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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>
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			<date>2012</date>
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pa<lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, GREENVILLE, V. C. <lb/>
Wilkinson <lb/>
CLASSES OF <lb/>
GOOD SOLD <lb/>
Fine Dress Goods, and Dry Goods, made not merely to <lb/>
sell, but to serve whoever gets This is particularly true <lb/>
of fine Dress Goods. Silks and Laces, Gloves and <lb/>
Trunks Valises, Shoes, Clothing, Hals. Pants, <lb/>
Shirts. <lb/>
A few kinds of our goods, are the same all other stores, <lb/>
like Ginghams, etc., but the bulk of the <lb/>
goods we is in one sense or another different from that sold <lb/>
by store. <lb/>
pan are returnable within a time <lb/>
if they fail to satisfy. <lb/>
Entire Stock of Summer Goods <lb/>
has been Reduced, and <lb/>
be Sold by August 10th. <lb/>
Dimities have reduced one thud to one <lb/>
half. Have made big reductions in our black dress goods. Low <lb/>
prices will prevail all through the month of July. <lb/>
Standard styles for September now <lb/>
ready. The August Designer Fashions sheets always free. <lb/>
A PROTEST.<lb/>
licks Wilkinson <lb/>
Marriage Licenses . <lb/>
Last week Register of Deeds U. <lb/>
Williams issued licenses to the fol- <lb/>
lowing couples; <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
H. A. Barrel and Lydia V. <lb/>
Davenport <lb/>
Williams <lb/>
To our friends and former patrons, <lb/>
the tobacco of Eastern <lb/>
North <lb/>
We take this method of inform- <lb/>
you that we have changed the <lb/>
of oar business and alter <lb/>
I August 1st we will be at the <lb/>
Lena New Farmers warehouse, which is <lb/>
on the street running to <lb/>
I, <lb/>
W. A. <lb/>
Stocks. <lb/>
T. L. Bland and the site of Hines Hamilton's old <lb/>
an. just opposite the factory of <lb/>
and Marie the American Tobacco Company. <lb/>
j In new warehouse, <lb/>
, which we have appropriately <lb/>
Jacob Harris and Martha we <lb/>
i to erect it with a view to snowing <lb/>
Simon and Arie Barrett. the f <lb/>
. possible advantage. Every <lb/>
The new comet seems to be a has been made to get the lights so <lb/>
good mannered comet, after all. It arranged as to show your tobacco <lb/>
hasn't butted into anything yet. i for all it is worth. We shall use <lb/>
Atlanta Journal. i every means to have every eon- <lb/>
for our customers, good <lb/>
warm box stalls for your horses, <lb/>
table for <lb/>
yourselves. <lb/>
have with us a larger and <lb/>
experienced set of warehouse <lb/>
helpers than ever before, whose <lb/>
every energy will be directed in <lb/>
i the advancement of your interest. <lb/>
And now to all our old friends <lb/>
we wish to express to you our <lb/>
heartfelt appreciation and <lb/>
gr for your liberal patron- <lb/>
age the past, and assure you if <lb/>
you will continue with us in our <lb/>
new quarters you shall never have <lb/>
have cause to regret it, we will <lb/>
do by you as we have in the past, <lb/>
everything that mortal effort can <lb/>
accomplish. <lb/>
And to those who have never <lb/>
tried us, if you will give us one <lb/>
chance we will convince yon that <lb/>
Joyner are the <lb/>
friends, guarantee that yon <lb/>
will come again. <lb/>
Sincerely <lb/>
Joyner <lb/>
N. C, July <lb/>
Mr. E. Borden, Supt. Transport a- <lb/>
A. C. L., Wilmington, N. C. <lb/>
We, the ministers of Greenville, I <lb/>
understand that certain citizens; <lb/>
of this town have petitioned for <lb/>
a Sunday train between Weldon <lb/>
and Kinston. In answer to said I <lb/>
petition, we beg leave to present <lb/>
the following considerations and <lb/>
counter <lb/>
The Sabbath, the church, <lb/>
the home are institutions that <lb/>
have come down from the <lb/>
age with divine authority, and <lb/>
there is a vital relation between <lb/>
them. The welfare of the nation <lb/>
depends upon of the <lb/>
home. The preservation of all <lb/>
that is best in the home the <lb/>
nation depends upon the <lb/>
of the Sabbath. The great <lb/>
moral and spiritual which <lb/>
preserve the of the home <lb/>
and secure the welfare of the j <lb/>
are maintained largely, if not <lb/>
altogether, by the proper <lb/>
the Sabbath day and its <lb/>
entire consecration to the worship <lb/>
of God. History shows that in <lb/>
proportion as any nation has dis- <lb/>
regarded the fundamental law of <lb/>
the Sabbath its moral forces have <lb/>
declined, its people have <lb/>
and its prosperity has <lb/>
declined also. There can <lb/>
be no doubt that the <lb/>
and substantial growth of our <lb/>
Christian civilization hinge upon <lb/>
the proper observance of the <lb/>
Lord's day in to the <lb/>
divine decree regarding it. <lb/>
In view of these facts we hereby <lb/>
respectfully express our <lb/>
said Sunday train, and <lb/>
that it be not put in op- <lb/>
believing, as we do, that <lb/>
it will have a demoralizing effect <lb/>
the towns along the route. We <lb/>
know of no town along this line of <lb/>
railroad that suffers want of a <lb/>
Sunday train, we earnestly, <lb/>
hope that your railroad company <lb/>
will not put such in operation. <lb/>
F. A. Bishop, Presiding Elder, <lb/>
Wash. District M. K. Church So. <lb/>
W. E. Powell, Pastor Disciple j <lb/>
Church. <lb/>
A. T. King, Pastor Baptist <lb/>
H. Eire, Pastor M. E. <lb/>
Church South. <lb/>
F. G. an, Pastor Pres <lb/>
Church. <lb/>
W. E. Cox, Minister in Charge <lb/>
Episcopal Church, <lb/>
GREENVILLE'S GREAT DEPARTMENT STORE <lb/>
BARGAINS <lb/>
FOR JULY <lb/>
It is not always the low price that makes the <lb/>
bargain, it is what you get for the price. To <lb/>
see a bargain you must use both one <lb/>
on quality the other on the price. <lb/>
Here arc a Few of Our <lb/>
Dimities and Colored Lawns that were re- <lb/>
to Those beautiful ones that were <lb/>
reduced to <lb/>
Swiss that has been sell for you <lb/>
can get during this sale <lb/>
We have placed a special lot of <lb/>
slippers on our counters some of these sold <lb/>
1.00 a pair your choice for Sizes, to <lb/>
Also Ladies Slippers worth to for <lb/>
Ladies Embroidered turnover collars each. <lb/>
Pearl shirt waist sets from to <lb/>
If these are not Bargains We Don't <lb/>
Know What Bargains Are. <lb/>
The canning season is most here, you had bet- <lb/>
prepare for it by buying your Fruit Jars. <lb/>
We have them in Glass and Stone. Rubber <lb/>
rings for fruit jars. This is the place to buy <lb/>
them we sell only the best. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY <lb/>
and COMPANY <lb/>
GREENVILLE'S GREAT DEPARTMENT STORE <lb/>
1875.------ <lb/>
. M. <lb/>
Wholesale retail Grocer and <lb/>
Dealer, Cash paid for <lb/>
Hides Fur- Cotton Seed, Oil Bar- <lb/>
Turkeys, Egg, etc. Bed <lb/>
steads, Mattresses, Oak Suits, Ba <lb/>
by Carriages, Go-Carts, Parlor <lb/>
suits, Tables, Lounges, Safes, P. <lb/>
and Gail Ax <lb/>
High Life Tobacco, Key West Che- <lb/>
roots, Henry George Can- <lb/>
Cherries, Peaches, Apples, <lb/>
Pine Apples, Syrup, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour Sugar, Meat, Soap <lb/>
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar- <lb/>
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Prunes, Currents, Glass <lb/>
and China Ware, Tin and Wooden <lb/>
Ware, Cakes and Crackers, <lb/>
Cheese, Best Butter, New <lb/>
Royal Sewing Machines, and nu- <lb/>
other goods. Quality and <lb/>
Quantity. Cheap for cash. Com <lb/>
to see me. <lb/>
S. M. Schultz. <lb/>
Your Tongue <lb/>
If it's coated, your stomach <lb/>
is bed, your liver is out c-f <lb/>
order. Pills Will clean <lb/>
your tongue, cure your <lb/>
make your liver right. <lb/>
Easy to take, easy to operate. <lb/>
All <lb/>
brown or licit <lb/>
r it <lb/>
en mo <lb/>
BUCKINGHAM'S <lb/>
r OS R Co. <lb/>
Greenville Produce and <lb/>
Provision Market. <lb/>
Much of a Good <lb/>
That's what we much Silk Mull, Mer- <lb/>
Pebble Cloth, Mercerized etc., <lb/>
for the season. The season really lacks two <lb/>
months of being over, but we must reduce stock <lb/>
for fall goods. Consequently we are making <lb/>
great reductions in Wash Silks, White Goods, <lb/>
Embroideries, Percales, etc. The profit goes to <lb/>
you if you take advantage these reductions at <lb/>
once. We will not carry them over. You'll not <lb/>
have another chance to get the same goods for <lb/>
anything like the same money. Note these <lb/>
Silk Mulls, all colors, was , now <lb/>
Mercerized Pebble Cloths, was now <lb/>
Mercerized Chambray, was now <lb/>
Reported by M. SCHULTZ. <lb/>
pat. <lb/>
Family <lb/>
bushel <lb/>
round per lb <lb/>
ham <lb/>
-sides <lb/>
shoulders <lb/>
Pork <lb/>
Lard <lb/>
lbs per bushel <lb/>
Peas <lb/>
Butter <lb/>
Duck <lb/>
head <lb/>
Broilers <lb/>
Eggs <lb/>
lb <lb/>
lb. <lb/>
lb <lb/>
Tallow <lb/>
Fodder <lb/>
Hay <lb/>
Beeswax <lb/>
Meal <lb/>
r. <lb/>
1.25 <lb/>
11.26 <lb/>
New Front <lb/>
JAS. F. DAVENPORT. <lb/>
1835. Incorporated 1903. <lb/>
WHITT CO <lb/>
Marble and Granite <lb/>
Monuments <lb/>
and Agents for Wire Fencing. <lb/>
Main and <lb/>
Macon, Ga. <lb/>
Branch offices and shops, Mount, <lb/>
N. C, and C. <lb/>
For prices address Rocky <lb/>
Mount<lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
T. J. WHICHARD, Editor end Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR IN ADVANCE <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY. AUGUST 4.1903. <lb/>
No. <lb/>
LECTURE BY REV. <lb/>
Have You For -He <lb/>
Asks the Teachers. <lb/>
What have you fr <lb/>
subject the teachers <lb/>
County Institute and the <lb/>
. citizen in and around ville <lb/>
i heard one of the strongest <lb/>
ever delivered to the teachers of <lb/>
thin comity. Mr. B. <lb/>
is entertaining speaker, <lb/>
. and his lecture was full -of sound <lb/>
philosophy, spiced with whole- <lb/>
some wit, and driven home by <lb/>
that enthusiasm which only <lb/>
i from a brain and heart fired with <lb/>
. holy zeal. This lecture the <lb/>
kind to make you think, re- <lb/>
solve mid <lb/>
The speaker mid every per- <lb/>
son has time for same <lb/>
amount of time pins what is to <lb/>
put into, it from his own i brawn <lb/>
limit, and enthusiasm. This <lb/>
r something else which <lb/>
with time is what makes the <lb/>
The <lb/>
who mixes muscle alone with his <lb/>
i time all his to <lb/>
compete with all miracle ma- <lb/>
chine. Rut, if to this he add- the <lb/>
the directive power of a cultivated <lb/>
mind to guide a trained hand he <lb/>
will move of competition <lb/>
of the world into <lb/>
the of the spirit. Then <lb/>
then-only the w <lb/>
of usefulness in service In the <lb/>
leave his <lb/>
graved in of low; upon the <lb/>
the people. Above all <lb/>
add the of u <lb/>
brink and yon will win <lb/>
your lo yd <lb/>
is laid up <lb/>
the children of the King. <lb/>
Tonight the Superior Court of <lb/>
THE TEACHERS AT WINTERVILLE. <lb/>
Second Week of the Institute Shows In- <lb/>
created Interest. <lb/>
present has been <lb/>
marked by increased interest in <lb/>
the work of the summer school <lb/>
now being held at Winterville. <lb/>
The enrollment at the beginning of <lb/>
this, second week, has reached one <lb/>
hundred sod twenty. The total <lb/>
enrollment will evidently go as <lb/>
high as one hundred and forty. <lb/>
No day so far has been so filled <lb/>
with work sod prospects of better <lb/>
results than last Tuesday. Besides <lb/>
the regular work of the day, two <lb/>
extra were at <lb/>
o'clock and another o'clock <lb/>
p. m. These two periods were <lb/>
given over entirely to <lb/>
of the Association <lb/>
for the of <lb/>
School House and <lb/>
Misses Lelah June and Viols <lb/>
of -the State Normal <lb/>
and Mrs. R. <lb/>
of Pit t, the district's <lb/>
presidents aX the association, were <lb/>
present. <lb/>
At the session the <lb/>
the association was <lb/>
explained by these three <lb/>
ladies and of meat- <lb/>
the association taken. At <lb/>
Uprisings in Cuba. <lb/>
Havana Cuba, July <lb/>
of the assertion <lb/>
yesterday by secretary of the <lb/>
that the killing of three men <lb/>
and capture of <lb/>
who bad attempted to cause an <lb/>
uprising in the of Bay- <lb/>
province of Santiago, effect- <lb/>
ended the only semblance of <lb/>
an uprising in Cuba, the rumors <lb/>
of uprisings in Eastern Cuba were <lb/>
fully confirmed today in the govern <lb/>
report from the officials of <lb/>
Santiago province. are to <lb/>
the that sine night of <lb/>
Sunday last armed and <lb/>
mounted men appeared out- <lb/>
villages proclaiming a <lb/>
lotion and the payment <lb/>
of the former the rev- <lb/>
army. No acts of <lb/>
Violence have been reported bat <lb/>
the inhabitants of I he Canto region <lb/>
are greatly excited. The leader <lb/>
of party is named <lb/>
He is a brother of one of <lb/>
the bandits killed by the rural <lb/>
guards Tuesday. Gen. <lb/>
commander in chief of the rural <lb/>
guards, has ordered the <lb/>
of aW the rural guards in <lb/>
eastern and the governor of <lb/>
Santiago province been in- <lb/>
M may be deemed <lb/>
to cooperate with the mounted <lb/>
troops. <lb/>
Gotten and Miss to enlist as many <lb/>
papers upon the <lb/>
education row <lb/>
confronting us. Miss Jones talked <lb/>
interestingly the in <lb/>
state. A organization <lb/>
then perfected of the <lb/>
Mis. , <lb/>
Wed musts y evening at o'clock <lb/>
at <lb/>
,, , , . Mrs. J Nobles, nix miles from <lb/>
of . . , . .,. <lb/>
Greenville, her daughter, Miss <lb/>
of u .,,,. . T <lb/>
. Nobles, Mr. Leon <lb/>
a Prey of Buzzards. <lb/>
New N. C, <lb/>
Coroner Dr. J. W. was <lb/>
summoned to six <lb/>
miles west of New Bern, to view <lb/>
the body of an unknown man. who <lb/>
was found in the swamp by <lb/>
while repairing bis fence. <lb/>
Dr. reports the body <lb/>
almost consumed by hogs and <lb/>
It is beyond recognition. <lb/>
No one has been missed in the <lb/>
community. weeks ago Mr. <lb/>
I pock gave a stranger employment. <lb/>
He got dinner and disappeared <lb/>
and has not been seen or heard <lb/>
since. Bones and a few re- <lb/>
of clothing was all was <lb/>
left. <lb/>
Lilly Whites Stirred Up. <lb/>
Pa., July is <lb/>
doubtful whether the great labor <lb/>
awaiting adjustment <lb/>
anthracite region will ever be set- <lb/>
by a conciliation board. The <lb/>
coal companies have <lb/>
on the board and so have <lb/>
the miners. Go every important <lb/>
question they are a tie one of <lb/>
the members admitted that it was <lb/>
unlikely they will be able to agree <lb/>
on an umpire, as provided by the <lb/>
commission award. <lb/>
Bead Remained in Her Head Years. <lb/>
Seventeen years ago, when Mrs. <lb/>
W. L. was years old, she <lb/>
was playing with some beads and <lb/>
Mime way got a glass bead <lb/>
about the size of a pea tip to the opinion that the cotton crop <lb/>
nose-. The failed to get <lb/>
Rumpus Among Colored Folks <lb/>
Boston, Mass., <lb/>
T. Washington missed the last <lb/>
train for South tonight <lb/>
of his making a tour of the <lb/>
newspaper offices here to a <lb/>
statement about a riot which <lb/>
curred at the African M. church, <lb/>
at the corner of Columbus avenue <lb/>
and Northampton streets this eve- <lb/>
Washington came into town <lb/>
from his home to give a <lb/>
lecture but he only succeeded in <lb/>
delivering it after a squad of <lb/>
had cleared the of <lb/>
some colored men who had made a <lb/>
lot of trouble. Four arrests <lb/>
made, one of the prisoners being a <lb/>
woman. She was . released <lb/>
later. <lb/>
Young Girl Killed in a Mill. <lb/>
Washington, N. C. Aug. 1.- <lb/>
Miss Bessie a 12-year-old <lb/>
girl employed in the knitting mill <lb/>
here, was accidentally killed this <lb/>
morning. She was at work near <lb/>
one of the operating tables when <lb/>
her dress was caught in the <lb/>
protected shaft, under the table, <lb/>
tier body was rapidly whirled <lb/>
around the shaft and her skull <lb/>
crushed against the floor, killing <lb/>
her almost <lb/>
The Future of Cotton. <lb/>
Mr. Ashley Home, of Johnson <lb/>
county, recently gave utterance <lb/>
Whichard; Secretary, Bess. <lb/>
Raiding, of Treasurer <lb/>
Mrs. of <lb/>
following <lb/>
It. Cut-, <lb/>
,, , ,<lb/>
sod Daisy j <lb/>
W. Tucker were married by <lb/>
M. T, Lawrence. <lb/>
Ai. Hie appointed hour for the <lb/>
ceremony march was <lb/>
played by Miss B. of <lb/>
will hold it first session As- <lb/>
at which session an <lb/>
important case for breach, of <lb/>
will occupy the the <lb/>
freight Car Wrecks <lb/>
Richmond, <lb/>
freight car loaded with <lb/>
of pimped from the <lb/>
and tore away of two <lb/>
buildings Main street. N one <lb/>
the The <lb/>
car had jumped the track several <lb/>
from Main street it <lb/>
was impossible for the men the <lb/>
rear of the train to a t tract the at- <lb/>
of the engineer. Just <lb/>
reaching Main street the ear <lb/>
lurched clear the <lb/>
and crashed below. It hit <lb/>
Clothing Co's <lb/>
store and the adjoining store <lb/>
by Joseph Johnston. <lb/>
The walls of the building were <lb/>
torn open from the third floor to <lb/>
the first. <lb/>
Labor Arbitrators Deadlocked. <lb/>
New La., <lb/>
expected the attitude of President <lb/>
Roosevelt on the question <lb/>
has made a break up of the white re- <lb/>
publican party of Louisiana. A <lb/>
circular addressed to the white <lb/>
republicans by republican leaders <lb/>
calls for an abandonment of party <lb/>
on ground that <lb/>
it identified with <lb/>
that s whits mar. belong to <lb/>
II. <lb/>
like crowd at the might meeting <lb/>
was it he largest yet had much <lb/>
as i a the <lb/>
know <lb/>
do their work and <lb/>
well did they do i a <lb/>
The the <lb/>
the <lb/>
first. of its existence. <lb/>
Through the of Mr. J. <lb/>
L. each recitation room <lb/>
has been-supplied with nit electric <lb/>
bell which call to- <lb/>
each section. <lb/>
No one ewer better work <lb/>
than is by these teach <lb/>
It is inspiring to see how <lb/>
earnestly they are prosecuting <lb/>
their studies. The educational in- <lb/>
of the enmity <lb/>
deceive a great from <lb/>
the work of thin The <lb/>
men charge of the work are do- <lb/>
honest, faithful service and <lb/>
each seems specially fitted for the <lb/>
part assigned him. <lb/>
Rev. B. W, will address <lb/>
the teachers tonight. It will pay <lb/>
to hear him. <lb/>
it out. A fie a few days the bead <lb/>
her no trouble and it was <lb/>
to have come Last <lb/>
week she gave a violent sneeze <lb/>
felt come her <lb/>
It was taken on I and <lb/>
lucre bead that bad gotten <lb/>
