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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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<pb facs="00019659_0001" n="1"/>
<p>
1.1.<lb/>
t H. E- A. MOTE, Manager. <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
II, . J-t- <lb/>
Manufacturers of <lb/>
Doors, Blinds, <lb/>
And all Kinds of Turned Work. <lb/>
Also Dealers in <lb/>
DRESSED LUMBER, CEILING, Flooring <lb/>
etc. m j <lb/>
ASSORTMENT OF DOORS AND; <lb/>
ALWAYS ON HAND. <lb/>
orders will receive prompt attention. Satisfaction <lb/>
guaranteed. <lb/>
OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF WINTERVILLE, <lb/>
WINTERVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At the Close Sept 1906. <lb/>
lit <lb/>
and Discounts <lb/>
b fixtures <lb/>
from is and <lb/>
Bank i<lb/>
Or <lb/>
i S. <lb/>
, profits, Less<lb/>
of <lb/>
subject to <lb/>
Cashiers <lb/>
currant expenses <lb/>
payable <lb/>
. i<lb/>
N r . <lb/>
C. of l <lb/>
. ashier of the named bank, do solemnly <lb/>
wear the above statement is true to the of my <lb/>
edge . d belief, <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before <lb/>
this 10th day of Sept. <lb/>
JAMES R. JOHNSON. <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
J . L. as <lb/>
A. G. OX, <lb/>
t;. <lb/>
i MAS. Directors. <lb/>
COMING SURE. <lb/>
ONE DAY. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, SAT, OCT.<lb/>
I , , . <lb/>
rational Entertainment- <lb/>
from different <lb/>
i .- The of frontier vivid Ml <lb/>
The only M In p- touring A th <lb/>
c i I is ti i<lb/>
I ;,, i -i i Burning n v p <lb/>
. L<lb/>
from e. T t train d to <lb/>
your I Prince Lu sea a -ii i <lb/>
i Troupe Wane rs tr <lb/>
Native Africans from the province <lb/>
American Australian Boomerang Thrower <lb/>
Bea landers Troupe of Arabian Acrobats Mexican Ru <lb/>
in Magnitude. Unsurpassed in Mont. <lb/>
Reviews bi Detachments of all a- <lb/>
Fresh months New <lb/>
India pi ant. Drove of Camels. Only bent <lb/>
Island Two performances daily at i. <lb/>
H p Seats people under sun and ram can- <lb/>
K veil son sale day show at Coward s <lb/>
spectacular Free parade with- <lb/>
charge at o'clock a. <lb/>
YOURSELF. <lb/>
XV <lb/>
i-xi i <lb/>
And look through our before buying. Each article <lb/>
of merchandise has been selected with great care as to quality, style <lb/>
price durability, and the usual high standard excellence ha <lb/>
been maintained. <lb/>
The New Cloaks and Rain Coats <lb/>
are coming in every few days, the variety is great and we are ottering <lb/>
some splendid values. Ladies Full length Rain Coats, well made in <lb/>
the latest styles, double breasted, belted, and trimmed with <lb/>
braid for the better grades run up to 118.00 and includes the <lb/>
new style. <lb/>
The New Dress Goods. <lb/>
are ready tor your inspection, the showing includes the season newest <lb/>
offerings, such as Broadcloth, Batiste, Voile, Serge, <lb/>
ma, Flannels, Wool Mixtures and Plaids, ask to <lb/>
see our special Chiffon Broadcloth at yard. <lb/>
The Silk Department. <lb/>
is and sparkling with good values, Crepe de <lb/>
the real double width in lovely shades for <lb/>
22-inch Crepe de in perfect shades tor So yard. Our <lb/>
Taffeta Silk in black and colors is worthy of your attention, price <lb/>
yard. New Plaid Silks mi all shades and Combinations. <lb/>
The Notion Department. <lb/>
Contains the newest of the seasons novelties in Fancy Back Combs, <lb/>
Belts, Shopping Bags. Handkerchiefs, Hosiery. <lb/>
Ribbons and Underwear, Ladies 1-Button length Black Kid <lb/>
Gloves 18.00 pair. and Colgate Powder box. <lb/>
Colgate Dental Powder box. Cashmere Bouquet Soap cake <lb/>
The Ladies Home patterns tor tall and winter are here, price <lb/>
and The Fall Fashion Book and Fashion Sheets <lb/>
free. <lb/>
will not regret paying this store a visit, tor we have many inter- <lb/>
things to show you. <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
J WHICHARD, Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR <lb/>
No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, Pin COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA TUESDAY. OCTOBER 1906. <lb/>
WHITE CAP CASE. <lb/>
Motion for Severance Allowed <lb/>
and J. K. Barnhill First Put <lb/>
On Trial- <lb/>
Continued from last issue. <lb/>
ED <lb/>
I Sun <lb/>
day in bis yard, him <lb/>
again dark pin- my house. <lb/>
I remember the Sunday <lb/>
of assault cm Teel. that <lb/>
day at my brother's Burn- <lb/>
bill, we all attended church at <lb/>
grove and went to <lb/>
bro tier's. Saw K. <lb/>
bill at church, he up and <lb/>
spoke to As we were leaving <lb/>
for that Mn, Brown <lb/>
children came up. brunt <lb/>
said about whipping <lb/>
Mr. Teel while there. <lb/>
hi that Son- <lb/>
day, saw J. K. and <lb/>
poke t him. <lb/>
bill, bis character is <lb/>
J. K, character is good.<lb/>
am one of the <lb/>
named in indictments in this mat- <lb/>
I did not go to house <lb/>
the of the assault, was <lb/>
never at but once <lb/>
that two Went to <lb/>
Ht Hickory Sun- <lb/>
day, saw Jim them D d <lb/>
Dot take my and buggy out <lb/>
that Sui day night. Teel to <lb/>
id d <lb/>
not gel u pis going to <lb/>
him. He me if wont rT <lb/>
Sunday let anybody have <lb/>
my I told In in <lb/>
no. He said he had billowed <lb/>
buggy luck there, it looked like <lb/>
the last track been made <lb/>
He told me to go look at my <lb/>
turned out aid Id <lb/>
him In see for <lb/>
be he would take my word for <lb/>
it. b rues <lb/>
on I spent Sunday sight Si <lb/>
borne, t in room wit <lb/>
boys <lb/>
Have never beard any <lb/>
body whip- <lb/>
ping there are no <lb/>
on me <lb/>
Ores x ruined--1 know <lb/>
Went to hi IV <lb/>
even ., . bi- <lb/>
court. I look d <lb/>
at track Teel pointed oat and it <lb/>
drove horse lit <lb/>
locked up I W, <lb/>
is nets before <lb/>
I refused to make State <lb/>
all one h i <lb/>
from my to <lb/>
would j; Teel told <lb/>
mi tho r been followed <lb/>
from house home <lb/>
my gate, say my horse <lb/>
was in i riven that night and l <lb/>
in- Inquiry to <lb/>
it. he ml <lb/>
l ll U <lb/>
ml <lb/>
Ii <lb/>
inn . <lb/>
V l i. I, <lb/>
who <lb/>
ton <lb/>
undo<lb/>
ah Mind eve <lb/>
c ml <lb/>
wont on homo. Saw <lb/>
him <lb/>
o'clock toM <lb/>
. and <lb/>
I him <lb/>
had ii up u the <lb/>
d 11.1 was <lb/>
I heard white g <lb/>
when me Teel. <lb/>
Henry is my <lb/>
-law, did not I never <lb/>
Of ii V . <lb/>
John Manning- married my sis- <lb/>
he was white capped before <lb/>
Teel was. made no effort to find <lb/>
out who it was while capped him. <lb/>
was at A. the night Mn-1 <lb/>
nine It was the 4th <lb/>
Sunday night in March. I have been <lb/>
accused of being a pally to the <lb/>
whipping. I have been charged <lb/>
with and am indicted for <lb/>
it. beard that L C James and <lb/>
Teel went to and bad me in- <lb/>
I was not in crowd that went <lb/>
to never heard any body say <lb/>
he ought to be whipped. I heard <lb/>
that Teel said I had been to <lb/>
and swore to a falsehood, <lb/>
feel about it and be ii was <lb/>
not so. On the Teel was <lb/>
peached at iii- <lb/>
Jack, did not preach lb <lb/>
but n tin in ii borne, <lb/>
there dark, OB my <lb/>
way home Jack <lb/>
I He <lb/>
tired that about ck, <lb/>
I not going to <lb/>
the following Tuesday, made no <lb/>
inquiry about Jim being in the <lb/>
white capping, I thought he was <lb/>
not wounded much if any and did <lb/>
not bother about it. He is my <lb/>
nephew <lb/>
lie-direct never heard any <lb/>
report about my connection with <lb/>
whiskey except what Lem James <lb/>
lam not guilty of Such <lb/>
charge. <lb/>
W W House testified to good <lb/>
character of both Barnhill <lb/>
and Teel. J S Brown and Wes <lb/>
Martin also testified to good <lb/>
character of Barnhill <lb/>
I live at place with <lb/>
tho Teel w as <lb/>
II Mail lied. Walter <lb/>
and lived at <lb/>
hen. and got <lb/>
mat at . was in <lb/>
and come down to give them <lb/>
no keys They both went to <lb/>
bed very soon after coming <lb/>
one went out of the house again <lb/>
lint night that know of <lb/>
got up at the usual time next <lb/>
mi ruing <lb/>
woke up <lb/>
and myself both. <lb/>
came. <lb/>
there. have not heard ll-- <lb/>
her say was o'clock when <lb/>
iii Did not, hear say <lb/>
lie sorry he went. <lb/>
WALTER <lb/>
Saturday f went down the <lb/>
river to attend a Ash fry, but they <lb/>
no I got back next mom- <lb/>
lag limit en red men <lb/>
, line with I left <lb/>
place and to <lb/>
met Jim Barnhill <lb/>
t re who lie hail to <lb/>
fry. I told him there not <lb/>
he went I went Oil <lb/>
railroad afternoon look <lb/>
at Stokes for Oakley. <lb/>
myself went to sec <lb/>
girls at It was in <lb/>
I intended going <lb/>
on train bill told <lb/>
in mil I <lb/>
I with him. <lb/>
Zeb I <lb/>
I in him <lb/>
w I; <lb/>
Is Wynn and <lb/>
. i In I<lb/>
II <lb/>
i . Linn . I III . .<lb/>
I V fl O e ll I II. Ir <lb/>
I. him . <lb/>
re l to <lb/>
., , the S <lb/>
v- . Raid there about i eel I <lb/>
kn b id re <lb/>
to <lb/>
i ml plat e about and i <lb/>
Moore k ya down to . <lb/>
Court here took s to <lb/>
o'clock Wednesday morning, <lb/>
was n considerably <lb/>
crowd <lb/>
did no I few days after attack He me Cross <lb/>
ray how many went into room. be did not know if Le could night to Mr. <lb/>
I haul logs for Zeb <lb/>
JACK BOWELL. on plat for u with <lb/>
Am years old, he when I jaw them Sun <lb/>
log about <lb/>
or Wednesday of following week <lb/>
know anything about it., LiVe u. place borne The load Briley and <lb/>
reopened Wednesday morning. <lb/>
appearing <lb/>
to be a very long one. the defend- saw where- latch was broken off anybody b the crowd. <lb/>
ant being tried mi three different door, did rot bear the shooting. <lb/>
Into dwelling It was after breakfast when I went <lb/>
house, conspiracy, assault to I did not say at Go. <lb/>
older to shorten the; in April court I <lb/>
State consented to accept <lb/>
a verdict not guilty the; <lb/>
count of conspiracy and the court <lb/>
was asked to eliminate all the <lb/>
evidence introduced bearing on <lb/>
Ibis <lb/>
Walter the stand <lb/>
to continue his testimony, but fur- <lb/>
question him being <lb/>
objected in a incompetent be was <lb/>
stood aside.<lb/>
I am one of the defendants in <lb/>
tn s matter, live at Sheppard <lb/>
First saw Barnhill on Sun- <lb/>
day at Tom he asked <lb/>
me money owed rim tor <lb/>
oxen. Next saw at Oakley, <lb/>
asked him about some tobacco <lb/>
and went by Oakley to get to- <lb/>
it was directly on our <lb/>
way home. Saw him last that <lb/>
night about o'clock, he, Wool- <lb/>
ard and myself silting in front of <lb/>
Nelson on opposite side <lb/>
did not break <lb/>
in house and assault him <lb/>
knew of. <lb/>
I mean <lb/>
to say It don't know <lb/>
broke in In <lb/>
not. <lb/>
MISS WARD. <lb/>
I live three or four hundred <lb/>
yard from W. J. <lb/>
the night his house was <lb/>
en. Mrs. Teel came to my house <lb/>
next she said she did <lb/>
no recognize any of them,<lb/>
l live quarter mile from <lb/>
went to his house about light <lb/>
next morning after trouble, stay- <lb/>
ad a short while. did not <lb/>
any suck en wire fence. asked <lb/>
Mis. reel were tho parties dis- <lb/>
guised and sin; said they were <lb/>
not. She was at my house the <lb/>
following and I asked <lb/>
her if she know any of them and <lb/>
she said no. i at <lb/>
house Monday night and ho said <lb/>
be reckon he was mistaken about <lb/>
shooting at any one in his yard, <lb/>
It might have been a plum tree <lb/>
on opposite side of path. <lb/>
Cross heard pis <lb/>
shots inroad, fain wife of <lb/>
Hen Ward, he went to <lb/>
when bell rang. He heard <lb/>
horse comb g by. <lb/>
live three quarters mile from <lb/>
, am wife of George Bed- <lb/>
dick, went to house next <lb/>
morning Mrs. Teel said she <lb/>
ti- ck and put in man's <lb/>
was man with slim <lb/>
little red chin beard. <lb/>
rotated to any of the <lb/>
day night, names <lb/>
in- who hi After they left <lb/>
The defendants counsel hate <lb/>
talked the mailer me to <lb/>
what knew. Teel was not home <lb/>
when was there. I n Teel <lb/>
and myself are have <lb/>
never given each other any <lb/>
trouble. Went to his house later, <lb/>
and talked with him, did not tell <lb/>
I did hear bis wife <lb/>
make the statement. Did <lb/>
bear Teal say anything about rec- <lb/>
Court; took to o'clock <lb/>
p. <lb/>
W S <lb/>
Recalled -I did not to <lb/>
house the night of attack, there are <lb/>
no gun shot wounds my person. <lb/>
When I left Oakley that night with <lb/>
Walter we went home, <lb/>
reached thereabout went by- <lb/>
way of Stokes, from there went on <lb/>
by swamp church. People <lb/>
live along read from Oakley to <lb/>
Sheppard place, we passed by W <lb/>
house. A colored man <lb/>
named Jack Unwell lives on doe <lb/>
buck place near road. Alter get- <lb/>
ling home we went in and saw <lb/>
Claude M and Tom <lb/>
we put up and wont to bed. <lb/>
I slept down stairs with Tom <lb/>
and Moore slept <lb/>
up stair-. Got up at usual time <lb/>
morning. Tuesday morning <lb/>
was time I about white <lb/>
Cross several <lb/>
parties in bar loom a Oakley <lb/>
night, <lb/>
other defendant among <lb/>
Think we had all been there before, <lb/>
John <lb/>
I lived at Sheppard mill at time <lb/>
of assault, Saw that <lb/>
at home, he got <lb/>
thereat I went in room <lb/>
when he called Claude and looked <lb/>
clock Had been asleep before <lb/>
went to bed with me <lb/>
He said a few words about the <lb/>
to be done next day, he <lb/>
house is close to road. Heard , or. is go to <lb/>
Briley pass that night a <lb/>
little pi-t o'clock, had got <lb/>
and was smoking when he pas-id, Live been there <lb/>
heard and to- <lb/>
Cross examined-Have not; Williams that night, <lb/>
known Briley long but knew bis ; Haw , ,.,., <lb/>
parents. Did not tell Mr. Roe. going Nelsons, <lb/>
buck that I expected they had ; ,, ,,,, c nU <lb/>
something to do with it I <lb/>
they passed my late. II Cross was <lb/>
heard somebody telling K hailed <lb/>
about it and they Briley had me then, <lb/>
in it. Mr. Thomas called <lb/>
Dame and said he he was <lb/>
there. Then I spoke that to- <lb/>
passed my o'clock <lb/>
LITTLE. <lb/>
Live at Jim <lb/>
remember Teel <lb/>
trouble. Between and o'clock <lb/>
that night I went to to <lb/>
going toward I knew It <lb/>
was without going out to see <lb/>
him, did not try to see him and <lb/>
never saw him. got cent <lb/>
of money have never <lb/>
mentioned to him. Told <lb/>
Roebuck it was directly <lb/>
o'clock when Briley pan ed, Roe- <lb/>
buck did not say it was much <lb/>
later than that. <lb/>
J. L PERKINS. <lb/>
Briley lives about from <lb/>
Stokes, his character and <lb/>
of good. Have known <lb/>
J. K. Barnhill since he has been <lb/>
in that neighborhood, and never <lb/>
heard anything against him <lb/>
