lb/>
county, lying on the South side of Reedy <lb/>
Branch and the land of Lewie I. <lb/>
GREENVILLE S. O. <lb/>
mil <lb/>
I . <lb/>
Frederick . <lb/>
Moore <lb/>
acre, more or less. the tract of <lb/>
land deeded to Lewis by 11-<lb/>
of <lb/>
Cotton Bagging lies <lb/>
on hand- <lb/>
Fresh goods kept constantly s <lb/>
hand. produce an <lb/>
sold. A trial will <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
Yours to please- <lb/>
Jas. B. White. <lb/>
It refers to Or. Liver <lb/>
Sack headache <lb/>
Insomnia ,. ,. <lb/>
ANY d symptoms and many others <lb/>
LIVER <lb/>
. . <lb/>
Ms Pills <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
V r the above heading The <lb/>
Richmond discusses with <lb/>
the <lb/>
AFTER TWO YEARS PREMIUMS HAVE BEES PAID IN THE<lb/>
E. E, Griffin, <lb/>
Practical Maker <lb/>
Opposite P. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Recently visited the <lb/>
mid purchased the largest stock clocks, <lb/>
watches, chains, pins He., ever <lb/>
brought to Special for <lb/>
holiday and presents <lb/>
Prompt attention to special orders Re- <lb/>
to clocks and watches done <lb/>
promptly. <lb/>
E. E. GRIFFIN. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED IN <lb/>
J. W. CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Factors and handlers of <lb/>
Bagging, Ties Bags. <lb/>
and shipments <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
of <lb/>
The is a statement of the <lb/>
of meetings of the Board of <lb/>
for Pitt county, number of <lb/>
each member hath attended, number <lb/>
miles traveled sad amounts allowed for <lb/>
services as for the <lb/>
year ending December 2nd. 1901. <lb/>
N i <lb/>
U h Davis hath attended days, <lb/>
O W Harrington hath attended day, <lb/>
O Little bath attended days, <lb/>
Joe Cannon hath attended H days, <lb/>
J J hath attended <lb/>
L J Chapman hath attended days. <lb/>
days as Com. it <lb/>
For miles traveled <lb/>
Pitt In Superior court. <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
D. <lb/>
D. above <lb/>
named, will take notice that an action en- <lb/>
titled above has been commenced in th <lb/>
Superior of Pitt conn y for divorce, <lb/>
defendant will further take <lb/>
appear at the <lb/>
held <lb/>
that he is required to be and appear at <lb/>
next regular term of Superior held <lb/>
fr the county of <lb/>
house in Greenville, on the <lb/>
Hie u. an i i, <lb/>
there to the which will <lb/>
be Hied before court, or <lb/>
will be granted accordingly to <lb/>
. <lb/>
OF N. J., TOUR POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value, <lb/>
Cash Value, <lb/>
Paid up <lb/>
Extended Insurance that works Automatically, <lb/>
Is Non <lb/>
Will be re-instated If arrears within on month <lb/>
living, or within three year after lapse, upon evidence <lb/>
and of arrears interest. <lb/>
second No Restrictions. Incontestable. <lb/>
Dividends are payable at the beginning of the second and cf each <lb/>
succeeding year, provided the premium for the current year be paid. <lb/>
They may be To or <lb/>
To Increase the Insurance, or <lb/>
To make policy payable as an during the <lb/>
of Insured. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
ASTHMA CUBE FREE. <lb/>
Instant Permanent Cure in all <lb/>
SENT ON OF POSTAL. <lb/>
is nothing like It brings <lb/>
instant relief, even in the worst cases. It cures when <lb/>
all else fails. <lb/>
The F. Wells, of Villa, Ridge, III., says. <lb/>
bottle of received in good <lb/>
