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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>
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/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019528_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
TRAVEL <lb/>
Telephone <lb/>
Advice to the Aged. <lb/>
Age brings such us I lass. <lb/>
bowels, mt kidneys and . . . <lb/>
and LIVER. <lb/>
have a specific effect on these i a n, <lb/>
the bowels, I hem <lb/>
to perform their natural s a <lb/>
in and <lb/>
IMPARTING VIGOR. <lb/>
to the kidneys, bladder and LIVER. <lb/>
They ore adapted to old and young. <lb/>
Not Quite <lb/>
Ho often you l <lb/>
thing done <lb/>
or seres or <lb/>
Have good <lb/>
.,. . r pared for <lb/>
emergencies Our <lb/>
a i-i I de n . and <lb/>
see your tool <lb/>
it a<lb/>
Of Course<lb/>
a You get Harness, g <lb/>
to Horse Goods, <lb/>
J P I <lb/>
M. <lb/>
II . oil<lb/>
r . <lb/>
; . . . I <lb/>
. I . . F <lb/>
. t -i.- <lb/>
i. .- I <lb/>
. . fill. <lb/>
, . eat. Boa. <lb/>
Gar <lb/>
. .<lb/>
in J u . <lb/>
. . . v <lb/>
NEWMAN <lb/>
the Old Stand. <lb/>
I liar.- purchased the <lb/>
of W. J. <lb/>
awl ill Hie bus- <lb/>
iii- old ml Five <lb/>
I mid in stock In meet the <lb/>
demands of the trade and will at <lb/>
times carry a Complete line of <lb/>
Heavy and Groceries. <lb/>
Fruits, Tobacco, <lb/>
Cigars, etc. <lb/>
me when yon want the <lb/>
beat Groceries the price <lb/>
at which they cs-ii be fold. <lb/>
J. J. TURNAGE <lb/>
The Five Grocer. <lb/>
COBB BROS. CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Buyers and Brokers In <lb/>
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and Pris- <lb/>
ons. Private Wires to New York <lb/>
Chicago and New Orleans. <lb/>
HILLIARD, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
MARBLE MONUMENTAL WORK <lb/>
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. <lb/>
Iron Fencing Sold <lb/>
LADIES <lb/>
COMPOUND. <lb/>
State of North <lb/>
County. <lb/>
In Superior Court. <lb/>
Town of , Notice of summons <lb/>
against . and t of <lb/>
K J attachment. <lb/>
The defendant. E. Pollard, <lb/>
t notice, on the 14th <lb/>
June, 1905, was issued <lb/>
against iii entitled ac- <lb/>
by the undersigned clerk of the <lb/>
Superior court of county, return- <lb/>
able to the September term. of <lb/>
Pitt Superior court, which convenes <lb/>
the second Monday after the Bret <lb/>
n September, 1906, it being <lb/>
the day of month, which <lb/>
summons ares returned by the sic nil <lb/>
of Pitt count tot executed with <lb/>
r-,. i. Defendant E. J- <lb/>
Pollard not to f n <lb/>
-1 d action as alleged <lb/>
plaint is to recover of the <lb/>
lam the sum of three hundred <lb/>
for breach In-warranty of a <lb/>
. . . . .-1 executed the plaintiff <lb/>
5th day of January. for a <lb/>
certain eel of land on Wilson<lb/>
es ill his deed r. corded in <lb/>
e this register's <lb/>
of co <lb/>
The said In defendant <lb/>
said, will notice a <lb/>
. Issued by <lb/>
the c , on tin- said <lb/>
. . I the r- <lb/>
lard, d <lb/>
I he -In riff county d n <lb/>
es id September term <lb/>
In of iii -r, mi, ii being <lb/>
. . , when the n <lb/>
i- I the d <lb/>
K J, d . . notice h <lb/>
i- to . mill the M <lb/>
three t answer or <lb/>
demur I <lb/>
or e relief demanded <lb/>
Done iii mi office In the town <lb/>
G em thin of June, <lb/>
. Moore <lb/>
i ,. S <lb/>
Plaintiff's <lb/>
LOW RATE TICKETS <lb/>
On Sale via. <lb/>
SOUTHERN RAILWAY. <lb/>
Extremely low Rates are <lb/>
announced by the South- <lb/>
Railway from points <lb/>
on its lines for follow- <lb/>
Special <lb/>
Park, X J , National A- <lb/>
M July 1905. <lb/>
Baltimore, Mil. United Society <lb/>
Living in a Age. <lb/>
Are we living in a freak age <lb/>
Have the sun spots spotted every- <lb/>
thing mundane as well as terrestrial <lb/>
The twentieth century has given <lb/>
birth to sonic curious <lb/>
Nothing would be beard <lb/>
of these freaks if it were not for <lb/>
their general public advertisement <lb/>
by the press In politics we have <lb/>
in recent years seen an unknown <lb/>
man spring from the ranks the <lb/>
Nebraska and, equipped <lb/>
. with a clever tongue, cleave <lb/>
E to ft presidential <lb/>
ii. Com , , ., <lb/>
nomination, and tun, on the basis <lb/>
N Y, Animal M eel tog <lb/>
e . P O. K , <lb/>
l. 1905 <lb/>
Colorado ts, <lb/>
International it <lb/>
. . tie C 5-6 <lb/>
ii v , <lb/>
. K if <lb/>
my e <lb/>
pi ell <lb/>
ion N l tons I<lb/>
the free advertising of a <lb/>
publication he edits, secures a <lb/>
princely income from it every year. <lb/>
la medicine. Hr Osier, addressing <lb/>
the public, declares that a man's <lb/>
usefulness ends at the age of <lb/>
and that the world would be well <lb/>
oil if men at sixty were chloroformed <lb/>
same doctor, not ago, in <lb/>
an address in Canada, recommended <lb/>
a tax on bachelors and an export <lb/>
duty on Canadian girls. Notoriety <lb/>
is evidently Osier's ambition, and <lb/>
Moo i., Bible j the newspapers are giving it to him. <lb/>
In finance, the freak of the ago is <lb/>
1905. Tom of Boston, whose <lb/>
.,. , ended as noon <lb/>
in -Hue, July M lust long enough, ii is <lb/>
1905. I to enable him to gall. <lb/>
, V <lb/>
A I 1905 <lb/>
p . P Mill <lb/>
lain wasting their <lb/>
i. I. V , <lb/>
f S I. <lb/>
heretofore doings is <lb/>
in the . . . <lb/>
by in c 1.-cot. <lb/>
eons owing the can sett e with <lb/>
either arty .; to come <lb/>
at settle their ac- <lb/>
count-. Any one nuts <lb/>
cu present to <lb/>
either i v. L. M. Savage. <lb/>
. Tun <lb/>
This June 7th, ID <lb/>
1905. <lb/>
Portland Ore., San L <lb/>
Die-. Cal <lb/>
Lewis Hint Clark Centennial I <lb/>
and special <lb/>
Occasions Pacific <lb/>
June to October 1905. <lb/>
Richmond, Va . National <lb/>
Congress, September to <lb/>
Hale- for above <lb/>
open to tile public. <lb/>
Tickets iii be sold to thee <lb/>
point- from stations Hie <lb/>
S Railway. <lb/>
in of shingles <lb/>
while, the great newspapers that <lb/>
space . <lb/>
every new freak as fast as lie appear <lb/>
are raising their advertising rates i <lb/>
all legitimate branches of business. <lb/>
world Leslie's Weekly. <lb/>
Digest all Classes of <lb/>
strengthens the stomach <lb/>
Cores <lb/>
Stomach Troubles, <lb/>
make-rich red <lb/>
and strength. <lb/>
Cure rebuilds tissues <lb/>
O. w Atkinson, W. Va <lb/>
have used a number of <lb/>
bottles of Dyspepsia Cine <lb/>
mil have to be a <lb/>
Detailed information can be and, h powerful <lb/>
Announcement <lb/>
We beg leave to announce that we are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for <lb/>
White Lead, Paints, <lb/>
Colors, and and <lb/>
v Ready Paints. <lb/>
There is no line in the world better than <lb/>
the Harrison line. It has behind it a <lb/>
reputation for honorable wares and honorable <lb/>
dealings. <lb/>
If you use the Harrison Paints you need <lb/>
never worry quality. <lb/>
DISSOLUTION OF PARTNER- <lb/>
SHIP. <lb/>
The j Hooker by <lb/>
was the ii st of <lb/>
June, 1905. I, J, Brink- <lb/>
purchasing I. Hooker's interest <lb/>
in the Brick The <lb/>
Brick here- <lb/>
after be run <lb/>
This June 14th, 1905 <lb/>
J. Prank Brinkle <lb/>
Hooker <lb/>
desire to auk my friends for <lb/>
their patronage in tin- <lb/>
i- . of the -nine, prom- <lb/>
I use my best <lb/>
to protect their Interest In the <lb/>
cm,. Very truly, <lb/>
J, <lb/>
application to any <lb/>
A. out the Southern Rill way, <lb/>
Ai eats lines, or <lb/>
III.- <lb/>
R. L. VERNON, T. P. A. <lb/>
Charlotte, X. c. <lb/>
J. H. WOOD. D. P. A. <lb/>
S H Pass, <lb/>
H.<lb/>
NORFOLK SOUTHERN CO <lb/>
Steamboat Service. <lb/>
remedy stomach ailment. I <lb/>
recommend n my Sold <lb/>
by Jno. L. Woolen, druggist. <lb/>
ITEMS <lb/>
L. leaves <lb/>
daily <lb/>
at a. for leaves <lb/>
Greenville daily night am <lb/>
at . A I , K <lb/>
will. <lb/>
Norfolk Railroad came Sunday <lb/>
Norfolk. Baltimore, Philadelphia, to visit her sister, Mrs. J. J. <lb/>
N. C, Jane 1905 <lb/>
C. H. Lang-Ion went to Winter <lb/>
ville Monday. <lb/>
The sure quite busy lay- <lb/>
by crops. <lb/>
The storm Saturday night did <lb/>
damage to c in this and <lb/>
adjoining neighborhoods <lb/>
Miss Ann. e is visit <lb/>
Miss Ibis week. <lb/>
J. J. Hardy and daughter, Miss <lb/>
spent Saturday <lb/>
near <lb/>
Oscar and Herod Hooks <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/>
BANK OF <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
T THE OF BUSINESS MAY 29th. 1905. <lb/>
UNIVERSITY <lb/>
op <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
Head of the Educational System. <lb/>
Collegiate, Engineering <lb/>
L a w, <lb/>
Medicine, <lb/>
New Boston and all other <lb/>
North. Connects a Norfolk <lb/>
with all points West. <lb/>
Shippers should <lb/>
freight via Norfolk, care k <lb/>
rt Southern K. H. <lb/>
bailing horns subject to change <lb/>
without <lb/>
T. H. MYERS, Washing- <lb/>
ton, N. C. <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, Agent, Green- <lb/>
ville, N. C. <lb/>
General T. and <lb/>
r. Agent, Norfolk, Va., <lb/>
Library contains volumes <lb/>
New water works, <lb/>
Lights, Central Heating <lb/>
system. New dorm- <lb/>
Y. M. O. A. Building <lb/>
INSTRUCTORS <lb/>
The Fall term begin <lb/>
Sept. -w <lb/>
A -s <lb/>
FRANCIS P- President. <lb/>
Chapel Hill. N. c. <lb/>
WOOD WOOD <lb/>
Dry, Split Pine Wood, every <lb/>
length, delivered st your door. <lb/>
Phone Ne. <lb/>
Tours fer <lb/>
JOE JENKINS. <lb/>
APPLICATION FOR LIQUOR <lb/>
LICENSE. <lb/>
Notice is hereby given that I Will <lb/>
make application to the Board of Com- <lb/>
missioners of Pitt county on the first <lb/>
Monday in July, for license to <lb/>
retail liquor in Grimesland. N. C <lb/>
J. <lb/>
This 27th day of 1906. <lb/>
APPLICATION FOR LIQUOR <lb/>
LICENSE, <lb/>
Notice is hereby given that I will <lb/>
make to the board of Com- <lb/>
missioners of Pitt county on the <lb/>
in July, for license to <lb/>
retail liquor In N. C. <lb/>
J. L, <lb/>
This of 1906. <lb/>
SUITED. <lb/>
A barrel far <lb/>
A hand far too beat, <lb/>
A for bruiser <lb/>
Aid fer n <lb/>
AH <lb/>
ell it and result. <lb/>
BEFORE THE HOUSE BURNS. <lb/>
If yon contemplate INSURING <lb/>
your property wait. bile <lb/>
yon are waiting or bus- <lb/>
house may be destroyed by <lb/>
fire. <lb/>
The Time to Act is Now <lb/>
while the property is and <lb/>
when yon get a <lb/>
the fire too late. I write <lb/>
that insures. Let me explain <lb/>
it to you. <lb/>
W. E. HOOKS, <lb/>
Hardy. <lb/>
boys went to Win <lb/>
Sunday as usual. <lb/>
Allie spent <lb/>
night night in Ayden. <lb/>
H. Corbitt, of Ayden, attend- <lb/>
ed school at Bethany <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
G. passed through <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Simon Tyson, colored, lost, <lb/>
hogs goose night <lb/>
by lightning. <lb/>
C. H. Charles <lb/>
have added much to <lb/>
their tenant by a new scat <lb/>
of paint. <lb/>
J. Bynum, of was out <lb/>
last week selling Log medicine. <lb/>
There will be a convention <lb/>
at Bethany the 18th of July. <lb/>
Everybody is invited to come and <lb/>
bring basket well tilled. <lb/>
Discounts <lb/>
. d I <lb/>
Overdrafts, unsecured <lb/>
securities, etc.<lb/>
real estate 2,000.00 <lb/>
Banks 52,958.6 <lb/>
Ca-h 1,109.84<lb/>
Silver Coin<lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
paid in <lb/>
25,000.00 <lb/>
Undivided Profits less <lb/>
Paid 7,250.72 <lb/>
Deposit subject to cheek 181,484.46 <lb/>
Cashier's checks out-<lb/>
North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt. <lb/>
James L-Little, Cashier of above-named bank, do solemnly <lb/>
swear that the statement above is true to the best of my knowledge <lb/>
mil belief JAMES L. LITTLE. Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before <lb/>
this day of June, <lb/>
J. C. TYSON. <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
J. Q. <lb/>
A. ANDREWS, <lb/>
R. W. KING, <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
The North Carolina <lb/>
STATE NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE <lb/>
COURSES <lb/>
L. H. CO <lb/>
Guttering <lb/>
Tin and <lb/>
Slate Roofing. <lb/>
Tobacco Flues and <lb/>
all kinds of Sheet Metal <lb/>
Work. <lb/>
J. B. Cherry A <lb/>
Greenville. N. O. <lb/>
Literary Commercial <lb/>
Domestic Science <lb/>
Scientific Manual Training <lb/>
Pedagogical Music <lb/>
Three Courses leading to decrees. Well-equipped Training for <lb/>
Teachers. Faculty numbers Board, laundry, tuition, and fees for use <lb/>
of text books, etc., a year For students MM, For non- <lb/>
of the state, Fourteenth annual session begins September <lb/>
To secure board in the dormitories, all free-tuition applications should <lb/>
be made before July Correspondence from those desiring <lb/>
tent teachers and stenographers. For catalog and information, address <lb/>
CHARLES D. President <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
The Reflector <lb/>
Is Read By Everybody i and <lb/>
It reaches people money to pay for they <lb/>
if you what they want advertise it and yon are sore to <lb/>
get a part of their money. <lb/>
p. R. L. <lb/>
Dentist. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Dr. D. L. James <lb/>
