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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
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f fOR THE LITTLE ONES. ALL OVER THE HOUSE. <lb/>
to Ba Played To Spot From <lb/>
With and Clothing. <lb/>
Of course you boys and girls all Spots on carpel <lb/>
how to play but clothing are not , remove. <lb/>
you may not know all the games out dust t may <lb/>
be with them. I on the <lb/>
D know in the chalk <lb/>
. , ,, . , . . is not at hand, <lb/>
o. B is played m the p;, or on w <lb/>
; . f the fabric if can get <lb/>
U I the from the hand to ,, ,,. If not. apply a paste the I <lb/>
he; round; are the eats. ,. to the right side cover <lb/>
place your left hand to the Just. Leave it thus j <lb/>
r twenty-four hours. Now lay i <lb/>
h thicknesses of tissue or <lb/>
paper over the chalk and <lb/>
moderately hot iron ., <lb/>
paper as the <lb/>
the surface. This is best <lb/>
by working from the wrong . <lb/>
f nil the oil is not extracted, <lb/>
household <lb/>
alkali. <lb/>
with the lightly closed,; <lb/>
i and linger <lb/>
the to one a <lb/>
J. k now be thrown up, and, <lb/>
while lie is the air, one of the <lb/>
lour 0.1 the ground must be <lb/>
up and put in the well. <lb/>
Re eat the operation with <lb/>
me I. and fourth <lb/>
. be t <lb/>
Tl., I. . DOW I <lb/>
leaving the dead cats in a <lb/>
Now may be tossed up, and <lb/>
this I its l ; <lb/>
n j u k do <lb/>
or <lb/>
It is t lie It <lb/>
boy- girls are sometimes <lb/>
over the spelling of the great <lb/>
name. It is written in three <lb/>
-it ways- Shakespeare. <lb/>
and ii of <lb/>
these is right The i- <lb/>
ally preferred, though many of our <lb/>
best scholars write it <lb/>
that is right because <lb/>
bis signature appears in <lb/>
that form. At the same lime it <lb/>
should be remembered that the <lb/>
name appeared as Shakespeare on <lb/>
the title page f books he <lb/>
I, and this warrants the <lb/>
lief th he accepted it as the <lb/>
spoiling, in spite of the auto- <lb/>
There is very lit- <lb/>
authority for the form <lb/>
Some <lb/>
Ten Square Feet. <lb/>
the have a elm- i <lb/>
I o one gallon of water add a one <lb/>
can of of lime and <lb/>
r of common washing <lb/>
so h. Allow it I <lb/>
When l ti. ti into <lb/>
fruit . or jugs. A <lb/>
in a of water will <lb/>
. the most soiled clothing, <lb/>
Ii . perfectly. It will cut <lb/>
a-e and dirt out of cooking <lb/>
sinks drain pipe-. Dilute <lb/>
lie water for except for <lb/>
clothes. tightly cork- <lb/>
I and plainly <lb/>
Horseradish Sauce. <lb/>
Put Lot .-. sauce; an over the fire <lb/>
tablespoonful of utter and a <lb/>
tablespoonful of Stir and cook <lb/>
until blended, -n add <lb/>
cu f I of strained soup stock, h , <lb/>
a of milk, half a <lb/>
of salt, five whole peppers and a <lb/>
of bay leaf, live minutes, <lb/>
move bay leaf and peppers, add <lb/>
three of grated horse- <lb/>
radish, a minute longer an I <lb/>
serve. <lb/>
Care of tho Baby. <lb/>
Don't give the baby any kind of <lb/>
pie so called q that raw food or any kind of fruit. <lb/>
M much in vogue among the pupils I Don't give the infant coffee, tea, <lb/>
at tunes. It is, is the beer or any liquor or kind <lb/>
square and J food except that is <lb/>
ten feet No and I'm n an scribed. <lb/>
or girl trips over it The infant sleep alone in <lb/>
and I here is r differ- crib. Don't let the baby .- <lb/>
thinking in a room near the Don't <lb/>
have unnecessary clothing in the <lb/>
mere u . I en square reel means the baby is kept, <lb/>
an area equal to a <lb/>
measuring ten feel on one ride and <lb/>
one fool on Hie the parallel- <lb/>
grim contains, therefore, ten <lb/>
feet. Ten sepia how- <lb/>
ever, h . no ten <lb/>
feet on h of its Bides, which, <lb/>
lore, col us feet. <lb/>
Tommy's Doubtful Compliment, <lb/>
A teacher instructing a class <lb/>
f boys, and ml half an hour <lb/>
faying to drive into their beads tho <lb/>
i. man tho <lb/>
lower animals, lint with <lb/>
little sue <lb/>
paid, <lb/>
Care of Hairbrushes. <lb/>
A way to clean <lb/>
is spirits of ammonia and warm <lb/>
water. Take a tablespoonful <lb/>
ammonia to a quart of water, d ; <lb/>
the bristles up and down in <lb/>
water without wetting the bf . <lb/>
rinse in clean warm water, sill. <lb/>
well and in the air, but not ill <lb/>
the in. Soap and soda soften <lb/>
and will turn an ivory back- <lb/>
ed brush How. <lb/>
ah <lb/>
. ; I i. <lb/>
. b a pig,<lb/>
I I <lb/>
her by <lb/>
VI He Worn. I. <lb/>
A boy said <lb/>
not . fl in till <lb/>
was afraid last i <lb/>
kit. hen elf ;. all lone <lb/>
I was <lb/>
by . <lb/>
but I <lb/>
It to <lb/>
lie <lb/>
av fully <lb/>
a foolish b replied <lb/>
as mother, ; ,, , <lb/>
dark <lb/>
I of <lb/>
find ate , <lb/>
Out <lb/>
Ism in . <lb/>
.,. <lb/>
Hi<lb/>
I've <lb/>
To . nose J <lb/>
Sea For Jan. <lb/>
lire of <lb/>
two- wax, Heat <lb/>
gel hi r, mi . well and put away <lb/>
needed. When it is to he use. I <lb/>
a lump of on lop of the jar or bot- <lb/>
in scaled and press it down <lb/>
v. a hot shovel. This will <lb/>
it, th.; Ill <lb/>
Gr.-- Pie. <lb/>
torn . <lb/>
up id cupful , j <lb/>
;. id one half j <lb/>
in I <lb/>
-mi e; juice loin <lb/>
one . <lb/>
h ill II i.Ill . <lb/>
Paint <lb/>
To <lb/>
ill I. <lb/>
and r <lb/>
t I <lb/>
. soil dot <lb/>
a . n <lb/>
in v . looks Ii <lb/>
Am. <lb/>
i of . <lb/>
nil <lb/>
. .<lb/>
mini. <lb/>
pen a v- <lb/>
Ii <lb/>
Cloaks<lb/>
e V <lb/>
Men's <lb/>
full if tin <lb/>
full ill, s- ts <lb/>
b y <lb/>
We guarantee <lb/>
be exactly as we . <lb/>
If you will avail <lb/>
this you will re- <lb/>
a greet saving.<lb/>
GLOVES <lb/>
ladies Elbow gloves <lb/>
red, white and <lb/>
blue, golf <lb/>
and So cents. <lb/>
INS <lb/>
Ai <lb/>
if d <lb/>
re <lb/>
A ft o m-s. <lb/>
i v t; to <lb/>
;. a. it lit <lb/>
v I <lb/>
I I <lb/>
I.-, ii-s <lb/>
i . ; . s <lb/>
HI <lb/>
i n <lb/>
BRAND <lb/>
ex <lb/>
offer you <lb/>
values <lb/>
in i his line. Big <lb/>
values in j <lb/>
Pattern Hats and I <lb/>
Novel- <lb/>
ties, Eats made <lb/>
IN <lb/>
me Om <lb/>
y- display. <lb/>
pl <lb/>
i I II; <lb/>
i S<lb/>
II buy it. right you it. Hoy- <lb/>
every Suit <lb/>
. Boys i-It and 1.00 <lb/>
fix-1 <lb/>
icy futility. Dark <lb/>
Si till mil. <lb/>
kid s <lb/>
. I II I I <lb/>
ii. gloves <lb/>
Mens <lb/>
Mt i <lb/>
R I I <lb/>
I vi s <lb/>
loves <lb/>
slopes <lb/>
SO <lb/>
to <lb/>
1.75 <lb/>
Me. <lb/>
Fur <lb/>
ill<lb/>
I J t i <lb/>
U v <lb/>
ft <lb/>
tilts <lb/>
iii. <lb/>
pi <lb/>
i ii i <lb/>
M i. V. <lb/>
ii ii brand <lb/>
room <lb/>
Steads, Solid <lb/>
Solid Oak chairs. <lb/>
i u <lb/>
III i S <lb/>
A V <lb/>
i Is, <lb/>
and enamel and <lb/>
ii r <lb/>
hit <lb/>
. c. <lb/>
iii. <lb/>
i of i <lb/>
I ll , <lb/>
i throw <lb/>
. I<lb/>
Th . ho <lb/>
f I;. , . , <lb/>
-A I-M Tau ha . I.- . <lb/>
On. dear, m l <lb/>
Or I I <lb/>
their m <lb/>
Their u, . n , <lb/>
I lull ill. <lb/>
To sit with i ii. . . Sour out <lb/>
T- <lb/>
.- <lb/>
I ii.- <lb/>
1.1. <lb/>
ins. <lb/>
tho <lb/>
its ca <lb/>
mil <lb/>
. <lb/>
or d then <lb/>
ill not <lb/>
torn. <lb/>
be hung i. <lb/>
n dry <lb/>
If <lb/>
In <lb/>
too Ii <lb/>
i . <lb/>
at the <lb/>
and Main Street, GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
EASTERN <lb/>
i J Editor and Owner. <lb/>
ml Friday. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. PITT WORTH C NOV <lb/>
K hi <lb/>
HO MONEY IN THE TREASURY. <lb/>
President C. C. Moore Secretary <lb/>
T. B. Parker Far Behind in <lb/>
No Relief <lb/>
Not Paid. <lb/>
The financial condition of the <lb/>
North Carolina division of e <lb/>
Southern Cotton Association is <lb/>
poor. President C. C. <lb/>
Moore has been laboring day and <lb/>
night for almost a year to build <lb/>
up the State organization and so <lb/>
far has received but for his <lb/>
services. His salary is <lb/>
per year. Secretary T. B. Par- <lb/>
was to receive He <lb/>
is yet to draw his first dollar of <lb/>
salary. There is nothing in the <lb/>
treasury and the prospects are <lb/>
rather slim for much in e <lb/>
future. No effort has yet been <lb/>
made to pay the State assess- <lb/>
of for the support <lb/>
and maintenance of the national <lb/>
organization. The South Caro- <lb/>
division has already paid its <lb/>
assessment of in full. <lb/>
North Carolina has not even <lb/>
made a start. <lb/>
The only method for raising <lb/>
money for the support of the <lb/>
State organization is to have the <lb/>
county officer to n sure to <lb/>
collect the cent levy on every <lb/>
bale and forward the State's <lb/>
share of three cents to the <lb/>
proper authorities. Little <lb/>
has been paid to raising this <lb/>
money in the past, and hence <lb/>
the present deplorable condition <lb/>
of the State treasury <lb/>
When I resident Moore started <lb/>
out on s of the State <lb/>
in September, he was forced to <lb/>
sell one o his horses BO as to <lb/>
procure tho needed funds for his <lb/>
is. Such a condition of <lb/>
things cannot continue much <lb/>
longer. Che Observer. <lb/>
Effected a Cure. <lb/>
your husband as <lb/>
much as tie <lb/>
friend of the <lb/>
no, replied the hostess <lb/>
doesn't smoke at all now. <lb/>
rejoined tie <lb/>
Mar. I Bent Win of cigar <lb/>
only Last <lb/>
she rep lie d. <lb/>
what broke him of the habit. <lb/>
Daily Ne r. <lb/>
FOUND PURSE. <lb/>
It Fell Get and was <lb/>
to Owner. <lb/>
Mr. Jesse was return- <lb/>
fro n Washington, Saturday <lb/>
evening and as he was about to <lb/>
get off of Capt. Ellsworth's train <lb/>
at Parmele, picked up a <lb/>
in the aisle. The purse contained <lb/>
Mr. reported the <lb/>
matter to Capt Ellsworth and <lb/>
asked him to make inquiry for <lb/>
the owner. This Capt. Ells- <lb/>
worth did on his way back to <lb/>
Washington and found that Mr. <lb/>
H. S. Congleton, of Whichard. <lb/>
who was returning home from <lb/>
Baltimore and changed cars at <lb/>
Parmele, had lost the purse. Mr. <lb/>
Congleton came over to Green- <lb/>
ville today for the purse and <lb/>
was very glad that it had fallen <lb/>
into good bands. <lb/>
Great care should be exercised <lb/>
by the property owner who is <lb/>
going to buy paint to secure the <lb/>
best and most economical paint, <lb/>
as often big claims are made for <lb/>
inferior paints. A poor paint or <lb/>
inferior paint mere stimulant <lb/>
like a treacherous expensive <lb/>
which gives only temporary <lb/>
relief to the home, while Town <lb/>
And Country Paint is a perfect- <lb/>
pure paint the result of over <lb/>
years of good paint making ex- <lb/>
and at the <lb/>
right price from Hart <lb/>
who are estimated be the <lb/>
distributors of exclusively <lb/>
high grade paints in the State. <lb/>
If your house Zen for the <lb/>
need of paint write them for <lb/>
color card or see them at once. <lb/>
Good Shown. <lb/>
The second series of stock in <lb/>
The Home Building Loan <lb/>
Association began Saturday <lb/>
nearly shares taken and <lb/>
others spoken for. The i <lb/>
series has nearly share operation. This is a fine show- <lb/>
. an association six <lb/>
Bridge Completed. <lb/>
N C, Nov. <lb/>
gr i railroad connecting <lb/>
and Morehead City <lb/>
rue -mi today- Master <lb/>
Charles the <lb/>
y old so of Charles <lb/>
L thy, drove the last <lb/>
nail completing the bridge This <lb/>
structure ii feet long and <lb/>
has two draws- The train will <lb/>
run Into Beaufort in about a <lb/>
week Beaufort is expecting to <lb/>
have a big celebration when <lb/>
station and all the <lb/>
railway through town and the Y <lb/>
and connections are completed <lb/>
her in I Tangle. <lb/>
The manner in which s <lb/>
of are to be <lb/>
settled has been announced by <lb/>
the Rev John Roach of <lb/>
Chicago, who told the minis- <lb/>
that woman's belief in the <lb/>
inspiration of the Bible was a <lb/>
sufficient refutation of the <lb/>
conclusions. <lb/>
never saw a destructive <lb/>
said Mr feminine <lb/>
form, for a woman gets her <lb/>
knowledge by <lb/>
inspiration. Man with his <lb/>
logic gen all tangled up, but the <lb/>
average woman knows. If Mr. <lb/>
with his logic is also <lb/>
he has got himself <lb/>
into the scrape of the <lb/>
Cretan, who said that <lb/>
Cretans York <lb/>
Evening Post. <lb/>
Diphtheria. <lb/>
in town are <lb/>
f diphtheria. They <lb/>
ire the horn s of It. F. Wind- <lb/>
th street and J. <lb/>
C. on Lane. <lb/>
Girl Killed by Gun Discharged. <lb/>
Oxford, Nov. 8.- News has <lb/>
here of a very distress- <lb/>
lie; accident a few miles from <lb/>
Oxford, near Mountain Creek, a <lb/>
few days ago, when Miss Hazel <lb/>
Currin, aged daughter <lb/>
of Mr. and Mm. Matt Currin. <lb/>
killed instantly by the <lb/>
dental discharge of a gun in the <lb/>
hands of the young lady's broth- <lb/>
a little boy of years. <lb/>
ii Refused. <lb/>
M. C, Nov. <lb/>
The much mooted bridge matter <lb/>
has been disposed of for the <lb/>
present at least Judge Thomas <lb/>
before whom the case <lb/>
was argued last week, has an- <lb/>
his decision, which is to <lb/>
the effect that he will not grant <lb/>
the injunction asked for. The <lb/>
plaintiffs will appeal to the <lb/>
Court and the case will be <lb/>
fought out there. <lb/>
Mr. E. T. B. Glenn Dead. <lb/>
Macon, Ga., Nov. 3-E. T. B. <lb/>
Glenn, traveling auditor of the <lb/>
Central Railway and brother of <lb/>
R. B. Glenn, of North Car- <lb/>
died at his home on Bond <lb/>
street this morning in his 48th <lb/>
year He had been ill several <lb/>
weeks. A mother and four <lb/>
survives him, besides his <lb/>
R. B. Glenn. Gov. <lb/>
Glenn will be present at the <lb/>
He was here <lb/>
days this week and had gone <lb/>
back home after a supposed rally <lb/>
of his brother. The funeral <lb/>
probably take place tomorrow <lb/>
AFTER HOUNDS. <lb/>
rags Leans <lb/>
H. <lb/>
Constable W. B. Savage leaves <lb/>
this morning for Greenville, N. <lb/>
