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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
I ll I <lb/>
C. FLANAGAN, <lb/>
Attorney at Law, <lb/>
Greenville. N. U <lb/>
AT ST. LOUIS, <lb/>
CRANK H. WOOTEN, <lb/>
MO- , <lb/>
within easy reach <lb/>
and other <lb/>
one post office, or . on any Agent or <lb/>
T H y <lb/>
Dentist. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
Dental <lb/>
. Dental i <lb/>
i Bagging, Ties at <lb/>
Greenville, i <lb/>
. solicited<lb/>
BLUSHED -N <lb/>
PERRY CB. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton and handlers of<lb/>
and shipments <lb/>
THERE ARE VERY FEW WOMEN WHO NOT KNOW SOME- <lb/>
THING POPULARITY OF <lb/>
The price is not the only thing that bar. mads <lb/>
One shoes famous. There other shoes at <lb/>
, the same price. The is in the <lb/>
THE ARK SOLD DEbS <lb/>
the boot,, as here is less material and <lb/>
less labor required to make <lb/>
THE SPRING STYLES <lb/>
have created more shoe Talk <lb/>
among the than <lb/>
ever shown <lb/>
Greenville. , <lb/>
Any Last or or <lb/>
or Leather, we have it. <lb/>
Pa yon will the <lb/>
ti a of knowing <lb/>
best shoe in America for <lb/>
., o fit where others <lb/>
Sold by <lb/>
C. S. FORBES, <lb/>
The Man's Outfitter. <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
C, June 1904. <lb/>
Job Moore opened the campaign <lb/>
of 1904 in Swift Creek township <lb/>
i Saturday afternoon, by calling to <lb/>
order the democratic primary at <lb/>
The statesmen who will visit <lb/>
this fall to tell the people <lb/>
which way to vote will miss the <lb/>
friendly shade of the pine trees <lb/>
which used to stand on the his- <lb/>
triangle on which the Mason <lb/>
lodge stands. The Ayden <lb/>
Co. has cut them all down and <lb/>
I carried them away. <lb/>
i Misses Julia Burney, Lizzie <lb/>
Burney and Fannie Roach are go- <lb/>
to Morehead City this evening <lb/>
to attend the Assembly. <lb/>
L. B. will list taxes at <lb/>
i June <lb/>
A. B. Davenport was at Cox- <lb/>
this is <lb/>
But the oil man says she <lb/>
I mint not be of the type. <lb/>
She must be just sweet Thirty <lb/>
years ago his ratio t one was <lb/>
it is today. He ought to sub- <lb/>
scribe for the Commoner. <lb/>
I will pay you for your <lb/>
Beeswax. B. M. Schultz. <lb/>
We have one Brie City Engine <lb/>
and Boiler, about SB horse power, <lb/>
I been in use about months. <lb/>
i-Practically good MS new. Will <lb/>
sell BLOCK <lb/>
R-26 d Bethel, N. C. <lb/>
Report of the condition of <lb/>
The Bank of Greenville <lb/>
Greenville, C- <lb/>
At the close of business <lb/>
Loans and Discount <lb/>
Overdrafts Sb <lb/>
Furniture Fixtures <lb/>
Due from Banks <lb/>
Checks cash Hems <lb/>
Coin <lb/>
27,871.00, <lb/>
GREAT SALE OF <lb/>
WHITE GOODS <lb/>
WE WILL PUT ON SALE <lb/>
THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 9TH, <lb/>
Several thousand yards of White Goods that have <lb/>
been recently secured from the H. B. <lb/>
Go-, of N. Y. Sale will last as long as the goods <lb/>
last. The goods are all nice patterns in plain, <lb/>
small dots and stripes. We give a few prices, <lb/>
but to know the real quality and value you <lb/>
should see them. <lb/>
Striped White <lb/>
Pique <lb/>
Regular price and <lb/>
per yard, <lb/>
Sale <lb/>
All Styles in Pique <lb/>
Shat sell regular price for <lb/>
to per yard, <lb/>
Stock paid <lb/>
I Surplus, <lb/>
I Undivided Profits less <lb/>
Expenses Paid <lb/>
Deposits <lb/>
cheek- out <lb/>
8,875.03 <lb/>
827,766.16 <lb/>
1,824.9<lb/>
m l HI. <lb/>
I L H. Pender. <lb/>
The <lb/>
8888,466.12 <lb/>
North <lb/>
County of Pitt. J <lb/>
James L. Cashier of the <lb/>
above-named bank, do. solemnly <lb/>
that the above statement is <lb/>
true to the bed <lb/>
belief JAMES L. LITTLE. <lb/>
Subscribed and to<lb/>
I Putin <lb/>
; Correct- <lb/>
Q. <lb/>
A. TYSON, <lb/>
A ANDREWS, <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
, . L<lb/>
L. Little. <lb/>
White Organdy <lb/>
price yard <lb/>
White French Organdy. <lb/>
inches wide, regular <lb/>
price per yard <lb/>
3-4 <lb/>
French Organdy. <lb/>
inches wide, regular <lb/>
pi ice per yd <lb/>
Sale <lb/>
Pink, Blue. Red. Green <lb/>
and in <lb/>
Organdy. <lb/>
Regular price per yard <lb/>
Bale <lb/>
Several Hundred Yards <lb/>
of Long Cloth. <lb/>
Regular price per yard <lb/>
Sale <lb/>
the Best <lb/>
Bleaching. <lb/>
Regular price per yard <lb/>
Sale <lb/>
in Dots <lb/>
Rose buds. <lb/>
Regular price So per yard <lb/>
Bale <lb/>
Plain White India Linen. <lb/>
Regular price per yard, <lb/>
Sale price. <lb/>
Plain White India Linen. <lb/>
in wide, regular price <lb/>
Lie per yard, <lb/>
Plain White Linen. <lb/>
in regular price <lb/>
and cents per yard, <lb/>
Sale price 3-4 <lb/>
White Persian Lawn. <lb/>
in wide, regular price <lb/>
per yard, <lb/>
Sale <lb/>
Black French Lawn. <lb/>
In wide, regular price <lb/>
per <lb/>
Sale <lb/>
Black Pique. in wide. <lb/>
Regular price per yard <lb/>
Bale <lb/>
Black in wide <lb/>
Regular per yard <lb/>
price . -----9 M <lb/>
striped Waist Goods <lb/>
It, price per <lb/>
Bite <lb/>
White striped Waist Goods <lb/>
price per yard <lb/>
Sale <lb/>
All Fancy <lb/>
That sell <lb/>
per yard, <lb/>
nm <lb/>
Lumber Co., <lb/>
Constructors and <lb/>
MANUFACTURERS <lb/>
, a railroad last North of the <lb/>
f by toe j <lb/>
turned and <lb/>
machinery new and up and of the best <lb/>
furnished and contracts taken for erection of <lb/>
buildings. and all kinds of sheet <lb/>
Tinning, to <lb/>
metal Our Wyatt has charge o <lb/>
m tinning and slating department. You will find <lb/>
do our bast to give satisfaction. <lb/>
M. SCHULTZ <lb/>
Wholesale and retail Grocer <lb/>
i furniture Dealer. Oaf for <lb/>
Fur. Cotton Head, Oil Bar- <lb/>
Turkeys, Egg, <lb/>
Oak Ba <lb/>
,, Carriages, <lb/>
Tables, <lb/>
i, and Gail ft <lb/>
High Key West pile. <lb/>
roots, Henry George n <lb/>
Led Cherries, Peaches, A up tea. <lb/>
I Plus Syrup, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Sugar, <lb/>
Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Seed Meal and Hulls Oar, <lb/>
On Seeds, Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Dried <lb/>
Prunes, Currents, Ula <lb/>
and China Ware. Tin and <lb/>
Ware. Cakes and Crackers, <lb/>
Cheese, Best Butter New <lb/>
Royal Machines, and nu- <lb/>
other goods. <lb/>
Cheap for cash. <lb/>
Bee me. <lb/>
S. M. Schultz <lb/>
lion <lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
a room in advance you <lb/>
and Tinware, South New I on , <lb/>
your inspection of our sample office was <lb/>
THOMAS BROS <lb/>
BALTIMORE, HP. <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR IN ADVANCE <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. Pin COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, JUNE <lb/>
No. <lb/>
PERSONALS m SOCIAL. <lb/>
FRIDAY, JUNE <lb/>
Miss is sick. <lb/>
Miss Maud left this <lb/>
morning for Raleigh. <lb/>
Miss Smith has been <lb/>
sick the last few <lb/>
Mrs. J. W. Higgs and children <lb/>
left today for <lb/>
T. J. Moore has return- <lb/>
ed Morehead <lb/>
Miss Laura went to <lb/>
Washington Wednesday. <lb/>
Miss Nell Skinner returned Wed- <lb/>
evening from Wilson. <lb/>
ft Mrs. W. H. White left <lb/>
day evening for Seven <lb/>
Dr. J. W. Bryan returned Wed- <lb/>
evening from Plymouth. <lb/>
W. O, returned from <lb/>
a t. up the road Wednesday. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. C. T. <lb/>
left this morning for Richmond. <lb/>
Mrs. A. H. Taft children <lb/>
left morning for Henderson. <lb/>
Miss Maude Lee left <lb/>
day evening for a visit to Ayden. <lb/>
Mrs. Bailey and children <lb/>
left Wednesday evening for Seven <lb/>
Springs. <lb/>
M. A. Allen and daughter, Mite <lb/>
went to Seven Spring Wed- <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
and Mm. J. R. Move and <lb/>
e returned today from <lb/>
Springs. <lb/>
Williams mid Mr. <lb/>
J. M. Tolar, who have been <lb/>
visiting Mrs. J. A. Brady, left <lb/>
this morning for Wilmington, <lb/>
Mrs. J. Tyson returned <lb/>
Wednesday from it visit <lb/>
to Bethel. Her Miss Ferrell <lb/>
Peel, accompanied her home for a <lb/>
visit. <lb/>
FRIDAY, JUNE W. <lb/>
went to Ayden <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
Cannon returned to Ayden <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
J. P. left this <lb/>
for Neck. <lb/>
J. W. rat a rued <lb/>
W returned <lb/>
evening <lb/>
Anderson returned to <lb/>
Ayden <lb/>
Edward <lb/>
evening from Washington. <lb/>
A. T. King returned <lb/>
from Elizabeth City. <lb/>
J. W. <lb/>
day evening from Rocky <lb/>
Mr-, F. G. of <lb/>
, U visiting Jones. <lb/>
Annie While returned <lb/>
Thursday evening from Plymouth. <lb/>
Lee, of Dunn, came <lb/>
up from Ayden to visit Mrs. L. <lb/>
H. Lee. <lb/>
Mrs. H. W. and little <lb/>
son, James Henry returned from <lb/>
today. <lb/>
Mr. and Mis. J. Bryan Grimes, <lb/>
of Raleigh, arrived Thursday <lb/>
evening to visit relatives. <lb/>
Mrs. T. R. Lee, of and <lb/>
Miss Lillian Bland, of Ayden, are <lb/>
visiting Mrs. T. L. Bland. <lb/>
Mrs. Sarah M. of <lb/>
Fremont, arrived Thursday even- <lb/>
to visit Mrs. W. R. Moore. <lb/>
Mrs. Annie Hardy, who has <lb/>
been visiting her daughter, Mrs. <lb/>
L. T. Small wood, left this morning <lb/>
Mrs. J. S. Tunstall and <lb/>
Misses Katie and Mamie <lb/>
Ruth, today from a visit <lb/>
to Greene <lb/>
Mrs. B. H. Hen me and Miss <lb/>
Lela Cherry went to Kinston <lb/>
Thursday evening to a <lb/>
Christian Science lecture. <lb/>
Four Days of Battle. <lb/>
June Chinese, <lb/>
both merchants and are <lb/>
Arthur with the <lb/>
permission of the Russian author- <lb/>
Fifty junks which left Port <lb/>
Arthur yesterday with Chinese <lb/>
are now arriving here <lb/>
The reports of the latest arrivals <lb/>
vary in minor details, but agree <lb/>
in a general statement that a bat- <lb/>
has been raging for four days <lb/>
within ten miles of Port Arthur. <lb/>
All the Russian soldiers have, it <lb/>
is said, left Port for the <lb/>
front and only large ships <lb/>
and a number of small ones re- <lb/>
main in the harbor. The Chinese <lb/>
are unable to explain what has <lb/>
become of the other large ships. <lb/>
It is further tut all <lb/>
the forts at Port have <lb/>
been more or lees damaged by re- <lb/>
cent bombardments, and that a <lb/>
number of mines recently laid in <lb/>
the to the harbor were <lb/>
exploded during a <lb/>
Celebrate Jane 14th at flag Day. <lb/>
June 14th known as Flag Day <lb/>
the United States and <lb/>
Flag Association is <lb/>
ting every way possible to have <lb/>
the day each year fittingly observed <lb/>
The 14th will be the <lb/>
anniversary of the adoption of the <lb/>
stars and stripes i lie got the <lb/>
United Stales. <lb/>
The a-ks <lb/>
of all A met citizens in <lb/>
celebrating the day. Mayors an <lb/>
requested to order to be dis- <lb/>
played upon <lb/>
of their respective by <lb/>
fa proclamation of <lb/>
to invite their fellow citizens t. <lb/>
do tho heir <lb/>
buildings. are <lb/>
red to decorate Mich stores with <lb/>
Old <lb/>
Woman to be Hanged. <lb/>
Trenton, N. J. <lb/>
one dissenting of <lb/>
pa don,, after of <lb/>
today to <lb/>
lite <lb/>
sentence of Anna Valentine, the <lb/>
Bergen woman, convicted <lb/>
of the of She <lb/>
will be banged June unless the <lb/>
ewe is carried to the court of <lb/>
errors appeals. It is said to <lb/>
lie mere twenty-live years <lb/>
tic-1 a woman has hanged <lb/>
in New Jersey, <lb/>
COUNTY CONVENTION. <lb/>
Delegate Selected to State and Con- <lb/>
Conventions. <lb/>
The democratic county <lb/>