Dental <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
J. W. BLOW, Manager and Authorized Agent. <lb/>
-.-.-. AYDEN, N. C. . <lb/>
N. C, June W, 1906.1 F. B. Tacker, coin-table for this <lb/>
A woman giving her seriously sick at the <lb/>
or Bettie Barber <lb/>
round of the small <lb/>
and soliciting the ladies who <lb/>
hare old cast off clothing dis <lb/>
pose of let her sell it com <lb/>
mission and what she not <lb/>
clear of the will return. There <lb/>
are several of our lad,, in <lb/>
Ayden who have bees taken in by <lb/>
this of light ginger cake <lb/>
complexion, say feet, <lb/>
fleshy, and in her promises ex <lb/>
fair but by her deed <lb/>
judge her methods dark <lb/>
and but justice be meted <lb/>
as it should this on <lb/>
rounds would find a borne where <lb/>
her complexion, slick tongue and <lb/>
wily ways would be to <lb/>
the gratification at her <lb/>
here perhaps others else <lb/>
where. She bails Goldsboro <lb/>
if any know ought of a <lb/>
little information waited <lb/>
in this would lie highly <lb/>
appreciated. <lb/>
As authorized agent for Daily <lb/>
and Eastern Reflector we take <lb/>
great pleasure in receiving sub <lb/>
and willing receipts <lb/>
those in arrears. We have a list <lb/>
of all who receive their mail at <lb/>
thin office. We also take orders <lb/>
for job printing. <lb/>
J. L Bags and Charles of <lb/>
here Tuesday <lb/>
When you nod a nice, light, <lb/>
tough pole, sty tot your boggy <lb/>
Call on us make a <lb/>
selection. Ayden Milling Mfg <lb/>
Co. N. C <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co., <lb/>
Ayden, N. C <lb/>
J. R. ill. family have <lb/>
been visiting country this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
If you need thing in way <lb/>
of Crockery, Tin ware <lb/>
in see 11-, I Lu I Jenkins. <lb/>
Harvey Cox, Winterville, <lb/>
spent Tuesday i . <lb/>
Call and ex. line <lb/>
grade You can In <lb/>
easily convinced I he superior <lb/>
of material and <lb/>
Ayden Milling . Co. <lb/>
Mr., CO, off on a <lb/>
visit to friends up road. <lb/>
E. K. all they <lb/>
possible can to please yon with <lb/>
their new line heavy and fancy <lb/>
groceries <lb/>
o. fer <lb/>
We are Headquarters Hint <lb/>
light <lb/>
Ayden Milling A Mfg Co., Ayden <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
L. Smith, of Vanceboro. <lb/>
has a visitor in Ayden this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
foal received, fine line of <lb/>
and can fit you up in any style <lb/>
or price. <lb/>
That was no small crowd which <lb/>
left here on the Ma- <lb/>
sonic excursion for Kinston. <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co. <lb/>
are re- <lb/>
daily new groceries and <lb/>
confectioneries right from the <lb/>
J. W. Taylor and wife left last <lb/>
Wednesday morning for Dunn, S. <lb/>
C, where Mrs. Taylor will remain <lb/>
Mr. Taylor returns from <lb/>
Philadelphia, where he will go to <lb/>
take a special course in optics. <lb/>
Yb manufacture seats for <lb/>
the trade, that are simply the <lb/>
smoothest seat on the market <lb/>
C. O. Brown was here yesterday <lb/>
soliciting for the marble works in <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co. <lb/>
We have full line of <lb/>
shoes for ladles. Every <lb/>
pair guaranteed. <lb/>
Miss Julia left Thursday <lb/>
morning for a to A dams town, <lb/>
Md., and other points in Western <lb/>
Maryland. She was accompanied <lb/>
by her little niece, Mis <lb/>
Fair. They will remain daring <lb/>
the <lb/>
home his father near Mere with <lb/>
fever, and grave are <lb/>
felt as it is feared an for <lb/>
will have to be <lb/>
formed, which will leave him ins <lb/>
critical condition, We hope how- <lb/>
ever to hear of bis speedy recovery. <lb/>
Mr. Tacker is an efficient officer, a <lb/>
gentleman and very <lb/>
with people, and all <lb/>
with him in his <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Cotton cultivators, Gopher <lb/>
plows extra blades J. R. <lb/>
J. W. Perkins Louis Law- <lb/>
were here yesterday. <lb/>
A large and latest <lb/>
improved tools with which to do <lb/>
work. Satisfaction <lb/>
teed. M. B. Tripp Bro. <lb/>
W. T. of Greenville, <lb/>
has been here in the interest of the <lb/>
Liberty warehouse. <lb/>
Call on Hart A bar <lb/>
rel of Columbia Flour, none better <lb/>
to be had anywhere. <lb/>
Capt. Richardson, one of the old <lb/>
vets of is here in the interest <lb/>
the insurance feature of the <lb/>
Masonic <lb/>
Needles, oil, and <lb/>
for all makes of sewing machine <lb/>
t J. H. Tripp Bro. Ayden, N <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Mr. Phillips, of <lb/>
has seemingly been very <lb/>
entertained here for the past day <lb/>
or so. <lb/>
if you do not <lb/>
one of our high grade buggies, <lb/>
your loss will be than ours <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co., <lb/>
den, N. C. <lb/>
Don't fail to see Ty- <lb/>
son's new crockery both and <lb/>
decorated. Prices are <lb/>
,. , better el <lb/>
man formerly. <lb/>
Bentley Harris mid L. FT <lb/>
ten, of Greenville, made a Short I <lb/>
trill yesterday. <lb/>
Come to see when you <lb/>
to buy Independent <lb/>
Tobacco, we handle Trust <lb/>
goods, Hart <lb/>
Miss Rosa Randolph came from <lb/>
House to visit Mis. <lb/>
Hodges. <lb/>
For peaches, apples, corn <lb/>
tomatoes, t-c, apply to E. E. <lb/>
On. <lb/>
Wednesday evening in <lb/>
church at Hill, Mr. <lb/>
J E. a prominent mer <lb/>
Chant of and Miss Mat- <lb/>
lie of, Snow Hill, were <lb/>
united marriage by the pastor <lb/>
that extend con- <lb/>
Now we have plenty the <lb/>
wagon and cart <lb/>
wheels and will sell them as cheap <lb/>
as any one. <lb/>
Ayden Milling Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
The ladies say that Cannon <lb/>
have the prettiest line of <lb/>
goods in town. <lb/>
Notice you <lb/>
your cotton ginned nice and <lb/>
in order that you might realize <lb/>
better prices for it, bring it to the <lb/>
Ayden Milling A Mfg. Co., Ayden, <lb/>
N. e. <lb/>
K. A <lb/>
market for beef, fresh meats, <lb/>
sage, and fresh fish. <lb/>
A high grade, smart graceful, <lb/>
well made durable buggy can be <lb/>
in any style at any at <lb/>
the Ayden Milling A Mfg. <lb/>
We continue to <lb/>
buggies Ac. for we do not <lb/>
set apace <lb/>
A Mfg, Co., Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
Fancy candies, oranges, apples <lb/>
and bananas at B. B. a Go's. <lb/>
For guano sowers see M. B. <lb/>
Tripp A The beat. <lb/>
Carlos Harris says that Harrison <lb/>
Town and Country paints and <lb/>
colors are by far the beat foods <lb/>
that he ever used and that it <lb/>
knocked several other <lb/>
brands is a test at Greenville last <lb/>
summer. This ii told by J. <lb/>
H. Smith a Bro. <lb/>
tan and white slippers all sizes at <lb/>
J. R. Smith A Bro <lb/>
Old man what makes you always <lb/>
go to J. R. Smith A Bro., to do <lb/>
I can <lb/>
always get any thing I want <lb/>
the boys. <lb/>
I do know that J. R. Smith A <lb/>
Bro., have the prettiest and <lb/>
cent calico and ginghams in town. <lb/>
That last car choice hay that J. <lb/>
R Smith Bra, received is fine. <lb/>
Lee lime is good for any <lb/>
crop and a farmer should use it <lb/>
freely, at J. R. Smith A Bra <lb/>
That lace and embroidery <lb/>
is the prettiest goods in town for <lb/>
baby dresses at J. R. Smith A Bro. <lb/>
King Quality shoes are the beet. <lb/>
Ton will find them at J. J. Ed- <lb/>
ward S Son <lb/>
Complete stock spring clothing <lb/>
at Edward A Sou. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
In order to make room <lb/>
next days we will sell our <lb/>
regular high grade buggies at <lb/>
exceptionally low prices. This is <lb/>
no lake, but strictly <lb/>
Milling and Co, <lb/>
Ayden, ff. O <lb/>
Just received our stuck of <lb/>
pants. J. J. Edwards Son. <lb/>
For heart <lb/>
shingles by J. H. Tripp A Bra. <lb/>
The of the Milling <lb/>
Co. which has <lb/>
repair is now in in first condition <lb/>
and they are prepared to <lb/>
shortest notice all who <lb/>
with patronage. <lb/>
They also call special attention to <lb/>
their line of <lb/>
We we can't interest the <lb/>
meD who prefer to walk or the <lb/>
men who will not believe that our <lb/>
buggies are the most economical at <lb/>
their price. <lb/>
We know vehicles and values, <lb/>
we also know the buggies we build <lb/>
sell we <lb/>
Come to see us Whet he. <lb/>
you buy not. If you can do <lb/>
sew here we do n expect <lb/>
your patronage. <lb/>
Milling and Co. <lb/>
Ayden, X r <lb/>
The sensible earrings buyer <lb/>
I knows a little often <lb/>
saves many doll is. lie know <lb/>
that here is a price below Ch a <lb/>
cannot be or sold. <lb/>
Our buggies represent h certain <lb/>
in style <lb/>
offered <lb/>
j Milling A Mfg. Co, Ayden. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Something new in Ayden J. <lb/>
Smith it Bro., have n whole <lb/>
cur load of cooking and beating <lb/>
stoves, and you can net our chub- <lb/>
by coming at mice. <lb/>
neighbor have seen <lb/>
Simplex fertilizer distributor l <lb/>
J. R, Smith A Bro. It puts it <lb/>
in any quantity you want does <lb/>
not waste any at the ends of row <lb/>
it is a cheap machine. <lb/>
Go to J. J. Edwards Son for <lb/>
your spring <lb/>
A. Griffin has first <lb/>
class brick fir sale and is burning <lb/>
new kilns constantly. When in <lb/>
see him or write <lb/>
Oranges, apples, and all I Those white and tea slippers at <lb/>
fruits kept by A J. B. Smith A Bra, are <lb/>
horn. for children I have seen this <lb/>
Ladies misses and children <lb/>
M. B. Tripp A Br. are no <lb/>
to wake wooden legs for <lb/>
cripple horse or mules. Their <lb/>
latest was a success. <lb/>
The freshet loaf bread right <lb/>
me A <lb/>
Get the On cotton planter the <lb/>
best on the market at J. Smith <lb/>
Bro. <lb/>
Did you know yon could get <lb/>
of old time Gophers and any <lb/>
size blade you want at J. R. Smith <lb/>
A Bro. <lb/>
We will beginning on <lb/>
day June 21st offer cash our <lb/>
stock of dry goods <lb/>
shoes hats Ac, at puces <lb/>
before of Jo the town of <lb/>
Ayden. Our stock is too large <lb/>
and we take this means of reducing <lb/>
same. We have just gotten a <lb/>
large lot run <lb/>
Ding at per yard, white sheet- <lb/>
per c. Jackson <lb/>
a Co. Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
Geo. Elli, of Greenville, spent <lb/>
the Sabbath her.-. <lb/>
My office will be I for about <lb/>
one I shall be <lb/>
taking <lb/>
J. lay <lb/>
Slippers, and straw hats <lb/>
are being sold cheap <lb/>
cash by Cannon <lb/>
bay, oats, ship <lb/>
brand, seed hull- and <lb/>
on hand. Cannon At Tyson. <lb/>
Those art <lb/>
C II j,,,, <lb/>
beauties <lb/>
Don't forge. <lb/>
Tyson can supply tour wants <lb/>
in nine. <lb/>
for sale -i- A Tyson. <lb/>
annul. A Tyson of <lb/>
selling the r pretty en <lb/>
tends ii,. me -i u- e- <lb/>
Royal F M. . <lb/>
Ti h. e are <lb/>
OP <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
AYDEN, N. <lb/>
At the close of business May 29th, 1905. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and Discounts. f ti <lb/>
Furniture and Fixtures <lb/>
Demand Lo N <lb/>
Due from Hanks. <lb/>
Cash Items, <lb/>
Gold Coin, Oil <lb/>
Silver Coin, <lb/>
National Bank notes and <lb/>
other U. S notes <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Total. <lb/>
1,622.00 <lb/>
Capital stock paid in. <lb/>
Surplus fund <lb/>
Undivided profits less <lb/>
expenses, <lb/>
Dividends unpaid . <lb/>
subject to check, <lb/>
Cashier's 196.82 <lb/>
Total. <lb/>
144.610 <lb/>
beat <lb/>
meal <lb/>
in <lb/>
Sleep Comfortable <lb/>
-BY. <lb/>
SLEEPING ON THE BEST. <lb/>
Royal Elastic Felt Mattresses are <lb/>
to all others. <lb/>
Our piece Enamel Bed Room Suits are rec- <lb/>
as the best <lb/>
Remember every Royal Elastic Mattress and <lb/>
Beds are sold under guarantee-If not the best, price re- <lb/>
funded. <lb/>
OUR STOCK IS <lb/>
EVERY DETAIL <lb/>
IN <lb/>
if <lb/>
We k. <lb/>
Bed Sp-i <lb/>
Iliad , <lb/>
-on. <lb/>
anyone <lb/>
Kill nil n ,. <lb/>
m s, Ck Si. <lb/>
If , Up gin <lb/>
ii <lb/>
in <lb/>
Floor Covering of every description, Sideboards, China <lb/>
Closets, Book Cases, Parlor Suits and Chairs of all <lb/>
kinds. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
I.- an n <lb/>
X. i <lb/>
H ; . <lb/>
t inn. i i , <lb/>
he lie-.- ii <lb/>
for two mid <lb/>
I In- lie la on <lb/>
M II h in it I<lb/>
ii.- <lb/>
Al , <lb/>
YOU NED FURNITURE <lb/>
You will be consulting the interest of your pocket book <lb/>
. held to investigate our stock. Our and Bed <lb/>
are perfection in making. Try a pair. <lb/>
l tested<lb/>
f e-in. <lb/>
by Prof <lb/>
B. K <lb/>
arrange- <lb/>
A. H. Taft, <lb/>
NEXT DOOR TO SAM WHITE'S. <lb/>
need of brick <lb/>
Ayden, N. <lb/>
J. H. <lb/>
HOG CHOLERA <lb/>
It Has Never Failed. <lb/>
references on demand. For <lb/>
sale in all country stores and <lb/>
drugstores. Call it No Cure <lb/>
No Pay. <lb/>
AYDEN, N. C. <lb/>
ASK FOR <lb/>
Scientifically <lb/>
Constructed. <lb/>
ULTRA <lb/>
A Shoe for <lb/>
Women. <lb/>
new <lb/>
J. A Bro. gives me <lb/>
more for my shoulders <lb/>
chickens and eggs then anybody <lb/>
else. <lb/>
A neat 5-room house with gar- <lb/>