C, to get the blood hounds re <lb/>
purchased by the county. <lb/>
A full grown and he is <lb/>
to be well trained, has been j, r <lb/>
chased and two puppies <lb/>
which are six months old. All <lb/>
are fully blooded hounds and <lb/>
when they are brought to the <lb/>
city the had bitter <lb/>
watch out when they get it in <lb/>
their head to comm.-. murder. <lb/>
There were so many -re and <lb/>
was found to locate <lb/>
the criminals that the <lb/>
decided to purchase <lb/>
hounds. <lb/>
The dogs W be given a trial <lb/>
n Monday and Constable Savage <lb/>
expects to get back to the city <lb/>
on Mes- <lb/>
4th <lb/>
Constable Savage arrived here <lb/>
Sunday evening to examine the <lb/>
logs which were purchased from <lb/>
Mr. W. C. Hi m . The dogs <lb/>
were given a test l id . a v. i <lb/>
e taken to <lb/>
row, Mr. -have <lb/>
a reputation for goo-1 i <lb/>
running down Is <lb/>
A Long <lb/>
An Irishman with one jaw j <lb/>
much lien from a tooth I <lb/>
lie wished have pulled, entered <lb/>
he office i <lb/>
When <lb/>
into the <lb/>
gleaming <lb/>
Buffering Celt was <lb/>
and saw lie <lb/>
pa g <lb/>
face, be positively refused <lb/>
open his Being a mar <lb/>
the dentist quietly in- <lb/>
d assistant to push a <lb/>
the leg, at <lb/>
hen the Irishman open d hi <lb/>
to y II the dent st I <lb/>
at the y m <lb/>
n was over, d intuit<lb/>
. as much as you <lb/>
. ad <lb/>
n . <lb/>
d. ed, as h ran his hand r <lb/>
the . which assist- <lb/>
ant had inserted the pin, <lb/>
d I think them roots that <lb/>
far <lb/>
BLACKJACK <lb/>
Jack, N. C, Nov. <lb/>
Elder G. S. Johnston filled his <lb/>
regular appointment at <lb/>
creek Sunday. <lb/>
J. W. and Abram Dixon went <lb/>
to Sunday. <lb/>
Harry Dunn and Miss <lb/>
of Chocowinity, were <lb/>
here yesterday. <lb/>
C S. Porter and others from <lb/>
here attended church at Salem <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Several of the people from <lb/>
here attended services at Mass <lb/>
dona Sunday afternoon. <lb/>
Mills, of W. H. <lb/>
s home Friday and <lb/>
returned Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Maud left Friday <lb/>
visit friends near Haddock's <lb/>
X Roads. <lb/>
J. O. Johnston attended <lb/>
o at Bear Creek Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Mary Midgett, of <lb/>
co county, came in Sunday to <lb/>
teach school here. <lb/>
Mrs. G. S. Johnston spent Sat- <lb/>
and Sunday with her <lb/>
sister, Mrs. W. P. Buck. <lb/>
Abram Dixon lost a fine young <lb/>
horse last week with blind stag- <lb/>
Charlie Mills, W. H. and Geo. <lb/>
Adams all went to last <lb/>
week. <lb/>
W. A. Hudson is very ill with <lb/>
typhoid fever. We hope he will <lb/>
soon get better. <lb/>
HUGHES HEATS HEARST. <lb/>
Nor ft Every <lb/>
Co <lb/>
Old covers Herself in ; and <lb/>
Buries the its Deeper <lb/>
Than<lb/>
. . ii . .- <lb/>
r a<lb/>
i i i <lb/>
1902 <lb/>
. by MO ma- <lb/>
ii it is Re- <lb/>
members as- <lb/>
this <lb/>
publicans majority <lb/>
. ball it. <lb/>
returns while <lb/>
Her vote than in <lb/>
Le slight Republican <lb/>
From All Over the as Received in Telegraph <lb/>
S Tuesday v.-r, a good day for The Times says at Hughes <lb/>
the North Carolina s elected by 40.000 to 50.000 <lb/>
did wt solid state ticket, <lb/>
delegation. , Evening Post <lb/>
look at Pitt , d Hughes, claims at <lb/>
i Hughes election by 40.000 <lb/>
in <lb/>
Hearst's cam- <lb/>
rent states <lb/>
believed Hearst had safe major- <lb/>
NEW YORK. <lb/>
Buffalo-At p. m state <lb/>
despite claims to the con- <lb/>
Lewis S. Chandler, candidate <lb/>
Connor said that <lb/>
. ., , , ,. pendent League and Democratic <lb/>
. give Hughes a plurality ticket, when told that he had <lb/>
-t and Erie county been elected said should be <lb/>
very sorry to be elected <lb/>
returns of <lb/>
City give Hughes 6.966 plurality. <lb/>
C county gives Hughes much gratified if I am elected as <lb/>
. ; . . Hearst 3.842. it now seems to be to be <lb/>
complete but- <lb/>
City gives Hughes uncertainty. I understand, how- <lb/>
plurality. ever, that my election is pretty <lb/>
New first World assured, but whatever my <lb/>
bulletin says returns indicate be my feeling is <lb/>
has about but <lb/>
majority gin Kings county. .,. j . <lb/>
carried <lb/>
The flashlight <lb/>
the st; j is but <lb/>
Utica Complete gives <lb/>
Hughes Hearst <lb/>
World bulletin says s <lb/>
are that majority <lb/>
The Herald says entire Tam- <lb/>
many judicial ticket elected by <lb/>
large majority. <lb/>
MASSACHUSETTS. <lb/>
cities and <lb/>
in gave Guild, <lb/>
for governor <lb/>
Moran dis- <lb/>
last year gave <lb/>
and will lie <lb/>
while cities am <lb/>
13.507, <lb/>
county <lb/>
owns <lb/>
7.783- <lb/>
gave <lb/>
Last<lb/>
i. runes year they <lb/>
that Ii Li elected- Bartlett <lb/>
Try City c impute gives The in <lb/>
Hughes Hearst f. In this State t one <lb/>
and eight <lb/>
ins 9.761. Re; loss OKLAHOMA. <lb/>
Bay Sh Reports far received <lb/>
I home, gave Democratic majority <lb/>
Hughes <lb/>
Syracuse Ci I y complete gives <lb/>
Hughes Hearst <lb/>
Democratic gain of 1904. <lb/>
Hearst said <lb/>
early tonight few telegrams 20.000. <lb/>
I have received arc <lb/>
in . convention. <lb/>
KANSAS <lb/>
reports <lb/>
that Governor Hock, Re- <lb/>
is re-elected by less <lb/>
DAKOTA. <lb/>
t be- Deep <lb/>
I believe v. II win. <lb/>
I will win. I <lb/>
tut if is cut i <lb/>
be <lb/>
The Herald say.-, indications are , <lb/>
that Hearst carries Great No <lb/>
York by <lb/>
which <lb/>
Bays it now <lb/>
had carried <lb/>
1.500 and <lb/>
interest in election in <lb/>
Crawford is elected <lb/>
I Republican ma- <lb/>
down <lb/>
FLORIDA. <lb/>
VI Demo <lb/>
I., <lb/>
rats in I<lb/>
The drain <lb/>
defeated. <lb/>
INDIANA. <lb/>
The Brooklyn <lb/>
supported <lb/>
looks like Heart. <lb/>
Erie county by <lb/>
Greater New <lb/>
The Times says indications <lb/>
Hughes is elected by ma- <lb/>
but Democrats possibly slow, Republicans elect congress- <lb/>
claim state from <lb/>
to 54.000. <lb/>
. quiet in <lb/>
elect Demo- <lb/>
congressmen- <lb/>
ISLAND. <lb/>
and <lb/>
Dem vote here about the <lb/>
same as last year- <lb/>
UTAH. <lb/>
Howell. <lb/>
Republican, elected. <lb/>
CONNECTICUT. <lb/>
New towns are <lb/>
reporting; early and indicate en- <lb/>
tire publican state ticket and <lb/>
all Congressmen by <lb/>
phi as large as two years <lb/>
ago. <lb/>
IOWA. <lb/>
The vote for governor is large. <lb/>
plurality of 1904 will <lb/>
i. much reduced, but <lb/>
point to his re-election. <lb/>
large vote was <lb/>
polled in state. Democrats are <lb/>
elected in 4th. 5th and 8th dis- <lb/>
Republicans carry state <lb/>
and will control legislature <lb/>
ting United States Senator. <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
Raleigh her was <lb/>
tine all over State. Re- <lb/>
turns show larger vote than ex- <lb/>
ed, running only a little <lb/>
-dent votes. <lb/>
Returns up to o'clock <lb/>
pear to show election of <lb/>
in and Crawford in 10th dis- <lb/>
gained votes <lb/>
in Blackburn's home county. His <lb/>
total gain so far is Crawford <lb/>
made gain in Hay wood. <lb/>
carried Iredell by <lb/>
Sta y by <lb/>
heavy gain in city of <lb/>
Dem carry State by <lb/>
proximately 45.000. According <lb/>
to careful estimate they <lb/>
elect s Fight was <lb/>
hot <lb/>
Small. <lb/>
Thorn, s, W W. <lb/>
L. Goodwin. R. N. <lb/>
. ; . Hackett, E. Y. Webb <lb/>
and . Crawford. <lb/>
We ii ; time and space <lb/>
ogive only the total vote <lb/>
the different received <lb/>
in the county. Later we J <lb/>
publish the full vote by town- <lb/>
ships. <lb/>
Slate Ticket. <lb/>
Demon <lb/>
Republican <lb/>
For Congress. <lb/>
Small Wood <lb/>
For Solicitor <lb/>
2.20-3 Edwards <lb/>
For Senate. <lb/>
Firming 2.331 King <lb/>
For Representatives. <lb/>
e 2.141 <lb/>
Whitehurst <lb/>
Jones <lb/>
For Superior Court Clerk. <lb/>
Moore 2.385 Patrick <lb/>
For Sheriff. <lb/>
Tucker Fleming <lb/>
For Register of Deeds. <lb/>
Williams Bullock <lb/>
For Treasurer. <lb/>
White <lb/>
For Coroner. <lb/>
Laughinghouse Patrick <lb/>
For Surveyor. <lb/>
Jenkins <lb/>
For Commissioners. <lb/>
and 10th districts. The <lb/>
en elected are J. H. <lb/>
Kitchen, C. R. <lb/>
W W. W. <lb/>
elect balance of state ticket. <lb/>
The Word says indications at <lb/>
p. m, are that Hearst will have <lb/>
60.000 in Greater New York and <lb/>
that Hughes will come down in <lb/>
Bronx with <lb/>
The Herald says Timothy <lb/>
Woodruff claims the state for <lb/>
Hughes by <lb/>
At o'clock it was stated at <lb/>
Democratic headquarters that <lb/>
election of Hughes was not con- <lb/>
ceded by I state committee. No <lb/>
estimates of pluralities being <lb/>
made. <lb/>
men. and <lb/>
governor, by about <lb/>
Cox <lb/>
Brooks <lb/>
I King <lb/>
Holland <lb/>
Spier <lb/>
PENNSYLVANIA- <lb/>
re- <lb/>
turns indicate large Republican <lb/>
gains as compared with last year. <lb/>
WISCONSIN. <lb/>
Milwaukee-Early returns <lb/>
from interior towns show David- <lb/>
son, Republican, running two to <lb/>
one against democrat- <lb/>
NEW <lb/>
Is stated from re- <lb/>
liable source that the Democratic <lb/>
candidate for congress in ninth <lb/>
Smith <lb/>
Overton <lb/>
Jones <lb/>
Harrington <lb/>
From <lb/>
Tries to Catch Stream of Water <lb/>
Hydrant. <lb/>
Mr John Ivey Smith's hull <lb/>
dog created lots of merriment on <lb/>
the street Monday afternoon. <lb/>
Policeman George Clark was <lb/>
having the street sprinkled from <lb/>
one the hydrants. The dog was <lb/>
attracted by the stream from the <lb/>
and ran out to catch it, <lb/>
and for several minutes ran back <lb/>
and forth grabbing at; I <lb/>
and cutting up all <lb/>
The dog did mind the water <lb/>
at all and his capers were very <lb/>
amusing <lb/>
-L<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019669_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
i II IN 1.1 <lb/>
Jill <lb/>
w- <lb/>
If dies Closes <lb/>
I Rain Coats. <lb/>
Ladies Long Dross <lb/>
Misses Long Dross <lb/>
BIG STORE NOW FILLED WITH BEAUTIFUL <lb/>
FALL AND WINTER MERCHANDISE. <lb/>
Men's <lb/>
. , <lb/>
s i -re <lb/>
Mom. in areas too- M <lb/>
Youths and buys J <lb/>
We guarantee all goods to <lb/>
be exactly as we represent, <lb/>
you avail yourself of <lb/>
this you will re- <lb/>
a eat saving.<lb/>
VT <lb/>
ladies Elbow <lb/>
red, white and <lb/>
blue, golf gloves <lb/>
and So cents. <lb/>
Made each <lb/>
and Gents. <lb/>
CORSETS. <lb/>
A tine lot Corsets. Well <lb/>
made with tape to prevent <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
and Gents fine Mer- <lb/>
last <lb/>
wit trimmed handles, <lb/>
each <lb/>
RUBBER COATS <lb/>
Ladies et inches <lb/>
coats <lb/>
I s II <lb/>
III <lb/>
A Very Imposing Nam. <lb/>
of Cambodia, who <lb/>
has ban attracting great interest <lb/>
in Paris, has a very long <lb/>
Bat<lb/>
S o a p <lb/>
The English translation <lb/>
this imposing title is, who is <lb/>
the supreme refuse, the being with <lb/>
the sacred feet, the lord, the being I <lb/>
most the <lb/>
the excellent, the perfect one; the <lb/>
descendant .;. <lb/>
the i. c and glorious son , <lb/>
.- id; the. splendid leader the I <lb/>
ran . glorious, illustrious, per <lb/>
i . . ;, of the in a I <lb/>
I of who is <lb/>
i and is placed <lb/>
n I i . n <lb/>
we can you <lb/>
excel values <lb/>
in <lb/>
values <lb/>
Pattern lacs an <lb/>
tics. Hats made <lb/>
Big <lb/>
in <lb/>
but Experienced <lb/>
MILLINERS <lb/>
; c --ink. <lb/>
. the c <lb/>
i us f; <lb/>
nil dwell n in the <lb/>
;. ten r <lb/>
taut to go him to i ail iv i <lb/>
stupid , , <lb/>
.-. <lb/>
go and then bur i n cs tn i <lb/>
their <lb/>
bad tin cf a ti a h e. <lb/>
these ii . , <lb/>
They dread I . h <lb/>
But I pr mi l em , u <lb/>
hurry to e; c <lb/>
then go aw <lb/>
c- <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
re I <lb/>
-aid <lb/>
JUST <lb/>
ONE <lb/>
WORD that word U <lb/>
It raters to Dr. and <lb/>
MEANS HEALTH. <lb/>
Are you constipated <lb/>
Troubled with <lb/>
Sick headache <lb/>
Bilious <lb/>
Insomnia <lb/>
ANY these symptoms and many others <lb/>
indicate Inaction of the LIVER. <lb/>
Take No Substitute.<lb/>
B . <lb/>
Jan, i Not <lb/>
I. I. <lb/>
u k <lb/>
i i <lb/>
If <lb/>
have been en r no is her <lb/>
is I k tow that parish <lb/>
priest, when she lived in the Sue <lb/>
never appealed in vain to <lb/>
her to relieve c of distress. She <lb/>
always did with an ungrudging <lb/>
spirit an I an open <lb/>
Truth. <lb/>
LAND <lb/>
By oft in -i.-r I <lb/>
of Fin n d m a L- <lb/>
line of <lb/>
and Bros <lb/>
Always on display. It pleases all <lb/>
Looks right when you buy it. Stays right after you wear Roy- <lb/>
Brand Clothing tor Youths and HOy. Medal every S <lb/>
Special in Pant . Knee Pants and <lb/>
Specials in Mens Pants, Fancy Worsted, Quality. Dark <lb/>
Ground Grey Stripes. <lb/>
nil. i , , i <lb/>
the <lb/>
i . h <lb/>
m i v ., r . <lb/>
nil. ism at m . <lb/>
land In <lb/>
of <lb/>
Ml W. II. Iv <lb/>
III. in Cm I'll, I . I i <lb/>
r . ,. ,. <lb/>
1.1. n <lb/>
to of ; . ,. . <lb/>
i hi . t. i n u ,. n, <lb/>
ii . n r. n r II . . ii<lb/>
ii . Mi , ,. a. <lb/>
K n. <lb/>
in <lb/>
by B m <lb/>
i i- day i-f <lb/>
. r. <lb/>
f r in <lb/>
ad will <lb/>
i. I or id <lb/>
lies i. f Novella <lb/>
i in<lb/>
h. ; lace <lb/>
. . i i . . J <lb/>
V . <lb/>
. ; I . <lb/>
Tin <lb/>
I ; <lb/>
i ma <lb/>
T V s V i , <lb/>
You Stop Set-<lb/>
; i Mi. . in; <lb/>
Mrs ,. i i <lb/>
Hum thin vein <lb/>
. I. III I little <lb/>
i III- I H. b <lb/>
. l-f l.;. , , ,,, ,,, w <lb/>
Shelia- , <lb/>
lb- I I.,,. r. ,. old, <lb/>
She <lb/>
I-. I in I <lb/>
I I ;. of <lb/>
. I<lb/>
I have completed my trip n <lb/>
testing and <lb/>
If any <lb/>
and will bring <lb/>
measures to <lb/>
a on the first Monday in X <lb/>
teat them i on <lb/>
E. <lb/>
s w <lb/>
To<lb/>
rives <lb/>
all Gloves <lb/>