cannot tell you how thankful I feel for the <lb/>
good derived from it. I was a slave, chained with <lb/>
putrid sore throat and asthma for ten years. I de <lb/>
paired of ever being cured. I saw your advertise <lb/>
the cure of this dreadful tormenting <lb/>
asthma, thought yon had <lb/>
but resolved to give it a trial. To my <lb/>
trial acted like Scud <lb/>
to send to every a trial treatment of <lb/>
that cured Mr. Wells. We'll send it by mail post <lb/>
Vie of to any sufferer who will write for it, <lb/>
Never though you are despairing, however <lb/>
case. will relieve and cure. The worse your <lb/>
the more glad we to send it. Do not write at once, ad- <lb/>
Dr. Taft Bros Medicine Co. TO 130th N. Y. City. <lb/>
in last Sunday's Observer, as <lb/>
to the future policy of the Deni- <lb/>
party. It begins with a <lb/>
high compliment to Governor Jar- <lb/>
visas beat men <lb/>
best Democrats that North Caro- <lb/>
has as of the <lb/>
Governors that the State has <lb/>
ever intensely Southern <lb/>
man, in war a id in peace true to <lb/>
his Stale to his <lb/>
It then takes up each of three <lb/>
that he lays down as <lb/>
the hue of its duly and its inter <lb/>
I all of which are <lb/>
by our <lb/>
laud <lb/>
The Charlotte Observer <lb/>
a public service in printing this <lb/>
interview with North Carolina's <lb/>
grand old man He has blazed the <lb/>
way Democratic success, if <lb/>
the party will follow his counsel to <lb/>
the letter it will gain all that ii has <lb/>
lost. Though it should not succeed <lb/>
in getting control of the govern <lb/>
it would at least be a strong <lb/>
respectable minority, and per- <lb/>
haps the best that Demo- <lb/>
party has done in this conn <lb/>
try has been when it was out of <lb/>
Democracy in this country <lb/>
is the great conserving force, and <lb/>
it is as truly a power lot good <lb/>
when in minority as when in <lb/>
the majority. <lb/>
The interviews with Governor <lb/>
Mr. have been <lb/>
widely read and have been the sub <lb/>
of much favorable comment. <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
As am no In hospital In Haiti- <lb/>
. more for the of undergoing an op- <lb/>
I have placed my ac- <lb/>
counts bands of my brother, Mr <lb/>
Wiley Hi own, a the <lb/>
Brown, and given him full authority to col- <lb/>
receipt fur same. I <lb/>
those Indebted to rue to call on him and set- <lb/>
as early a <lb/>
M D. <lb/>
be- <lb/>
Monday of <lb/>
W, R. WHICHARD MO., <lb/>
V, C. <lb/>
The In de <lb/>
and low the <lb/>
lowest. Highest market <lb/>
paid for country produce.<lb/>
prayer of the complaint. <lb/>
Clerk of Superior <lb/>
SPECIAL TERM OF COURT. <lb/>
In accordance with an order of Hi. Ex- <lb/>
II. Aycock, Governor of <lb/>
North Carolina, appointing a special term <lb/>
of Superior court for Pill county for the <lb/>
of trying civil actions, notice Is <lb/>
given that said term of court will <lb/>
convene on Monday, th day or <lb/>
1901, two <lb/>
of said court shall be sooner finish- <lb/>
ed. This Nov. 4th, 1901 <lb/>
K. L. DAVIS, Chairman. <lb/>
Board of Commissioners county. <lb/>
tot <lb/>
O W <lb/>
day as Com. W. <lb/>
For day as Committee m f i <lb/>
miles <lb/>
ALLOW KU W LITTLE <lb/>
For days as Com. . <lb/>
For days as ii M <lb/>
For miles traveled <lb/>
7.60 <lb/>
For days as f <lb/>
For days as Committee <lb/>
For miles traveled J <lb/>
50.00 <lb/>
I J <lb/>
For days V, <lb/>
For miles traveled <lb/>
L J <lb/>
For U MM <lb/>
