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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>
All Hr, <lb/>
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stimulated by <lb/>
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-mile, ought to be the <lb/>
tn <lb/>
These seventeen are now in .<lb/>
them t. have a <lb/>
time, at l if tier i- <lb/>
ft the metropolis t <lb/>
i. i. <lb/>
The of the bet <lb/>
. m I tie mo-T par <lb/>
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i ha fear-l. She <lb/>
does <lb/>
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., like tier t Ann <lb/>
, . . <lb/>
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rd dance. But <lb/>
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honor. <lb/>
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yearns W rd I <lb/>
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. it f I h Bl <lb/>
Into which born and <lb/>
moves, ,,. , <lb/>
Card <lb/>
seventeen -y <lb/>
Alabama, <lb/>
i , After they haw had <lb/>
lit lime of their life here, .-. <lb/>
v ill go bark if they r. <lb/>
Our is a hard, <lb/>
even <lb/>
the <lb/>
The happy South k--.- <lb/>
that <lb/>
N Mail. <lb/>
I C i n <lb/>
to a third <lb/>
nomination have been in a rein of <lb/>
admirable good humor. The Time <lb/>
sends today from <lb/>
L an interview in which he <lb/>
puts very cleverly the situation a <lb/>
regards himself and Mr. <lb/>
program. didn't get nil <lb/>
my said, Mr. Bryan, re- <lb/>
erring political joke the <lb/>
day, f doubt her what <lb/>
he did get fit him <lb/>
The V the <lb/>
of re- <lb/>
f in shown the <lb/>
ere tempted to <lb/>
era of an <lb/>
pattern with hie tar- <lb/>
t up i an-1 <lb/>
pr i less thin <lb/>
Si <lb/>
f , <lb/>
, h on. <lb/>
t rake Mabel <lb/>
K i I, Mil inf t of Mr. <lb/>
in J. R. His <lb/>
Kn i . <lb/>
I. <lb/>
in <lb/>
t the of Him who <lb/>
things l <lb/>
with Brother Co y wife <lb/>
ind family in their <lb/>
would them to <lb/>
said little children to <lb/>
Be <lb/>
our <lb/>
a is able heel us in every <lb/>
time of <lb/>
Boo a of <lb/>
and Io Brother <lb/>
Corey and family <lb/>
b Relief- <lb/>
tor <lb/>
IS FOR YOU <lb/>
J. W. <lb/>
hey. <lb/>
Jar <lb/>
of of <lb/>
TUE NATIONAL BANK <lb/>
OF GREENVILLE, <lb/>
take I t. k <lb/>
who .- k <lb/>
with me for the tine <lb/>
. the G <lb/>
I Up always, a- on- <lb/>
fr at all times, after <lb/>
to- <lb/>
if will to sell <lb/>
With <lb/>
I have in the <lb/>
season i at me <lb/>
to <lb/>
come you at all times <lb/>
IS. T. Hooker, ore -t i- <lb/>
be-f . fl <lb/>
H we all the b <lb/>
in the i <lb/>
safe in saying that I MB <lb/>
to look <lb/>
, after he- <lb/>
Y o vi i<lb/>
Th o <lb/>
ll. I <lb/>
. . r <lb/>
At Greenville, in the State of North <lb/>
Carolina, at business; <lb/>
June <lb/>
and 53,263.80 <lb/>
tin<lb/>
t, <lb/>
U. s. <lb/>
house, fur- <lb/>
on. <lb/>
Due fro a National <lb/>
reserve <lb/>
Hue tr -i State Bank . <lb/>
Oho approved reserve <lb/>
. and other rash Items <lb/>
other National <lb/>
r on- money reserve n<lb/>
notes <lb/>
U Si <lb/>
f p <lb/>
t. Moore., an-; m s <lb/>
the I r <lb/>
declined to u r <lb/>
Mr .<lb/>
the <lb/>
ye .-, . unable u i <lb/>
. a, ire the <lb/>
. , <lb/>
, . . , I <lb/>
,,. d soil e on way. <lb/>
bush pending <lb/>
. . , . lien In which <lb/>
i I us hi been Re- <lb/>
,,,. to <lb/>
I .,,,. p id law<lb/>
a-d <lb/>
stork paid i i <lb/>
profits. <lb/>
p and p .- <lb/>
National bank not <lb/>
st-kn Unit <lb/>
in <lb/>
in <lb/>
I , <lb/>
.; -i <lb/>
-1 <lb/>
II <lb/>
a ,<lb/>
JULY <lb/>
Clearance <lb/>
SALE. l <lb/>
, -i r f <lb/>
, r m .-a. iii<lb/>
.<lb/>
. . ,; <lb/>
ii w<lb/>
We making a busy d <lb/>
making it <lb/>
J . -i <lb/>
All Summer Goods <lb/>
WILL BE SOLD AT REDUCED PRICES <lb/>
to make room for the new fall stock. The . <lb/>
Reduction includes<lb/>
ii nil <lb/>
ill <lb/>
is i <lb/>
, q <lb/>
.-or North <lb/>
of Pitt.- IS. <lb/>
I, J. w. <lb/>
bank, <lb/>
Stan men <lb/>
of an , , i i <lb/>
ii-. <lb/>
ii above<lb/>
I -I I , <lb/>
J v . R. PARKER<lb/>
LUMBER <lb/>
SHINGLES <lb/>
AND BRICK. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
C . <lb/>
Subscribed and n fore me <lb/>
J i <lb/>
r . i i <lb/>
Attest <lb/>
ii. w. K, <lb/>
SAM T. <lb/>
K. A. MOTE, Jr. <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
For R Deeds <lb/>
l hereby <lb/>
ff-r <lb/>
primaries <lb/>
and county convention. <lb/>
W. M. Moore <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Colored Lawns, <lb/>
Black Lawns, <lb/>
Dress Ginghams, <lb/>
Ready-made Shirt Waists, <lb/>
Hosiery, <lb/>
Embroideries, <lb/>
Ladies Belts and <lb/>
Ladies, Children <lb/>
and Infants <lb/>
An early call will money saving to you.<lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
I D J WHICHARD, Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR IN A VANCE <lb/>
I-<lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA JULY 1906. <lb/>
NO <lb/>
MAIL ORDER HOUSES. <lb/>
PROTECTING WITNESS S. <lb/>
Cl <lb/>
Dunlap la jolt a <lb/>
waiting for that dynamo to t <lb/>
ii ml when it does show up the day I <lb/>
will lo<lb/>
The Local Merchant Can Hold <lb/>
His Own Against Them if <lb/>
They Will Follow <lb/>
heir Example <lb/>
In the damage inflict- <lb/>
ed upon business, of the local <lb/>
the competitions of <lb/>
the mail house the South- <lb/>
western Manufacturer and Jobber, <lb/>
of City, i inclined to be- <lb/>
Hi the home dealer <lb/>
would have no difficulty in hold <lb/>
log his own for the fact that <lb/>
the mail Older house is invariably <lb/>
an advertiser. <lb/>
th power that enables <lb/>
the mall order people to divert <lb/>
the dollar f the farmer from the <lb/>
till of the country store into their <lb/>
own <lb/>
They advertise and well <lb/>
They full descriptions of <lb/>
their show them <lb/>
invariably print <lb/>
the prices. How else could <lb/>
they It is by heavy <lb/>
advertisement that they succeed. <lb/>
Io a <lb/>
year in vii forms of <lb/>
is no thing with <lb/>
with houses. Their annual <lb/>
heavy volumes <lb/>
are out by the cartload, <lb/>
They reach almost every <lb/>
the country by their cir- <lb/>
and letters; they <lb/>
with the rural delivery car- <lb/>
they expend effort, time and <lb/>
money in getting the addressee of <lb/>
in every neighborhood and <lb/>
hamlet in the entire country. <lb/>
They advertise by sending <lb/>
letters <lb/>
a d papers to every home <lb/>
where there is a possibility of sell- <lb/>
five cents worth of <lb/>
Moreover, they employ talented <lb/>
in their correspondence de- <lb/>
manager with often <lb/>
number of devotee hie <lb/>
entire time to tie and <lb/>
complaints of dissatisfied cue timers <lb/>
Genial pleasant letters ate <lb/>
written, regrets for mistakes, <lb/>
assurances that the <lb/>
make it right, and a strong stale <lb/>
that such a valued <lb/>
will get <lb/>
advertisements in in- <lb/>
direct f <lb/>
The mail order horse endeavor <lb/>
to get into direct personal <lb/>
with every possible customer. <lb/>
Th.- local might <lb/>
by a like course. Let him <lb/>
the of the mail <lb/>
house and meet them on their own <lb/>
grounds them with their <lb/>
own the local merchant <lb/>
should as carefully, II <lb/>
he would the method, <lb/>
cl good, the o <lb/>
strongly n. <lb/>
as lie mail <lb/>
to hi <lb/>
lie might find a very <lb/>
t in a short time. <lb/>
BLACKJACK ITEMS <lb/>
Peebles, who has <lb/>
in the past bad mo- <lb/>
on the Superior Court <lb/>
Bench, is holding court in <lb/>
Mecklenburg county for the first <lb/>
time. Monday, after convening <lb/>
court, he took to deliver <lb/>
a sort of introductory speech <lb/>
the bar and in which he dwelt <lb/>
interestingly upon the rights <lb/>
that witnesses are entitled to. <lb/>
bis remarks were timely, as it is <lb/>
often the case that some lawyer <lb/>
is found who rough shod <lb/>
over witnesses irrespective of <lb/>
their rights much less <lb/>
feelings. Judge Peebles, of <lb/>
course made no personal thrust <lb/>
and his remarks could apply <lb/>
with equal force to the oar of one <lb/>
county as well as to the bar of <lb/>
another He stated that he <lb/>
would not allow a lawyer to <lb/>
duly a witness, nor <lb/>
he allow a party to a suit <lb/>
to be treated properly. If a <lb/>
lawyer treated a witness or a <lb/>
party to a suit improperly and a <lb/>
verdict was rendered for the <lb/>
party the lawyer represented he <lb/>
would set the verdict aside, <lb/>
though if an adverse verdict was <lb/>
rendered he would permit it to <lb/>
stand <lb/>
Relative to the legality of a <lb/>
judge setting verdicts aside on <lb/>
grounds we are in the dark- <lb/>
but there appears plenty of <lb/>
light from common sense, <lb/>
able standpoint, for lawyers who <lb/>
unduly witnesses de, <lb/>
serve to lose. There are cases, <lb/>
of course, where witnesses <lb/>
parties to suits may need <lb/>
and criticizing severely, <lb/>
but there are many more cases <lb/>
where witnesses especially are <lb/>
and they do not de- <lb/>
serve it- Its true that a witness <lb/>
may not always possess a good <lb/>
character, but it seems hard if <lb/>
fate makes him witness a crime <lb/>
that he should be made to suffer <lb/>
fur it, and it is not right for <lb/>
small tilings in the life of a <lb/>
to be picked- up and flaunt- <lb/>
ed vividly and harshly before the <lb/>
people merely because accident <lb/>
may have placed him in the wit- <lb/>
chair. It is be duty of <lb/>
every judge, like Judge Peebles, <lb/>
to protect witnesses from undue <lb/>
criticism and in doing so they <lb/>
will be but following a plain line <lb/>
of responsibility and will well <lb/>
merit the gratitude of the people. <lb/>
The of lawyers who <lb/>
indulge in such wanton practice <lb/>
is small, but it should grow <lb/>
smaller Some lawyer may in- <lb/>
in such conduct <lb/>
hut then he should be <lb/>
sharply reminded of his <lb/>
Dispatch. <lb/>
Black Jack, K. O. July 1900, <lb/>
Crops in this are <lb/>
damaged on account of the rain. <lb/>
The farmers would rejoice to see <lb/>
a few days of fair weather. <lb/>
J. W. and wife went to <lb/>
Washington last week. <lb/>
FARMERS INSTITUTE. <lb/>
Meets in Greenville Aug. 10th. <lb/>
There will be a Farmers <lb/>
held in Greenville on Fri- <lb/>
day, August 10th, and every <lb/>
, r and every one interested <lb/>
OVER THE STATE. <lb/>
Miss Julia left yesterday to <lb/>
spend a few days with Miss <lb/>
Cox. <lb/>
E. F. Clark went to Greenville <lb/>
last Friday. <lb/>
Porter and John S <lb/>
attended at <lb/>
and church at <lb/>
land. <lb/>
Hon. Geo. H. Cole has returned <lb/>
an to <lb/>
Baltimore, and other <lb/>
points. <lb/>
Mis. F. G. and Mrs. H. <lb/>
B. Phillips spent Tuesday in <lb/>
Greenville shopping. <lb/>
Mrs. J. O. Bobbitt and Miss <lb/>
Elizabeth left this morn <lb/>
for the latter's borne in Nor- <lb/>
folk. <lb/>
Elder G. left last <lb/>
to go over the river where <lb/>
be will spend some time with his <lb/>
people. <lb/>
Prince Burroughs Charlie <lb/>
Harper left Saturday for a trip to <lb/>
Washington to <lb/>
There were a large crowd at <lb/>
Sunday school Sunday. It looks as <lb/>
if the school is very <lb/>
much. <lb/>
, Smith and bis sister, of <lb/>
were here Sunday. <lb/>
Bight many of oar people <lb/>
ed at Pleasant Hill <lb/>
John and James Clark went <lb/>
the road Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Jennie Buck, of Ayden, <lb/>
who has been visiting Miss Mag- <lb/>
left her home Fri <lb/>
day. <lb/>
R. M. Williams want to Green- <lb/>
ville Thursday. <lb/>
A. J. Johnson, of Norfolk, was <lb/>
here last week. <lb/>
F. L. Stancill, of Washington <lb/>
were here yesterday. <lb/>
in farming in Pitt county should <lb/>
lay aside everything and devote <lb/>
that day strictly to the one idea <lb/>
of getting all there is out of the <lb/>
exercises of the institute. <lb/>
There is not a farmer in the <lb/>
county, it makes no difference <lb/>
how smart or how good a f <lb/>
he may be, that cannot get many <lb/>
lesson that will apply to <lb/>
his particular case by attending <lb/>
this institute. <lb/>
Another gentle <lb/>
men who come here and <lb/>
in holding these institutes a-e in <lb/>
the employ of the State and <lb/>
every farmer in the county con- <lb/>
of Interest in North <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
Two people were killed at Dur- <lb/>
ham by the explosion of a gasoline <lb/>
tank. <lb/>
A. first <lb/>
mine this State has begun <lb/>
OPERA HOUSE MANAGEMENT. <lb/>
Coming <lb/>
Many <lb/>
Attractions for <lb/>
Season. <lb/>
Mr. M Beat, who for the <lb/>
past seas in gave very f <lb/>
vice as manager of th Masonic <lb/>
temple opera g resign- <lb/>
ed hoc of other <lb/>
the temple committee of <lb/>
I. has <lb/>
to <lb/>
near Webster, in Johnson lie Masonic <lb/>
county. j with D. J. <lb/>
c induct L m-e for the <lb/>
have been Issued for the latter placed <lb/>
nearly five hundred of iD , he, <lb/>
Greensboro fr to pay tax on ,,,,.,. is ac ,., , <lb/>
opera an I <lb/>
Two North Carolina bunk,., at knows aC the it he- <lb/>
and get attractions nave air <lb/>
part of the been booked th c <lb/>
bonds, the former season pron.- <lb/>
the latter <lb/>
A highway robbery near <lb/>
a holding up a <lb/>
white man at point of a pistol <lb/>
him of his money watch <lb/>
and coat. The was arrested. <lb/>
tributes toward defraying this j New Bern, July <lb/>
expense, and unless the farmers I the <lb/>
Railway at Jacksonville, between <lb/>
Marriage Near Greenville. <lb/>
Tuesday at the h o j <lb/>
lier parents, I miles from Greenville I <lb/>
the presence of relatives and <lb/>
friends, Hoover Boyd <lb/>
married Strickland. <lb/>
Rev. I B. performing I <lb/>
the <lb/>
The entered the prettily <lb/>
decorate-1 with her brother, <lb/>
C. the groom with his <lb/>
Miss Lizzie Strickland. <lb/>
After the wedding they were driven <lb/>
to where left on the <lb/>
for <lb/>
other places of interest. <lb/>
Strickland is one of Pitt <lb/>
county's charming young ladle. <lb/>
Mr. Strickland is one of Wilson's <lb/>
promising Their <lb/>
many friends bespeak for them a <lb/>
future- They will <lb/>
home <lb/>
AN EXPLANATION. <lb/>
N. V. July <lb/>
Not I authorized the <lb/>
of my for Clerk of <lb/>