He <lb/>
i gloves 1.00 <lb/>
Me- iv gloves <lb/>
driving gloves <lb/>
Mei s t. iii gloves <lb/>
driving <lb/>
Mens skin gloves 1.75 <lb/>
s gloves <lb/>
shirts <lb/>
A I. t princely braid <lb/>
la CO Notice display <lb/>
in north window. <lb/>
lot <lb/>
k -it es <lb/>
w lour in ties <lb/>
in tit s in d col is each <lb/>
Furniture. <lb/>
if Oak Slit it j i it <lb/>
Dining room hairs, each <lb/>
Odd Bed Solid Oak <lb/>
Solid k ii eking chairs. <lb/>
Easels, E <lb/>
12.98 <lb/>
c;. and enamel and <lb/>
B OP<lb/>
bit <lb/>
in I he town . Pitt <lb/>
Icon tr. North <lb/>
i.; ,. .,, <lb/>
i i . <lb/>
I o i ,. <lb/>
ii mo <lb/>
and pace a id we <lb/>
t; ,., <lb/>
land bespeak tor his <lb/>
H in.-s the mi s- iii p <lb/>
Persons <lb/>
said i r the <lb/>
Mr. E Pie en, Green <lb/>
e. N C. once <lb/>
his the day . f A i <lb/>
B Fie <lb/>
. ii. <lb/>
w. <lb/>
T P. Taylor, <lb/>
FUTURE i I <lb/>
a h <lb/>
and Main Street, GREENVILLE, K. C. <lb/>
I Not Quite I <lb/>
Bo h <lb/>
w driver <lb/>
Have good <lb/>
S prepared for <lb/>
I one i . i ii- line <lb/>
ft. la yo d and <lb/>
i, we will tool <lb/>
, i lack a <lb/>
a elide. <lb/>
S Of Course I <lb/>
You get Harness, <lb/>
Goods, <lb/>
and <lb/>
-r iv. ,. ; <lb/>
. . j, <lb/>
i-. ,,. Q .<lb/>
pt. and Ki <lb/>
a a now <lb/>
11-i w any <lb/>
knobs or feet on the hot <lb/>
torn. <lb/>
PRICES <lb/>
Column and Head <lb/>
. . iv. .-no <lb/>
and <lb/>
fit.-. Id <lb/>
per <lb/>
A Rh . w rut; ti- <lb/>
ha. <lb/>
n. <lb/>
Iv <lb/>
and <lb/>
High Mater <lb/>
I. Wit. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
Co <lb/>
IN <lb/>
if Provisions <lb/>
ii<lb/>
as always on hand <lb/>
ill <lb/>
Fr sh kept inn- <lb/>
I in Country <lb/>
Produce Bo. end Sold <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
O t <lb/>
North Carol i n a. <lb/>
In Superior <lb/>
Court. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
Corey I <lb/>
North l <lb/>
Pi it County. <lb/>
Lemuel Tee <lb/>
Vs. <lb/>
Ida Teel <lb/>
. will tuba <lb/>
,,,,,, <lb/>
torn Hi- <lb/>
r aim ,. r, i, <lb/>
ha i. , ,, <lb/>
I ,. Ural <lb/>
S lilt <lb/>
O. <lb/>
lit. for <lb/>
in <lb/>
day Of <lb/>
O. o. Moore <lb/>
nun Brow., <lb/>
A II <lb/>
Vi <lb/>
it <lb/>
t- <lb/>
th <lb/>
CO <lb/>
th <lb/>
th <lb/>
b, <lb/>
pr <lb/>
de <lb/>
To <lb/>
the <lb/>
be <lb/>
Ni <lb/>
bee <lb/>
Jes <lb/>
Ala <lb/>
wit <lb/>
at <lb/>
ft <lb/>
day <lb/>
Announcement <lb/>
We leave to we are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for--------n <lb/>
Lead, Paints, <lb/>
Colors, and and <lb/>
Country Ready Paints. <lb/>
There is n line in the world better than <lb/>
It I 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 you will f us with your <lb/>
orders you want good paint for any <lb/>
Have just a car load and <lb/>
can give you Special Prices. <lb/>
Baker Hart <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
of business 4th, 1908. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and discounts i <lb/>
Overdrafts, secured <lb/>
unsecured <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
Due from Ban <lb/>
Cash <lb/>
Gold m <lb/>
Silver <lb/>
National <lb/>
Capitol stock paid in <lb/>
Surplus 12,500.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits, 3,085.29 <lb/>
Bills payable 55,000.00 <lb/>
Deposits <lb/>
line t u <lb/>
u to 106.565 I <lb/>
Due to 293.31 <lb/>
Cashiers ck 558.87 <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
State of North Carolina. County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, C. S Carr, of the above named bank, do solemnly <lb/>
swear that is true to the best of my knowledge <lb/>
belief <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before <lb/>
me. this 11th day of Hf 1900. <lb/>
J MOO HE, <lb/>
Public <lb/>
C. S. CARR, Cashier <lb/>
R. O. <lb/>
F. G. <lb/>
E. O. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
TH BANK OF <lb/>
At the Close 4th <lb/>
i .-. I Hi <lb/>
, . <lb/>
red <lb/>
in r <lb/>
Cash Item <lb/>
Gold <lb/>
Silver <lb/>
paid la<lb/>
Profits ax- <lb/>
Tares Paid 12.8748 <lb/>
i no in i i <lb/>
n Time of deposit 11,330.9 <lb/>
to check <lb/>
Cashier's checks out- <lb/>
1,617.12 <lb/>
7,2.19.00 <lb/>
North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt. <lb/>
I. L. Little, Cashier of the above-named do <lb/>
wear that the statement above is true to the best of my <lb/>
l JAMES L. LITTLE, <lb/>
and sworn to before <lb/>
mo. this Kith of Sept, 1906. <lb/>
WALTER G. WARD, <lb/>
J. <lb/>
R. W. KING, <lb/>
J. R. <lb/>
FOR THE LITTLE ONES. <lb/>
Interesting to Be<lb/>
Of course you I and girls ail <lb/>
know how to play but <lb/>
you may not ail the games <lb/>
can with thorn. <lb/>
Do you know in the <lb/>
for It i- played in the <lb/>
following <lb/>
Roll the jacks from the hand to <lb/>
the ground; arc the cats. <lb/>
Then your hand near <lb/>
with the fist lightly closed, <lb/>
the thumb first finger forming <lb/>
the opening to one ell. <lb/>
Jack may now be thrown up, and, <lb/>
while he is in the air. one of the <lb/>
four cats on the ground must be <lb/>
picked up and put in the well. <lb/>
Repeat the operation with the <lb/>
second, third fourth eats until <lb/>
nil have been drowned in the well. <lb/>
The left hand may now lie taken <lb/>
away, leaving the dead cats in a <lb/>
bunch. <lb/>
Now jack may be tossed up, and <lb/>
this time oil four cats must be pick- <lb/>
ed up before comes down. <lb/>
It is be ired at that <lb/>
boys and girls are sometimes <lb/>
over the spelling of the gnat <lb/>
poet's name. It is written in throe <lb/>
and Which of <lb/>
these is right The first is <lb/>
ally preferred, though many of our <lb/>
best scholar write it <lb/>
contending that it is right because <lb/>
his autograph signature appears in <lb/>
that form. At the same time it <lb/>
should be end that the <lb/>
name appeared as Shakespeare on <lb/>
the title page of that he <lb/>
and this warrants the <lb/>
belief that he accepted it as the <lb/>
spelling, in spite of the auto- <lb/>
graph signature. There is very lit- <lb/>
authority for the form <lb/>
Tan Square Feet. <lb/>
Some of Cue schools lime a <lb/>
so called that <lb/>
is much in vogue among the pupils <lb/>
at times. It is. is the <lb/>
between ten square fee <lb/>
ten feel Now then n <lb/>
unwary boy or girl trips over it <lb/>
and answers, is no differ- <lb/>
but a little thinking shews <lb/>
them that there is a good den of <lb/>
difference. Ten square feet moans <lb/>
an area equal to a parallelogram <lb/>
measuring ten feet on one side and <lb/>
one foot on the other; the parallel- <lb/>
contains, therefore, only ten <lb/>
square feet. Ten feet square, how- <lb/>
ever, means a square measuring ten <lb/>
feet on each of sides, which, <lb/>
therefore, contains square feet. <lb/>
ALL OVER THE HOUSE. <lb/>
To Remove Grease Spots From Carpets <lb/>
and Clothing. <lb/>
Spots on <lb/>
clothing are not . remove. I <lb/>
First brush out any dust that may <lb/>
nave gathered on the soiled place. <lb/>
rub powdered French chalk, <lb/>
or, if this is not at hand, common I <lb/>
chalk or magnesia, on the wrong <lb/>
side of the fabric if you can get <lb/>
it. If not, apply a paste of the <lb/>
alkali to the right side and cover <lb/>
to exclude the Leave it thus <lb/>
for twenty-foul hours. Now lay <lb/>
several of tissue or of <lb/>
blotting paper over the chalk and, <lb/>
set a moderately hot iron on it, <lb/>
shifting paper as the grease i <lb/>
pears on the surface. This is best I <lb/>
by working from the wrong . <lb/>
side. If the oil is not extracted, <lb/>
sponge with household ammonia and <lb/>
renew the alkali. <lb/>
home of <lb/>
yr<lb/>
or <lb/>
Water. <lb/>
To one gallon of water add a one <lb/>
pound can of chloride of lime and <lb/>
four pounds of common washing <lb/>
coda. Allow it to boil <lb/>
ten minute. i cool turn into <lb/>
bottles, jars or stone A <lb/>
I in . tub of water will loosen <lb/>
dirt in most clothing, <lb/>
perfectly. will cut <lb/>
grease e dirt cut of conking <lb/>
drain <lb/>
the water an pt for <lb/>
we g i- <lb/>
i an-l -1. <lb/>
We have an j of these stylish salts <lb/>
Also new in <lb/>
a. <lb/>
i- m over the fire <lb/>
. hatter and a half <lb/>
i .-. Stir and cook <lb/>
add one-half <lb/>
Dress D-p <lb/>
Fancy smart Gray Plaids, latest <lb/>
Our Department <lb/>
into n <lb/>
tablespoonful o <lb/>
until blended, <lb/>
cupful of strained e <lb/>
a cupful of milk, half a <lb/>
of salt, five whole and a bit <lb/>
of bay leaf. Cook five minutes, re- <lb/>
move bay leaf u rs, add ; <lb/>
three of gr <lb/>
radish, a minute lunger and <lb/>
serve. <lb/>
is ablaze with the popular s <lb/>
when they see our line, <lb/>
Shots for <lb/>
I ; <lb/>
i n <lb/>
fr<lb/>
Come show a <lb/>
of <lb/>
Tommy's Doubtful Compliment. <lb/>
A teacher was instructing a class <lb/>
of boys, and had spent half an hour <lb/>
trying to drive into their heads the <lb/>
difference between man and the <lb/>
lower animals, but apparently with <lb/>
little success. <lb/>
he said, to <lb/>
a little chap, you know the <lb/>
between, say. mo and a pig, <lb/>
or any other bride r <lb/>
replied Tommy, innocent- <lb/>
but another teacher standing by <lb/>
laughed. <lb/>
Why He Worried. <lb/>
A Chicago boy said to his <lb/>
not afraid in the dark, but I <lb/>
was afraid last night. went to the <lb/>
kitchen closet all alone in the dark <lb/>
by myself, and I was awfully <lb/>
afraid. <lb/>
are a foolish replied <lb/>
his mother, there is nothing in <lb/>
the dark that can hurt <lb/>
I wasn't afraid of an- <lb/>
the rogue; was afraid I <lb/>
wouldn't any cake <lb/>
Caro of ho . <lb/>
Don't the baby . i <lb/>
raw food or any kind <lb/>
Don't give the infant tea, <lb/>
boor or any liquor or a kind of <lb/>
food except that which is <lb/>
The infant should sleep alone in <lb/>
a crib. Don't lei <lb/>
in a room near Don't <lb/>
have unnecessary clothing in the <lb/>
room where the baby is kept. <lb/>
C L WILKINSON <lb/>
Care of <lb/>
A good way to clean <lb/>
is with spirits of ammonia and n <lb/>
water. Take a tablespoonful of <lb/>
ammonia to s quart of water, dip <lb/>
the bristles up and down in the <lb/>
water without wetting the back, <lb/>
rinse in clean warm water, shake <lb/>
well and dry in the air, but not in <lb/>
the sun. Soap and soda soften the <lb/>
bristles and will turn an ivory buck- <lb/>
ed brush <lb/>
H. EVANS, Supt. h. A. <lb/>
Manufacturing C i <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb/>
Noses Out of Joint. <lb/>
You cry and look so <lb/>
I love you. dour, the same <lb/>
I truly I you <lb/>
E.-fore <lb/>
But a little now. <lb/>
You Know, and lie la r-mull <lb/>
got lo most to <lb/>
Tour nose la out of Joint, that's all. <lb/>
Sealing Wax For <lb/>
Make a of one-third resin <lb/>
two-thirds beeswax. Heat to- <lb/>
mix well and put away until <lb/>
i needed. When it is to he used lay <lb/>
a lump of it on top of the or bot- <lb/>
to be sealed and press it down <lb/>
with a hot shovel. This will moll <lb/>
it, and thus seal the cork. <lb/>
Green Tomato Pie. <lb/>
Three medium size <lb/>
chopped fine, half cupful of raisins; <lb/>
one and one-half of <lb/>
half each of cinnamon <lb/>
and allspice; juice of u small lemon; <lb/>
one teaspoonful of cornstarch, stir- <lb/>
red smooth in a little Water. Rake <lb/>
in open <lb/>
Cleaning Paint. <lb/>
To eh. paint dampen a clean <lb/>
water, dip it in whiting <lb/>
and rub the until the dirt is <lb/>
removed. well in clean water, <lb/>
dry with a soft cloth and polish with <lb/>
a chamois leather. Paint cleansed <lb/>
in this way looks like new. <lb/>
Ants. <lb/>
To get rid of ants wring out a <lb/>
sponge in a solution of sugar and <lb/>
water put it on a plate where <lb/>
the ants congregate. Soon it will <lb/>
be filled with the insects. Plunge <lb/>
it in boiling water and use a. <lb/>
in the same manner. <lb/>
Don't you remember that col, day <lb/>
They left me ,.,., hours In bed <lb/>
when nurse came for me at <lb/>
nose Is out of she said <lb/>
baby's come to with <lb/>
Well. then, that's the matter <lb/>
now. <lb/>
You might have known haw U would be. <lb/>
Oh, dear, my head don't meow. <lb/>
Or I you from the room. <lb/>
Nice little don't a noise <lb/>
When their give nil <lb/>
Their to red <lb/>
I tell yo, .-- t. <lb/>
To sit with kit upon knee. <lb/>
And It's no wonts fur to have <lb/>
Tour put ea n ma. <lb/>
Manufacturers of <lb/>
Sash, Doors, Blinds. Monti <lb/>
And all of <lb/>
t, <lb/>
Also <lb/>
AND LUMBER, CEILING, Flooring <lb/>
etc. <lb/>
LARGE ASSORTMENT OF O <lb/>
BLINDS ALWAYS ON HAND <lb/>
. II orders will receive <lb/>
guaranteed. <lb/>
rapt <lb/>
A Good Cosmetic. <lb/>
Cucumber is one of nature's own <lb/>
cosmetics. Try using a slice of <lb/>
instead of soap for wash- <lb/>
your face. Don't throw away <lb/>
even the rind. Boil it and use the <lb/>
water for washing your face. <lb/>
In tho Laundry. <lb/>
After starched garments have <lb/>
been ironed they should be hung in <lb/>
the sunshine to thoroughly dry and <lb/>
that the sunshine may take away <lb/>
any yellow spots caused by too hot <lb/>
Irons. <lb/>
A Cooking Hint. <lb/>
If raisins and currants are rolled <lb/>
in flour before using them in <lb/>
or puddings and then the <lb/>
last they will not sink to the bot- <lb/>
tom- <lb/>
He Was Enlightened. <lb/>
A stout old gentleman with a <lb/>
short temper was having trouble <lb/>
with the phone, lie could hear <lb/>
nothing but a confused jumble of <lb/>
sounds finally became so i <lb/>
ho yelled into the trans- <lb/>
v-re a fool at the end of this <lb/>
this was the i <lb/>
A a<lb/>
The will <lb/>
gimme few pennies me <lb/>
wife <lb/>
Old me. In tin <lb/>
fir-t place haven't got any <lb/>
in the second place I have no en <lb/>
iv use for a starving wife and in the <lb/>
th id place don't wont a wife any- <lb/>