For miles traveled . <lb/>
175.------- <lb/>
S. M. Schultz. <lb/>
Total allowed Board <lb/>
1310.00<lb/>
Pitt. I <lb/>
I T U Moore, ex-officio clerk of the <lb/>
of count <lb/>
that the <lb/>
la a correct statement as doth appear <lb/>
of record In my office, ibis day of No- <lb/>
1901. T R MOORE, <lb/>
or North court <lb/>
Pitt county. I <lb/>
William J. Notice of summons <lb/>
v, land Warrant of At- <lb/>
T. <lb/>
defendant, will take <lb/>
on the 20th day <lb/>
a was issued against him <lb/>
in above entitled action by the <lb/>
clerk of the Superior court of Pitt <lb/>
county, returnable to the January term <lb/>
1902 of Superior which <lb/>
on Monday before the 1st Monday <lb/>
in March, 1902, It being the 18th day of <lb/>
January, Which summons was re- <lb/>
turned by Sheriff of said county ex- <lb/>
and with this endorsement, <lb/>
T. C. not to be in <lb/>
my said action, <lb/>
a alleged the to recover of <lb/>
the C <lb/>
fifteen hundred damages <lb/>
alleges is due him, damages. <lb/>
a violent vicious assault committed on <lb/>
him by the defendant by which <lb/>
received serious and painful personal In- <lb/>
C. defendant afore- <lb/>
said, will take notice that a warrant of <lb/>
Attachment was issued by under- <lb/>
signed clerk on the day of November, <lb/>
1901. against said <lb/>
directed to Sheriff or Mania <lb/>
county and returnable to the January term, <lb/>
1902 of Superior court which convenes <lb/>
on the 7th Monday let Monday <lb/>
in march, 1902, It being the 18th <lb/>
1902, and being time <lb/>
and place when and where Hie. <lb/>
summons is returnable. A ad the raid T. <lb/>
C will take notice that be la re- <lb/>
demur to <lb/>
it m, <lb/>
A LINK Of <lb/>
mm <lb/>
Also a nice of Hardware. <lb/>
J. . <lb/>
Norfolk, V. <lb/>
Cotton Buyers sod <lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
ons. Private Wires to Hew York, <lb/>
Chicago and New <lb/>
is a <lb/>
is a vice. <lb/>
Wholesale retail Grocer and <lb/>
Furniture Dealer. Cash paid for <lb/>
Hides, Fur. Seed, Oil Bar <lb/>
Turkeys, Egg, etc. Bed- <lb/>
steads, Mattresses, Oak Suits, Be <lb/>
by Carriages, Go Carts, <lb/>
suits, Tables, Lounges, Safes, Pi <lb/>
Gail at Ax <lb/>
Key West Cheroots, <lb/>
American Can- <lb/>
Peaches, Apples, <lb/>
Pine Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour Sugar, Coffee, Meat, <lb/>
Ly, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Oar- <lb/>
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Prunes, Raisins, Glass <lb/>
Chins Ware, Tin and Wooden <lb/>
Ware, Cakes and Crackers, Macs <lb/>
Cheese, Best Butter, Stand <lb/>
ard Sewing and nu <lb/>
other goods. Quality <lb/>
Cheap for cash. Com <lb/>
to see me. <lb/>
Phone <lb/>
Board Com. PHI County. <lb/>
the complaint of plaintiff In this action or <lb/>
the be granted. <lb/>
Dene at my office in town of Greenville <lb/>
Clerk Superior <lb/>
THE GREENVILLE <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
Manufacturers of <lb/>
Doors, Sash and Blinds, <lb/>
Interior and Exterior Finishings <lb/>
for Fine Modern Cheap Build- <lb/>
We solicit your patronage <lb/>
guarantee to give satisfaction is <lb/>
prices, styles work. <lb/>
Please send your orders to <lb/>
N. o. <lb/>
notice to <lb/>
The Commoner <lb/>
WILLIAM J. <lb/>
Editor A Publisher, <lb/>
LINCOLN, <lb/>
la Advance. <lb/>
One Year Six Months <lb/>
Three Sing. Copy Be. <lb/>
ATTENTION AGENTS I <lb/>
Mr. John C. General for <lb/>
North Carolina and Virginia, of Well- <lb/>