den and all necessary houses <lb/>
located on main street in a good <lb/>
neighborhood for rent by J. R. <lb/>
Smith A Bro. <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/>
nice try them. <lb/>
Pianos and at J. II. <lb/>
Tripp A Bro. We sell them <lb/>
for cash on credit term, Ayden, <lb/>
That rock salt at J. R. A <lb/>
Bro., is the best thing I can get <lb/>
for my stock. They only eat what <lb/>
they want of it at a time. <lb/>
Singer sewing machines sold <lb/>
for cash or on installment <lb/>
J. at It Tripp A Bro., Ayden N. C <lb/>
Simplex guano distributors, Cox <lb/>
planters and repairs at J. R. <lb/>
Smith A Bro. <lb/>
COLUMBIA FLOUR, <lb/>
If it give you <lb/>
your dealer <lb/>
pay you for returning it. <lb/>
R. F. <lb/>
Dist. N. C. <lb/>
WINTER <lb/>
CLOTHES <lb/>
Time to lay away winter <lb/>
clothes pretty soon. Better <lb/>
see to it that they are protect- <lb/>
ed from 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 can't near any of <lb/>
them. They're cheaper than <lb/>
buying new clothes. <lb/>
M. M. SAULS, Ph. G. <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Dixon <lb/>
AND <lb/>
Use Railroad, <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
THE ULTRA SHOE for women <lb/>
is with careful reference <lb/>
to the most minute and <lb/>
is mo perfected in its numerous <lb/>
styles tint there is no other <lb/>
shoo on the market selling <lb/>
at the price tho Ultra dues, its <lb/>
superior, if its equal. <lb/>
Here is the fundamental basis <lb/>
of a perfect employ <lb/>
our own expert designers, and <lb/>
every Ultra Shoe is made over <lb/>
a last scientifically <lb/>
to meet the closest variations <lb/>
of width and in <lb/>
footwear. <lb/>
Tho Ultra Shoe meats every <lb/>
requirement of the <lb/>
whims of <lb/>
We carry SHOE, for men, in Oxfords, Tans, etc. <lb/>
Pulley Bowen, <lb/>
THE HOME OF FASHIONS. <lb/>
Try a Pair <lb/>
oar VICTOR SPRINGS and one our OS- <lb/>
PATENT ELASTIC MAT- <lb/>
and if you are more than satisfied we <lb/>
will prise. <lb/>
Tex. <lb/>
TAFT VANDYKE. <lb/>
POOR PRINT <lb/>
. .<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019528_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
saw <lb/>
I I <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
AND <lb/>
P. j. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor <lb/>
post at Greenville, N. C, as second class matter. <lb/>
upon <lb/>
A desired at every post office Pitt a-d adjoining counties. <lb/>
in to fiction <lb/>
Pitt County, N. C, 1905 <lb/>
As time change nature seems to <lb/>
change also, what is puzzling <lb/>
us right now is how did the people <lb/>
get along in olden limes when there <lb/>
was no such thing as appendicitis <lb/>
We guess our ancestors didn't have <lb/>
any vermiform appendix at all. and <lb/>
too, these numerous breakfast foods <lb/>
not on the market back in <lb/>
those days, yet they lived a long <lb/>
time back there <lb/>
If that genius who succeeded i n <lb/>
growing the potato can only <lb/>
grow one without eye, we may <lb/>
possibly see a rise the of <lb/>
potatoes. <lb/>
IT IN THE BUD. -s <lb/>
I over to court. This record a <lb/>
Are not the place of vice. <lb/>
cried again <lb/>
from th m P <lb/>
j showing favor of a <lb/>
j over open saloons. It is well <lb/>
, the homes or om . . . <lb/>
begin, and where know,, dial a majority of ewe in the <lb/>
the place to atop I mayor's are for drunkenness, <lb/>
p w, the year ending June, <lb/>
the paragraph iron,; ti,,,,.,. saloons in Greenville, <lb/>
i stand will give daring the last year there <lb/>
Asheville is making all <lb/>
to royally and to <lb/>
make the sojourn of the quill drivers <lb/>
in the of the an enjoy- <lb/>
able occasion. <lb/>
It is said that is not will <lb/>
to sue for peace; that she wants <lb/>
to put the initiative upon Japan. <lb/>
We will just bet our last summer <lb/>
straw hat that when is caught <lb/>
suing it will be for a big pile of <lb/>
peace. Japan don t <lb/>
want peace; she is baring the time <lb/>
of her life in this war affair. <lb/>
gee it- In the I But for the fact <lb/>
evil in the homes, <lb/>
we might say <lb/>
Churches too, are the right places to <lb/>
existence of a distillery, and that <lb/>
In over whiskey from the saloon <lb/>
made business for blind tigers, there <lb/>
hare been fewer cases <lb/>
suppress an evil yon must during the rear. <lb/>
it in the bud. Don't until it improvement in favor <lb/>
has grown into a far reaching dis- , large and <lb/>
The midsummer meeting of the <lb/>
North Baptist <lb/>
at Jackson Springs, Moore county, <lb/>
on the 28th, and will continue until <lb/>
the <lb/>
form The preacher, j <lb/>
Sunday school teacher, and <lb/>
runt than either, the parent, am under <lb/>
should exert every influence lo circumstances for instance. <lb/>
train and educate the the Baltic fleet won a over <lb/>
j iris of the land to ever fishermen in <lb/>
moral and the North Sea, and when they <lb/>
If Th- men I against the Japanese they were <lb/>
i men are not properly trained in I helpless and were quickly put out <lb/>
and church all the of They are very brave in <lb/>
The merchant in Greenville have <lb/>
been wasting money on their side <lb/>
walks long enough for them to make <lb/>
a change. They are continually <lb/>
making repairs on the sidewalks in <lb/>
front of their They In <lb/>
brick last never more than <lb/>
eighteen mouths. It would greatly <lb/>
improve the appearance of the town <lb/>
The two propound Republican <lb/>
papers fur Greensboro bid fair to <lb/>
lock horns, but thou they will get <lb/>
along as well as the three dailies at <lb/>
the capital. <lb/>
WINTERVILLE <lb/>
about some people is <lb/>
that they never discover how little <lb/>
insignificant they are until they <lb/>
are ready to the <lb/>
the land combined will nut make <lb/>
moral. Christian people out of them. <lb/>
There can be enacted and en- <lb/>
forced against certain crimes, hut <lb/>
the idea cf into the <lb/>
hearts of men and women a sense of <lb/>
conduct as a in <lb/>
t the least. <lb/>
there law that prevents the <lb/>
the interior of Russia <lb/>
helpless women and children- The <lb/>
Jewish race quake tremble be- <lb/>
fore these wonderful but <lb/>
in the war between them and Japan <lb/>
there is not a single victory to their <lb/>
The last Russian <lb/>
took place at Lodz, and a great many <lb/>
frail women and children are <lb/>
A funny law has been passed <lb/>
Indiana, that of requiring revolves; <lb/>
found on prisoners to be destroyed. <lb/>
This smells cheesy. Smith <lb/>
Wesson and Iver Johnson must <lb/>
have been hanging around when <lb/>
that law was passed. <lb/>
to the front with her <lb/>
bale of new cotton for the sea- <lb/>
son. It was sold at auction and <lb/>
brought cents a pound. <lb/>
The crusade against vagrancy in <lb/>
various places seems to have stopped <lb/>
all of a sudden. Surely they haven't <lb/>
all gone to work. <lb/>
you'll like, <lb/>
come here. <lb/>
Our styles are not like every <lb/>
other <lb/>
We keep things that an <lb/>
Styles 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 the best things and we get <lb/>
them. <lb/>
FRANK WILSON, <lb/>
The King Clothier. <lb/>
conceiving and harboring the be red among the dead and <lb/>
to commit murder and la Russia ready for peace In our <lb/>
might as well try to do this as to <lb/>
try to against immoral- <lb/>
The only solution and remedy <lb/>
lies in the homes and churches, and <lb/>
to these and these only must we <lb/>
look for the remedy and suppression <lb/>
of existing evils. All the laws of <lb/>
our land cannot prevent vice. <lb/>
Nothing but the proper home train- <lb/>
can prevent it. <lb/>
CHINESE BOYCOTT. <lb/>
opinion she needs another blowup <lb/>
or down Doesn't make much differ <lb/>
how the blow is administered <lb/>
Georgia has covered herself in <lb/>
again. A few night ago <lb/>
a mob went to the jail at Watkins- <lb/>
ville. in that state, forced the <lb/>
to open the door and lynched nine <lb/>
prisoners, one of them white and <lb/>
eight colored. <lb/>
The reason so many <lb/>
broke is because -they make it a <lb/>
habit of breaking every dollar they <lb/>
get their on <lb/>
The way cotton is acting on the <lb/>
New York cotton exchange makes <lb/>
us think that Dan Sully is hanging <lb/>
around there again. <lb/>
Gratifying News. <lb/>
The seriousness of the Chinese <lb/>
trade situation struck this country <lb/>
very suddenly with <lb/>
and when it became apparent that <lb/>
merchant Shanghai <lb/>
other commercial centers were de- <lb/>
in their effort to boycott <lb/>
American manufactured goods, the <lb/>
authorities at Washington were <lb/>
quick to t. The cabinet was mus- <lb/>
together, and the matter <lb/>
discussed, and as a result of <lb/>
that Mr. Roosevelt went to <lb/>
work to try to satisfy the indignant <lb/>
Chinese <lb/>
All this trouble has grown oat of <lb/>
the exclusion of th celestials of this <lb/>
country. But it remains t he sees <lb/>
how the Chinese take this <lb/>
lion. It may be that <lb/>
nation cannot be diverted, and this <lb/>
country will have to act very careful <lb/>
if they smooth over these difference. <lb/>
The warmest thing we have seen <lb/>
crime down the pike is the editorial <lb/>
which appeared in a recent issue of <lb/>
the Charlotte Observer, in which <lb/>
Editor Caldwell unmercifully scores <lb/>
one Rev. A. -I. It reads <lb/>
as follows. <lb/>
twenty-eight years I have <lb/>
been writing newspaper editorials <lb/>
and it has been my fortune within <lb/>
that time that many have <lb/>
barked at my heels. Some of these <lb/>
have left the Stat between suns and <lb/>
others have dropped into obscurity. <lb/>
Others still remain. The most <lb/>
malignant and indecent of all these <lb/>
dogs is A J. preacher, <lb/>
reformer, editor of a so-called <lb/>
paper and common <lb/>
It looks like China is determined <lb/>
to make all that is possible out <lb/>
the of the <lb/>
States with regard to immigrants <lb/>
from the Flowery Kingdom. Their <lb/>
indignation may them too far- <lb/>
Japan can do more the way of <lb/>
bringing about, peace than all the <lb/>
combined powers put together <lb/>
It sill take some time but the job <lb/>
will be well done and will be lasting <lb/>
Stand back and let scrap. <lb/>
Biggest Bargains in all kinds of Merchandise. The cheap- <lb/>
est reductions we ever offered. Th represents a great <lb/>
There are scores of people who loss of money, but it is one of cleaning the odd <lb/>
lots at half price and loss Silks. Goods, Trimmings. <lb/>
Linings Braids, Lac-a, Embroideries. Lawns, Men's and <lb/>
Slippers, and Clothing. All reduced i some <lb/>
i i. Improve your by coming eat y <lb/>
swallow their conscience without the <lb/>
slightest fear of having a case of <lb/>
indigestion. <lb/>
and Slippers to go <lb/>
The announcement of the date of in tan white Hen's suite that were <lb/>
the the two Republican I slippers <lb/>
papers at Greensboro has not yet i slippers <lb/>
been made. Slipper <lb/>
It appears that the <lb/>
war has satiated the war spirit <lb/>
of more countries than Germany <lb/>
and France. <lb/>
and make their places of business <lb/>
more attractive if they would swing <lb/>
together, each man paying his pro- <lb/>
share, and put in a good asphalt <lb/>
side-walk on each side of Evans <lb/>
street, or even cement would be bet <lb/>
and cheaper in the end. And <lb/>
again, why not save some of the <lb/>
money the town is expending in the <lb/>
present street force, and in the re- <lb/>
pairing of the after every <lb/>
storm, and pave or macadamize our <lb/>
streets and side-walks all over town. <lb/>
An interesting comparison may be <lb/>
draws from the review of the mayor's <lb/>
court as reported by Mayor Wooten <lb/>
to the aldermen Thursday night for <lb/>
the past year and the record for the <lb/>
previous year. For the year ending <lb/>
there were <lb/>
arrests by the police upon warrants <lb/>
issued by th mayor. Of this <lb/>
ad judged guilty, <lb/>
not guilty, and bound over to <lb/>
Superior For the <lb/>
year ending June 30th, 1904, there <lb/>
were arrest, adjudged <lb/>
The bale of cotton grown <lb/>
this year was sold a few days ago <lb/>
in Texas for thirty cents <lb/>
a pound. We hope this is an <lb/>
cation that the fleecy staple will <lb/>
bring a good price this fall. <lb/>
It would be a good idea to have <lb/>
little Willie's picture made before <lb/>
the Fourth. In future years you <lb/>
can shew different ones what a <lb/>
pretty little boy Willie was before <lb/>
he got his eyes blown out. <lb/>
has been awarded two <lb/>
more year in the penitentiary. <lb/>
This is all right a far as <lb/>
goes, but ex Slate Senator Greene <lb/>
and Heavers haven't got what's <lb/>
to them. <lb/>
There was doing <lb/>
Wednesday in the base ball line at <lb/>
Kinston. Grenville one, Kinston <lb/>
none. <lb/>
lie <lb/>
, , in. lo A reduced <lb/>
to 10.00, <lb/>
. All shirts <lb/>
ad and shirts now <lb/>
and boy's Straw <lb/>
Hats, reduced one half <lb/>
Umbrellas steel rods <lb/>
fall inch were and <lb/>
Lases and Hamburg reduced now <lb/>
one half and 2.00 Urn <lb/>
Ladies Hand now <lb/>