in there when she was a child. <lb/>
The bead gave her no when <lb/>
it came out and it is strange to <lb/>
know how the bead stayed there <lb/>
M long without giving trouble. <lb/>
News. <lb/>
In Raleigh a one-year-old child <lb/>
was chewing a piece of beef steak <lb/>
and fell over into a tub of water. <lb/>
The beef lodged in the child's <lb/>
throat and prevented it from <lb/>
drowning. <lb/>
If the citizens of this of any <lb/>
other want to turnover their <lb/>
earnings to the manipulators of <lb/>
stock market, that is <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
with her sister and maid of <lb/>
Nobles. <lb/>
A few friends were present to <lb/>
witness the marriage and partake <lb/>
of wedding supper <lb/>
followed. <lb/>
Mt deputy <lb/>
his bride <lb/>
f Pitt's most two to stag for them; <lb/>
ladies a sister Dr. J. every where ho was paid <lb/>
K. Of Greenville. <lb/>
and Mrs. Tucker to <lb/>
today and for the <lb/>
make home at Mr. <lb/>
T. R. it South <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
Two Rapists lo <lb/>
Petersburg, Va., July Two <lb/>
arrested a few <lb/>
days at Chase City on the <lb/>
charge of attempting as- <lb/>
sault on K. <lb/>
have convicted and <lb/>
were sentenced by Judge Holmes <lb/>
to be hanged on the 2nd of <lb/>
The feeling against the <lb/>
prisoners was such that it was <lb/>
necessary to have a military com- <lb/>
present at the trial. Today <lb/>
the two men men were brought <lb/>
here under guard. <lb/>
Closing About Over. <lb/>
Two Rag Time Anthems. <lb/>
A colored divine from Salisbury <lb/>
was holding a meeting here last <lb/>
week the services he <lb/>
told the that he had <lb/>
that <lb/>
live <lb/>
dollars each singing them, but <lb/>
because of the friendly relations <lb/>
between and <lb/>
himself he would render the two <lb/>
for five dollars, At once the con- <lb/>
set. to work and raised <lb/>
the money, for which they received <lb/>
two ragtime anthems. <lb/>
Randolph Argus. <lb/>
He Went to Winterville. <lb/>
A man at the depot <lb/>
evening said be had been <lb/>
in his mind whether to take a <lb/>
trip to Atlantic City or to Win- <lb/>
He wanted to go where <lb/>
there was a crowd of girls, and on <lb/>
heating the proportion was to <lb/>
at the teacher's institute, be was <lb/>
not long reaching a decision. <lb/>
Will Wait for Prices. <lb/>
The farmers will not likely rush <lb/>
the market with tobacco at the <lb/>
The early closing agreement of the season. They want <lb/>
tween the dry ex- to find out how prices are going to <lb/>
So far as the run. Reports of low prices come <lb/>
done at night is concerned, <lb/>
there will not be much doing yet, <lb/>
and some may continue to close <lb/>
early for a few week longer. <lb/>
from markets that have already <lb/>
opened, you can on <lb/>
Greenville giving the highest j <lb/>
prices that are to be had. <lb/>
of this country cannot be large <lb/>
again. Scarcity of labor and the <lb/>
uncertainty of holding contracts <lb/>
with those who can be hired and <lb/>
many other influences enter into <lb/>
against large cotton <lb/>
crop any more. The present out- <lb/>
look tor cotton is ii <lb/>
good price the coming season. <lb/>
The first bale of the was sold <lb/>
in New a few day ago at <lb/>
twenty six a half cents per <lb/>
pound; but of course we cannot <lb/>
hope for anything that price <lb/>
the crop. There is every in- <lb/>
however, that the <lb/>
of cotton will rule high this year, <lb/>
a little prudence in selling <lb/>
will almost certainly secure good <lb/>
prices for all. Of course no one <lb/>
can tell what will be the yield of <lb/>
the cotton in North <lb/>
this year; whether it <lb/>
large or small, the price will <lb/>
almost certainly be <lb/>
land Neck Commonwealth. <lb/>
Mr. Joseph W. Folk, the St. <lb/>
Louis lawyer who has made a <lb/>
reputation as wide as the bound- <lb/>
of the continent by his fear- <lb/>
less running to earth of the Mis- <lb/>
legislative is a <lb/>
native of county, this state <lb/>
and a graduate of Wake Forest <lb/>
College. They turn out men with <lb/>
high ideals of righteousness and <lb/>
courage of conviction in this <lb/>
famous Tar Heel Baptist college. <lb/>
Charlotte Chronicle. <lb/>
Twenty to One. <lb/>
They tell us the proportion of <lb/>
attendance the teacher's in- <lb/>
at Winterville, is about <lb/>
females to male. Boys are <lb/>
at a premium down there. <lb/>
No wonder Joe Blow is having <lb/>
such a good time. <lb/>
It is always an era of hard times <lb/>
with the shiftless man. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019343_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
it <lb/>
TWO <lb/>
TOTE EASTERN GREENVILLE, <lb/>
Cipher <lb/>
tO <lb/>
a young <lb/>
daughter of general. At the time the <lb/>
Crimean war out she was en- <lb/>
gaged to a lieutenant <lb/>
the army. There are cases <lb/>
where lovers so wrapped in <lb/>
each other that separation is agony. So <lb/>
It was with these two young people <lb/>
when departed for the <lb/>
ward. Lisa held to him till tho last <lb/>
minute and fell in a stupor when he <lb/>
left her. <lb/>
It had been arranged between them <lb/>
that should not only send word <lb/>
by everyday mail, but telegraph her in <lb/>
case of his being wounded or taken <lb/>
Rick. This wight involve sending news <lb/>
of a battle. The Russian government <lb/>
Rives out nil the news, not permitting <lb/>
oven the newspaper correspondents to <lb/>
Bend any except what has passed a <lb/>
censor. Therefore would not <lb/>
only obliged to send his message <lb/>
surreptitiously, but In cipher. The <lb/>
lover arranged a code, giving the <lb/>
key. He not tell her that there was <lb/>
little hope of his being able to use it <lb/>
Still, since the cipher as simply a few <lb/>
ordinary sentences, each with a special <lb/>
the sending of a message <lb/>
not impossible. <lb/>
was wealthy, and Russian <lb/>
are very corrupt. He made <lb/>
acquaintance of a telegrapher at head- <lb/>
quarters and arranged with him for <lb/>
1.000 rubles to send a message if re- <lb/>
quired. <lb/>
One evening Lisa was at an enter- <lb/>
at the house of Vladimir <lb/>
a prominent government of- <lb/>
at St. Petersburg. The <lb/>
had been stormed and the government <lb/>
was especially desirous of keeping <lb/>
news which forebode One defeat of the <lb/>
Russian cause from the people. The <lb/>
host knew of it and was instructed to <lb/>
proceed with his entertainment, since <lb/>
a postponement would excite suspicion <lb/>
In the midst of the festivities a <lb/>
gram was banded to Lisa. She tore off <lb/>
the envelope, scanned the words In the <lb/>
message and fell In a faint. <lb/>
who had been feigning to be in a merry <lb/>
mood, but really was depressed by what <lb/>
he was concealing, happened to be near <lb/>
Uh when she swooned, seized <lb/>
telegram, noticed the point from <lb/>
whence it came and knew at once that <lb/>
it must be a cipher message containing <lb/>
some news about the disaster. He <lb/>
bad Lisa carried upstairs to a private <lb/>
room, the police to come and <lb/>
take charge of her, and disappearing <lb/>
from among his guests went directly <lb/>
to the Imperial palace with the <lb/>
gram. <lb/>
The telegram was composed of two <lb/>
sentences, am on picket duty to- <lb/>
and love you as the <lb/>
first meaning has been a <lb/>
the second am badly <lb/>
It had been understood between the <lb/>
lovers that in the latter event Lisa <lb/>
should go to her lover If possible. Lisa <lb/>
before recovering from her swoon <lb/>
raved about Ills condition, then as soon <lb/>
as she came to herself raised herself <lb/>
the Couch on which she had been <lb/>
laid, saying that she must go at once <lb/>
to Then for the first time she saw <lb/>
among those about bar police officer. <lb/>
She knew at once that she had betray- <lb/>
ed herself. <lb/>
Lisa was Bent to her father's house, <lb/>
where she was kept under the <lb/>
lance of the police. Every effort was <lb/>
made Without success to induce her to <lb/>
tell from whom the telegram, which <lb/>
was unsigned, came. Rut it was quite <lb/>
plain that it must have from her <lb/>
lover. An account of the matter was <lb/>
sent to the headquarters of the army <lb/>
with orders to watch without <lb/>
Informing of the result of his mes- <lb/>
sage. In the of catching him send- <lb/>
another and discovering through <lb/>
what operator he sent it. how- <lb/>
ever, sent no more messages, for he <lb/>
was lying in a hospital severely <lb/>
wounded. <lb/>
Several months passed, during which <lb/>
Lisa was kept in close confinement, <lb/>
without any knowledge of her lover's , <lb/>
condition. She did not know whether <lb/>
Be had died of his wound or would live <lb/>
to suffer a worse fate for sending <lb/>
a telegraph message that j <lb/>
only the government might send. She j <lb/>
sank rapidly under the strain. Those <lb/>
who attended her dared not speak of <lb/>
anything that had happened in ; <lb/>
with the matter, Lisa did not <lb/>
even know bow her own father, who , <lb/>
was with the army in the Crimea, <lb/>
stood toward her. <lb/>
One afternoon there was n sound of <lb/>
hoofs and the Clatter of sabers <lb/>
In the court. Thinking that her father , <lb/>
had from tho war. a sudden <lb/>
thrill of hope passed through Lisa that <lb/>
he would bring her news of <lb/>
Then she heard her father's voice and <lb/>
looked for him to rush upstairs as he <lb/>
was used t- doing when he came home, <lb/>
but when be did not she supposed that <lb/>
he had not forgiven her for her part In <lb/>
the deceit. Presently she heard several <lb/>
people coining op the stairway very <lb/>
slowly. Then her d-or opened and her <lb/>
father enter d, followed Try the order- <lb/>
lies supporting the wasted figure of her <lb/>
lover. . I <lb/>
ate forgiven, my <lb/>
said the father. emperor has <lb/>
listened to my prayer in behalf. <lb/>
Vladimir won his own forgiveness by <lb/>
gallantry In the action of which he <lb/>
sent you the <lb/>
The father embraced his daughter; <lb/>
then her pale soldier lover limped to <lb/>
her and they were locked In one an- <lb/>
other's arms. <lb/>
The telegraph operator was not so <lb/>
fortunate. The message was traced <lb/>
him. and he sent to Siberia. This <lb/>
was the only cloud upon the <lb/>
and Lisa, a few years later, <lb/>
while at court, persuaded the emperor <lb/>
grant the man a pardon. <lb/>
HELEN W. STOCKARD. <lb/>
PERSONAL AND SOCIAL <lb/>
SATURDAY, <lb/>
W. R. Smith left this morning <lb/>
for <lb/>
Misses Ives and fox of <lb/>
spent today here. <lb/>
W. F. came from-Win- <lb/>
this morning. <lb/>
Vernon Bateman left Friday <lb/>
DEPARTMENT <lb/>
evening few Goldsboro. <lb/>
Firm I Rod. t r. . <lb/>
Almost everybody believes that, Emma Starkey went to <lb/>
Franklin was the Inventor of the light- Friday evening, <lb/>
rod. and in this one particular <lb/>
nearly everybody Is mistaken. The <lb/>
lightning conductor was not In I Kooky this morning, <lb/>
vented by the genius who Is to <lb/>
have the lightning wild and j B. returned <lb/>
played with bolts of but . Seven this morning; <lb/>
by a monk who lived <lb/>
it who erected his light- j Miss Rosa Tucker, from near <lb/>
catcher tin- palace of the cu , spent today hf re. <lb/>
of Moravia, June r <lb/>
The name of this Inventive Airs. J. G. <lb/>
monk was His a <lb/>
Conducted by DR. C. <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
from <lb/>
B. returned ; <lb/>
Friday Plymouth. <lb/>
Mrs. W. T. Burton children i <lb/>
was composed of a pole <lb/>
mounted by an Iron rod supporting <lb/>
twelve curved branches and <lb/>
In as many metallic boxes filled <lb/>
with iron ore and with a i <lb/>
WOOden cover. This was <lb/>
by twenty-seven Iron pointed <lb/>
rods, the bases of which were connect-1 <lb/>
ed with the ore luxes. This entire j <lb/>
system of wires was united with the morning for <lb/>
earth by a large chain. ,, , ,. <lb/>
The enemies of Jealous of j of <lb/>
his success, excited the arrival Friday evening to visit <lb/>
the neighborhood against him, claiming relatives, <lb/>
that his invention was the cause of the <lb/>
dry weather that was mining their <lb/>
crops. When the inventor laughed at <lb/>
them and refused to remove It they <lb/>
put him In prison and then destroyed <lb/>
his work. <lb/>
M. used a triple pointed rod <lb/>
years before Benjamin ever <lb/>
thought of a lightning rod. <lb/>
i and Susie Moore <lb/>
a birthday party <lb/>
tty Miss at bit <lb/>
G. went t i in country <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
A passed through <lb/>
Tuesday bit dogs <lb/>
toward Greenville air <lb/>
bit several dogs o the way. <lb/>
them all. <lb/>
Rev. Mr. and daughter <lb/>
Elizabeth, are in town at W. Hi <lb/>
Prof. W. IS. came Moore's. Mr. tinges is <lb/>
this Winterville. after the interest o his school <lb/>
W. M. MOORE CO. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
for Dry <lb/>
goods-be- <lb/>
Ila Groceries.- <lb/>
this <lb/>
from Morehead City. <lb/>
Snake's <lb/>
The most relentless exterminator of <lb/>
reptiles Is a member of the family It- <lb/>
beautiful, lithe, yellow <lb/>
black king snake, the friend of m-n <lb/>
the avowed enemy of anything <lb/>
that creeps or crawls regardless of size <lb/>
or poison fang. A native of our own <lb/>
south, the king snake Is between five <lb/>
and eight feet long and no thicker <lb/>
around than a man's thumb. In <lb/>
every muscle and bone for speed <lb/>
tremendous constricting power, there <lb/>
la not another snake earth that can <lb/>
withstand his assault, lie Is <lb/>
to the poison of the cobra and of <lb/>
rattler alike, and the strength of n <lb/>
thirty foot python no terrors <lb/>
him. Within five t <lb/>
opening of the i . ; <lb/>
kill I n e-e <lb/>
lived. Fer. c-;. the little <lb/>
is toward I is own u ml. toward <lb/>
man he is friendly and rarely <lb/>
to escape when met W. <lb/>
linker in <lb/>
Ms. Charles <lb/>
Miss Fat tie will leave this <lb/>
for Springs. <lb/>
and son. Churchill, <lb/>
left this <lb/>
W. A. I <lb/>
Bro. of whole <lb/>
and no <lb/>
is here <lb/>
Talley, a few <lb/>
spent mi the <lb/>
with his u back again <lb/>
with J. L. Gibson. Co. <lb/>
M. her <lb/>
Mrs. are visiting <lb/>
ti leads in today. <lb/>
A to W, ,. <lb/>
for HI, <lb/>
county to vial relatives. Not mat. <lb/>
M, A. Jarvis and <lb/>
Miss Sophia, returned, Friday to <lb/>
evening from. Seven Springs. <lb/>
Misses Eva Mrs. Smith v. is visiting <lb/>
Allen and. Addie Johnston, return- W- My- <lb/>
ed. morning from is <lb/>
; few days family W. <lb/>
Miss Sledge, <lb/>
who has been visiting Nellie . <lb/>
Fender, renamed home this mom- A woman <lb/>
If is roving to do better <lb/>
Mrs. resumed is fie, <lb/>
morning, visit to <lb/>
and <lb/>
Mrs. Herbert Mia , . <lb/>
Bertha Simmons, j. t . r. <lb/>
Dry Notions, dint- <lb/>
and The <lb/>
only in town. All <lb/>
. the Bat <lb/>
sold at half price. <lb/>
Special i trices or. <lb/>
hats caps and rib- <lb/>
laces and millinery goods; <lb/>
Wanted u- dozen eggs <lb/>
at <lb/>
Car load chickens from cents <lb/>
down. <lb/>
Best Tin-thy hay at lowest <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
Cheapest place for jars. <lb/>
ways on hand,. especially <lb/>
hot days. <lb/>
Bring all of country pro- <lb/>
duce and W. M. <lb/>
for highest prices. <lb/>
Dud Moore- and Scott Galloway <lb/>
will please you. <lb/>
T. F. PROCTOR, <lb/>
Grimesland,. C <lb/>
GENERAL <lb/>
MERCHANDISE <lb/>
Anything wanted the way <lb/>
of doming, Dry Mo- <lb/>
and H can. be <lb/>
here, whether is <lb/>
to eat, something- to <lb/>
wear, or some foe the <lb/>
house-or farm., you can he <lb/>
supplied. Highest <lb/>
for cotton, country <lb/>
or anything sells. <lb/>
H. C. VENTED,<lb/>
Mr. the <lb/>
Way, doc. what is good for <lb/>
Doctor club n <lb/>
Welsh rabbit is sometimes good <lb/>
about three days of <lb/>
A TORPID LIVER <lb/>
Is the parent of <lb/>
Constipation <lb/>
and all <lb/>
Rheumatic Symptoms. <lb/>
The Safest and Surest Remedy knows is <lb/>
Dr. s <lb/>
German Liver Powder <lb/>
This is not a mixture, but a veritable <lb/>
translation of one of Nature's <lb/>
innermost secrets. If you re a suffer- <lb/>
tr we; will end you FREE OP <lb/>
a sample package of German <lb/>
Liver Powder with our <lb/>
pare booklet, which contains authentic <lb/>
from patients who have been <lb/>
cured by this wonderful Specific. Do not <lb/>
delay, but send your full address at once to <lb/>
The American Co. <lb/>
bid. <lb/>
and recommended by <lb/>
everywhere. <lb/>
visiting <lb/>
here. <lb/>
J. Bros. <lb/>
SUPPLY HOUSE. <lb/>
Daniel, of Dunn, who <lb/>
has been sister, <lb/>
W. C. Hines, <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
Miss Priscilla Williford, of <lb/>
Mount, who has been visiting Mi, <lb/>
S. M. Friday <lb/>
for Springs. <lb/>
Miss Joyner, who baa <lb/>
visiting Miss Alice Lang, re- <lb/>
to her home at i <lb/>
this morning. <lb/>
every <lb/>
c. n. JONES <lb/>
Physician <lb/>
and <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Complete Stuck of <lb/>
If to build a <lb/>
in <lb/>
for- your r for <lb/>
we can. supply your <lb/>
We <lb/>
TOBACCO P L E S <lb/>
rod sell the tobacco also <lb/>
of arts <lb/>
Mid to us any- <lb/>
thing <lb/>
PUTS AN KN U TO I C A LL. <lb/>
A wail <lb/>
Mrs. T. H. Coffield, of Hassell, as M pain I rot <lb/>
who has visiting her brother, <lb/>
j A. J. Out returned home <lb/>
this <lb/>
Miss Mary Medearis, of Win- <lb/>
who has been visiting <lb/>
Mis Patrick, <lb/>
for Clinton, <lb/>
rick accompanied her. <lb/>
taxed j <lb/>
thank to In-. <lb/>
Dr. Fill <lb/>
an end i all. bey are gentle <lb/>
bat thorough, Try <lb/>
by <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions <lb/>
left this Drug Store. <lb/>
Miss Pat- <lb/>
J. B. James and Walter John- <lb/>
jam who have been playing ball I <lb/>
with the Ayden team at Hooker- <lb/>
ton and other places this week, <lb/>
came home this morning. <lb/>
promptly obtain U. end Foreign <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
i Send model, sketch or photo <lb/>
i For free book. <lb/>
OPPOSITE US <lb/>
SUICIDE <lb/>
The startling announcement <lb/>
a preventive of suicide had been <lb/>
i discovered will interest many. A <lb/>
; run down system, or , <lb/>
invariably precede <lb/>
has been found that <lb/>
condition which makes suicide <lb/>
likely. At the first thought <lb/>
Self destruction take Electric Bit- <lb/>
It being a great tonic and <lb/>
will strengthen the nerves <lb/>
and up the system. also <lb/>
