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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<pb facs="00019389_0001" n="1"/>
<p>
Bad Coughs<lb/>
had a bad cough for six <lb/>
and could find no relief <lb/>
until I tried Cherry <lb/>
Only one-fourth of the bottle <lb/>
cured <lb/>
L. Hawn, Ont. <lb/>
Neglected colds always <lb/>
to something serious. <lb/>
I hey into chronic <lb/>
bronchitis, pneumonia, <lb/>
asthma, or consumption. <lb/>
Deal wait, but take <lb/>
Cherry Pectoral <lb/>
just as soon as your cough <lb/>
begins. A few doses will <lb/>
cure you then. <lb/>
Tb-et Mb, <lb/>
Jan. P, greatest of nations. <lb/>
. low up Iowa yesterday and <lb/>
Smith went to K <lb/>
today I Herald and Broiling telegram by <lb/>
M. H. Tucker, of Norfolk, In i the largest printing pie.- Use <lb/>
town. world. comparing II <lb/>
Jean Cannon, of is In press and the <lb/>
a was one to <lb/>
.,, ., low. More OM thousand <lb/>
to J <lb/>
folded ready <lb/>
TOO If mt take It. <lb/>
then u he . If ; <lb/>
t . i don't It.<lb/>
C. T. went to i <lb/>
Monday evening. <lb/>
iT. it. King led to <lb/>
Monday evening. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
J suppose in another quarter <lb/>
a possibly the <lb/>
city navel will be <lb/>
improved upon, and <lb/>
tunes will be the node <lb/>
when a man can leave at <lb/>
the Battery and get to <lb/>
. A. returned to Tar-1 park before he . starts, counting <lb/>
the difference in time. I shall no <lb/>
be what will <lb/>
any rate lam coming up to <lb/>
New York hen and see. <lb/>
When I first came N <lb/>
j this morning. <lb/>
Mi- i. J. Cobb left Ibis morn- <lb/>
I for a visit to Norfolk. <lb/>
.;. v. little daughter <lb/>
Greenville's Great Store <lb/>
Dorothy Dodd <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
PERSONALS SOCIAL <lb/>
Hobday, Fan <lb/>
IT. went <lb/>
L. Tyson i a to<lb/>
this morning from Kins- stewards town <lb/>
ton. the wonder of the day. It <lb/>
Mayo Sieves, of I was seven stories high and <lb/>
meat Monday in town with ; the every- <lb/>
friends. body. It is the smallest i-ow <lb/>
, . ., city. Almost <lb/>
Mrs. J. Barr, of Weldon, is .,,.,, business place <lb/>
Mr. a ; stories high, and <lb/>
V value of is so u <lb/>
. eel <lb/>
.-. ii be. t-<lb/>
vent to <lb/>
ti. an left Sunday <lb/>
E II . <lb/>
Joyner returned <lb/>
. j; from <lb/>
v Lena Matthews and Ferrell <lb/>
ch went to Washington <lb/>
and Mr-. W. E. Moore went <lb/>
. Sunday, <lb/>
Hedges and son, <lb/>
it to Sunday. <lb/>
B. A. has been quit <lb/>
m grip. <lb/>
i Sal <lb/>
B. Forbes and Fred Forbes <lb/>
; h <lb/>
. . Tl i. <lb/>
, . . . <lb/>
. r e <lb/>
iii. n visit to Kins <lb/>
, and Josh Mills <lb/>
,. Sunday t fr m <lb/>
;. ., v . , returned <lb/>
n a trip up I<lb/>
, ; mi <lb/>
. and ed <lb/>
. and i <lb/>
. i i<lb/>
I I; <lb/>
I . <lb/>
I ii <lb/>
i Wash <lb/>
O. <lb/>
who has been <lb/>
turned b <lb/>
. <lb/>
., Fan <lb/>
Mr, and M <lb/>
, who <lb/>
Mrs W. ion <lb/>
borne jay evening. <lb/>
H. <lb/>
graded school, spent <lb/>
the day here and took in <lb/>
the work of the Greenville school <lb/>
Miss Mable of Bethel, <lb/>
arrived Saturday evening to visit <lb/>
her J. H. in <lb/>
South Greenville. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. T.<lb/>
Charles Skinner went up <lb/>
road this morning. <lb/>
i this <lb/>
you will t t <lb/>
moat the <lb/>
i-u market. It may <lb/>
occur before Thursday, but <lb/>
there is a sky performance <lb/>
being arranged and the <lb/>
heights will be started as <lb/>
as the report is read out. <lb/>
t-- . I know some people are saying <lb/>
j. W. Brown went to <lb/>
Tuesday evening. <lb/>
This is about as disagreeable <lb/>
weather as cornea <lb/>
Rev. W. E. returned Tues- <lb/>
day evening from <lb/>
Mrs. J. Brown and children <lb/>
where are those sky-parlor prices, <lb/>
the market has broke cents <lb/>
Well, it <lb/>
one way all the while. The other <lb/>
fellow's blood would <lb/>
My calculations have all been <lb/>
verified BO for and I am net <lb/>
MK Tl . <lb/>
given myself plenty of time to <lb/>
all that I predicted <lb/>
repeat again, war or no war, <lb/>
on will sell much higher <lb/>
cents, where touched <lb/>
an t week Ago- <lb/>
I, takes meritorious skill <lb/>
price abnormal <lb/>
but sentiment to <lb/>
ii to tumble as it has the <lb/>
-as, week. The scene yesterday <lb/>
I market dosed <lb/>
beyond and July, <lb/>
., . t.-. at 13.48. <lb/>
has gone to <lb/>
I leave the <lb/>
,,,, . the present <lb/>
, by i <lb/>
lie i- New and will be <lb/>
from before this <lb/>
I j to care to have than that <lb/>
a r m roe, tr , , Ha, ,.;,, <lb/>
. . , care either, but I i s . e . th is it i <lb/>
, and when it is warm <lb/>
rain . <lb/>
A i hi- in <lb/>
i . nil ; room o'clock d <lb/>
.,. was a great throng, <lb/>
, . few ,,, ,. ind gave <lb/>
. and N . everything for <lb/>
, . , little ,, v. was <lb/>
, i v II not ho y slapped and <lb/>
, , . . was ion be sch . years <lb/>
,. . the <lb/>
Everett, <lb/>
, and Ella House, <lb/>
ire visiting Valeria and <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
M of <lb/>
visiting her <lb/>
mother, Mrs. W. M. King, return, <lb/>
ed home this morning. <lb/>
Interesting Things Told by Col. <lb/>
to His <lb/>
in Cotton. <lb/>
New <lb/>
Bl i i.; <lb/>
ii . I mind <lb/>
i a <lb/>
ears all i <lb/>
. Then <lb/>
earn railway that <lb/>
l Id<lb/>
I . is s, biles, <lb/>
. . . . that A mi lies <lb/>
b divine. <lb/>
, .,, i ;,, can b to New <lb/>
i here In the world so <lb/>
many people came from, and as <lb/>
I old Sheriff Tyson need to say <lb/>
looked like court week all the <lb/>
No one can come to this <lb/>
city and see the thousand and one <lb/>
things, gigantic in proportion, <lb/>
almost out of conception, and not <lb/>
feel of the met that he is an <lb/>
American, the foremost and<lb/>
The Shoe has <lb/>
and style that means individuality. <lb/>
, in the highest <lb/>
to i or. In <lb/>
for every from the i-i. <lb/>
tin- sun. y winter street II <lb/>
n. H i <lb/>
They Fit <lb/>
should always lit closely . <lb/>
as to make it impossible f i <lb/>
ward and crowd the toes, while nail and <lb/>
have of room thus giving tree , <lb/>
This is exactly what shoes <lb/>
Our new Spring Styles in ids and funds <lb/>
here very shortly. <lb/>
re <lb/>
b, <lb/>
KS <lb/>
lie <lb/>
or- <lb/>
i. <lb/>
be <lb/>
, Association will <lb/>
,., The program <lb/>
interesting and pro <lb/>
.,. . The library, con-1 <lb/>
one hundred <lb/>
volumes, has arrived and Prof. <lb/>
lie will be ready to <lb/>
begin the lending of books by; <lb/>
Saturday's meeting. We hope to <lb/>
see all the teachers in the county <lb/>
present. <lb/>
No one in work can afford <lb/>
to miss these meetings if he or she <lb/>
desires to keep up with <lb/>
school work In county. <lb/>
Severn young ladies can get <lb/>
employment operating sewing ma- <lb/>
chines on underwear. The work <lb/>
is light, neat and <lb/>
Whole families can get employ- <lb/>
to. <lb/>
Weldon Co. <lb/>
taken I have taken <lb/>
p with V stock one male pig, <lb/>
weight <lb/>
boat Owner gel <lb/>
by property and <lb/>
N. C.<lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Owner.<lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR IN ADVANCE <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, <lb/>
No. <lb/>
Some of the Great <lb/>
The Observer is indebted to Mr. <lb/>
Thomas Griffith for the following <lb/>
record of some of the greatest fire <lb/>
that have occurred in the country <lb/>
the year of their occurrence, their <lb/>
scenes and the <lb/>
1835, New York <lb/>
1838, New York <lb/>
New York <lb/>
1745, <lb/>
1848, Albany <lb/>
1349, St. Louis <lb/>
1851, San Francisco <lb/>
1866, Portland, Me. <lb/>
1871, Chicago <lb/>
1372, Boston <lb/>
1901, <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
10.000.000 <lb/>
7.000.000 <lb/>
15.000.000 <lb/>
200.000,000 <lb/>
80.000.000 <lb/>
Party to N rs <lb/>
After the last election the Char <lb/>
Observer had a well considered <lb/>
article on the subject of the unpaid <lb/>
and debts which parties <lb/>
and politicians owe to the <lb/>
especially the country <lb/>
which print the full country <lb/>
ticket at their mast-head, and do <lb/>
besides all of <lb/>
FROM THE SEAT OF WAR. <lb/>
IN TROUBLE. <lb/>
Attempt to Land Repulsed. , Japan Torpedo BoatS. <lb/>
Port Arthur, Feb. Cable to Reflector. <lb/>
Japanese transports and six war reports <lb/>
u- . ,. . j, confirm the information that Japan <lb/>
ships conveying troops attempted . . . <lb/>
K , three out of boats <lb/>
to land at while the remain- j ,,., <lb/>
Japanese fleet <lb/>
In Honor of Mrs. J. Bryan <lb/>
A delightful afternoon was <lb/>
j spent yesterday at the home of <lb/>
OTHER NATIONS ABOUT TO BECOME <lb/>
ville street, who entertained at <lb/>
progressive six handed euchre in <lb/>
honor of nit sister-in-law, Mrs. J. <lb/>
Bryan having <lb/>
been Miss <lb/>
of <lb/>
Thirty engaged in <lb/>
f the afternoon, <lb/>
fire being used The first <lb/>
a book. <lb/>
harbor, <lb/>
of the <lb/>
a tier t <lb/>
The <lb/>
i repulsed <lb/>
hi of bald <lb/>
War Risks Increased. <lb/>
By Cable Reflector. <lb/>
London, <lb/>
I reports Lloyd's <lb/>
with on both i. ,. . <lb/>
raised re <lb/>
to <lb/>
n . , n. . . ; between <lb/>
Russian Attack <lb/>
By cable Io ave <lb/>
too, P. It. The tie stock<lb/>
lad Ha <lb/>
Japan, doing great damage, <lb/>
I i- r,. <lb/>
U not jet confirmed and is ff, a <lb/>
ed battle la now raging at sea <lb/>
Arthur the <lb/>
By Cable to .-. <lb/>
t j m aM . west of the Peninsular, <lb/>
London, Feb. report, <lb/>
has just reached here, but is not <lb/>
Russian Fleet Ice Sound- <lb/>
F-b. <lb/>
was won by <lb/>
Mrs. Grimes per, present- <lb/>
ed it to the guest honor, <lb/>
was presented a hand <lb/>
some bouquet of white <lb/>
an I ferns by the hostess The <lb/>
consolation was won by Miss Jen- <lb/>
this Japanese <lb/>
carved ivory candle-stick. The <lb/>
score was kept by Ms. Palmer <lb/>
Jerman and Mrs. Mary <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
The residence was handsomely <lb/>
decorated for the occasion, the <lb/>
color scheme being pink aid white, <lb/>
carried out in patted plants, <lb/>
white carnations <lb/>
The tally were <lb/>
ornamented with beads. <lb/>
credited, that Port Arthur has <lb/>
booming of candidates for office to Japan. <lb/>
directly or through the medium of . . Baltic fleet is still at i Dainty refreshments were served, <lb/>
correspondence contributed by their The ice breaker of these being in heart <lb/>
ed effects. <lb/>
friends. It was pointed out that <lb/>
hardly one of these organs printed <lb/>
less than a thousand dollars worth of <lb/>
such party literature gratuitously, <lb/>
and the Charlotte paper thought it <lb/>
was a foolish practice, but yet a kind <lb/>
of folly which would long be <lb/>
though probably in lessening <lb/>
degree. <lb/>
course, success <lb/>
dates do their best to make some re- <lb/>
Recalled. <lb/>
By Cable Io <lb/>
i trying to Keep c open. <lb/>
other Nations Preparing for War <lb/>
tiding the Russian Heel sit . f <lb/>
Port Arthur, bas been <lb/>
Io the <lb/>
feat Russian fleet by <lb/>
Japanese. <lb/>
hood British <lb/>
Ad mini has seal out letters <lb/>
officers to <lb/>
readiness for <lb/>
The social event was greatly en- <lb/>
joyed by all the who were <lb/>
delighted to meet the charming <lb/>
d welcome her as a <lb/>
; ; i tired . <lb/>