Character of T. W. White- <lb/>
good, character Jack I <lb/>
good. <lb/>
am indicted <lb/>
Federal court. <lb/>
get some whiskey for my wife who <lb/>
was sick, Barnhill put hi head <lb/>
out and asked if -h- was <lb/>
sick much, be slept at Will urns. <lb/>
r. in-- was very contused <lb/>
on <lb/>
I. H. Little d to character <lb/>
of witness Una Little, also to <lb/>
character Barnhill. also <lb/>
testified to character Teel, J. <lb/>
R. J. T. Jenkins and <lb/>
H. R. I to <lb/>
W. J. Fleming testified god <lb/>
character of Briley, and Sane <lb/>
testified to good <lb/>
C. Forbes <lb/>
to good character of T. W. <lb/>
Miss DAISY <lb/>
about miles from Oak <lb/>
went to church Easter Sunday <lb/>
and spent of day <lb/>
Miss Taylor's. Saw K. <lb/>
bill Saturday night, a; <lb/>
stayed there balance of night. morning and at Mrs <lb/>
lace, he <lb/>
In am <lb/>
in <lb/>
parties<lb/>
in<lb/>
ed- not e-<lb/>
Ii <lb/>
mi, the do<lb/>
. I ml I <lb/>
I v home. think <lb/>
Mrs. Teel any<lb/>
1.1 in I- h <lb/>
Am husband of lady on <lb/>
in Teel describe <lb/>
the man whose face she put match <lb/>
in, said he a kind of tall <lb/>
man with face roil chin <lb/>
beard. <lb/>
Claude Moore up stalls in <lb/>
different room from <lb/>
Cross <lb/>
old, lived with Briley a <lb/>
months. Claude was to <lb/>
wake up when they c inc. Wool- <lb/>
ard struck match, he came In <lb/>
tho door, it was unlocked. I <lb/>
stopped staying there alter this <lb/>
trouble got out. None of us <lb/>
said hoy came in at i <lb/>
First heard of Pas <lb/>
Tuesday, m till a <lb/>
man named him. <lb/>
Never been to court before <lb/>
Looked at clock because I want- <lb/>
ed to know what time ii was. <lb/>
might have boon a tow minutes <lb/>
past alarm <lb/>
; id <lb/>
filial I<lb/>
ll <lb/>
I. <lb/>
. .en ii Jung , Keys to Told Ii <lb/>
they caught no fish. J. K-. I <lb/>
hill carried me to Stokes <lb/>
evening, did not ask <lb/>
was going to Oakley <lb/>
told him Briley had gone to <lb/>
grove. <lb/>
W. J. B. <lb/>
live in Bethel, saw Teel a <lb/>
that <lb/>
ZEB <lb/>
I remember testimony of witness <lb/>
Gurganus. I was talking to <lb/>
about buying out. Wynne <lb/>
said he wished he could get out of <lb/>
it, hut it had no reference to white <lb/>
cap case. saw that Sun- <lb/>
day night, he got up and rode with <lb/>
i me as far as my gin house. Went <lb/>
to his store later and several of us <lb/>
were in there together, I left about <lb/>
o'clock and saw Barnhill no <lb/>
more that night, lie came In room <lb/>
where sleeping Nelsons <lb/>
about light next morning, saw him <lb/>
about his place of business <lb/>
the day. <lb/>
Cross by my- <lb/>
self that night, Wynne, Barnhill <lb/>
and Charlie . bad been staying <lb/>
there. Barnhill did in <lb/>
until about day. after I left <lb/>
store got lo house a man come <lb/>
there with between there loosing for tap Bog <lb/>
and o'clock. I left ti ere about I ere laid it was him. went out <lb/>
and he was still there. <lb/>
MARX TAYLOR. <lb/>
Saw Barnhill evening <lb/>
my home, he came between <lb/>
o'clock and kit about It is <lb/>
about a mile to Oakley, <lb/>
was with Think Barn- <lb/>
hill had on a tan colored shirt. <lb/>
Saw quite frequently <lb/>
in last six months, shown <lb/>
he know I <lb/>
again. <lb/>
v. JAMES. <lb/>
Testified to good character of <lb/>
Barnhill. <lb/>
Cross tn good <lb/>
character of Teel, also said Teel <lb/>
told him about the white capping <lb/>
said he had recognized some of <lb/>
the parties.<lb/>
Lived at mothers 1-1 miles <lb/>
him that A <lb/>
,., , , ., . from y at lime of I el assault. <lb/>
cap that lo, ks like . , <lb/>
c it is it . <lb/>
I iii w. I put <lb/>
I e ,;. and ll <lb/>
. . u<lb/>
there, <lb/>
Saw r <lb/>
o'clock I . . I I lo get <lb/>
In; r. <lb/>
hits <lb/>
111- <lb/>
aV <lb/>
Her<lb/>
, . , <lb/>
put it the . <lb/>
I k<lb/>
, , , ,. <lb/>
hill. I . , <lb/>
tho . ho <lb/>
led. ,., ., k <lb/>
would n the I hilt <lb/>
bill night ; . , , , . ,. , . , <lb/>
, ., with Bin it n <lb/>
Ml. Is, . . , , . , ,, <lb/>
. . in and <lb/>
clock. Saw vi eel and <lb/>
e ore in f re <lb/>
then in and went toward <lb/>
Stoke-. Barnhill about light <lb/>
Monday morning between Nelsons . <lb/>
. Do not remember to have read m- <lb/>
and . ., <lb/>
page, <lb/>
him <lb/>
En <lb/>
Cross <lb/>
were present. <lb/>
when first hi<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019659_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
i vim i i i <lb/>
mm <lb/>
THE<lb/>
COX FRO <lb/>
of blue aim i roar <lb/>
there o i I <lb/>
th patter i i a I of fall- <lb/>
bod <lb/>
v a lie the <lb/>
thirty w i for <lb/>
valor, onto, ; s f <lb/>
the w and those th were . men, Al- <lb/>
ready us i <lb/>
mi e I . I <lb/>
cider plan of attack, lire <lb/>
it i that are to <lb/>
abandon the cried <lb/>
But the shook his j <lb/>
dead. wolf would soon a <lb/>
half as <lb/>
a prize as <lb/>
tiny have lost <lb/>
Aye. net so ourselves <lb/>
In proportion to <lb/>
have ion out l a and <lb/>
No. no; I <lb/>
they are a and we <lb/>
hear from ii but <lb/>
It may tie some hours fir a you <lb/>
will take my advice v.- w I rive an <lb/>
sleep, fir you are I can I <lb/>
by your ores, s c. . <lb/>
Without it as I <lb/>
Do was to the <lb/>
last pitch of human en .-.-. a Amos <lb/>
Croon and the Seaman had already I <lb/>
in th--r Muskets i <lb/>
and sunk sleep under e I of <lb/>
the . Tl o .- up- . <lb/>
to say few . comfort <lb/>
to the Adele, and t km, <lb/>
himself down upon a couch. <lb/>
he the dreamless sleep of ex- <lb/>
When at last be was <lb/>
aroused by a fresh spin d musketry <lb/>
Are from the woods the sun was <lb/>
ready low in the heavens, and the <lb/>
mellow of evening the <lb/>
bare wall of the room He sprang <lb/>
from his coach, seized musket <lb/>
rushed downstairs. The <lb/>
were gathered at their loopholes once <lb/>
more, m ill and <lb/>
were whispering eagerly <lb/>
together. <lb/>
is it, Are they coming <lb/>
he naked. <lb/>
up to said <lb/>
peering out at the corner of <lb/>
the embrasure, are gathering <lb/>
thickly at the east fringe, and yet the <lb/>
comes from the north, it is not <lb/>
the Indian way to attack across <lb/>
open, yet, if think help is <lb/>
coming- from fort, they <lb/>
The wood in front of us Is alive with <lb/>
said Amos. are as busy <lb/>
as beavers the <lb/>
they are go to attack <lb/>
from this side and cover the attack <lb/>
by ii fire from the <lb/>
Is what I cried the <lb/>
the spa-- gins up <lb/>
here and all the except live for <lb/>
The words were hardly out of his <lb/>
when a shrill yell rose from the <lb/>
wood, and in an instant a cl of <lb/>
rs burst and charged <lb/>
the bowling, i m and <lb/>
and In the <lb/>
air. of those in I or c <lb/>
in, . <lb/>
y . i a . <lb/>
and H them v . <lb/>
been f <lb/>
,. .-r.; .; <lb/>
the of their <lb/>
Q v. lie oil a-s <lb/>
again on to tops <lb/>
the palisades and ; <lb/>
down upon Inner <lb/>
while they had to load, <lb/>
and then, chi their . Hoy <lb/>
e rod head <lb/>
i. above <lb/>
Tho din the I v at In- <lb/>
the shouts and the <lb/>
tho ; t S as <lb/>
and tho terrified of the <lb/>
women i one <lb/>
dreadful uproar, above c i A be <lb/>
beard the high, shrill oil <lb/>
Imploring his to <lb/>
fast. With Du t nun, De <lb/>
and hi was <lb/>
ever In the forefront of -ht <lb/>
to desperately did they fa heat <lb/>
and butt l i, <lb/>
hawk, that at At. <lb/>
the pain ids <lb/>
slain or a <lb/>
when a fresh burst i <lb/>
face, which <lb/>
Of Its defenders. Lb II n an <lb/>
Instant tint tho is tot and <lb/>
that only one thing sees the <lb/>
house. <lb/>
thorn for he <lb/>
d. and, rushing at a <lb/>
gun, his flint and -u I <lb/>
fired It straight Into the Out k of the <lb/>
Then, as recoil d tot an <lb/>
Instant, he stuck a nail lit, touch- <lb/>
kola and It home a blow <lb/>
the of bis cm Dashing <lb/>
cross tho yard, he spiked the at <lb/>
the other corner was ha at tho <lb/>
as the of the garrison <lb/>
rare hurled against It by the rush of <lb/>
assailants. The Canadians darted <lb/>
In and swung the ponderous mass of <lb/>
rood Into position, breaking the leg of <lb/>
the foremost warrior who bad striven <lb/>
to follow them. Then for an Instant <lb/>
bad time for breathing and for<lb/>
MAN DOYLE <lb/>
ES <lb/>
terribly reduced, <lb/>
left weary <lb/>
it. had <lb/>
had Peon <lb/>
it <lb/>
I hi r . as a very evil <lb/>
one. guns been <lb/>
I hey he turned <lb/>
, v d, or. all further <lb/>
been vain. Put <lb/>
bad saved <lb/>
tin . i anger. The two guns <lb/>
the river face and the <lb/>
were safe for were commanded <lb/>
by the Ii lows of the nonce. But <lb/>
their u Is rs were <lb/>
and who were <lb/>
ii-o . l c. <lb/>
while a had <lb/>
by a tomahawk and <lb/>
COUld raise las <lb/>
. la la . id wore <lb/>
uninjured. bad a <lb/>
bullet hob In bis and Amos <lb/>
was bleeding from a out upon tho face. <lb/>
a few shots from the <lb/>
windows suffice to clear tho <lb/>
sure, for It was nil to their <lb/>
Sim. but on the other hand the <lb/>
had the shelter of the <lb/>
now, and from farther side of It <lb/>
up a tire upon the <lb/>
windows. Half a of the <lb/>
the fusillade, while the <lb/>
leaders consulted as to what bud best <lb/>
be done. <lb/>
have twenty-five women and <lb/>
fourteen said tho seigneur. <lb/>
am sore you will agree with <lb/>
me, gentleman, that our duty is <lb/>
Some of you. like my- <lb/>
self, have lost sons or brothers this <lb/>
day. us at least save our wives <lb/>
and <lb/>
canoes have passed up <lb/>
the said one of the Canadians. <lb/>
the women start the <lb/>
can get away to the <lb/>
Ste. <lb/>
claimed <lb/>
well if you c. <lb/>
this also, for <lb/>
be held until <lb/>
e of ex- <lb/>
. think It would be <lb/>
get your men out of <lb/>
see how It Is to<lb/>
. j- <lb/>
ml <lb/>
. lit <lb/>
tut What Is <lb/>
Io make attack upon it No. no, <lb/>
gentlemen; there still nearly a <lb/>
score of us. and when the garrison <lb/>
Icarus so proceed, which <lb/>
will be by tomorrow morning at the <lb/>
latest, they will certainly scud us re- <lb/>
you stand by the fort I will not <lb/>
desert yet It <lb/>
Is a pity to sacrifice men for <lb/>
canoes will hardly hold the <lb/>
and children as It cried <lb/>
but two large <lb/>
end four small. There Is not <lb/>
for u single <lb/>
Tho Iroquois were very quiet now, <lb/>
and an dropping shot from <lb/>
the trees or the stockade was the only <lb/>
of their presence. The twilight <lb/>
was gathering In and tho sun bad <lb/>
ready beneath the treetops. <lb/>
Leaving a watchman at each window, <lb/>
the loaders went round to the back of <lb/>
the the canoes wore lying <lb/>
Upon the bank. There were no signs <lb/>
of the enemy upon the river to the <lb/>
north of them. <lb/>
ore In said Amos. <lb/>
clouds are gathering, there will <lb/>
little <lb/>
Is luck, Indeed, since the moon Is <lb/>
p past the answer- <lb/>
ed la; wonder that the <lb/>
have not cut us the <lb/>
but it is likely that their canoes <lb/>
ha re gone south to bring up another <lb/>
war <lb/>
an hour it might be dark enough <lb/>
to i <lb/>
think tint there is rain in those <lb/>
clouds, that will make It darker <lb/>
Tho women and children were as- <lb/>
their places In each boat <lb/>
wen- assigned to them To Onega, the <lb/>
Indian wife of the who was <lb/>
us wary and as experienced as a war <lb/>
sachem of her people, the command of <lb/>
the women was <lb/>
Is not very far, <lb/>
Is but h league or <lb/>
I do not wish to leave yon, <lb/>
Amory. We have been together in <lb/>
our <lb/>
dear love, you will tell at <lb/>
the tort bow us, and <lb/>
they will us <lb/>
the Io that, and I will <lb/>
I useless. <lb/>
Onega has mo to load a gun. I <lb/>
will not be afraid, Indeed I will <lb/>
must not ask It, It Is <lb/>
Impossible. Child. I could not let you <lb/>
stay. It Is for my sake dear. You <lb/>
do not know what a load It will be <lb/>
from my heart when I know that you <lb/>
safe. And you need lot afraid <lb/>
for mo. We hold the place <lb/>
Until <lb/>
Adele was silent, but her hands tight- <lb/>
upon his arm. Her was <lb/>
still endeavoring to her when <lb/>
a groan burst from the watcher In the <lb/>
window which overlooked the stream. <lb/>
Is a canoe on the river to the <lb/>
north of be cried. <lb/>
many warriors are In ask- <lb/>
ed the seigneur. <lb/>
cannot see. The light Is not very <lb/>
good, and it is In the shadow, of the <lb/>
way is It coming r <lb/>
Is coming this Ah, It shoots <lb/>
out into the open now, and I can see <lb/>
she goad Lord be <lb/>
is it cried De la <lb/>
impatiently. <lb/>
is not an canoe. There <lb/>
it but one man in it He Is a <lb/>
cried Du <lb/>
springing up to the window. but <lb/>
a madman would venture into such a <lb/>
nest Ah. yes; can see <lb/>
him now. lie keeps well out from the <lb/>
hank to avoid their fire. Now he Is In <lb/>
be turns toward <lb/>
is a said one. craning his <lb/>
are there Is <lb/>
most <lb/>
can see his said an- <lb/>
other, -it is h Franciscan <lb/>
Au later there was the sound <lb/>
of a canoe gr upon the pebbles, <lb/>
the door was unbarred, and u <lb/>
strode In attired in the long, dark <lb/>
gown of the He cast a <lb/>
rapid glance around and then, step- <lb/>
ping up to De laid his band <lb/>
upon shoulder. <lb/>
You have not said <lb/>
he. have caught the evil seed be- <lb/>
fore it had lane to root <lb/>
do you mean, asked <lb/>
the have made some <lb/>
mistake. This is my good friend <lb/>
Amory de of a noble French <lb/>
is do the here- <lb/>
tic and Tied the monk. <lb/>
have followed him up the St. Law- <lb/>
and have followed him up tho <lb/>
and would have followed <lb/>
to tho world's end If I could but <lb/>
bring him tick with <lb/>
father Your seal carries you <lb/>
too the <lb/>
would you take my friend, <lb/>
go back to France with his <lb/>
wife. Then Is no in Canada for<lb/>
Du Unit burst out laughing. <lb/>
Ste. Anne, said he. you <lb/>
could take us all back to France at <lb/>
since you followed us here <lb/>
and since there is no getting sway we <lb/>
may settle this question at some later <lb/>
A groat brown cloud had overspread <lb/>
the heavens and the had fallen <lb/>
so rapidly that they could see <lb/>
gleam of the river in front of <lb/>
The savages in woods and behind <lb/>
the captured stockade were quiet, save <lb/>
an occasional shot. Suddenly a <lb/>
loll red glow began to show above one <lb/>
of the roofs of the cottages. <lb/>
have set It on cried Du <lb/>
must go at once, <lb/>
for the soon be as light as <lb/>
day. In in There is not an instant <lb/>
to lie <lb/>
There was no time for leave taking. <lb/>
One Impassioned kiss and Adele was <lb/>
torn thrust into the smallest <lb/>
Canoe, which she shared Onega, <lb/>
two children and an girl. <lb/>
The Others rushed into their places, <lb/>
in a few moments they had pushed <lb/>
off and had vanished into the drift sud <lb/>
