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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>
. MO <lb/>
DOPE FOR THE FANS. <lb/>
Hot Linen QuarK rs <lb/>
Arc <lb/>
was t <lb/>
didn't hit m , <lb/>
he no tor contention between <lb/>
Washington and Greenville. All <lb/>
I the tome Greenville regrets <lb/>
an on her grounds and <lb/>
it. <lb/>
A Tobacco Grower's Profit <lb/>
is dependent upon properly <lb/>
Startling Evidence <lb/>
Fresh in <lb/>
sector <lb/>
Maybe <lb/>
one. I j coming in, <lb/>
Walker and Rowe sore King's New Discovery for <lb/>
well double. j Consumption, Coughs mid olds <lb/>
Metric- carried be A <lb/>
lion from T. J. MB- <lb/>
Va. a <lb/>
He had Blond for <lb/>
and doctored all<lb/>
i j ON THURSDAY, MAY 25TH. <lb/>
N stock of Children's and Infant's Ox- <lb/>
T. lid at Greatly Reduced Prices. <lb/>
but good, New Shoes. to buy new <lb/>
At Reduced Prices <lb/>
, just in time to mitt your needs, before the stock <lb/>
and size; run down, is a rare opportunity <lb/>
megaphone. <lb/>
My but that boy <lb/>
any where. <lb/>
made <lb/>
catch the game. <lb/>
The hamlet. <lb/>
the Tar. Ba <lb/>
Did . player boo <lb/>
acorn d like Short <lb/>
bat there was a lot <lb/>
in the grand Maud. <lb/>
The great wonder Springs only <lb/>
the air time-. <lb/>
The work of the Greenville <lb/>
the work. <lb/>
Bow,, and Harris hath bl <lb/>
In the How h <lb/>
It was a gain crowd at the <lb/>
Washington cams I P <lb/>
three years <lb/>
without being benefited.; <lb/>
I began taking Dr. <lb/>
New Discovery, and a ft <lb/>
wholly cored <lb/>
in caring all and Throat <lb/>
trouble, Pneumonia <lb/>
and Grip Guaranteed by J. L- <lb/>
Woolen, Di Trial hot tie <lb/>
free, and 11.00 <lb/>
No <lb/>
crop is <lb/>
so easily <lb/>
spoiled as <lb/>
tobacco. The <lb/>
fertilizer must <lb/>
be right, and to <lb/>
be right it must <lb/>
contain at least <lb/>
actual <lb/>
Potash <lb/>
as It- r <lb/>
. ill <lb/>
Pointed Paragraphs <lb/>
It's a wise proverb that knows <lb/>
ii own lather. <lb/>
H- who wean a long face doesn't <lb/>
lies the <lb/>
In marriage one make <lb/>
colors divorce on- from leaves <lb/>
back them <lb/>
flying <lb/>
I job see two <lb/>
looking King and <lb/>
tiled <lb/>
0-EH St. <lb/>
BALL TEAM ENTERTAINED. <lb/>
Pleasant Evening tor the Boy <lb/>
Friend. <lb/>
m the home Mr. <lb/>
H. A. White the ball <lb/>
h an <lb/>
and <lb/>
but <lb/>
for <lb/>
re a fast trio. They <lb/>
m I to me. <lb/>
two <lb/>
Any cm poetry, <lb/>
it a wise gay hi -wan <lb/>
ready money. <lb/>
, Men who talk BUM- anally <lb/>
bat little, and bore everybody <lb/>
look themselves <lb/>
ideal <lb/>
I nice <lb/>
Nothing worries a .,.,. ,. <lb/>
than toe made by people <lb/>
who shoot far Joy. <lb/>
When a young man a-ks the <lb/>
heiress he humus the <lb/>
an <lb/>
team gathered<lb/>
the tea-., were Bum <lb/>
Mary James, As Alice <lb/>
White, Maud <lb/>
Mr. Mr,. White are <lb/>
ma every <lb/>
feel at and gave then <lb/>
lion-. <lb/>
Music, and <lb/>
was by Miss Kins <lb/>
in, ii- were I <lb/>
and sen a after <lb/>
had it <lb/>
lime bid the best and hi <lb/>
the <lb/>
was <lb/>
vies <lb/>
and <lb/>
a kisses a ;,.,;,, <lb/>
hasn't it, and the <lb/>
of <lb/>
Occasion <lb/>
the <lb/>
h i <lb/>
i buyers, who appreciate <lb/>
Driven to <lb/>
way <lb/>
, a<lb/>
K.<lb/>
OFFER <lb/>
end We are over <lb/>
Summer Shoes, we need the room and <lb/>
i slippers, ind in order t <lb/>
give is Pimple, plain <lb/>
an them out quickly we <lb/>
pretty good ran- <lb/>
bases, he fa-test man <lb/>
either team <lb/>
Poor little Cotton <lb/>
tire- <lb/>
where <lb/>
has a girl because <lb/>
play hall h ; Io tackle one nearer hi own<lb/>
-w the after years usually give, a <lb/>
game. Be it salted mm. a every. ,. ,, <lb/>
good. i- from <lb/>
crowd was the wedding march. family is often driven to <lb/>
of <lb/>
but they son <lb/>
the the laying on anything be than to It's <lb/>
IO the lean, A-ll of them closed, . ha .,. B, , L W; <lb/>
their were In <lb/>
Mrs H. Ala. <lb/>
three she writes, Buggy Wrecked. <lb/>
endured pain from .,,. . a the <lb/>
was the ball <lb/>
Arthur park, I-inlay <lb/>
. . . ,. <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
go, i Io king, orderly, <lb/>
Burns, cm-. <lb/>
sic. a of <lb/>
Halve. <lb/>
st vie. <lb/>
Did Tun E <lb/>
t oat a down <lb/>
pest up dumped <lb/>
Li <lb/>
., patent leather Court Tie Oxfords, worth for <lb/>
leather, Court Tie Oxfords, worth for <lb/>
leather and plain kid Oxfords, 2.50 for 1.85. <lb/>
-s leather Strap Sandals, plain kid Strap Sandals, <lb/>
leather tip Oxfords, tan kid Court Tie Oxfords, <lb/>
sizes, worth and 2.25 per pair, to be sold for <lb/>
j j per pair. <lb/>
., or black Court Ties, plain kid Sandals, patent <lb/>
a . w ti Oxfords, dressy styles and plain common sense <lb/>
styles and sizes, that are selling for pair, <lb/>
w; tit it lit pair. <lb/>
AU th styles of Ladies Oxfords and Sandals that are selling <lb/>
for to pair we offer In this sale for to per <lb/>
pair. <lb/>
AU the and Babies SUppers are offered In this <lb/>
Sal and are in proportion to the Ladies as quoted above. <lb/>
toward first beat it on. <lb/>
Toe loggers from the lumber <lb/>
camp <lb/>
e, that there are some ball players <lb/>
at the hamlet up the called <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
kept blackboard <lb/>
and the core, in <lb/>
the blank with <lb/>
cartoon was <lb/>
If you standing the <lb/>
catcher at the don't you. <lb/>
think hi been far more <lb/>
fair to the two and to <lb/>
people, in the grand stand who <lb/>
more than yon. if you <lb/>
best on <lb/>
. <lb/>
work am, <lb/>
third and <lb/>
or.- down <lb/>
literally <lb/>
try the result <lb/>
wee miraculous. Improved at <lb/>
and sow I m <lb/>
For Liver. Kidney, <lb/>
Stomach sad Bowel troubles <lb/>
is the medicine. <lb/>
only If- <lb/>
I. Druggist. <lb/>
in <lb/>
evening. A <lb/>
to pieces was the extent <lb/>
the damage. A colored <lb/>
occupying the buggy was thrown <lb/>
but i injury. <lb/>
Village <lb/>
As the days glide <lb/>
become more Mid more <lb/>
live in a small <lb/>
pal <lb/>
course, Ufa to great <lb/>
there are those <lb/>
, i stood luck a- you should by the country town that <lb/>
done Try to improve on it for the city <lb/>
time. It is not fair to catcher. I attractions. we decide to nail <lb/>
rather lath an our chicken coop, <lb/>
do so without fearing a <lb/>
Wash <lb/>
woods, <lb/>
line of vi <lb/>
S vies are <lb/>
early will get first pick at this beautiful line of <lb/>
beautiful, the makes are of the best, and a full <lb/>
your inspection. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
STORE. <lb/>
By the way, Isn't <lb/>
After defeating <lb/>
a to any <lb/>
club in North Carolina or Virginia <lb/>
ts play a in Washington. <lb/>
Washington club, on the <lb/>
Washington with a <lb/>
Washington umpire can beat any <lb/>
club in the States, John i <lb/>
aggregation not except <lb/>
ed. But they can't do it else <lb/>
where. <lb/>
John Ivey Smith was not com- <lb/>
in I be regular write up. <lb/>
John is a excuse that <lb/>
Latin, please, out it's the express <lb/>
tun for him. John his <lb/>
team well, and directed their <lb/>
movements with a master head. <lb/>
No wonder we won the game. You <lb/>
feel one of these satisfied <lb/>
when you see a ball going to John's <lb/>
precinct, and you see a <lb/>
good stunt when he goes to the <lb/>
bat. John makes a pretty good <lb/>
captain, yon <lb/>
deplores and con- <lb/>
damns the trouble that occurred <lb/>
near the end of the inning. A <lb/>
man with too much trip- <lb/>
up a Washington runner who <lb/>
was for the home plate <lb/>
and hurt him. The inaner gained <lb/>
bis and knocked his man <lb/>
down. As both were <lb/>
chums, with honors between <lb/>
them about <lb/>
we can <lb/>
call from the ion; it <lb/>
want to carry home a piece <lb/>
kindling, we can do so without <lb/>
being boycotted by teamsters- are <lb/>
only two of the things enjoyed <lb/>
man who is willing to <lb/>
Wealthy Citizen. <lb/>
An old man carried a <lb/>
under his arm when he <lb/>
went Io give in bis taxes Friday. <lb/>
He warned show what be <lb/>
chicken <lb/>
these times might be regarded as <lb/>
rich. <lb/>
Cotten <lb/>
H. J. Mills, of Winterville, <lb/>
drought us two cotton blossoms <lb/>
j morning <lb/>
L. Moore brought us a red <lb/>
cotton blossom that opened <lb/>
on the 21st. <lb/>
J. O. Mabry, a car inspector on <lb/>
the Southern was awarded eight <lb/>
thousand dollars Thursday in So- <lb/>
rt at tor the <lb/>
leg <lb/>
coot <lb/>
the pleasures by city life, i lost a leg. Mabry lost his <lb/>
Kan., while coupling a yea. <lb/>
That Throbbing Headache <lb/>
Would quickly yon, if you <lb/>
used Dr. King's New Life Pills. <lb/>
Thousands of <lb/>
ed their merit sick <lb/>
and nervous Headaches. <lb/>
make pure blood and up <lb/>
Only money <lb/>
back if not cured. Sold by <lb/>
Wooten, Druggist <lb/>
ago. <lb/>
STATE NEWS <lb/>
E. C. Edwards, a young white <lb/>
man of Henderson, run down <lb/>
by a train and killed Tuesday. <lb/>
Big Bill Artie, a from <lb/>
was arrested in Raleigh <lb/>
Tuesday night for freight <lb/>
A young white man by the <lb/>
name of of Henderson, N. <lb/>
C, crushed to death by a <lb/>
near Raleigh Thurs- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
to <lb/>
THREE <lb/>
Of Cholera with OM <lb/>
Small Battle <lb/>
cholera and <lb/>
Remedy. <lb/>
Mr G. W. Fowler of <lb/>
Ala., relates on he had <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 <lb/>
Kent to the drug store for a certain <lb/>
mixture, but the druggist <lb/>
sent me a bottle of Chamberlain s <lb/>
and <lb/>
Remedy saying that he <lb/>
what I sent for, hut that this <lb/>
medicine was so much better he <lb/>
would rather it to me in the <lb/>
fix I was took dose of <lb/>
it and was better in five minutes. <lb/>
The second dose cured me entire- <lb/>
Two fellow jurors were afflict- <lb/>
ed in tbs same manner and one <lb/>
cured the three of <lb/>
For at <lb/>
us. <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
J. WHICHARD, Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR YEAR IN <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. Pin COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY. JUNE 1905. <lb/>
No. <lb/>
CLAUDE INFAMY. <lb/>
Sin at Lad Unmasked Him. <lb/>
to <lb/>
There is nothing truer under the rumors as <lb/>
sun the teaching, involved, Rogers <lb/>
sure will find <lb/>
you A man , a in <lb/>
sin for a time and by his shrewd. <lb/>
or <lb/>
misdeeds bid for a time, but <lb/>
sooner or later the mask ill lie <lb/>
off and he up in hi <lb/>
true light to public acorn. <lb/>
at a tense kept by one Jen-1 HAPPENINGS AT THE RABBITS FOOT. <lb/>
j May, on East street. <lb/>
Storm Interfered With Performance. <lb/>
l was with the pleasure of little <lb/>
children that many of the men and <lb/>
boys of the town followed the road <lb/>
of the Rabbit's Foot people, <lb/>
were happy the <lb/>
of the evening performance. <lb/>
The show was an one <lb/>
this time and have given an <lb/>
entertaining decent <lb/>
but for the interruption of <lb/>
thunder <lb/>
ii. <lb/>
CHARLIE'S AUNT. <lb/>
two <lb/>
and <lb/>
Unwell bad been floating <lb/>
about, discolored and prejudiced <lb/>
side or the other as <lb/>
the of those who spoke <lb/>
leaned hither or you. The matter <lb/>
was itself public property. De- <lb/>
tails alone ed to find. Hence <lb/>
went in a carnage to the house <lb/>
is the career M. Ber- of May. <lb/>
an erstwhile citizen of <lb/>
Greenville, for whom <lb/>
too and caused him <lb/>
to seek other While <lb/>
there were some ready to shield <lb/>
there many who lie <lb/>
be was a scoundrel, <lb/>
libertine, a wolf <lb/>
in sheep's Yet <lb/>
that system of society that opens <lb/>
its arms to a man who is a sinner, <lb/>
never knew were girls <lb/>
virtuous she repealed. <lb/>
They came here, driving up to <lb/>
back door and the came <lb/>
and asked me if I had rooms. I <lb/>
told ye-. There was a <lb/>
in town. I thought they were <lb/>
-how gills. They In laugh, <lb/>
All four of them went in <lb/>
that room across the hall. <lb/>
though he be more dangerous than, hey separated and two of <lb/>
a ,,, , wk i them came ii. this room and the <lb/>
allowed logo on in high places two stayed that one. <lb/>
until his own infamy expo ed h in That was in the last part of May. <lb/>
But the pity of it is that this did was a show in town on an <lb/>
not come other lives bad jail-week stand. I tell you, I <lb/>
been ruined, and others suffer thought to the <lb/>
beside himself. show. They were laughing and <lb/>
We will let There was no way for <lb/>
and Observer of Sunday tell the <lb/>
remainder of the <lb/>
At approximately o'clock <lb/>
Raleigh Police- <lb/>
man Ike shot and, In all <lb/>
probability fatally wounded John <lb/>
Dockery, United States Deputy <lb/>
and a son of Marshal <lb/>
Henry Dockery, United State- <lb/>
for the District <lb/>
of No- th Carolina. <lb/>
The trouble arose <lb/>
misconduct with the <lb/>
of Mi. by Mr <lb/>
daughter <lb/>
eke y. <lb/>
and similar reports a lo <lb/>
Mr. H. II with <lb/>
Claude Bernard, <lb/>
Republican of Raleigh and ex <lb/>
District Attorney, who was <lb/>
expelled from Greenville on a <lb/>
charge of a similar import. Ber- <lb/>
is married; Dockery is a <lb/>
single man, than years <lb/>
of age. Rogers i- quite an old <lb/>
man. over sixty years obi. <lb/>
The has <lb/>
greatest excitement and <lb/>
me to know what <lb/>
Jennie May went to that <lb/>
this was on l Tuesday night. They <lb/>
came again on Saturday, the same <lb/>
collides. <lb/>
did not know Mr. <lb/>
she said. had never seen him <lb/>
before. I did not know the girls, <lb/>
although I both their <lb/>
knew Mr. Bernard. He <lb/>
knows a lot about women <lb/>
I thought he would have <lb/>
to go around with girl- <lb/>
like that I thought lie knew what <lb/>
be up to. his experience <lb/>
he ought to have known <lb/>
of the best citizens in <lb/>
member of bar. <lb/>
by last <lb/>
people of not t., <lb/>
permit I bat man Claude Bernard <lb/>
to live Hi- <lb/>
is an to decency. The <lb/>
drove out of Greenville at the <lb/>
point of a pistol for same crime <lb/>
lot which be will be arrested ii he <lb/>
returns to And yet be <lb/>
is greatly mixed as to the right or I has bean tolerated and the <lb/>
wrong of Mr action as to I have not taken steps to <lb/>
Dockery. As is to Bernard, who I have hint disbarred Where is our <lb/>
is a married man and notorious for civil virtue. time was when, <lb/>
like escapades, there is little law is impotent, men would <lb/>
expressed. the initiative inform Ber- <lb/>
The summarized in that j that be could stay <lb/>
Rogers acted as any would any longer. Ought be to <lb/>
have done, but that lie tolerated Ought the bathers <lb/>
fault, while was of to permit such a man to <lb/>
not so bad as that of his run at large on the It <lb/>
associate. But as to Bernard, the <lb/>
feeling is bitter. He is at present Immediately the shooting <lb/>
in there King, a local Republican, <lb/>
rumors that on part j telegraphed the occurrence to Mr. <lb/>
girl's is Bernard at Wilmington, <lb/>
awaiting his A private telegram from <lb/>
Yesterday afternoon papers last night states that <lb/>
in a suit against Bernard for Claude Bernard is not there; that <lb/>
twenty dollars damage he left Seashore Hotel at <lb/>
for seduction under what is Wrightsville in and <lb/>
the prepared Ion bis at Wilmington took <lb/>
by Messrs. Argo and Shaffer, a train bound His present <lb/>
attorney-. Mr. H. C. whereabouts are unknown in <lb/>
The.-e papers include an order <lb/>
airest and bail, the <lb/>
the Old <lb/>
off bis woman's garment mar- <lb/>
Benefit of Public Ella Jack and Miss <lb/>
Charley Miss <lb/>
re married in order <lb/>
named, and Jack's father makes <lb/>
thing by marrying <lb/>
aunt. Then Homes here <lb/>
on stage a bell rings, and <lb/>
D IN <lb/>
Library. <lb/>
very single public spirited <lb/>
citizen of ought to <lb/>
attend the play in lie given In the <lb/>
opera home the part of <lb/>
week, the first of next. The drops ending the best local <lb/>
exact will tie announced later, ever given <lb/>
It is to be given by talent All it a to <lb/>
and all are to be given I <lb/>
for the improvement of public that are rich, <lb/>
The show hi composed of men I It should de well attend- themselves in fumy <lb/>
that can do most any In led not only because if Is for a go--d place-. Old <lb/>
th- afternoon, they i purpose, but because be lime four women who be- <lb/>
exhibited their talent in a well I well worth the small admission a conversation that makes bin <lb/>
played game of base ball with and there are <lb/>
local colored team. It resulted III j It is a comedy iii three act, equally us funny. <lb/>
a victory for by a score of j is full of Inn from beginning Io It to to lie given in be opera <lb/>
to and among them end. It is the of I collage for benefit a <lb/>
of trained ability, cake walker-, at Oxford n and . good cause, a good play, so <lb/>
soloists, can't got <lb/>
cast of character is us j <lb/>
Quite a number of the white THE STORM. <lb/>