for the purpose of selecting <lb/>
d legate to the state and <lb/>
conventions, was called to <lb/>
order a noon <lb/>
A. L. Blow, of the <lb/>
executive committee. H <lb/>
Slated that it had been a pleasure <lb/>
and an honor to him to call the <lb/>
democratic conventions of Pitt <lb/>
to order for years. <lb/>
The roll of delegates was called. <lb/>
On motion of W. R. Williams, <lb/>
A. L. Blow was made <lb/>
chairman of the convention. <lb/>
D. J. Whichard and H. T. King tonal convention will be printed <lb/>
were elected secretaries. later. <lb/>
O. L. Joyner offered the follow- At close of the convention <lb/>
which was Secretary of Stale J. Bryan <lb/>
O. W. Harrington, E. B. <lb/>
L. C. Arthur, D. C. Moore, T. R. <lb/>
Moore. <lb/>
Glenn 89-122, Davidson 14-122, <lb/>
Turner Stead man 9-122. <lb/>
Winston Morton 8-101. <lb/>
E. Clark. Alter- <lb/>
W. L. Nobles. <lb/>
Half for Glenn, half for Std- <lb/>
unanimous for Winston. <lb/>
SWIFT <lb/>
J. L. H. <lb/>
Cox. G. James, <lb/>
A. L. Blow. <lb/>
for Glenn and Win- <lb/>
The list of delegates to <lb/>
in a brief speech heartily thanked <lb/>
the convention for the endorse- <lb/>
given him. <lb/>
The democracy of Pitt <lb/>
in convention assembled takes <lb/>
great pleasure in endorsing the <lb/>
course and conduct of their <lb/>
man, the Boo, J, Bryan Grimes, <lb/>
secretary of state, and do hereby <lb/>
then dell gates in <lb/>
state convention to cast the vote <lb/>
of Pitt for him for <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
LOOK AT COWARD<lb/>
There seems to be much differ- <lb/>
to the same high office of to who <lb/>
the nominee for sheriff this year. <lb/>
he so honorably and faith- <lb/>
fully tills. <lb/>
I think it will be easy to settle <lb/>
The delegates of the several l <lb/>
townships then selected that H. L. Coward, one of our <lb/>
township's number of delegates to retired will serve <lb/>
the state <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Edward <lb/>
of Greenville, North Caro- <lb/>
announce the engagement of <lb/>
their sister, Mrs. Willie <lb/>
Mr. Williamson <lb/>
to take <lb/>
at Buckingham in July. <lb/>
, Held Too Long. <lb/>
Some people are now wishing <lb/>
they had Mild their cotton when <lb/>
it was so high a few months ago. <lb/>
It is hard to tell just what is best <lb/>
to do at the right time. <lb/>
twins. <lb/>
The following delegates were <lb/>
appointed to the. convention <lb/>
KAY <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
Unanimous for and Win- <lb/>
A. Sugg. Alter <lb/>
L. Fountain. <lb/>
Unanimous tor an <lb/>
Winston. <lb/>
BETH Kl, <lb/>
Brown. <lb/>
Unanimous and <lb/>
u. irons, W, <lb/>
G, Stokes. <lb/>
A fraction over for <lb/>
tin US <lb/>
A. Stocks, Al too <lb/>
W. B. Proctor. <lb/>
II. Mill,, M, W. <lb/>
E. Tucker <lb/>
for one- <lb/>
third for <lb/>
E. T. <lb/>
A. G. H. A. Blow- <lb/>
B. J. D. <lb/>
Cox, Dr. A. Jesse Can- <lb/>
non. <lb/>
Unanimous for Glenn and Win- <lb/>
FALKLAND <lb/>
R. Gotten. Al- <lb/>
-W. R. Williams. , <lb/>
for Stedman and <lb/>
Winston. <lb/>
R. Home. Al- <lb/>
L. Barrett. <lb/>
for <lb/>
L. Fleming F. G. <lb/>
if he is nominated. All whose <lb/>
good fortune it has been to meet <lb/>
him know that he is blessed with <lb/>
a good nature, is rather <lb/>
looking, will a capital <lb/>
good officer. lie can make a <lb/>
good canvas bus lots of time. <lb/>
Ho gentlemen, you come <lb/>
down to the. convention, if you <lb/>
don't know the man look up <lb/>
and look at Mm, and I am sure <lb/>
yon will him. <lb/>
F. <lb/>
June, 1904. <lb/>
C. H. Langston and Tom <lb/>
spent Sunday near <lb/>
Miss Minnie Jones, after spend- <lb/>
with friends and <lb/>
relatives here, returned home <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Miss Annie spent <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday friends <lb/>
near Grifton. <lb/>
Patrick and R E. Hardy <lb/>
spent Munday in <lb/>
Many of our friends attended <lb/>
the commencement at <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
J. A. of Farmville, was <lb/>
here awhile Sunday. <lb/>
Arnold an aged man, <lb/>
lied Friday, He leaves a number <lb/>
of friends relatives to mourn <lb/>
his loss. <lb/>
George and Luther attend- <lb/>
ed church at Ready Branch Sun- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mr. of <lb/>
spent Thursday night with K. E. <lb/>
Ernest Langston went to Win- <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
B. D. Braxton went to <lb/>
ville Monday. <lb/>
Misses Bailie and VestA Worth- <lb/>
are on the sick lint. <lb/>
E. E. to den Mon- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Henry Langston And ulsters, <lb/>
Eva and Lucy Bell, spent <lb/>
Saturday night and Sunday with <lb/>
relatives near <lb/>
IF YOU ARE WELL BRED <lb/>
The 30th is Day. <lb/>
There be a hitch sane- <lb/>
when-. Some ago it was <lb/>
to- the <lb/>
corner stone nil of the <lb/>
new temple in <lb/>
take on Thursday, June <lb/>
and tin, <lb/>
will t to in mil hi t <lb/>
Mill NoW till- mi- <lb/>
In In Kt <lb/>
-t Free .-. h big <lb/>
tale in I Kit- <lb/>
n on unit the <lb/>
Grain Lodge officers wail be there. <lb/>
It is hardly probable will <lb/>
in both <lb/>
writing the above we see <lb/>
in the Free Press that the Masons I others, <lb/>
I at the time 1111-I <lb/>
aware f this in dates and; <lb/>
will <lb/>
You-will not use <lb/>
will not <lb/>
You will try to make others <lb/>
happy. <lb/>
You will never Indulge In <lb/>
lined <lb/>
You will never forget the respect <lb/>
due to <lb/>
You ill not. boast your <lb/>
achievements. <lb/>
Yon will think of other before <lb/>
think of <lb/>
You will in your <lb/>
of others, <lb/>
A hi will m t your civil- <lb/>
by account-, <lb/>
Yon forgot engagements <lb/>
promise of any <lb/>
In you will not be <lb/>
or <lb/>
You will n r I tho <lb/>
or of <lb/>
have the day <lb/>
celebration to <lb/>
for their <lb/>
Dr. Farmville. <lb/>
Dr. of Kinston, will <lb/>
Farmville at the July <lb/>
0th and 7th, Monday, <lb/>
Assembly. <lb/>
County Superintendent W. H. <lb/>
returned <lb/>
from I meeting of the <lb/>
assembly at Morehead. He re- <lb/>
ports the meeting a most <lb/>
fill one with good attendance of <lb/>
teachers. We see from <lb/>
Wednesday for the purpose of reports of the meeting that Prof. <lb/>
treating discuses of the eye was chairman the <lb/>
fitting glasses Those who are not Committee took <lb/>
able to pay lee will be examined prominent part the general <lb/>
free. <lb/>
6-7 <lb/>
Another Convention. <lb/>
proceedings of the assembly. <lb/>
Six Games Soon. <lb/>
The bate ball team is preparing <lb/>
The Saturday a good field play out near the <lb/>
Is not to nominate county officers, and the fun will soon be <lb/>
but only to select delegates to the gin. Six games are scheduled for <lb/>
James, J. J and congressional the next two with <lb/>
T. Hooker, H. T. King, R. W The nominating Kinston and three with Washing. <lb/>
King. L Moore, ion w be held later. ton.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019423_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
HAVE YOU <lb/>
CLOTHING <lb/>
Department <lb/>
The Branch of it Reflector is in <lb/>
of C. E. Bradley, who is authorized to transact any bust- <lb/>
the paper in and territory. <lb/>
WANTS <lb/>
If so it matters not whether you wish to cloth <lb/>
a or small man, we can accommodate you. <lb/>
Our store is full to overflowing with <lb/>
New High Grade Clothing <lb/>
which we offer at an extraordinary low price to <lb/>
Spot Cash <lb/>
Don't fail to see us for it will pay if <lb/>
you are in need of anything n the Clothing me . <lb/>
One of the of the. <lb/>
North Carolina exhibit at the St. <lb/>
exposition be a piece of I <lb/>
meat years old. It was a <lb/>
of Nassau pork issued to <lb/>
Private B. C. of Frank- <lb/>
county, on the 3rd day of May, <lb/>
1864, near Orange Court House, <lb/>
Va , the day before the <lb/>
fight commenced. Perhaps, owing <lb/>
to its small it got lost through <lb/>
a hole in his pocket and was hid in <lb/>
the lining of his coat or the corner <lb/>
of his knapsack. At any rate Mr. <lb/>
carried this piece meat <lb/>
with him until the close of war <lb/>
and brought it home with him. <lb/>
He has kept it ever since, <lb/>
it as something sacred almost, <lb/>
until a short time ago be <lb/>
upon to send it to the state <lb/>
museum in Raleigh, where it was <lb/>
placed in the Hall of History de- <lb/>
Mr. is UM- <lb/>
ed that his war time ration <lb/>
been sent to St. Louis and visitors <lb/>
to the exposition may see it In the <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
son Gold Leaf. <lb/>
The Populists will hold their <lb/>
convention at Springfield, <lb/>
July 4th. It is quite <lb/>
ate for the Pops to be doing some- <lb/>
thing on the the fire- <lb/>
crackers <lb/>
J. J. Satterthwaite <lb/>
Bro.<lb/>
Invite 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/>
dress goods at about <lb/>
half price, to make room for <lb/>
all goods. <lb/>
c. <lb/>
E, Tucker Co. <lb/>
THE HUSTLING CLOTHIERS <lb/>
is the only <lb/>
perfect <lb/>
Oil. Tastes as <lb/>
god as Maple Syrup. Per <lb/>
bottle <lb/>
Druggist, Wk <lb/>
E. BRADLEY <lb/>
The-One-Price-Store. <lb/>
We carry a general line of Mer- <lb/>
Dry Goods and Notions. <lb/>
Nice line of Shoes, Shirts and Neck <lb/>
wear etc. Fresh Stock of Fancy <lb/>
Heavy Groceries. New line o <lb/>
Wood, Tin and Hardware, we <lb/>
make of Furniture Sew- <lb/>
Machine and Cook Stoves. <lb/>
We do not claim to have any <lb/>
better Goods or Prices than other <lb/>
merchants, but we do claim a fair <lb/>
and honest deal for ail, we for <lb/>
cash which enables M to do a safe <lb/>
business we give our <lb/>
mer- the benefit of it, Cash Sales, <lb/>
I Small Margins and one price to all <lb/>
is our motto. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and <lb/>
Ties always on hand <lb/>
Fresh kept con- <lb/>
In stock. Country <lb/>
Produce Bought end Sold <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
VILLE <lb/>
Norfolk, Va, <lb/>
, Cotton Buyers and Brokers in <lb/>
Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
ions. Private Wires to New <lb/>
Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
IN <lb/>
American and Italian Marble <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
WIRE AND IRON FENCE SOLD <lb/>
First work and prices reasonable <lb/>
designs sen upon application. <lb/>
Baltimore is going to use the <lb/>
small boy during vacation time as <lb/>
an instrument of destruction on <lb/>
It is proposed to arm <lb/>
each school child with a quart can <lb/>
of petroleum and send it out to <lb/>
seek stagnant water to sterile. <lb/>
It is calculated that there are <lb/>
eighty thousand children in he <lb/>
I district. But just think of the <lb/>
I Is the place to Bet Cluing. Dry Goods Notions, Shoe <lb/>
Crockery, etc., at <lb/>
bottom prises. <lb/>
fall line and Medicines. prices paid <lb/>
for all kinds of country produce. <lb/>
eighty thousand children <lb/>
do with eighty thousand quarts <lb/>
kerosene oil. The fire depart- <lb/>
Lent had hi well make up its- <lb/>
keep on the go for the-<lb/>
The Strategy of Samuel. <lb/>
Proud tell you, sir, <lb/>
that boy of mine will be a <lb/>
Friend won- <lb/>
thing ha he done <lb/>
the other <lb/>
day he ate all the preserves In the <lb/>
pantry. overheard him say, as- <lb/>
he smeared the cat's face with the, <lb/>
The man hastens to pat yon <lb/>
or. the back when you happen to <lb/>
please him is the to do the other <lb/>
tiling when yow go the other way. <lb/>