tho Tho cloud had <lb/>
broken and the rain pattered heavily <lb/>
on the roof. <lb/>
i lad for this <lb/>
Du will prevent the <lb/>
cottages from blazing up too <lb/>
But be had forgotten that, though the <lb/>
roofs be wet tho Interior was as <lb/>
present should be very much <lb/>
yon will said De <lb/>
la sternly, you are under <lb/>
my roof and that you are speaking of <lb/>
my <lb/>
But tho friar was not to be <lb/>
st said ho. whipping a <lb/>
paper out of his bosom. is signed <lb/>
by the governor, and calls upon you. <lb/>
under pain of tho king's displeasure, <lb/>
to return this man to Quebec. But I <lb/>
have you now and I never leave <lb/>
you until I see you on board of the <lb/>
ship which will carry you and your <lb/>
wife back to <lb/>
Do could hut admire tho en. <lb/>
orgy tenacity of the <lb/>
seems to me. father, tint you <lb/>
would have shone more as a soldier <lb/>
than as a follower of said he, <lb/>
dry tinder. He MA hardly spoken <lb/>
before a great yellow tongue of <lb/>
licked out of one of the windows, and <lb/>
again, until suddenly half of <lb/>
roof fell In, the cottage woe <lb/>
blazing like a pitch bucket The <lb/>
hissed and sputtered the pouring <lb/>
rain; but. led from below, they grew <lb/>
still hither and flashing <lb/>
upon the great and <lb/>
trunks to burnished brass. Their light <lb/>
made the the manor <lb/>
house as clear as day and the <lb/>
whole long stretch of the river. A fear- <lb/>
yell from the woods announced that <lb/>
had seen the canoes. <lb/>
are rushing through the woods. <lb/>
They making for the water's <lb/>
cried Do <lb/>
canoes <lb/>
Du <lb/>
they must pass cried the <lb/>
Ste Wane. down <lb/>
the cannon and ore if you cannot <lb/>
had hardly reached the guns <lb/>
when two large canoes filled with war- <lb/>
shot out from the <lb/>
below the fort <lb/>
you are our best cried <lb/>
De la for her as <lb/>
passes tho great pine tree. Lambert. <lb/>
do you take the other <lb/>
The two wrinkled old artillerymen <lb/>
glanced along their guns and waited <lb/>
for the canoes to come abreast of <lb/>
The fire higher higher, and <lb/>
the broad river My like a sheet of dull <lb/>
metal, with two dark lines which <lb/>
marked the canoes sweeping swiftly <lb/>
down the center. One was fifty In <lb/>
front of the other, but In each the In- <lb/>
were bending to their paddles <lb/>
and pulling frantically, while their <lb/>
comrades from the wooded shores <lb/>
whooped them on to exertions. <lb/>
The fugitives had already disappeared <lb/>
around the bend of the river. <lb/>
Ac the first abreast of <lb/>
the lower of the two guns the <lb/>
H. A. <lb/>
JOHN A RICKS <lb/>
Sticks. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
Having consolidated the two stocks of H. A. and John A. is one <lb/>
store we are prepared to furnish our customers anything needed in <lb/>
Dry goods and groceries <lb/>
We carry an up-to-date <lb/>
Hats, Shoes, dress goods, Notions, Sc. <lb/>
n Groceries we will all i fall or the very best goods, not <lb/>
the staples like <lb/>
Meat, Flour, Sugar, coffee, but all kinds of <lb/>
canned goods, the finest brands <lb/>
We can supply you need to wear or to eat, and pay highest prices <lb/>
COUNTRY PRODUCE. Quality and price. of our goof's please you. <lb/>
thicks <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ <lb/>
Wholesale retail a <lb/>
aides, Far, Cotton Oil Ba <lb/>
Turkeys, B, <lb/>
toads, Mattresses Suits, B <lb/>
y Carriages, <lb/>
Tables, P <lb/>
and Ax <lb/>
Key <lb/>
Henry George Can <lb/>
Cherries, Apples <lb/>
Pine Syrup, Jelly, Milk <lb/>
Flour Sugar, Meat, Soap <lb/>
Lye, Magic Food, Oil <lb/>
Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar <lb/>
Jen Seeds, Oranges, Apples, Nuts <lb/>
Candies, Dried Apples, <lb/>
Prunes, Currents, Raisins, Ola. <lb/>
and China Ware, Tip and <lb/>
War., and Crackers, Mai <lb/>
Best Batter, Nev <lb/>
Roy-l Sewing and <lb/>
i good and <lb/>
Cheat Com <lb/>
M. SCHULTZ <lb/>
IS <lb/>
Knowing <lb/>
HALF OF IT. <lb/>
u i i i lit i . -t <lb/>
Same when it conies to buying <lb/>
w at to t. where to bay, and you are going to pay is where th <lb/>
Co m-s in. <lb/>
My go and prices will convince you that this is the place to <lb/>
buy in quantity. <lb/>
COTTON SEED. MEAL AND HULLS <lb/>
Hay, Corn, Oats Bran, Ship Lime and Groceries. <lb/>
When you in this Hue it will be to your interest to <lb/>
F- V- JOHNSTON <lb/>
In for <lb/>
by tin <lb/>
S REWARD <lb/>
Executive <lb/>
official information has <lb/>
been received at this department . <lb/>
W. H. Jr. late of the <lb/>
of Pitt stands charged with <lb/>
and assault upon W. J. Tell, <lb/>
whereas, it appears that said v <lb/>
H. Jr- has lied the State. <lb/>
or so conceals himself that the i <lb/>
nary process of law cannot be served <lb/>
upon him. <lb/>
Now, therefore, I, B. Glenn. Gov <lb/>
of the State of North Carolina. <lb/>
virtue of authority in me vented <lb/>
aw, do issue this my proclamation <lb/>
a reward of One <lb/>
Dollars for the apprehension and deli <lb/>
of the said w. H. Jr <lb/>
to the Sheriff of Pitt County at the <lb/>
Courthouse in Greenville N. C. and <lb/>
so enjoin all officers of the State and <lb/>
all good assist in bringing <lb/>
said criminal to justice. <lb/>
Done at our City of the <lb/>
day of July, in the year of our Lord <lb/>
one thousand hundred and <lb/>
and in the one hundred and thirty- <lb/>
first year of our American <lb/>
By the Governor. <lb/>
A. H. ARRINGTON. K <lb/>
CAROLINA, <lb/>
State. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
To whom Them Presents Mai <lb/>
ii my satisfaction, tr <lb/>
record of <lb/>
I tor the voluntary dissolution <lb/>
tin- unanimous of th.- <lb/>
I In nine., that The <lb/>
National Halve <lb/>
of this Stats, Whose la situ <lb/>
In town of <lb/>
of North Mun <lb/>
th and <lb/>
thereof, up whom process may he <lb/>
his compiled with the requirement <lb/>
Chapter II. of mi, <lb/>
to the issuing . <lb/>
Certificate in. <lb/>
Now. Therefore. I, J <lb/>
of the State of N do here- <lb/>
by that the i corporation did. a <lb/>
the th day of fit. In my <lb/>
duly executed and c writ <lb/>
to the dissolution of c <lb/>
by s <lb/>
which consent and th record of the r <lb/>
ire n nu my all <lb/>
ones provided bf law <lb/>
n in v I have hereto <lb/>
my hand and I my <lb/>
at Kn this day A. t. <lb/>
J J. Bryan <lb/>
ll of <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
m- I the <lb/>
of Pitt of <lb/>
he of Wick <lb/>
thereby to all In to the <lb/>
to make Immediate payment to the <lb/>
and all <lb/>
sud e same for <lb/>
on or before the day of <lb/>
notice will be plead tr of <lb/>
recovery, Tat day of A us. <lb/>
W. I. <lb/>
Wick <lb/>
J. J. TURNAGE, <lb/>
Five Points Grocer. <lb/>
In addition to Full line of Heavy <lb/>
and Fancy Groceries we carry a <lb/>
line of Hardware such as Home <lb/>
Trace <lb/>
Chains, Plows, Also <lb/>
line <lb/>
ware, Tinware. consisting <lb/>
Chill Tonic, Liver <lb/>
Regulator, Quinine, Soothing <lb/>
Syrup, Nerve and Bone Liniment <lb/>
Call me anything, in the <lb/>
above lines <lb/>
J. J. TURNAGE, <lb/>
Five Points <lb/>
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/>
Tours to serve, <lb/>
H. L. <lb/>
The Hardware Man.<lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
M. BLOW, Manager and Authorized Agent <lb/>
. C. . -at. <lb/>
I expect to be New <lb/>
about two will <lb/>
be closed in-m 22nd, till <lb/>
J. <lb/>
As <lb/>
we <lb/>
hat pleasure m <lb/>
recess to, <lb/>
in arrears. list g,,,., <lb/>
Of all who receive their mail hi Prices way down <lb/>
this office We also take orders n to<lb/>
or job o <lb/>
, We have on one . <lb/>
will be glad to i. B. <lb/>
price on tame. pram, ball <lb/>
J. R. Co. . on seed meal, ship stuff, <lb/>
,.,,, on hand, Cannon and Tyson <lb/>
can <lb/>
i , v V <lb/>
tomatoes, c, apply to ,.,. e, <lb/>
, J. K. i <lb/>
To any who are in need of a cook <lb/>
we can make his <lb/>
to see us as we have bought a <lb/>
tr load, and expect them to arrive -II he pres now <lb/>
Cannon Tyson. interest the most buy- <lb/>
Buy the i Cannon and Tyson. <lb/>
tor J. B- Kr h hoy a <lb/>
at W. Taylor's. Ii<lb/>
children have been <lb/>
Light on Dairying. <lb/>
In OM of the modal schools in <lb/>
i world's stock of town first grade teacher was <lb/>
a on the She <lb/>
trying impress on the young <lb/>
the various uses of tho milk. <lb/>
cheese, had been <lb/>
posed of, and she wanted some <lb/>
Might to tell how the farmer <lb/>
surplus milk to the pigs. <lb/>
Leading up to tin-, she asked this <lb/>
iv, children, after the farmer <lb/>
made all the <lb/>
he needs and uses who milk be <lb/>
wants for his family, what does ho <lb/>
do with Che milk I lint ill <lb/>
silence followed for a mo- <lb/>
and hen little hand <lb/>
ed frantically. The teacher smiled <lb/>
and said, <lb/>
it hack into the <lb/>
piped Woman's Home <lb/>
Com pa n ion. <lb/>
The <lb/>
pig is. very use- <lb/>
an ii., ., young <lb/>
cow . called an <lb/>
stomachs of the cow is <lb/>
shaped. leaves f the <lb/>
The is called a <lb/>
. lives on <lb/>
farm arc i a <lb/>
cow is i tor to gel milk, <lb/>
but w jg for to <lb/>
m cows have <lb/>
and . d bulls. The <lb/>
ma ill <lb/>
flesh of the lamb called <lb/>
twee Co. <lb/>
your eyes need <lb/>
J. W. Taylor, optician- <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. is the man to do <lb/>
your work if yon to be <lb/>
leased. <lb/>
Our line is now cum- <lb/>
we will be glad to <lb/>
yon cur stock before buy- <lb/>
J. B- Turnage A Co. <lb/>
Merchandise <lb/>
u lull line meat, lard can <lb/>
goods. Don't buy before <lb/>
. me trial. Frank Lilly Co <lb/>
infant child of Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. A. died last <lb/>
morning and was bur-, <lb/>
i Tied in the In the <lb/>
we a big stock , <lb/>
of good drew and <lb/>
J it- Tunings, <lb/>
keep vii band u <lb/>
line stuff lowest <lb/>
j prices Such bay, oats, con, <lb/>
reed meal and bulls, <lb/>
to give <lb/>
J. B. C-. <lb/>
in improved <lb/>
call to et- and we <lb/>
will be pleased quote yon prices <lb/>
J. B. ft Co. <lb/>
Go to B, E. Mail Co's new <lb/>
market beef, fresh meats, sail <lb/>
sage, and fresh <lb/>
For good cat ten cents com <lb/>
to Os. J. B. <lb/>
Too lo Bo True. <lb/>
A with n <lb/>
for conservatism was <lb/>
ed by a callow hopeful friend <lb/>
seeking to an in- <lb/>
tended investment <lb/>
wants me to take some <lb/>
stork he says will pay <lb/>
at per rent per annum and <lb/>
is a sure he said. <lb/>
The financier stroked his <lb/>
he said slowly, <lb/>
T should prefer per cent <lb/>
with a <lb/>
Home Companion. <lb/>
Cigar <lb/>
Here is a thing which all cigar <lb/>
smokers might observe with profit <lb/>
to themselves. Before lighting a <lb/>
cigar bite oil the end and, placing <lb/>
the be lighted between <lb/>
lips, blow through it. In this <lb/>
you get of a lino dust that ace <lb/>
in a when it is <lb/>
SCHUBERT'S SAD LIFE. <lb/>
which is apt to your <lb/>
chords and Injure your voice. It <lb/>
a valuable hint to m <lb/>
there are quite a of <lb/>
opera never light <lb/>
a cigar until v have blown oil <lb/>
the To failure to do this <lb/>
may be -i part e <lb/>
throat which steady <lb/>
smokers are <lb/>
There Was No Hurry. <lb/>
Stern of mien and keen of eye, <lb/>
the school was examining <lb/>
the boys in arithmetic. <lb/>
he said, just set <lb/>
one more sum. If a col falls down <lb/>
a b- well, and for two <lb/>
feet -limbs up it falls down three, <lb/>
how mg i take to get out of <lb/>
the <lb/>
One got hold of a slate, and <lb/>
after filling sides of it with a <lb/>
mass of figures for another <lb/>
slate. <lb/>
ions. snapped <lb/>
the inspector, -haven't you the.-e <lb/>
eat will never gel <lb/>
out of well <lb/>
he n hurry, replied <lb/>
boy; plenty of time and <lb/>
heaps more slates. If you <lb/>
enough I'll bring the little beggar <lb/>
out in An- <lb/>
ago a porter named f- <lb/>
i , , t-ii- I in r i en <lb/>
employed Billingsgate I ,, vi, m. <lb/>
I Shall to Sneak Door to <lb/>
to Beg My <lb/>
One of the bitterest disappoint- <lb/>
in Schubert's life <lb/>
In 1818 he <lb/>
sent n selection of his compositions <lb/>
to the poet's songs to <lb/>
What precious pearls of music were <lb/>
among the songs of <lb/>
and those <lb/>
from the sad melodies <lb/>
d sum billy Wanderer's Earl <lb/>
Buy a Fish- <lb/>
J. B. Co. The King of <lb/>
We want to make room for other j and the to <lb/>
stocks nun in to do so an of Villa Goethe, who had <lb/>
offering very cheap in sum- <lb/>
We must move them turns <lb/>
Peer got <lb/>
out way and have put a price <lb/>
on them that will sure t get <lb/>
them oil Now is the time to gel <lb/>
tin value your money. <lb/>
farm <lb/>
m or <lb/>
acres cleared hall <lb/>
mile Ayden. Good well water <lb/>
and out houses. Land in <lb/>
blah state cultivation. Apply <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
Offered <lb/>
When she entered the ear it was <lb/>
I to that she we- angry. Her him, <lb/>
chin was i in the and her lips <lb/>
were i rigid line. The car <lb/>
as i. e- seat was <lb/>
so p . her way up<lb/>
I front <lb/>
ave <lb/>
ionI car j-. i <lb/>
man <lb/>
this <lb/>
i. <lb/>
yo <lb/>
vie. <lb/>
. ., <lb/>
n, I<lb/>
i her <lb/>
lied the i en <lb/>
a tall, . ii . <lb/>
at, ;<lb/>
an ear only for stiff <lb/>
and <lb/>
tin n in fashion in took no <lb/>
notice of Schubert's music and ft <lb/>
his letter unanswered. Sot until <lb/>
Schubert's <lb/>
Goethe appreciate the ex- <lb/>
value of the <lb/>
lay neglected in his <lb/>
I. was then that <lb/>
mine r sang <lb/>
Earl In him. <lb/>
. S delight <lb/>
e i e little ion with <lb/>
his friends to the <lb/>
villages in the or <lb/>
on the and it was in <lb/>
of tho small inns, with a <lb/>
p re country wine before <lb/>
inspiration <lb/>
c. i de- <lb/>
v. . by the <lb/>
red him as a drunkard <lb/>
com -e, go n lien he <lb/>
f- . wine. i an absolute <lb/>
t e not lose ho faculty <lb/>
-i under tho sad- <lb/>
. He . <lb/>
of I <lb/>
was ill in hos- <lb/>
From London In a Sack. <lb/>
Some <lb/>
Fuller, en <lb/>
market. London, made a bet that h <lb/>
would jump from London bridge <lb/>
tied up in a sack, his only <lb/>
being that ho should be <lb/>
ed with o knife, which he was not <lb/>
to open he touched tho water, <lb/>
with which to rip open tho sack. <lb/>
ITo succeeded in accomplishing the <lb/>
feat and when picked up by some <lb/>
friends in a ho it was none the worse <lb/>
for his dive. <lb/>
DIRTY AIR. <lb/>
Ar Two of Impurity,<lb/>
The <lb/>
and of a <lb/>
sir in living room , a In oping <lb/>
or waking, has d <lb/>
anon. Without <lb/>
and unless t . i <lb/>
pure i be <lb/>
although it and a proof of tho <lb/>
in . to r <lb/>
environment to i . I in <lb/>
of at ion of I u lit <lb/>
can he borne with seeming <lb/>
There are to forms of impurity <lb/>
in the and solid. The <lb/>