Known and Popular Company, <lb/>
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT <lb/>
Life Insurance Co., of <lb/>
Desires to announce to Its large number of <lb/>
policy holders, and to the public <lb/>
generally, of North <lb/>
will now Business In this <lb/>
state and from this date will issue Its <lb/>
splendid and desirable to all de- <lb/>
siring the vary beat insurance In the best <lb/>
life insurance company In world. <lb/>
If the local agent In your town baa not <lb/>
yet completed address <lb/>
JOHN O. <lb/>
BUM Agent, Raleigh, N. <lb/>
Assets <lb/>
Paid policy <lb/>
Live, reliable energetic agents wanted at <lb/>
. once to for <lb/>
No traveling em- <lb/>
ployed. at <lb/>
Weekly and <lb/>
will be sent <lb/>
one year for or <lb/>
and <lb/>
one year tor 13.60 In ad- <lb/>
PATENT <lb/>
ABE KNOCKING <lb/>
THEM <lb/>
Hew Baby at the Are Mads <lb/>
Ge to Bed. <lb/>
Baby lions, as well as baby boys <lb/>
and girls, need fresh air and sun- <lb/>
shine, at the Washington Zoo the <lb/>
baby lions have summer quarters <lb/>
where they can run and stretch <lb/>
their limbs in a freedom somewhat <lb/>
akin to that of the jungle. So well <lb/>
do they like their outdoor quarters <lb/>
that will not in at closing <lb/>
time, although their big, tender <lb/>
mother urges them by all the ways <lb/>
of which she is mistress. A novel <lb/>
method has to be resorted to in <lb/>
order to get big babies into <lb/>
their cage without hurting them, <lb/>
for gentleness is one of the rules at <lb/>
the Washington Zoo, and no animal <lb/>
is punished where humane treat- <lb/>
will answer. When the <lb/>
are called to their quarters, <lb/>
the three baby lions poke their <lb/>
wrinkled noses close to the bars <lb/>
settle themselves down as if to pro- <lb/>
test against going to bed. Then s <lb/>
watchman approaches with a hose <lb/>
and shoots s stream of water close <lb/>
to their small snarling faces. Then <lb/>
back go the kittens by tho great <lb/>
to the cavern like door of the <lb/>
inner cage, followed every step of <lb/>
the way by the man with tho nose. <lb/>
Finally the three small heads dis- <lb/>
appear and tho sliding door hides <lb/>
three pairs of eyes from glaring out <lb/>
into the darkness. Baby lions do <lb/>
not like water at least, not on <lb/>
their smooth the animal <lb/>
keeper, who has noticed- a kitten <lb/>
stop and shake a protesting foot on <lb/>
a wet pavement, has turned his ob- <lb/>
to good account in get- <lb/>
ting these giant; pussies to bed. <lb/>
Prices Reduced <lb/>
On All Stock of <lb/>
FURNITURE, <lb/>
For Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Hats. Caps, Shoes, Trunks <lb/>
Boys and Mens Clothing, Gents Furnishings, Gloves, <lb/>
and b M line of Baby Caps, Cloaks, Mitts and Bootees. <lb/>
Come to see day a bargain day and everything a <lb/>
bargain. Your friends, <lb/>
W. T. LEE CO- <lb/>
A POLICY THE <lb/>
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
6,000.00 <lb/>
3.604.00 <lb/>
6,000.00 <lb/>
3,602.80 <lb/>
Mr. Dan Abram, of Rocky Mount, N. C, took out policy <lb/>
No. in 1886, amount kind, ordinary life, <lb/>
year accumulation period; annual premium total <lb/>
payments <lb/>
OPTIONS OF SETTLEMENT. <lb/>
year dividend payable in <lb/>
and continue policy for <lb/>
Full paid additional <lb/>
and continue policy for <lb/>
. Withdraw total cash value <lb/>
For an agency, or example of results at your age for com- <lb/>