was print <lb/>
paper mention of mil <lb/>
hit <lb/>
For years I have id <lb/>
tree ballot, ard worked <lb/>
for the <lb/>
e house ring <lb/>
of <lb/>
not <lb/>
in Put county ha had <lb/>
time and n-<lb/>
And dim t propose bet <lb/>
any , of -I , <lb/>
ping Stone mini r <lb/>
k III- pa. I I- <lb/>
me man . I <lb/>
Care to be i <lb/>
near the farmer class growing <lb/>
and now the is <lb/>
eliminated from politic, the <lb/>
Republican parts i lining up to <lb/>
its ill give battle this <lb/>
more especially <lb/>
Many Hied of ring <lb/>
and i. e tenure of may falter <lb/>
their allegiance to Democracy, <lb/>
or there is color line to light <lb/>
now. Respectfully, <lb/>
c. l, <lb/>
SPEED TRIAL FOR <lb/>
The Municipal J and En- <lb/>
of New York is the <lb/>
for the following regarding I be <lb/>
active little city of Wilson, N. C. <lb/>
town has introduced a <lb/>
new of <lb/>
racing. a hobo the <lb/>
be is arrested <lb/>
cerated in the lockup. <lb/>
several have been accumulated <lb/>
the whole lot is marched out into <lb/>
the public Across this a <lb/>
line is drawn the tramps art- <lb/>
told line up. Hardly has the <lb/>
ragged lib when the <lb/>
I rout j them, <lb/>
hide whip band. <lb/>
ham that one mile down the road <lb/>
i a ditch that Barks the corporate <lb/>
of the At a given <lb/>
are to for <lb/>
inch, and in to be <lb/>
that hobo a hose <lb/>
i i mil <lb/>
he in to be I reeled to meta a <lb/>
II . ii an he will cause Is <lb/>
ml his life <lb/>
show some interest and come <lb/>
out to these meetings the money <lb/>
thus expended is thrown away <lb/>
The managers of these <lb/>
are skilled and <lb/>
farmers themselves, they want <lb/>
assist and aid the farmers in <lb/>
their work, but in order to get <lb/>
benefits of the institute work the <lb/>
farmers themselves must take <lb/>
an interest in em They <lb/>
not only go out to them, <lb/>
but as the institutes belong to <lb/>
the farmers they should ask <lb/>
questions about matters on <lb/>
which they want information. <lb/>
The writer has known Dr. <lb/>
Tate Butler, director of farmers <lb/>
institutes, well for some <lb/>
considerable time and we know <lb/>
to be a conscientious, hard <lb/>
king, practical man, deeply <lb/>
in love with his work and <lb/>
to aid in advancing <lb/>
promoting the agricultural in- <lb/>
of the is <lb/>
In speaking about these mat- <lb/>
some time ago Dr. Butler <lb/>
said to us the farmers of <lb/>
Pitt county would manifest a <lb/>
sufficient interest and me out <lb/>
in large numbers that he could <lb/>
very easily arrange for two <lb/>
or ire institutes instead of one <lb/>
each year and instead of <lb/>
only one day, if the <lb/>
desired and indicated the desire <lb/>
by presence, several days <lb/>
could devoted to work, <lb/>
but that the poor encouragement <lb/>
and the small attendance that <lb/>
We have had here in tho past was <lb/>
not an inducement to hold more <lb/>
than <lb/>
Now, farmers of county, <lb/>
let us put our county in the lead <lb/>
a an agricultural county. We <lb/>
have as g mil farmers and as <lb/>
the best Greenville <lb/>
yet The mm <lb/>
will alert to secure the <lb/>
tractions on the road. <lb/>
have <lb/>
r-t at <lb/>
SATTERTHWAITE<lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
To the Democratic raters Pitt <lb/>
county. We the cit- <lb/>
and voters of town- <lb/>
ship beg to the name of J. <lb/>
J. as a candid for <lb/>
nominal ion to Legislature from <lb/>
the side of Tar Mr. <lb/>
is a resident of <lb/>
and his <lb/>
will enable to represent his <lb/>
this Mas <lb/>
by lightning burned <lb/>
yesterday. near <lb/>
by were damaged, The less is <lb/>
at <lb/>
One of the most pathetic and <lb/>
pitiable sights ever seen in <lb/>
was that yesterday afternoon <lb/>
Hargett between <lb/>
and street. AI fellow countrymen on the North <lb/>
man and his blind wife ere side of river to an <lb/>
ejected from the r borne, supposed-1 and we know of no other man <lb/>
became bad failed to we believe would represent us <lb/>
They and their s satisfactorily. He has always <lb/>
were put out on the <lb/>
News Observe<lb/>
N. C. July <lb/>
Miss Mae Bailey of Suffolk. Va <lb/>
is the guest Mrs. F. G. <lb/>
on Bobbin's boulevard. <lb/>
Rev. Jamie spent <lb/>
at the home of hi. father, Mr, J. <lb/>
D. Winterville. <lb/>
Miss Mamie Is the <lb/>
guest Mrs. F. G. on <lb/>
Grove lane. <lb/>
City W. T. Sledge spent <lb/>
between and <lb/>
Grimesland. <lb/>
P. H. spent <lb/>
J. Ogle Million is spending <lb/>
bis at bis home <lb/>
Miss Margaret leaves <lb/>
morning for New York <lb/>
where sue will sail on the steamer <lb/>
for China, to <lb/>
u ii it- her missionary duties. <lb/>
Registered at the Hotel Leg It. <lb/>
O. B. Vb., A. <lb/>
been a Democrat, a <lb/>
advocate of educational advantages <lb/>
and moral uplifting in <lb/>
the community in which he reside-, <lb/>
and we believe he will receive <lb/>
hearty support, of the Democratic <lb/>
party nominated and we ask the <lb/>
South side of the liver to join us <lb/>
securing the Domination for <lb/>
Alphonso Ward., <lb/>
Jasper Langley, <lb/>
J. H. Gurganus. <lb/>
V. E. Perry, <lb/>
M. G. Waters, <lb/>
J. T. <lb/>
W, ii, Williams, <lb/>
George Williams, <lb/>
R. It. Fleming, <lb/>
O, II. Little, <lb/>
W. A. Whitehurst. <lb/>
Mod as can be found of Washington, D, <lb/>
Tax D <lb/>
It ca not lie denied that there is a <lb/>
good dial of taxable property this <lb/>
which does not contribute one <lb/>
cent in the way of taxes to support- <lb/>
city, state and county govern <lb/>
It does seem that there <lb/>
should In- someway of making these <lb/>
people in their share of govern <lb/>
There is one thing <lb/>
sure, the poor man can't dodge his <lb/>
and all have got <lb/>
do is to indicate a desire for <lb/>
methods and more <lb/>
in order the very <lb/>
beet skilled practical <lb/>
from the State depart- <lb/>
If we will do this Dr. <lb/>
and In associates will <lb/>
lion. Geo. H Di, Jo <lb/>
B. E. <lb/>
regular appointment here Sunday <lb/>
night <lb/>
Line the mark us ,,, <lb/>
hunts -he a . I Go ; ,,. if he M ,,,,,, ., <lb/>
line then breaks and <lb/>
off go The marshal and <lb/>
his leap upon their wait- <lb/>
horses aw after <lb/>
Hying tramps, up with <lb/>
them and spurring ambit ion <lb/>
of the laggards with sharp waring <lb/>
fruit their As a mat <lb/>
of no in been <lb/>
dogged, but belief in the <lb/>
of last the ditch i- <lb/>
no tramp once <lb/>
run the race ever been known <lb/>
to return town <lb/>
only a or two farm- <lb/>
era lie will neither have the <lb/>
Interest nor to spend <lb/>
much time with us. <lb/>
Remember the day and date, <lb/>
Friday, August the 10th, be <lb/>
certain to come out. <lb/>
O. I <lb/>
institute <lb/>
Wool <lb/>
M. Schultz. <lb/>
for <lb/>
When a young gets so that <lb/>
he will pay any attention to <lb/>
the teachings of his we do <lb/>
not think a reform school will do <lb/>
him much cl <lb/>
Church Dedication. <lb/>
The church <lb/>
will he dedicated next Sunday <lb/>
The o <lb/>
will be conducted l <lb/>
Clayton and Rev. Thus. Chapman, <lb/>
A Invitation is we, did to <lb/>
everybody d He service. <lb/>
Rev. Mr. Chapman will pi each <lb/>
at the on Friday and Sat- <lb/>
nights, y and <lb/>
previous at the dedicatory services <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
He has to come up every <lb/>
time. If ho does not do so his <lb/>
wages, if he is an of some <lb/>
other party, are Ii <lb/>
working r he to go <lb/>
down in bis jeans and up tho <lb/>
amount. The man who dodges the <lb/>
tax assessor is man of means <lb/>
here the the schemer <lb/>
thinks the chief cud of life is <lb/>
financiering of any kind <lb/>
B. The man who gives in his property <lb/>
n its lull value has to <lb/>
tax dodgers <lb/>
and the rich both are <lb/>
any m re taxes than <lb/>
a poof men <lb/>
More High <lb/>
Mr. B. T. sent The Re- <lb/>
another till of com as <lb/>
a to t he one sent us y <lb/>
Mi C W. This la-t one <lb/>
for <lb/>
pay <lb/>
Th. i <lb/>
loath lo <lb/>
they have to. <lb/>
fill to lop <lb/>
rich men will <lb/>
man <lb/>
. <lb/>
i y, <lb/>
in i <lb/>
thorough <lb/>
just a few inches of <lb/>
shorter other. <lb/>
mark just as some <lb/>
hi fact, the average <lb/>
I- that there is a. <lb/>
about <lb/>
he governs himself <lb/>
If there is anything <lb/>
hie country, it is a <lb/>
taxi <lb/>
gram.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019640_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
III I <lb/>
i. m, <lb/>
. <lb/>
C L Wilkinson Co <lb/>
GREAT SUMMER <lb/>
MAKING ,. <lb/>
FOR THE LITTLE ONES. <lb/>
The Way Try to Propitiate the Geographical Game That Requires <lb/>
cf Forfeits. Quick Thinking. <lb/>
All Indians are superstitious and j in a circle <lb/>
have ways by t en-1 and one takes a <lb/>
propitiate the goddess of j handkerchief and, throwing it <lb/>
fortune, or. an Hie. t-all it, another, calls A <lb/>
medicine. either l them good I ten rather <lb/>
or to break a spell of bad lock. <lb/>
Still Going O <lb/>
G L. WILKINSON.; <lb/>
AND <lb/>
Company <lb/>
-r ,<lb/>
Economy. <lb/>
The foundation of success in a <lb/>
way is ECONOMY. There is f <lb/>
I nothing which helps you to save like <lb/>
keeping your money in a bank. Do <lb/>
not wait until .-you have a big deposit. <lb/>
We accept small ones as well. We I <lb/>
pay interest on Time Deposits. If <lb/>
t you do not carry a account, come <lb/>
in or write us. <lb/>
THE GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST CO.<lb/>
THE BANK of GREENVILLE <lb/>
H II <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
CAPITAL <lb/>
SURPLUS <lb/>
UNDIVIDED PROFITS <lb/>
OVER <lb/>
25,000.00 <lb/>
25,000.00 <lb/>
13,300.00 <lb/>
We pay interest on Time Certificates, <lb/>
K or deposited for <lb/>
stipulate I time percent. <lb/>
Accounts of merchants, far- <lb/>
and individuals solicited <lb/>
R. L. Davis. <lb/>
Jas. L. Little. Cashier. <lb/>
SECONDHAND MACHINERY <lb/>
FOR SALE <lb/>
One H. Boiler <lb/>
One IS H. P. Center <lb/>
One Sawmill <lb/>
One Q Gin F. and C. <lb/>
One Press. <lb/>
This machinery months old and will he sold It it <lb/>
as good as new, solid inserted; tooth <lb/>
or both. <lb/>
HENRY HARDING, agent <lb/>
T-l At <lb/>
a 4- <lb/>
u. <lb/>
-4<lb/>
has hi.- or her own <lb/>
medicine, mast made <lb/>
us own peculiar <lb/>
Sometimes an Indian will quietly <lb/>
tease camp, go to a hilltop <lb/>
or and ere alone in <lb/>
hot sun for hoping to <lb/>
induce the power of medicine to <lb/>
and abide with Another <lb/>
Indian on coming to a stream or <lb/>
will strike the water with his <lb/>
land or bow or tomahawk or other <lb/>
weapon, at time uttering <lb/>
n prayer to the Spirit to sens <lb/>
him good medicine, or he will dip <lb/>
up tome of the water in a vessel and <lb/>
pour it on the ground where grass <lb/>
is growing before taking a drink, <lb/>
no matter how thirsty he may be. <lb/>
Others make a particularly strong <lb/>
and medicine by standing <lb/>
in the rain until their hair is <lb/>
thoroughly wet through. If the rain <lb/>
last but u short time it is thought <lb/>
that the medicine, has been broken <lb/>
will be Some of <lb/>
the Indian women make medicine <lb/>
by standing in the water and cut- <lb/>
ting their arms and legs with a <lb/>
knife, believing that the deeper the <lb/>
cut the more powerful will be the <lb/>
medicine. <lb/>
Indians also have it they call <lb/>
medicine horses, medicine <lb/>
medicine arrow.-, medicine bags, <lb/>
medicine bones medicine images <lb/>
of men and beasts, all of which are <lb/>
supposed to bring their owners good <lb/>
luck. The medicine horse is often <lb/>
painted decorated in the most <lb/>
fantastic manner is thought to <lb/>
lie able to carry his rider safely <lb/>
through every battle. The <lb/>
cine dog is used to good luck <lb/>
when on chase end sometimes <lb/>
to cure or pi. vi e. So <lb/>
as the dog prove lo be good <lb/>
cine he i- tie pot. <lb/>
woe to him when <lb/>
for into his master's stomach lie <lb/>
goes a.- as water and <lb/>
strong teeth can take him. <lb/>
Medicine bags are very common <lb/>
and are suppose I to ml n <lb/>
good medicine will van <lb/>
disease, good c and pie- <lb/>
serve the all harm <lb/>
hunt or light. Whenever an Indian <lb/>
has ill hick he is quite sure that it <lb/>
was caused by some one or some- <lb/>
thing having broken his medicine, <lb/>
and he ill immediately endeavor to <lb/>
find who or what made the <lb/>
break and to repair it by making <lb/>
good medicine. <lb/>
But, after all, the Indian is not <lb/>
alone in his medicine making. <lb/>
white nun hit medicine dogs, <lb/>
horses, eats, birds and goats, only <lb/>
he them Mascots, has <lb/>
feet horseshoes and lucky <lb/>
coins, but he laughs at the medicine <lb/>
making of the York <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
They couldn't for the life <lb/>
agree on tin- name for the newest <lb/>
boy baby. They not <lb/>
just couldn't decide on <lb/>
a mime. At length somebody <lb/>
that compromise so <lb/>
that no possibility of a name that <lb/>
had aver been used, a secondhand <lb/>
should by chance he <lb/>
chosen. It was suggested that the <lb/>
letters the alphabet be put in His <lb/>
hat and drawn nut one by oho till <lb/>
a collection Win drawn with vowels <lb/>
and consonants to <lb/>
a brand name. It was <lb/>
done, and to this day bull's the <lb/>
name of The next <lb/>
in the family the name, <lb/>
ed in he manner, of<lb/>
the can- <lb/>
traveler and explorer, owed hit <lb/>
discovery of the source of the Blue. <lb/>
Kile to ability to the <lb/>
lie had some <lb/>
tun as an astrologer, his cure <lb/>
ff smallpox was more of a <lb/>
m his cap as a medicine man. His <lb/>
firing of a candle through <lb/>
table established his fame till high <lb/>
as a worker of miracles. II <lb/>
taming f savage hones and shoot- <lb/>
of kites on the wing tbs <lb/>
maneuvers the <lb/>
Id. the to <lb/>
d life. <lb/>
Waning . <lb/>
the Dial tor, her <lb/>
Soother trouble in <lb/>
wife's face. <lb/>
telegram <lb/>
and sot with the paper <lb/>
in her lap. <lb/>
i I to <lb/>
I hope Ire been in a I <lb/>
he well and will <lb/>
be homo . t , lie <lb/>
. I <lb/>
pin I the person whom the <lb/>
