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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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<p>
N EMERGENCY SPEECH. <lb/>
Hearst Accepts. <lb/>
Elmira. N. Y. Oct <lb/>
Randolph Hearst today <lb/>
formally accepted the Demo- <lb/>
nomination for governor <lb/>
Now York State in a letter ad- <lb/>
It, dressed to W. J. Connors, chair <lb/>
the Democratic State <lb/>
from <lb/>
and Probably <lb/>
Saved <lb/>
People often say wry funny <lb/>
iii times of emergency. It. <lb/>
for the general whose, man of <lb/>
efforts arc described <lb/>
life of her.-------- <lb/>
the with A Potato Yield. <lb/>
Mien were dealing had J. W. gathered <lb/>
of humor. g patch, about one- <lb/>
a on the staff of Genera . , . <lb/>
exclusive of. <lb/>
cf the Sac nation. I is a yield at the rate i <lb/>
Ti council met in a tent. The than bushels to the I <lb/>
decked with war paint and ft <lb/>
Mi r-. Kit scowling silent. <lb/>
., near by. S <lb/>
them was a dark old woman, Electric Motor Installed. <lb/>
to a mere <lb/>
lathed in white woolen. She held; power electric <lb/>
heY with r-at majesty of mien, motor for Mr. Hooker's gin- <lb/>
T bean the council in plant has arrived and been <lb/>
manner He , runs the <lb/>
I-was for the Indians <lb/>
m . for the white man mart plant finely. <lb/>
At this the old <lb/>
became greatly excited and <lb/>
tins with vehemence. <lb/>
Large Pear. <lb/>
Alex Selby, a colored <lb/>
with . <lb/>
r I that the Sac. die scriber to The Reflector, brought <lb/>
on r om limiting ground. large pear. It meas- <lb/>
inches in circumference <lb/>
considerable <lb/>
Eon In r tirade and spoke to weighed ounces <lb/>
. it is <lb/>
; not . to interfere between <lb/>
the o and Indian braves. <lb/>
I must <lb/>
The rose from her seat <lb/>
Convention. <lb/>
LaGrange, N. C. Oct <lb/>
The State convention of the Dis- <lb/>
of Christ of North Caro- <lb/>
and will be hold in the Christian <lb/>
with Rn it <lb/>
i skinny arms above tier <lb/>
ii wild gesture. <lb/>
v. lie Bin to be silent in <lb/>
. i-i my people In <lb/>
blood of the last of <lb/>
the It is my right to <lb/>
church in Dunn during the last <lb/>
week in October. E. A- <lb/>
of Greenville, is the president. <lb/>
i . be made by <lb/>
national workers of the I <lb/>
churches of Christ <lb/>
Col. Sugg Withdraw. <lb/>
Col. I. A. Sugg, who some time <lb/>
i ago announced himself an <lb/>
pendent candidate for solicitor, <lb/>
I has withdrawn. He authorized <lb/>
chiefs roe about her, stirred <lb/>
words, gesticulating angrily. <lb/>
was plain that trouble was at <lb/>
hand, and the Indians far <lb/>
the whites. <lb/>
The general calmly listened until <lb/>
his withdrawal be made <lb/>
silence. I public at the speaking in Ayden <lb/>
he said, Saturday. <lb/>
mother was <lb/>
No wonder there was a <lb/>
Thia revelation brought grunts of ca in Cuba. The pat- <lb/>
from the Indians, and j found out that there were <lb/>
the frankness of the statement, thirteen million dollars in the <lb/>
pleased the old princess. Order was j treasury. The thought <lb/>
and the council proceeded was time for their inning if <lb/>
the business in hand. <lb/>
, A Costly <lb/>
A woman of says a Vi- <lb/>
dispatch, wishing to give her <lb/>
raffling nephew, living in a neigh- <lb/>
town, a pleasant surprise. <lb/>
fought a little tablet of chocolate <lb/>
were ever to get any of the <lb/>
benefits of freedom which in <lb/>
their estimation is holding office <lb/>
and looting the <lb/>
Messenger. <lb/>
The may be taxed in the <lb/>
., South without being allowed rep- <lb/>
posted it to him in an envelope but there is not a <lb/>
marked The state in the South in which he <lb/>
on account of its high de-does not cost the state twice as <lb/>
value, attracted the notice; much as it out of him- <lb/>
of the postal authorities, who do-1 Durham Herald, <lb/>
St extra fee on delivery. <lb/>
nephew, suspecting a hoax, re- <lb/>
fuse the which was duly re- <lb/>
turn -1 to and the sender <lb/>
advised. <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC SPEAKING. <lb/>
ed n<lb/>
the <lb/>
-her <lb/>
of <lb/>
The candidates of the Demo- <lb/>
Tho woman, half ashamed, . m t will <lb/>
U the . <lb/>
real value but it was speak at the following times and <lb/>
her i at <lb/>
and she <lb/>
, i <lb/>
then i to <lb/>
. In I P bad <lb/>
. i to the <lb/>
, . She paid without; <lb/>
In r complain <lb/>
Practical <lb/>
said the <lb/>
tori to q <lb/>
the <lb/>
Oct. <lb/>
Store News. <lb/>
Chapel. Tuesday. Oct. <lb/>
Falkland. Wednesday. Oct. <lb/>
Stokes. Friday, Oct. <lb/>
Bethel, Saturday, Oct. <lb/>
John Cox's store. I <lb/>
Tuesday. Oct. <lb/>
Oct. <lb/>
Johnson's Mills. <lb/>
ii,. of its <lb/>
and I r. This is <lb/>
due o the action the alkali con- <lb/>
what if there is a dog sleep- <lb/>
near the coal, <lb/>
of your levity, young man. <lb/>
Tins is a serious <lb/>
what father thought <lb/>
per cent of his coal pile dis- <lb/>
daring three nights of ex- . <lb/>
Then he asked advice and Black Jack. Nov. o. <lb/>
a d I told <lb/>
., . Fie ht a dog <lb/>
t i and the <lb/>
alt upper lip, <lb/>
wt lose per cert of our coal The t r <lb/>
the kind of a offices I <lb/>
Friday, Oct. <lb/>
Farmville, Saturday, Oct. <lb/>
Black Jack. Saturday. Nov. <lb/>
Hon. J. H. will speak <lb/>
with the candidates at Stokes, <lb/>
OctHon. John H. Small will speak <lb/>
with the candidates at Bethel, <lb/>
Oct. at Farmville, Oct. <lb/>
PUBLIC SPEAKING. <lb/>
chemist I am. Now go on with; <lb/>
year <lb/>
Whits Fl w- Rd. <lb/>
t white . into a <lb/>
a suitable <lb/>
To Make <lb/>
U ; <lb/>
is <lb/>
for the garden or the drawing room <lb/>
The dry of a white rose or <lb/>
any other must lie drat deli- <lb/>
cat . . id as far as possible <lb/>
sprinkled with aniline <lb/>
The should be shaken so <lb/>
s to leave as little as possible <lb/>
What there is will be only <lb/>
trifling specks. By bringing to play <lb/>
on it a spray of de cologne or <lb/>
other from a <lb/>
connected with a finger ring enable <lb/>
the perform once to be most mys- <lb/>
delicate <lb/>
petals can be promptly <lb/>
with a rich crimson blush. <lb/>
II-in and <lb/>
Farmville, 18th. <lb/>
V Chapel, Oct. <lb/>
Oct. <lb/>
Fountain, Oct. <lb/>
Falkland, Oct. 24th. <lb/>
Bell's X Road-. Oct. h. <lb/>
Stokes, <lb/>
Bethel, Oct. <lb/>
Oct. 31st. <lb/>
Nov. 3rd. <lb/>
Hon. Claudius Dockery and <lb/>
Hon. Skinner will be with <lb/>
candidates and speak at their <lb/>
appointments at Ayden <lb/>
Bethel. C. Flanagan, <lb/>
Ex. Com. <lb/>
W. B. Sec.<lb/>
FAIR<lb/>
YOURSELF. <lb/>
cm n inn. before buying. lath <lb/>
cl has been with great as to quality, <lb/>
price and the 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 offering <lb/>
some splendid values. Ladies Full length Rain Coats, well made in <lb/>
the styles, double breasted, belted, and trimmed with <lb/>
braid for 15.50, 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 our special Chiffon Broadcloth at 1.00 yard. <lb/>
The Silk Department. <lb/>
is ard sparkling with good values, 86-in Crepe de <lb/>
the real double width in lovely shades for 1.00 yard. <lb/>
22-inch Crepe de in perfect shades tor yard. Our <lb/>
Taffeta Silk in I lack and colors is worthy of your attention, price <lb/>
yard. New d bilks in all shades and combinations. <lb/>
x C <lb/>
Notion Department. <lb/>
Contains the newest the seasons novelties in Fancy Back Combs, <lb/>
Belts, Shopping Bags, Gloves. Handkerchiefs, Hosiery, <lb/>
Ribbons and Underwear, Ladies 16-Button length Black Kid <lb/>
Gloves pair. and Colgate Talcum Powder <lb/>
Colgate Dental Powder box. Cashmere Bouquet Soap cake <lb/>
The Ladies Home Journal patterns for fall and winter are here, price <lb/>
and The Fall Fashion Book and Fashion Sheets <lb/>
tree. <lb/>
You will not regret paying this store a visit, for we have many inter- <lb/>
things to show you.<lb/>
J WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner. <lb/>
r. am G. <lb/>
REFLECTOR. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEA<lb/>
GREENVILLE. PITT NORTH CAROLINA OCTOBER 1906 <lb/>
TEACHERS MEETING. <lb/>
Last <lb/>
Grand <lb/>
Gathering <lb/>
Success. <lb/>
for it. n.-.-r. r. <lb/>
All the forces of nature seemed <lb/>
to combine for the success of the <lb/>
Association last <lb/>
day, A clear, cool morning, good <lb/>
roads, and bright sunshine made <lb/>
pi possible for nearly every teach- <lb/>
of this county, besides many <lb/>
ex-teachers and visitors, to be <lb/>
present at one of the best, most <lb/>
inspiring meetings the <lb/>
has ever held. The <lb/>
of this good meeting can not <lb/>
but be felt throughout the whole <lb/>
One hundred and forty <lb/>
were present, and all felt <lb/>
, that it was good to be there. <lb/>
At half past ten o'clock the <lb/>
meeting was called to order by <lb/>
the president, Prof. J. A <lb/>
Iver. Rev. J. A. Hornaday con- <lb/>
ducted the devotional exercises, <lb/>
reading the nineteenth Psalm <lb/>
and leading in prayer. <lb/>
The program that followed was <lb/>
varied and very interesting. <lb/>
Prof. in his kindly, <lb/>
, way, addressed the <lb/>
offering congratulations on <lb/>
large attendance, and speak- <lb/>
hopefully of the future, <lb/>
A committee was appointed to <lb/>
retire to select nominations for <lb/>
the various offices. <lb/>
j Prof. H. B. Smith discussed <lb/>
of teaching geography, <lb/>
kid gave many useful <lb/>
He exhibited a large <lb/>
globe that he had made, and <lb/>
gave instructions as to how a <lb/>
one may be acted. <lb/>
I The committee then returned <lb/>
and nominated the following, <lb/>
who were unanimously <lb/>
Prof. J. A. <lb/>
president, Prof. F. C. <lb/>
secretary, Florence <lb/>
Better judgment could <lb/>
lot have been shown in the <lb/>
of officers. Under theirs <lb/>
vise supervision, and that of the <lb/>
faithful, county super- <lb/>
the association hopes <lb/>
achieve greater success than <lb/>
The illness of Gov. T. J. Jarvis <lb/>
invented his taking part on the <lb/>
to the regret of <lb/>
very one present. His address I <lb/>
DELIGHTFUL <lb/>
fr r- <lb/>
Wednesday evening a very en- <lb/>
dance was given at Falk- <lb/>
land, complimentary to Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. G. V. Smith. <lb/>
The couples at the dance were <lb/>
as <lb/>
Miss Rachel Pitt, of Old Sparta, <lb/>
with Shelton, of Old <lb/>
Sparta. <lb/>
OF SCHOOLS. <lb/>
MARION BUTLER'S FALSEHOOD EXPOSED. <lb/>
. Show the Gnat of Cur Schools Under <lb/>
Administration in the few Years. <lb/>
Some days ago when Marion county would appreciate the <lb/>
Butler was here and spoke, gotten and given to <lb/>
Miss Lillian Pitt, of Old Sparta, made false statements about the them, <lb/>
with Herbert Shelton, of Old I expenditures for education in the <lb/>
Sparta. -State and charged <lb/>
Miss Ada Smith with Joe <lb/>
Farmville. <lb/>
Miss Alice Newton with Jas- <lb/>
therefore <lb/>
we have com- <lb/>
piled from the records in the <lb/>
superintendent's office, and from <lb/>
with extravagance, the treasurer's books the follow- <lb/>
Joyner has statement, comparing the <lb/>
answered his charge and years 1898 and 1905. the two <lb/>
of Fountain. at Butler. hen <lb/>
. he said. We had some de-. here, and we give it with pleas- <lb/>
BUSS Mary bland Pitt, Old sire to know what was . he I am, our and <lb/>
Sparta, with Leslie Smith. i state of facts in Pitt county ask and invite <lb/>
Miss Lillian Fountain with bearing- upon Butler's statements, for themselves the truthful- <lb/>
MRS. DAVIS DEAD. <lb/>
Charlie Newton. <lb/>
Miss Mary Pierce, with Tom <lb/>
of Farmville. <lb/>
Miss Moore, of Old Sparta, <lb/>
with J. V. Moore, of Fountain. <lb/>
Miss Brown with <lb/>
Bryan. <lb/>
We were sure the people in the of the figures. <lb/>
Mileage and per diem of Board of Education <lb/>
No. of children on census report <lb/>
Total enrollment in schools <lb/>
Charlie I Average attendance <lb/>
I Length of term, weeks <lb/>
Miss Shelton, of Old <lb/>
m , Expense of Board <lb/>
Sparta, with Otto Turnage. of Value of white school property <lb/>
Farmville. <lb/>
Miss Little with Willie Bryan, <lb/>
of Fountain. <lb/>
Miss Selma Knight with <lb/>
John Harris, of Farmville. <lb/>
Miss Elna Warren with <lb/>
Pierce. <lb/>
Miss Mabel Nichols with <lb/>
ton Newton. <lb/>
Miss Bessie Fountain with <lb/>
Clarence Pierce. <lb/>
Mesdames J. H. <lb/>
Smith. W. H. Moore, E. C. <lb/>
King, J. Morrill, Luther Warren. <lb/>
A more enjoyable evening has <lb/>
Cost of superintend. icy week for child <lb/>
Days served by Superintendent <lb/>
Days spent in examination of teachers. <lb/>
Days spent as clerk of board, etc. <lb/>
Days left for other school work <lb/>
Tax rate on for schools <lb/>
We desire to call attention to <lb/>
some of the above facts. It will <lb/>
be seen that the mileage and <lb/>
per diem of the board then was <lb/>
more than double what it is now. <lb/>
You will observe that the aver- <lb/>
age attendance of children in <lb/>
the schools now is nearly three <lb/>
times as large as then. You will <lb/>
never been spent by the writer. see that then it was costing <lb/>
cents a week to school the <lb/>
now it has been reduced <lb/>
to cents per week. The term <lb/>
then was only weeks, now it <lb/>
is weeks. The expenses of <lb/>
CHANGE OF AGENTS. <lb/>
Mr. J. R. Moore Succeeded by Mr. <lb/>
Moore Succeeded <lb/>
W. H. Ward. <lb/>
Mr. J. R. Moore, who ever <lb/>
since the Atlantic Coast Line <lb/>
was completed to Greenville in <lb/>
1889 has been agent of the com- <lb/>
here and a familiar figure a-1 <lb/>
y , . . , , e board tor <lb/>
round the depot, has been <lb/>
in the agency by Mr. W. <lb/>
H. Ward. Mr. Moore's impaired <lb/>
ed health was the cause of the <lb/>
change, and we understand that <lb/>
eat subject, the company will place him in a <lb/>
Opportunities This position with easier work, <lb/>
the board of education in 1898 <lb/>
was Last year the ex- <lb/>
were a difference <lb/>
of only What are the <lb/>
facts about the work of the <lb/>
In 1898 <lb/>
not a single house was built, not <lb/>
one painted and there wore <lb/>
hardly any signs of improve- <lb/>
was only one <lb/>
school the county <lb/>
but if you take the whole period <lb/>
from 1898 to 1905 you will have <lb/>
an increase of more than <lb/>
a year, an amount equal to, <lb/>
taking the years, one-fourth of <lb/>
the entire school fund. <lb/>
Now a word as to the cost of <lb/>
It will be <lb/>
seen from the above that in 1898 <lb/>
it cost 1.4 cents per week for <lb/>
each child for superintendency. <lb/>
Last year the cost was 1.4 cents <lb/>
per week for each child, not <lb/>
one cent of extra cost. Examine <lb/>
the record and you will see that <lb/>
for 1898 the superintendent <lb/>
drew pay for day, of these <lb/>
days days were spent in the <lb/>
examination of teachers, 5-6 <lb/>
days with the board, making re- <lb/>
ports, attending committee <lb/>
This leaves days <lb/>
given to the supervision of <lb/>
schools. Last year days were <lb/>
given to the examination of <lb/>
teachers, days with board <lb/>
making reports etc. This left <lb/>
there was more than 1280 days to be given to the <lb/>
If there is man in the employ <lb/>
of the Atlantic Coast Line who <lb/>
deserves to be retired on a pen- <lb/>
that man is Mr. J. R. Moore. <lb/>
He has given years, practical- <lb/>
best part of his life, to the <lb/>
admiration of the company, having <lb/>
, been with them sometime <lb/>
to Greenville. <lb/>
of arduous labor are the <lb/>
been until the <lb/>
An address <lb/>
a s- of such vital <lb/>