kerchiefs all atone Big mark down in Milli- <lb/>
Talcum powder nary. 1.00, 1.50 and <lb/>
Cc Lawns <lb/>
Lawns <lb/>
Lawn- <lb/>
SILK RIBBONS <lb/>
quality all colors <lb/>
If peace is not reached very soon <lb/>
bids fare to break the <lb/>
sprinting record of Russia. <lb/>
Next week the <lb/>
editors will b doing Asheville. <lb/>
We hope to have a hand in it. <lb/>
It is not a question now as to who <lb/>
started the war between Russia and <lb/>
Japan. Who is going to stop it is the <lb/>
question at issue. <lb/>
why pay more <lb/>
C. B. R. G- Corsets <lb/>
11.26, now <lb/>
Special prices in all <lb/>
mer <lb/>
to reduce the <lb/>
stock <lb/>
Misses Patent Leather and <lb/>
Tan Shoes and Slippers <lb/>
to close quick <lb/>
and<lb/>
Men s and all wool <lb/>
Serge suits, worth <lb/>
we close at <lb/>
it hot enough for This <lb/>
question is generally by <lb/>
who haven't anything else to do. <lb/>
Men who work and attend to their <lb/>
own business haven't got time to <lb/>
be asking such foolish questions. <lb/>
At this season of the year we all <lb/>
know it is hot enough for <lb/>
A. widow in Pennsylvania has <lb/>
brought suit against a man <lb/>
year old for breach of promise. If <lb/>
The rise cotton now does net <lb/>
do the farmers good the <lb/>
majority of farmers, the ones who <lb/>
needed good price more, forced <lb/>
to of the staple for about <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
liquor question in some <lb/>
is getting about as hot a <lb/>
the genuine article <lb/>
It i authentically stated that the <lb/>
Japanese have mastered the theory <lb/>
and practice of inoculation of their <lb/>
armies against all forms of diseases <lb/>
common to war, even typhoid fever. <lb/>
man in Goshen, lad., suing <lb/>
his wife for absolute divorce. The <lb/>
charge being that wife dance <lb/>
Disorder and revolt is the order <lb/>
the day in Russia, and this spirit <lb/>
is rapidly spreading. <lb/>
1.75 Hats now <lb/>
and 1-15 <lb/>
white Duck <lb/>
Hats <lb/>
Big lot baby <lb/>
One hundred ladies <lb/>
white Hand- <lb/>
kerchiefs, worth <lb/>
each, now for <lb/>
H Suspenders, the <lb/>
best kind row <lb/>
Cuff Buttons, Scarf Pins, <lb/>
Ladies waist sets all go <lb/>
at half the original price <lb/>
The Dundee so <lb/>
mush used, black <lb/>
and navy, now <lb/>
e. L. Wilkinson Go. <lb/>
Whenever the firecracker <lb/>
is invented we can look for quieter <lb/>
4th of July's. <lb/>
Se far Mr. Blackburn got <lb/>
a single scalp to adorn his belt. <lb/>
the old gentleman he will to much. Mo been <lb/>
plead th of limitation. giving him a sang dance also. patch. <lb/>
It is that than <lb/>
person annually disappear in the <lb/>
United States. The amount of money <lb/>
that disappears them is too <lb/>
large to mention. Wilmington Dis- <lb/>
Hardware. <lb/>
For Cook Stoves Rang, <lb/>
Heaters Pumps, Guns, <lb/>
unit ion, One and Two Horse <lb/>
Steel Plows, neat Cutters and <lb/>
Stutters. 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/>
Look up Mr. Cooper ask bin <lb/>
prices of anything that you <lb/>
are interested in. <lb/>
Spanish peanuts for seed at T. <lb/>
N. Manning <lb/>
We have been informed that <lb/>
A. W. Do. pay highest <lb/>
price for country prices. <lb/>
Car flour just received. <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
have moved into my <lb/>
new store the depot. I keep <lb/>
a good line of hardware. Have a <lb/>
black smith and and repair shop <lb/>
and livery stable in connection. <lb/>
W. L. House. <lb/>
another <lb/>
of ladies, men and children <lb/>
Harrington <lb/>
your eyes feel like there <lb/>
Do they you <lb/>
and feel tired reading Do <lb/>
bey <lb/>
while asleep That <lb/>
paired vision and should he <lb/>
by wearing eye B. <lb/>
T. Cox carry a full line of <lb/>
and can fit your <lb/>
with the proper <lb/>
or men to solicit <lb/>
orders for stock Pitt <lb/>
For particulars enclose <lb/>
stamp. Box Winterville; N. C, <lb/>
We handle T. W. Wood <lb/>
Sous and millet <lb/>
T. Cox and Bro. <lb/>
Nice lot of glass ware crock- <lb/>
always on Harrington <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
White's Black Liniment, spec <lb/>
recommended for the human <lb/>
family, fine for perfectly <lb/>
balanced, sub-cutaneous com <lb/>
For sale by <lb/>
B. T. Cox Bro. <lb/>
Don't worry over that lot <lb/>
of cotton you had left over when <lb/>
yon got ginning your last <lb/>
lots. be Pitt Co. Oil Mill, bays <lb/>
seed cotton in any quantity the <lb/>
best market price paid every <lb/>
For Plymouth Rock <lb/>
per Fob orders <lb/>
fined as fast as the hens lay. H. <lb/>
Jackson Winterville N. C. <lb/>
At the drugstore there we think <lb/>
she moat can be pleased <lb/>
table silverware and jewelry. <lb/>
White's Colic and Kidney Cure, <lb/>
the combination kidney medicine <lb/>
for stock and a <lb/>
at the Store <lb/>
A few subscribers the Eastern <lb/>
area bit in arrears. <lb/>
I have the Winterville list <lb/>
the list on all the trail routes from <lb/>
Winterville of all subscribers <lb/>
and am prepared to give receipts <lb/>
for the paper. Come see me <lb/>
and pay up, make me happy, make <lb/>
the editor happy, and get happy <lb/>
yourself. I've got a good <lb/>
for all those who pay for a <lb/>
year in advance. <lb/>
A. D. Johnston. <lb/>
Farmers who raise their hay can <lb/>
be supplied with the well known <lb/>
Mowing machines and <lb/>
rakes by Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
call see them. <lb/>
Try a bottle of Dr. <lb/>
for indigestion at the drag <lb/>
Our spring and summer stock of <lb/>
dress notions ladies and gents <lb/>
slippers has arrived and our stock <lb/>
of ladies dress good trimmings <lb/>
Ac. is more complete than ever <lb/>
before. Consisting of mohair <lb/>
suitings, <lb/>
batiste, weather proof, batiste in <lb/>
all the latest c <lb/>
The are respectfully invited <lb/>
to call and inspect our <lb/>
Barber a Co. <lb/>
For hay, corn and oats, go to <lb/>
Harrington Barber x Co. <lb/>
new corned herrings, just <lb/>
received Harrington Barber A Co. <lb/>
Corned herrings cheap, at <lb/>
Ange's. <lb/>
For Holt tobacco time alarm <lb/>
clocks and see It. G. <lb/>
Chapman Co. <lb/>
Highest price for cotton seed <lb/>
paid by Pi it County Oil Mill. <lb/>
Go to T. N. Maiming .- <lb/>
fresh candies, nuts, raisins and <lb/>
choice <lb/>
We carry samples of over five I <lb/>
hundred wall I <lb/>
We are prepared to furnish y a <lb/>
cheap as the cheapest. Come j <lb/>
examine before <lb/>
B. T. Cox a Bro. <lb/>
The Pitt Oil Mill is now <lb/>
Cotton Seed. They pay, <lb/>
I the highest cash price or will ex.; <lb/>
for meal. When <lb/>
; are ready write for prices. <lb/>
There is no reason why Pitt Co. <lb/>
I should have to such <lb/>
for they <lb/>
raise their own wheat and the <lb/>
Winterville Mfg. Co. is thoroughly, <lb/>
equipped tor making splendid <lb/>
flour <lb/>
All colors of paint, and yellow <lb/>
at Harrington Barber a Co. <lb/>
Have now on band nice line of <lb/>
lass crockery all <lb/>
cheap. Harrington Barber <lb/>
Lace and cheap as <lb/>
cheapest at A. W. A. Co. <lb/>
made on <lb/>
goods and Chapman <lb/>
We hive on a lot of nice <lb/>
will now go <lb/>
below cost. <lb/>
We will sell Ht some price. <lb/>
k. G. Chapman Co. <lb/>
paint, guaranteed <lb/>
the at Barber <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
For Pine Tar hooey, Walkers <lb/>
I tonic, Dr. Bell's Anti Pain <lb/>
Dr. Bell's Dye salve, and a <lb/>
sure cure for all heart troubles, see <lb/>
T. N. Manning Co. <lb/>
need of any thing in <lb/>
tin crockery and ware line <lb/>
be sure to see us buying. <lb/>
It. G. Chapman <lb/>
Some try to meet. <lb/>
buggies prices. A few try to <lb/>
I them <lb/>
j But none undertake to do both. <lb/>
Another large shipment of shoes <lb/>
styles and lies prices very <lb/>
I reasonable. <lb/>
IA Co. <lb/>
Paint your house how is the <lb/>
time, Ange A Co. h the old <lb/>
reliable Town <lb/>
where are <lb/>
I am going to A. W. Ange Co's. <lb/>
they are selling goods way <lb/>
down cheap now. <lb/>
Special prices on ice <lb/>
cream freezers at R. G. Chapman <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
AND STILL WE WIN. <lb/>
ENTRY OF VACANT LAND. <lb/>
W. H. Johnson enters claims <lb/>
one hundred and fifty acres of land, <lb/>
more or less, adjoining the lands of <lb/>
Jesse Sutton, A. G. Cox's Ed- <lb/>
wards or Sophia Edwards land <lb/>
others in and near the Horse Neck <lb/>
and the Great opening in Pitt <lb/>
county, N. C. and township. <lb/>
This June 8th, <lb/>
W. H Johnson. <lb/>
Any person or persons claiming <lb/>
title to or interest in the above de- <lb/>
scribed land, must file their protest <lb/>
with me in writing within the next <lb/>
thirty days, against the issuing a <lb/>
warrant or will be barred by law. <lb/>
This June 8th, R. Williams. <lb/>
Taker fer Pitt Co <lb/>
ARNOLD'S BALSAM <lb/>
to <lb/>
Cholera By <lb/>
L and <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
About four hundred people saw <lb/>
Greenville win the <lb/>
game from Friday after- <lb/>
noon. It slowest game <lb/>
seen here this . For awhile <lb/>
it was something then it began <lb/>
t slump, an I it <lb/>
plumped, and it -lumped <lb/>
even the team grew careless, d <lb/>
played base ball. <lb/>
The crowd went to the park for <lb/>
a good game, and everybody ex- <lb/>
it usually has <lb/>
a fast game. <lb/>
There were no spectacular play- <lb/>
to make the fans grow wild, only <lb/>
a long hit or to <lb/>
applaud and talk about. <lb/>
The features of the game <lb/>
Greenville was the hitting of John <lb/>
Ivey Smith, win, got four nits of <lb/>
live chances, the of <lb/>
James behind second, and the all <lb/>
round loose work of the team. <lb/>
A team always has an off day <lb/>
once in a while, Friday was the <lb/>
day. Next Tuesday they will be <lb/>
in trim and will give Washington <lb/>
all she is looking for, perhaps <lb/>
a great deal <lb/>
Greenville did do one right good <lb/>
stunt didn't she. It was <lb/>
good work when she kept the <lb/>
tors from soon when <lb/>
three men on base. with nothing <lb/>
out It looked so bright for them <lb/>
that began to feel <lb/>
show their big pitcher, began to <lb/>
smile, for he was at the bat. <lb/>
was counting of these hard, <lb/>
corking, stinging singles; one of <lb/>
t you usually two <lb/>
on, but he was like <lb/>
sometimes count little chickens <lb/>
and Tarboro had three men on <lb/>
bases hen there men were <lb/>
It would have beau uneasy shut <lb/>
out, but it. nobody <lb/>
Three bits are what they are <lb/>
credited with, while we made font <lb/>
times that many. Eight error <lb/>
all we made, and they mad <lb/>
Nice game wasn't ill <lb/>
pshaw, nobody cares how it was. <lb/>
just so we won it, and nobody will <lb/>
kick on a bad game in Washington <lb/>
just M it our way, but it is <lb/>
going to take hard work to win it <lb/>
team can work and the game <lb/>
is coming to us. <lb/>
Night Was Her <lb/>
would cough nearly ail <lb/>
writes Mrs. Chas. Apple <lb/>
gate, of Alexandria, <lb/>
could hardly get a sleep. I bad <lb/>
consumption so bad that if I <lb/>
walked a block I would cough <lb/>
and spit blood, but, <lb/>
when all other medicines failed, <lb/>
three bottles of Dr. <lb/>
New wholly cured me <lb/>
and I gained It's ab- <lb/>
guaranteed to cure Coughs, <lb/>
Cold, La Grippe, <lb/>
all Throat and Lung Troubles. <lb/>
Price and 11.00. Trial bottles <lb/>
free at J. L. drug tore. <lb/>
No Pity Shawn. <lb/>
year after me con- <lb/>
writ F. A. <lb/>
Ala. had a <lb/>
of Pile causing tumors. <lb/>
When all failed <lb/>
Salve me. Equally for Burns <lb/>
and all aches and pains. Only <lb/>
at Wooten's Drug Store. <lb/>
Brutally Tortured. <lb/>
A case cam to that fr <lb/>
persistent and unmerciful torture <lb/>
ha perhaps never been equaled. <lb/>
Joe of Calif, <lb/>
writ, year I endured <lb/>
J pain from <lb/>
and nothing; relieved me <lb/>
though I tried every things known. <lb/>
I came across Bitters and <lb/>
Ike greatest earth <lb/>
for that trouble. A few bottles of <lb/>
it completely relieved and cured <lb/>
Just a good fer Liver sad <lb/>
Kidney trouble and general de- <lb/>
Only Satisfaction <lb/>
guaranteed by Jno. L. Wooten, <lb/>
druggist. <lb/>
Working Night and Day. <lb/>
Th busiest and mightiest little <lb/>
thing that ever was is Dr. <lb/>
King's New Life fills. There pills <lb/>
change weakness into strength, <lb/>
listlessness into energy, brain fag <lb/>
into mental power. They're won- <lb/>
building up the health. <lb/>
Only per box. Sold by Jno, L. <lb/>
Wooten. <lb/>
Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets <lb/>
A Tor Bob <lb/>
Health Vigor. <lb/>
A for . <lb/>
ii PROMISING <lb/>
OF FIVE <lb/>
Trouble. Pimples, <lb/>
Bad Headache <lb/>
and <lb/>
Rocky lea In lab- <lb/>
lot form, as a box. by <lb/>
FOR PEOPLE <lb/>
Ml I I I II II <lb/>
In the early days of my <lb/>
would he absurd to <lb/>
0.1 II it i was considered <lb/>
promising. The provost himself, <lb/>
when went to breakfast him <lb/>
on the last day of th summer term <lb/>
was enough to tell me so. <lb/>
he remarked, <lb/>
from you, Mr. <lb/>
wish, I rejoined, th <lb/>
college may not be <lb/>