a great Stomach, Liver and Kid-1 <lb/>
regulator. Only i <lb/>
faction guaranteed by <lb/>
Drug Store. <lb/>
Wood's Seeds <lb/>
FOR FALL SOWING. <lb/>
Farmers and Gardeners who de- <lb/>
sire the latest and fullest <lb/>
Vegetable and Farm Seeds <lb/>
should write for Wood's New <lb/>
Fall It tells all about <lb/>
the fall planting of Lettuce, Cab- <lb/>
and other Vegetable crops <lb/>
which are proving profitable to <lb/>
southern growers. Also about <lb/>
Crimson Clover, Vetches, <lb/>
Grasses and Clovers, <lb/>
Seed Oats, Wheat, <lb/>
Rye, Barley, etc <lb/>
Wood's New Fall mailed <lb/>
free on request. Write for it. <lb/>
T. W. WOOD SONS, <lb/>
Richmond, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and <lb/>
Ties always on hand <lb/>
Fresh Goods kept con- <lb/>
in stock. Country <lb/>
Produce Bought and Sold <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
THREE <lb/>
Ayden News and Advertisements. <lb/>
The Ayden Branch Office of The Eastern Reflector is in charge of R. F. JOHNSON, to whom any mutter for publication on <lb/>
this page be sent, and who is our authorized agent in Ayden and surrounding territory. <lb/>
W. C. JACKSON CO. <lb/>
Dealers in DRY GOODS NOTIONS, <lb/>
CLOTHING, HATS, <lb/>
HARDWARE, GROCERIES. ETC. <lb/>
Hay, Corn, Lime, Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls. <lb/>
Depository for <lb/>
Public School Books. <lb/>
Agents for <lb/>
Royal <lb/>
Blue Shoes. <lb/>
AYDEN ITEMS <lb/>
CANNON . <lb/>
TWO STORES-DOUBLE STORY BRICK BLOCK <lb/>
ALL KINDS OF- <lb/>
foods and <lb/>
We are to our stock a nice, new and up-to-date line of B B <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
We carry almost everything in the furniture line prices will he made as <lb/>
cheap m consistent with good goods. Prices are very much reduced on <lb/>
Lawns. Slippers, etc., also a certain lino of Shoes. u pair of <lb/>
Shoes better come at once as we have put a pi-ice them that will certainly <lb/>
move them Yours for business, TYSON. <lb/>
REPORT OF <lb/>
fr SATISFACTORY DEPARTMENT STORE. <lb/>
J. R. Smith Bro. <lb/>
Quality is ever the first consideration in this store, because <lb/>
that is the only basis For values that insures the satisfaction <lb/>
of customers and the continuance of successful business. <lb/>
OUR STOCK OF <lb/>
General Dry Goods, Millinery, Furniture, <lb/>
Hardware, Groceries, etc., <lb/>
is probably the most extensive in town, oar prices are <lb/>
ways We also carry a la ire Stock of such as <lb/>
Hay, Oats, etc. Let us nerve you. J. B. Smith Bro. <lb/>
AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS, JUNE II, <lb/>
-r l <lb/>
and Discounts. 4,110.45 <lb/>
Furniture and <lb/>
Expenses Paid. <lb/>
Due from banks and bankers 11,1168.00 <lb/>
Cash. . 817.70 <lb/>
Total. <lb/>
Capital <lb/>
Interest. 179.47<lb/>
Total, . <lb/>
you bought it from HINES it's all <lb/>
Country <lb/>
Produce <lb/>
Bought <lb/>
Sold. <lb/>
J. J. HINES <lb/>
Live and <lb/>
Lit Live <lb/>
Prices to all. <lb/>
Dry <lb/>
Groceries, Hardware. <lb/>
J. W. and BROS. <lb/>
GENERAL <lb/>
HEADQUARTERS FOR <lb/>
AMERICAN FIELD AND HOG FENCE <lb/>
INCH. <lb/>
Ai <lb/>
-Ii <lb/>
St <lb/>
k Style <lb/>
Stays i J in. In. apart <lb/>
Special Hog, and Cattle Style <lb/>
Stays ii In. or o Id. apart<lb/>
Made of large, strong, high-grade steel wires, heavily galvanized. <lb/>
Amply provides for expansion and contraction. Is practically ever- <lb/>
lasting. Never goes wrong, no matter how great a strain is put on it. <lb/>
Does not mutilate, but does, efficiently, turn cattle, horses, hogs <lb/>
and pigs. <lb/>
EVERY ROD OF AMERICAN FENCE GUARANTEED <lb/>
by the manufacturers and by us. Call and see it. Can show you how <lb/>
it will save you money and fence your fields so they will stay fenced. <lb/>
Also Mower, Rakes, Binders, Cultivators and all <lb/>
IMPROVED FARM MACHINERY. <lb/>
Always go to the <lb/>
DRUG STORE <lb/>
for your drugs. I carry a good clean stock of pure <lb/>
drugs and chemicals, sundries, <lb/>
stationery and toilet articles. <lb/>
. , Try a bottle of my Pig Fruit Syrup for constipation. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Price cents, <lb/>
your <lb/>
If you are not satisfied I will return <lb/>
M. SAULS Ph. G. <lb/>
Pharmacist, C. <lb/>
Ayden, N. C, , Aug. 190.1. <lb/>
Ned S. F. and <lb/>
J. O. went to Fountain Hill i <lb/>
Wednesday night to be with a <lb/>
party a ride. <lb/>
P. O. Mayo, who has <lb/>
here for some time, baa gone <lb/>
to his home near re <lb/>
creation. <lb/>
Master Taylor Whitehurst, of <lb/>
Aurora, is Master Letter <lb/>
Cox. <lb/>
Mrs. Rountree, of Kinston, is <lb/>
Visiting at the home K. Can-<lb/>
Misses Ella Wayne, who bag of the game made <lb/>
been in New Bern for back to Ayden <lb/>
returned yesterday. but talked as <lb/>
Miss Lizzie came over About tin-cleverness of the <lb/>
from Winterville yesterday. I a they did of <lb/>
We are glad to see Capt. D. G. their Especially did <lb/>
Berry out again. praise the most excellent dinner. <lb/>
Mr. Ellington, state hunk exam- <lb/>
was here yesterday to look <lb/>
into the affairs of our bank. We <lb/>
are glad to report that he found it <lb/>
in a flourishing condition. <lb/>
Mi's. Jas. Long gave an ice black <lb/>
T , , ,. <lb/>
supper last evening honor her <lb/>
guests, Misses Davis Hemby. <lb/>
Miss Cannon went to <lb/>
Thursday to spend a <lb/>
few days. <lb/>
of has <lb/>
succeeded P. Mayo as operator <lb/>
t this place. <lb/>
A. P. Murray, who has been in <lb/>
Granville live weeks, <lb/>
returned Thursday. <lb/>
K. of Ridge Springs, i <lb/>
was in town Friday. <lb/>
of <lb/>
was here yesterday. <lb/>
the advertisements in <lb/>
the page of <lb/>
We have good less <lb/>
men and clever salesmen and <lb/>
prices that can't be beaten. You j <lb/>
will save money by for <lb/>
ha rest in offered by them. <lb/>
Old Ayden m on a boom. We <lb/>
will get the graded school and soon j <lb/>
may look for new enter-1 <lb/>
prise. Such talent and capital <lb/>
has can't buried tor long. <lb/>
We need factories and must <lb/>
them. Let the capitalists speak. <lb/>
photographer, F. Man- <lb/>
left Wednesday fur i <lb/>
where he will remain a few days, <lb/>
work in that <lb/>
H- Manning formerly f the <lb/>
firm of F. Manning A Bro., has <lb/>
opened a shoe and <lb/>
shop Main street, opposite <lb/>
W. Bros. <lb/>
Clarence went <lb/>
to Friday. <lb/>
J. J. and It S. <lb/>
spent evening in Winter- <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
Bryant Ives, of near is <lb/>
reported as his wile <lb/>
daughter very severely Mon- <lb/>
day. Tuesday night a masked <lb/>
crowd of eight men took out <lb/>
and gave him fifty with a <lb/>
trace and five with a horse whip. <lb/>
He since received a note <lb/>
him to leave the state in tea <lb/>
days. Ives is suffering very badly <lb/>
from his experience.<lb/>
Sponges are cultivated in West In- I <lb/>
Alan waters and the Mediterranean. <lb/>
in its natural state the bath or toilet I <lb/>
sponge is Busby and covered with n <lb/>
skin. To obtain the light <lb/>
elastic skeleton, <lb/>
sponges are left In shallow sea water <lb/>
for several days in a Staked <lb/>
until the rotten animal matter can be <lb/>
beaten out. For artificial cultivation <lb/>
a living sponge Is cut into small blocks, <lb/>
about a cubic Inch In size, with a <lb/>
Of the oilier skin on each. These. <lb/>
fixed to a frame of weighted trellis- <lb/>
work, are sunk Into a few fathoms of <lb/>
clear water, where they Sourish best <lb/>
on a bottom of green free <lb/>
from mud. In about seven years the <lb/>
cuttings crow into of market- <lb/>
able slue. <lb/>
of somewhat <lb/>
reputation, who was <lb/>
the American way of spelling, once <lb/>
turned to the <lb/>
actor, and leave it to Mr. <lb/>
Barrymore. Is It right to leave out <lb/>
the in such words as harbor, neigh- <lb/>
honor, candor, about <lb/>
harbor neighbor I am not <lb/>
replied when it comes <lb/>
to honor and candor leave you <lb/>
Physician and <lb/>
Surgeon. <lb/>
A N. <lb/>
Office in brick Block. <lb/>
HART JENKINS, <lb/>
General <lb/>
EVERYTHING KEPT IN A FIRST <lb/>
CLASS STORE. <lb/>
Get our prices on Meat and Flour <lb/>
before buying. <lb/>
sell your Eggs and Chickens <lb/>
till you get our offer on them. <lb/>
THE AYDEN HUSTLERS <lb/>
AYDEN, N. C. <lb/>
Ayden Brick Works, <lb/>
E. S. EDWARDS, <lb/>
Owner and Manager. <lb/>
N. O.<lb/>
you ever asked a well <lb/>
; know n physician the other day, <lb/>
i men who out oranges not much <lb/>
injured by smoking It is a fact <lb/>
I Orange Julee has the faculty of <lb/>
nicotine, and that is the <lb/>
reason. I have seen men weakened <lb/>
even made by excessive <lb/>
and it few oranges were nil that <lb/>
was necessary to straighten them <lb/>
Philadelphia Record.<lb/>
What's the matter. Blank <lb/>
You're all cut about and your <lb/>
arm a as though you had been <lb/>
a tight, and yet you look beaming <lb/>
smiling over It nil. <lb/>
fact Is have all along <lb/>
thought my boy Harold a sort of muff, <lb/>
and the other I undertook to give <lb/>
him some boxing lessons. This is the <lb/>
result of the first lesson. Oh, I'm <lb/>
proud of that boy <lb/>
lit- <lb/>
Bobby's father was breaking the <lb/>
news to hi in. <lb/>
Would you like to have a little <lb/>
brother. he asked, <lb/>
replied the youngster <lb/>
cheerfully. Then lie reflected a min- <lb/>
lie said slowly. guess, <lb/>
after ill. rather have a sister. I'm <lb/>
a boy you York <lb/>
Tribune. <lb/>
BASE BALI. <lb/>
Friday the Ayden ball team <lb/>
went over to Hookerton to play <lb/>
the home team, and left the Hook- <lb/>
boys grieving to the tune of <lb/>
to The batteries were for <lb/>
Ayden, James and and <lb/>
for Hookerton, Caraway and Pal- <lb/>
mer. A. wet ball toward last <lb/>
all v of . <lb/>
until isn't addicted to drink, <lb/>
to <lb/>
Oh. Of course he <lb/>
takes a glass sow and <lb/>
see I must my question. <lb/>
Doesn't let his <lb/>
blend with his a little too <lb/>
Plain Dealer. <lb/>
Dr. Louis C Skinner, <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND <lb/>
SURGEON. <lb/>
Ayden, North Carolina. <lb/>
Ont door north of post office. <lb/>
the best Brick in <lb/>
Eastern Carolina. Bricks <lb/>
all hand made- Makes furnace <lb/>
arch and building brick. Full <lb/>
always baud. Prices to <lb/>
suit the times. Write or phone <lb/>
me for prices by the. thousand or <lb/>
car load. Yours truly, <lb/>
F. S. EDWARDS. <lb/>
HOTEL TRIPP, <lb/>
Ayden, N. <lb/>
EDWIN Proprietor. <lb/>
Best the market affords. <lb/>
meets all trains, <lb/>
Rooms. Electric lights. <lb/>
VICTOR COX, <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW, <lb/>
Ayden, North <lb/>
WEAK EYES. <lb/>
Why suffer from eve strain, <lb/>
pain in the eye balls, severe <lb/>
headaches and general dis- <lb/>
comforts of the eyes, when <lb/>
J. W. <lb/>
GRADUATE OPTICIAN. <lb/>
AYDEN, N. C. <lb/>
Can permanently cure you of <lb/>
those discomforts by fitting <lb/>
you with the proper glasses. <lb/>
Satisfaction guaranteed <lb/>
or your money re- <lb/>
funded.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019343_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
mm<lb/>
. <lb/>
THE IT.<lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
AND FRIDAY. <lb/>
D. J. <lb/>
PAUL K. OUTLAW, <lb/>
Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
Associate Editor. <lb/>
CHANCE FOR GREENVILLE <lb/>
MAKE GOOD. <lb/>
TO <lb/>
A CLEAR NOTE. <lb/>
The board of aldermen will pro- <lb/>
The First <lb/>
pays <lb/>
j tribute to of Pitt <lb/>
Baptist Church of braves <lb/>
Entered in the post office at Greenville, N. C, as second class matter, <lb/>
Advertising rates made known upon application. . <lb/>
A correspondent desired at every post office in Pitt and adjoining counties. <lb/>
to <lb/>
Greenville, Pitt County, N. C, Tuesday, August 1903. <lb/>
THE LAW OF THE LAND. <lb/>
Bow down to th Dick militia It is getting in its <lb/>
work, as evidences the following <lb/>
New Orleans, July Washington Artillery, the <lb/>
order an election to take the <lb/>
; Wilmington ha taken an advanced <lb/>
sense of the voters of this town as <lb/>
position on the temperance <lb/>
to bonds to the amount of; <lb/>
for exchange for second <lb/>
mortgage bonds of the Raleigh <lb/>
Pamlico Sound railroad. We <lb/>
earnestly hope the proposition i <lb/>
bat it is exactly right, <lb/>
and its example ought to be <lb/>
followed by every <lb/>
is to be held at Fort. <lb/>
Fisher.; the lath of August; of <lb/>
the survivors- of the confederates <lb/>
who were captured there the <lb/>
th 1865. <lb/>
This is eminently right an <lb/>
will carry. ought to <lb/>
in the state. A resolution, fen the heroism of the <lb/>
hat been passed in confer- the famous fort should <lb/>
that the hand of fellowship <lb/>
be perpetuated to the remotest <lb/>
tuber The gallant survivor <lb/>
show its faith in the enterprise to , . I have to be proud of <lb/>
I hereafter be found guilty .- f . <lb/>
this extent. There is question ; their and will so <lb/>
be from any <lb/>
hut that the road will be of great <lb/>
benefit to this entire The <lb/>
of it has cost us many thous- <lb/>
oldest and strongest military organization in the southwest, has and in the past,, well <lb/>
M kept away from us enter- <lb/>
prises that d not care to place <lb/>
split and gone pieces over the question of the Dick militia <lb/>
bill and service in the militia. By a majority of nine, in a <lb/>
large meeting, the men decided to join the militia under govern- <lb/>
auspices. Colonel Richardson, commanding, and mos-J of I themselves at the mercy of a rail- <lb/>
of endorsing of sign- on that <lb/>
petitions to grant license for spot pride and sad-- <lb/>
of <lb/>
the heaviest <lb/>
gun powder. <lb/>
acts in its defense have <lb/>
received the praise u <lb/>
selling liquor. Men aid <lb/>
loons ought to leave the <lb/>
There is no deadly enemy to <lb/>
all the church stands eat the <lb/>
no matter whether a <lb/>
the officers left the after the vote was announced and re- <lb/>
fuse to abide by i. The artillery is sixty It served <lb/>
with distinction in the war and furnished batteries to <lb/>
both the armies of Virginia and Tennessee, and <lb/>
has been used in suppression of all local riots and <lb/>
It owns its armory, cannon, guns, etc. Most of the <lb/>
time it has been an independent military regiment, but for the <lb/>
ten or twelve years has been a member of the stats militia. <lb/>
BloW is the Wilmington Messenger content to by <lb/>
the judgment in the It appears that the <lb/>
New Orleans officers are made of different stuff from the <lb/>
geniuses of this state. The Messenger that the <lb/>
Dick bill is the law of the land. What, will happen to <lb/>
those officer and enlisted men who declined to obey the <lb/>
How will you uphold the majesty of the law The Messenger <lb/>
knows the Dick bill is no more the law of the land to those who <lb/>
decline to obey it than a town ordinance in the law of the land <lb/>
road having monopoly. <lb/>
Now, good people, get together <lb/>
push this thing <lb/>
Don't howl increase in <lb/>
man sells liquor by or; they so- union deserve. Indeed <lb/>
retail, or aids the traffic by they a known to very few per- <lb/>
Durham the retail <lb/>
association is fought by an <lb/>
Buyers organized by a <lb/>
from South Carolina. The <lb/>
pledges its members to buy <lb/>
nothing except for cash, and to <lb/>
boycott all merchants who <lb/>
to the association. This <lb/>
latter's appears to us to be <lb/>
a piece of lolly The object of the <lb/>
association is to compel <lb/>
people to pay their debts, and any- <lb/>
thing in opposition to this is <lb/>
dishonest. If the Buyers <lb/>
induce its members to <lb/>
buy nothing except for cash it <lb/>
will have accomplished a great <lb/>
good, also one of the aims of the <lb/>
association. But to seek <lb/>
to perpetuate the frauds from <lb/>
which continually <lb/>
fer is nothing short of <lb/>
robbery. <lb/>
renting to liquor or scarcely any <lb/>
. one baa heard of the of <lb/>
signing petitions praying for h <lb/>
e k l- v i Private Christopher C. <lb/>
be should be made t walk <lb/>
when the probabilities are, u . company. Thirty Sixth North <lb/>
. , . , the plan. There can be do mid- Carolina The <lb/>
there will not be a of . <lb/>
; die ground and no compromise in was with <lb/>
increase. The lax on m-. The saloon one when the order was given t. raise <lb/>
road's property in this count y the <lb/>
gather with the one per cent, ad <lb/>
vantage in will equal-the <lb/>
interest on our bonds. So you <lb/>
have no excuse whatever talk- <lb/>
about increase in taxation <lb/>
The plans upon <lb/>
suit if <lb/>
did we would no railroad <lb/>
we would soon sprout wings and ,,, , <lb/>
, Wilmington, we <lb/>
fly to Raleigh. But the project is <lb/>
for ultimate good of <lb/>
j to He <lb/>
No ca stand y . . <lb/>
the began climbing <lb/>
H is art for h <lb/>
on the other, <lb/>
on both sides. <lb/>
us is us. He that is tho <lb/>
friendly to be by shrieking of sh which <lb/>
. friendly to the he two he he <lb/>
institutions are under two different the flag top. <lb/>
down a shell tore.- <lb/>
no man can serve <lb/>
. .- sad of the nm and at <lb/>
int <lb/>
hat <lb/>
both. <lb/>
the good of <lb/>
action will the steps <lb/>
jam almost and <lb/>
wain fastened the ii g <lb/>
was made yesterday of <lb/>
the fact that a county officer in <lb/>
county, this state, had re- <lb/>
his office and the <lb/>
was offered that be be detain- <lb/>
ed for inquiry sanity. <lb/>
Here is a case that is even more <lb/>
astonishing. The commissioner <lb/>
of pensions has received a letter <lb/>
from a pensioner, as <lb/>
withdraw and cancel all . . , , <lb/>
papers to my claim for ; e an- by t but not a <lb/>
a he requests, do u Co., Raleigh, a Children. has ever <lb/>
i dart, g <lb/>
me to it It is that x- July wag . <lb/>
hot , 31st, It gives the <lb/>
town and Qr y H e , <lb/>
it ought meet History baa <lb/>
dismay thus very, important t . . . . <lb/>
on hand. . Lu. J the-heroism, <lb/>
The way is Moultrie,. <lb/>
right way, and the. way shot down. <lb/>
if . <lb/>
has a<lb/>
i. make of M beheld <lb/>
was <lb/>
to draw upon -our esteemed <lb/>
flighty in. that time, the name and wiSe-stranded it <lb/>
very warm the . K ft <lb/>
officials, and much useful was <lb/>
information, about The from original, it was as <lb/>
calendar is, pages sells for , we have <lb/>
taken to. death. , j w m the <lb/>
bright side is .-. <lb/>
Charlotte just will keep ahead, <lb/>