.- as able a man can not <lb/>
; benefit all who hear it. <lb/>
Letty Wright completely <lb/>
f audience by her excellent <lb/>
per OH We May Make c <lb/>
Schools The <lb/>
in promoting education, <lb/>
breathed in every line of <lb/>
beautiful production. Its <lb/>
cannot be measured now. <lb/>
After the adjournment of the <lb/>
Theodore Price is advising the <lb/>
a Woman's farmers to hold their cotton better one in the United <lb/>
for the betterment cents. We hope they will get states. Then the-s was not a <lb/>
j years <lb/>
of a noble character, in- <lb/>
cause of his broken health now. <lb/>
tensely interested in her company would do the <lb/>
earnestly striving to assist in providing for <lb/>
him. He has been a faithful <lb/>
agent and looked well to their <lb/>
interests at all times. <lb/>
one teacher, there was no organ- <lb/>
of the teachers. Last <lb/>
year a number of houses were <lb/>
built, are now being built. <lb/>
More than one fourth of the <lb/>
houses in the county have <lb/>
been painted and improved, <lb/>
re is a school here <lb/>
with teachers, one at Bethel <lb/>
with one a Farmville with <lb/>
five, one at Ayden with one at <lb/>
with one at Center- <lb/>
l with one at Standard <lb/>
with one at Smithtown with <lb/>
one being built at <lb/>
dine for one at Falkland for <lb/>
one at Bruce for There is <lb/>
also the finest <lb/>
in the State and probably <lb/>
school houses and school <lb/>
rounds as organized. Miss <lb/>
Wright was elected <lb/>
Miss Dora Hornaday, vice <lb/>
resident and Miss Annie <lb/>
Prof. spoke <lb/>
of the originator of this <lb/>
Dr. C. D. This <lb/>
decided to meet the <lb/>
Saturday in each month, <lb/>
after the adjourn- <lb/>
of the <lb/>
on. The prospects for this <lb/>
needed organization are <lb/>
bright. <lb/>
If events cast their <lb/>
before those <lb/>
in educational work in <lb/>
county may feel assured of <lb/>
success during <lb/>
it, but there is danger in taking <lb/>
too much chance. <lb/>
October is cutting <lb/>
weather capers. <lb/>
many <lb/>
the scholastic year 1906-1907. for <lb/>
if last Saturday's work is a <lb/>
marvelous indeed <lb/>
must be the reality. Let us take <lb/>
fresh courage and inspiration <lb/>
from that grand meeting and <lb/>
press nobly and bravely on in the <lb/>
work, for <lb/>
right is right, and God is <lb/>
God, <lb/>
Then right the day must win; <lb/>
To doubt would be disloyalty. <lb/>
To falter would be <lb/>
Dora A. Hornaday. <lb/>
library in the county. Now <lb/>
there are and others ready <lb/>
to be taken. All of this change <lb/>
in the past three years and yet <lb/>
to plan and bring to completion <lb/>
this work only additional <lb/>
expense was incurred. Then <lb/>
not one cent was contributed by <lb/>
individuals to <lb/>
terms etc. Last year <lb/>
was given by individuals for this <lb/>
purpose. <lb/>
Glance for a moment at your <lb/>
school property in 1898, the <lb/>
value was while now <lb/>
it is which is nearly <lb/>
increase in valuation <lb/>
within the short period really of <lb/>
three years, because most of this <lb/>
has come about within this time; <lb/>
schools. What has this done for <lb/>
the educational work It has <lb/>
put more than times as many <lb/>
children in school as were at- <lb/>
tending. It has improved the <lb/>
efficiency of the teachers at least <lb/>
per cent. It has given life <lb/>
and enthusiasm to work both in <lb/>
the country and in the town. It <lb/>
has placed county in front <lb/>
rank in the State for educational <lb/>
progress. It has killed <lb/>
to public schools. It <lb/>
made it possible for c <lb/>
to have an educated citizenship. <lb/>
Now read carefully and <lb/>
well what is now to be said. <lb/>
All of this has been done and <lb/>
your school tax is not one <lb/>
cent higher than it was in <lb/>
1898. It was then <lb/>
the worth of It <lb/>
is now the same. There is not a <lb/>
man in Pitt county now who is <lb/>
paying one more than he <lb/>
did then unless his property has <lb/>
increased in valuation or he has <lb/>
accumulated more property. <lb/>
course this does not apply to the <lb/>
the local tax districts where the <lb/>
people themselves have voted for <lb/>
a local tax extra. <lb/>
With the above facts before <lb/>
lengthen school them we that the people <lb/>
of Pitt county will feel a pride in <lb/>
their educational progress and <lb/>
we say frankly a man who would <lb/>
in the face of these fig- <lb/>
cannot be influenced by the <lb/>
truth. He prefers to believe a <lb/>
falsehood and this solely to <lb/>
some prejudice or to advance <lb/>
some other interests at the ex- <lb/>
of the interests of the <lb/>
children of the county. <lb/>
Pasted Away in New York <lb/>
Night. <lb/>
New York, Oct. <lb/>
Davis, widow of the pres- <lb/>
of the Confederacy, who <lb/>
Md been ill for a week at the <lb/>
Hotel Majestic in this, city, died <lb/>
at o'clock tonight. Death <lb/>
was due to pneumonia induced <lb/>
by a severe cold which Mrs. <lb/>
Davis contracted upon her return <lb/>
from the Adirondacks, where <lb/>
she had spent the summer <lb/>
months. <lb/>
At the bedside when death <lb/>
came were Mrs. J. A. Addison <lb/>
Hayes, of Newark. N. J. only <lb/>
surviving daughter of Mrs. <lb/>
Hayes, a grand- <lb/>
. who is a student at Prince- <lb/>
t University; Mrs. Charles E. <lb/>
Bat son, a niece, and Dr. and <lb/>
Mrs. Gustav Webb, the latter a <lb/>
and Dr. Robert <lb/>
. Wilie. who with Dr. Webb <lb/>
had cared for Mrs. Davis <lb/>
throughout her illness. J Addi- <lb/>
son Hayes, husband of Mrs. <lb/>
only living child,, had <lb/>
summoned from Colorado <lb/>
Springs, and was hurrying across <lb/>
the continent, when a message <lb/>
announcing the death of Mrs. <lb/>
Davis interrupted him. <lb/>
SAM P. JONES DEAD. <lb/>
The Georgia Evangelist Expires Sud- <lb/>
on a Railroad Train. <lb/>
Little Rock, Ark. Oct, 15.-r <lb/>
Rev. Sam P. Jones, the well <lb/>
known evangelist of <lb/>
Ga., died early today of heart <lb/>
failure in a sleeping car on the <lb/>
Rock Island railroad near <lb/>
Ark. Mr. Jones had been con- <lb/>
ducting a revival at Oklahoma <lb/>
City, and left there last night for <lb/>
his home in Georgia. He de- <lb/>
sired to attend a family reunion <lb/>
tomorrow, it being the fifty- <lb/>
ninth anniversary of his birth. <lb/>
Mrs. Jones and his daughters, <lb/>
Mrs. Annie and Miss Julia <lb/>
Jones, were with him when he <lb/>
passed away. <lb/>
Mr. Jones arose from his <lb/>
berth in the sleeper about five <lb/>
o'clock this morning and com- <lb/>
plained of nausea. He drank a <lb/>
glass of hot water and <lb/>
afterward collapsed. Rev. <lb/>
Walt Holcomb. who had been <lb/>
associated with Mr. Jones for a <lb/>
number of years, took the dying <lb/>
man in his arms and in a few <lb/>
minutes the evangelist breathed <lb/>
his last. The body was em- <lb/>
and was sent to Carters- <lb/>
ville this afternoon. <lb/>
Sixty for <lb/>
Don't put off until tomorrow <lb/>
the matter of subscribing for <lb/>
The Youth's Companion. The <lb/>
publishers offer to send to every <lb/>
new subscriber for 1907 who at <lb/>
once remits the subscription <lb/>
all the <lb/>
remaining weeks of 1906 free. <lb/>
These issues will contain near- <lb/>
complete stories, besides <lb/>
the opening chapters of Hamlin <lb/>
Garland's serial. Long <lb/>
in addition to the <lb/>
issues of of <lb/>
Whatever your six. six- <lb/>
teen or sixty, you will find The <lb/>
Companion to be you, It <lb/>
touches every worthy interest in <lb/>
interest that pro- <lb/>
motes cheerfulness, develops <lb/>
character, enlarges the under- <lb/>
standing and ideas of true <lb/>
patriotism. <lb/>
Full illustrated announcement <lb/>
of The Companion for 1907 will <lb/>
be sent to any address free with <lb/>
sample copies of the paper. <lb/>
New subscribers will receive <lb/>
a gift of The Companion's Four- <lb/>
Leaf Hanging Calendar for 1907. <lb/>
lithographed in twelve colors <lb/>
and gold. <lb/>
Subscribers who get new sub- <lb/>
will receive <lb/>
in cash and many other special <lb/>
awards. Send for information. <lb/>
The Youth's Companion, <lb/>
Boston, Mass. <lb/>
Berkeley Street. <lb/>
Rev. W. E. Cox returned from <lb/>
Tuesday evening. <lb/>
HI <lb/>
PROGRESS <lb/>
Win. rile, NEditor <lb/>
I wish to thank <lb/>
pr the <lb/>
statistic of <lb/>
past eight years a id ha <lb/>
to <lb/>
trains <lb/>
work, but <lb/>
to inter- <lb/>
nth. <lb/>
person <lb/>
for the <lb/>
in Th- . <lb/>
fa what <lb/>
had been i am . ad t see <lb/>
it reduced to <lb/>
In my opinion <lb/>
of our sup . lent for <lb/>
all of-hi l <lb/>
work the board of ed has <lb/>
done in all of y <lb/>
We worth <lb/>
of the <lb/>
our county. It n <lb/>
the for th <lb/>
gives them <lb/>
est the par in better <lb/>
welfare of their children, and <lb/>
thus the children re sent to <lb/>
school. The worth of the <lb/>
well prepared school <lb/>
teacher is great and we hope the <lb/>
public sentiment will soon see <lb/>
fit to reward them more liberally. <lb/>
I rejoice to know that Pitt <lb/>
county is to have a woman's <lb/>
society to promote its interest <lb/>
in the betterment of school <lb/>
houses and yards and wish them <lb/>
great success in their <lb/>
The school houses are our <lb/>
training homes for our boys and <lb/>
girls, and our boys and girls are <lb/>
the wealth of our country. Then <lb/>
why spare the same care for our <lb/>
school houses that we have for <lb/>
our individual homes. <lb/>
A. G. Cox. <lb/>
ROBBERY IN DAY TIME. <lb/>
want to <lb/>
her <lb/>
the house. <lb/>
Hid the <lb/>
miss- <lb/>
Home W. J. Turnage Pilfered. <lb/>
This morning Mrs. W. J. <lb/>
and guest, Mrs. M. F. <lb/>
Turnage, of Colorado, left the <lb/>
home in West Green- <lb/>
ville and came down town to do <lb/>
some shopping. Returning about <lb/>
o'clock they found a small <lb/>
g in ti e yard. As Mrs. <lb/>
W. J. in the gate <lb/>
the r. v. watching in the <lb/>
, r ; g up sited Mrs. <lb/>
I s did <lb/>
hire he. Lie. . , <lb/>
i-i and went on in <lb/>
in she f. <lb/>
scattered <lb/>
rooms and several a <lb/>
Mr. Turnage was phoned for <lb/>
and he hurried home with Police- <lb/>
man Clark. It was found that <lb/>
the girl caught in the yard and <lb/>
an older accomplice had been in <lb/>
the house through a window on <lb/>
the back porch and had carried <lb/>
a lot of things over to where <lb/>
they live on King How. Most of <lb/>
the articles that the girls stole <lb/>
were recovered and both of them <lb/>
wire arrested. The older girl <lb/>
to be a hard case and <lb/>
said she did not care what was <lb/>
done with her for breaking in <lb/>
the . <lb/>
What a Republican Newspaper Says <lb/>
The editor of the <lb/>
Empire, a Republican newspaper <lb/>
in Kansas, was asked to o <lb/>
to Republican cam <lb/>
fund, and here is his <lb/>
have been invited to send <lb/>
a dollar contribution to the Re- <lb/>
publican campaign fund We <lb/>
recently have completed build- <lb/>
a house at a cost of some- <lb/>
thing over and for every <lb/>
foot of lumber, every pane of <lb/>
glass, every sac, of cement, <lb/>
every pound of nails, and. in <lb/>
fact, for nearly every bit of ma- <lb/>
that went into it we made <lb/>
a good. liberal contribution <lb/>
through the trusts that control <lb/>
them and we guess we have done <lb/>
our share. It may be treason for <lb/>
a Republican newspaper to talk <lb/>
this way. but facts, are facts, <lb/>
and it sort of relives our con- <lb/>
science to tell the truth about <lb/>
the trusts once in a while. We'll <lb/>
just let the trusts, which we <lb/>
have had to pay tribute <lb/>
in the past year, pay dollar <lb/>
for us. We it Sand they <lb/>
don't- <lb/>
mm<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019663_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
mm<lb/>
OPENING <lb/>
Goods, Millinery and <lb/>
October and 10th. <lb/>
p n <lb/>
j c French Pattern Hats and Millinery <lb/>
Th Clark of PISS <lb/>
e. ink. day of <lb/>
la to all Indebted <lb/>
c the to auk Inn to <lb/>
lb. and to all of mM <lb/>
to Clara, <lb/>
to the within <lb/>
the Notice, <lb/>
will h In bar of their <lb/>
Of Sept ,. <lb/>
B. Hal lard <lb/>
an the <lb/>
lard <lb/>
In Superior <lb/>
Court <lb/>
NOTICE, <lb/>
I cm Tool <lb/>
Vs J <lb/>
Ha Teel <lb/>
Tie . r. i v, named will lake <lb/>
a. t. <lb/>
Dam c n i r. in <lb/>
I fork divorce from the BOB <lb/>
f By; and the will fur <lb/>
l i- I re he I. to <lb/>
t-ear . ii rm of the <lb/>
of id cum to I e held 111- M <lb/>
II the th lay <lb/>
t a- th of <lb/>
in o . and or <lb/>
t ii , L i.- In or <lb/>
will . ply to th-Court for the relief <lb/>
in., in . <lb/>
Th'S day of <lb/>
C. Moore <lb/>
, Clerk superior <lb/>
Brown, <lb/>
for <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
Hy virtue of a In the Superior Court <lb/>
ii h <lb/>
i . . L. a <lb/>
Carte, the under, <lb/>
will Hell fol nil I -f. I- <lb/>
in . oil i i <lb/>
Nth lint. lock <lb/>
tract of In <lb/>
That iii. i. it,, in w. II. at t <lb/>
on . i .- <lb/>
her Mn the . I n <lb/>
to the I i. T <lb/>
two rue <lb/>
c. mail <lb/>
t e paper, t e <lb/>
i iv <lb/>
r the <lb/>
of <lb/>
late <lb/>
I I <lb/>
if the <lb/>
n Hi- name <lb/>
it w <lb/>
lo. an <lb/>
mole <lb/>
HEALTH <lb/>
INSURANCE <lb/>
The man who Insures his Hie Is <lb/>
his family. <lb/>
The man who insures his health <lb/>
Is wise both for his family and <lb/>
himself. <lb/>
You may Insure health by guard- <lb/>
It. It Is worth guarding. <lb/>
At the first attack of disease, <lb/>
which generally approaches <lb/>
through the LIVER and <lb/>
Itself In Innumerable ways <lb/>
TAKE , <lb/>
And save your health. <lb/>
III. France, when <lb/>
prisoner in the fortress at <lb/>
wrote and published a paper on <lb/>
possibility of linking the Pacific <lb/>
Atlantic oceans by means of a canal <lb/>
This created so profound an <lb/>
that the minister <lb/>
of Guatemala offered <lb/>
the presidency of the construction <lb/>
of the a The pro-. <lb/>
the offer of <lb/>
re- <lb/>
a as <lb/>
Philippe's <lb/>
upon the <lb/>
tie Mover to <lb/>
Napoleon <lb/>
his pa rule, and <lb/>
prime <lb/>
. was willing to <lb/>
for release <lb/>
Lord<lb/>
the<lb/>
,.<lb/>
latter's <lb/>
return i <lb/>
was it <lb/>
Sir . <lb/>
hack up his n <lb/>
upon tin <lb/>
however, would . hear of it, so the- <lb/>
prisoner remained to be president <lb/>
find of his native land. <lb/>
LAND SALK <lb/>
M. <lb/>
W. to B, O. n th.- day of <lb/>
I r- h the office <lb/>
f r of Herd of Pit <lb/>
i; , v-it. the will sell <lb/>
fish i r- Curt loop n. <lb/>
i -T. sixth i In <lb/>
d- I c i r laud. <lb/>
That tract of la <lb/>
I i i i m mi <lb/>
or <lb/>
K. <lb/>
C. K. <lb/>
By P <lb/>
d i f <lb/>
Tritt of in I i -i.;. <lb/>
rm th-B M W. hot. place <lb/>
the i . J <lb/>
ii.- i- <lb/>
Not Quite <lb/>
How often you can gel a <lb/>
thing <lb/>
nail or screw driver or <lb/>
lacking. Have a good <lb/>
tool box and be prepared for <lb/>
B Our line of tools <lb/>
is to i could desire, and <lb/>
S we will see that your tool <lb/>
S box does not lack a single <lb/>
W. useful article. <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
f r i , ,. i PHI i if, <lb/>
to <lb/>
on Ill, f <lb/>
U. Mat. <lb/>
to r m Indebted to <lb/>
lo to <lb/>
; . v , <lb/>
t an- <lb/>
e-.-ii-Hi-i. to the <lb/>
twelve dale of this notice <lb/>
will be plead In bar of their recovery <lb/>
day of Oct. <lb/>
J. B. <lb/>
.-state of <lb/>
D. <lb/>
P. Q.<lb/>
Course <lb/>
You get Harness, <lb/>
Horse Goods, <lb/>
ft <lb/>
I , <lb/>
J m <lb/>
re <lb/>
Tho Ho , <lb/>
A ;, <lb/>
a new office I;. <lb/>
boy's he <lb/>
note under the ink <lb/>
letting the end j <lb/>
went out to <lb/>