ho <lb/>
call it reported <lb/>
that is a Is making prep. <lb/>
I r war, It is believed <lb/>
oil y Will <lb/>
ii- bit <lb/>
-1 . <lb/>
of Neutrality. <lb/>
By <lb/>
-The ha <lb/>
here from Cone <lb/>
turn for gratuitous by giving to j <lb/>
county paper that kept the sue- j <lb/>
ticket standing all <lb/>
through the campaign, much <lb/>
public printing Gs the law author- <lb/>
but that necessarily bills far <lb/>
short of received, The <lb/>
ingratitude and meanness. <lb/>
den <lb/>
News an Observer, <lb/>
GENERAL <lb/>
Colonel raised a <lb/>
regiment of roach rider in the <lb/>
war with Spain, is <lb/>
raising another for <lb/>
the service Japan in <lb/>
Hampton Ag- <lb/>
Hampton, <lb/>
will by the <lb/>
will of Hudson H H-land who died <lb/>
there Jan. <lb/>
The president ha- a <lb/>
the United <lb/>
will remain u in the <lb/>
Russian Japan war <lb/>
Atlanta h <lb/>
a to funds to <lb/>
of three d <lb/>
among the Jews A with <lb/>
to buy a war u tr <lb/>
The war depart me r Wash- <lb/>
has been t of the <lb/>
departure of the Reg- <lb/>
U. <lb/>
en-route Tn- regiment <lb/>
has the Philippines three <lb/>
years. <lb/>
As the ruins of Baltimore Are <lb/>
cool v tilts and <lb/>
safes to be opened it is found in <lb/>
most every instance tut In val- <lb/>
in are ii good <lb/>
WHICHARD <lb/>
C. Ft, <lb/>
body <lb/>
Sea Tower of and <lb/>
The snow mikes <lb/>
shiver to look at it. <lb/>
W Feb. B. <lb/>
Whitney, clerk of the to-.-i <lb/>
mitt-eon naval affairs, hi-, com. People that sowed their <lb/>
piled a careful statement showing before <lb/>
fifteen the exact strength of the navies of b the pleasure of sowing them <lb/>
the Kiel in t --It Is re nor Japan. Russia <lb/>
many. is is considered here i here th-t Minister f . , ,,.,,,. . <lb/>
the part has left and Miss Francis is very <lb/>
v. departure. Bud Japan baa <lb/>
in Cotton. <lb/>
-ling a <lb/>
of giving any portion of the wharf y e . r. <lb/>
printing to papen that do not sap , ,,. <lb/>
post the ticket was not averted to by <lb/>
the Charlotte paper, no .,. of <lb/>
cause ii could in r imagine that d n <lb/>
g thing could occur. f weeks to m in <lb/>
The subject is to which the market, A well known <lb/>
newspaper fraternity in giving more <lb/>
;. <lb/>
t .; <lb/>
At .- <lb/>
Slid <lb/>
We. <lb/>
h hi<lb/>
It . i <lb/>
I . Ii ., <lb/>
re . <lb/>
v Mill ; , <lb/>
and more as the money <lb/>
value of advertising is mid <lb/>
more realized. The Baltimore <lb/>
makes the contending politicians in <lb/>
its for their <lb/>
cations, and it is probable that it <lb/>
receives a hundred thousand dollars <lb/>
per annum from that source alone, <lb/>
and hence is able to make a Letter <lb/>
paper for the general <lb/>
ville Observer. <lb/>
The reading world is once more <lb/>
up against jawbone breakers trying <lb/>
to pronounce the names in the war <lb/>
news. <lb/>
George Bowell, democratic con- <lb/>
from the Tenth <lb/>
district, has unseated <lb/>
end his place given to William <lb/>
Connell, republican contestant. <lb/>
fret over the It looks <lb/>
follow is Liking care of <lb/>
all right I <lb/>
lessor to the conclusion <lb/>
money to In- made by I <lb/>
ting cotton, nit bey could <lb/>
get Consent of their minds to <lb/>
in futures, Bo Instead of <lb/>
putting tip margins, they bought <lb/>
outright, bales of cotton, when <lb/>
the staple was sell log around <lb/>
cents <lb/>
When the price reached <lb/>
cent-, the physician that it <lb/>
was tune to sell, for Could they not <lb/>
make a snug profit the hales <lb/>
The professor did not look at it <lb/>
that he saw no why <lb/>
they should not wait for cents <lb/>
and more money. The <lb/>
carried his p for the <lb/>
time being, but when spot cotton <lb/>
reached the doctor sold <lb/>
bis share and pocketed his profit, <lb/>
in the neighborhood of <lb/>
The professor held on to <lb/>
bis share, expecting to double <lb/>
profit of bis partner, but today he <lb/>
acknowledged that ha was cured <lb/>
of all desire to speculate in cotton. <lb/>
Charlotte <lb/>
Hi<lb/>
a tr in <lb/>
he v s ; d and <lb/>
s iii of <lb/>
candies. la-s de- <lb/>
spent in playing hist. <lb/>
The wan us charming us in <lb/>
tie- suite day seven years u. and <lb/>
is fair as a bride, was <lb/>
assisted her Slater, Mrs. Joseph <lb/>
P. Jr., of Washington, <lb/>
D. O., Mi's Mi-s <lb/>
Lottie and Mis James <lb/>
served in ball <lb/>
After several games of whist <lb/>
delightful refreshments were <lb/>
ed. center piece was a beau- <lb/>
brides cake, decorated with <lb/>
seven pink <lb/>
Those present were Mrs, E. B. <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. Fleming, Mrs. <lb/>
Richard Williams, Mis. F. G. <lb/>
James, Bottle Tyson, <lb/>
Lena Hum and <lb/>
Lissie Blow. Those from of <lb/>
town were Mrs. A. B. White and <lb/>
Mrs. A. Q. Hume, of Greensboro, <lb/>
and Mrs. of Washington, <lb/>
. 124.1,58 tonnage officers <lb/>
and men. <lb/>
Russia bus first <lb/>
hat h ti ton- <lb/>
, i second <lb/>
I, -i . n,,,; . . <lb/>
61.8711 <lb/>
VI J j . ; i <lb/>
;. I <lb/>
,,,.,.;<lb/>
from <lb/>
Oil <lb/>
c e I <lb/>
el.-- pro <lb/>
ill<lb/>
D. C. <lb/>
1.1 I. . . <lb/>
ton . . a <lb/>
i-. h <lb/>
first . of 2.861 <lb/>
fed <lb/>
of tons, and <lb/>
nice protected cruiser <lb/>
of . <lb/>
total of sin . <lb/>
with a of <lb/>
Russia's torpedo Heat consist of <lb/>
one submarine, and she is cl- <lb/>
nine and five tor- <lb/>
bouts. <lb/>
Japan has six first class battle <lb/>
ships of tons, Other <lb/>
battleships of tons, eight <lb/>
armed cruisers of tons, <lb/>
protected cruisers of tons, <lb/>
seventeen other cruisers above <lb/>
tons each, with a total <lb/>
making a total of <lb/>
ships with a of <lb/>
Japan is building three <lb/>
protected cruisers of tons. <lb/>
Her lighting vessels <lb/>
built and building is ships with <lb/>
a tonnage of <lb/>
Japan ha torpedo boat <lb/>
destroyers, torpedo boats, <lb/>
Mrs. W. in <lb/>
Tuesday with M rs. M <lb/>
Miss P <lb/>
Mm J.  <lb/>
Tuesday here i . <lb/>
sick. <lb/>
. . <lb/>
at <lb/>
flopped her school <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
B. was <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mm. M. A <lb/>
W, W. Thomas <lb/>
evening with T <lb/>
mar here <lb/>
; spent <lb/>
Which-<lb/>
last <lb/>
i- right <lb/>
been <lb/>
. has <lb/>
S on <lb/>
and Mrs. <lb/>
Daniel <lb/>
E. R to Wash- <lb/>
Wednesday and <lb/>
m his home enjoyed their break <lb/>
fast next morning of shad. <lb/>
Cotton exchange will take <lb/>
day tomorrow, it being lie <lb/>
of Lincoln's bin inlay and <lb/>
observed by some of the states. <lb/>
Who is the king of the goober <lb/>
trust time to give m great <lb/>
a man <lb/>
Constitution. <lb/>
do you think, be asked, <lb/>
men progress after <lb/>
Well, she replied, if they don't, <lb/>
it would almost seem useless for <lb/>
some of them to<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019389_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
The Farmville Branch the Eastern Reflector is in charge of REV. L. E. SAWYER, who is <lb/>
authorized to transact any business for the paper in Farmville and territory.<lb/>
Department <lb/>
LONDON'S GRASSHOPPER. <lb/>
For Three Bod a Half <lb/>
a Famous Landmark. <lb/>
The golden grasshopper on tower <lb/>
f the Exchange has been for <lb/>
nearly three a half centuries a <lb/>
London as familiar as the <lb/>
cross on St. or the dragon on <lb/>
Bow church steeple. <lb/>
Sir Thomas tin-sham, a royal agent <lb/>
In three founded the <lb/>
exchange the reign of Elizabeth. He <lb/>
erected at his own expense a beautiful <lb/>
structure in the Flemish style of <lb/>
with shops on the first floor. A <lb/>
bell tower crowned by a huge grass- <lb/>
hopper stood on one side of the chief <lb/>
entrance. The in this tower sum- <lb/>
the merchants at o'clock noon <lb/>
and o'clock evening. During the great <lb/>
Ore of the building was totally de- <lb/>
The statues of kings and <lb/>
queens which ornamented the corridors <lb/>
were precipitated into lbs enormous <lb/>
and with then, the tower and <lb/>
grasshopper. <lb/>
was loyally loved by the <lb/>
metropolis, and his generous services <lb/>
were not forgotten. From the <lb/>
of debris the grasshopper was res- <lb/>
cued, and it was lofty vane <lb/>
of gilt the new dome sup- <lb/>
ported by eight columns, <lb/>
and hour It swings to the points <lb/>
of the compass, perpetuating the <lb/>
a. crest of family. The <lb/>
clock in ibis tower had four dials <lb/>
and turned four times daily, on Sunday. <lb/>
the Hundred and Fourth <lb/>
on Save on <lb/>
Tuesday, on Wed- <lb/>
Nae Lock <lb/>
on the Con- <lb/>
Hero on Friday, <lb/>
Let Us and on Saturday, <lb/>
In 1838 <lb/>
again devastated the stately building, <lb/>
beginning soon after at night, and <lb/>
by nest morning the clock tower alone <lb/>
was It is significant that the <lb/>
last air played by the chimes before <lb/>
they went crashing tower <lb/>
roof, crushing the entrance arch below, <lb/>
was Nae Lu k the <lb/>
then the eight bells ceased <lb/>
their clanging. <lb/>
The grasshopper was unharmed and <lb/>
t day remains, eleven feet of <lb/>
metal, looking down from <lb/>
Its perch feet above the busy <lb/>
streets. Julian King In St <lb/>
Nicholas. <lb/>
CHEAP GOODS. <lb/>
W. G. administrator of R. H. deceased, <lb/>
to notify the public that he has charge of the stock of <lb/>
goods owned by said it. II. at his death, and is offer- <lb/>
them to the public regardless of cost. The stock consists <lb/>
line of DRY CLOTHING, <lb/>
HATS, CAPS, hardware and groceries, all fresh aDd <lb/>
nice W. G. is alt-u agent of the Royal Tailors Mfg <lb/>
Co. All suits made to order to fit the individual. Your meas- <lb/>
is taken and a good fit guaranteed. We can furnish these <lb/>
goods at percent, less than tailors charge. <lb/>
If you want bargains come <lb/>
W. Q. Store, <lb/>
Farmville, N. C. <lb/>
The obis Branch of the is in charge <lb/>
of C. Bradley, who is authorized to transact any <lb/>
for paper in and territory. <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
Do you Eat <lb/>
Good, Fresh Groceries <lb/>
APHORISMS. <lb/>
Mirth cannot move a soul in agony.- <lb/>
Shakespeare. <lb/>
Candor is the rarest virtue of <lb/>
No circumstances can repair a defect <lb/>
of <lb/>
Cheerfulness is an offshoot of good- <lb/>
and of <lb/>
Bad men excuse their faults; good <lb/>
men will leave <lb/>
There are plenty of acquaintances in <lb/>
the world, but very few real friends. <lb/>
-J. F. <lb/>
Charity and personal force are the <lb/>
only investments worth anything. <lb/>
Walt Whitman. <lb/>
It is generally more profitable to <lb/>
on up our defects than to boast of our <lb/>
A man cannot have an idea of per- <lb/>
in another which lie was never <lb/>
sensible of <lb/>
Gratitude is the fairest blossom <lb/>
which springs from the soul, and <lb/>
heart of mun none more <lb/>
Twice Declined. <lb/>
The Invitation list of the governor <lb/>
general of Canada is made out strictly <lb/>
in accordance with precedent, but la <lb/>
not kept up to date always, the aid <lb/>
who has to send the invitations out, <lb/>
generally an Englishman or Scotch- <lb/>
man, not always being with <lb/>
changes on the list. <lb/>
The late Sir chief <lb/>
justice of Quebec, was once invited to <lb/>
some function, as was proper, but <lb/>
who was dead, was invited <lb/>
likewise. Sir accepted for <lb/>