Us was must <lb/>
place, river, n. <lb/>
per on or thing with <lb/>
c of before <lb/>
ton I- Ii e <lb/>
ed ll at the person <lb/>
, . .- the nest question. Ii <lb/>
incorrect or enable to answer a for- <lb/>
f t i aid. <lb/>
The players must be <lb/>
for en the one who throws the <lb/>
will look at one while <lb/>
ins in quite a different <lb/>
The game i lie made <lb/>
a- us interesting by <lb/>
countries, and for older <lb/>
a a century may he given, and <lb/>
the famous character- belonging to <lb/>
it must be quickly thought out. <lb/>
Decayed especially peat <lb/>
have occasionally been observed to <lb/>
evolve n faint light, and even some <lb/>
have I remarked to give <lb/>
out brilliant Hashes of light during <lb/>
a warm summer's evening, This <lb/>
light, emitted without apparent <lb/>
heat, is termed phosphorescence, <lb/>
Various animal substances become <lb/>
luminous before putrescence has be- <lb/>
gun especially the flash of <lb/>
flab, of which the most remark- <lb/>
able are carp and sole. Herring, lob- <lb/>
and crabs often emit a <lb/>
light. familiar of <lb/>
all phosphorescent objects to <lb/>
and girls is, however, the phosphor- <lb/>
of living animals, such as <lb/>
the firefly and The <lb/>
legged worm, found in decayed <lb/>
poplar wood or under lime, bricks <lb/>
and pots in the garden, emits flashes <lb/>
of light when irritated by a little <lb/>
waler. <lb/>
Coiling Without Fire. <lb/>
Do you know that it possible to <lb/>
boil water without lire and without <lb/>
the use of any chemical All you <lb/>
have to do is to put the water in a <lb/>
may he ice water, if you <lb/>
stir it with a wooden <lb/>
paddle; if stir long enough it <lb/>
will ton Hut just here <lb/>
i.- the crucial point of the operation <lb/>
you will have to keep on stirring <lb/>
for about live hour.-. and girl. <lb/>
therefore are advised to make <lb/>
the experiment unless they are in <lb/>
need of some rather strenuous <lb/>
drawn out. If any feel <lb/>
brave to try it, it might in- <lb/>
them to watch the gradual <lb/>
warming of the water until it gets <lb/>
so hot the hand cannot be held, <lb/>
it finally begins to boil. <lb/>
An Experiment <lb/>
A simple kaleidoscope may be <lb/>
made by any or girl by taking a <lb/>
straight lamp <lb/>
one is painting the out- <lb/>
side of black. If make a pin- <lb/>
hole in a piece of paper and hold it <lb/>
at one end and at it <lb/>
the other it appear as a number <lb/>
of of light. It is the <lb/>
surface reflects and <lb/>
causes this. If now fasten two <lb/>
pieces of ; I las at one end of the <lb/>
chimney, placing them <lb/>
beads and bright colored bits of <lb/>
glass so that they may move as yon <lb/>
turn the chimney, you will have a- <lb/>
good a kaleidoscope as you would <lb/>
care to buy. <lb/>
Answered at Last. <lb/>
Why the Only the <lb/>
gnu knew-. <lb/>
Why was the sideboard Because <lb/>
it beard the talk. <lb/>
Why did the cream <lb/>
it the acid drop. <lb/>
Where was the salad droning <lb/>
In the green room. <lb/>
Questions. <lb/>
A being <lb/>
asked by what method no had ac- <lb/>
quired so much knowledge, an- <lb/>
not <lb/>
from Hiking questions when <lb/>
I teas <lb/>
The <lb/>
A piece of cardboard shaped info <lb/>
a the corners of which ore <lb/>
rounded off, should be placed oh the <lb/>
Sneer. Ii <lb/>
board inclined <lb/>
at an in<lb/>
rigorous flip of the <lb/>
band the extremity <lb/>
toy it is <lb/>
e GuM <lb/>
of <lb/>
With r <lb/>
of <lb/>
of the <lb/>
A Riddle. . . <lb/>
i r- net i <lb/>
OF THE CONDITION <lb/>
AT THE Cl OF BUS JUNE <lb/>
Loans Discount <lb/>
Du from Banks fig <lb/>
Cash Items 9.39 <lb/>
Gold coin <lb/>
Silver coin 1,179.11 <lb/>
Nat,<lb/>
Capital in <lb/>
Undivided . <lb/>
sub to 40.233 <lb/>
of North Carolina, <lb/>
of Pitt. <lb/>
I. J. Cashier of the above-named hank, do solemn- <lb/>
the above statement is true to the best of <lb/>
knowledge and j. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me, this 28-d of June <lb/>
1906. <lb/>
V. JOHNSTON. <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
T. L. <lb/>
B. L. <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
REPORT OF HE CONDITION OF <lb/>
BETHEL BANKING AND TRUST CO <lb/>
AT BETHEL, N. C. <lb/>
I At the close of business 1906. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
Due from Banks 1- . <lb/>
Bankers <lb/>
Hold <lb/>
c i National bank <lb/>
and S. notes <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital stock <lb/>
Surplus fund <lb/>
Undivided profits<lb/>
Time certificates of <lb/>
deposit , <lb/>
Deposits subj. to chock <lb/>
checks out- <lb/>
Checks <lb/>
300.00 <lb/>
174.30 <lb/>
309.50 <lb/>
72.67 <lb/>
ate of North Caroline, fruity cf Pin, <lb/>
I. H. H of the-above named solemnly <lb/>
that above statement is true to best of my <lb/>
and belief. , B. H. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
me, this 22nd day April <lb/>
Sen <lb/>
Votary Public<lb/>
it <lb/>
. . M. O. H LOU . <lb/>
, ,., , Directors <lb/>
TIT <lb/>
aw <lb/>
. I <lb/>
I ,. <lb/>
l m;.,. <lb/>
We beg leave to announce that we, are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for <lb/>
, , -i <lb/>
White Lead, Paints, <lb/>
Colors, and and <lb/>
Country Ready nixed Paints. <lb/>
There is no line in the world better than <lb/>
line. It ha behind it a <lb/>
reputation for honorable wares and honorable <lb/>
dealings. <lb/>
If you use the Harrison Paints you need <lb/>
never worry quality. <lb/>
We trust that you will favor us with your <lb/>
orders whenever you want good paint for any <lb/>
Have just a car load and <lb/>
can give you Special Prices. <lb/>
Baker Hart <lb/>
--t- <lb/>
As authorized agent for DAILY <lb/>
we take <lb/>
that pleasure In receiving sub- <lb/>
and writing receipts for <lb/>
those in an ears. We have a list <lb/>
of all who receive their mail at <lb/>
this office. We also orders <lb/>
for job printing. <lb/>
J. K. Turnage to Wilson <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
For can apples, corn <lb/>
, apply to E. E. <lb/>
There bus been rain each day <lb/>
for last ten consecutive days. <lb/>
It lo look but we <lb/>
stick to what we always have said, <lb/>
can't a working <lb/>
and if of Pitt are not <lb/>
of that then we would like to <lb/>
a real smart fellow. We are <lb/>
not going to The old Pitt <lb/>
stock have got too much push to <lb/>
about it. <lb/>
your need attention <lb/>
J. W. <lb/>
N C. is the man to do <lb/>
your work if yon want to be <lb/>
pleased. <lb/>
Prof. A has been <lb/>
here on a to brother, J. F. <lb/>
carry <lb/>
lull of meat, lard can <lb/>
goods. Don't buy before giving <lb/>
me a trial. Lilly Co. <lb/>
went to and returned <lb/>
from Washington yesterday, <lb/>
A full line of trunks, valises, tel- <lb/>
grips, satchels, baud bur, <lb/>
suits taxes at J R Smith Bro <lb/>
Mis. Julia Dunn came up on the <lb/>
afternoon Monday from a <lb/>
visit the road. <lb/>
I keep on hand a <lb/>
sine stuff at lowest cash <lb/>
prices Such as hay, oats, Corn, <lb/>
cotton seed meal brand <lb/>
Ship stuff. Frank Lilly Co. <lb/>
is a certain young <lb/>
in town who is very <lb/>
much In mind. Be has <lb/>
tine cow that gives anywhere <lb/>
from three to tour gallons of milk <lb/>
day, now he thinks it to his <lb/>
interest to dispose of her at once, <lb/>
as be discovered she has no <lb/>
tipper teeth. Here is a bargain for <lb/>
some one wants a good cow. <lb/>
You win Wheeler and <lb/>
son Singer machine. <lb/>
Prices way way H, <lb/>
Tripp Bro. to Early Hotel. <lb/>
Ayden, <lb/>
F. Berry and wife <lb/>
from where they <lb/>
have been visiting the family of <lb/>
lie, left on tile <lb/>
morning train theft <lb/>
home in Washington. <lb/>
supply of bay, grain, hulls, <lb/>
cotton Mod meal, ship stuff, <lb/>
always band, Cannon and Tyson <lb/>
J. Ii, Miss <lb/>
Exum of <lb/>
the day hue <lb/>
tools, grindstones <lb/>
i hemp moo and pulleys, at J. K. <lb/>
Mis. hi <lb/>
Va. is a visit to tier <lb/>
paid I , C, C. <lb/>
Our pi must co, season <lb/>
is well ad r need. The prices now <lb/>
will tie buy- <lb/>
and Tyson. <lb/>
r. r. lug, ban a little <lb/>
ii ii , he much <lb/>
Tunny are in need of a cook <lb/>
in it lo bin -1 <lb/>
have bought B solid <lb/>
I them to arrive <lb/>
I Tyson-. <lb/>
t in in, <lb/>
I Gray, <lb/>
of <lb/>
, Ult to visit <lb/>
On to K. E. Go's new <lb/>
market tor beef, fresh meats, <lb/>
sage, and fresh fish. <lb/>
Mies Bailie Bet came <lb/>
borne Sunday from a visit in the <lb/>
country. <lb/>
A beautiful line of crockery, glass <lb/>
ware, fancy lamps, and tinware <lb/>
at J B Smith Bro <lb/>
F. M. Smith, of Greenville, <lb/>
spent Saturday night with W. J. <lb/>
A full supply of Trunks. <lb/>
Telescopes, Grips, Satchels and <lb/>
Suit Gases, at J. B. Smith A Bro. <lb/>
Hooks left for <lb/>
Greensboro. <lb/>
We want to make room for other <lb/>
stocks and in order to do so we are <lb/>
offering very cheap in sum- <lb/>
mer goods- We must move <lb/>
out of the and have put a price <lb/>
on them that will be t get <lb/>
them off. Now is time to get <lb/>
big value for your money. Cannon <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
Car load V. Crimped roofing in <lb/>
lengths to cover residences <lb/>
churches, school barns <lb/>
shelters, stables cheaper than <lb/>
shingles and very little labor, at J. <lb/>
R Smith Bro J <lb/>
John Tripp, a former <lb/>
boy, but who has attained success <lb/>
to the business world and is now a <lb/>
resident of Philadelphia, in com- <lb/>
with bis sister, Miss Nancy <lb/>
Tripp, of Greenville, spent from <lb/>
Saturday until Monday with his <lb/>
sister, Mrs. Titus Jolly, near here. <lb/>
John shown true and his <lb/>
people are as they <lb/>
be. Such boys are rare and <lb/>
deserve but should <lb/>
be appreciated by <lb/>
For a nice present boy a novel- <lb/>
clock at J. W. Taylor's. It is <lb/>
for any occasion. <lb/>
Mrs Smith, <lb/>
Delia Smith are at Morehead <lb/>
in the delights of old ocean's <lb/>
billows its other <lb/>
attractions. <lb/>
Core, Hay m Lima always <lb/>
J. It. Smith at Bro. <lb/>
W. M. Edwards family are <lb/>
off In lovely city the <lb/>
Hooker to g <lb/>
In order to large <lb/>
stock preparatory to we <lb/>
will make prospective buyers ex- <lb/>
low prices. J. R. Smith <lb/>
Bro. <lb/>
Nice new North Car- <lb/>
Cut Herrings at J. B. Smith <lb/>
Bro. <lb/>
For large nice new <lb/>
single story brick store located <lb/>
But Avenue in Town of <lb/>
can five tenant possession <lb/>
August 15th. <lb/>
J. K. Smith Bro. <lb/>
MISS COIN'S ENGAGEMENT. <lb/>
North Carolina Girl to Become <lb/>
Bride of Boston Man An. <lb/>
at Birthday <lb/>
Party. <lb/>
The birthday i <lb/>
Mr. and also the <lb/>
birthday of Miss Hilly <lb/>
was at the home <lb/>
of Mr. 4th July, <lb/>
and occasion made <lb/>
happy by announcement by <lb/>
Mr. that tine of the <lb/>
of Miss n, of Cotton- <lb/>
dale, N. C, a cf old <lb/>
Southern friend, Col. B. <lb/>
Cotten, to Mr. B. <lb/>
of Boston, a broker. <lb/>
The celebration took <lb/>
the form of a party, was while the wen- seated <lb/>
at which was decorated <lb/>
for 4th with and <lb/>
souvenirs, that i i-up <lb/>
van brought on Mr. ti.-- <lb/>
made the of be- <lb/>
As the lowing cup <lb/>
passed around etch guest respond- <lb/>
ed wittily with toasts nod <lb/>
for the young <lb/>
people. <lb/>
very beautiful <lb/>
accomplished young lady; u true <lb/>
daughter of South. She is a <lb/>
over if music a <lb/>
Like many of <lb/>
Southern sisters is of <lb/>
much wit, i any company In <lb/>
which she be, with her <lb/>
tee <lb/>
Miss Gotten is still the of <lb/>
her father's old friend at <lb/>
Castle on the bill. Her home, <lb/>
takes its pane <lb/>
from her family, in a part of the <lb/>
town of Bruce, Ci. C, which <lb/>
its name from Mr. Robert M. <lb/>
The two families have been <lb/>
close in friendship. <lb/>
the <lb/>
of telegrams aid a host of good <lb/>
upon the <lb/>
happy on pie <lb/>
stove i <lb/>
to Bee n- <lb/>
ear load, <lb/>
next <lb/>
Mr <lb/>
have <lb/>
G. Bi <lb/>
V. <lb/>
mid paper rooting, <lb/>
Ii long or <lb/>
pipe at J. B. <lb/>
Kev. P. B. Hill, a <lb/>
in, came up <lb/>
Saturday and went over In Greene <lb/>
here he <lb/>
Miss Nora Smith <lb/>
n extended visit Bertie <lb/>
Your <lb/>
If you are troubled with your <lb/>
eyes or have a obtain- <lb/>
glasses, It <lb/>
how your case, call J. <lb/>
an expert <lb/>
N. C, who has yen- <lb/>
with some of the mo <lb/>
cases. He never fail I <lb/>
give patients satisfaction or <lb/>
Over five hundred <lb/>
Lenoir <lb/>
nest people to testify to his <lb/>
and ability, Give him your <lb/>
you want <lb/>
UP <lb/>
I taken up one inn <lb/>
at, weight B p <lb/>
mi earmarks Owner ran gel <lb/>
by paying <lb/>
K. K. I. No. <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Dixon, <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. <lb/>
Baal <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
W. L HOOKS. W J <lb/>
HOOKS BOYD. <lb/>
General Insurance and Merchandise Brokers. <lb/>
AYDEN, <lb/>
We wish to that we have associated our <lb/>
selves together for the purpose of conducting a gen-<lb/>
Superintendent In. <lb/>
J. Y. Joyner made the <lb/>
int. <lb/>
of the f <lb/>
Insurance and Merchandise Brokerage and the <lb/>
In the Town of Ayden and Vicinity. We will <lb/>
represent none but the most reputable concerns, <lb/>
and any part of your business you may see fit to <lb/>
favor us with we will thank you for and feel very <lb/>
grateful. <lb/>
AND., <lb/>
Phone CARRIED IN STOCK AT ALL TIMES. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
N. , <lb/>
At the Goose of business June 18th, 1906. <lb/>
Loans and Discounts, <lb/>
Overdrafts Secured i <lb/>
Furniture and <lb/>
Due from Banks,<lb/>
Gold Coin, <lb/>
Silver Coin, <lb/>
National Bank notes <lb/>
other U. S. <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital stock paid in, 118.500 <lb/>
Surplus fund 2,700.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits less <lb/>
expenses, tH-59 <lb/>
Dividends unpaid . 222.00 <lb/>
Deposits subject to check, <lb/>
Cashier's 830.72 <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
855,043.67 <lb/>
OF NORTH CAROLINA, <lb/>
COUNTY OF PUT, <lb/>