a couple of hour- <lb/>
pone. A silver q . <lb/>
place. <lb/>
Pale with rage <lb/>
lawyer called the i <lb/>
I went out . <lb/>
stand. <lb/>
there. How <lb/>
The mi <lb/>
he sir I, <lb/>
gentleman <lb/>
cigar bill <lb/>
to i <lb/>
standing t n I <lb/>
it with i.- <lb/>
the <lb/>
the. r. . <lb/>
Boy. <lb/>
had <lb/>
to test the <lb/>
a twenty dollar <lb/>
did on desk, <lb/>
ii rude, when he <lb/>
his return <lb/>
; . the note was <lb/>
t occupied its <lb/>
horror, the <lb/>
boy to him. <lb/>
luted, <lb/>
this ink- <lb/>
plain <lb/>
fitly. <lb/>
r you left n <lb/>
i a wine end <lb/>
were <lb/>
had been <lb/>
, so I settled <lb/>
under <lb/>
Here's <lb/>
There ii a i. nap of the <lb/>
railway <lb/>
station painted on the tiled en- <lb/>
trance of the Victoria station in <lb/>
London. painter whoso work it <lb/>
was had an experience with local <lb/>
pride. While work he was ac- <lb/>
come from <lb/>
painted bigger <lb/>
I -i <lb/>
and Hoy ton <lb/>
pat get <lb/>
if chaps as Ah know <lb/>
W thee <lb/>
F This ii Worth <lb/>
Suppose You Stop and See<lb/>
N. C. March <lb/>
Mrs Joe lake pleas- <lb/>
that your Remedy <lb/>
has entirely cured our little girl of <lb/>
very bad of eczema, which- <lb/>
covered a great part of her body. <lb/>
She had eczema from <lb/>
the time was three weeks old, <lb/>
until she was six years old. <lb/>
s now perfectly well and I feet <lb/>
bat I cannot i o highly of <lb/>
t She hue not hail a of <lb/>
t for six yearn. Respectfully, <lb/>
J. W. COBB. <lb/>
To Publishers <lb/>
and Printers <lb/>
We have an entirely new <lb/>
process, on h patents <lb/>
are pending, whereby we <lb/>
tun reface old Braes Col- <lb/>
and Head <lb/>
it. and thicker, make <lb/>
i hem fully an good fib now <lb/>
and without any <lb/>
or mi the hot <lb/>
torn. <lb/>
PRICES <lb/>
defacing Column and Head <lb/>
Rules regular <lb/>
L. S. and <lb/>
Head Ruled inches in <lb/>
and ever per <lb/>
A sum pie of re faced <lb/>
Rule, full <lb/>
will be cheerfully <lb/>
sent on application. <lb/>
Printers Iv Co <lb/>
Manufactures of Type and <lb/>
High Brads Mater <lb/>
N. Hail Street, i <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and <lb/>
Ties always on hand <lb/>
Fresh kept con- <lb/>
In stock. Country <lb/>
i Produce Bought and Sold <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
Announcement <lb/>
We beg leave to announce that we are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for <lb/>
White Lead, Paints, <lb/>
Colors, and and <lb/>
v Ready Paints. <lb/>
There is no line In the world better than <lb/>
It his 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/>
HON. LEE S. OVERMAN. <lb/>
SPEAKS AT <lb/>
AYDEN AND <lb/>
VILlE. <lb/>
GREEN- <lb/>
North Carolina Patriotism <lb/>
can Charge of Democratic Ex- <lb/>
A.-i in <lb/>
of Tariff Fully <lb/>
Explained. <lb/>
y was day <lb/>
for the Democrats of Pitt county. <lb/>
The county candidates were at <lb/>
Ayden on that day, and with <lb/>
them was Hon. Lee S. Overman, <lb/>
the junior United States Senator <lb/>
from North Carolina. Senator <lb/>
Overman spoke to a large and <lb/>
enthusiastic crowd, numbering <lb/>
over four hundred. He was <lb/>
listened to with best attention <lb/>
and his speech accomplished <lb/>
much good. <lb/>
Saturday night Senator Over- <lb/>
man spoke to a i t crow; in <lb/>
the court house at <lb/>
many ladies b in <lb/>
He was intro- <lb/>
by Mr. ii. W. Whedbee <lb/>
and spoke for nearly hour and <lb/>
a half. After expressing his i day for every day in the <lb/>
asked could our people again <lb/>
in the face of such occur- <lb/>
and put back on <lb/>
the registration books <lb/>
Senator Overman then took up <lb/>
National issues, dealing mainly <lb/>
with the tariff, referring to Sec- <lb/>
Shaw speaking in North <lb/>
Carolina in favor of protection <lb/>
and Secretary Taft speaking in <lb/>
Maine in favor the revision of <lb/>
the tariff. The Republican par- <lb/>
did not bring prosperity no <lb/>
party can bring it. Prosperity <lb/>
or panics are the outcome of con- <lb/>
He then used <lb/>
strong illustrations to show how <lb/>
the tariff takes money from the <lb/>
people and puts it in the <lb/>
pockets of the trusts. The <lb/>
does not go into the govern- <lb/>
treasury, but goes to the <lb/>
trust magnates to reward <lb/>
for their large contributions to <lb/>
Republican campaign fund. <lb/>
Rockefeller is said to be worth <lb/>
but he has not <lb/>
made that vast sum fairly. No <lb/>
man in his life time can <lb/>
that much wealth honest- <lb/>
If a man had made a <lb/>
appreciation at th presence of <lb/>
he ladies Senator Overman went <lb/>
back to the founding of our gov- <lb/>
and told of the part <lb/>
North Carolina took in it. The <lb/>
pioneers to escape oppression and <lb/>
enjoy liberty and freedom, <lb/>
braved the billows of the At- <lb/>
and landed on these shores. <lb/>
The hand of oppression followed <lb/>
them here but they arose in their <lb/>
manhood and threw it off. North <lb/>
Carolina was prominent in this <lb/>
revolutionary struggle. <lb/>
The speaker then contrasted <lb/>
the two parties in existence at <lb/>
years since the birth of Christ, <lb/>
he would not have <lb/>
If Adam had lived until now and <lb/>
made a day for every day <lb/>
of the years since his <lb/>
and saved every dollar of ii, <lb/>
he would not have as much as <lb/>
Rockefeller. It is through <lb/>
fair laws that foster trusts and <lb/>
permit the robbing of the people <lb/>
that such sums are made. <lb/>
By several examples Senator <lb/>
Overman showed how the tariff <lb/>
works detriment to our country, <lb/>
as it prevents them selling their <lb/>
goods to us and through <lb/>
the beginning of our government. they refuse to buy our pro- <lb/>
One was led by Hamilton who ducts and other markets are <lb/>
said the people were not capable I thus closed against us. It was <lb/>
j of self government and wanted an able speech and made a last- <lb/>
i to establish a centralized govern- impression on all who heard <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST COMPANY, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At close of business Sept 4th, 1903. <lb/>
. RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and discounts I <lb/>
Overdrafts, secured an <lb/>
unsecured <lb/>
Bonds, 1,000.00 <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures 2,451.09 <lb/>
Due from Ban 20,830.05 <lb/>
Cash items 2,596.82 <lb/>
Gold Coin 90.00 <lb/>
Silver Coin 893.17 <lb/>
bank noses <lb/>
S notes <lb/>
Total <lb/>
10,111.00 <lb/>
in Washington. The other <lb/>
was led by J who said the <lb/>
people had established this gov- <lb/>
and should have a gov- <lb/>
of their own with equal <lb/>
rights to all and special privileges <lb/>
to none. The latter principle <lb/>
won. North Carolina has always <lb/>
been conservative and jealous of <lb/>
I her rights. <lb/>
Later a party of spite came <lb/>
Capital stock paid in f 25,000.00 into existence and the civil war <lb/>
Surplus 12,500.00 followed. North Carolina was <lb/>
Undivided profits, 3,085.29 to secede, but when <lb/>
payable 55,000.00 dent Lincoln issued a <lb/>
calling for troops <lb/>
from this State she <lb/>
Cashiers 558.87 against her sister States <lb/>
joined forces with <lb/>
According to the voting <lb/>
she furnished a larger <lb/>
i number of troops than any other <lb/>
State and lost per cent of <lb/>
Return- <lb/>
to devastated homes after <lb/>
him. <lb/>
SPOONS.<lb/>
Total, <lb/>
State of North County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, C. S. Carr. Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly on the battlefield, <lb/>
swear that the above is true to the best of my knowledge in <lb/>
and belief. C. S. CARR, Cashier the remnant threw aside <lb/>
. . . . their guns, and encouraged by <lb/>
and sworn to before Correct n. , . <lb/>
me, this 11th day of Sit 1906. It- O. our noble- Patriotic women set to <lb/>
J. MOORE, K G. <lb/>
J Notary Public E. G. FLANAGAN <lb/>
Al <lb/>
CONDITION <lb/>
THE BANK OF N. L. <lb/>
THE OF 4th, 1906<lb/>
Loans <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
Cash <lb/>
Gold <lb/>
Silver <lb/>
A notes <lb/>
31,777.6 <lb/>
of North Carolina., <lb/>
County of Pitt. <lb/>
I, J. R. Davis, of the bank, do solemn <lb/>
swear the statement is true to best of <lb/>
stock pd in <lb/>
Undivided profits <lb/>
Bills payable <lb/>
sub to check <lb/>
work to rebuild our State. Did <lb/>
the new party help in this No, <lb/>
but the contrary put its heels <lb/>
on our necks and put ballots in <lb/>
the hands of half <lb/>
ages in the South. <lb/>
Senator Overman then <lb/>
the days of reconstruction <lb/>
following the war, how the Re- <lb/>
publicans plundered the State <lb/>
for their own benefit, robbed the. <lb/>
the children of their school <lb/>
g depriving them of education, <lb/>
of Origin Unknown, <lb/>
So Ancient. <lb/>
If you desire to know about the <lb/>
scarcity of really reliable data on <lb/>
the of spoons, take down <lb/>
your handbooks and encyclopedias <lb/>
and sec if it doesn't take you a long <lb/>
while to learn anything <lb/>
their origin, etc. In <lb/>
fact, the do not <lb/>
lend to give us anything of value in <lb/>
that line. It is admitted that they <lb/>
are but just exactly <lb/>
how old they are and by whom <lb/>
where they wore first mod <lb/>
points upon which we are left com- <lb/>
in the dark. Creighton <lb/>
says, must have been a <lb/>
very ancient invention, for a Saxon <lb/>
spoon of perforated silver or- <lb/>
with gems, was found in a <lb/>
grave Barre, <lb/>
When forks were unknown spoons <lb/>
played a very important pan the <lb/>
table. Spoons of the thirteenth <lb/>
century, and even later, had bundle <lb/>
terminating in a knob, knot, acorn <lb/>
or other odd and cumbersome de- <lb/>
vices. About the period of tho <lb/>
restoration, c which so much in English a <lb/>
was made In . f raw of <lb/>
spoon.-. In of the unique pet- <lb/>
ten Mm part was divided <lb/>
into two, and even four ports, <lb/>
and the handles always split, or <lb/>
twisted and turned up instead of <lb/>
down and be Spoons <lb/>
period all blunt instead of be- <lb/>
pointed, as in the forms general- <lb/>
seen at present. They continued <lb/>
short and blunt to the time of <lb/>
I when they were first<lb/>
When <lb/>
Buying <lb/>
ONE <lb/>
.Look deeper than the Surface <lb/>
Make a careful inspection of the material <lb/>
If you will came here and that tin. Autumn, <lb/>
and Winter models of the noted <lb/>
FASHIONABLE CLOTHES. <lb/>
You will find that in quality of materials and as well <lb/>
u-j in cut and lit, they equal the Costliest creations of the swell <lb/>
tom at half their pr and. you be that <lb/>
ab we have said, or all that i have beard in favor of <lb/>
fashionable is absolutely true. <lb/>
SINGLE AND DOUBLE BREASTED SACK SUITS <lb/>
of made of handsome quality <lb/>
in a wide assortment of exclusive weaves, to <lb/>
FALL OVERCOATS. <lb/>
The fashionable J inches with <lb/>
back an I pressed side also conservative models, as Well as <lb/>
Rain Coats, to <lb/>
Fashionable Wearing. <lb/>
May be found here n a profusion of makes to <lb/>
all tastes for day, afternoon or evening dress <lb/>
mm t fir urn <lb/>
C. L. Wilkinson Co. <lb/>
FATE AND ANDREW JACKSON. <lb/>
knowledge and belief. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me, this 11th day Sept. <lb/>
1906. <lb/>
J. V. JOHNSTON, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
J. R. DAVIS, <lb/>
Correct- <lb/>
T. L. TURN AGE, <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS. <lb/>
Dire <lb/>
my <lb/>
and sold the money for made pointed and had the handles <lb/>
which went into their pockets. I turned down instead of up. <lb/>
Yet this Republican party i were <lb/>
, . . i I known n e spoons were <lb/>
now has the audacity to charge; . , ,, ,, . , <lb/>
,, . They were so called be- <lb/>
the Democratic party with ex- cause of t.,, <lb/>
the apostles carved upon their <lb/>
of the public They handles. They were generally given <lb/>
tend to figures in . to children at their time <lb/>
son but do no of <lb/>
and to report. <lb/>
Yes, i if more <lb/>
than they did and we have <lb/>
our splendid at to show for <lb/>
it, of which we are proud. We <lb/>
promised the people to give them <lb/>
education and we are carrying <lb/>
out that promise. <lb/>
When the Republican party <lb/>
was in power in North Car. <lb/>
riot and trouble <lb/>
dominated, but the Demo- <lb/>
party peace and quiet <lb/>
He referred to recent <lb/>
scenes in Atlanta and Mobile and <lb/>
the entire twelve, those who could <lb/>
not afford to in such <lb/>
giving one or more, <lb/>
M they felt able. <lb/>
The most and remarkable <lb/>
spoon in the world perhaps is a <lb/>
coronation preserved <lb/>
among the other royal relies in the <lb/>
Tower of London. The bowl is of <lb/>
gold and the handle of silver. The <lb/>
handle is split down the middle and <lb/>
set with all kinds of precious stones. <lb/>
The relic is valued at about <lb/>
What Going West, Not East, Meant to <lb/>
the Fiery Lawyer. <lb/>
During the young manhood <lb/>
Andrew when he rode the <lb/>
circuit in Tennessee, knowing more <lb/>
law most of his brethren at the <lb/>
bar. afraid of nothing on earth, <lb/>
ready challenge to a duel some <lb/>
trained from the older set- <lb/>
cuts, that lawyer <lb/>
upon his own preserves and <lb/>
made fun of Ins <lb/>
hold- <lb/>
his ground against all <lb/>
partly brute force and <lb/>
mental superiority, he was probably <lb/>
nearer to happiness than he over <lb/>
was afterward. <lb/>
court to court he rode his <lb/>
race horse, pistols in holsters, <lb/>
his gun and hi- pock of bound . <lb/>
ready for tho courthouse, ready for <lb/>
o deer chase, ready for the <lb/>
match, ready for the horse race, <lb/>
Iv for house raising and log <lb/>
rolling, ready to go out himself and <lb/>
drag into the courthouse the <lb/>
whom the sheriff feared to <lb/>
arrest. <lb/>
Hough and tumble times e <lb/>
were in backwoods Tennessee, <lb/>
rude and <lb/>
and bubbling in that i o- <lb/>
of unrest struggle h <lb/>
prevails in border <lb/>
fore the take for <lb/>
everybody smugly <lb/>
everybody else on the <lb/>
and <lb/>
Ill such a state <lb/>
young Jackson was <lb/>
lo lead, dominate at d <lb/>
Had ho gone <lb/>
westward, had he east in hi lo <lb/>
lawyers were <lb/>
in e i <lb/>
original thirteen seaboard <lb/>
I nothing is more i <lb/>
the world would Hi have <lb/>
of him. <lb/>
His lack of knowledge of <lb/>
would have made him easy pi <lb/>
those who were masters of this pro- <lb/>
His fiery temper would <lb/>
have kept him constantly in battle <lb/>
array, and it fighting those lawyers <lb/>
who got the better id him the <lb/>
of legal authorities he would, <lb/>
in the re of have <lb/>
the man or late<lb/>
WHOSE WAS IT <lb/>
a Rare Coin, Two Bargain Sales anal <lb/>
Three Questions. <lb/>
A scholar traveling the east <lb/>
soys that lie was in camp with <lb/>
his friend a man of kin- <lb/>
tastes, in a wretched <lb/>
village far from tho track of travel <lb/>
era. As they were sinking tents <lb/>
the morn dig a heavy faced boy <lb/>
brought Mr. a handful of <lb/>
bronze for sale. He sorted it rapid- <lb/>
on the palm of his hand and <lb/>
found among tho rubbish one very <lb/>
rare coin of Then he <lb/>
put it all back again in the boy's <lb/>
outstretched palm and offered half <lb/>
a dollar for the lot. Tl boy ac- <lb/>
the bid, gave bi k the hand- <lb/>
took bis money .. disappear- <lb/>
ed, while the exultant <lb/>
went among <lb/>
horses. <lb/>
Ten minutes later the boy <lb/>