with any other company, address, giving date of birth, <lb/>
T. ARCHIBALD GARY, General Agent. <lb/>
For Virginia and North Carolina, <lb/>
1201 B. Main Street, Richmond, Va. <lb/>
ALL ARGUMENTS HALT WHEN THE <lb/>
AND MERCHANDISE IS RIGHT. <lb/>
A Life Accidents. <lb/>
said to be <lb/>
years old, who died the other <lb/>
in Dublin, Ind., had mot with many <lb/>
accidents during her life. At the <lb/>
age of G years she fell from a picket I <lb/>
fence and broke her finger. In 1853 i <lb/>
she broke her ankle, in she fell <lb/>
down n cellar and broke her collar i <lb/>
bone and three ribs, in 1885 in a <lb/>
runaway while returning from <lb/>
church she was thrown from a <lb/>
and her right hip broken, in <lb/>
1888 slipped and fell on the <lb/>
breaking her left hip; <lb/>
a 1892 she broke her left leg at the <lb/>
knee, in 1896 she fell from a tree, <lb/>
breaking her arm; in 1898 fell <lb/>
out of bed, breaking her right arm, <lb/>
and in 1900 she broke her right hip <lb/>
for the second time. <lb/>
Fascinating Abdul <lb/>
Tho character of Abdul <lb/>
must obviously have many facets. <lb/>
The latest of his visitors is Dr. <lb/>
Herzl, the Zionist loader, who re- <lb/>
ports that ho is perfectly charming. <lb/>
sultan spoke to with the <lb/>
greatest kindness. I found him a <lb/>
courteous, charming gentleman. <lb/>
One almost forgot he was this <lb/>
mighty potentate. He has kept <lb/>
himself in touch, I found, with all <lb/>
the latest developments of modem <lb/>
and evident is far from <lb/>
those oral notions which <lb/>
one somehow associates with tho <lb/>
Ottoman Mail. <lb/>
of handsome Oak Suits. Odd <lb/>
Beds, Wish Stands, Lounges, Couches, Side <lb/>
Boards, and Rockers, we have greatly <lb/>
reduced tie prices and invite all who need <lb/>
to our stock, we can and will save <lb/>
yon money. <lb/>
Don't that we have a large line of <lb/>
Loading Guns- <lb/>
and will sell them at reduced prices. Call and <lb/>
secure a bargain. Your friends, <lb/>
I. A t o <lb/>
The Place to <lb/>
get the Best <lb/>
Goods for the <lb/>
Least Money <lb/>
v w then yon will <lb/>
HUNTING So straight to <lb/>
HOOKER, <lb/>
Complete stock of fall and winter goods <lb/>
now ready for your inspection, and our I <lb/>
HEW <lb/>
YOU ARE <lb/>
cannot be surpassed anywhere. The <lb/>
ladies should not fail to see our stock, <lb/>
H. C. HOOKER. <lb/>
Tim's Pi <lb/>
MEAN LOOKING <lb/>
W Has lost pan a dollar for men. If a man is <lb/>
C Indeed he wears, he is also judged by th <lb/>
C letter-head he uses. Au artistic, nicely <lb/>
head may looked on as a good investment. <lb/>
It will be don. right. <lb/>
The price It <lb/>
will be right, <lb/>
Stud your next order to <lb/>
The Reflector Office. <lb/>
will be right, <lb/>
m m <lb/>
HART, <lb/>
Headquarters<lb/>
The pleasant days we have been having are now a thing <lb/>
of the past, and only the pleasant memories of the same re- <lb/>
main. Have you supplied yourself with all necessary winter <lb/>
clothing I When yon face facts all arguments halt. We give <lb/>
no prices but all winter goods <lb/>
SOLD. <lb/>
A full and up-to-date line of Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Dry <lb/>
Goods, Rugs, Notions, Dress Goods and Trimmings. Under- <lb/>
wear the cold weather kind. Winter and season right for <lb/>
Blankets and Comforts, yes stock right too. <lb/>
STANDARD PATTERNS. <lb/>
RICKS WILKINSON. <lb/>
An Aquarium. <lb/>
A globe with goldfish makes a <lb/>
very attractive ornament for a <lb/>