people went to for the; solicitor at . r, , . <lb/>
. . . , . . ,, Much Damage Done by Wind and <lb/>
show, among them was a machinist Jack Garden. <lb/>
a man, and one hardware Colonel Sir Francis <lb/>
man, all well known State Indian Service, Frank <lb/>
life of the town, and Wooten. <lb/>
with this trio were people in great Jack under graduate, <lb/>
forming a swell Carr. <lb/>
They were s with St. Col <lb/>
expectancy, and impatiently cage, <lb/>
Lord <lb/>
Tom Moore. <lb/>
. Scout, John <lb/>
for the performance, when sudden- j <lb/>
the dusty atmosphere of <lb/>
Heavens was knocked to <lb/>
atoms by tremendous claps of, <lb/>
the darkness of j <lb/>
was made lurid with the light-1 from <lb/>
ti almost <lb/>
the windows of Heaven opened <lb/>
and water in <lb/>
great torrents began to fall. <lb/>
tent of the <lb/>
Foot lifted <lb/>
bled spectators found themselves. <lb/>
drenched by of the <lb/>
clouds. <lb/>
But buck to our tr o. The <lb/>
machinist began hi- exit from <lb/>
and a <lb/>
swinging to bis <lb/>
coot tail; a- the hardware man was <lb/>
Donna i <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
Kitty <lb/>
Ward, Mm .<lb/>
Mis- Loll <lb/>
Alice While. <lb/>
of <lb/>
and ,, <lb/>
well, and <lb/>
patronage, <lb/>
In the fir-t hi <lb/>
a id Charley , <lb/>
lunching party <lb/>
honor ,,. <lb/>
if <lb/>
a, i <lb/>
Skinner. <lb/>
it<lb/>
impel <lb/>
y deserve . <lb/>
s,. <lb/>
passing a tent pole dealt him a i d <lb/>
blow on the upper story, and Lei for to <lb/>
found a place Donna D <lb/>
his mother earth; the tobacco however, <lb/>
man Wat the last to leave the wind to alive <lb/>
tossed tent; as he was passing out ladies <lb/>
the band of a a c <lb/>
man knocked from his cranium his The pull n <lb/>
plug hat. for a solid <lb/>
boor be for bis head b; <lb/>
in the drenching rain Thus bud pi <lb/>
I for a play he is lo <lb/>
I. <lb/>
ed the for trio, <lb/>
most others <lb/>
in a thorough wetting. <lb/>
and <lb/>
it ended <lb/>
being quasi -criminal in its nature. <lb/>
Clerk Russ fixed the bond required <lb/>
and subpoenas were <lb/>
issued to both Wake and New <lb/>
Hanover counties. <lb/>
For some days there bad been <lb/>
greatest excitement among <lb/>
families of both Rogers <lb/>
and Mr. Howell. From one thing <lb/>
to another, ugly stories as to the <lb/>
conduct of Lula Rogers, years <lb/>
old, Bertha Howell, <lb/>
years of age, had come to light. <lb/>
The fathers of girls bad <lb/>
them and it was made plain <lb/>
that had been in company <lb/>
with Mr. Dockery and Mr. Ber <lb/>
Body Found. <lb/>
The body of A. T. Mitchell, of <lb/>
Washington, who was drowned by <lb/>
Forbes Ah rams. <lb/>
At the residence of the bride's <lb/>
parents in there in- <lb/>
curred Sunday the marriage <lb/>
of Mr. John It. Forbes, Miss <lb/>
residents of <lb/>
respectively. <lb/>
The ceremony, which was <lb/>
at p. m., was witnessed by <lb/>
a large number of the of <lb/>
bride and groom, many- <lb/>
were the congratulations showered <lb/>
mi them their large circle <lb/>
acquaintances. Rev. H. II. Moore, <lb/>
of Christian church, <lb/>
officiated. <lb/>
Crow Better. <lb/>
The B. Y. P. U. had another <lb/>
very interesting meeting in the <lb/>
lack . Li ti <lb/>
, . . <lb/>
t looms in <lb/>
i . Ml <lb/>
in i <lb/>
in an I, <lb/>
u-y .,,,<lb/>
j in . <lb/>
-i i., c <lb/>
i, n ii n . <lb/>
i tin- bole t <lb/>
d . . <lb/>
y i hum they <lb/>
ii icing his <lb/>
In loll,, i- <lb/>
night. is that of a <lb/>
woman, is In <lb/>
costume. He agrees In <lb/>
become Lucia, chap- <lb/>
the girls. <lb/>
In the meantime Jack's father, <lb/>
pays bin <lb/>
a visit. He is up against it ; <lb/>
dally, and decides to lie <lb/>
Donna Lucia for the of her <lb/>
W bile they <lb/>
ed there the guardian <lb/>
the girls comes in a towering rage <lb/>
; to take them away, but decides to i <lb/>
slay for lunch, so he too can meet I <lb/>
Charley's <lb/>
The scene of second act is <lb/>
garden. <lb/>
Old taking advantage of <lb/>
his posit ion acts too <lb/>
toward two girls to <lb/>
suit Jack and but he has <lb/>
The storm of Saturday night <lb/>
a fierce one. and accompanied <lb/>
by severe and thunder. <lb/>
The gardens in town suffered <lb/>
not a little; everything <lb/>
lug enough was blow down, a ires t <lb/>
many were broken and n <lb/>
I about the streets, nod for a short <lb/>
time the and were <lb/>
in darkness, lightning <lb/>
I burned the wires m several <lb/>
j places all i the belt on <lb/>
lit the n . <lb/>
ii,. idea tin- smoke stack <lb/>
I lie, <lb/>
A in O. A. <lb/>
ard Was blown on his well <lb/>
and demolished. <lb/>
The church Buffered <lb/>
. some damage from water by <lb/>
wall protected tin <lb/>
spare around <lb/>
The streets in places were <lb/>
cut and washed, <lb/>
Crops in vicinity were badly <lb/>
beaten down <lb/>
Toe reached in mi. <lb/>
Inches. <lb/>
Colored Couple Came Creel <lb/>
be Joined. <lb/>
Id early afternoon s <lb/>
couple drove into town that at- <lb/>
some at ten tint, <lb/>
pasted street. The <lb/>
man was to hie Sunday <lb/>
beat, while the douse by bis <lb/>
was robed white in <lb/>
striking contrast with her complex, <lb/>
ion. They did not take until <lb/>
the court where <lb/>
they I alighted in. <lb/>
Inquiry for the register <lb/>
of deed fact that <lb/>
were on matrimony bent, A <lb/>
license was obtained <lb/>
Bought who could <lb/>
joining. A messenger went <lb/>
J. A. Hornaday came <lb/>
loan and united couple la his <lb/>
go id a number of <lb/>
having gathered in the mean- <lb/>
time to . i he ceremony. The <lb/>
duple ere Cornelius Kittrell <lb/>
Gardner, of Swift Greek <lb/>
township. There was every <lb/>
cation la faces <lb/>
left the house and <lb/>
went out to take in the town <lb/>
fine home, <lb/>
CLASS ENTERTAINS. <lb/>
Baptist church afternoon. the on have <lb/>
H. B. and Misses Ethel While they are <lb/>
falling boat between Bagwell, Mary the proved charming <lb/>
and Grimesland Friday night, V calls herself Mrs. <lb/>
. . . ,,., With . I. <lb/>
found about o'clock rt m program. The <lb/>
afternoon. attendance is increasing. <lb/>
In Honor Two Other Classes. <lb/>
, of the <lb/>
school gave a delight- <lb/>
Tuesday nigh , <lb/>
i. n, o ,. o <lb/>
W. entertain. <lb/>
was In honor of the <lb/>
class and Mrs. class id <lb/>
the same school, but many of the <lb/>
young men were so <lb/>
with the excursion and ball <lb/>
that hey allowed hi <lb/>
miss a most delightful occasion. <lb/>
The was beautiful with <lb/>
electric light- Mini II men and <lb/>
a charming place for such <lb/>
a gathering, Miss Bags- <lb/>
dale was by Miss <lb/>
Bagwell in receiving guests at <lb/>
the door and all were most <lb/>
welcomed. <lb/>
The evening was devoted to <lb/>
popular games and music, and <lb/>
merriment and reigned <lb/>
supreme. <lb/>
Refreshments consisting f <lb/>
creams cakes were served <lb/>
the dining room, <lb/>
after all bad sumptuous- <lb/>
games and music were resumed <lb/>
and until hour of <lb/>
bidding good night came. The <lb/>
SB <lb/>
Don't Wash Dog. <lb/>
the <lb/>
July, Reginald V. <lb/>
careful feeding, however, <lb/>
will not. give a dog's emit glow <lb/>
which is a sure sign of he <lb/>
if In. is washed with <lb/>
soap water. Owners who <lb/>
allow their d ea lo in a <lb/>
are forever washing the <lb/>
animal, forever tin that <lb/>
s j- coming out. <lb/>
the is nod scrubbed <lb/>
the more will his coat leave its <lb/>
trail, deader and duller <lb/>
will it The health and <lb/>
growth of a dog's cat depends en- <lb/>
a natural oil from <lb/>
skin. A- ii as a dog is d <lb/>
so i- t he oil washed d <lb/>
so much la <lb/>
of the coat. <lb/>
dog brushed every <lb/>
day live or <lb/>
as well with grain, bis coat <lb/>
would limy have a luster, hut <lb/>
I would cease to distribute itself all <lb/>
place, except for a very <lb/>
Short once or twice n year. <lb/>
this, brushing has a slim- <lb/>
effect on the whole <lb/>
helps th this <lb/>
the digestion, so the general <lb/>
examples brushing <lb/>
washing, I have a d I <lb/>
-hosed la-; June at the <lb/>
how be has not <lb/>
washed since. Another, that was <lb/>
Newport last September <lb/>
has been washed since; two <lb/>
others, that were shown at New <lb/>
last February, have been <lb/>
washed since, still another <lb/>
which I have had a <lb/>
half has never been washed at all. <lb/>
In the warm weather they get <lb/>
of swimming, and in the <lb/>
Winter snow, or a drench <lb/>
in the rain, but a good rub down <lb/>
Very Good water Indeed. <lb/>
second sample of water from <lb/>
the Greenville water works exam- <lb/>
by slate <lb/>
biologist, is pronounced by him to <lb/>
be very good water indeed. <lb/>
largest of <lb/>
Iron at . M. <lb/>
Card of <lb/>
We thank the people <lb/>
of for their kindness <lb/>
shown us during dear mother's <lb/>
sickness death, and for <lb/>
many beautiful tributes. <lb/>
Smith. With her she brings Ella <lb/>
her adopted daughter. <lb/>
Old still posing <lb/>
Lucia bud- himself in several em- <lb/>
positions. Tb <lb/>
Donna Lucia asks him for a story the <lb/>
of her former husband, and of <lb/>
he tell <lb/>
time be wants to pay his <lb/>
to Ella but cannot, <lb/>
cause of bis woman's garb. <lb/>
Change of Superintendents. <lb/>
J. L. has tendered bis <lb/>
true resignation a- superintendent of <lb/>
water light <lb/>
plants, to take effect July <lb/>
The water and commission <lb/>
has selected J. A. as his <lb/>
be- successor. Mr. Livers will return <lb/>
Wanted posts. <lb/>
D. J. Whichard. <lb/>
j to construction work in <lb/>
the third, the which be was engaged <lb/>
destinies of each ate brought the position here. <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
Register of Deeds has issue <lb/>
marriage license to the billowing <lb/>
couples since last report. <lb/>
M B, Hart and Either Cannon. <lb/>
X. I-. I Hart. <lb/>
A. Cash and Lula <lb/>
Saul Haddock <lb/>
J. B. Forbes and <lb/>
Alfred Annie Ward. <lb/>
Davis Bottle <lb/>
sou, <lb/>
Wiley Maggie House. <lb/>
James Staton. <lb/>
Mitchell and <lb/>
J. A. Brown and Ore <lb/>
Joyner and <lb/>
-.-i <lb/>
POOR PRINT<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019527_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
I Sim I I <lb/>
i ii <lb/>
Service is Tired I <lb/>
the Modern Genius <lb/>
WITH A TELEPHONE <lb/>
IN YOUR HOUSE THE <lb/>
RESOURCES OF THE <lb/>
WHOLE STATE ARE <lb/>
AT ELBOW <lb/>
For apply to Local <lb/>
Manner <lb/>
It may be from overwork, but <lb/>
the chance are Its from an in- <lb/>
LIVER. <lb/>
With a well conducted LIVER <lb/>
one can do mountains of labor <lb/>
without fatigue. <lb/>
It a hundred cent to <lb/>
ones earning capacity. <lb/>
by, and only by <lb/>
TAKE HO SUBSTITUTE. <lb/>
Not Quite <lb/>
ran get a <lb/>
thing . <lb/>
nail or screw driver or <lb/>
Haw a <lb/>
,.,. box and be for <lb/>
emergencies, i t <lb/>
is all could desire, <lb/>
, , see th your tool <lb/>
box does ample <lb/>
article <lb/>
Of Course <lb/>
You get Harness, <lb/>
Horse Goods, <lb/>
of <lb/>
J. P <lb/>
Corey <lb/>
COUNTY <lb/>
J. Elks, <lb/>
Chairman, W. K. <lb/>
J. K. Spier, J. K. Barnhill <lb/>
J. W. Page. <lb/>
Clerk Superior C. <lb/>
Moore. <lb/>
j Sheriff L. W. Tucker. <lb/>
Register of <lb/>
Hams. <lb/>
T. White. <lb/>
William <lb/>
D. Cox. <lb/>
Hoard G. <lb/>
Chairman, B. M. <lb/>
L. C. Arthur.<lb/>
H. <lb/>
Standard OB, Klein- <lb/>
State of North Car <lb/>
County. <lb/>
In the Superior Court, <lb/>
Town of i of summon <lb/>
and t of <lb/>
I J <lb/>
The defendant. K. J. Po lard, will <lb/>
take notice, that on the day <lb/>
June, 1906, a summons was issued, <lb/>
against him. ill th u entitled a <lb/>
lion, by the undersign d clerk of the <lb/>
Superior court of county, return- <lb/>
able to the September term, of <lb/>
Pit court, which convene on <lb/>
i the second Monday after the Ural <lb/>
Monday In September, 1906. it v , <lb/>
the day month, <lb/>
summons was returned by sir riff , P. J. v I. <lb/>
ml and with ,. <lb/>
h J. <lb/>
T. <lb/>
s. Congleton, <lb/>
J. H. tiny, <lb/>
U . Bowen, A. II. Tuft. <lb/>
C S T. B. Hooker. <lb/>
j t Lanier. <lb/>
tins <lb/>
Pollard not to be l o my county. <lb/>
The of laid action as allege I <lb/>
by the plaintiff la tn recover of the <lb/>
defendant the mm of three hundred <lb/>
dollars for breach hi- of a <lb/>
certain deed executed In <lb/>
on the day January, 1890 for a <lb/>
h land on Wilson <lb/>
street in the and <lb/>
fully described in deed <lb/>
Hook pass <lb/>
office of <lb/>
lie said K defendant <lb/>
aforesaid, will notice a <lb/>
warrant of attachment Issued by <lb/>
e'er . on the said <lb/>
June, the crop r- <lb/>
of the K Pollard, directed <lb/>
In the sheriff of Pitt county aid re- <lb/>
turnable to the September term <lb/>
of Pitt Superior court, it being <lb/>
the t me and place where the aforesaid <lb/>
summons la returnable, . Hie said <lb/>
B, will take notice that <lb/>
is required to appeal thin tin-. Brat <lb/>
three days said v and <lb/>
demur to the complaint of the plaintiff <lb/>
n. or t relief demanded <lb/>
will be granted. <lb/>
in the town <lb/>
Greenville, day of June,<lb/>
Clerk e Superior curt. <lb/>
Blow, Plaintiff's <lb/>
M. SCHULTZ <lb/>
On r sod <lb/>
Hide, Fur. Cotton Oil Bar- <lb/>
Turkeys, Egg, mo. Bed- <lb/>
tends, Oak Suits, Ba <lb/>
nulls, Tables, P <lb/>
High mi- . Che- <lb/>
root-. <lb/>
Cherries, Peaches, Apples , <lb/>
Pine Jelly, Milk, office North <lb/>
In . <lb/>
r . p,, fill will to public sale <lb/>
before the Court <lb/>
vi <lb/>
Hi virtue of the power of sale con- <lb/>
In a certain Mortgage <lb/>
and delivered l Richard <lb/>
wife H. <lb/>
27th <lb/>
Is.;, in <lb/>
and Hulls, <lb/>
Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Dried Apple. <lb/>
. Cum <lb/>
rid <lb/>
i, <lb/>
. . ill i I <lb/>
II<lb/>
TUESDAY. I, S <lb/>
or parcel land lung <lb/>
and being in of Pitt and <lb/>
Mi e North described <lb/>
as to That tract land <lb/>
in i lying on et <lb/>
aide the main road from <lb/>
Greenville to and known <lb/>
, inn . <lb/>
that piece land by J, <lb/>
K. 1- Adams, adjoining <lb/>
I'm. i,. W. Venters on the <lb/>
,. it <lb/>
h.- <lb/>
NEWMAN <lb/>
the Old Stand. <lb/>
South, Oscar Hooker on the on <lb/>
I the iv tin, lands, and on <lb/>
the West by the Davis land, <lb/>
moor less, to <lb/>
said Mortgage Deed. <lb/>
it sale <lb/>
This day May <lb/>
F. Q. Attorney. <lb/>
I have purchased the stock <lb/>
and W. J. <lb/>
Thigpen will carry on the <lb/>
at his old stand Five <lb/>
Points. <lb/>
will add to the to meet the <lb/>
demands trade and will at <lb/>
ll times a complete line of <lb/>
DISSOLUTION OF <lb/>
SHIP. <lb/>
The Hi ink A Hooker by <lb/>
mutual content the pi <lb/>
June, dissolved, J. Frank <lb/>
purchasing o. Hooker's interest <lb/>
In the Brick Warehouse. <lb/>
Warehouse will here- <lb/>
after be run by J. Fran. Brinkley. <lb/>
This June 14th, 1905 <lb/>
Frank <lb/>
Hooker <lb/>
I to friends for <lb/>
their patronage in and <lb/>
Tobacco, ask a continuance of the same, prom- <lb/>
that I will always my best <lb/>
effort to protect then- in the <lb/>
future, <lb/>
J. Frank Brinkley. <lb/>
Heavy and. Groceries. <lb/>
Fruits <lb/>
Cigars, <lb/>
Call on me you want the <lb/>
best Groceries the lowest price <lb/>
at which they be fold. <lb/>
J. J. TURNAGE <lb/>
The Five Grocer. <lb/>
COBB BROS. CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Vb. <lb/>
Buyers Brokers in <lb/>
Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
ons. Private Wires to New <lb/>
Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
HILLIARD, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
MARBLE MONUMENTAL WORK <lb/>
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. <lb/>
Iron Fencing Sold <lb/>
Tax D. <lb/>
J. T As <lb/>
J W <lb/>
H. <lb/>
Chief Ola <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
Bryan, J. S. Hart, J. <lb/>
L. Sufi; <lb/>
Prayer meetings each <lb/>
day night. Sunday schools <lb/>
a. <lb/>
Rot. King, pas <lb/>
tor. Services every Sun. <lb/>
day. W. H. <lb/>
of Sunday <lb/>
School. <lb/>
H. H. Moore. <lb/>
pastor. Bun <lb/>
day. W. H. Parker Super- <lb/>
Sunday School. <lb/>
Episcopal--Rev. W. E. Cox, <lb/>
rector, Services every <lb/>
and third Sunday. B <lb/>
Brown of <lb/>
Sunday School, <lb/>
Will <lb/>
No <lb/>
regular service <lb/>
day Services every Sunday <lb/>
O s <lb/>
dent of Sunday School <lb/>
K G Hart- <lb/>
man pastor Services every <lb/>
Sunday I first <lb/>
Sunday in month. W <lb/>
Dove Superintendent <lb/>
Lodge No. A <lb/>
K A M. meets 1st <lb/>
Monday nights in each <lb/>
month R Williams, W <lb/>
Wiley Brown, Sec <lb/>
Covenant Lodge No. I O <lb/>
F Meets every Tuesday <lb/>
night. T H Moore, N <lb/>
W F Evans, Sec <lb/>
Tar River Lodge No. K of <lb/>
Meets every Thursday <lb/>
night K Q Flanagan, C <lb/>
T J Moore, K of R <lb/>
Tribe No <lb/>
O R M, meets every <lb/>
Thursday night J U Co <lb/>
Sachem; W P Ed <lb/>
wards, C of R <lb/>
Council No Jr O U A <lb/>
M. meets every Friday <lb/>
night J B Randolph, Conn <lb/>
J U R S <lb/>
EATING AND DRINKING. <lb/>
of an of Food and th. <lb/>
Effects of <lb/>
Every living body requires a <lb/>