gases, those resulting from <lb/>
from the lings, and in city <lb/>
houses from the little unnoticed <lb/>
leak.-, from the gas pipes and from <lb/>
defective plumbing, are the most <lb/>
Injurious. removal of these <lb/>
free ventilation h open win- <lb/>
and op.-n is most <lb/>
But of little <lb/>
ice in the removal the other kind <lb/>
of is to say, tho <lb/>
solid particles of <lb/>
which arc always floating in the air <lb/>
of houses is well in that of the <lb/>
streets <lb/>
A beam of sunlight entering <lb/>
through a half closed shatter makes <lb/>
visible this dust, and one looks <lb/>
with startled eyes on the beam <lb/>
which lights up the floating <lb/>
the wonder growl that the <lb/>
lungs are not made solid by this <lb/>
stream of dust flowing in with every <lb/>
breath. Fortunately the nose and <lb/>
the moist lining of the air tubes are <lb/>
designed to filter the by arrest- <lb/>
these particles before they can <lb/>
enter the delicate air chambers of <lb/>
the lungs. They do their work well, <lb/>
but not perfectly, and the greater <lb/>
the amount of dust the more they <lb/>
fail in their function. <lb/>
First Matrimonial Agency. <lb/>
The title agencies <lb/>
mil ought <lb/>
attention in our time, when re- <lb/>
quests for marriage the journals Sunday August th <lb/>
in the form of gross or jocular and nineteenth, between John <lb/>
sometimes serious d a gold wish- <lb/>
That may seem to be a new <lb/>
of modern life, yet M. <lb/>
Henri in La <lb/>
says tho real originator <lb/>
of this industry was one <lb/>
In the last days of the empire ho <lb/>
set up in Paris sort of universal <lb/>
agency which would supply furnish- <lb/>
ed apartments, domestics, wives and <lb/>
do St. <lb/>
Workmen engaged in trades <lb/>
i . r- <lb/>
felt <lb/>
acquire disease of lungs from <lb/>
I the inhalation of dust. <lb/>
Dust particles are injurious not <lb/>
only mechanically, but also and <lb/>
chiefly because they act as carriers <lb/>
of germs. <lb/>
Since it is impossible, to remove <lb/>
entirely by ventilation, is <lb/>
necessary to do is practicable <lb/>
; to prevent its dilation h <lb/>
the Settled is but <lb/>
inoffensive. when the troll <lb/>
but ignorant <lb/>
flops it into the air with a feather <lb/>
duster she only rouses the ling <lb/>
lion. Brooms and feather rs <lb/>
are relics of barbarism and should <lb/>
be banished, The damp cloth for <lb/>
furniture and the mop and carpet <lb/>
or for floors, or, best of all, <lb/>
j tho vacuum process, are the modern <lb/>
civilized agents of cleanliness. These <lb/>
gather up the dust and do not <lb/>
of a decree In tile Superior <lb/>
PHI Comity u in a <lb/>
.- h. Lail--. grinder <lb/>
tote the Court <lb/>
the <lb/>
in <lb/>
Thai Ira. I a of the <lb/>
W. II. others <lb/>
en i ii lot <lb/>
t. In the <lb/>
late <lb/>
Se c heir of John Ti be- <lb/>
HIT in M <lb/>
ml ii an <lb/>
mi l w h r, hereby <lb/>
the I I Is II I e else. <lb/>
r. 1.1. I I <lb/>
V O. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Dixon, <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. <lb/>
Block, Bast St. <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
bone, set pearls u <lb/>
diamond in the center. Liberal <lb/>
for the finder. <lb/>
Vivian Parker X. <lb/>
aw <lb/>
he <lb/>
tie work <lb/>
.<lb/>
Stationery <lb/>
Now <lb/>
is your time save <lb/>
V by coining to us for <lb/>
I have taken up one black bar <lb/>
shoat, weight about <lb/>
no earmarks. Owner can get same <lb/>
by paying charges. <lb/>
Tucker. <lb/>
R. F. Greenville. N. C <lb/>
ply scatter it in the air, where it is <lb/>
invisible, but <lb/>
Companion. <lb/>
FREE <lb/>
Tho Honest Office Soy. <lb/>
A Baltimore lawyer had <lb/>
a new hoy, and teat Hie <lb/>
boy's honesty he put a twenty dollar <lb/>
under the inkstand on desk, <lb/>
, letting the v . in ho <lb/>
i went out to lunch. On hi return <lb/>
a couple of Inter the note was <lb/>
gone. A quarter occupied its <lb/>
Tale with and horror, the <lb/>
sufferers of Liver or ,,. ., <lb/>
Bladder I Other <lb/>
child school requisites; i fact urea say a bottle and If <lb/>
tablets, pens, era- It cure we will refund <lb/>
.,.,. <lb/>
have also a great assort- <lb/>
all <lb/>
0.1 <lb/>
The <lb/>
S in I.<lb/>
if <lb/>
for use <lb/>
plain or hemstitch- <lb/>
say a. <lb/>
i full size free bottle of <lb/>
if you, then <lb/>
SOL until <lb/>
This entitles you <lb/>
to a bottle SOL at <lb/>
ho shouted, <lb/>
left under this ink- <lb/>
Eland. Now there's only a quarter <lb/>
there. How do you explain <lb/>
boy smiled brightly. <lb/>
he said, after you <lb/>
gentleman called with a wine and <lb/>
bill that he knew you were <lb/>
to because if <lb/>
iv of social cur- <lb/>
DRUG , fr <lb/>
Only a limited of but ties ,, , <lb/>
inkstand. Here's <lb/>
receipt, <lb/>
given away- Don't miss this <lb/>
to <lb/>
N.<lb/>
V to <lb/>
Music. <lb/>
musician. .-. <lb/>
flower is hi <lb/>
the<lb/>
the land i the lily, ha <lb/>
for its <lb/>
is W and <lb/>
Ireland I hi n <lb/>
Gem<lb/>
Du<lb/>
i . <lb/>
la<lb/>
roe i <lb/>
of I <lb/>
I i and <lb/>
notes<lb/>
i unpaid <lb/>
f.<lb/>
NO THINKING <lb/>
A Up In Vault <lb/>
A pr. i -it <lb/>
me n hit great weakness <lb/>
inability to stop <lb/>
retiring. In he is <lb/>
v ho <lb/>
i all is I day. <lb/>
i i him to i <lb/>
of ii f the i of his <lb/>
bi net . at the i <lb/>
that he cloned the of his <lb/>
I said, <lb/>
the current of <lb/>
your thoughts when you have your <lb/>
business for the day as you <lb/>
change your environment or as you <lb/>
change your dress for dinner when <lb/>
you go home in the evening. Turn <lb/>
thoughts to your wife and <lb/>
v. joys and cares. Talk <lb/>
to them, play games with them. <lb/>
Read some humorous or entertain- <lb/>
-tor or some strong, interest- <lb/>
book that will lift you in <lb/>
of yourself out of your business rut. <lb/>
Go out for a long walk or a ride. <lb/>
Fill your lungs with strong, <lb/>
air. Look about you and ob- <lb/>
serve beauties of ire or <lb/>
a bobby of cue kind to which yon <lb/>
can turn for I and refresh- <lb/>
when you your regular <lb/>
business. He master of your mind. <lb/>
Learn to control it instead of <lb/>
lowing ii to control you and <lb/>
over you. <lb/>
Hang up in your bedchamber in <lb/>
a conspicuous place where you can <lb/>
always see it a card bearing in bold. <lb/>
Illuminated characters this <lb/>
Thinking <lb/>
Shut off all thinking process of <lb/>
every kind when you retire for tho <lb/>
night, relax every muscle, let there <lb/>
be no tension of mind or body, <lb/>
in a short time you will find that <lb/>
sleep will come to you as easily and <lb/>
naturally as to n little child. <lb/>
The habit of thinking after going <lb/>
to bed is fatal to all freshness of <lb/>
work. These men have not <lb/>
learned to lot their business in <lb/>
their offices or factories when they <lb/>
quit for the night, so they drag it <lb/>
home, bring it up at the dinner <lb/>
and depress the whole family, <lb/>
or if they do not talk about their <lb/>
problems their anxiety and absent- <lb/>
mindedness totally unfit them for <lb/>
the of <lb/>
families. The; are absorbed in <lb/>
tin problems of their vocations that <lb/>
they do not know what is <lb/>
around them. They do not Know <lb/>
to relax, to unbend, to Test, so <lb/>
they lie down -op with all their. <lb/>
burden, just as a tired camel lies <lb/>
down in desert with its great <lb/>
burden still on it.- hack. <lb/>
It is a great art to ha able to <lb/>
shut the gales in the mental <lb/>
power house on retiring, to control <lb/>
oneself, to put oneself in tune with <lb/>
the infinite, to oneself in <lb/>
with those about him, in <lb/>
with the world, to expel from <lb/>
the mind everything which jar-, <lb/>
all and <lb/>
the . i f our pea v and <lb/>
happiness, I we go to -I .,. <lb/>
S. in Si Magazine. <lb/>
An tent Cue t. <lb/>
When Mi.-- Phoebe . I u <lb/>
r. i in her to <lb/>
t . where I as <lb/>
cook several <lb/>
ed briefly .- had tun ed <lb/>
i in led to- <lb/>
. i . i hi next <lb/>
evening, ed hoc <lb/>
I . to the mis of tho house- <lb/>
hold. <lb/>
i i c go toil <lb/>
me tin I let n a a <lb/>
on lucky number. Miss <lb/>
she .-. id gloomily, guess I known <lb/>
now how was <lb/>
i lei at <lb/>
Id M . I wed <lb/>
t, how <lb/>
very lad looked <lb/>
is <lb/>
5,045.00 <lb/>
to check, . <lb/>
i i 677.1 <lb/>
graph. <lb/>
Tho Life i . <lb/>
Coil ; <lb/>
that r Total, <lb/>
Sis-. <lb/>
Total. <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, <lb/>
COUNTY OF PUT, <lb/>
I, J. Smith, c shier of the above-named do <lb/>
that the statement in true to the best of my and be- <lb/>
lief, s J. R. SMITH, <lb/>
Subscribed and to before <lb/>
me, day of Slept, 1900. <lb/>
Public <lb/>
J. R. SMITH <lb/>
JOSEPH DIXON <lb/>
R. C. CANNON <lb/>
tors, <lb/>
weighing LOGO <lb/>
after twenty-four blows of <lb/>
. . but makers said <lb/>
It was calculated for a lighter blow. <lb/>
Daily News.<lb/>
m l <lb/>
Twain. you . <lb/>
hired younger men. These u I <lb/>
lows Lave lost their teeth, of <lb/>
they don't speak Arabic <lb/>
J They speak<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019659_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
t-- <lb/>
V J ii<lb/>
TH. reflector <lb/>
SEMI-WEEKLY- TI AND FRIDAY. <lb/>
i. J. WHICH <lb/>
stared in post office iii N- C, m i <lb/>
Advertising rates d id application. <lb/>
Arm office counties. <lb/>
i ii i <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA TUESDAY, kT. 1906. <lb/>
It is geld i It <lb/>
is punished, bi i I <lb/>
TAP <lb/>
escape pun .-i I <lb/>
T. effector. was <lb/>
first asked about Hie conversation <lb/>
I,. M by Mr. Mi <lb/>
r I stem misc. <lb/>
, Live on r id m Stokes <lb/>
formed I a M a waste <lb/>
Oakley. the night of <lb/>
of time and money <lb/>
the reel . or <lb/>
the trial a per u . ,., , , men w <lb/>
with any crime of ward Stokes, <lb/>
magnitude. <lb/>
lad r of road lea I <lb/>
While who <lb/>
good, that of ex iv. C buck. <lb/>
cock iii I Character Fleming, proceeding <lb/>
. ,.,, u good I live on r ad <lb/>
i.-. between Stokes and mill <lb/>
the <lb/>
has be <lb/>
fore a Pitt count; <lb/>
Ex-Gov. T. J. jams uttered a <lb/>
great truth in hist speech <lb/>
the jury in white cap in <lb/>
a man engages <lb/>
the illicit sale or of Thomas that passed there <lb/>
whiskey he bids bye to law some after From my <lb/>
truth. <lb/>
Tack Howell lives on my place, las <lb/>
character I. Beard some <lb/>
that nigh going towards <lb/>
do not what time it <lb/>
as or who the were. Mr. <lb/>
Thomas was telling me about the <lb/>
white capping some days later and <lb/>
I in presence of <lb/>
It looks very much ox- <lb/>
Governor Aycock said in his <lb/>
closing argument to the jury in <lb/>
the white cap case, that a <lb/>
of not guilty would a <lb/>
declaration that every man in <lb/>
Tour. i-ii around Oakley that <lb/>
went to my father's and <lb/>
-pent that with W. J. Man- <lb/>
Greenville Wed- <lb/>
and back t Oakley <lb/>
I beard testimony <lb/>
I . m <lb/>
I he to <lb/>
i borrow i y <lb/>
so I a from <lb/>
i if i . what i <lb/>
i . did i i hear the <lb/>
related. I <lb/>
iii yon going to <lb/>
n-. ; ck was known wit- <lb/>
I carry i. to <lb/>
.- i i v. like it <lb/>
el <lb/>
I, i . came to <lb/>
; . ; . get two <lb/>
in t- ii. i .- n ii we k and of- <lb/>
t iv. . i did <lb/>
cot g bat night and d-; <lb/>
, , . was <lb/>
. u l i t had <lb/>
j , i . p ; ;. I <lb/>
i, Jot kl . , , i . i i <lb/>
-I ., j I in i . DO, wolf off <lb/>
a, ii ; year or stopped <lb/>
a i . i i. . ii stayed <lb/>
i i . . i i <lb/>
, Ii I it my room <lb/>
Mil in <lb/>
cap Sunday night <lb/>
t Mary Taylor, <lb/>
She was teasing ma about failing <lb/>
to g-i -i crown at tournament <lb/>
said had to a mourning <lb/>
lay I her not to put <lb/>
it Inn put SIM also put a ho on El- <lb/>
mer cap. No wounds are <lb/>
on my person. <lb/>
Cross years <lb/>
old, have lived in Oakley about <lb/>
j years, work for and <lb/>
house to mill miles, and to <lb/>
tokes miles. was sub- <lb/>
by both State and defense. <lb/>
Cross examined-Think Mr Blow <lb/>
was first i f I talked with <lb/>
getting under Thompson around their stills and <lb/>
Thomas told me that opened, a barroom of my <lb/>
was accused of being in white cap- <lb/>
ping. The buggy going by fast <lb/>
that night woke me up, it might <lb/>
Pitt county would hive t- arm haVe or <lb/>
himself it defense of his own <lb/>
as he could no <lb/>
to th law to protect him <lb/>
Judge Thomas J. Shaw has <lb/>
closed a two weeks term of Pitt <lb/>
Superior court, the first he has held <lb/>
in this county. He is an able <lb/>
judge and has made a host of <lb/>
in this county. Judge <lb/>
Shaw was feeble when he came <lb/>
here to begin the court, and though <lb/>
the docket has been a heavy one he <lb/>
has held up well under the severe <lb/>
train. <lb/>
Before court Friday <lb/>
evening Judge Shaw <lb/>
that he had witnessed more per- <lb/>
jury this court than had ever <lb/>
before under his observation. <lb/>
He said if he had to hold another <lb/>
court here he would send some <lb/>
twelve or persons to the <lb/>
roads for as the county <lb/>
such example. Judge <lb/>
Shaw further that he w h <lb/>
the that Pi- <lb/>
is dominated by whiskey i Hi. <lb/>
as long as exists a <lb/>
reign of evil may be expected to <lb/>
continue Judge words <lb/>
are true, and should the <lb/>
blush of to the cheek if any <lb/>
self respecting <lb/>
county. <lb/>
OF NOT GUILTY <lb/>
End of First White Cap Trial. <lb/>
The white cap trial that began <lb/>
morning ended lite Fri- <lb/>
day evening in a verdict of not <lb/>
live days of the <lb/>
consumed on the in-.-. <lb/>
Only one defendant, J. K . Barn- <lb/>
hill, was on trial. <lb/>
case was a strongly fought <lb/>
one from beginning to end, there <lb/>
being an able array of counsel on <lb/>
both sides. In all witnesses were <lb/>
placed on the stand for the State <lb/>
and for the defense. <lb/>
The verdict of the jury was a <lb/>
miscarriage of justice, as the State <lb/>
established a clear case of guilt to <lb/>
unbiased d. <lb/>
I. K. <lb/>
I hitched up that Sunday morning <lb/>
about o'clock and started to river <lb/>
to fish fry, met road told <lb/>
me they caught no I turned <lb/>
back and went to Hickory grove <lb/>
church. After church I went to Tom <lb/>
Williams to see who beard <lb/>
was there and about <lb/>
some money be owed me. I went <lb/>
to Oakley and in afternoon <lb/>
took a nap. <lb/>
Later went with to Mrs. <lb/>
Williams and remained there until <lb/>
about o'clock, then went out <lb/>
about my place of business where <lb/>
asked rue about getting a <lb/>
box of tobacco. Taylor boy came <lb/>
in and was talking about <lb/>
puppy On way from Mrs. <lb/>
to Oakley and I <lb/>
got up with and rode <lb/>
as far as his house. While In my <lb/>
lace . in and Wynne <lb/>
came, several were there. After <lb/>