himself, but declined for her ladyship, <lb/>
on the ground that she was in the <lb/>
cemetery. The next year, however, the <lb/>
same mistake was made; so the old <lb/>
Judge wrote back to the old -de-camp <lb/>
in <lb/>
Antoine accepts, etc. but <lb/>
her ladyship being in St. <lb/>
cemetery Sir Is compelled <lb/>
again to decline the invitation for <lb/>
Another For It. <lb/>
veterinary made a critical ex- <lb/>
of ailing steer. <lb/>
Here and wherever the <lb/>
cation of n bone was visible, he <lb/>
to the skin. <lb/>
But it would not work. <lb/>
is the matter with asked <lb/>
owner of the steer. <lb/>
has what -would be. called <lb/>
in a man. But as he is only <lb/>
brute we say he la <lb/>
American. <lb/>
If you do come to see us. We keep every- <lb/>
thing in the grocery line and sell it to our <lb/>
at the Lowest Possible Price, <lb/>
Johnston Bros. <lb/>
CASH <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
ADMINISTRATORS SALE. <lb/>
administration upon the <lb/>
estate of N. deceased, <lb/>
having day been issued to the <lb/>
undersigned, and having duly <lb/>
as such administrator, notice is <lb/>
hereby given to all persona holding <lb/>
claims said estate to <lb/>
them to me. for pay- <lb/>
on or before the nth day <lb/>
February 1903, or this notice he <lb/>
plead of recovery. All persons <lb/>
indebted to said estate are <lb/>
to make immediate payments to me. <lb/>
This the 2nd of February 1894. <lb/>
Jarvis Blow, J as. H. COBS, <lb/>
Attorneys, of Hue B. Hemby, <lb/>
FARMVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
MILLINERY and FANCY GOODS, <lb/>
Leaders in Fashions. Full line of <lb/>
trimmed and untrimmed hats, flowers, <lb/>
ribbons, Cheaper than ever. <lb/>
J. H- CO-, <lb/>
FARMVILLE. C. <lb/>
Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes, Hats, <lb/>
Fancy Groceries, Crockery, <lb/>
Glassware, Fruits, To- <lb/>
and Cigars. Everything cheap <lb/>
for cash. Highest price for <lb/>
produce.<lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
DEALER <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions <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/>
FRIENDS <lb/>
money winning <lb/>
written by men who know, tell <lb/>
you all about <lb/>
Potash <lb/>
They are needed by every man <lb/>
who owns a field and a plow, and <lb/>
who desires to get the most out <lb/>
of them. <lb/>
They Send card. <lb/>
GERMAN KALI <lb/>
Hew Street, <lb/>
Se. at, <lb/>
Lady <lb/>
or gentleman to manage business <lb/>
in this county and adjoining <lb/>
for house of solid financial <lb/>
standing. straight cash <lb/>
salary and expenses paid each <lb/>
Monday direct from headquarter. <lb/>
Expense money advanced, position <lb/>
permanent. Manager, <lb/>
Chicago. <lb/>
So Tired <lb/>
It may be from overwork, but <lb/>
the chances are its from an In- <lb/>
active LIVER. <lb/>
With a well conducted LIVER <lb/>
one can do mountains of labor <lb/>
without fatigue. <lb/>
It adds a hundred per cent to <lb/>
ones earning capacity. <lb/>
It can be kept In healthful action <lb/>
by, and only by <lb/>
Tim's Pills <lb/>
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. <lb/>
N. C, Feb. 1904 <lb/>
Guessing bee has about closed. <lb/>
new garden seed at C. B. <lb/>
Bradley Co's. <lb/>
Our street lights are quite an <lb/>
addition. <lb/>
W. Williams went to Green- <lb/>
ville yesterday on business. <lb/>
C. H. Rawls, of Robersonville, <lb/>
a few hours with Mon- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Georgia no <lb/>
in the kiss line at C. E. Bradley <lb/>
Co's. <lb/>
J, J. Satterthwaite attended the <lb/>
institute at <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
J. L. Perkins W. S. <lb/>
spent in Washing- <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
P. E. Davenport wife, of <lb/>
Spring Hope, came in <lb/>
night to spend Sunday with <lb/>
parents here. <lb/>
Did you ever smoke Jno. H. <lb/>
The best five cent cigar <lb/>
in town at C. E. Bradley Co's. <lb/>
Old Jim died here <lb/>
Saturday, He was a very old <lb/>
having served his master <lb/>
for longtime. <lb/>
is now a W. D. <lb/>
graph office, company has <lb/>
recently cut in a new wire. <lb/>
J. P. Fleming and J. J. <lb/>
made a trip over in Beau- <lb/>
fort Sunday. It's too late now <lb/>
boys, another fellow <lb/>
for her. <lb/>
has a deed<lb/>
DAVENPORT <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
After years of successful business I am <lb/>
butter than prepared to supply all the <lb/>
needs of the people with a complete stock of <lb/>
General Merchandise <lb/>
I can furnish anything wanted, from <lb/>
needle to a steam engine. <lb/>
I handle fertilizers and gin cotton in season. <lb/>
The manufacture of the Davenport <lb/>
Fertilizer will begin about Aug. <lb/>
15th. It is the best invention of the century. <lb/>
Logger with tank <lb/>
wagons and one oxcart. <lb/>
Is the place Clothing, Dry Goods, <lb/>
Eats, Groceries, Crockery,, etc., at <lb/>
full line of Medicines. Highest paid <lb/>
Air all kinds of country produce.<lb/>
CO <lb/>
SO <lb/>
a. <lb/>
XI <lb/>
cS <lb/>
a. <lb/>
-p <lb/>
g i <lb/>
a if <lb/>
fa <lb/>
I S <lb/>
II <lb/>
CS <lb/>
. I <lb/>
g J -i <lb/>
lb S <lb/>
-a <lb/>
c O<lb/>
is <lb/>
a a <lb/>
s . <lb/>
i o<lb/>
J J. Satterthwaite <lb/>
Bro. <lb/>
Invite 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 selling Lawns and other <lb/>
summer dress good at about <lb/>
half price, to make room for <lb/>
fall goods. <lb/>
General News. <lb/>
N. Y., had a million <lb/>
dollar Wednesday. Two fire- <lb/>
men were injured, one of them <lb/>
fatally. <lb/>
bunking firm of Stephen <lb/>
of Bremen, Ger- <lb/>
many, has failed. New York was <lb/>
affected the failure. <lb/>
A slight improvement is report- <lb/>
ed in the condition of Senator <lb/>
Hanna. <lb/>
The Equitable National bank of <lb/>
New has failed. It was one <lb/>
of the smallest financial <lb/>
in the city and the failure is <lb/>
most without <lb/>
-t <lb/>
. <lb/>
Please <lb/>
Listen <lb/>
Seed unto at <lb/>
hi in the Household. of D <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
I will handle Maine stock <lb/>
. . Johnston Bros. B <lb/>
We are here to please the <lb/>
public. We better <lb/>
ed than ever before to do Society's New Game, <lb/>
work promptly and well. W e <lb/>
are here to give you the bet has society by <lb/>
consistent with It is something n t, <lb/>
material and workmanship. <lb/>
Keep your money in your j as the name Implies, is <lb/>
home town unless you can get founded on <lb/>
better returns for it elsewhere. i- with <lb/>
a fair proposition i in f col. r-, <lb/>
Sash Doors, log fox to be <lb/>
Come and see us before b, i. h and value <lb/>
, . , . i . in U. <lb/>
your seed lush departments. doing an <lb/>
A Cabarrus was <lb/>
male. The mule <lb/>
.-, features is f Pitt County Baggy has five teeth less, <lb/>
article by Eleanor dissolved by mutual <lb/>
night Charles The Merchants <lb/>
all the of the firm and <lb/>
-ii <lb/>
Refresh <lb/>
ed. I will continue <lb/>
of <lb/>
every kind of Interior and Ex , ,, . <lb/>
I and ion. pat- <lb/>
tenor . . <lb/>
I tit i teen <lb/>
his n constantly <lb/>
. . m ring interest for <lb/>
to evening, marked contra <lb/>
illustrated, as the <lb/>
will <lb/>
popular , <lb/>
i will <lb/>
in.,. to lessen <lb/>
d this sea- <lb/>
sun, Navel Oyster lie- <lb/>
K. Special <lb/>
the same n <lb/>
HUH <lb/>
under <lb/>
Pitt Coin, <lb/>
W. J. Davis, near Wilson, lost <lb/>
Boggy Co. All persons <lb/>
i to the firm either by note barrels of and stacks <lb/>
to all who enjoy dainty . count are come for of by fire. <lb/>
and Bet lie with a- <lb/>
as <lb/>
This 18th of Jan. 1901 <lb/>
II <lb/>
C t <lb/>
I- ; . is, <lb/>
sold my good will<lb/>
, . ,. lO H. To h <lb/>
lieu, am. . Ill's Mar- <lb/>
. I e. W <lb/>
II ,<lb/>
in i <lb/>
NOTICE TO I TORS. <lb/>
to <lb/>
recent games <lb/>
bore the players at the end of <lb/>
an hour <lb/>
the one pack six other <lb/>
splendid, new, -aim<lb/>
Letters of administration upon the <lb/>
estate of George Jefferson deceased, <lb/>
having been issued to the undersigned <lb/>
by the Clerk of the Superior Court of <lb/>
county, and having duly qualified <lb/>
as administrator of said estate, notice <lb/>
is hereby given to persons holding <lb/>
claims against sail estate to <lb/>
them to the undersigned for <lb/>
on or before the lira day of member <lb/>
1901, or this be plead in b r <lb/>
of their recover can lie dealers <lb/>
to said estate are requested to or sent postpaid, edge, <lb/>
make Immediate payment. ,,,,, . ,, <lb/>
This the nth <lb/>
H. <lb/>
all lends for their pad <lb/>
Haiti lib. there are j the past and <lb/>
oil- . recipes same o Mr. H <lb/>
.-. for ; will at ail . <lb/>
to pk-a-e ii u . , <lb/>
work. <lb/>
in . <lb/>
i- i,. <lb/>
II s <lb/>
engineer of <lb/>
at Char- <lb/>
II was <lb/>
i if ilk. <lb/>
Home needs. <lb/>
Ml <lb/>
t i- -aid <lb/>
More to National Guard. <lb/>
The me-- the <lb/>
will end in the appoint <lb/>
I-. W. ii e. <lb/>
Cotton seed for sale. <lb/>
by W. P. <lb/>
Also a limited f <lb/>
seed potatoes. One It was need <lb/>
eat one acre in cotton from the ant . <lb/>
of the war mad. i- i <lb/>
I ., . <lb/>
another allotment of the thous <lb/>
he Lin- <lb/>
ii <lb/>
of George Jefferson <lb/>
Jarvis ft Blow, attorney's. <lb/>
COM I I'll. <lb/>
Sena mood r <lb/>
WIRE AND IRON FENCE SOLD Atlanta<lb/>
e .-. i to . <lb/>
First work m prices <lb/>
sent upon <lb/>
C. <lb/>
j corn is per <lb/>
after spring crop of I National Guard of North . <lb/>
limited ton I This makes a total of nearly <lb/>
Price if to received by the state troop <lb/>
. i, u. bushel, Cot n SI on , ,. Superior <lb/>
M ; court the <lb/>
Ward, Pin in in, . and <lb/>
plead guilty m i . ,, for <lb/>
the killing of Jones last <lb/>
May and are to a to tie State's <lb/>
prison. Lawrence M another <lb/>
I of the alleged slayers of Jones is <lb/>
still at large with a of <lb/>
ins i. iii . <lb/>
Attorney at Law, <lb/>
Greenville, N, C. <lb/>
.-. <lb/>
Fountain, PI. <lb/>
and <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Office door east of post office, <lb/>
up . <lb/>
y. up Our i <lb/>
ii <lb/>
A. aV i. <lb/>
an <lb/>
Br. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
PI u- <lb/>
I dentist. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
fRANK<lb/>
d ;. <lb/>
AN;<lb/>
M. SCHULTZ <lb/>
Wholesale retail Grocer <lb/>
Dealer. Cash paid <lb/>
Hides, Far, Cotton Seed, Oil <lb/>
re's. Turkeys, Egg, etc. <lb/>
steads, Mattresses, Suits, c, u <lb/>
Carriages, Go-Carts, <lb/>
suits, Tables, Lounges, Safes, <lb/>
and Gail . As . <lb/>
Life Tobacco, West Ci <lb/>
Henry Q <lb/>
d Chi tries, Peaches A , <lb/>
. , Coffee, <lb/>
, .-, <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
declined to <lb/>
-i . ., v <lb/>
fl ft El r I <lb/>
; W h <lb/>
Fact One t i a Tonic end not B . <lb/>
, . ,, , I ; . fa . ., Dr <lb/>
Fact TWO and lends .,; , ,, <lb/>
. . the entire -j .<lb/>
I I m, <lb/>
gift i I <lb/>
.-. <lb/>
ES. <lb/>
i II I V <lb/>
l ,;. <lb/>
on i . . <lb/>
i,. I hail of <lb/>
i i, i i i <lb/>
I. <lb/>
I Three not a d <lb/>
a normal, title cure for <lb/>
I Malarial Complaints <lb/>
Chills n d <lb/>
r. . . <lb/>
. <lb/>
II <lb/>
I i . <lb/>
no <lb/>
i tale f <lb/>
th r, . i <lb/>
i cal m. I <lb/>
. AN;. <lb/>
U Mr. D. .<lb/>
U cured I . i . . <lb/>
r.; <lb/>
. of <lb/>
t ii c y, ion- <lb/>
. i. . will <lb/>
the b i j . <lb/>
