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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
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<p>
I Dissolution Sale<lb/>
ENTIRE STOCK OF HIGH GRADE <lb/>
GOODS THROWN ON THE MAR- <lb/>
AT A GREAT SACRIFICE. <lb/>
Goods Go. <lb/>
Almost Regardless Of Price. <lb/>
III<lb/>
FALL <lb/>
I will have to include <lb/>
same <lb/>
As I have more Goods than I can handle <lb/>
Don't Wait Come Early -and <lb/>
Get your Choice <lb/>
U TUCKER. <lb/>
Next Door to the Bank of Greenville. <lb/>
LETTER TO L. I. MOORE <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
The <lb/>
of Oliver mi <lb/>
wait <lb/>
in with and ; <lb/>
ii. <lb/>
years; there are <lb/>
of the difficulty is to <lb/>
of <lb/>
of The Far- <lb/>
residence, <lb/>
Maine, was painted year <lb/>
ago; the paint was <lb/>
yearn ago, we saw it; <lb/>
know any Our agent then-, <lb/>
Spear <lb/>
know. Enclose a if you <lb/>
write <lb/>
Yours truly. <lb/>
F W. Co. <lb/>
P. S. H. i sells our paint. <lb/>
TO THE WORLD'S <lb/>
ST. LOUIS, MO. <lb/>
via. <lb/>
The Atlantic Coast Line, <lb/>
THREE <lb/>
Via and O. <lb/>
Via Petersburg and N. W. <lb/>
By. <lb/>
Via Augusta, Atlanta <lb/>
Nashville. <lb/>
Stop overs permitted a <lb/>
on tickets reading via. <lb/>
Richmond, also at u bummer <lb/>
I and at Atlanta <lb/>
and Nashville on tickets via <lb/>
Augusta. <lb/>
Finger. <lb/>
While catching at a base ball, <lb/>
Tuesday evening, A. R. Forbes <lb/>
was painfully The ball <lb/>
struck end of third finger <lb/>
on bis hand, driving entire <lb/>
nail back under the flesh and j <lb/>
breaking the first joint. <lb/>
Lewis of <lb/>
cut xi is wife to death with a razor, <lb/>
attempted to kill bis old <lb/>
daughter and then <lb/>
Whiskey was of <lb/>
hi <lb/>
ONLY ONE CHANGE OF CARS. <lb/>
Take Best it Costs No More. <lb/>
Rates from Greenville; <lb/>
for season tickets via. <lb/>
Richmond or Petersburg. <lb/>
season tickets via. <lb/>
Augusta. <lb/>
for sixty day t via. <lb/>
Richmond or Petersburg. <lb/>
for sixty day tickets via. <lb/>
Augusta. <lb/>
for fifteen day tickets <lb/>
via. Richmond. <lb/>
for fifteen day tickets <lb/>
via. Augusta. <lb/>
for coach excursion <lb/>
tickets on September <lb/>
and 29th. <lb/>
other information ad- <lb/>
dress any ticket agent of this <lb/>
company or undersigned. <lb/>
H. M. Emerson, W. J Craig <lb/>
T M. G. F. A <lb/>
Wilmington, N C <lb/>
Several North Carolinian <lb/>
killed in the that m-cured I <lb/>
Saturday <lb/>
If yon want to something <lb/>
nice look at the new <lb/>
Parker fountain pen- at Reflector <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Bland <lb/>
a Special sale. See <lb/>
A good typesetter straight <lb/>
newspaper can get a position <lb/>
at Tub Reflector office. <lb/>
Had You up Again <lb/>
King's New Life <lb/>
Pills each night for two weeks <lb/>
pat me in my <lb/>
writes D. H. Turner of <lb/>
town, Pa They're the bet in <lb/>
the world for Liver, Stomach and <lb/>
Bowels vegetable Never <lb/>
Only i Wooten's <lb/>
Drug Store <lb/>
Stomach <lb/>
Troubles <lb/>
cured by <lb/>
ESTABLISHED <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ <lb/>
Wholesale retell Grocer and <lb/>
furniture Dealer. Cash paid for <lb/>
Hides, Fur. Cotton Seed, Oil Bar- <lb/>
rel. Turkeys. Egg, etc. Bed- <lb/>
Mattresses,, Oak Suits, Ba <lb/>
Go-Carte, Parlor <lb/>
Tables, Lounges. Safes, P <lb/>
and Gail ft Ax <lb/>
Life Tobacco, Key <lb/>
Henry George Can- <lb/>
Cherries, Peaches, Apples. <lb/>
Pine Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Sugar, Coffee, Meat, Soap- <lb/>
Ly, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar <lb/>
ten Seeds, Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Gaudies, Dried <lb/>
Prune, Currents, Glass <lb/>
ind China Ware. Tin and <lb/>
Ware, Cakes Crackers, <lb/>
Best Butter, New <lb/>
Sewing Machine nu- <lb/>
other goods. Quality <lb/>
Cheap for cash. <lb/>
we me. <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
Under <lb/>
Mr. D. <lb/>
Nevada, O., <lb/>
by <lb/>
which <lb/>
had <lb/>
heart. <lb/>
Of <lb/>
Pa.,<lb/>
by <lb/>
the of <lb/>
Folks Must Eat <lb/>
No matter how low the price <lb/>
of tobacco, and we are the <lb/>
to supply <lb/>
Seasonable at <lb/>
Seasonable Prices. <lb/>
Fresh, Clean, Pure Goods only <lb/>
are offered. We don't call <lb/>
shoulders hams. Everything <lb/>
by its honest name. <lb/>
good com just in <lb/>
W. J. THIGPEN <lb/>
GROCER, <lb/>
Five Points. <lb/>
Phone <lb/>
Sale By <lb/>
L. <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
EXECUTORS NOTICE <lb/>
Letters testamentary having <lb/>
been Issued to me, by the Clerk of the <lb/>
Superior Court of Pitt county, as ex- <lb/>
of the last will and testament <lb/>
cf Martha A. Mills, u, and <lb/>
having duly qualified as such executor, <lb/>
notice is hereby Riven to all persons <lb/>
holding claims against the estate of <lb/>
said Martha A. Mills. t present them <lb/>
duly authenticated, <lb/>
on or before the d <lb/>
or this notice be plead <lb/>
in bar o U elf All poisons <lb/>
Indebted to said estate are <lb/>
o make immediate to me. <lb/>
of <lb/>
JOHN BROOKS, <lb/>
Executor of Mary A. Mills. <lb/>
A Blow, <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
J. WHICHARD. Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR IN ADVANCE <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA. TUESDAY. OCTOBER <lb/>
No. <lb/>
MADE HIS ESCAPE <lb/>
Slips Away From Officers Between Court <lb/>
Room and Jail. <lb/>
The George who on <lb/>
Tuesday night of last week stole <lb/>
clothing belonging to one of Faust's <lb/>
while the performance <lb/>
was on in the opera house was tried <lb/>
in court next morning, convicted <lb/>
and sentenced to two years on the <lb/>
roads, has made his escape. After <lb/>
being placed in jail did a <lb/>
lot of talking, in which another <lb/>
was implicated in the stealing. <lb/>
The matter was sent before the <lb/>
grand jury on Friday, they found a <lb/>
bill against other he <lb/>
was arrested and placed In jail t <lb/>
awaits trial. The ease tilled <lb/>
before noon when <lb/>
e s <lb/>
who beard him talking <lb/>
brought from jail In the court room <lb/>
to When the time for <lb/>
noon recess came officers took the <lb/>
prisoners back to jail, at least <lb/>
thought they did. It was then <lb/>
that gave the officers the <lb/>
slip his absence was not notice <lb/>
other prisoners were lock- <lb/>
ed w court set after dinner <lb/>
and the officers went to bring the <lb/>
our again it was found <lb/>
that had made good his <lb/>
escape <lb/>
SUPERIOR COURT.<lb/>
RESOLUTIONS BY SANS CLUB. <lb/>
The San- Book Club had a <lb/>
called meeting at Faille Skin- <lb/>
Wednesday morning at <lb/>
o'clock, when the following <lb/>
were unanimously <lb/>
That whereas, by the <lb/>
an all wise Providence, the <lb/>
Bans Club has sustained an <lb/>
irreparable loss in the removal by <lb/>
death of our honored beloved <lb/>
president, Mrs. <lb/>
Carr, whose shining virtues were <lb/>
at once a source of education and <lb/>
inspiration to our club, <lb/>
therefore, be it resolved, <lb/>
1st. the secretary be in- <lb/>
to enroll on the books <lb/>
-of this club a copy of these <lb/>
testifying to the beautiful <lb/>
qualities of head and heart of <lb/>
our lamented president whose <lb/>
memory we shall ever beat in <lb/>
tender while life <lb/>
lasts. <lb/>
2nd. That a copy of these <lb/>
resolutions be sent to her stricken <lb/>
husband into whose life was <lb/>
given as a benediction, and to the <lb/>
beloved mother family who <lb/>
sit in the shadow of a great grief <lb/>
3rd. That club <lb/>
of their sorrow wear a <lb/>
badge of for the next <lb/>
thirty days. <lb/>
Respectfully submitted by Win- <lb/>
Skinner, Nina James, Marv <lb/>
Rosalind <lb/>
Pattie Vice Pres. <lb/>
After the passing of these res- <lb/>
s the club at once ad- <lb/>
September Term in Session. <lb/>
The following cases have been <lb/>
disposed of since last <lb/>
L. A. and Joe <lb/>
Mabry, assault with deadly <lb/>
on, guilty, fined <lb/>
Mabry <lb/>
Sarah Spruill and Willie Spruill, <lb/>
with deadly weapon, <lb/>
Spruill not guilty, <lb/>
guilt v, sentenced days jail. <lb/>
John Johnson, not <lb/>
guilty <lb/>
John <lb/>
weapon, pleads guilty, fined lb <lb/>
costs. <lb/>
Evans, larceny, guilty, <lb/>
W. H. Tucker, assault with <lb/>
deadly weapon, not guilty. <lb/>
Jim Wright, not guilty. <lb/>
Patrick, appeal from <lb/>
Mayor's court, not guilty. <lb/>
Leon Patrick Elias Bunn <lb/>
for gambling were sentenced to <lb/>
three mouths each to be assigned <lb/>
to roads. <lb/>
John assault, <lb/>
and costs. <lb/>
Teel, appeal from May- <lb/>
or's court, pleads <lb/>
John Stancil, concealed <lb/>
weapon, guilty, lined and <lb/>
costs. <lb/>
Cornelius King, <lb/>
affray, guilty, Moore fined <lb/>
Cox, a-sit with deadly <lb/>
weapon, guilty, sentenced days <lb/>
in j to be assigned to roads. <lb/>
Zeb Gatlin, carrying concealed <lb/>
weapon, not guilty. <lb/>
Sentence against John W. Car- <lb/>
sen of months in jail was <lb/>
stricken out and judgment <lb/>
over he having <lb/>
rendered his stock of liquors <lb/>
the of the court. <lb/>
Court adjourned this afternoon <lb/>
for the term. <lb/>
N. C, Sept. 1904. <lb/>
Mrs. C. Langston spent <lb/>
day afternoon in Winterville. <lb/>
E. E. went to Greenville <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
A number of people have <lb/>
attending court in Greenville <lb/>
week <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Malone Tucker <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday with <lb/>
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lo- <lb/>
Army worms have done much <lb/>
to cotton in this section. <lb/>
farmers are very <lb/>
housing their cotton. <lb/>
C. H. Langston, and <lb/>
Miss Eva, spent Sunday near <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Braxton. <lb/>
went to V Monday. <lb/>
Miss Allie Wail spent Saturday <lb/>
with friends in Ayden. <lb/>
The revival at Bethany was a <lb/>
success, fourteen with the <lb/>
church. <lb/>
Luther and sister, Miss <lb/>
Lizzie, attended church in Ayden <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Quite a number of people attend- <lb/>
ed church at <lb/>
Miss Tessie has come <lb/>
home to spend a few with <lb/>
her parents. <lb/>
Miss Elvin Sutton is visiting <lb/>
Miss Annie <lb/>
Mrs. T. B. Allen and <lb/>
Miss Annie spent n <lb/>
portion of last week la Greenville. <lb/>
Miss Minnie Brown of Kinston <lb/>
and Miss Lou Edwards, of Little- <lb/>
field spent part of last week with <lb/>
Miss Allie <lb/>
REPUBLICAN CONVENTION <lb/>
Dr. Hyatt at Farmville. <lb/>
Dr. H. O. Hyatt be in <lb/>
at the hotel, October <lb/>
. 18th. and 19th., Monday, <lb/>
Tue-day and Wednesday, for the <lb/>
purpose of treating diseases of the <lb/>
eye and fitting glasses. Those <lb/>
not able to pay a fee will be ex- <lb/>
free. <lb/>
For Sale hand Brooks <lb/>
Cotten Press, in good running <lb/>
B. L. Nichols. <lb/>
Route No. L. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
8-26 ltd <lb/>
LETTER TO DR. CHAS. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Dear For house, no <lb/>
matter the matter with it <lb/>
it isn't a human you <lb/>
lead zinc. Apply <lb/>
with a brush, from one to three <lb/>
a to do it. <lb/>
Seven state chemists know all <lb/>
about have analyzed it <lb/>
report it pure will analyze it <lb/>
They it in the <lb/>
open market like. <lb/>
You know what color and <lb/>
dryer are do you know what <lb/>
the lead and-zinc and oil are for <lb/>
Not being a painter, you may not <lb/>
choose to know; but we'll tell you, <lb/>
Lead-am zinc and oil combine <lb/>
to form a rubbery waterproof <lb/>