Unrelenting Disapproval. <lb/>
must admit that our friend <lb/>
the courage of his <lb/>
said one statesman. <lb/>
the ease of such opinions a <lb/>
answered the other, isn't <lb/>
courage; <lb/>
Star <lb/>
Quite Contrary. <lb/>
isn't it, about <lb/>
about <lb/>
when s man has a dry way <lb/>
of telling them it whets people's <lb/>
for <lb/>
A at <lb/>
Your Canadian will hook up a <lb/>
couple of range ponies to his light i <lb/>
buckboard or swing himself over tho <lb/>
hack of a home bred borne <lb/>
travel a trifle of fifty sixty miles <lb/>
to a dance or frolic any <lb/>
without thinking it over n <lb/>
And along tho line of the railroad <lb/>
the Fame. met n very genial <lb/>
th ma while over <lb/>
Ci North n .; I rightful <lb/>
speed of eight miles an h who, <lb/>
as ; . mi been <lb/>
up lire o bit t i take dinner with <lb/>
Aunt Hat The genial <lb/>
lived Albert, and found <lb/>
out after n little conversation that <lb/>
I re some odd <lb/>
in e up away. Think of traveling <lb/>
f; a tn I ago to take <lb/>
tea with s i -r Sue or <lb/>
it u . <lb/>
Washington Star. <lb/>
of a Golf Ball. <lb/>
One I rd of morsels of straw <lb/>
being clean into solid timber <lb/>
by the force of a tornado. Some- <lb/>
what similar and equally <lb/>
was the result of a strode <lb/>
at golf made by A. Wyndham <lb/>
on the famous Westward course <lb/>
two or three years ago. He found <lb/>
his ball in a bed of rushes, actually <lb/>
impaled upon a rush, so that it <lb/>
possible to pick up the ball and <lb/>
it suspended upon the rush, <lb/>
a golf ball, which is almost as <lb/>
as wood, should be spiked in <lb/>
fashion upon the point of <lb/>
a thing a a rush a most <lb/>
a bin i <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019669_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
I i<lb/>
the <lb/>
Advertising rub<lb/>
AND FRIDAY. <lb/>
AND <lb/>
. lit Greenville, N. C, as second class matter, <lb/>
upon application. <lb/>
i office in Pitt and adjoining counties. <lb/>
in Preference to <lb/>
OF RESPECT. <lb/>
To the officers and Members of <lb/>
Lodge No. Ayden N. C. <lb/>
We your committee appointed <lb/>
to draft a series of resolutions <lb/>
expressive of the respect and es- <lb/>
CONDENSED STORIES. <lb/>
Th Peril of on Railroads and <lb/>
Mayor of New York, <lb/>
who so narrowly escaped taking the, j <lb/>
FALL SUIT <lb/>
1906, kg leave to submit <lb/>
That in the death of Bro. Cox <lb/>
this lodge sustains a i <lb/>
GREENVILLE NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY NOV. 1906. zealous aw <lb/>
shirked a duty imposed upon <lb/>
and in recognition of our regard <lb/>
be it <lb/>
That in his death we <lb/>
E. that j <lb/>
V. Cox, who died October 29th, <lb/>
the <lb/>
WORDS WE APPRECIATE. <lb/>
The editor of this as <lb/>
n oilier of the Consolidated <lb/>
Tobacco Company desires lo ex- <lb/>
tend the thanks of the <lb/>
to Editor Whichard for the many <lb/>
nice and complimentary things it <lb/>
has said in behalf of the <lb/>
dated Tobacco Company. <lb/>
When almost as a boy e <lb/>
writer came from the farm to <lb/>
engage in the tobacco business in <lb/>
Greenville one of the first men to <lb/>
extend to him the hand of friend- <lb/>
ship and good wishes for <lb/>
of the business was D. J. Which- <lb/>
ard. During all the years <lb/>
to our personal <lb/>
edge this man has never failed <lb/>
an opportunity to say and do <lb/>
thing that he could for the . <lb/>
of the tobacco inter- <lb/>
of Greenville and Pitt county. <lb/>
During the early days of ti e <lb/>
m history when its fate <lb/>
most hung in the balance, when <lb/>
the other business interests of <lb/>
the town were arrayed against <lb/>
the tobacco market, <lb/>
and the Reflector stood up and <lb/>
fought for the mar- <lb/>
He opened the columns of <lb/>
his paper and many of the <lb/>
of the county remember that <lb/>
for a period of several years a <lb/>
regular tobacco department was <lb/>
conducted through the columns <lb/>
of the Reflector. This cont <lb/>
in no snail to making <lb/>
permanent the success of the <lb/>
market when it strong <lb/>
efforts to keep it from going <lb/>
down. <lb/>
The truth is we have known of <lb/>
no public enterprise that looked <lb/>
to the and advance- <lb/>
of the general interest of <lb/>
the community that the Reflector <lb/>
did not enter into the fight and <lb/>
assist with all its power in bring- <lb/>
about the successful build <lb/>
up and development of these en- <lb/>
and while all the <lb/>
p e of the county may not have <lb/>
agreed and may not have seen <lb/>
as the Reflector saw <lb/>
them, yet no one can doubt the <lb/>
sincerity and honesty el purpose <lb/>
of the Reflector in doing that <lb/>
which it thought would result in <lb/>
building up and protecting the <lb/>
moral as well as the material in- <lb/>
of the community.- L. <lb/>
Joyner in October <lb/>
Life. <lb/>
It always helps a man to know <lb/>
t t his efforts in any <lb/>
are appreciated, and the <lb/>
is doubly appreciated be- <lb/>
cause it comes from a man <lb/>
whom we know to be sincere. In <lb/>
the past dozen or more years we <lb/>
have been thrown much with Mr. <lb/>
Joyner in business relations and <lb/>
have always found him to be a <lb/>
man of word, a man of value <lb/>
to the community, and one whose <lb/>
energy was indomitable. We <lb/>
have k iv . u of his struggles ard <lb/>
sacrifices in determination to <lb/>
Greenville a great tobacco <lb/>
r. and it has teen <lb/>
if to <lb/>
a y m render what <lb/>
it could in undertaking, <lb/>
and, r. he intimates, the result <lb/>
speaks for itself <lb/>
We have always had faith in <lb/>
Mr. Joyner and faith in Green- <lb/>
ville, and the belief that a strong <lb/>
tobacco market would be a great <lb/>
factor in the of the <lb/>
town spurred us on all the more <lb/>
to do what we could to establish <lb/>
it <lb/>
without her tobacco <lb/>
there would be but one answer <lb/>
a dead town. Hence we are glad I w deprived of the <lb/>
i of his presence in our <lb/>
every effort put forth this the wise <lb/>
direction. words that often fell from his <lb/>
u i u lips, and were of and <lb/>
As has also been said several results to the order and u. <lb/>
times in this paper, we have the brotherhood. <lb/>
faith in the Farmers Consolidated I That we bow in humble sub- <lb/>
, , on to the will of our great <lb/>
Tobacco Company, and we be- Chancellor, who at all times <lb/>
to prove the does that which is best and has <lb/>
only the interest of his children <lb/>
Ki., was dining in at <lb/>
the i <lb/>
A number of Americans in <lb/>
the fashionable and they <lb/>
took coffee together in the foyer <lb/>
dinner, seated at little tables <lb/>
the low white balcony, near the <lb/>
orchestra, which affords so fine a <lb/>
new of restaurant and foyer. <lb/>
The talk turned to high speed <lb/>
and its perilous high <lb/>
spied of motor ears, express I ruins, <lb/>
and I Ice. <lb/>
Mayor smiled and <lb/>
is undoubtedly, <lb/>
it is going <lb/>
greatest help to the farm <lb/>
of any m tint has <lb/>
ever been started. <lb/>
Beware of Such Agents, <lb/>
it is strange that People <lb/>
easily taken in and so ready <lb/>
part with their to some <lb/>
dick tongued agent. <lb/>
at heart. <lb/>
That this lodge deeply mourns <lb/>
the d i th Brother Cox and that <lb/>
his absence from our lodge <lb/>
will long be felt, and the place, <lb/>
h so and acceptably I <lb/>
-1 can not easily be <lb/>
i. a page our records be <lb/>
set aside to his memory with his, <lb/>
name, date, and age in- <lb/>
Some scribed then on. <lb/>
he <lb/>
request to <lb/>
ago a man came into this J jg <lb/>
county selling washing machine brother our s sympathy <lb/>
rights, and all told in this their, and our sad, be-, <lb/>
, . and consolation <lb/>
about the scheme is true, it is a comfort point them to Him <lb/>
far reaching swindle. If seems our Great Father who lo<lb/>
the plan of procedure was . copy of these <lb/>
this man to first sell a right be sent the family of our <lb/>
a large sum, and then <lb/>
die person to whom he sells out Free Will Baptist <lb/>
filing rights to others on which publish same. <lb/>
, . W. L. I <lb/>
lie gets a royalty, and every vie- g <lb/>
of the scheme in turn goes J. 2.1. Blow. <lb/>
out and find other to be deemed <lb/>
i i t The way in which one Okla- <lb/>
making it a kind of endless announced that his <lb/>
matter The actual selling mother was coming to visit him <lb/>
of asking machines cuts but lit- may seem a trifle but it's <lb/>
pretty safe to say that away <lb/>
tie figure in it, as that would down in her heart was <lb/>
in too slow, but the prouder than forty queens. <lb/>
., Lt j s the way he did it; <lb/>
is to sell the rights and The editor of the News-Re- <lb/>
get larger sums. publican is going to tog up a <lb/>
with such speed that <lb/>
Mr. W. <lb/>
farmer who had been of cuffs, if he can find any. got acquainted, yesterday we <lb/>
ad give note aggregating Going to get shaved and going engaged, and today find he <lb/>
to give note, to get our shoes shined and the ready owes me En- <lb/>
for one of rights, was so we can walk <lb/>
in Greenville Tuesday, to get right Ma's <lb/>
a. advice as to how -bout Y know who th. <lb/>
CO protect himself against the she's a good one too -one of th i sternly. You most not <lb/>
of the notes He told old Quaker know. bu <lb/>
collection notes, torn Ma lives promptly and <lb/>
us he knew several people who our ma when we were born; well, replied the pert wit- <lb/>
were caught just as he had been she was our ma out in ., . <lb/>
. . . , . . western Kansas when we Now, then, what is your <lb/>
something should be done to stop hunted None of your <lb/>
SUCh imposition or. people. i ma when we drank parched Ledger. <lb/>
corn in old Oklahoma in . <lb/>
and she's our ma now. If <lb/>
One of most hopeful you see us tomorrow <lb/>
. i m down the street with a little <lb/>
things observed in woman with a little her <lb/>
election was that almost face you'll know that's ma. If <lb/>
never had a ma you should <lb/>
one like our ma, <lb/>
5- <lb/>
M F <lb/>
in the Selection <lb/>
a suit clothes ac- <lb/>
companies poor judgment <lb/>
in other things. <lb/>
It is as bad to be under- <lb/>
dressed as it is to be over- <lb/>
dressed. <lb/>
Wear Clothes in <lb/>
with your station. <lb/>
The sack suit we illustrate <lb/>
here is appropriate for solid <lb/>
substantial men in <lb/>
Any Walk of life <lb/>
Every detail has been <lb/>
studied and to be in <lb/>
keeping with the character <lb/>
the man who wears it. <lb/>
The style is conservative, <lb/>
and yet keeps pace with the <lb/>
trend of fashion. The <lb/>
has been increased, the back <lb/>
n form fitting, the lapels <lb/>
broadened, shoulders m i- <lb/>
and the front shaped <lb/>
to accord with the prevailing <lb/>
fashion without the extreme <lb/>
IS <lb/>
something dangerous about speed. <lb/>
When I was n student at Princeton, <lb/>
there was n middle cook, a <lb/>
pie minded woman with a good deal <lb/>
of money saved, who suddenly got. <lb/>
herself engaged to a horse jockey. I j <lb/>
law the cook standing looking out <lb/>
her kitchen window with a dazed <lb/>
expression one morning, and I said <lb/>
to ; <lb/>
is the matter, <lb/>
she said, my <lb/>
husband that is to be, everything <lb/>
Suits in at 12.50 and <lb/>
u y easy steps to <lb/>
Our and Suits appear to <lb/>
hive the most fiends. <lb/>
FRANK WILSON <lb/>
The King <lb/>
A. <lb/>
W. H. RICKS <lb/>
Without exception the young men <lb/>
walked up to the ballot box and too. <lb/>
voted the straight Democratic <lb/>
ticket. Int in North . <lb/>
. , , , , . ., I he Georgia mill operative who <lb/>
Carolina always lead into the a saloon for a sleeping car <lb/>
Democratic party. hit ch; place, to<lb/>
In this <lb/>
section at least the Reward. <lb/>
campaign just closed has been I will pay a reward of and <lb/>
remarkably clean. Of course expenses, for the arrest and de- <lb/>
livery to me of Will Turner, col- <lb/>
here has been some who the chain <lb/>
usually is, but on the whole the of Pitt county on Oct. <lb/>
. , , , Very dark, about <lb/>
campaign has been free from fa about <lb/>
bitterness and nothing has pounds, feet o inches <lb/>
high. Send any information to <lb/>
Furniture Problem <lb/>
We can solve it for you. <lb/>
Leadership <lb/>
furniture Sale Competition Is Brisk and <lb/>
to create enmity between <lb/>
men or cause heart burnings. <lb/>
For a season there will be <lb/>
from the of politics, at <lb/>
which we should all be thankful. <lb/>
It will be a good day the <lb/>
country when political campaigns <lb/>
become less frequent, that is if <lb/>
a time ever arrives. <lb/>
the or to <lb/>
Joe Supt. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Nobody cares particularly what <lb/>
hour, minute or second the pres- <lb/>
voted, or <lb/>
he wore, but we bet the press <lb/>
dispatches tell it- <lb/>
Now that a <lb/>
Ask any business man declared that Adam was a <lb/>
today what Greenville would be man there is room for doubt. <lb/>
tell me that that young <lb/>
feller from wot be staying <lb/>
down at your place have got <lb/>
caught it afore he came, <lb/>
then, for he ain't touched nothing <lb/>
stronger than milk since he bin <lb/>
a Week. <lb/>
What Might Have Bean. <lb/>
confessed the penitent <lb/>
man, a moment of weakness I <lb/>
stole a carload of brass <lb/>
a moment of ex- <lb/>
claimed the <lb/>
man What would you have taken <lb/>
if you had yielded in a moment <lb/>
when you felt <lb/>
London <lb/>
The taximeter system has been <lb/>
i introduced in London, and one of <lb/>
An r of I <lb/>
i.-d pan died j <lb/>
endeavored during a <lb/>
of a passed <lb/>
a bill for in <lb/>
standing windows while <lb/>
cleaning luring his lust <lb/>