Sum. <lb/>
OLD DOMINION <lb/>
Tom, to do <lb/>
but I can't have <lb/>
pert <lb/>
CO-. <lb/>
FARMVILLE. C. <lb/>
Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes, <lb/>
Groceries, Crockery, <lb/>
price V country <lb/>
, M <lb/>
N. <lb/>
MILLINERY and FANCY GOODS. <lb/>
leaders la Fashions. Jg<lb/>
Cheaper <lb/>
Eat <lb/>
Good, Fresh Groceries <lb/>
If do come to us, We keep every <lb/>
Johnston Bros.<lb/>
Greenville, S. O. <lb/>
Not Quite <lb/>
How often you can get a <lb/>
done-a <lb/>
nail or screw driver or <lb/>
lacking. Have a <lb/>
tool box and be prepared for <lb/>
emergencies. Our line <lb/>
Is all could desire, and <lb/>
we will see that your tool <lb/>
box does not lack a single <lb/>
useful article. <lb/>
Of Course I <lb/>
You get Harness, <lb/>
Horse Goods, <lb/>
m--------- of <lb/>
J. R.<lb/>
Steamer B. L. Myers leave <lb/>
Washington daily, except Sunday, <lb/>
at a m for Greenville, leave <lb/>
Greenville daily, except Sunday, <lb/>
at m. for Washington. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
Steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore, <lb/>
Philadelphia, New York Boston, <lb/>
all points North. Connects at <lb/>
Norfolk with railroads for all <lb/>
order their <lb/>
freight by Old Dominion Line <lb/>
and <lb/>
Norfolk and Southern B. <lb/>
Old Dominion Line from Norfolk, <lb/>
Clyde line from l <lb/>
Bay Line Line <lb/>
iron, Merchants <lb/>
and Miners Line from <lb/>
Sailing hours to change <lb/>
without Notice. <lb/>
T. H. Myers, Act <lb/>
Washington, <lb/>
j. J. <lb/>
N. O.<lb/>
, K. Y. <lb/>
1904 <lb/>
K. W Smith we to Greenville <lb/>
One roller board is a <lb/>
it is without a <lb/>
and destined to take the <lb/>
lead, o try one, is to buy one, <lb/>
and buy one-, is to never be <lb/>
without one <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co, <lb/>
Smith has in <lb/>
this week. <lb/>
Canned of every <lb/>
at Hart Jenkins. <lb/>
We the ladies to call -and <lb/>
examine our line of lawn before <lb/>
J. J. <lb/>
Lime, plastering hair, <lb/>
blinds and side lights at <lb/>
J. B. Bro. <lb/>
Ed Hardy, of Greene <lb/>
was here yesterday. <lb/>
-yon need a <lb/>
pole, for your buggy or <lb/>
carriage. Call on us and make a <lb/>
selection. Milling Mfg. <lb/>
The ladies have oat where <lb/>
to go when they need the <lb/>
dress good, laces <lb/>
etc. and <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
Lula Smith is on a v to <lb/>
in <lb/>
As authorized <lb/>
we take <lb/>
peat pleasure in receiving sub- <lb/>
willing for <lb/>
in We a list <lb/>
of all who receive their at <lb/>
this office. We also take-orders <lb/>
for job <lb/>
Call d <lb/>
boa's attractive of <lb/>
groceries. <lb/>
of Baltimore,, has <lb/>
been Here week. <lb/>
fresh and butter and <lb/>
t.-Sum- <lb/>
Mot <lb/>
W. M. Co., sell <lb/>
you up- suit of <lb/>
mighty <lb/>
Ci x took in the <lb/>
Friday. <lb/>
line of <lb/>
did at W. M. <lb/>
wards Co. <lb/>
AYDEN DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
J. M. BLOW, Manager and Authorized Agent. <lb/>
The latent straw hits assortment of ladies and <lb/>
and caps es. Hines. at prices at <lb/>
spring it cloth- Jenkins. <lb/>
for i- F. W. of Dover, came <lb/>
Fancy oranges, up Wednesday to visit her <lb/>
and at E. E. Bail Co's. <lb/>
ad E. G. Cox <lb/>
have t the capital city this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Confectioneries, and <lb/>
everything <lb/>
at fair can by call- <lb/>
at-store f Jenkins. <lb/>
do go to<lb/>
Having appointed to list <lb/>
the tr the town of Ayden, <lb/>
year I-will be pleased <lb/>
to meet any and ail persons at <lb/>
store of J. R. Smith Bro. <lb/>
to list in said <lb/>
J. <lb/>
ASK FOR <lb/>
Fresh butter and cheese on ice <lb/>
the Builders will give a <lb/>
Bock Sociable Tuesday evening <lb/>
14th inst. in the new building re- <lb/>
completed by B. W. Smith. <lb/>
Every body invited and those not <lb/>
invited are expected to be present. <lb/>
A good time to all. Ice <lb/>
I cream and other delicacies will be <lb/>
at , , . <lb/>
served. The committee is composed <lb/>
of four the prettiest girls to-be- <lb/>
COLUMBIA FLOUR, <lb/>
If it doesn't you <lb/>
your dealer will <lb/>
pay you for it. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
Dist Ayden, <lb/>
W. F. went to <lb/>
Wednesday <lb/>
morning, <lb/>
beautiful line of <lb/>
youths straw <lb/>
at J. B. Smith Bro. <lb/>
can peaches, apples, <lb/>
apply to E. E <lb/>
Mrs. W. A Barber was <lb/>
at the home f Marshall her <lb/>
during the past week. <lb/>
carry a splendid assortment <lb/>
of body carpets in various <lb/>
styles and patterns, which <lb/>
excellent hall rugs, at a normal <lb/>
cordially <lb/>
to call and <lb/>
Mfg. Co., <lb/>
Ayden, ST. C. <lb/>
Cotton Hay, <lb/>
Cotton Seed meal sold by <lb/>
Cotton Stonewall and <lb/>
Carolina Plows at J. u. <lb/>
We have cu ti e price m <lb/>
J.-K. J J- B, <lb/>
Cox, Of were <lb/>
Jr. <lb/>
Qt to E. E Co's new <lb/>
market for beef, fresh meats, <lb/>
sage, and fresh fish. <lb/>
a nice drink go to Sum- <lb/>
rM Law horn fountain. <lb/>
brick <lb/>
ply to E. S. Edwards Sot;, <lb/>
den, A full supply always <lb/>
D. G. came in yesterday <lb/>
recent visit to South <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
The ladies are invited <lb/>
to call inspect our line of <lb/>
mercerized we have it <lb/>
bolts also patterns -of <lb/>
lengths. J J- Hines <lb/>
First Class made buck., by <lb/>
the wholesale and large <lb/>
stock always on your orders <lb/>
solicited. J- <lb/>
Mrs. Martha Moore, -of Hooker <lb/>
ton, has been on J. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Hart Cypress Shingles for <lb/>
sale by Cannon <lb/>
G. Cox in com <lb/>
life, and <lb/>
health guarantees the best plans, <lb/>
safest means <lb/>
See him. <lb/>
Misses <lb/>
have returned to homes <lb/>
in. Pamlico <lb/>
81.50 <lb/>
day, near depot on West Ave- <lb/>
Transient custom-solicited <lb/>
F. <lb/>
hear the young say the <lb/>
cheapest and best clothing <lb/>
is sold by Cannon Tyson, <lb/>
and <lb/>
Cox, of Greenville have been a <lb/>
to friends here. <lb/>
Two small new iron safes <lb/>
kind for small business or farmers <lb/>
at J. B. Smith Bro. <lb/>
Miss Cricket <lb/>
has visiting relatives and <lb/>
friends here this week. <lb/>
The best quality of flour as cheap <lb/>
as the cheapest at Hart Jenkins. <lb/>
Corn, hay and oat-, at J. B. <lb/>
Smith <lb/>
Tessie of Winter <lb/>
ville, spool a very pleasant day <lb/>
with friends here yesterday. <lb/>
Cotton seed meal hulls at <lb/>
J. B. <lb/>
We want your hams chickens <lb/>
and eggs. J. B Smith A Bro. <lb/>
Nora of <lb/>
Greenville, has been on a visit to <lb/>
of E. T. Phillips. <lb/>
A new lot of men's <lb/>
shirts just received at W. M. Ed- <lb/>
wards Co's. <lb/>
New corned herrings at J. B. <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
Now we have plenty of the <lb/>
and cart <lb/>
wheels and will sell them as cheap <lb/>
as any one. <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
The new handsome residence <lb/>
built by B. W. Smith is complete <lb/>
and ready for <lb/>
We are told that Cannon <lb/>
Tyson keeps the best and most <lb/>
complete furniture in town <lb/>
Just another case of <lb/>
men's at W. M. Ed- <lb/>
wards Co's. <lb/>
Miss Daisy Mum ford, of sear <lb/>
pleased her friends with a <lb/>
visit of too short a duration Wed- <lb/>
Buck salt for stock, at J. <lb/>
Smith. Bro. <lb/>
K. E. Dull will do all they <lb/>
sure. If this enough, aMend <lb/>
and we guarantee satisfaction in <lb/>
lull. <lb/>
For flour, lime, hay, meal, hulls <lb/>
etc., go to Jackson Co's. <lb/>
See lace remnants at Jackson <lb/>
Co's. <lb/>
G. W. Howard in shutting his <lb/>
stable door the other slipped <lb/>
It out of the slides, it was an <lb/>
it come down on his toes <lb/>
him a very painful hurt. <lb/>
E S. Edwards left for Washing- <lb/>
ton in the of <lb/>
bis brick enterprise. Mr. Ed- <lb/>
brick are all made <lb/>
of the very best material. He <lb/>
always keeps a large on <lb/>
baud. <lb/>
re- another lot of boys . u. please you with <lb/>
M. <lb/>
children's clothing at W. <lb/>
wards, <lb/>
I v suffer intense head- <lb/>
ache, eye ache smarts and burns, <lb/>
you <lb/>
white goods. buy a <lb/>
Ed warded. <lb/>
and Lillian <lb/>
All straw at ready paint, the best, <lb/>
reduced M. Miss <lb/>
Co. Has just <lb/>
yon find all the <lb/>
DOM Optician, Ayden, N. C. weak <lb/>
i, need of glasses, <lb/>
. ,. . . . <lb/>
. wave to t<lb/>
. tie piece of glass properly <lb/>
Dicker a. dress goods. <lb/>
i is my employ. <lb/>
Mn T. B. Lee who has been vis <lb/>
Hi. , , . , . <lb/>
. ,, , ,, friends here to m-r <lb/>
Mo re and Coward b <lb/>
. , t evening. <lb/>
passed this week from <lb/>
t- Mrs. J. D. Andrews, of Norfolk, <lb/>
i patent a row days with <lb/>
shafts, black hickory friends. She will leave in a few <lb/>
ash No. ma- days Greensboro to make it <lb/>
aid to- her future home. <lb/>
I by thoroughly practical and Lil <lb/>
I skilled We Vale son had a call to Greenville <lb/>
Jot we day. <lb/>
of I to the neatest Mien Nina Cannon has returned <lb/>
most durable from the Normal Industrial <lb/>
Ayden Milling Co., School at Greensboro for the sum- <lb/>
Ayden, N. fl, mer vacation. <lb/>
other goods too <lb/>
J. Smith <lb/>
J. J. has <lb/>
several <lb/>
Call our laces and <lb/>
J. H, Smith Bro <lb/>
Do you It- Smith Bro. <lb/>
keep the most of <lb/>
and <lb/>
i i town. Their tell me <lb/>
that it is so. <lb/>
lie line of heavy and fancy <lb/>
groceries. <lb/>
Misses Mary Kittrell Lula <lb/>
who have visiting <lb/>
bore returned to their Homes <lb/>
Greenville yesterday. <lb/>
New up-lo-date Wheeler and <lb/>
sewing only i <lb/>
at M. Co. <lb/>
Carry your soring chickens to <lb/>
Edwards Co If you <lb/>
good prices <lb/>
Prof. w. <lb/>
In <lb/>
mis been <lb/>
relatives. <lb/>
BED <lb/>
Poison <lb/>
M. M. SAULS, <lb/>
PHARMACIST, <lb/>
IN. C. <lb/>
Safe, Strong, <lb/>
George <lb/>
work in this line <lb/>
or <lb/>
The <lb/>
strong <lb/>
The g <lb/>
has <lb/>
Beaufort <lb/>
a visit lo <lb/>
A hi nu <lb/>
be <lb/>
It <lb/>
had business here <lb/>
Oar stock of is <lb/>
narrow, nice and cheap, J. B. <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
I wish to remind my friends that <lb/>
I keen a very nice millinery <lb/>
goods, and I know that my Tessie <lb/>
girdles, ribbons and new kid bells <lb/>
will please you all. Give me a <lb/>
call, Mrs J. A. Davis. <lb/>
Letha Fair is visit <lb/>
Mrs. J. D. Cox in Winterville. <lb/>
W. Jackson Co., want all <lb/>
the can carry <lb/>
them for the next few weeks. They <lb/>
will also ship your potatoes and <lb/>
other truck for you. <lb/>
We call special to our <lb/>
new line of Tan and Ideal Kid <lb/>
hoes Cannon Tyson. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN, <lb/>
N. <lb/>
At the dose of business March 28th, j. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and Discounts, <lb/>
Furniture and Fixtures <lb/>
Due from Banks, <lb/>
Cash Items, <lb/>
Cash in Bank, <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital stock paid in, <lb/>
Undivided less <lb/>
expenses, <lb/>
Deposits, <lb/>
Total. <lb/>
a Specially, Work The <lb/>
Guaranteed, <lb/>
find class brick <lb/>
ply to E. S. Edwards Sou, <lb/>
-en, N. C. A full suppl always <lb/>
on hand- <lb/>
Misses Mitchell, of Greene <lb/>
and Little, of Winter- <lb/>
ville, have been v siting Miss<lb/>
Yon will a complete of <lb/>
light weight coats at W. M <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Another lot of ladies 91.50 Ox- <lb/>