room, but globes and are <lb/>
not always available, and so the ex- <lb/>
temporized aquarium may be <lb/>
In great advantage. It is one of the <lb/>
bottles that can lie purchased <lb/>
for a few cents at a druggist's. <lb/>
one that holds about two gallons <lb/>
and some clean sand in tho bottom, <lb/>
with a few mossy stones, and an- <lb/>
in the sand a few plants from <lb/>
some nearby brook. From the same <lb/>
brook can secured snails, tad- <lb/>
salamanders and tho tiny <lb/>
lack nosed dace. Hero is an aqua- <lb/>
at almost no cost that is <lb/>
of affording a great deal of en <lb/>
and not a little <lb/>
When the plants arc growing <lb/>
nicely, giving off oxygen and feeding <lb/>
upon tho carbonic acid gas in the <lb/>
water, the latter need not <lb/>
ed than a week unless <lb/>
too much animal life is introduced <lb/>
into the bottle. A little experience <lb/>
will show just how many inmates of <lb/>
tho aquarium the plants will<lb/>
Flower. <lb/>
One of the strangest botanical <lb/>
plants in the world is Hie <lb/>
found in the Malay <lb/>
peninsula It is limply a blossom, <lb/>
without vine or stem, and <lb/>
grows a on decayed <lb/>
flower is <lb/>
like n yard in <lb/>
and has cup in mid- <lb/>
a five or <lb/>
FOR HARDWARE STEAM SUPPLY. <lb/>
How Sparkling Drops o Sew . <lb/>
Formed. <lb/>
Ground a little below the surface <lb/>
is always wanner than the air over <lb/>
It. lone as the surface of the <lb/>
ground is above the dew point vapor <lb/>
must rise pass from the earth <lb/>
into the air. The moist air so <lb/>
formed will mingle with the air <lb/>
above it, and its moisture will be <lb/>
condensed, dew wherever it <lb/>
comes in contact with a surface <lb/>
cooled below the tarn point. In <lb/>
fact, dew rises from the ground. <lb/>
tome metal trays over the <lb/>
the soil and the road on <lb/>
nights. You will generally <lb/>
find more moisture on the grass in- <lb/>
side the trays than outside; you will <lb/>
always observe a deposit of dew in- <lb/>
side the trays, even when there is <lb/>
none outside at all. This shows <lb/>
that far more vapor rises out of the <lb/>
ground during the night than con- <lb/>
dew on the and <lb/>
other objects. <lb/>
Dew, then, rises from the ground. <lb/>
But how is the dew formed on <lb/>
bodies high up in tho air Dew <lb/>
does not rise in particles, as. it <lb/>
once considered, to fall in particles <lb/>
like line rain. It rises in vapor. <lb/>
Some is caught by what is on the <lb/>
I surface of the earth, but the rest <lb/>
ascends in vapor form until it comes <lb/>
in contact with a much colder <lb/>
face to condense it into moisture. <lb/>
The vapor does not flow upward <lb/>
in a uniform treats, but is mixed in <lb/>
the air by eddies and whirl currents <lb/>
and carried to bodies far from <lb/>
where it In fact, dew may be <lb/>
deposited even though country <lb/>
for many miles all round dry <lb/>
incapable of yielding any vapor. In <lb/>
such cases the supply of vapor to <lb/>
form that dew would depend on the <lb/>
evaporation of the dew and on what <lb/>
was wafted over by the winds. <lb/>
the are a <lb/>
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE; <lb/>
-a. <lb/>
system thaw <lb/>
Take No Substitute- <lb/>
BLACKJACK ITEMS. <lb/>
Black Jack, K. C, Nov. <lb/>
the sick list. <lb/>
Mills, of South Carolina, is <lb/>
visiting and relatives here. <lb/>
Mrs. L. C. Mills is visiting <lb/>
parents here. <lb/>
W. H. Wynne and L. C. <lb/>