I, J. R. Smith, Cashier of above-named bank, do solemnly swear <lb/>
that the statements true to the best of my and be- <lb/>
lief. J. B. SMITH, Cashier. <lb/>
and sworn to before <lb/>
me, day f 1906. <lb/>
HODGES, <lb/>
J. R. SMITH, <lb/>
JOSEPH <lb/>
R. C. CANNON. <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
WHAT THE TRUST HAS DONE TO <lb/>
TOBACCO GROWERS. <lb/>
The tobacco of Rock i <lb/>
ham are reported to be <lb/>
the to <lb/>
tie from out of because the <lb/>
town at the birthday <lb/>
II. <lb/>
las continually hammered down <lb/>
the price until it cannot now be <lb/>
fat organizing the <lb/>
of holding their crops in <lb/>
older to compel the trust to pay <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
An examination of prices shows <lb/>
the Miss C n; Mr, and prices. <lb/>
lira, of Norwich, other <lb/>
Conn.; Miss <lb/>
Ly nun A. U. N.; <lb/>
Bruce, of New <lb/>
city; Mr. Wesson, of <lb/>
in Smith Wesson, <lb/>
Mr- and Mis- <lb/>
Mr. himself, although <lb/>
l.-i hi- i j <lb/>
day, Is and and <lb/>
into spill <lb/>
as much zest with <lb/>
as much <lb/>
w Conn., Graphic. <lb/>
OBITUARIES. <lb/>
of <lb/>
Jessie Haddock, was born July 24th <lb/>
died at her home near <lb/>
Haddock X Roads, July 18th, 1906. <lb/>
She was the youngest daughter of <lb/>
Wm E. deceased. <lb/>
In early womanhood, she<lb/>
posed State education, i journal <lb/>
has resulted the deter , n <lb/>
to begin in <lb/>
The name be h <lb/>
of <lb/>
it will be published <lb/>
of <lb/>
the graded will <lb/>
be the chief, there <lb/>
will be editor for <lb/>
among <lb/>
will inter- <lb/>
mediate and sch l, city <lb/>
schools and <lb/>
State depart- <lb/>
of college <lb/>
the <lb/>
The de. <lb/>
be aim, <lb/>
The prospectus will be <lb/>
once. <lb/>
Mr. Joyner fays that . <lb/>
mi <lb/>
the educational forces th- t it <lb/>
has long an- <lb/>
proven <lb/>
advancement the cm- i <lb/>
cation State. <lb/>
Russell Dead <lb/>
New July <lb/>
Sage died suddenly at bis <lb/>
country home, at <lb/>
Lawrence, L. <lb/>
cause death was heart failure <lb/>
resulting from a of <lb/>
diseases incident to old age. <lb/>
ave <lb/>
his 87th Aug- <lb/>
Mr. had been i if <lb/>
good health his <lb/>
arrival at bis summer home <lb/>
six months ago. At noon , <lb/>
he was seized sinking spell <lb/>
and collapsed, falling into <lb/>
about two hours -t <lb/>
bis death, which occurred at <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
M. E church, South, at Mace <lb/>
and that day on, she. <lb/>
tried to live a Christian. <lb/>
ethers, had her trials and con- j <lb/>
diets. And above all, there was <lb/>
i sickness and disease to against <lb/>
; yet she fought patiently and bravely <lb/>
how the has steadily put <lb/>
ITEMS. , <lb/>
j i <lb/>
down the price ts its enrich- <lb/>
and impoverishment of <lb/>
tobacco growers. The Danville <lb/>
market is largest bright <lb/>
k. t in the country. In <lb/>
1875 there were Bold that mar- <lb/>
pounds and it <lb/>
She was conscious that death was <lb/>
near, but said that all well, and <lb/>
there was no dread or fear of death <lb/>
except its sting. So we believe <lb/>
lister Haddock has entered into rest. <lb/>
May this glorious thought com- <lb/>
the bereaved husband, <lb/>
or an <lb/>
in ii i i ii i He Superior <lb/>
i folk of <lb/>
via mill, of Fault A <lb/>
i I. ii I lo i nil <lb/>
In, , ii, <lb/>
till.-i. U <lb/>
v n -an <lb/>
ill II.- In or lie- <lb/>
-dill,. i f <lb/>
Hill I I II, , I <lb/>
lilt I'm <lb/>
A. <lb/>
Corn. <lb/>
Talking high Mr. C. <lb/>
W. Harvey The R <lb/>
at k that feat, <lb/>
A tail and thrifty stalk is <lb/>
u has only one ear it. <lb/>
For Spring Housecleaning <lb/>
new, will i <lb/>
looking furniture or <lb/>
in when this <lb/>
worker ii No <lb/>
or in <lb/>
Veneer <lb/>
Food tin- <lb/>
Ii <lb/>
m ever. <lb/>
If the <lb/>
Picture Interior <lb/>
H .,,., Kt- <lb/>
. ; , if <lb/>
A cm it. <lb/>
km of i- <lb/>
U lo to W. <lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
av <lb/>
at. <lb/>
N r. <lb/>
es and <lb/>
B. E. P. C <lb/>
has claimed <lb/>
of per bundled j. <lb/>
In there was sold <lb/>
pounds for <lb/>
an average of 818.54 per j <lb/>
hundred pounds. In there <lb/>
was sold pounds for another victim. <lb/>
and average of K Venters, son of Mr <lb/>
per These Mrs. Johnny Venters, was <lb/>
show that twenty one years, sick just exactly seven weeks with <lb/>
ago, before the became all typhoid fever; and died July 21st, <lb/>
powerful, tobacco got 1908, <lb/>
over twenty cents a pound for He was only years of <lb/>
product. Now that the trust age when he died, so he was just <lb/>
magnates fix the price in aback- into young manhood, <lb/>
room Wee in the and seemingly had a <lb/>
get only seven and three him. we know the <lb/>
quarter cents a pound Ii hour that we must die. <lb/>
m re make n i of Hew ready. <lb/>
now than then for labor received <lb/>
-else i c up in price, last fall <lb/>
Hid I hope he lived <lb/>
that day on. He has <lb/>
me since that he was deter- <lb/>
lo try, to do his duty <lb/>
ti. d I <lb/>
mother, sisters and brother-, <lb/>
oilier relatives during this <lb/>
hour of i <lb/>
H E. P <lb/>
PI c . i ha <lb/>
ed t I while ill <lb/>
It CO be, II tO <lb/>
h Kent- and <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
Mr. a. A. Andrew, who la <lb/>
more familiarly us <lb/>
is of i <lb/>
raiser, and has a patch at bin <lb/>
Greenville in which e <lb/>
pride, lie brought <lb/>
The <lb/>
moth ipounds and said <lb/>
I will <lb/>
come <lb/>
Heavy Rain. <lb/>
nil night last night, in <lb/>
several times ii came down <lb/>
V. W <lb/>
tells us tot <lb/>
night <lb/>
N. C, July 190-i <lb/>
W. H. Ricks and family, f <lb/>
Greenville, and War- <lb/>
of <lb/>
day night with K. T. <lb/>
Wilson and family. <lb/>
Miss Ward Moore is spend in j <lb/>
sometime with relatives in N <lb/>
folk, <lb/>
Robert Wilson and wife, of <lb/>
Beaufort county spent <lb/>
with W. M. Moore. <lb/>
F. Ward and F. Boyd, from, <lb/>
Greenville, spent Saturday <lb/>
night and Sunday with Dr. C. M. <lb/>
Jones. <lb/>
Our sick are all much <lb/>
We hope to see them out soon. <lb/>
Rev. B. Reapers filled his <lb/>
regular appointment here Sunday, <lb/>
Godfrey r John Dixon, <lb/>
of Black Jack, spent Sunday at J. <lb/>
Proctor's, <lb/>
Jno Warren, and Miss Helen <lb/>
Galloway went to Hookerton <lb/>
Friday but go home Sunday afters <lb/>
Mrs. W. H. Galloway <lb/>
Willie also Miss <lb/>
out Sunday in our city. <lb/>
K. G. Mayo and R. A. Fleming <lb/>
went Sunday <lb/>
Miss Julia Wharton, <lb/>
time with Mis- <lb/>
Holliday. <lb/>
Warn cats <lb/>
Owing dim <lb/>
branch being washed In two by <lb/>
the heavy Carrier A. I. <lb/>
Potter, on Route No, <lb/>
could only reach the patrons <lb/>
this of the branch on Tuesday, <lb/>
l he la to reach hi<lb/>
ll. <lb/>
LITTLE FOR <lb/>
the undersigned voters of <lb/>
i i township, second <lb/>
in seating K. I. <lb/>
e of Green hip for our <lb/>
We <lb/>
lie Mill prove more <lb/>
ii than any <lb/>
Held. <lb/>
I . S <lb/>
H. i <lb/>
W. II. <lb/>
m.<lb/>
W. Mortal <lb/>
It is sure to pay you<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019640_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
in <lb/>
r-w- <lb/>
TH i EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
AND FRIDAY. <lb/>
A J. Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
in the post office at N. C, as matter, <lb/>
rates made application. <lb/>
A i at every post office in Pitt and adjoining counties. <lb/>
in to fiction <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA JULY 1906 <lb/>
Joe has not <lb/>
bis r foot. <lb/>
In the lops are not well <lb/>
dressed unless the., wear collars. <lb/>
The usual summer cry is raised <lb/>
about the of men at the <lb/>
resorts. <lb/>
Charlotte is that the <lb/>
city water has mo good <lb/>
without boiling. <lb/>
railroads catch it hard in <lb/>
wrecks as the recent one near <lb/>
Hamlet. <lb/>
tumble just like <lb/>
Other folks when their automobile <lb/>
gets tn <lb/>
The government is now taking <lb/>
the powder trust. They <lb/>
find something to blow up yet. <lb/>
subscriber suggests that The <lb/>
talk streets more. <lb/>
That is almost talking to the <lb/>
. <lb/>
Blackburn has become very <lb/>
He lays he is to beat <lb/>
this and<lb/>
Adams next <lb/>
From the way folks went after the <lb/>
Panama canal bonds <lb/>
shows that they like Sam's <lb/>
due <lb/>
Whether Thaw is insane or not <lb/>
some folks may be if they have to <lb/>
keep on reading about it. <lb/>
they get through executing <lb/>
the death sentence on Russian <lb/>
there will fewer of them <lb/>
. j <lb/>
Those who murdered the <lb/>
family are trying to bring in <lb/>
a white man as accessory to the <lb/>
crime, but they do not give hie <lb/>
name. <lb/>
When Russia turns on her own <lb/>
folks there is a feeling that she is <lb/>
reaping the of her own sowing <lb/>
but when she goes to slaughtering <lb/>
the innocent Jews it is enough to <lb/>
make the blood boil. <lb/>
NO BY AND BY. the who defend <lb/>
corporation damage suit. <lb/>
Col. James Hamilton Lewis, he get for the life- <lb/>
counsel of I h puts into his tight <lb/>
politician, farmer Congressman, j the criminal lawyer. He <lb/>
wit and speaker,, hid very flesh to the cause, <lb/>
says eight hundred years h. life and liberty, and in <lb/>
yes, that period has return what does he get but a <lb/>
elapsed -the lawyer will be <lb/>
without a profession. <lb/>
is in the midst of <lb/>
he said to u <lb/>
Chicago writer be- <lb/>
that in the <lb/>
will hive processed so far <lb/>
that we will have a tribunal <lb/>
something like those of ancient <lb/>
Greece, where any man. whether <lb/>
he be lawyer or go and <lb/>
sum <lb/>
repeat that the world is <lb/>
learning tn get along without <lb/>
is. You ask if it is not <lb/>
that the collages are turn- <lb/>
out more lawyers today than <lb/>
ever before that the number <lb/>
of lawyer in the <lb/>
n i- increasing. am <lb/>
a red to say that such IN <lb/>
the My opinions have <lb/>
been decried by the law schools <lb/>
that are tinning out lawyers to <lb/>
present his case. <lb/>
lawyer, except as an ad- starve <lb/>
is disappearing from the . g, <lb/>
world. The necessity for is to see what an already <lb/>
It has been some time since <lb/>
Greenville appeared in the list <lb/>
towns getting charters from the Sec- <lb/>
of State to establish some en- <lb/>
A chamber of commerce <lb/>
could work up the way for us to get <lb/>
en the list oftener. <lb/>
business men of Greenville <lb/>
re. not tumbling over each other to <lb/>
a chamber of commerce or <lb/>
board of trade, hut it is not because <lb/>
they ought not lo he doing so. <lb/>
A Louisiana man announces the <lb/>
discovery of a variety of cotton that <lb/>
sis weevil proof. A kind that could <lb/>
be immune from the attacks of bulls <lb/>
bears would be best. <lb/>
The fact being established that <lb/>
paper can be made out of cotton <lb/>
stalks, a product that has heretofore <lb/>
gone to waste, this would be <lb/>
a good one in which to locate a mill <lb/>
to utilize the stalks. A large <lb/>
of them are grown in Pitt <lb/>
county. <lb/>
Tho announcement that Superior <lb/>
Court Judge C. M. Cooke was go- <lb/>
to resign because of ill health is <lb/>
denied by that gentleman as <lb/>
untrue. It is strange how <lb/>
such rumors get started. The news- <lb/>
pa per that put out the story even <lb/>
went so far as to suggest who should <lb/>
succeed Judge Cooke. <lb/>
waning. Men are learning to <lb/>
get together and settle their <lb/>
business matters or their <lb/>
troubles without him. <lb/>
There v as a time when the <lb/>
law offered a can preferment <lb/>
honors, social and every- <lb/>
thing to be desired. Not so <lb/>
today. The lawyer is looked <lb/>
upon a parasite, feeding on <lb/>
the body politic. On every hand <lb/>
we see lawyers turning away <lb/>
from the practice of their pro <lb/>
and into channels <lb/>
of life offering them better re- <lb/>
turns for their abilities. <lb/>
without hesitation that <lb/>
the lawyer is the lowest paid <lb/>
worker in any class of endeavor <lb/>
to be cited, considering what he <lb/>
puts into his work Take the <lb/>
corporation lawyer getting per- <lb/>
haps or a year. <lb/>
He makes it possible his em- <lb/>
to accumulate millions. <lb/>
has taken place in the legal call- <lb/>
Now it is not learning <lb/>
takes a man to the front. It i- <lb/>
not of wisdom, years of <lb/>
study or work. <lb/>
What is it Paper cap <lb/>
Noise <lb/>
longer i- it necessary for <lb/>
a man to be lawyer to go to <lb/>
Congress, Business men go <lb/>
there. The places once Con id <lb/>
as only to the <lb/>
lawyer are going to men in <lb/>
other walks of life. Tho lawyer <lb/>
on every hand is being crowded <lb/>
out, The people are becoming <lb/>
intelligent enough to get along <lb/>
without him as <lb/>
What would have to <lb/>
the Republican party of North <lb/>
if the President had <lb/>
sent some more of his cabinet <lb/>
thereto sit on tho lid It is <lb/>
evident that mere weight did not <lb/>
tell weighs over <lb/>
If there is a man on earth who should have a good Salt <lb/>
of Clothes for his money, it's certainly the <lb/>
He not only is entitled to it but hi also wants it <lb/>
Now we, make it our particular business to pro- <lb/>
in fine vary. K <lb/>
Good Durable, Suits <lb/>
Workingmen <lb/>
We think this fact has been noised, abroad, <lb/>
by the number of Workingmen who are com- <lb/>
he- e for their clothes. <lb/>
Our Suits are made from strong <lb/>
fabrics in neat, good looking patterns, cat in con- <lb/>
Styles that are always correct and tailor- <lb/>
ed as well and strong as it is possible to make gar- <lb/>
workingmen, wearing our kind of Clothing, <lb/>
are <lb/>
ALWAYS WELL <lb/>
They are never troubled with seams ripping, but- <lb/>
tons coming off or a general state of suit collapse. <lb/>
We back these Suits with our strong guarantee <lb/>
of back, if anything goes <lb/>
Frank Wilson, <lb/>
THE KING CLOTHIER. <lb/>
THE READING OF NEWSPAPERS. <lb/>
Rockefeller is reported to be <lb/>
laughing at Ohio sheriff who <lb/>
declares ht will arrest him as soon <lb/>