Tl<lb/>
. r <lb/>
It <lb/>
; . . i i if w <lb/>
t i i <lb/>
; -.-. , <lb/>
. d<lb/>
Norfolk. <lb/>
PI. II<lb/>
HO <lb/>
Fresh, Clean, Put <lb/>
are We<lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, Grain <lb/>
ons. Private Wires to <lb/>
Chicago and New <lb/>
Whichard. W. C. <lb/>
The Stock complete in every <lb/>
and prices as low as the <lb/>
fewest. Highest market price <lb/>
paid produce <lb/>
Steamer L. Myers <lb/>
ton <lb/>
Cotton and Brokers U leave- i <lb/>
except c by its honest <lb/>
m. for <lb/>
with <lb/>
Steamers tor Norfolk, <lb/>
Philadelphia, York Boston, <lb/>
Li. A D n points Worth. Connects at <lb/>
. K. Norfolk With railroads nil <lb/>
points West. <lb/>
Shippers should order their <lb/>
freight by Old Dominion Line <lb/>
York and <lb/>
Norfolk and Southern It. R. and <lb/>
Old Dominion Line from Norfolk; <lb/>
Clyde from <lb/>
Bay Line and Chesapeake Line <lb/>
from Baltimore and Merchants <lb/>
and Line from Boston. <lb/>
Sailing hours subject to change <lb/>
without Notice. <lb/>
T. H. Myers, Ant <lb/>
Washington, N. <lb/>
J. J. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
H. B. Walker, Vice President <lb/>
Manager, <lb/>
Bench Street, V. T. <lb/>
Jobs has <lb/>
from lbs of the <lb/>
Hod be the. steal ii com <lb/>
Constitution. <lb/>
How often you can jet a <lb/>
thing <lb/>
nail or screw driver or an- <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 a single <lb/>
useful <lb/>
Of Course <lb/>
You get Harness, <lb/>
Horse Goods, <lb/>
of <lb/>
The Hay Grain Co <lb/>
BUYERS AND SELLERS OP <lb/>
Hay, Grain, Cracked Corn, <lb/>
Bran, Cotton Seed <lb/>
Meal and Hulls. <lb/>
cars <lb/>
I he <lb/>
in <lb/>
Friday morn <lb/>
call foe Had just <lb/>
Hie to get <lb/>
Some clot In from a wire <lb/>
minutes as was re- <lb/>
rd <lb/>
wrapped In flames, Mrs. Forrest <lb/>
hastened to the little one x- <lb/>
Five Points, the flames as soon as <lb/>
possible. The body, arms, and <lb/>
Deck of little one were badly <lb/>
Baptist. <lb/>
W I she Heart <lb/>
J. I the child screaming and saw i <lb/>
GROCER, <lb/>
Phone <lb/>
STREET, ONE DOOR PROM <lb/>
FIVE POINTS. <lb/>
our prices and sea our <lb/>
buying. We o by <lb/>
and for oath. <lb/>
Ryan Loan Ratified. <lb/>
Petersburg, Va., Feb. <lb/>
the stockholders of the <lb/>
Seaboard Air Line Railway Com- <lb/>
was held at the office of the <lb/>
company in this city . <lb/>
a was <lb/>
the directors to issue <lb/>
bonds ts the <lb/>
various earnest of tee <lb/>
Ml<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019389_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
D. f. WHICH Editor and <lb/>
men may differ as to that, can- <lb/>
be difference of opinion on <lb/>
the question of taxation. <lb/>
At present the town gets from the <lb/>
eleven bar rooms for a whole year. <lb/>
but on their business Can <lb/>
it be doubted that if we had a dis- <lb/>
the. town would get <lb/>
many times that amount We think <lb/>
regulated dispensary cannot be less <lb/>
we successfully showed in a former <lb/>
issue of this paper that the town's <lb/>
About the next largest thing to the THE MONEY VIEW OF THE DIS part from the proceeds of a well <lb/>
Stored In the post office at Greenville, N. C. as second class matter, <lb/>
rates made upon application. <lb/>
A correspondent desired at every post office Pitt and adjoining counties. <lb/>
in to <lb/>
Pitt County, N. Tuesday, 1904. <lb/>
cotton crop this year will be the crop <lb/>
of candidates. <lb/>
There is one redeeming feature <lb/>
about is the kind you can't <lb/>
be balled <lb/>
AGAIN. <lb/>
We resume again the money view <lb/>
of the dispensary. The sale of <lb/>
has long been regarded a fit <lb/>
subject for government control and <lb/>
taxation. It is true we have had as <lb/>
The bureau reports ., , . ,., <lb/>
little of either in Greenville as <lb/>
bales of cotton of this season's; .,, ,, . ,. . . . , , <lb/>
I I he law which is enacted to <lb/>
ginned to Jan. 16th, 1904.1 , . , . , . . , <lb/>
control the sale ts set at defiance and <lb/>
, , , , , the bar rooms run about as they <lb/>
Admiral us been ordered j <lb/>
please. They sell to drunkards, to <lb/>
minors and on Sunday, when the law <lb/>
says they shall do neither. As to <lb/>
I taxation, the saloons do not bear <lb/>
ti , iv ; their full share of its burdens <lb/>
I he ground hog can laugh in Ins <lb/>
. i . their business creates the <lb/>
at those who thought spring had h <lb/>
need of taxes. Under the town <lb/>
to take his squadron to Chinese <lb/>
waters to observe the naval opera- <lb/>
in the pretty weather a few <lb/>
day ago. <lb/>
charter is a maximum limit to <lb/>
taxes on the bar room and on prop- <lb/>
The town government taxes <lb/>
property for town purposes to its <lb/>
highest limit, but not so as to bar <lb/>
rooms. When they come to tax them <lb/>
they put the tax very little above the <lb/>
Fifty thousand people are thrown lowest limit. The highest-limit <lb/>
out of by the Baltimore the charter for property is sixty <lb/>
Practically all of the and <lb/>
safes of financial concerns in <lb/>
more whose places were <lb/>
by the fire are found to be unhurt <lb/>
fire. This means much additional <lb/>
loss to the actual property damage <lb/>
The extent of such a -aster is far <lb/>
p aching. <lb/>
The year 1904 is early making a <lb/>
record. Already we have had the <lb/>
Chicago holocaust, the <lb/>
six and two thirds cents on the one <lb/>
hundred dollars worth of property. <lb/>
This is the amount the town govern- <lb/>
levies on the property. They <lb/>
go to the highest limit. The max- <lb/>
limit on bar rooms is <lb/>
The government levies just half this <lb/>
amount. They levied for town <lb/>
than per year. Then we <lb/>
ask the thoughtful tax payer how <lb/>
I can he hesitate to vote for a <lb/>
How can he hesitate to vote <lb/>
to lighten his burden of taxation <lb/>
How can he hesitate to vote for a <lb/>
system that will lessen the evils of <lb/>
whiskey and at the same time <lb/>
raise a large sum of money each <lb/>
year to improve the streets an J make <lb/>
other needed improvement without <lb/>
taxing the property. <lb/>
us establish a dispensary and <lb/>
give it a fair trial. If it is not a <lb/>
vast improvement on what we now <lb/>
have both as to lessening the evils <lb/>
of the sale of liquor and a revenue <lb/>
raiser we abolish it. Let us <lb/>
try it. <lb/>
A New York broker who is o phi- <lb/>
let his pretty typewriter <lb/>
buy a brass bedstead and make <lb/>
chases to the amount of The <lb/>
bills got into the hands of the old <lb/>
lady at home, and the philanthropist <lb/>
looked like cents at the breakfast <lb/>
table when his wife asked him to <lb/>
explain what connection brass bed- <lb/>
stead had with philanthropy. <lb/>
more tire and several smaller <lb/>
And now the Japanese-Res- <lb/>
war is on. <lb/>
Pennsylvania mine horror, the Haiti- purposes an I for schools, <lb/>
for nil purposes. When <lb/>
they levy the tax on property they go <lb/>
as high as the law will allow them. <lb/>
; When they levy the tax on bar rooms <lb/>
The outlook opposes the proposed they do not go as high as the law <lb/>
service pension bill, and says to pass , stop half <lb/>
it would he an act of unfairness s we , not know. We <lb/>
the South. It South in a former issue from the <lb/>
has borne tremendous burdens and; record how Use bar rooms pay their <lb/>
is still hearing them as a result of tax to the state and now we <lb/>
the war; it is unfair to that section pay their license tax <lb/>
to make another great addition to <lb/>
those The South is now <lb/>
paying millions in pensions of which <lb/>
it gets back nothing. It is willing <lb/>
to pay to pension every soldier who <lb/>
needs the government's help, but to <lb/>
pension is to tend to <lb/>
it for those who do not need <lb/>
it. <lb/>
The State Chemist of <lb/>
has taken specimens of the <lb/>
cheap liquor sold in different parts <lb/>
of that state and submitted them to <lb/>
analysis, finding that of per cent <lb/>
of the specimens, wood was <lb/>
their basis, and that prunes, red <lb/>
pepper and tobacco were among <lb/>
their constituents. The Raleigh <lb/>
of this paper stated a <lb/>
low ago that concentrated lye <lb/>
enters into a considerable part of <lb/>
the that is man- <lb/>
in North Carolina, this <lb/>
being employed to or, <lb/>
s Pooh Bah said, to make it <lb/>
Whether the specific <lb/>
things stated above are true or not <lb/>
the wonder about the business <lb/>
in, not that gets so many <lb/>
tun but that it gets so <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
to the town. <lb/>
We now ask the conservative, <lb/>
thoughtful tax payer of the town <lb/>
this question, which they must <lb/>
answer at the ballot box on the 2nd <lb/>
day of Marsh. If the sale of liquor <lb/>
is a proper subject for government <lb/>
control and taxation, then not <lb/>
wise to put it under that sort of con- <lb/>
that it will do the least harm <lb/>
and pay the largest amount of tax. <lb/>
Will a dispensary do this <lb/>
Can any sane man believe <lb/>
that the sale of liquor at one place, <lb/>
and only from sun up to sun down <lb/>
and never on Sunday and never to <lb/>
drunkards or to minors, will do as <lb/>
much harm as the sale of it at <lb/>
places and night. Sunday <lb/>
and Monday and to minors and to <lb/>
drunkards We know that for one <lb/>
reason or another men will advocate <lb/>
the bar room and oppose the dis- <lb/>
We know they will go so <lb/>
far as to argue that eleven bar <lb/>
are no worse than one dis <lb/>
and we also know that men <lb/>
sometime argue things they do not <lb/>
It is an old saying that is <lb/>
the root of all We have long <lb/>
been of the opinion that idleness is <lb/>
the root of most evil, but after care- <lb/>
consideration and observation <lb/>
we have about reached the <lb/>
that ignorance instead of idle- <lb/>
is the greater cause of evil. By <lb/>
ignorance of the laws of nature, one <lb/>
fails to see the beauty in nature; and <lb/>
hence, has no admiration for the <lb/>
things that would further his <lb/>
progress Although ignorance <lb/>
progress in all lines of industry <lb/>
it does the farmer more harm than <lb/>
any one else. Most people think <lb/>
the man who farms has no need of <lb/>
any knowledge, of rather <lb/>
beyond that afforded in the public <lb/>
schools; but don't anybody with <lb/>
good sound sense know that an <lb/>
cation makes a man more fit for any <lb/>
thing he may want to do Trained <lb/>
minds are are needed for <lb/>
as well as everything else. <lb/>
r------- i i <lb/>
HOW WILL A DISPENSARY AFFECT l because some farmer might <lb/>
BUSINESS , . , , <lb/>
carry tobacco t Kinston or <lb/>
son. But, said the friend, Kinston <lb/>
ad Wilson have dispensaries. Well <lb/>
said A. he his cot- <lb/>
ton to Farmville or Falkland. The <lb/>
friend do you the trade <lb/>
of a farmer worth much who would <lb/>
haul his cotton to Farmville or <lb/>
Falkland rather than to Greenville <lb/>
because he jean buy a cent <lb/>
at either of these places and <lb/>
cannot at Greenville <lb/>
This is about a sample of the <lb/>
argument that is being used by <lb/>
those who tan Lad no better excuse <lb/>
for wanting to keep the bar rooms <lb/>
running. Of course there is <lb/>
in it. The progress and growth <lb/>
of the town does not depend upon <lb/>