notwithstanding the recent com- <lb/>
plaint in the local of <lb/>
the Observer that so little happened <lb/>
in the city to make news out of. <lb/>
It looks to outsider <lb/>
that Charlotte gets what is going <lb/>
in way of happenings, and the <lb/>
nature of them aught to be start- <lb/>
ling enough to suit any burg. The <lb/>
latest, which a murderous <lb/>
on a man while in bed in <lb/>
his home, with his wife and child- <lb/>
asleep in the room with <lb/>
would have done credit to a Iron- <lb/>
tier town. <lb/>
has been of some duration. <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
Don't give all the praise for <lb/>
this to the hot weather. That <lb/>
man may have a streak of honesty <lb/>
or bit of conscience him <lb/>
things that are in the <lb/>
The Greensboro ma- who mail-, true <lb/>
make up of the bulk of ed in a letter to the- a needed win <lb/>
drawers. <lb/>
re- <lb/>
At a young <lb/>
man years old was charged<lb/>
Raleigh, which letter and y chance would <lb/>
not been heard from since mailed, a young, the . <lb/>
little wondering on his <lb/>
with infanticide and submitted to own account. What he would j in of <lb/>
A. whit . . i <lb/>
to relief, j <lb/>
secured assistance, <lb/>
to save their lives, sent them As might have been expected <lb/>
with a new faith in the there the <lb/>
as to who shall succeed the pope t <lb/>
The latest American rev- <lb/>
was started because a gen- <lb/>
got drunk. If that was <lb/>
cause for a revolution in this <lb/>
town peace would be a dream in- <lb/>
deed. <lb/>
An Elizabeth City man was re- <lb/>
of while bathing at <lb/>
Virginia Beach. Which shows <lb/>
that cleanliness may not be <lb/>
next to keeping your money. <lb/>
manslaughter. Judge to know is who got that money. <lb/>
before whom the case was beard, I <lb/>
regret that the man who General Cassius M. Clay boasted <lb/>
this girl could not he reach- that he could his ancestry <lb/>
ed and severely punished. Alas, j back to the dawn of but of man ,, <lb/>
the pity that we such law and j failed to specify the tribe of j true that ere m. <lb/>
such society that punishes and keys from which he descended. Bat men of <lb/>
casts out the woman in sin, <lb/>
There are numerous <lb/>
yet let i go free and opens arms Riding on the Southern railway <lb/>
to the fiend who is the author of i worse than going to war. <lb/>
the girl's downfall and ruin. <lb/>
HEALTH <lb/>
Mr. Fred L. Merritt has resign- iNSURANCE <lb/>
state, but seems to be a deep- <lb/>
appreciation vi this <lb/>
among North No <lb/>
matter how wide the gulf wealth <lb/>
or social position that <lb/>
them, the cry of a North Carolin- <lb/>
The man who loses his money <lb/>
generally loses his and <lb/>
ought to be glad to get rid of the <lb/>
average friend. <lb/>
ed as editor of the Asheville <lb/>
and is succeeded by Mr. W. <lb/>
W. Moore. The latter is a Green- <lb/>
ville boy and The Reflector is <lb/>
glad to know be is making a <lb/>
of ins journalistic work in <lb/>
the mountain city. He is not only <lb/>
editor but also one of the <lb/>
pal owners of the Citizen. <lb/>
Greensboro is talking with fear <lb/>
about a water famine. And the <lb/>
town full of barrooms. <lb/>
The man who Insures his life h cannot go unheeded by any <lb/>
for His family. native of this state whether lie <lb/>
The man who Insures his , . <lb/>
is wise both for his family an. New York or Manila, <lb/>
himself. <lb/>
J. Morgan indulges in a <lb/>
little profanity occasionally, but <lb/>
one thing he will not be <lb/>
able corner. <lb/>
It is the North Carolina spirit <lb/>
brotherhood that I <lb/>
You may insure health by guard-11 he spirit of <lb/>
it. It la worth guarding. j, . , , <lb/>
. ., binds in affection all the sons <lb/>
At the first attack of disease <lb/>
which generally approaches good mother and <lb/>
through the LIVER and man Observer. <lb/>
Itself In Innumerable <lb/>
TAKE <lb/>
Ho who hesitates may be lost, <lb/>
but he who does not count the<lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR, GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
FIVE <lb/>
in a i <lb/>
C. T. buyer for Bi Store, is now in New York <lb/>
buying his fall stock of <lb/>
Clothing, Dress Goods, Shoes, etc. <lb/>
and in order to make room we have started one the Greatest Midsummer Clearance <lb/>
Sales ever known to the people, of all Summer Goods. They must go. This includes <lb/>
our mammoth stock of fine <lb/>
Dimities, Organdies and Lawns that were <lb/>
1-2 and now only <lb/>
CENTS <lb/>
per cent, reductions on all Clothing. <lb/>
cost is apt to he the lost also. <lb/>
s Pills <lb/>
And eave your health. <lb/>
Ab the preachers begin to take <lb/>
Sir Thomas Lipton wears a vacations the devil begins to , <lb/>
ball mask to escape the kisses of see where he comes in at. <lb/>
the misses. And even that doesn't i. <lb/>
Car Load Fine Furniture and Felt Mattresses Just in <lb/>
Hurry up with the cash and get the great bargains. Money is what it takes to get them. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
some pt stick <lb/>
their tongues through the slats. <lb/>
The lawyers denounce lynching <lb/>
it eliminates their fees. <lb/>
Crude Tow her. <lb/>
Ai ii , said <lb/>
a vision- who <lb/>
of <lb/>
the of York <lb/>
city public were all- <lb/>
of Were <lb/>
Just as of <lb/>
the the of Superintend- <lb/>
to me ti be <lb/>
worthy of by <lb/>
the words an en- <lb/>
partisan, I set wort <lb/>
making inquiries about those <lb/>
teachers in the school home. <lb/>
The fallowing are the data given me <lb/>
by of this school, which, <lb/>
am told, is by no more favored <lb/>
In the way of than the <lb/>
others in the of ten male <lb/>
teachers ail three could if <lb/>
they to do so. the possession of <lb/>
a bachelor's degree. Two of the seven <lb/>
are masters, with some work done to- <lb/>
ward a Ph. nearly all ore <lb/>
doing postgraduate work either <lb/>
at Columbia or at the State university. <lb/>
The spoken of are ex-high school <lb/>
principals from up state . My <lb/>
respect for the New York city school- <lb/>
teacher has been wonderfully , In- <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
by <lb/>
There are always a number Of mar- <lb/>
on board the <lb/>
ply between Calcutta and th West <lb/>
coolies are very fond of <lb/>
marrying before entering on <lb/>
of servitude. as many <lb/>
a hundred of them will <lb/>
nuptial knot tied. <lb/>
The captain of any British <lb/>
power to marry people, but <lb/>
master of one of these vessels <lb/>
boa grown tired of reading the <lb/>
can or sixty times a <lb/>
age. So lie had a <lb/>
printed With the essential the <lb/>
service. The bride and bridegroom <lb/>
step into the cabin, sign one of these <lb/>
forms, have it witnessed and become <lb/>
man and No questions i are <lb/>
asked. They simply sign names. <lb/>
It the quickest kind of <lb/>
on record, but the British Authorities <lb/>
have declared it perfect valid. <lb/>
Heart, and Heel. <lb/>
Many good have to <lb/>
time been told of Rev. <lb/>
the -temperance orator a well <lb/>
known figure in the early history of <lb/>
valley. , .- <lb/>
the civil War he enlisted <lb/>
served as chaplain in one of the <lb/>
of Infantry raised the valley, <lb/>
One day, in the midst of a fierce <lb/>
the major rode, up in of, the <lb/>
regiment to his <lb/>
Father Hunt at the head the ranks. <lb/>
what are you;, doing <lb/>
he asked. <lb/>
echoed the old minister <lb/>
briskly. am trying to cheer the <lb/>
hearts, of the bravo and out for <lb/>
the heels of the I <lb/>
I The Sen Cook's <lb/>
tried every kind pf female <lb/>
determined to said <lb/>
a portly, millionaire. <lb/>
occurred to me that an liner <lb/>
was the best place find him. Every- <lb/>
thing is so clean a ship's kitchen, <lb/>
you know. Well. fine <lb/>
Swede and him my <lb/>
kitchen at a week. He seemed to <lb/>
be all right, but presently my neigh- <lb/>
complained that he was throwing <lb/>
nil the refuse out of the window. <lb/>
habit He thought the window a <lb/>
porthole on a ship. I haver <lb/>
break hi ill of the trick bad to let <lb/>
him York Press. <lb/>
i , m I t <lb/>
A Servant. I <lb/>
a pend- <lb/>
In the <lb/>
to n of which <lb/>
j known The case defended <lb/>
on a known only <lb/>
old servant, who to it. <lb/>
a kirk her <lb/>
she must speak on peril of <lb/>
of <lb/>
would ye mt the honor or an mild <lb/>
Scottish family In competition the <lb/>
of a creature<lb/>
science <lb/>
the <lb/>
doctor, for a patient <lb/>
must take out his Heart It with <lb/>
On his way home ho cold <lb/>
for the next three weeks matte <lb/>
one miserable listening to his <lb/>
toms. <lb/>
An Order. <lb/>
can show you, <lb/>
sir <lb/>
Absent Minded want- <lb/>
let me see, what do I want Dear ma <lb/>
I can't for the life of me remember <lb/>
what it Is. Well, well, it doesn't mat- <lb/>
Give me the nearest thing you <lb/>
have to it. <lb/>
Bookseller I have a very Interesting <lb/>
work by, a favorite Last <lb/>
Days of <lb/>
Customer I don't know <lb/>
an author of that name. What did ha <lb/>
I die of <lb/>
Bookseller-Of eruption. <lb/>
Him<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019343_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
SEVEN <lb/>
An Intended <lb/>
Sacrifice <lb/>
was n young Russian who <lb/>
If not belong lo the <lb/>
wan nit Car abort it. <lb/>
the son of a wealthy <lb/>
man who lived in tho same province, <lb/>
Vera. met one day while he <lb/>
was hunting, and an Intimacy sprang <lb/>
up between the two young people <lb/>
Which ended. In lam. When <lb/>
father beard of the attachment he for- <lb/>
bade his son ever to speak to the girl <lb/>
again under pain of being disinherited., <lb/>
This naturally led to secret meeting. <lb/>
One afternoon Van went to the wood j <lb/>
to meet Alexis by appointment. She <lb/>
waited a Ions wall at the <lb/>
pure, bat bar lover did not <lb/>
misfortune, she walked <lb/>
toward the home. She <lb/>
gone but a abort distance when she <lb/>
saw torso nipping the grass <lb/>
beside the road. Then her eye <lb/>
on his near by. The, <lb/>
horse bad thrown him, giving him <lb/>
broken arm mid n sprained ankle. <lb/>
soon M Vera came up the two i <lb/>
consulted as to what should be done., <lb/>
Vera to mount the horse and . <lb/>
ride for help, but the animal refused to <lb/>
be caught and ran back toward the <lb/>
estate. Vera did what she <lb/>
could to make bar lover comfortable. <lb/>
Then night came on. <lb/>
Presently they heard n bark.; <lb/>
Vera, who was holding her lover In <lb/>
arras with his hand In hers, gave, <lb/>
a convulsive clutching of her Angers. <lb/>
Both knew the sound to be the baying <lb/>
of a wolf. <lb/>
It was far distant, but It reminded <lb/>
thorn that there were other wolves <lb/>
through the wood. Indeed, <lb/>
It was not long before they saw within <lb/>
a stone's throw two eyes glaring like <lb/>
coals of fire. <lb/>
Vera bad had time to prepare <lb/>
self for this. She knew that Alexis <lb/>
could neither stand on his feet nor <lb/>
hold a gnu. except with one hand, and <lb/>
that the left. Disengaging herself <lb/>
from him, she seized his rifle, which <lb/>
she had taken the precaution to re- <lb/>
cover, and waited for the wolf to draw j <lb/>
nearer. When he had come within i <lb/>
proper range she raised the rifle to her <lb/>
shoulder and fired, aiming between j <lb/>
the eyes. The wolf, whose head was J <lb/>
only cut by the ball, gave a yelp and <lb/>
dashed away. <lb/>
the shell, laid Alexis. <lb/>
will be back <lb/>
Vera drew the shell and, taking a <lb/>
cartridge from belt, fixed It in j <lb/>
the rifle and waited. Alexis, who was <lb/>
a splendid shot, begged her If the wolf <lb/>
returned to <lb/>
Vera hesitated, then <lb/>
It plain that one must die. <lb/>
If delay the wolves there was a <lb/>
chance of help coming for Alexis. It <lb/>
was also possible that their hunger, <lb/>
would be appeased with my body and <lb/>
Alexis <lb/>
who was great <lb/>
man and a brave man Bet <lb/>
this heroic devotion con- <lb/>
to union with Com, and <lb/>
never tired of the of how j <lb/>
aha had saved his son and offered <lb/>
elf to the wolves In his stead. <lb/>
ROSS <lb/>
Ho.<lb/>
A large part of the floor <lb/>
Original. <lb/>
in. you are discharged from <lb/>
Ms prison and may go where you like. <lb/>
I hope you'll live an honest life and not <lb/>
have to come hack here <lb/>
As the warden spoke the prisoner <lb/>
stared at him though his mind were <lb/>
upon other matters, then, without a re- <lb/>
ply, hastened out Into the world. <lb/>
Several years before this Henry <lb/>
Tracy was a young business man of <lb/>
such marked ability that when Man- <lb/>
an Intimate friend, <lb/>
though fifteen years his senior, died it . <lb/>
was found that Tracy had been named Space Will be ready for the <lb/>
sole executor of his estate and guard- <lb/>
of the only heir, Edith Bright- Sale. <lb/>
man. seventeen years old. One day y t <lb/>
Abel Ba who bad once been . <lb/>
attorney, produced <lb/>
transferring the whole estate to Sarah <lb/>
who claimed to be the second The building Will be <lb/>
of the deceased. These papers <lb/>
disappeared, and there was such strong . . . . , <lb/>
that Tracy had stolen them III <lb/>
that his followed. While <lb/>
he was In prison the estate remained in <lb/>
litigation, and Edith being <lb/>
deprived of her Income, was forced to <lb/>
earn her own living. <lb/>
On the evening of his discharge he <lb/>
stood on a street corner waiting for <lb/>
the clocks to At the first <lb/>
stroke a man crossed the Street and <lb/>
Joined him. <lb/>
asked Tracy. <lb/>
the <lb/>
right. You go ahead, I'll <lb/>
low. We don't want to be seen to- <lb/>
Tracy followed the man out of town <lb/>
to n deserted house standing beside the <lb/>
road, and the two entered the grounds. <lb/>
A pick and a shovel wen found under <lb/>
n porch, Tracy, leading the way to <lb/>
a large tree in a corner of the lot, be- <lb/>
to dig. Coming to a small sheet <lb/>
Iron box, they removed It and returned <lb/>
with It to the illy. <lb/>
go to your room. said <lb/>
Tracy. got the documents <lb/>
there, I <lb/>
Parham and Parham <lb/>
TOBACCO WAREHOUSE <lb/>
OPENING SALE. <lb/>
Monday, Aug. 3rd, 1903. <lb/>
Competent assistants. <lb/>
Class Service. <lb/>
New House and <lb/>
Sell your Tobacco <lb/>
Last and always at P. r <lb/>
ham War. <lb/>
house. <lb/>
Sell with us and will get you all we can for your tobacco. <lb/>
Your friends, <lb/>
PARHAM and PARHAM. <lb/>
A few minutes later Brown scratched <lb/>
hold the rifle for him and I a match In his room, lit the gas. locked <lb/>
let him fire with the gun against his <lb/>
left shoulder. consented <lb/>
took the position required, to see <lb/>
how It would work, but Alexis was <lb/>
obliged to up, was so faint that <lb/>
he did not dare try the experiment. <lb/>
When the wolf came back there <lb/>
were four pairs of glaring eyes <lb/>
of one. Vera had lived all her <lb/>
life in a country infested with wolves <lb/>
and knew that when one was killed <lb/>
the others would eat the before <lb/>
pushing on. Selecting one pair of eyes <lb/>
for she could see else of the <lb/>
was about to lire when she <lb/>
felt her band tremble. She paused <lb/>
and, turning, kissed lover the <lb/>
lips. That kiss strengthened her <lb/>
nerves, and, again aiming, she fired, <lb/>
and a wolf dropped dead. <lb/>
While Its fellows were scrambling <lb/>
for the food Vera drew the shell of <lb/>
the exploded cartridge Inserted <lb/>
another. Hut this unequal contest <lb/>
could not Inst. The four wolves were I <lb/>
Joined by half n dozen others, and the <lb/>
lovers knew that as soon the dead <lb/>
wolf bad been devoured there would j <lb/>
be another rush which It was hopeless <lb/>
that they could withstand. Vera to j <lb/>
gain distance took hold of Alexis under <lb/>
the arms and dragged back us far <lb/>
she was able; then, taking the rifle, <lb/>
he stood before him, waiting for the <lb/>
wolves to finish their meal. <lb/>
Most of the carcass was consumed. <lb/>
She could bear a few wolves still pick- <lb/>
at the while one or two, she <lb/>
fancied, were licking their chops. One <lb/>
pair of eyes appeared In the middle of <lb/>
the road glaring at her. and In a mo- <lb/>
she wan sure they were drawing <lb/>
nearer. She raised her rifle, aimed and <lb/>
purled the trigger. <lb/>
The cartridge did not explode. <lb/>
Vera that the end at <lb/>
hand. Throwing down her rifle, she <lb/>
deliberately to offer herself <lb/>
a sacrifice to delay her lover's death. <lb/>
At the moment there were a clatter <lb/>
of hoofs before her a shot. <lb/>
In an Instant the wolves had vanished. <lb/>
Horsemen came up found Vera <lb/>
standing In the road some distance be- <lb/>
fore Alexis. In the darkness they <lb/>
would have run her down had she not <lb/>
aside. They were a party Of <lb/>
the horse had gone <lb/>
home without his rider, and they had <lb/>
come out to search for <lb/>
Alexis was taken home and insisted <lb/>
that Vera should go with him. <lb/>
doff, the of Alexis, questioned <lb/>
Vera, who told the leaving out <lb/>
her Intended sacrifice. <lb/>
wore you so far In advance of <lb/>
son, unarmed, when you were <lb/>
RIGHT <lb/>
IN AT THE AND THOUGH TO THE <lb/>
FINISH. HAVE YOU CONSIDERED THE <lb/>
RECORD OF THE <lb/>
The Old Reliable <lb/>
the door, pulled down the shades, and <lb/>
the two opened the iron box, taking <lb/>
out a bundle of papers. mean- <lb/>
while unlocked a desk brought <lb/>
forth an envelope containing <lb/>
Tracy seized them and <lb/>
scanned them one after another till he <lb/>
came to one at which he uttered n cry <lb/>
of Joy. <lb/>
Is the key to the he <lb/>
exclaimed. tills the others <lb/>
are worthless. I'll take care of this <lb/>
myself. You look out for the others. <lb/>
Meet me in the morning at the court- <lb/>
house, and we will swear out the war- <lb/>
It was o'clock at night when <lb/>
Tracy left the detective walked <lb/>
rapidly to a house where there was but <lb/>
one light burning. He rang the bell <lb/>
and when a servant came asked for <lb/>
Miss <lb/>
to <lb/>
mind that, i roust see her tie to sell tobacco on the Greenville market. It has weathered the <lb/>
Who shall i tell her wishes to see ; of difficulty and stood the storms of opposition through all the years of the market, <lb/>
out with the proud record of doing better for the farmers than any other house <lb/>
mind that either. She'll f , , a i i u <lb/>