as he sets Ids foot back on <lb/>
laughs best who<lb/>
An man has <lb/>
against the compilers of a city <lb/>
directory because by the mistake of <lb/>
a printer a mark was placed by <lb/>
name distinguishing the family as <lb/>
In a short while now the National <lb/>
Guard of the State will go into sum- <lb/>
mer encampment. It is to be hoped <lb/>
that such disgraceful scenes that <lb/>
have marked the conduct of the <lb/>
en route to and from the <lb/>
camp in past years will be left off <lb/>
this time. <lb/>
Much has been said of late <lb/>
excessive rains, and up to now the <lb/>
end is not in sight but it keeps right <lb/>
on raining every day. It has <lb/>
ready reached the point of being a <lb/>
very serious matter for the farmers, <lb/>
along with them for every other <lb/>
of business, for when the <lb/>
kind <lb/>
nil <lb/>
I. <lb/>
Crops <lb/>
d untold <lb/>
. <lb/>
I I <lb/>
a M<lb/>
It may lie said without contra <lb/>
diction, that it is only the <lb/>
person that reads the daily <lb/>
newspaper so as to be able to have <lb/>
any coherent idea of it contents an <lb/>
hour after the paper has been laid <lb/>
aside. The newspaper reader as a <lb/>
rule, reads just the portion which <lb/>
is of personal or individual eon- <lb/>
or interest, social or <lb/>
of finance or of sports, and <lb/>
the rest the paper is parsed <lb/>
over. <lb/>
Two phases of newspaper read- <lb/>
or the neglect of it, perhaps a <lb/>
combination each, are thy of <lb/>
special consideration, these being <lb/>
the quickness with which the <lb/>
reader of the newspaper will see <lb/>
an article, be it good or bad, of a <lb/>
personal nature, and extreme <lb/>
Impossibility of becoming able to <lb/>
see other articles in the same pas <lb/>
per, which may be equally person- <lb/>
yet of a different character. <lb/>
An article of a complimentary <lb/>
kind, will be noted at glance on <lb/>
a page of matter, as will also the <lb/>
article which may be <lb/>
The newspaper reader <lb/>
will quickly see either of these, <lb/>
but let an advertising notice be <lb/>
in prominent type, calling at- <lb/>
to the fact that taxes are <lb/>
due, and the tax-payer will swear <lb/>
that he never saw the notice, <lb/>
though he looked over the news- <lb/>
paper every day for a month. But <lb/>
let the same tax-payer be a <lb/>
delinquent and be will note that <lb/>
bis name is published in the first <lb/>
of the paper, it be <lb/>
n an inside page, and tho <lb/>
in and win <lb/>
hundred other Xe <lb/>
ii-r <lb/>
we will begin Monday July <lb/>
23rd, selling our ox- <lb/>
fords, figured lawns, laces <lb/>
and embroideries at cost. <lb/>
The price on all Dry Goods and <lb/>
Notions will be marked down low.<lb/>
Shoes at <lb/>
figured <lb/>
Lawn at <lb/>
2.50 O <lb/>
Shoes at <lb/>
1-2 cent <lb/>
Percale at <lb/>
figured <lb/>
Lawn at <lb/>
A. F. C. <lb/>
hams at <lb/>
Pulley Bo wen <lb/>
THE HOME OF FASHIONS. <lb/>
We will inaugurate Our Spring Season by <lb/>
, putting on display the newest <lb/>
iv<lb/>
ideas to lie shown in <lb/>
j BILKS I WHITE <lb/>
We have no trash or Special Sale stuff but <lb/>
f we will have the latest and best things that <lb/>
were obtainable in the American markets <lb/>
we cordially invite the Ladies that are <lb/>
desirous of seeing the NEWEST <lb/>
IN SILKS AND WHITE GOODS <lb/>
to call at our establishment and feast their <lb/>
eves. <lb/>
Very truly yours, <lb/>
PULLEY St BOWEN <lb/>
Jas F Davenport, <lb/>
NEAT JOB <lb/>
Our specialty <lb/>
Reflector Job Printing Office<lb/>
When Secretary Root attempts <lb/>
to manipulate the <lb/>
conference at Rio he <lb/>
will run up against the so-called <lb/>
doctrine as opposed to <lb/>
the The <lb/>
doctrine is merely a declaration <lb/>
against the indiscriminate use <lb/>
of force in debts from <lb/>
a nation, but it is expected our <lb/>
delegates will oppose its <lb/>
lion.<lb/>
Ask your friends to go on Bond when you can get it famished at a cost <lb/>
We can sign Judicial Bands for Guardians, Administrators etc., In FIVE MINUTES <lb/>
after you apply Any Bond to be filed in the Court at once <lb/>
Cal on or write <lb/>
The U. S. FIDELITY and GUARANTY CO., <lb/>
H. A. WHITE, Agent, or <lb/>
H W. WHEDBEE, Attorney <lb/>
WINTERVILLE <lb/>
This department is in F. C. who is authorize <lb/>
resent the Eastern Reflector in Winterville and <lb/>
rep- <lb/>
Poor said a <lb/>
raved, it, a penny made. It is <lb/>
more than that placed in a <lb/>
savings bank for it <lb/>
yon sleep. The Bank Winter- <lb/>
ville pays time <lb/>
its. <lb/>
Miss Elizabeth of Bel- <lb/>
cross, spent Sunday here <lb/>
Miss Laura Cox. Hiss Boushall <lb/>
from of the leading families <lb/>
the State. Winterville High <lb/>
school fortunate in <lb/>
securing her as a teacher of the <lb/>
primary department the coming <lb/>
year. the took a course in <lb/>
primary at Raleigh this <lb/>
summer. We predict for her much <lb/>
success here. <lb/>
takes the place of <lb/>
We sell it. <lb/>
B. T. Cox, Bro. <lb/>
Rev. C. J. Wells, of Kinston, <lb/>
Rev. T. H. King's appoint- <lb/>
t the Baptist church Sun- <lb/>
day morning, preaching an excel- <lb/>
lent sermon. There were no eel- <lb/>
vices Sunday evening on account <lb/>
of rain. He returned to Kin <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
line of dress shirts ever <lb/>
shown in Winterville at <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Miss Helen Galloway, of <lb/>
land, was visiting at Mrs. R. G <lb/>
Chapman's Sunday. <lb/>
We still have a few cop- <lb/>
of Teachers Bibles, we are off- <lb/>
to the trade at very low <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
B. T. Cox, Bro. <lb/>
Miss Cox left to <lb/>
spend some time visiting in Kin- <lb/>
LaGrange and Seven Springs-; <lb/>
Go to the Store of B. T. <lb/>
Cox Bro for T. W. Wood <lb/>
Son's high turnip <lb/>
bags seed. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Jolly, of <lb/>
Ayden, attended church <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Nice Robes at Harrington <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
Miss Mollie Bryan returned Sat. <lb/>
evening a most pleas- <lb/>
nut visit at Springs for <lb/>
several <lb/>
large shipment of shoes <lb/>
all styles wizen and prices very <lb/>
reasonable. Burlier <lb/>
A Co. <lb/>
Prof. spent Sunday at <lb/>
home and went to Snow Hill M n- <lb/>
If you want a nice or tie <lb/>
go to Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
need of not having good <lb/>
pants when Harrington, Barber <lb/>
Co., have just received anew lot, <lb/>
that they will well cheap. <lb/>
For fruit jam and rubbers go <lb/>
to Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
tell which way the wind <lb/>
blows, just nonce the stream of <lb/>
customers going in and out from <lb/>
Harrington, <lb/>
All colors of paint, and yellow <lb/>
at Harrington Barber <lb/>
Iron natures <lb/>
great household remedy. A con <lb/>
Mineral Water. Stops <lb/>
blood cut. Cures <lb/>
. Kidney trouble, Liver com- <lb/>
plaint, Female weakness, cuts <lb/>
sores etc. For at the <lb/>
store of B. T. Cox, and Bro. <lb/>
A. W. Ange and Co. are clean- <lb/>
out summer goods cheap. <lb/>
For hay, corn and oats go <lb/>
Harrington, Co. <lb/>
It i hard for tome people to see <lb/>
the in advertising their bus- <lb/>
here <lb/>
who are advertising in this de- <lb/>
tell us that people <lb/>
and tell that they <lb/>
articles advertised in The <lb/>
tor and in this way the. people <lb/>
know who has the article <lb/>
Let the people know what you <lb/>
have for tale. <lb/>
Farming implements of all kinds <lb/>
at Barber Co. <lb/>
Nice line of fresh groceries <lb/>
ways on hand Barber <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
A car load of lime received <lb/>
at Harrington, Co., <lb/>
A large of trunks, suit cases, <lb/>
and telescope of all and <lb/>
grades has j arrived at the <lb/>
the large store of A W. and <lb/>
Co. wishing to visit <lb/>
the summer need s good <lb/>
traveling trunk. Bee them for <lb/>
bargains. car <lb/>
received car <lb/>
of fancy hold furnishings <lb/>
which made our line so complete, <lb/>
it would be difficult for a custom- <lb/>
to something haven't <lb/>
got in Eastern Caro- <lb/>
Supply Co. <lb/>
For Victor talking machines <lb/>
and music racks see Eastern Caro- <lb/>
Supply Co. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Man. Co are <lb/>
making preparation to make quite <lb/>
a lot of their splendid school desk. <lb/>
They have only been in <lb/>
one ear, yet their desk is <lb/>
quite a reputation. <lb/>
order for this season <lb/>
comes from New Bern. <lb/>
Republican H <lb/>
best shown by the fact that <lb/>
while our population increases <lb/>
than cent a year, yet <lb/>
tho appropriations increased for <lb/>
the present year per <lb/>
cent, more than wore for <lb/>
the year previous. Every year <lb/>
u ft,. .,,. t much greater increase <lb/>
I. D. in-, t . I than the per cent, of increase of <lb/>
party in Mm., of Ml- population. <lb/>
Boushall . ii , ,. , K <lb/>
, r , .- <lb/>
,, . . i The Lincoln republicans of <lb/>
no received into <lb/>
the <lb/>
sometime <lb/>
by at mimic furnish. <lb/>
1.50 rents <lb/>
1-25 cents <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.25 <lb/>
3.00 <lb/>
All qualities of Jets. <lb/>
Good Umbrellas at this <lb/>
rainy <lb/>
A new assortment of the famous <lb/>
Parker fountain pen in a <lb/>
Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
Car load of corn j alt arrived at <lb/>
Frank V. Johnston's. <lb/>
For Sale gallon oil <lb/>
tank suitable for store. Apply <lb/>
to i or. <lb/>
ed by Vim i x. many <lb/>
Couple repair the <lb/>
id decorated <lb/>
dining for -1,111. r <lb/>
were man <lb/>
young lady <lb/>
which Had In-en given it in. Out <lb/>
young ho has very red hair <lb/>
rendered his f r tho rapid <lb/>
disappearance of by <lb/>
My u ii it. <lb/>
Aft.-i the the <lb/>
retained the parlor for <lb/>
and games. Couples for the goes, <lb/>
contest in room were <lb/>
gain by the <lb/>
the States and the <lb/>
men tho The <lb/>
prize was awarded to J. S and <lb/>
Miss Kale the booby <lb/>
U Rollins and Mrs. <lb/>
Taylor- The prizes were deliver- <lb/>
ed by R. Carroll with a neat <lb/>
and appropriate little speech. <lb/>
The party was an success in <lb/>
feature. <lb/>
Pennsylvania have invited some <lb/>
tho members of the cabinet to <lb/>
speak in that state for the <lb/>
ticket, but there does not seem <lb/>
to be one that is not allied with <lb/>
the machine organization for <lb/>
none of them have accepted the <lb/>
invitation. This shows how far <lb/>
reform is advocated by the ad <lb/>
ministration. <lb/>
The Republican machine in <lb/>
Oklahoma enters upon the fight <lb/>
for the fruits of statehood some- <lb/>
what handicapped. The <lb/>
governor has just been <lb/>
under investigation on charges <lb/>
implicating him in Osage <lb/>
oil leases Most of the other <lb/>
federal officials have been mixed <lb/>
up with land of Indian frauds <lb/>
and the people have no <lb/>
deuce in them. <lb/>
Doctors <lb/>
The County Medical Association <lb/>
held a meeting here today. After <lb/>
the meeting the local doctors en- <lb/>
their visiting brethren at <lb/>
dinner in Carolina Club rooms. <lb/>
Distance Traveled in Dancing. <lb/>
A young man man <lb/>
dancing tooK a pedometer with <lb/>
him to a ball, at d found that in <lb/>
the course of the evening be had <lb/>
covered thirteen and a half <lb/>
Fairbanks, Cannon, Taft, Shaw <lb/>
are, or were, candidates for the <lb/>
Republican nomination for Pres- <lb/>
but the voters don't take <lb/>
kindly to any of them. Fair- <lb/>
banks, Cannon and Shaw are <lb/>
uncompromising <lb/>
and machine politicians and Taft <lb/>
seems to be an understudy of <lb/>
the President and the people <lb/>
want some one that has ideas of <lb/>
his own. The only chance for <lb/>
Taft would be a differing with <lb/>
Roosevelt on one of the <lb/>
miles. The average length of a issues in which ho takes the <lb/>
waltz was half a mile; of a I palpably wrong side, such as the <lb/>
three-quarters of a mile; of a gal- c, r j, <lb/>
. . ,. , . Domingo and Panama <lb/>
op or a mile, of <lb/>
landers, a quarter of a mile. A <lb/>
girl usually dances more than a <lb/>
man, and is calculated to cover All wanting electric motors, <lb/>
more than miles in a single electrical <lb/>
;., . will do well to see H. <lb/>
Harding. <lb/>
A Taft V. It Rick-, <lb/>
H. Co <lb/>
Greenville's Furniture Dealer's <lb/>
Quality, <lb/>
Originality, <lb/>
Price. <lb/>
We sell for cash or <lb/>
easy terms <lb/>
You will find a complete <lb/>
line at all times <lb/>
e are sole agents <lb/>
for Enameled Beds. <lb/>
a ours to please <lb/>
Framed to Order <lb/>
r , <lb/>
Save the Worry <lb/>
The hot weather brings you <lb/>
enough discomfort without adding to it worrying what to <lb/>
by for breakfast, dinner or With. a of <lb/>
Groceries, Canned Goods, Package <lb/>
Goods, Pickles, Butter Cheese, Coffee, <lb/>
Candies, as I carry, the selecting and buy- <lb/>
are easy and the all saved. It will take no argument to <lb/>
you of if you visit my store and see what I carry. <lb/>
You find me one door North of <lb/>
J. B <lb/>
TO OUR FRIENDS <lb/>
THE TOBACCO GROWERS <lb/>
We f it to our friends and patrons our sincere for the liberal patronage <lb/>
bestowed upon us the past season. <lb/>
THE CENT <lb/>
was first three years ago, it was the intention of its management up a permanent on a sound <lb/>
basis, Our business has increased with the years, and we trust to be favored with the coming season <lb/>
Each Customer, as well as each Pile of Tobacco shall have our <lb/>
Personal Attention, and we shall endeavor, as in the <lb/>
past, to make The Brick headquarters for <lb/>
High Prices, Fair and honorable treatment, <lb/>
It affords us announce In this connection that <lb/>
MR. W. T. <lb/>
THE VETERAN TOBACCONIST AND WAREHOUSEMAN <lb/>
Will be associated with us the coming season. Mr. Lipscomb Is too well-known to the trade, planters, or <lb/>
to need any commendation at our hands, suffice to say with judgment and experience at the com mil of on- <lb/>
our facilities for conducting the warehouse business, assisted as we will be by an id <lb/>