went to Friday and re- <lb/>
turned Monday. <lb/>
Mrs. Dixon is here spend- <lb/>
a few days with her mother. <lb/>
Willie Cox were here <lb/>
a while Saturday evening. <lb/>
Miss Susan Harper, an aged lady <lb/>
of this place, is very low with <lb/>
fever. <lb/>
Mis. G. K. Dixon, of Winter- <lb/>
ville, was here a few days <lb/>
visiting her sister, Miss Harper, <lb/>
who is very sick. <lb/>
Mrs. L. H. White is improving <lb/>
slowly. <lb/>
White, of Washington, <lb/>
was here on business several days <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
We have list added Steam Supply to our business and <lb/>
will sell in this line very low. See us when in want of <lb/>
Jenkins Globe and Anglo Valves, Standard <lb/>
and Valves, Check Valves, Water <lb/>
Oil Cup, Air Cocks, Steam Hancock <lb/>
U. S. Injectors, Cocks, Steam <lb/>
Pipe Fitting all sizes. <lb/>
OF Packing, Rubber Bolt, <lb/>
Belt, Belt, Belt Lacing, Belt Hooks, <lb/>
SOLE AGENTS <lb/>
Machines. Sewer and Farm <lb/>
Garland Cook Stoves. <lb/>
BAKER HART. <lb/>
Building. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Some Canine Warriors. <lb/>
Tho idea of the monks of St. <lb/>
Bernard been adopted by an <lb/>
English officer, who has trained St. <lb/>
Bernard dogs and collies to act <lb/>
carriers of ammunition and as <lb/>
aid to tho wounded. London <lb/>
has been enjoying a dog show by <lb/>
these gifted animals. Each dog <lb/>
carries several first aid to the <lb/>
wounded packages two small <lb/>
flasks of brandy and been so <lb/>
trained alter delivering the <lb/>
bandages be turns about so that the <lb/>
flasks of brandy are within reach <lb/>
of the wounded man. <lb/>
Other don have been trained to <lb/>
act sentries and pickets up- <lb/>
on discovery of an will ft <lb/>
pit for and<lb/>
George, your hat <lb/>
blown If you lean so fur MM <lb/>
the exclaimed a Cowl <lb/>
to his Hills bob who was wits <lb/>
him in n railway Quickly <lb/>
tho from lbs head of <lb/>
r papa bid it he <lb/>
hack. <lb/>
now, too hat has he <lb/>
angry, <lb/>
George set up a howl. <lb/>
a time father <lb/>
In if i whistle your <lb/>
hot will come back <lb/>
Thou be whistled and the <lb/>
en bead. It's bee <lb/>
yon Afterward, while imps <lb/>
was n shrill <lb/>
voice Ob <lb/>
papa, Drown my i at <lb/>
of window lie Will <lb/>
Driving Out the Enemy, <lb/>
These are Jays of sharp lid <lb/>
attacking throat and lungs, <lb/>
one dues not like to <lb/>
think about Avoid further exposure and <lb/>
the comfort with <lb/>
Painkiller lbs family <lb/>
sixty a cold la <lb/>
Boo the right article <lb/>
There is <lb/>
A leader of woman. <lb/>
realizes <lb/>
Irony of fate. <lb/>
It is better to break n good <lb/>
never to have made <lb/>
any. <lb/>
People may take their meals out <lb/>
and Mill lake them in. <lb/>
There is often a in one <lb/>
little smile. <lb/>
The best way to kill a falsehood <lb/>
is to let it lie. <lb/>
Many people have only to <lb/>
inn c <lb/>
The power that industry of <lb/>
what it has won in a <lb/>
The calendar has no trouble in <lb/>
up to date. <lb/>
Even a hungry sailor will scorn <lb/>
a bight of rope. <lb/>
Tho clergyman's job is some- <lb/>
thing of a <lb/>
The Best Prescription Malaria <lb/>
hills Fever Is a bottle of Grove's <lb/>
Tasteless Ionic. It Is simply iron <lb/>
and quinine in a form. <lb/>
Pay. <lb/>
cure.<lb/>
SB <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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