a little more <lb/>
he pursued, class is. in the <lb/>
opinion of the college, within <lb/>
your <lb/>
I believe I blushed. The young <lb/>
lady sitting opposite to me Bung up <lb/>
her eyelashes for demur. unused <lb/>
glance. <lb/>
The provost smiled kindly. <lb/>
you are a promising young <lb/>
man. Mr. lie. <lb/>
bless my soul o'clock, and <lb/>
the vice chancellor i.- waiting fur <lb/>
said the young lady <lb/>
opposite to me. <lb/>
The provost held out his hand. <lb/>
clasped it believe that ho sup- <lb/>
posed me be going at the same <lb/>
time, lie went. I remained. <lb/>
I observed, with a pro- <lb/>
found sigh, day of <lb/>
said the young lady. <lb/>
said were to <lb/>
and unlock the pale at the bottom <lb/>
of garden could reach <lb/>
rooms that <lb/>
it the she <lb/>
asked. <lb/>
will he too short any- <lb/>
said <lb/>
A few minutes later sat down <lb/>
on a bench. Daisy stopped, looked <lb/>
doubtful, shook her head, sat down. <lb/>
We pursued the conversation which <lb/>
we had begun us we came along. <lb/>
Tap would never hear of <lb/>
she said. <lb/>
should not wish him <lb/>
observed, when <lb/>
taken my <lb/>
two years off at <lb/>
she interrupted. <lb/>
do you mean by <lb/>
I asked, rather hurt. <lb/>
don't always get things <lb/>
the time they <lb/>
thinking of the first <lb/>
time <lb/>
I'm she cried, blush- <lb/>
amazingly. meant you'd <lb/>
probably be <lb/>
going to get said I. <lb/>
said Daisy. <lb/>
I drew a little nearer. <lb/>
read the asked. <lb/>
fellow showed quite plainly <lb/>
that it could be done on <lb/>
careful management, you <lb/>
nodded sagaciously. <lb/>
I don't see why I shouldn't <lb/>
have in about three <lb/>
spoke as though three years <lb/>
were u moment of time. <lb/>
shall be mused Daisy <lb/>
an awestruck tone. <lb/>
not a bit too I cried. <lb/>
I suppose, she con- <lb/>
Ceded, it's a terribly long time, <lb/>
A pause followed. I hammered <lb/>
my cap against I he bench. <lb/>
a beast of I burst <lb/>
out. the deuce can't <lb/>
There's the dean just got <lb/>
dean must be ob- <lb/>
served Daisy. <lb/>
says he's And <lb/>
we both laughed. happen lo know <lb/>
now that the dean spoke the truth. <lb/>
said Daisy in a wistful <lb/>
tone, wish you were rich, like <lb/>
Franklin <lb/>
a said I. <lb/>
didn't say he wasn't that, Dick, <lb/>
course if money's what you <lb/>
know don't, but suppose <lb/>
there is harm in wishing that <lb/>
recovered good temper. <lb/>
always did when she said <lb/>
can make as much as he's <lb/>
said I confidently. <lb/>
can you, Dick How <lb/>
was not going to boast. <lb/>
a calm and wise air, <lb/>
the lime I am thirty any- <lb/>
Daisy's face fell woefully. <lb/>
she moaned. Then <lb/>
turned to me, with a smile, say- <lb/>
mind. Dick, dear. We <lb/>
shan't want quite as much. Why, <lb/>
he's got a <lb/>
do you <lb/>
Jackson told me so. Oh, <lb/>
what do you think, Dick She said <lb/>
that if liked said <lb/>
she was sure might Where are <lb/>
you going, <lb/>
you're only going to tell me <lb/>
hat that wretched old woman says <lb/>
to my rooms. What <lb/>
PREMIUMS. <lb/>
Young man, why pay premiums when you can buy <lb/>
the same contract for premiums On account of a higher <lb/>
interest rate and lower expense loading THE SECURITY <lb/>
LIFE AND ANNUITY can make this great <lb/>
saving you. Write the Home Office, Greensboro. North <lb/>
Carolina, or see <lb/>
F. M. Hornaday, <lb/>
Agent, <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina <lb/>
REPORT O ION Or <lb/>
THE BETHEL BANKING AND TRUST Cl <lb/>
AT X. O. <lb/>
the close of business 29th. <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
and discounts Cm pi stock paid in S <lb/>
. , . ,. . t profits <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
from 4,315.40 <lb/>
Cash items 1,818.71 b. to check <lb/>
Silver <lb/>
529.99 <lb/>
780.00 <lb/>
348.06 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
128,073.49 Total <lb/>
State of North Carolina, of as; <lb/>
f, B. II. Taylor, of the bank, do <lb/>
swear the above statement la to he knowledge, <lb/>
and belief II. H TAYLOR Cashier. <lb/>
mid sworn to before <lb/>
this 6th day of June. 1905. <lb/>
A. <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
R. J. MRS. <lb/>
J. W. <lb/>
STATON, <lb/>
T won't talk shout it if you <lb/>
did hi; , <lb/>
break the corner <lb/>
your in a minute, <lb/>
Mr. Franklin <lb/>
knew you would cup is in <lb/>
an state, Dick, so i vow <lb/>
Mr. Franklin Ford <lb/>
oh, how you arc, Dick <lb/>
You know perfectly well what <lb/>
I flung the battered cup upon tin <lb/>
bench, thrust my hands into my <lb/>
pockets, rested my chin on my neck- <lb/>
tie and stared moodily at my toe. <lb/>
There was pause. Presently <lb/>
fell the lightest touch on my arm. <lb/>
I took no notice. The touch grew <lb/>
more insistent. <lb/>
said Daisy. <lb/>
I told her that thought Mr. Ford <lb/>
I cried, my hands fly. <lb/>
from my pockets <lb/>
wish papa insist on <lb/>
going abroad all the long vacation. <lb/>
He says he can work better there. <lb/>
Never mind. Dick. It's only till <lb/>
said in tones Hamlet <lb/>
might proud of. <lb/>
ii in very she <lb/>
asked, drooping her lashes. <lb/>
if you didn't <lb/>
Dick. may like to be <lb/>
told all the game, you <lb/>
So told her. and eons eons <lb/>
of weary waiting rose before us at <lb/>
the bidding of my words. <lb/>
in all that she said, <lb/>
you sure you won't <lb/>
Oh, well, then believe won't. <lb/>
Think. Dick, it will be when <lb/>
you hack You must look out <lb/>
of your window nil the day <lb/>
and perhaps I may come <lb/>
look <lb/>
you'll have <lb/>
Dick, that is horrid of you I <lb/>
I never forget my <lb/>
I echoed indignantly, <lb/>
you know what <lb/>
said she indulgently. <lb/>
As she the great clock in <lb/>
the tower struck She sprang <lb/>
her feet. <lb/>
I urged. <lb/>
the last <lb/>
hut must. So must <lb/>
She seemed resolute. <lb/>
then, before you go prom <lb/>
urged. <lb/>
have promised. Well, <lb/>
then, yes, I promise, <lb/>
think of no one else the <lb/>
whole time <lb/>
of no one <lb/>
The garden seemed peaceful and <lb/>
quiet. We sat down on the bench <lb/>
gain for a it was <lb/>
meant to be a moment. But such <lb/>
moments endowed from heaven <lb/>
with blessed elasticity. <lb/>
Then, at a cry from Daisy J look- <lb/>
ed up. <lb/>
A tall, stout man in gold <lb/>
vies stood looking down at us, a <lb/>
curious, only half unkind smile on <lb/>
face. It was the I felt <lb/>
crimson all over and speechless. <lb/>
what's the meaning <lb/>
this. Mr. he asked, the <lb/>
mixed smile still on his lips. <lb/>
i looked at fright for an <lb/>
then a pride arose in me. <lb/>
I cleared throat and began, <lb/>
am <lb/>
The demon of irony raked up <lb/>
the provost's mind the memory <lb/>
his last words to me. Oh, that <lb/>
had found another for <lb/>
ii speech <lb/>
my said he, thrust- <lb/>
one hand into his cross cut <lb/>
trousers pocket and nulling at his <lb/>
whisker with the other, arc <lb/>
promising, for your age, very prom- <lb/>
Mr. <lb/>
The bubble was broken. <lb/>
hung her head. was red and hot <lb/>
again. <lb/>
chuckled the <lb/>
provost, jingling the money in <lb/>
pocket. promising indeed <lb/>
could have struck him for <lb/>
mocking iteration. <lb/>
go said he. <lb/>
Mr. may lend <lb/>
my key of the garden gate <lb/>
Pray he so good as to return ii <lb/>
the <lb/>
lb- handed ii to Die, with a polite <lb/>
bow. Daisy was in retreat, hurry- <lb/>
in sad shame toward the house <lb/>
I took the key. <lb/>
meant it, stammered. <lb/>
a young said hi <lb/>
and held out bis hand. <lb/>
a he said <lb/>
as he shook hands. I went. <lb/>
lie stood, watching my exit. <lb/>
looked back as reached the gate <lb/>
lie was there and behind him <lb/>
in the porch, waved a handkerchief <lb/>
I passed through the gate and lock <lb/>
oil ii behind me. <lb/>
And was the long vacation <lb/>
long And did forget her in tin <lb/>
am willing to answer, at any <lb/>
cost to my own character, all mate- <lb/>
rial questions, but that question <lb/>
immaterial, for she forgot me <lb/>
the long. <lb/>
Dear me, hope she's <lb/>
somewhere Anthony Hope <lb/>
Idler. <lb/>
His Big <lb/>
A gentleman entered a <lb/>
office and asked to have his <lb/>
head examined. a moment's <lb/>
inspection the professor started <lb/>
back, <lb/>
gracious You have the <lb/>
most unaccountable combination of <lb/>
attributes ever do-covered in a <lb/>
man being. Were your parents <lb/>
replied the all round <lb/>
character, my wife is. You <lb/>
needn't pay any attention to the <lb/>
bumps, <lb/>
Say It. <lb/>
The reported disappearance of <lb/>
the sea of recalls that old re- <lb/>
mark that the sea and it <lb/>
us. that, picas <lb/>
Boston Herald. <lb/>
MB <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
POOR PRINT<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019528_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
SHOES for Men, Women, Boys and Children <lb/>
At <lb/>
THE BIG STORE <lb/>
THE OUTFITTERS FOR ALL MANKIND. <lb/>
is Believing, and <lb/>
Values <lb/>
EXCEPTIONAL SHOE VALUES FOR MEN WOMEN AND OFFERS. <lb/>
A Special lot of Hand-made 1.50 and Oxford Ties, all sizes, 1.38. 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 made welled Patent leather, Kid and Chrome Calf, Military heels, <lb/>
Freak, Tn mp, swing and straight r better made for the money. ranging from to <lb/>
w. <lb/>
III I <lb/>
A Great in Millinery <lb/>
S, <lb/>
An assortment including only the latest and most popular novelties in the ready-to wear and walking <lb/>
hats. 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/>
ME <lb/>
DIRECTORY. <lb/>
SPECIAL RATES <lb/>
via <lb/>
ATLANTIC COAST LINE. <lb/>
Oat., and return <lb/>
IS, International Sunday <lb/>
School Association. Toronto, <lb/>
Out., Jane 30-27. Ticket on <lb/>
ale June 19th, 90th, 21st <lb/>
to <lb/>
passage in each direction <lb/>
with final limit leave Toronto <lb/>
However, <lb/>
of final limit to leave <lb/>
Toronto not later then August <lb/>
may he by de- <lb/>
of ticket with Joint <lb/>
between Jane 20th and June a <lb/>
and payment of f of 11.00 <lb/>
to time of deposit. <lb/>
N. V., return <lb/>
20.10 Anneal meeting <lb/>
Lodge B P O B U, N. T. <lb/>
July 1905. on <lb/>
July th, 9th and 10th, final <lb/>
limit will be <lb/>
restricted to passage <lb/>
in each direction of <lb/>
final limit to August be <lb/>
obtained by deposit of ticket <lb/>
with and payment <lb/>
of fee of STOP at <lb/>
Washington, ire and <lb/>
Philadelphia mi tickets reading <lb/>
points will be <lb/>
on going trip within <lb/>
limit, return trip <lb/>
within final limit, July If <lb/>
ticket have been <lb/>
OH lie taken not en <lb/>
Uteri hen August In. <lb/>
National Educational <lb/>
Association, J. <lb/>
July 87th. Tickets on sale <lb/>
June to July 2nd inclusive, <lb/>
Goal limit July <lb/>
i to <lb/>
in each reel ion. Kile union of <lb/>
the final limit may lie <lb/>
to 31st, of <lb/>
ticket with Agent <lb/>
payment of fee of cents at <lb/>
time of deposit. Stop over at <lb/>
flow York on trip may <lb/>
tie obtained provided ticket <lb/>
has been joint <lb/>
agent. Park . and is <lb/>
deposited Joint Agent New <lb/>
York later one day <lb/>
after validation at Park <lb/>
a d upon payment i of <lb/>
1.00 time of deposit, but in <lb/>
on shall Mop over at New <lb/>
York ex. end August <lb/>
31st. Slop Washington, <lb/>
Baltimore and will <lb/>
lie on Hie trip <lb/>
wit going limn the ticket <lb/>
i to exceed on <lb/>
return trip t i in filial <lb/>
limit ticket. tickets have <lb/>
en stop may <lb/>
taken period days not <lb/>
to exceed August Milt. <lb/>
Dyspepsia Can be Cured if One <lb/>
Will Try the Right Thing <lb/>
with Servant <lb/>
tic When I a <lb/>
taken I and <lb/>
u red need me to I not <lb/>
touch solid food. I believe if I <lb/>
bad taken Solid fowl it <lb/>
killed me, and I had to live <lb/>
sweets and lightest kind diet. <lb/>
severe spells near- <lb/>
Covenant Lodge No. I O j day would <lb/>
F Meets every Tuesday to Heal me, hut did <lb/>
night. TR Moore, N not do me one particle of good <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Chairman, W. R. Home, <lb/>
J. R. J. R. Barnhill <lb/>
J. W. Page. <lb/>
Clerk C. <lb/>
Moore. <lb/>
W. Tucker. <lb/>
Register of <lb/>
Hams. <lb/>
T. White. <lb/>
D. Cox. <lb/>
Board of Q. <lb/>
Cox, Chairman, B. M. <lb/>
L. C. Arthur, <lb/>
Superintendent <lb/>
H. <lb/>
Standard keeper C K. Flem- <lb/>
S. Congleton, <lb/>
J. K. <lb/>
W. A. Bowen, A. H. Taft, <lb/>
C. S. Carr, T. B. Hooker, <lb/>
J. V. Lanier. <lb/>
M. Wooten. <lb/>
J. Whichard. <lb/>
L. Carr. <lb/>
Tax D. <lb/>
J. T As <lb/>
J G. AV. <lb/>
H. <lb/>
Chief Fire <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
Dispensary <lb/>
W. Bryan, J. N. Hart, J. <lb/>
L. Sugg. <lb/>
Prayer meetings each <lb/>
day night. Sunday schools <lb/>
a. in <lb/>
H. <lb/>
Superintendent of Sunday <lb/>
School. Ho pastor. <lb/>
H. H. Moore, j <lb/>
pastor. Services every Sun <lb/>
day. W. <lb/>
School. <lb/>
E. Cox, <lb/>
rector. Services every first <lb/>
third Sunday. W. B <lb/>
Brown of, <lb/>
Sunday School, <lb/>
Free Will <lb/>
H. <lb/>
regular service <lb/>