to keep out dampness. <lb/>
the whole business. <lb/>
The oil would do it alone- lead- <lb/>
would without <lb/>
zinc; zinc and oil without the lead; <lb/>
but the <lb/>
because they wear best. <lb/>
We say to a <lb/>
as we'd say to him a <lb/>
every man to his trade. Can't <lb/>
all be and doctors; don't <lb/>
to. <lb/>
You will be more successful in a <lb/>
prosperous looking and be <lb/>
in good health. Take good care of <lb/>
one another. <lb/>
Yours truly. <lb/>
F W. Co. <lb/>
P. S. H. sells our <lb/>
CORN FAIR. <lb/>
Farmville, N. C, Sept. 1904. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
The first Pitt county corn fair <lb/>
will be held in Greenville on Oct. <lb/>
13th, 1904. <lb/>
Professor Williams, of the A. <lb/>
M. College, of Raleigh, will be <lb/>
present and make a speech upon <lb/>
corn breeding and help the judges <lb/>
decide who has the best corn. <lb/>
J. S. Harris, of Falkland; <lb/>
Joshua Tucker, of W. J. <lb/>
Teel, of Bethel; Alston Grimes, of <lb/>
Dr. J. N. Bynum, of <lb/>
Farmville; ate requested to act as <lb/>
judges. <lb/>
Col. I. A. Sugg will be chief <lb/>
He will appoint his <lb/>
own assistants. <lb/>
Each farmer in Pitt county is <lb/>
requested to bring at least a dozen <lb/>
this <lb/>
fair. Entrance is free and <lb/>
charge for exhibiting. <lb/>
As this is first attempt to <lb/>
to the attention of <lb/>
of Pitt county the importance <lb/>
of improving corn plant, it is <lb/>
hoped will take an <lb/>
interest in matter and turn <lb/>
in largo numbers. <lb/>
A. J. <lb/>
o. l. <lb/>
Fernando Ward, <lb/>
W. M. Smith <lb/>
Committee <lb/>
Dr. W. H. of Char- <lb/>
N. C, will be in Greenville <lb/>
at Hotel Monday Oct. 3rd <lb/>
and until of Tuesday 4th <lb/>
for one day only. His practice i <lb/>
limited to Eye, Ear, Nose and <lb/>
Throat, fitting glasses. <lb/>
Nominates Part of a Ticket. <lb/>
There was a small gathering in <lb/>
the court this afternoon in <lb/>
response to a call for a Republican <lb/>
convention. <lb/>
W. J. Pope called the meet- <lb/>
to order and suggested J. J. <lb/>
for chairman and J. W. <lb/>
Harper for secretary, both of <lb/>
whom were elected. <lb/>
Mr. Perkins not being present <lb/>
Col. Pope was asked to <lb/>
until the chairman came in. He <lb/>
was stating the object of the meet- <lb/>
when the chairman came in, <lb/>
and he continued to preside. <lb/>
a commute of five was appoint- <lb/>
ed to retire and recommend <lb/>
dates for the county offices. <lb/>
The committee recommended <lb/>
two candidates, W. J. Pope and <lb/>
Elias for the house of <lb/>
and three for county <lb/>
S. Tyson, B. <lb/>
F. and J. W. <lb/>
all other places to be filled by <lb/>
the executive committee. <lb/>
The executive committee was <lb/>
called to meet next Saturday <lb/>
date of the to <lb/>
decide about finishing the ticket. <lb/>
ITEMS <lb/>
N, C, Sept. <lb/>
Mrs. Ben who bas <lb/>
been visiting relatives here left <lb/>
for her home in Halifax <lb/>
Mrs Cook continues quite sick <lb/>
but though to be a little better <lb/>
to day. <lb/>
H. B. Phillips, arrived <lb/>
Mr. representative of <lb/>
piano company spent <lb/>
day night in <lb/>
Mrs. Charlie Jennings spent <lb/>
Tuesday in <lb/>
H. H. Stanley spent today in <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
James Bobbitt and bride rived <lb/>
to day their wedding trip <lb/>
and were entertained at tea by Mr. <lb/>
and Mrs. George Cole. <lb/>
Claude Chapman, a prosperous <lb/>
farmer and merchant of Pitt <lb/>
yesterday shipped here <lb/>
two car loads of tobacco <lb/>
cotton. <lb/>
J. D. Cox, today in Green- <lb/>
ville on business for <lb/>
County Company. <lb/>
RESOLUTION BY SCHOOL TRUSTEES. <lb/>
Greenville, N. 30th. <lb/>
Whereas the Board of Trustees <lb/>
of the Greenville Graded <lb/>
has received the resignation of <lb/>
their Vice M. A. Allen, <lb/>
who is leaving Greenville to make <lb/>
his residence at Danville, Virginia, <lb/>
Whereas Mr. bas been <lb/>
a member of said Board Trustees <lb/>
from its organization, and by his <lb/>
experience, ability and willing <lb/>
service has contributed largely to <lb/>
the Therefore be it <lb/>
Resolved that we rejoice <lb/>
with Mr. Allen in his promotion <lb/>
to larger fields of responsibility, <lb/>
it is with regret that we lose him <lb/>
from our Board and we hereby <lb/>
extend to him the thanks of said <lb/>
Board for his efficient work with <lb/>
us in the past, and best wishes <lb/>
bis success happiness in <lb/>
his field of the <lb/>
secretary this Board a copy <lb/>
of these resolutions to be forwarded <lb/>
to Mr. That a copy be <lb/>
spread upon the minutes of this <lb/>
Board a copy be furnished to <lb/>
The Daily Reflector <lb/>
cation. <lb/>
G. E. Harris, <lb/>
W. L. BROWN X Committee <lb/>
F. C. <lb/>
BEAVER DAM ITEMS. <lb/>
Beaver Dam, N. C, SO. <lb/>
Miss Maud Tyson, of Farmville, <lb/>
is spending sometime with her <lb/>
uncle, G. T. Tyson. <lb/>
The people in our section are <lb/>
busy picking cotton and saving <lb/>
hay. <lb/>
Misses Maud and Annie Tyson <lb/>
went to Mrs. S. Joyner's <lb/>
day evening. <lb/>
The new school house at <lb/>
lard's Cross Roads is going up <lb/>
very <lb/>
Grigg and Lydia Tyson are <lb/>
going to take Miss Mary Tyson <lb/>
home Saturday. <lb/>
Miss Annie Tyson spent Monday <lb/>
afternoon in Greenville. <lb/>
Mis. Bettie Smith two child- <lb/>
of Greenville, spent, last week <lb/>
with Mrs. Chas. <lb/>
Grigg, Elbert and Misses Mary <lb/>
and Annie Tyson attended the <lb/>
yearly meeting at the Meadow <lb/>
Sunday and reported a good time. <lb/>
Under Guard. <lb/>
The man Ed <lb/>
who came in town some days ago <lb/>
with a case of smallpox, was here <lb/>
again Thursday. The county <lb/>
superintendent of health at once <lb/>
notified the mayor called a <lb/>
special meeting of the of <lb/>
aldermen provision was made <lb/>
to detain until <lb/>
arrangement be made for a <lb/>
pest house, lie will not be <lb/>
lowed to go at large. <lb/>
They are Hustlers <lb/>
Barnaul's warehouse bas <lb/>
men it and selling <lb/>
large quantities of tobacco. <lb/>
farmers know that when they go <lb/>
I to with their tobacco <lb/>
effort will lie to make <lb/>
lit bring the very highest prices. <lb/>
is kind work that <lb/>
counts. ltd <lb/>
September Tobacco Sales. <lb/>
Secretary C. W. Harvey of the <lb/>
tobacco board of trade reports the <lb/>
sales of leaf tobacco Green- <lb/>
ville market for the month of <lb/>
at pounds. For <lb/>
the corresponding mouth of 1903 <lb/>
the sales were pounds, <lb/>
an increase for this year of <lb/>
pounds. The total sales for Aug- <lb/>
and September this year are <lb/>
pounds. <lb/>
It makes a wife to <lb/>
think what bad habits her <lb/>
band might acquire if he did not <lb/>
smoke, drink and swear. <lb/>
March Boger, a sixteen year- <lb/>
old white boy, is held under bond <lb/>
at Statesville, for the larceny of a <lb/>
horse. <lb/>
Fruit jars, tumblers and <lb/>
stone jars at M. <lb/>
good to <lb/>
sell b book iv r published, <lb/>
gs and Po-ins of The <lb/>
Southern Confederate by II. M. <lb/>
Wharton, D. ate. <lb/>
Send for circular at d <lb/>
Elliott Pub. Co., <lb/>
Pa, <lb/>
POOR PRINT<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019454_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
D. W. <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and <lb/>
Ties always on hand <lb/>
A FACT <lb/>
ABOUT THE<lb/>
Fresh Goods kept con- <lb/>
n stock. Country <lb/>
Produce Bought and Sold <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
G R <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
What is known as the <lb/>
Is seldom occasioned by exist <lb/>
external conditions, but In th <lb/>
great majority of cases by disorder- <lb/>
ed <lb/>
THIS IS A FACT <lb/>
which may be <lb/>
by trying a coarse of <lb/>
Pills <lb/>
They control and regulate the LIVER. <lb/>
They bring hope and to <lb/>
mind. They bring health and elastic- <lb/>
to the body. <lb/>
TAKE NO<lb/>
Not Quite <lb/>
How often can get a <lb/>
tiling <lb/>
nail or screw driver or <lb/>
lacking. Have a good <lb/>
tool box and prepared for <lb/>
emergencies. Our line of tools <lb/>
is could desire, <lb/>
will see that your tool <lb/>
box does not lack a single <lb/>
useful article. <lb/>
Of Course <lb/>
You get Harness, <lb/>
Horse Goods, <lb/>
J. R. <lb/>
Corey <lb/>
To The <lb/>
Owing to the law recently pass- <lb/>
ed by the forbidding any <lb/>
buggies to be left on the street, <lb/>
and room being limited, we <lb/>
are forced to quit feeding or <lb/>
care of any horses. <lb/>
And as we are and be- <lb/>
that our is the cause <lb/>
of the law enacted, we re <lb/>
request the Board of <lb/>
Aldermen to repeal the law as to <lb/>
all stables except ours, that the <lb/>
public may be entertained. <lb/>
Sept. 1904. A. Savage Co. <lb/>
m-w <lb/>
Let us speak of man as we find <lb/>
him, <lb/>
And only what we <lb/>
see, <lb/>
I Remembering that no one can be <lb/>
perfect, <lb/>
Unless he uses Rocky Mountain <lb/>
Tea. <lb/>
Drug Store. <lb/>
After Hid by <lb/>
Hi <lb/>
A smart officer belonging <lb/>
to a cavalry corps in India was sent <lb/>
on sick leave to the convalescent <lb/>
of Simla, and recovering <lb/>
his health among the hills there <lb/>
was robbed of his heart and in re- <lb/>
turn captivated the charming thief. <lb/>
The young fellow proposed and was <lb/>
accepted, and with all possible dis- <lb/>
patch the wedding day was fixed. <lb/>
But the colonel of the expectant <lb/>
bridegroom's regiment was strongly <lb/>
opposed to the lieutenant marrying <lb/>
and telegraphed an welcome <lb/>
at to the amorous sub. <lb/>
The chagrined soldier handed the <lb/>
peremptory message to his fair one. <lb/>
She glanced at it and then, with a <lb/>
becoming blush of sweet simplicity, <lb/>
am more than glad, dear, that <lb/>
your colonel so approves of your <lb/>
choice, but what a hurry he is in for <lb/>
the wedding I don't think can <lb/>
be ready quite so soon, but I'll try, <lb/>
for, of course, the colonel must he <lb/>
you don't seem to under- <lb/>
stand the telegram, said <lb/>
the lieutenant, upsets every <lb/>
plan we have made. You sec, he <lb/>
says at <lb/>
he does, replied <lb/>
the lady, looking up with an arch <lb/>
smile, it is you who don't seem <lb/>
to understand it. When the colonel <lb/>
says at what docs he <lb/>
mean but get married immediately <lb/>
What else, indeed, can he possibly <lb/>
else, indeed, de- <lb/>
exclaimed no ardent lover, I <lb/>
rejoicing in the new reading, which <lb/>
lie received with the utmost alacrity. <lb/>
So hours had scarcely <lb/>
passed before the colonel received <lb/>
the orders have <lb/>
been carried out. We were joined at <lb/>
World. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
GENERAL <lb/>
MERCHANDISE <lb/>
Dealers for the Next <lb/>
THREE MONTHS <lb/>
Will offer some very low prices en all stock. <lb/>
TO THE WORLD'S PAIR <lb/>
ST. LOUIS, MO. <lb/>
via. <lb/>
The Atlantic Coast Line. <lb/>
OLD DOMINION <lb/>
RIVER <lb/>
Steamer B. L. Myers leave <lb/>
Washington daily, except Sunday, <lb/>
at a. m for Greenville, leaves <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/>
and all points North. Connects at <lb/>
Not folk with railroads for all <lb/>
points West. <lb/>
Shippers should order <lb/>
freight by Old Dominion Line <lb/>
New York and <lb/>
Norfolk and Southern B. It. and <lb/>
Old Dominion Line from Norfolk; <lb/>
Clyde Line from Philadelphia. <lb/>
Bay Line and Chesapeake Line <lb/>
Baltimore and Merchants <lb/>
and Miners Line from Boston. <lb/>
Sailing hours to change <lb/>
without Notice. <lb/>
I. H. Myers, Act <lb/>
Washington, N. C. <lb/>
J. J. Cherry, A gt. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