n going up to the <lb/>
other Englishman, offered another <lb/>
handful of rubbish, among which <lb/>
was the game rare <lb/>
coin. The gentleman kept <lb/>
bronze in his hand and offered a <lb/>
half dollar for it, which the boy re- <lb/>
fused, though tho bargain was <lb/>
eventually concluded for a dollar. <lb/>
Then the gentleman, in high glee, <lb/>
hailed his companion and, showing <lb/>
his purchase, informed him that he <lb/>
was not the man who possesses <lb/>
a coin of <lb/>
us said the other, <lb/>
the pocket his <lb/>
ling <lb/>
Me the lot felt in <lb/>
v pot . , i coin f <lb/>
. there. T . <lb/>
an <lb/>
r did . Hie coin <lb/>
fir in l to sell <lb/>
V II far <lb/>
the ha d be <lb/>
. the val rt <lb/>
id to did <lb/>
coin <lb/>
His Milk. <lb/>
Minister I've <lb/>
wanting to see you, Mr. Kurd, in <lb/>
regard to the quality of the milk I <lb/>
with which you are serving me. <lb/>
sir. <lb/>
Minister <lb/>
wanted , Mr. i <lb/>
the <lb/>
par. t <lb/>
and not for christening. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019663_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
. ii M <lb/>
J REFLECTOR <lb/>
., i M <lb/>
,., M. C, M second matter <lb/>
application <lb/>
. in Pitt and adjoining counties <lb/>
corn poi <lb/>
After three years of waiting <lb/>
the United States Supreme court <lb/>
has decided that ex-Senator Bur- <lb/>
ton, of Kansas, convicted of <lb/>
fees while in the senate and <lb/>
sentenced to prison, must take <lb/>
his medicine. <lb/>
II <lb/>
to fiction<lb/>
G . <lb/>
t. <lb/>
FRIDAY OCT <lb/>
FACTS AS TO SALARY.<lb/>
pro <lb/>
last <lb/>
of <lb/>
it-i- <lb/>
ll <lb/>
Nor <lb/>
It is strange how some people <lb/>
will <lb/>
order m y i <lb/>
. e i. m <lb/>
late<lb/>
in <lb/>
re w <lb/>
th I f. <lb/>
.- now the . he got the <lb/>
i i year that he elected to <lb/>
of his time . the work. <lb/>
salary is p and <lb/>
i has to pay I expenses <lb/>
of this. Every and <lb/>
h used, <lb/>
hill. <lb/>
. ant d I i <lb/>
New B <lb/>
to m <lb/>
folk if the A. I tn <lb/>
train at Goldsboro, to p t <lb/>
.,. . . . . railroad in <lb/>
him home in time, an was ail-. <lb/>
, , , . . u expense, is paid by mm the <lb/>
vised that it would. He <lb/>
the ticket started home, <lb/>
the trains failed to c. ran ct in <lb/>
and he had to lay aw r <lb/>
there m . next day, missing <lb/>
the business engagement. Hi <lb/>
brought suit against the <lb/>
for <lb/>
co has never had any ex- <lb/>
for superintendency ex- <lb/>
it the salary. <lb/>
To do the work as he is doing <lb/>
necessitates c ex- <lb/>
We publish this because <lb/>
i . <lb/>
good people are <lb/>
deceived by the false <lb/>
SCHUBERT'S SAD LIFE. <lb/>
of who have a <lb/>
The cash that escaped the ice purpose to serve. For the work <lb/>
man will now go to the fuel deal- done the county has never <lb/>
had cheaper superintendency <lb/>
than it is getting now. Think <lb/>
of a man thoroughly equipped <lb/>
work, with twenty-six <lb/>
years of constant successful ex- <lb/>
in educational work, a <lb/>
ability is recognized <lb/>
Some of the straw hats <lb/>
wont be frozen out by a <lb/>
frost. <lb/>
just <lb/>
little <lb/>
It will be harder to learn how <lb/>
The Rate Law and Separate Cars. <lb/>
The process of ; and <lb/>
the new rat la i <lb/>
ever an anon fail <lb/>
by the general <lb/>
lie. ii now appears the in- <lb/>
creased rigidity of sup i i <lb/>
given the inter-State commerce <lb/>
commission involves, to <lb/>
extent, the car i <lb/>
of the Southern Sta <lb/>
commission to <lb/>
i a i <lb/>
i of <lb/>
m . . . t <lb/>
i p <lb/>
a . . hi r re I and . <lb/>
i id this i f i <lb/>
for the bill. And <lb/>
is the reasonable view. <lb/>
Both races pay equally and <lb/>
should have equal <lb/>
The quest m of <lb/>
or not they am <lb/>
apartments is entirely de. <lb/>
is no more of a <lb/>
against than it is <lb/>
for. It is feared that the law- <lb/>
may cause friction in regard to <lb/>
B ping cars and dining cars. <lb/>
A petition from <lb/>
discrimination on this score <lb/>
already been presented to <lb/>
the commission. If the <lb/>
should arise, however, it <lb/>
looks as if this difficulty might <lb/>
be avoided in like manner as the <lb/>
first, by giving equal but en- <lb/>
separate accommodation. I <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
I Shall to Sneak from Door U <lb/>
Door to Boa My <lb/>
One of the bitterest disappoint- <lb/>
in Schubert's life was <lb/>
Goethe's indifference. In 1818 he <lb/>
sent a selection of his compositions <lb/>
to the poet's songs to <lb/>
of music were <lb/>
among songs of <lb/>
and <lb/>
from the sad melodies<lb/>
Earl <lb/>
King of <lb/>
and the music to <lb/>
of Villa Goethe, who had <lb/>
ear only for the stiff <lb/>
of and <lb/>
. n in iii took no <lb/>
e , . and left <lb/>
letter unanswered. Not until <lb/>
I Schubert's <lb/>
. u in appreciate the ex- <lb/>
value of <lb/>
i n lay neglected in his <lb/>
n tint <lb/>
r sang <lb/>
liar lo him. <lb/>
greatest delight <lb/>
t. p o little excursion with <lb/>
his ,; to the picturesquely sit- <lb/>
villages in the or <lb/>
on the and it was in <lb/>
the arbors of the small inns, with a <lb/>
glass of pure country wine before <lb/>
Dim, inspiration came most <lb/>
easily. Rut even these modest de- <lb/>
light's were by the malice <lb/>
that pictured him as a drunkard <lb/>
who composed his songs when he <lb/>
was full of wine. It is an absolute <lb/>
fact that ho did not lose the faculty <lb/>
of artistic work even under the sad- <lb/>
circumstances. Be composed <lb/>
the greater part of the <lb/>
while he was lying ill in hos- <lb/>
in 1823. <lb/>
He was quite right when he <lb/>
wrote to his friend in <lb/>
March, of my <lb/>
which have been inspired by <lb/>
RIGHT <lb/>
is r, it; <lb/>
inn look <lb/>
is s <lb/>
ii it <lb/>
I their goad. <lb/>
to spell words in the the g giving entire <lb/>
simplified way than to follow the paying of his ex. <lb/>
spelling book. having no greater <lb/>
. I than a year <lb/>
. The sudden death of Rev. Sam We the little soul that is so <lb/>
P. Jones is generally regretted, j selfish and miserly as to want <lb/>
His noted lectures and sermons the earth; for nothing, <lb/>
gave him a reputation that was The has given its <lb/>
two excellent articles <lb/>
the <lb/>
Hon. John Sharp Williams the last Saturday. <lb/>
Democratic leader in o is One of the paper read <lb/>
making some speeches North by Mi- Hetty Wright, and the <lb/>
Carolina, and reports them in- other the report of the meeting <lb/>
that he is giving out some prepared by Miss Dora <lb/>
old time sound Democratic doc- day. reporter for the association, <lb/>
as these give an in- <lb/>
to the character of teachers <lb/>
If the woman down this de in Pitt county schools <lb/>
were to follow the example of .,.,,,, be proud <lb/>
tie New woman who com- ,,., h. an, <lb/>
suicide because the cock ,,,.,,.,. <lb/>
left, there would be an amazing ;, the <lb/>
decrease in population. am was <lb/>
Pap Fairbanks says his truly an see such <lb/>
his son's marriage was an assemblage of cultured teach- <lb/>
the extreme youth of the hoy. In this particular Pitt <lb/>
As this yo h has reach- county is excelled by no county <lb/>
ed the twenty five, it looks anywhere, <lb/>
like he is old enough to know <lb/>
what he is d Hon John Sharp Williams, the <lb/>
Democratic leader in congress <lb/>
Pitt county, do who is making speeches in North <lb/>
by too much of Carolina this week, finds that he <lb/>
the strong talk tr has many among the <lb/>
anything will u you Tar Heels. Some of them, de- <lb/>
away from I . polls on n of Dr. Robert Williams <lb/>
It is t i ire , <lb/>
be a full vote, i <lb/>
The Mutineer's Will Hang. <lb/>
Robert Sawyer and Arthur <lb/>
the mutineers <lb/>
from the schooner Harry A. Ber- <lb/>
wind, now confined in the county <lb/>
jail here will hang on Thursday. <lb/>
November 1st, President <lb/>
yesterday having declined <lb/>
to grant either an absolute par- <lb/>
don or a commutation to the <lb/>
prisoners. This will come as a <lb/>
surprise to the public <lb/>
which generally that <lb/>
if the prisoners were not par- <lb/>
outright, their sentence <lb/>
would be commuted at least to <lb/>
life imprisonment. The prison- <lb/>
themselves have been <lb/>
confident since the con- <lb/>
of Scott when he was <lb/>
hanged some months ago, and <lb/>
the announcement now that the <lb/>
President has declined to inter- <lb/>
will no doubt baa crushing <lb/>
blow to them in the jail today. <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
Miners Blown to Pieces. <lb/>
N. Oct. 16.- <lb/>
Burgess Cox and Frazier, <lb/>
miners of Gold Hill, fifteen <lb/>
miles from kill- <lb/>
night by the explosion of <lb/>
dynamite in the mine where <lb/>
were working. The men <lb/>
on the night shift upon <lb/>
which there were others <lb/>
engaged and a half <lb/>
dozen cartridge, preparatory to <lb/>
making the shot. They gave the <lb/>
signal for the discharge, which <lb/>
is made and before <lb/>
they had gotten to a safe dis- <lb/>
they were blown to pieces. <lb/>
Both bodies were partly buried <lb/>
under falling dirt feet <lb/>
ground. They were not <lb/>
en out until this morning when <lb/>
an undertaker prepared the re- <lb/>
mains for burial. <lb/>
Cox was married and had a <lb/>
family. This is the first <lb/>
dent in some time at Gold Hill. <lb/>
Vs. <lb/>
One man sold some cotton to- <lb/>
day for cents that he had been <lb/>
holding for three years. He was <lb/>
offered for it but refused <lb/>
to sell. <lb/>
pain seem to please <lb/>
iii a letter to <lb/>
will become of <lb/>
poor me Like Goethe's harp <lb/>
player. shall have to sneak from <lb/>
door to door and beg <lb/>
The only ray of light that fell into <lb/>
his dark life was when, through the <lb/>
kindness of Count Johann Ester- <lb/>
manager, the father <lb/>
of the famous <lb/>
he was appointed music <lb/>
master in the household in <lb/>
where he spent some happy <lb/>
summers, the happiest of his life. <lb/>
It was in Castle that he is <lb/>
supposed to have fallen in love with <lb/>
Caroline, his patron's beautiful <lb/>
daughter, who was his pupil <lb/>
who probably never learned the <lb/>
secret of the musician's heart, <lb/>
though it is strange that one <lb/>
gifted and so beautiful should no <lb/>
have married before she was well <lb/>
into the thirties. Bitter disappoint- <lb/>
followed this short of a <lb/>
life free of <lb/>
graph. <lb/>
BACKWARD BOYS. <lb/>
In <lb/>
Brilliant Man Who Did Not Shin <lb/>
Days. <lb/>
I think most men who have been <lb/>
public school <lb/>
numerous <lb/>
were always <lb/>
e not done <lb/>
iii after <lb/>
upon <lb/>
iv years of <lb/>
inns <lb/>
career it <lb/>
educated any <lb/>
will readily call t i <lb/>
instances of I <lb/>
winning prizes, <lb/>
anything worth i <lb/>
life. And I am co <lb/>
Investigating the <lb/>
those ho have led . <lb/>
remarkably <lb/>
do found that the majority were <lb/>
rather lazy than not before en- <lb/>
upon the actual battle of life. <lb/>
Oliver was looked <lb/>
by bis schoolmaster u a dunce. <lb/>
That may possibly have been the <lb/>
Here 77.1 see <lb/>
more la <lb/>
famous <lb/>
mod- <lb/>
designed with <lb/>
rare skill by <lb/>
the finest man <lb/>
ors in the bus- <lb/>
HIGH <lb/>
O ii- of <lb/>
tor men is a rev- <lb/>
u it ion wonder- <lb/>
the 881- <lb/>
of tailoring. The <lb/>
best-dressed m n <lb/>
where buying <lb/>
these splendid c J <lb/>
,. <lb/>
there is no reason why <lb/>
you should stick i the <lb/>
slow, tailor, <lb/>
COME IN <lb/>
And See The <lb/>
Styles. <lb/>
Yon ureas welcome to <lb/>
look as to We <lb/>
tun fit you perfectly <lb/>
whether you are of nor- <lb/>
or unusual build. <lb/>
Our prices range from <lb/>
down to the point <lb/>
where quality ceases to <lb/>
be a virtue, but we can <lb/>
fit your as <lb/>
readily as figure. <lb/>
Frank Wilson <lb/>
THE KING CLOTHIER. <lb/>
fault of the latter, <lb/>
something special <lb/>
the mind in a <lb/>
as there is in a <lb/>
least is my <lb/>
Gladstone never <lb/>
school, if I <lb/>
he subsequently <lb/>
first Oxford. <lb/>
of science and p <lb/>
Huxley. I i <lb/>
did not <lb/>
I t is <lb/>
in to <lb/>
career, just <lb/>
V That at <lb/>
experience. <lb/>
a at <lb/>
ht, though <lb/>
I a double <lb/>
Ii priests <lb/>
rt <lb/>
shine in <lb/>
Tom has given up the ticket in this <lb/>
editorship of the magazine a <lb/>
his name. The resignation ton of blanks in <lb/>
was due to a dispute between him And the way some who were <lb/>
Some items that from <lb/>
over salary due him. We; are coming down there in Tuesday evening's <lb/>
doubt if his place as can is to but a mail are not published <lb/>
be easily filled. I the Democrats the name of the writer did not <lb/>
I to bury on election day. along then. <lb/>
their younger <lb/>
We find plant that <lb/>
people who in l of <lb/>
their career and ex- <lb/>
demand r stores of <lb/>
nerve force rut length of <lb/>
days. Whether muds have <lb/>
been made pursuit of <lb/>
Wealth or fur s. noble ob- <lb/>
do nu e result is <lb/>
the lame. m <lb/>
about to n <lb/>
good night's n joined the <lb/>
majority kens pass- <lb/>
ed over at i . real rival, <lb/>
Thackeray, at fifty-two. Byron <lb/>
achieved his unique reputation in <lb/>
the short of thirty-six <lb/>
Tears, Mozart in and <lb/>
Schiller in forty-fire. Alfred <lb/>
at fifty-three Mid <lb/>
H W. H. RICKS <lb/>
I FIT IS A <lb/>
Furniture Problem, <lb/>
We can solve it for you. <lb/>
L m <lb/>
Furniture Competition is Brisk end <lb/>
Sale Claims are many and <lb/>
WHY <lb/>
What decide it. There is but out <lb/>
That sale is test and most Important <lb/>
that you <lb/>
i Prices the Furniture You Want <lb/>
Come be convinced. Yours to e. <lb/>
A. TAFT <lb/>
Pictures Framed to Order. <lb/>
Pi y Bowen <lb/>
, i. OP WOMAN'S FASHIONS. <lb/>
PULLEY <lb/>
Tuts is in charge l F. C. NYE, who is authorized to rep- <lb/>
resent the Eastern Reflector in and territory <lb/>
ithe of th- year has come. The A. G. Mfg Co <lb/>
Bad money lain greater J fur their fa- <lb/>
in and the Back Baud to b <lb/>
leading om from to Baltimore <lb/>
who in arrears nu I Miss Bryan is <lb/>
h i , who I . near<lb/>
A HORSE'S <lb/>
Stokes, this <lb/>
in <lb/>
by h i i i r <lb/>
you psi Ii hi i nil i- y <lb/>
iit. <lb/>
Rev. E. Cox spent Mon <lb/>
night with hi.- mother, E. <lb/>
E. Cox. and returned to Green- . <lb/>
afternoon. <lb/>
Call and the large line <lb/>
We <lb/>
UP <lb/>
I h iv.- e . , up v, <lb/>
i k. ii . , <lb/>
Ii I .-k s II. s . PH . <lb/>
by <lb/>
l , J Hi. <lb/>
J. V ., Ur. O. <lb/>
i . i . , . . i <lb/>
ii<lb/>
ii i i i <lb/>
e-. <lb/>
in <lb/>
any <lb/>
Ill i <lb/>
Co <lb/>
N. C. Everett, of Gold Point. <lb/>
a while here <lb/>
He is an old <lb/>
V. H s <lb/>
. . en-1 report <lb/>
,.,,. I y fills ii ii k V. C. VSm <lb/>
age Licenses. <lb/>
Way It Should Be <lb/>
Am <lb/>
To ii to a bore I- <lb/>
nip of and only <lb/>
neglect and the good nature and <lb/>
e of the animal allow any de- <lb/>
from exactness. Fen brow- <lb/>
fit as they should, but are <lb/>
the ears are <lb/>
pinched. Blinkers carelessly kepi <lb/>
become warped out of shape and <lb/>
obstruct vision, if <lb/>
flare or the check pieces are <lb/>
loose they lose their in the <lb/>
one care and are as <lb/>
fording glimpses the owing <lb/>
i in the oilier. I I <lb/>
too wide rather than too <lb/>
row; bits too thin and <lb/>
sharp, i chains are often <lb/>
or . <lb/>
nest or too tightly drawn. Collars <lb/>
too much ct p <lb/>
and up-to-date Fill and <lb/>
Goods. Shoes, Silks, Woolen, Dress trim a id <lb/>
Cloaks, we only to yo i a i <lb/>