quantity of food that is common- <lb/>
with the tissues it consumes <lb/>
in the performance of its functions. <lb/>
When nourishment is withheld, the <lb/>
body is forced to subsist on own <lb/>
tissues. The tat is first <lb/>
ed, then the muscles and other <lb/>
structures. The emaciation and loss <lb/>
of strength are so rapid that life has <lb/>
rarely been maintained longer than <lb/>
ten days when neither food nor <lb/>
drink was taken. If, however, an <lb/>
abundance of water is drunk, <lb/>
wasting is greatly retarded, and life <lb/>
can be supported for a much longer <lb/>
tune, provided that the body be <lb/>
kept at complete rest. Thus re- <lb/>
lasting is often a valuable <lb/>
adjunct to other measures in the <lb/>
treatment of disease. A limitation <lb/>
of the diet is more frequently re- <lb/>
to than an entire withdrawal <lb/>
of nourishment. <lb/>
of die i- often <lb/>
ii means of preventing <lb/>
illness. x not employed <lb/>
in manual labor eat more than is <lb/>
requisite tor their support. Overeat- <lb/>
seldom yields an increase of <lb/>
nutrition. The of fond, on <lb/>
the contrary, imposes a burden <lb/>
upon the liver, Other <lb/>
organs whose office is to free t lie j <lb/>
of effete matter.- When <lb/>
burden heroines illness is <lb/>
ind ii i. loss of <lb/>
nil other <lb/>
, under <lb/>
t lit; Ii i in are the Usual <lb/>
manifestations of it. The <lb/>
of poisons is further favored <lb/>
by neglect of when mo little <lb/>
wain- i- taken into the system to <lb/>
maintain the secretions and earn <lb/>
off waste. <lb/>
The waste products which result <lb/>
from an overindulgence in meal are <lb/>
more acutely poisonous than those <lb/>
from vegetables. They belong to <lb/>
the uric arid group of poisonous <lb/>
substances, which are regarded as <lb/>
particularly active in the <lb/>
of gout, rheumatism and <lb/>
or if the quantity of <lb/>
food taken be so excessive and <lb/>
remain so long in the intestines as <lb/>
lo undergo decomposition through <lb/>
the action of bacteria, ptomaine <lb/>
poisoning is produced, n may <lb/>
u -ii as to be distinguished <lb/>
with difficulty from typhoid fever. <lb/>
In the severe cases relief is <lb/>
by abstaining <lb/>
from meat for a few day-, hastening <lb/>
the removal the matter by <lb/>
the drinking of as much pure water <lb/>
as the stomach tolerate or by <lb/>
means of a laxative mineral water. <lb/>
Muscular and bathing arc <lb/>
also advantage for prevention. <lb/>
Youth's i <lb/>
Announcement <lb/>
We beg leave to announce that we are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for n <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 the Harrison Paints you need <lb/>
never worry quality. <lb/>
We trust that you favor us with your <lb/>
orders whenever you want good paint for any <lb/>
Have just a car load and <lb/>
can give you Special Prices. <lb/>
Baker Hart <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
AT THE OF BUSINESS MAY 29th. 1905. <lb/>
OF DISSOLUTION. <lb/>
The of <lb/>
heretofore doing s mercantile business <lb/>
in the town Greenville, has <lb/>
dissolved by mutual c All per- <lb/>
sons Owing the firm ran settle with <lb/>
either party and are requested to <lb/>
Mi-ward at once and settle their SO <lb/>
Any one accounts <lb/>
against the can present lo <lb/>
either party. I- M. Savage. <lb/>
J. . <lb/>
This June 1905. <lb/>
APPLICATION FOR <lb/>
LICENSE. <lb/>
Is hereby given that I will <lb/>
make application lo the Board of Con <lb/>
of enmity i <lb/>
Monday in July. license <lb/>
retail liquor in N. <lb/>
Thus. J. <lb/>
This 27th day of May, ISM. <lb/>
DR.<lb/>
I. t P. <lb/>
COMPOUND. <lb/>
APPLICATION FOR LIQUOR <lb/>
is hereby given that I will <lb/>
make application to the board of Com- <lb/>
county on the Brit <lb/>
July, 1905, for license <lb/>
retail liquor in N. C. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
This of May, <lb/>
NORFOLK SOUTHERN CO <lb/>
Steamboat Service. <lb/>
L. leaves <lb/>
daily <lb/>
at ti a. for leaves <lb/>
daily <lb/>
at in. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
Norfolk Southern Railroad <lb/>
Norfolk, Philadelphia, <lb/>
,. New York, <lb/>
n the first North. Connects a Norfolk <lb/>
with all West. <lb/>
order <lb/>
freight via Norfolk, care Norfolk <lb/>
A Southern R. R. <lb/>
Sailing hours subject to change <lb/>
without <lb/>
T, H. Agent, Washing- <lb/>
ton, N. O. <lb/>
J. J. Agent, <lb/>
N. <lb/>
If. General T. <lb/>
f. Agent, Norfolk, Vs., <lb/>
Recompense. <lb/>
A popular physician was much <lb/>
plea-id with a certain aerated <lb/>
and by his assiduous <lb/>
procured for n a <lb/>
ii deserved, The doctor <lb/>
hi h in the inter -i of j <lb/>
generally and expected no <lb/>
return. <lb/>
To bis there came one <lb/>
morning effusive letter from the <lb/>
. ling that <lb/>
done them so much <lb/>
good they ventured to <lb/>
semi him ii Here the <lb/>
page i lo an end. <lb/>
ill never said the <lb/>
doctor. very kind, hut <lb/>
co i accepting any- <lb/>
Here lie turned the page <lb/>
and found the sentence <lb/>
ii, our circulars for <lb/>
Dodging o Duke. <lb/>
One time the I hike <lb/>
king of Cyprus and Jerusalem, <lb/>
was in love beautiful <lb/>
Mme. d ah who had <lb/>
estate at Monaco. the <lb/>
of Mine, de <lb/>
Monaco without <lb/>
of trumpet or drum o us to <lb/>
give her agreeable surprise. Mine, <lb/>
de did not in the <lb/>
least her neighbor, who, more- <lb/>
over, was a septuagenarian and <lb/>
humpbacked like a sack nuts. In <lb/>
order to put s stop bis w-its she <lb/>
used have his movements watch- <lb/>
ed, end directly he passed her from <lb/>
he saluted from all her <lb/>
batteries. Twenty-one guns was the <lb/>
precise number, sufficient to pro- <lb/>
claim for miles around that bis <lb/>
grace Inking an <lb/>
A Financial <lb/>
Mr-. a woman with a <lb/>
head for <lb/>
sec lure. I have bought a <lb/>
beautiful rocking chair auction <lb/>
worth only paid <lb/>
So. see, have clear profit. <lb/>
tell sir after this <lb/>
women have no business tense. <lb/>
Deed the recking <lb/>
r. <lb/>
Then w did j h i it <lb/>
save . How <lb/>
hi i if hadn't <lb/>
bought it, t <lb/>
1102,151.411<lb/>
Overdrafts, <lb/>
blocks, securities, etc.<lb/>
real estate 2,000.00 <lb/>
Hue from Banks 52,858.67<lb/>
Gold Coin <lb/>
Goto <lb/>
9,871.00 <lb/>
Stuck paid Is 125,000.00 <lb/>
Surplus, 25,000.00 <lb/>
Undivided Profits hi <lb/>
Expenses Paid 7,250.72 <lb/>
Deposit subject to check 181,484.46 <lb/>
out- <lb/>
standing 2,751.35 <lb/>
North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt. <lb/>
James L. Little, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly <lb/>
swear that the statement above in true to tho best of my knowledge <lb/>
and belief JAMES L. LITTLE. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before <lb/>
this 7th day of June, 1905 <lb/>
J. C. TYSON, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
J. A- ANDREWS, <lb/>
Ii. W. <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
i i <lb/>
II Victor Receives <lb/>
THE <lb/>
To the Victor Belongs the Spoils. <lb/>
to the Enquirer. <lb/>
St. Mo., Oct. Victor Safe a Look Co., of <lb/>
Cincinnati, received, to-day, the Grand Prize at the World's <lb/>
Pair, for their exhibit of solid Manganese Steel bank safes <lb/>
and general line of tire and burglar-proof safes and vaults, <lb/>
their magnificent display taking first prize over all <lb/>
tors for modern improvements, construction, workmanship <lb/>
and finish- <lb/>
The Safe that has never been Burglarized. <lb/>
J. L Agent. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
The Reflector <lb/>
Is Road By Everybody and <lb/>
It resell people to pay for what they want, <lb/>
if yen have what want advertise it are sure to <lb/>
a part of money. <lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
J. M. BLOW, Manager and Authorized Agent. <lb/>
s. N. C. <lb/>
AYDEN ITEMS. <lb/>
I Don't fail lo see Ty- <lb/>
I son's new both plain and <lb/>
IT. C, June 1905. decorated. Prices are cheaper <lb/>
authorized agent for DAILY <lb/>
and Reflector we take <lb/>
pleasure in receiving sub- <lb/>
and willing for <lb/>
those arrears. We have a list <lb/>
of all who receive their mail at <lb/>
this office. We also take orders <lb/>
job <lb/>
When yon need a <lb/>
tough pole, for buggy or <lb/>
carriage. Call and make a <lb/>
election. Ayden Milling Mfg <lb/>
Co. den. N. C. <lb/>
Milling Mfg. Co., <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Saturday night just at dark <lb/>
of the inn-t terrific wind and lain <lb/>
passed over this section <lb/>
known in many years, carrying <lb/>
with it devastation and ruin from <lb/>
almost every source, Here in <lb/>
the sheet in front of the <lb/>
the signal light of the <lb/>
railroad, the <lb/>
than formerly. <lb/>
Come to see us when you <lb/>
to buy Independent Manufactured <lb/>
Tobacco, we handle Trust <lb/>
goods, Hart Jenkins. <lb/>
Mrs. Calvin of <lb/>
came up on Sunday morning's <lb/>
train to her brothers, the <lb/>
Messrs. <lb/>
For can peaches, apples, corn <lb/>
tomatoes, c, apply to E. Ii <lb/>
Now we have plenty the <lb/>
wagon and cart <lb/>
wheels and will sell them as <lb/>
a any one. <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
The ladies say that Cannon <lb/>
Tyson have the prettiest, line of <lb/>
dress goods in town. <lb/>
Notice you <lb/>
your ginned nice clean, <lb/>
in order that you might realize <lb/>
Bra., have pretties or om and stay <lb/>
cent and ginghams lo town, site blade yon want at J. K. Smith <lb/>
That last car choice hay that <lb/>
colored l church and tot if <lb/>
fences all around, were blown <lb/>
down to the four <lb/>
winds of Heaven. In the <lb/>
great damage was done to <lb/>
crops and fences. All along the <lb/>
public roads are large washouts <lb/>
m many places the bridge <lb/>
swept away. It was a <lb/>
Storm, much thunder light- <lb/>
accompanying it. The <lb/>
electric light plant had to shut <lb/>
down and those of our citizens <lb/>
Milling A Mfg. Co., <lb/>
R. F. Johnson came up <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
Cannon Tyson are displaying <lb/>
the most up to dale line of <lb/>
ever brought to this <lb/>
Go to E. B. Co's new <lb/>
market beef, fresh meats, <lb/>
sage, and fresh fish. <lb/>
A high grade, graceful, <lb/>
well made durable buggy can be <lb/>
had no lamps had to spend the at t-up at <lb/>
remainder of night in Mfg. . g <lb/>
Even poor little us had to dispense , with their eyes <lb/>
only Saturday night or way; should <lb/>
luxury and our way to bed Bot to J- w- Taylor, <lb/>
ponder and reflect on the graduate optician, who <lb/>
past lo our glasses properly <lb/>
when light should again appear. <lb/>
Will deal with you <lb/>
and the storm should nave passed and your money<lb/>
If you need anything the way S is <lb/>
of Crockery, Tin ware We Continue to build -High <lb/>
come to sec us, Hart Jenkins. buggies for we do not <lb/>
Call and examine our line of <lb/>
high grade buggies. You can be Ayden, S. O. <lb/>
easily convinced of the superiority Taylor, <lb/>
of material and who has been on a visit daring <lb/>
Ayden Milling Co. <lb/>
Co. returned <lb/>
possible can to please you with i her home Sunday. <lb/>
their new line of heavy and fancy <lb/>
groceries. <lb/>
We are Headquarters Brat <lb/>
class, light neat Harness, Ac <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co., Ayden <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Fancy candies, oranges, apples <lb/>
and bananas at E. <lb/>
For guano sowers see M. H. <lb/>
The lie-t. <lb/>
Carlos Harris says Harrison <lb/>
Town Country paints and <lb/>
Just received, line line of colors ate by far the best goods <lb/>
and can lit you up in any style <lb/>
or price. <lb/>
Ayden Milling Co. <lb/>
T. J. of Green- <lb/>
that he ever used and that it <lb/>
knocked out several other <lb/>
brands a teal at Greenville last <lb/>
This paint is sold by J. <lb/>
ville, spent Saturday night with K- <lb/>
Billy Oranges, apples, bananas and all <lb/>
are re. kept by <lb/>
daily new groceries and <lb/>
confectioneries light from the misses and black <lb/>
slippers all sizes at <lb/>
manufacture seats J- K <lb/>
the trade, that are simply the Old man what makes you always <lb/>
smoothest seat on the market J- K- Bro., to do <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co. I can <lb/>
We have full line of any thing I from <lb/>
shoes for ladies. Every boys. <lb/>
pair guaranteed. <lb/>
J. J. Edwards ii Co. <lb/>
Cotton king cultivators, Gopher <lb/>
plows extra blades at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
We are offering good values for <lb/>
the money in shoes, hats, caps, <lb/>
rugs obi pets, tables and <lb/>
floor oil cloth Cannon Tyson. <lb/>
John Pierce went up the road <lb/>
A large plaining outfit and latest <lb/>
improved tools with which to do <lb/>
our work. Satisfaction <lb/>
teed. M. B. Tripp it Bro. <lb/>
Call on Hart A Jenkins for a bar <lb/>
tel of Columbia Flour, none better <lb/>
be had anywhere. <lb/>
Needles, oil, bands and <lb/>
for all makes of sewing machines <lb/>
at J. H. Tripp Bro. Ayden, N <lb/>
C. <lb/>
if you do not secure <lb/>
one of our high grade <lb/>
Miss Crawford, of Win- <lb/>
after a plea-ant visit to <lb/>
Miss Willie Faulkner, returned to <lb/>
her home yesterday. <lb/>
M. B. Tripp Bro. are now <lb/>
to make wooden legs for <lb/>
cripple horses or mules. Their <lb/>
latest was a decided success. <lb/>
L. C. who has been <lb/>
away from home for quite a while <lb/>
returned Wednesday evening. <lb/>
The freshest loaf bread right <lb/>
from the oven at <lb/>
Get the Cox cotton planter the <lb/>
best on the market at J. Smith A. <lb/>
Bro. <lb/>
Simplex guano distributors, Cox <lb/>
cotton planters and repairs at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
Singer sewing machines sold <lb/>
cheap for cash or on installment <lb/>
J. at H. Tripp A Bro., Ayden N. C <lb/>
Those white and tan slippers at <lb/>
loss will be ours. I J. R. Smith A Bro., are the <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co., for children I have this <lb/>
den, N. C. <lb/>
R. Bra, received is fine. <lb/>
Lee lime is good for any <lb/>
and a farmer it <lb/>
freely, at J. R. Smith <lb/>
That lace and embroidery <lb/>
is the prettiest goods in town for <lb/>
baby J. R. Smith <lb/>
King Quality shoes are the best. <lb/>
You will find thew at J. J. Ed- <lb/>
ward Son. <lb/>
Complete stock spring clothing <lb/>
at J. J. Edward A Sou. <lb/>
notice. <lb/>
In order to make room the <lb/>
next days we will sell <lb/>
regular high grade buggies at <lb/>
exceptionally low prices. This is <lb/>
no lake, but strictly business. <lb/>
Ayden Milling and <lb/>
Ayden, N. C <lb/>
What a pity policeman of <lb/>
didn't get Claim Her. <lb/>
too. If there is a jury <lb/>
Wake that would <lb/>
any Hung in I bis <lb/>
that jury ought and should lie <lb/>
lynched. <lb/>
our spring of <lb/>
pant-. J. Edwards Son. <lb/>
For heart <lb/>
by J. II. Tripp Bro. <lb/>
Die mil of the Milling <lb/>
and Mfg. Co. has been out <lb/>
now in first <lb/>
they are prepared to <lb/>
shortest notice all who <lb/>
may I. with patronage. <lb/>
They also call special attention to <lb/>
their line of beautiful buggies. <lb/>
We know we can't interest the <lb/>
men who prefer to walk or the <lb/>
men Who Will not believe that <lb/>
buggies are the most economical at <lb/>
price. <lb/>
We know vehicles and <lb/>
we also know tin- buggies we build <lb/>
and sell we <lb/>
Come to see us <lb/>
you buy or If you can do <lb/>
better elsewhere we do u i expect <lb/>
your patronage. <lb/>
Ayden Milling and Co. <lb/>
Ayden, N <lb/>
Mi-s of is <lb/>
visiting <lb/>
The carriage buyer <lb/>
knows a little judgment often <lb/>
saves many doll is. He knows <lb/>
i that there i- a price below h eh a <lb/>
good buggy be or sold, j <lb/>
Our <lb/>
style and <lb/>
no offered general I <lb/>
Milling Mfg. Co, Ayden, j <lb/>
i N. C <lb/>
Something new in Ayden J. <lb/>
Smith have bought a whole j <lb/>
car load of cooking and beating <lb/>
stoves, and you can get your choice <lb/>
by coming at <lb/>
Mrs. Mary J. Forrest and Mis. <lb/>
Will have been on a visit <lb/>
to the family of J. A, Finest <lb/>
the week. <lb/>
neighbor have you seen <lb/>
Simplex fertilizer distributor at <lb/>
J, It, Smith A It puts it out <lb/>
any quantity you want and does <lb/>
not waste any at the cuds of row- <lb/>
it is a cheap machine. <lb/>
to J. J. Edwards A Sou for <lb/>
your spring clothing. <lb/>
A. Griffin has first <lb/>
class brick fir sale and is burning <lb/>
new kilns constantly. When in <lb/>
need of brick see him or write <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
Miss Irma Bell Dawson is visit- <lb/>
in <lb/>
J. R, Smith Bro. gives me <lb/>
more for my <lb/>
and eggs <lb/>
else. <lb/>
a neat house with gar- <lb/>
den and all necessary out <lb/>
located on main street in a good <lb/>
neighborhood for rent by J. R. <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
W. E. Patrick spent the Sabbath <lb/>
in Greenville. <lb/>
The soda fountain a <lb/>
will be in service <lb/>