its whiskey shops. The business <lb/>
of the merchants does not depend <lb/>
upon the ability of their customers <lb/>
to visit a grog shop also. We have <lb/>
in Greenville good merchants, good <lb/>
banks and good business men; The <lb/>
amount of business they do depends <lb/>
upon their own efforts and method <lb/>
and not upon the rum milk of the <lb/>
town. The fact is, if the <lb/>
dimes, quarters and half dollars <lb/>
which into-the of. the bar <lb/>
rooms for whiskey could o into the <lb/>
money drawers of the for <lb/>
something and to wear, both <lb/>
the merchant and that- customer <lb/>
would be the gainer. <lb/>
We must admit, however, that <lb/>
there is one class of whose bus- <lb/>
would be seriously hurt if <lb/>
not entirely destroy ed by closing up <lb/>
the bar rooms, and the bar- <lb/>
keepers themselves . will be <lb/>
about in the of a gentle- <lb/>
man in Raleigh hen the Federal <lb/>
army entered th at April,. <lb/>
1865. general took the <lb/>
house i name we <lb/>
his The.- <lb/>
general a kind companionable <lb/>
sort of fellow, an i sought to get <lb/>
on wit b the gentleman <lb/>
he w a occupying, but. <lb/>
the man was and reticent. <lb/>
y the said <lb/>
to i cheer up I no- <lb/>
you arc down cast and seem <lb/>
to He in a great deal of trouble. <lb/>
This-wont do. must, not give, <lb/>
up., Business soon start up <lb/>
will so mi he b act to your <lb/>
business pro than <lb/>
said th bu- <lb/>
is gone-fore r. It is utter- <lb/>
destroyed awl I never resume <lb/>
tho general <lb/>
was <lb/>
Don't let cotton and war news <lb/>
overshadow your interest in the dis- <lb/>
election. battle here <lb/>
at against the <lb/>
of more importance <lb/>
The ice dealers of the state had <lb/>
appointed a meeting at Raleigh, but <lb/>
they have found cold chunks a <lb/>
around home for the last few days <lb/>
without going to the capitol city. <lb/>
From the big type in the <lb/>
one has to look carefully to see <lb/>
whether he is going to get on to a <lb/>
display advertisement or war <lb/>
news. <lb/>
The records for the last few years <lb/>
have shown the coldest weather about <lb/>
believe. Our any <lb/>
believe. But. <lb/>
sane <lb/>
We hear some of the good citizens <lb/>
of Greenville are-hesitating to vote <lb/>
for a dispensary because they fear <lb/>
the closing up of the bar rooms <lb/>
would hurt the business of the <lb/>
town. We have replies to make <lb/>
to this suggestion. First, if it were <lb/>
true that closing up bar rooms <lb/>
and opening a dispensary <lb/>
hurt the business of the town, even <lb/>
will a man with a-soul in him <lb/>
say that he prefers a prosperity <lb/>
chased at the sacrifice of the moral <lb/>
tone of the town to a growth in <lb/>
and intellectual development. <lb/>
Will he put the morality of his town <lb/>
in one end of the scales <lb/>
based on the liquor trade in the <lb/>
other, and say give me business at <lb/>
whatever sacrifice Will he prefer <lb/>
a few dollars to the life of some <lb/>
young man saved from <lb/>
grave Will he hazard the safety <lb/>
of his own son rather than risk the <lb/>
loss of a few dollars from an <lb/>
loss of business Will he <lb/>
take the chance of his <lb/>
marrying a man given over to the <lb/>
drink habit in preference to taking <lb/>
his chance of doing a <lb/>
town without bar rooms The father <lb/>
who says he vote for the dis- <lb/>
because he fears it may in- <lb/>
his business assumes a fearful <lb/>
risk. The man who says he <lb/>
vote for it fear it may in- <lb/>
the business of the town putt a <lb/>
higher estimate on business <lb/>
does on morality. Have such men <lb/>
ever felt the danger of temptation <lb/>
Have they ever been to <lb/>
the force of example Have they <lb/>
ever stopped to consider how many <lb/>
men have fallen because they t were <lb/>
Have they estimated the <lb/>
danger of a bad example As long <lb/>
as the bar rooms stand open <lb/>
and respectable men of standing <lb/>
and influence go in and out, is there <lb/>
not danger that some young; man <lb/>
may fall who tries to follow their <lb/>
bad example What father- with a <lb/>
son can safely say will, not be <lb/>
my What father can. stand to <lb/>
be told in coming years he bad the <lb/>
opportunity on the 2nd March <lb/>
1904, to vote to close bar and <lb/>
remove this temptation out of the <lb/>
his boy. He them <lb/>
might hurt his business. He risked <lb/>
his boy but would not-risk his <lb/>
His boy, notable- to stand <lb/>
temptation, fell. What a terrible,, <lb/>
crushing blow this must be to the <lb/>
father on whom it And yet <lb/>
it will on some- father if the <lb/>
election the 2nd of March fail. <lb/>
Our second answer to this unholy <lb/>
suggestion is that it is not true as a <lb/>
matter of fact, and the man win en- <lb/>
it is simply taking of <lb/>
of his fears. To say that <lb/>
will loose a part of her if the <lb/>
bar are closed is a very poor <lb/>
to the men who come <lb/>
here to trade. It is equivalent to <lb/>
saying that their trade can be bought <lb/>
with whiskey. It is likewise a poor <lb/>
to the Greenville mer- <lb/>
chants. It is equivalent to saying <lb/>
that they cannot compete with the <lb/>
merchants in other towns and that <lb/>
they are obliged to hold on to the bar <lb/>
rooms to hold the We heard <lb/>
a few days age conversation <lb/>
something like this. Mr. A. said to a <lb/>
friend he set vote for th dis <lb/>
what was <lb/>
a the man. <lb/>
Our Raleigh, soon went in <lb/>
to and did well for <lb/>
himself and f the community. So <lb/>
will the two men who are <lb/>
now in the bar room <lb/>
if their present occupation is <lb/>
destroyed, go into some other <lb/>
which they will do well and <lb/>
in which they will be helpful and <lb/>
hurtful t the community. <lb/>
If little Japan does whip big <lb/>
wonder if it will embolden Col <lb/>
to Uncle Samuel, <lb/>
One boy is worth more than all <lb/>
the bar rooms. Will you do your <lb/>
part in to save the boy <lb/>
As between cotton and news, <lb/>
the former holds the biggest <lb/>
in the eye of the <lb/>
-Hi <lb/>
WIN <lb/>
This <lb/>
E SWEPT BY FIRE. <lb/>
Block of Stores <lb/>
The business portion <lb/>
local- I <lb/>
Line. i <lb/>
of was l <lb/>
Are this <lb/>
The was <lb/>
o'clock in the drug <lb/>
B. T. Mooted i <lb/>
way the block on the side of <lb/>
Railroad street, and had made <lb/>
headway that it not lie <lb/>
checked The block <lb/>
ed of frame building that made <lb/>
it is in J. ML Blow, who is authorized to <lb/>
Eastern Reflector in Winterville and territory. <lb/>
Miss Pauline Joyner, of Ayden. <lb/>
is the Misses Dawson. <lb/>
Irwin of Ayden, <lb/>
was yesterday looking at the <lb/>
remnant.- of the tire. <lb/>
Many were the fall <lb/>
slip Thursday night. They <lb/>
had regard neither for the fair nor <lb/>
even for the homely. First a <lb/>
maiden and a lad, next a <lb/>
comely dame followed battle <lb/>
hero, all paying homage <lb/>
to their majesty the heels <lb/>
upward and heads downward, <lb/>
could be Here and there. <lb/>
Loss of With <lb/>
Insurance. <lb/>
f t he tow n <lb/>
i the At- <lb/>
South <lb/>
by <lb/>
d about <lb/>
re of Dr. <lb/>
mid- <lb/>
Josephus Cox building no <lb/>
insurance. <lb/>
Mfg. supply <lb/>
store, stock no insurance. <lb/>
G. A. Co., stock <lb/>
no insurance. <lb/>
Tucker Bros, building in- <lb/>
Guy Taylor, stock in. <lb/>
H. L. Johnson, stock no <lb/>
insurance. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Go., stock <lb/>
fuel upon which the rap ; insurance <lb/>
idly. The fire spread both J. S. Barber, <lb/>
from starting point mid dirt <lb/>
not stop until the entire block of <lb/>
stores swept away. <lb/>
Almost the entire <lb/>
of town, including the <lb/>
of the school, turned out the <lb/>
snow and heroically <lb/>
battled with fire and <lb/>
but for this work the destruction <lb/>
doubtless would have been <lb/>
When fire reached the store <lb/>
Barber Co., on <lb/>
the aimer, it was only by good <lb/>
work that the large factory of the <lb/>
A. G. Cox Co , across the <lb/>
street was The glass fronts <lb/>
in the brick store and <lb/>
on side of Railroad street, <lb/>
were broken out by the heat from <lb/>
fire. <lb/>
all nine were <lb/>
burned, and besides the brick <lb/>
building there is but one other <lb/>
store left <lb/>
Those burned out aDd the losses <lb/>
are as <lb/>
Dr. B. T. Cox, building <lb/>
stock soda fountain <lb/>
no e. <lb/>
Mrs. Sarah Taylor, millinery <lb/>
Stock no insurance. <lb/>
C. D. Honks, vacant store <lb/>
no insurance. <lb/>
insurance <lb/>
J. B. Cooper, building <lb/>
insurance <lb/>
Winterville Lodge A. F. A. <lb/>
M., loss do <lb/>
Winterville Council J. O. U. A. <lb/>
no insurance. <lb/>
Will no <lb/>
J. M. Blow, personal property, <lb/>
no insurance. <lb/>
A. D Johnson, personal prop- <lb/>
no insurance. <lb/>
A. G. Mfg., Co , <lb/>
slightly, damaged. <lb/>
This makes a total loss, <lb/>
estimated of to <lb/>
with only about <lb/>
We understand that practically <lb/>
all of this insurance is carried in <lb/>
companies by H. A. <lb/>
White. <lb/>
The sympathizes <lb/>
with Winterville in this disaster. <lb/>
But the town is composed of <lb/>
of such enterprise and deter- <lb/>
that we feel sure they <lb/>
will set to work at once <lb/>
and that will <lb/>
out of the better than be- <lb/>
WINTERVILLE ITEMS. <lb/>
N. C, Feb <lb/>
We m readers will <lb/>
pardon a- and all things locking <lb/>
to the i of this issue up <lb/>
to their usual We have <lb/>
been by most terrible fire, <lb/>
many four citizens out <lb/>
of Hid thrown entire- <lb/>
upon in- of a cold, <lb/>
Very cold world facts have <lb/>
in your <lb/>
paper, with our other <lb/>
losses, a position <lb/>
entirely out of order to write. <lb/>
. however, that <lb/>
our people are Americans true and <lb/>
brave, and despair finds no <lb/>
resting place here. Though ad- <lb/>
have overtaken them, <lb/>
with it of <lb/>
courage they have already <lb/>
on their armor, and with a hero- <lb/>
ism worthy of a noble cause they <lb/>
are determined that the Winter- <lb/>
ville of twelve months shall far <lb/>
surpass the just laid <lb/>
in ash s. Such determination as <lb/>
thin can never fail. <lb/>
G. A. Kittrell went to Norfolk <lb/>
Wednesday and returned Thurs- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
W. F. Harrington, living three <lb/>
miles below Greenville, died Tues- <lb/>
day and hurried Wednesday. <lb/>
A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. have just <lb/>
received another car load of wire <lb/>
and can furnish you fence <lb/>
to high at prices <lb/>
from <lb/>
Our town lock-up is complete <lb/>
and on last Tuesday was dedicated <lb/>
in due form. The proceedings <lb/>
interesting of a high <lb/>
order. As a of test one of <lb/>
our aldermen was therein <lb/>
and left for a to reflect and <lb/>
ponder upon the possibilities of a <lb/>
way faring man, for a <lb/>
change our honored mayor, <lb/>
of police ex <lb/>
chanced places with him and they <lb/>
too, left to experience th <lb/>
wild imaginations of him with <lb/>
whom the world goes hard, and in <lb/>
the glooming will be gov- <lb/>
what they know deal <lb/>
kindly with one who must pass <lb/>
through the same trying ordeal. <lb/>
We have a nice lot of porch <lb/>
column timber. II you are in need <lb/>
of them why not let us fit you up <lb/>
Prices are light. Winterville <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