but have lots of goads and will take pleasure in <lb/>
you . <lb/>
Make our st ors your headquarters <lb/>
Dress in solid colors, <lb/>
Plaids and mixed, <lb/>
s a .<lb/>
A. J <lb/>
-V, j Kill . t Kl IA I V <lb/>
Register of Deeds R. Will- Our horses are rather r C r <lb/>
pupil issued marriage licenses to as a rule, and sore or O J Z <lb/>
. 1.25 . <lb/>
I Pads an <lb/>
usually broader in the <lb/>
In C v if <lb/>
COLORED, tree <lb/>
John Crandall and Lula Peyton. horse is in flesh, and the ridge j <lb/>
David Daughtry and a housing is worn. <lb/>
Blow. <lb/>
Mooring and Caro- <lb/>
ed v.-.-l I k, as they <lb/>
ho lie. however, generally <lb/>
sh tea daily arriving at B. F., <lb/>
Manning Co. They will give Ms Leta Roach, who had been j <lb/>
visiting and Kate Mooring n. i <lb/>
you Chapman, left for House Monday, line Davis it be. ,,,,,,,,, ,,, <lb/>
There is a series of meetings where she will ,, the elbows. <lb/>
in progress at the Free Will friends. I Vass and Laura Breastplates are far too <lb/>
church this week, held . . ., I Phillips and Lucy <lb/>
. ,. , ,, need too Forest, <lb/>
at night. They will Clarence Tyson and Laura <lb/>
Lt. V. aiming i i Harris. <lb/>
R. T. Evans, th clever Up to the 15th no license had <lb/>
A iii i . <lb/>
things most c <lb/>
4.11.1 <lb/>
III <lb/>
through the <lb/>
continue <lb/>
week. <lb/>
of <lb/>
t. <lb/>
B. T <lb/>
Miss Mollie Maynard left this <lb/>
morning for Raleigh where she <lb/>
excellent photographer of Green- <lb/>
ville, was here Tuesday taking <lb/>
; i of the school. <lb/>
Datum <lb/>
anal a con <lb/>
. . . . I <lb/>
Mineral Water. Sops <lb/>
blood from chip. <lb/>
relatives. <lb/>
have a cop <lb/>
it are off- <lb/>
at very low <lb/>
pi <lb/>
B T Cox, Bro. <lb/>
Joshua Manning spent <lb/>
day night in Ayden. <lb/>
Nice sun dried apples fresh <lb/>
and bright at J. B. Carroll Co. <lb/>
FOR SALE.-One-half acre <lb/>
corner lot with three room dwell- <lb/>
i, i i . in <lb/>
plaint, east <lb/>
wires etc, at Ann <lb/>
-t -re of B. T. B-o. <lb/>
Quite a crowd of our citizens <lb/>
went down to Ayden Saturday to <lb/>
hear Senator Overman. They <lb/>
report an excellent speech. <lb/>
Yin in well <lb/>
i A. Q. <lb/>
buggy <lb/>
conveniently located to school a- have the <lb/>
and business part of town- For <lb/>
particulars see <lb/>
J. A. Manning. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C. <lb/>
J. R. Turnage, a prosperous <lb/>
merchant of Ayden, was here <lb/>
up line ever in <lb/>
see bin <lb/>
let you and <lb/>
lest pi <lb/>
Alex. and <lb/>
of were visiting <lb/>
Monday on business. <lb/>
. -i If . . of H. T. <lb/>
A- for T. W. <lb/>
The town has driven a pump <lb/>
near the bank building for the <lb/>
benefit of its citizens and visit- special prices <lb/>
ors. It is excellent water. be to see <lb/>
All kinds of fancy candies, just elsewhere and <lb/>
at J. B. Carroll Co. n bargains <lb/>
Mr. Job, of Greenville, was goods <lb/>
here Monday superintending <lb/>
the moving of dynamo. same y. <lb/>
The Electric Light has <lb/>
installed a new engine for their j W are <lb/>
use- <lb/>
a lull inn; i <lb/>
use, men's work g <lb/>
a at a <lb/>
barmaid ii. i o. <lb/>
A full line of candies <lb/>
and fruit at J. B A. Co <lb/>
in need nice winter <lb/>
pants will see B. F. and <lb/>
Co. before b <lb/>
We are our line cf <lb/>
ways dangerous, as inciting to u <lb/>
kicking scrape, especially if the <lb/>
crupper is not thickly padded. <lb/>
Tight girthing is never necessary. <lb/>
The breeching should hang in the <lb/>
right place and be tight enough <lb/>
to come into play when slack, <lb/>
without that length which leaves it <lb/>
the Demo- dangling about, and stopping the <lb/>
party in . county will j vehicle with a sudden jerk. Pole <lb/>
speak at the following times and pieces should, while controlling the <lb/>
been issued to white people this <lb/>
month. <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC SPEAKING. <lb/>
The <lb/>
loose, dangling aimlessly about. <lb/>
whereas vitally important <lb/>
duties to perform in handling <lb/>
Percales and for <lb/>
school dresses in ind <lb/>
plaids. <lb/>
our underwear is complete. <lb/>
2-and cent <lb/>
Stokes. Friday, Oct. <lb/>
Bethel, Saturday, Oct. <lb/>
pole head instantly, not be drawn so <lb/>
tight that the horses are jammed <lb/>
against the pole, nor should they <lb/>
F. <lb/>
l. to <lb/>
John Cox's store, dangle loosely about No strap ends <lb/>
Tuesday, Oct. i should i; up or out, but every- <lb/>
Oct. billeted. As a rule <lb/>
. backhands are made long enough <lb/>
Johnson's Mills, I for a dromedary and girths big <lb/>
Oct. I enough for an elephant, with from <lb/>
Winterville, Oct. are net- <lb/>
j visited by a buckle tongue. <lb/>
Friday, Oct. I bands should have a lot of holes, I <lb/>
Farmville, Saturday, Oct. together, and be used when <lb/>
Black Jack, Saturday, Nov. needful to assist bitting. At all j <lb/>
Hon. J. H. will speak they should lit snugly. I <lb/>
with the candidates at Stokes, <lb/>
Oct. <lb/>
Hon. John H. Small will speak <lb/>
with the candidates at Bethel, <lb/>
Oct. at Farmville, Oct. <lb/>
and at Black Jack, Nov. <lb/>
of condition of <lb/>
BANK <lb/>
OF GREENVILLE. <lb/>
At Greenville, In North <lb/>
Carolina, at the of business, <lb/>
Sept <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loam and <lb/>
Overdrafts <lb/>
our <lb/>
S. to secure <lb/>
, 12,500.00 <lb/>
Bonds <lb/>
Tr hI Banking home, <lb/>
We have the <lb/>
been visiting Misses and <lb/>
Kate Chapman, left for Grifton <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
buggy and seats. H <lb/>
ever the v. O. Cox Mtg Co. <lb/>
j One from National Bunk <lb/>
reserve <lb/>
I Dim State Banks and <lb/>
of I rs <lb/>
I hecks and other cash items <lb/>
j ladies and <lb/>
Miss Ives who had Harrington ind L <lb/>
mL <lb/>
is now great cents <lb/>
Lawful money reserve in <lb/>
Hank,<lb/>
J. Co. are to go don o mi your r <lb/>
their store thus showing j par coot of <lb/>
.,,. ,. ,, ,. i <lb/>
progress this firm. The A. G Cox Mfg Co , <lb/>
J. B. Little went to receiving daily orders <lb/>
Monday. improved cart We <lb/>
The men will do well lo <lb/>
M S Co, before <lb/>
buying lull huts. They are <lb/>
r or. <lb/>
entire <lb/>
Mum ford, of Ayden, <lb/>
was here Saturday. <lb/>
2,27.1. t <lb/>
560.12 <lb/>
107.3 <lb/>
solicit your <lb/>
Dur co-op of Fall and <lb/>
millinery goods <lb/>
i ready for inspection at nine <lb/>
i o'clock morning Oct. <lb/>
110th 1900 through <lb/>
An of All are invited to call <lb/>
at band just our with the J. <lb/>
II P and Co. R. Smith Company. <lb/>
The books are <lb/>
open and in th- bands of J. B, <lb/>
Little. <lb/>
Miss in Nichols will <lb/>
of depart- <lb/>
in the large store of B. F. <lb/>
Total <lb/>
141,380.08 <lb/>
stock paid In <lb/>
Undivided profits, less ex- <lb/>
and taxes paid <lb/>
National bans notes out- <lb/>
standing 11,600.00 <lb/>
of what U called inertia, c <lb/>
should always be quite <lb/>
loose. Coupling reins should be <lb/>
long, with several holes bit end. <lb/>
The hand reins should have more <lb/>
holes and rather closer together <lb/>
than usually M. Ware <lb/>
in Outing Magazine. <lb/>
How Was Saved. <lb/>
During the reign of terror David <lb/>
had the sculptor, arrested <lb/>
and wished to have him guillotined, <lb/>
as he had declared war against all <lb/>
the artists, his colleagues. Mine, <lb/>
went to and urged <lb/>
him to save her husband. see no <lb/>
.-aid. tell me, <lb/>
for which of bis works has he been <lb/>
a statue of <lb/>
St. said Mine. <lb/>
does she look line <lb/>
woman, with a scrap of paper her <lb/>
At that moment <lb/>
Barren said to <lb/>
has made a statue of <lb/>
Philosophy meditating nu lie <lb/>
You have bought <lb/>
by the assembly and plan in the <lb/>
room in of the a room <lb/>
and declare that has <lb/>
well c Th <lb/>
was done, and i ed <lb/>
X. G. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE, <lb/>
At the Close of Business, Sept. 4th 1908. <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
Liabilities- <lb/>
Di Stock paid to <lb/>
H , . <lb/>
and red <lb/>
Surplus, <lb/>
25,000.00 <lb/>
bonds mortgages ,; <lb/>
12.878 <lb/>
Banking Boom <lb/>
Motion. <lb/>
Some experimenter every now <lb/>
and then tries to persuade himself <lb/>
the public Offal <lb/>
perpetual ; <lb/>
motion means the motion of a ma- <lb/>
chine or a device that con- <lb/>
forever or until it were out <lb/>
without the aid of any o ex- <lb/>
ti itself. A this <lb/>
kind is an impossibility, <lb/>
the resistance of air me con- <lb/>
opposing the action ma- <lb/>
and as matter, on <lb/>
en- <lb/>
D ; from Ban us <lb/>
Items <lb/>
-oM Coin <lb/>
Iver Coin <lb/>
1,817.12<lb/>
Time of deposit <lb/>
Deposit subject to check <lb/>
check out- <lb/>
Handing <lb/>
230,611.58 <lb/>
I crate power that <lb/>
Tb. <lb/>
Morrison. <lb/>
H O <lb/>
In deposits subject <lb/>
or Vi <lb/>
cheeks outstanding u C I external <lb/>
and bills force, as water or team, <lb/>
or deposit t-r <lb/>
borrowed <lb/>
SALE OP PERSONAL PROPER <lb/>
TY. <lb/>
mien that on <lb/>
, , , c, . , mat on <lb/>
Manning and Co. She will hi noon, i <lb/>
, . of <lb/>
glad to Of lady V or <lb/>
. . , mi in of <lb/>
give bur a call. k. <lb/>
and strongest lino of I fir's i n. <lb/>
Shot's ever tail . <lb/>
r it , t of <lb/>
at Barber and Co. n. <lb/>
nor t <lb/>
rev. T. H. King, of LaGrange, t <lb/>
here M <lb/>
Total <lb/>
of North <lb/>
County of <lb/>
I, J. W. Cashier of the above <lb/>
ii bank, do swear <lb/>
the above Statement is true the best <lb/>
of my knowledge belief. <lb/>
J. W. AYCOCK, Cashier <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before me <lb/>
this 12th day or <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Notary <lb/>
Correct . <lb/>
H, W. WHEDBEE, <lb/>
SAM T. <lb/>
f A. <lb/>
keeps acting on it ml mo- <lb/>
on l is. therefore. <lb/>
141,380.08 <lb/>
c. <lb/>
Notice of <lb/>
We, the undersigned, ha by <lb/>
mutual consent dissolved co- <lb/>
partnership and offer the entire <lb/>
stock of goods Consisting <lb/>
merchandise at cost. A <lb/>
discount offered. For <lb/>
terms and particulars address R. <lb/>
J. Little Co,, N. C. <lb/>
R. Little, <lb/>
II. Clark. <lb/>
We will pay the highest mar- <lb/>
price for chickens, eggs, <lb/>
corn, peas or anything in that <lb/>
line. <lb/>
North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt. I <lb/>
I, James L. Little, Cashier the above-named bank, do <lb/>
wear that the statement above is true to the best of my knowledge <lb/>
belief <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to <lb/>
of Sept, <lb/>
WALTER O. WARD. <lb/>
Notary <lb/>
JAMES L. LITTLE. <lb/>
J. A. <lb/>
R. W. <lb/>
J. R. <lb/>
i rectors <lb/>
j Neat Job <lb/>
Our specialty. <lb/>
Job Printing Office <lb/>
mil. am <lb/>
aM<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019663_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
SH<lb/>
WHAT WE CAN DO. <lb/>
IMPROVING SCHOOL ROOMS. <lb/>
Paper Read by Miss Before <lb/>
the Association. <lb/>
What can be done for our <lb/>
school r Of all the <lb/>
can do. the <lb/>
foremost i on them dean. <lb/>
. i, ho each <lb/>
play a id all nut hulls. <lb/>
lunch papers, etc., in thorn. <lb/>
Any convenient receptacle may <lb/>
be made t the purpose of <lb/>
a waste basket i the <lb/>
rooms. We can have the floors <lb/>
scoured once every two or three <lb/>
months, and the rooms carefully <lb/>
swept and dusted every day. <lb/>
Children handle chalks, pencils <lb/>
and ink. eat greasy lunches and <lb/>
play hall, rinsing their hauls <lb/>
once, perhaps, during the day. <lb/>
Can we not get them to have <lb/>
soap, towels and wash pans at <lb/>
school and use them freely <lb/>
Any one can have pictures in <lb/>
her room. Put up one of your <lb/>
own first, then ask the children <lb/>
to bring any they may have. At <lb/>
the expenditure of a few cents <lb/>
Perry pictures may b had, and <lb/>
they make an admirable <lb/>
Schools presided over by ear- <lb/>
nest and progressive teachers <lb/>
will in a few years be provided <lb/>
with maps, globes, flags, <lb/>
bridged dictionaries and libraries <lb/>
Yards will be swept as often as <lb/>
necessary and possibly enclosed <lb/>
by a fence and flowers planted <lb/>
. The influence of an attractive <lb/>
personal appearance is boundless. <lb/>
Without extra expense a <lb/>
teacher will dress neatly and be- <lb/>
We do not need ex- <lb/>
pensive clothes but we do need <lb/>
to exercise good taste and com- <lb/>
sense in what we wear, and <lb/>
above all let us be neat and <lb/>
scrupulously clean in every de- <lb/>
tail of the toilet. To look as at- <lb/>
tractive as we can is a duty we <lb/>
owe ourselves, our friends and <lb/>
the dear God who made us in <lb/>
His own image. Let those of us <lb/>
who are women take our woman- <lb/>
hood with us into the school- <lb/>
room, and live there not only as <lb/>
teachers but as women and let <lb/>
our fight be for cleanliness, beau- <lb/>
and purity in all things. <lb/>
Like the Nautilus which <lb/>
rounds itself with a shell of <lb/>
pearl, teachers with lovely <lb/>
its express their souls and char- <lb/>
in the beautiful things <lb/>
they place about them. The <lb/>
crudest natures love beauty, <lb/>
the common cord by which <lb/>
all humanity may be drawn. <lb/>
Heaven, the highest goal man <lb/>
may reach, is always delineated <lb/>
as a i of perfect b man <lb/>
hims -if is a thing of beauty. Did <lb/>
not God make him in His own <lb/>
then collect nature's rarest <lb/>
gens into the garden of Eden <lb/>
and leave his firs-, man cradled <lb/>
in the lap of beauty Nature's <lb/>
beauties, which are but God's <lb/>
thoughts have an <lb/>
unbounded power over us. The <lb/>
mountains their heaven- <lb/>
piercing Is; the ocean roaring <lb/>
and rumbling with the <lb/>
Itself; the sun, with its <lb/>
majestic rise and mellow decline; <lb/>
the strains of music <lb/>
the meanest flower that <lb/>
s give <lb/>
Th- t do often lie too <lb/>
i; f -r tears. <lb/>
his <lb/>
wit <lb/>
It <lb/>
feat <lb/>
rug <lb/>
his grasp, <lb/>
Or what's a heaven <lb/>
To shut a child in an <lb/>
school-room with all the <lb/>
beauties of nature just outside <lb/>
is to reiterate the predicaments <lb/>
of Tantalus who was placed in a <lb/>
pool of water up to his chin with <lb/>
a bough of apples swaying above <lb/>
his head. When he stooped to <lb/>
quench his agonizing thirst the <lb/>
water would mockingly recede, <lb/>
and as often as he reached his <lb/>
hungry hand for an apple just <lb/>
SO often did the bough sway be- <lb/>
his reach. When school- <lb/>
rooms are so unattractive and <lb/>
the outside world so beautiful, <lb/>
small wonder that children don't <lb/>
like going to school. <lb/>
My Mr. College <lb/>
w had the supervision of <lb/>
three schools in a county of <lb/>
North Carolina asked me to visit <lb/>
bis schools with him. First we <lb/>
went t the neighborhood of <lb/>
iv Creek where the <lb/>
schools had been consolidated. <lb/>
The cleanliness of the large room <lb/>
was attractive, but the most <lb/>
striking feature was the <lb/>
The ceiling and were <lb/>
painted and the walls plastered. <lb/>
At a glance the eye <lb/>
scanned nicely framed portraits <lb/>
of such patriots as Washington, <lb/>
such authors as Longfellow until <lb/>
it rested on the benign <lb/>
of the great teacher him- <lb/>
self. There were other pictures <lb/>
which told stories of mercy, hope <lb/>
courage, faith and charity. On <lb/>
top of the book case was a bust <lb/>
of Socrates, one of Minerva <lb/>
the goddess of Wisdom. The <lb/>