day Services every Sunday <lb/>
G S Pritchard <lb/>
dent o Sunday School <lb/>
B Dove Sup <lb/>
School <lb/>
Mo pan tor. <lb/>
LODGES <lb/>
Lodge No. A <lb/>
F A M, meets 1st <lb/>
3rd Monday nights in each <lb/>
month R William-, W <lb/>
M; Wiley Brown, Sec <lb/>
F Evans, Sec <lb/>
Tar River Lodge No. K of <lb/>
P, Meets every I <lb/>
night E G Flanagan, C <lb/>
T J Moore, K of R <lb/>
Tribe No <lb/>
to r. me. <lb/>
I was so weak that for <lb/>
I months was able to walk <lb/>
j across the room. I had rather die <lb/>
than to sutler it over again, I <lb/>
felt that I was in a worse condition <lb/>
than any one who ever lived. <lb/>
Mis. Person and my wife <lb/>
Pitt Council Jr U A <lb/>
M. meets every Monday <lb/>
night T H Conn <lb/>
I R M. meets every I persuaded me to use Mrs. Joe Per <lb/>
Wednesday night J H sou's Remedy <lb/>
Harris. Sachem W <lb/>
. ., was three months before I felt <lb/>
relief at all. Then I commenced <lb/>
to improve right <lb/>
I thirty five bottles and it <lb/>
cured me. <lb/>
It has been two years since I was <lb/>
and I have never had a <lb/>
touch of the trouble since, can <lb/>
eat anything the as <lb/>
much of it as I want. <lb/>
If any one will to Mrs. <lb/>
Person's Remedy long enough <lb/>
build up the system, I know it will <lb/>
cure the mt st case of <lb/>
dyspepsia or nervousness that <lb/>
be found. <lb/>
B. SI. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
N. C, R. F. D., No. August <lb/>
1904. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions <lb/>
Cotton and <lb/>
Ties always on hand <lb/>
fresh Good kept con- <lb/>
In stock. Country <lb/>
Produce Bought and Sold <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
HARNESS REPAIRED and SHOES <lb/>
by at the<lb/>
stables <lb/>
tin ma a trial. <lb/>
GREENVILLE'S <lb/>
TONSORIAL PARLOR, <lb/>
Hopkins, Daniel Davis. Props <lb/>
Cleanliness our Motto. <lb/>
Only experienced man em <lb/>
ployed. Opposite as drag <lb/>
tat <lb/>
Why, when buying e book, are <lb/>
Why, by an if we <lb/>
picture <lb/>
do wise buyers upon <lb/>
having a reliable on nearly <lb/>
everything they <lb/>
It the name attached <lb/>
is the of the buyer a <lb/>
protection the off <lb/>
of articles. <lb/>
we <lb/>
for in most important <lb/>
thing we buy, and what can be <lb/>
more important than our <lb/>
knows that all <lb/>
housekeepers are very <lb/>
particular about the buying of <lb/>
things to eat drink, and <lb/>
it more than the <lb/>
up tn date who caters to <lb/>
the wants of his <lb/>
For instance, every real grocer <lb/>
known the reason oil lie <lb/>
of Coffee, the <lb/>
of all package Coffee. Hi- <lb/>
that its uniform <lb/>
high quality have made it welcome <lb/>
in of American homes f. r <lb/>
over a quarter of a century. <lb/>
this, he cannot but <lb/>
hand it out cheerfully asked <lb/>
for it. He knows that the e <lb/>
accept the package a guarantee <lb/>
of contents. <lb/>
Vet may be a few <lb/>
left who do not that the <lb/>
the the <lb/>
light and want <lb/>
to fell coffee <lb/>
knows what it i, or where it came <lb/>
Instead Linn Coffee, <lb/>
which the for, <lb/>
the merits of which both know. <lb/>
In Mich eases the wise <lb/>
your <lb/>
It sometimes happens that the man <lb/>
who is popularly rated as successful <lb/>
has utterly failed, though no one <lb/>
else is so well aware of the fact as <lb/>
he is himself. He may have <lb/>
ed or he may achieved <lb/>
fame, but in neither the one thing <lb/>
nor tho other did he obtain r <lb/>
was moat essential to him. <lb/>
other hand, the man is rated i- <lb/>
a failure may have achieved a <lb/>
desirable sort of success He <lb/>
live in poverty and obscurity, but <lb/>
he may he the possessor of a <lb/>
which is an inestimable blessing <lb/>
to him to others. He has ad- <lb/>
justed himself well to his environ- <lb/>
sustains right relations to <lb/>
the world about him Idle <lb/>
does not disturb and he is <lb/>
tilled with apprehension by the <lb/>
pranks of fortune We do not con- <lb/>
of such a man as an inactive <lb/>
Work is . of the best <lb/>
forms of prayer, and it brings the <lb/>
best form peace Hint is <lb/>
Bible Io men in this world <lb/>
We would not understood as <lb/>
holding that the man who has ac- <lb/>
cumulated wealth has necessarily <lb/>
II that was his chief desire <lb/>
and ambition, and if he iii <lb/>
his efforts, he may be satisfied . The <lb/>
that he has sacrificed every thing <lb/>
to the one end of money getting may <lb/>
trouble him, his <lb/>
may his sense of need, This <lb/>
is sometimes case, though not <lb/>
always, but when it is, it is an in <lb/>
stance of success as the world gen <lb/>
looks at it. When a man <lb/>
accumulate a fortune and feels that <lb/>
ii represents sacrifices for which it <lb/>
not alone, he knows lie <lb/>
has railed, no matter what others <lb/>
may think So with the <lb/>
individual who achieves fame. The <lb/>
sacrifices often outweigh the reward, <lb/>
though occasionally it may mean <lb/>
success. Generally, though, there <lb/>
When e'er you feel Impending <lb/>
ill, <lb/>
And need a little pill, <lb/>
No other one will fill the bill <lb/>
Like Hewitt's Li tie Early Risers. <lb/>
The Little Pills, <lb/>
cure I nation, j is more satisfaction in the struggle <lb/>
Headache, etc. They j upward than there is iii the scat on <lb/>
never gripe or sicken, but Impart Very often the situation <lb/>
early energy, foil. . . . . ,, <lb/>
or adult-. by Jno. removed from <lb/>
L. Wooten, druggist. of human sympathy. <lb/>
Money dies nor necessarily mean <lb/>
The Chinese are right not does fame, and these <lb/>
and have knocked us down with their facts claim consideration. People <lb/>
argument We had entirely over- <lb/>
looked the fact that they were en- <lb/>
titled to be treated white till we <lb/>
try to determine what is best <lb/>
worth while, as u chief in life <lb/>
There is wealth in this world's goods <lb/>
discovered that they bought annually and there is wealth of character- <lb/>
worth of goods from <lb/>
the Country. Our Chinese friends <lb/>
must please excuse us and hereafter <lb/>
call often. It is no trouble to show <lb/>
A new idea in a cough i up is <lb/>
the Laxative principal and is orig- <lb/>
with Kennedy's Laxative <lb/>
Honey and Tar. This cough syrup <lb/>
in the <lb/>
system by gently moving the bow- <lb/>
els. Best for coughs, colds, croup, <lb/>
etc. The red clover is on <lb/>
eve-y package of original Lax- <lb/>
Cough Sold Jno. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
A Broader Sphere. <lb/>
with regret that the <lb/>
News and Observer announces that <lb/>
the Raleigh Male Academy has closed <lb/>
its doors. For many years it lies <lb/>
done work preparing boys for <lb/>
college, and there are too few schools <lb/>
of this <lb/>
The above from the Greenville <lb/>
represents a <lb/>
that has been somewhat general. <lb/>
In name the Raleigh Male Academy, <lb/>
with its honorable history, is no <lb/>
more, but the work the spirit of <lb/>
the Raleigh Male Academy, with its <lb/>
scholarly head, remain with us in a <lb/>
sphere of usefulness. Here- <lb/>
the advantages of Mr. <lb/>
wise instruction have been limited <lb/>
largely only to the youth whose par- <lb/>
were able to pay tuition. In <lb/>
the future, the new Raleigh High <lb/>
School, the head of Raleigh's public <lb/>
school system, the instruction that <lb/>
has made the Raleigh Male Academy <lb/>
famous will be freely given to every <lb/>
ambitious in Raleigh. This <lb/>
step is the most progressive move- <lb/>
in education taken in Raleigh <lb/>
in a dozen News <lb/>
and Observer. <lb/>
personal worth. This abides. It is <lb/>
something that the may <lb/>
take with him wherever he goes. Its <lb/>
possession does not necessarily in- <lb/>
self satisfaction, but it is rare <lb/>
n of disappointment. It is <lb/>
not accompanied, with the feeling <lb/>
that life has been frittered away, <lb/>
that the individual vitality has been <lb/>
expended in an effort to gather trifles <lb/>
that are only for a day. Danville, <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
The ins I, Pills <lb/>
RISERS cure Constipation, Sick <lb/>
Headache, Biliousness, etc. They <lb/>
or sicken, but impart <lb/>
early <lb/>
children or adults. Sold by Jno <lb/>
L. Woolen, <lb/>
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve Pen- <lb/>
pores the skin, <lb/>
by Its antiseptic, and <lb/>
healing influence it subdues in <lb/>
and cures Boils, <lb/>
Hums, Cuts, King <lb/>
all skin diseases. A <lb/>
specific for blind itching <lb/>
and tiding Piles. The original <lb/>
genuine Witch Hazel <lb/>
is made E. C. Cm <lb/>
sold by L. Wooten, drug- <lb/>
gist. <lb/>
Bernard Has Cruised Alps. <lb/>
got a special message tonight <lb/>
by the wireless said a prom- <lb/>
Republican in front of the <lb/>
Buford last night, it was fresh <lb/>
from the Alps of <lb/>
was it asked Col. <lb/>
Jake who made one of the <lb/>
party. <lb/>
late this afternoon, <lb/>
crossing the top, with coat tail <lb/>
Hying straight behind and tongue <lb/>
hanging out, one Claude M. <lb/>
running like the <lb/>
was all. The message was <lb/>
complete and the information all <lb/>
that was necessary. I had wagered <lb/>
on it. That fellow can outrun any <lb/>
short-legged man that ever started <lb/>
on a <lb/>
Greenland is the next <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
you Had to Get Your <lb/>
In the Old Way <lb/>
In the old times people had to from to house <lb/>
tell the news or meet th- roads atom once a week <lb/>
to find out what was firing on. They slow days <lb/>
It Is Not So Now <lb/>
in this day of and rural free delivery <lb/>
mail tonics you can get the day. <lb/>
This is the leading age an I u i- without <lb/>
a good newspaper. Every man might to take his county papal <lb/>
know what is going on. <lb/>
The Reflector <lb/>
can supply you with the news. print two editions, Daily <lb/>
and Semi-Weekly <lb/>
THE DAILY THE EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
is a page paper and costs j i twice-a-week i is a large <lb/>
only a year. page paper, a year. <lb/>
Don't be without a paper when you et one so cheap, <lb/>
yon are not a subscriber bend in order today. <lb/>
The <lb/>
Job Department <lb/>
OF THE <lb/>
IS BETTER EQUIPPED TO <lb/>
DAY THAN EVER BEFORE <lb/>
To Produce Qom <lb/>
me real Printing, <lb/>
SEND IN YOUR ORDERS. <lb/>
REFLECTOR PRINTING HOUSE, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
The Store <lb/>
A beautiful Line <lb/>
Of <lb/>
LAG <lb/>
ALL-OVER <lb/>
AND <lb/>
mS COLLARS, <lb/>
not to be matched <lb/>
in town At The Price. <lb/>
E. Tucker, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
Institute for <lb/>
Young <lb/>
Women and <lb/>
of <lb/>
Music. Th <lb/>
Best <lb/>
for Your <lb/>
Daughter <lb/>
ANOTHER OFFER. <lb/>
FREE To All Our Subscribers <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
FARMER, <lb/>
Indianapolis, Indiana. <lb/>
The Leading Agricultural Journal of the Nation, <lb/>
Edited by an Able 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 is to all new and all <lb/>
old ones who pay up all arrears and renew within <lb/>
SAMPLE COPIES FREE. y <lb/>
Tire 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/>
St. Hospital. Va. Mm <lb/>
Water I o. <lb/>
Henderson, N. <lb/>
It me pleasure to state have been <lb/>
myself and prescribing for my patients the Buckhorn <lb/>
very freely for several month, and I do not hesitate <lb/>
mend u in highest terms. <lb/>
In in rheumatic and gouty and in <lb/>
certain eases of constipation I have seen excellent results follow <lb/>
its use. It is an exceedingly pleasant drinking water. <lb/>
Very <lb/>
K. L. If. <lb/>
OUR <lb/>
The shippers guarantee, that, of ail the mineral waters so far <lb/>
known, is the most powerful diuretic. <lb/>
They will furnish a case of any water, regardless of its <lb/>
reputation or price, and by actual, practical, scientific <lb/>
comparison, that there is not a water known to the public <lb/>
that will equal Buckhorn in uric acid diathesis. <lb/>
R. H. HOOD. <lb/>
This Water Ii on isle at J. A. RICKS <lb/>
College <lb/>
Courses <lb/>
. U. Pit, <lb/>
Harry Skinner, Harry Skinner. Jr. <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
SKINNER <lb/>
LAWYERS, <lb/>
Hom j Building. <lb/>
hereby that we hare <lb/>
associated with us. in the practice of <lb/>
the Law, Mr. Harry Skinner, <lb/>
The firm name will continue a here- <lb/>
SKINNER A <lb/>
Lawyers. <lb/>
January Sod, <lb/>
HARRY <lb/>
H. W. U III lint I<lb/>
IN <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Factors handlers of <lb/>
Ties and Bags. <lb/>
and shipments <lb/>
SUBSCRIBE 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/>
The Cash <lb/>
Grocers. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019528_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
SPECIAL Sale <lb/>
POINTERS. <lb/>
Why Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy Should be used. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
Low Shoes and <lb/>
Slippers. <lb/>
No preparation on the mar- <lb/>
today can show en <lb/>
from North Carolina. <lb/>
It has been on the market <lb/>