prove of your calling her What have done can to do. For the season of 1903 we are in better <lb/>
When Edith entered the than ever to do business and protect the interest of the tobacco grower. Prices <lb/>
room and saw her guardian, the ex- , . ,,,,,, <lb/>
convict, she caught at the door knob, and Best shall be our motto. <lb/>
The Greenville Warehouse continues under the same management as heretofore, and every <lb/>
member of the firm is a warehouseman of . <lb/>
Bring us your tobacco and will go home r <lb/>
His Imprisonment and the mystery at- <lb/>
tending it, together with the loss of her <lb/>
property, had not only boon a puzzle <lb/>
hut a horror to her. When it occurred <lb/>
she still half n Child. Now she <lb/>
was a woman. <lb/>
said Tracy, estate is <lb/>
saved to <lb/>
She stared at him at <lb/>
he <lb/>
your father me to be <lb/>
his executor he told me of the woman <lb/>
who claimed to be his wife, and that <lb/>
he also suspects <lb/>
I he said, be some rascal <lb/>
practiced on my little girl. <lb/>
me you will see that she Is not <lb/>
T promise on my honor and my <lb/>
I replied. <lb/>
the blow fell I knew the pa- <lb/>
wore fraudulent, but could not <lb/>
prove It. The court was about to turn <lb/>
I over the estate to this woman. WOO <lb/>
would at once turn It Into cash <lb/>
leave the country. I deliberately stole <lb/>
their papers and burled them in my <lb/>
yard. While erring term I em- <lb/>
i ployed a detective, who has only re- <lb/>
unraveled the case. Here Is a <lb/>
contract between Abel and <lb/>
Sarah wherein she agrees to <lb/>
divide the estate with him in case he <lb/>
secures It for her, and below her con- <lb/>
that she was never married to <lb/>
your father, and the documents are all <lb/>
i forced, the signatures being, copied <lb/>
MARKET OPENS AUG. 3rd <lb/>
Q. F. Evans Co. Props.<lb/>
G. F. <lb/>
R. S. EVANS <lb/>
D. S. SPAIN <lb/>
from letters or rather which <lb/>
fallen into her possession. This con- <lb/>
was to hold <lb/>
her In ease she refused to divide with <lb/>
him after the estate was <lb/>
While Tracy was giving his ward <lb/>
this brief summary of a case which <lb/>
could only he written In volumes her <lb/>
wore the expression not of one de- <lb/>
lighted at hearing how she had re- <lb/>
gained her property, but an engrossing <lb/>
pity mingled with wonder, admiration, <lb/>
gratitude for one who had suffered dis- <lb/>
grace and Imprisonment that It might <lb/>
pass to Its legitimate owner. <lb/>
you did this to fulfill a prom- <lb/>
I loved tho little girl for whom <lb/>
I did <lb/>
It was a long while before <lb/>
reversing the conventional <lb/>
order of matrimonial occurrences, <lb/>
could persuade Henry Tracy to be- <lb/>
come her husband. Despite the truth, <lb/>
to the world he was known as an ex- <lb/>
his career was ruined. <lb/>
Then be fell III, and It was In one of <lb/>
his weaker physical moods his <lb/>
consent WM obtained. The pair went <lb/>
abroad and have never returned to <lb/>
America. ROBERT F. <lb/>
people ore so conscientious <lb/>
about loving their enemies that If they <lb/>
haven't any they are perfectly willing <lb/>
to make n <lb/>
Men Hut Too Much. <lb/>
Eating Is tho greatest of all our <lb/>
standard amusements. A great <lb/>
of people obviously cat a great <lb/>
deal more than they need, and It la en- <lb/>
credible that a large proportion <lb/>
of the moderate eaters might thrive <lb/>
well and look as handsome and work <lb/>
as hard live as long on a very <lb/>
restricted diet. But would the <lb/>
Joy of life continue unimpaired for <lb/>
them The native born might raise <lb/>
plenty of children if they could <lb/>
for cents a day, but would they <lb/>
think life was worth living on cents <lb/>
worth of food a day No, they <lb/>
wouldn't. That Is thing that <lb/>
them.- Harper's.<lb/>
STATEMENT <lb/>
OF TOWN <lb/>
List of Claims Audited and Al- <lb/>
lowed by the Board of Alder- <lb/>
men of the Town of Greenville <lb/>
from July 1st, 1902, to June <lb/>
30th, 1903. <lb/>
POLICE. <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
J. T- Smith . <lb/>
S. I- Dudley . <lb/>
S. I. Dudley . <lb/>
J. T- Smith . <lb/>
W. H. . <lb/>
J. T. Smith . <lb/>
W. H- . <lb/>
S. I. Dudley . <lb/>
S. Dudley . <lb/>
J. T. Smith . <lb/>
W. H- . <lb/>
T. F. Nobles . <lb/>
J. J- Jenkins . <lb/>
Jno. W. Tucker . <lb/>
L. N- Smith . <lb/>
J. T. Smith . <lb/>
W. H- . <lb/>
I. Dudley . <lb/>
J. T. Smith . <lb/>
W. H. . <lb/>
S- I. Dudley . <lb/>
Frank Wilson, uniforms. <lb/>
J. C- Dicker-son . <lb/>
F. Nobles. <lb/>
J. T- Smith . <lb/>
S. I. Dudley . <lb/>
W. H. . <lb/>
J- T- Smith . <lb/>
S. I. Dudley . <lb/>
W. H- . <lb/>
J. T. Smith . <lb/>
S. I. Dudley . <lb/>
W. H- . <lb/>
J- T. Smith . <lb/>
S. I- Dudley . <lb/>
W. H. . <lb/>
J. L. Daniel . <lb/>
J. T- Smith . <lb/>
I. Dudley . <lb/>
W- H- . <lb/>
J. L. Daniel. <lb/>
J. T. Smith . <lb/>
S. I- Dudley . <lb/>
W. H. . <lb/>
J. L- Daniel . <lb/>
so <lb/>
Savage Move . <lb/>
Peter . <lb/>
J. R. Corey . <lb/>
Pitt Co. Buggy Co. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Peter Bagley . <lb/>
Pitt Co. Buggy Co <lb/>
Peter Bagley . <lb/>
Savage . <lb/>
Peter Bagley . <lb/>
J. R, Corey . <lb/>
A. Savage Co . <lb/>
Peter . <lb/>
Savage Co . <lb/>
Peter Bagley . <lb/>
J. R. Corey . <lb/>
Savage. Co. <lb/>
ATTORNEY'S FEES AND MEDICAL <lb/>
SERVICES. <lb/>
No. Whom Issued- <lb/>
Alex. L. Blow, 1902. <lb/>
.<lb/>
Fleming Moore . <lb/>
Jarvis Blow . <lb/>
J. Jarvis. <lb/>
Dr. J. E. Nobles . <lb/>
A. L. Blow . <lb/>
I M <lb/>
. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
W. <lb/>
D. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
f Arthur <lb/>
R. Parker . <lb/>
S. Spain. <lb/>
L. Carr .<lb/>
BOND <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
D. Rountree . <lb/>
Harry Skinner. Jr. W <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
Miss Maude Nixon . <lb/>
United States Mort. Trust <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee . <lb/>
Harry Skinner. Jr. <lb/>
D. C. Moore. C. S. C. <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. o <lb/>
Chas. Cobb. <lb/>
B. F. Patrick . <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee . <lb/>
L. C. Arthur . <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee . <lb/>
K, K. B. . <lb/>
B. F. Tyson . <lb/>
B. F. Patrick <lb/>
R. L. Carr . <lb/>
D. S. Spain . <lb/>
Cobb . <lb/>
H W. It. Parker . <lb/>
J. C. Tyson . <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
J. C. Tyson . <lb/>
B. F. Tyson . <lb/>
E. B. <lb/>
D. S. Spain . <lb/>
L. C. Arthur. <lb/>
R. L. Carr . <lb/>
W. R, Parker . <lb/>
B. F. Patrick . <lb/>
Cobb . <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
J. C. . <lb/>
D. S. Spain . <lb/>
Chas Cobb . <lb/>
L. C. Arthur . <lb/>
E. B. . <lb/>
B. F. Patrick . <lb/>
W. It. Parker . <lb/>
.<lb/>
CO <lb/>
Henry . <lb/>
Moses Williams . <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
Moses <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
Williams . <lb/>
Zeno Moore Bro <lb/>
H. L. Carr . <lb/>
H. A. White . <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
Williams . <lb/>
Moore Bro . <lb/>
H. A. While . <lb/>
i .<lb/>
No. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
MISCELLANEOUS. <lb/>
To Whom Issued. <lb/>
Rountree. dog tag. <lb/>
Moore, recording <lb/>
listing <lb/>
1,586 <lb/>
WELLS AND PUMPS- <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
Willis Clark . <lb/>
Pitt Co. Buggy Co . <lb/>
B. F. Patrick . <lb/>
Pump and Well <lb/>
H. L- Carr for S. P. Well <lb/>
C . <lb/>
R. L Humber . <lb/>
W. O- . g <lb/>
Pitt co. Co. <lb/>
so <lb/>
STREETS. CULVERTS <lb/>
SEWERS. <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
Baker Hart . <lb/>
J. N- Halt . <lb/>
H. G- Carr . <lb/>
Baker Hart . <lb/>
R. J. Cobb . <lb/>
Fred . <lb/>
Parker. <lb/>
H. L. Carr . <lb/>
Fred <lb/>
H. L- Carr . <lb/>
Parker. <lb/>
Fred . <lb/>
h. l- Carr . <lb/>
H. L- Carr . <lb/>
Fred . <lb/>
Parker. <lb/>
H. L. Carr. <lb/>
Baker Hart. <lb/>
AND <lb/>
FIRE DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
R. Hyman . <lb/>
It. Hyman . <lb/>
R. Hyman, for R. and R. <lb/>
Fire Co . <lb/>
R. Hyman, for Red H. Fire <lb/>
Co . W <lb/>
R. Hyman . <lb/>
D. L James . <lb/>
Frank Wilson . <lb/>
G. E. Harris. <lb/>
Wade Butts . <lb/>
E. C. <lb/>
Richard Forbes . <lb/>
Wm. . <lb/>
Warren King . <lb/>
A. J. Griffin . <lb/>
A. J. . a <lb/>
Zeno. Moore Bro. <lb/>
Bank of Greenville. Hose <lb/>
Note . <lb/>
A. J. . <lb/>
A. J. . <lb/>
A. J. Griffin . <lb/>
A. J. . <lb/>
A. J. . <lb/>
E. B. . <lb/>
A. J. . <lb/>
A. J. . <lb/>
H. C Hooker . <lb/>
A. J. . <lb/>
Church Moore . <lb/>
A. I . <lb/>
A. J. . <lb/>
H. C. Hooker . <lb/>
a. Savage at Co . <lb/>
A. J. Griffin . <lb/>
M. Fleming.<lb/>
. <lb/>
Fred <lb/>
Parker . <lb/>
Parker . <lb/>
R. O . <lb/>
H. L. Carr . <lb/>
H. L- Carr . <lb/>
H. L- Humber . <lb/>
Fred . <lb/>
A Parker . <lb/>
H. L- Carr . <lb/>
Baker Hart . <lb/>
Fred . <lb/>
H. L. Carr . <lb/>
Baker ft Hart . <lb/>
Parker. <lb/>
H. L. Carr . <lb/>
. <lb/>
H. L- Can- . <lb/>
Parker . <lb/>
S. T- White . <lb/>
Frank Elks . <lb/>
Tom Williams . <lb/>
Fred . <lb/>
H. L- Carr . <lb/>
Parker. <lb/>
Baker Hart<lb/>
Fred <lb/>
Baker Hart . <lb/>
H. L. Carr. o <lb/>
Move Parker . J <lb/>
H. L Carr . J <lb/>
Cotten . <lb/>
Fred . <lb/>
H- L. Carr . <lb/>
Baker Hart . <lb/>
H- L. Carr . <lb/>
Fred . <lb/>
Greenville Mfg- Co . <lb/>
ft Parker . H <lb/>
H. L. Carr . <lb/>
H. L. Carr . <lb/>
Hit H. L. Carr . <lb/>
L- Carr . <lb/>
-40 John Flanagan Buggy Co. l <lb/>
L- Carr . <lb/>
H- L. Carr . <lb/>
Fred . B <lb/>
ELECTIONS. <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
Allen Warren . <lb/>
J. L Starkey . <lb/>
J. N. Booth . <lb/>
Henry Harding . <lb/>
R. A Tyson, Jr. <lb/>
J. G. Bowling . <lb/>
L. W. Lawrence . <lb/>
A. A. Andrews. <lb/>
J. S. Tunstall . <lb/>
G. C. Moore . <lb/>
T. E. Hooker. <lb/>
J. D. Garden. <lb/>
B. B. Patrick . <lb/>
Edgar Buck . <lb/>
J. L, Daniel . <lb/>
Josiah Dixon . <lb/>
Pitt Co Buggy Co. <lb/>
J. G. Bowling . <lb/>
R. A. Jo. <lb/>
Henry Harding . <lb/>
Allen Warren . <lb/>
L. W. Lawrence . <lb/>
J. S. Tunstall . <lb/>
A. A. Andrews . <lb/>
G. C. Moore . <lb/>
T. E. Hooker . <lb/>
W. H. Smith . <lb/>
Edgar Buck . <lb/>
Josiah Dixon . <lb/>
W. C. . <lb/>
J. D. Garden . <lb/>
J. L Daniel . <lb/>
Allen Warren . <lb/>
B. F. . <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
J. Tyson . <lb/>
B. F. Tyson . <lb/>
D. S. Spain . <lb/>
Chits. Cobb . <lb/>
L. C. Arthur. <lb/>
E B. . <lb/>
W. Parker . <lb/>
R. L. Carr . <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
J. C. T-son . <lb/>
D. S. Spain . <lb/>
Chas. Cobb . <lb/>
B. B. <lb/>
It. L. Carr. <lb/>
W. It. Parker . <lb/>
B. F. Tyson . <lb/>
B. F. Patrick . <lb/>
. c. Arthur . <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
J. C. Tyson . <lb/>
B. F. Tyson . <lb/>
E. B. . <lb/>
D. S. Spain . <lb/>
Chas. Cobb . <lb/>
W. R. Parker. <lb/>
P. L. Can- . <lb/>
B. F. <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
J. C. Tyson . <lb/>
B. F- Tyson. <lb/>
D. S. Spain . <lb/>
Chas. Cobb . <lb/>
t F. Patrick . <lb/>
W. R, Parker . <lb/>
E. E. Griffin . <lb/>
K. B. . <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
J. C. Tyson . <lb/>
B. F. Tyson . <lb/>
Spain . <lb/>
Cobb . <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Carr . <lb/>
Griffin . <lb/>
Whedbee. <lb/>
Tyson . <lb/>
Tyson . <lb/>
. <lb/>
Spain . <lb/>
F. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
E. <lb/>
W. <lb/>
D. S.<lb/>
E. R. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
H. <lb/>
J. c. <lb/>
B. F. <lb/>
E. B. <lb/>
D. S. <lb/>
Chas <lb/>
E. E. Griffin . <lb/>
B. F. Patrick <lb/>
R. L. Carr . <lb/>
W. R. Parker <lb/>
D. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Allen Brown . <lb/>
C. D. Rountree. <lb/>
taxes. <lb/>
c. D. Rountree. dog tags----- <lb/>
D. J. Bible <lb/>
J. L. Wooten. stationary, <lb/>
etc . <lb/>
J. C. stamps . <lb/>
W. H. Dall, Jr. draying <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co. guard <lb/>
house . <lb/>
i L. H. Rountree. damage to <lb/>
n on I building . <lb/>
of error <lb/>
. <lb/>
SO W. B. Wilson, for <lb/>
n N <lb/>
On<lb/>
. <lb/>
H. Jenkins, auctioneer's <lb/>
refunded . <lb/>
C. T. damage by <lb/>
fire . <lb/>
Of old house. <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee, error <lb/>
taxes refunded .<lb/>
SUMMARY. <lb/>
Wells and Pumps . <lb/>
Streets, Culverts and Sewers. <lb/>
Teamster. Horses. Feed, <lb/>
etc . <lb/>
F-s and Medical <lb/>
Services . <lb/>
Bond Issue, including; <lb/>
old issue . <lb/>
Fire Department. <lb/>
Elections . <lb/>
Printing and <lb/>
AW Mayor. <lb/>
. Interest, Rents and <lb/>
Note Paid . <lb/>
Court Costs . <lb/>
Boarding Prisoners . <lb/>
i White C <lb/>
Coffins for Paupers . <lb/>
Lamp.-. Oil. Matches, Wicks <lb/>
Lamp Lighten . <lb/>
I Miscellaneous . <lb/>
1.586 <lb/>
2.966<lb/>
TOWN OF GREENVILLE <lb/>
In account with H. L. CARR, Treasurer, term ending June -Win, <lb/>
GENERAL FUND <lb/>
I Bl amount from J. M. Hart, ex-treasurer. <lb/>
f Alf Forbes, assistant police. . <lb/>
H. Whedbee. mayor's ct. of ed. <lb/>
horse hire. <lb/>
back taxes. <lb/>
bond and school tax uncalled for <lb/>
. Co. well at court house. <lb/>
J. T. Smith. C. P. <lb/>
I. Dudley, assistant police. <lb/>
C. tax collector. <lb/>
B. V. Tyson, sale of lumber. <lb/>
. a. J. money tor coal returned. t- <lb/>
To cash paid as per order filed herewith. <lb/>
per cent. on receipts. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Amount due town to <lb/>
1903. <lb/>
201.38 <lb/>
7.00 <lb/>
1.00 <lb/>
119.28 <lb/>
31.61 <lb/>
61.78 <lb/>
687.53 <lb/>
256.71 <lb/>
9,900.32 <lb/>
10.50 <lb/>
2.65 <lb/>
277.25 <lb/>
368.42 <lb/>
U. 291.47 <lb/>
amount due town to balance. <lb/>
Jun. <lb/>
CHERRY HILL CEMETERY <lb/>
By from J. N. HART, ex-treasurer. <lb/>
E. E. GRIFFIN, com. <lb/>
72.21 <lb/>
80.00 <lb/>
80.00 <lb/>
To sundry vouchers paid and tiled herewith, <lb/>
com. on receipts and <lb/>
Amount to balance. <lb/>
amount due White Cemetery. <lb/>
5.89 <lb/>
150.77 <lb/>
May <lb/>
Jun <lb/>
CHERRY HILL CEMETERY COLORED <lb/>
By cash of E. U- com. <lb/>
4.87 <lb/>
2.50 <lb/>
2.50 <lb/>
To per cent. com. <lb/>
amount to balance, <lb/>
15.00<lb/>
INSURANCE. INTEREST, RENTS i <lb/>
AND NOTES PAID. <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
John Flanagan Buggy Co., <lb/>
rent . <lb/>
H. A. White, insurance <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co, rent . <lb/>
P. It. W. E. Hooker, in- <lb/>
. <lb/>
H. A. White, insurance----- <lb/>
John Flanagan Buggy Co., <lb/>
rent . <lb/>
P. R. W. E. Hooker, note <lb/>
and interest . <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co., rent. <lb/>
Green Hooker, rent. <lb/>
Balance due Colored Cemetery. . <lb/>
We the undersigned Finance Committee, beg to report that we have <lb/>
examined the books of H. L. Carr, Treasurer and find them <lb/>
R. L. Carr, I <lb/>
D. S. Spain, Finance Committee. <lb/>
B. F Patrick, j <lb/>
J. C. Tyson, of the Board of Aldermen of Town of <lb/>
for the term ending July 30th, 1903, do hereby certify that <lb/>
and as appear upon the <lb/>
J. Clerk. <lb/>
foregoing statements are true <lb/>
record. <lb/>
COURT COSTS. <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
A. W. Harrington, sheriff. <lb/>
D. C. Moore. C. S. C. <lb/>
D. C. Moore. C. S. C. <lb/>
Jarvis Blow . <lb/>
D. C. Moore, C. C. <lb/>
D. C. Moore. C. S. C. <lb/>
D. C. Moore, C. S. C. <lb/>
D C. Moore. C. S. C. <lb/>
PRINTING AND ADVERTISING. <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
Burch Book and Job <lb/>
Co . M <lb/>
H. T. King . <lb/>
D. J. Whichard . <lb/>
D. J. Whichard . <lb/>
H. L. Carr, Ordinances <lb/>
Walker, <lb/>
Co . M <lb/>
Burch Book and Job <lb/>
Co . <lb/>
Burch Book and Job <lb/>
Co . H <lb/>
D. J. Whichard . <lb/>
Burch Book and Job <lb/>
Co . <lb/>
D. J. Whichard . <lb/>
D. J. Whichard . <lb/>
Edwards ft Broughton . <lb/>
D. J. Whichard . <lb/>
Burch Book and Job <lb/>
Co . <lb/>
D. J. Whichard . <lb/>
D. J. Whichard . <lb/>
BOARDING <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued. <lb/>
Harriet Hopkins . <lb/>
Harriet Hopkins . <lb/>
Harriet Hopkins . <lb/>
Harriet Hopkins . <lb/>
Harriet Hopkins . <lb/>
Harriet Hopkins . <lb/>
t i Roberts Joe <lb/>
PRISONERS. <lb/>
LIST FOR YEAR <lb/>
PERSONS NOT LEFT TOWN. <lb/>
Allen Sam N 2.00 <lb/>
Anderson Frank <lb/>
, Bailey Alex, Jr 2.00 <lb/>
Peter 2.00 <lb/>
i Lovelace 2.00 <lb/>
James W B 2.34 <lb/>
James Andrew <lb/>
King James 2.00 <lb/>
King Alonzo 2.00 <lb/>
James 2.00 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
Perkins Joe <lb/>
l Tuft John <lb/>
Wesley <lb/>
i w Webb Chas <lb/>
HORSES. FEED. <lb/>
STABLES. ETC. <lb/>
. To Whom Issued <lb/>
Bagley . <lb/>
Bagley . <lb/>
B. Cherry ft Co. <lb/>
A. Andrews <lb/>
Bagley . <lb/>
Cherry . <lb/>
. B. Cherry ft Co . <lb/>
. <lb/>
S F. C. Williams . <lb/>
. <lb/>
Richard . <lb/>
U Peter Bagley . <lb/>
l Parker. <lb/>
B. Cherry ft Co . <lb/>
Peter Bagley . <lb/>
B. Cherry ft Co. <lb/>
Greenville Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Peter Bagley . <lb/>
GO <lb/>
3-i<lb/>
CLERK, ALDERMEN AND MAYOR. <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
Chas. Cobb. for year 1901 <lb/>
J. S. Tunstall. for year 1901. <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee . <lb/>
J. C. Tyson . <lb/>
B. F. Tyson . <lb/>
W. It. Parker. <lb/>
Chas. Cobb . <lb/>
II. . <lb/>
D. S. Spain . <lb/>
T. Arthur . <lb/>
R. L. Carr . <lb/>
W. R. Parker . <lb/>
B. F. . <lb/>
B. Patrick . <lb/>
Chas. Cobb. <lb/>
S. Spain . <lb/>
H. W Whedbee . <lb/>
J. C. Tyson. <lb/>
E. B. . <lb/>
J. C. Tyson . <lb/>
E. R. . <lb/>
B. F. Tyson . <lb/>
WHITE CEMETERY. <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued- <lb/>
H. L. Carr, work in <lb/>
tery . <lb/>
H. L. Carr. work in <lb/>
tery . <lb/>
H. L. Carr. work In <lb/>
tery . <lb/>
Parker, lumber. <lb/>
L. C. Arthur, work in <lb/>
tery .<lb/>
White G F <lb/>
Wooten Aaron <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Not Quite <lb/>
How often you can get a <lb/>
thing <lb/>
nail or screw driver or <lb/>
lacking. Have a good <lb/>
tool box and be prepared for <lb/>
emergencies. Our line of tools <lb/>
is all you could desire, and <lb/>
we will see that your tool <lb/>
box does not lack a single <lb/>
useful article. <lb/>
Of Course <lb/>
You get Harness, <lb/>
Horse Goods, <lb/>
of <lb/>
38.62 <lb/>
INSOLVENT LIST FOR FOR <lb/>
PERSONS WHO ARE DEAD, <lb/>
KNOWN OR GONE. <lb/>
COFFINS FOR PAUPERS. <lb/>
No. To Whom Issued. <lb/>
Flanagan Coffin Co . <lb/>