windows were curtained with <lb/>
white lawn ruffled and draped <lb/>
gracefully about the casements. <lb/>
In the sunny ones sat pots of <lb/>
and geraniums. In a <lb/>
corner was a pyramidal arrange- <lb/>
of shelves on which <lb/>
pots ferns, fragrant flower- <lb/>
plants, and graceful vines. <lb/>
On the teach-rs desk sat a vase <lb/>
of cut flower and on the floor in <lb/>
front was spread a rug. The <lb/>
charm of the room was <lb/>
and I went away thinking <lb/>
money is like a fairy's wand, its <lb/>
magical touch can change hovels <lb/>
into palaces. <lb/>
next school we <lb/>
said my friend, in Sleepy <lb/>
Hollow. The people there have <lb/>
money, but their ambition has <lb/>
not been kindled for anything <lb/>
better than the old <lb/>
able school Sure enough <lb/>
the room was as rough as a chest- <lb/>
nut burr both inside and out. <lb/>
No paint, no pictures, no cur- <lb/>
no flags or flowers were <lb/>
here. I closed the door with a <lb/>
bang, for I was repulsed by the <lb/>
room and impatient with people <lb/>
who were so dead always as to <lb/>
such a place. <lb/>
said Mr. <lb/>
ate. feel the useless <lb/>
necessity of and <lb/>
co they squander their money in <lb/>
providing these luxuries and re- <lb/>
main indifferent to the <lb/>
ties of the school <lb/>
Next we visited the school at <lb/>
y Cross roads. The build- <lb/>
was e the one in <lb/>
Sleepy Hollow. Inside we found <lb/>
the bright of a progressive <lb/>
young teacher. In pretty group- j <lb/>
the walls were <lb/>
ranged pictures cut from <lb/>
nines; calendars were hanging <lb/>
here and there. The bright <lb/>
pictures from I he back of scratch <lb/>
tablets had been pasted in pan- <lb/>
on card board, an so at- <lb/>
tractive pictures were made. <lb/>
There were no curtain-; but <lb/>
around each window was twined <lb/>
a bamboo vino. On the table <lb/>
was a holding a <lb/>
wild flowers. There some <lb/>
boxes on a containing ferns <lb/>
the boys had got from the <lb/>
When we ab her <lb/>
decoration the teacher id, <lb/>
thought to myself, I do <lb/>
have bad walls and no n o I <lb/>
can and I shall the <lb/>
difficulty, find that Got <lb/>
those who help I <lb/>
am going to use Perry pi <lb/>
and have one corner of my room <lb/>
a literary corner, decorated with <lb/>
pictures of authors, another <lb/>
orated with Bible pictures and <lb/>
the third is to be, the patriot's <lb/>
corner, in the fourth I shall put <lb/>
have better things if we but <lb/>
desire them with such force as <lb/>
to our desires into <lb/>
actual realizations. <lb/>
says Ruskin <lb/>
intended for the solace of <lb/>
nary humanity. Children love <lb/>
It require no money <lb/>
to our rooms with autumn <lb/>
leaves and golden In the <lb/>
spring when the world is one <lb/>
blooming flower bed. the teacher <lb/>
who neglects to have flowers in <lb/>
her room is responsible to God <lb/>
for one lost opportunity. Money <lb/>
furnishes rooms with handsome <lb/>
pictures, fine maps, flags and <lb/>
statuary, but how thankful I am <lb/>
we don't have to pay God for <lb/>
this and beautiful ex- <lb/>
of his flower. <lb/>
A beautifully decorated room <lb/>
warmed by a noble teacher's <lb/>
certainly begets a love <lb/>
for school, is conducive to more <lb/>
and better labor and has an ad- <lb/>
effect on the discipline. <lb/>
Apart from the cheer and hap- <lb/>
brought on the wing of <lb/>
beauty, its chiefest value is the <lb/>
appeal to the finer nature. It's <lb/>
effect is to calm men and make <lb/>
them cultured. How <lb/>
powerful is this thing called <lb/>
beauty. <lb/>
Man is but a reflection of all <lb/>
that he has seen and heard. <lb/>
Then let us surround him from <lb/>
his infancy with things lovely <lb/>
that the reflection, too. may be <lb/>
The is the <lb/>
Godlike side. Let us cultivate <lb/>
this side, for many there be who <lb/>
shall enter fields of culture and <lb/>
Christianity through the gate <lb/>
called Beautiful. <lb/>
WORK AND EFFICIENCY. <lb/>
Remedy For Every <lb/>
to Make Life Healthy. <lb/>
It is the kind of work in which a <lb/>
mar. is engaged which determines <lb/>
for him the meaning of the <lb/>
term The success of <lb/>
his efforts may depend upon the <lb/>
quantity of his output or it may de- <lb/>
pend upon quality. Quality <lb/>
Quantity Upon these two hung all <lb/>
the laws of efficiency. <lb/>
For of us it is possible to in- <lb/>
crease the duration of his best mo- <lb/>
and to render them more <lb/>
It is also possible for us to <lb/>
reduce the number and the length <lb/>
of those of depression and <lb/>
low vitality when our work <lb/>
and our lives lack snap and en- <lb/>
If ire succeed in bringing <lb/>
about such a change we shall have <lb/>
raised the whole plane of our living <lb/>
to something higher and more ad- <lb/>
Our work will be <lb/>
of results that would otherwise <lb/>
have been quite oar reach. <lb/>
There conditions for each in- <lb/>
under which he can do the <lb/>
most and the best work. It is bis <lb/>
business to ascertain those <lb/>
and to comply with them. <lb/>
It is for the nervous, high <lb/>
strung, quickly fatigued man to try <lb/>
to live by the same as <lb/>
his phlegmatic, even tempered <lb/>
neighbor. The conditions under <lb/>
which the two men produce the best <lb/>
results are not identical. The man <lb/>
who can't work at his best until aft- <lb/>
a long period of warming ought <lb/>
to stick to his job. when e he has <lb/>
got it, as long as he can keep up to <lb/>
the high grade level. That is the <lb/>
only real economy for him. On the <lb/>
other hand, the man who <lb/>
most when he works by <lb/>
spurts and takes interval- of <lb/>
between times ought not to feel <lb/>
that he is doing wrong when he <lb/>
gives up imitating the steady work- <lb/>
man. System and continuous <lb/>
decrease, not increase, his <lb/>
Both men can do high <lb/>
grade work, bu not under the same <lb/>
conditions. <lb/>
Every man to discover the <lb/>
special conditions of hi- own best <lb/>
work and try to -h <lb/>
for himself so M he can. <lb/>
Otherwise I some- <lb/>
where. much <lb/>
la lost th i every- <lb/>
through the i mold <lb/>
World's Wort, <lb/>
id's home; earth <lb/>
and n <lb/>
vision of man <lb/>
decorated. <lb/>
. ; pit with <lb/>
. i rising <lb/>
i delicate tints of <lb/>
I . Here and there <lb/>
. floor ire placed green <lb/>
of grass showered with <lb/>
flowers. It is dotted <lb/>
with silvery lakes and mighty <lb/>
cities and over all is placed Sol, <lb/>
the janitor, who keeps it bright, pictures of men and things <lb/>
Though we are j Our visit was over, I <lb/>
powerless to have anything so, was touched and inspired. Many <lb/>
grand, we can imitate our model houses our Old North , <lb/>
at least, for arc at Poverty <lb/>
man's reach should we shall surely<lb/>
i. <lb/>
rd . . . he is <lb/>
i tint i <lb/>
Ins <lb/>
Me is <lb/>
a . <lb/>
. critical <lb/>
f and <lb/>
utters. <lb/>
. II. and not a <lb/>
. . when fearful- <lb/>
i from <lb/>
e, <lb/>
. in en- <lb/>
he is the <lb/>
Bona- <lb/>
t Ii i, . U <lb/>
There is real pleasure in chewing the beet tobacco grown <lb/>
where the best tobacco grows -in the famous Piedmont <lb/>
country <lb/>
CHEW WHAT YOU KNOW AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb/>
Piedmont <lb/>
belt <lb/>
-.- -3- .; <lb/>
Only choice of well matured and <lb/>
cured tobacco is in making SCHNAPPS. <lb/>
That's why -nu of <lb/>
brands, as shown by internal Revenue statistics <lb/>
for a fiscal the wonderful growth of six I <lb/>
and one-quarter million pounds, or net gain of <lb/>
one-third of the entire increased consumption <lb/>
of chewing and smoking in the <lb/>
United States. <lb/>
M. BLOW, Manager and Authorized Agent <lb/>
. CH a. <lb/>
we <lb/>
I J . . , I i . <lb/>
All <lb/>
Evidently, chewers cannot resist the <lb/>
flavor and they cheer SCHNAPPS be- <lb/>
cause SCHNAPPS cheers them more <lb/>
than any other chewing tobacco and <lb/>
every chews SCHNAPPS panes the <lb/>
good thing chewer make other chew, <lb/>
the fact is now established that there <lb/>
are many more chewers and pounds of tobacco <lb/>
chewed, to the population, in those States where <lb/>
SCHNAPPS tobacco was first sold than there are in <lb/>
the Stales where SCHNAPPS has not yet been offered <lb/>
to the trade. <lb/>
for <lb/>
then mail t <lb/>
receive <lb/>
h. V i's office. We <lb/>
vS- i print in . <lb/>
l-i-SitS ow any sensible man can <lb/>
; hearing Senator Lee S. Over- <lb/>
be other than a <lb/>
AND KNOW WHAT YOU ARE <lb/>
Insist <lb/>
traP- <lb/>
v iSCHNAPPS is like a cup of fine Java coffee, sweetened <lb/>
just enough to bring out its natural, stimulating qualities. <lb/>
SCHNAPPS pleases all classes of the rich, be- <lb/>
cause they do not find a chew pleases them better <lb/>
at any price; the poor, because it is mere economical than <lb/>
the larger or plugs and they get their money's worth <lb/>
of the snappy, stimulating flavor so appreciated by tobacco <lb/>
lovers. All imitations contain much more sweetening- than <lb/>
SCHNAPPS. They are made that way to hide poor tobacco <lb/>
properly cured. <lb/>
For the man who chews tobacco for tobacco's sake, there is <lb/>
like SCHNAPPS. <lb/>
Sold at per pound in cuts. Strictly and <lb/>
B. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO <lb/>
H. A. <lb/>
JOHN A HICKS <lb/>
flicks. <lb/>
Big Sale Now Going On. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C,<lb/>
I l I-. II ii mil <lb/>
way down at J. H. <lb/>
I Bro, next to Early Hotel. <lb/>
In., <lb/>
e very much regret to learn <lb/>
M. M. Sauls is confined to <lb/>
home with malarial fever, <lb/>
and they are legion, <lb/>
id around Ayden, earnestly <lb/>
a speedy recovery. <lb/>
I i , L; trial, I I <lb/>
on need meal, ship stuff <lb/>
van <lb/>
ITS. Charlie Johnson and child- <lb/>
from a visit to <lb/>
Taylor, <lb/>
N. O. i- nun to <lb/>
work if want to be <lb/>
Bf- Dunn, of Kinston; is here <lb/>
visit to her cousin, Mrs. R. <lb/>
union. <lb/>
we can make it to his <lb/>
as as we have a solid <lb/>
expect them to arrive <lb/>
week. Tyson. <lb/>
is rapidly coming in. <lb/>
suppose there were some- <lb/>
; like bales sold here <lb/>
and Monday. <lb/>
in i in I- lint is now c oil <lb/>
a d will Oil t auto nave<lb/>
lie two year old baby of Mr. <lb/>
Mrs. E. L. Brown died yes- <lb/>
lay morning and was buried <lb/>
afternoon. Rev. T. H. <lb/>
of LaGrange, will conduct <lb/>
services. <lb/>
must go, the season <lb/>
advanced. The prices nut <lb/>
i lit most buy- <lb/>
. and <lb/>
house of ton <lb/>
Ridge Spring, caught <lb/>
Saturday and came near <lb/>
j, as it was only a <lb/>
damage was sustained. <lb/>
, baa been oil on <lb/>
III n <lb/>
Mr. Yelverton, of Fremont, <lb/>
has temporarily located in <lb/>
den and accepted a <lb/>
book keeper with Winslow <lb/>
Mills. <lb/>
Misses Mary Whitehead, Hen- <lb/>
Brown, Lilian Munn, Dora <lb/>
Lena and Ni- <lb/>
Cannon and Prof. <lb/>
attended the teacher's outing in <lb/>
Greenville Saturday. <lb/>
We want to make room for other <lb/>
stocks and in order to do so we are <lb/>
very cheap bargains in sum- <lb/>
mer We must move them <lb/>
i lie way and have put a price <lb/>
n them that will be sure get <lb/>
the off Now is time to get <lb/>
value for Cannon <lb/>
F A nice one farm <lb/>
., es more or less <lb/>
. i thin <lb/>
of Good well wale <lb/>
and out s. Land in <lb/>
i of cultivation. Apply to <lb/>
J. <lb/>
g. X <lb/>
THE SONS LIBERTY. <lb/>
ii know <lb/>
its denied <lb/>
to tax the <lb/>
i it <lb/>
fore<lb/>
ti<lb/>
author i of<lb/>
AIR. <lb/>
Impurity, <lb/>
Fred and <lb/>
spent Sunday with Mrs. <lb/>
new <lb/>
-an <lb/>
I'm, <lb/>
M II. <lb/>
e and <lb/>
and <lb/>
all <lb/>
horses <lb/>
-Ions. <lb/>
week <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
i i n F. M <lb/>
A i , <lb/>
duly <lb/>
In f th of <lb/>
Pit C. . K-T <lb/>
the will hi- i tor cash l-fur. <lb/>
In on Md <lb/>
tit follow <lb/>
Hi-Mi of tract of <lb/>
v. th <lb/>
tide riv-r, u u . i -d th- north by <lb/>
t- of L. if. <lb/>
h. ti on Nip by the J <lb/>
. w n . of I <lb/>
-Urn. more or and <lb/>
i- K. M. <lb/>
T, J. Com <lb/>
in. UM n <lb/>
I- l lend II to Mid , <lb/>
I. <lb/>
i I <lb/>
In and examine my <lb/>
CORN PLANTERS, GUANO DIS <lb/>
HARROWS, SMOOTHING HARROWS, OW <lb/>
AND TWO HORSE STEEL PLOWS, WIRE <lb/>
FENCE FOR FARM OR GARDEN AND WASH- <lb/>
MACHINES. <lb/>
Yours to serve, <lb/>
H. L. <lb/>
The Hardware <lb/>
J. and <lb/>
left for State fair this <lb/>
pg. <lb/>
I'll AN i i i car <lb/>
I i.-iii, and can <lb/>
buy before <lb/>
k Lilly Co <lb/>
as a thunder clap among the <lb/>
here Saturday when <lb/>
from Greenville was <lb/>
the withdrawal <lb/>
A. Sugg as an aspirant <lb/>
. It was also a sky <lb/>
when the people were <lb/>
it was without his consent or <lb/>
that the name of <lb/>
tr Fred was <lb/>
ed in the Radical list, that he <lb/>
a Democrat and proposed in <lb/>
coming election to vote the <lb/>
e Democratic ticket, It was <lb/>
keep on a <lb/>
feed stuff at lowest cash <lb/>
Such oats, corn, <lb/>
meal mil brand <lb/>
Mn Lilly A Co. <lb/>
lief of Police Alexander has <lb/>
from his vacation and <lb/>
med his duties on force. <lb/>
E. C. Flynn and <lb/>
. or Fortress Monroe, who <lb/>
. i been to see B. F. Early, <lb/>
Mrs. Flynn, left for <lb/>
; homes Monday. Mr. Early <lb/>
critically ill. <lb/>
There Are Two Forms of <lb/>
C. and Solid. <lb/>
mil i nice of ventilation <lb/>
, i supply of fresh <lb/>
in rooms, sleeping <lb/>
or insisted <lb/>
upon. Without air is <lb/>
mid air be moder- <lb/>
ate, cannot be main- <lb/>
it is astonishing <lb/>
and a proof of the wonderful <lb/>
adaptation of living beings to their <lb/>
environment to note how great an <lb/>
amount of contamination of the air <lb/>
can lie borne with seeming <lb/>
arc two forms of impurity <lb/>
in mid The <lb/>
gases, from <lb/>
from the am in <lb/>
houses from the unnoticed <lb/>
leaks from the gas pipes and from <lb/>
defective plumbing, are the most <lb/>
injurious. Tor the removal of these <lb/>
ventilation through open win- <lb/>
and is most <lb/>
efficacious, it is of little <lb/>
ice in the removal of the other kind <lb/>
of is to say, the <lb/>
particles of <lb/>
which are always floating in the air <lb/>
of houses as well as in that of the <lb/>
streets <lb/>
A beam of sunlight entering <lb/>
through a half closed shutter makes <lb/>
visible this dust, and a one looks <lb/>
with startled eyes on the beam <lb/>
which lights up the floating <lb/>
the wonder grows that the <lb/>
lungs an- 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 ore <lb/>
designed to filter the by arrest- <lb/>
these particles they can <lb/>
enter the delicate air 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/>
Workmen in dusty trades <lb/>
carpet heaters, coal miners, pot- <lb/>
grinders, felt <lb/>
acquire disease of the lungs from <lb/>
the inhalation of dust. <lb/>
Dual particle are injurious not <lb/>
only mechanically, but also and <lb/>
chiefly because they act as <lb/>
of disease <lb/>
Since it is impossible to <lb/>
entirely by ventilation, it is <lb/>
necessary to do what is practicable <lb/>
to prevent its dissemination through <lb/>
the air. Settled dust is Ugly, hut <lb/>
inoffensive Hut when the well <lb/>
meaning but ignorant housewife <lb/>
flops it into the air with a <lb/>
duster she only rouses the sleeping <lb/>
lion. Brooms and feather dusters <lb/>
are relics of barbarism and should <lb/>
be banished. The damp cloth for <lb/>
furniture and the mop and carpet <lb/>
sweeper for floors, or, best of all, <lb/>
the vacuum process, are the modern <lb/>