more than twenty years, and <lb/>
made more wonderful cures than <lb/>
any known. <lb/>
Its field for usefulness is <lb/>
unlimited, as it will cure any <lb/>
thing that can be cured by <lb/>
building up the system and <lb/>
purifying the blood. <lb/>
It is a line Tonic; as an <lb/>
there is none better; as <lb/>
BEGINNING ON THURSDAY, MAY 25TH. <lb/>
we offer our entire stock of Children's Ox- <lb/>
ford Ties and t Greatly Reduced Prices. <lb/>
No b it v i Shoes. A chance o buy good, new shoes <lb/>
At Reduced Prices <lb/>
in to meet your Is, the stock <lb/>
in down, is a rare opportunity, <lb/>
early in t <lb/>
is broken an <lb/>
s e a<lb/>
that d m <lb/>
R. <lb/>
and <lb/>
if buyers, who appreciate gen- <lb/>
a Purifier or the Blood it has no <lb/>
equal. It is a line and <lb/>
and give good natural sleep to <lb/>
those who restless. This is <lb/>
merely the affect of the <lb/>
properties of the medicine, as no <lb/>
narcotic enters into its <lb/>
Wash is of the utmost <lb/>
importance, in connection with <lb/>
the Bitters, in eases of <lb/>
sores, ulcerations or itching <lb/>
humors. <lb/>
MB SOCIAL <lb/>
June <lb/>
Miss returned from <lb/>
this <lb/>
G. Prichard will from <lb/>
Panacea Spring Friday night. <lb/>
J. L. Hearse, of Tarboro. came <lb/>
id Wednesday evening and return- <lb/>
ed this morning. <lb/>
Misses Mary and Mattie <lb/>
Phillips, of Kinston, are visiting <lb/>
Mis Tunstall. <lb/>
Mrs Harry Skinner and sob. <lb/>
Francis returned Wednesday <lb/>
evening from Beach. <lb/>
Mrs. J. Allen, of this <lb/>
CARD FROM MRS. <lb/>
SON. <lb/>
PER- <lb/>
Can it be That Most of the <lb/>
Ills of Life Can be Cured <lb/>
Through the Blood <lb/>
have confined the <lb/>
seen them perfectly cured, after <lb/>
having used my Remedy and <lb/>
Wash for about a <lb/>
I have known it to cure a great <lb/>
many cases of stomach trouble, <lb/>
that had failed to to any <lb/>
other treatment <lb/>
I known it to cure four <lb/>
cases of nurse's sore mouth, <lb/>
after all medical treatment had <lb/>
place, left for Raleigh <lb/>
to spend some <lb/>
relative. <lb/>
this morn- <lb/>
time with<lb/>
stock <lb/>
you t <lb/>
make <lb/>
m i<lb/>
ER <lb/>
plain <lb/>
and <lb/>
are over<lb/>
we n and want <lb/>
r to clean q we. <lb/>
my Remedy to failed. <lb/>
troubles that had their have known the Wash to <lb/>
in impure blood, a cure a case of bladder trouble, <lb/>
system, and yet I know it can do when the physician said an <lb/>
more. alone could it. <lb/>
Five years ago my Remedy In the beginning <lb/>
cured Mrs. J- S- Thompson, of career, twenty one years <lb/>
Hasty, N. C, of trouble, ago, what u powerful <lb/>
and since then she has used it as agency far relief to the afflicted <lb/>
a family medicine, and now I was D my hands, I went to the <lb/>
have bar testimonial showing medical fraternity of Raleigh, <lb/>
that it car lied two of her child and invited them to invest gate <lb/>
ran safely through an attack of my I had a specific for <lb/>
fever troubles came from blood <lb/>
My cured a case of impurity. I invited examination, <lb/>
kidney trouble in my own family, to the end it might be gen <lb/>
of six standing, alter used by the profession, <lb/>
all medical treatment failed if d substantiate my claim <lb/>
and the party was regarded as a offered to accept any number <lb/>
doomed man. Finding that he of teat cases that would satisfy <lb/>
was rapidly reclining, ho tried them in regard to the merit of <lb/>
the Remedy, and in two weeks a my Remedy, and I would cure <lb/>
g eat change was apparent, and them free I only asked them <lb/>
in two months he was well, and to agree to watch the result of <lb/>
the cure was permanent- my Remedy, and if cured every <lb/>
I known it tried in a well one, to acknowledge publicly <lb/>
know a this state this they said would be <lb/>
name am a liberty to and an <lb/>
for puerperal fever, when and they <lb/>
four doctors in consultation said therefore declined, although <lb/>
could not live many offered to give them officially <lb/>
hours, and it cured her The full formula. <lb/>
reaction was immediate. goes to prove the <lb/>
I saw Mr. of , d i m <lb/>
Goldsboro, M C, when he was . <lb/>
down with l saw Remedy in the beginning of my <lb/>
him again recently, a well man. work, and it is now established <lb/>
after using the Remedy two u pedestal none can <lb/>
veins. Ms JOE PERSON, <lb/>
I have seen two ladies, suitor <lb/>
Charlotte, N. C. <lb/>
,, i. Tie for <lb/>
., Tie Oxfords, worth for 2.25. <lb/>
plain 2.50 far 1.85. <lb/>
Strap Sandals, plain kid Scrap <lb/>
; tip tan kid Court Tie ail <lb/>
a per pair, to be told for <lb/>
in or lack Ties, plain kid Sandals, patent <lb/>
tip or s tip Oxfords, dressy styles and plain common sense <lb/>
Hid sizes, that are selling for pair, <lb/>
or 1.1 pair. <lb/>
All th styles f Ladies Oxfords and Sandals that are selling <lb/>
for 11.00 to 1.25 we offer in this sale for to per <lb/>
pair. <lb/>
All the Children and Babies Slippers are offered in this <lb/>
Sale and are in proportion to the Ladles as <lb/>
Those early will get first pick at this beautiful line of <lb/>
goods. The are beautiful, the makes are of the best, and a full <lb/>
line of sizes await your inspection. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
seen two ladies <lb/>
of <lb/>
and know of a and have January 1st, <lb/>
with cancer of the womb <lb/>
Special Remarks. reeling any benefit a great <lb/>
r . many tell me they have fell bet <lb/>
I am sine my Remedy will the -dose; most <lb/>
perfect satisfaction in cry case benefit on second or third <lb/>
where a Tonic. Purl <lb/>
tier of the Blood, or is j, cure indigestion and <lb/>
needed do not believe its troubles It will conn <lb/>
equal can be found for nervous poison In such <lb/>
prostration, and when one is full every <lb/>
it will certainly minutes or o minutes until <lb/>
build up and restore to perfect is felt in the head. <lb/>
health. to direct if half urgently recommend <lb/>
dozen bottles of my Remedy be Remedy to every one suffer <lb/>
taken and no benefit felt to stop <lb/>
it. that it was useless to try <lb/>
more, but have met with a <lb/>
great many chronic cases, where <lb/>
no perceptible benefit was fell <lb/>
on first half dozen bottles, <lb/>
and its continued use effected a <lb/>
cure. <lb/>
In chronic cases of long stand <lb/>
frig where any of my Remedy is <lb/>
needed at all the of a dozen <lb/>
from any trouble that comes <lb/>
from impoverished, <lb/>
or poisoned blood, or for a <lb/>
system. <lb/>
The use of the Wash is of the <lb/>
utmost importance to he in <lb/>
with the Remedy, in <lb/>
case where there any external <lb/>
trouble, inflammation, or itching <lb/>
humor. Send <lb/>
For further information, <lb/>
bottles is necessary, and in many ply to <lb/>
more. Some take half MRS. JOE <lb/>
dozen bottles more before Charlotte. N. C. <lb/>
MRS. JOE PERSON'S REMEDY <lb/>
For Sale by the Following <lb/>
Baltimore Jobbers. The Drug <lb/>
Dunn Co., Charlotte, Manufacturing Co., Charleston, <lb/>
N. 0- John M. Co., Char- S. C W. H. King Drug Co. <lb/>
C. Purcell, Ladd Raleigh, N. C. Goldsboro Drug <lb/>
Richmond, Va. Owens Minor Co, N. C. L. <lb/>
Drug Co, Richmond, Va. Greensboro <lb/>
Powers Taylor Drug Co., Rich- N. Drug C, <lb/>
Va. burg, R. R. Bellamy, <lb/>
Drug Co., Va. the C. <lb/>
Murray Drug Co., <lb/>
R. W. Lawson Co., <lb/>
Boston, Va. Williams, Martin Also by druggists and dealers <lb/>
Gray, Norfolk, Va. The generally in North <lb/>
Drug Co., S. 0- South Carolina and V <lb/>
Saturday, July <lb/>
A J. Moore went to <lb/>
this <lb/>
G. W. Baker left this morning <lb/>
for Lewis ton. <lb/>
Miss Mary Bernard went to New <lb/>
York this morning. <lb/>
Claude King came in Friday <lb/>
evening from New <lb/>
Harry Skinner returned Friday <lb/>
from Raleigh. <lb/>
Miss Tyson to <lb/>
Beach this morning. <lb/>
Mies Janie M. Brown went to <lb/>
Ga., this morning. <lb/>
Miss Mabel of <lb/>
1- waning Miss Pattie Skinner. <lb/>
Mr. Mrs, L. <lb/>
went to Beaufort Friday evening <lb/>
Dr. R. L. has returned <lb/>
and can lie at bis office <lb/>
any time. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Allen, <lb/>
arrived to visit <lb/>
Hi K. L. Carr. <lb/>
Mrs. T. R Moore and M Inez <lb/>
h I I'm nun went <lb/>
Norfolk this <lb/>
Clyde and Julia Farmer, <lb/>
. of Wilson, came in Friday even- <lb/>
visit Mrs. D C. Moor. <lb/>
Thus. E Move, of <lb/>
died in the hospital in Wilmington <lb/>
from poison. <lb/>
Dr. K L. Carr and son, <lb/>
Mn. Alice Harper, and Miss <lb/>
from Beaufort to- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Miss Whedbee, of <lb/>
arrived Friday evening to <lb/>
visit her brother, II. W. <lb/>
bee. <lb/>
Misses Jennie and Ruth Brinkley <lb/>
Mamie Ruth Tunstall and Frank <lb/>
Brinkley to Scotland Neck <lb/>
this <lb/>
Mrs. W. Barton, of Edenton, <lb/>
who has Mrs. E. H. <lb/>
Tali, left this morning for Ply- <lb/>
Miss Katie L. of Wash- <lb/>
who has been <lb/>
Bertha Patrick, returned home <lb/>
this morning. <lb/>
Miss Moore, of Browns- <lb/>
ville, Tenn., who been teach- <lb/>
school in returned <lb/>
home Friday morning. <lb/>
J. D. Bundy, of <lb/>
Mount, alder of the <lb/>
Washington of M. E., <lb/>
came in Friday evening. <lb/>
Prof. W. H. <lb/>
Annie Mamie <lb/>
and Hooker <lb/>
this from <lb/>
where been attending <lb/>
learners <lb/>
STORE. <lb/>
Always <lb/>
-ON- <lb/>
Hand. <lb/>
of Framing It, z Id ft. <lb/>
German Siding, Ceiling and <lb/>
Partition and all kinda <lb/>
lamber for building a <lb/>
house complete Bills cat to <lb/>
an abort <lb/>
lumber I Co- <lb/>
White Front Barber Shop <lb/>
a. a a. <lb/>
Sharp clean <lb/>
Work <lb/>
sod all for pas <lb/>
and your <lb/>
NOBLES, Prep. <lb/>
la TO <lb/>
UP of <lb/>
red white <lb/>
flank and on tail, <lb/>
with in left ear slit <lb/>
right, bar light him is shorter <lb/>
than left, wears <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
let Cox villa, N. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
I hi re been j by the <lb/>
beys the town who <lb/>
field sad bi crop la <lb/>
of fruit, sad take this opportunity <lb/>
to both the boys their par- <lb/>
I will <lb/>
any boy who repeat I <lb/>
r any <lb/>
if<lb/>
II <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD. Editor <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
VOL Ho. <lb/>
ONE IN ADVANCE <lb/>
Pin COUNTY, CAROLINA FRIDAY, JULY 1905. <lb/>
. L <lb/>
MOW IT HAPPENED <lb/>
Scar Wat in of <lb/>
It was through ii of <lb/>
Thompson was de. <lb/>
sated in Washington <lb/>
He pitched a that under <lb/>
ordinary circumstances is bound <lb/>
to win. At every stage of the <lb/>
he was master of the situation <lb/>
had twirler <lb/>
completely outclassed. <lb/>
People had been talking Hobbs <lb/>
and Hobbs son e of them <lb/>
were looking for wonders. <lb/>
was Hobbs superior at <lb/>
hitting, at base, running and on <lb/>
the rubber. the little <lb/>
He wan not in it at all when com <lb/>
pared with Rowe, whose <lb/>
was a to the of <lb/>
is greatly superior to <lb/>
the Washington aggregation. Our <lb/>
battery is stronger. fanned <lb/>
men Rowe bad no pass <lb/>
balls, the pitcher, fanned <lb/>
ten of our men, and Hobbs, the <lb/>
catcher, had several pass balls. <lb/>
Our team eight hits; their <lb/>
tram made five. Oar errors were <lb/>
theirs were cosily. <lb/>
seems to be our <lb/>
for we never play the <lb/>
ball them that we are cap- <lb/>
able of playing. <lb/>
The tun begun for and the <lb/>
trouble for us when Turner, E., <lb/>
misjudged an easy right <lb/>
field, and then threw wild at. home, <lb/>
allowing Springs to SOON from <lb/>
Note of the team except <lb/>
son, the pitcher, and were <lb/>
at their mutt of the other <lb/>
had their off <lb/>
days will come tie best <lb/>
of men and they us <lb/>
day. Washington was proud. The <lb/>
were closed, <lb/>
there was an Immense crowd, men, <lb/>
women and children, but <lb/>
was much for <lb/>
there was nothing for them to <lb/>
root for. <lb/>
John Ivey Smith not up to <lb/>
usual form by a long way. He <lb/>
made a Mil throw was off with <lb/>
the stick, but made a couple of <lb/>
Forbes played <lb/>
game and swatted sphere <lb/>
two safe ones. the new <lb/>
fielder, was tip lop; everything <lb/>
that went his way counted against <lb/>
Washington, and he faced <lb/>
for a beauty hum. <lb/>
Turner, J., made one excusable <lb/>
error, and the grand <lb/>
at his feet by robbing Washington <lb/>
a hit. <lb/>
Bert at second, although a little <lb/>
off on the diamond, up for it <lb/>
at the tint, scored one of <lb/>
runs. <lb/>
Thompson, at first, was off on a <lb/>
couple of but threw <lb/>
well was in the game all unfit, <lb/>
but for that. He is a good man <lb/>
and will be all right. <lb/>
Turner, E., played the greatest <lb/>
dumb base ball ever seen in these <lb/>
parts. He misjudged, muffed and <lb/>
threw them away. He partly <lb/>
himself with the stick, <lb/>
The Washington people were all <lb/>
right treated the team nicely. <lb/>
The team makes no guarantees, <lb/>
make no promise to the future, <lb/>
offer no the past; it will <lb/>
do its bast. <lb/>
CAN'T CRUSH <lb/>
Opinion Not b Held by <lb/>