the left <lb/>
and I my place and <lb/>
out in front Nelson's where we <lb/>
talked for Mime time While I <lb/>
was at Nelson's eating <lb/>
Zeb called me out <lb/>
Rogers wanted to borrow my <lb/>
for next day. As <lb/>
and off I asked <lb/>
to get the money for me as <lb/>
soon as he could, they went to- <lb/>
wards Stokes. I then went to <lb/>
Williams and wont to bed. AU <lb/>
dropping to sleep Ernest <lb/>
Carson came and wanted some <lb/>
liquor, it was not o'clock so I <lb/>
did not let him have It. j had <lb/>
been staying, at Nelson's before <lb/>
this. A colored man also <lb/>
between and o'clock to <lb/>
get for his wife, it was <lb/>
Geo. Little. I stayed there all <lb/>
night and got u; about day break <lb/>
next morning, went to <lb/>
and changed clothes; went to <lb/>
Stokes about hour after sun op <lb/>
to get hay, Wynne was with me. <lb/>
We examined bay at both Stokes <lb/>
and Perkins store, bought aim <lb/>
from Perkins, pat one bale of it <lb/>
on wont back to Oak- <lb/>
Train came along while we <lb/>
were in stables, Dr. got off <lb/>
train and went in his office, I went <lb/>
there to get medicine for my <lb/>
throat. After getting back to <lb/>
Oakley a tout o'clock I <lb/>
down bed and slept an <lb/>
own. got up that Sunday morn- <lb/>
about or o'clock, Wynne <lb/>
and occupied same <lb/>
room with me, Whitehurst and I <lb/>
slept together I started to <lb/>
Hall that morning on river, <lb/>
went by way of Stokes nearly <lb/>
to mill; it was not near- <lb/>
est way to Yankee Hall. I started <lb/>
by to see if had gone to fish <lb/>
fry. I met walking up <lb/>
road, he told me they were catch- <lb/>
no fish. Before I met <lb/>
I met John James and answered <lb/>
yes to his question if I was going <lb/>
to Hickory Grove. It was <lb/>
lock when I got back to Oakley, <lb/>
went to Nelson's where I got down, <lb/>
had been boarding there since <lb/>
February. Think was <lb/>
there, No was room when <lb/>
I went to sleep after dinner. I <lb/>
got up and went out to <lb/>
he did not tell me that morning <lb/>
he was coming on train. Wool- <lb/>
ard and I went to Mrs. Taylors <lb/>
and stayed until o'clock; we <lb/>
both got up and rode with White- <lb/>
when he came along. Don't <lb/>
know if and I ever wen <lb/>
to see girls together before, or It <lb/>
we rode with Whitehurst <lb/>
before. called over names of <lb/>
parties embracing all defendants <lb/>
who were in store <lb/>
Ate supper about <lb/>
o'clock. kept waiting <lb/>
around bar after getting the <lb/>
co. Do not know that I ever had <lb/>
in my barroom on Sunday <lb/>
night before. It i called miles <lb/>
from Oakley to <lb/>
and I stayed out and <lb/>
talked about three quarters <lb/>
hour they left, then I went <lb/>
to Williams. Whitehurst told me <lb/>
Bryan wants to see <lb/>
but it was Cap Rogers. my <lb/>
way to William's Frank Stater <lb/>
hailed me and asked me if I had <lb/>
changed my boarding place. <lb/>
did not keep me awake all that <lb/>
night after whiskey. I would not <lb/>
let Carson have any. to <lb/>
sleep and did not hear clock <lb/>
or My clerk let the <lb/>
have whiskey when he came for i <lb/>
between and o'clock <lb/>
I raised window and asked <lb/>
about his wife. I tiled an <lb/>
affidavit for continuance at April <lb/>
term because of absence of Gus <lb/>
Little who said in affidavit called on <lb/>
me at my that night in Oak- <lb/>
to get whiskey. Don't know <lb/>
why I did not say in affidavit that <lb/>
he called on me at home Will- <lb/>
I swore to affidavit. It was <lb/>
my clerk who let Little have <lb/>
key. saw me the <lb/>
same night Gus Little did. When <lb/>
I left Williams and wen to <lb/>
sons I lay again, I Car- <lb/>
son put his heed in d or and asked <lb/>
ii iv. to sleep all day. Hid <lb/>
n i -1 that changed my <lb/>
V . and were in <lb/>
room Brought t along be <lb/>
cause it said I shot in <lb/>
body. not walk to train <lb/>
it and Dr <lb/>
Do not know what of the <lb/>
doctor at April court. He was my <lb/>
doctor for a while. Wynne <lb/>
with i i- use both <lb/>
wanted hay There phone from <lb/>
Oakley to St which we <lb/>
could r i hay. lay down <lb/>
on in I an lour, felt <lb/>
like lying d Zeb Whitehurst <lb/>
did not take my bloody clothes out <lb/>
of room that morning, colored worn, <lb/>
an washed the shin for me. Joe <lb/>
Williams did not u White- <lb/>
had taken the bloody <lb/>
room I had better be care <lb/>
fill. I had heard it and asked Joe <lb/>
about it. That is not why I am not <lb/>
putting W on II <lb/>
spent Tuesday night with W J <lb/>
Manning, he has been helping me <lb/>
in the trial. I do nut know if lawyers <lb/>
employed for me I was <lb/>
Did <lb/>
Manning that night at his house <lb/>
about white capping. Wednesday <lb/>
n first time heard I was accused <lb/>
of it. People told me <lb/>
Oakley and looked <lb/>
and saw me in bed, I got out of <lb/>
room about J o'clock <lb/>
I never got Manning to <lb/>
send to Teel and offer him f <lb/>
for the cap. Joe did not <lb/>
tell me that he offered Teel <lb/>
for the cap and that Teel replied <lb/>
the whole liquor interest of the <lb/>
county did not have money <lb/>
enough to make him tell a <lb/>
about it. I did not bear until <lb/>
May that Teel had said he <lb/>
me. I read the article in <lb/>
The Reflector, and know it said <lb/>
Teel staled he two of <lb/>
the parties. Never brought cap <lb/>
here out of my trunk until this <lb/>
court, brought it for in -i time <lb/>
yesterday morning. I heard next <lb/>
day after trouble that Teel had a <lb/>
cap which said to be I <lb/>
do not know that this cap was <lb/>
shown Joe Williams and be said it <lb/>
was cap I wore. I <lb/>
do not know that Joe Williams <lb/>
told Mr. Gray Little that my <lb/>
bloody clothes were in the room <lb/>
and that he tried to keep me out <lb/>
of that but I just would <lb/>
HO. <lb/>
I am indicted in Federal <lb/>
with helping to con- <lb/>
whiskey. I am not charged <lb/>
with helping to whip Manning. <lb/>
I drove something like miles <lb/>
that it was ordinarily <lb/>
warm day my horse was tired. <lb/>
Put the horse up in my stables at <lb/>
Jenkins stables is <lb/>
about yards from mine. Do <lb/>
not know where Whitehurst went <lb/>
that day, he was out driving that <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
I K <lb/>
am witness <lb/>
ed yesterday who said Taylor <lb/>
had sown bow in my cap, and have <lb/>
the cap with me today, <lb/>
Save not worn the cap much since <lb/>
tournament. <lb/>
Miss Mary Taylor was recalled <lb/>
and examined Parker's cap and <lb/>
said it was the bow she put there. <lb/>
STATE <lb/>
The defense at this point closed <lb/>
its testimony, the State Intro- <lb/>
further witnesses rebuttal <lb/>
of testimony defense. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
I talked with Teel about <lb/>
o'clock Monday morning after <lb/>
assault, Teel with others came <lb/>
to my store and asked if I heard <lb/>
the news, told me white caps <lb/>
were after him the night before <lb/>
but did not whip him; said he <lb/>
recognized two of them. Later he <lb/>
told me the two he recognized were <lb/>
Barnhill and reel's char- <lb/>
is good. <lb/>
Gross was during <lb/>
same week he told me names of <lb/>
parties he recognized. <lb/>
on 5th <lb/>
A. BL TAFT <lb/>
W. H. RICKS. <lb/>
Furniture Problem, <lb/>
We can solve it for you. <lb/>
Leadership- <lb/>
Furniture Sale and <lb/>
Furniture Sale Claims ire and <lb/>
WHO WHY <lb/>
What decide it. There Is but one <lb/>
test. That sale is belt and most important <lb/>
that offers you <lb/>
he Lowest Prices on Furniture You Want <lb/>
Come and be convinced, to please. <lb/>
A. H. TAFT <lb/>
Pictures Framed<lb/>
Watch this <lb/>
for our <lb/>
fall <lb/>
Jas F Davenport, <lb/>
Save the Worry <lb/>
The hot weather brings you <lb/>
I without adding to it by w <lb/>
r With a stock of <lb/>
Grocer Canned Goods, Package <lb/>
Goods, Pickles, Butter Cheese, Coffee, <lb/>
Tea, Cakes, Candies, Fruits, Ac as I carry, the buy- <lb/>
are easy and tho all saved It will take no argument to <lb/>
convenes you of this if you visit my store and see what I carry. <lb/>
You can find me one door North of <lb/>
J. B <lb/>
Neat Job Printing <lb/>
Our specialty. <lb/>
Reflector Job Printing Office <lb/>
WIN I <lb/>
This department is In i P. C. NYE, who is authorized to rep- <lb/>
resent the Hasten Reflector in and territory <lb/>
. Cox Co., are <lb/>
The Bank of wants <lb/>
all the farmers in the <lb/>
orders for their<lb/>
A line of fancy i <lb/>
i . and mil at I. Ii. Carroll <lb/>
WHITE CAP CASE. <lb/>
O. L. <lb/>
Teel of matter in n <lb/>
presence soon after it occurred, <lb/>
-nil be two <lb/>
how they <lb/>
I i r open, drained him off , <lb/>
by of matches <lb/>
Ids wife he d i. <lb/>
community to leave their j moos Economic Back Band to <lb/>
money with for <lb/>
when they sell their crops. It <lb/>
is more convenient to pay your <lb/>
get a receipt when you do so. <lb/>
The returned check is a legal re- <lb/>
V, Brooks, T , <lb/>
of .- .-- he <lb/>
day W. II, s. <lb/>
m attending the Lades in need of tho <lb/>
It in can find them <lb/>
One of the strongest of <lb/>
shoes ever exhibited can be found . <lb/>
B. F. <lb/>
, aid <lb/>
i and i i <lb/>
ii. to . today. <lb/>
cold sloppy days will soon <lb/>
be here Those in need of <lb/>
es, rubber boots and <lb/>
I its u . i qualities will <lb/>
do i i B e A, Vi . Ange Co. <lb/>
. for them. <lb/>
ii. ; . Ila ming Co. <lb/>
A he I. I are roost cordial- <lb/>
it. of dress <lb/>
I goods ever shown in the town of <lb/>
H a. C. <lb/>
and best Hoe boss at <lb/>
i 1st ever <lb/>
i me at a. u . <lb/>
highest grade <lb/>
We are prices Hour at J. Carroll and <lb/>
outranks, grips and hand bags <lb/>
A. W. Ange and <lb/>
Mil- i Myrtle Proctor <lb/>
students of <lb/>
in Bun <lb/>
at Hit. ion <lb/>
Burlier Co., <lb/>
the to wait a few d <lb/>
and i stock of y . d <lb/>
I tog, i iii-v u <lb/>
them them. <lb/>
ionic early and get the <lb/>
II Barber A C i <lb/>
School, tablets, pencils, <lb/>
a i t i -it u Car <lb/>
roll <lb/>
Rev. Smith and little <lb/>
son, of C, are <lb/>
relatives here, is <lb/>
Be will preach at <lb/>
the church <lb/>
at All are <lb/>
invited t. bear <lb/>
Shoo s one <lb/>
Black one black <lb/>
and <lb/>
BET. J. E. <lb/>
Dim time I saw Teel r <lb/>
be said he knew one if <lb/>
parties and thought he knew <lb/>
Have known <lb/>
his is good. <lb/>
n. a. ix-. <lb/>
one mile from U <lb/>
mill, caw Barnhill <lb/>
o'clock going <lb/>
mill and he before I <lb/>
returned home and had <lb/>
to look at clock, r l <lb/>
miles -loin my lo Hickory <lb/>
I. <lb/>
ii. I. <lb/>
Teal in Greenville a few <lb/>
rod color days after the trouble <lb/>
marked hole in left ear about told me he <lb/>
o up same and j,,;,., two of but did not <lb/>
then they were, j i <lb/>
TO <lb/>
Alonzo <lb/>
i ii u it ii i p of a I <lb/>
i I l i. , Md <lb/>
ab I in of pr I. m<lb/>
and <lb/>
We've <lb/>
A full Hue of summer silks all <lb/>
at cost. Co. <lb/>
Nine corned mullets at Barring <lb/>
Moore, of were pleas- <lb/>
ant visitors in Friday, <lb/>
t We have just received a nice I Barber <lb/>
me of horse collars. A. W. <lb/>
Ange and Co. <lb/>
Mi-- Kate Chapman is visiting <lb/>
and white waitings, all <lb/>
washable, at cost. <lb/>
her brother near <lb/>
A now lot of the latest of <lb/>
furniture just received at A. W. <lb/>
Ange and Co. <lb/>
Go. <lb/>
Lee a student of W. H <lb/>
left today to spend in <lb/>
I Dover with his mother. <lb/>
Hon; George E. Hood, of Golds-1 at Barrings <lb/>
delivered a most excellent i Barber Co. <lb/>
lecture on the principles of the <lb/>
A nice of drugs always on hand <lb/>
at <lb/>
nice <lb/>
Junior Older of United <lb/>
last night the <lb/>
of W. if, After c. n- <lb/>
the voiles, lusters, at cost. <lb/>
excellent school, he Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
began his address by a beautiful grade of calico at cents <lb/>
of Just per yard and cents, quality <lb/>
as the flowers of the field the at cents at Harrington <lb/>
myriads of differ in and Company, <lb/>
selves yet there is a beautiful i Nicest and strongest line of <lb/>
harmony in them all so does i shoes ever offered in Winterville <lb/>
lift men into a broad at Harrington Barber and Co. <lb/>
plain above the petty jealousies of j Nice line of fresh <lb/>
life and into one Harrington Earlier <lb/>
P D. Winterville N. <lb/>
Pants for <lb/>
Pants for <lb/>
J for <lb/>
Pants for <lb/>
Pants for <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
and <lb/>
You lo well t <lb/>
A. G. Cox before <lb/>
your winter buggy <lb/>
robes as they have the and <lb/>
most up line ever shown in <lb/>
Winterville. Call to see him <lb/>
let him submit you samples and <lb/>
lest prices. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Mfg Co., have <lb/>
jest completed a nice buggy for a <lb/>
Virginia sport and we think we <lb/>
can those of Carolina also. <lb/>
The school desk interest seems <lb/>
to increasing very rapidly. <lb/>
Bead to A. Q Cox Mfg <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
DAYS FREE. TRIAL <lb/>
sympathy d. <lb/>
It goes into the homes of the poor <lb/>
and carries the of life time <lb/>
distress and enters the <lb/>
palace carries sympathy and <lb/>
brotherhood that the <lb/>
human and gold <lb/>
Is to purchase. <lb/>
Mr. the all <lb/>
present in his effort, <lb/>
we id lo him a most cordial <lb/>
ion t come into our <lb/>
again. <lb/>
t the place of <lb/>
We sell it. <lb/>
B. Bro. <lb/>
Annie was in <lb/>
town Id evening <lb/>
We to see Messrs. P. <lb/>
Buck i . F. It. of Black <lb/>
Jack, here Friday, <lb/>
hired dress shirts <lb/>
shown <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
The town tax boots are open and <lb/>
will be the sure of B. F. Man- <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Iron <lb/>
great household remedy. A con <lb/>
Mineral Water. Stops <lb/>
blood from cuts. Cures <lb/>
Kidney trouble, Liver com- <lb/>
plaint, Female weakness, cuts <lb/>
sores etc. For sale at the drug <lb/>
st B. Cox, and Bro. <lb/>
Miss Nichols will have <lb/>
charge of the dry good depart- <lb/>
in the largo store of B. F. <lb/>
Manning and Co. She will be <lb/>
glad to have her host of lady <lb/>
give her a call. <lb/>
The young men will do well to <lb/>
see 8- Co., before <lb/>
buying their fall hats. They are <lb/>
offering special bargains on their <lb/>
I, Grade<lb/>
line. <lb/>
Miss <lb/>
spend <lb/>
homes. <lb/>
Wei <lb/>
of I <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
J Barber Co. <lb/>
. II and Ward, <lb/>
left Friday to <lb/>
lay at their <lb/>
I . hand a few mp- <lb/>
Bibles, we are off- <lb/>
trade at very low <lb/>
ANY <lb/>
TRY <lb/>
In- I, i. <lb/>
it <lb/>
will<lb/>
Don't <lb/>
Vi ll hi <lb/>
II . <lb/>
will p <lb/>
any<lb/>
i ; It <lb/>
FAMILY <lb/>
A. <lb/>
ti don't find <lb/>