T. R. Walker, Vice President <lb/>
Traffic Manager, <lb/>
Kl-85 Beach Street. N, Y <lb/>
THREE <lb/>
Via Richmond and O. By. <lb/>
Via Petersburg and K. W. <lb/>
By. <lb/>
Via Augusta, Atlanta and <lb/>
Nashville. <lb/>
Stopovers permitted a <lb/>
on tickets reading via. <lb/>
Richmond, also at all Summer <lb/>
Tourist and at Atlanta <lb/>
and Nashville on tickets via <lb/>
Augusta. <lb/>
New Fall Catalog j <lb/>
ONLY ONE CHANGE OF CARS. <lb/>
Take the Best it Costs No More. <lb/>
Rates from <lb/>
for season tickets via. <lb/>
Richmond or Petersburg. <lb/>
for season tickets via. <lb/>
Augusta. <lb/>
for sixty day tickets via. <lb/>
Richmond or Petersburg <lb/>
for sixty day tickets via <lb/>
Augusta. <lb/>
26.46 for fifteen day tickets <lb/>
via. Richmond. <lb/>
for fifteen day tickets <lb/>
via. Augusta. <lb/>
for coach excursion <lb/>
tickets n September <lb/>
and 29th. <lb/>
other information ad- <lb/>
dress any ticket agent of this <lb/>
company or the undersigned. <lb/>
II. M. Emerson, W. J <lb/>
T M. G. P. A <lb/>
Wilmington, N C <lb/>
Not Very <lb/>
said the man who seem- <lb/>
ed to be cherishing a case of asthma, <lb/>
have doubtless road and heard <lb/>
of cases where a perfectly well man <lb/>
has developed a disease simply be- <lb/>
cause somebody made him believe he <lb/>
had <lb/>
of was the reply. <lb/>
you must believe <lb/>
a great part in j <lb/>
course <lb/>
you ever know of the <lb/>
nation being appealed to to develop <lb/>
smallpox, for <lb/>
did. I once made a perfectly <lb/>
healthy sound roan believe that j <lb/>
lie smallpox, and lie had as <lb/>
a case of it as one ever saw. <lb/>
came from his imagination, <lb/>
must have been an interest- <lb/>
ins experiment <lb/>
so very. I attended <lb/>
for six weeks, and then it was his <lb/>
do you <lb/>
he made mo imagine he had <lb/>
paid a forty-five dollar doctor <lb/>
bill, I have never been able <lb/>
get a cent, out of him <lb/>
SHOES. SHOES. <lb/>
Worth our price <lb/>
Worth 2.60. our price 1.96 <lb/>
Worth 1.75. our price 1.35 <lb/>
Worth our price <lb/>
Solid <lb/>
Mens <lb/>
Mens <lb/>
Patent <lb/>
Sunday Shoes. <lb/>
Womens Extra <lb/>
You pay elsewhere. <lb/>
CLOTHING. <lb/>
We carry a full lino of MENS <lb/>
PANTS and BOYS SUITS- <lb/>
Boys Suits 11.50, <lb/>
our price <lb/>
Boys Suits worth <lb/>
our price 1.48 <lb/>
Mens Pants from up to <lb/>
per pair <lb/>
HATS AND CAPS <lb/>
All the latest styles in Mens <lb/>
and Boys Hats and Caps at very <lb/>
low prices. <lb/>
DRESS GOODS. <lb/>
also have a full line of Sta- <lb/>
and Dress Goods <lb/>
which we are offering at very <lb/>
low prices. <lb/>
MENS SHIRTS. <lb/>
Shirts worth our price <lb/>
Shirts worth our price <lb/>
Work Shirts from to pair <lb/>
Hens Underwear. <lb/>
Heavy fleeced lined, <lb/>
our price per garment. <lb/>
ALL THESE GOODS NEW, NO OLD STOCK <lb/>
also carry a full line <lb/>
HEAVY II GROCERIES <lb/>
that will be sold as low as can be had anywhere. <lb/>
Bland <lb/>
Issued August 1st, is the most j <lb/>
helpful and publication <lb/>
of its kind issued in America. It <lb/>
tells all about both <lb/>
Farm and Garden <lb/>
SEEDS <lb/>
which can be planted <lb/>
and profit in the Fall. Mailed true <lb/>
to a. upon <lb/>
request. Write or it. <lb/>
Wood Sons, <lb/>
RICHMOND, <lb/>
R. L. <lb/>
Dentist. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va <lb/>
Cotton Buyers and Brokers in <lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
ons. Private Wires to New <lb/>
Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
I ESTABLISHED IN 1866. j <lb/>
J W. k CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Factors and handlers of <lb/>
Ties and Bags. <lb/>
Correspondence and shipments <lb/>
solicited <lb/>
Her Relations. <lb/>
note that the handsome young <lb/>
woman wears many military hut-, <lb/>
tons, badges and other mementos. <lb/>
you the of the <lb/>
we <lb/>
no, responds the gentle; <lb/>
thing; I have promised to be, <lb/>
a to all the <lb/>
At this might have <lb/>
made a witty remark about o call to <lb/>
arms and the penalty for disregard- <lb/>
it. but because of her blushes <lb/>
we <lb/>
Folks Must Eat <lb/>
No matter how low the price <lb/>
of tobacco, and we are the <lb/>
to supply <lb/>
Seasonable Eatables at <lb/>
Seasonable Prices. <lb/>
Fresh, Clean, Goods <lb/>
are offered. We call <lb/>
shoulders hams. Everything <lb/>
by its honest name. <lb/>
good corn just in <lb/>
W. J. THIGPEN <lb/>
GROCER, <lb/>
Five Points. <lb/>
Phone <lb/>
PIANO PURCHASE. <lb/>
COLLEGE. <lb/>
Gainesville, Ga., May <lb/>
Chas. M. Stuff, <lb/>
St., Baltimore, Md. <lb/>
Dear I beg to enclose <lb/>
you an order executed <lb/>
for the purchase of fifty <lb/>
Pianos, to be delivered <lb/>
at Conservatory, <lb/>
Gainesville. Ga. This will <lb/>
equip the with <lb/>
Pianos exclusively, with <lb/>
the exception of one Concert <lb/>
Grand which we have on hand. <lb/>
When I began to investigate <lb/>
pianos with a view of taking <lb/>
out all and putting in an en- <lb/>
new supply, the <lb/>
came to my notice. I have <lb/>
studied closely during <lb/>
the last van years and have <lb/>
purchased ninety instruments <lb/>
in that time. After visiting <lb/>
the factories in a number of <lb/>
cities, I inspected your plant <lb/>
in Baltimore. I felt sure that <lb/>
no factory in the United States <lb/>
was better equipped to produce <lb/>
a strictly high-grade piano <lb/>
than the factory. <lb/>
have bad one of your <lb/>
instruments in the <lb/>
for on- year, and have <lb/>
tested the tone, quality and <lb/>
mechanical construction. <lb/>
thoroughly testing it for <lb/>
eight or ten hours per day, I <lb/>
have placed an order for fifty <lb/>
new Pianos. I find the <lb/>
action of this piano in every <lb/>
way to the artist and <lb/>
to the student. <lb/>
the cost of your piano <lb/>
is more than I <lb/>
have to pay for others, it has <lb/>
greater merits, and I consider- <lb/>
ed best none too good <lb/>
for Conservatory. <lb/>
I take pleasure in saying <lb/>
that after we have secured <lb/>
pianos ordered all of our <lb/>
rooms, both for <lb/>
and students, will be supplied <lb/>
with excellent <lb/>
Yours vet y truly, <lb/>
A. W. <lb/>
Rarest display of <lb/>
ville. N. from the far <lb/>
to suit. <lb/>
pianos in w on at Green- <lb/>
t at factory pi ires. Terms <lb/>
CHAS. M. <lb/>
G. G. Fa Representative<lb/>
U. C, Sept. 1904. <lb/>
Our roller wash board is a <lb/>
it is without a <lb/>
and is destined to take the <lb/>
lead, to try one, is to buy one, <lb/>
and to buy one, is to never he <lb/>
without one <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co., <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
Lime, plastering hair, windows, <lb/>
doors, blinds and aide lights at <lb/>
J. B. Smith Bro. <lb/>
Mrs. F. F. Brooks, of <lb/>
has been visiting he.- brother, J. <lb/>
this week. <lb/>
When yon need a nice, light, <lb/>
tough pole, for your buggy or <lb/>
carriage. Call us and make a <lb/>
selection. Milling Mfg. <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
The ladies have out where <lb/>
to go when they need the finest <lb/>
quality dress goods, laces, <lb/>
hamburg etc. <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
Mrs. Cannon has <lb/>
home a visit at <lb/>
As authorized for DAILY <lb/>
and we lake <lb/>
great pleasure in receiving sub <lb/>
and willing for <lb/>
those in arrears. a list <lb/>
of all who receive mail at <lb/>
this office. We also take orders <lb/>
for job printing. <lb/>
Ben went to and re- <lb/>
turned trout day this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
From the large of <lb/>
the Hart Bros, carry out <lb/>
every week they must be doing a <lb/>
big business as well as doing good <lb/>
work. <lb/>
Remember you can <lb/>
nicker piques and <lb/>
ether nice goods too numerous to <lb/>
mention at J. R. Smith Bro. <lb/>
Call Hi, Lam- <lb/>
burgs, J. R. Smith Bro. <lb/>
Do you know J. R. Smith A <lb/>
keep the most complete line of <lb/>
bleaching and ginghams <lb/>
in town. Their customers tell me <lb/>
hat it is so. <lb/>
Pictures satisfactorily enlarged <lb/>
or no charges made. Best <lb/>
given, Hart Bros., Ayden, <lb/>
Coward, Greenville, <lb/>
has been visiting to our <lb/>
The railroad authorities are <lb/>
making their warehouse larger at <lb/>
this point. The freight is <lb/>
so rapidly the old depot was <lb/>
not sufficient. <lb/>
If you need anything in the way <lb/>
of Crockery, Tin ware <lb/>
come to see us, Hart Jenkins. <lb/>
Groom,, of Kinston, <lb/>
was here Tuesday. <lb/>
Ask B. G. Cox about it. Life <lb/>
Fire, Accident Health <lb/>
P. O. Building, Ayden. <lb/>
Cotton seed bulls, Hay, Oats and <lb/>
Cotton Seed meal sold by Cannon <lb/>
and Tyson. <lb/>
Yard wide sheeting for at W. <lb/>
M. Edwards Co. <lb/>
Miss Fannie of Greene <lb/>
county passed through one day <lb/>
this week to visit friends up the <lb/>
road. <lb/>
Call and examine our line of <lb/>
high grade buggies. You be <lb/>
-easily convinced of the superiority <lb/>
of material and <lb/>
Aden Milling Mtg. Co. <lb/>
Cannon handles <lb/>
ready mixed palate, the best. <lb/>
Bock salt tor stock, J. ft <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
E. E. Co. will do all they <lb/>
possible can to please you with <lb/>
their line of heavy and fancy <lb/>
groceries. <lb/>
We call to our <lb/>
new line of Tan and Ideal Kid <lb/>
shoes Cannon Tyson. <lb/>
Men and boy suite at cost at W. <lb/>
X. Edwards Co. <lb/>
and can fit you up in any style. market tor beef, fresh meats, sail <lb/>
or price. <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Fancy candies, oranges, apples <lb/>
and fresh fish. <lb/>
First Class hand made brick, by <lb/>
the wholesale and retail large <lb/>
and bananas at E. E. Go's, stock always on hand, your orders <lb/>
Call on Hart Jenkins for a bar <lb/>
rel of Columbia Flour, none better <lb/>
to be had any where. <lb/>
Mrs. Beach, of Washington City, <lb/>
who has visiting Mrs. Charles <lb/>
left here for her home <lb/>
Wednesday. <lb/>
evening <lb/>
at the borne Claudius Jackson, <lb/>
a short distance from town. Mr. <lb/>
Clarence Hart and Miss Mary <lb/>
Jackson; Mr, Garris and <lb/>
Miss Mamie Worthington. <lb/>
E. T. Phillips officiated and made <lb/>
four hearts that were happy, hap- <lb/>
pier still. After ceremony a <lb/>
I old fashion country wedding <lb/>
supper was spread and everything <lb/>
as expected and at <lb/>
morn the scene of festivity <lb/>
rejoicing had barely ceased. <lb/>
I We lender congratulations. <lb/>
For can peaches, apples, corn <lb/>
j apply to E. E. <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Mrs. J. A. Flanagan a visit <lb/>
to friends and relatives here. <lb/>
Cannon Tyson wish to call <lb/>
special attention to land plaster <lb/>
for peanuts. <lb/>
Elder C. C. spent the day <lb/>
in Greenville Wednesday, <lb/>
if you do secure <lb/>
one of our high grade buggies, <lb/>
loss will lie than ours. <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. <lb/>
den, N. U. <lb/>
are Headquarters for first- <lb/>
class, light i eat <lb/>
Ayden Mfg. Co., <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
W. C. Jackson Co., are offer- <lb/>
for the next days their en- <lb/>
tire stock of summer goods at great- <lb/>
reduced prices. Note these few <lb/>
Pants that were 83.50. 3.00 <lb/>
2.50 and are now <lb/>
2.25 1.75. Shirts that were <lb/>
each are now <lb/>
each. A few pair of shoes in <lb/>
both low and high cuts at <lb/>
your own figures. Lawns, white <lb/>
goods and all trimmings at almost <lb/>
2-3 their value. Come see. <lb/>
What a fine time the farmers <lb/>
are having to harvest their crops. <lb/>
Harrison ready mixed paints, <lb/>