fords for at W. M. Ed- <lb/>
wards Co. <lb/>
of took <lb/>
in the commencement here last <lb/>
week. He is an old friend of the <lb/>
long ago we were glad to see <lb/>
The fullest store Ayden is <lb/>
that of W. C. Jackson Co. Yon <lb/>
can get anything usually kept in <lb/>
a first class store from them and at <lb/>
to suit the times. <lb/>
. I <lb/>
Liberal. <lb/>
i than <lb/>
wife arid <lb/>
I ranee <lb/>
con. <lb/>
to<lb/>
fa I <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Dixon, <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, <lb/>
Block, <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
Dr. Louis Skinner, <lb/>
Practicing Physician Surgeon <lb/>
Hotel Annie, <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
E. V- COX, <lb/>
ATTORNEY- AT- LAW, <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
W. B. ALEXANDER, <lb/>
Tonsorial Artist, <lb/>
Latest Styles Hair <lb/>
Shaving and<lb/>
. a .<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019423_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR I <lb/>
AND <lb/>
Di J. <lb/>
in the S. Z -d <lb/>
A STRUGGLE <lb/>
FOR THE MASTERY PROFITABLE TO RE A BRICK <lb/>
graft in to <lb/>
COUNTY, N. C, Tr-PAY, <lb/>
1904. <lb/>
Glean ahead, Steadman ahead. <lb/>
Thew are headings read in the <lb/>
in the same day. Hie <lb/>
going to take the Greensboro con- <lb/>
to show Which one <lb/>
really ahead. <lb/>
We see in the Charlotte papers <lb/>
that Harding, <lb/>
of Greenville, is unions the speakers <lb/>
who are making a vigorous canvas <lb/>
in the anti campaign now <lb/>
in progress in that city. You can <lb/>
always count on Harding being <lb/>
in the forefront of the light for <lb/>
moral issues. <lb/>
Potatoes are bigger in the public <lb/>
eye than cotton just at this <lb/>
The do not s em to be com- <lb/>
out altogether so well in late <lb/>
encounters with the Russians. <lb/>
We will soon ascertain how <lb/>
much power a judge really possesses <lb/>
in this enlightened country and age. <lb/>
If n judge may throw a citizen into <lb/>
prison lime he feels that his <lb/>
dignity is assailed we are not free- <lb/>
men but slaves, and the most <lb/>
work the next legislature <lb/>
has before it is to strip these <lb/>
of their unnatural and <lb/>
bridled power. It has been gen- <lb/>
held in this country that the <lb/>
people are invested with supreme <lb/>
power, but the present contention <lb/>
put the judges head over all. <lb/>
we view it, this conflict is <lb/>
for the mastery between free citizens <lb/>
and lordly may the <lb/>
citizens Child- <lb/>
The New York Herald estimates <lb/>
that the in this <lb/>
try averages, for doctors, <lb/>
preachers, lawyers, <lb/>
teachers, college professors, <lb/>
newspaper men, 1.200; <lb/>
musicians, architects, <lb/>
actors, bricklayers, <lb/>
a year when they work <lb/>
steadily. Notice that the brick- <lb/>
layers head the list-Biblical Re- <lb/>
corder. <lb/>
WRITTEN ABOUT WOMEN. <lb/>
When the government gets through <lb/>
with boll weevils and mosquitoes, <lb/>
we suppose there will still be boll <lb/>
weevils and mosquitoes- <lb/>
Taught Him a <lb/>
the democrats can elect <lb/>
anybody they put up h no reason <lb/>
why they should put up <lb/>
i. the way the Durham Herald <lb/>
expresses a truth. Something in <lb/>
this the democrats of county <lb/>
consider when they go to <lb/>
nominate candidates for <lb/>
officers- <lb/>
We had hoped that the contest <lb/>
for the gubernatorial nomination <lb/>
would go through to a finish with- <lb/>
out the friend of one candidate <lb/>
a word of disparagement to say <lb/>
about another. But the thing kepi <lb/>
This is a time when it matters not <lb/>
which man gets the nomination for <lb/>
governor, the people will not be <lb/>
afraid to vote for him. <lb/>
If the next legislature does not <lb/>
take steps to check the divorce evil <lb/>
and make divorces harder to obtain <lb/>
in North Carolina it will fall short <lb/>
of its duty. <lb/>
The discovery by the secret service <lb/>
department that a new counterfeit <lb/>
certificate is in circulation, <lb/>
need not alarm the newspaper frat- <lb/>
They are not troubled with <lb/>
change of that size. <lb/>
The historic liberty bell is now <lb/>
St. Louis on exhibition flt the <lb/>
fair. The bell was escorted <lb/>
to the fair grounds by immense <lb/>
parade of military and citizens. <lb/>
be well with on hell taken many long <lb/>
journeys in its tiny. <lb/>
too dote and Wake county <lb/>
the The j <lb/>
are all good men and <lb/>
Back in the seventies, when <lb/>
Dewey had command of a ship of <lb/>
the old Hartford type, he was lying <lb/>
in the harbor off Genoa. Visitors <lb/>
were allowed on board at all times, <lb/>
except Sunday morning, when in- <lb/>
took place. One Sunday a <lb/>
well known American millionaire <lb/>
steamed out with a party of friends <lb/>
in his yacht and succeeded in get- <lb/>
ting on deck, where he was met by <lb/>
Captain Dewey, who asked him to <lb/>
leave. Mr- Money remonstrated an <lb/>
finally, exasperated by the cool firm- <lb/>
of the he burst <lb/>
sir; I wont leave. am an American <lb/>
citizen and have a perfect right on <lb/>
this vessel. I pay taxes in America <lb/>
I am on my own property. Part of <lb/>
this ship belongs to Calmly. <lb/>
Dewey opened his stooped <lb/>
down and split off a piece of the <lb/>
deck flooring. Handing it to the <lb/>
incensed American citizen, he <lb/>
ed. There's about what own, <lb/>
and there's the ladder. Now <lb/>
And he got <lb/>
A WHIPPED. <lb/>
Troutman, June the <lb/>
way they do it in Iredell. About <lb/>
two weeks ago a man named <lb/>
Henry Neill went to the home of a <lb/>
highly respected white man during <lb/>
his absence and made improper <lb/>
proposals to his wife. The next <lb/>
night ten middle-aged, cool headed, <lb/>
determined men took the and <lb/>
gave him such a whipping as only <lb/>
men of this kind could administer <lb/>
to a for an insult to a white <lb/>
woman. After they had plied <lb/>
the whip until the guilty wretch was <lb/>
a quivering bundle of pains they <lb/>
told him to get. He got. They <lb/>
then quietly said goodbye to one <lb/>
another and went home to their <lb/>
families. Next morning as usual <lb/>
they were all out at work and not a <lb/>
word of this was known for some <lb/>
time. <lb/>
A man never so bountifully shown <lb/>
his own strength as when he re- <lb/>
a woman's weakness. <lb/>
Douglas Jerrold. <lb/>
One can, to almost a laughable <lb/>
extent, infer what a man's wife is <lb/>
like from his opinion about women <lb/>
in It. H. <lb/>
They govern the world, these <lb/>
sweet voiced women, because beau- <lb/>
and harmony are the index of a <lb/>
larger fact than W. <lb/>
Holmes. <lb/>
The best thing know of is a first <lb/>
rate And the next best <lb/>
thing is a second rate one Josh <lb/>
Billings. <lb/>
All women are for <lb/>
something, or good for nothing, <lb/>
Cervantes. <lb/>
Unhappy is the man to whom Lia <lb/>
own mother has not made all other <lb/>
mothers venerable. <lb/>
A woman is the only <lb/>
man is not authorized to <lb/>
Hugo. <lb/>
They say man was created first. <lb/>
Well, suppose he first <lb/>
experience alway <lb/>
A curious deprived <lb/>
Job of everything except his wife. <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
A good book and a woman are <lb/>
excellent thing for those who know <lb/>
how to appreciate their value. <lb/>
There are men, however, who judge <lb/>
of both by the beauty of the cover- <lb/>
Johnson. <lb/>
of them in the executive <lb/>
i . . i <lb/>
The anti-saloon campaigns in <lb/>
Charlotte and Wilmington will be <lb/>
watched with much interest <lb/>
throughout the In nearly <lb/>
all towns where such elections have <lb/>
been held the moral forces have <lb/>
been victorious, and the result in <lb/>
these two largest cities of the state <lb/>
will indicate to what extent the <lb/>
temperance sentiment prevails in <lb/>
them. We believe the time is fast <lb/>
when there will be no <lb/>
open saloons in North Carolina. <lb/>
H. F. Seawall, of Carthage, who <lb/>
n nominated by the republicans <lb/>
of as their candidate for <lb/>
congress, has declined the <lb/>
. He thinks it is better to stick <lb/>
to his law practice than to make n <lb/>
run only to be defeated- <lb/>
Tho North Carolina hotels have <lb/>
been falling into line with the <lb/>
movement to displace colored wait- <lb/>
with white help. The hotels <lb/>
that have made the change have <lb/>
found it satisfactory in every way. <lb/>
On this line, The Hotel Worlds <lb/>
colored roan <lb/>
The Secret of <lb/>
there be so many mar- <lb/>
wrecks if the secret of <lb/>
were asks Lillie <lb/>
Hamilton French in the July <lb/>
This author, who, of <lb/>
course, writes her <lb/>
tides Joy of <lb/>
the woman's goes on to <lb/>
tell of two women who found their <lb/>
exacting, and of the hap- <lb/>
results brought about by <lb/>
generous yielding of the wife <lb/>
one Of these wet. The writer <lb/>
the are <lb/>
always imposed upon. They end <lb/>
I being the little <lb/>
exclaims. , Ml i <lb/>
we give too much, and lien <lb/>
they have all they want <lb/>
never <lb/>
that Hie <lb/>
i never robbed. It i- like <lb/>
Something good is coming out o <lb/>
the efforts of the retail <lb/>
associations in this state. The as- <lb/>
railways, an organization <lb/>
composed of the Southern Hallway, <lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Line and the Sea- <lb/>
board Air Line, had proposed an <lb/>
increase in freight rates on staple <lb/>
goods in less than car lots, the rate <lb/>
to go in effect July 1st. A storm <lb/>
of protest was raised against the <lb/>
proposed advance in freight rates, <lb/>
this protest coming chiefly through <lb/>
the retail associations, <lb/>
and the is result the railroads have <lb/>
postponed the idea indefinitely. <lb/>
This is one instance that shows what <lb/>
can be accomplished through organ- <lb/>
and concert of action. Other <lb/>
things could as easily be brought <lb/>
about. The Reflector believes the <lb/>
association in Greenville could <lb/>
A New York letter to The Louis- <lb/>
ville Evening contains an in- <lb/>
with leader in the Hearst <lb/>
in which the following state- <lb/>
is greatest <lb/>
to the democracy, in my <lb/>
is that man with the <lb/>
of oratory will get the floor <lb/>
at an opportune moment and <lb/>
the to <lb/>
No danger in that. It would be <lb/>
the best thing that could happen <lb/>
for the party and the country. <lb/>
Many papers throughout the <lb/>
are discussing the repeal <lb/>
of the two-thirds role that prevails <lb/>
in the national convention. It <lb/>
unreasonable that two-thirds of the <lb/>
delegates to a national convention <lb/>
should vote one way before a <lb/>
date for president can be nominated. <lb/>
The -third rule was adopted <lb/>
nearly a century ago. <lb/>
State conventions have long since <lb/>
abolished it and are governed by a <lb/>
was when the H .- .------- <lb/>
was the only safe, sure I i <lb/>
the commercial hotel and tho in- add , the joy um <lb/>
ported waiter was the choice for <lb/>
fashionable place. Now waitresses <lb/>
are displacing the- colored waiter <lb/>
in many places where formerly <lb/>
the service of the farmer would <lb/>
have been deemed totally <lb/>
You ask any hotel <lb/>
or manager why it is that he- <lb/>
employs girls, and you are told <lb/>
that the guests prefer their service,, <lb/>
and here also <lb/>
sum total of the argument why <lb/>