and <lb/>
i market, we <lb/>
. . a ii. land <lb/>
you <lb/>
I entirely <lb/>
. iv h ere until <lb/>
ROYAL. <lb/>
, yourself <lb/>
i a that <lb/>
. you batter ilia <lb/>
i make <lb/>
V. Ange and Co. <lb/>
Winterville, <lb/>
Cox, Bro. <lb/>
Little who <lb/>
i days on his farm i Demand Loans <lb/>
i, returned home i- <lb/>
spend in <lb/>
near Pt, <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Goto I rag Store of B. T. <lb/>
Cox for T. W. Wood <lb/>
hi h and <lb/>
soul. <lb/>
Miss . ah Parker, who has <lb/>
been vii III i; her parents re- <lb/>
turned to Washington this morn- <lb/>
A full lino of highest grade <lb/>
ion made- overalls special bur- <lb/>
gain at J B. Carroll Co. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
BANK OF WINTERVILLE, <lb/>
WINTERVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At the Close of Business, Sept <lb/>
Loans Mid Discounts 9,945.00 <lb/>
Furniture and Fixtures <lb/>
Due from Banks and <lb/>
Bankers <lb/>
Gold Coin <lb/>
Silver Coin <lb/>
Nat. Ilk and other U. S. <lb/>
notes <lb/>
288.33 <lb/>
2904.00 <lb/>
15000.28 <lb/>
Capital Stock paid in 5,000.00 <lb/>
Undivided loss <lb/>
currant expenses 93.36 <lb/>
Bills payable <lb/>
certificate of deposit 2100.00 <lb/>
Deposits subject to ck. 6785.26<lb/>
State of North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt <lb/>
I, J. L. Jackson, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly <lb/>
sweat the above is true to the best my <lb/>
J. L. JACKSON, Cashier. <lb/>
edge and belief. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before <lb/>
of paint, mill this day of Sept. 1906. <lb/>
a Harrington Burlier It. JOHNSON, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
A. G. COX, <lb/>
G. E. <lb/>
CHAN. <lb/>
tell me later they were <lb/>
hi I and Ted's <lb/>
is good. <lb/>
Cross <lb/>
character while he lived in my <lb/>
neighborhood was good, I <lb/>
him until he was grown. <lb/>
mil Barnhill is good. <lb/>
MKS <lb/>
testimony of <lb/>
George and wife. I <lb/>
made no such declaration in their <lb/>
presence as they stated. <lb/>
George Teel and Teel <lb/>
were also recalled mil said no <lb/>
such statement was made by their <lb/>
mother. <lb/>
I have heard George Reddick <lb/>
say that be was summoned over <lb/>
here to April coin t, but that he <lb/>
went to the lawyers and told the a <lb/>
he whatever about <lb/>
it. got to about o'clock <lb/>
the of the attack. Teel <lb/>
snowed me where he had shot in <lb/>
the and I saw door broken. <lb/>
Crowd gathered and we followed <lb/>
in-i tracks out to old then <lb/>
followed buggy tracks around to <lb/>
forks of road leading to Oakley <lb/>
I with Teel to Oakley that <lb/>
day, he has never said In my pres- <lb/>
that he did not any <lb/>
of them, but the first thing <lb/>
morning he said he did recognize <lb/>
them. I saw the hats and caps at <lb/>
house. <lb/>
Cross <lb/>
was preaching at Hickory grove <lb/>
that day, I did not go. Never <lb/>
heard of a that <lb/>
community. I will swear that we <lb/>
could plainly follow tracks of the <lb/>
buggies. I did not follow tracks <lb/>
beyond fork of road leading to <lb/>
Oakley because my sou met us <lb/>
there and said that Mrs. Nelson <lb/>
had told him in Oakley that Barn- <lb/>
hill, and had <lb/>
gone in their loom that night, took <lb/>
their clothes, put on <lb/>
clothes and left there <lb/>
would be some mischief and white <lb/>
capping to take place that night. <lb/>
Because my sou told this we did <lb/>
not follow the tracks further to- <lb/>
ward Oakley, I am lust cousin <lb/>
f both Teel <lb/>
J N. HART. <lb/>
Had conversation with In <lb/>
Greenville MOD after trouble, he <lb/>
told me a of broke in <lb/>
his house and how he defended <lb/>
himself; that his wife struck <lb/>
bis boy run down <lb/>
stairs gun, said he <lb/>
two of the parties; day <lb/>
Teel told me <lb/>
hill positively and was unite <lb/>
about <lb/>
At of Thurs- <lb/>
day afternoon the recalled <lb/>
defendant Barnhill and asked it <lb/>
he would submit to an <lb/>
of his person by a physician, <lb/>
and Barnhill consented. Dr. A. <lb/>
was selected to make this <lb/>
examination, and with certain of <lb/>
counsel on both they re- <lb/>
tired that purpose. <lb/>
2.50 <lb/>
SCHOOL SOWS <lb/>
s Fancy . <lb/>
the best moderate price know of <lb/>
Breasted suits of pure wool, Fancy cheviots and <lb/>
Scotches, extra well tailored 95.56 <lb/>
a Breasted suits of tho very best Fancy Cheviots <lb/>
Wot Excellence in every I t i r <lb/>
Also a fall line of Boys Hats and Caps. <lb/>
Don't send the Boy to school next Monday without a new <lb/>
suit. He's been promoted, new class <lb/>
get him a new suit. <lb/>
FRANK <lb/>
The King Clothier. <lb/>
Pulley Bo wen <lb/>
THE HOME OF WOMAN'S FASHIONS. <lb/>
PULLEY Se BOWEN <lb/>
Tobacco Pack Barns and Cot- <lb/>
ton Gins <lb/>
ins urea, <lb/>
Reasonable <lb/>
Apply to H. A. WHITE <lb/>
It is sure to pay you<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019659_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
The Big <lb/>
Is receiving Daily. Stronger Line of Dry <lb/>
Clothing, Furniture end Furnish <lb/>
than ever before. See our line before buying.<lb/>
-r <lb/>
i- <lb/>
r-3 <lb/>
L . ii. u <lb/>
r n f <lb/>
f- <lb/>
i -J I <lb/>
It <lb/>
Working For <lb/>
An occupation which does not f. <lb/>
re in statistics, nor <lb/>
. . . I <lb/>
id to tho I <lb/>
in<lb/>
iv; <lb/>
. . <lb/>
I C <lb/>
, h f <lb/>
. editor th <lb/>
r-SIr. . II . <lb/>
i i I -I <lb/>
. i . <lb/>
. . <lb/>
for <lb/>
the<lb/>
Our . <lb/>
i i . <lb/>
Ala i Ills i Id II . i . I . i-. <lb/>
not dizzy and l him lo .Convention <lb/>
The <lb/>
will convene in the <lb/>
Chapel, in our on the <lb/>
and 7th of October, The pub- <lb/>
in cordially invited to attend all <lb/>
the services. The <lb/>
desire to say, they will <lb/>
ate resistance in tuning the <lb/>
delegates. be about <lb/>
them. If you can help, phone <lb/>
to Mrs. W. M. King. <lb/>
To Return, <lb/>
count dome Coming and <lb/>
Jubilee Week <lb/>
via <lb/>
ATLANTIC LINE. <lb/>
8th, <lb/>
ard limit Sept. <lb/>
further information Call <lb/>
Ticket A gent or <lb/>
with <lb/>
T. C. M <lb/>
General <lb/>
W. J. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
R. R. CO <lb/>
N. S. <lb/>
Steamboat Service. <lb/>
Simmer L. leaves <lb/>
Washington daily <lb/>
at t a. i. . for leaves <lb/>
Greenville daily <lb/>
at VI m, Washington- <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
Norfolk Southern lot <lb/>
Norfolk, Baltimore, Philadelphia, <lb/>
New York, Burton all other <lb/>
North. meets a Norfolk <lb/>
with all West. <lb/>
Shippers should order their <lb/>
freight via Norfolk, care Norfolk <lb/>
Southern R. K, <lb/>
Sailing hours subject to change <lb/>
without notice. <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, Agent, Green- <lb/>
ville, N. C. <lb/>
H. C. General T. and <lb/>
t. Agent, Norfolk. Va. <lb/>
M. K. KING, V. P. G. MThose real estate i <lb/>
town or to sell, or those <lb/>
wishing to purchase real <lb/>
town lots ii i ;. land, will do we <lb/>
to call on me at my office in Green <lb/>
ville. N. C. <lb/>
A. <lb/>
friend. This Ii Worth Reading <lb/>
Suppose You Stop a See <lb/>
r H <lb/>
Greensboro. N. March <lb/>
Mrs Joe take pleas- <lb/>
me in stating that your Remedy <lb/>
has entirely cared our little girl of <lb/>
a very bad case of eczema, which <lb/>
covered a great part of her body. <lb/>
She had from <lb/>
the time she was three weeks old, <lb/>
until she was biz years old, She <lb/>
too well and I <lb/>
Will b Hip of <lb/>
Pill Hi for lie <lb/>
nil c lo <lb/>
h mm l. n. who M <lb/>
of July Mi- , <lb/>
In Hi- . <lb/>
I too highly of <lb/>
int b on Th <lb/>
i- <lb/>
I. M or <lb/>
It lint it . t When <lb/>
or old, n <lb/>
It. n <lb/>
d th- of of lb <lb/>
l i I<lb/>
w H. <lb/>
s. <lb/>
virtue of the power off alt <lb/>
certain M <lb/>
t Peyton and <lb/>
Ii I. I S f <lb/>
hi ii dull in <lb/>
i I ft i i f N- t <lb/>
. in h i I. k . hf <lb/>
V i i r- ti Ll lie . j . I , U . i <lb/>
u. i . t Ii. I. , <lb/>
I -i oil I I. h o <lb/>
a n j o i <lb/>
Hi i ii i III Mi n . it i <lb/>
II ii i . i t i I i . I . in v ; u . , <lb/>
i w. p v iv i 1.1 Mt in Hall <lb/>
j i t ; ii. Vi , i . l in I i <lb/>
ft i. . ti i;, i i. <lb/>
t. ii i. i. u ii laid pi , <lb/>
It . in . <lb/>
f S. <lb/>
I. M I s <lb/>
H It . All ii<lb/>
the TORPID LIVER, <lb/>
i the i organs, <lb/>
i tho bowels, and aw <lb/>
In malarial M their virtue.-. <lb/>
I bus not had a <lb/>
i for six j Respectfully, <lb/>
. . I. W COBB. <lb/>
To Publishers <lb/>
and Printers <lb/>
We have new <lb/>
on h patents <lb/>
are pending, whereby we <lb/>
can relate old Brass Col- <lb/>
and Head Rules, <lb/>
pi. and thicker, ard make <lb/>
then fully as now <lb/>
and any unsightly <lb/>
knobs or f-et on the hot <lb/>
torn. <lb/>
PRICES <lb/>
Column and Ii. ad <lb/>
Ii <lb/>
L. S. and <lb/>
Head Ruled in <lb/>
and over per <lb/>
A sample of n faced <lb/>
Rule, <lb/>
will <lb/>
. I. <lb/>
. t; ,,; . Iv Co <lb/>
I h i C M<lb/>
. <lb/>
. Of <lb/>
You get Harness, <lb/>
Horse <lb/>
of <lb/>
. i hand <lb/>
. . con <lb/>
In stock, Country <lb/>
Produce and Sold <lb/>
II<lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
f ex <lb/>
Announcement<lb/>
We beg leave to announce that we are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for <lb/>
White Lead, Paints, <lb/>
Colors, and and <lb/>
Country Ready Paints. <lb/>
There is no line in the world better than <lb/>
the Harrison line. It has behind it a <lb/>
reputation for honorable wares and honorable <lb/>
dealings. <lb/>
If you use the Harrison Paints you need <lb/>
never worry quality. <lb/>
We trust that you will favor us with your <lb/>
orders whenever you want good paint for any <lb/>
Have just a car load and <lb/>
can give you Special Prices. <lb/>
Baker Hart <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
BETHEL BANKING AND TRUST GO. <lb/>
AT BETHEL, N. C. <lb/>
At the close of business June 1906. <lb/>
Loans and <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
Due from Ban Its <lb/>
Cash <lb/>
Silver com National <lb/>
and other U. S. <lb/>
Total <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital stock f 5,300.00 <lb/>
Surplus fund <lb/>
Undivided profits <lb/>
Bills <lb/>
Time certificates of <lb/>
deposit <lb/>
Deposits subj. to check 32,799.21 <lb/>
chocks out- <lb/>
standing 72.67 <lb/>
Certified 28.20 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
1,174.30 <lb/>
6.000,00 <lb/>
2,309.50 <lb/>
of North C <lb/>
I. H. H Taylor Cashier of the above named solemnly <lb/>
swear that the above statement is true to the best of my <lb/>
II. H. Taylor Cashier <lb/>
ROUT. <lb/>
J. It. BUNTING, <lb/>
M. O. <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
edge and belief. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
me, this day of April <lb/>
Sun A. <lb/>
Votary Public <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION <lb/>
THE BANK OF FARMVILLE, FARMVILLE. N. t. <lb/>
AT THE CLOSE OF SEPT. 4th, 1906 <lb/>
Loans Discounts <lb/>
1,630.50 <lb/>
Due from Banks 10,219.83 <lb/>
Cash Items <lb/>
Gold coin <lb/>
Silver coin <lb/>
Nat, bk notes 3,170.00 <lb/>
Capital stock pd <lb/>
Undivided profits 2.055.70 <lb/>
Bills payable <lb/>
sub to check 31,777.66 <lb/>
State of North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt. <lb/>
I, J. R. Davis, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemn- <lb/>
swear that the above statement is true to the best of my <lb/>
J. R. DAVIS, <lb/>
THE REFUGEES- <lb/>
PACKS <lb/>
Come, Not if <lb/>
be <lb/>
do Ml they will lie <lb/>
in- baud <lb/>
upon <lb/>
fear. The u long start, and tin- <lb/>
women her., eta as well lb <lb/>
j men. these canoe the Mo- <lb/>
are m the in- <lb/>
birch barks ire use. In <lb/>
I tiny ii ii Impossible to <lb/>
we bare do <lb/>
lying <lb/>
It will hold a man. <lb/>
It Is the friar <lb/>
I am in that Sly place <lb/>
Is with <lb/>
lie Bung open the door, rushed out <lb/>
was about to push off the frail skiff <lb/>
when some one sprang past hi in and <lb/>
a blow from a hatchet stove in <lb/>
the side of I lie boat. <lb/>
Is my said the friar, throw- <lb/>
down ax and folding his arms. <lb/>
have found yon and you shall not <lb/>
escape me <lb/>
The hot blood flushed to the soldier's <lb/>
head. and. picking up the ax, he took <lb/>
a quick step forward. The from <lb/>
the open door the grave. <lb/>
face of the friar, but not a mus- <lb/>
twitched nor a feature changed us <lb/>
he saw the ax whirl up In hands <lb/>
of a furious man. He only signed <lb/>
himself with the cross and muttered a <lb/>
Latin prayer under his breath. It was <lb/>
that which saved bis life. <lb/>
lie hurled down the ax again <lb/>
with a hitter curse and was turning <lb/>
away from the shattered boat when <lb/>
In without it Warning, the <lb/>
great of the manor house crashed <lb/>
Inward and a flood of <lb/>
burst into the house.<lb/>
WHAT had occurred Is easily <lb/>
explained. The watchers In <lb/>
the windows at the front <lb/>
found that It was more than <lb/>
Beth blood could endure to remain <lb/>
waiting at post while fines <lb/>
of their wives and children were being <lb/>
decided at the back. All was quiet at <lb/>
the stockade and the Indians appeared <lb/>
to as absorbed as the Canadian In <lb/>
what was passing upon the river. One <lb/>
by one. therefore, the men on guard <lb/>
had crept away had assembled at <lb/>
the back to the shot and to groan <lb/>
as the remaining canoe sped like n <lb/>
bloodhound down the river in the wake <lb/>
of the fugitives. But the savages hail <lb/>
one their head who was as full of <lb/>
wiles and resource as <lb/>
The Flemish Bastard had <lb/>
watched the house from behind the <lb/>
stockade as a dog a hole, <lb/>
and he discovered that <lb/>
the defenders had left their pus. With <lb/>
a score of other warriors he raised <lb/>
great log from the edge of Hie forest. <lb/>
and. crossing the open space <lb/>
he and his men rushed it <lb/>
against the door With such violence <lb/>
as to crack bar across and tear <lb/>
the WOOd from the hinges. The Brat <lb/>
Intimation Which the survivors had of <lb/>
the attack was the crash of the door <lb/>
mid the screams of two of the <lb/>
gent Watchmen who had been seized <lb/>
scalped in the hall. The whole <lb/>
basement floor was in the hands of the <lb/>
Indians, and and his enemy <lb/>
the friar were cut off from the foot of <lb/>
the stairs. <lb/>
Fortunately, however, the manor <lb/>
houses of Canada were built with the <lb/>
one Idea of defense against Indians, <lb/>
and even now there were hopes for <lb/>
the defenders. A wooden ladder which <lb/>
COUld he drawn up In case of need <lb/>
hung down from the upper windows to <lb/>
the ground upon the river tide. De <lb/>
rushed round to this, followed <lb/>
by the felt for the ladder in <lb/>
darkness, it gone. <lb/>