the old fellow to a <lb/>
colleague that his object in intro- <lb/>
papers there a how <lb/>
by the how for that. it. y e <lb/>
the bill, said he, not for the sake f t fa <lb/>
of the but for the I don't know whether <lb/>
they might idea of the a quid over for You <lb/>
was suggested to me by the fen like <lb/>
that a window cleaner aught fall j <lb/>
Furniture Sale Claims are many and loud <lb/>
WHO WHY <lb/>
What decide it. There but one <lb/>
test, sale is best and most important <lb/>
that offers you <lb/>
Prices on the Furniture Need <lb/>
convinced. Tours to please. <lb/>
E. TOT <lb/>
Pictures Framed to Order. <lb/>
This department is in C. NYE, who <lb/>
resent the Eastern Reflector in <lb/>
i aw I l a . <lb/>
the fall of the year has come <lb/>
and money is in greater circulation, <lb/>
those in and on the <lb/>
routes leading out from here, <lb/>
who are in arrears on subscription <lb/>
to the Daily Reflector <lb/>
will confer a upon us <lb/>
by handing the amount lo me -u <lb/>
your earliest Receipts <lb/>
will be promptly. Subscriptions <lb/>
also solicited <lb/>
P. C NYE. <lb/>
Winterville Dent. <lb/>
Mrs- J. K. and <lb/>
daughter, Miss Minnie, were here <lb/>
a short while Saturday shopping. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Co., are <lb/>
still receiving orders for their <lb/>
A full line of <lb/>
and fruit at J B. Cut i oil Co <lb/>
There in need nice will <lb/>
pants P. <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Remember Rev. J. E. <lb/>
will preach to the Red Men here <lb/>
next Sunday at p. m <lb/>
The season is now at hand <lb/>
when most of the farmers are <lb/>
housing their corn and some of <lb/>
them are worried about not <lb/>
bodies in which to haul their <lb/>
corn Now don't let this worry <lb/>
Sou any longer for the A. G Cox <lb/>
Co., has on hand a full sup- <lb/>
ply of these bodies and would be <lb/>
glad to supply your needs. <lb/>
Ernest Manning and Oscar <lb/>
authorized to rep- <lb/>
and territory <lb/>
Hunters in need of best loaded <lb/>
Us can get them at J. B. Car- <lb/>
roll A Co, <lb/>
Water. <lb/>
Cures <lb/>
Liver e <lb/>
V weakness, i- <lb/>
at the <lb/>
I T. x. Bro.<lb/>
STRAY TAKEN UP. <lb/>
I have taken up one unmarked <lb/>
stray sandy color, weight <lb/>
about or pounds. Owner <lb/>
can get same by proving property <lb/>
and paying <lb/>
W. M. Jones. <lb/>
P. D. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
buggy bodies and seats. This goes came down Tuesday from <lb/>
show that they are putting .,. . , . <lb/>
the best bodies and seats on the Greenville to vote. <lb/>
market and we are confident you I are our entire line of <lb/>
will make no mistake in sending.,. goods at Special low prices <lb/>
them your order. <lb/>
Mrs. Maud Hardy, of Oakley, <lb/>
is visiting her mother, Mrs- <lb/>
Pattie Sutton, this week. <lb/>
lakes of <lb/>
We sell II, <lb/>
B. T. Bro. <lb/>
W. C. Vincent, of Bethel, was <lb/>
and it will be to see <lb/>
them before buying elsewhere and <lb/>
come before bargains <lb/>
cent goods <lb/>
now and goods <lb/>
i and several others same way. <lb/>
Harrington and Co <lb/>
Two and pi <lb/>
In in a new kid ting <lb/>
null S. C. <lb/>
es. Apply lo O. W. Jeffreys, <lb/>
Tarboro, K. C <lb/>
pleasant caller here Sunday We proud of these yet we <lb/>
. , , , can mink of many things of <lb/>
night We are always glad to we still stand in and <lb/>
see him. one of these is a good laundry <lb/>
m . f, ,,, , n , plant. The servant question is <lb/>
Au g. becoming alarming and the time <lb/>
on hand a full supply of their fa near at hand this must <lb/>
Tar Heel cart and wagons. Bet- be and it that an <lb/>
see or write them before you enterprise of this kind would <lb/>
prove the situation- <lb/>
We still m mil i f i , <lb/>
lee of off- The business done through the <lb/>
ring to a very low Bank of Winterville amounted to <lb/>
more than thus making <lb/>
an excellent record. Others are <lb/>
B t ox, toking advantage the bank <lb/>
A private phone system has and not <lb/>
just been put in connecting the school season is here and <lb/>
dormitories, the office of A. G. your boy will need a good com- <lb/>
Cox Mfg. Co , the store of A. W. winter suit. B. F. Man- <lb/>
depot, and the Co., have them of all <lb/>
residence of A. G. Cox. See them for Prices. <lb/>
A Urge line of plaids of all , the line of <lb/>
grades just at B. F. and umbrellas we ever <lb/>
Manning Co. They are going, carried Harrington and Co <lb/>
Call and see them at once. Good nice three crown raisins <lb/>
What town can ours for at B. Carroll Co. <lb/>
modern conveniences to its size <lb/>
and age It has a first class Ange Co. before buying. They <lb/>
electric light plant, a thriving are over stocked with mohair <lb/>
bank, department stores, four goods, silks and nice shirt, waist <lb/>
daily mails, three rural free de- goods. <lb/>
livery routes going out into every The A. G Cox Mfg Co., <lb/>
surrounding section, and one now receiving daily orders for <lb/>
Of the very best schools in the their improved cart We <lb/>
State. I solicit your orders. <lb/>
Plenty of best lime always on <lb/>
hind at A. W. Co. New lines of fine dress goods <lb/>
W. L. Smith, of Falkland, was arriving daily at Harrington; <lb/>
here Sunday night. Co- <lb/>
Nice sun dried apples fresh The is <lb/>
and bright at J. B. Carroll Co. thin,; for tearing up rough land. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. R. G- Chapman You them at Harrington <lb/>
spent Sunday at <lb/>
Notice of Dissolution. <lb/>
We, the undersigned, have 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,, Conetoe, N. C. <lb/>
R. J. Little, <lb/>
J. H. Clark. <lb/>
We will pay the highest mar- <lb/>
price for chickens, eggs, <lb/>
corn, peas or anything in that <lb/>
line. <lb/>
I lathe mi e <lb/>
U III i <lb/>
. m. I I. putrid <lb/>
K . i t I. ii. v <lb/>
in l--u <lb/>
l i u, y <lb/>
TO AND <lb/>
HE<lb/>
TUB NO <lb/>
Y k lo ii r l mi. . r- <lb/>
sup. -r . -I. a <lb/>
him.- in <lb/>
h- II- It-.-pi. <lb/>
v r n Id ii be<lb/>
Hire, I drill -ii<lb/>
r. ail <lb/>
. at She 1-1 <lb/>
u ether-111 r.-1 <lb/>
Ii- an<lb/>
Farm <lb/>
The firm hi <lb/>
which Kid. I lived <lb/>
situated at iii a <lb/>
for rent the year par- <lb/>
i In. in <lb/>
James L. Little, N. C. <lb/>
ltd w. <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Co. <lb/>
just shipped a car load of their <lb/>
Pitt county School Desk. Bitter <lb/>
send them your order at once. <lb/>
line of and <lb/>
Winter millinery <lb/>
ready for inspection nil e <lb/>
O'clock Oct ,<lb/>
FOR SALE.- One-half acre <lb/>
corner lot with three room dwell- <lb/>
conveniently located to school <lb/>
and business part of town- For <lb/>
particulars see <lb/>
J. A. Manning. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C <lb/>
Rev. W. E. Cox, of Greenville, <lb/>
Spent Tuesday night with his <lb/>
Mrs. E. E Cox. Thursday Ml are invited I <lb/>
to the drug of B. I. new the J. <lb/>
Cox A for T. W. j R. Smith and Company. <lb/>
trade and Ml I Misses<lb/>
C- A. Fair was in town Sun- Why use that old <lb/>
day. machine of yours when you <lb/>
Call and see the large line of can get a brand new <lb/>
ladies cloaks at B. for a vs <lb/>
F, Manning Co. They are off- up, at CO. <lb/>
them at a bargain. <lb/>
The young men will do well to <lb/>
see K- ; Co., before <lb/>
buying fall hats. They are <lb/>
STRAY TAKEN <lb/>
I up . <lb/>
all-nil fir. r <lb/>
bargains on their black Split <lb/>
entire lino. <lb/>
We bought mill in <lb/>
that any <lb/>
thing ever saw money. <lb/>
Harrington Barber and Co. <lb/>
Ladies in need of <lb/>
and patterns can find them <lb/>
at B. F. Maiming Co. <lb/>
buggies Man- f <lb/>
A. G Cox Mfg. <lb/>
are still in demand. Better send u mo <lb/>
then your order. hot t <lb/>
get by p, <lb/>
property paying <lb/>
J. F. May, N O. <lb/>
SALE OF PERSONAL PROPER <lb/>
TY. <lb/>
Notice la hereby given that <lb/>
at u noon, <lb/>
will to at the of <lb/>
the B. of <lb/>
all the of the <lb/>
, I- B. <lb/>
A Pensioner. <lb/>
An pensioner of France <lb/>
died other day. Through all the <lb/>
of and forms <lb/>
an servant of <lb/>
Charles tho hi t king of <lb/>
had boon his stipend. In <lb/>
Char u u pension of <lb/>
year in o; c of his man <lb/>
ants, year in and year oat ever <lb/>
since, whatever system might he up <lb/>
or down, the good fellow religiously <lb/>
presented himself on pension day to <lb/>
draw his and just as religiously <lb/>
every succeeding finance minister <lb/>
had it for him. When he died <lb/>
the ancient pensioner was a <lb/>
The <lb/>
Claims Sustained <lb/>
United States Court of Claims <lb/>
Tho of International <lb/>
Dictionary that it is, In <lb/>
-i <lb/>
enriched parts with <lb/>
tho f adapting It to meet tho <lb/>
severer . another <lb/>
are of opinion that this allegation <lb/>
most tho <lb/>
that Las ii . and tho <lb/>
1- ill u . ;. <lb/>
It now hits been re- <lb/>
been In <lb/>
part, i u <lb/>
the and a <lb/>
than any <lb/>
hut the world I.It Is perhaps n to that we refer <lb/>
to tho in our work <lb/>
the highest audio l-i of <lb/>
and In r e pat It <lb/>
be t i <lb/>
A o. <lb/>
above to <lb/>
INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY <lb/>
THE GRAND PRIZE <lb/>
was given to the <lb/>
at the World's Fair, m. <lb/>
GET THE LATEST AND BEST <lb/>
be <lb/>
MERRIAM <lb/>
CORRESPONDENCE. <lb/>
Party, Cora <lb/>
Politics and Personals. <lb/>
Bethel, N. C, Nov. 5.1906. <lb/>
The party given <lb/>
by the Literary society <lb/>
on Friday night last, in the <lb/>
society hall for the benefit of the <lb/>
graded school library was quite <lb/>
a success. The attendance was <lb/>
good and the receipts amounted <lb/>
to over Miss Inez Thomas, <lb/>
in a fetching gypsy costume, <lb/>
made a charming daughter <lb/>
the mystic art and foretold every <lb/>
happiness for the fortunate one <lb/>
palm with <lb/>
Miss Whitehurst had <lb/>
charge of the lemonade <lb/>
and by her pleasing r <lb/>
waxed many a tardy <lb/>
from unwilling purses, <lb/>
Miss Maud cut the <lb/>
wedding cake and gave to the <lb/>
lads and lassies a peep into the <lb/>
book of fate with their slices of <lb/>
cake- <lb/>
The following you lg ladies <lb/>
served the refreshments; <lb/>
Alice James. Carrie Ila <lb/>
Bullock, Lizzie Eb- <lb/>
I William. Gladys Andrews <lb/>
and Jennie Jones. <lb/>
S. M. Jones gave an old tin e <lb/>
at his <lb/>
able home near Bethel on last <lb/>
Thursday night. Quite a <lb/>
of our young people attended <lb/>
and had a most enjoyable time. <lb/>
The songs, the old leader, <lb/>
the crowd of huskers round <lb/>
corn pile all in the ht <lb/>
of a <lb/>
back the pictures and of <lb/>
Joel Chandler a d <lb/>
Thomas Nelson Page <lb/>
the young folks a living picture <lb/>
f one ff the scenes of <lb/>
de <lb/>
Miss Effie Grimes <lb/>
a few of her friends most <lb/>
charmingly on Saturday even- <lb/>
with a chafing party. The <lb/>
following were the fortunate <lb/>
Misses Bertha <lb/>
Nannie Watson Etta <lb/>
Huggins; Henry <lb/>
and Harlie <lb/>
Quite a number of our young <lb/>
people attended the perform- <lb/>
of the in <lb/>
Tarboro last week. <lb/>
Several Bethel folks attended <lb/>
the Conetoe dance last Friday <lb/>
night and report quite a swell <lb/>
affair. <lb/>
Miss Effie Grimes returned <lb/>
Friday evening from a visit to <lb/>
friends in Rocky Mount. <lb/>
Mrs. Herbert Taylor, of Tar- <lb/>
spent Saturday here with <lb/>
her mother Mrs. Hetty Taylor. <lb/>
Mrs. D. E. House, of Greenville <lb/>
returned home Sunday afternoon <lb/>
after a visit to her mother, Mrs- <lb/>
Mayo, of this vicinity. <lb/>
T. R. Andrews, C. M Warren, <lb/>
Fred Forbes and Tom Moore, of <lb/>
Greenville, spent Sunday here. <lb/>
W J. Mayo, of spent <lb/>
Sunday in Bethel. <lb/>
On last night <lb/>
Rogers an old suffered <lb/>
a stroke of paralysis. <lb/>
Don't Wait. <lb/>
Again we would remind those <lb/>
who have received statements of <lb/>
what they owe The Reflector for <lb/>
subscription, and have not y I <lb/>
responded, to let US hear from <lb/>
them We do not like to pub- <lb/>
items of this kind, but the <lb/>
money due is to help us <lb/>
meet our obligations- All should <lb/>
appreciate this and be prompt in <lb/>
paying. <lb/>
Jas f D <lb/>
New, latest, and up-to-date Fall and Winter <lb/>
Goods, Shoes, Silks, Woolens. Dress trimmings and <lb/>
Cloaks, we only to give you a few price <lb/>
but have lots goods and will take pleasure in <lb/>
showing you <lb/>
Make our store your <lb/>
Dress goods in solid colors. <lb/>
Plaids and mixed, the <lb/>
newest at <lb/>
1.00,1.25,1,50 per <lb/>
SIMS AT ANA PRICE <lb/>
and Shoes for Ladies the <lb/>
things out and the most comfortable made a 3.00 <lb/>
3.50 and 4.00 <lb/>
Percales and <lb/>
school dresses in figures <lb/>
plaids. <lb/>
. and cent <lb/>
our underwear is complete. <lb/>
F. <lb/>
ton Mill Men be Prosecuted. <lb/>
Washington Nov 2.- <lb/>
The government is gong to pros- <lb/>
North Carolina cotton mill <lb/>
men for violation of the alien la- <lb/>
contract law. This fact was <lb/>
made known though not <lb/>
officially announced, in a state- <lb/>
from Assistant Secretary <lb/>
Murray, of the Department of <lb/>
Labor and Commerce, who de- <lb/>
that the government has <lb/>
decided to deport the English <lb/>
textile operatives under arrest <lb/>
Charlotte and Gastonia. There <lb/>
have been twenty-three of these <lb/>
foreign cotton mill operatives <lb/>
arrest and the number was <lb/>
J ht. <lb/>
BoweN <lb/>
HOME Of WOMAN'S FASHIONS. <lb/>
Save the <lb/>
The hot weather brings <lb/>
with to ii by o ti V <lb/>
f tapper. With u slum <lb/>
es. Canned Goods, Package <lb/>
Goods, Pickles, Butter Cheese, Coffee, <lb/>
Tea, Cakes, Candies, Fruits, Ac as T carry, the and buy. <lb/>