Pitt Co Buggy Co .<lb/>
LAMPS. OIL. MATCHES. WICKS <lb/>
AND LAMP LIGHTERS. <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
Zeno Moore ft Bro. <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
H. A. While . <lb/>
H. A. White . <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
H. A. White . <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
II. A. While . <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
Moses Williams . <lb/>
H. A. White . <lb/>
Red C. Oil Co . <lb/>
Henry Duff . <lb/>
Moses Williams <lb/>
Zeno Moore ft Bro. <lb/>
T. H. Bateman . <lb/>
H. A. White. <lb/>
H. A. White <lb/>
Clark Peter <lb/>
U so Cox W D dead <lb/>
Dudley E B gone <lb/>
Daniel John gone <lb/>
I Dickens <lb/>
Ellis Richard gone <lb/>
Tom <lb/>
Hodges Robt G <lb/>
King S D gone <lb/>
Little George <lb/>
Savage J C <lb/>
Tate E L gone <lb/>
Thomas J T gone <lb/>
I Walker J R gone <lb/>
Woodard J E gone <lb/>
i Wilson A J dead <lb/>
So J H gone<lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.87 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
3.02 <lb/>
2.02 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
WHICHARD <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
Whichard, N. C. <lb/>
Total insolvent list <lb/>
Respectfully submitted, <lb/>
C. I. Rountree, <lb/>
75.64 i The Stock complete in every <lb/>
payment and prices as low as <lb/>
the <lb/>
lowest. Highest market <lb/>
Tax Collector, paid for country produce. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019343_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
EIGHT <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR, GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
NINE <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR, GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
THE DREAMER <lb/>
I was born h To say <lb/>
U to saying <lb/>
that I was to most <lb/>
deposition a man can have. <lb/>
earliest boyhood was to <lb/>
fancy myself t military hero, a <lb/>
artist, clergyman, but <lb/>
my favorite dream was to he Immense- <lb/>
rich and known as a great <lb/>
There was one person to <lb/>
whom I ever told my dreams, my little <lb/>
playmate, Jennie who as a child <lb/>
wit pleased with them, but she <lb/>
had no sooner given up her doll than <lb/>
she gave up Interest In my dreams. In- i <lb/>
deed, at sixteen she said to <lb/>
never amount to anything In the <lb/>
world. of giving away money <lb/>
lavishly you'll be begging It from <lb/>
This was a blow to It <lb/>
should have taught me to stop dream- <lb/>
lag and myself. Had I not been; <lb/>
from my birth n besotted <lb/>
doubtless It would have helped me. At I <lb/>
It was it stimulated me to take only <lb/>
action a dreamer Is capable of. I read , <lb/>
the gold fields of Colorado, and when <lb/>
I was twenty-one and paid a legacy of <lb/>
that had been left me by an aunt <lb/>
I departed for the State. <lb/>
When I had reached the goal I had <lb/>
wit for. Georgetown. I went to a <lb/>
hotel, where I met n man who sold me I <lb/>
claim for what money I left <lb/>
which I discovered won after was <lb/>
worthless. Then I dreamed that I <lb/>
would find a fortune prospecting, and <lb/>
wandered with a pick on my <lb/>
shoulder, which I bad no time to put <lb/>
into the earth, because I was constant- <lb/>
lost In a dream as to what I would <lb/>
do with the proceeds of my bonanza <lb/>
mine when I should And it. <lb/>
wag that I was one picked <lb/>
op by a prospector In a state of rags <lb/>
and starvation. He was nearly as <lb/>
ragged as I and completely <lb/>
aged. However, be took me to his <lb/>
camp and gave me something to eat, <lb/>
and after I wove for him a <lb/>
chain of circumstances which would <lb/>
in fabulous wealth for him. <lb/>
next day be went to work with re- <lb/>
newed vigor, permitting me to remain <lb/>
with him for sake of my <lb/>
dreams. Every evening he would <lb/>
coma in discouraged, and every evening <lb/>
I would weave a new fancy, sending <lb/>
out next day with new <lb/>
The result that one lie struck <lb/>
a bonanza. <lb/>
never done it but for you. <lb/>
be said, and when he organized a com- <lb/>
to work his mine be gave half <lb/>
Ms stork, and left me the other half In <lb/>
his will. Then something happened <lb/>
that bad never entered Into my dreams <lb/>
for was killed while blasting. <lb/>
That gave me three-quarters of the <lb/>
stock of biggest paying mine in <lb/>
Colorado. I hadn't time to operate it <lb/>
myself. I was too busy dreaming bow <lb/>
I would surprise folks at home. So <lb/>
I left In charge of the directors and <lb/>
started eastward. <lb/>
Of conn It would have spoiled all <lb/>
dreams to go back and at once an- <lb/>
myself a gold king. To make n <lb/>
fine climax I dressed myself in the <lb/>
rags that I had on when good luck <lb/>
struck me and one day appeared In my <lb/>
native village and stood before the <lb/>
house where Jennie lived. She was <lb/>
going to the well for water, and, seeing <lb/>
what she thought a hungry looking <lb/>
tramp In road, said, and <lb/>
give you a piece of When she <lb/>
returned with the water and saw me I <lb/>
thought was going to topple over. <lb/>
heaven's sake, she said, <lb/>
did you come from And Is <lb/>
this what your dreams have brought <lb/>
you <lb/>
I laid, would you <lb/>
think If I were to tell you that I'd been <lb/>
prospecting In Colorado and found a <lb/>
big mine and bad come home to make <lb/>
and your mother your father <lb/>
and all your brothers and sisters <lb/>
she said, the tears <lb/>
to her eyes. you've been <lb/>
away I've hoped that yon would get <lb/>
your dreams knocked out of you. You <lb/>
are the best fellow, the loveliest fellow <lb/>
in the world, and but <lb/>
I Interrupted, you <lb/>
I would redeem myself <lb/>
and come back and you and I would <lb/>
enjoy fruits of my Industry to- <lb/>
She made no reply to this, but I <lb/>
knew by a fresh outburst of tears that <lb/>
be had been doing that very thing. <lb/>
I went on, <lb/>
dreamed a bigger dream than that. I've <lb/>
dreamed that I've got n big mine and <lb/>
it's turning out a <lb/>
She sat down on the porch and burled <lb/>
her face In her bands. <lb/>
went to her and put <lb/>
my arm about her while with the <lb/>
hand I took hers away from bar <lb/>
weeping true, every word of <lb/>
it I put my band Into my; <lb/>
pocket and pulled out a fat roll of bills, <lb/>
every one a hundred dollars. <lb/>
looked at me in terror, thinking I'd <lb/>
stolen it <lb/>
to me, Jennie. There's no <lb/>
faculty that may not useful, even <lb/>
dreaming. I was starving in these, <lb/>
clothes when I met a man who <lb/>
what I do I <lb/>
what he did fancy capable of <lb/>
Of <lb/>
would nave other- <lb/>
wise he was to make a <lb/>
success. He me my i on an <lb/>
tying, left me <lb/>
I married and became a I <lb/>
dispensing <lb/>
her. for I am too busy <lb/>
dreams to attend to r. re <lb/>
suits of the old ones. have <lb/>
to hundreds of addresses, sneaker <lb/>
referring to n n example fir <lb/>
the youth of Am Tea. wife say <lb/>
that If I had got my deserts I <lb/>
have occupied a <lb/>
F. A. <lb/>
Talked a Man <lb/>
In John Creatures <lb/>
of there Is a quotation from <lb/>
little Latin printed at <lb/>
in the years which tells a <lb/>
most wonderful story. quotes <lb/>
as found in a <lb/>
or of corn almost as many <lb/>
snakes, adders and other as <lb/>
there was so us no one sheaf <lb/>
could lie removed but there presently <lb/>
appeared a of and <lb/>
The men <lb/>
to set tire upon the barns and <lb/>
so attempted to do. but In value, for <lb/>
the straw would take no Are, although <lb/>
they with all their and <lb/>
to burn them up. <lb/>
last there appeared unto them at <lb/>
the top of the a huge great <lb/>
which lifted up his head and <lb/>
spake with s man's to the <lb/>
men. saying. to prosecute <lb/>
your devise, for you shall not be able to <lb/>
accomplish our burning, for wee <lb/>
not by nature, neither came we <lb/>
here of our own but were sent <lb/>
by God to take on slimes <lb/>
of <lb/>
Ashton loaves us In the dark as to <lb/>
what the men did, but It is <lb/>
natural to suppose that they <lb/>
at once. <lb/>
WILL OPEN <lb/>
Picture In Stone. <lb/>
could tongues In <lb/>
trees, books In the running brooks, <lb/>
mons In stones and good in every- <lb/>
but he falls to mention the <lb/>
of finding a picture drawn by <lb/>
nature in a stone. In several of the <lb/>
ancient as well as modern scientific <lb/>
Journals we read of lines and mark- <lb/>
in certain stone formations, par- <lb/>
agates, which bear striking <lb/>
resemblances to the outlines of men, <lb/>
animals, landscapes, etc. <lb/>
One of these curiosities now <lb/>
served in the museum of the Vatican is <lb/>
a perfect likeness of n crowned king. <lb/>
Many of these representations so <lb/>
lifelike that they have been mistaken <lb/>
for medallion portraits. We read ac- <lb/>
counts of several of these wonders In <lb/>
One plainly shows a man In <lb/>
the attitude of running, another Is a <lb/>
perfect figure of the good St. Jerome, <lb/>
but most remarkable of all is an <lb/>
agate containing a representation of <lb/>
Apollo surrounded by nine muses. <lb/>
Ready to get you highest prices. We want to sell your tobacco <lb/>
e-TRY US <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LIN <lb/>
A Story. <lb/>
There Is a story in Persian literature <lb/>
of a certain poet who came before <lb/>
great man and praised very or- <lb/>
The rich man was very pleased <lb/>
and money I have not; <lb/>
nevertheless there Is In my granaries <lb/>
very much corn. If you come <lb/>
row I will give you The poet <lb/>
went to his own house and on the <lb/>
row presented himself to his patron. <lb/>
The rich man naked him, have <lb/>
you He you I <lb/>
promised to give me corn. For this <lb/>
am The rich <lb/>
most wonderful fool thou art. What <lb/>
you said to me gave me pleasure. What <lb/>
I have said to you equally pleased you. <lb/>
Why, then, should I give you <lb/>
The poet was covered with shame and I <lb/>
departed. <lb/>
He or she who enters n house for the <lb/>
first time is supposed in the <lb/>
countries to living it good or bad luck j <lb/>
for the whole twelvemonth. This be- <lb/>
lief gives rise to a curious observance, j <lb/>
The visitor before crossing the thresh- <lb/>
old picks up a stone of <lb/>
or a green twig of health and ; <lb/>
and lays it on the <lb/>
He also brings with him some grains j <lb/>
of salt, Which he easts Into the flames,, <lb/>
and then, squatting by the fireside, <lb/>
wishes his hosts prosperous, a i <lb/>
plentiful crop and many I <lb/>
Then as grains of salt burst <lb/>
crackle In the fire he utters the <lb/>
quaint I am sitting j <lb/>
even so sit the hen and warm the <lb/>
eggs. As this salt splits even so may <lb/>
split the eggs of the clucking hen and <lb/>
the chickens come <lb/>
No <lb/>
Young Criminal have <lb/>
ranged to have the prisoner's wife and <lb/>
babies sit in front of Jury and <lb/>
weep all through the trial. Do you <lb/>
think It advisable to pick bachelors or <lb/>
married men for the Jury <lb/>
Old Criminal it doesn't <lb/>
make a particle of difference. If <lb/>
they will sympathize with the <lb/>
woman and babies, and if married men <lb/>
they will sympathize with the <lb/>
oner. <lb/>
RIVER if ICE <lb/>
Steamer R. L. Myers leave <lb/>
Washington daily, except Sunday. <lb/>
at a. in fur Greenville, leaver I <lb/>
Greenville daily, except Sunday, <lb/>
at m. for Washington. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
Steamers for Baltimore, <lb/>
Philadelphia, New York Boston, <lb/>
Aurora, South Creek, Belhaven, <lb/>
Swan Quarter, Ocracoke and <lb/>
all for the West with rail <lb/>
roads at Norfolk. <lb/>
Shippers should order freight by <lb/>
the Old Dominion S. S. Co. from <lb/>
New York; Clyde Line from <lb/>
Bay Line and Chesapeake <lb/>
S. S. Co. from Baltimore. Mer- <lb/>
and Line from <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
J. E. Supt. <lb/>
Washington, N. C <lb/>
J. C. <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
American and Italian Marble <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N, C. <lb/>
Wire and Iron Fence Sold. <lb/>
First-Clans work and prices reasonable <lb/>
design f. pen on <lb/>
ESTABLISHED IN <lb/>
J. W. PERRY CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton handlers of <lb/>
Bagging, Ties and Bags. <lb/>
Correspondence and shipments <lb/>
solicited.<lb/>
you are thirsty you can't over-look our <lb/>
Soda Water The soda water con- <lb/>
daily from our fountain during hot <lb/>
is enormous. The quantity sold is <lb/>
proof positive of its Your favorite <lb/>
hind is here, because we have all hinds. <lb/>
Bryan Nichols, <lb/>
mm <lb/>
Hard to Meet <lb/>
Miss -1 <lb/>
guess in Bohemia every one is Tom, Cotton Buyers Brokers in <lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
I Lott poor yes. I. to New York <lb/>
out there are a goad many bills I <lb/>
i Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
Reduction Sale of <lb/>
Summer Pants. <lb/>
The Fine Line of Pants we have been carrying in stock at <lb/>
and dollars are now offered at the y <lb/>
GREAT REDUCTION PRICE OF. <lb/>
for each pair, regardless of former price. These are strictly <lb/>
all-wool goods, finely tailored and in the very latest style. <lb/>
We have a large stock and can surely fit and please you. <lb/>
Xi <lb/>
WINTERVILLE <lb/>
This department is in charge of J. M. Blow, who is authorized to rep- <lb/>
resent the Eastern Reflector in Winterville and territory. <lb/>
N. C, Aug., <lb/>
Little Miss Mattie Murphy, of <lb/>
is visiting her <lb/>
Henry Murphy, near here. <lb/>
Too should not fail to see or <lb/>
write the Winterville Mfg. Co., <lb/>
and get their best prices on Porch <lb/>
Columns, Turned Balustrades <lb/>
Newel Posts, Pickets for Stair <lb/>
Way, Bailing Porch, Bracket, <lb/>
Boxing Brackets; Sawed <lb/>
and Trimming for be- <lb/>
tween Brackets. <lb/>
A colored driver for one of the <lb/>
livery in Greenville came <lb/>
down last Wednesday and put his <lb/>
horse up at the stables of G. A. <lb/>
Co. Before leaving, <lb/>
however, he look a special fancy <lb/>
to some of those fine chickens of <lb/>
Mr. anyway, as he start- <lb/>
ed off there was a noise under the <lb/>
seat of the buggy and upon in- <lb/>
one of the finest <lb/>
chickens was found tied up in a <lb/>
bag. The chicken is still here but <lb/>
if better fortune has not overtaken <lb/>
him, there is a hungry nigger in <lb/>
Ladies Gentlemen s furnish <lb/>
goods to suit the old, the <lb/>
pretty, the ugly even the <lb/>
most fastidious at our <lb/>
F. Manning Co <lb/>
Mrs. Sarah Taylor and Mrs. J. <lb/>
R. Cooper were Green- <lb/>
ville Wednesday. <lb/>
For soap, linking powder, flour, <lb/>
lard, eggs, snuff, cigars, tobacco and <lb/>
canned goods, see A. D. <lb/>
An excursion ran over a <lb/>
sheep and killed it near the depot <lb/>
Thursday. This i the first in- <lb/>
stance the kind we ever knew. <lb/>
The drag store has just <lb/>
ed from T. W . Wood Sons a <lb/>
fresh line of turnip rutabaga <lb/>
seed. <lb/>
Mrs. Nancy Jones, of <lb/>
is visiting Mrs. Frank near <lb/>
here. <lb/>
Would you like to sweeten your <lb/>
tooth. If so try some of <lb/>
fresh candies at the drug <lb/>
store. <lb/>
Dr. Cox's drug store is one of <lb/>
the depositories for free school <lb/>
books in Pitt county. You will <lb/>
always find there fanny stationery, <lb/>
pens, pencils, ink, scratch tablets, <lb/>
composition books, <lb/>
Have you the line of <lb/>
pens at the drug store <lb/>
When your supply of feed stuff <lb/>
is all gone don't fail to purchase a <lb/>
new supply from G. A. <lb/>
Co., as their prices are right. <lb/>
Tobacco in tins has a <lb/>
rather small body, but it is <lb/>
fine texture, which, perhaps, <lb/>
will make up the difference in <lb/>
price. <lb/>
G. A. while in Norfolk, <lb/>
bought two very fine horses, one <lb/>
for himself the other for a <lb/>
gentleman in Greene county. He <lb/>
says the prices for horses are <lb/>
high. <lb/>
A few Plymouth roosters <lb/>
left that we will sell reasonable <lb/>
G. A. Co. <lb/>
A on the side- <lb/>
walks, bridges, might <lb/>
add to the appearance <lb/>
of our town and be to our town <lb/>
a of much <lb/>
as no doubt the <lb/>
they would receive from a <lb/>
much inconvenienced public would <lb/>
prove both pleasing and beneficial. <lb/>
If in need of China Closets, <lb/>
Desks, Window Frames or Mantles <lb/>
fitted in the best and latest styles, <lb/>
do not pass the Winterville Mfg. <lb/>
Co; by. <lb/>
Mrs. David Sutton and Carrie Brown, of <lb/>
children, of Snow Hill, are visit-1 ville, and Ella Lassiter, of Dur- <lb/>
her Mis. Sarah Taylor, <lb/>
and the family of her father, J. F. <lb/>
Elliot. <lb/>
For Furniture in the latest de <lb/>
signs and patterns to suit every- <lb/>
one, call and see B F. Maiming <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
have been visiting Mrs. <lb/>
Johnson this week. <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co., have <lb/>
just revived a nice line of <lb/>
tan such as chairs, cupboards, <lb/>
Boarding J. <lb/>
Cox. Board fl per day. Best <lb/>
Bargains equal to the best can House in town. <lb/>
be had at the store of B. F. Man <lb/>
Co., dry goods; boots and <lb/>
shoes. <lb/>
The Winterville Cigar Co., <lb/>
offering special inducements in i <lb/>
Cheroot line. Try their goods <lb/>
Singletrees Plow Beams I be convinced that you have a; <lb/>
made of the very best material by good article for sale. Write for <lb/>
the Winterville Mfg. Co. prices. <lb/>
Maj. J. B. Neal came in from Mrs. G. E. Lineberry, who hail <lb/>
Scotland Neck Thursday evening, been spending the summer up <lb/>
Tonsorial A. Fair, <lb/>
good shave fine hair cut. <lb/>
Latest style. <lb/>
Masons fruit jars and rubbers, <lb/>
plenty on hand, prices low. <lb/>
D. H. Parker, of Pinner Point, <lb/>
has accepted a position as <lb/>
to J. E. Green, at <lb/>
depot. <lb/>
Miss Lee of Kinston, <lb/>
is visiting the family of Rev. <lb/>
Manning. <lb/>
All kinds of scroll turned <lb/>
work done to order by the Winter- <lb/>
ville Mtg. Co. <lb/>
W, L. left yesterday <lb/>
to accept a position as telegraph <lb/>
operator at <lb/>
See A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. not <lb/>
only for regular style farm wagons <lb/>
the middle section of the state, <lb/>
came home Thursday evening. <lb/>
M. L. and <lb/>
Watch maker. Give him a <lb/>
trial. Work guaranteed. <lb/>