Then. Indeed, his heart sank la de- <lb/>
When- he fly to; The <lb/>
boat was destroyed. <lb/>
lay between him and the forest, and <lb/>
they were In the hands of lie <lb/>
Suddenly he heard a voice from some- <lb/>
where In darkness above <lb/>
me your gun. It said. <lb/>
sec the loom of some of the heathen <lb/>
down by the <lb/>
Is I It Is I, cried De <lb/>
with the ladder or I <lb/>
am dead <lb/>
a It may a <lb/>
said the voice of Mint. <lb/>
I'll for cried <lb/>
Amos, and an later down cam <lb/>
the ladder. De and the friar <lb/>
rushed up It. and they hardly had their <lb/>
feel upon the rungs when a swarm of <lb/>
warriors out from the door and <lb/>
poured along the river bank. <lb/>
It was a very small band who now <lb/>
held the last point to which they could <lb/>
retreat. Only nine of them remained <lb/>
the s the two <lb/>
cans, tic friar, De <lb/>
the major dome and two of the <lb/>
The stone staircase ran <lb/>
up from kitchen lo the hill, <lb/>
the which had been <lb/>
ed across lower pint by two <lb/>
seemed as <lb/>
enemies above, but the lies aged soon <lb/>
found that if they attempted to <lb/>
upon they were as <lb/>
I watched as ever. The major <lb/>
passing a <lb/>
and a light was killed In by a <lb/>
. and both <lb/>
Alum and old seigneur h d narrow <lb/>
the ii eastern <lb/>
ii; f I and <lb/>
. bi fall <lb/>
leg, I ii warm col <lb/>
. the he of Hie <lb/>
drifting clouds. o stood at <lb/>
I ow <lb/>
. eye i.-ll oh a dork spot upon the <lb/>
of <lb/>
canoe coming <lb/>
he<lb/>
knowledge and belief. <lb/>
Subscribed and to be- <lb/>
fore me, this 11th day of Sept. <lb/>
1906. <lb/>
J. V. JOHNSTON, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
T. L. <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS.<lb/>
Neat Job Printing <lb/>
i Our specialty. <lb/>
Reflector Job <lb/>
Ires- i . i <lb/>
The can <lb/>
end the <lb/>
lapping <lb/>
them, <lb/>
there <lb/>
and <lb/>
Witt h. <lb/>
face to <lb/>
the whole <lb/>
were still laid out ore <lb/>
table, with the tricks <lb/>
h other, us they had <lb/>
there was something <lb/>
Interest to <lb/>
not c <lb/>
been <lb/>
bite or sup. xi . <lb/>
with death Nature still <lb/>
cried for her dues, and the hungry <lb/>
men turned savagely upon the <lb/>
the ham and the cold wild duck. A <lb/>
cluster of wine stood <lb/>
the buffet, and these bad their necks <lb/>
knocked off and were emptied down <lb/>
penned throats. <lb/>
For four hours sounds of riot, of <lb/>
dancing of reveling up from <lb/>
the storehouse, and the smell of <lb/>
open brandy casks filled the whole air <lb/>
once the quarreled <lb/>
-mi i . and <lb/>
river la the <lb/>
j There is <lb/>
i In Instant they had nil rushed to <lb/>
the opening, but Du sprang after <lb/>
and pulled them angrily toward <lb/>
the do you wish to die before. <lb/>
your be cried. <lb/>
said Captain <lb/>
who understood the gesture if not the <lb/>
words. must leave a watch on <lb/>
deck. Amos, lad, lie here with m <lb/>
and lie ready if they <lb/>
The two Americana and the old <lb/>
held the barricade, while the eyes <lb/>
of the otters were turned upon <lb/>
approaching boat a green broke sud- <lb/>
from the only surviving <lb/>
is an he cried. <lb/>
your excellency. It Is so. and <lb/>
It is the lame one which passed us <lb/>
last <lb/>
then the women have escaped <lb/>
trust so. Hill. alas, seigneur, I <lb/>
fear that there are more in the canoe <lb/>
now than when they passed <lb/>
The little group of survivors waited <lb/>
in breathless anxiety while the canoe <lb/>
sped swiftly up the river, with a line <lb/>
of foam on either side of her a <lb/>
long forked swirl III the waters behind <lb/>
They could see she appeared to be <lb/>
very crowded, they remembered <lb/>
that the wounded of the other bout <lb/>
wore aboard of her. On and <lb/>
on, until as she came abreast of the <lb/>
fort she swung round, and the rowers <lb/>
raised their paddles and burst Into a <lb/>
shrill yell of derision. The stern of <lb/>
the canoe was turned toward them <lb/>
they saw that two women <lb/>
were seated In it. The one was Onega <lb/>
and the other Adele. <lb/>
Charles do In None, seigneur de Ste. <lb/>
Marie, was a hard and self contained <lb/>
man, hut a groan and a bitter curse <lb/>
burst from when he his In- <lb/>
wife in h. is of I kin. men, <lb/>
from whom she Ii for little <lb/>
mercy. even now Ills old fashioned <lb/>
courtesy to his guest had him <lb/>
turn lie with some words of <lb/>
sympathy, when there was a clatter of <lb/>
darkened of <lb/>
the window, and the young soldier was <lb/>
gone. Without a word he had lowered <lb/>
the ladder and was clambering down it <lb/>
with frantic haste. Then, as his feet <lb/>
touched the ground, he signaled to his <lb/>
comrades to draw It up again, end. <lb/>
dashing Into the river, he swum tow. rd <lb/>
Canoe. Without arms and lit <lb/>
a plan, he had but the one thought, <lb/>
his place was by the side of his wife In <lb/>
this the hour her danger. <lb/>
But there was another whose view of <lb/>
duly led him from safely into the face <lb/>
of All the Franciscan <lb/>
had watched as a miser <lb/>
winches his treasure, filled with the <lb/>
thought that this heretic was the one <lb/>
seed which might spread and <lb/>
spread It choked the vine- <lb/>
yard of the church. He, too, clambered <lb/>
down at very heels of his prisoner <lb/>
and rushed into the stream not ten <lb/>
paces behind him. <lb/>
And so tin- watchers at the window <lb/>
aw of sights. In <lb/>
midstream lay the canoe, with bur. <lb/>
den of dark warrior, and two <lb/>
men crouching the of h <lb/>
Swimming madly toward was <lb/>
rising to the shoulders with <lb/>
of every stroke, and be- <lb/>
hind him again was the tonsured <lb/>
of the friar, with his dark <lb/>
long Hailing gown floating upon the <lb/>
surface of the water, in his seal <lb/>
had thought too of own <lb/>
powers. lie woe a good but <lb/>
he was weighed and by his <lb/>
unwieldy Slower aid slower <lb/>
grew his stroke and lower and lower <lb/>
his head until at last with a great <lb/>
shriek of tuns, <lb/>
he threw tin his band and vanished ill <lb/>
swirl of the river. A minute later <lb/>
the Watchers, hoarse with screaming to <lb/>
him to return, saw De pulled <lb/>
aboard the which <lb/>
Instantly turned and continued Its <lb/>
course up the river. <lb/>
cried Amos <lb/>
have taken him lie is <lb/>
have seen some strange things Is <lb/>
these forty years, but never like <lb/>
of sold <lb/>
The seigneur took a little pinch of <lb/>
from his gold box and flicked <lb/>
the wandering grains from his shirt <lb/>
front with his dainty lacs <lb/>
chief. <lb/>
de has acted like a gen- <lb/>
of said he. <lb/>
I glanced round bin and <lb/>
shook his head. are Only six <lb/>
said he. the are <lb/>
up to some deviltry because they are so <lb/>
very <lb/>
are leaving the cried <lb/>
the who was peeping <lb/>
through one of the side windows. <lb/>
can It mean Holy Virgin. Is <lb/>
It possible that no saved See <lb/>
how they throng through the trees <lb/>
They are making for the <lb/>
On the river the single ca- <lb/>
which held the captives, was <lb/>
speeding south as swiftly as twenty <lb/>
piddles could drive It; but, save this <lb/>
one dark streak upon the blue stream, <lb/>
not a sign was to be seen of their en- <lb/>
TO BE <lb/>
FORM TWO <lb/>
. . i ,. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
If You Seek The <lb/>
Highest Class Clothes <lb/>
At Prices <lb/>
clothes that in every detail are the peers of the best <lb/>
made-to measure garments come here and examine <lb/>
he Fall and of <lb/>
Fashionable Clothes <lb/>
No effort has been spared by the makers, and <lb/>
no available tailoring skill left to make <lb/>
CLOTHES the best that can be produced. <lb/>
You can see that in the of styles, the beauty <lb/>
of the workmanship and excellence of the materials <lb/>
and if you try on the of your size you'll <lb/>
surely buy, especially if you've been wearing fine made <lb/>
to-measure clothes <lb/>
SACK SUITS <lb/>
in conservative and ultra fashionable single and <lb/>
breasted styles-embodying the latest fashion <lb/>
though in a wide range of smart patterns in worsteds, <lb/>
tweeds and , v to <lb/>
Autumn Over <lb/>
Mm <lb/>
coats <lb/>
of distinguished cut and finish-in new fashionable me- <lb/>
or dark gray in plain or herring- <lb/>
bone weaves, to <lb/>
Correct Autumn Hats, to <lb/>
C. L. Wilkinson Co.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019659_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
THE WHITE CAP CASE. <lb/>
teal is <lb/>
pistol <lb/>
n likely <lb/>
teat to <lb/>
on through <lb/>
back. Size <lb/>
Ml. K. A. <lb/>
huh K. <lb/>
d on <lb/>
i scar <lb/>
de by any la- <lb/>
ii the skin; <lb/>
our H <lb/>
Bl I <lb/>
bail body t r . <lb/>
I i made a <lb/>
Worn here is no <lb/>
that Bent <lb/>
out i <lb/>
scar doe- not indicate six <lb/>
that s a wound, i- die <lb/>
kin retracts. It is a scar <lb/>
I ill that was lift <lb/>
aid healed by . n I <lb/>
c- not a; If a hail In Ins <lb/>
U DO. <lb/>
E CARBON. <lb/>
Recalled- I <lb/>
Monday alter trouble, <lb/>
went to Joe Williams, who <lb/>
for to get <lb/>
went i s to get key <lb/>
Tom cap was <lb/>
own v. i i t be cap <lb/>
won at tit, his <lb/>
cap had white buttons on ii. <lb/>
. C. K. DAVENPORT. <lb/>
Character of Teal is good. Some- <lb/>
time after the while capping he <lb/>
told me he recognized two of the <lb/>
parties as and <lb/>
H. W. MARTIN <lb/>
Teel me i two <lb/>
the it very <lb/>
week following the I <lb/>
went with deputy lo <lb/>
taking <lb/>
in custody we with him <lb/>
to bis room in clothe, in <lb/>
changing he baled from <lb/>
waist up; saw ii. wounds on <lb/>
his <lb/>
f . r. vs. <lb/>
I went out to arrest <lb/>
I. K. <lb/>
n i <lb/>
he <lb/>
both shifts; <lb/>
to -a o<lb/>
h war- <lb/>
where<lb/>
on <lb/>
Hie <lb/>
of <lb/>
alter <lb/>
character is <lb/>
breast <lb/>
This i t-irony on i <lb/>
both sides. <lb/>
court that speeches would <lb/>
made on each side, Judge I <lb/>
advised time <lb/>
Ci in it no <lb/>
exceed on each side. <lb/>
. T. made <lb/>
opening tIt <lb/>
St and said he i as i <lb/>
all the most case <lb/>
bad ever i sUrd III <lb/>
His made a i <lb/>
and was folio- <lb/>
ed II. W. <lb/>
the speech for <lb/>
speech the <lb/>
of the after, session f <lb/>
the com <lb/>
At ;, session <lb/>
of Court -ii.; e- w p b <lb/>
and Pi- mil <lb/>
tor defense, Li i. -tame, Solicitor Slav. <lb/>
good for -i eel <lb/>
sides. <lb/>
Got, Aycock t- ; e to <lb/>
speak alien., lie I <lb/>
close the argument th <lb/>
to followed by Judge S <lb/>
charge j<lb/>
food. <lb/>
s M. <lb/>
Teel me follow- <lb/>
In seemed <lb/>
distressed said he would tell <lb/>
about later. Afterward <lb/>
he told me recognized <lb/>
and i <lb/>
a . . <lb/>
A Ml It <lb/>
Wat .- . <lb/>
after i <lb/>
lug I, <lb/>
care <lb/>
was in <lb/>
k- <lb/>
he <lb/>
ft . nut did not <lb/>
w ho they were. <lb/>
Recalled i told T. W. <lb/>
If bis brother <lb/>
would Sta he <lb/>
could act ; d d. <lb/>
The . closed. <lb/>
W. i was recalled for <lb/>
said lie defend- <lb/>
arts . . i. toe Monday <lb/>
STRAY TAKES UP. <lb/>
We have taken up two Shouts <lb/>
one black male with no ear mark <lb/>
one red female With ear marks, <lb/>
weight about BO pond <lb/>
Owner can get same by paying <lb/>
charges. J. other <lb/>
Ii. V Kn l. C, <lb/>
Dr. H. I. Char <lb/>
N will lie <lb/>
Hotel Oil. <lb/>
l . , Ku- <lb/>
Oct. 12th, in <lb/>
Oct. 10th. for the e <lb/>
pro, <lb/>
m and throat, ii. <lb/>
Two hundred and <lb/>
In a i <lb/>
mill S. Good <lb/>
i to C. W. . <lb/>
Tarboro, K. c. <lb/>
TAKEN <lb/>
I have taken up .; <lb/>
d i <lb/>
s- <lb/>
c gt t i <lb/>
pro; , at j <lb/>
May. G<lb/>
id <lb/>
I i <lb/>
COMING SURE. <lb/>
ONE GLORIOUS <lb/>
SAT., <lb/>
n n y. <lb/>
it<lb/>
. i i <lb/>
. <lb/>
OF<lb/>
An <lb/>
i i <lb/>
and H p <lb/>
R r <lb/>
Dru; Mi c. A <lb/>
charge at Id <lb/>
i i . <lb/>
ii<lb/>
the . <lb/>
a . Thrower South <lb/>
Arabian Acrobats <lb/>
I hi Merit. T <lb/>
ii- , all <lb/>
V Herd . I <lb/>
Only herd <lb/>
. d cattle. Two <lb/>
10.000 people sun and rain <lb/>
seats Mm day Coward k . <lb/>
and Free Street parade with- <lb/>
o'clock a. <lb/>
, -v i. n <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
Store News <lb/>
BE FAIR TO<lb/>
YOURSELF. <lb/>
And look through our mammoth stock before buying. Each article <lb/>
merchandise has been selected with great care as to quality, style <lb/>
price durability, and the usual high standard excellence ha <lb/>
been maintained. <lb/>
The New Cloaks and Rain Goats <lb/>
are coining in every few days, the variety is great and we are offering <lb/>
some splendid values. Ladies Full length Rain Coats, well made in <lb/>
the latest styles, double breasted, belt eel, and trimmed with <lb/>
braid for 85.50, the better grades run up to and includes the <lb/>
new style. <lb/>
The New Dress Goods. <lb/>
are ready for your inspection, the showing includes the season newest <lb/>
offerings, such as Broadcloth, Batiste. Voile, Serge. <lb/>
ma, Mohairs. Flannels. Wool Mixtures and Plaids, ask to <lb/>
see special Chiffon Broadcloth at yard. <lb/>
The Silk Department. <lb/>
is and sparkling with good values, 86-in Crepe de <lb/>
double width in lovely shades for yard. <lb/>
Crepe de in perfect shades for yard. <lb/>
Silk in black and colors is worthy of your attention, price <lb/>
yard. New Plaid Silks in all shades and combinations. <lb/>
The Notion Department. <lb/>
Contains lie newest of the seasons novelties in Fancy Back Combs. <lb/>
Belts, Shopping Bags. Gloves, Handkerchiefs. Hosiery. <lb/>
Ribbons and Underwear, Ladies lO-Button length Black Kid <lb/>
Gloves pair. and Colgate Talcum Powder box. <lb/>
Colgate Dental Powder box. Cashmere Bouquet Soap cake <lb/>
The Ladies Home Journal patterns for fall and winter are here, price <lb/>
The Fall Fashion Book and Fashion Sheets <lb/>
free. <lb/>
ill not regret paying this store a visit, for we have many inter- <lb/>
to show you.<lb/>
. <lb/>
D J Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR <lb/>
No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. Pin COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA FR DAY. OCTOBER 1906. <lb/>
NO <lb/>
Bill's Wild West Show. <lb/>
THe far . i-t <lb/>
Pawnee Bill how. which will he <lb/>
in Greenville Saturday, Oct. 6th, <lb/>
are mere interesting than the <lb/>
public generally <lb/>
a a <lb/>
learned that leaver <lb/>
life's time and <lb/>
I. who have of the are <lb/>
given an opportunity of coming <lb/>
contact with people are only <lb/>
known to them described by <lb/>
travelers and explorers. It co. J <lb/>
by every one that it the <lb/>
most complete assembly of strange <lb/>
people that have ever been <lb/>
brought Not only the <lb/>
opportunity given to see this con <lb/>
of n it but the unheard <lb/>
of opportunity to study their mode <lb/>