in ever it pats us in better position than any other warehouse In Eastern Carolina, at all times, to f Dr oar <lb/>
friend prices for their To When you come to GREENVILLE, always <lb/>
Always make the BRICK your headquarters, <lb/>
when your tobacco is ready to sell, bring it where experienced judges will sell it to th- tor you. Again thanking you <lb/>
tor your liberal patronage we beg to remain. Your <lb/>
BRINKLEY and LASSITER, <lb/>
BRINKLEY, LASSITER and LIPSCOMB, Successor<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019640_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
r- <lb/>
u w <lb/>
OAKLEY ITEMS. <lb/>
LA DI <lb/>
SETS <lb/>
Good Corsets, all <lb/>
slats, Qr<lb/>
Big <lb/>
STORE <lb/>
Still Offering Goods at Sale <lb/>
Prices. <lb/>
Doz. Ladies <lb/>
HOSE. <lb/>
1-2 to 1-2, 1-2 <lb/>
value going at cents will <lb/>
be on display Saturday. <lb/>
Come and be convinced. <lb/>
Keep Your Eye on he March of Progress. <lb/>
S , m ill not it i cu lock aims a has been Lite business-is buying the best tor the money Do not <lb/>
until you complete line of Men's youths and They ht and style <lb/>
Ladies Summer Vests <lb/>
Good Apron ginghams <lb/>
Reduction mILLINERY <lb/>
Keep Cool. <lb/>
co Ladies quality <lb/>
Hurry <lb/>
MuSlin value <lb/>
India Linen in <lb/>
one while <lb/>
last cent <lb/>
Cambric cents. inch <lb/>
now it edits. inch <lb/>
l . a ft w days <lb/>
Shoe to fit all classes and Prices to suit the man or <lb/>
women who know the worth a hard earned dollar. A look <lb/>
will convince you and to try a will there is none <lb/>
better. Kid going at Men's <lb/>
all Patent 1.99. Men's 3.50 Patent <lb/>
Boy's 2.50 Patent-leather <lb/>
Silks. <lb/>
One yard wide black <lb/>
only China <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
Ladies . <lb/>
Handkerchiefs. <lb/>
Ladies Handkerchiefs hem- <lb/>
stitched last Sets. <lb/>
Dress Ginghams. Best <lb/>
hams now 1-2 cents. <lb/>
cent quality now cents. <lb/>
V, M <lb/>
17.60 Spring <lb/>
Style 8.99 <lb/>
Suit, foil spring <lb/>
tor 6.98 <lb/>
12.60 suit full spring <lb/>
style for 7.08. <lb/>
SO Grey and Blue <lb/>
Men's suit summer <lb/>
10.98. <lb/>
full <lb/>
Off <lb/>
C a r virile our are good. <lb/>
Buys suits. to H <lb/>
cunts. <lb/>
Boys Double two <lb/>
puce suit <lb/>
Boys Breasted two <lb/>
piece suit <lb/>
Boys Double Breasted two <lb/>
piece Blue Flannel suit 1.98 <lb/>
Breasted Mixed <lb/>
Worsted suit it <lb/>
Youth two piece <lb/>
pants 4.98 <lb/>
costs you nothing to look. <lb/>
N. C-, July 1906. <lb/>
W. U. Little was in town Fri- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Elbert Andrews of Kooky Mount <lb/>
in spending few days here with <lb/>
bis grand-parents, Mr. and Mis. <lb/>
J. T. Jenkins. <lb/>
Mrs. Martha Bawls <lb/>
Mr. A. <lb/>
the sister near Washing- <lb/>
t in, last week. <lb/>
When you are bound to thrash <lb/>
a fellow wait until you know <lb/>
he is several miles off. <lb/>
has been blessed tie <lb/>
pat week the of <lb/>
many pretty young ladies from <lb/>
different Caro- <lb/>
The city is com- <lb/>
it will keep at all times <lb/>
canned beet and lobsters. <lb/>
nil call at ones, but come soon and <lb/>
I the rush. <lb/>
night lire <lb/>
W. J Jenkins <lb/>
house and with a large <lb/>
amount of corn and <lb/>
I Ills <lb/>
bill <lb/>
Moore, of Bethel, spent a <lb/>
while here S <lb/>
this plane <lb/>
m grove Sunday. <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. i H In <lb/>
ill- wit.-i her father, Caleb <lb/>
Smith, who is quit- sick. <lb/>
in this section has <lb/>
floe Drops and expects good <lb/>
Mrs. Hat fie of Winter- <lb/>
ville returned to her home <lb/>
d after spending a days <lb/>
wither h daughter, Mrs. Hardy <lb/>
James Congleton, of <lb/>
was bare Saturday on <lb/>
closed Thursday p. m. <lb/>
good many disposed o. <lb/>
Much consumed in prov <lb/>
character. All of us proved <lb/>
to be very people. When <lb/>
the lawyer was against u <lb/>
I thought I should be bung, <lb/>
felt that I was almost guilty, <lb/>
got through <lb/>
for me I was not guilt <lb/>
Visiting lawyers Fleming and <lb/>
J nit-, and <lb/>
Lassie Overton returned <lb/>
Sunday from Mt. olive, Dudley <lb/>
where she bad been <lb/>
Visiting I r I he pa t dais. <lb/>
J. V. Mines Monday to <lb/>
bis work. <lb/>
J. H. and son, Will, <lb/>
of Stokes, honored Oakley with <lb/>
their a short while <lb/>
Sun lay, <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Gray Corey <lb/>
a id daughter, Ella, spent <lb/>
Sunday hire with Mrs. J. <lb/>
Williams. <lb/>
Friend, II Vi it e <lb/>
Suppose You Stop and Sea <lb/>
it Wonderful <lb/>
N. C. March <lb/>
Mrs Joe take <lb/>
stating that your Remedy <lb/>
has entirely cured our little girl of <lb/>
a very bad case of eczema, <lb/>
covered a great part of her body. <lb/>
She had eczema from <lb/>
the rime she was three weeks old, <lb/>
she was six years old. Sh <lb/>
is now perfectly well and I feel <lb/>
that I cannot speak too highly of <lb/>
it She has not had a symptom <lb/>
it for six years. Respectfully, <lb/>
J. W. COBB. <lb/>
To Publishers <lb/>
and Printers <lb/>
We an new <lb/>
process, on a In h patents <lb/>
are lending, whereby we <lb/>
can old Brass Col- <lb/>
and Head Rules, <lb/>
pt. and thicker, and make <lb/>
tin-in fully as good as now <lb/>
and unsightly <lb/>
knobs or on the bot- <lb/>
tom. <lb/>
PRICES <lb/>
and <lb/>
regular ear <lb/>
L. S aH <lb/>
Head Ruled Inches in <lb/>
and over per <lb/>
A of refaced <lb/>
full <lb/>
will be cheerfully <lb/>
on <lb/>
Pointers <lb/>
of Type and <lb/>
Printing Mater <lb/>
N. Street. p <lb/>
a SOUTHERN R. R. CO <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Steamboat Service, <lb/>
;. L. leaves <lb/>
daily <lb/>
it in. for leaves <lb/>
Greenville daily <lb/>
at in. <lb/>
A Railroad for <lb/>
New York, mil all other <lb/>
North, Connects a Norfolk <lb/>
w lib all points West. <lb/>
Shippers <lb/>
freight via rare Norfolk <lb/>
hem B. I. <lb/>
to <lb/>
without i <lb/>
J, J. Agent, <lb/>
ville, N. ;. <lb/>
I H. O. <lb/>
f. Norfolk. Vs., <lb/>
M. K. KING, V. P . M. <lb/>
T. and <lb/>
.-.<lb/>
torpid LIVER. <lb/>
the <lb/>
the bow els, and arc <lb/>
xis an <lb/>
MEDICINE, <lb/>
In <lb/>
properties r <lb/>
. stem from i . <lb/>
No Substitute. <lb/>
, W. <lb/>
p, ., IN <lb/>
Not Quite <lb/>
if <lb/>
now ran net a <lb/>
T -a <lb/>
i nail or screw <lb/>
Have a <lb/>
j tool for <lb/>
enc i . line of tools <lb/>
i could desire, unit <lb/>
E we will . your tool <lb/>
; ii.,. not tingle <lb/>
useful <lb/>
Hat <lb/>
if <lb/>
Morse<lb/>
Provisions I<lb/>
i g <lb/>
. i s always on hand <lb/>
Si <lb/>
Moo,. <lb/>
pi l <lb/>
. , which life in <lb/>
ken; ion <lb/>
i i- .-. n have <lb/>
. Ii tin ii I. it. n ours, <lb/>
i-. he. Bilious- <lb/>
lie, . <lb/>
. i in i Torpid <lb/>
. <lb/>
lei. <lb/>
a a vi. An- <lb/>
r ii weak i n <lb/>
Ii induce, sleep, <lb/>
by J. L.<lb/>
Having made t <lb/>
the <lb/>
Truck and also to sell same <lb/>
a will be pleased to <lb/>
in need of Man- <lb/>
J. A. N. <lb/>
Country <lb/>
and <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
K. L. <lb/>
Dentist. <lb/>
Greenville, N. G. <lb/>
Mt <lb/>
Doctors Praise its <lb/>
We <lb/>
n ; m <lb/>
Dr. John staff <lb/>
of Medical <lb/>
Of which <lb/>
la one of chief of <lb/>
remedy Li is<lb/>
we bare <lb/>
Mot fully <lb/>
any drug I am <lb/>
In -s <lb/>
r to It i- a cue is <lb/>
i dos not <lb/>
for Dr. Pyre <lb/>
are the <lb/>
Pain <lb/>
of In with <lb/>
of the <lb/>
of Ir- <lb/>
with of <lb/>
of women, <lb/>
heat Lu of the <lb/>
to a <lb/>
condition of the <lb/>
or <lb/>
from or accompanying an <lb/>
condition of the <lb/>
In extreme lower part the <lb/>
If more or leas of tho <lb/>
Are no woman can do <lb/>
than Dr. Favorite <lb/>
one of tho <lb/>
of which is Unicorn root, or <lb/>
and the medical properties of which It <lb/>
most faithfully represents. <lb/>
Of Golden root, another prominent <lb/>
Ingredient of <lb/>
Prof. Finley M j . of Jen- <lb/>
Medical Chicago, <lb/>
It la an Important remedy In disorder of <lb/>
the womb. In all conditions <lb/>
and It Is <lb/>
Prof. John M. M. late of <lb/>
Cincinnati, of Golden Seal <lb/>
relation to Its on the <lb/>
there U no medicine in w- <lb/>
is unanimity It <lb/>
Is u Vic tonic useful In <lb/>
all debilitated <lb/>
Prof. M. D. of Jefferson <lb/>
Medical College, says of Golden <lb/>
Valuable In uterine hemorrhage, <lb/>
and congestive <lb/>
Dr. Favorite Prescription faith- <lb/>
fully represents the named In- <lb/>
and cures the diseases for which <lb/>
they recommended. <lb/>
FOR THE LITTLE ONES. <lb/>
tho Weeping Willow Came to <lb/>
America. <lb/>
weeping willow mine to <lb/>
America through tho medium of <lb/>
Alexander the poet, who <lb/>
planted a willow on the of <lb/>
the Thames at his <lb/>
la. The t to him in a <lb/>
Bent from Smyrna by n friend <lb/>
who had lost nil ill tho south <lb/>
had gene to that dis- <lb/>
land to recoup his fortune <lb/>
of <lb/>
States tells tho story of <lb/>
willow's arrival in America. <lb/>
A young British officer, who came <lb/>
to Boston with the army to crush <lb/>
the rebellion of the American <lb/>
brought a twig from <lb/>
Pope's now beautiful willow tree, <lb/>
Intending to plant it in America <lb/>
when ho should comfortably settle <lb/>
down lands confiscated from the <lb/>
conquered Americans. Tho young <lb/>
officer, disappointed in these <lb/>
gave his willow wrap, <lb/>
pod in oil silk, to John Parks <lb/>
tis, Washington's son, who <lb/>
slanted it on his estate, <lb/>
Virginia. It thrived and became <lb/>
the progenitor of till willow <lb/>
trees. <lb/>
Mint Punch. <lb/>
From one dozen of <lb/>
mint remove the braised <lb/>
leaves, which give n rank flavor. In . <lb/>
a quart jar shake one pan of crushed <lb/>
ice and one-half cup of sugar until <lb/>
the sugar is dissolved. Add the j <lb/>
mint, pour over it one ; <lb/>
of pure cider vinegar or lemon <lb/>
juice. Add one cup of currant . <lb/>
juice or one of currant jelly I <lb/>
water to make one . j If <lb/>
currant used omit the sugar; <lb/>
wholly or in part. Good <lb/>
keeping. <lb/>
For Children. <lb/>
Children's white dress sleeves can <lb/>
be kept perfectly dean at the <lb/>
if a small pair of extra sleeves of <lb/>
white are made with an elastic in- <lb/>
the lop and at the wrist. <lb/>
They can he made of any light- <lb/>
weight material and are easily <lb/>
The will also be <lb/>
found useful when the children are <lb/>
play, us the cuffs of a dress soil <lb/>
quickly. <lb/>
To Clean a Rusty Pot. <lb/>
To remove rust from a kettle put <lb/>
into it us much hay as it will hold, <lb/>
fill it with water and boil it many <lb/>
hours. If the kettle is not entirely <lb/>
fit for use, repeat the process. It <lb/>
will be certainly Hub the <lb/>
rusty spots on the stove with sand- <lb/>
paper, then with sweet oil. <lb/>
Spiced Apple Jelly. <lb/>
If a small bag of spice is placed <lb/>
in tho kettle when making apple or <lb/>
crab apple jelly the flavor will be <lb/>
much improved, it the <lb/>
jelly without effort. A few Agaves <lb/>
if sweet geranium thrown into the <lb/>
jelly also gives a delicious flavor. <lb/>
f Children Table <lb/>
M if art. <lb/>
Parents m cottage <lb/>
home should pity attention to tho <lb/>
conduct and of their <lb/>
cannot tell <lb/>
what position will till in after <lb/>
life, and a or Roman <lb/>
of most simple -s of <lb/>
table etiquette is terribly handicap- <lb/>
Were the parents to <lb/>
the who conveys its food its <lb/>
mouth with o knifes, who drinks its <lb/>
tea from the saucer or who stick its <lb/>
elbows out right angles the lesson <lb/>
so taught would never forgotten. <lb/>
is a certain amount of free- <lb/>
at the family table, where one <lb/>
scarcely expects to find the <lb/>
deportment of a set dinner <lb/>
party, but in the home there <lb/>
arc minor rule- observances <lb/>
which should always be followed, <lb/>
says Woman's Life. <lb/>
H. A. <lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
Sticks. <lb/>
HEADQUARTERS FOR <lb/>
materials, use <lb/>
An <lb/>
Ironing Colored Goods. <lb/>
When ironing colored <lb/>
matter of what materials, <lb/>
a very hat iron. <lb/>
injures the colors, making them <lb/>
look dull and faded. All <lb/>
ginghams and chintzes should be <lb/>
ironed on the wrong side. <lb/>
Cleaning Vegetables. <lb/>
After washing green vegetables <lb/>
two or three teaspoonfuls of vinegar <lb/>
should put into the next water. <lb/>
This not only nukes the vegetables <lb/>
nice and crisp, but also draws or <lb/>
inserts that may ho In in <lb/>
the leave. <lb/>
Almond Macaroons. <lb/>
Half D pound of sweet almonds, a <lb/>
coffee cup full of white sugar and <lb/>
the whites of two eggs; blanch the <lb/>
almonds and pound them to a paste,, <lb/>
add them the sugar and the boat- <lb/>
en whites of the eggs, work the <lb/>
whole together the back of a <lb/>
spoon, then roll mixture in your <lb/>
hands in balls the size of a <lb/>
nutmeg; dust sugar over the top and <lb/>
them on n sheet of at <lb/>
least an inch apart; in a cool <lb/>
oven a light brown. <lb/>
To <lb/>
put <lb/>
Cuban <lb/>
coffee in Cuban <lb/>
pints of sweet rich <lb/>
into the . <lb/>
lei it come to a boil. U t in <lb/>
if ground coffee mil <lb/>
live Strain and <lb/>
A Marine View. <lb/>
vessel is different in Qua way <lb/>
from anything <lb/>
so <lb/>
is when she is tied that <lb/>
she can't make knots in her <lb/>
Baltimore American. <lb/>
To Darken Floors. <lb/>
Put into u bottle two <lb/>
each of linseed oil and good <lb/>
vinegar and one of <lb/>
spirits of turpentine the <lb/>
quantities may be increased, though <lb/>
the proportions must be cork <lb/>
this up and it well to mix. <lb/>
Wash the floor thoroughly with hot <lb/>
and water, then the <lb/>
boards are still warm, though fairly <lb/>
dry, apply the polish, shaking the <lb/>
bottle well before each application, <lb/>
rubbing it well in. <lb/>
About Moths. <lb/>
It is a great mistake to think that <lb/>
Camphor or other moth preventives <lb/>
are only required in the height of <lb/>
the summer, when the insects may <lb/>
be seen living about. The chief <lb/>
danger to feared is during the <lb/>