are easy and the all saved H will take no argument to <lb/>
you of this if you visit my store and sue what I carry. <lb/>
You can mo dour North of <lb/>
J. B <lb/>
Neat Job <lb/>
Our specialty, <lb/>
deflector Job Printing Office<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019669_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
mm <lb/>
e Values In Mens, and young <lb/>
lens Suits and Overcoats. <lb/>
U. A. .-. <lb/>
a ricks <lb/>
Suit or to <lb/>
production on our Clothing <lb/>
they are better values than obtainable else The <lb/>
same cure is taken to give our customers the best. ere is <lb/>
not the equal mite or Overcoats in Pitt county. It will <lb/>
pay yon a short while to over this line Clothing. It <lb/>
meant more Style tor you and values you don't else- <lb/>
where. It is not possible to describe the elegance of our <lb/>
Clothing. You must see the line to appreciate it. <lb/>
RAIN 12.50 TO <lb/>
A Guaranteed Raincoat <lb/>
Rain <lb/>
The cuts shown t he f and view o <lb/>
Coals no introduction to good Dress rs. Th -y h i introduced by <lb/>
mine-. i f to m our in oat your u i is c <lb/>
line of <lb/>
A . <lb/>
Mi t.<lb/>
A Black L-. tin best mine <lb/>
Grey t <lb/>
w ill a black pi <lb/>
Pi i. e <lb/>
Special, form or loose <lb/>
if <lb/>
forth <lb/>
25.00 <lb/>
S FORBES. <lb/>
THE OUTFITTER. <lb/>
tint <lb/>
MM <lb/>
Selling <lb/>
AYDEN <lb/>
PASHA. <lb/>
Manager <lb/>
. , <lb/>
ll all. <lb/>
i u,. for Daily If you need any paint be sure <lb/>
I to call on E. E. Co. They <lb/>
ii . k i. a Will cover over <lb/>
as much and wear as long <lb/>
up a by street <lb/>
quarter, old, <lb/>
o lives the man <lb/>
Ii e ruled Egypt. If <lb/>
i in Cairo to- <lb/>
I you he is dead, <lb/>
I r e do not know. <lb/>
Ladies Dress Goods, Men's and Boys <lb/>
Hats, Shoes and Notions. <lb/>
-1 At and Below v- <lb/>
us call up- <lb/>
Also Heavy and Fancy and <lb/>
Soft Drinks. <lb/>
I-are mo<lb/>
kicks <lb/>
mug for <lb/>
a. lit i a<lb/>
. ll, . , <lb/>
e traveling through the <lb/>
sections of <lb/>
can but be impressed <lb/>
l the surroundings contingent <lb/>
In any and every local- <lb/>
center to circumference <lb/>
horses, mules, cattle and <lb/>
he in excellent the <lb/>
homes, the <lb/>
in the highest state of <lb/>
the scenery and land- <lb/>
by any clime, <lb/>
with inspection -f <lb/>
bank account will readily <lb/>
fine th skeptic mind <lb/>
and <lb/>
creator <lb/>
b. eked i ; the bone and <lb/>
hard oner- <lb/>
winch lies the <lb/>
;. thriving town of <lb/>
n. A w factories, a <lb/>
by capitalist. <lb/>
;. <lb/>
N, c, <lb/>
A rare opportunity by the Farmers cf this <lb/>
Section to get improved stock at common <lb/>
Stock Prices. <lb/>
on <lb/>
and <lb/>
j as and a good price. <lb/>
John Owens, of Saratoga, a <lb/>
l from the <lb/>
spent Saturday and <lb/>
I Sunday here. <lb/>
We are displaying a very <lb/>
line of art squares and <lb/>
rugs. Cannon Tyson. <lb/>
Mrs. R. M. Prince and child <lb/>
have been on a visit to <lb/>
her here, left for Port Nor- <lb/>
folk Saturday. <lb/>
If you wish to make your <lb/>
mend or relative a handsome <lb/>
present buy one of those rich <lb/>
and beautiful framed picture; <lb/>
Cannon Tyson. <lb/>
Some time ago Mr. J. I. Hum- <lb/>
lives but a few miles <lb/>
Ayden, came to town <lb/>
transacting his bush <lb/>
ind conversing with a <lb/>
at <lb/>
. r <lb/>
fruit of <lb/>
; this . <lb/>
ll as <lb/>
id in <lb/>
in e <lb/>
I it<lb/>
j not a land he hitched P <lb/>
to y, yet the generous and home- After <lb/>
rival there he missed his r <lb/>
book and nowhere could t be <lb/>
Three weeks la r he <lb/>
j came to Ayden again and <lb/>
to the pest where he usually <lb/>
hitched his horse, in a v pub- <lb/>
place, on getting out his <lb/>
buggy there on the ground lay <lb/>
long lost pocket b not <lb/>
dollar gone, not a penny miss <lb/>
Fortunate man, <lb/>
and no wonder Mr. Hum <lb/>
has had the sine <lb/>
For good and cheap ll go to <lb/>
E. E. Co, always have <lb/>
fresh hand. <lb/>
Miss Dora of Win- <lb/>
was with . tends hen <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
We handle Goldman's shoes <lb/>
for women. and children. <lb/>
Every pair sold under strict <lb/>
guarantee. On overcoats and <lb/>
clothing Cannon Tyson can <lb/>
please you in both quality <lb/>
price. <lb/>
A line borne farm <lb/>
that <lb/>
and <lb/>
before the <lb/>
everything <lb/>
untold<lb/>
, success of <lb/>
phase and as an <lb/>
successful in- <lb/>
I speculations sure <lb/>
seemed <lb/>
of i e capitalist has not <lb/>
heard for surely <lb/>
is .- of prospective <lb/>
a sure <lb/>
of any venture <lb/>
In a lit <lb/>
of ti. <lb/>
day, <lb/>
v. <lb/>
while Hi <lb/>
a fa after bombardment of <lb/>
h-m to exile for <lb/>
in . on as allowed some <lb/>
r in return to his <lb/>
h after a week's <lb/>
u Dative journalist, the <lb/>
. of Even <lb/>
now, in h year, he is a <lb/>
big hut prime he must have <lb/>
s- hair and <lb/>
beard . r forehead. <lb/>
the Turkish tar- <lb/>
Ii; Ii I es, dulled little by <lb/>
I. lighting up wonderfully <lb/>
when I.- things which <lb/>
. powerful <lb/>
a mouth, which must <lb/>
or. e have I hard and cruel, <lb/>
by Though the <lb/>
jay is I e an overcoat, <lb/>
he heavily on a massive <lb/>
ebony Mall Gazette. <lb/>
Boxes. <lb/>
The in. , as spending his <lb/>
vacation in the <lb/>
at the <lb/>
i- in I <lb/>
i I no iv, is such <lb/>
e p. I. <lb/>
I a pop ; <lb/>
the n . I -ii. <lb/>
mm higher I t . and <lb/>
1.1 cap; n c i tow <lb/>
n box <lb/>
The postmaster I t of his <lb/>
barred <lb/>
-I can explain <lb/>
see, the country <lb/>
rover gel new boxes, <lb/>
leftover when l a <lb/>
make over <lb/>
FALL, 1906 <lb/>
We are receiving ;,. u w <lb/>
DRY GOODS,<lb/>
ES <lb/>
SIS <lb/>
and it give s us pleasure to say <lb/>
stock th as complete as we can <lb/>
line of arid boy's <lb/>
On Wednesday November 14th, I will offer for sale at my farm, three miles <lb/>
c the Tarboro bout head of high bred bogs, about young <lb/>
end a choice r bullocks of the Red Pole <lb/>
and Polled Angus breed. I ill also s II sonic very fine mules. Only reason for sell- <lb/>
is t t.- them with mares for breeding. lam ordering this sale of <lb/>
m ck Iv s an experiment and if the farmers will buy this stock at anything <lb/>
my in future Is to have an annual sale improved Here <lb/>
raw r fine gilts, either of the Berkshire or China blood, <lb/>
force mil on the red tor sole in such a manner that every- <lb/>
one or l r. can I the chance to In other words you can buy one <lb/>
or h o unlike. Let p one in this branch farming attend <lb/>
his sale.<lb/>
II <lb/>
I L. i <lb/>
nu <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Hi. in the op- <lb/>
J. with a lira <lb/>
alt <lb/>
Ever v v-i I fr <lb/>
in c at very lowest <lb/>
-1 aid is run in <lb/>
m-iii with <lb/>
t i so veil in any <lb/>
or sold by Give <lb/>
me a O ll. <lb/>
STRAY TAKEN UP <lb/>
SI <lb/>
I have taken up a cow and calf. <lb/>
Cow is in Rood condition, black <lb/>
with white list across shoulders, <lb/>
nearly white Calf about <lb/>
five months old, dark color. <lb/>
Owner can get same by proving <lb/>
properly and paying costs. <lb/>
Stephen <lb/>
Near School House, West <lb/>
of Race Track. <lb/>
J. H. Starkey. <lb/>
Farms for Craven, <lb/>
Wake, Beaufort and <lb/>
counties in North Carolina <lb/>
and Virginia. Tell me <lb/>
wants. R. E. Prince, Raleigh at <lb/>
LOST. On the railroad yard at <lb/>
Greenville, a pocket book con- <lb/>
about a trunk check <lb/>
and gold ring A liberal <lb/>
reward will be paid finder by <lb/>
leaving at Reflector office. <lb/>
Mrs- C T. Gardner, <lb/>
Salisbury, N C <lb/>
C. <lb/>
d. t s w. <lb/>
SALE OF PERSONAL PROP- <lb/>
Dec 5th, I will <lb/>
expose to public sale, to the <lb/>
bidder for cash, all my <lb/>
horses, hogs, farming <lb/>
utensil and household and <lb/>
en furniture. This sale will he <lb/>
my home place on Great <lb/>
a I you M <lb/>
SAVE <lb/>
at and one of <lb/>
the best made, <lb/>
There c n <lb/>
PIANOS me <lb/>
rot sold dealer bu <lb/>
direct Dakar to <lb/>
you middle <lb/>
man's <lb/>
EVERY PIANO <lb/>
GUARANTEED. <lb/>
Drop a line lot us <lb/>
tell you all about it, a d <lb/>
how we help you to own <lb/>
this sweet ,. <lb/>
Let us tell you M- <lb/>
who <lb/>
have bought m <lb/>
Ad- <lb/>
dress. <lb/>
Three ways are used by farmers <lb/>
for curing and preparing their to- <lb/>
for the market; namely sun <lb/>
cured, air cured and flue cured. <lb/>
The old and cheap way is called air <lb/>
cured; the later discovery and <lb/>
proved way is called flue cured. <lb/>
In flue curing the tobacco is taken <lb/>
from the fields and racked in barns <lb/>
especially built to retain heat and <lb/>
there subjected to a continuous high <lb/>
temperature, produced by the direct <lb/>
heat of flame heated flues, which <lb/>
brings out in the tobacco that <lb/>
stimulating taste and aroma that <lb/>
expert roasting develops in green <lb/>
coffee. These similar processes give <lb/>
to both tobacco and coffee the cheer- <lb/>
and stimulating quality that pop- <lb/>
their use. <lb/>
The quality of tobacco depends <lb/>
much on the curing process and the <lb/>
kind of soil that produces it, as ex- <lb/>
pert tests prove that this flue cured <lb/>
tobacco, grown in the famous Pied- <lb/>
region, requires and takes less <lb/>
sweetening than tobacco grown in <lb/>
any other section of the United States <lb/>
and has a wholesome, stimulating, <lb/>
juicy, full tobacco taste that satisfies <lb/>
tobacco hunger. That's why chewers <lb/>
prefer Schnapps, because Schnapps <lb/>
cheers more than any other chewing <lb/>
tobacco, and that's why of <lb/>
Schnapps pass the good thing along <lb/>
one chewer makes other chewers, <lb/>
until the fact is established that <lb/>
there are more chewers and more <lb/>
pounds of tobacco chewed to the <lb/>
population in states where Schnapps <lb/>
tobacco is sold than there are in <lb/>
those states where Schnapps has not <lb/>
yet been offered to the trade. <lb/>
A plug of Schnapps is more <lb/>
economical than a much larger <lb/>
plug of cheap tobacco. Sold at <lb/>
per pound in cuts. Strictly <lb/>
and cent plugs. <lb/>
h ; n ore <lb/>
acres <lb/>
Bet who has <lb/>
in I. r home with <lb/>
i . for considerable <lb/>
of lime, left Satin day for <lb/>
t she reside <lb/>
I MI -I <lb/>
. lard nun iv.<lb/>
. ll- ,. <lb/>
pea Cox and <lb/>
I of Winterville, <lb/>
Lizzie and Lorena <lb/>
from ; until Mon- <lb/>
-i <lb/>
Ion. <lb/>
my hong, h <lb/>
ion. <lb/>
I and in <lb/>
A lo <lb/>
e. om. <lb/>
READING ROOM STORIES. <lb/>
Mil. <lb/>
ill IS <lb/>
get new boxes. So ; <lb/>
to have <lb/>
high <lb/>
numbers <lb/>
you won't any i- s than <lb/>
Some other pot- <lb/>
drew the lower my- <lb/>
self rather et the big <lb/>
for it makes w- n <lb/>
little Post. <lb/>
Parks F-.- the <lb/>
One of many signs of an <lb/>
awakened is the <lb/>
clothing is exceptionally good this season <lb/>
and if call our line, <lb/>
we will convince that our styles are <lb/>
he latest and prices as reasonable as can <lb/>
be made. We have hard to give <lb/>
of is mere complete this fall ever think <lb/>
of steads. We <lb/>
kw <lb/>
We your business and if you will come to see we <lb/>
treatment. our stoic or your <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
Leaders in Low Prices. <lb/>
tho idea d diver ; November is not making much <lb/>
their public spaces. pretense about the cold part of it. <lb/>
. dozen years r. trued <lb/>
may he n vacant <lb/>
sign. hey are not so keen <lb/>
Hi <lb/>
The Home <lb/>
for <lb/>
. <lb/>
book <lb/>
n to Retain<lb/>
e. . . a department <lb/>
u library i <lb/>
. a <lb/>
She <lb/>
read it all day. <lb/>
railed for o <lb/>
four sue. days<lb/>
On tho i <lb/>
the CUd <lb/>
t, y <lb/>
. <lb/>
J, <lb/>
in char e Unit she ., <lb/>
tile <lb/>
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, N. C. <lb/>
ii n I h <lb/>
at Cash <lb/>
i buy, to i <lb/>
i . <lb/>
. , . . ., lie inquired <lb/>
. billy . i, ,. <lb/>
its tins way, i <lb/>
B- R Wall came up on trail educated, <lb/>
Monday from a visit to or <lb/>
Is down the road- i and looked at <lb/>
., . . .-T J in <lb/>
all interested in cook j she <lb/>
. and heaters it will pay I been for some time that I <lb/>
o examine quality and was my husband's love. I <lb/>
that Cannon Tyson are know my conversation isn't biter <lb/>
eating, and I thought if I could read <lb/>
of Winter- up on some useful things my talk <lb/>
a short while table would hold him, and <lb/>
he slay in <lb/>
they wen <lb/>
to <lb/>
fountain <lb/>
baa ;. <lb/>
in a <lb/>
trees or . , <lb/>
often . <lb/>
-V. <lb/>
I . i m- <lb/>
; and <lb/>
park areas. n <lb/>
I a i id e. <lb/>
v. it grove of no.- o <lb/>
meadow, they ore <lb/>
lo let it <lb/>
Ayden <lb/>
School <lb/>
Stationery <lb/>
I . <lb/>
M,<lb/>
in in <lb/>
i f-<lb/>
Now is <lb/>
n n- f u <lb/>
tablets, pens, ii i <lb/>
we have a trout us<lb/>
note fin- i; <lb/>
i plain o-i<lb/>
N, N. <lb/>
To . I Mi n- . i <lb/>
Bladder . i-r <lb/>
s-. lie aim it <lb/>
it we will <lb/>
your a <lb/>
full 11.00 size if <lb/>
and if hem i., then <lb/>
use IVA until <lb/>
. entitles you <lb/>
i to a bottle I VA L at <lb/>
Only n. d number bottle, <lb/>
away. thin i <lb/>
v to t-it <lb/>
SOL <lb/>
NOW <lb/>
Si A I <lb/>
it <lb/>
S warm <lb/>
Levi <lb/>
M. <lb/>
S, No-folk, <lb/>
t. r u.-sear. <lb/>
b street- <lb/>
of i <lb/>
l n I It <lb/>
I . n . lay . , j. <lb/>
the mi win -i for r, i h-f i, <lb/>
17- N. in 1904. Mir <lb/>
or lot of n <lb/>
Pin and In lo n <lb/>
r i h- I . I ,,. ft . <lb/>
of n i-r , n Una a <lb/>
n,,. ,. road. <lb/>
Man runs a e <lb/>
h, a it <lb/>
II In a ml. .-,. an <lb/>
with f- <lb/>
on <lb/>
road to <lb/>
a I an <lb/>
en or h th . <lb/>
Hi I I U M i , ,,, <lb/>
nil i I it ii a <lb/>
ii a ma pa run a. ad T h<lb/>