Nice line gents four-in-hand <lb/>
midget ties just received, cheap <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and Co. <lb/>
Straw Hats per cent, below <lb/>
cost at B. F. Manning Co. If you <lb/>
them come at once, only a <lb/>
few left. <lb/>
We carry line of school <lb/>
stationary, slates, pencils, tablets, <lb/>
pen points and ink, Composition <lb/>
books, paper etc., give us a <lb/>
call please. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
Prof. A. A. Forbes, Al Forbes, <lb/>
Jr., D. were again with <lb/>
Two Piece <lb/>
new suits of <lb/>
are the thing for sum- <lb/>
wear. We're always plow- <lb/>
new follow- <lb/>
the old furrows that will <lb/>
result in a rut. Plenty of of indulgence is allowable in <lb/>
L very handsome suits. Rough surfaces predominate. <lb/>
u I strange that a rough <lb/>
r cloth can be woven to <lb/>
cooler than a smooth one. <lb/>
It we can show you how true that is, Wool Crashes, Home- <lb/>
Serges, Striped Flannel. <lb/>
two-piece suit is the thing <lb/>
J laW IS comfort. <lb/>
GOODS<lb/>
The NOW. <lb/>
THE KING CLOTHIER. <lb/>
and carts, but also for the strongest Thursday night and rendered as- <lb/>
dray carts and low down to the band was very <lb/>
purposes. These; highly appreciated by the <lb/>
wagons have the front wheels low in attendance upon the <lb/>
tinder and are going <lb/>
to favorite with tobacco When you come to the summer <lb/>
farmers. school be sure to get your ice <lb/>
Miss Mattie of cream and cold drinks from A. D. <lb/>
who has been Johnston. He has the list, <lb/>
a private school for Rowan I B. W. remarked in his <lb/>
Cooper left for her home yesterday. lecture here the other night that <lb/>
Most any wire fence is better some men did not have sense <lb/>
than none. Perfect enough to which end of a <lb/>
Fencing is that bought of A. G. cow got up first. A few years <lb/>
Cox Mfg. Co. Why Because from today that class of farmers <lb/>
their price is best and they carry will be the only ones not using <lb/>
biggest stock. Economic Back Bands. <lb/>
Mr. Elias Sutton had a little II you are thinking to <lb/>
boy wandered some distance a horse see G. A. Co. <lb/>
in the field other got Shirt waists as described in <lb/>
a; <lb/>
issue recent of The Reflector; <lb/>
made their appearance, <lb/>
here yet. Like everything else <lb/>
we suppose they are on way. <lb/>
In awarding damages if the <lb/>
lost in the tobacco patch. After <lb/>
careful search and much an- <lb/>
the little fellow was found <lb/>
all O. K. <lb/>
We could not help smiling one <lb/>
morning this week as we passed the <lb/>
Hunsucker Buggy Shop would how much goes to <lb/>
had rolled out five buggies and <lb/>
were jut hustling to get their <lb/>
shipment ready. There don't <lb/>
seem to be any dull season for <lb/>
them. <lb/>
Your Eyes, <lb/>
My <lb/>
with one of those fine imported Lace at Pulley <lb/>
Bowen's. They are reduced from and cents to <lb/>
CENTS <lb/>
, If you girls must cry do it gracefully. Women's <lb/>
tears are too sacred to waste on common <lb/>
chiefs. Don't be caught with one. <lb/>
Pulley Bowen's <lb/>
the plaintiff and how much to <lb/>
lawyer it would perhaps be a good <lb/>
thing, except for the lawyer. <lb/>
Durham Herald. <lb/>
DISTRIBUTING DEPOT FOR <lb/>
FENCES, <lb/>
ALL GALVANIZED STEEL WIRES. <lb/>
FOR FIELD, FARM AND HOG FENCING. <lb/>
THE ONLY ELECTRICALLY WELDED FENCE. <lb/>
EVERY ROD GUARANTEED PERFECT. <lb/>
The DURABLE Fence, <lb/>
None so STRONG. <lb/>
All large wires. <lb/>
Highest EFFICIENCY. <lb/>
LOWEST COST. <lb/>
No Wraps- <lb/>
to hold <lb/>
Moisture <lb/>
and cause <lb/>
Rust<lb/>
STOCK We can SAVE YOU MONEY on Fencing. <lb/>
CALL AND SEC IT. <lb/>
House, <lb/>
P. H. KITTRELL, Proprietor. <lb/>
Well Furnished with Fish, as <lb/>
the Market Justifies. <lb/>
A Grocery also attached <lb/>
Try him. <lb/>
WINTERVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
A Full Line of Millinery <lb/>
Goods. <lb/>
HALE OF LAND. <lb/>
By virtue of a decree of the <lb/>
Court of Pitt County made this <lb/>
day in a certain special proceeding <lb/>
pending, entitled M. <lb/>
administrator versus Willis <lb/>
and I will on <lb/>
Monday. September 7th, be- <lb/>
fore the Court House door in <lb/>
ville, sell at public sale to the highest <lb/>
bidder for cash, the <lb/>
ed real estate situated in Swift Creek <lb/>
township, Pitt County; to <lb/>
one piece of parcel land adjoining <lb/>
the lands of Willis and Lydia <lb/>
Tingle, containing one hundred <lb/>
acres more or less. <lb/>
One other piece adjoining the above <lb/>
described tract and containing H acres <lb/>
more or less. <lb/>
This the 30th day of <lb/>
of James Tingle <lb/>
Blow,, Attorneys. <lb/>
. <lb/>
a. a. cox co. <lb/>
Mrs Sarah Taylor, <lb/>
Fashionable <lb/>
i Milliner, <lb/>
Best and latest styles always on <lb/>
hand. Call and see. Next door <lb/>
to Dr. B. T. Cox's drug store. <lb/>
CRANK H. WOOTEN, <lb/>
Attorney-at-Law, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Practice in all the courts. Special <lb/>
attention to collection of <lb/>
and other claims. Prompt <lb/>
n to all business. <lb/>
,. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019343_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
mm<lb/>
Lr- <lb/>
The Farmville Branch of the Eastern Reflector is in charge of Rev. T. H. who is <lb/>
authorized to transact any business for the paper in Farmville and territory. <lb/>
N. July 1-103. factory of Davis <lb/>
It is to look out pod up a flue and substantial <lb/>
nature and behold the gnat variety buggy, tor which ready kale is to <lb/>
products which the ground be found. The tobacco truck lac- <lb/>
yields. We travel along our pub- K. L. Davis has been put- <lb/>
lie roads and we see stretches ting up large numbers of trucks, <lb/>
Of corn and tobacco, the so much needed gathering lo- <lb/>
th great staples of commerce I the field. The brick <lb/>
other we can say that this j of Bros, baa been <lb/>
is a tine section for all kinds of several mouths their <lb/>
vegetables, as cabbage, product has found ready sale. <lb/>
peas, beats, sweet ate other <lb/>
Ancient Table Manner. <lb/>
A description of a dinner given In <lb/>
1880 shows that there has been a vast <lb/>
improvement in bible manners since <lb/>
then. As a rule, one knife had to serve <lb/>
for two people, and often a bowl of <lb/>
soup was used by two persons. For <lb/>
this reason the party giving the din- <lb/>
arranged his guests in couples, try- <lb/>
ins to place people together who would <lb/>
be congenial and net adverse to this <lb/>
common use of table appointments. <lb/>
Spoons were seldom supplied the <lb/>
guests, and the soup was drunk <lb/>
from the bowl, the latter usually <lb/>
having side handles by which it was <lb/>
to hear the tumble noise of a <lb/>
.,, cotton a merry <lb/>
it takes be- <lb/>
toes. <lb/>
peaches <lb/>
anywhere. Tin <lb/>
fair crop annually, with some ex- at Farmville. <lb/>
in speaking of the railroad <lb/>
Conner article, we have nine, as <lb/>
vast of iron fingers and than <lb/>
be and twists it thread, <lb/>
suitable or hosiery. <lb/>
A new firm has opened in Farm- <lb/>
ville, Thorne and Parker, <lb/>
who carry a full line of patent <lb/>
medicines, toilet articles, station <lb/>
We know held. In less refitted company there <lb/>
Of fruit we have never u tones the town. <lb/>
grown no place in the state w-ere no separate soup bowls, only one <lb/>
. V. .- . .- large porringer, which was passed <lb/>
yields a a la. would pa <lb/>
We hope long <lb/>
Dainty things for any meal sold <lb/>
at prices to suit <lb/>
any purse. <lb/>
We provide the most attractive necessity. for your <lb/>
table. We do it this having the Groceries, <lb/>
by handling them in the best way, and by boiling them <lb/>
at most reasonable margin. <lb/>
Cotton seed Meal and Hulls, Hay, Oats, Corn and Bran <lb/>
always on band. <lb/>
Johnston Bros. <lb/>
CASH<lb/>
products <lb/>
WHICH <lb/>
shipped direct, seeking a ready- <lb/>
market, not found home. <lb/>
Of the Interests, <lb/>
we have Greenville this line o <lb/>
road which does an enormous <lb/>
in tobacco cotton, and kind of cool drinks <lb/>
Wilson with all Us varied usually kept at i <lb/>
there would be a large <lb/>
traffic of these manufactured goods <lb/>
going out and other goods coming <lb/>
The firm is composed of young <lb/>
who deserve the patronage <lb/>
of the and community <lb/>
L to supply of trade. handle ice by the car load <lb/>
Along this hue of the pro- and are prepared furnish the <lb/>
duets of the ocean, baa and oysters trade in any quantity, <lb/>
be handled with great pro- has gone to Hal- <lb/>
lit to the retail dealer, to see his father-in-law, <lb/>
as this road would give the short- j Mr. Phillips, who is quite sick at <lb/>
est quickest route to the s-a. the hospital, had a. very <lb/>
We wish to remark here that serious operation performed. <lb/>
our good town of Farmville <lb/>
little manufacturing of Love makes the vise man fool- <lb/>
kind operation. Toe buggy 1st the fool completely daffy. <lb/>
around to the guests In turn. The <lb/>
diners helped themselves to the pieces <lb/>
of meat they desired from the common <lb/>
dish their Angers. <lb/>
Napkins were considered a luxury, <lb/>
and were only provided in very <lb/>
and wealthy <lb/>
A of <lb/>
Phyllis -Yes. he was paying <lb/>
tn her quite a long time. <lb/>
he hadn't the <lb/>
courage to propose. <lb/>
Phyllis I don't know. Perhaps <lb/>
he had the courage not to propose. <lb/>
Town and Country. <lb/>
JAS. B. WHITE, <lb/>
General Merchandise <lb/>
and Department Store, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
An Mini. <lb/>
it true the jury disagreed In that <lb/>
murder <lb/>
they say there was one blamed <lb/>
crank that held out for the <lb/>
man who done the <lb/>
Tribune. <lb/>
t.<lb/>
FARMVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
G. C. BARRETT. ; <lb/>
FARMVILLE. N. C <lb/>
f Dry Goods. Notions <lb/>
I T a in my I am s <lb/>
offering all dry good, and notion on m <lb/>
Z hand for This ton a <lb/>
a to<lb/>
stock of carefully selected Groceries. Goods. <lb/>
Notions, Boots. Shoes, Hats, Caps and Furnishings. <lb/>
Produce and sold. Fresh Butter, Eggs <lb/>
and Family Supplies constantly on hand. Country trade <lb/>
a specialty. Flour and feed by the car load. <lb/>
JAS. B. WHITE. <lb/>
C. C. JOYNER, <lb/>
, Physician <lb/>
and Surgeon. <lb/>
Farmville, N. C, <lb/>
Offers selections from as complete a stock of <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
M on in Eastern Caroline-. <lb/>
Special line of Dress Goods and Trimmings for Ladies. <lb/>
Full line Celebrated Shoes for men. Every pair warranted. <lb/>
Corliss, Coon Co. Collars and I for Men and Ladies. <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
OP ALL GRADES. WHITE IRON, <lb/>
BEDSTEADS AND MATTRESSES. <lb/>
i- <lb/>
Clothing, Goods, Hats and Groceries. <lb/>
Hardware, Implements and Cream Freezers <lb/>
and Hammocks. <lb/>
T. of flour, corn, oats, hay <lb/>
R. L DAVIS B <lb/>
General Merchants. <lb/>
No need of going further when we can supply all your needs in <lb/>
Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Hardware, j <lb/>
Furniture and Groceries. i <lb/>
Pull Una of Richmond Stove Cook Stoves and Heaters, <lb/>
Car load lots Hay, Corn, Cotton Seed Hulls and <lb/>
Meal, and Lime, <lb/>
Manufacturers of Buggies, Tobacco Pines and Trucks. <lb/>
Farm Wagons, and Caskets always on hand. <lb/>
In season we operate a Munger Cotton <lb/>
N. <lb/>
MILLINERY and FANCY GOODS, <lb/>
Leaders In Fashions. Full line of <lb/>
and hats, flowers, <lb/>
ribbons, cheaper than ever. <lb/>
J- Ii CO-. <lb/>
FARMVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes, Hats, <lb/>
Fancy Groceries, <lb/>
Fruits, To-i <lb/>
u id Everything cheap <lb/>
for cash. price for country <lb/>
produce. <lb/>
BRO. <lb/>
FARMVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
t. .-,; . <lb/>
Cold Comfort <lb/>
Is what we are after, and the possession of one of <lb/>
our Refrigerators will insure sweet milk, cream and <lb/>
butter, cool drinking water and many dainties that <lb/>
would he unattainable without the Refrigerator. <lb/>
HAVE YOU A LAWN <lb/>
If you have you will want a Lawn Mower pretty <lb/>
soon, and we've made it easy for you to own one. <lb/>
There is no need to borrow a lawn mower when we <lb/>
we sell a good machine with best steel knives at such <lb/>
a satisfactory price, and guarantee it to do work. <lb/>
Water Coolers. lee Cream Freezers. and <lb/>
everything else in the hardware line. <lb/>
H, L. CARR <lb/>
TWO YEARS PREMIUMS HAVE BEEN PAID IN TH <lb/>
f. <lb/>
Clothing, Dry Goods, Groceries, <lb/>
Tobacco, Cigars. <lb/>
TURNS<lb/>
We make a specialty of <lb/>
I For Men <lb/>
Women and <lb/>
Children <lb/>
ll is conceded that we give the <lb/>
best Shoes for the money of <lb/>
any house in Farmville. <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANTS, <lb/>
FARMVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
We carry a large stock of General Merchandise, Dry Goods, <lb/>
Clothing, Heavy and Fancy Groceries, Furniture, Tools, Farm- <lb/>
Implements, Seed, Fertilizer, Hay, Corn, Oats and other <lb/>
feed stuffs. We solicit a snare of your patronage. Fair and <lb/>
courteous treatment to all. <lb/>
HARDY SISTERS, <lb/>
Milliners, <lb/>
FARMVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
The newest and latest styles in <lb/>
Millinery. Hats trimmed to or- <lb/>
on short notice. <lb/>
Hotel <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
M. T. HORTON, Proprietor. <lb/>
Table furnished with best <lb/>
the market <lb/>
rooms, and prompt <lb/>
attention. <lb/>
OF NEWARK, N. J., YOUR POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value, <lb/>
Cash Value, <lb/>
Paid-up Insurance, <lb/>
Extended Insurance that works automatically, <lb/>
Is <lb/>
Will be re-instated if arrears be paid within month while you <lb/>
are living, or within three years after lapse, upon satisfactory evidence <lb/>
of and payment of arrears with 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 reduce Premiums, or <lb/>
To Increase the Insurance, or <lb/>
To make policy as an during the lifetime <lb/>
j of insured. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
STATE AND INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE <lb/>
Classical, Scientific, Pedagogical, Commercial, <lb/>
Domestic Science, Manual Music. <lb/>
Five courses to diplomas; courses leading to de- <lb/>
well equipped practice and observation school; faculty <lb/>
board, laundry, tuition and fees for use of text books, etc., <lb/>
a year; for non-residents of the state twelfth annual session <lb/>
begins September lo, to secure board in the dormitories nil free- <lb/>
tuition applications should be made before July Correspondence <lb/>
invited from those desiring competent teachers and, stenographers; for <lb/>
and other Information, address. <lb/>
CHARLES D. President, N. C- <lb/>
BIS- <lb/>
-I <lb/>
MM <lb/>
Department <lb/>
Branch of the Reflector in charge <lb/>
of C. E. who is to transact <lb/>
for the paper in and territory. <lb/>
J. J. <lb/>
Bro. <lb/>
-1 you to make their store <lb/>
headquarters and while there to <lb/>
inspect their complete stock of <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
and learn their low prices. We <lb/>
can supply all your needs in <lb/>
any line of goods. <lb/>
We are Lawns other <lb/>
summer dress goods at about <lb/>
half price, to make room for <lb/>
fall goods. <lb/>
C. E. BRADLEY <lb/>
Dealers in G-i <lb/>
Dry <lb/>
Hardware, Mr <lb/>
Shoes, Clot <lb/>
ware, e <lb/>
Sewing Machines <lb/>
ONLY COLD <lb/>
IN <lb/>
and Fan- <lb/>
k. Tin- <lb/>
etc. <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
s, a <lb/>
LL <lb/>
LL.<lb/>
c o <lb/>
CO <lb/>
cs <lb/>
Si <lb/>
it <lb/>
V S <lb/>
CO <lb/>
Bethel, N C, July 1903. <lb/>
Mrs. F. C. James left Tuesday <lb/>
for Boston, where she will spend <lb/>
the summer months with relatives <lb/>
and friends. <lb/>
M O. Blount, left this morning <lb/>
for New Jersey, <lb/>
Maine. He is still following up <lb/>
the potato market. They are just <lb/>
to dig the <lb/>
toes. <lb/>
Miss Grimes left Tuesday <lb/>
for Asheville. She will <lb/>
visit the most noted place <lb/>
Notions, state, that is, park, <lb/>
and many other places of interest. <lb/>
We hear from reliable sources <lb/>
that the town of Bethel will have <lb/>
electric lights in the neat <lb/>
Crops are suffering right much <lb/>
around here for lack of rain. <lb/>
R. D. tobacco <lb/>
barn Saturday night, the loss was <lb/>
about cause of tire unknown <lb/>
Jefferson of Ports <lb/>
mouth, came in today <lb/>
the manufacturing <lb/>
of bed springs, making two <lb/>
factories of the same kind in town. <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. Nelson left Tuesday <lb/>
for Mount Olive, where she <lb/>
her home. <lb/>
H. W. Martin's horse ran away <lb/>
the other day with a plow and <lb/>
cut himself, but is <lb/>
along very well. <lb/>
Mrs. R. F. Garner, Washing- <lb/>
ton, is spending a few days here <lb/>
with friends relatives. <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
SUNK BY <lb/>
A WHALE <lb/>
allies. <lb/>
ST. <lb/>
STAND <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
After thirty years of successful business I <lb/>
better than to supply ail the <lb/>
needs of people with a complete stock of <lb/>
General Merchandise <lb/>
I can furnish anything wanted, from <lb/>
needle to a steam engine. <lb/>
cam- <lb/>
handle fertilizers and gin cotton in season. <lb/>
The manufacture of the Davenport Braxton <lb/>
Fertilizer begin about Aug. <lb/>
15th. It is the best invention of the century. <lb/>
Logger with some experience, with two bunk <lb/>
wagons and one ox can. <lb/>
place to get Clothing. Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes. <lb/>
Groceries, Hardware, Furniture, Crockery, etc., at <lb/>
bottom prises. D <lb/>
line of Drugs and Medicines. Highest juices paid <lb/>
for all kinds of country produce. S<lb/>
1903. <lb/>
The farmers are nearly through <lb/>
curing <lb/>
Mrs. W, K. Patrick and child <lb/>
of Greenville, Saturday <lb/>
Sunday with her Mr. <lb/>
and Mrs. Lorenzo <lb/>
Mrs. Lorenzo went <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
J. A. and To be Trip p <lb/>
went to Greenville Friday. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Major Si Spent <lb/>
Sunday in Mm <lb/>
Exum and sister, Miss <lb/>
Allie, spent Saturday and Sunday <lb/>