colors, lead, oil and at J. It. <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
pair double, single and fold- <lb/>
wire bed springs at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
Hart Cypress Shingles for <lb/>
sale b C Tyson. <lb/>
We bear the young men say the <lb/>
cheapest best <lb/>
is sold by Cannon Tyson. <lb/>
percales and ginghams for <lb/>
at W. M. Edwards Co. <lb/>
One lo t of calico at W. M. <lb/>
Edwards Co. <lb/>
solicited. J. A. Griffin. <lb/>
Why suffer from intense head <lb/>
ache, eye ache smarts and burns, <lb/>
hen you can be permanently <lb/>
el pair of glasses properly <lb/>
fitted, by J. W. Taylor, grad- <lb/>
Optician, N. C. Weak <lb/>
eyes, in need of glasses, <lb/>
ways go to worse. A lit- <lb/>
piece of glass properly <lb/>
ed will work wonders. <lb/>
J. R. Smith says his firm has a <lb/>
pair of for every body. <lb/>
come by car loads. <lb/>
Our stock of ribbons is wide, <lb/>
narrow, nice cheap, J. R. <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
Come to see OS when you wan; <lb/>
to buy Independent Manufactured <lb/>
Tobacco, we handle Trust <lb/>
goods, Hart <lb/>
W. O. wife spent the <lb/>
cay in Greenville yesterday. <lb/>
I take this method of informing <lb/>
the public that as the Summer sea- <lb/>
son is about over I am offering <lb/>
special inducements in order to <lb/>
sell. My. line of pants cannot be <lb/>
excelled, and the Edwin <lb/>
shoe which I handle exclusively is <lb/>
nut surpassed by any other make. <lb/>
Give a call and I have <lb/>
shown you my dry goods, notions <lb/>
other line goods I know I shall <lb/>
be able lo please you and sell you <lb/>
J. J. <lb/>
A big stock of Richmond cook <lb/>
and heating stoves repairs for <lb/>
same at J. R. Smith Bro. <lb/>
Elder S. B. Jones, of New Bern, <lb/>
has been here this week. <lb/>
Large stock of furniture consist- <lb/>
of suits, steads, <lb/>
and fitting chairs, mattresses, <lb/>
straw, felt and cotton at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
One lot of shirts for <lb/>
at W. M. Edwards. <lb/>
Mason Jars <lb/>
Rubbers at J. R. Smith Bro. <lb/>
To make room for fall stock we <lb/>
will dry goods, shoes and hats <lb/>
at greater reduced prices. W. If. <lb/>
Edwards and Co. <lb/>
George Worthington Bro <lb/>
work in this line <lb/>
Work <lb/>
Guaranteed. <lb/>
A lot of hamburg edgings in <lb/>
remnants. You I my them <lb/>
in the enlargement of pictures will <lb/>
do well to see Hart Bro,. <lb/>
sold <lb/>
Dr. Sure cure for <lb/>
In- <lb/>
We manufacture seats for and sale <lb/>
the trade, that are simply the y J and <lb/>
smoothest seat on the market , be best in mar- <lb/>
and is to do all its <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg Co. <lb/>
Corn, hay and oats, at J. R. <lb/>
Smith <lb/>
The protracted meeting still con- <lb/>
in the Methodist church. <lb/>
Rev. J. A. Hornaday, Green- <lb/>
ville, is assisting the pastor. <lb/>
Now we have plenty of the <lb/>
wagon and cart <lb/>
wheels and will sell them as cheap <lb/>
as any one. <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
New goods, new clerks, new <lb/>
and tobacco, with these there <lb/>
is no reason things shouldn't <lb/>
hustle, they are hustling <lb/>
is getting better every day. <lb/>
The longer we here the better <lb/>
we like it, and if we stay much <lb/>
longer, we shall grow here. <lb/>
We are told that Cannon <lb/>
Tyson keeps the best and most <lb/>
complete Hue of furniture in town <lb/>
If you need a pair of pants now <lb/>
is the time to buy them at W. M. <lb/>
Edwards Co. <lb/>
New up-to-date Wheeler and <lb/>
Wilson sewing machines for only <lb/>
at W. M. Co. <lb/>
For next fifteen days you can <lb/>
buy a suit at cost from W. M. <lb/>
Edwards Co. <lb/>
All percales for at W <lb/>
If. Edwards Co. <lb/>
Cotton seed meal and hulls at <lb/>
J. R. Smith <lb/>
perhaps just at this E. <lb/>
G. may not possibly be as <lb/>
busy as a Wall street broker yet <lb/>
It is plain a an Insurance man he <lb/>
gets there He is not only a <lb/>
but has found it necessary to <lb/>
employ His companies <lb/>
are first and every body <lb/>
realizes the fact, hence Mr. Cox <lb/>
is to be being a <lb/>
hustler and having something <lb/>
good to hustle. <lb/>
Ladies and Misses slippers at <lb/>
costs it W. M. Edwards Co, <lb/>
A nice selection of rugs at W. <lb/>
M. Edwards <lb/>
We want your hams chickens <lb/>
and egg. J. R. Smith Bro. <lb/>
An nice line of <lb/>
waist bats at Mrs. J. <lb/>
We continue to build <lb/>
buggies Ac. for we do <lb/>
claims <lb/>
ASK FOR <lb/>
COLUMBIA FLOUR, <lb/>
If it doesn't give you absolute <lb/>
satisfaction your dealer will <lb/>
pay you for returning it. <lb/>
R. P. Johnson, <lb/>
Dist. Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
The public to know that <lb/>
a first-class <lb/>
stock of DRUGS, an <lb/>
up-to-date line of STA- <lb/>
all kinds <lb/>
TOILET articles, best <lb/>
quality of RUBBER <lb/>
goods and the best <lb/>
Also carry Garden Seed <lb/>
Dye-stuff, Cigar.-, Cigar- <lb/>
Chewing and <lb/>
Tobacco, a large as- <lb/>
of Pipes. Hard <lb/>
Rubber and Elastic <lb/>
.-es, Rest stock of Brush <lb/>
es of all kinds. <lb/>
ally com- <lb/>
pounded. <lb/>
M. M. SAULS, <lb/>
PHARMACIST, <lb/>
AYDEN, f. C. <lb/>
cheap at W. M. Edwards Go's cannot <lb/>
Special attention is called to Mfg, Co., Ayden, N. C <lb/>
zephyr shawls, infant caps and i <lb/>
general assortment of ribbons at; <lb/>
Mrs. A. <lb/>
Notice you j <lb/>
your cotton ginned nice and j <lb/>
in order that you might realize <lb/>
better prices for it, bring it to the <lb/>
Milling Mfg. Co., Ayden, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Dr. Joseph <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON <lb/>
Office Block, Railroad, <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
Dr. <lb/>
Practicing Physician Surgeon <lb/>
Office Hotel Annie, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
At the close of business Sept 0th, <lb/>
Loans and Discounts, <lb/>
Furniture and <lb/>
Due from Hanks, <lb/>
Check and Cash <lb/>
Gold Coin, <lb/>
Silver <lb/>
National Bank notes <lb/>
other U. S. <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital stock paid in, <lb/>
Undivided profits less <lb/>
expenses, <lb/>
Dividends unpaid <lb/>
Individual deposits sub- <lb/>
to chock, <lb/>
Certified checks <lb/>
Cashier's <lb/>
Bills <lb/>
of of <lb/>
183.02<lb/>
RM <lb/>
Fence Your Farm With <lb/>
American Steel <lb/>
BECAUSE <lb/>
They save stock. They save land, The save neigh- <lb/>
They save worry, save time, hey are <lb/>
guaranteed. They are best steel. They have the <lb/>
only hinge Easy to build. No expense <lb/>
for repairing, Last a lifetime. The Am Is <lb/>
the best square mesh on the market. Car load just <lb/>
received. Come to s e us <lb/>
J. W. BROS.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019454_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
AND FRIDAY. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, <lb/>
AND <lb/>
Entered in the post office at Greenville, N. C, as second class matter, <lb/>
Advertising rates made upon application. <lb/>
A correspondent desired at every post office in Pitt and adjoining counties. <lb/>
to <lb/>
Pitt County, N. C, Tuesday, October -1, 1904. <lb/>
Yon will not have much more of <lb/>
warm weather to complain of. <lb/>
The nearer the election comes the <lb/>
mom it looks like Parker will win. <lb/>
Tin re is no need of any alarm <lb/>
because a with a case of small <lb/>
wandered in town. It will be <lb/>
properly looked after. <lb/>
Republican will vote for him even <lb/>
if he should say their whole tribe <lb/>
wars horse thieves. It does look a <lb/>
little strange, however, that any self <lb/>
respecting man born in the South <lb/>
could support him. <lb/>
You will not hear any better <lb/>
Speeches in this campaign than the <lb/>
one Congressman Kitchen d <lb/>
liven d in Greenville Wednesday. <lb/>
Port Arthur has been allowed in <lb/>
tho dispatches a three months longer <lb/>
lease to stand. That guarantees <lb/>
Christmas to the boys before they <lb/>
fall. <lb/>
Rev, Dr. A. who <lb/>
for the past year has been on the <lb/>
editorial staff of the Charlotte News, <lb/>
resigned his position to take <lb/>
ether employment. <lb/>
The Charlotte Observer says <lb/>
several hauled <lb/>
their cotton back home when they <lb/>
got to market and found the price <lb/>
down to cents. <lb/>
If Secretary- Loeb undertakes to <lb/>
deny every charge made against <lb/>
President Roosevelt he had better <lb/>
he sure that they haven't got it <lb/>
marked in one of his hooks. <lb/>
Cotton receipts are very heavy <lb/>
and there is a falling off in price. <lb/>
But Sully is quoted as saying that <lb/>
the supply is going to fall some- <lb/>
thing like a million bales short of <lb/>
the demand. <lb/>
In one section of county <lb/>
farmers complain that deer are BO <lb/>
numerous that they go into fields <lb/>
and do much damage to crops. That <lb/>
section ought to be a mecca for <lb/>
hunters a little later. <lb/>
There is enough truth to tell about <lb/>
the Republican candidate for <lb/>
dent without resorting to <lb/>
This should be a clean <lb/>
campaign. is evident that Judge <lb/>
Parker wants that kind by his re- <lb/>
questing that reflections on personal <lb/>
character be omitted. <lb/>
Jew Dr. Strange, bishop coadjutor- <lb/>
elect of the diocese of East Carolina, <lb/>
before a large audience in St. Thomas <lb/>
Protestant Episcopal church, New <lb/>
York, declared that the one set factor <lb/>
in any real and practical solution of <lb/>
the problem was the entire <lb/>
separation of tho races in social, <lb/>
scholastic, us and domestic <lb/>
affairs. <lb/>
Of course President Roosevelt <lb/>
wrote in his book the reference to <lb/>
the and character of <lb/>
the Southern people. But what <lb/>
does it make Democrat <lb/>
vote for him and every <lb/>
Some days ago we published two <lb/>
squibs as <lb/>
must he growing <lb/>
popular when men go four or live <lb/>
times a day to get a <lb/>
have been requested <lb/>
to ask the what sort of <lb/>
combination does a blind tiger <lb/>
a tonsorial establishment <lb/>
We are informed that Mr. S. J. <lb/>
Nobles feels at this <lb/>
and he requests us to say if the <lb/>
referred to We say they <lb/>
did not. We have no evidence that <lb/>
Mr. Nobles has engaged any <lb/>
illegal sale of liquor and we not <lb/>
charge it- <lb/>
of the entire people of Pitt county, <lb/>
and ratified by them before it shall <lb/>
become operative in Pitt <lb/>
Then the Messenger f on in a <lb/>
half column editorial to explain the <lb/>
position in which the Democrats of <lb/>
Pitt county placed themselves in <lb/>
adopting such a resolution. <lb/>
What This wants to <lb/>
know is where did the Messenger <lb/>
get its information That it may <lb/>
be correctly informed and how <lb/>
misplaced km its editorial, let us <lb/>
remind the Messenger that the <lb/>
Democratic convention of Pitt <lb/>
adopted no resolutions whatever, <lb/>
neither before nor after making the <lb/>
nominations. After the nominations <lb/>
had all been made a delegate did <lb/>
introduce a resolution referring to <lb/>
Training For Young Farmers. <lb/>
The popular course for young far- <lb/>
in the North Carolina A. M. <lb/>
College, Raleigh, N. C known as <lb/>
the short course in dairying and <lb/>
agriculture, opens this year January <lb/>
4th, 1905, and continues for ten <lb/>
weeks closing March 10th, 1905. <lb/>
On account of many improve- <lb/>
in the line of work introduced <lb/>
the work will be far more interest- <lb/>
and important than before. A <lb/>
new course farm engineering that <lb/>
will lie given in connection with the <lb/>
other studies will add much to the <lb/>