When you go to the yellow front <lb/>
to buy your grocers you can always <lb/>
be satisfied that you have bought <lb/>
them as as any else <lb/>
and have got fresh goods. <lb/>
While in town stop at the <lb/>
low Front and look through our <lb/>
line of dry goods. No charge <lb/>
made for looking. <lb/>
Always bear in mind that the <lb/>
Winterville Mfg. Co. manufactures <lb/>
a good wash board of good <lb/>
and will quote same <lb/>
upon application. <lb/>
A good article is better you <lb/>
have to pay a little more for it <lb/>
than a cheaper article at a smaller <lb/>
price, so try one of the Carroll <lb/>
singletrees manufactured by the <lb/>
Mfg. Go. <lb/>
A. <lb/>
HAPPY IDEAL SPRING BUGGY. <lb/>
MANUFACTURED BY <lb/>
G. COX MANUFACTURING COMPANY. <lb/>
WINTERVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
u in need of seed Irish es <lb/>
A. O. and Miss Ghent I northern grown or second crop see T f from <lb/>
Haddock were married Wednesday j G. A . Kittrell Co. can sup- T, U top of a <lb/>
at the home of J. J. Haddock, ply you. and <lb/>
father of the <lb/>
All who doubt what we <lb/>
fierce flames as I hey would all lost <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
Seed oats and cotton seed meal. <lb/>
Constantly on hand. Harrington <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Mrs. B. F. Manning and child <lb/>
about buggy harness <lb/>
taking the lead, both in price and <lb/>
quality, are kindly asked to <lb/>
see for themselves. Several <lb/>
sets stock the while. <lb/>
The other day a party bought <lb/>
some wire fence from A. G. <lb/>
Mfg. Co , saying that he wanted a I who have been visiting friends <lb/>
fence which would his own here several days, returned to <lb/>
hos as well as other and I their home in Greenville Monday. <lb/>
only that will I G. A. Kittrell Co. will give <lb/>
do it is your make with barb wire you 1333 lbs seed meal <lb/>
exchange for a ton of cotton seed <lb/>
A plow beam manufactured by j or give per bushel, <lb/>
the Winterville Mfg. Co., always; if in of cotton <lb/>
gives good satisfaction when corn, hay or in the <lb/>
goto them to have one put in feed Hue see G. A. Kittrell Co <lb/>
your plow they can also furnish <lb/>
bandies for your plow. <lb/>
A. G. Cox Mfg. Co., have just <lb/>
gotten out a neat little <lb/>
illustrating and describing J. D. <lb/>
various articles their Cox Board per day. Best <lb/>
lure, This little book with prices in town. <lb/>
For Bent or house and <lb/>
i- i . i l , -r . . upon and <lb/>
lot totaled between Joseph us Cox ,, . <lb/>
A. on j, the <lb/>
l. <lb/>
Apply to C. A. Fair. factory, and yet you stood and <lb/>
Just received car load of flour. back, swelled <lb/>
Car load of shingles expected to <lb/>
arrive in a few days. See them <lb/>
before buying. <lb/>
G. A. Kittrell Co. <lb/>
marked is free for the asking, or a <lb/>
simple request on postal card will <lb/>
bring it to you. Don't delay, <lb/>
write now. It is no small matter <lb/>
to be well posted. <lb/>
Notice the cut of a <lb/>
buggy on this page This is <lb/>
only one of many, and if yon will <lb/>
keep your eves open from time I. <lb/>
time we will be glad to show yon <lb/>
a variety of styles. Of course as <lb/>
it would be better if you have not <lb/>
done so to visit fact and <lb/>
let Hunsucker show you through. <lb/>
William Cooper, of Greensboro, <lb/>
has been visiting hit uncle, Rowan <lb/>
Cooper, the past week. <lb/>
John A. Edwards fell on the <lb/>
snow Thursday and he swears <lb/>
he saw seven stars and believes he <lb/>
saw some more, but didn't count. <lb/>
C. A. Fair, of Ayden, was here <lb/>
H. A. was here Friday <lb/>
regarding the recent lire and <lb/>
The yellow front furnish <lb/>
you with drinks that are as <lb/>
Dr. B. T. Cox wishes to good as one can. Do not <lb/>
chase lbs new goose feathers. <lb/>
For best grade of chewing and <lb/>
smoking tobacco go to the drug <lb/>
store. <lb/>
judge the drinks by the fountain, <lb/>
but try one, and be convinced of <lb/>
the fact that it is always the <lb/>
looking instrument that <lb/>
makes the best music. <lb/>
books, pens, pencils and Q. a. Kittrell Co. have just <lb/>
best quality of stationary always received a shipment seed oats <lb/>
or sale at the drug I that are for sale cheap get <lb/>
If you your horse shod <lb/>
if your s or own shoes <lb/>
peed repairing, and for general <lb/>
blacksmith work call and see W. <lb/>
L. House on Main street. <lb/>
We have a line hats for <lb/>
both old and young, also trunks, <lb/>
valises, at prices <lb/>
we think very reasonable and <lb/>
always glad to serve you and save <lb/>
your money if possible. <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
Go to see or write the <lb/>
ville Mfg. Co. your house <lb/>
trimmings. They can furnish you <lb/>
with good low prices. <lb/>
This season the A. G. Cox Mfg. <lb/>
Co., will sell by far more cotton <lb/>
planters than ever before. The <lb/>
demand for is very great. <lb/>
G. A. Kittrell Go. are buying <lb/>
immense quantities of cotton seed. <lb/>
Seed are bringing a nice price and <lb/>
add to the income of the <lb/>
farmer. <lb/>
with gratitude our tongue <lb/>
fails to find to express <lb/>
our thanks to you, and silence <lb/>
our heart speaks and says <lb/>
this is a debt we never pay. <lb/>
We especially mention the true <lb/>
that have no earthly <lb/>
interest here, yet they <lb/>
the effort to the saving of our <lb/>
factory. May the guiding hand <lb/>
of the Lord ever direct them i. <lb/>
this life, may He abundantly <lb/>
bless them In their efforts to <lb/>
pare for life. <lb/>
Again thanking each every <lb/>
one, both white and colored, who <lb/>
stood by our interest in such time <lb/>
of need, t u sincere hope that <lb/>
blessing's may be your. <lb/>
Cox. <lb/>
use greasy Castor Oil <lb/>
any is the only <lb/>
perfect tasteless Castor Oil. <lb/>
per bottle, for sale by Dr. B, T. <lb/>
Cox, Winterville, N. <lb/>
2-16, <lb/>
Moving Dollar. <lb/>
A stationary dollar is a poor <lb/>
thing. Money is made to calculate. <lb/>
It is not intended that it should be <lb/>
idle and remain in one place all the <lb/>
time. And he gets hold of a dollar <lb/>
and confines it so it will do no ons <lb/>
any prevents it from its <lb/>
mate course and use. So then, every <lb/>
man ought to be in a hurry to pay <lb/>
his debts, so that the man to whom <lb/>
he pays money may in turn pay it to <lb/>
another, and he to another. Thus <lb/>
one dollar may pay ten times a <lb/>
debt in a day if men were careful <lb/>
to keep the dollar in constant <lb/>
Every man who can ought <lb/>
to pay his honest debts everyday. <lb/>
Scotland Neck Commonwealth. <lb/>
prices before buying. <lb/>
Cotton seed meal and hulls <lb/>
sale. G. A. Kittrell Co, <lb/>
A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. have a nice <lb/>
lot of coffins on hand. Prices <lb/>
are very reasonable as heretofore. <lb/>
Prompt attention given all order. <lb/>
B. F. Manning, wife and child- <lb/>
of Greenville, are visiting <lb/>
in town. <lb/>
Mr. of was a <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
The burnt district will be re- <lb/>
built at once. <lb/>
Just a few loafers in town now. <lb/>
No fault of ours, though. Better <lb/>
times, boys, and bye. <lb/>
OF APPRECIATION. <lb/>
In behalf of the A. G Cox Mfg. <lb/>
Co., I desire to express <lb/>
thanks for such earnest efforts of <lb/>
both white colored, that so <lb/>
miraculously saved our factory <lb/>
from the fierce flames that were <lb/>
so destructive to our town. <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
J. M. Patterson, one of <lb/>
oldest and most respect- <lb/>
ed i-it died at his home five <lb/>
miles south of Winston Salem on <lb/>
11th <lb/>
he at Mocksville was <lb/>
broken into a few nights ago. The <lb/>
rail load suffered no loss. The <lb/>
burglars only three small pack- <lb/>
ages belonging to the Southern <lb/>
Express Co., which were scarcely <lb/>
of any value. <lb/>
All of counties except <lb/>
eight have settled taxes with the <lb/>
treasurer for 1903. <lb/>
Archie colored, has <lb/>
been sentenced to be hanged in <lb/>
Oxford on April 15th the <lb/>
of a by the name of Mer- <lb/>
A car load of blockade whiskey <lb/>
being shipped from near Raleigh <lb/>
to some party in Asheville was <lb/>
seized by Thurs- <lb/>
As we saw you working at so day.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019389_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
Department. <lb/>
T. F. PROCTOR, <lb/>
Grimesland, N. C. <lb/>
soil; general <lb/>
MERCHANDISE <lb/>
J. Proctor Bros <lb/>
SUPPLY <lb/>
There considerable Improve <lb/>
meat in price of tobacco and <lb/>
the result is the market is having <lb/>
good sales for the time year. A <lb/>
farmer prices now are better <lb/>
than they were in February last <lb/>
ear. <lb/>
BETHEL DEPARTMENT <lb/>
you ho <lb/>
furniture to .<lb/>
tr, , , . i . hi <lb/>
J I, <lb/>
Oar mill n v <lb/>
full <lb/>
pared tr gin i <lb/>
. , i . . <lb/>
do . . <lb/>
. .<lb/>
in the way <lb/>
Dry Goods, No- <lb/>
Hats, Groceries <lb/>
here. It is s.- <lb/>
; . <lb/>
wear, or some for the <lb/>
,. you can be <lb/>
t prices paid <lb/>
, ,. . <lb/>
,,, a ,. Is. <lb/>
he <lb/>
the very one can <lb/>
along <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Goods, N Fancy Or. <lb/>
eerie . T baa Cigar. <lb/>
ft Fountain to . All <lb/>
the popular <lb/>
. try i <lb/>
Mrs. Post Guilty. <lb/>
Jacksonville, Fla., Feb. <lb/>
verdict of guilty was returned <lb/>
this evening by the jury the <lb/>
against Helen Post, <lb/>
the mental science healer who has <lb/>
been on trial for the Jen days <lb/>
in the United States The <lb/>
charge against Mrs. Post was that <lb/>
violating section l the <lb/>
Statutes of the United <lb/>
If specifically <lb/>
that she denied a scheme to de- <lb/>
fraud divers people and that she <lb/>
ii- d the United States mails to <lb/>
further said <lb/>
DR. R. J. GRIMES, <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. <lb/>
BETHEL, X. C. <lb/>
; Office opposite depot. <lb/>
DR. G. F. <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, <lb/>
BETHEL, N. C. <lb/>
next door to Post Office. <lb/>
STATON AND BUNTING, <lb/>
BETHEL, N. C. <lb/>
DEALERS IN <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE, <lb/>
Complete Line Clothing, Dry Furniture, Groceries. <lb/>
We Pay Highest Prices for Cotton, <lb/>
Cotton Seed and Country Produce.<lb/>
ire<lb/>
.-. <lb/>
. . . . <lb/>
. v I i . poss. one of <lb/>
; i . milk, cream end <lb/>
man, <lb/>
he i I. i <lb/>
HAVE YOU A LAWN <lb/>
I. ;. m will want o u Mow r <lb/>
soon, and made It tor own one. <lb/>
. i., to burrow ii i i when we <lb/>
u id knives at such <lb/>
. . ;. , o . work. <lb/>
i .,,;. mm. and <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
ARR<lb/>
ill . Si l l<lb/>
. . I I P <lb/>
. i <lb/>
t W .<lb/>
. Am I; <lb/>
I in beauty <lb/>
. .-. <lb/>
If . in lies . gives die- <lb/>
i . i fool In ; dive c-1 Mi; are <lb/>
. , i q lie <lb/>
win n nil have u <lb/>
Hi ;., psi own, which is sure to <lb/>
D w nu i . <lb/>
flT; ; , <lb/>
always lit closely and about <lb/>
instep so as to make it impossible for fool to slip for- <lb/>
ward and crowd toes, while bull mid toes should <lb/>
have plenty room giving free play lo the toot. <lb/>
This is exactly what <lb/>
Our new Styles in and will be <lb/>