Oscar and sister, Miss <lb/>
went to Winterville <lb/>
day evening. <lb/>
E. Braxton and Lorenzo M-- <lb/>
went to <lb/>
I day. <lb/>
; A. Frost, of den, spent <lb/>
Sunday afternoon in the neighbor- <lb/>
hood. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Todd Allen and <lb/>
children spent Sunday in the <lb/>
neighborhood. <lb/>
Mr. Mrs. C. II. <lb/>
went to Tuesday after-, <lb/>
Mrs. Eli went on the <lb/>
to Norfolk. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Joe spent , <lb/>
with Mr. and Mrs. Joe <lb/>
went to Norfolk <lb/>
Tuesday. <lb/>
j i <lb/>
.,. i . tin <lb/>
a i a <lb/>
I . ml Drug I <lb/>
i . w mt i . u from business, i no craving <lb/>
for or . ; restore and physical systems to <lb/>
on ,. w remove causes of disease. A homo remedy, <lb/>
by <lb/>
we a Lull trial I <lb/>
Confidential with physicians, solicited. Write today, j <lb/>
Therapeutic Association <lb/>
A Broadway, New York City <lb/>
It is simply beyond the under- <lb/>
standing of a man how a woman <lb/>
can see to walk right into his arms <lb/>
when it is pitch dark. <lb/>
There are no women <lb/>
they only do wicked <lb/>
girl can answer a question be <lb/>
lore it is asked if it is a proposal. <lb/>
Coughing <lb/>
I given up to with <lb/>
quick consumption. I then began <lb/>
lo use Cherry Pectoral. I <lb/>
improved at once, and am now in <lb/>
perfect E. Han- <lb/>
N. Y. <lb/>
If you know Malaria, you certainly don't <lb/>
like it. If you know Malaria and <lb/>
Ague Cure, yon certainly do like it. <lb/>
Sold by <lb/>
an <lb/>
It's too risky, playing <lb/>
with your cough. <lb/>
The first thing you <lb/>
know it will be down <lb/>
deep in your lungs and <lb/>
the play will be over. Be- <lb/>
gin early with <lb/>
Cherry Pectoral and stop <lb/>
the cough. <lb/>
He., II. All <lb/>
your doctor, n lie It, <lb/>
do h. If l. tell, you not <lb/>
It, then don't ml- It. He known. <lb/>
It with titan. We i- willing. <lb/>
J. C. CO., Man. <lb/>
In space of ton months and at <lb/>
I distances hundreds of miles w <lb/>
the English ship Castle caught <lb/>
of the famous known for some <lb/>
years as six n <lb/>
times. We lowered for him the first <lb/>
two mill put harpoons Into <lb/>
him. In return be smashed three <lb/>
boats mid killed five men. that <lb/>
we ran away from him. After the <lb/>
; sixth time we no more for a <lb/>
year. Then he came for his revenge. <lb/>
We were in the south Atlantic and <lb/>
i had completed our cargo set a <lb/>
, course for home. About noon one day. <lb/>
i while we wen- cleaning ship, a <lb/>
suddenly right astern of u- <lb/>
i and not more MM feet away. I <lb/>
was at the wheel at the time, and we <lb/>
were going off at n four knot <lb/>
from the southeast. I heard the whale <lb/>
I as he broke water, and sight of him <lb/>
standing on his tail caused me to shout <lb/>
alarm. <lb/>
a dozen of the crew saw him n <lb/>
he fell back on the water, and it seemed <lb/>
to all of us as if he were going to strike <lb/>
i the ship. His tail raised three or four <lb/>
which the ship about as <lb/>
If we were lying to in gale, <lb/>
I though the monster settled away out of <lb/>
i sight at once, we had identified <lb/>
It may seem queer to you to read that <lb/>
; every man from captain to <lb/>
was badly frightened as soon <lb/>
as it was known that our enemy <lb/>
had hunted us down, us It were. We <lb/>
had MM him almost four months before <lb/>
at a point 2.000 miles away, and yet he <lb/>
had us, as If he had been a <lb/>
steamer sent in search and a <lb/>
to our cruising around. Ills breaching <lb/>
so near was taken as evidence of his <lb/>
evil intentions, and some argued that <lb/>
he meant lo strike the ship. <lb/>
It was I believe, when the <lb/>
whale disappeared, but for an hour <lb/>
after that we continued to in <lb/>
whispers and tiptoe I am sat <lb/>
that not captain in a hundred <lb/>
would have done what ours did that <lb/>
evening. No living man could charge <lb/>
him with cowardice or but <lb/>
when supper was over he called his <lb/>
mates and boat Into <lb/>
and <lb/>
I hope we have seen the last <lb/>
of the whale. I think it my duty to <lb/>
prepare far trouble. You will there- <lb/>
fore see the boats overhauled and pro- <lb/>
visioned and ready for hoisting <lb/>
Before o'clock every was <lb/>
ready. The wind had freshened a bit <lb/>
the went down, and the n.; <lb/>
was clear and starlight. The watch <lb/>
was changed at and everything ran <lb/>
smoothly till hour after midnight. <lb/>
Then the odor Of a whale suddenly <lb/>
saluted the nostrils of the men. and <lb/>
they looked to windward to catch sight <lb/>
of H great black hulk on the witter. It <lb/>
was Fighting Tom again. <lb/>
A Whale cannot remain under water <lb/>
above fifty minutes at the extreme <lb/>
limit, and where this monster had put <lb/>
In the eight hours we could not guess. <lb/>
If he had run to windward when he <lb/>
settled away o'clock he had <lb/>
such a distance before coming up <lb/>
again we had failed to detect his <lb/>
spout We bad at least forty <lb/>
miles since losing sight of him, and <lb/>
yet he hail somehow picked us up <lb/>
again. was passed around, and <lb/>
all hands turned up. and from to <lb/>
we were in H slate of suspense. <lb/>
At the whale begun lashing <lb/>
the water with his dukes. We bad <lb/>
done to arouse him. but he <lb/>
probably thought it was lime to begin <lb/>
business, As soon as be began his <lb/>
c prepared ourselves for a ca <lb/>
and it was not long delayed. <lb/>
When lie had churned an or so <lb/>
of the surface to foam be slewed <lb/>
around mill beaded for us. but in <lb/>
diluted speed and passed astern, <lb/>
though flouring the rudder by not <lb/>
than live foot. <lb/>
As he rushed away to leeward. <lb/>
winging his thrashing the <lb/>
water, we luffed sharp up until we <lb/>
were heading due east. I <lb/>
was watching tin- through the <lb/>
night glass. I think ho a full mile <lb/>
before turning. Whether he located <lb/>
us by sight or sound no man can say. <lb/>
lint as he slewed around I saw that he <lb/>
would head on for one stern. <lb/>
As be started on his mad rush I he <lb/>
ship's bead was brought due north <lb/>
again In hopes lo avoid him, but he <lb/>
changed his course as well cams <lb/>
down our quarters. I believe <lb/>
every man In the ship bad his eyes on <lb/>
the furious leviathan as he came bear- <lb/>
down upon us. Ills head was car- <lb/>
so high It seemed as if a big rock <lb/>
was pushing along the surface, lie <lb/>
left behind a great wake of foam <lb/>
and a sen which would have swamped <lb/>
II yawl. <lb/>
on For your lives, hang <lb/>
shouted the Captain as be saw what <lb/>
was coming, fifteen seconds later <lb/>
then was a as heavy as If <lb/>
hail struck a rock while running be- <lb/>
fore a hurricane, <lb/>
Every soul aboard knew the ship <lb/>
was doomed, she was heeled to star- <lb/>
board until almost on her beam ends. <lb/>
and the she settled back there <lb/>
was a rush tor Hie boats. No one gave <lb/>
the further attention, but every i <lb/>
effort was put forth to get the <lb/>
Into the water the ship mu luffed <lb/>
Into the wind. Her decks were <lb/>
us CM lust one got .- <lb/>
four minutes she w us struck. <lb/>
When we came to look around for <lb/>
Fighting Tom lie had disappeared from <lb/>
sight, and no whaler ever reported see- <lb/>
him that Ii bus always been <lb/>
believed that he that <lb/>
caused his death. <lb/>
We were picked up three days later- <lb/>
by s Scotch whaler, none the worse <lb/>
In health for our adventure, but <lb/>
small fortune which that rich cargo- <lb/>
would have given every man. If safely <lb/>
landed, had gone to the bottom of the <lb/>
Atlantic. M. <lb/>
Special Knowledge. <lb/>
The unique botanical knowledge of <lb/>
Sir one of the <lb/>
erudite men in th.- India service, om <lb/>
enabled to perform almost <lb/>
bit of detective work. <lb/>
He was In Bombay when he was <lb/>
asked to investigate tin case of a <lb/>
young who in applying to <lb/>
the governor fur an appointment <lb/>
that he was coil from <lb/>
land and that his letters of <lb/>
had been lust the <lb/>
A days a Hit Hr. as he <lb/>
then wits, had undertaken tho <lb/>
tie met the young nobleman at <lb/>
dinner at the governor's house. The <lb/>
decorations of orchids suggested a <lb/>
conversational opening, and <lb/>
wood b praise drew from the young no- <lb/>
standing <lb/>
should see the <lb/>
its native woods, <lb/>
It was a fatal <lb/>
come from in- <lb/>
exclaimed Dr. <lb/>
The Date face, the silence that <lb/>
be felt, request of the young man <lb/>
that be might leave the table, all pie- <lb/>
pared the governor and the company <lb/>
for the subsequent discovery that he <lb/>
had absconded front with <lb/>
some public funds. <lb/>
How to Ft.- <lb/>
lions than with any other dean <lb/>
the of tin- rose have special <lb/>
Bed is love, white s <lb/>
yellow speaks jealousy, says N. <lb/>
son Moore in the One of <lb/>
the legends connected with the row <lb/>
tells that it became through be- <lb/>
bathed with the of mourn-s <lb/>
who sought the sweetest flower to <lb/>
in the of their dead, a <lb/>
conceit declares that all roses <lb/>
white until one day young <lb/>
dancing among them, upset in his mer- <lb/>
sport a f wine, which dyad <lb/>
roses upon which It fell red. its <lb/>
color. Another legend tells the story of <lb/>
a holy little maid of Bethlehem <lb/>
was doomed to death. When the stakes <lb/>
were around her the Ore would <lb/>
not burn, but brand-, which bad <lb/>
been turned to red man. <lb/>
those which bad not caught to <lb/>
From this time forth rod <lb/>
white, were flowers. The <lb/>
Turks say that Bed roses sprang from <lb/>
the blood of <lb/>
Lara-eat Bell. <lb/>
What is perhaps the largest hanging <lb/>
bell In the world is to be seen Man- <lb/>
This is the bell, on the <lb/>
right bank of the almost <lb/>
opposite the city of Manila I This <lb/>
immense measures as <lb/>
Height to crown, feet; diameter <lb/>
the lip. Hi feet thickness of <lb/>
metal, from to inches, it weighs <lb/>
eighty tons and is suspended on <lb/>
three massive round beams of teak <lb/>
placed horizontally the one over the <lb/>
other. ends on two pillars <lb/>
of enormous size, composed of mason- <lb/>
and large upright teak posts. This <lb/>
bell was cast the end of the eight- <lb/>
century under the superintend- <lb/>
of reigning king. <lb/>
Chad. Africa, miles <lb/>
long and mi i <lb/>
larger in i bum Urn ye it Is <lb/>
only feel deep It deep- <lb/>
est pan i live feel Its eastern <lb/>
lite, <lb/>
ll has tin nils. barren, <lb/>
others only pasture laud and some <lb/>
with forests plantations <lb/>
having a population about <lb/>
60.000. <lb/>
Storms arise with surprising quick- <lb/>
on bike, and the <lb/>
of I wall r force b n waves <lb/>
notice, treacherous <lb/>
puffs of wind the Islands <lb/>
make navigation dangerous. <lb/>
Pate, <lb/>
In some of the top- <lb/>
ping of a bird round the house is <lb/>
looked by the superstitious <lb/>
ruing. <lb/>
A doctor was recently summoned in <lb/>
hot basic <lb/>
farmhouse not many miles from <lb/>
found an old man in bed. hut in <lb/>
perfect health, asked why be bad <lb/>
been sent for. <lb/>
Why. replied the daughter-in- <lb/>
law, room n little robin about <lb/>
the door. We U no wed It was p <lb/>
we thought ll i- so <lb/>
we put hi bad soul far <lb/>
is <lb/>
hi- <lb/>
. v <lb/>
Papa v . in ma I with i legs. For <lb/>
his a biped i <lb/>
Well, w <lb/>
James I only got one leg. <lb/>
bus<lb/>
i.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019343_0007" n="7"/>
<p>
TWELVE <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
CLASSES OF <lb/>
GOOD SOLD <lb/>
Fine Dress Goods, and Dry Goods, made not merely to <lb/>
sell, but to serve whoever gets This is particularly true <lb/>
of Ladies line Dress Goods, Silks and and <lb/>
Trunks and Shoes, Clothing, Hats, Pants, <lb/>
Shirts. <lb/>
A few kinds of our goods, are the same in all other stores, <lb/>
like Muslin, Flannels. Ginghams etc. but the bulk of the <lb/>
goods we st is in one sense different from that sold <lb/>
by other store. <lb/>
returnable within a reasonable time <lb/>
if they fail to satisfy. <lb/>
Entire Stock of Summer Goods <lb/>
has been Reduced, and <lb/>
be Sold by August 10th. <lb/>
Lawns and Dimities have reduced one third to one <lb/>
half. Have made big reductions in our black dress goods. Low <lb/>
prices through the month of July. <lb/>
styles for September now <lb/>
ready. The August Designer Fashions sheets always free. <lb/>
Ricks Wilkinson<lb/>
BAKER HART <lb/>
HARDWARE MERCHANTS <lb/>
Summer Hardware. <lb/>
Refrigerators, Stoves, Ice <lb/>
Cream Freezers, Lawn Mowers, <lb/>
Hammocks, Rakes, Hoes, Shovels <lb/>
and other Garden Tools. Also <lb/>
Lawn Tennis and Baseball Sets. <lb/>
DON'T WASTE MATERIAL <lb/>
and labor buying an inferior grade of paint. It <lb/>
is economy to pet good quality always. The <lb/>
paints are recommended by <lb/>
all who once use them. Covers more surface <lb/>
with lees labor than other; costs no more. <lb/>
IN ONE SUMMER <lb/>
one of our Refrigerators will save you the <lb/>
amount of it's cost, in the food it prevents from <lb/>
spoiling. They are largo and roomy and are <lb/>
designed in a way that prove economical in <lb/>
using the ice. There is absolutely no odor about <lb/>
one of these. In two sizes at rock bottom <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
HOME-MADE ICE CREAM. <lb/>
There is very little trouble, very little expense, <lb/>
very little time involved in making delicious <lb/>
sherbets, etc., with the freezer we <lb/>
we sell. It is solidly built, metal parts heavily <lb/>
tinned, easy running and a rapid freezer. Prices <lb/>
low. <lb/>
Court. <lb/>
Mayor H. W. Whedbee has <lb/>
of the following cases <lb/>
in his court last <lb/>
Ed. and Frank Hop- <lb/>
kins, Fleming fined <lb/>
Hopkins fl, total 7.15. <lb/>
William Whitaker, drunk and <lb/>
don street, fined H and costs, <lb/>
total <lb/>
drunk and down <lb/>
on street, fined and cost, total <lb/>
3.40. <lb/>
Oscar using profane <lb/>
language on the street, fined <lb/>
and cost. <lb/>
Hattie Bobbins and Nora House, <lb/>
affray, fined each and one half <lb/>
each, total 85.25. <lb/>
John A. Wilson, disorderly con- <lb/>
duct, fined fl cost, total, <lb/>
13.35. <lb/>
Bob assault fined <lb/>
cost, <lb/>
Alex Bailey, disorderly conduct, <lb/>
fined and costs, total, <lb/>
GREAT DEPARTMENT STORE <lb/>
END OF FIGHT. <lb/>
physicians had a long and <lb/>
stubborn tight with an on <lb/>
my right writes J. F. <lb/>
Hughes Ga. <lb/>
gave me up. Everybody thought <lb/>
my time had come. As a last re- <lb/>
sort I tried Dr New Dis <lb/>
co very for Consumption. The <lb/>
I received was striking <lb/>
I was on my feet in a few days. <lb/>
Now I've entirely my <lb/>
It conquers all Coughs, <lb/>
Colds and Throat and Lung <lb/>
Guaranteed by <lb/>
Drag Store. Price and <lb/>
free. <lb/>
I find nothing better for liver <lb/>
and constipation <lb/>
Chamberlain's Stomach Liver <lb/>
F. Andrews, Des <lb/>
Iowa For Sale by <lb/>
Store, Greenville, <lb/>
B. L. Davis Bros. ilk-. <lb/>
Durham county has found out <lb/>
the way to have good roads is <lb/>
to build them. There is no count <lb/>
la Mate that can make them <lb/>
by long-winded <lb/>
i resolutions. Ben. <lb/>
THE DEATH PENALTY. <lb/>
A little thing sometimes results <lb/>
I in death. Thus a mere scratch, <lb/>
cuts or puny boils have <lb/>
paid tin- penalty. It is wise <lb/>
to have Salve <lb/>
ever handy. It's the Salve <lb/>
earth and will prevent fatality, <lb/>
Barns, Sons, Ulcers <lb/>
Bile threaten. Only at <lb/>
Drug Store. <lb/>
BARGAINS <lb/>
FOR JULY. <lb/>
It is not always the low price that makes the <lb/>
bargain, it is what you get for the price. To <lb/>
see a bargain you must use both one <lb/>
on quality the other on the price. <lb/>
Here arc a Few of Our <lb/>
Dimities and Colored Lawns that were re- <lb/>
to Those beautiful ones that were <lb/>
reduced to <lb/>
Swiss that has been sell for you <lb/>
can get during this sale <lb/>
We have placed a special lot of <lb/>
slippers on our counters some of these sold for <lb/>
1.00 a pair your choice for Sires, to <lb/>
Also Ladies Slippers worth to for <lb/>
Ladies Embroidered turnover collars each. <lb/>
Pearl shirt waist sets from to <lb/>
If these are not Bargains We Don't <lb/>
Know What Bargains Are. <lb/>
canning season is most here, yon had bet- <lb/>
prepare for it by buying your Fruit Jars. <lb/>
We have them in Glass and Stone. Rubber <lb/>
rings for fruit jars. This is the place to buy <lb/>
them we sell the best. <lb/>
CHERRY <lb/>
and COMPANY <lb/>
GREENVILLE'S GREAT DEPARTMENT STORE <lb/>
ISSUES MISSING <lb/>
Much of a Good <lb/>
Sick <lb/>
Food doesn't digest well <lb/>
Appetite poor Bowels i <lb/>
Tongue coated <lb/>
your Pills <lb/>
re liver pills; they cure <lb/>
biliousness. <lb/>
Al <lb/>
Want four n- i true or a i <lb/>
BUCKINGHAM'S <lb/>
That's what we much Silk Mull, Mer- <lb/>
Pebble Cloth, Mercerized Chambray, etc., <lb/>
for the season. The season really lacks two <lb/>
months of being over, but we must reduce stock <lb/>
for fall goods. Consequently we are making <lb/>
great reductions in Wash Silks, White Goods. <lb/>
Embroideries, Percales, etc. The profit goes to <lb/>
you if you take advantage of these reductions at <lb/>
once. We will not carry them over. You'll not <lb/>
have another chance to get the same goods for <lb/>
anything like the same money. Note these <lb/>
P A CG. <lb/>
Greenville Produce and <lb/>
Provision Market. <lb/>
Silk Mulls, all colors, was , now <lb/>
Mercerized Pebble Cloths, was now <lb/>
Mercerized Chambray, was now <lb/>
Reported by M. SCHULTZ. <lb/>
pat. <lb/>
i Family <lb/>
bushel <lb/>
l round per lb <lb/>
ham <lb/>
sides <lb/>
shoulders <lb/>
Lard <lb/>
I lbs per bushel <lb/>
I Peas <lb/>
Potatoes- <lb/>
Potatoes sweet <lb/>
Butter <lb/>
Dock <lb/>
head <lb/>
Broilers <lb/>
Eggs <lb/>
lb <lb/>
Geese <lb/>
Feathers-new <lb/>
lb. <lb/>
lb <lb/>
Tallow <lb/>
Fodder <lb/>
Hay <lb/>
Beeswax <lb/>
Ida U <lb/>
1.001.20 <lb/>
Matt <lb/>
1.25 <lb/>
1.25 <lb/>
New White Front <lb/>
JAS. F. DAVENPORT.<lb/>
1835. <lb/>
Incorporated 1903. <lb/>
WHITT CO <lb/>
Marble and Granite <lb/>
Monuments <lb/>
and Agent for Wire Fencing. <lb/>
Main office and electric <lb/>
Macon, Ga. <lb/>
Branch offices and shops, Mount, <lb/>
N. C, and Sumter, S. C. <lb/>
For address Rocky <lb/>
Mount Office. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>