importance of the work This s <lb/>
will embrace rural architecture, and <lb/>
farm machinery, and special stress <lb/>
will be placed upon designing barns, <lb/>
houses, silos, etc. <lb/>
Another course that will be added <lb/>
is that of Farm Management, which <lb/>
will include n discussion of the <lb/>
tho Watts law and to the road law, of the farm ill various de- <lb/>
but the convention immediately ad- j <lb/>
without the I A be <lb/>
, , I offered will be the course <lb/>
attention whatever. . ., . , . <lb/>
which will include cotton growing, <lb/>
It be well to also call it to i , j. j <lb/>
judging, breeding, and soil manage- <lb/>
the attention of the Messenger in all of its phases. It is be- <lb/>
Pitt county's nominee for the senate i that the cotton course will be <lb/>
and one of the nominees especially important to the young <lb/>
We were wondering the other day <lb/>
what had become of Colonel Harry <lb/>
Skinner and we to learn <lb/>
that he is still in the middle of the <lb/>
road. At Greenville, recently, he <lb/>
made a speech in which he charged <lb/>
that taxes in Pitt county are twice <lb/>
as high at present under the Demo- <lb/>
rule as they were when the <lb/>
were in control several <lb/>
years ago. The Greenville <lb/>
tells Colonel Skinner that <lb/>
his crowd had control of Pitt county, <lb/>
the poll-tax was two dollars, against <lb/>
one dollar and ninety-two cents this <lb/>
year, and the tax on property was in <lb/>
the fame But this is <lb/>
aside. What we wanted to say is <lb/>
that we are glad to know that Colonel <lb/>
Skinner is still an humble plodder <lb/>
in the Populist ranks and has not yet <lb/>
the plutocrats Char- <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
Your felicitations are a little mis- <lb/>
placed, brother Chronicle. You <lb/>
seem to overlook the fact that the <lb/>
Colonel is holding down the job of <lb/>
United States district attorney <lb/>
His purpose in <lb/>
was to spring a nicely planed <lb/>
trap to catch them for the <lb/>
cans, and his failure at that time <lb/>
was quite amusing. <lb/>
THE MESSENGER IS WRONG <lb/>
The Wilmington Messenger prints <lb/>
the following in a recent issue <lb/>
democratic convention of <lb/>
Pitt county adopted the following <lb/>
resolution before nominating its <lb/>
candidates for the senate and house <lb/>
of <lb/>
the state democratic <lb/>
convention in its platform adopted at <lb/>
Greensboro in June, 1904, suggests <lb/>
the wisdom of leaving all needful <lb/>
amendments to the Watts bill to be <lb/>
made by the democratic legislature, <lb/>
Now, therefore be it <lb/>
by the democratic party <lb/>
of Pitt county in convention <lb/>
bled in Greenville, on the 15th <lb/>
day of September, 1904, That our <lb/>
senator and representatives, to be <lb/>
nominated by this convention this <lb/>
Jay, are directed and <lb/>
to cause the Watts bill to be so <lb/>
amended as to provide that the said <lb/>
bill shall be submitted to the vote <lb/>
house were delegates to the state <lb/>
convention and helped to make the <lb/>
platform of that convention, and are <lb/>
pledged support the <lb/>
action of the state convention upon <lb/>
the Watts law. <lb/>
Living Beyond One's Means. <lb/>
As Sweet has so <lb/>
aptly put it, beyond one's <lb/>
means is absolute <lb/>
Rut there are people who practice <lb/>
it the world over, and Raleigh is no <lb/>
exception. <lb/>
If you are trying to do what you <lb/>
cannot afford to Io you are living a <lb/>
lie If you are wearing clothes that <lb/>
you cannot afford, they are perpetual <lb/>
witnesses They are la- <lb/>
all over with falsehood- <lb/>
jewelry, your carriages, your <lb/>
your costly gowns tell me that you <lb/>
are rich, when you live in a <lb/>
stricken home, and when your <lb/>
mother is obliged to make all sorts <lb/>
of sacrifices to enable you to make <lb/>
this false display, you lie just as <lb/>
surely as you would if you should <lb/>
try to deceive me by your words. <lb/>
The consciousness of being well <lb/>
dressed and yet owing for it, of rid- <lb/>
in carriages which one cannot <lb/>
afford, of wearing jewelry and tail- <lb/>
or-made suits which are beyond one's <lb/>
means, or of patronizing expensive <lb/>
hotels and restaurants which one <lb/>
cannot by any stretch of <lb/>
or sophistry afford, is <lb/>
to self respect, to hon- <lb/>
and to manhood and woman- <lb/>
hood. You cannot afford to wear <lb/>
lies on your body or eat lies at ex- <lb/>
pensive more than you <lb/>
can afford to tell lies with your <lb/>
tongue. <lb/>
There is only one possible result <lb/>
upon character of falsehoods, <lb/>
acted or told, and that is <lb/>
deterioration and demoralization. <lb/>
No one can act a lie or live a lie <lb/>
without being dishonest. <lb/>
When a man sacrifices his honesty, <lb/>
he loses the mainspring of his char- <lb/>
and he cannot be perfectly <lb/>
honest when he is lying by frequent- <lb/>
costly restaurants or hotels, by <lb/>
wearing expensive clothing, or by <lb/>
extravagant living in any of its <lb/>
expressions, when he cannot <lb/>
afford it Raleigh Times. <lb/>
farmers in our State, and it should <lb/>
receive the attendance of every <lb/>
young cotton farmer that can get <lb/>
away from home during the winter <lb/>
months. <lb/>
No entrance examination is re- <lb/>
quired in these winter courses and <lb/>
no tuition is charged at all <lb/>
courses are hereby open to all <lb/>
who desire to better themselves in <lb/>
the various lines of agriculture. The <lb/>
total cost for ten weeks, including <lb/>
board, zoom, light and fuel, etc. is <lb/>
but Young men <lb/>
plating marriage should send in <lb/>
their application at once to C. , <lb/>
of Agriculture, <lb/>
West Raleigh. N. C, as all students <lb/>
are registered in advance of the <lb/>
opening date. <lb/>
Judge Parker Will Win, <lb/>
In a speech made before Tamma <lb/>
Hall in New York recently Rep- <lb/>
Win. said in <lb/>
Parker will win <lb/>
ion we will easily carry the Stats of <lb/>
New York. Everywhere I go I find <lb/>
public sentiment in favor of the <lb/>
brilliant New York jurist. He is. <lb/>
popular with all classes of people, <lb/>
and I have no doubt he will be the <lb/>
next President. The Democrats are <lb/>
united and enthusiastic this year. <lb/>
are alive to the tusk before <lb/>
them control of the country <lb/>
from the Republicans, and are work- <lb/>
with confidence and deter- <lb/>
for a sweeping Democratic <lb/>
victory. <lb/>
Empire State is safe for <lb/>
Democracy, and we will carry all <lb/>
the other doubtful States. The <lb/>
know Judge Parker is an honest, <lb/>
upright, an able and fearless <lb/>
man, a great a Democrat <lb/>
through and through. The more <lb/>
the people know about Judge Par- <lb/>
the more they like him. He is i <lb/>
growing stronger with the voters <lb/>
every <lb/>
on the other side of the <lb/>
says a contemporary, <lb/>
said to be almost unanimously in <lb/>
favor of Roosevelt's That <lb/>
is because they are on the other side <lb/>
of the <lb/>
Some people are more <lb/>
ed by the success of others <lb/>
by own failures. <lb/>
There is considerably copied and <lb/>
commented upon, a recent article <lb/>
from The Sanford Express to the <lb/>
that man who recently <lb/>
ed to this put his children in <lb/>
the cotton mill, was asked the other <lb/>
day if he wouldn't send his children <lb/>
to school. said he, i took care <lb/>
of my children when they were small; <lb/>
now they must support People <lb/>
who have read of the <lb/>
without knowing exactly <lb/>
what was meant by them, can gather <lb/>
a perfectly clear idea from the <lb/>
of this incident. This gentle- <lb/>
man is a vampire parent right down <lb/>
to the ground. His young children <lb/>
must support him, which support <lb/>
includes all the whiskey he can <lb/>
rink, along with the other <lb/>
necessities of life Every mother's <lb/>
son of them ought to be breaking <lb/>
rock on the Ob- <lb/>
server <lb/>
We want to call the attention of <lb/>
Confederate veterans to the fact that <lb/>
not a penny has ever been <lb/>
for them in this State except <lb/>
by authority of democratic <lb/>
lion. The last legislature <lb/>
the handsome sum of <lb/>
a year for pensions to Confederate <lb/>
soldiers, and since 1885, when they <lb/>
made tho first appropriation for this <lb/>
purpose, they have paid the veterans <lb/>
the munificent amount of <lb/>
If the Republican party is a <lb/>
friend to the old soldiers it has <lb/>
never shown it. The only <lb/>
ate soldiers to whom they have given <lb/>
liberal pensions are those who de- <lb/>
their colors in a pressing time <lb/>
of need and entered the Union army <lb/>
to fight against their own section <lb/>
and their own Times. <lb/>
It is strange that some people will <lb/>
persist in becoming <lb/>
every time their candidate fails of <lb/>
nomination and will take unusual <lb/>
pains to let j know of their dis- <lb/>
pleasure in the matter. When <lb/>
goes into a political convention he <lb/>
virtually binds himself to acquiesce <lb/>
in its decision and to support the <lb/>
nominees of that convention in every <lb/>
possible way. The time for fighting <lb/>
is before the convention meets. <lb/>
I it has met it is the duty of every <lb/>
man to work for the ticket and for a <lb/>
man to allow his prejudices in the- <lb/>
matter and his preference for a de- <lb/>
candidate to prevent <lb/>
from doing he can for <lb/>
success of the ticket does him little <lb/>
credit. All of which is <lb/>
by the attitude of certain North <lb/>
Carolina newspapers toward certain <lb/>
candidates during the present cam- <lb/>
Winston Sentinel. <lb/>
Tho Impossible Proofreader. <lb/>
Former what's <lb/>
become of old who used <lb/>
to be working in the <lb/>
Editor Dated to <lb/>
part with him too. But the pres- <lb/>
sure became unendurable. Although <lb/>
he me say that old <lb/>
who died, had industry <lb/>
and frugality accumulated a lone- <lb/>
some when I wrote it <lb/>
I forgave him <lb/>
and let him stay on. Rut when he <lb/>
me say in a society item that <lb/>
Miss coiffure <lb/>
frightful by reason of the <lb/>
derangement of her soft in- <lb/>
stead of by reason of the <lb/>
careful arrangement of her soft <lb/>
the pressure brought to <lb/>
bear by influential citizens was some- <lb/>
thing I could no longer withstand. <lb/>
Baltimore American. <lb/>
I have just, returned from <lb/>
more where I bought my fall mil- <lb/>
and notion. Opening Sept <lb/>
1904. Mr. H. L. <lb/>
N. O , next door to <lb/>
Dr's. <lb/>
Mistake. <lb/>
A parrot in a country district es- <lb/>
caped from its cage and settled on <lb/>
the roof of a laborer's cottage. The <lb/>
laborer had never seen such a thing <lb/>
before and climbed up with a view <lb/>
of securing it. When his head <lb/>
reached the level of the top of the <lb/>
roof, the parrot flapped a wing at <lb/>
him and said, want <lb/>
Very much taken back, the labor- <lb/>
politely touched his cap and re- <lb/>
plied <lb/>
beg your pardon, sir, I thought <lb/>
you were a <lb/>
Nothing There. <lb/>
Albert, the young man of the <lb/>
family, was undeniably ill. The <lb/>
doctor was sent fr. He pronounced <lb/>
it a case of as indeed the <lb/>
parents had suspected, from the pa- <lb/>
yellowish appearance. <lb/>
Albert's little sister was explain- <lb/>
to a caller. <lb/>
got the jailer <lb/>
aid. <lb/>
how the doctor tell,. <lb/>
asked the relief. <lb/>
I- <lb/>
into v<lb/>
WINTERVILLE <lb/>
This department is in charge of A. D. Johnston, who is authorized to rep- <lb/>
resent the Eastern Reflector in Winterville and territory. <lb/>
There is selection of <lb/>
Inks, library paste and <lb/>