from now to the end of the season. <lb/>
The newest and latest drinks will <lb/>
be found there. If you want <lb/>
something nice try them. <lb/>
and organs at J. <lb/>
Tripp Bro. We sell them cheap <lb/>
for cash on credit term, Ayden, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
That rock salt at J. R. Smith <lb/>
Bro., is the best thing I can get <lb/>
for my stock. They only eat what <lb/>
they of it at a time. <lb/>
We are indebted to little <lb/>
Miss Thelma and <lb/>
Zeb for a nice least on <lb/>
some of the sweetest most <lb/>
luscious peaches, for which we <lb/>
tender many thanks. <lb/>
We will beginning on <lb/>
day June 21st for our <lb/>
entire stock of clothing, dry <lb/>
notion, shoes hats at prices <lb/>
before unheard of. in the n of <lb/>
Ayden. Our stock is too large <lb/>
and we take this means of reducing <lb/>
same. We have just a <lb/>
large lot plaid mat air run <lb/>
Ding at per yard, white sheet- <lb/>
per C. Jackson <lb/>
k Co. Ayden, N. <lb/>
Bills, of Greenville, t <lb/>
Sabbath hem, <lb/>
WINTER <lb/>
CLOTHES <lb/>
Time to lay away winter <lb/>
clothes pretty sen. Better <lb/>
tn it they are protect <lb/>
ed moths until they are <lb/>
wanted again. We have <lb/>
MOTH BALLS <lb/>
MOTH POWDER <lb/>
CAMPHOR <lb/>
TAR BAGS <lb/>
CHAMBRAY <lb/>
A moth near any of <lb/>
them. They're cheaper than <lb/>
buying new clothes. <lb/>
M. M. SAULS, Ph. G. <lb/>
IN. C. <lb/>
BEFORE THE HOUSE BURNS. <lb/>
If -on contemplate INSURING <lb/>
property wait, VA bile <lb/>
are walling your house or bus <lb/>
h use may be by <lb/>
The Time to Act is Now <lb/>
while the property is valuable and <lb/>
when you can a <lb/>
Hie Din ii- too late. I write incur <lb/>
lie- that Let me explain <lb/>
it l you <lb/>
E. HOOKS, <lb/>
J. H. <lb/>
CHOLERA CURE. <lb/>
It Has Never Failed. <lb/>
Real references on demand. For <lb/>
sale in all country and <lb/>
drugstores, Cull for ii <lb/>
No Pay. <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
AYDEN, N. C. <lb/>
At the close of business May 29th, 1905. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
and Discounts, ti <lb/>
Furniture and Fixtures <lb/>
Demand Lens <lb/>
Due from Hanks, <lb/>
Cash Items, 106.90 <lb/>
Gold Coin, <lb/>
Silver Coin, fill <lb/>
National Hank notes and <lb/>
other U. S notes <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
144,616.28 <lb/>
Capital st-k paid in. <lb/>
Surplus <lb/>
Undivided profits <lb/>
expenses, <lb/>
Dividends unpaid <lb/>
Deposits subject to <lb/>
Cashier's <lb/>
Total. <lb/>
A. H. TAFT'S <lb/>
BIG <lb/>
Furniture Store <lb/>
Waits to serve you <lb/>
anything wanted in <lb/>
FURNITURE, CARPETS, MATTINGS, <lb/>
RUGS, LAMPS and CURTAINS <lb/>
Can fit out your whole <lb/>
House. <lb/>
AYDEN, N. C <lb/>
ASK FOR <lb/>
COLUMBIA FLOUR, <lb/>
II git you <lb/>
satisfaction your dealer will <lb/>
pa , J ii h Ho inn.; <lb/>
It. Johnson, <lb/>
Diet. Ayden, <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Dixon <lb/>
AND <lb/>
Office Block, Railroad, <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
A. H. Taft, <lb/>
NEXT DOOR TO SAM WHITE'S. <lb/>
Scientifically <lb/>
Constructed. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
A Shoe for <lb/>
Women. <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and <lb/>
Ties always on hand <lb/>
Fresh kept con- <lb/>
In Stock. Country <lb/>
Produce Bought and Sold <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
Q R <lb/>
North Ca <lb/>
SHINGLES SHINGLES <lb/>
All grades and sizes, in car loft, <lb/>
less quantity, to suit purchaser. <lb/>
F. K. RANDOLPH CO. <lb/>
Home, N. C <lb/>
THE ULTRA SHOE tor <lb/>
is made with reference <lb/>
to the most details and <lb/>
is so perfected in its numerous <lb/>
styles there is no other <lb/>
man's shoo on the market selling <lb/>
tit the price Ultra docs, its <lb/>
superior, if its equal. <lb/>
Horn is the fundamental basis <lb/>
of a perfect shoe. We employ <lb/>
our own expert designers, and <lb/>
every Ultra over <lb/>
a lust scientifically constructed <lb/>
to meet the closest variations <lb/>
of width and size in woman's <lb/>
footwear, <lb/>
The Ultra Shoo moots every <lb/>
requirement of the many <lb/>
whims of <lb/>
We carry SHOE, for men, in Oxfords, Tans, etc. <lb/>
Pulley Bowen, <lb/>
THE HOME OF WOMAN'S FASHIONS. <lb/>
Try a Pair <lb/>
our VICTOR SPRINGS and one our OS- <lb/>
PATENT ELASTIC FELT, MAT- <lb/>
TRESSES and it yon are not more than satisfied we <lb/>
will refund the price. <lb/>
truly. <lb/>
TAFT VANDYKE. <lb/>
Subscribe to THE<lb/>
POOR PRINT<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019527_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
mm<lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
AND <lb/>
P. J. Editor and <lb/>
Entered in the post at Greenville, N. C, as second class matter, <lb/>
Advertising rates made upon application. <lb/>
A desired at every post in Pitt and adjoining counties. <lb/>
The Winston aldermen are deter <lb/>
mined to get rid of small money <lb/>
sharks. On Saturday the aldermen <lb/>
instructed the town tax collector to <lb/>
collect an annual tax of from <lb/>
even- money lender. <lb/>
in to fiction <lb/>
Pitt County, N. C, Km day, 1905. <lb/>
IT EFFECTS THE SOUTH <lb/>
While the country at large is His- <lb/>
cousins worrying Chi- <lb/>
exclusion, the Sooth, the very <lb/>
portion will he most visibly <lb/>
affected, no matter which way it is <lb/>
decided, is saying hardly a word <lb/>
Upon decision <lb/>
depend in a great degree the <lb/>
tin Soul China is no <lb/>
longer the rout, <lb/>
n he <lb/>
powerful, magic finger Japan has <lb/>
ti ached her. and she is waking; the <lb/>
ways and methods f I he Western <lb/>
world el e is in and she <lb/>
is stronger r before <lb/>
man I the <lb/>
race pride or any <lb/>
other man has. ins ill mat ; <lb/>
you invite his ill will, <lb/>
now that i- p Insult the <lb/>
have the respect and support of all <lb/>
honest, conservative people To <lb/>
oppress we or to disguise it is <lb/>
wrong The public wants the fads <lb/>
in all things as they are. <lb/>
CARE SHOULD BE USED <lb/>
We need immigrants and <lb/>
them, but the most extreme care <lb/>
should be exercised in this matter. <lb/>
We want the right kind Do <lb/>
other. We think the first and <lb/>
m would be to get desirable <lb/>
pie from other this <lb/>
country. In this way believe many <lb/>
could be secured. This being dona <lb/>
the movement might lie extended to <lb/>
include desirable immigrants from <lb/>
England, Scotland, Ireland, Norway, <lb/>
Sweden and other foreign countries <lb/>
It would be very easy to secure <lb/>
immigrants of nationalities <lb/>
n mid not he so desirable, for the <lb/>
Chinaman now. you lose las trails <lb/>
proportion of people of latter <lb/>
class coining over here is fast <lb/>
increasing, while from the <lb/>
nationalities that are more desirable <lb/>
is not increasing so very rapidly <lb/>
Thus you see the utmost care should <lb/>
be used in securing the right kind. <lb/>
Tin- Soul . dependent <lb/>
her prosperity on the cotton markets <lb/>
of the China has been and is <lb/>
still her most valuable customer. <lb/>
Already the trade is falling off and <lb/>
Because, the disrespectful, <lb/>
unreasonable and <lb/>
st <lb/>
of e students <lb/>
and t with the <lb/>
i even from <lb/>
can prime ministers, are subjected <lb/>
to the indignities of the examination <lb/>
accorded the common ct oils laborer <lb/>
verity of the immigration bureaus <lb/>
l . old kin <lb/>
We want them, but wont be <lb/>
with just any <lb/>
THE COMING FOURTH. <lb/>
Most people follow the nils of <lb/>
blowing their money in, but the <lb/>
who went crazy in San Francis- <lb/>
co and used bills for wadding <lb/>
in his gun undoubtedly believed <lb/>
blowing it out. <lb/>
The yellow fever outbreak in the <lb/>
Zone ought not Io cause very- <lb/>
much excitement owing to the <lb/>
amount of work that has <lb/>
been going on over there for quite a <lb/>
while. <lb/>
We don't think there is any doubt <lb/>
but what the at Greens <lb/>
will fail but we will just bet <lb/>
dollars to pennies that Mary Ann <lb/>
don't lose anything. <lb/>
Russia is to build another great <lb/>
fleet. It looks to us like it would be <lb/>
great deal cheaper to bury her sail- <lb/>
ors on land. <lb/>
If Governor Glenn does not let <lb/>
those gold stay in the pen <lb/>
he will not do what he <lb/>
ought to. <lb/>
Blackburn had better get busy <lb/>
and start up No If he <lb/>
don't he may have to gaze upon his <lb/>
finish. <lb/>
If the Republicans take in Butler, <lb/>
the first thing the knows <lb/>
Holler will be taking it in <lb/>
It would get the habit <lb/>
of hanging a few men, she might <lb/>
escape less scandals. <lb/>
WINTERVILLE <lb/>
While Mockery may not have de- <lb/>
served killing, there is very little to <lb/>
lie said in his favor. <lb/>
In the invention of the <lb/>
potato we can see the finish of the <lb/>
potato hug. <lb/>
Roosevelt, we learn has just <lb/>
a new library to his Oyster Hay <lb/>
Bummer home. What's the matter <lb/>
Andy We have not heard <lb/>
from you lately <lb/>
. It is a ease of Mr saw <lb/>
Mayor Weaver is determined to it first, but the other crowd beat <lb/>
rive all the rascals out of him to it. <lb/>
If he succeeds. Philadelphia <lb/>
will look like thirty cents when he <lb/>
finishes the job. <lb/>
A tramp is not apt at-chops <lb/>
unless it happens to be wood chops <lb/>
All Americans arriving at <lb/>
must submit to being fumigated. <lb/>
The Americans should make no kick. <lb/>
If they can stand the Chinese they <lb/>
can stand the fumigation. <lb/>
The Washington paper with <lb/>
hyphenated name is sore over it yet. <lb/>
now crops out that the corset <lb/>
was worn four thousand years ago <lb/>
e Furnishing that you'll like, <lb/>
come <lb/>
Our styles are not like every <lb/>
other Clothier's, <lb/>
We keep things that are <lb/>
Styles that can't be found in <lb/>
every store you enter. <lb/>
Furnishings can never be too <lb/>
fresh. <lb/>
Come here for your Shirts, <lb/>
Ties, Gloves, Hosiery, etc., and <lb/>
you'll get the correct things. <lb/>
We search the best markets <lb/>
for best tilings and we get <lb/>
them <lb/>
FRANK WiLSON, <lb/>
The King Clothier. <lb/>
The Filipinos are called very shy <lb/>
people, and a hank manager seem to have been clipped <lb/>
there who is shy just in i <lb/>
Every year about this time the of <lb/>
warning the <lb/>
bis account is convincing evidence, china was not long in making the <lb/>
States see the point. <lb/>
MERCERIZED CONTROVERSY <lb/>
Still Continues to Burn Advertising Space <lb/>
people of the July celebrations, The college graduate who leaves <lb/>
The South should kick on tins., <lb/>
because it men, her ruin. Already in for <lb/>
their part, and the death that <lb/>
folio of July <lb/>
the Chinese trade is boycotting <lb/>
systematically the American <lb/>
with a telling effect <lb/>
Another phase we should look <lb/>
The -is a household servant <lb/>
has hid the majority of his days. <lb/>
The Chinaman decidedly the best <lb/>
fort his can e found; they are <lb/>
clean, honest mid industrious, and <lb/>
as path i I us can lie He is a much ; <lb/>
more desirable immigrant than the <lb/>
and riffraff Southern Europe <lb/>
that is coming now lie will not <lb/>
underbid American labor, for his <lb/>
is of a class that the American will <lb/>
not do We need him, and <lb/>
is a place here that will he distinct- <lb/>
his the South should <lb/>
work for his , <lb/>
college with the intention of con <lb/>
Ottering the world usually finds it <lb/>
right difficult to conquer an <lb/>
nary little job. <lb/>
equals many engage- <lb/>
set fourth in history as <lb/>
Vet the public <lb/>
gives little or no In ed to the death <lb/>
harvest. There have been enough <lb/>
laws coasted the suppression of <lb/>
these deadly explosives to till a good <lb/>
library, but the failure of en- <lb/>
f renders such laws worse <lb/>
than none at all <lb/>
FACTS A THEY ARE. <lb/>
The following from the Richmond <lb/>
Times-Dispatch will prove both <lb/>
instructive and interesting to the <lb/>
close readers of daily <lb/>
newspaper is under a tacit <lb/>
agreement with its readers to print <lb/>
the news fairly, and when it distorts <lb/>
or colors its news reports in order to <lb/>
deceive, it violates a solemn <lb/>
and defrauds its readers, as <lb/>
much so does a merchant when <lb/>
ho sells spurious articles of <lb/>
It is impossible for a news- <lb/>
paper always to he accurate in its <lb/>
news reports, for the truth is mighty <lb/>
hard to get, but it is desire of <lb/>
every honest newspaper to print the <lb/>
news correctly, whether or not the <lb/>
reports are agreeable to the editor. <lb/>
We have often said that fairness is a <lb/>
newspaper's honest <lb/>
publisher strives to be fair, just as <lb/>
every honest man strives to <lb/>
not merely as a matter of justice to <lb/>
others, but that ha may be true <lb/>
to <lb/>
The above well said, sets a <lb/>
good lesson for all daily papers <lb/>
excepted. The paper <lb/>
that adheres to the above policy will <lb/>
It is rumored that a Republican <lb/>
established at Col- <lb/>
but a New Englander <lb/>
says he does not know where it will <lb/>
get a subscriber as looked every- <lb/>
where in South Carolina couldn't <lb/>
find a single Republican. Possibly <lb/>
he had visited the cemetery he <lb/>
might have found the resting place <lb/>
of some postmaster. <lb/>
evening, any late news from <lb/>
Greensboro <lb/>
Safe blowing is not a very safe <lb/>
business. <lb/>
The fact that Japan is not <lb/>
ed, cites a Missouri editor, is that I to a a year <lb/>
graft is not known there. It may position as financial agent represent- <lb/>
that it is known under this country abroad. i this <lb/>
other name. <lb/>
treason Spanish <lb/>
war fame, the man who granted <lb/>
, . American register to a pirate ship <lb/>
is not issuing a dial- . . . <lb/>
conveying munitions of war to <lb/>
to the world to come play hall Surely, this cannot be. <lb/>
with her, but if any other club wants Durham Sun <lb/>
to earn all it gets let it tackle our <lb/>
ho vs. <lb/>
and Money. <lb/>
Mary land a little lamp <lb/>
The <lb/>
Ami everywhere that Mary wont <lb/>
The always <lb/>
Mary had the whooping cough <lb/>
She would cough and . <lb/>
but for Mary's lamp <lb/>
She'd her head <lb/>
But ST night by <lb/>
The faithful amp bur right, <lb/>
And Mary's cough and parents too, <lb/>
reel the long night <lb/>
Some of our <lb/>
organs are nil the <lb/>
In the game between Norway of the peace movement to President <lb/>
Sweden Norway j No one will begrudge the <lb/>
r i- t. -ii -r i i i j president of the credit that is <lb/>
Possibly if she had drawn f . <lb/>
fairly his due, and it is a great deal; <lb/>
a king would have tilled her hand. , , ., , , <lb/>
n , but there is an impression abroad <lb/>
that a man named Togo has had <lb/>
We blame the gold brick something to do with <lb/>
swindlers from frying to get out of Argus, <lb/>
the penitentiary, but will blame <lb/>
some one else if they do get out. <lb/>
A girl in New York while at- <lb/>
at a of base ball <lb/>
aught a foul ball on the end of her <lb/>
nose. Whereupon she sued the <lb/>
manager for damages. The case <lb/>
was dismissed by the court. <lb/>
the grounds, we suppose, that a foul <lb/>
ball was not fair. <lb/>
In the case of the gold brick men <lb/>
who are appealing to Glenn for <lb/>
pardons, we suggest to the governor <lb/>
that he just keep them in the pen <lb/>
and let them make some genuine <lb/>
clay brick instead of turning them <lb/>
lose to make <lb/>
Both and <lb/>
That Governor Glenn is to soon <lb/>
It is now said that Admiral Ne- a please the <lb/>
Ideal Clothes are not easily defined, but it's easier to <lb/>
than to make Ideals vary, what one man doesn't <lb/>
please another. That's what makes ideals an index to character, <lb/>
and also what makes ideal clothes difficult to produce. There tire <lb/>
some general principles, however, and good quality is one of them. <lb/>
The Style of Your Clothes <lb/>
the pattern, the price yon pay disclose your common <lb/>
sense, but the quality is an index of character. <lb/>
If you pay an all wool price for fabrics <lb/>
that shows that you are easily but your ideals may <lb/>
be good. If you willingly buy and wear the <lb/>
because it looks good, and nobody knows the differ <lb/>
that's another indication. Maybe you govern your conduct <lb/>
by the same test. <lb/>
Be an All-Wool Man <lb/>
it comes to buying clothing. Your clothes can be as good us <lb/>
they look if you say so Our label means all wool and work <lb/>
it is a small thing to look for. a big thing to find. Let <lb/>
your next suit have <lb/>
ii <lb/>
who is still in Japan has <lb/>
gone crazy. He will never go crazy- <lb/>
enough to go back to Russia. <lb/>
Blackburn has been on to Wash <lb/>
and had the ear of the <lb/>
Maybe he feels that much <lb/>
ahead of the other fellows. <lb/>
It is reported the Interstate <lb/>
Commerce is to tour <lb/>
the South again to hear complaints <lb/>