Come in and examine my <lb/>
CORN PLANTERS, GUANO SOWERS, DISC <lb/>
BARROWS. SMOOTHING HARROWS, <lb/>
AND HORSE STEEL PLOWS, WIRE <lb/>
arc ma chin <lb/>
Greenville Livery and <lb/>
Transfer <lb/>
Had ear <lb/>
uM tr all . <lb/>
me wept <lb/>
o. in <lb/>
O Ml <lb/>
go, lie <lb/>
ti. be now <lb/>
buy- <lb/>
n Tyson, <lb/>
E. Cox is confined to <lb/>
me on account of sickness. <lb/>
now runs the town <lb/>
and he proves a <lb/>
too- <lb/>
in E, E. Dali Co, foe <lb/>
they will <lb/>
and treat you nice. <lb/>
Co carry a nice line <lb/>
oranges and <lb/>
Call on them for same. <lb/>
. came up from, <lb/>
he road yesterday. i <lb/>
r cordially in- <lb/>
Indies to call <lb/>
cloaks and rain- <lb/>
i.- husband's <lb/>
new asked her <lb/>
lip has ii string of hones at the <lb/>
she <lb/>
O i another occasion same <lb/>
was by a brisk <lb/>
e; woman of twenty-four or <lb/>
with u very <lb/>
way. <lb/>
. you on <lb/>
she asked. <lb/>
attendant brought nut <lb/>
volume on i. <lb/>
those tire too large, I <lb/>
have not time . e bis <lb/>
books. Have not something <lb/>
man article <lb/>
on in in the encyclopedia. <lb/>
i ton I have <lb/>
not time to re-d that Yon see, <lb/>
I'm over to India a mis- <lb/>
and manly v.-ant to pet <lb/>
the main points so I can confute <lb/>
their Header. <lb/>
iNT OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF ; <lb/>
N. J. r <lb/>
; hush . AI <lb/>
or Information Or <lb/>
RESOURCES.<lb/>
Overdrafts <lb/>
furniture and <lb/>
Due from Banks, ; <lb/>
Gold Coin, <lb/>
Silver Coin, <lb/>
. bank notes and <lb/>
F S. notes <lb/>
Capital stock paid m, <lb/>
fund <lb/>
Undivided profits less <lb/>
expenses, 720.80 <lb/>
Dividends unpaid . <lb/>
Deposits subject to check, 41,002.48 <lb/>
Cashier's<lb/>
1,232 <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
5,045.00 <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
Save Your Dollars <lb/>
A n J v i. n l i I i i I i j, <lb/>
i, u v i i i f l j i i t j u <lb/>
get them cheapest. have <lb/>
Cottonseed Hulls <lb/>
STATE OF CAROLINA, <lb/>
I, J. K. , Cl of the <lb/>
sieve is true to the beat of my be- <lb/>
ed sworn to <lb/>
the, Ibis of pt, <lb/>
Notary <lb/>
J. B. Cashier. <lb/>
lie- J i <lb/>
J. B. SMITH <lb/>
K. <lb/>
HAY, CORN, OATS. BRAN, SHIP STIFF, <lb/>
and can sell M me at very lowest also carry a <lb/>
line <lb/>
k these. See me before <lb/>
and can save r <lb/>
IF <lb/>
LOW RICES FOR T <lb/>
mm <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019669_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
ii- ii<lb/>
PURNELL ROASTED. <lb/>
Sheriff Replies to <lb/>
Wilmington, N C, Nov. 5.- <lb/>
Sheriff Frank H. Stedman, is out <lb/>
in a signed card in the morning <lb/>
papers today replying to the sen- <lb/>
charges as to the <lb/>
of the New Hanover jail by <lb/>
Judge Purnell in the Federal <lb/>
court last week. The -ard of <lb/>
Sheriff Stedman is as <lb/>
T that the re- <lb/>
made upon me and my <lb/>
in the United States court <lb/>
by Judge Purnell when I was not <lb/>
present were false and unjust in <lb/>
regard to the fare of prisoners in <lb/>
DR. BAXTER MATTHEWS A <lb/>
IN BALTIMORE. <lb/>
Last Chapter in a Sensational Wire- <lb/>
Murder by a Greensboro <lb/>
Baltimore, Md., Nov. In a <lb/>
cheap lodging e on East <lb/>
street at some time <lb/>
the twenty-four hours <lb/>
two o'clock this after- <lb/>
noon, Dr. J- Baxter Matthews, of <lb/>
Greensboro, N C, blew out his <lb/>
brains with a shot from a cal- <lb/>
revolver. <lb/>
Dr. Matthews was convicted <lb/>
my custody in New 9th, 1905, at Greensboro. <lb/>
; county jail. The report of the, h poisoning of his wife De- <lb/>
and also the reports of out of custody under bail pending <lb/>
decision of his appeal r a <lb/>
new trial, which was denied <lb/>
him. and relatives and bonds- <lb/>
men have been searching for <lb/>
him for some weeks that he <lb/>
and juries, all <lb/>
ed or our best sub- <lb/>
what I say. The <lb/>
at issue is who is to be be- <lb/>
the grand jury or the <lb/>
States prisoners Would <lb/>
States , before the court <lb/>
Judge Purnell have reflected j be sentenced In the <lb/>
himself it lie i , , ,. . ,.<lb/>
he did so rather than serve <lb/>
said to be twenty <lb/>
., .,, <lb/>
more credit upon himself if he , reason for his <lb/>
had investigated before he made. his is supposed <lb/>
such statements I am willing <lb/>
for record and his <lb/>
be published side by side and penitentiary, to be <lb/>
let the people of North Caro on <lb/>
Say who is right in this M lodging where <lb/>
he ended his life he gave the <lb/>
name of E J. Graham. <lb/>
Immediately after his <lb/>
which was of murder in the <lb/>
second degree, Dr. Matthews <lb/>
became a patient at Mount Hope <lb/>
Retreat, near this city, and was <lb/>
there under treatment for the <lb/>
morphine and liquor habits for <lb/>
months, finally being dis- <lb/>
charged as cured. <lb/>
KOSSUTH IN LONDON. <lb/>
Mil Were Conducted <lb/>
Formality. <lb/>
When lie arrived in London the <lb/>
a of the English people <lb/>
teemed to know no bounds. His <lb/>
entry like f a national <lb/>
from a <lb/>
-the in crowding <lb/>
th i <lb/>
in i mis an <lb/>
gar., in his car- <lb/>
with his saber <lb/>
an <lb/>
. V. I hen ho began <lb/>
to speak, <lb/>
i rural an I <lb/>
tonsil ; <lb/>
V. I <lb/>
classic V- <lb/>
ti <lb/>
at i <lb/>
of the I <lb/>
K .<lb/>
citizen <lb/>
i,<lb/>
in the . I <lb/>
hi <lb/>
of court <lb/>
in .; <lb/>
th <lb/>
time mellow <lb/>
; its ban any <lb/>
in <lb/>
Mi-e<lb/>
ill <lb/>
I k- ottered the hos- <lb/>
of private <lb/>
who took a- <lb/>
in . Ii <lb/>
r h he <lb/>
-d n . A <lb/>
him; hi- i <lb/>
always . i their Hangar; <lb/>
national stained in act <lb/>
Ii of hi <lb/>
tin rightful governor <lb/>
Hungary. lie granted audience <lb/>
like a prince, he enter <lb/>
the room he v mi by <lb/>
aid-de-camp us Ail <lb/>
; I saluted <lb/>
hr-r Brave <lb/>
. Kilos of other no- <lb/>
formalities <lb/>
displeasure. <lb/>
. i intention to <lb/>
c is i <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
The agency existing <lb/>
J. E. Winslow and J. W. Mills; <lb/>
from Sept. 1st, 1904 to this date j <lb/>
is hereby discontinued. All per- <lb/>
owing notes or accounts <lb/>
through said agency for <lb/>
or mules, are hereby requested to <lb/>
in at once and settle <lb/>
All notes and accounts will be j <lb/>
found at my office in Greenville. <lb/>
This Oct. <lb/>
J. E. WINSLOW. <lb/>
It was a quiet election down <lb/>
here in Pitt- <lb/>
grapes, celery, <lb/>
berries, sweet and sour pickles, <lb/>
at S. M. Shultz.<lb/>
i- <lb/>
it <lb/>
due- Tl <lb/>
it <lb/>
i it in his own, but in <lb/>
i. as t that <lb/>
. seemed to him <lb/>
upon tin <lb/>
of II the <lb/>
of in her own gov. <lb/>
I to illustrate to them <lb/>
the ii v faith of <lb/>
in the j of <lb/>
ii m i- t improper he <lb/>
i. ; n <lb/>
i ii for the<lb/>
h ire's.<lb/>
h n. <lb/>
Ii<lb/>
tn <lb/>
fee <lb/>
he.<lb/>
the <lb/>
th.<lb/>
v l<lb/>
. . i r <lb/>
i. <lb/>
. r <lb/>
I of the condition of <lb/>
BANK <lb/>
OF GREENVILLE. <lb/>
At p. in the <lb/>
C at of business, <lb/>
Sect 1806. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and Disc <lb/>
f S. Bonds to secure <lb/>
0.00 <lb/>
U. S. i <lb/>
house,<lb/>
Due National <lb/>
12.297.80 <lb/>
Due State mid <lb/>
Hank, rs f <lb/>
Cheeks and other cash s <lb/>
Notes of other National <lb/>
Banks <lb/>
cents <lb/>
Lawful money In <lb/>
Hank, <lb/>
no <lb/>
Legal-tender notes <lb/>
fund will. I <lb/>
In per I of <lb/>
i,<lb/>
had n-. <lb/>
. for tin <lb/>
ho in <lb/>
no i in <lb/>
lid <lb/>
t. em man <lb/>
i in his <lb/>
indeed was <lb/>
he <lb/>
upon the <lb/>
i.,, wanted <lb/>
Total <lb/>
CE. <lb/>
I ha three for <lb/>
each aid one for <lb/>
These rotes were given for the <lb/>
Swifts Washing Machine <lb/>
right- Any buying or <lb/>
for these notes will do so in <lb/>
their own light, as I shall refuse <lb/>
to pay en account of mis- <lb/>
This Nov. 1st, <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
paid ii I <lb/>
i d profits. i. <lb/>
pan 1.17 <lb/>
i hank<lb/>
In V <lb/>
to <lb/>
n ii f M <lb/>
n's <lb/>
i ii bills ii 12,011.68 <lb/>
I v us hi i r<lb/>
Total <lb/>
Sit i i ill <lb/>
l l ill <lb/>
I . . V . C t thin if ill abort <lb/>
run ill tie m hi is ii Hi lie <lb/>
i . ii I i n lie. <lb/>
J V. <lb/>
IT i I <lb/>
. f- <lb/>
i i .,<lb/>
THE REASON WHY <lb/>
r b only by reason of the maker's intimate, thorough <lb/>
knowledge of women's tastes and the requirements <lb/>
of her that Shoes have achieved <lb/>
First, they satisfy the eye and <lb/>
-.-. distinction to the foot. Secondly, they fit <lb/>
can fit Thirdly, <lb/>
their large sale permits them to be sold at a moderate <lb/>
price. This store secured and controls the sale of these <lb/>
splendid shoes, because it believes them to offer the <lb/>
wearer more real value and than any others <lb/>
possible to procure. New styles now ready. Glad to <lb/>
show even th h you do not care to buy. <lb/>
,. J. is. M <lb/>
J J WHICHARD, Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 1908 <lb/>
N l <lb/>
SHOT BY SECRET ASSASSIN. <lb/>
Mr. L. Banks Holt the Victim. <lb/>
Graham, Nov. L. <lb/>
Banks Holt was shot by an <lb/>
known person in his house at <lb/>
o'clock tonight. <lb/>
He was sitting in his bed room <lb/>
when the telephone rang, Mr <lb/>
Holt went to the and <lb/>
called several times without <lb/>
any response. Then a shot rang <lb/>
out and when Mrs. Holt rushed <lb/>
into the hall she found Mr. Holt <lb/>
lying against the his face <lb/>
streaming with blood. The hall <lb/>
was full of smoke, The alarm <lb/>
was given over the and <lb/>
soon the house was filled with <lb/>
j an anxious crowd, <lb/>
Just to the right of the <lb/>
is an open hall door, from be- <lb/>
hind which the shot was evident- <lb/>
fired, the assailant escaping <lb/>
through the side hall door. <lb/>
There are foot marks on the <lb/>
freshly painted steps. The deed <lb/>
was evidently committed by one <lb/>
familiar with the house, who had <lb/>
secreted himself Sus- <lb/>
is directed towards one, <lb/>
who is being traced. Mr. Holt is <lb/>
not regarded as being in a <lb/>
condition. <lb/>
Another Cabinet Change. <lb/>
Washington, Nov. <lb/>
of the Interior Ethan Allen <lb/>
Hitchcock will retire from Pres- <lb/>
Roosevelt's cabinet on the <lb/>
4th of next March, and James <lb/>
R. of Ohio, at present <lb/>
commissioner of corporations <lb/>
will succeed him- Herbert Knox <lb/>
Smith, now assistant <lb/>
of corporations will be <lb/>
appointed to Mr. <lb/>
place. These changes and that <lb/>
of Richards, of <lb/>
the general land office on March <lb/>
4th, were announced from the <lb/>
White House today. <lb/>
CAN SHOOT FIREWORKS. <lb/>
That Will Nets the Boys. <lb/>
The d of aldermen held an <lb/>
adjourned meeting <lb/>
night, t C matter.; <lb/>
k-i over from the last regular <lb/>
me. twig. One of these was the <lb/>
matter of granting a franchise <lb/>
to the Raleigh and Pamlico <lb/>
sound railroad to run a track <lb/>
across Dickinson avenue an. <lb/>
Clark street so as to reach <lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Line track <lb/>
north Imperial factory. <lb/>
t discussion the matter <lb/>
was again deferred to a later <lb/>
ordinance prohibiting the <lb/>
booting of fireworks in town <lb/>
was to be for <lb/>
Christmas, between <lb/>
the hours of p. m. r <lb/>
a C. a m. December 26th. <lb/>
There was much discussion <lb/>
and several motions regarding <lb/>
the hours of duty between the day <lb/>
and night police. This was set- <lb/>
by ordering the day police <lb/>
to be duty from a. m- to <lb/>
pm. and the night police from <lb/>
m. to a. <lb/>
Far-Sighted. <lb/>
Little Margaret is a far- <lb/>
sighted child and she always <lb/>
in her thoughts for the <lb/>
Recently her father <lb/>
went to Boston on business; a. <lb/>
the evening prayer time her <lb/>
mother suggested that Margaret <lb/>
should add papa safe in <lb/>
To this <lb/>
Goodness I did not know God <lb/>
was in Then, ponder- <lb/>
she continued, I'll ask <lb/>
Him, for papa is very important, <lb/>
isn't he <lb/>
very, dear. If we did <lb/>
not have our papa, we not <lb/>
have this pretty house and all <lb/>
our nice <lb/>
papa give us all these <lb/>
the little <lb/>
without him would we have to <lb/>
give them <lb/>
I think it an <lb/>
risk to have only one papa <lb/>
a family. I think there should <lb/>
s in case of <lb/>
Ala., if So <lb/>
One who observes well often <lb/>
sees indications and suggestions <lb/>
that the as the <lb/>
older people sometimes call them, <lb/>
are not altogether and uniform- <lb/>
courteous, which means that <lb/>
good manners are somewhat <lb/>
passing jut If this is true it <lb/>
a pity; for nothing so commends <lb/>
one as good manners coupled <lb/>
with a good life. To be sure, <lb/>
some people whose lives are <lb/>
and whose characters are <lb/>
above reproach, have blunt and <lb/>
repelling manners. But even <lb/>
with these people it would be far <lb/>
better for all if good manners <lb/>
were coupled with the correct <lb/>
life and unsullied character. It <lb/>
is not always an intention to be <lb/>
and discourteous, but of- <lb/>
ten-times the spirit of <lb/>
gets such hold upon the younger <lb/>
people they forget to lay it aside <lb/>
when older persons appear to <lb/>
speak. Fun and frolic aid jollity <lb/>
are all well enough, and some- <lb/>
time frivolity is really good <lb/>
place; but nothing should ever <lb/>
be so far as to make it <lb/>
seem a sacrifice of good manners. <lb/>
Neck Commonwealth. <lb/>
One Use for a Grave. <lb/>
William a nephew of <lb/>
John K. formerly consul <lb/>
general to Paris, is a candidate <lb/>
for county assessor in <lb/>
Ind Democratic leaders <lb/>
his eligibility, charging <lb/>