here very shortly. <lb/>
Greenville's Great Department Store <lb/>
The State Normal. <lb/>
N. C, Feb. V. <lb/>
Letters have been sent to all <lb/>
pupils, stating the work of <lb/>
the State Normal and Industrial <lb/>
be resumed on Thurs- <lb/>
day, 18th, and students <lb/>
. to arrive in <lb/>
on the h. <lb/>
executive committee of the <lb/>
was in session all day <lb/>
until a late hour <lb/>
the <lb/>
ion a new dormitory <lb/>
take the place of the <lb/>
on destroyed. <lb/>
The only definite and decisive <lb/>
o in regard to the mat <lb/>
the employment of Hook <lb/>
and Sawyer, of Charlotte and Dur- <lb/>
ham . architects. The full board <lb/>
will meet within the next three <lb/>
h decide upon <lb/>
, hi upon the amount -f <lb/>
pan he invested in the <lb/>
ii . y Die contract will then <lb/>
; i will be <lb/>
. the building <lb/>
is <lb/>
hr e Jaded <lb/>
I mo, X. O., in. <lb/>
Tun Parker, Jim <lb/>
i , <lb/>
last eek, <lb/>
i h i . <lb/>
i i <lb/>
yards <lb/>
trim <lb/>
in nine eases. <lb/>
i i t are in <lb/>
jail in it lei n i. . <lb/>
1.1 <lb/>
, X. C <lb/>
it, who en aged in <lb/>
i i . . i . o <lb/>
II I HI <lb/>
three miles f <lb/>
i on the i id dead. Hi <lb/>
. i n j in <lb/>
i j. V I <lb/>
, , John <lb/>
way to ii <lb/>
T; i u <lb/>
, In I , and DO <lb/>
he i- to hi Is not known. <lb/>
. of this city. <lb/>
LET i ER TO Wm. R. HORNE. <lb/>
Farmville, X. C. <lb/>
A man Send <lb/>
gallons. Generally I use <lb/>
don't think it'll be <lb/>
Had left <lb/>
O 1-, for another <lb/>
for the job. <lb/>
Had left. <lb/>
This comes from Messrs. W. A. <lb/>
F. Bower, Mass. They <lb/>
This has been our experience <lb/>
all this year. <lb/>
New agents always have to go <lb/>
through it. After a little, they <lb/>
learn to guess better. <lb/>
. Yours truly <lb/>
F. W. Co. <lb/>
P. S. II. L. Carr sells our <lb/>
paint. <lb/>
AT <lb/>
yon fret honest goods at living price. <lb/>
large stock before you buy and ail <lb/>
Suits, Overcoats, Cloaks, Dress Goods, Shoes, Hats, Caps, Under- <lb/>
wear, Crockery Ware, Hardware, <lb/>
and everything you wear. Everything yon use in <lb/>
your house and even thing you ill your r. <lb/>
Millinery Goods a Specialty. <lb/>
Our goods are here and we are ready to serve yon. <lb/>
Everybody that sees buys, everybody that tries <lb/>
our goods becomes oar customers, t n trial <lb/>
and save yourselves money, <lb/>
BLOUNT BROTHERS. <lb/>
B ET E L, N. C. <lb/>
TWO YEARS HAVE THE <lb/>
mi <lb/>
II II Iii J <lb/>
OF NEWARK, N. J., YOUR H <lb/>
Loan Value, <lb/>
Value, <lb/>
;. Paid-up <lb/>
that works ally, <lb/>
la <lb/>
fl. Will if arrears mi i <lb/>
ire living, or within three lapse. <lb/>
of and payment of arrears v I <lb/>
second No I <lb/>
Dividends are pays at the ch <lb/>
year, provided the u mi id, <lb/>
be used Tn <lb/>
h th I <lb/>
To make i i <lb/>
i i<lb/>
ville N C, <lb/>
THE KEELEY CURE <lb/>
yOU know What it does u <lb/>
for strong drink or drugs, restore system to lie <lb/>
and reinstates a man to bis home and full <lb/>
THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, <lb/>
Correspondence <lb/>
ft. <lb/>
POOR PRINT <lb/>
WHY THE JUROR HELD OUT. <lb/>
Th Secret That Was Imparted to an <lb/>
English Chief Justice. <lb/>
The most remarkable case of <lb/>
jury against what <lb/>
seemed irrefutable testimony, and <lb/>
all through the resolution of j <lb/>
occurred before Chief Justice <lb/>
Dyer many years ago. lie presided <lb/>
at a murder trial in which every- <lb/>
thing went the prisoner, fl <lb/>
who on his part only say I <lb/>
on his going to work in the morn- <lb/>
he found the murdered man <lb/>
dying and tried to help him, where-1 <lb/>
by he had become covered with j <lb/>
blood, but when the man presently <lb/>
died he hod come away and said <lb/>
nothing about it because was <lb/>
known to have had a quarrel with <lb/>
the deceased and feared he might <lb/>
get into The with <lb/>
which the man had been <lb/>
had the name on it. <lb/>
In other respects his guilt appeared <lb/>
to be clearly established, and the <lb/>
chief justice was convinced of it, <lb/>
hut the jury returned a verdict of <lb/>
Thia was Chief Justice Dyer's <lb/>
case, and he put some very search- <lb/>
questions to the high sheriff. <lb/>
The cause of the acquittal, said the <lb/>
Official, undoubtedly the fore- <lb/>
man, a farmer of excellent <lb/>
esteemed by all his neighbors <lb/>
and very unlikely to be obstinate or <lb/>
vexatious. said the judge, <lb/>
must see this foreman, for an <lb/>
explanation of the matter I will <lb/>
The foreman came, and aft- <lb/>
extracting his lordship a <lb/>
promise of secrecy proved at once <lb/>
that the prisoner had been rightly <lb/>
said he, was I <lb/>
Myself who killed the <lb/>
It had been no murder, for the <lb/>
ether had attacked him with the <lb/>
he <lb/>
injured him, but in the <lb/>
to get possession of the weapon <lb/>
had the misfortune to give the <lb/>
man a fatal wound. He had no <lb/>
fears as to his being found guilty <lb/>
of murder; but, the assizes being <lb/>
ever, his farm and affairs would <lb/>
ave been rained by a confession, <lb/>
through lying in jail so long, so <lb/>
he suffered matters to take their <lb/>
course. lie horrified to <lb/>
one of his own servants accused of <lb/>
the murder. He supported his wife <lb/>
and children while In jail, managed <lb/>
to be placed on the jury and elected <lb/>
foreman, lie added if he had <lb/>
failed in this lie would certainly <lb/>
have confessed to his own share in <lb/>
the business, and the judge believed <lb/>
him. <lb/>
Every year for fifteen years the <lb/>
judge made inquiries as fore- <lb/>
man's existence, and at last, hap- <lb/>
to survive him. he consider- <lb/>
ed himself free to tell the story. <lb/>
London News. <lb/>
She Treasured His Scalp Lock. <lb/>
remarked the man <lb/>
who prides himself on his winning <lb/>
ways with the other sex, in <lb/>
the pretty locket you are wearing <lb/>
there is some token <lb/>
of a past love <lb/>
did you guess asked <lb/>
the dazzling creature beside him. <lb/>
there's a <lb/>
lock of my husband's hair <lb/>
The man of fascinating manner <lb/>
looked surprised. said lie, <lb/>
I had no idea that you were a <lb/>
They told me, if mistake not., <lb/>
that your husband was <lb/>
so he responded the <lb/>
woman, his hair is<lb/>
Stopping the Rush. <lb/>
A clergyman once preached a long <lb/>
from the text are <lb/>
Weighed in the balance found <lb/>
After the congregation <lb/>
had listened about an hour some <lb/>
began to get weary and went out. <lb/>
Others soon followed, greatly to the <lb/>
annoyance of the minister. <lb/>
person started, whereupon the <lb/>
parson stopped his sermon and <lb/>
is right, gentlemen. As fast <lb/>
as you are weighed pass lie <lb/>
continued his sermon at some length <lb/>
after that, but no one disturbed him <lb/>
by C. <lb/>
A Study of Wild Flowers. <lb/>
A public museum at Brighton, <lb/>
England, has a custom which should <lb/>
he followed elsewhere. Persons are <lb/>
encouraged to bring in fresh bunch- <lb/>
es of local wild flowers culled during <lb/>
their walks to one of the officials, <lb/>
Who arranges the specimens each <lb/>
morning in glass vases containing <lb/>
water and affixes both the botanical <lb/>
and name. Thus visitors <lb/>
are made acquainted, <lb/>
era which, they seen <lb/>
Wild, but regarding which they have <lb/>
no information. <lb/>
e. t.<lb/>
WATCH THIS S <lb/>
241-243 <lb/>
W. Main St <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019389_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
a said the visitor. <lb/>
Thomas v. us u <lb/>
j-v v- a said the visitor. a now- v.-i-u <lb/>
f ., I long ctn a man go without of the gold of silence and would <lb/>
Dad I for hours, away at 1.- <lb/>
J fl -Ask the man said the pipe, without uttering than r <lb/>
, , or n <lb/>
I had a bad cough for sir <lb/>
weeks and find no relief <lb/>
until i tried <lb/>
Only of the <lb/>
L. Ont. <lb/>
Neglected col is always <lb/>
lend to something serious. <lb/>
they run into chronic <lb/>
bronchitis, pneumonia, <lb/>
I asthma, or <lb/>
but <lb/>
Cherry <lb/>
ML <lb/>
MUG <lb/>
man <lb/>
make ed grunt or a gruff <lb/>
i , tin edit who j;,.;, neighbor and i I A <lb/>
once wrote to . t V C <lb/>
went in he I L f f <lb/>
mm -f u. j Here and at par ; <lb/>
Mrs. That picture one of i he snapped day t <lb/>
j; the sum of the conversation . <lb/>
new n. it can't I honored me with. But hex <lb/>
his silence is I just sat and looked <lb/>
i at him came away strength i <lb/>
sine. . . . .- . ,. .<lb/>
a fresh <lb/>
V.-T r are shout<lb/>
I as soon as your cough Mn, , . . . u t,,. mar- sir- on <lb/>
begins A Will . Chicago Tribune. . <lb/>
. r-i H are speaking the truth, <lb/>
S cure you ill en. <lb/>
i, All <lb/>
i . doctor, it take it. <lb/>
t . if i lens not <lb/>
Her Little Nose. <lb/>
Little i not. <lb/>
four, who the kindergarten n <lb/>
tor, but I can tell without your i <lb/>
whether I getting better or <lb/>
the behavior of my <lb/>
, i o . you not .- ,. t, <lb/>
a ,.; ; ,; and calls it the <lb/>
Lowell, Mm, S .,. l, .;.,,, . .,.,,. ;,,;.,. ,. , . iris <lb/>
AND SOCIAL <lb/>
Fin. <lb/>
D. C. to <lb/>
day. <lb/>
hat are your ears for. <lb/>
hear -as the answer. <lb/>
are our eyes <lb/>
Tn <lb/>
what is your nose <lb/>
the innocent an- <lb/>
Magazine. <lb/>
of It. <lb/>
or we'll n s <lb/>
can't find my diamonds or <lb/>
purse. <lb/>
well, never <lb/>
but the purse had in <lb/>
New York Weekly. <lb/>
SALE Oh SILK AND <lb/>
C. Corsets, <lb/>
to close them out no <lb/>
All Silks reduced <lb/>
regular price <lb/>
waist patterns at <lb/>
One more of odd <lb/>
in Laces and <lb/>
went to <lb/>
today. <lb/>
. O. O. of is in <lb/>
I own. <lb/>
T. A. went to Scotland <lb/>
Nick today.<lb/>
Q i <lb/>
r.,. <lb/>
has , <lb/>
the past few days. <lb/>
F OR--<lb/>
. <lb/>
ma <lb/>
mp <lb/>
Kin- , T g <lb/>
evening. ,; O -1 B <lb/>
Brownie, little son O. <lb/>
Brown i quite <lb/>
Mrs. D. Harrington left this <lb/>
i tor Wake Forest. <lb/>
is in tog <lb/>
i . . his candy here. I k <lb/>
i I <lb/>
If there is of men that this store hard <lb/>
to please with good dependable Clothing, its the median- <lb/>
We have made especially for <lb/>
Whedbee, of Hertford, I made from stout, serviceable mixtures that will not soil <lb/>
been relatives , ;. <lb/>
are, left this morning, . . f, <lb/>
or Rocky Mount, Put Together to Stay. <lb/>
; Seams sewed with the best of silk and put on with , the <lb/>
I strongest linen thread. <lb/>
Our snits cut to be roomy r. . <lb/>
J. left <lb/>
in for Baltimore. <lb/>
om , Moderate <lb/>
el Thursday evening. <lb/>
D. returned J PH t <lb/>
Friday, Feb. <lb/>
easy and still retain an appearance of sty and gentility <lb/>
who have given these suits one trial, <lb/>
Postponed , Seven <lb/>
Owing lo the inclemency of the <lb/>
. , chines on <lb/>
to other pedal ,, <lb/>
in the unveiling Whole fan <lb/>
memorial window Ai <lb/>
i i-r church will ho <lb/>
, . . at N <lb/>
. i- <lb/>
A. T. King, Pastor, j <lb/>
Stray tali <lb/>
Tuesday Night. m <lb/>
I black <lb/>
Mr. J. w. Bailey, of Raleigh, <lb/>
v . . . in the opera house, <lb/>
an the subject temperance and paying nil <lb/>
dispensary, n Tuesday night, AUDI <lb/>
B mom the time and be <lb/>
i If yon <lb/>
warships make a good can in help <lb/>
I i at <lb/>
II f <lb/>
. k <lb/>
; i <lb/>
i t <lb/>
Hi-- <lb/>