at the drug store of Dr. B. T. Cox <lb/>
Bro. ever brought to <lb/>
Protect your eyes by buying one <lb/>
of those eye shades at the Drug <lb/>
Store, price cents. <lb/>
For underwear that will make it <lb/>
warm for you in cold weather call <lb/>
at John Whitty Son's. <lb/>
Stoves, heaters and ranges. All <lb/>
styles, lowest prices. See our stock <lb/>
before purchasing and save money. <lb/>
Winterville Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Boarding J. D. <lb/>
Cox. per day. Best <lb/>
town. <lb/>
For are now fully <lb/>
moved in our new factory <lb/>
would rent smaller shop with en- <lb/>
, , and boiler attached ready <lb/>
Corn, Oats and May ,., he <lb/>
cheap for cash, O. A. Kittrell you ad <lb/>
and Co. <lb/>
Highest price for cotton seed <lb/>
paid by County Oil Mill. <lb/>
Q. A. Kittrell and Co. pay <lb/>
per bushel No. grapes <lb/>
and others according to quality. <lb/>
See Kittrell Taylor for a fresh <lb/>
loaf of bread. <lb/>
better <lb/>
apply soon. <lb/>
A. Q. Cox Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Penny candies a specialty at the <lb/>
store of B. T. Cox Bro. <lb/>
Kittrell have just re- <lb/>
a nice assortment of cutlery <lb/>
if you want a nice knife see them. <lb/>
Everett of Ayden, is <lb/>
good barrel here a force of bands build- <lb/>
flour or pork see Kittrell and the <lb/>
pots, Wash pole and <lb/>
you want ice lemons I crockery <lb/>
fail to get them from Kittrell and <lb/>
Taylor. j willow ware. <lb/>
Caps the very kind you are <lb/>
for- from to j want at per <lb/>
G. Chapman and Co. Barber Co. <lb/>
I have been informed that A. I We now have a <lb/>
W. Ange and Co. has the ladies dress goods and trimming. <lb/>
line of dress goods silks, ribbons, hats and umbrellas, rugs <lb/>
For nice picture frames <lb/>
we've got cheap. <lb/>
A. W. Co. <lb/>
Trunks and valises cheap. <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
For dress and work shirts call at <lb/>
Son's. <lb/>
If you need a wagon don't fail <lb/>
to buy one A. G. Cox Mfg. <lb/>
Tar <lb/>
G. A. Kittrell Co. will pay the <lb/>
top of the market for your grapes. <lb/>
W. A. Pollard, of Standard was <lb/>
here Friday. <lb/>
For lime and sieves see A. W. <lb/>
Ange Co. <lb/>
lat <lb/>
wood cart hubs. A, G. Cox Mfg. <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
For A pair of me- <lb/>
size mules. A. G. Cox. <lb/>
Second band buggies cheap. If <lb/>
wish to buy a second band <lb/>
cheap see A. G. Cox <lb/>
Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Plastering hair and cook stoves <lb/>
at A. W. Ange. <lb/>
A lb. bale of cotton in <lb/>
minutes is the way they gin at <lb/>
oil mill. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Co. are <lb/>
chasing a lot of fine tinnier for Tar <lb/>
Back to School Again. <lb/>
and lace town. shades. Will take Heel carts and wagons. They are <lb/>
Why halt ye between two pleasure in showing one and all also making a supply of <lb/>
ion A. W. Ange and Co. have through our line, <lb/>
the best Shoes. right along Barber Co. <lb/>
bee fitted. <lb/>
Window and door frames, porch <lb/>
H. A. White was here brackets and all kinds of <lb/>
insuring the Pitt Co. Oil Mill. trimmings at rock bottom <lb/>
T. N. Manning Co. are tarry prices, Winterville Mfg. Co. <lb/>
the medicine that will cure, At t <lb/>
diseases of the in any slate. , ,., ,. <lb/>
wish to notify the just doing Its <lb/>
public that I every day. <lb/>
day at my mill one mile south of <lb/>
Level Sam place. <lb/>
Tripp. <lb/>
We have on hand a nice <lb/>
these wheels so can till a big <lb/>
demand when the proper season j <lb/>
arrives. <lb/>
Get Sum soda Sets per <lb/>
T. X. and Co. <lb/>
Pictures and picture frames. <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
C, Co. say <lb/>
business than they <lb/>
done. <lb/>
we carry a complete of heavy. <lb/>
fancy prices light, <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Being in position to secure first I <lb/>
raw material cheap, having <lb/>
How time flies He it is September again and your <lb/>
Boy must have some good School Clothes. <lb/>
The growing, romping School Boy is an expensive <lb/>
proposition at best. Parents, who have raised a few, know <lb/>
all about it. They know, too, the real value of <lb/>
Good School Clothes. <lb/>
We have the satisfying kind, with all the style features <lb/>
to please Boy, and back of it the sold, substantial wear <lb/>
the parents always insist upon. <lb/>
We insure by back, if anything <lb/>
goes wrong with the Clothes. <lb/>
6-c- <lb/>
Frank WilsOn, <lb/>
The King Clothier.<lb/>
For Pent. One wood shop with <lb/>
blacksmith shop plainer at- <lb/>
Also horse engine <lb/>
horse boiler <lb/>
line of dress at remarkably for work wood , <lb/>
low figures, come, see and be con- . f M ft w ft with which to do our <lb/>
Yours truly and In save and <lb/>
Kittrell Taylor. Apply to work up nearly all of timber, <lb/>
Box Body for Sale-It. is Mrs up.,. area few of reasons why we <lb/>
now the season when you may <lb/>
want a cart to haul your <lb/>
farm products to the <lb/>
market. The A. Cox Mfg. IV. are <lb/>
making and selling them and y <lb/>
had better send them your order <lb/>
at once. <lb/>
J. A. Pate, of Rocky Mt., <lb/>
here Friday. <lb/>
That old reliable Elk <lb/>
r sale at R. G. Chapman . . <lb/>
for <lb/>
The Winterville Mfg. Co., puts <lb/>
up nice fly proof kitchen <lb/>
They arc cheap and convenient. <lb/>
Get your dealer to order you one. <lb/>
The Pitt County Oil Mill soon <lb/>
the northern , where she has j Mfg. Co. <lb/>
selected latest of Car load received, <lb/>
Ladies call be j Harrington, Co. <lb/>
School <lb/>
money and give satisfaction and all <lb/>
Yours truly, at the drug <lb/>
Mrs. Sarah Taylor I <lb/>
The A. C. L's work tr-in is Heel Shoes i <lb/>
the a pair and be convinced of their <lb/>
worm. It. O. Chapman Co. <lb/>
j. <lb/>
oil mill. <lb/>
At Reduced Prices The A. G. <lb/>
Cox Mfg. On, are closing out a big <lb/>
lot wire fence reduced <lb/>
They have the and most <lb/>
be ready to bay your cotton seed fence made and you <lb/>
end will pay highest cash prices a at <lb/>
them. <lb/>
G. A. Kittrell Co., will be on i <lb/>
the market season as grape <lb/>
will pay tho highest <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
See the Furniture at A. <lb/>
Ange Prices right. <lb/>
Light wood Cart <lb/>
Hobs. A. G. Cox Mfg. Co <lb/>
We want your grapes every day <lb/>
up to Friday at o'clock a. in. <lb/>
Don't bring them after that time <lb/>
Fridays nor on Saturdays. <lb/>
pay per pound for No. <lb/>
ken and He per pound for No- <lb/>
It. picked. <lb/>
Yours truly, <lb/>
G. A. Co-; <lb/>
For a flue line of dress <lb/>
yon should see K. G, Chapman <lb/>
o, <lb/>
Nail and Lime see A. W. <lb/>
Ange A Co. I <lb/>
once. <lb/>
is on <lb/>
perfectly <lb/>
Tasteless CASTOR OIL sold. <lb/>
Taste as good as Maple Syrup. <lb/>
cents per bottle at Dr. B. T. <lb/>
Cox. Winterville, N. <lb/>
The American Girl. <lb/>
A good as its name. pair fully <lb/>
j guaranteed in the wearer. This is the <lb/>
Best Shoe Made. <lb/>
C E, Misses and Children. Weber Bros, <lb/>
for Men and Boys. <lb/>
Now is the Time You Should Think <lb/>
About Your Winter Shoes. <lb/>
We can show y- u to your entire mi infliction. <lb/>
KING COMBINATION BUGGY. <lb/>
MANUFACTURED BY <lb/>
A. COX MANUFACTURING COMPANY <lb/>
WINTERVILLE, N <lb/>
C L<lb/>
THE <lb/>
FOR FINE JOB PRINTING <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019454_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
W t-t-t . <lb/>
Greenville's Great <lb/>
Department Store <lb/>
Clot. Call Far <lb/>
Harcourt in his office discuss- <lb/>
with a friend his plans for <lb/>
old fashioned at his <lb/>
grandfather's in the Just <lb/>
then a messenger boy brought in a <lb/>
telegram; it u from the grand- <lb/>
father. <lb/>
all burned last <lb/>
Only house and smoke house <lb/>
it read. <lb/>
Harcourt looked gloomy for a <lb/>
moment. Then hi.; face lighted up. <lb/>
he cried, the <lb/>
pig. is safe cut hi in u and <lb/>
cured him before <lb/>
exclaimed <lb/>
friend. must be thankful <lb/>
that he escaped the <lb/>
DEPARTMENT <lb/>
DR. R. J. GRIMES, <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, <lb/>
BETHEL, N. C. <lb/>
Office opposite depot. <lb/>
DR. G. F. <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, <lb/>
BETHEL, N. C. <lb/>
next door to Post <lb/>
THREE a day you sit, <lb/>
with your an I <lb/>
Glass. is the we <lb/>
can of for baring plenty <lb/>
a ii fin baring dainty and <lb/>
attractive. <lb/>
i- a saying th if <lb/>
oft hi- on and if <lb/>
this should prove in your case <lb/>
and v rot b r. I- to fill the <lb/>
vacuum, call in our Grocery <lb/>
Department the very best <lb/>
for man, and if <lb/>
you should too we <lb/>
expect you will if you buy our <lb/>
immense <lb/>
Furniture merit where you <lb/>
will find Beds, <lb/>
Chairs, on you can re-t <lb/>
until you iv cured of the Gout. <lb/>
If you don't believe this cull <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co <lb/>
GREENVILLE'S GREAT STORE <lb/>
Her Ex-Son. <lb/>
goes Mrs. <lb/>
with her stepson. What <lb/>
a homely boy he <lb/>
Mrs. De and yet <lb/>
remember several years ago <lb/>
thought him quite pretty. <lb/>
Mrs. but you were <lb/>
his mother at that time, were you <lb/>
not <lb/>
Mrs. De yes, I be- <lb/>
I was, <lb/>
A Great Drawback. <lb/>
tests show it to be a <lb/>
did medicinal said the <lb/>
chemist. <lb/>
there's only one thing <lb/>
wrong with said the owner of <lb/>
the spring; <lb/>
the taste <lb/>
course; that's the trouble. <lb/>
No one would believe it was a <lb/>
water if it didn't have an <lb/>
unpleasant Philadelphia <lb/>
Ledger. <lb/>
A weak atomic weakens <lb/>
man, it <lb/>
i fond he <lb/>
Health cannot l re- <lb/>
stored any sick Hi weak <lb/>
Brat <lb/>
and lo the A <lb/>
I weak stomach cannot digest enough <lb/>
I fen to lee tissue and revive <lb/>
j the tired and run down limb and <lb/>
i and of Hie tidy. <lb/>
j yon <lb/>
I eat, cleanses and Hie <lb/>
glands and <lb/>
stomach, and<lb/>
Sold at Ding <lb/>
AND BUNTING, <lb/>
BETHEL, N. C. <lb/>
DEALERS IN <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE, <lb/>
Complete Line Clothing, Furniture, Groceries. <lb/>
W o Pay Highest Prices for Cotton, <lb/>
Cotton Seed and Country Produce. <lb/>
o Yon Eat <lb/>
Good, Fresh Groceries <lb/>
If you do come to see us, We keep every- <lb/>
thing in the grocery line and sell it to our<lb/>
at the Lowest Possible Price, <lb/>
Johnston Bros. <lb/>
I CASH <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS SEPTEMBER 6th, 1904. <lb/>
and Discounts 5-13 <lb/>
Overdraft -i t <lb/>
Stock, securities, <lb/>
Demand loans <lb/>
Due from Hanks <lb/>
cash items <lb/>
Gold<lb/>
500.40 <lb/>
Stock paid in 926,000.00<lb/>
Undivided Profits less <lb/>
Paid 3,509.03 <lb/>
Individual deposits <lb/>
subject to check <lb/>
of depot, 20,000.00 <lb/>
Cashier's checks out- <lb/>
standing 335.21 <lb/>
Bil's <lb/>
of depot, for <lb/>
borrowed 20,000.00 <lb/>
1283,500.10 <lb/>
North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt. <lb/>
I, James L. Little, Cashier of the above-named bunk, do solemnly <lb/>
wear that the statement above is true to the best of my knowledge <lb/>
and belief JAMES L. LITTLE. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before <lb/>
me, this 20th day of June, <lb/>
JAMES C. TYSON, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
W. II. WILSON, <lb/>
J. G. MOVE, <lb/>
J. A. ANDREWS, <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
The more people know the <lb/>
brag <lb/>
What's In a Name <lb/>
Everything is in when u i <lb/>
comes to Witch II- Salve E. <lb/>
DeWitt of <lb/>
some how to <lb/>