waitresses are now so much employ- <lb/>
White are taking the <lb/>
place of the in the hotels and <lb/>
white barbers are crowding him <lb/>
out of business in the art. <lb/>
Thus his field of opportunity is <lb/>
gradually being narrowed and the <lb/>
time is coming when tho <lb/>
must make competent in <lb/>
other lines, for competency is <lb/>
to <lb/>
The most natural place for the <lb/>
is in the field as a farm labor- <lb/>
and the sooner he learns that his <lb/>
most useful occupation is hoeing <lb/>
corn and chopping cotton the better <lb/>
for him. There is no room for him <lb/>
in the trades and professions. <lb/>
It appears that while Judge Park- <lb/>
is not talking he is working. <lb/>
From more than one reliable New <lb/>
York source The Washington Post <lb/>
learns that Barker is <lb/>
managing bis presidential campaign <lb/>
and that he is doing it in a manner <lb/>
which commands the admiration of <lb/>
Democratic politicians privileged to <lb/>
know what tho moves on the <lb/>
cal chess board are. He makes <lb/>
trips to New York city, is in <lb/>
consultation with leading politicians <lb/>
there, in fact, has regular places of <lb/>
rendezvous with his lieutenants. <lb/>
Furthermore, he resents the talk of <lb/>
his being Hill's man. A few day <lb/>
ago he remarked to a prominent <lb/>
Democrat who called to see <lb/>
am no man's This said <lb/>
with much spirit when the subject <lb/>
Hill's connection with his <lb/>
was <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
He Knew His Fate. <lb/>
my lad said the grocer <lb/>
to his new bought <lb/>
that moldy cheese <lb/>
was the <lb/>
youths reply. <lb/>
the stale loaf we could not <lb/>
sell last <lb/>
Brown, <lb/>
that lump of rancid <lb/>
batter the baker <lb/>
it, <lb/>
was the answer. <lb/>
the-ix eggs we could not <lb/>
sell a <lb/>
you ill, <lb/>
ask the grocer turned <lb/>
green and groaned. <lb/>
Only I'm going to tea <lb/>
the replied <lb/>
the man us be wiped th.- <lb/>
perspiration from bis face and wok <lb/>
into a Bit. <lb/>
majority vote. National conventions <lb/>
should also change and let a <lb/>
w o- . <lb/>
better train and better of the vote be sufficient <lb/>
went at the A majority of the people <lb/>
. . always rule, <lb/>
It is said New York wants <lb/>
shall Field, Chicago, the <lb/>
second place on the Presidential <lb/>
ticket. will strike the <lb/>
as a most sensible and practical <lb/>
If Mr. Field can carry Ill- <lb/>
for Democracy the White House <lb/>
will be occupied by a for <lb/>
the next four Why do we say <lb/>
so The solid South, including <lb/>
Maryland, New York, New Jersey <lb/>
and Illinois, elects a President, with <lb/>
vote to spare. If Parker can <lb/>
carry New York, and it's he <lb/>
can, New Jersey, with the guiding <lb/>
hand of Cleveland, will vote <lb/>
with her, and if Mr. Field can land <lb/>
Illinois, the job will complete. It <lb/>
is perfectly that Democratic <lb/>
brightening every day. <lb/>
If we can only avoid making mis- <lb/>
takes at tho convention, stand a <lb/>
fine chance for <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
If this thing keeps on in the <lb/>
state we shall have to add a new one <lb/>
to our patented brands of liars, <lb/>
namely the Gubernatorial Estimate <lb/>
News. <lb/>
We note that a large number of <lb/>
school districts are voting a special <lb/>
tax for the support of longer school <lb/>
terms. This is the best sort of <lb/>
of their real interest in <lb/>
matter. It does not require any <lb/>
of sacrifice to vote away the <lb/>
of others, but when a man <lb/>
votes to increase his own <lb/>
taxes for the purpose of adding to <lb/>
his school term, it may reasonably <lb/>
be claimed that his heart is in the <lb/>
right Times. <lb/>
Mr. Thomas Funderburk, of Bu- <lb/>
ford, report a strange occurrence. <lb/>
The other day he hid near a guinea <lb/>
nest which he had found in the <lb/>
brush on his place While there <lb/>
he was much surprised to see a <lb/>
partridge come, get M the nest <lb/>
with the guinea, and as laying <lb/>
When it left another one came and <lb/>
did the same thing. When the <lb/>
guinea left the nest he found two <lb/>
partridge eggs in <lb/>
WINTERVILLE <lb/>
This department Is . charge of A. D. Johnston, who is authorized to rep- <lb/>
resent Eastern Reflector in Winterville and territory. <lb/>
V. C, June 11th. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. have <lb/>
few pairs of Shoes saved from <lb/>
the lire. shoes to <lb/>
to cents. They <lb/>
are bargains. <lb/>
Work is being pushed on Henry <lb/>
new house. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and Co. <lb/>
have a new awning at their new <lb/>
tore. <lb/>
Borne new residences are being <lb/>
contracted for here. <lb/>
Kittrell A Taylor desire to an- <lb/>
that they are now in their <lb/>
new store are carrying <lb/>
full line of heavy and fancy <lb/>
snuff, tobacco, cigars and <lb/>
notions. <lb/>
Mis Letha Fair, of Ayden, is <lb/>
visiting her many friends here. <lb/>
We are always glad to see her. <lb/>
Try Maryland biscuit at R. G. <lb/>
Chapman Co. <lb/>
Lumber is now being hauled for <lb/>
the Dew Methodist church. <lb/>
When you want a good smoke <lb/>
try a James G. at <lb/>
Kittrell Taylor. <lb/>
New corrugated iron sheds are <lb/>
being put in of the drug <lb/>
tore, i lie <lb/>
ring store and J. It. <lb/>
A store. adds much to <lb/>
the of the property. <lb/>
wish to notify the <lb/>
public that I grind every <lb/>
day at ray mill one stile south of <lb/>
Level on Sam place. <lb/>
Purnell Tripp. <lb/>
A good many of our people are <lb/>
going to the a. b. picnic at Run, <lb/>
trees today. <lb/>
have reopened my <lb/>
barber shop in the stare formerly <lb/>
-occupied by Kittrell and Taylor. <lb/>
Will <lb/>
i am now prepared t furnish <lb/>
brick at Lowest market prices. <lb/>
O. M. Manning. <lb/>
Emmet Smith has returned <lb/>
from where he <lb/>
been visiting friends and relatives <lb/>
Car load cotton teed just <lb/>
received, G. A. Kittrell Co. <lb/>
Roan Cooper with his <lb/>
be alive. Call and us <lb/>
either at factory or store. Our <lb/>
smile- will do good- <lb/>
Mfg. . <lb/>
Louisa Barber, Miss <lb/>
Barber and Jasper Barber went to <lb/>
Grind <lb/>
All kinds of soft cool and <lb/>
refreshing. II. L. Johnson. <lb/>
Fruit jam l sis <lb/>
U, L. Johnson. <lb/>
Boarding J. <lb/>
Cox. Board per day. Be-t <lb/>
town. <lb/>
The necessary papers for a char- <lb/>
for the Pitt County Oil Mill, <lb/>
to be located at Winterville, N. C. <lb/>
have been forwarded to the Sec- <lb/>
of state. <lb/>
For the best grades of smoking <lb/>
and chewing go to the <lb/>
Drag Store. <lb/>
Dr. Heart <lb/>
cure for all affections of the <lb/>
Every package guaranteed <lb/>
by T. N. Manning Co. <lb/>
Whitty, of I <lb/>
rented the Tucker on <lb/>
Main St. He will move here about <lb/>
June open up h stock of <lb/>
goods in the store formerly <lb/>
pied by H. L. Johnson. <lb/>
Cabbage fresh from the field <lb/>
every day. Kittrell Taylor. <lb/>
shoes hats <lb/>
It. G. Chapman k Co. <lb/>
Miss Martha A. Hudson, of <lb/>
Black Jack, is visiting the family <lb/>
of Elder T. N. Manning. <lb/>
bottles only t <lb/>
Drug Store. <lb/>
Send in order for a Handy <lb/>
tobacco truck. These are a <lb/>
great labor saver and are <lb/>
the farm. <lb/>
J. R. A <lb/>
is now Mr. Ange a no <lb/>
will be to charge move here <lb/>
and open about tho 15th, inst. <lb/>
This is what is called <lb/>
the of the year for <lb/>
merchant and manufacturer. <lb/>
far this is far from true at the <lb/>
A. G. Cox Mfg. Co's shops. They <lb/>
-re still hustling there and we <lb/>
learn that they are not laying by <lb/>
much of a stock still. That is <lb/>
because their are selling <lb/>
almost s fast as they be made. <lb/>
If yon need in their Hue <lb/>
send in your order and let them <lb/>
make it to order you will be <lb/>
pleased with it. <lb/>
We have the finest smoked <lb/>
and the heat Boston <lb/>
factory t. N. Manning and Co. <lb/>
Dr. Cox has moved lo the new <lb/>
drag store If is I he moat tastily <lb/>
furnished store in new brick <lb/>
block. <lb/>
G. A. Kittrell Co., <lb/>
received a cur load No. Timothy <lb/>
Hy. <lb/>
A, O. Cox Mfg. C. ship. <lb/>
ping wagons to truck over <lb/>
lour eastern section la ha in <lb/>
and the hauling If they can serve <lb/>
W. F. The Reflector <lb/>
force was here Friday taking or- <lb/>
for job work. As our people <lb/>
know his work well <lb/>
it was him to get <lb/>
orders here. <lb/>
Major H. Harding, of Green- <lb/>
ville, and Mr. Pate representing <lb/>
the Co. of Charlotte, were <lb/>
here Friday. <lb/>
Dr. B. T. Cox A Bro., are now in <lb/>
their new drugstore. They invite <lb/>
to call and see <lb/>
while Winterville. Their goods <lb/>
of kinds are new up-to-date <lb/>
5-19 Lin Mr. Dixon, their clever salesman, <lb/>
will great pleasure in showing <lb/>
yen through. <lb/>
My office is now in the rear end <lb/>
of the drug Your patronage <lb/>
solicited Fire having destroyed <lb/>
gin our store on Feb. 12th <lb/>
we were compelled to rebuild at <lb/>
much We would be glad <lb/>
if all of having accounts <lb/>
a us would adjust them <lb/>
earliest convenience. Yours truly <lb/>
B. T. Cox, M. D. <lb/>
Mrs. Taylor returned <lb/>
from Greene county. She says she <lb/>
had a very pleasant visit. . <lb/>
Mrs. J. H. C. Dixon has returned <lb/>
from <lb/>
in town. ft Taylor. <lb/>
Salt at R. G. Chap. <lb/>
man Co. <lb/>
L. L Kittrell, John D. Cox, <lb/>
Pan Harrington, Joe Buck, W. <lb/>
I. King. Richard Wingate G. <lb/>
E. Jackson went to Greenville <lb/>
today. <lb/>
You will do well to call and see <lb/>
the Winterville Mfg. Co. before <lb/>
your house trimming. <lb/>
They will make some close <lb/>
price- on all material of their <lb/>
manufacture. <lb/>
AH who doubt what we say <lb/>
harness taking <lb/>
the lead both in price and <lb/>
are kindly asked to and <lb/>
see for themselves. Several sets <lb/>
in stock all the while. <lb/>
you in this line will be glad <lb/>
to do so. <lb/>
N. Manning and Co <lb/>
the Best cakes and crackers. <lb/>
for <lb/>
over contempt proceed <lb/>
it's our deliberate judgment <lb/>
that there ought to be no such a law, <lb/>
with it's special and extraordinary <lb/>
proceedings with the offender. If <lb/>
an individual so behaves us to merit <lb/>
the contempt of the court, let him <lb/>
be arrested just is any other violator <lb/>
of the law, the proper process served <lb/>
upon him, and tried by a regular <lb/>
jury. Tho thought of any judge, <lb/>
it matters not who lie is trying and <lb/>
passing upon offender <lb/>
against and his court, does not <lb/>
sot well with an American <lb/>
Such a smacks of royalty <lb/>
and tyranny. <lb/>
Why not got in contempt of the <lb/>
governor of the state, or of the <lb/>
secretary, the treasurer, or the <lb/>
auditor, as well as of a judge <lb/>
Those are parts of the state, just us <lb/>
are the courts. Not one man in <lb/>
ten thousand will over give a judge j <lb/>
good for an action for con- <lb/>
tempt and that one ought to be <lb/>
tried, convicted if guilty, pun S <lb/>
by due process of law. <lb/>
Raleigh Times, <lb/>
This is Die a Kentucky <lb/>
Judge the jury the other <lb/>
you believe what <lb/>
counsel for plaintiff have <lb/>
verdict for the <lb/>
plaintiff, but if on the other hand, <lb/>
yon I HI eve what the h <lb/>
has yon, <lb/>
fur the <lb/>
me like me <lb/>
don't either of them <lb/>
Mild, I <lb/>
no. <lb/>
Four Words Tell The Story, <lb/>
Best For The Money. <lb/>
We don't advertise any one sort <lb/>