T. A. Duke returned y ; f f 1.-f <lb/>
Neck. <lb/>
; in child e i <lb/>
from j <lb/>
THE CLOTHIER. <lb/>
Rev. A. . King return ;. <lb/>
i ; from . s . -v . I . s<lb/>
. . ; <lb/>
. to i <lb/>
. White. <lb/>
and i <lb/>
. . of i, who were <lb/>
, Vi . <lb/>
R,. J. <lb/>
C. V. <lb/>
b. <lb/>
Dr. L. Skinner, of A, n <lb/>
Friday <lb/>
W. B. of <lb/>
Friday here. <lb/>
J. B. -if came in <lb/>
Friday evening. <lb/>
Mies Annie of Hill, is . <lb/>
visiting Fannie Jenkins, <lb/>
Fri <lb/>
day evening from a trip up the <lb/>
rand. <lb/>
Mis. R. J. Cobb returned <lb/>
day evening from Norfolk, where <lb/>
she had been visiting relatives. <lb/>
Mrs. II. and little <lb/>
daughter, Mildred, returned <lb/>
Friday evening from a visit to <lb/>
Wilson. <lb/>
and <lb/>
Lt <lb/>
Contractors, Constructors and <lb/>
MANUFACTURERS <lb/>
Miss TiDy Tyson arrived Friday <lb/>
evening to visit Miss Pennie <lb/>
Moore, on corner of Third and <lb/>
Greene street. <lb/>
Factory by the railroad just North of the <lb/>
Imperial Tobacco Factory . <lb/>
All kinds of dressed lumber, turned and <lb/>
i scroll work. <lb/>
I All machinery new and up-to-date and of the best <lb/>
i make. <lb/>
Plans furnished and contracts taken for erection of <lb/>
I building. <lb/>
Tinning, Slating, Guttering and all kinds of sheet <lb/>
I metal work. Our in shop is on fourth street, opposite <lb/>
I marble yard. Mr. R. L. Wyatt has charge of <lb/>
our tinning and slating department. You will find him <lb/>
a master of his trade. <lb/>
We ask for our share of the public and <lb/>
will do best to give satisfaction. <lb/>
POOR PRINT <lb/>
. , <lb/>
THE <lb/>
D. J. Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday.<lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR IN ADVANCE <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY <lb/>
WAR AND OTHER TELEGRAPH MEWS <lb/>
SENATOR HANNA DEAD-TURKEY AND BULGARIA <lb/>
GETTING HOSTILE-SUFFERING FROM COLD <lb/>
AMONG RUSSIAN TROOPS. <lb/>
Japanese Landing Party Repulsed. <lb/>
Europeans in China Uneasy. Senator Manna Dead. <lb/>
Feb. effect f Washington. Feb. <lb/>
tho Japanese victories is now The Arlington hotel this morning <lb/>
plainly seen in all treaty points in <lb/>
the increased Insolence of Japanese <lb/>
and coolies and Orientals <lb/>
generally. Throughout the whole <lb/>
of China t e foreign move <lb/>
No. <lb/>
London, Feb. re- <lb/>
ports from Port Arthur say <lb/>
Japanese landed six <lb/>
troops at Wane, four <lb/>
of whom were cut down by <lb/>
the The Japanese <lb/>
landing party at Dove Hay was <lb/>
also with heavy loss. <lb/>
Another Cruiser Blown Up. <lb/>
London, Feb. dispatch <lb/>
from St. Petersburg this <lb/>
states that it has been officially <lb/>
announced there the Russian <lb/>
cruiser . h <lb/>
the <lb/>
has been u by a <lb/>
mine in of <lb/>
Port Arthur. The is said <lb/>
to have completely destroyed j <lb/>
and officers mid men killed. <lb/>
Battle Among Land Forces <lb/>
London, Feb. The Paris <lb/>
correspondent of the Central Sews <lb/>
wires that news from Russian China Cannot Remain Neutral, <lb/>
source stales a battle is <lb/>
meat is growing an alarming <lb/>
rate. residents <lb/>
renewal of the movement. <lb/>
It is freely predicted that events <lb/>
In China the next three mouths <lb/>
was a scene of quiet in comparison <lb/>
with the of e it <lb/>
had been. Throngs of <lb/>
visited the suite, but there <lb/>
were do rushing messenger boys, <lb/>
do excited newspaper <lb/>
dents running down stairs and <lb/>
through corridors, no shrill <lb/>
hells. <lb/>
Members family <lb/>
fought on northern bank of <lb/>
river where the Russian land <lb/>
forces are <lb/>
News learns from <lb/>
a officials another <lb/>
at <lb/>
has been bud <lb/>
Arthur. <lb/>
Th j Czar Prostrated, <lb/>
Berlin, Feb. Report from <lb/>
St. that the war <lb/>
disasters in the have pros- <lb/>
the Czar. He sat tor hours I <lb/>
gazing spans and <lb/>
., iv-;. Conversing <lb/>
with relatives he eon <lb/>
the evil which <lb/>
his advise In <lb/>
th. war. Bis majesty is , <lb/>
be ; <lb/>
broke d <lb/>
Feb. appears t- <lb/>
more certain that absolute <lb/>
o-i part of China t.- <lb/>
wards K war <lb/>
be Che Dow. <lb/>
ager Prince <lb/>
.-., rise <lb/>
Chinese neutrality in the <lb/>
corps of advisers The Empress <lb/>
is said to Ira in some what of a <lb/>
The conviction <lb/>
is to the midst of a <lb/>
I real state of war, it la <lb/>
prepare to resist ab- <lb/>
by ever <lb/>
proves victorious. <lb/>
The result may be that China, <lb/>
and <lb/>
three <lb/>
Russia Three More Ships. <lb/>
15.-It-is officially <lb/>
ed Unit three the four <lb/>
from <lb/>
were h n b . r <lb/>
milieu ., v. <lb/>
i . ii i;, <lb/>
i, . . <lb/>
Dr at i.; . j Victory. <lb/>
I. a, I . ;. . <lb/>
r . -i <lb/>
i. i . hut <lb/>
I . I <lb/>
I a Ml i ; <lb/>
Opinions on the Hay Mote, <lb/>
St. Petersburg, Feb. <lb/>
here regard <lb/>
relative to <lb/>
will transfer the sympathy of the bearing up under the bereave- <lb/>
world to the side well. In spite <lb/>
Russia. of the blow which has fallen, it <lb/>
I was a relief for them lo know the <lb/>
Russian Troops Suffering. <lb/>
St, Petersburg, Feb 17.-P. <lb/>
m to and Mrs. Co.- <lb/>
recalled invitations <lb/>
far East ordinary ears, <lb/>
in each car. Great delays <lb/>
being experienced is <lb/>
scarce. Many the soldiers <lb/>
been frost <lb/>
War officials declare that any <lb/>
serious block to the line from <lb/>
to Manchuria is liable to sub- <lb/>
t the <lb/>
temperature is from to j <lb/>
degrees below zero. <lb/>
Wreck on <lb/>
Md., . <lb/>
STews reached a big <lb/>
wreck on the Ohio <lb/>
railroad, near Va. is <lb/>
reported that many people are in- <lb/>
The ire down and <lb/>
officials of the any have been; <lb/>
of .- <lb/>
for j cabinet dinner which was to <lb/>
have given at th home <lb/>
th is <lb/>
rite senator's remains will In- <lb/>
taken to the capitol <lb/>
aid will in state the <lb/>
j of tie senate until noon, <lb/>
hen official services will <lb/>
be held the <lb/>
Dr Everett <lb/>
senate, will conduct <lb/>
services. and <lb/>
tiers of the diplomatic corps. <lb/>
as veil as all <lb/>
and people <lb/>
be present. <lb/>
The president possibly <lb/>
company the body to Cleveland. <lb/>
To The White Teacher of Pitt County. <lb/>
You will see from a notice in <lb/>
papers that the president of <lb/>
the Association has <lb/>
called a meeting of the Association <lb/>
for next Saturday, February 20th. <lb/>
Ye are not complaining that <lb/>
yon not present <lb/>
day. The either w is not such <lb/>
you ovoid come. Ii is a <lb/>
known by those <lb/>
who do attend that a number of <lb/>
teachers are not taking the <lb/>
interest they should in these meet- <lb/>
I desire to be frank m th <lb/>
and to be so f must say to that <lb/>
your real interest in the work in <lb/>
you an engaged i lamely <lb/>
judged by those charge of the <lb/>
-ii work by the at you <lb/>
show in these meetings. Tune <lb/>
again we lave inserted notices <lb/>
asking to these meet- <lb/>
an I yet some of you <lb/>
pay no to <lb/>
Again I ask yon ti <lb/>
Will <lb/>
Tribute to Senator Hanna. <lb/>
it r <lb/>
it of Japan <lb/>
; Kit v. ii a <lb/>
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a. f the of <lb/>
f the war area of <lb/>
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Inn . They believe <lb/>
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. powers are likely <lb/>
a arr. . t me it <lb/>
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Senator Hanna Given State Fun- <lb/>
Washington, D. C, 17.-- <lb/>
g-e-. say <lb/>
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. Cleve I, Ohio, <lb/>
Pi. D r this <lb/>
. he life <lb/>
. . n . . a la i i; ill Miami <lb/>
s ;. example ten <lb/>
huh <lb/>
de e . <lb/>
live in a of <lb/>
political life <lb/>
you do sit Your to yourself <lb/>
and school work demands that <lb/>
you avail yourself <lb/>
for m m which <lb/>
association are <lb/>
invited, and to <lb/>
be tho me i n <lb/>
and all succeeding .-lings. <lb/>
What will you do We <lb/>
wait to see. W. H <lb/>
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fin ships.<lb/>
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Cheers His Army.<lb/>
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German Cruiser Fired On. <lb/>
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. ml -t have he <lb/>
listed u mi-by I In <lb/>
Petersburg, duty to protect ten and tin <lb/>
official Fatherland, and <lb/>
at Port powerful, and if out strong <lb/>
stains the cruiser give u- <lb/>
Hausa, which had Port strength power lo him. <lb/>
Arthur to take away German sub- Let for <lb/>
was by Let man perform <lb/>
The Hausa some task that prayer <lb/>
women children board, vie the <lb/>
are never wasted, Lome live <lb/>
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and m the lieu Be. <lb/>
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Married. <lb/>
Sunday evening, <lb/>
o'clock, iii the <lb/>
Mr. ii. . <lb/>
ks e m In v <lb/>
alien <lb/>
Willie Elks ii i . <lb/>
let. ii E <lb/>
Burlie <lb/>
License. <lb/>
Last . . <lb/>
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Ha-,, <lb/>
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ii V <lb/>
Cutting Railroad. <lb/>
London. Feb. <lb/>
company T <lb/>
the God be with <lb/>
and Bulgaria Hostile. <lb/>
Mr. Speech. <lb/>
. J. W Bade , of <lb/>
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d- ,. <lb/>
go me was . d <lb/>
spite the desperate cold ,,., . <lb/>
capital said. R <lb/>
lie. the ,. <lb/>
r crowded <lb/>
casket into senate ., . ,. <lb/>
we wan n to give a <lb/>
it was reverently pi on <lb/>
ITEM <lb/>
change <lb/>
publishes a <lb/>
wind has Paris, Feb. <lb/>
Parts a large Japanese diplomatic age it. tells inter- <lb/>
fleet has been sighted in gulf view that an of <lb/>
of Tung at d are en- between Turkey and <lb/>
to Is Bulgaria, he <lb/>
purpose of says, i seeking to to , ,, r , , <lb/>
Up leading the order of , t <lb/>
outside services <lb/>
of the speech, as b <lb/>
Urn ,,.,,,,. M <lb/>
th the short Thai <lb/>
he made to it today. <lb/>
A wonderful profusion of floral I <lb/>
tiff-rings were heaped on me bier in the Open Hows. <lb/>
j a few minutes before Hon, W. of morning and spent the <lb/>
noon hour distinguished person Neck, mill address f i with hi mother, Mrs. M, A. <lb/>
ages came to in the Greenville the opera house next j returned yesterday <lb/>
were seated in their appointed j Friday night at o'clock upon W. B. went to Nor- <lb/>
subject of the establishment of a i folk last Friday and return <lb/>
X. . i. <lb/>
Ma is increasing as <lb/>
snow j decreasing, <lb/>
Owing to the bad i <lb/>
was ., small crowd <lb/>
Sunday, but <lb/>
there enjoyed good and , <lb/>
iv sermon by Rev. <lb/>
of Hamilton. <lb/>
C. L. of No <lb/>
who at. Washington a few <lb/>
week on business, e <lb/>
us <lb/>
re <lb/>
pry <lb/>
1- <lb/>
. <lb/>
Throughout the ceremony Mrs. <lb/>
was brave. <lb/>
Rev. Edward Everett Hale, <lb/>
in the town. Mr. <lb/>
Dunn is an earnest, vigorous <lb/>
speaker and our people may ex- <lb/>
to hear something good. <lb/>
Everybody should hear <lb/>
day. <lb/>
S. M. Jones, from near Bethel, <lb/>
and his daughter, Miss Bet tie,, <lb/>
came down Sunday. <lb/>
Mrs. G. M. Mooring is<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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