a naive from Witch Bas-I that <lb/>
specific for For bleed . <lb/>
protruding file, j <lb/>
eczema, buns, <lb/>
all skin Salve <lb/>
has no has <lb/>
to numerous worthies counterfeit <lb/>
Ask for the <lb/>
Sold at Wooten's Drag Store. <lb/>
WAREHOUSE <lb/>
To be patient It than to <lb/>
lie <lb/>
AFTER TWO PREMIUMS HAVE BEEN PAID IN THE <lb/>
LIE nil SUNK <lb/>
OF NEWARK, N. J., YOUR POLICY HAS <lb/>
Loan Value, <lb/>
Cash Value, <lb/>
Paid-up Insurance, <lb/>
Extended Insurance that works automatically, <lb/>
Is <lb/>
Will be re-instated if arrears be paid within on month while yon <lb/>
are living, or within three years after lapse, upon satisfactory evidence <lb/>
and payment of arrears with interest. <lb/>
second No Restrictions. Incontestable. <lb/>
Dividends are payable at the beginning of the second and cf each <lb/>
succeeding year, provided the premium for the current year be paid. <lb/>
They may be To reduce Premiums, or <lb/>
To Increase the Insurance, or <lb/>
To make policy payable as an during the <lb/>
J. <lb/>
IT. C. <lb/>
A Power For Good <lb/>
The pill that are potent in their <lb/>
action and pleasant in are <lb/>
DeWitt's Early W. <lb/>
S Philpot, i Albany, G. <lb/>
a Id lions attack I took <lb/>
one. Small it w it Hid <lb/>
more good than <lb/>
or any other I ever look at <lb/>
the same time the was pleas <lb/>
ant. Little Early are <lb/>
an meal Sold by <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Tobacco has Advanced Prices <lb/>
are Higher. We are well equip- <lb/>
for selling your tobacco to <lb/>
fine have com- <lb/>
men and, one of the <lb/>
est and best lighted houses in <lb/>
the State. Sell with us, we'll <lb/>
yon. <lb/>
PARHAM, FOXHALL, BOWLING. <lb/>
Auctioneers have a way oil, <lb/>
receiving bids. <lb/>
cured Lame After i Years of <lb/>
had been troubled with lame; <lb/>
back for fifteen years and I found <lb/>
I a complete recovery In the use of <lb/>
Chamberlain's Pain say <lb/>
I John G Ind. <lb/>
I liniment is also without an equal <lb/>
for sprains bruises. It is for j <lb/>
sale by Wooten's Drug Store, <lb/>
Greenville. f <lb/>
A good man when be drops <lb/>
good manners. <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 drinking water and many dainties that <lb/>
would be, unattainable without the Refrigerator. <lb/>
HAVE YOU A LAWN <lb/>
If you have you will want a Lawn Mower pretty <lb/>
soon, and we've made it easy for you to own one. <lb/>
There is no need to borrow a lawn mower when <lb/>
we sell a good machine with best steel knives at such <lb/>
a satisfactory price, and guarantee it to do the work. <lb/>
Water Coolers, Cream freezers, Hammocks and <lb/>
everything in the hardware line. <lb/>
O. M. Ailing, U <lb/>
ran down. Guild not eat <lb/>
Kooky Tea <lb/>
made me a well man. <lb/>
Tea or Tablet. Drugstore <lb/>
H. I. CA R R <lb/>
. five Persons arc Bitten by Md Cat. <lb/>
D. J. Hodges will today <lb/>
to apply the Pasteur treat- <lb/>
at Hospital, in <lb/>
this city, to Mr. J. L. Baldwin and <lb/>
four of his family from <lb/>
Mangum, who have recently <lb/>
been bitten by animals that died <lb/>
of hydrophobia. <lb/>
Three were also bitten <lb/>
but none of them have <lb/>
the dread disease, though the <lb/>
white persons come to lake <lb/>
the treatment, at. precaution. <lb/>
The case is quite an interesting <lb/>
one though the full details <lb/>
not be secured last <lb/>
A dog in the town was suffering <lb/>
from and he <lb/>
could killed be bit a cat. All <lb/>
wire or died, <lb/>
but not until they had bitten all j <lb/>
the persons mentioned above. <lb/>
The family physician of the North <lb/>
Carolina people accompanied <lb/>
here, and will be with them <lb/>
their treatment. Dr. Hodges <lb/>
will have them in direct <lb/>
Richmond Times Dispatch. <lb/>
THREE JURORS CUBED <lb/>
Of Cholera with One <lb/>
Small Bottle Chamberlain's <lb/>
Colic, cholera <lb/>
Remedy. <lb/>
Mr. G. W. Fowler of <lb/>
Ala., relates an experience tie Lad <lb/>
while serving on a jury in a <lb/>
murder case at <lb/>
seat of county. Ala- <lb/>
He there I <lb/>
ate some fresh meat and some <lb/>
souse meat and it gave me cholera <lb/>
in a very severe form. I <lb/>
was never more sick in my life and <lb/>
to the drug store fore <lb/>
mixture, but the druggist <lb/>
sent me a of Chamberlain's <lb/>
and <lb/>
Remedy instead, saying that he <lb/>
bad what I sent for, but that this <lb/>
was so much better he <lb/>
would rather send it to me in the <lb/>
fix f was in. I took one dose of <lb/>
it and was better in five minutes. <lb/>
The dose cured me entire- <lb/>
Two fellow jurors were <lb/>
in same manner and one <lb/>
small bottle cured the three of <lb/>
For at Wooten's <lb/>
Store. t <lb/>
The mill will never be turned by <lb/>
the water in the <lb/>
From to Pounds <lb/>
One of the most remarkable <lb/>
of a cold, deep seated on the lungs <lb/>
causing is that of Mis. <lb/>
E Former, <lb/>
was entirely cured by lbs use <lb/>
of One Minnie Cough Cure. She <lb/>
coughing and straining <lb/>
ho weakened me that I ran down <lb/>
down in weight from MS lbs. <lb/>
I tried a number of to no <lb/>
avail until T used Minute <lb/>
Cough Four of this <lb/>
wonderful remedy cured me entire- <lb/>
of the cough, strengthened my <lb/>
lungs and restore I me to my <lb/>
weight, health and <lb/>
Sold at Wooten's Drug Store. <lb/>
No woman is proud of it when <lb/>
she has a new to exhibit. <lb/>
Sour Stomach <lb/>
When of food taken <lb/>
is too or the quality rich, <lb/>
sour stomach is likely to follow, <lb/>
and especially so if the digestion <lb/>
hat been weakened by I pa <lb/>
slowly and not freely <lb/>
of easily digested food. Masticate <lb/>
the thoroughly. Let live <lb/>
elapse between meals, and <lb/>
when you feel a fullness and weight <lb/>
in the legion of the alter <lb/>
eating, take Chamberlain's <lb/>
and Liver Tablets and the <lb/>
sour stomach may be avoided. <lb/>
For sale by Woo ten's Drug <lb/>
I a young has money, some <lb/>
girl is sure to think him clever. <lb/>
Tour goes through your <lb/>
body with jumps and bounds, <lb/>
carrying warmth and active life to <lb/>
every part, if you take <lb/>
Rocky Mountain Tea. cents, Tea <lb/>
or Tablets. Drag Store. <lb/>
FALL OPENING <lb/>
c r<lb/>
and Thursday, <lb/>
October 5th and 6th, 1904.<lb/>
The most gorgeous exhibition <lb/>
of Artistic Millinery ever shewn. <lb/>
Exact duplicates of Paris, Lon- <lb/>
don and New York patterns. <lb/>
Come early and avoid the rush <lb/>
Doors open et or <lb/>
shine. <lb/>
The day and date October 5th and 6th, Wednesday and Thursday <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
V. <lb/>
and Evans street. <lb/>
THE BIG STORE.<lb/>
i. . . . .<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019454_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
Si <lb/>
Dissolution Sale <lb/>
ENTIRE STOCK OF HIGH GRADE <lb/>
GOODS THROWN ON THE MAR- <lb/>
AT A GREAT SACRIFICE. <lb/>
Goods Go. <lb/>
Almost Regardless Of Price. <lb/>
FALL <lb/>
I will have to include <lb/>
same <lb/>
As have more Goods than I can handle<lb/>
Don't Wait Come Early <lb/>
Get your Choice <lb/>
Next Door to the Bank of Greenville. <lb/>
Announcement <lb/>
We beg announce that we are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for- <lb/>
White Lead, Paints, <lb/>
Colors, and and <lb/>
country Ready 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 Paints you 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/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
in mil<lb/>
Go To St. Louis <lb/>
Via <lb/>
C. Route. <lb/>
Now is the time to see the great World's Fair at St. <lb/>
Louis, Mo. Delightful weather and the Exposition <lb/>
complete in all its beauty. An opportunity not to be <lb/>
missed and never to be forgotten. See that your tick- <lb/>
read via the <lb/>
C. and Big Four Railways, <lb/>
Shortest, quickest and best with fast vestibule train <lb/>
service W. D. P. A.<lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ <lb/>
Wholesale and <lb/>
furniture Dealer. paid <lb/>
Hides, Cotton Seed, Oil Bar- <lb/>
rel, Turkeys, Egg, etc. Bed- <lb/>
steads, Mattresses, Oak Suite, Ba <lb/>
y Carriages, Go-Carte, <lb/>
wits, Tables, Lounges, Safes, P <lb/>
and Ax <lb/>
High Life Tobacco, Key West Che- <lb/>
roots, Henry George Can- <lb/>
Cherries, Peaches, Apples. <lb/>
Pine Apples, Syrup, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour Sugar, Meat, Soap- <lb/>
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar <lb/>
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Prunes, Currents, Raisins, Glass <lb/>
and China Ware, Tin and <lb/>
Ware, Cakes and Crackers, <lb/>
Cheese, Best Batter, New <lb/>
Royal Sewing Machines and nu- <lb/>
other goods. Quality <lb/>
quantity. Cheap for cash. Come <lb/>
see me. <lb/>
S. M. Schultz <lb/>
HOME TELEPHONE AND <lb/>
TELEGRAPH COMPANY. <lb/>
The following points can now <lb/>
De reached over the lines of <lb/>
this <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Charlotte, <lb/>
Beaufort <lb/>
Durham, <lb/>
afield, <lb/>
Henderson, <lb/>
Littleton, <lb/>
New <lb/>
Oxford, <lb/>
Rocky Mi. <lb/>
Winston, <lb/>
Angus a, <lb/>
Atlanta, <lb/>
Baltimore Md. <lb/>
Chattanooga, Tenn. <lb/>
Charleston. S- C. <lb/>
Chase City. Va. <lb/>
Ill <lb/>
Cincinnati, Ohio. <lb/>
Columbia, S. C. <lb/>
Danville, Va <lb/>
Va <lb/>
Nashville, Tenn. <lb/>
New York <lb/>
New Orleans, L <lb/>
Norfolk. Va. <lb/>
Petersburg, Va <lb/>
Pi <lb/>
I Va <lb/>
St. Mo. <lb/>
Va <lb/>
And all Important and in <lb/>
points east of the Mis, <lb/>
River. <lb/>
F. <lb/>
Milling i i <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
t. J. WHICHARD. Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR IN ADVANCE <lb/>
vol. No <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1904 <lb/>
No. <lb/>
Tribute to Judge Brown. <lb/>
Wilmington, Sept. <lb/>
the adjournment of Brunswick <lb/>
Superior court at Southport today, <lb/>
at noon, Judge George H. Brown <lb/>
closed a distinguished service <lb/>
yearn on the lower court bench in <lb/>
North a fact which was <lb/>
adverted to by Hon. Jno. D. Bel- <lb/>
in a and most com- <lb/>
speech as the final act <lb/>
of the term was about to transpire. <lb/>
Mr. Bellamy personally, and in <lb/>
behalf of the bar of the state, <lb/>
thanked Judge Brown for his <lb/>
form at all times during <lb/>
his long as a Superior court <lb/>
judge, and referred in most com- <lb/>
terms to the urbanity <lb/>
and to others which <lb/>
his judicial <lb/>
His elevation he Supreme <lb/>
Court bench of was <lb/>
spoken of in gratifying terms, the <lb/>
remarks of Mr. my having <lb/>
been seconded by Mr. <lb/>
Meares and other of the <lb/>
Wilmington and Southport bars <lb/>
in attendance, all of which was <lb/>
gracefully acknowledged. Judge <lb/>
Brown came up to the city this <lb/>
afternoon and is spending a short <lb/>
while with; friends on the sound <lb/>
before going to bis home in Wash- <lb/>
NOTES FROM BETHEL. <lb/>
Bethel, N. C , Oct. <lb/>
The share holders of the Bethel <lb/>
Banking and Trust Company met <lb/>
Sept. and perfected <lb/>
by electing the following <lb/>
President, M. O. Blount; <lb/>
vice president. J. R. Bunting; <lb/>
cashier, H. H. Taylor. The fol <lb/>
lowing gentlemen were elected as <lb/>
the board of Dr. R. J. <lb/>
Grimes, chairman; Robert <lb/>
F. G. James B. W, Moseley, <lb/>
Greenville; T. T. Cherry, <lb/>
S. C. Whitehurst, S. M. <lb/>
COUNTY MATTERS. <lb/>
Proceeding of the Commissioners. <lb/>
The board of county commission- <lb/>
were in monthly session on the <lb/>
3rd. all members being ores- <lb/>
usual pauper allowances <lb/>
were made and claims against <lb/>
were audited and paid. <lb/>
The treasurer and <lb/>