However, Ne- <lb/>
Continue <lb/>
Not Ripe Apple <lb/>
St. July S, a. <lb/>
for in armistice <lb/>
between the of Russia <lb/>
Japan, it can be definitely stated, <lb/>
are now in progress, presumably <lb/>
at Washington; but they have not <lb/>
reached a stage where any further <lb/>
announcement can be made. <lb/>
The decision seams to rest with <lb/>
Japan, which country is weighing <lb/>
the of the pros- <lb/>
of bettering her present <lb/>
advantageous position against the <lb/>
enormous cost of lives and money <lb/>
of another great battle. <lb/>
The for a decisive and <lb/>
final Japanese victory, it is be- <lb/>
here, are no better w <lb/>
than before Lino Yang and <lb/>
den, and it is pointed nut that It <lb/>
is idle to talk of <lb/>
falling like a ripe apple into <lb/>
Japan's hands before the <lb/>
meets. <lb/>
of Secretary <lb/>
N. H., July <lb/>
body of Secretary of State <lb/>
Hay, whose death early <lb/>
today ha sorrow <lb/>
out the land and evoked <lb/>
of sympathy and regret the <lb/>
world over, lie tonight in a room <lb/>
of the quaint Gain <lb/>
roofed mansion, winch for <lb/>
fourteen years, had been the slim- <lb/>
mer home of Hay family <lb/>
Just one week ago tonight the <lb/>
BROTHER KILLS BROTHER. <lb/>
Tragic Affair from Momentary Rage in a <lb/>
. Street. <lb/>
Baltimore, Md., July <lb/>
E. Ream was shot and killed today <lb/>
in front of his horse his brother <lb/>
Harry, who tired a second shot, it <lb/>
is said, intended for another <lb/>
brother, William. <lb/>
There bad a love affair <lb/>
between Harry Beam and <lb/>
Mis Jennie Hutton, . eider <lb/>
of Mrs James E. Ream, at <lb/>
whose home Mi Hut ton became <lb/>
a guest, and Harry Ram became <lb/>
because the others re- <lb/>
fused to receive him there today. <lb/>
He is under arrest. <lb/>
Death of Mayor Munn. <lb/>
N I. <lb/>
Major Angus formerly of <lb/>
Tar Heel, died in <lb/>
Norfolk, V , at <lb/>
St. Pauls, recently, Before <lb/>
Major Munn was one of <lb/>
living alumni of the <lb/>
University of North Carolina. <lb/>
After his he began <lb/>
teaching and devoted the greater <lb/>
part his to that <lb/>
He was one of the <lb/>
educators of his day in North <lb/>
Carolina. Polished la manners, <lb/>
dignified in <lb/>
courteous His friends were limited <lb/>
only the number of his ac <lb/>
nil of on will lei <lb/>
of his death <lb/>
gills, so <lb/>
that lie refrained <lb/>
a f <lb/>
Visit Prom <lb/>
Sunday school was <lb/>
delighted to have a visit <lb/>
from M. A. Alias, <lb/>
Danville, who while a <lb/>
hare was superintendent of the <lb/>
school. Sunday afternoon he also <lb/>
visited lb school in the country <lb/>
of which he win also once <lb/>
AND SOCIAL <lb/>
Off On Trip. <lb/>
Rat Tom link <lb/>
Hall wet to creek <lb/>
Tuesday night on the <lb/>
They earned a and <lb/>
ill spend few days The <lb/>
boys were anticipating a good time <lb/>
and we sincerely hope they are <lb/>
having it. <lb/>
Negro Killed at <lb/>
Million Tyson, a was <lb/>
Tuesday about o'clock, <lb/>
b Policemen Smith. The trouble <lb/>
over another <lb/>
on the sidewalks. The policeman <lb/>
arrested the ow when Simon <lb/>
interfered with a drawn <lb/>
knife, whereupon <lb/>
Smith shut him to <lb/>
Secretary arrived at this village j for the <lb/>
from Washington, wearied with which he, with <lb/>
the cares of State anticipating and <lb/>
a summer ability as a <lb/>
the same launch in which Mr. Hay <lb/>
made the short trip from <lb/>
I to at <lb/>
conveyed relatives of Mrs, to <lb/>
the cottages, where they brought <lb/>
sympathy and help to the stricken <lb/>
woman her only son. <lb/>
The only the <lb/>
family at when yesterday, <lb/>
the end came were Mis. Hay and Jas J. retired <lb/>
Hay, Ml. James A acted a <lb/>
Had Knock Out Root. <lb/>
Marion Hart, of <lb/>
now weight champion ling- <lb/>
of the world, has detested <lb/>
in the <lb/>
twelfth round in Kern-. Nev. <lb/>
I hey Know How to do the Right Thing <lb/>
Tub extends it <lb/>
to the <lb/>
the <lb/>
Washington ball team for their <lb/>
courtesies and royal entertainment <lb/>
our representative <lb/>
y the 4th. He reports <lb/>
trip and is grate- <lb/>
When it come to <lb/>
are not found wanting. <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
. Chapel Sunday. <lb/>
July 3rd <lb/>
Key Brown went to <lb/>
today. <lb/>
J. L. Joyner to Parmele <lb/>
tins morning. <lb/>
R. O. to Old Point <lb/>
this morning. <lb/>
Dr. M. I. Fleming went to Oak <lb/>
City this morning. <lb/>
went to Winter- <lb/>
ville Sunday evening, <lb/>
Jack Smith Nor- <lb/>
folk Saturday. <lb/>
Charlie James to Seven <lb/>
Springs Sunday <lb/>
Italian F. Smith went to Seven <lb/>
Spring Saturday. <lb/>
Josh Mills went Sat- <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
W. F. Harding eon <lb/>
came Saturday from Charlotte. <lb/>
Mrs. K. O. went to <lb/>
this morning. <lb/>
J. S. Tunstall returned from <lb/>
Seven Springs this morning. <lb/>
Miss left this <lb/>
afternoon for <lb/>
Miss Linda Buck, of Ayden, i <lb/>
visiting her brother, Walter Buck. <lb/>
Mrs. O A. <lb/>
from a visit to New Bern <lb/>
this morning. <lb/>
Misses and <lb/>
of Washington, are Mis <lb/>
Julia Harris. <lb/>
Mrs. J. Woodward returned <lb/>
Saturday evening from Scotland <lb/>
Neck. <lb/>
DOPE THE FANS.<lb/>
Miss Ague <lb/>
of <lb/>
d N. V., a <lb/>
bus been ill recently and <lb/>
be belling; odds were to on <lb/>
Root, but it hard punch just <lb/>
had not been at Lake this j <lb/>
season. Mrs. Payne looked like op till the lust <lb/>
daughter, is on her way to <lb/>
Europe. <lb/>
Mr. Hay died at <lb/>
tins morning, <lb/>
o'clock <lb/>
Good Preacher. <lb/>
The Baptists arc to be <lb/>
having secured the <lb/>
vices of Rev. John K. to <lb/>
supply for the of July. <lb/>
He is a man of ability <lb/>
that would <lb/>
coveted belt. <lb/>
near the <lb/>
Sunday School Statistics. i;, j <lb/>
At the Sunday school J. C lib Sunday. <lb/>
the Lillie May Cash visiting <lb/>
read the record the school near <lb/>
the past quarter, This Prank Pollard returned <lb/>
showed that the average at <lb/>
the quarter was and a- of Standard, was <lb/>
and personality. He took fraction including the cradle roll, Sunday. <lb/>
both the Bachelor's Master's 35- collections for the went to Ayden <lb/>
Misses and Helen <lb/>
N. July 1906, Jones went to <lb/>
filled Ins Springs Saturday. <lb/>
it May's p and two <lb/>
iii, Misses and left <lb/>
this id term. to <lb/>
attend the Carolina Virginia <lb/>
meeting, <lb/>
Tuesday, 4th. <lb/>
w. F. Evans went to <lb/>
Monday evening. <lb/>
J Smith Monday <lb/>
from <lb/>
Col. Hurry Skinner went to <lb/>
No. Monday evening. <lb/>
Lucy and Mary John-i <lb/>
went to Ayden Monday evening, <lb/>
Miss Tyson returned fr <lb/>
visiting his Beach Monday <lb/>
Mr. Mrs. T. It. Jenkins <lb/>
this morning for a visit In Edge, <lb/>
Miss Helen Galloway, of <lb/>
is visiting Mils <lb/>
Miss Leo <lb/>
Carr were Visiting <lb/>
Smith Sunday. <lb/>
T. E. of <lb/>
here Sunday. <lb/>
I. Tyson family, <lb/>
Ayden, were here Sunday, <lb/>
Mini from <lb/>
neat visit lug <lb/>
.-1 and Smith. <lb/>
So-, c, of Greenville <lb/>
j was here Sunday. <lb/>
Forbes, is <lb/>
his grandfather, J. <lb/>
Printer <lb/>
G. W. Hearne, who has <lb/>
sometime a position with <lb/>
resigned and after <lb/>
a few days test experts to leave <lb/>
for the West. Hts purpose is to <lb/>
go to Chicago and complete hi <lb/>
trade one of the lame printing <lb/>
establishment in that city. He <lb/>
is not afraid of <lb/>
work, and will win his way <lb/>
success. <lb/>
degrees at Wake Forest, and <lb/>
recently graduated with <lb/>
Chicago University, the <lb/>
Bachelor of Divinity degree. <lb/>
While at Chicago he preached <lb/>
regularly at with <lb/>
satisfaction good results. <lb/>
He preached Sunday to a <lb/>
audience, and gave them a good <lb/>
sermon. <lb/>
He was in his classes at <lb/>
college, is popular among <lb/>
young people, will do good <lb/>
service while he is here. <lb/>
Dewey Case <lb/>
New Hem, N. C, July <lb/>
case of Thomas Dewey will come <lb/>
up Wednesday. Today counsel <lb/>
for Dewey moved a continuance <lb/>
case because of the appeal <lb/>
made to the Supreme court in the <lb/>
matter the refusal of the judge <lb/>
have the solicitor give a bill of <lb/>
particulars to the defense, but the <lb/>
solicitor opposed <lb/>
holding the appeal to be inter- <lb/>
The judge decided <lb/>
against continuance the ease <lb/>
is set Wednesday. <lb/>
quarter an average of <lb/>
94.24 for each The R. A. Smith went t. <lb/>
amount contributed to the orphan <lb/>
age was <lb/>
Patrick. <lb/>
Miss Lillie Stewart, of Peters- <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Killed. <lb/>
Dr. William <lb/>
was called to Saturday <lb/>
evening to hold an inquest over a <lb/>
youth killed by a train. <lb/>
The boy was sitting on the railroad <lb/>
track and was struck by a passing <lb/>
No one could Identity <lb/>
him or tell where he came from. <lb/>
He was ginger cake color, had en <lb/>
overalls with a base ball mil bis <lb/>
pocket. <lb/>
A Socialist Ticket. <lb/>
Richmond, Va., July <lb/>
ha named a ticket <lb/>
as <lb/>
For Governor, George M, Non <lb/>
of Richmond; <lb/>
William Oath, of Newport News; <lb/>
Secretary of Commonwealth, Max <lb/>
Newport News; Trees- <lb/>
area Jas. H. Cooper, of Newport <lb/>
News. <lb/>
Pardon for the seeming <lb/>
but are you The <lb/>
new every <lb/>
hour with some we are <lb/>
that theft is a tar more com- <lb/>
term than w hen <lb/>
coined by our forefathers. Tom <lb/>
Lawson shook us up some with his <lb/>
the astound- <lb/>
rottenness of <lb/>
and yet Sis tales are as <lb/>
twice told in comparison with the <lb/>
the paint manufacturers, <lb/>
who claim their stint to <lb/>
be the equal to Harrison's <lb/>
and Country paint, the <lb/>
of which <lb/>
was <lb/>
president in ye olden <lb/>
days how to make and <lb/>
try which it a <lb/>
pure paint. Brothers <lb/>
Co. were making paints <lb/>
before the fathers of the <lb/>
paint manufacturers were <lb/>
Hart, agents <lb/>
burg, mine in Monday to <lb/>
visit her sister. Mrs. J. A. Webb. <lb/>
Mrs. J. II. Mitchel <lb/>
of Suffolk, who have been visiting <lb/>
Mis. W. Johnson, returned <lb/>
home this Mrs. John- <lb/>
son and sou, Herbert, accompanied <lb/>
her home. <lb/>
Wednesday, July 5th. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. H. T. <lb/>
to Tuesday. <lb/>
J. L. Fleming went to Hassel <lb/>
this <lb/>
Prof. G. K. of Win- <lb/>
Is in <lb/>
Mrs, C. Y. York child left <lb/>
Pilot <lb/>
Miss Mollie Manning, of Bethel, <lb/>
who has spending a few <lb/>
with Mrs. C. returned <lb/>
home this <lb/>
Miss Lillian Carr returned from <lb/>
Wilson Tuesday Miss <lb/>
Susie accompanied her <lb/>
borne to a few days- <lb/>
pasta <lb/>
. J. Whichard. <lb/>
in tithe Grand Stand <lb/>
You should have beard <lb/>
Forbes and Dr. singing <lb/>
got coming from Wash- <lb/>
last night. <lb/>
The fat <lb/>
but I wish I <lb/>
I'd make it warm fer <lb/>
old boy yon know I'm <lb/>
you. What do at Caro- <lb/>
next year will be A. P., <lb/>
in lie, too, again next um- <lb/>
Gene, we know you were a <lb/>
But then we all lost the <lb/>
name the Dr <lb/>
hurt in he first inning <lb/>
did count for anything for he <lb/>
was e game.<lb/>
Gene, Gee but y m like the <lb/>
Can't out them out <lb/>
Old Rick din bunt one, <lb/>
mil did n t be run He is a peach <lb/>
hi anyway,<lb/>
Tr. Rowe we <lb/>
team, but Washington ii our <lb/>
j ways. <lb/>
got a two bagger, single <lb/>
a sacrifice. Well what do <lb/>
think We know ho <lb/>
can hit. <lb/>
Jack Ivey says he was a <lb/>
IV. But we all know he. is a star <lb/>
in and uses the stick like a <lb/>
By Did you s e those <lb/>
beautiful sacrifices he golf <lb/>
. . <lb/>
It look ; line inning, <lb/>
we crossed rubber, but oh, <lb/>
third three <lb/>
Boys we want three out <lb/>
if tour next week. <lb/>
Poor <lb/>
sorry. <lb/>
Don't <lb/>
didn't gel <lb/>
you know he <lb/>
is <lb/>
Say what you the <lb/>
buttery look mighty <lb/>
nod tome and surely they deserve <lb/>
of the credit for winning <lb/>
tame, for what we didn't give <lb/>
hem the boys look. <lb/>
-Nearly all th. <lb/>
What <lb/>
going to <lb/>
me <lb/>
are <lb/>
Dr. Howe <lb/>
entitled to milk shakes <lb/>
liter his long <lb/>
go an first <lb/>
base, can't He is all to the <lb/>
evergreen any <lb/>
tine young was beard to <lb/>
remark Friday night that Rowe <lb/>
was so bashful that be was actually <lb/>
cute. <lb/>
the popular <lb/>
salesman of Co., <lb/>
in our this week. He <lb/>
one the oldest and most <lb/>
men on the road. <lb/>
Vanceboro Went Wet. <lb/>
New Bern, N. C, July Last <lb/>
May an was called in the <lb/>
of Vanceboro to determine <lb/>
whether that locality should have <lb/>
saloons or no saloon. was a <lb/>
very light vote, only votes <lb/>
being cast; for saloons and <lb/>
vote against. <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
Harold Crewel, engine dispatcher <lb/>
at the round-house at Spencer, <lb/>
was run aver and killed Sunday <lb/>
was <lb/>
to death at New Bern Sunday <lb/>
POOR PRINT <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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