of Underwear, because we have <lb/>
the very best fitting Underwear <lb/>
we can find every good make, <lb/>
and Underwear I. <lb/>
Leslie, Mercerized <lb/>
Mesh Underwear. Some <lb/>
handsome tint and stripes <lb/>
All sizes, to a garment. <lb/>
For men who prefer the Jean <lb/>
drawers i have splendid ones <lb/>
well mad SOc to <lb/>
UNDERWEAR IS A HOBBY OF OURS <lb/>
THE <lb/>
i i <lb/>
THERE ARE VERY Ft <lb/>
THING OF Tl <lb/>
w, s; <lb/>
WHO DO NOT <lb/>
POPULARITY OF<lb/>
know what yon will I<lb/>
is the on <lb/>
perfectly <lb/>
Tasteless OIL <lb/>
Taste as god Maple <lb/>
cents per bottle at Dr. B. T. <lb/>
ox, V. C <lb/>
KING COMBINATION <lb/>
MANUFACTURED BY <lb/>
A. COX COMPANY. <lb/>
WINTERVILLE, <lb/>
these shoes I <lb/>
about Mn <lb/>
shoes No <lb/>
THE OX v <lb/>
tho b <lb/>
labor re <lb/>
THE <lb/>
have create . <lb/>
among tho i n <lb/>
any other i <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Any ; <lb/>
or Leather, <lb/>
he only that has ma In <lb/>
. There other at <lb/>
e. Cue is in the <lb/>
es oil-red <lb/>
ARK SOLD <lb/>
is material and <lb/>
o make them. <lb/>
I NO STYLES <lb/>
o Talk <lb/>
limn <lb/>
ill <lb/>
it <lb/>
WEAR THE <lb/>
and you will I <lb/>
of know .- I <lb/>
the best <lb/>
hi w <lb/>
fail. <lb/>
C. S. <lb/>
The Man <lb/>
FOE <lb/>
V n have <lb/>
el i for <lb/>
by <lb/>
es, <lb/>
a.- <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019423_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
Grimesland Department. <lb/>
Mrs. Bettie <lb/>
and Fancy Goods, <lb/>
Goods and latest <lb/>
, me before <lb/>
j. Proctor Bros <lb/>
SUPPLY HOUSE. <lb/>
Piers and <lb/>
you lumber to <lb/>
and are <lb/>
In full blast and we are <lb/>
pared to gin grind um, <lb/>
lumber, do all <lb/>
turned work for <lb/>
house trimmings. We also <lb/>
do general <lb/>
carts and wagons. <lb/>
T. F. PROCTOR. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
GENERAL <lb/>
MERCHANDISE <lb/>
WOODLAND ITEMS. <lb/>
Anything wanted in the way <lb/>
Dry Goods, No- <lb/>
Shoes, Hate, <lb/>
can be found <lb/>
here, whether it la some- <lb/>
to eat, something to <lb/>
near, or some article for the <lb/>
op farm, you can be <lb/>
supplied. prices paid <lb/>
for cotton, country <lb/>
or the tanner wile. <lb/>
W N. C. June 8th. 1904. <lb/>
George and Luther Bail, of <lb/>
were in the neighborhood <lb/>
afternoon. <lb/>
Miss Cornelia Nobles spent Sun- <lb/>
day afternoon in the <lb/>
C. T. went to Winterville <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
Henry was in the <lb/>
a while <lb/>
John Crawford has been very ill <lb/>
for the past few days. <lb/>
j Henry sisters, Miss <lb/>
and Lac, were in the <lb/>
I Sunday. <lb/>
Misses Bessie and Laura <lb/>
by their brother, J. <lb/>
M. Smith went to Ayden Thursday. <lb/>
Grover was in the <lb/>
neighborhood Sunday afternoon. <lb/>
John Crawford went to <lb/>
den Wednesday afternoon. <lb/>
Timothy has very <lb/>
ill for the past week. <lb/>
j Mr. and Mrs. II. B. Smith went <lb/>
Tuesday. <lb/>
j Pattie Sutton spent Sunday <lb/>
with her sister, Mr. <lb/>
; Maud Harare. <lb/>
L. Fletcher was in the neigh- <lb/>
afternoon. <lb/>
Mas. H. B. Smith is slightly ill <lb/>
Like <lb/>
a Comet <lb/>
In Ike sky cornea <lb/>
lite stir of health <lb/>
to the week end<lb/>
item h <lb/>
troubles end <lb/>
digestive <lb/>
disorders. <lb/>
BETHEL DEPARTMENT <lb/>
I remedy <lb/>
I which, it <lb/>
is unable to do for <lb/>
Itself, even ii but <lb/>
I slightly disordered <lb/>
I or overburdened. <lb/>
supplies the <lb/>
Juices of digestion ind <lb/>
does the work of the <lb/>
Stomach, relaxing the <lb/>
nervous tension, while <lb/>
the Inflamed muscles <lb/>
and membranes of that . <lb/>
organ are allowed to <lb/>
rest and heal. It cures I <lb/>
Indigestion, <lb/>
palpitation of the heart, <lb/>
nervous dyspepsia and <lb/>
all stomach troubles by <lb/>
cleansing, purifying and <lb/>
the glands, I <lb/>
membranes of the <lb/>
and digestive organs. <lb/>
Tour C. Supply Tm. <lb/>
Benin Sire <lb/>
the trial which Mils <lb/>
E. CO, <lb/>
DR. R. J. GRIMES, <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Office opposite depot. <lb/>
DR. G. F. <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. <lb/>
BETHEL, . <lb/>
next door to Post Office. <lb/>
Benin, <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/>
TWO HAVE BEEN PAID IN THE <lb/>
H. C. VENTERS, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Dry Goods, Notions, Fancy <lb/>
Tobacco and Cigars. The <lb/>
only Soda Fountain in town, All <lb/>
the popular drinks. Hot Peanuts <lb/>
every day. <lb/>
i h <lb/>
Greenville's Great <lb/>
Depart Store <lb/>
i, <lb/>
Great Remnant Em- <lb/>
Sale. <lb/>
SHOT STOPS. <lb/>
Yes, it is rain or shine with a boot <lb/>
black. <lb/>
Sighs and tears will never pay <lb/>
rears of duty. <lb/>
A man always feels put out when <lb/>
he is taken in. <lb/>
Yes, indeed, butchers be <lb/>
called steak holders. <lb/>
It is the astronomer who most <lb/>
frequently rises to observe. <lb/>
The man who gets left doesn't be- <lb/>
that what is, is right. <lb/>
The young man full of promise <lb/>
frequently had pay. <lb/>
Moths are the most opera- <lb/>
tors in wool we ever knew. <lb/>
A barber who talks too much is <lb/>
often given to cutting remarks. <lb/>
Regret not despise not <lb/>
to-day, depend not on to-morrow. <lb/>
The rise and fall Standard <lb/>
never effect alpine <lb/>
Nothing can be love to Hod which <lb/>
d es not shape itself into obedience. <lb/>
OF NEWARK, N. J., POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value, <lb/>
Cash Value, <lb/>
Paid-up Insurance, <lb/>
Extended Insurance that works automatically, <lb/>
Is <lb/>
Will be reinstated if arrears be paid within on month while yon <lb/>
are living, or within three years after lapse, upon satisfactory evidence <lb/>
of and payment of arrears with interest. <lb/>
second year-7. No Restrictions. Incontestable. <lb/>
Dividends are payable at the beginning of the second and cf each <lb/>
year, provided the premium for the current year be paid. <lb/>
They may be To reduce Premiums, or <lb/>
To Increase the Insurance, or . <lb/>
To make policy payable as an during the lifetime <lb/>
insured. <lb/>
J. U SUGG, <lb/>
Greenville N. C. <lb/>
Cold Comfort <lb/>
what we are after, and the possession of one of <lb/>
our Refrigerators will insure sweet milk, cream and <lb/>
butter, cool water and many dainties that <lb/>
would be unattainable without the Refrigerator. <lb/>
. <lb/>
I S II Bill <lb/>
HAVE YOU A LAWN <lb/>
arts. <lb/>
is no need to borrow a lawn mower when we <lb/>
we sell a rood machine with best steel knives at such <lb/>
a price, and guarantee it to work. <lb/>
Water Coolers, Ice Cream Freezers, and <lb/>
everything else in the hardware line. <lb/>
t- <lb/>
We have this day placed on <lb/>
the BARGAIN COUNTER <lb/>
of yards of BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
Short Ends, <lb/>
Soiled Pieces and some Clean <lb/>
new pieces all marked down <lb/>
to much less than real value <lb/>
Some at half price. Come <lb/>
early and take advantage of <lb/>
this offering. <lb/>
. <lb/>
.- MM <lb/>
,,, ,.;.; . . I <lb/>
. If. Ii H <lb/>
. . <lb/>
. I ho MUM <lb/>
Ci <lb/>
. ; <lb/>
. . . ., . tool <lb/>
lugs. I <lb/>
a o. <lb/>
Love <lb/>
A woman with face <lb/>
by the kindness of her <lb/>
heart was visiting at a public poor- <lb/>
bongo She had brought a doll for <lb/>
a little girl who had en placed in <lb/>
the institution, but before giving it <lb/>
to her the <lb/>
would you rather have <lb/>
anything <lb/>
The child looked up wistfully. <lb/>
like to sit on your lap awhile <lb/>
like was your own little <lb/>
was her shy answer. <lb/>
mother heart, in whose home <lb/>
there are no children now will you <lb/>
not fold your arms about one of <lb/>
these lonely little ones as though <lb/>
she were own <lb/>
St. Vincent's Hospital and Sanitarium,<lb/>
Exchange. <lb/>
The Only Way <lb/>
Greenville's Great Department Store <lb/>
The reason it takes a baby so <lb/>
long to learn to talk is that it starts <lb/>
trying to talk the same kind of <lb/>
baby talk that its mother talks. <lb/>
Atlanta Journal. <lb/>
To get <lb/>
FINE JOB PRINTING <lb/>
Is send it to <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR,<lb/>
N. C. Jane, 1904. <lb/>
Did that among the <lb/>
farmers in Pitt and adjoining <lb/>
war has been declared <lb/>
against General <lb/>
have several potato bugs <lb/>
from New York and <lb/>
Hotel waiting fa big <lb/>
potatoes. They had better look; <lb/>
sharp for the people use lots of j <lb/>
green hero to kill bugs. <lb/>
J, B. Ward was in town <lb/>
day shaking hands with old <lb/>
friends, returning on the rooming <lb/>
train back to where he <lb/>
has erected a saw mill. <lb/>
Tr. P. O. James is on the sick <lb/>
list again. We hope he will soon <lb/>
he on the road again. <lb/>
There car loads of <lb/>
shipped from hero <lb/>
day. <lb/>
J. C. Taylor Bro., are <lb/>
to a brick store on Bail- <lb/>
road streets in the near future. It <lb/>
will be an ornament to town. <lb/>
Don't forget the old potato <lb/>
hustler is out is paying <lb/>
the highest prices potatoes. <lb/>
His name might be <lb/>
T. A. Carson has had corn silk <lb/>
for ten days and in ten day more <lb/>
will he eating new corn. <lb/>
yesterday while there was a <lb/>
fire in Mounts back yard, sparks <lb/>
by some means to <lb/>
his M with gallons <lb/>
oil, which MS about feet from <lb/>
the b end f his store. When <lb/>
the fire was the flames <lb/>
were three feet high around the <lb/>
tank. few minutes later <lb/>
that hole end of town would <lb/>
have gone but with quick work <lb/>
they saved it. That makes three <lb/>
they have been threatened <lb/>
with instruction on <lb/>
tree. <lb/>
Potatoes are rolling in here <lb/>
from all parts the earth. The <lb/>
three dollars, per barrel has pot a <lb/>
smile on th-i farmers face, for God <lb/>
they are the best people III <lb/>
the world. <lb/>
Mrs. W. Martin has been <lb/>
gone for days to Chapel <lb/>
Hill to take In the commencement. <lb/>
She returned last night with her <lb/>
brother, <lb/>
Robert ban purchased <lb/>
horse for his son, John. Girls <lb/>
you may look now. <lb/>
J. P. was married a <lb/>
few days at South <lb/>
Carolina. We wish him a happy <lb/>
journey through life. <lb/>
Bryan Shakes Hinds With John D. Rock- <lb/>
feller. <lb/>
When Mr. Bryan attended the <lb/>
Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, in <lb/>
New York, it fell to the lot of J <lb/>
D. Rockefeller to pass the t <lb/>
him. Mr. Bryan put a dollar bill <lb/>
on the. plate without up. <lb/>
Tho-e nearest to the two <lb/>
men watched movements in- <lb/>
When the services <lb/>
over Mr. Bryan was introduced to <lb/>
Mr. Rockefeller in the lobby of the <lb/>
church As they approached to <lb/>
shake hands they eyed each other <lb/>
from head to foot. The mutual <lb/>
scrutiny was so significant as to at- <lb/>
tract attention. They exchanged <lb/>
commonplace greetings, but con- <lb/>
to study each other's faces. <lb/>
The powerful features, eagle gaze <lb/>
and burly physique of the radical <lb/>
leader contrasted strikingly with <lb/>
the pallor and dyspeptic frailty of <lb/>
the richest man in the world, <lb/>
greatest genius among trust, organ- <lb/>
When they parted each <lb/>
his lips and smiled in <lb/>
n moused sort York <lb/>
i Id. <lb/>
A man may feel like cU, <lb/>
be told by his wife that he's worth <lb/>
less than a penny, but if he gets <lb/>
hart in a railroad accident, ha <lb/>
sues for anything less than <lb/>