against the railroads. Hearing the <lb/>
will be about all this <lb/>
tour will amount to. <lb/>
The Republicans of North <lb/>
might pull themselves together <lb/>
they could all stick their <lb/>
the pie counter. <lb/>
Up until a week ago there were <lb/>
five dispensaries in county, <lb/>
but on last Thursday the county <lb/>
roted itself dry. <lb/>
people of North Carolina It will <lb/>
please them because they will <lb/>
not miss the for they will, <lb/>
bat it will because they <lb/>
feel that Excellency by his <lb/>
tiring, zealous work since he entered <lb/>
upon his duties last fall deserves a <lb/>
vacation and that his health, which <lb/>
he has endangered much by this hard <lb/>
service, needs it. <lb/>
The equal of Governor Glenn for <lb/>
work we don't believe found <lb/>
in a Governor the United States. <lb/>
And his labor has not confined itself <lb/>
to speech making and the usual <lb/>
routine of his high position, but he <lb/>
has worried over and mastered some <lb/>
problems already though he <lb/>
has only been Governor a <lb/>
short while. In connection <lb/>
with the legislature many knotty <lb/>
questions arose for him and he had <lb/>
to scuffle with the Dakota bond mat- <lb/>
Perhaps of Asheville <lb/>
getting so things is that eke enjoy his rest and that it will greatly <lb/>
for them. i him Wilmington Dispatch. <lb/>
Label on inside Made by Co. and <lb/>
sold by <lb/>
G. L. Wilkinson Go. <lb/>
Hardware. <lb/>
For C Stoves Ranges, <lb/>
Heaters Pumps, Guns, Am- <lb/>
munition, One and Two Horse <lb/>
Steel Plows, Cutters and <lb/>
In fact anything <lb/>
in Hardware come to <lb/>
H. L. CARR <lb/>
This department is in A. D. Johnston, who is authorized to rep- <lb/>
resent the Eastern Reflector in Winterville and territory. <lb/>
WINTERVILLE ITEMS. <lb/>
N. June <lb/>
A. I. Johnston went to Rocky <lb/>
Mourn Monday. <lb/>
took tip Mr. Cooper ask him <lb/>
bout prices of anything that you <lb/>
are interested <lb/>
Mrs. W. Spark- and children <lb/>
to Saturday evening <lb/>
and Monday. <lb/>
Misses Lydia <lb/>
Mamie spirit eve., <lb/>
Mrs. <lb/>
A few subscribers the <lb/>
Reflector area hit in arrears. <lb/>
I the Winterville list sun <lb/>
the list on all the .-ail routes from <lb/>
Winterville of all our <lb/>
and am prepared to give receipts <lb/>
for the paper. Gone and see me <lb/>
and pay up, make me happy, make <lb/>
the happy, and get Lapp <lb/>
Spanish for seed at T. <lb/>
N. Manning .,, fr who pay for <lb/>
We have informed that <lb/>
A. W. Co. pay highest <lb/>
price for country prices. <lb/>
year in advance. <lb/>
A. D. Johnston. <lb/>
Miss Mamie Galloway, of <lb/>
Mrs. W. L. House and children ,, to <lb/>
been relatives <lb/>
near Ayden and re <lb/>
turned home Monday. <lb/>
Gar load flour just received. <lb/>
Harrington Burlier Co. <lb/>
Mis. W, L. Hort on the sick <lb/>
list. <lb/>
have moved into my <lb/>
new store neat the depot. I keep <lb/>
hardware. Have i <lb/>
black and and repair shop <lb/>
and livery stable in connection. <lb/>
W. L. House. <lb/>
Mrs. and Mrs. J. F. Smith and <lb/>
little daughter, spent Sat- <lb/>
Sunday with Mi <lb/>
and Mrs. Tucker. <lb/>
another shipment <lb/>
raise their can <lb/>
he -applied with the well known <lb/>
Mowing machine- and <lb/>
lakes Barber A Co. <lb/>
aid them. <lb/>
Mrs. Fannie Mr. <lb/>
and Mrs. Sat- <lb/>
and Sunday Visiting <lb/>
the country. <lb/>
Try a Dr. <lb/>
fur the drug <lb/>
Misses Myrtle White and Lizzie <lb/>
who have been bro <lb/>
the returned to <lb/>
their homes Monday. <lb/>
Our spring and stock of <lb/>
gone notions ladies and gents <lb/>
A lo n in need of anything in <lb/>
and glass ware lb e <lb/>
he sure to see us before buying. <lb/>
G. <lb/>
I Some try to meet <lb/>
. buggies in prices. A few try to <lb/>
them quality and finish, <lb/>
i But undertake to do both. <lb/>
Another large shipment of shoe- <lb/>
l all styles and vises and prices very <lb/>
reasonable. Barber <lb/>
ft Co <lb/>
Paint your how is the <lb/>
lime, Ange fit Co. have the old <lb/>
reliable Town and paint. <lb/>
Uncle, where re going. <lb/>
I going to A. W. Go's, <lb/>
they are selling goods say <lb/>
down cheap now. <lb/>
Special prices on ice <lb/>
cream freezers at ft. G. Chapman <lb/>
ft Co, <lb/>
of ladies, men and children Shoes. nod our stock <lb/>
Harrington Barber Ado. of ladles good, trimming <lb/>
Galloway aid more complete than ever <lb/>
Miss Helen, of spent Consisting of mohair <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday at B G. sailings <lb/>
Chapman's weather pr of, batiste <lb/>
Don't your eyes feel like latent design-, <lb/>
is gut them Do they pain ult.- respectfully invited <lb/>
and feel tired reading i., a-d our <lb/>
sh become mattered and Barber Co. <lb/>
while asleep That Mr ,, Mr <lb/>
paired vision and should be , <lb/>
by wearing eye glasses, is.; <lb/>
For hay, and oats, go to <lb/>
Barber ft Co. <lb/>
new corned herring.-, <lb/>
received Harrington Barber ft Co. <lb/>
Corned herrings cheap, at <lb/>
T. Cos and B o. h full line <lb/>
Spectacles and can your eve- <lb/>
with the proper lees. <lb/>
went to Kins <lb/>
ton Saturday and returned Mon- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
or men to solicit I Ange's. <lb/>
orders for nursery stock in Pitt For Holt time alarm <lb/>
For particulars enclose chicks and see R. G. <lb/>
stamp. Box Winterville; N. C, Co. <lb/>
Mr-. Butler and Mils Highest price for cotton seed <lb/>
Lilly Watson, of Vanceboro, spent j by County Oil Mill. <lb/>
Saturday with Mrs. J. H. C. j o T N <lb/>
and Mrs. Chapman. <lb/>
We handle T. W. Wood and choice <lb/>
millet We of over <lb/>
hundred styles of wall paper, <lb/>
Miss Bertha Kittrell is spending j w, are M <lb/>
the week with Mis. J. W. Spark. U,, the Come <lb/>
Nice lot of glass ware and crock-1 examine before buying elsewhere, <lb/>
always on hand. Harrington i B. T. <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
Miss Sarah Baker spent <lb/>
Pitt County Oil Mill is now <lb/>
buying Seed. They pay- <lb/>
day and Sunday with Miss Nancy the highest cash price or will ex- <lb/>
Smith near Greenville, for meal. When yours <lb/>
White's Black spec- j are ready write for prices. <lb/>
Wily recommended for the human j is no Pm <lb/>
family, fine for perfectly ; should have to pay such <lb/>
balanced, <lb/>
For sale by <lb/>
B. T. Bro. <lb/>
Miss Clyde of Cary, <lb/>
came Monday to spend a days <lb/>
with friends. <lb/>
Don't worry over that little lot <lb/>
of cotton you had left over when <lb/>
high prices for their they <lb/>
can raise their own wheat, and the <lb/>
Winterville Mfg. Co. is thoroughly <lb/>
equipped tor making <lb/>
flour <lb/>
All colors of and yellow <lb/>
at Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
Have now on hand nice line of <lb/>
you got through ginning your last I and crockery all very- <lb/>
lots. The Pitt Co. Oil Mill, Harrington Barber Co <lb/>
cotton in any quantity the <lb/>
beet market price paid every day <lb/>
Miss Crawford returned <lb/>
Monday from a visit to Ayden. <lb/>
For Plymouth Bock <lb/>
per dozen. Fob orders <lb/>
filled as fast as the hens lay. O. H. <lb/>
Jackson Winterville N. C. <lb/>
Miss Letha Forrest who has been <lb/>
visiting Miss Vivian Sparks, left <lb/>
Saturday for home near Ayden. <lb/>
At the drug store there we think <lb/>
Lace and hamburg cheap as the <lb/>
cheapest at A. W. A. Ange Co. <lb/>
Reduction sales made on white <lb/>
goods and G. Chapman <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
We hand a lot of nice <lb/>
gents straw hats that will now go <lb/>
below cost. I i fail to see <lb/>
We will you at sonic price. <lb/>
R. G. Chapman Co. <lb/>
L. L. went to <lb/>
most be pleased ville <lb/>
in table silverware and jewelry. paint, guaranteed <lb/>
Major Manning, torrent House I the bes. at Harrington Barber <lb/>
and Mr. Whichard spent Co <lb/>
and Sunday For Pine Tar honey. Walkers <lb/>
White's Colic Kidney Care, tonic, Dr. Bell's Pain killer, <lb/>
she kidney medicine Dr, Bell's r salve, and a <lb/>
for Mock an I a colic cure for all heart troubles, see <lb/>
at the Drugstore i. N. A Co. <lb/>
THE BARBER'S SIGNAL. <lb/>
A Little Light Conversation That Con- <lb/>
a Hidden Meaning. <lb/>
It ii hardly probable the <lb/>
union has any set rules <lb/>
governing the acceptance of tips by- <lb/>
its members, hut it is a certainty <lb/>
that in some shops the tonsorial <lb/>
have a code of signals for <lb/>
mutual welfare. his was <lb/>
ed in one of the best patronized <lb/>
ill I hut section of <lb/>
known Great White Light <lb/>
a few yours ago. <lb/>
A customer of inquiring turn <lb/>
of in in who was undergoing tin <lb/>
whole tonsorial process, from hair <lb/>
cut in shampoo, greatly puzzled <lb/>
at the conversation exchanged be- <lb/>
tween the barbers. The monotony <lb/>
of the phrases seemed to indicate <lb/>
there some bidden mean- <lb/>
hi hind i In <lb/>
Jim one barber <lb/>
would ask. <lb/>
How's he <lb/>
pretty <lb/>
Sometimes the answer would <lb/>
vary. Jim was looking <lb/>
or of or <lb/>
it's n sort of signal that we <lb/>
admitted the man <lb/>
first chair. see, there are reg- <lb/>
customers who generally wait <lb/>
for their own particular barber to <lb/>
shave them. Sometimes they are in <lb/>
a hurry and take the man <lb/>
happens to he idle. That man docs <lb/>
not know whether to throw in u few <lb/>
extra trills or whether be would he <lb/>
wasting his tip, you know <lb/>
so he asks the man who is in the <lb/>
habit of shaving the customer. <lb/>
The answer guides <lb/>
him in his I rent of the mail <lb/>
under the razor. <lb/>
a small tip. of means <lb/>
in all the extras you <lb/>
signifies that the <lb/>
customer never tips, so don't waste <lb/>
any time on New York <lb/>
Press. <lb/>
Needed All the Water. <lb/>
In a little bayou so near I he beach <lb/>
that the low tide rose and fell on <lb/>
the overgrown hunks a bot- <lb/>
puddled by an old <lb/>
shelved mi a mud bunk. The mud <lb/>
was too deep for him to gel out and <lb/>
push, and his maneuvers with tin <lb/>
paddle were proving less and <lb/>
effectual. <lb/>
In hi- exasperation he saw a <lb/>
man stooping in lauding <lb/>
some yards above to fill her pail <lb/>
from the stream. <lb/>
out he called out <lb/>
angrily. yo lakes a drop oaten <lb/>
die bayou till I afloat <lb/>
I'll nick ye pay far it cf <lb/>
wade do <lb/>
ENTRY OF VACANT LAND. <lb/>
W II. Johnson enters claims <lb/>
one fitly acres land, <lb/>
more or less, the lands of <lb/>
Jesse Button, A. G. Thus. Ed- <lb/>
wards or Sophie Edwards land and <lb/>
others in and Dear the Horse <lb/>
and the Great opening <lb/>
N. C., and <lb/>
This June <lb/>
u. Johnson. <lb/>
Any person or persons claiming <lb/>
title tool-interest in the above de- <lb/>
land, must tile their protest <lb/>
with me in writing within the next <lb/>
thirty days, against the issuing of a <lb/>
Warrant or they will be barred law. <lb/>
This June 8th, 1905 It. Williams. <lb/>
Taker fer Pill Co <lb/>
ARNOLD'S BALSAM <lb/>
Warranted lo I I HI <lb/>
Cholera By <lb/>
Jut. L. and Coward <lb/>
O o <lb/>
A rough brown dog -at at the <lb/>
edge of the tumble down break- <lb/>
He -an looking steadily sea- <lb/>
ward, lb- was evidently old, and <lb/>
he was scarred by many lights, but <lb/>
sunken from which he <lb/>
had lost many let ill, showed he <lb/>
would not fight ii victoriously. <lb/>
Sometime.- lie turned from his <lb/>
gaze sen in lanced behind him <lb/>
a child who sitting in a <lb/>
wheelbarrow a few feet away. <lb/>
i me he glanced thus be <lb/>
his stump of a tail, and tie <lb/>
child or die said ill a soft <lb/>
And then wagged harder, <lb/>
but he could not gin- much <lb/>
to his for his whole <lb/>
heart was with that bent old woman <lb/>
who was up to her waist in the <lb/>
by the outermost ledge. It was <lb/>
there that the most grew, and <lb/>
at low title the woman could gather <lb/>
it. Sin- thrust her arm down u the <lb/>
shoulder each time for her handful <lb/>
of She Mil- wet, sodden wet, <lb/>
save for a small place across her <lb/>
hack. <lb/>
she had a man's straw hat fasten- <lb/>
ed by a small rope tightly under her <lb/>
chin. Her face looked years <lb/>
was in truth <lb/>
seamed and leathery, and it was a <lb/>
face you loved to look at. <lb/>
moments she raised her <lb/>
head and put her dripping hand <lb/>
up over her eyes a sin- turned to- <lb/>
ward the land. She was first <lb/>
dazzled by the glare of the water. <lb/>
When -he looked up the <lb/>
girl in the wheelbarrow always <lb/>
waved her hat. a dim, beau- <lb/>
smile would come in the faded <lb/>
eyes. <lb/>
jest of her lots of <lb/>
she would say aloud. <lb/>
awful glad I wheeled her down. I <lb/>
wish now brought, her down <lb/>
summer. <lb/>
Twin- a- she looked <lb/>
called out <lb/>
you care of her. <lb/>
Won't you. <lb/>
Then Boss pricked up his <lb/>
and shook his tail, and the <lb/>
laughed and said she V <lb/>
Boss could git first <lb/>
used to it, ain't we. <lb/>
When sin- said this, the dog got <lb/>
up, came to her side, gave her <lb/>
swift lick across the cheek, then <lb/>
hurried back and sat down on the <lb/>
edge of the plank- again. <lb/>
the woman out in the water <lb/>
slipped and fell splashing, and Boss <lb/>
jumped up. whining in a piteous <lb/>
quaver, and would not be comforted <lb/>
even when the child said soothing- <lb/>
mind, old <lb/>
But when the woman floundered <lb/>
to he- feet again and cried <lb/>
the dog sat down. <lb/>
The child sniffed the bracing <lb/>
odor and stretched out her hinds, <lb/>
smiling happily. <lb/>
To he sure, she could walk, hi. <lb/>
granny wheeled to the <lb/>
where she could see the moss <lb/>
gathered. <lb/>
It was a low course of tides, and <lb/>
now the water had gone far out so <lb/>
that one could gel to one of the <lb/>
ledges where the moss grew. <lb/>
Granny had no boat, as most of <lb/>
the were some <lb/>
boats now farther along, and little <lb/>
-Molly could see the men put their <lb/>
long handled ropes down and draw <lb/>
ii lull, she knew that those <lb/>
men made more money than her <lb/>
grandmother, but then she didn't <lb/>
know much about money. <lb/>
guess they don't know much <lb/>
about a she told <lb/>
guess we got anything lo <lb/>
eat have some of it. <lb/>
old <lb/>
sank back on her pillow <lb/>
in the barrow. She amused herself <lb/>
by almost closing eyes so that <lb/>
the sea to come up nearer <lb/>
and in sparks of lire. Then <lb/>
she would open her lids u Me. <lb/>
the stretch of water would <lb/>
Hash on her vision. She <lb/>
played at tin- a long time, <lb/>
always front of her was the dog. <lb/>
She had grown up in the conviction <lb/>
that all was well if he was near. <lb/>
Soon everything grew <lb/>
dim then clear, the -all <lb/>
sweeter, and she was walk- <lb/>
over the hard sand as straight <lb/>
at anybody, holding her head up <lb/>
strongly. She did not know -be was <lb/>
asleep. It was real to her that .-la- <lb/>
walking. <lb/>
Suddenly the sat upright in <lb/>
wheelbarrow, clutching the sides of <lb/>
it. Boss was not there. Had he <lb/>
barked Or had some one called <lb/>
She looked to the ledge. Sh <lb/>
saw Ross leaping frantically <lb/>
the weedy reeks. He went us if he <lb/>
were a young dog. lb- went like n <lb/>
creature 11.- not <lb/>
to leap, but to fly from one rock ti <lb/>
another over the still, green pools. <lb/>
Molly could see <lb/>
GUARANTEED DIVIDEND OF FIVE <lb/>
PREMIUMS. <lb/>
Young man. why pay premiums when you can Buy <lb/>
the Mine contract for premiums On account of a higher <lb/>
interest rate and lower THE SECURITY <lb/>
LIFE AND ANNUITY can make this <lb/>
saving for you. Write the Home Office, Greensboro, North <lb/>
Carolina, or see <lb/>
F. M. Hornaday, <lb/>
Agent, <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
REPORT Of . ON <lb/>
THE BETHEL BANKING AND TRUST <lb/>
AT N. <lb/>
At the close of business Many 20th, <lb/>
SOURCES. LIABILITIES. <lb/>
912,923.24 t . paid in <lb/>
unsecured fr-l ,. <lb/>
fixtures 93.1 <lb/>
Hoe 4,315.40 ; <lb/>
items 1,318 15,348.06 <lb/>
-OP <lb/>
Nil U <lb/>
Total <lb/>
107.41 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
073.49 <lb/>
Sole of N d of Pitt, <lb/>
Taylor, of the link, do seemly <lb/>
v ear the above true the bent of my knowledge <lb/>
belief H TAYLOR Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and I <lb/>
me. Ii nay -I June, in.;,. K. <lb/>
A. J. W <lb/>
Notary ROBT. ST AT X, <lb/>
beyond him shining Mater. Where <lb/>
Mas <lb/>
The child tried to but she <lb/>
fell us if in u and could <lb/>
no sound. <lb/>
Oh, there something down <lb/>
the k.- on the fur side <lb/>
but she helped nil could and <lb/>
made no <lb/>
Win ii she was in lost, Jim <lb/>
took Lin ours to go round i he <lb/>
sandy There stood Boss <lb/>
shivering on n rock. All at mice lie <lb/>
appeared older than ever. It seem- <lb/>
the ledge as there that Boss as he could hardly stand. <lb/>
was going. And there the moss- him. laid his mi-- <lb/>
in hi- boat, hi- rake down <lb/>
just as he had been doing when the him <lb/>
child had to sleep. I-or an in- ., ., , ; <lb/>