dent of health both presented their <lb/>
monthly reports which were ac- <lb/>
and filed. <lb/>
The of Greenville <lb/>
Volunteer Fire company were re- <lb/>
WOODLAND ITEMS. <lb/>
Jones, W. J. Teel,, . , . , ,,., <lb/>
, leased from poll taxes for 1904. <lb/>
E. A. Cherry, J. J. Carson. ,. . . . . . <lb/>
m , . The sheriff made report show <lb/>
row. d. .,. f.-. . <lb/>
To Cook Carp. <lb/>
Many person have been dubious <lb/>
Hie value of <lb/>
the carp, which is so abundant in <lb/>
the Columbia. As much of the <lb/>
flavor is lost through careless cook- <lb/>
it is important, to enjoy the <lb/>
fish, that a good recipe be strictly <lb/>
adhered to. The following method, <lb/>
which is in use at a local <lb/>
rant, is the fact, the only <lb/>
way to cook carp so it will <lb/>
be appreciated. <lb/>
Take a good sized carp and clean <lb/>
it well. Get some stiff clay, make <lb/>
a paste of it, plaster around <lb/>
carp to a thickness of two <lb/>
inches. Bake in oven until clay is <lb/>
very hard. Then get a hammer <lb/>
and I; off the clay. Throw the <lb/>
carp away and serve the clay. <lb/>
laud Oregonian. <lb/>
and <lb/>
will be ready to accommodate the <lb/>
public in days. The cashier, <lb/>
EL Taylor, had some <lb/>
in a of Nor- <lb/>
folk, and will conduct the business <lb/>
with that skill honesty that <lb/>
characterize all his dealings with <lb/>
his t el low man. <lb/>
Bethel is awaking from her <lb/>
lethargy will not go into win- <lb/>
quarters her army of busy <lb/>
toilers shall have won in the in- <lb/>
strife. <lb/>
Mr. Mrs. H. H. Taylor have <lb/>
begun house keeping their <lb/>
beautifully painted little <lb/>
front of the academy. <lb/>
Mr. cotton gin has <lb/>
running day this week. <lb/>
The farmers are selling their cotton <lb/>
as s they can get it ready for <lb/>
the <lb/>
A new brick store on Railroad <lb/>
street will soon be and <lb/>
will be occupied by Taylor, Smith <lb/>
and Thomas. <lb/>
There is one in the flesh <lb/>
mg <lb/>
that he had established a public- <lb/>
road in township ville g- i <lb/>
accordance with an order issued at <lb/>
September meeting of the <lb/>
R. M. was released from <lb/>
es on solvent credits <lb/>
listed. <lb/>
It was that a certain <lb/>
public road in <lb/>
ship, laid off in 1889, be <lb/>
Richard P. Moore, t Jones, <lb/>
Win. Hazard John Dick <lb/>
ens were released from poll tax for <lb/>
1904. <lb/>
Richard Anderson was added to <lb/>
pauper to receive per month <lb/>
and Sallie Baker per month. <lb/>
J. L. Fountain and S. M. Crisp <lb/>
were ordered to appear before the <lb/>
at November meeting to <lb/>
give information concerning <lb/>
bridge. <lb/>
J. F. Allen and J. U. Kittrell <lb/>
were employed as guards for <lb/>
A consultation was had <lb/>
with the board of physicians to <lb/>
Woodland, N, C, Oct, <lb/>
Mrs. E. E. Lail spent Sunday <lb/>
with Mrs. H. B. <lb/>
Mr. Mrs. Manning <lb/>
were in the neighbor- <lb/>
hood Sunday afternoon. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Smith went <lb/>
to <lb/>
Mr. and M-s. B. T. spent <lb/>
afternoon with Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. H. B. Smith. <lb/>
went to Green- <lb/>
ville . <lb/>
Harvey was in the neighbor <lb/>
hood Sunday. <lb/>
Benjamin Craft went to Green- <lb/>
PERSONALS AND SOCIAL <lb/>
H. B. Smith went to Winterville <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
Mrs. C. T. Kittrell went to <lb/>
Winterville Friday afternoon. <lb/>
Misses Evelyn Pattie button <lb/>
were in neighborhood Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Nina Smith has been slight- <lb/>
ill for past few s. <lb/>
Henry in vicinity <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
ITEMS <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
Licenses were issued to the fol- <lb/>
lowing couples last <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
Chis. J and Laura <lb/>
Parker. <lb/>
B Jones Caroline Morton <lb/>
Flunk Williams and Katie <lb/>
Dickens <lb/>
J. Allen and Lillie B. <lb/>
James Pender and Par- <lb/>
John Button and Dawson. <lb/>
consult as to best steps to take in <lb/>
. to smallpox- <lb/>
Commissioners Barnhill <lb/>
Spier were a committee <lb/>
with the superintendent of <lb/>
as to the location of pest houses, <lb/>
An order was passed that <lb/>
shall be paid cents for <lb/>
each the county to <lb/>
Dispensary Profits. <lb/>
The total sales of the e <lb/>
dispensary for the month of Sept- <lb/>
ember was and net <lb/>
profit, This average <lb/>
for a year will give the county <lb/>
school fund the county <lb/>
of the fits. When <lb/>
had bar rooms they <lb/>
paid a tax of that went to <lb/>
the county, so that it will be seen <lb/>
that a not gain of is <lb/>
added to the county by the <lb/>
At the same time you only <lb/>
have to look about you <lb/>
streets of Greenville to see that <lb/>
there is not near the drunkenness <lb/>
here dispensary was <lb/>
established as existed when the <lb/>
town had eleven bar rooms. <lb/>
Unmistakable evidence was <lb/>
that one certain man of <lb/>
Bethel has flagrantly violated <lb/>
law against sale of spirituous <lb/>
liquors in Bethel. The court found <lb/>
this man guilty -aid imposed a <lb/>
sentence of-twelve mouths in jail. <lb/>
But within two days after this <lb/>
who has so ,,,, <lb/>
persistently violated the said laws, <lb/>
found the court re- <lb/>
turned to his home. Toil manner <lb/>
of has been tried and <lb/>
failed to correct the evil until it <lb/>
seems time for the good people to <lb/>
Inquire should have mercy j <lb/>
shown them by the com Shall <lb/>
it be those who try to protect the <lb/>
interests of the state and <lb/>
to her industrial and Intel <lb/>
and growth, or <lb/>
it be those who violate laws <lb/>
and out those deadly <lb/>
that the citizen, <lb/>
and bring disgrace upon the com- <lb/>
the <lb/>
Bethel graded school has <lb/>
just completed a very successful <lb/>
mouth's work. With new piano, <lb/>
new desks and increased faculty <lb/>
A resolution was adopted order- <lb/>
compulsory vaccination in in- <lb/>
towns or districts in the <lb/>
county. <lb/>
Jurors for November court were <lb/>
drawn, <lb/>
A Great Sermon. <lb/>
There was another large audience <lb/>
ft the Baptist church, Monday <lb/>
night, to hear Dr. Wharton. His <lb/>
sermon was Prodigal <lb/>
and in idea deep es- <lb/>
on the many men present. <lb/>
It teen that there was <lb/>
deep interest in all the speaker <lb/>
said. The sermon was strong and <lb/>
even more effective by apt <lb/>
illustrations, Some of the <lb/>
met by a young man when he <lb/>
the work gos on with Increasing j to Md makes up <lb/>
interest and with increased success, j w , ,.,, to niB <lb/>
Many visited were , BUg. <lb/>
Friday. Shows do draw some these may <lb/>
people's money. overcome. <lb/>
The service at o'clock this <lb/>
County Canvass , was delightful. Tonight <lb/>
The comity candidates the i usual at <lb/>
Democratic party will Hi <lb/>
N. C, Oct. <lb/>
Miss Lula Sexton returned Sat- <lb/>
from a visit to friends <lb/>
and relatives in Halifax <lb/>
J. D. Cox is in town this week, <lb/>
H. H. Stanley spent in <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
F. P the popular <lb/>
drummer, representing Harvey <lb/>
Blair grocers, of Richmond, visited <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
Joseph Rawls spent Sunday with <lb/>
friends here. <lb/>
Frank Whaley George Cal- <lb/>
we are sorry to say are on <lb/>
the sick list. <lb/>
H. B. Phillips, manager of <lb/>
Beaufort County Lumber Co., will <lb/>
this week in in <lb/>
interest of his company. <lb/>
A. B. Miner, of Suffolk, <lb/>
dent of Greenville Lumber and <lb/>
Veneer company, spent last night <lb/>
with O. G. Calhoun. <lb/>
Regulation for Election Ballot <lb/>
Section chapter, laws of <lb/>
North Carolina provides that the <lb/>
ballots to be used in the coming <lb/>
election on Tuesday, November, <lb/>
8th. shall on white paper <lb/>
and may be printed or written <lb/>
partly printed and partly written, <lb/>
and snail be without device. <lb/>
It is ordered by the County <lb/>
Board Elections of Pitt <lb/>
that the ballots for Legislative <lb/>
officers shall be inches wide <lb/>
inches That the <lb/>
lots for the county officers shall be <lb/>
inches and inches wide. <lb/>
That the ballots for Township <lb/>
Officers shall be and <lb/>
inches long. <lb/>
Ordered this toe 5th of 1904. <lb/>
F. <lb/>
County lid. Elections <lb/>
J. Smith, Secretary. <lb/>
Monday, October 1904. <lb/>
H. A. White went to Rocky <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
W. M. Lang went to Kinston <lb/>
Sunday evening. <lb/>
Miss Lydia Thigpen left this <lb/>
morning for Tar bore. <lb/>
O. L. Joyner Sunday <lb/>
evening from Raleigh. <lb/>
Miss Clyde Cox returned <lb/>
morning from Ayden. <lb/>
Mrs. C. F. Manning <lb/>
this morning from Ayden. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Brown left <lb/>
this morning for <lb/>
Miss Estelle Thigpen is visiting <lb/>
her sister, Mrs. G. E Cherry. <lb/>
Mrs. J. F. Joyner took the train <lb/>
here Sunday evening for Kinston. <lb/>
J. A. Lang moved into Mrs <lb/>
new house in South <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
D. H. came in Sunday <lb/>
night to deliver several speeches <lb/>
in this <lb/>
Jenkins and child- <lb/>
returned Sunday evening front <lb/>
a visit to Tarboro. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Taylor and <lb/>
child, of Ayden, are visiting Mr. <lb/>
Mrs. L. H. Lee. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Laughing- <lb/>
house returned Sunday evening <lb/>
from a trip to St Louis. <lb/>
Ex Gov. T. J. left this <lb/>
for Durham to deliver an <lb/>
address at Trinity college. <lb/>
Miss Ruth Everett, of Farmville <lb/>
is aunt, Mrs. W. E. <lb/>
Harris, in Greenville <lb/>
J. K. Williams has accepted h <lb/>
position with the Chicago Portrait <lb/>
company and left Sunday to take <lb/>
the road. <lb/>
Mrs. G. Baker, of <lb/>
arrived Sunday evening to visit <lb/>
Mrs. D. J. Whichard. Mr. Baker <lb/>
also Sunday night here and <lb/>
returned home thin morning. <lb/>
Tuesday, 1904. <lb/>
Fred Cox went to Norfolk today. <lb/>
I. A Sugg, left this morning for <lb/>
St Louis. <lb/>
J. Campbell, of on, <lb/>
is in town. <lb/>
campaign next week. They will <lb/>
speak at Fountain on Friday, Oct. <lb/>
and at Farmville on Saturday, <lb/>
Oct. <lb/>
For Sale hand Brooks <lb/>
Gotten Press, good running <lb/>
R. L. <lb/>
Route No. N. C. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
I have just returned from <lb/>
more I bought my fall mil- <lb/>
and notions. Opening Sept <lb/>
Mrs. H. I,. <lb/>
N. C , neat door to <lb/>
office. <lb/>
The Sick. <lb/>
Supt. W. B. Dove, of l be graded <lb/>
was on the sick today. <lb/>
Miss Janie Tyson hat been sick <lb/>
the last s <lb/>
Mis- Mary Lee Smith is sick. <lb/>
Far rail one of Tn Rb <lb/>
Fruit jars, tumblers I r, has been kepi <lb/>
stone jars at M. home with the past week <lb/>
R. L. Smith <lb/>
for Norfolk. <lb/>
left this morning <lb/>
J. R. Turnage, of <lb/>
was here today. <lb/>
J. F. King, left for Norfolk on <lb/>
the morning <lb/>
E. S. Philips returned to Winter- <lb/>
ville Monday evening. <lb/>
Mrs. E. A. Sr, returned <lb/>
Monday evening from a visit to <lb/>
Rocky <lb/>
Miss Nina White, Hobgood, <lb/>
Monday evening to visit <lb/>
Mrs. <lb/>
Mrs. Mary Smith, of Winterville <lb/>
spent Monday here with her grand- <lb/>
son Rev, W. E. Cox, returned <lb/>
on I lie evening I rain. <lb/>
Rev. B. Stephens, Ayden, <lb/>
who conducting a meeting <lb/>
in the Free church <lb/>
Mi- weeks, left <lb/>
Monday <lb/>
The temperature is pretty close <lb/>
frost these mornings. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>