Tery Ban. <lb/>
SOLD <lb/>
STOCK <lb/>
OF <lb/>
MOSTLY NEW GOODS BOUGHT <lb/>
FOR THIS SEASON HAS FALLEN <lb/>
f INTO THE HAND OF <lb/>
The Hive Company <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH <lb/>
Business entirely suspended in order to prepare, sort-over, re-ticket, <lb/>
mark down and placard each lot to be sold. <lb/>
Less Than Cents on the Dollar <lb/>
Positively the most Sensational Retailing Merchandise ever in this State. <lb/>
PUBLIC SALE THURSDAY. MAY AT A. M.<lb/>
W. L, DOUGLAS SHOE <lb/>
For Men Allowed f <lb/>
three days to sell all V y <lb/>
YARDS HAMBURGs <lb/>
Worth ct. AI- Of <lb/>
lowed sell all <lb/>
DRESS GOODS <lb/>
Worth <lb/>
lie <lb/>
. days <lb/>
J to sell all <lb/>
Under Lock and Key <lb/>
CLOSED TIGHTLY. <lb/>
Look for Large Green Banner <lb/>
Skilled stock Hustlers engaged, <lb/>
working day and night, adjusting <lb/>
and j a price on <lb/>
each lot that will every <lb/>
Older. Not a single <lb/>
ill be wed to the store <lb/>
while tin- fearful pi Ice reducing is <lb/>
way, Store opens <lb/>
Thursday, May 19th. <lb/>
BOYS PANT <lb/>
Pair to Sacrifice <lb/>
for three days <lb/>
pr <lb/>
CALICO <lb/>
best cent. <lb/>
Allowed days r-ll <lb/>
aC <lb/>
CORSETS <lb/>
cent <lb/>
to i <lb/>
I c <lb/>
it <lb/>
HENS SHIRTS <lb/>
Sold for All <lb/>
sizes days <lb/>
MIGHTY <lb/>
Steel Rod, Pram <lb/>
To sell fast, allowed <lb/>
Boys Shoes for Sunday. <lb/>
Shoes days <lb/>
excitement now <lb/>
reigns throughout Greenville and vi- <lb/>
People are seen in groups <lb/>
around doors, talking <lb/>
outcome of such <lb/>
an i lulling, bow the multitude of <lb/>
people will be served and waited on <lb/>
in sh ft h t clerks engaged <lb/>
must dose this stock of Goods <lb/>
inside days, <lb/>
TURKISH V <lb/>
cents, a . in on <lb/>
El <lb/>
PANTS <lb/>
yard. <lb/>
worth <lb/>
Buyers <lb/>
Remove Goods Same Day <lb/>
of <lb/>
g mi c <lb/>
Allowed days to sell <lb/>
all. Merchants take notice <lb/>
Store keepers mid country mer- <lb/>
chants wishing to purchase portions <lb/>
of this stock, may do so from to <lb/>
o'clock in the evening during <lb/>
days. The regular retail trade <lb/>
and consumer must be served first- <lb/>
Look for Green Canvas Banner <lb/>
overing entire front of Store. <lb/>
Hive <lb/>
CASH STORE. <lb/>
Look Green Banner. <lb/>
st Sell in <lb/>
Store will <lb/>
There ill b h <lb/>
be led t I <lb/>
good t-. ; <lb/>
anything i j v n <lb/>
day. morn <lb/>
Look for a,. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019423_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
I GREAT SALE OF<lb/>
WE WILL PUT ON SALE <lb/>
THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 9TH, <lb/>
Several thousand yards of Whits Goods that have <lb/>
been recently secured from the H. B. <lb/>
Co- Sale will last as long as the goods <lb/>
last The goods are all nice patterns in plain, <lb/>
small dots and stripes. We give a few prices, <lb/>
but to know the real quality and value you <lb/>
should see them. <lb/>
Plain White India Linen. <lb/>
Regular price per yard, <lb/>
Bate <lb/>
Stria White <lb/>
Pique <lb/>
Regular price and <lb/>
per yard. <lb/>
Bale pi 3-4 <lb/>
AH Pique <lb/>
That sell regular for <lb/>
to per yard, <lb/>
p-ice. -17 <lb/>
White Organdy <lb/>
price per yard <lb/>
Bel . <lb/>
Plain White India Linen. <lb/>
wide, regular price <lb/>
per yard, <lb/>
Bale <lb/>
White Trench Organdy. <lb/>
inches <lb/>
price per <lb/>
3-4 <lb/>
White French Organdy. <lb/>
inches wide, regain <lb/>
per yd <lb/>
Bale price. <lb/>
Pink, Blue, Red, Green <lb/>
and in <lb/>
Organdy. <lb/>
pi <lb/>
Bale pile <lb/>
Several Hundred <lb/>
English Long Cloth. <lb/>
Regular price per yard <lb/>
B. <lb/>
the Best <lb/>
Bleaching. <lb/>
Regular price per yard <lb/>
Sal <lb/>
Plain White India Linen. <lb/>
in regular price <lb/>
and cents per yard, <lb/>
Bale price. <lb/>
White Persian Lawn. <lb/>
wide, regular price <lb/>
per yard, <lb/>
Bale price. <lb/>
Black French Lawn. <lb/>
in wide, price <lb/>
per yard. <lb/>
Bale pi <lb/>
Black Pique, in wide. <lb/>
price per yard <lb/>
Bale <lb/>
Black in wide <lb/>
Regular per yard <lb/>
Stir price <lb/>
White striped Waist Goods <lb/>
Regular price per <lb/>
Bale<lb/>
Figured in Dots <lb/>
buds. <lb/>
Regular price pet yard <lb/>
Sale <lb/>
White striped Waist Goods <lb/>
Regular price per yard <lb/>
Bale <lb/>
All Fancy <lb/>
That sell for <lb/>
yard, <lb/>
Bale <lb/>
Log Cabin <lb/>
What's the over spill- <lb/>
ed nave got <lb/>
anyhow, and, ten to one, it was <lb/>
half water. <lb/>
If we spent less time in <lb/>
at the world, and more in trying <lb/>
to make it better, we'd pull <lb/>
through like a railroad train on <lb/>
smooth rails. <lb/>
Half the trouble in this world <lb/>
is in thinking that it's <lb/>
When it does come it's never so <lb/>
great but we can bear it, with the <lb/>
hope shouting by and <lb/>
by. <lb/>
There's no use in looking on <lb/>
life as a dream. Tue fellow that <lb/>
spends it dreaming has to dodge <lb/>
the bailiffs and never has enough <lb/>
cash for the gas <lb/>
Constitution. <lb/>
r. l. <lb/>
Dentist. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Birthday Party. <lb/>
Miss Ethel Bowling, little <lb/>
of Mr. and Mrs. J G. <lb/>
Bowling, gave a birthday <lb/>
Friday Many of her <lb/>
little friends enjoyed the occasion <lb/>
with her. <lb/>
Dr. D. L. Jame- <lb/>
Dental <lb/>
Surgeon <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
C. FLANAGAN, <lb/>
Attorney at Law, <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
CRANK n. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
William Fountain, H. <lb/>
Physician and Surgeon, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C- <lb/>
Office one door east of post office, or. <lb/>
Phone <lb/>
ESTABLISHED <lb/>
j W. PERRY k CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Factors and handlers of <lb/>
Bagging, Ties and Bags. <lb/>
Correspondence and shipments <lb/>
solicited <lb/>
We have one Erie Oily <lb/>
and Boiler, about horse power, <lb/>
been in use mouths. <lb/>
Practically good as new. Will <lb/>
sell cheap. Blount <lb/>
5-26 d aw Bethel, N. C. <lb/>
I will pay you cash for your <lb/>
Beeswax. S. M. <lb/>
Report of the condition of <lb/>
of <lb/>
Greenville, A. C- <lb/>
the close of business 28.1904. <lb/>
and Discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts 1,030.09 <lb/>
Fixtures 3,618.57 <lb/>
Due from 183,023.76 <lb/>
Checks cash items 1,002.32 <lb/>
Coin <lb/>
Silver Coin 3,289.59 <lb/>
27,871.00 <lb/>
8,875.03 <lb/>
327,756.15 <lb/>
We think these values will arrest your <lb/>
and promise an early investigation. <lb/>
paid <lb/>
Surplus, <lb/>
Undivided Profits less <lb/>
Expenses Paid <lb/>
Deposits <lb/>
Cashier's checks out- <lb/>
standing <lb/>
North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt. <lb/>
I, James L. Little, Cashier of the <lb/>
above-named bank, do solemnly <lb/>
swear that the above statement is <lb/>
true to the my knowledge <lb/>
belief JAMES L. LITTLE <lb/>
Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and to <lb/>
mo, this 8th day of 1904. <lb/>
JAMES C. TYSON, <lb/>
J. G. MOVE, <lb/>
R. A. TYSON, <lb/>
J. A ANDREWS, <lb/>
Directors<lb/>
J. L. Little. <lb/>
We beg leave to announce that we are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for i <lb/>
White Lead, Paints, <lb/>
Colors, and and <lb/>
Country Ready nixed Paints. <lb/>
There is no line in the world better than <lb/>
the Harrison line. It has behind it a <lb/>
reputation-for honorable wares and honorable <lb/>
dealings. <lb/>
If you use the Harrison need <lb/>
never worry quality. <lb/>
We trust that you will favor us with your <lb/>
orders whenever you want good paint for any <lb/>
Have just a car load and <lb/>
can give you Special Prices. <lb/>
Baker Hart. <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
rat <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
some . . <lb/>
avoid this we have made of private <lb/>
a room in advance <lb/>
carry the largess line of Crockery, China, Table <lb/>
GlasS South of Now York, and invite <lb/>
your inspection of our sample rooms. <lb/>
The Angle Lamp used in Uh Reflector Office was <lb/>
bought of at It is the best Oil Lamp made. <lb/>
examine it, <lb/>
THOMAS BROS., <lb/>
Wholesale China, Glass and Tinware. <lb/>
S. Charles St., <lb/>
BALTIMORE, <lb/>
M. SCHULTZ <lb/>
Wholesale retail Grocer and <lb/>
Dealer. paid <lb/>
Fur. Cotton Seed, Oil Bar- <lb/>
Turkeys, Egg, etc. <lb/>
Mattresses, Oak Suits, <lb/>
Carriages, Go-Carts, <lb/>
suits, Tables, Lounges, Safes, P. <lb/>
and Gall Ax <lb/>
Life Tobacco, Key West Che- <lb/>
Henry George Can <lb/>
Cherries. Peaches, Apple <lb/>
Pine Syrup, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour Sugar, Meat, Soap <lb/>
Ly, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
notion Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar, <lb/>
den Seed. Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Prunes, Glass <lb/>
and China Ware. Tin and <lb/>
Ware, Cakes and <lb/>
Cheese, Beat Butter, New <lb/>
Royal Sewing Machines, and nu- <lb/>
other goods. Quality and <lb/>
quantity. Cheap for cash. Come <lb/>
see me. <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
R. J. Cobb. C. V. York. L H. Pender. <lb/>
The Building <lb/>
and <lb/>
Lumber Co., <lb/>
Contractors, Constructors and <lb/>
MANUFACTURERS <lb/>
Factory situated by the railroad just North of the <lb/>
and <lb/>
a.- up to-date the host <lb/>
and contract, taken erection <lb/>
. and all <lb/>
our tinning and slating department. Yon -ill <lb/>
will do our best to give u <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
D. J. Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR IN ADVANCE <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, Pin COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY. JUNE 1904. <lb/>
No. <lb/>
POISONING. <lb/>
Popular Couple Married This Afternoon. <lb/>
Tuesday evening at his home <lb/>
the corner of th and Washing- <lb/>
ton streets, Mr. J. J. gave <lb/>
a nuptial reception in honor <lb/>
of the approaching marriage of <lb/>
his Miss Helen, to Mr. <lb/>
Buy This <lb/>
was an elaborate social <lb/>
event and was attended by a large <lb/>
amber of friends who called to <lb/>
express best wishes to the <lb/>
popular soon to pledge <lb/>
vows at the matrimonial <lb/>
altar. <lb/>
. The residence was <lb/>
decorated, hall, parlor and <lb/>
dining room each being especially <lb/>
appropriate to such occasion. <lb/>
The display of handsome and <lb/>
Valuable bridal presents was ex- <lb/>
large. <lb/>
The marriage took place at <lb/>
o'clock Wednesday afternoon in the <lb/>
Memorial Baptist Here i doubt due to poisoning <lb/>
the hand of artist wan again the bees had probably <lb/>
played, green I socked the of Che yellow <lb/>
and white, superb. TUe I which is a poisonous <lb/>
windows wow darkened, and j flower, and this way had poison. <lb/>
hi a lights the gave a led the honey, <lb/>
halo to the scene it ore <lb/>
entrancing beauty. <lb/>
Causes Death of a Colored Child. <lb/>
Dr. E. A. tells us of a <lb/>
death that occurred in this county <lb/>
a few days ago under unusual cir- <lb/>
It was a child of <lb/>
Thad Began, colored, who lives <lb/>
on Mr. F. Ward's place about <lb/>
miles from town. It seems that <lb/>
tome of Toad's relatives living in <lb/>
neighborhood bad taken <lb/>
honey. They sent word to Thad <lb/>
to go to their house and they <lb/>
would vs him some of the honey. <lb/>
He went after the honey <lb/>
home bis two children <lb/>