of living, their industries, tinny <lb/>
at range and manner of <lb/>
warfare. The far east baa always <lb/>
been tn Interesting and the <lb/>
many t range and weird tales that <lb/>
writers of have related of the <lb/>
inhabitants of that tut away clime, <lb/>
have been woven Into prose <lb/>
ind poetry. The tales of <lb/>
and have not <lb/>
Ibsen one bit by <lb/>
writers for made <lb/>
dent by the and <lb/>
cloth that many of these from the <lb/>
Orient the Bill Shows <lb/>
affect. <lb/>
i There are others, particularly <lb/>
South Sea I- <lb/>
Australian and <lb/>
Island whose <lb/>
wearing apparel is not so gorgeous. <lb/>
There is but of it, for in their <lb/>
clothing is but little thought <lb/>
of. A breech cloth, string of neck <lb/>
beads and nova ear rings <lb/>
t but <lb/>
corning in .-.; i. t with the <lb/>
of has been <lb/>
. when in <lb/>
mock battle their <lb/>
religions they have <lb/>
condescend in wear beautifully <lb/>
woven grain In the <lb/>
huge tent d the congress <lb/>
of nations, have an horn <lb/>
before the performance in the <lb/>
arena adjoining and inure can e <lb/>
of world's strange <lb/>
people in Mine, than during a <lb/>
time from i-o ks. <lb/>
Complaint of Changing <lb/>
There is m among <lb/>
who sending children <lb/>
to the because of the <lb/>
wholesale change of books that has <lb/>
been made graded school <lb/>
here not r to us the <lb/>
adopted the State board, <lb/>
there seems to be <lb/>
the complain at the change. The <lb/>
people bad already purchased a <lb/>
apply of boo s for last session that <lb/>
were hence they com <lb/>
plain at having to no throw away <lb/>
those a my go to the ail- <lb/>
no t buying new <lb/>
GROUND WATERS OF THE NORTH <lb/>
CAROLINA COASTAL PLAIN. <lb/>
coastal of North Caro- <lb/>
stretching back from the At <lb/>
for a distance of <lb/>
more to the highlands of the Pied <lb/>
plateau, a region of many <lb/>
great none of <lb/>
which are more important from an <lb/>
standpoint than the <lb/>
underground water supplies now in <lb/>
investigation by <lb/>
branch of the United <lb/>
States geological survey. The <lb/>
studies have already demonstrated <lb/>
that there are few in this <lb/>
region where good water not pro <lb/>
curable, and at many points <lb/>
are favorable for obtaining <lb/>
supplies. These artesian <lb/>
flows are specially strong in the <lb/>
lowlands along the coast. It is <lb/>
probable that all of these waters are <lb/>
suitable for domestic use, but some <lb/>
contain ingredients harm- <lb/>
in certain lines of <lb/>
The work now being carried on <lb/>
includes a of geologic <lb/>
conditions which govern the occur- <lb/>
of the underground water, a <lb/>
determination of the depths to <lb/>
various beds, and <lb/>
estimates of the quantity of <lb/>
they may be expected to <lb/>
yield- The quality of the water is <lb/>
also being investigated. Special <lb/>
effort will be made to indicate the <lb/>
uses for which the available supplies <lb/>
are best fitted, and in places where <lb/>
the waters are inferior in quality <lb/>
better supplies will, if possible, be <lb/>
located. <lb/>
It is probable that sufficient ad- <lb/>
data will have been collect- <lb/>
ed by the field men this summer to <lb/>
enable the publication of a report <lb/>
during the winter. This report will <lb/>
avoid far as the discus <lb/>
mission of technical questions, and <lb/>
the matter will be so prepared and <lb/>
that those interested can <lb/>
readily obtain from it detailed in- <lb/>
formation concerning quantity <lb/>
and quality of the ground waters of <lb/>
any part of the area. Copies of <lb/>
tins report will be obtainable with- <lb/>
out cost on application to the Di- <lb/>
rector of the Survey at Washington, <lb/>
D. C <lb/>
i i t. <lb/>
i the i <lb/>
lion <lb/>
In <lb/>
In c <lb/>
Of ed; also <lb/>
n. <lb/>
. . i <lb/>
at on h op <lb/>
for <lb/>
Store Improved <lb/>
J. i. M have ha I <lb/>
the old front, in en <lb/>
out and replaced with a hand<lb/>
a much bet appearance. <lb/>
GRADED SCHOOL. <lb/>
Opens With Large <lb/>
The graded school opened <lb/>
morning with an attendance con- <lb/>
than that of any <lb/>
previous year. All grades are <lb/>
well attended, and it was especial- <lb/>
gratifying to note the splendid <lb/>
enrollment in the upper grades, <lb/>
was present, made <lb/>
a brief well received talk to <lb/>
the children. <lb/>
teachers are as <lb/>
Misses of Milton, N. C <lb/>
of Wade, of <lb/>
Kan Pa., <lb/>
of ill <lb/>
Cox, o <lb/>
ville, and Mi K R <lb/>
. k<lb/>
II <lb/>
. <lb/>
I I I <lb/>
n pub in honor <lb/>
of the Dr. on <lb/>
Of ill will <lb/>
. d, a Dr. <lb/>
was well known In Green <lb/>
UNION. <lb/>
Meeting With Greenville Baptist <lb/>
Church. <lb/>
Saturday morning's of <lb/>
the Roanoke Union was opened <lb/>
with devotional by T. L. <lb/>
The moderator appointed G. L. <lb/>
Merrill, J. W. Nobles and U J. <lb/>
Austin a committee on time and <lb/>
place of next <lb/>
G. E. of <lb/>
in the Association, was <lb/>
corned to a scat in the and <lb/>
to participate in the <lb/>
J. W. Nobles. G. E. Lineberry, <lb/>
H. A. J. E. G. T. <lb/>
ii G, L. Merrill made <lb/>
helpful and interesting on <lb/>
the subject of discipline. <lb/>
T. J. Crisp, J. T. and J. <lb/>
E, made valuable <lb/>
on pastoral <lb/>
The afternoon Saturday <lb/>
opened devotional exercises <lb/>
by T. J. <lb/>
subject of revivals <lb/>
methods in conducting them was <lb/>
discussed by J, T. Jenkins and G- <lb/>
L. Merrill. <lb/>
G. T. spoke the <lb/>
work at Farmville and a committee <lb/>
consisting of W. H. <lb/>
Noah Biggs and T, L. Vernon <lb/>
together with A. G. Cox. of the <lb/>
association, <lb/>
to look into the advisability of <lb/>
curing a lot and a house <lb/>
of there immediately. <lb/>
T. L. Vernon power in <lb/>
and how to obtain it. <lb/>
The giving <lb/>
discussed by H. A. Willis, J. <lb/>
K. and G. T. <lb/>
missions was the <lb/>
subject before the Union at <lb/>
day evening session. G. T. <lb/>
kin of <lb/>
among Baptists River <lb/>
especially in <lb/>
of Roanoke Union. W. II. <lb/>
spoke the special needs <lb/>
to meet these <lb/>
money, more men, mire wisdom in <lb/>
of missionaries and <lb/>
fields of operation. <lb/>
Sunday morning a mass meeting <lb/>
was held in n the <lb/>
Sunday school. The addresses <lb/>
were in the interest of the orphan- <lb/>
age at by H. A <lb/>
Willis, T. L. Vernon G. T. <lb/>
the ad- <lb/>
dresses a collection was taken for <lb/>
orphanage amounting to some <lb/>
over <lb/>
At o'clock G. T. <lb/>
delivered an address on the sub- <lb/>
of State missions. <lb/>
In the afternoon the subject of <lb/>
missions was by <lb/>
T. L. Vernon, H. A. and <lb/>
G. T. <lb/>
Sunday evening a sermon was <lb/>
delivered T. Jenkins.<lb/>
X g. <lb/>
R. T Bell, mi Elizabeth City, <lb/>
the Mr. and Mrs. J. <lb/>
O. week. <lb/>
Mr. and Mr. O. G. left <lb/>
Monday In from <lb/>
there will g. t. the for <lb/>
their health. Mr. Calhoun has <lb/>
been sick we hope he <lb/>
will much improved. <lb/>
Hon. Udent the Charitable Brother- <lb/>
hood, lectured in behalf of the C. <lb/>
B. H in the Hall here <lb/>
Sunday morning. <lb/>
Mrs. G. Whaley, who ha <lb/>
been sick for several <lb/>
slowly Improving, <lb/>
A anted at cents per <lb/>
dozen. Beaufort Co. Lumber Co, <lb/>
We are glad to see P. H. <lb/>
the street again. <lb/>
W. A. Stilley, of Goldsboro, <lb/>
Tuesday night town. <lb/>
Dr. L. E. Tuesday <lb/>
in Greenville on business. <lb/>
The Methodist revival will be- <lb/>
gin the third Sunday in this <lb/>
month. Mr. Hornaday, of <lb/>
Greenville will assist Mr. Stan- <lb/>
tied. <lb/>
Preston who has been <lb/>
in tie of B. C. L. <lb/>
Co., has gone to Rocky Mount, <lb/>
having secured a position there. <lb/>
Tery, of Norfolk, spent Mon- <lb/>
day in town. <lb/>
H. M. Jenkins, of Washington, <lb/>
spent the day here Wednesday. <lb/>
R. Williams, W. L. Brown and <lb/>
W. J. Homes, of Greenville, at- <lb/>
tended Masonic here <lb/>
T. B. who baa <lb/>
been visiting her daughter, Mrs. <lb/>
J. O. Bobbitt, baa returned to her <lb/>
in <lb/>
J. P. and W. T. Harrell <lb/>
spent Sunday in Washington. <lb/>
Jack spent Sunday after- <lb/>
noon very pleasantly at Mr. Car- <lb/>
Messrs. Mitchell, of New Bern, <lb/>
Little, of Washington, Davis, of <lb/>
City, of Charlotte, <lb/>
F. P. Stalling, of Richmond, <lb/>
Duke, of Suffolk, town last <lb/>
week <lb/>
Building and Loan. <lb/>
The directors of the Home <lb/>
Building and Loan Association <lb/>
were in monthly session <lb/>
afternoon. There was not much <lb/>
except hearing the report <lb/>
of the secretary and treasurer. <lb/>
This was most gratifying <lb/>
showed the good work the <lb/>
is doing. A new series will <lb/>
begin in <lb/>
and hooks for subscription to <lb/>
the stock will open in a few day. <lb/>
Tie Hist series is carrying nearly <lb/>
a thousand abates and the second <lb/>
series is also exp to be large. <lb/>
THROW PREJUDICE ASIDE. <lb/>
tint they not doing what i <lb/>
for them to if <lb/>
I d <lb/>
en.- on i L in all <lb/>
were t . and the <lb/>
i . one i i <lb/>
om- <lb/>
Farmers Should Use Their <lb/>
Sense. <lb/>
The Farmers Consolidated To- <lb/>
Company continues to main- <lb/>
its line record in leading the <lb/>
Greenville tobacco market on high <lb/>
prices. According to the report of <lb/>
the secretary of the Board of Trade, <lb/>
during the month of <lb/>
were sold on this <lb/>
market pounds for <lb/>
an average of per <lb/>
hundred pounds. Of this Con- <lb/>
sold 981.164 pounds <lb/>
91,722.02, an average of a fraction <lb/>
over per hundred pounds. <lb/>
Deducting what the Consolidated <lb/>
sold from the total of the mar- <lb/>
leaves pounds for <lb/>
an average of <lb/>
per hundred, which gives the <lb/>
cents per hundred, higher <lb/>
than all the other houses obtained <lb/>
A further of these fig- <lb/>
discloses the fact that <lb/>
of cents per hundred <lb/>
pounds obtained by the <lb/>
ed put more in the pock <lb/>
of the farmers who with <lb/>
company than if they had sol <lb/>
with other warehouses. At the <lb/>
same time i t can be i that this <lb/>
difference of cents per hundred <lb/>
pounds on what was sold at other <lb/>
was a loss of f 3,345.52 to <lb/>
those farmers who did not sell with <lb/>
the Consolidated. The figures <lb/>
speak for themselves, and the won- <lb/>
that the go on losing <lb/>
money like this on a crop they have <lb/>
worked hard to make when they <lb/>
could easily save it. By the <lb/>
old adage dollar saved a <lb/>
The benefit the is to <lb/>
the farmers Dot end with get- <lb/>
ting them higher prices than other <lb/>
warehouses, but all who are stock- <lb/>
holders in it receive their share of <lb/>
the profits arising from the <lb/>
in cash dividends at tho end of <lb/>
the season. In three years these <lb/>
dividends have aggregated per <lb/>
cent, and this year will carry the <lb/>
total up to at least per cent. It <lb/>
looks like every tobacco farmer <lb/>
ought to able to ace that it <lb/>
would be to his interest to have <lb/>
stock in tho and sell <lb/>
his tobacco their ware- <lb/>
houses. When prejudice takes <lb/>
out of your pocket it time <lb/>
to throw to the <lb/>
Tho Farmers Consolidated To- <lb/>
Company is admirably con- <lb/>
ducted on business principles, and <lb/>
it is tho beat organization for far- <lb/>
that has over yet been put on <lb/>
foot. <lb/>
BOAT PARTY. <lb/>
Grimesland, N. <lb/>
Tuesday morning Ben <lb/>
Mayo Warren of <lb/>
Grimesland, gave a most plea-ant <lb/>
boat party to the guests of Mrs. J. <lb/>
O. Proctor, Misses Palmetto and <lb/>
Julia Taylor and Fannie <lb/>
The boat left Ferry for <lb/>
Washington where the <lb/>
served cold fruits, etc., as <lb/>
an to n <lb/>
repast to come. Tl o barn yard <lb/>
fowls were <lb/>
of occasion, and it was said <lb/>
that the generous host managed <lb/>
the disappearance of two entire <lb/>
chickens. The cake was <lb/>
fine and every one took a <lb/>
generous share. <lb/>
The party went on a sight see- <lb/>
expedition at Bay Side where <lb/>
the sights were <lb/>
numerous lumber mills. <lb/>
From here went to Aurora <lb/>
where they were met by Mr. <lb/>
Mayo, who entertained them moat <lb/>
royally at his home. Toe follow- <lb/>
morning was spent taking <lb/>
pictures and noting places of in <lb/>
this charming little <lb/>
village, where every one seemed <lb/>
interested the pleasure of <lb/>
era. <lb/>
From here they visited the his <lb/>
little burg of Bath. After a <lb/>
good at the Water's House, <lb/>
they went to see church <lb/>
in North Carolina, <lb/>
church. This venerable old <lb/>
well the wear of <lb/>
ages and good for several <lb/>
to come. <lb/>
From Bath they went to <lb/>
and registered at Hotel <lb/>
for The carnival <lb/>
was center of excitement <lb/>
where confute battles raged thick <lb/>
and every one had at least one <lb/>
mouthful of the pink and blue <lb/>
paper. <lb/>
From Washington the party had <lb/>
a beautiful tide back to <lb/>
Grimesland. The <lb/>
expressed themselves as <lb/>
had a most enjoyable time. <lb/>
FARMVILLE ITEMS. <lb/>
every w j.<lb/>
.Thia la rough awl on open <lb/>
cotton H <lb/>
h . <lb/>
Una. <lb/>
vis tractive <lb/>
log. <lb/>
p ;. men <lb/>
N C <lb/>
since one in. f of t the Chi <lb/>
in the mi of I <lb/>
Baptist ti ; a <lb/>
denomination l as <lb/>
est responsibility. <lb/>
But, whit there <lb/>
many Baptists are <lb/>
and the contributions show <lb/>
. i<lb/>
Will in Raleigh. <lb/>
The Wake County <lb/>
Protection Association <lb/>
will meet in Raleigh on the 0th, <lb/>
and L. Joyner, president the <lb/>
. Ida ed <lb/>
. has ; <lb/>
invited to I <lb/>
I i of his<lb/>
Farmville, N. C, Oct. <lb/>
graded school opened today <lb/>
with bright prospects for the <lb/>
rare, is a thriving <lb/>
little town, if yon don't it <lb/>
why just give her a call. <lb/>
Herbert Bundy improves very <lb/>
slow. <lb/>
Mrs. Burt Smith is very much <lb/>
We have learned that H. W. <lb/>
Wilkinson is going to move to our <lb/>
town. Come, Mr. Wilkinson, we <lb/>
are glad to have just such men as <lb/>
you are. <lb/>
Frank Tyson sister, <lb/>
Rosalind, reported a good time <lb/>
while ii . g Mrs. <lb/>
Willie . <lb/>
. . <lb/>
he <lb/>
the . <lb/>
. I <lb/>
.,;. I in <lb/>
i a as an e . and <lb/>
the to the <lb/>
mi a inter- <lb/>
n lull enthusiasm <lb/>
Late are growing rapidly <lb/>
i North Carolina, <lb/>
and with such well equipped <lb/>
j men as they have in the <lb/>
Union they to <lb/>
go forward with increased <lb/>
tum. <lb/>
on <lb/>
the mo <lb/>
i i by<lb/>
B . . were I <lb/>
i i an <lb/>
pound-. total sales for Aug- <lb/>
and x, tho sea- <lb/>
son v . ; 1,348 pound, <lb/>
been <lb/>
Bob <lb/>
hay <lb/>
. <lb/>
just <lb/>
illy i . that <lb/>
. b lie <lb/>
couldn't keep it and that it <lb/>
was a <lb/>
fr <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>