civilized agents of cleanliness. These <lb/>
gather the dust do not <lb/>
ply scatter it in the where it is <lb/>
invisible, but <lb/>
Companion <lb/>
For Tired Feat. <lb/>
Put a handful of common salt <lb/>
into four quarts of hot water, and <lb/>
while it is as hot u can borne <lb/>
place the feet in it. Afterward rub <lb/>
well with a rough towel. <lb/>
aw. <lb/>
To Paint <lb/>
B Lida Roberson of Gold To keep an open pail of paint <lb/>
been visiting Miss Ni- fresh stir well to dissolve nil the oil, <lb/>
then Hie pail with water. <lb/>
S. Carr, of Greenville, was When the paint In rain needed for <lb/>
Friday. . use pour off tho water. <lb/>
Norfolk's Early Protest Against <lb/>
George's Tyranny. <lb/>
But few the most diligent <lb/>
of <lb/>
that Norfolk <lb/>
right of <lb/>
colonies <lb/>
over two mo <lb/>
of <lb/>
burg <lb/>
r. <lb/>
tires <lb/>
met at Phil; <lb/>
renounced ti <lb/>
Britain. <lb/>
Yet as k a <lb/>
n n . , <lb/>
led the of <lb/>
of in <lb/>
of and certain term <lb/>
their determined opposition to <lb/>
encroachments of British <lb/>
on their rights to govern <lb/>
under the British crown. <lb/>
These Norfolk people did not de <lb/>
their independence. They ex- <lb/>
affirmed their wish to be <lb/>
subjects of King George They <lb/>
merely declared that there should <lb/>
be no taxation without <lb/>
Among the many prominent <lb/>
Norfolk names attached to the doc- <lb/>
arc Henry Tucker, Robert <lb/>
Tucker, Robert Tucker, Jr.; Maxi- <lb/>
Culvert. Thomas Butt. <lb/>
Thomas Willoughby, John Taylor, <lb/>
Jr.; Joseph Hutchings, Jr., and <lb/>
James Parker. <lb/>
The resolutions adopted read a- <lb/>
Having taken consideration <lb/>
tendency of that oppressive and <lb/>
unconstitutional act of parliament com <lb/>
called the stamp act and <lb/>
desirous our sentiment should b. <lb/>
known to and <lb/>
we arc a part of the colony which <lb/>
In assembly openly expressed <lb/>
detestation of the said act. which ll <lb/>
with ruin and productive o <lb/>
the <lb/>
willing to rivet the shackles of <lb/>
d oppression on and <lb/>
; et unborn, v.-e have I <lb/>
to the following <lb/>
That we <lb/>
lord and sovereign. King George III., <lb/>
to our and lawful <lb/>
and t we will at all times to the <lb/>
most f our power and ability <lb/>
and his most sacred person, <lb/>
and d. and shall always be <lb/>
called upon to as <lb/>
with our lives and <lb/>
tunes and defend his Just an. <lb/>
prerogatives. <lb/>
Resolved. That will by all <lb/>
ways and means which Divine <lb/>
has put Into our hands defend <lb/>
In the full enjoyment of, and preserve i <lb/>
violate to those <lb/>
of all free born <lb/>
taxed only by <lb/>
lives of their own choosing and of <lb/>
tried by none hut a Jury of their peers <lb/>
And that If we quietly submit to <lb/>
of said stamp act all out <lb/>
claims to civil liberty will be lost w <lb/>
and our subjects In America <lb/>
Of the Invaluable <lb/>
Resolved. That a commute <lb/>
who shall In such manner as they <lb/>
think proper upon necessary business <lb/>
and make public the above resolutions <lb/>
and that they correspond as they shall <lb/>
see occasion with the Associated Sons <lb/>
and Friends to Liberty In the other Brit <lb/>
colonies In America. <lb/>
FALL, 1906 <lb/>
W e are daily our f all line of <lb/>
DRY <lb/>
DRESS GOODS. <lb/>
nOES<lb/>
C v <lb/>
and it s us pleasure to say that our <lb/>
stock th s fall is as complete as we can <lb/>
make it. Our line of men's and boy's <lb/>
clothing is exceptionally good this season <lb/>
and if you call and inspect our line, <lb/>
we will convince you that our styles are <lb/>
latest and prices as reasonable as can <lb/>
be made. We have striven hard to give <lb/>
our good for the least <lb/>
money possible and with the celebrated c in stock <lb/>
We ink we can serve you. <lb/>
Our line of dress goods is more complete this fall than ever, and we think <lb/>
we can save you money. We pay special attention to this part of our business <lb/>
and have bought only the latest styles, with right. In our shoe department <lb/>
celebrated shoes tor women. Every pair <lb/>
famous and shoes for men, none better <lb/>
made. We have recently inc our furniture stock, and are in position to sell <lb/>
you at the lowest possible prices. See our line of suits and roll foot steads. We <lb/>
also have in some rockers at very low prices. Buy our Royal <lb/>
Elastic Felt <lb/>
We your business and if you will come to see us we will assure you <lb/>
treatment. action at our your <lb/>
CO <lb/>
Leader in Low Prices. <lb/>
As a re-nit of <lb/>
those resolutions <lb/>
who commanded <lb/>
Norfolk, made n t <lb/>
fired fin <lb/>
tile adoption <lb/>
Lord <lb/>
d British fleet off. <lb/>
ministration be- j <lb/>
i hots were. i,,,,,, <lb/>
Liverpool. <lb/>
School <lb/>
Stationery <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Dixon <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. <lb/>
Office Brick Railroad B <lb/>
Ayden. N. C. <lb/>
On bin Annum <lb/>
nil John <lb/>
d Fare wish- <lb/>
III <lb/>
In- <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Now is your time to save <lb/>
money by coining to us for <lb/>
children's school requisites; <lb/>
pens, era- <lb/>
we have also a grout assort- <lb/>
of <lb/>
note tip <lb/>
all tints plain or hemstitch- <lb/>
ed <lb/>
The mainstay of social <lb/>
M. SAULS, Druggist. <lb/>
AYDEN, N. <lb/>
FREE <lb/>
To sufferers of Kidney, Liver or <lb/>
Bladder Troubles. Other <lb/>
say a bottle and if <lb/>
it cure we will d <lb/>
your We say a <lb/>
full 11.00 free bottle t f <lb/>
SOL and if it benefits then <lb/>
use SOL until <lb/>
r for use advt entitles you <lb/>
to a bottle SOL at <lb/>
DRUG STORE. <lb/>
Only a limited number of bottles <lb/>
given away. Don't miss this <lb/>
to test <lb/>
SOL. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
At the of business Sept. Hi. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
and -10,827.34 <lb/>
Overdrafts Secured 663.21 <lb/>
Furniture and Fixtures 610.59 <lb/>
Due from Hanks, <lb/>
Cash Items, 80.80 <lb/>
Gold Coin, 200.00 <lb/>
Silver Coin, 1,232 <lb/>
Dank notes and <lb/>
other U. notes 6,045.00 <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital stock paid in, <lb/>
Surplus fund 8,700.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits less <lb/>
expenses, 720.86 <lb/>
Dividends unpaid . 102.110 <lb/>
Deposits subject to check. 41,003.48 <lb/>
Cashier's <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
456,2.21 <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, <lb/>
COUNTY OF PUT, <lb/>
I, J. R. Smith, Cashier of above-named bank, do solemnly <lb/>
that the statement is to beet of my and be- <lb/>
lief. . J. R. SMITH, Cashier. <lb/>
J. R. SMITH <lb/>
JOSEPH <lb/>
R. CANNON <lb/>
Public , <lb/>
SECOND SERIES <lb/>
BUILDING AND LOAN <lb/>
ASSOCIATION. <lb/>
Now otters another series of its stock to the public bear- <lb/>
date of Nov. <lb/>
to its share holders since its May <lb/>
SERIES LIMITED TO SHARES <lb/>
The books are now open and you can secure this stock by <lb/>
plying to the Secretary who will be glad to give you information <lb/>
Constitution and by-laws Will <lb/>
be on request. <lb/>
OFFICERS <lb/>
H. A. WHITE, Pres. G. S. PRICHARD, Vice Pies, <lb/>
WHITE, and Treas <lb/>
H. A. <lb/>
it t; Flanagan <lb/>
it j. <lb/>
l Moore, <lb/>
H. v . h. <lb/>
It, O <lb/>
G. K <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Ii V C, <lb/>
H, , <lb/>
S. T. Into <lb/>
Save the Worry <lb/>
The hot weather brings you <lb/>
without adding to it by <lb/>
r supper. With such a stock of <lb/>
Grocer es, Canned Goods, Package <lb/>
Goods, Pickles, Butter Cheese, Coffee, <lb/>
Tea, Cakes, Candies, Fruits. Ac as I carry, tho selecting and buy- <lb/>
are easy and the all saved It will take no argument to <lb/>
you of if you visit my store and what I <lb/>
You can And me one door North of <lb/>
J. B<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019663_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
THE QUEER <lb/>
ALL OVER THE <lb/>
Customs of These Sieve Holding <lb/>
Natives of Africa. <lb/>
The lire on the <lb/>
Wok of the Kongo between <lb/>
and or between the <lb/>
twentieth mid twenty-second <lb/>
of east longitude, and to <lb/>
long in the I <lb/>
to By <lb/>
of the I <lb/>
d forth men, others <lb/>
the and yet a third kind <lb/>
These .-lave.- are <lb/>
glares birth or men sold for <lb/>
Ti ire well treated, and <lb/>
an island on <lb/>
Much i i who ire i<lb/>
I rm <lb/>
when a man, not <lb/>
In-. . <lb/>
obtain one. <lb/>
i i mi <lb/>
of the <lb/>
One I <lb/>
man <lb/>
has <lb/>
of <lb/>
m- i a <lb/>
y. mi the<lb/>
in <lb/>
, d <lb/>
kit <lb/>
. their h i <lb/>
fends. H ti <lb/>
and wrestling <lb/>
mat. i The <lb/>
tor a I red. S i are <lb/>
burial, but In I <lb/>
i in t ii the bodies, <lb/>
ton i in which they are <lb/>
i e colored. <lb/>
i. Here in life after <lb/>
. id a spirits. They think <lb/>
Their J. and friends are <lb/>
always thorn, all hough <lb/>
they cannot be teen. Their god is <lb/>
named account of <lb/>
origin of the white mid black <lb/>
curious. I sent hi i are always <lb/>
ton, on earth to see what ; <lb/>
the races of mankind were doing. <lb/>
he was well re- <lb/>
so he gave them a white skin <lb/>
sad m knowledge, among <lb/>
the Africans he was received, <lb/>
hi black and stupid. <lb/>
One of myths entertained by <lb/>
; this people that Kongo and <lb/>
, Its tributaries were created <lb/>
the tears of the tribe weeping for <lb/>
favorite chief long ago. The moon <lb/>
ft supposed be an immense ship <lb/>
in conveying the souls of <lb/>
the dead to and the stars <lb/>
are tin eyes of the dead, who sleep <lb/>
Brass, copper or tin vessels <lb/>
used in ring Id as <lb/>
Points to Remember Win Preparing <lb/>
Pickles. <lb/>
Vinegar used for pickling must <lb/>
be of the best, whether cider, <lb/>
wine or grain vinegar. Never l I <lb/>
it longer than five or six minute.-, <lb/>
unless you wish to reduce its <lb/>
strength. <lb/>
Bras <lb/>
no <lb/>
. of the . id m these met- <lb/>
. . . t in pro n <lb/>
son in pit <lb/>
earthenware is also affected by <lb/>
the action of the vinegar. Use <lb/>
of porcelain or granite ware for <lb/>
the cooking no glass or <lb/>
ware jars fir keeping them. <lb/>
W i n the jars an- filled the <lb/>
gar must completely rover the <lb/>
fruit. Tie the spices up in <lb/>
less whole <lb/>
the I i <lb/>
i the mustard pickles, i I <lb/>
. etc., an Indian saffron called <lb/>
turmeric is used. <lb/>
A very small quantity of <lb/>
; i in kin j the pickles firm <lb/>
, the u-e of alum is an <lb/>
i o-i r u i <lb/>
,. i e. layers i i- <lb/>
rs ., are beating v. ill <lb/>
them. <lb/>
The C to cf China. <lb/>
If i . with gold it <lb/>
i ever I with M <lb/>
as a dull in effect and i <lb/>
causes i c gill to rub off. <lb/>
Hot water d .- no harm. It is I <lb/>
t r soft, if no rain water be <lb/>
is an easy r to hod it <lb/>
well, hen reduce it the proper <lb/>
temperature. The softer the dry- <lb/>
in o it the mo- , <lb/>
the articles are out of the <lb/>
rinse in cold water is to re- i <lb/>
the Besides, many j <lb/>
a- are due to the sudden <lb/>
from hot to cold water. <lb/>
Cooking <lb/>
There is quite a difference in <lb/>
quality and flavor of wild ducks. <lb/>
The canvasback and redhead ducks <lb/>
best cooked without <lb/>
Menu a pity to stuff <lb/>
these fine birds. <lb/>
Mallards, teals, and <lb/>
wood ducks may stuffed with rice, <lb/>
hominy or potatoes nicely seasoned <lb/>
with chopped English walnuts. Can- <lb/>
and redheads are vegetable <lb/>
hence the flavor is sweet. <lb/>
AN ARABIAN TRIAL. <lb/>
Like Patriarchal of OW <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
In his of a Year's <lb/>
Tl . I and East- <lb/>
Mr. gives a <lb/>
n m n dings in <lb/>
A ,. Hi was s <lb/>
hearing before a <lb/>
and <lb/>
the<lb/>
.-t in- <lb/>
t . , . .we <lb/>
Ci<lb/>
In <lb/>
if<lb/>
TO<lb/>
bud a <lb/>
is <lb/>
this <lb/>
I the <lb/>
i.<lb/>
ho lo <lb/>
ii re <lb/>
yo i <lb/>
th <lb/>
is m th <lb/>
swiping In <lb/>
hear, <lb/>
the cu <lb/>
Of i <lb/>
fore d, <lb/>
of h. for <lb/>
el. <lb/>
i- <lb/>
i a <lb/>
. ii I <lb/>
in, in <lb/>
ho <lb/>
. with <lb/>
lent, ho i <lb/>
do h <lb/>
. . e the <lb/>
i- <lb/>
his its <lb/>
, to III. <lb/>
w. <lb/>
Do yo . <lb/>
reminder <lb/>
lie is mil <lb/>
I j-; i <lb/>
i I ii on, <lb/>
I i-<lb/>
. I i <lb/>
Cod, child. It <lb/>
You shall not <lb/>
Bleeding Gums. <lb/>
Where there is bleeding of the <lb/>
gums table salt is good. It may be <lb/>
gently rubbed into the gums or a <lb/>
little used on the brush. Camphor <lb/>
is also a good thing to use where the <lb/>
gums are not very firm, and a gm d <lb/>
powder that can put up by any <lb/>
druggist is made of half an Ounce <lb/>
of gum camphor, two and <lb/>
ounces chalk and <lb/>
and one-half ounces of pulverized <lb/>
orris root. <lb/>
Keeping Lemons <lb/>
Lemons should always well <lb/>
d in warm water before they <lb/>
., pi is to be <lb/>
. i. , lion it will be <lb/>
found the of a 1- -on <lb/>
i- anything but clean. To <lb/>
j m i up put them in <lb/>
.; cover with cold <lb/>
I . the water every <lb/>
r four J he lemons <lb/>
will a month. <lb/>
Ingrowing flails. <lb/>
For . re nova the <lb/>
nil i e of pa- <lb/>
too spoonful <lb/>
. . pour i ind <lb/>
e nail on s d until re <lb/>
, . . a few <lb/>
j Ii v the mutton <lb/>
tallow, lard will lo or any kind o <lb/>
t and as l as an be borne <lb/>
Department <lb/>
NEWS. <lb/>
Every charm and grace of <lb/>
nine footwear finds expression <lb/>
this season in <lb/>
shoes. No fashionableness of <lb/>
costume will cover a neglect of <lb/>
footwear, for are not woman's <lb/>
credentials to refinement signed <lb/>
by her shoes and her passport <lb/>
therefore should be the <lb/>
thy <lb/>
If you have never n a just try one pair. It <lb/>
will work wonders in e locks your These claiming shoes <lb/>
can be found here in a lull assortment styles and sizes. <lb/>
The cloaks and furs are here in great abundance of <lb/>
styles and prices. We have the newest and most <lb/>
styles and yon should give them a look before buy- <lb/>
a, -mos <lb/>
FAY <lb/>
no mending. They are the ideal <lb/>
stockings for Winter. <lb/>
Never wrinkle or come down as they fasten securely <lb/>
at the waist. They are made of the best yarns and <lb/>
only nor-poisonous DYES are used in their construe- <lb/>
EVERY PAIR GUARANTEED TO SATISFACTION AFTER A FAIR <lb/>
TRIAL OF NOT LESS I FOUR WE KS <lb/>
I Egg HY <lb/>
As we lay In the <lb/>
you away. <lb/>
But mil <lb/>
Bath do Ml <lb/>
Ami now Is hi <lb/>
and com lo play <lb/>
For nine long months you. <lb/>
Bo you needn't make n fuss. <lb/>
For we shall guide you. <lb/>
Aid you'll I .- I . . I. v <lb/>
Poet <lb/>
be i <lb/>
T i ailed on I wit- <lb/>
fan ll province, to <lb/>
their -av. and on their confirmation , . <lb/>
mi the he gavel January, the <lb/>
orders to two of his satellites to, the primrose; March, the violet; <lb/>
March for and before him the April, the daisy; May, the haw- <lb/>
p. n, ho added to thorn; Juno, the honeysuckle; July, <lb/>
right, daddy, you the water lily; August, the poppy; <lb/>
your own. Put con-1 September, the morning glory; <lb/>
and composedly the hop blossom; November, <lb/>
back to his place. I the December, th. <lb/>
No. -14 price only <lb/>
No. price only <lb/>
No. sizes to price only <lb/>
No. to price only <lb/>
We heartily recommend that you give Fay a <lb/>
fair trial. <lb/>
J. R. WM. G.<lb/>
j mis i him -1 j. <lb/>
IV <lb/>
m m<lb/>
REFLECT <lb/>
J Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR <lb/>