period in which the moth lays her <lb/>
eggs, these being BO <lb/>
discovery is almost impossible until <lb/>
the larvae are hatched, by which <lb/>
time tho or fur is <lb/>
done. Every garment should lie <lb/>
thoroughly examined inch by inch <lb/>
before it is put away. <lb/>
of Gang. <lb/>
For this jolly game you want <lb/>
about a dozen boys, one <lb/>
an officer, a dozen to rep- <lb/>
resent his marines and the rest to <lb/>
represent victims of the press gang. <lb/>
The officer his marines catch <lb/>
one of companions and call <lb/>
hip it low <lb/>
or <lb/>
If nays or <lb/>
or ho is led oil <lb/>
a prisoner in charge of two of the <lb/>
Bill if he he <lb/>
is nixed bodily by the gong <lb/>
and hi I, I off Io tho place reserved <lb/>
for men. <lb/>
and for <lb/>
mi kin a lot of excitement. <lb/>
After all the victims have <lb/>
been pressed or have been <lb/>
prisoners hey in turn represent a <lb/>
gang and do the same <lb/>
Ono Among Many. <lb/>
of us fellows the <lb/>
paid the callow young <lb/>
student, decided to <lb/>
raise a <lb/>
should reasonably <lb/>
replied many <lb/>
is expected con- <lb/>
Press. <lb/>
Wrongly <lb/>
Tommy Did you tell a <lb/>
friend of mine the other day Hint <lb/>
Was the biggest fool in town <lb/>
All I said <lb/>
W that you were tho biggest fool <lb/>
for you'd <lb/>
Miracle. <lb/>
,. about that novel <lb/>
of ion's which <lb/>
that it was accepted <lb/>
by file to whom it <lb/>
-i I to <lb/>
An In; <lb/>
my cigar <lb/>
said smoker. <lb/>
opposed to ; --o <lb/>
me. I<lb/>
lie .<lb/>
does Lucia get <lb/>
golden hair <lb/>
her <lb/>
Is ho blond V <lb/>
but he is a <lb/>
Motto <lb/>
Why Him. <lb/>
She- -Wealth is worst fine <lb/>
my. <lb/>
is the reason <lb/>
loves him for the enemies he has <lb/>
mails. I <lb/>
In Luck. <lb/>
you have any iron- <lb/>
in learning to play <lb/>
All Were poor <lb/>
ago News. <lb/>
Blackberry Cordial. <lb/>
the berries into a preserving <lb/>
kettle, let simmer until they break, <lb/>
then mash and strain. To each pint <lb/>
of juice add one pound of white <lb/>
sugar, half an ounce of cinnamon, <lb/>
half an mince of mace and one- <lb/>
of ounce of cloves and <lb/>
let boil minute. When cold <lb/>
brandy may lie <lb/>
it is. not Seal <lb/>
in a cool, dark <lb/>
move <lb/>
it <lb/>
I i <lb/>
en <lb/>
or writing may lie re- <lb/>
a by <lb/>
diluted or six <lb/>
bulk water, which <lb/>
off in or three <lb/>
with clear water. A <lb/>
oxalic, citric or acid <lb/>
the mime purpose, as <lb/>
I in of will the print- <lb/>
mm <lb/>
Having consolidated the two stocks of H. A. and John A. is <lb/>
store we are to furnish our customers anything needed in <lb/>
Dry goods and groceries <lb/>
We will carry an up-to-date line <lb/>
Hats, Shoes, dress goods, Notions, Sc. <lb/>
In Groceries we will have all times a full line of the very best goods, not <lb/>
the staples like , <lb/>
Meat, Flour, Sugar, coffee, but all kinds of <lb/>
canned and Package goods, the finest brands <lb/>
We can supply anything you need to wear or to eat, and pay highest prices for <lb/>
COUNTRY PRODUCE. Quality and prices of our goods will please you. <lb/>
Ricks, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Come in and examine my <lb/>
CORN PLANTERS, GUANO SOWERS, DISC <lb/>
HARROWS, SMOOTHING HARROWS, ONE <lb/>
AND TWO HORSE STEEL PLOWS, WIRE <lb/>
FENCE FOR FARM OR GARDEN AND WASH- <lb/>
MACHINES. <lb/>
S. <lb/>
Yours to serve, <lb/>
H. L. <lb/>
The Hardware Man. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED <lb/>
M. SCHULTZ <lb/>
Wholesale and retail Grocer an, <lb/>
furniture Dealer. Cash paid for <lb/>
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed. Oil Bar- <lb/>
Turkeys, Egg, Bert <lb/>
Oak Butts, Ba <lb/>
Carriages, Parlor <lb/>
suite, Tables, Lounges, Safes, P <lb/>
and Gall Ax <lb/>
Life Tobacco, Key Went Che- <lb/>
root, Henry Can- <lb/>
Cherries, Peaches, Apples <lb/>
I Apples, Syrup, Jelly, Milk, <lb/>
Flour Sugar, Meat, Soap- <lb/>
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Seed Meal Gar. <lb/>
-n Oranges, Apples. <lb/>
Dried Apples, <lb/>
doesn't take <lb/>
. the fan, <lb/>
even <lb/>
ton Star. <lb/>
-j Lace. <lb/>
level of tin <lb/>
tea, a gum ; <lb/>
a of boiling I I <lb/>
these in a and <lb/>
slowly over lire until gum <lb/>
is tho <lb/>
good Mark color. U <lb/>
u prevent tin-gum from eking U <lb/>
the pan and strain through <lb/>
Knowing <lb/>
IS HALF OF IT. <lb/>
V it y hi Ii are <lb/>
it to buying <lb/>
w where to buy, what you are going to pay it w here tin- <lb/>
con <lb/>
v will is the place to <lb/>
COTTONSEED. MEAL AND HULLS <lb/>
Hay, Corn. Oats Bran, Ship Stuff, Lime said Groceries. <lb/>
When you in lino it will bi to y to <lb/>
F- V. JOHNSTON- <lb/>
Currents, <lb/>
w. <lb/>
I. ii L <lb/>
if ire, and V <lb/>
.-., ., Butter, New <lb/>
and nu- <lb/>
Quality and <lb/>
Coats <lb/>
-ante. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Bad Wreck on <lb/>
The local get train on the- <lb/>
Seaboard Air Lino <lb/>
and was <lb/>
night. <lb/>
I were killed <lb/>
in d <lb/>
by the <lb/>
I f a , h operator at <lb/>
i. to deliver an order. <lb/>
Desirable Bull <lb/>
LOts For <lb/>
Near Five Points on<lb/>
Terms. <lb/>
Call an or <lb/>
SAM Greenville. N. C <lb/>
.- -n<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019640_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
mm <lb/>
i.<lb/>
A CLEAR. <lb/>
the people <lb/>
rd i to <lb/>
f-. n-e or big i <lb/>
lb FOR YOU <lb/>
I to k v-j <lb/>
one who has sold h loud of <lb/>
with for the psst <lb/>
years. oft the Greenville <lb/>
market I Lave always, a- <lb/>
err, at all times, looked after <lb/>
net interest in toe sale to- <lb/>
if you will Mil <lb/>
we with me I will the future, a <lb/>
i have in the past, that every pile <lb/>
f. in n printed <lb/>
J . . i <lb/>
on a letter <lb/>
V. <lb/>
i it well looked alter <lb/>
season you find me at toe <lb/>
to <lb/>
you at all with i <lb/>
. T. Hooker, e, of Green-1 <lb/>
in it, bit those j bet . f mi ace., <lb/>
out and <lb/>
lie to set the ex- <lb/>
we all th bid- <lb/>
. -n state, <lb/>
in saying am in a <lb/>
p. m to look j <lb/>
after font -n lie-; <lb/>
Y u <lb/>
H t i. is <lb/>
ii i- or <lb/>
e . to <lb/>
kill W SE, . Co. <lb/>
p. i. A. <lb/>
muter. <lb/>
. Mi night P. <lb/>
Argus. <lb/>
This is sound c. even <lb/>
home trade and <lb/>
such to the cf <lb/>
advocating I ad they all <lb/>
. read and heed <lb/>
J. the duty M to patronize <lb/>
me but at the tine <lb/>
the duly of these Lome con- <lb/>
t- to patronize the people, <lb/>
V I y giving em work as <lb/>
preference to other, by Dr V. A <lb/>
not at French, G. <lb/>
printing dons at home, but he l H. the <lb/>
no, <lb/>
t-. when he e. of Odd with I <lb/>
Of if there t to known <lb/>
be obtained, M Kt No. <lb/>
ability or the Tb JUt will be coin <lb/>
of town or city h p and ltd meeting <lb/>
lint not before, and he d nest Light, <lb/>
to picture such condition in <lb/>
to labor. Thia EXCESS <lb/>
apply to ever- town and <lb/>
ind hence no hard-1 anywhere. There seems to ho a grow- <lb/>
place welcomes new-comer-. t mg that this country is be- <lb/>
. ii i . <lb/>
from a logical, <lb/>
t to <lb/>
n people. <lb/>
Kick Foreign Labor. <lb/>
N. C., <lb/>
The strike of <lb/>
stills was this <lb/>
import ail I <lb/>
in s form the North to lea in the <lb/>
walked <lb/>
after; Th- e- <lb/>
es of the three mill- <lb/>
The <lb/>
I, <lb/>
and all operatives <lb/>
row, <lb/>
Because a or in <lb/>
the <lb/>
the id a of n <lb/>
the y <lb/>
to fill th- v i bill <lb/>
pot -Hid <lb/>
it. Thy did <lb/>
or <lb/>
that <lb/>
in overrun with <lb/>
and slip shod <lb/>
pars. would gainsay Hie <lb/>
good Put there are <lb/>
in one's hones <lb/>
that some of tin in the <lb/>
nun- couldn't mike <lb/>
lining else and <lb/>
any real work <lb/>
fire h in their <lb/>
hands than a com field . if they <lb/>
hail to work it. Super nous and <lb/>
inefficient work in the <lb/>
field is as useless in any of the <lb/>
fields of material industry. Slip <lb/>
-hod for any old <lb/>
name of philanthropy <lb/>
ought to he <lb/>
of fellows are not real <lb/>
agents, but are getting <lb/>
salaries an easier way than work- <lb/>
for <lb/>
S V <lb/>
on corn. <lb/>
low <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Tb. pen a or<lb/>
We hay i <lb/>
Style j. <lb/>
as t. d rain <lb/>
to <lb/>
the mid th.- <lb/>
Bake --ii all <lb/>
e I null- <lb/>
or at lag <lb/>
mt-e ii In <lb/>
it is tine hi <lb/>
yea. ago the <lb/>
nil I <lb/>
in <lb/>
C II I i <lb/>
f In I. I I <lb/>
sea I tie ma a i i <lb/>
for I m . <lb/>
to i Ire, in get h . <lb/>
I, i nil . i. mi <lb/>
e., , l an reputation. <lb/>
arid X. Li <lb/>
if Urn I <lb/>
,, l In i ii. <lb/>
Bast b <lb/>
rat n b <lb/>
, . . . wain <lb/>
. ., . i I i <lb/>
n . will I <lb/>
, , , a spa I , en- <lb/>
, , has -i. <lb/>
. I, . I I'M ; <lb/>
, ,., i i. , in a <lb/>
, , ,. m i v the l <lb/>
., ,,. -i tract land in <lb/>
, , i. <lb/>
-u ,. i And the <lb/>
, l mil will take notice <lb/>
, to at the <lb/>
t .,. <lb/>
on ii,,.<lb/>
cu in said or <lb/>
u. for <lb/>
relief Bi <lb/>
the 24th day of July <lb/>
D. C. <lb/>
e Court <lb/>
of the of <lb/>
NATIONAL BANK <lb/>
OF GREENVILLE. <lb/>
At in the State North <lb/>
the <lb/>
June 1906. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
r. in. a ml . <lb/>
Overdrafts and <lb/>
cured <lb/>
p s. to mm<lb/>
Rands 116.011 <lb/>
fun <lb/>
and <lb/>
in., Hunk <lb/>
nil 24,191.01 <lb/>
I in. fr Banks and <lb/>
Hunkers 10,111.11 <lb/>
Due from approved n w -.-<lb/>
is other Items <lb/>
. . other n <lb/>
I, . <lb/>
;. . money tea <lb/>
rial <lb/>
i . a notes I la i <lb/>
Red option lab V M. <lb/>
surer <lb/>
nation <lb/>
Total<lb/>
pa <lb/>
Undivided . <lb/>
p uses and la- paid <lb/>
bank <lb/>
to <lb/>
deposit<lb/>
Hi <lb/>
IS <lb/>
Total 114,519.88 <lb/>
Stale of North <lb/>
I II <lb/>
W. , , of the above <lb/>
named swear that <lb/>
ti above -i strut- lo best <lb/>
of my knowledge and belief. <lb/>
J. W. AYCOCK, Cashier <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn lo before me <lb/>
this of June <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Correct Attest <lb/>
H W. <lb/>
SAM T. WHITE, <lb/>
E. A. MOTE, <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
w.<lb/>
JULY <lb/>
Clearance <lb/>
L E. <lb/>
We purpose making July a busy d <lb/>
making it a Bargain month. <lb/>
All Summer Goods <lb/>
WILL BE SOLD AT REDUCED PRICES n S <lb/>
to make room for the new fall stock. The <lb/>
Reduction includes;<lb/>
up<lb/>
THE EASTERN<lb/>
J Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER Y <lb/>
VOL No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA TUESDAY. JULY <lb/>
NO<lb/>
FOILED<lb/>
Colored Lawns, <lb/>
Black Lawns, <lb/>
Dress Ginghams, <lb/>
Ready-made Shirt Waists, <lb/>
Lace Hosiery, <lb/>
Embroideries, <lb/>
Ladies Belts and <lb/>
Ladies, Children <lb/>
and Infants Slippers. <lb/>
An early will mean money saving to you. <lb/>
Of New York Plotters to Get <lb/>
Hawley Pardoned. <lb/>
HELD UP ON BOWERY. <lb/>
July <lb/>
nor Robert l;. of North <lb/>
guardedly to- <lb/>
night the report of bis having <lb/>
been hi Id up by a gang of Tam- <lb/>
many men in Near York city and <lb/>
and with if he <lb/>
r. to a for a <lb/>
Bowery swindler, who was serving <lb/>
s the North <lb/>
lent in 1.1. <lb/>
The fact that a governor bad <lb/>
been ed to such an outrage <lb/>
has been suppressed carefully <lb/>
a year for fear of creating <lb/>
political prejudices. <lb/>
The as related <lb/>
by lose to he governor, <lb/>
he was the guest <lb/>
of Tammany as one of the <lb/>
orators at the Fourth of July <lb/>
summer. Governor <lb/>
Glenn Lieutenant-Governor <lb/>
of Louisiana, another <lb/>
guest, at the the <lb/>
ceremonies were lo. join a <lb/>
going Island. <lb/>
There a deliberate effort, <lb/>
the, governor, to get <lb/>
him drunk, several of the party <lb/>
intoxicated. The governor <lb/>
however, had been discreet and <lb/>
was They stopped at <lb/>
restaurant and wine <lb/>
was ordered. <lb/>
Scarcely had they seated them- <lb/>
selves hen one of the <lb/>
leader it from <lb/>
bis pocket n legally drafted par- <lb/>
don favor of a gold-brick artist <lb/>
mined or Halstead, then <lb/>
doing time t Raleigh, North Caro- <lb/>
but whose headquarters were <lb/>
the Battery Four- <lb/>
street. <lb/>
Attempt Made to Pardon. <lb/>
Thinking the governor was <lb/>
to sign anything <lb/>
by that time, the leader remarked. <lb/>
a favor, governor. We <lb/>
would like you to sign this and let <lb/>
man back to New York. <lb/>
told the leader <lb/>
tin. pal had been presented <lb/>
to him just he left home tor <lb/>
mail's that he had <lb/>
looked Into the case, and de- <lb/>
in lie negative. He was <lb/>
sorry, bin he could not <lb/>
the ., even lo oblige bis <lb/>
hosts. The man is reported to <lb/>
have ugly, shouted <lb/>
tin would not get <lb/>
out alive the not <lb/>
Hun allege a <lb/>
was bra <lb/>
The rose the <lb/>
table and <lb/>
I friends in this <lb/>
crowd I they would come on <lb/>
this side of Ilia table, for there's <lb/>
like to I. doing here <lb/>
pretty <lb/>
by <lb/>
of lbs <lb/>
an attitude Of help- <lb/>
leas lion. <lb/>
Now, do your <lb/>
is ii- <lb/>
by .- <lb/>
in hell I'll sign that par- <lb/>
Led Plate Unmolested. <lb/>
The related to carry <lb/>
out f gov- <lb/>
us <lb/>
and he the <lb/>
He to his hotel <lb/>
his own <lb/>
The died in <lb/>
prison a few ago, and his <lb/>
wile applied to the governor fur <lb/>
permission to take the body from <lb/>
the State for re- <lb/>
her efforts to free- <lb/>
d for her husband the <lb/>
RESOLUTIONS OF SYMPATHY <lb/>
BY R. M. <lb/>
Whereas the Great Spirit has <lb/>
seen lit to to take from our brother <lb/>
J. J. Elks bis little one, therefore <lb/>
be it <lb/>
Resolved, 1st. That <lb/>
Tribe No. extend to Brother <lb/>
and bis family their heart <lb/>
felt sympathy in this sad hour of <lb/>
their bereavement. While it seems <lb/>
hard for us to lose one of our loved <lb/>
ones, yet we should remember He <lb/>
who giveth taketh away and <lb/>
all tilings well. <lb/>
Resolved, 2nd. That a copy of <lb/>
these resolutions be sent to brother <lb/>
and in our daily <lb/>
paper. <lb/>
T. While. <lb/>