i Mr mis i .,., , . i ii <lb/>
,, ,, , n I most in reel v, lies tun <lb/>
Bu ; walk oil the <lb/>
with a laugh. <lb/>
rocks. It s hat sticking j. t ft <lb/>
iii. inn she mil move. j .- <lb/>
again to scream, awl -i-i i , . . -i- <lb/>
., , , ,, , I lie man to tears <lb/>
it was as if her hear break ,, , , ,,. -c . u <lb/>
. ,, into eves. Her <lb/>
in t i I fer voice was on v a . i . . <lb/>
,,,, voice was <lb/>
Hoarse of u r. . , , , <lb/>
,, . ., , ,. i on m- got in take him, she <lb/>
Bu there Boss has reached his y .,. . <lb/>
friend. He tried to mill her out. .,, ,, , , ,.,., .,;, <lb/>
lie . ii Ins i;,., , . . , , ,, , , , <lb/>
, , iii i i v i the dog into tin- boat, <lb/>
he he he o , i , i i . i <lb/>
. . . ins friend, <lb/>
m- hear .,., .,, i i . i . i i <lb/>
, , tin lie lean- <lb/>
also i i-i, <lb/>
. . , , , more in it more on <lb/>
At hist the out there n; ., ,;,. <lb/>
,. i , III- ll ere HI ill.-. <lb/>
ins tin- and -i i , , <lb/>
i V i i i- had up her hand again <lb/>
shore listening. , <lb/>
, , , r III tin- <lb/>
he was nil i , ,, . <lb/>
. ii there on tin- wet moss at <lb/>
the hunt tin no t nine clear v. ,, , ., . , . , , ,, <lb/>
,., . , ,, ., . bottom .-I the she could <lb/>
he man saw lit U , . . , . , . <lb/>
,, , , ii i i look without into the dog's <lb/>
on the breakwater. Hail file cried ,. ,,,. ,,. , . , <lb/>
, ., . , i . , . rare. II- vi-t el <lb/>
Ami was i in- in; .; , <lb/>
, . i With a t <lb/>
on so on i i ,, i . r i <lb/>
r , . , . a she managed to draw even <lb/>
was he . . is,. i.,,. i , . , , <lb/>
,. , i ii i her to his head. <lb/>
Ilia was in the -hallow . i , , i <lb/>
lie tali too mi said <lb/>
He was struggling with it, making j-,,, m <lb/>
frantic efforts to pull ,. from the , <lb/>
water. <lb/>
lined mi the breakwater <lb/>
against the dazzle of the blue sky <lb/>
the man saw Molly rise up in her <lb/>
barrow as if she would walk and <lb/>
then fall back again. <lb/>
lie cried. He drop- <lb/>
the rope int. the water, caught <lb/>
up his oars and rowed to the ledge. <lb/>
All the time he rowed he saw Mrs. <lb/>
Tonne's motionless form lying <lb/>
there and Boss trying to help her. <lb/>
a sharp voice. <lb/>
Tin next moment she said In large- <lb/>
Louise Pool <lb/>
in Chap book. <lb/>
Side Light on History. <lb/>
and Id inns were having <lb/>
ii pillow light who <lb/>
would ii i ii i tin. dear, <lb/>
in. <lb/>
the wolf, ad- <lb/>
As he stepped out of his <lb/>
began slipping and jumping over .-nil. j ,,,,, , .,,. <lb/>
tin- rocks Hi.- woman and <lb/>
a- him again. <lb/>
This cheap wit was too for <lb/>
the wolf, who went out and made <lb/>
howl.- Chicago Journal. <lb/>
Th Way tad I. <lb/>
The young wife was bit- <lb/>
Her mother softly stole in and put <lb/>
her arm- about her. <lb/>
the matter, she<lb/>
am so she <lb/>
wailed. <lb/>
what <lb/>
asked this <lb/>
if he <lb/>
marry again if and <lb/>
., <lb/>
Did the brute tell <lb/>
he would <lb/>
That what's the <lb/>
math r lie list looked a m <lb/>
n I accused of <lb/>
Iran mid said, should <lb/>
raised her head, lie sail her reach <lb/>
out her hand to the dog. lie saw <lb/>
the dog throw himself down and <lb/>
lick her face eagerly. <lb/>
yon. she <lb/>
asked. guess I've broke my leg. <lb/>
slipped. I've mossed twenty year, <lb/>
never slipped to speak of be- <lb/>
She spoke trembling, but with <lb/>
pride. I tainted or some <lb/>
git you right into the <lb/>
Jim briskly, V lake <lb/>
you home in <lb/>
close by watching the <lb/>
man. <lb/>
Mrs. looked to tho shore. <lb/>
saw i he child, waved her hand and <lb/>
called cheerily. <lb/>
And Molly shook her <lb/>
chief feebly, though she tried to <lb/>
shake it vigorously. <lb/>
do hope .-In- didn't see me <lb/>
said the woman. oh, <lb/>
It was not easy to get her into the was i . he said <lb/>
boat, and she and grew pole, <lb/>
POOR PRINT<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019527_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
SHOES for Men, Women, Boys and Children <lb/>
At <lb/>
THE BIG STORE <lb/>
THE FOR ALL MANKIND.<lb/>
tarn <lb/>
is Believing, and <lb/>
Values <lb/>
EXCEPTIONAL SHOE VALUES FOR MEN WOMEN AND OFFERS. <lb/>
A Special lot of and Oxford Ties, all sizes, Only pair to the <lb/>
Customer. <lb/>
Hand-made Welted and Turned Strap Sandals in all the newest leather, Cuban, Military and <lb/>
French Heels, and all the style and service of grade for <lb/>
Six Hundred Pair Men's hand welted Patent leather, Kid and Chrome Calf, Military heels, <lb/>
Freak, Tramp, swing and straight lasts, no better made for the money. Prices ranging from to <lb/>
in <lb/>
An assortment including only the latest and most popular novelties in the ready-to wear and walking <lb/>
hats. All new 1905 patterns in fancy braids turban and wide brim sailors, shapes, tastefully trim- <lb/>
med quills and satin bows in white, black, brown navy and <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
Street, <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
nit it mini <lb/>
SPECIAL RATES <lb/>
via <lb/>
ATLANTIC COAST LINE. <lb/>
BALTIMORE, M. D. for <lb/>
trip Interns- <lb/>
r United <lb/>
ion Society, July <lb/>
Tickets op July 2nd, <lb/>
3rd lib. Tickets mat <lb/>
deposited with Joint Agent <lb/>
Baltimore, Md., upon <lb/>
arrival and will ho to <lb/>
not later than July <lb/>
15th. Extension sf the final limit <lb/>
to August Silt may be <lb/>
by of fee of on <lb/>
each ticket to Joint Agent. <lb/>
TORONTO, Ont., and <lb/>
International Sunday <lb/>
School Association. Toronto, <lb/>
Out., 20-27. Ticket on <lb/>
June 19th, 20th, Slat 22nd <lb/>
restricted to <lb/>
in such direction <lb/>
with Haiti leave <lb/>
iii However, ex- <lb/>
tension of line limit leave <lb/>
Toronto not later <lb/>
may lie l. de- <lb/>
posit ticket Joint Agent. <lb/>
between June 20th June <lb/>
and of it of <lb/>
to time of deposit. <lb/>
BUFFALO, N. Y., and return <lb/>
20.20 Animal meeting Grand <lb/>
Lodge B O K N. Y. <lb/>
July 11-15, 1805. Tickets on <lb/>
Mile July Hill, in final <lb/>
limit July 15th. Tick-is will be <lb/>
China And Our Trade, <lb/>
While American cottons and other <lb/>
are doing fairly well in China <lb/>
an a whole, in some of the older ports <lb/>
is not the case. In the <lb/>
in 1901 the falling off in the <lb/>
sale of American compared <lb/>
with goods from other nations, was <lb/>
marked There may have bee <lb/>
reasons for this in the cotton and <lb/>
woolen trade in the United States, <lb/>
but it is quite probable that the <lb/>
strongest reason is that American <lb/>
manufacturers are not making the <lb/>
close study of the Chinese market <lb/>
that they should make. This <lb/>
is by the fact <lb/>
that there were times last year, <lb/>
the great fluctuations in cotton <lb/>
prices, when the advantage certainly <lb/>
was with the United States. How- <lb/>
ever, the i of the middleman <lb/>
in Chinese trade is greater than in <lb/>
meet countries, sudden <lb/>
are not taken advantage <lb/>
of so rapidly. <lb/>
It ought to be plain to American <lb/>
manufacturers that, no matter of how <lb/>
fair quality may be, or how <lb/>
cheap, they will not he sold if they <lb/>
do not requirement of <lb/>
buyers. Another fact to be <lb/>
red in this connection is that certain <lb/>
restricted of cotton goods, and to a ear- <lb/>
ii. Extension oil . , . , <lb/>
,, . . . , i extent of woolen also. <lb/>
final limit to August 4th may be , <lb/>
obtained by deposit of ticket ports of <lb/>
with Special Agent and payment; China for many have ac- <lb/>
of lee of STOP quired a fixed rating. It is the <lb/>
Washington, Baltimore soil advantage of American <lb/>
on tickets reading , . . <lb/>
, f, ,,, , , era to approach the chops or <lb/>
those points , , <lb/>
lowed on going trip within grades of these well known goods <lb/>
transit limit, on trip closely as possible <lb/>
final limit, July If be arguments back <lb/>
ticket-, have extended, forth on the needs <lb/>
em lie taken lo ex. ten , . , . n, . ,, <lb/>
days, not later of American trade in China, <lb/>
and return Consul George Anderson, it <lb/>
National Educational la fact which stands for a world of <lb/>
J argument that the countries which <lb/>
July Tickets. have given the to the <lb/>
June in 2nd inclusive, . . , <lb/>
final July 10.0. and spent the most money <lb/>
restricted passage in ate the countries that <lb/>
In each Extension are selling China the most goods, <lb/>
may is particularly <lb/>
to of i r l l <lb/>
august . , j i and food products and other personal <lb/>
with ., i , <lb/>
of cents necessities. Chinese standards <lb/>
deposit over living are so different from American <lb/>
Ken on ii. p and European standards that <lb/>
be obtained provided ticket manufactured or Americana and <lb/>
been validated by j ,. , <lb/>
Is . <lb/>
deposited with Joint Agent New l A few months a <lb/>
Yuk mil later than one I cotton expert in China now and then <lb/>
after validation Park would do the American cotton trade <lb/>
upon b this of the world incalculable <lb/>
If. Chronicle. <lb/>
I till at lime deposit, tint in <lb/>
on ease shall slop ill New <lb/>
extend beyond August <lb/>
Stop <lb/>
and will <lb/>
on going <lb/>
w ii tin going limit the ticket <lb/>
not lo exceed July and oil <lb/>
Hand Writing. <lb/>
to exceed August <lb/>
UNIVERSITY <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
m to urn <lb/>
Head of the State's Educational System <lb/>
DEPARTMENTS <lb/>
Collegiate, Engineering <lb/>
Graduate. L a w, <lb/>
Medicine, <lb/>
been considerable <lb/>
relative to tin- systems <lb/>
if writing ill the schools the <lb/>
the return trip Quail country. The vertical system has <lb/>
limit of ticket. It tickets come in for a good share of <lb/>
d stop over In , . i , <lb/>
, , i on the it is for <lb/>
taken I. period days not . . . . <lb/>
rapid writing and is handicap <lb/>
to the boy who leaves school and <lb/>
I engages in business pursuits. Oil <lb/>
the other hand, its advocates point <lb/>
to its legibility as a decided <lb/>
t seems to us that while <lb/>
writing is legible and while it <lb/>
is certainly superior for girls to the <lb/>
large angular handwriting which so <lb/>
many them use, still it is rather <lb/>
unsuited for business purposes. It <lb/>
Certainly does not admit of as rapid <lb/>
writing as some oilier systems. <lb/>
While the typewriter is coming to <lb/>
more generally used than ever <lb/>
before it cannot be denied that writ- <lb/>
by hand will still continue to <lb/>
holds place of For <lb/>
this reason we think that the differ- <lb/>
systems of writing should <lb/>
given careful consideration to the <lb/>
cud that the most suitable for <lb/>
purposes should be It <lb/>
may be that the vertical system is <lb/>
the most perfect yet devised but we <lb/>
believe that this will at least admit <lb/>
of Sentinel. <lb/>
cared of Lame After Years of <lb/>
had been troubled with lame <lb/>
back for fifteen years and I <lb/>
a complete recovery in the use of <lb/>
Chamberlain's say <lb/>
John Q This <lb/>
is also without an equal <lb/>
for sprains and bruises. It is <lb/>
sale by Drug Store, <lb/>
Th. Children. Favorite. <lb/>
For Coughs, Croup, Whooping <lb/>
Cough, etc., Minute Cough <lb/>
Cure is the children's <lb/>
This is because it contains u. <lb/>
opiate, is h u in less, <lb/>
good and cures. Bold by J no. L. <lb/>
Wooten's Drug <lb/>
Library contains volumes <lb/>
New water works, Electric <lb/>
Lights, Cent nil Heating <lb/>
system. New dorm- <lb/>
Y. M. A. Building <lb/>
STUDENTS INSTRUCTORS <lb/>
The Fall term beg-in <lb/>
Sept. <lb/>
A DURESS v <lb/>
FRANCIS P VENABLE, <lb/>
Chapel. Hill, N. C. <lb/>
institute far <lb/>
Young <lb/>
Women and <lb/>
of <lb/>
Music. The <lb/>
Beat Place <lb/>
for Your <lb/>
Daughter <lb/>
College <lb/>
Courses <lb/>
Huh <lb/>
lit, <lb/>
before you know what <lb/>
you want to say and keeping on after <lb/>
said it lands s merchant <lb/>
in a lawsuit or the poorhouse, and <lb/>
one's a short cut to the other. <lb/>
Gorgon<lb/>
The ordinary course justice <lb/>
denied to protect personal friends. <lb/>
This is not square which <lb/>
we had a right to expect from our <lb/>
President. Paul Morton other <lb/>
of the Santa should have <lb/>
been treated exactly as the officers of <lb/>
and other corporation had <lb/>
violated an injunction. <lb/>
he violation of the injunction is <lb/>
admitted. This violation was the <lb/>
act not of the intangible corporation <lb/>
but of its officers and agents. To <lb/>
proceed against them no other <lb/>
was required than the of <lb/>
violation. The proceeding in con- <lb/>
tempt is an inquiry to find the in <lb/>
who is guilty. Every <lb/>
lawyer knows that this is <lb/>
procedure <lb/>
The president made a <lb/>
blunder He has lent encouragements <lb/>
and countenance to every derelict <lb/>
official who protects from prosecution <lb/>
his friends the friends of his <lb/>
The blind goddess is not supposed <lb/>
to discriminate between <lb/>
friend or foe. Harmon and Judson <lb/>
have been loyal to best traditions <lb/>
of the profession. They have <lb/>
firmly and courageously an <lb/>
pleasant situation and have forced <lb/>
an issue which it becomes the duly <lb/>
of every good citizen and <lb/>
of every lawyer push until it is <lb/>
rightly decided Atlanta <lb/>
LINK., X. C. June <lb/>
Joe a popular insurance <lb/>
agent, of spent Wednesday <lb/>
night with his sister, J. <lb/>
Bobbitt. <lb/>
Mrs E. II. spent n <lb/>
or two this week with Mrs. P. G , <lb/>
Whale. <lb/>
We are glad to report that our <lb/>
sick friends are all improving. <lb/>
Mrs. G Calhoun spent <lb/>
day in Greenville with Mrs. K B. <lb/>
Mrs. Jennings and children <lb/>
are visiting relatives in Portsmouth <lb/>
Mrs. George Cole is on the sick <lb/>
list this week. <lb/>
Mrs. Hell and daughter, Miss <lb/>
Rosa, are visiting friends and <lb/>
in Enfield. <lb/>
Mrs Pulley, who has been visiting <lb/>
relatives in returned <lb/>
Tuesday to her home in Enfield. <lb/>
Pat Harrington, Mr. Minion <lb/>
if r. Ruffin attended-the ball game <lb/>
in Greenville lay. <lb/>
I Hit <lb/>
He. with <lb/>
Small Bottle <lb/>
Colic, <lb/>
Mr G. w. fowler of tower, <lb/>
A hi., on lie null <lb/>
while serving on a in a <lb/>
murder at <lb/>
seat of county. Ala- <lb/>
Hi <lb/>
ate some mill some <lb/>
and ii cholera <lb/>
in a very seven- I <lb/>
was never sick in and <lb/>
sent lo Hie drug stoic font certain <lb/>
mixture, but the <lb/>
sent in.-1. <lb/>
tillers and <lb/>
saying he <lb/>
I -em for, Unit this <lb/>
medicine so much better be <lb/>
would send it to me in the <lb/>
fix I in, I i, one dose <lb/>
it was in live minutes. <lb/>
The dose cured me <lb/>
o fellow jurors ware afflict- <lb/>
in tbs same manner and one <lb/>
small bottle- cured the <lb/>
Poi .-it Drag <lb/>
A swarthy man drew out of <lb/>
the fund, the cashier said <lb/>
on departure, all our <lb/>
tors were like that gentleman our <lb/>
concern would soon become rich. <lb/>
Ali is an Indian, native of <lb/>
Calcutta, and Ida religion forbids <lb/>
him to take interest on money. He <lb/>
has had a savings with us <lb/>
for twelve yens. His interest alto- <lb/>
has amounted to Hut <lb/>
he baa never accepted a cent of it. <lb/>
It has all Into <lb/>
again. All are like <lb/>
They won't take in- <lb/>
on their money. Hence, India, <lb/>
I think, must he a grand country <lb/>
the banking business, and how glad <lb/>
our bankers would if <lb/>
were to spread a <lb/>
Philadelphia Bulletin. <lb/>
Bilious Bill the sleepy head, <lb/>
Dearly loved in lay a lied- <lb/>
wake him if you shook <lb/>
When slumbers overtook him. <lb/>
Suddenly he Blurted waking <lb/>
mom when day was break- <lb/>
I hi. t <lb/>
that's tbs an- <lb/>
The Little <lb/>
Constipation, <lb/>
Headache, Biliousness, el., by <lb/>
their Ionic <lb/>
They never grip- or sicken, but <lb/>
Impart early rising energy. Good <lb/>
for children i Sold <lb/>
John L. Wooten's Drug Store, <lb/>
If One Should Happen That Way. <lb/>
Ii was in if we mistake not <lb/>
that the United Stales received its <lb/>
first Japanese Washington <lb/>
then contained between and <lb/>
was literally a <lb/>
city of magnificent distances, <lb/>
ling and badly built, a dreary <lb/>
stretch of open field from the Smith <lb/>
Institute clear to the Potomac <lb/>
liver boat landings. <lb/>
If old . in tho <lb/>
service of his country its statesman <lb/>
and of the members <lb/>
of that em of Hi years hack <lb/>
should he of the coming pence <lb/>
he will now behold <lb/>
a city with s population of nearly <lb/>
passed in magnificence, <lb/>
splendor wealth by none of the <lb/>
proudest and most opulent capitals <lb/>
of Times. <lb/>
you Had to Get Your <lb/>
In the Old Way <lb/>
In the old times people had to go fro n to h us. <lb/>
to tell the news meet at r i I. s- . w eh <lb/>
to find out what was going on, Thy r . <lb/>
It Is So ow <lb/>
Bat in this day of numerous mid <lb/>
mail you can gel the news every day. <lb/>
is the leading age an I no i. with <lb/>
a good newspaper. Every man t-. mi pat <lb/>
and know what is going on. <lb/>
The Reflector <lb/>
can supply you with the news. print -I <lb/>