PITT DAY OCTOBER 1906 <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
SEE THEY STAND <lb/>
RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT. <lb/>
COULDN'T <lb/>
Republicans Still Bid for The <lb/>
Vote. <lb/>
The following is a <lb/>
from the National Republican <lb/>
Campaign Text-Book for <lb/>
year, which shows I an <lb/>
Whereas, our kind lieu ten- Boy Beats <lb/>
y Father in His wise providence <lb/>
Ii is P fit to remove from our; <lb/>
chap i midst to His Heavenly abode our; <lb/>
brother Robert M. <lb/>
fore we the members of <lb/>
i church, The <lb/>
Endeavor and Sunday school <lb/>
Kore. <lb/>
You j can't t away with <lb/>
I these beys. ,. II h <lb/>
their own way of <lb/>
into lands o <lb/>
He I <lb/>
A i . j <lb/>
; t <lb/>
HAVE<lb/>
ii. i n i <lb/>
till bidding for the <lb/>
. , ,. I e North Carolina, <lb/>
for the . <lb/>
Congressional can m, 1906 <lb/>
page i <lb/>
Colored <lb/>
i lore as <lb/>
to i be i i of <lb/>
i i <lb/>
to the I<lb/>
than l i <lb/>
of North ; <lb/>
in qua I a <lb/>
In North v. i <lb/>
do <lb/>
Resolve 1st. That though we <lb/>
cannot understand the <lb/>
of Providence, yet we bow <lb/>
humble submission to His <lb/>
Divine Will, I v and be- <lb/>
that all things <lb/>
for<lb/>
it, <lb/>
i pay it.<lb/>
in ll <lb/>
of <lb/>
ism is colored citizens, <lb/>
although a minority f the <lb/>
are given participation in <lb/>
the control <lb/>
counties and States, and are <lb/>
elected to public office in <lb/>
these respective units of our <lb/>
governmental system; in the <lb/>
South, the stronghold of <lb/>
racy, the colored citizen is being <lb/>
systematically disfranchised and <lb/>
from effective <lb/>
in the conduct of public <lb/>
affairs, and each year witnesses <lb/>
a narrow of his political and <lb/>
civil rights. The mere mention <lb/>
of the facts well known to every <lb/>
observer of the times will suffice <lb/>
to indicate the relative attitude <lb/>
of the two gr- at political parties <lb/>
the The <lb/>
Republican party believes in the <lb/>
political equality of all men with- <lb/>
out reference to race or nation- <lb/>
and this belief it has sup- <lb/>
ported by the most costly and <lb/>
sanguinary war in the history of <lb/>
our national history. The Dem- <lb/>
party believes in restrict- <lb/>
the citizenship <lb/>
class and has written her <lb/>
I opinion into the <lb/>
I tut ions and practices of nearly <lb/>
every Southern State where that <lb/>
party is dominant. <lb/>
party believes in doc- <lb/>
so expressed by <lb/>
President K n <lb/>
up. n do <lb/>
it r <lb/>
I it <lb/>
i i . i i i and <lb/>
irk lo <lb/>
hie <lb/>
f true to every <lb/>
interest of the church and its <lb/>
societies. One whose life ex- <lb/>
Christian <lb/>
which always marks a faith that <lb/>
leads to our Lord and Savior, <lb/>
who was always willing, patient, <lb/>
loving and forbearing and of a <lb/>
gentle and affectionate <lb/>
He filled his place in all <lb/>
departments of church work <lb/>
with honor to himself and credit <lb/>
to the church. While he will be <lb/>
greatly missed from our meet- <lb/>
yet we will ever cherish <lb/>
the of his <lb/>
faithful service and devotion, <lb/>
3rd. We hereby tender our <lb/>
heartfelt sympathy to his grief <lb/>
stricken wife, father, brother <lb/>
and sister, who were so much <lb/>
devoted to him, also t all <lb/>
who are sorrowful because <lb/>
he is gone from them. To <lb/>
these there should be this com- <lb/>
thought, that he is now <lb/>
with our Savior, free from all <lb/>
suffering and care, and at rest <lb/>
for evermore. <lb/>
4th. That a copy of these res- <lb/>
on our minutes <lb/>
chief. it with all their mis- <lb/>
chief, the home that ,., <lb/>
a boy in it is w-ll it's not just wiring me i t r <lb/>
a ch on <lb/>
In hi the hell in <lb/>
the editor's desk at home land th .,,,,., <lb/>
pip and sack of tobacco, and may p th, . <lb/>
when the night is <lb/>
am m. pi I ., . A , <lb/>
r q on h <lb/>
out ll A doll from <lb/>
i i to the I <lb/>
all <lb/>
tack was i re <lb/>
i to C. T <lb/>
i down to load up , <lb/>
found be filled with bits <lb/>
of paper he had cut up. As we fifty bushel <lb/>
talk paper, and live on paper he was hon to kiss i good <lb/>
wind, but he hadn't learned <lb/>
. . i Denver Post. <lb/>
that that boy must have I <lb/>
concluded we could smoke paper, <lb/>
e R y <lb/>
Collage A <lb/>
in Gets , i, , <lb/>
A End of the <lb/>
kick was <lb/>
. and <lb/>
too. <lb/>
BLACK JACK <lb/>
A New Question. <lb/>
the consideration by a juror <lb/>
of a case in court, Two <lb/>
members of a jury in Durham so <lb/>
considered it, and refused to <lb/>
work on . -y; thereby causing <lb/>
a mistrial in an important suit <lb/>
T jury deliberated until <lb/>
Saturday night, when <lb/>
two of the members then an- <lb/>
-ii that it was then Sun- <lb/>
day id as they could not work <lb/>
on refused further dis- <lb/>
of the case until Monday. <lb/>
court was required to ad- <lb/>
at midnight Sunday, so <lb/>
there was nothing for the judge <lb/>
Black Jack, N. C, Oct. 1906. <lb/>
J. O Johnston attends church <lb/>
at chapel Sunday and <lb/>
returned to his home here Mon- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Miss Lula Mills, who is <lb/>
the Winterville High school, <lb/>
came home Friday and returned <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Abram Dixon and his sister, i to do but order a mistrial. This <lb/>
Earn. <lb/>
he mock marriage at the <lb/>
la . a brilliant . <lb/>
and i I <lb/>
inc . <lb/>
Irvine <lb/>
song, i <lb/>
. In ich the I i <lb/>
the . <lb/>
i . <lb/>
tin <lb/>
. IT, . .- <lb/>
., rs and <lb/>
in the pathway of ihi. . followed the <lb/>
Is and ring-bearer, then <lb/>
maids of honor, and last, the <lb/>
lovely bride leaning on the arm <lb/>
of her father. The groom, with <lb/>
his best man, joined her in front <lb/>
of the dignified bishop, who pro- <lb/>
to unite them in the bonds <lb/>
of padlock. <lb/>
After the ceremony they re- <lb/>
it i is <lb/>
the <lb/>
t is <lb/>
J.<lb/>
In <lb/>
for <lb/>
any <lb/>
I Jar- <lb/>
to <lb/>
,. he <lb/>
the <lb/>
the <lb/>
Mrs. L. C. Mills and Miss Re- <lb/>
Mills all went to Washing- <lb/>
ton Saturday. <lb/>
L. F. Stancill, of Washington, <lb/>
was here Friday. <lb/>
E. L. Clark, who is clerking <lb/>
for C. T. in Greenville, <lb/>
came home Sunday returned <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Abram Dixon <lb/>
is the first instance of <lb/>
the kind on record and there <lb/>
may be some judges who would <lb/>
into the matter to <lb/>
see if it had any bearing on the <lb/>
law against contempt of court. <lb/>
But can thinking about and talk- <lb/>
over a question at issue <lb/>
called That is what <lb/>
the Chronicle puts up to the d- <lb/>
bating society. If thinking <lb/>
I. to the i to <lb/>
l . on any <lb/>
he could find on which to lay his <lb/>
hands. The first thing he saw- <lb/>
was a string of cars standing on <lb/>
a siding near the old freight de- <lb/>
pot. There was only one means <lb/>
of egress into this switch; the <lb/>
other stops up against <lb/>
tired to the strains of South Elm, so the officer got a <lb/>
wedding march, and a lock and <lb/>
the congratulations of the as- locked to the <lb/>
guests in the halls and .,., way <lb/>
parlors. The ceremony the there was no <lb/>
beloved we are j a one of <lb/>
herein the sight of the he to what <lb/>
dean and in the face of this as-. When a shifting <lb/>
company to join engine came along to take out <lb/>
the cars the engineer saw that <lb/>
he would have to pull up the <lb/>
track to get the cars out and <lb/>
he also saw that <lb/>
have to be pulled <lb/>
W. H. talking can be construed as work <lb/>
that. <lb/>
a copy <lb/>
on um . i <lb/>
be sent to the Adams went to New Bern Sun- and that sort work <lb/>
is a <lb/>
family and a to the <lb/>
Watch Tower and Reflector for <lb/>
publication. <lb/>
J. A. Lang, <lb/>
C . E. Society <lb/>
Latham, S. S. <lb/>
i n<lb/>
. <lb/>
Li . i i th <lb/>
o. purpose to <lb/>
exclude colored men from any <lb/>
in the control of local <lb/>
high in <lb/>
e Democratic counsels of his <lb/>
party. <lb/>
stated the <lb/>
fest intention of the Democracy <lb/>
to as far as possible, <lb/>
the colored voters of the country, <lb/>
and in a recent speech <lb/>
South passed through <lb/>
scenes of turbulence and disorder <lb/>
rape and riot. By amend- <lb/>
to State Constitutions, <lb/>
and by legislation the whites <lb/>
the have secured control, <lb/>
for the time being, of their own <lb/>
focal governments, and the col- <lb/>
r ; no longer a political <lb/>
f; ii a State south of the <lb/>
Here is a frank ad- <lb/>
i that Democracy no <lb/>
long . sorts the time-honored <lb/>
maxim i governments derive <lb/>
just powers from the con- <lb/>
sent of the and that <lb/>
only a portion of the citizenry, <lb/>
are in the opinion of its leaders, <lb/>
entitled to a voice in public <lb/>
flairs. <lb/>
Republican party en- <lb/>
courages the highest character <lb/>
in the the Democratic <lb/>
party seeks to degrade it. No <lb/>
Republican Legislature has ever <lb/>
laws inimical to the <lb/>
day. <lb/>
A. C. <lb/>
spent <lb/>
with . <lb/>
I . <lb/>
Jo II <lb/>
of Sunday, then re are <lb/>
. . , many more sinners in this world that ye now tie your hearts to- <lb/>
rt than had counted on, Char- the rope of <lb/>
. i m here lotto Chronicle. . ., i <lb/>
Id the Will thou have <lb/>
this man and this woman <lb/>
firm padlock. If any one can <lb/>
show just cause why they may <lb/>
not be agreeably joined, let her, f <lb/>
speak now, or forever after hold ti,, cars <lb/>
her peace, along and over the ground, so he <lb/>
require and charge you was stand- <lb/>
both, as ye will answer before the <lb/>
faculty, who are supposed to Finally an hour or two <lb/>
all hearts ;,.,.,,,,,,,, peached <lb/>
the movement of all feet, through tho of some <lb/>
that th <lb/>
I B. Convene <lb/>
e C <lb/>
this i . I con <lb/>
y tin i ii of the two <lb/>
. <lb/>
, ii th vi it.-- <lb/>
in No <lb/>
convention of the l <lb/>
of C v. ill co i <lb/>
ii . ear. <lb/>
is new- . i <lb/>
night by <lb/>
in Ti I phi . <lb/>
. armer us <lb/>
her produce In a <lb/>
pan . i a also a <lb/>
i an in the town a few <lb/>
cap k from to <lb/>
Suffolk, <lb/>
mar. northern terminus of <lb/>
the combined roads, and <lb/>
N. C, the southern <lb/>
mites away who has many <lb/>
regular told me that <lb/>
had half her load sold <lb/>
before leaving home, How <lb/>
i this woman for thy governing <lb/>
. lie Will t ii<lb/>
, 1-it <lb/>
. , n <lb/>
. lie <lb/>
in Mr. , . . , <lb/>
e . ,. <lb/>
th speed , <lb/>
now in session in r o worth y I boo <lb/>
which influent- . th b Ion is wife will lei <lb/>
, select Norfolk as its n t meet- i the . <lb/>
place, and also from M . J. <lb/>
H. to Mr. J. . <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mr. Mason and Air. <lb/>
Steed were sent from Nor <lb/>
be paid <lb/>
i i<lb/>
money would <lb/>
and cars <lb/>
it <lb/>
. h<lb/>
minus. The Pamlico, Oriental By telephone. Many farmers <lb/>
Western Railroad was sold do net the immense ad- <lb/>
the Atlantic North Carolina <lb/>
Railroad and certain matters <lb/>
the John L. Roper <lb/>
Company, brought <lb/>
into the consolidation, were <lb/>
disposed of as planned. <lb/>
progress, happiness and comfort <lb/>
or any class of citizens; <lb/>
Democratic legislatures, on <lb/>
the other hand, have enacted <lb/>
laws which make it impossible <lb/>
for a colored person of refine-1 <lb/>
vantages and labor-saving <lb/>
in the telephone. Ry <lb/>
its use. one may learn from the <lb/>
city village the state of the <lb/>
market, the probable demand, <lb/>
any shortage that and be <lb/>
prepared to take advantage of it <lb/>
promptly, while Mr. <lb/>
is finding out too late that there <lb/>
was a brisk demand for the very <lb/>
goods he had lo sell. Market <lb/>
reports in weekly papers are <lb/>
history when received <lb/>
to travel in decency from <lb/>
one part of the State to another. <lb/>
No Republican governor would <lb/>
dare veto a measure for the <lb/>
cation of any class of citizens in <lb/>
the rudiments of knowledge <lb/>
that is just what has recently <lb/>
been done by the chief executive <lb/>
Mississippi. The Republican <lb/>
party is on record as being in <lb/>
favor of the most liberal policies <lb/>
with respect to education, <lb/>
believing that no other position <lb/>
is consistent with the <lb/>
of our <lb/>
th <lb/>
What <lb/>
secure, if possible, the next , , <lb/>
meeting for n an . <lb/>
their efforts have <lb/>
successful. <lb/>
This means that <lb/>
twenty-five and thirty <lb/>
, n . <lb/>
is <lb/>
v. Ii v he I put <lb/>
have this man for thy obedient whereupon <lb/>
husband Wilt thou promise found some y about <lb/>
R. E. him wisely and well <lb/>
to Wilt thou be ever constant and <lb/>
i. e <lb/>
in <lb/>
n sud- <lb/>
his person. <lb/>
in thy upon <lb/>
his nurse, his time and his <lb/>
p. r, and forsaking all else, en- <lb/>
between I to spend his money as <lb/>
thousand thy husband will earn it <lb/>
more people will visit Jamestown for <lb/>
Exposition and Norfolk in <lb/>
when they come . <lb/>
will spend almost a week as <lb/>
guests of this city. <lb/>
At St. Louis i years <lb/>
there were about <lb/>
and delegates alone at the meet- <lb/>
to say nothing of the people <lb/>
attracted lo that city incident . <lb/>
the convention. It is believed the faculty sane <lb/>
that the exposition will bring as let the same stand, day or back on w <lb/>
many if not more people thin d I night, summer or winter, time boy ha <lb/>
St. Louis, and it II i or no Charlotte Ob- . <lb/>
want w. ,. . , i ., . <lb/>
m, , to its capacity to entertain <lb/>
advance information. The expected. Norfolk <lb/>
graph also comes in handy. <lb/>
Progressive <lb/>
County Canvass. <lb/>
The Democratic candidates are <lb/>
having interesting meetings at <lb/>
their appointments tor speakings <lb/>
over the county. They had a <lb/>
large crowd at May's chapel on <lb/>
Tuesday and, also at Falkland <lb/>
Wednesday. The prospects <lb/>
point to a larger Democratic vote <lb/>
than two years ago. <lb/>
Landmark. <lb/>
From Life, <lb/>
There was a lady W h i <lb/>
hastened to the nursery, <lb/>
to her little <lb/>
what do you mean <lb/>
shouting and Play <lb/>
quietly like Tommy. See, <lb/>
doesn't make a <lb/>
course he said <lb/>
the little is our <lb/>
game. He is papa coming home <lb/>
late and lam <lb/>
When to Pa. <lb/>
All exchange says the wise mer- <lb/>
chant will cease to advertise <lb/>
I when trees grow upside down; <lb/>
woman when the beggar wears a crown; <lb/>
I when ice forms on the sun; <lb/>
The steps forth, the when the sparrow w. <lb/>
ring is produced, and the man when gold dollars too cheap; <lb/>
this ring when worn keep; <lb/>
wed and with all my a fish forgets to <lb/>
kisses thee swim; when Satan sings . <lb/>
. and when the girls g i <lb/>
mall <lb/>
pie <lb/>
when <lb/>
fun to break a . w u n all <lb/>
tell the truth; when cold <lb/>
Wilmington, N. Oct. makes you when <lb/>
Early this a the j when <lb/>
; r I e <lb/>
Fire in Cotton Vessel. <lb/>
was discovered under the <lb/>
third hatch among b lies <lb/>
of cotton. the aid of the <lb/>
local fire department and the <lb/>
pumps of the compress, the fire, <lb/>
which seemed to have been <lb/>
for some days, was <lb/>
extinguished. <lb/>
these things all i to pass; <lb/>
then th man wise will <lb/>
neglect to advertise. <lb/>
Two women like to -tail a fuss <lb/>
and then leave their to <lb/>
fight it out. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>