Moore. <lb/>
R. A. Forbes. <lb/>
Com. <lb/>
TO THE VOTERS OF PITT COUNTY. <lb/>
I have been informed that there <lb/>
a report being circulated through <lb/>
the country that if W. M. is <lb/>
nominated and elected as Register <lb/>
of Deeds of Pitt county that I would <lb/>
charge of the office. I want <lb/>
to say to the people that there is <lb/>
truth in the report, that the re <lb/>
port has been circulated for the <lb/>
pose of damaging W. M. Moore in <lb/>
the coming primary and election. <lb/>
I want to say further that if want- <lb/>
ed office from the people of Pitt <lb/>
county I am man enough to ask for <lb/>
it myself. <lb/>
Very <lb/>
T. R. <lb/>
State Committee Meeting. <lb/>
There will be a meeting of the <lb/>
members of the Democratic State <lb/>
Committee on Monday August <lb/>
at o'clock p. in. in the Senate <lb/>
Chamber in tho city of Raleigh, for <lb/>
the of electing a chairman <lb/>
and secretary, four members of the <lb/>
central committee from each dis- <lb/>
and the transaction of such <lb/>
other business as may be necessary. <lb/>
attendance is desired. <lb/>
F. M. Si in in s, <lb/>
mini Dem. Slate Ex. Com. <lb/>
A. J. Field, <lb/>
Cob Covered. <lb/>
Mr. Noah Forbes, of R. F. D. <lb/>
No. found an ear of <lb/>
corn his and brought it to <lb/>
The The striking <lb/>
about Ibis ear of corn was <lb/>
the grains covered <lb/>
the end the cob, finishing <lb/>
it off round, and nut leaving the <lb/>
exposed. <lb/>
Poor <lb/>
B. W. King returned <lb/>
Friday evening from a trip to his <lb/>
firms over in Craven <lb/>
He tells us he thought, crop were <lb/>
bad enough in Pitt count , but ho <lb/>
found even worse in Craven. <lb/>
He also said he so much <lb/>
water along the roads and in the <lb/>
fields as at present. <lb/>
MOONLIGHT RIDE TAR <lb/>
Reported for Reflector <lb/>
One of the most enjoyable affairs <lb/>
of the season was a moonlight <lb/>
given Friday night <lb/>
by the men of town com- <lb/>
to Miss Rachel II. <lb/>
Borden, of Goldsboro. Slight <lb/>
TOOK HIM Al MIS WORD. <lb/>
Two Boys Start Walking to Farm- <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
Saturday when Policeman W. H. <lb/>
went home to dinner, his <lb/>
son Wallace, about years old, <lb/>
aid I will walk to <lb/>
if you let The policeman <lb/>
showers in the only made e . , . ,. , . <lb/>
ft. ,. having finished his dinner by this <lb/>
time and, night policeman <lb/>
and his usual time for retiring just <lb/>
after out and go <lb/>
Ion Wallace took Joe, <lb/>
night, it j <lb/>
the moon brighter at <lb/>
seems . for it was half <lb/>
brightly, adding greatly to <lb/>
the evening, The <lb/>
party left the landing about nine <lb/>
clock on which <lb/>
was beautifully lighted with <lb/>
lanterns, and went fifteen <lb/>
miles down the liver where they <lb/>
landed at Hull <lb/>
delightful refreshments <lb/>
served. Afterwards they headed <lb/>
homeward, and the was <lb/>
made me. by In <lb/>
brother, and <lb/>
I About an hour later or more <lb/>
his wife him that <lb/>
I Wallace and Joe were both gone <lb/>
y an I to be uneasy <lb/>
about them. <lb/>
Mr. after looking <lb/>
about town and failing to find the <lb/>
boys went to a livery stable and <lb/>
, secured a horse and and <lb/>
which all the , , , . . . <lb/>
L . r. . , went to look for them. <lb/>
I hey reached the home landing at <lb/>
hall after twelve, and amid much <lb/>
merriment all went up to <lb/>
room, and danced there <lb/>
about an hour, which made a very <lb/>
pleasant ending of the occasion. <lb/>
Among th km- who were present <lb/>
Miss Nina James with Jack <lb/>
Goodwin, of Philadelphia <lb/>
Miss Alice White with Ballard <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
Miss Anna Howard, of Kinston, <lb/>
Tom Moore. <lb/>
Miss Rachel M. of <lb/>
Goldsboro, with Walter B, <lb/>
Jr. <lb/>
Miss Mary James with Burney <lb/>
Warren. , 1.1 <lb/>
Miss with Car <lb/>
Warren. <lb/>
Miss Alice Blow with Mark <lb/>
Miss May field Ray <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
Miss of Hander- <lb/>
s in, with Fred Forbes- <lb/>
Miss of Richmond, <lb/>
with <lb/>
Miss Helen Jenkins, of Gastonia, <lb/>
with Frank Wilson. <lb/>
Miss Mae Lather <lb/>
Miss with Kin- <lb/>
Miss Phillips, of with <lb/>
John <lb/>
Miss of with <lb/>
Mr. <lb/>
Miss Skinner with Cecil <lb/>
Cobb. <lb/>
Miss Willie of Snow <lb/>
Hill, w th <lb/>
Miss Maud with Andrew <lb/>
Moore. <lb/>
Miss with <lb/>
To <lb/>
Miss Fremont, with <lb/>
Alex. Blow. <lb/>
and Mrs. J. <lb/>
W. Aycock Mr. and Mrs. W. <lb/>
II. Wilson. <lb/>
she had arranged to have the gov- <lb/>
to New and so <lb/>
with <lb/>
be could not deny <lb/>
was <lb/>
Thinking <lb/>
of his conversation with Wallace at <lb/>
dinner time, lie took the road to <lb/>
Farmville. After about <lb/>
he overtook them about <lb/>
sore. When be asked them <lb/>
where they were going and <lb/>
them about the matter <lb/>
lace said papa, you said get <lb/>
out and goon, and we did <lb/>
Policeman said boys <lb/>
were hitting the road in a lively trot <lb/>
when he overtook He <lb/>
brought the boys back with him on <lb/>
the buggy. t <lb/>
CHEAP BUT VALUABLE. <lb/>
TROUBLE AT GRIMESLAND <lb/>
An Officer and Two Colored Men <lb/>
Wounded, One of the <lb/>
Latter Fatally. <lb/>
There was another difficulty in <lb/>
the town of Sat day <lb/>
evening, in which Policeman T. J. <lb/>
Tally was seriously cut by two <lb/>
colored men, Thomas and Sherman <lb/>
Grimes, father and son, and both <lb/>
were shot by the <lb/>
one fatally. <lb/>
The trouble started in the store <lb/>
of the Grimesland Supply Com- <lb/>
where She-man Grimes bad <lb/>
gone and a quarrel with Ml. <lb/>
R. M. Elks, a of the firm, <lb/>
about an owed <lb/>
them. The became so <lb/>
the store that <lb/>
T. J. Tally was called. When <lb/>
officer arrived the was very <lb/>
disorderly and resisted the officer <lb/>
as the latter was getting him out <lb/>
of Mine. the officer and <lb/>
got out to the street Thomas <lb/>
father- of Sherman, went <lb/>
up the two assaulted the of- <lb/>
Policeman Tally the <lb/>
elder Grime on the temple with <lb/>
his billet but this did not stop the <lb/>
attack. He then broke away from <lb/>
the two and drawing his <lb/>
gun them to stand back. <lb/>
of obeying the or they <lb/>
renewed the attack when the <lb/>
who was already cut in four <lb/>
places, shot them both, <lb/>
the in the bowels <lb/>
and the older one in the leg. <lb/>
This stopped the difficulty and <lb/>
men were all placed <lb/>
in the hands of physicians for at- <lb/>
Officer Tally's cuts were <lb/>
found to be quite serious for <lb/>
Politeness and good mariners <lb/>
are two of the crowning virtues <lb/>
of life. They are <lb/>
cheap in point of cost but <lb/>
in point <lb/>
Knowledge and -wealth and hours wan <lb/>
GEMS FROM <lb/>
mail is a mil ho hue <lb/>
and his self-respect. <lb/>
he is practical <lb/>
ad- <lb/>
until <lb/>
n he loses <lb/>
ad. <lb/>
man is beaten <lb/>
i a it. <lb/>
There ii a great ho- <lb/>
Mini the governor bust . , , , , . <lb/>
en and a dogged Ins <lb/>
between to do a thing An-old <lb/>
and determining to do it. <lb/>
position may possibility, <lb/>
nay, may be an actual condition <lb/>
with one; of <lb/>
politeness and good can <lb/>
largely negative these things <lb/>
which ought to be helpful to any <lb/>
and all who possess them. A <lb/>
young man's politeness counts <lb/>
much more with many people <lb/>
than his money or his de- <lb/>
and it ought to. Becoming <lb/>
behavior under all circumstances <lb/>
is a hotter adornment for a <lb/>
young man a young <lb/>
than college degrees, dress <lb/>
or any externals which giddy <lb/>
society might must appreciate. <lb/>
remember how, in the days <lb/>
of out- boyhood, a plain but <lb/>
courtly farmer, whose hands <lb/>
were hardened with toil and <lb/>
whose face was burned with the <lb/>
summer's sun, used to tell of the <lb/>
joy lie in observing <lb/>
the politeness and good manners <lb/>
of a certain young who was <lb/>
always careful on the country <lb/>
church yard to speak to every <lb/>
one in a polite agreeable <lb/>
way. This good and <lb/>
farmer, who bus lung since gone <lb/>
up to receive bis reward, saw <lb/>
nothing so attractive in his <lb/>
young man friend as bis polite- <lb/>
and good planners. T be <lb/>
In- strong <lb/>
fellow in appearance, and <lb/>
handsome to loon upon but <lb/>
a qualities wen <lb/>
as to their <lb/>
For a while Sunday morning he <lb/>
unconscious but improved <lb/>
later and today is reported able to <lb/>
be up is thought that Sherman <lb/>
shot wound in the bowels <lb/>
will prove fatal. He was report- <lb/>
ed in a dying condition today. <lb/>
The other Thomas Grimes, <lb/>
is not seriously wounded beyond <lb/>
being disabled for a time. <lb/>
EL. <lb/>
Church Dedicated <lb/>
On Sunday morning build- <lb/>
lately erected on Dickinson <lb/>
venue, west of the railroad, for <lb/>
the worship of the T <lb/>
congregation, was dedicated with <lb/>
ail appropriate service The <lb/>
exercises conducted <lb/>
by Rev. Thomas of <lb/>
Kinston, and Benson was <lb/>
preached by Dr. D. B. of <lb/>
Columbia, C. <lb/>
n-i a <lb/>
upon the faith and b.- <lb/>
ginning of his discourse n de <lb/>
reference to the handsome bu <lb/>
in which they worshiped, <lb/>
and said was well known to all <lb/>
present that this edifice been <lb/>
one through the unceasing <lb/>
efforts of <lb/>
Mrs. Her <lb/>
was in the work when she begun <lb/>
it, and though confronted by many <lb/>
obstacles she to be dis- <lb/>
and the building stands <lb/>
as a monument to her <lb/>
then delivered his and <lb/>
as he concluded said that <lb/>
this house to the service of <lb/>
God it had been given ft name <lb/>
Chapel, t <lb/>
This was a memorial to Mrs. <lb/>
who died the time the <lb/>
building was completed. A <lb/>
window memory of Mrs. <lb/>
has placed in the build- <lb/>
on the west side of the pulpit. <lb/>
At conclusion of the sermon <lb/>
and some remarks which followed <lb/>
by Rev. Mr. Chapman In eulogy of <lb/>
Mrs. a church was organ- <lb/>
eight persons presenting <lb/>
themselves for membership . <lb/>
A offertory <lb/>
Miss Meta and Mr. Paul <lb/>
of Rocky sang <lb/>
very <lb/>
A large i A <lb/>
the dedication .-. <lb/>
BUGGY TURNED OVER. <lb/>
Men Thrown Out in the <lb/>
Street. <lb/>
BOTTLE CAME <lb/>
the more <lb/>
making address tin- <lb/>
Tammany meeting l out <lb/>
party of men to see the <lb/>
The were not <lb/>
en, so far us but the <lb/>
try to get me <lb/>
I learned that these <lb/>
men had been by the wife <lb/>
of man in our to <lb/>
get me drunk so that I could be <lb/>
to <lb/>
of begging or requesting <lb/>
me to sign a pardon, they made an <lb/>
demand, they were <lb/>
downright insolent about it, too, <lb/>
I picked up my <lb/>
hat, turned on my walked <lb/>
out. I cannot tell who they <lb/>
New York American. <lb/>
man was saying <lb/>
lie meets young <lb/>
poverty, think poverty , w, , forgotten, <lb/>
act long you or never to have learned, how to <lb/>
will be convinced there Let all j <lb/>
but poverty for you. that two of <lb/>
ill qualities are as <lb/>
well as disease; and the mind is at <lb/>
much liable to infection as <lb/>
the. body , <lb/>
They swearing In <lb/>
police and special constables and <lb/>
deputy sheriffs ill in <lb/>
ration fur the Republican state <lb/>
convention. The Republican ma <lb/>
Secretary and tho <lb/>
J railroads do., anything to <lb/>
the crowning virtues of all life, <lb/>
and especially lite, <lb/>
and good monitors <lb/>
everywhere. Scotland Neck <lb/>
Commonwealth. <lb/>
Why is it that Norway is constant- <lb/>
increasing her marine <lb/>
and built besides sail- <lb/>
vessels during the past year <lb/>
she pays no Is it be- <lb/>
cause Norway has a tut ill for <lb/>
and tho United States stand pat <lb/>
This morning Dr. <lb/>
of Columbia S. C, and Mr. Lam <lb/>
Lawrence, county, <lb/>
who are the guests of Mr. Mis. <lb/>
W. M, King, were returning from <lb/>
tin depot to Mr. King's home In <lb/>
vehicle belonging to the latter. <lb/>
While Fifth street opposite the <lb/>
of Dr. Laughinghouse, <lb/>
horse they were driving be- <lb/>
came frightened at a goat and <lb/>
heeled around so suddenly as to <lb/>
the buggy over and throw <lb/>
both gentlemen out. Dr. Clayton <lb/>
tell in the sand and escaped with <lb/>
only -light braises. Mr. Lawrence <lb/>
was less He fell on the <lb/>
curb of the sidewalk and his face <lb/>
was painfully cut and bruised. <lb/>
License. <lb/>
Resistor of Deeds, Williams, <lb/>
issued the following licenses since <lb/>
last report.<lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
Strickland and II <lb/>
Interesting Sequel to Ocean Trip. <lb/>
A few weeks Green- <lb/>
ville F. J. <lb/>
Forbes, Eugene Wilson and W. Q. <lb/>
Ward, went on a pleasure <lb/>
trip. While some distance at <lb/>
ocean on the steamer Princess <lb/>
between and New <lb/>
York, a note was written on a <lb/>
piece of brown paper, placed in a <lb/>
bottle with a piper stopper and <lb/>
overboard. The note <lb/>
is the remains of F. J. <lb/>
Forbes, Eugene Wilson and W, G. <lb/>
Ward's trip to New York July <lb/>
1006- If found return <lb/>
either of the above parties at <lb/>
North and a <lb/>
reward of will be <lb/>
The young men little Idea <lb/>
of ever hearing from it again, bat <lb/>
today Mr. Forbes a letter <lb/>
from Mr. Baden Martin, n druggist <lb/>
at Pa., dated July 28th, <lb/>
enclosing the written at sea <lb/>
and he on the <lb/>
beach at Seaside Park, N. J., <lb/>
10th a quart bottle. <lb/>
It is up to the v. ii- <lb/>
the; will forward the promised <lb/>
am <lb/>
President <lb/>
Cannon me alarmed about the <lb/>
outcome of the congress; cam- <lb/>
and have w -y little <lb/>
confidence in the, <lb/>
managers must be <lb/>
for protection that fosters trusts and I nuts for win is on <lb/>
high prices. the anxious seat<lb/>
w. has started <lb/>
work the nice n he will <lb/>
basil on he Ham White <lb/>
ville. A <lb/>
number t been sold and <lb/>
it a ill be a pretty part of the <lb/>
town. J. W . who was <lb/>
to get a bail <lb/>
on this I his <lb/>
new home there this week.,<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>