that he had not be n a free hold- <lb/>
for four years, required by <lb/>
law. Young however, <lb/>
proved that during the period <lb/>
named he had owned half a lot <lb/>
in the Cemetery, and <lb/>
Attorney General Miller has de- <lb/>
that the possession of this <lb/>
feet of constitutes <lb/>
eligibility in the eye of the law. <lb/>
Boston Transcript. <lb/>
BUCK JACK ITEMS. <lb/>
a Club. <lb/>
The ans Book club was <lb/>
delightfully entertained on -he <lb/>
aft. loon of Tuesday, the sixth <lb/>
of N by Miss Janie <lb/>
Br her pleasant home. <lb/>
was in the form <lb/>
of a debate as to the merits of <lb/>
new s; Mrs W H. <lb/>
took the side and <lb/>
the opposing. <lb/>
refreshments were <lb/>
d and the club adjourned to <lb/>
its next meeting with Mrs. <lb/>
C. Carr <lb/>
Black Jack, C, Nov. 1906. <lb/>
Elder G. S Johnston filled his <lb/>
regular appointment at Bear <lb/>
creek Sunday. <lb/>
J. W. and Abram Dixon went <lb/>
to Winterville Sunday. <lb/>
Harry Dunn and Miss Mollie <lb/>
of Chocowinity, wee <lb/>
here yesterday. <lb/>
G S. Porter and others from <lb/>
here attended church at Salem <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Several people from <lb/>
here attended services at <lb/>
dona Sunday afternoon. <lb/>
Mills, H. <lb/>
school, came home Friday and <lb/>
returned Sunday. . <lb/>
Miss Maud left Friday <lb/>
to visit friends near Haddock's <lb/>
X Roads. <lb/>
J. O. Johnston attended <lb/>
church at Bear Creek Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Mary Midgett, of <lb/>
co county, came in Sunday to <lb/>
teach school here. <lb/>
Mrs. G. S. Johnston spent Sat- <lb/>
and Sunday with her <lb/>
sister, Mrs. W. P. Buck. <lb/>
Abram Dixon lost a fine young <lb/>
horse last week with blind stag- <lb/>
Charlie Mills, W. H. and Cop. <lb/>
Adams all went to t <lb/>
week. <lb/>
W. A. Hudson is very ill with <lb/>
typhoid fever. We hope he <lb/>
soon get better. <lb/>
i d of Thanks. <lb/>
I desire in this method to re- <lb/>
turn my heartfelt gratitude to <lb/>
the brethren of the Odd Fellows, <lb/>
people generally and <lb/>
the ladies, for their many kind- <lb/>
shown mo during my re- <lb/>
cent sickness I shall always <lb/>
hold them in grateful <lb/>
J. JPreparing Depot. <lb/>
The for the and <lb/>
depot; on <lb/>
on Dick a is being <lb/>
clearer, o put in readiness <lb/>
for war t commence on the <lb/>
buildings. <lb/>
Taking Ore. <lb/>
he following from a letter by <lb/>
some writer to the Progressive <lb/>
Farmer is worth the attention <lb/>
of every farmer- <lb/>
either shelter my tools or <lb/>
burn them. A thing not worth <lb/>
is not th saving. <lb/>
wagon hasn't stood out <lb/>
four nights n years. I have <lb/>
i. . J my team for no other <lb/>
purpose than to draw the wagon <lb/>
into the barn. <lb/>
thirty years of farm- <lb/>
I have the same wagon I be- <lb/>
with The same with my <lb/>
horse-rake It cost thirty <lb/>
years ago, and still does good <lb/>
work. A new one can tie <lb/>
bought for half the sum. <lb/>
have never owned a reaper <lb/>
because I haven't room to shelter <lb/>
it. <lb/>
keeping my build- <lb/>
and contents insured every <lb/>
hour, I use the greatest care in <lb/>
regard to fire. A chimney or <lb/>
stove-pipe that isn't right is <lb/>
mediately seen to. No old stove- <lb/>
pipe in the kitchen for <lb/>
me. <lb/>
My horses do lots of work, but <lb/>
are not banged up. <lb/>
stop them often when draw- <lb/>
a load up <lb/>
Died. <lb/>
Mrs. Fannie Edwards, wife of <lb/>
Mr. Alonzo Edwards, of Hooker- <lb/>
ton, died Wednesday. <lb/>
Mr Mrs. Robert Randolph <lb/>
Cotten <lb/>
request the pleasure of your <lb/>
company <lb/>
at the marriage of their daughter <lb/>
Sally <lb/>
to <lb/>
Mr. Russell Benjamin <lb/>
on Wednesday the <lb/>
twenty-First of November <lb/>
nineteen hundred and six. <lb/>
at high noon <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina <lb/>
Mow to be Great. <lb/>
Here in a little clipping that <lb/>
we found in one of our exchanges <lb/>
a few days ago that we take <lb/>
pleasure in publishing for the <lb/>
benefit of some of our <lb/>
you don't just like every- <lb/>
thing you see in your home <lb/>
paper, go around the streets and <lb/>
howl. The editor is never sup- <lb/>
posed to make a mistake and of <lb/>
course cannot do so. Other <lb/>
can, but the editor is <lb/>
omniscient, <lb/>
If you can't see a good point, <lb/>
don't fail to see a bad one. If <lb/>
a thousand pleasant things are <lb/>
said of people, hunt for some- <lb/>
thing unpleasant. If you don't <lb/>
find it, howl some more; if you <lb/>
do, howl anyway. Never mind <lb/>
your own business; watch for <lb/>
something to find fault with in <lb/>
some other man's business this <lb/>
will make you <lb/>
field <lb/>
One Way of Paring Off. <lb/>
A number of years , at a <lb/>
small town in Main, an <lb/>
local election was take <lb/>
and re was rival- <lb/>
between the Republicans and <lb/>
Democrats. Old Hiram Morse the <lb/>
b was a strong Demo- <lb/>
but many of the farmers <lb/>
were Republicans. <lb/>
On the morning of the election <lb/>
a farmer came into have his horse <lb/>
shod- The blacksmith said to <lb/>
both busy. You're <lb/>
a Republican and I'm a Demo- <lb/>
Let's pair off We'll <lb/>
of us vote, and it amount <lb/>
to the same as if we both went <lb/>
to the <lb/>
This was agreed upon. After <lb/>
the election it was found out <lb/>
that Mar. e had paired off with <lb/>
five Republican <lb/>
ton Herald. <lb/>
not <lb/>
their noes. <lb/>
Again <lb/>
Coroner's Jury Blames Stewart lie <lb/>
Atlantic City <lb/>
Atlantic City, N. J., Nov. <lb/>
After a stormy scene, lasting <lb/>
several hours, the coroner's jury <lb/>
late tonight agreed to place the <lb/>
blame for the Thoroughfare <lb/>
of Sunday, October <lb/>
upon D Stewart, the aged <lb/>
bridge tender. The jury dis- <lb/>
agreed on many points. Accord- <lb/>
to the coroner, Stewart will <lb/>
be arrested on a charge of <lb/>
Given a Respite. <lb/>
Those who were expecting to <lb/>
attend a hanging in Pitt county <lb/>
on the 17th can change their <lb/>
calculations. The governor has <lb/>
given Sylvester Barrett a respite <lb/>
to Dec. 18th, and an effort is <lb/>
to have the sentence <lb/>
against him commuted to life <lb/>
A . trouble in <lb/>
keeping foil in line as <lb/>
long as it persists in putting up <lb/>
candidates that part of the par- <lb/>
r. without hold- <lb/>
kl. <lb/>
who have received statements of <lb/>
what owe for <lb/>
subscription, have not yet <lb/>
responded, to let us ii from <lb/>
them We do t id pub- <lb/>
items of this, but the <lb/>
money is needed to help us <lb/>
meet our All should <lb/>
to this and be prompt in <lb/>
paying. <lb/>
Trying to Hears Vote. <lb/>
New York, Nov. 8.-Chair- <lb/>
man Connors, of the Democratic <lb/>
committee, today Issued a <lb/>
call for a meeting of th <lb/>
committee to be held hero to <lb/>
morrow. The object <lb/>
meting is to devise plans <lb/>
safeguard the interests of the <lb/>
Democratic <lb/>
that, the <lb/>
were holding I <lb/>
that fraud was being <lb/>
and that in his opinion then <lb/>
were enough i <lb/>
League ballots not counted i <lb/>
reduce greatly <lb/>
possibly to elect <lb/>
Hearst. <lb/>
Fell Over Grip. <lb/>
This morning while the pas- <lb/>
train was at the depot <lb/>
some one set a grip on the <lb/>
ground right in the midst of the <lb/>
crowd A lady while going from <lb/>
the train to the platform <lb/>
bled over the grip and fell, <lb/>
escaping injury. The per- <lb/>
son who set the grip in such a <lb/>
place ought to have had better <lb/>
sense. <lb/>
CHAIRMAN SIMMONS TALKS. <lb/>
Fine Showing Fir Democrats. <lb/>
Raleigh, <lb/>
Simmons said r <lb/>
majority is going to be <lb/>
nearly to, if not quite <lb/>
to that given two years <lb/>
ago. We have made gains in <lb/>
two-thirds of the counties, these <lb/>
being simply wonderful in the <lb/>
east. For example we <lb/>
gained several hundred, in Le- <lb/>
in Wilson, in and <lb/>
Harnett, and in Sampson, Marion <lb/>
Butler's own county. We have <lb/>
carried more by majorities vary- <lb/>
from to GOO. That <lb/>
county had been considered <lb/>
doubtful. Columbus votes for <lb/>
by Jones by Cum- <lb/>
b by Martin by 1.000. <lb/>
Tyrrell by this having been <lb/>
a doubtful county, Greene by <lb/>
to Chatham by Up- <lb/>
State, the have car- <lb/>
Davie by and Caldwell <lb/>
by a falling off in both <lb/>
I figure that <lb/>
majority is well up. somewhere <lb/>
between and 1,500. Craw- <lb/>
ford is elected by majority <lb/>
have been talking to Locke <lb/>
wire about that <lb/>
district and he tells me that is <lb/>
the figure in the 10th. We have <lb/>
carried Pitt by The Re- <lb/>
publicans actually talked about <lb/>
carrying it. Wake leads in ma- <lb/>
but Pitt makes a fin <lb/>
showing- Splendid work <lb/>
done in Sampson, where t. <lb/>
Republican majority was <lb/>
and we reduced it by <lb/>
votes. I want to say that Ma- <lb/>
Butler carried the State in <lb/>
1894 by a campaign of gross m's- <lb/>
and deception and <lb/>
same this time, <lb/>
bill The is <lb/>
a great rebuke to him. The re- <lb/>
will put an end t the cam- <lb/>
speaking and r work <lb/>
r the big postmaster . some of <lb/>
whom actually for <lb/>
State offices, and en here <lb/>
there among <lb/>
these being of <lb/>
Reynolds, of Win. <lb/>
Meekins, of <lb/>
In the four or five divs <lb/>
after the Bin Francisco fir <lb/>
when got no mono <lb/>
from the many applied <lb/>
the ; for tickets on <lb/>
promise to pay when they <lb/>
reached their on, op <lb/>
when they could. They gave <lb/>
written promises and received <lb/>
ticket. to all points in and out of <lb/>
the State. The officials took <lb/>
promises to pay to an <lb/>
amount aggregating <lb/>
ii nearly one r- <lb/>
. It is <lb/>
five months of <lb/>
tar no less than or nine- <lb/>
tenths of the full amount. <lb/>
. en paid by remittance from <lb/>
, . refugees to whom credit <lb/>
b n extended, of <lb/>
this came from grateful suffer- <lb/>
had int. even been <lb/>
asked to sign a pron to pay. <lb/>
C NEGRO. <lb/>
Sylvester Barr Who to be <lb/>
it Asking <lb/>
for L a <lb/>
Sylvester Barrett, a of <lb/>
Pitt county, was to be hang- <lb/>
ed on the of No- <lb/>
f murder of Walter <lb/>
a constable, has been <lb/>
granted till the <lb/>
of December. <lb/>
Barrett's counsel took an <lb/>
j peal to the Supreme Court, but <lb/>
; this was not sustained, and No- <lb/>
was set for the date <lb/>
of the execution. His counsel <lb/>
are now r for a <lb/>
of to life <lb/>
and Governor Glenn <lb/>
has granted the respite till the <lb/>
18th of December, so as to give a <lb/>
hearing in the and <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
This part of November is quite <lb/>
dry, but will not likely stay that <lb/>
way long. <lb/>
Neck Broken. <lb/>
John Grant, of Snow Hill, was <lb/>
returning home from Kinston a <lb/>
few days ago when he fell off the <lb/>
cart on which he was riding and <lb/>
broke his neck- <lb/>
Leslie's Weekly discovers that <lb/>
editors are usually unfortunate <lb/>
when they try to get office. Sad <lb/>
but true. Ye editor is not a pop- <lb/>
than. He is always <lb/>
the wrong man or faMing to <lb/>
praise the right one. Ye editor <lb/>
had better keep out of politics if <lb/>
he want to out hew <lb/>
unpopular he is. He sees the <lb/>
seamy side of life as it is but it <lb/>
could, as a rule, he worse. <lb/>
Greensboro Telegram. <lb/>
Didn't Want to Arouse the Juror. <lb/>
Mr. Chas. of <lb/>
was in town one d- <lb/>
last week and dropped into t <lb/>
Superior court room to see <lb/>
was going on While then <lb/>
citizen was <lb/>
charged with selling <lb/>
contrary to the form of t <lb/>
st; The prisoner n <lb/>
lawyer ind Mr. <lb/>
ways kind-hearted, generously <lb/>
volunteered to him, <lb/>
which he with tact and <lb/>
but the evidence was too <lb/>
strong for him and his man went <lb/>
to the roads. <lb/>
While Mr. was <lb/>
the case to the jury, Mr. R. <lb/>
J. Leinster, who was one of the <lb/>
jurors, closed his eyes as if <lb/>
sleep, bu was only playing <lb/>
for he knew what was <lb/>
going on. Seeing Mr. <lb/>
s droop Mr. <lb/>
d his voice to a stage <lb/>
whisper. You'll have to speak <lb/>
louder, said <lb/>
Judge it please <lb/>
your said Mr. <lb/>
blandest smile, as he <lb/>
turned the judge, of the <lb/>
Jurors lee; I don't want <lb/>
to wake him <lb/>
An the court house roared. <lb/>
Landmark. <lb/>
Registered Letter With Dis- <lb/>
appears. <lb/>
It has just leaked out that on <lb/>
the of October 26th the <lb/>
biggest robbery that <lb/>
occurred in this section in <lb/>
years took place in the Fayette- <lb/>
ville A registered <lb/>
letter, containing in cur <lb/>
to the Fayette- <lb/>
ville National Bank by the Plant- <lb/>
National Bank, of Richmond, <lb/>
arrived here on the 1.40 o'clock <lb/>
a. m train, and was regularly <lb/>
receipted for. The letter was <lb/>
supposed to ha e been plated in <lb/>
the vault. On Monday morning <lb/>
the letter could not be found in <lb/>
the vault or anywhere else, de- <lb/>
spite the most minute <lb/>
Postmaster at . <lb/>
notified the mes <lb/>
at Washington and inspector are <lb/>
now making a thorough <lb/>
So far there is no clue <lb/>
to the Dis- <lb/>
patch, 5th. <lb/>
Died. <lb/>
Miss Jane Moore, aged <lb/>
years, died Tuesday morning at <lb/>
the home of her brother, Mr. <lb/>
Richy Moore, miles below <lb/>
Greenville, and was buried Wed- <lb/>
She had been in feeble <lb/>
health f r sometime. She leaves <lb/>
three sisters, one brother, and <lb/>
many relatives and friends <lb/>
mourn their Sh was a <lb/>
good, kind and obliging woman, <lb/>
and was held in high esteem by <lb/>
neighbor <lb/>
. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>