and Semi-Weekly <lb/>
THE DAILY <lb/>
is a page paper and costs <lb/>
only a year. <lb/>
The Store <lb/>
A beautiful Line <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
i twice-a-week i is a large <lb/>
page paper, a year. <lb/>
Don't be without a paper when you .,,. so cheap. <lb/>
if you are not a subscriber send in <lb/>
V Job Department <lb/>
ALL-OVER <lb/>
AND <lb/>
COLLARS, <lb/>
not to be matched <lb/>
in town At The Price. <lb/>
OF THE <lb/>
Quality vs. Quantity. <lb/>
Hard muscles and do <lb/>
not depend on tee quantity of food <lb/>
you eat, but on perfect <lb/>
and proper assimilation. <lb/>
When yon take Dyspepsia <lb/>
Cure your system gets <lb/>
nourishment out of all h ; <lb/>
yon eat. It digests -u eat <lb/>
regardless of the of the <lb/>
stomach conveys <lb/>
proprieties to the blond and <lb/>
tissues. This build- up <lb/>
the entire urn <lb/>
comes and cures t in, <lb/>
Belching, Stomach <lb/>
etc. Dyspepsia Cute <lb/>
what is sometimes railed America's <lb/>
national disease. Dyspepsia, is <lb/>
destined work a <lb/>
lasting to <lb/>
from this unit <lb/>
mind harassing condition. Bold by <lb/>
Jno. L. <lb/>
If the crowd do decide <lb/>
have a daily paper, their ax <lb/>
fr other purposes will reap <lb/>
a substantial benefit from the <lb/>
Telegram. <lb/>
Sour Stomach <lb/>
When the quantity of food taken <lb/>
is hug.- or the quality rich, <lb/>
sour stomach is likely to follow, <lb/>
and especially so if the digestion <lb/>
been weakened by <lb/>
Kat slowly inn freely <lb/>
of easily digested food. Masticate <lb/>
I he food thoroughly. Let rive <lb/>
hours elapse between meals, and <lb/>
when you feel a fullness weight <lb/>
in the region of the after <lb/>
eating, lake Chamberlain <lb/>
and Liver Tablets the <lb/>
our stomach may lie avoided <lb/>
For Drag Store,<lb/>
An Apology. <lb/>
certain editor was visited in his <lb/>
by a ferocious looking <lb/>
gentleman, who exclaimed <lb/>
as he notice of <lb/>
my death in your paper today is a <lb/>
lie, sir. I'll horsewhip you public, <lb/>
sir, if you don't apologize in your <lb/>
next issue. <lb/>
The next day the editor inserted <lb/>
the following <lb/>
extremely regret to announce <lb/>
that the in our issue of <lb/>
yesterday which stated that Col. <lb/>
was dead is without <lb/>
Weekly. <lb/>
The That Penetrates. <lb/>
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve <lb/>
pores of the skin, and <lb/>
by antiseptic, and <lb/>
healing it <lb/>
inflammation mid cures Bolls, <lb/>
Burns, Enema, <lb/>
King Worm and nil skin diseases, <lb/>
A specific blind, bleeding, <lb/>
and protruding Piles. The <lb/>
Slid genuine Witch r <lb/>
Halve is made by lie x <lb/>
and by John. L. <lb/>
Druggist. <lb/>
largest stock <lb/>
Iron hi M. M. <lb/>
PRINTING <lb/>
IS BETTER EQUIPPED TO <lb/>
DAY THAN EVER BEFORE <lb/>
To Produce <lb/>
me real Printing. <lb/>
SEND IN <lb/>
REFLECTOR PRINTING HOUSE, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
A. E. Tucker, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
ANOTHER OFFER. <lb/>
FREE To AI Our <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
AMERICAN FARMER, <lb/>
Indianapolis, Indiana. <lb/>
Tho Leading Agricultural Journal of the Nation, <lb/>
Edited by an Corps of Writers. <lb/>
Within the Next Thirty days We Offer Two for the <lb/>
Price of <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
and THE AMERICAN FARMER. <lb/>
Both One Year For Think of It. <lb/>
This unparalleled offer la made to all new and all <lb/>
You Suffering <lb/>
From Indigestion, Constipation, or do you have any <lb/>
with your Kidneys or Bladder if so Drink the <lb/>
Buckhorn Water. <lb/>
i, , , ST. Va. May <lb/>
o. <lb/>
Henderson, N. . <lb/>
have I., . <lb/>
for the Buckhorn <lb/>
v.-i-v freely for several mid I not to <lb/>
in.-nil u In terms, <lb/>
In In rheumatic and sod <lb/>
of constipation I have seen excellent <lb/>
us It an drinking water. <lb/>
Very truly, <lb/>
It. L. PAYNE, M. <lb/>
OUR <lb/>
The shippers guarantee, that, of ail the mineral -o far <lb/>
Known, is the most powerful diuretic. <lb/>
They will a case of any other water, regardless of its <lb/>
reputation or price, and by actual, practical, <lb/>
that there is not a known to the public <lb/>
that will equal Buckhorn in uric acid diathesis, <lb/>
R. H. HOOD. <lb/>
W This Water on sale at J A. RICKS BRO. <lb/>
Harry Skinner, <lb/>
Harry Skinner, Jr. <lb/>
IN <lb/>
J f. <lb/>
Norfolk. Va. <lb/>
Factors of <lb/>
II W. <lb/>
SKINNER <lb/>
LAWYERS, <lb/>
Room J I <lb/>
have i <lb/>
with In tho Ties h rid <lb/>
Harri Skinner, Jr, <lb/>
Tbs firm name ill continue a here- i a . L. and <lb/>
SKINNER <lb/>
January lad, <lb/>
H. W. w m i TO THE <lb/>
GET YOUR SUPPLIES <lb/>
Now <lb/>
Everything you want in the way of <lb/>
nice Groceries, Canned Goods, Pickles, <lb/>
Fruits, Candies, Nuts, can be had at <lb/>
our store. <lb/>
We carry a large supply of the Best <lb/>
Goods <lb/>
JOHNSTON BROS. <lb/>
POOR PRINT<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019527_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
II HIM<lb/>
w ii<lb/>
SPECIAL Sale <lb/>
OF <lb/>
Low Shoes and <lb/>
Slippers. <lb/>
BEGINNING ON THURSDAY. <lb/>
we offer our entire stock of Children's and Infant's Ox- <lb/>
ford Ties and Sand at Greatly Reduced Prices. <lb/>
No trash, but good. New Shoes. A chance o buy good, new shoes <lb/>
At Reduced Prices <lb/>
early in the season, just in time to meet needs, before the stock <lb/>
is broken and styles and sizes run down, is a rare opportunity, and <lb/>
that demands of all careful buyers, who appreciate gen- <lb/>
Baffin-.<lb/>
WHY DO <lb/>
re s <lb/>
stocked, H<lb/>
into <lb/>
we give is Se, plain and hon <lb/>
we <lb/>
many <lb/>
need <lb/>
ht-v <lb/>
you to <lb/>
make this <lb/>
. rs, in order to them i <lb/>
We are over <lb/>
and want <lb/>
quickly <lb/>
we <lb/>
Ladies pate it Court Tie for <lb/>
Ladles patent leather, Court Tie Oxfords, worth Tor 2.25. <lb/>
Ladies patent kid Oxfords, 2.50 for 1.85. <lb/>
patent leather Strap Sandals, plain kid Strap Sandals, <lb/>
patent leather tip Oxfords, tan kid Tie Oxfords, all <lb/>
and sizes, worth and 2.25 per pair, to H for <lb/>
pair. <lb/>
tan or black Ties, plain kid Sandals, patent <lb/>
tip or ck tip Oxfords, dressy styles and plain <lb/>
Oxfords, all styles and sizes, that are selling for pair, <lb/>
we off ii- for 51.15 pair. <lb/>
Ali the styles of Ladies Oxfords and Sandals that are selling <lb/>
for 51.00 to 1.25 pair we offer in this sale for to per <lb/>
pair. <lb/>
All tie and Babies Slippers are offered in this <lb/>
Sale and are in proportion to the Ladies as quoted above. <lb/>
PERSONALS AND SOCIAL <lb/>
Monday, June 1905. <lb/>
B. C came <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
J. Tunstall is at Seven <lb/>
Spring. <lb/>
F. Binkley went to <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
Vick in Sunday <lb/>
from San lord. <lb/>
Joe Rawls and n Louis went <lb/>
Ocean View ibis morning. <lb/>
J. Saturday <lb/>
from a trip up the road. <lb/>
Mrs. J. P. Keel and son Sam <lb/>
returned evening from <lb/>
Bethel. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. H. W of <lb/>
Danville, who have been visiting <lb/>
W. Pruitt returned home this <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
J. J. W. Baker, J. <lb/>
X. Hurt, P. W. F M. <lb/>
Hodge K. A. have <lb/>
returned from <lb/>
1905. <lb/>
Mia Jan Tyson to Kin- <lb/>
Monday <lb/>
W Smith and family returned <lb/>
from morning. <lb/>
Mis Sidney of <lb/>
it visiting here. <lb/>
Mrs. A. B. child <lb/>
to Petersburg this morn- <lb/>
Mamie Basket returned to <lb/>
Winterville Monday evening to <lb/>
attend the institute. <lb/>
of <lb/>
is here not talking a thing <lb/>
out n's Town and Country <lb/>
Paint. <lb/>
M. P. J. of <lb/>
the company Green <lb/>
returned Monday evening <lb/>
from a visit county <lb/>
Sirs. Joe Person, proprietor <lb/>
the famous remedy hearing <lb/>
none, the day in town. <lb/>
she carries the same cheerful, <lb/>
sunny yore. <lb/>
Wednesday, June <lb/>
V J. Lie came Tuesday <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
P. Vandyke went to <lb/>
tin morning. <lb/>
Miss Nellie went to <lb/>
Bethel this morning, <lb/>
C. D. from <lb/>
Wilson Tuesday evening. <lb/>
C M Jones returned Iron, <lb/>
Tuesday evening. <lb/>
Mis. I Woodward went to <lb/>
; d Keck morning, <lb/>
C. W, Harvey returned from <lb/>
Danville Tuesday evening. <lb/>
Mr. hi i Mi-. left <lb/>
Hi is morning for Washington. <lb/>
B. brown and family went <lb/>
A Pleasant Exercise. <lb/>
At the Christian <lb/>
the young people's society of <lb/>
Christian Endeavor rendered a <lb/>
picturing program in place of the <lb/>
regular eve. lag service <lb/>
of the meeting was <lb/>
National Heritage <lb/>
Miss Minnie ably <lb/>
and the program was carried <lb/>
without a hitch <lb/>
This speaks well for the young <lb/>
people, who <lb/>
been it training for this kind of <lb/>
work in church. <lb/>
This service was designed to <lb/>
stimulate interest in home missions <lb/>
among the young people, was <lb/>
uniform with one held throughout <lb/>
the country by the people's <lb/>
societies of all denominations, <lb/>
especially wherever Christian En- <lb/>
societies are organized. <lb/>
The Christian of <lb/>
the Christian have for their <lb/>
special missions in <lb/>
Rico. A goodly offering taken <lb/>
for this cause. <lb/>
Better Fruits-Better Profits <lb/>
Batter peaches, apples, pears and <lb/>
are produced Potash <lb/>
i liberally applied to the soil. To <lb/>
Insures full crop, of choicest quality, <lb/>
a containing not leas <lb/>
in la per cent, actual <lb/>
Potash <lb/>
for oar practical books of <lb/>
pamphlet. <lb/>
authoritative i <lb/>
KALI WOWS<lb/>
Broad <lb/>
Off For Philadelphia. <lb/>
J. M. Hart and Carlos Harris <lb/>
this morning <lb/>
to attend a <lb/>
of painters and wholesale <lb/>
distributors of paints, held at th- <lb/>
works of Harrison Co., <lb/>
who are the largest oldest <lb/>
paint manufacturers in the world <lb/>
Their works covering seres of <lb/>
which is located <lb/>
buildings devoted to the <lb/>
of the celebrated brand or <lb/>
and Country paint which <lb/>
of its purity and wonder <lb/>
till capacity is need <lb/>
largely by the and <lb/>
railroads. <lb/>
Mr. Hart and Mr. expect <lb/>
while in Philadelphia to <lb/>
the painting department <lb/>
Navy yard, Pennsylvania railroad, <lb/>
and Cramp's ship yard. <lb/>
Nothing Equals Town Country. <lb/>
Compliments to the stalled <lb/>
pure of paint to <lb/>
be the equal to <lb/>
Country paint. Indeed hat the <lb/>
property owner is getting <lb/>
their time cluck isn't <lb/>
working; their mental <lb/>
fails to find the difference between <lb/>
perfectly pure paint M SO- <lb/>
pore paint. The <lb/>
use t Id be <lb/>
a of quality, a fiat <lb/>
ha stood the test time, a paint <lb/>
is the of over me <lb/>
such as <lb/>
Country aim. It <lb/>
a was <lb/>
the <lb/>
i me aid cannot keep <lb/>
like a la y mi . of <lb/>
paints soul t equal <lb/>
ft paint the i <lb/>
split It'll <lb/>
slave like gal by Vol <lb/>
trying to a pi m <lb/>
Town Country h <lb/>
Truth a woman's age are <lb/>
not on speaking terms. <lb/>
Now the festive mosquito <lb/>
a the pin- <lb/>
Into <lb/>
hard earned <lb/>
tine its by not air. <lb/>
W I<lb/>
preparing for a season. <lb/>
Money l- tight wilt <lb/>
man who is shy of loose, chimp . <lb/>
II you would convince <lb/>
you are a fool boast of your <lb/>
wisdom. <lb/>
A pessimist thinks it's mi ill <lb/>
that anybody good but <lb/>
himself. <lb/>
claim to practice what <lb/>
they preach merely as an excuse<lb/>
if yon can't any h n else you <lb/>
can at least keep the other <lb/>
fellow's way, <lb/>
Why is it one never sec- <lb/>
portrait of an angel in <lb/>
r of devil in <lb/>
One little fl a living <lb/>
is worth m than n wagon load <lb/>
of floral to u dead one. <lb/>
Alter making a strenuous effort; <lb/>
to marry the man of her choice a I <lb/>
woman is apt to be <lb/>
See I hat <lb/>
buy is II. <lb/>
unify paint. <lb/>
ha <lb/>
is <lb/>
T. <lb/>
UP o <lb/>
June. 1905 no <lb/>
a l i t I II, <lb/>
with crop i -ii s <lb/>
tight, net ugh ti <lb/>
sell, wests<lb/>
N C <lb/>
The lees <lb/>
Pa, <lb/>
Claudio, where <lb/>
Virginia Beach morning <lb/>
B. Hooker daughter, I pointed if she succeeds. <lb/>
Miss went to Seven Springs I <lb/>
today. <lb/>
N. Hart, Carlos Harris <lb/>
went to <lb/>
this morning, <lb/>
Mrs. Laura brown, who has been <lb/>
visiting Mrs. M. A. left <lb/>
morning for Oxford. <lb/>
A. o. of <lb/>
arrived this to take a <lb/>
position on The <lb/>
Mrs. II. L. Carr daughter, <lb/>
who come early will get first pick at this beautiful line of <lb/>
The Styles are beautiful, the makes re of the best, and a full <lb/>
line of sizes wait your inspection. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
when a man comes about <lb/>
a. m. and bit- wife wailing <lb/>
for him at the bead of the stairs <lb/>
he imagines he's a bigamist. <lb/>
Mow Wonderful ii Nature. <lb/>
Many caught in caves <lb/>
have no eyes Nature made them <lb/>
so because they have no use for <lb/>
them. If you live in an unsightly <lb/>
STORE. <lb/>
visit in Greene county this <lb/>
Mrs. H. W. of New <lb/>
came in this to <lb/>
M visit her mother, Mrs. J. T. <lb/>
Abrams. <lb/>
Mrs. J. K. Brown, of <lb/>
who has visiting relatives in <lb/>
around Greenville, returned <lb/>
home this morning. <lb/>
Mrs. J. T, Chesson, of Baltimore <lb/>
Mrs. Arthur Harden, of Brian- <lb/>
ton, came in Tuesday evening to <lb/>
visit Mis. K. EL Taft, in West <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Two <lb/>
Dyspeptics <lb/>
i If you too fat it is because your food <lb/>
house for the need of paint, best <lb/>
.,. i. that you not properly digested and <lb/>
, , . . <lb/>
Lean, thin, stringy people do <lb/>
enough Pepsin in the while fat <lb/>
people have too much Pepsin and not <lb/>
enough <lb/>
Dyspepsia Cure <lb/>
contains all the digestive juices that are <lb/>
found in a healthy and in <lb/>
those proportions necessary to <lb/>
enable the and digestive organs <lb/>
to and assimilate all foods that may <lb/>
be eaten. is not only a perfect <lb/>
but it is a <lb/>
building tonic as well. cures <lb/>
Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Sour Stomach. <lb/>
Heartburn, Palpitation of the Heart and <lb/>
Constipation. You will like it. <lb/>
What You Eat <lb/>
rebuilds the <lb/>
tissues and gives firm flash. <lb/>
thing to do is to employ a <lb/>
class painter have him apply <lb/>
Harrison's Town Country- <lb/>
Paint. Might just as well live in <lb/>
a cave an unsightly house. <lb/>
Wholesale <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
I hive been greatly annoyed by the <lb/>
boys of the town who tramp through <lb/>
ray Held and my In <lb/>
of fruit, and I take this opportunity <lb/>
to notify both the boys and their par- <lb/>
that positively I prosecute <lb/>
for trespass any boy who repeats the <lb/>
hereafter James Turnage, <lb/>
N. J. <lb/>
In a month now talk will <lb/>
to fall Those who talk <lb/>
moat through the advertising, <lb/>
columns of will <lb/>
get the best share of the <lb/>
NOTICE OF SALE. <lb/>
tin Tuesday, day of July, <lb/>
at the home the late Laura <lb/>
will sell at <lb/>
for cash household and <lb/>
furniture belonging to the estate of the <lb/>
said Laura <lb/>
Cherry Jr. <lb/>
of Laura <lb/>
This Juno 27th, B i w d <lb/>
ii. . . a <lb/>
r M <lb/>
at vs. L. <lb/>
Sale By <lb/>
L. WOOTEN. <lb/>
Law- I <lb/>
Witt I <lb/>
A. J <lb/>
THE EASTERN <lb/>
J. WHICHARD. Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and <lb/>
ONE TEAR M <lb/>
f Na. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA. TUESDAY, JULY 1905. <lb/>
AND ANOTHER. <lb/>
Thompson Adds Laurels to His <lb/>
Crown. <lb/>
In a magnificent pitcher's hat <lb/>
Wednesday at Kinston <lb/>
Thompson led to another <lb/>
the second shutout for the <lb/>
redoubtable twirler. The <lb/>
fol grandstand at the park was <lb/>
filled to overflowing and the field <lb/>
was partly filled the interest- <lb/>
ed spectators. as exciting, for <lb/>
often the impetuous rooters would <lb/>
find themselves between Turner E. <lb/>
in right field Walker on first, <lb/>
and the umpire would have to <lb/>
stop the game, and yet it was <lb/>
played in one and fifteen <lb/>
minutes. How is that for some- <lb/>
thing <lb/>
That park at is some- <lb/>
thing to make your pain <lb/>
with its monotony, nowhere is <lb/>
there a brush or a grass to <lb/>
relieve the glare of the <lb/>
sun. Everywhere yon see an <lb/>
absolutely level stretch of land, <lb/>
packed reminds yon of the <lb/>
streets of a great <lb/>
metropolis, under these conditions <lb/>
our lads went out to a <lb/>
diamond aid field as level as the <lb/>
pool tables in the Carolina <lb/>
Thompson in the box, in <lb/>
perfect form; the whole team filled <lb/>
full of the confidence that spells <lb/>
victory, with hall grand <lb/>
stand shouting their lore <lb/>
for <lb/>
Said one K m-ion fan to <lb/>
crowd of Greenville women <lb/>
must be made up of, yea composed <lb/>