ate some of it. Not long after eat- <lb/>
it they complained of being <lb/>
blind and dizzy became ho <lb/>
so Hick <lb/>
Seeing <lb/>
hitching up to come to the doctor, <lb/>
but a few minutes one of the <lb/>
children, aged about years, was <lb/>
dead. The other child baa <lb/>
Dr. says the death no <lb/>
ROUNTREE FOR MAYOR. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
Without in the least meaning to <lb/>
reflect upon any one who may be <lb/>
mentioned for mayor of Greenville, <lb/>
fur two reasons I want to second <lb/>
the suggestion for that place the <lb/>
name of C. D. <lb/>
1st, Mr. is as well <lb/>
to discharge the duties of that <lb/>
office as any man in Greenville, <lb/>
many respects he possesses <lb/>
superior qualifications. His <lb/>
as a conservative, <lb/>
painstaking bus <lb/>
man especially him <lb/>
for the the next mayor of the <lb/>
will be called upon to dis- <lb/>
SILVER WEDDING. <lb/>
.,,. . . . . , charge. His knowledge <lb/>
It that they to bed. ,, B <lb/>
. ,. , , of human nature trained in the <lb/>
condition Thad began <lb/>
Mrs. J. B. Cherry presided at <lb/>
the organ with her grace <lb/>
and sweet rendered the <lb/>
wedding march as the bridal party <lb/>
entered. <lb/>
First the ushers, Messrs. W. H. <lb/>
L. I. Moore, F. M. <lb/>
Died <lb/>
Little Sadie, of <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. died <lb/>
Saturday afternoon at Beaufort, <lb/>
where they carried the child <lb/>
in the hope of <lb/>
its health. <lb/>
The remains were brought to <lb/>
Sunday evening and <lb/>
; in Cherry cemetery <lb/>
up the opposite aisles and took after the arrival , <lb/>
their places on each side the altar.; g <lb/>
Tue groom with best at the grave by J. A. <lb/>
M . E. i. Flanagan, The pall bearers were <lb/>
entered the near the T. S <lb/>
hi crossing L M. and Z. P. <lb/>
the who had passed Vandyke. <lb/>
down the aisle with her <lb/>
Perkins, as ma-id <lb/>
honor <lb/>
was ugly at <lb/>
tired In white lace over <lb/>
t white Mis. with <lb/>
hat carried bride ruses. <lb/>
maid of honor wore cream <lb/>
tissue, hat trimmed with j Bright Jewel Lawn Party. <lb/>
a of The Bright Jewels of the <lb/>
and purple sweet peas. church give a lawn party <lb/>
The ceremony la Mis. Brown's yard <lb/>
united this couple was evening 1904. <lb/>
The wish and of the <lb/>
Bright Jewel Baud is to make it a <lb/>
and cordial invitation extended to <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. G. E. of <lb/>
parents of Mrs. <lb/>
I accompanied the remains <lb/>
from that point to Greenville. <lb/>
The friends of Mr. and <lb/>
eloquently performed by Rev. <lb/>
T. King. <lb/>
After the ceremony the <lb/>
party returned to the borne of h <lb/>
bride where she changed her to present. <lb/>
robes to a handsome travel- <lb/>
suit, and the left on <lb/>
the evening train a trip to <lb/>
City Boston, <lb/>
be absent about two weeks. <lb/>
Suicide. <lb/>
Mr. George C. of Nor- <lb/>
folk, well known in this section <lb/>
where he used to frequent- <lb/>
committed Friday by <lb/>
Mr. Flanagan is a young lawyer j jumping off a steamer to <lb/>
postmaster Green- He had been <lb/>
ville, and a sou of the late Mr. for sometime. <lb/>
John The bride is <lb/>
youngest daughter of Mr. J. J. i Married. <lb/>
On Sunday afternoon at the <lb/>
Perkins, postmaster. No <lb/>
couple in Greenville have begun <lb/>
their married with more good <lb/>
wishes than these. <lb/>
Dr. Farmville. <lb/>
Dr. Hyatt, of will be at <lb/>
Farmville at the hotel July <lb/>
6th and 7th, Monday, Tuesday and <lb/>
Wednesday for the purpose of <lb/>
treating diseases of the eye and <lb/>
fitting glasses. Those who are not <lb/>
able to pay a tee will be examined <lb/>
free. 6-7<lb/>
home of the bride in the country, <lb/>
Rev. W. H. and <lb/>
Miss Annie Tripp were married. <lb/>
After the ceremony they came to <lb/>
Greenville, the home of the groom. <lb/>
Cypress or <lb/>
per poles thirty-five feet <lb/>
measure Dot less than twenty-one <lb/>
inches in circumference at the top <lb/>
not leas than forty-one inches <lb/>
six feet from butt. <lb/>
Must be straight, skinned <lb/>
knots smoothed. For further in- <lb/>
J. L. Chm. <lb/>
6-13 ltd Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
right field of experience, his com <lb/>
sense knowledge of the <lb/>
cation of law, and his desire <lb/>
to do right <lb/>
combine to make him <lb/>
from the business man's standpoint <lb/>
an ideal mayor. <lb/>
2nd. The second reason is <lb/>
a sentimental one. The <lb/>
is- well aware that in the push and <lb/>
press for place at this day, <lb/>
is a quantity unknown and <lb/>
foreign to the minds of must men, <lb/>
and if the -1 this sketch <lb/>
had nothing ft g r to commend <lb/>
him than the fact that he was <lb/>
brave, true loyal Confederate <lb/>
soldier, mention of his name for <lb/>
for the place would not be made. <lb/>
This is cited here only for h <lb/>
purpose of refreshing the minds <lb/>
of the aldermen elect for town <lb/>
will have an opportunity <lb/>
of voting tor a man who <lb/>
every necessary <lb/>
i. discharge the duties of the <lb/>
office, and who in addition to this <lb/>
is one of the few surviving patriots <lb/>
who forty years and more ago an- <lb/>
first Pitt county his <lb/>
call, and in the terrible <lb/>
bloody years that followed he <lb/>
never duty. First from <lb/>
Pitt county to volunteer, he <lb/>
fought through it all, and several <lb/>
months after Lee had surrendered <lb/>
he wan paroled by the <lb/>
lit Fort Delaware, <lb/>
heroism, valor aim of the <lb/>
Confederate soldier should mid <lb/>
will for y, t unborn <lb/>
generations awake deep patriotic <lb/>
and now while <lb/>
we still have a few of them <lb/>
left among us let snow our <lb/>
for them while they ye; <lb/>
live. Pretty words tenderly <lb/>
en, fragrant flowers garlanded <lb/>
wreaths of loving remembrance <lb/>
are all well enough their <lb/>
place for the dead, but a little of <lb/>
these during life often cheers the <lb/>
lonely heart costs the donor <lb/>
All things being equal <lb/>
this writer is at all times for the <lb/>
old soldier. His place among us <lb/>
will soon be vacant never more to <lb/>
be filled and while we yet <lb/>
time him. J, <lb/>
Senator and Mrs. Alex. L. Blow Celebrate <lb/>
Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of Their <lb/>
Marriage. <lb/>
On Saturday at their <lb/>
home Pitt street Senator and <lb/>
Mrs. Alex. L. Blow celebrated the <lb/>
anniversary their <lb/>
marriage. <lb/>
Their handsome home was <lb/>
decorated with the <lb/>
happy occasion and was indeed a <lb/>
scene of beauty. The lawn and <lb/>
veranda were lighted with <lb/>
lantern.-. The hall was <lb/>
ed in red and silver, the parlor in <lb/>
white silver, the sitting room <lb/>
white, green and silver and the <lb/>
dining room pink silver. <lb/>
large number of <lb/>
callers to extend congratulations <lb/>
and wish them many more happy <lb/>
years. <lb/>
The guests were received at the <lb/>
front door by Miss Alias M. Blow <lb/>
Alex. L. Blow, Jr., <lb/>
the hall by Mr and Mrs. <lb/>
Williams. <lb/>
Senator and Mrs. Blow received <lb/>
in the parlor as they Stood between <lb/>
two arches, bearing the figures <lb/>
1879 the other 1904. Mrs. <lb/>
Blow was handsomely attired in <lb/>
gray crepe de chine trimmed in <lb/>
white and carried pink <lb/>
Carnations. They were assisted in <lb/>
receiving by Gov. Mrs. T. J. <lb/>
Jarvis, Mr. and Mrs. N. <lb/>
ford, of Washington, and Mr. <lb/>
W. H. Jr. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. and <lb/>
y received <lb/>
the sitting room, Mrs. M. D. <lb/>
Biggs, Miss Martha and <lb/>
Mrs. Charles Skinner in din- <lb/>
Misses lie Blow and Winnie <lb/>
Skinner presided at punch <lb/>
the silting room were dis- <lb/>
played a number of <lb/>
silver presents expressing the <lb/>
esteem <lb/>
Greenville u.-is no more popular <lb/>
people I ban Senator and Mrs. <lb/>
Blow, it is the wish of all that <lb/>
their wended life may for <lb/>
many years to c as as it <lb/>
has be-u first quarter <lb/>
of their union. <lb/>
Mrs. Dead. <lb/>
The lie announces the <lb/>
death of Mrs. <lb/>
which occurred in that city Sun- <lb/>
afternoon. She as the <lb/>
mother of Mr. Hugh W. <lb/>
former representative of the Amer <lb/>
Tobacco this <lb/>
market, who visited him when he <lb/>
lived in Greenville Mr. <lb/>
friends here extend <lb/>
sympathy. <lb/>
PITT DELEGATES. <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
Register of Deeds B. Williams <lb/>
issued licenses to the following <lb/>
couples last week. <lb/>
W. H. and An- <lb/>
Tripp. <lb/>
Oliver and Pennie <lb/>
Mills. <lb/>
William Watson and Eva Dix <lb/>
on. <lb/>
Warren Slade and Du- <lb/>
Jno. Jones and Eva Davis. <lb/>
Dr. Joyner Hurt. <lb/>
Dr. Joyner, of Farmville, <lb/>
came from his home to take the <lb/>
train here for Morehead this <lb/>
morning, and his horse ran away <lb/>
with him while driving over, <lb/>
and Dr. Joyner was hurt on the <lb/>
face, receiving right severe bruises <lb/>
the Free <lb/>
Press, 13th. <lb/>
Owing to the cool weather the <lb/>
lawn party that was to have been <lb/>
held night by the ladies <lb/>
of the Episcopal church bag been <lb/>
postponed to next week. <lb/>
I will pay you cash for your <lb/>
Beeswax. S. M. Schultz. <lb/>
To Congressional Convention. <lb/>
The county convention held <lb/>
here on the 11th named the fol- <lb/>
lowing as delegates and alternates <lb/>
to the congressional convention of <lb/>
this <lb/>
DAM. <lb/>
Delegates- G T Tyson, W A. <lb/>
Pollard, Will <lb/>
P Willoughby, <lb/>
S V. Joyner, Edgar <lb/>
L Parker, W W <lb/>
Bullock. <lb/>
W E <lb/>
D Hathaway. <lb/>
M Jones. S A <lb/>
Gainer, J It G W Ed. <lb/>
T H <lb/>
G Little, B M <lb/>
Whitehurst, M A James, M O <lb/>
Blount, T II William. <lb/>
CAROLINA <lb/>
M Mooring, W <lb/>
A Jr., A J <lb/>
M A <lb/>
Alternates W G Little, <lb/>
Leggett, A <lb/>
J M <lb/>
J W E <lb/>
Tucker, W B Proctor, Alston <lb/>
Grimes, Abram Galloway, J H <lb/>
Mills, J M Cox, W L Clark, J S <lb/>
Robert Dixon. <lb/>
B Galloway, J T <lb/>
J B Williams, J A <lb/>
King Button, L N E <lb/>
L a. Arnold, J B Tucker, W L <lb/>
Wooten, Dr. C M Jones. <lb/>
Delegates J Z Bin G E <lb/>
J V Harrington, <lb/>
Cannon, Richard Levi <lb/>
Pierce, T It Allen, J M C Nelson, <lb/>
B Kills, J It Spier, L A Cobb. <lb/>
I II -Smith. <lb/>
S J S <lb/>
James, W B Wingate, A L Jack- <lb/>
son, Dr. W W W F <lb/>
Hart, J J Stokes, A R Holton, H <lb/>
Cannon, Charles BL <lb/>
K K Jack-on. <lb/>
II R . <lb/>
Little, T L inn.,<lb/>
Hilda. G W id, <lb/>
E M <lb/>
Lewis, J R Dav A Flanagan. <lb/>
Alternates W E R J <lb/>
Lang, W M M V kl <lb/>
L Kr C <lb/>
Moore, J J J <lb/>
Harrington, R King, J <lb/>
E B II T King, II L Cow- <lb/>
ard, Elgar Buck, W H Long. E <lb/>
G Flanagan, S I White, A L <lb/>
Blow, J Paul <lb/>
M G <lb/>
A Hardy, L C <lb/>
Arthur, Joe Bawls, j White, <lb/>
Noah Forbes, Nash Hardy, SI <lb/>
Dudley, J m. Briley, Tripp, Joe <lb/>
Evans, W J Briley, J J <lb/>
F M smith, R H Allen, O A Tuck- <lb/>
J R e, J Hester. <lb/>
B Little, J R <lb/>
T Spier, J P <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
SWIFT CREEK. <lb/>
Moore, W B <lb/>
Bland, Smith, J A Gardner, <lb/>
E S Laughinghouse. <lb/>
A Stokes, J B <lb/>
A A Smith, O P <lb/>
Moore, Smith. <lb/>
The county is unanimous fr <lb/>
the of J H Small. <lb/>
R J <lb/>
i Smith. <lb/>
. Jonas <lb/>
Bar- <lb/>
Hi<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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