entirely of so I bought <lb/>
the Greenville team, for though <lb/>
out two to one, <lb/>
made themselves heard, for <lb/>
Harris away out in <lb/>
kept ain't them <lb/>
women singing <lb/>
knows was <lb/>
pitching ball, but that wasn't all, <lb/>
for he was backed by n base ball <lb/>
learn Wednesday. Go back at <lb/>
Prank Skinner's book <lb/>
you find that not an error mars <lb/>
the page on which was scored <lb/>
Wednesday game. When a ball <lb/>
went to put of the field it <lb/>
was with the assurance that it <lb/>
would lie fielded. Only time <lb/>
did Kinston team reach the <lb/>
sack; two men were down, <lb/>
and a fly to Turner in light field <lb/>
their hopes. . <lb/>
Another time it looked bad for <lb/>
us, the first man walked, <lb/>
but the man tapped out <lb/>
to the never failing <lb/>
then nailed second <lb/>
and the next one was killed at first <lb/>
on an infield hit. <lb/>
the game was ours we <lb/>
did not play all the ball. <lb/>
for Kinston pitched a nice game, <lb/>
Miller in left did several rob- <lb/>
stunts, and the people in <lb/>
Kinston They were as nice to <lb/>
our team and to the of the <lb/>
team as any town can ever be. They <lb/>
are whole-souled, hospitable <lb/>
and it is a pleasure to visit <lb/>
the town. Ask the Greenville <lb/>
ladies if the men are not all right, <lb/>
and it goes without saying that <lb/>
the girls are. <lb/>
The umpire was Mr. Suggs, and <lb/>
there is no kick coming from <lb/>
Greenville about him. He was all <lb/>
right. It is possible that Kinston <lb/>
may come here this week. <lb/>
Tabulated <lb/>
is, <lb/>
p. <lb/>
Whitaker, lb. <lb/>
Jordan, S <lb/>
Allen, <lb/>
Battery for <lb/>
son Kinston, <lb/>
and struck <lb/>
Thompson by base <lb/>
on balls off Thompson off Hat- <lb/>
earned two base hit <lb/>
Smith; double play Miller to <lb/>
Time of game <lb/>
Skinner. Attendance 1,500. <lb/>
Thorn p- <lb/>
out by <lb/>
Amos Writes Pap. <lb/>
N. O. <lb/>
1905. <lb/>
My Deer <lb/>
i win when Gar <lb/>
and Berte yew <lb/>
gone to home i yew <lb/>
not went fer i i <lb/>
make yew a <lb/>
gift of, it i got <lb/>
outer niB. ed store, <lb/>
don't yew know that one close <lb/>
the corner i felt like <lb/>
last yew beet the <lb/>
game from an <lb/>
a nest rite <lb/>
over Winder in yew <lb/>
staid in in <lb/>
lance he <lb/>
in it. <lb/>
i see yew ketch that <lb/>
yew <lb/>
in the center feel. <lb/>
rite yew- a fore <lb/>
hug but, don't yew <lb/>
for Me tho. <lb/>
i scribe my trend, <lb/>
S. p. i live close to tie <lb/>
an s. P. times, i <lb/>
like fer got is be a <lb/>
play in next <lb/>
weak, it's to be <lb/>
i reckon its <lb/>
i asked him, <lb/>
but i think it is. i yew <lb/>
in it. an <lb/>
CHILD DIES SUDDENLY. <lb/>
Sad Bereavement of Mr. and Mrs. J. N. <lb/>
Hart. <lb/>
Little Helen, aged month, <lb/>
infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
J. N. Hart, died at o'clock this <lb/>
morning at their home in West <lb/>
Greenville. The little one bad <lb/>
been slightly sick with whooping <lb/>
cough for some days, though her <lb/>
condition bad at no time been <lb/>
as to cause on the part <lb/>
of the During last night <lb/>
she suddenly grew worse, and in a <lb/>
few hours was taken from mother's <lb/>
loving arms and transplanted <lb/>
the bright world above. <lb/>
The death of this sweet child is <lb/>
all the more sad owing to the ab- <lb/>
from home of the father. <lb/>
Mr. Hart left morning <lb/>
for Philadelphia, never dreaming <lb/>
of the dark shadow before him <lb/>
Even before he reached <lb/>
a telegram had preceded him <lb/>
there telling him of the sorrow <lb/>
that hail come into his home. <lb/>
Sad was the blow coming <lb/>
to him so far from bis loved ones. <lb/>
Mr. Han left on first train to <lb/>
home, but cannot reach <lb/>
here until sometime tomorrow. No <lb/>
announcement can yet lie made as <lb/>
to the funeral, but if he arrives in <lb/>
time it will probably take plate <lb/>
tomorrow at The deepest <lb/>
sympathy is expressed for the par- <lb/>
their sorrow. <lb/>
TIME CALL A HALT. <lb/>
Windsor Burned, <lb/>
Nearly the whole of the <lb/>
part of the of Windsor <lb/>
was destroyed by fire Mon- <lb/>
day morning. The fire, which was <lb/>
of unknown origin, started in the <lb/>
store pied by E. L. Joy <lb/>
and spread very rapidly. The <lb/>
blaze was discovered about <lb/>
o'clock by some one in the rear of <lb/>
the building, who immediately <lb/>
awakened the in the neigh <lb/>
On account of having <lb/>
no means of fighting the fire, the <lb/>
gained considerable headway <lb/>
and in a few minutes had spread <lb/>
to the and other build- <lb/>
The fire raged until five <lb/>
o'clock. Tarboro Southerner. <lb/>
Mammoth Radish. <lb/>
J. R. Cooper, of Winterville, <lb/>
the largest <lb/>
radish we ever saw. It is immense <lb/>
in size, peculiar in shape, and <lb/>
weighs J pounds. <lb/>
James, <lb/>
Tamer, B., <lb/>
Smith, <lb/>
Turner, J., <lb/>
Thompson, <lb/>
Harris, <lb/>
Forbes, <lb/>
Walker, <lb/>
Miller, <lb/>
Poor Reason for Divorce. <lb/>
Seasons for divorce are very <lb/>
plentiful. One man asks <lb/>
for a decree because he and <lb/>
wife were both drunk the time of <lb/>
the marriage. He didn't get one, <lb/>
the judge evidently holding that <lb/>
after marrying on champagne <lb/>
there was plenty of time for <lb/>
repentance on Then <lb/>
an Iowa man, weight pounds, <lb/>
asks a divorce his wife, who <lb/>
weighs pounds and manifests <lb/>
her displeasure by walloping <lb/>
diminutive head of the <lb/>
This case hasn't been deeded, so <lb/>
that it may yet be <lb/>
what difference in weight is good <lb/>
for divorce. Tarn Reed's <lb/>
declaration that gentleman <lb/>
or weigh snore than <lb/>
pounds may possibly be <lb/>
law, so far the divorce <lb/>
Sentinel. <lb/>
The Rivalry Going Too Far. <lb/>
This useless the <lb/>
between Washington and <lb/>
Greenville gone far enough, <lb/>
for it is mi making the feeling <lb/>
stronger is already too strong <lb/>
I between i n towns. <lb/>
the game here last week, <lb/>
or since be next day after it was <lb/>
played, Washington has been <lb/>
growing sorer. It maybe that the <lb/>
in <lb/>
of which was <lb/>
by their beautiful slurs of a few- <lb/>
days eat tier, is in some degree <lb/>
responsible. <lb/>
They could hot kick on the game <lb/>
which, we to admit, m <lb/>
lost in us through their errors, but <lb/>
now they arc attacking the police <lb/>
force of Greenville. It is a <lb/>
they have in Washing- <lb/>
ton, but if they had had the <lb/>
welfare of Greenland in their <lb/>
hands last Friday, 1905, <lb/>
their they could have <lb/>
done no more thin the police of <lb/>
for the ball park is not <lb/>
in but is the <lb/>
city limits, and the <lb/>
of the officers of Pitt <lb/>
and not the police force of <lb/>
town. <lb/>
It was said in these columns <lb/>
last week that the unfortunate <lb/>
toward the close of the <lb/>
game was in no way <lb/>
with the ball team, and again it <lb/>
was said in the plainest phrases <lb/>
of the English language that the <lb/>
Greenville people were not in <lb/>
sympathy with such conduct, and <lb/>
deplored and regretted the occur- <lb/>
and further more the <lb/>
ville authorities are in no way <lb/>
responsible. <lb/>
Greenville did not kick when <lb/>
you beat us, so with <lb/>
us and cut your slurring out, and <lb/>
let have only the that <lb/>
is becoming, and that will let us <lb/>
meet on either diamond with the <lb/>
proper spirit. <lb/>
stain rail for Jane. <lb/>
C. V. York, who is beer- <lb/>
for the government station at <lb/>
this point on Tar river, reports <lb/>
that the total fall here for the <lb/>
month June reached inches. <lb/>
The heaviest fall any day <lb/>
the month was 2.10 24th, <lb/>
TOWN <lb/>
Hold Last fer <lb/>
the Final Year. <lb/>
The board of aldermen met for <lb/>
the tint Thursday night in <lb/>
the official headquarter for <lb/>
the town in temple build- <lb/>
found it a comfortable <lb/>
and convenient place for meeting. <lb/>
This was the regular business <lb/>
session for the fiscal year. The <lb/>
writer, who served as clerk t j <lb/>
the board the year, can say <lb/>
that he has never served with more <lb/>
clever and agreeable gentlemen. <lb/>
They are all thorough business <lb/>
men and have acted the affairs <lb/>
of the town la a business like way. <lb/>
Through the entire year we do not <lb/>
recall a single harsh or unkind <lb/>
word uttered at any meeting, the <lb/>
proceedings always being conduct- <lb/>
ed pleasantly. AH but one the <lb/>
members succeeds himself for the <lb/>
coming year. <lb/>
At this last meeting the finance <lb/>
gave a report showing <lb/>
settlement with tax collector, <lb/>
incl the insolvent list. <lb/>
figures embraced in this will be <lb/>
given in a statement being <lb/>
paid by the for <lb/>
cation later. <lb/>
The tax collector was instructed <lb/>
to collect what he could the <lb/>
I insolvent list, a reasonable com- <lb/>
mission in be allowed. <lb/>
street committee <lb/>
damage done to the streets <lb/>
j by the storm on the had been <lb/>
repaired. <lb/>
The and wells committee <lb/>
i that some of the old <lb/>
street lamps been sold, aid <lb/>
the public wells repaired where <lb/>
needed. <lb/>
The market committee reported <lb/>
; that the I ital rents Collected from <lb/>
the for the <lb/>
year amounted <lb/>
The white cemetery committee <lb/>
that the cemetery needed <lb/>
cleaning but there no funds <lb/>
in at to do the work. <lb/>
The file department committee <lb/>
Unit all the boat reel Sta- <lb/>
were completed the reels <lb/>
placed them ready for use, <lb/>
A small of was <lb/>
gold in <lb/>
I lie treasurer, tax collector, <lb/>
lice officers and chief of lire de- <lb/>
presented for <lb/>
the past month. <lb/>
The mayor tendered a r- <lb/>
which made the following <lb/>
Number of arrests made <lb/>
by policemen during fiscal year <lb/>
upon warrants issued by the Mayor <lb/>
Of this <lb/>
adjudged guilty not guilty, <lb/>
were bound over to Sup- <lb/>
court. There was paid over <lb/>
to the treasurer of the board of <lb/>
education for public schools of the <lb/>
fines collected, <lb/>
and paid into the treasury of the <lb/>
town arising from costs <lb/>
Orders drawn on the treas- <lb/>
amounting to of <lb/>
this amount being for <lb/>
interest on bonds fer <lb/>
the past of six months. <lb/>
The board took a recess until <lb/>
o'clock Saturday morning when <lb/>
it meets to turn over to the in- <lb/>
coming board. <lb/>
BEGIN NEW YEAR, <lb/>
Aldermen Organize and Officers. <lb/>
The board of aldermen for the <lb/>
new fiscal year met this morning <lb/>
and organized for the year's work <lb/>
The beard is composed as follows, <lb/>
the first ward being the only <lb/>
change from last <lb/>
First Fleming <lb/>
Second Cobb, J. R <lb/>
Third A A. <lb/>
H. Taft. <lb/>
Fourth T. K. <lb/>
Hooker. <lb/>
Fifth C. Lanier. <lb/>
The members were in by <lb/>
D. C. Moore, clerk court. <lb/>
The following officers <lb/>
elected at the salaries <lb/>
M. Woolen, pet <lb/>
month. <lb/>
Clerk and tax collector J, C <lb/>
Tyson, per year. <lb/>
Chief T. Smith, <lb/>
per <lb/>
Assistant A. Clark, <lb/>
per month. <lb/>
Night H. <lb/>
per month. <lb/>
L. Carr, <lb/>
year. <lb/>
Dispensary N. <lb/>
Hart, J. L Sugg, J. W. Bryan. <lb/>
Chairman per ethers <lb/>
Chief fire J. <lb/>
; Griffin, per year. <lb/>
The term of L. Brown and <lb/>
i E. B. as trustees of <lb/>
j school expired, L. <lb/>
. Brown and L. C Arthur were <lb/>
elected. <lb/>
Fred Cox was granted license to <lb/>
distillery for six months, but <lb/>
had to enter written agreement <lb/>
to remove all tic and hogs <lb/>
the premises keep th <lb/>
rounding free from tilth. <lb/>
A RECEPTION AT DR. MOTE'S. <lb/>
Funeral of Little Helen Hart. <lb/>
Just as sun was sinking <lb/>
the West Friday evening, the <lb/>
remains of little Helen, infant <lb/>
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. N. <lb/>
Hart, who died Thursday morn- <lb/>
were laid to rest in Cherry <lb/>
Hill cemetery. Mr. Hart, who <lb/>
was absent when the little one <lb/>
away, could not <lb/>
home until the evening <lb/>
train, the funeral took place as <lb/>
soon thereafter as arrangements <lb/>
could be made. Services were <lb/>
conducted at the grave by Rev. J. <lb/>
A. Hornaday. The pall bearers <lb/>
were C. T. Frank <lb/>
son, A. B. Ellington, C. M. Jones, <lb/>
Z, P. Vandyke. O. E, Warren, G. <lb/>
E. Harris and L. H. Pender. <lb/>
were many beautiful floral <lb/>
tributes from sympathizing friends. <lb/>
In Honor Mist <lb/>
Dr. and Mis. ten <lb/>
dared the people of the town <lb/>
a reception Friday evening in <lb/>
honor of Miss <lb/>
Washington, who bis been <lb/>
visiting and Helen <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
It was a pretty evening, a jolly <lb/>
crowd, and an ideal host and <lb/>
hostess. lawn was <lb/>
softly lighted with Japanese Ian. <lb/>
tarns, and well supplied with <lb/>
hammocks, swings, chairs and <lb/>
benches, making convenient <lb/>
places in all parts of it. <lb/>
The guests received at the <lb/>
door by Mrs. conducted <lb/>
to the parlor, thence to hall <lb/>
where was served by Miss <lb/>
Helen F Walter Wilson. <lb/>
Then the young people -vent to the <lb/>
lawn where they talked to who <lb/>
warned to until refreshments <lb/>
ware served. These consisted of <lb/>
cake and creams of different kinds. <lb/>
Alter the refreshments <lb/>
talked on until night <lb/>
giving way to coming <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
instrumental, and vocal <lb/>
was rendered by different <lb/>
ones of the company. <lb/>
Mies Simmons is attractive <lb/>
entertaining Dr. and Mr. <lb/>
have a way making one feel at <lb/>
borne and at ea-e and the crowd <lb/>
one these combined <lb/>
the evening a pleasant <lb/>
indeed, a id it time to go he- <lb/>
fore anyone had thought of t, <lb/>
Among those present <lb/>
Miss and <lb/>
Hooker, Miss Lottie Blow and Tom <lb/>
Moore, Mies Mary Higgs and Fred <lb/>
Hornaday, Alice Lang <lb/>
Ben Hiss Nell Skinner and <lb/>
Eugene Turner, Mis- V i <lb/>
and John Mt-s <lb/>
Alice White and Jim Turner, Mi a <lb/>
Jamie Bryan and Home, <lb/>
Miss Helen Walter <lb/>
Wilson, Miss May Whitfield and <lb/>
Frank Wilson, Miss Claudia Sim <lb/>
Dick White, Mies Glenn <lb/>
Ft L Best, Miss Jessie <lb/>
Sugg Mr. Williams, <lb/>
Skinner, Mr. Hone, <lb/>
Hill Alex Blow-, Grant <lb/>
Tyson, Gary Warren, Jack Garden <lb/>
and Alvin Dupree. It was a <lb/>
pleasant evening every y. <lb/>
Altai Simmons in her <lb/>
home in Washington this morning, <lb/>
She has made friends here that <lb/>
will be glad to see her again. <lb/>
Common Now. <lb/>
So many came <lb/>
to all of <lb/>
them could not be mentioned. <lb/>
The Bret one came on the 21st <lb/>
and by the 24th they were no longer <lb/>
a novelty. <lb/>
Lewis, Wilmington; <lb/>
in a fit of remorse following a pro- <lb/>
and because he <lb/>
not get more whiskey, a bullet <lb/>
into hie heart in the <lb/>
his wife afternoon at <lb/>
o'clock at home <lb/>
N. C. July 1st. <lb/>
Dr. of <lb/>
Greenville, was in town a short <lb/>
While Thursday. <lb/>
Mrs. O. G. Calhoun has been <lb/>
sick for several days, but is report- <lb/>
ed better today. <lb/>
Mr. Stallings, of Richmond, <lb/>
spent Thursday in <lb/>
Mr. H. B. Phillips and family <lb/>
came Tuesday night and will spend <lb/>
several weeks in <lb/>
Mrs. George Robins, who has <lb/>
been critically ill for several days <lb/>
is slowly improving. <lb/>
Mr. Braswell, of Tarboro, made <lb/>
us a visit week. <lb/>
Mr. Joe Bobbitt and bride, <lb/>
Miss Daniels of Williamston, ate <lb/>
visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Bob- <lb/>
Mr. of Greenville, <lb/>
was in Thursday. <lb/>
Dr. L. E. Ricks visited Green- <lb/>
ville week. <lb/>
Mrs. Jennings and child- <lb/>
who have been visiting <lb/>
in Portsmouth, <lb/>
home Friday night. <lb/>
J. D. in town this week. <lb/>
Charlie. Expects Trouble. <lb/>
Charlie receive an <lb/>
intimation yesterday that he <lb/>
might expect trouble at the <lb/>
reception he has planned for <lb/>
his aunt Donna Lucia at the opera <lb/>
next Wednesday night. <lb/>
Charlie is filled fall of superstition, <lb/>
so he has secured the services of <lb/>
Lord an old <lb/>
actor, who is something funny <lb/>
enough. <lb/>
No telling what is going to <lb/>
pan, but old feels sure <lb/>
he will be a counteracting <lb/>
for whatever it is, and he has got <lb/>
a terrible face, and he is as funny <lb/>
as old Sir John Falstaff in the <lb/>
Merry Wives of and he <lb/>
resourceful too. He has a <lb/>
I can Mil you so <lb/>
much about him. Yen go see him <lb/>
yourself next night, <lb/>
and you will be glad of it, and <lb/>
you will have something to talk <lb/>
about when you go <lb/>
Charlie going to have Jack <lb/>
there too, and he so <lb/>
handsome. <lb/>
Den Teachey, of county, <lb/>
must hang for the murder Rob- <lb/>
Governor Glenn <lb/>
having announced that ha will not <lb/>
farther interfere. <lb/>
POOR PRINT <lb/>
s-a. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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