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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
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<p>
.-- tide I <lb/>
The ladies of the Episcopal <lb/>
church have a masquerade <lb/>
party and supper in <lb/>
on Tuesday night before Thanks- <lb/>
giving the 27th. It is going to <lb/>
be an interesting occasion and <lb/>
you are invited to attend. <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
of mi executed <lb/>
and Mills <lb/>
R . wife. <lb/>
ton. 23rd day November, <lb/>
the <lb/>
Core the Court l <lb/>
on Thursday, IS <lb/>
tin- S <lb/>
on the north Street <lb/>
ward . .,. h i <lb/>
to J. S. <lb/>
v f. S. <lb/>
tun <lb/>
wit to <lb/>
. i . , <lb/>
First Street feel to the I. <lb/>
nil.; <lb/>
mere i i the <lb/>
the , <lb/>
i WILLS, <lb/>
F. G. <lb/>
Will Close Thanksgiving. <lb/>
Thanksgiving day is now only <lb/>
a week off. Greenville <lb/>
likely continue to follow the <lb/>
tom adopted several years ago <lb/>
of suspending business in <lb/>
of the day. and the <lb/>
tobacco market and business <lb/>
houses will be closed- <lb/>
Chord.<lb/>
v I or i <lb/>
will i <lb/>
at n last I <lb/>
Rev. T. H King v II assist the <lb/>
pastor in the vice. <lb/>
You ; r . invited to at- <lb/>
tend Ail members of the <lb/>
church are asked to be present <lb/>
SALE Or PERSONALTY. <lb/>
Monday the 17th of December <lb/>
of tin late Alfred <lb/>
Foil <lb/>
known m Williams <lb/>
; i will sell at public sate the <lb/>
p, re rt i the w- <lb/>
of Alfred .-. I, o it- <lb/>
, of i- s, wagons, carts, farm- <lb/>
. fodder, I i <lb/>
. Tern i cash. <lb/>
This the 21st d i f <lb/>
I I. FORBES <lb/>
of the ill and <lb/>
orb b. <lb/>
TO <lb/>
.,, ire <lb/>
of or Court <lb/>
I a <lb/>
Hi <lb/>
. n d, i hereby to <lb/>
II . i against the <lb/>
of said Elizabeth ti <lb/>
I them to i r t duly <lb/>
ed, on or I for <lb/>
. i. pie d in their recovery. <lb/>
VII deb ed estate will <lb/>
in mi i in I e. <lb/>
Executor of Elizabeth <lb/>
Jarvis Blow, Atty s. <lb/>
In every department, of the <lb/>
Best and is <lb/>
Is tempting <lb/>
that we are prepared <lb/>
give perfect satisfaction to. <lb/>
t he most critical and <lb/>
buyers, o o o o o o<lb/>
You can't <lb/>
Doubt <lb/>
you see our <lb/>
Line of new i and <lb/>
Winter Yon are <lb/>
to REASONS <lb/>
you should buy of us <lb/>
simply looking at either <lb/>
Quality or the Price.<lb/>
i n <lb/>
E. H. EVANS. Supt. E. A. Manager <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
E N. C. <lb/>
Manufacturers of <lb/>
Doors, Blinds, <lb/>
And all of Turned Work. <lb/>
A . <lb/>
BOUGH AND LUMBER, CEILING, Flooring <lb/>
etc. <lb/>
ASSORTMENT OF SASH DOORS <lb/>
BLINDS ALWAYS ON HAND <lb/>
orders will receive prompt attention. <lb/>
guaranteed. <lb/>
Every quality and is a warrant of Excellence, <lb/>
Every Price an object lesson in the economy of buying, <lb/>
The Fair Price B Waves Over All<lb/>
With pride an confidence in the variety richness, <lb/>
Completeness, and cheapness of our beautiful <lb/>
we invite you to come and <lb/>
examine our seasonable line. <lb/>
m am <lb/>
of the condition <lb/>
THE BANK OF FARMVILLE, FARMVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
Al THE CLOSE OF NOV. 12th, 1906<lb/>
Loan <lb/>
cured <lb/>
d. 76.8<lb/>
Dur- <lb/>
Cash <lb/>
Gold coin <lb/>
Silver <lb/>
Nat, notes 10,418.00 <lb/>
176,550.09 <lb/>
Capital stock <lb/>
1,000.00<lb/>
of d <lb/>
to 66,723.29<lb/>
State North Carolina, gs. <lb/>
Pitt. f <lb/>
I J S. Davis, Cashier of the above-name bank, do solemn- <lb/>
the statement is true to the best of my <lb/>
and J. R. DAVIS, <lb/>
sworn O be- <lb/>
lore h day of Nov <lb/>
j. v JOHNSTON, <lb/>
Public. <lb/>
TURN AGE, <lb/>
W. LANG, <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS, <lb/>
Groceries, Clothing, <lb/>
Boots end hoes, <lb/>
Hats, Cap, Notions etc., etc. <lb/>
cf ore showing the <lb/>
N Styles, and <lb/>
Variety an for and Guarantee. Prices Right. <lb/>
There i- . rest re Profit in Buying Here. <lb/>
Remember merit on <lb/>
account f Quality that i equals f r Cheapness <lb/>
AND TRUST CO. <lb/>
AT BETHEL, N. C. <lb/>
At the close of business Nov. 12th, 1900. <lb/>
RESOURCES. LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overt <lb/>
Furniture Fixtures <lb/>
Due from Ranks and <lb/>
Hankers <lb/>
Cash items <lb/>
Gold coin, <lb/>
Silver In Nat I bank V 4,787.37 <lb/>
and other U. S. notes J <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Capital stock 5,800.1 <lb/>
Surplus fund <lb/>
Undivided profits <lb/>
Bill <lb/>
certificates of <lb/>
deposit 3,091.76 <lb/>
Deposits subj. to check <lb/>
checks out- <lb/>
standing <lb/>
Certified Checks <lb/>
Total <lb/>
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt, <lb/>
I W H lard Cashier of the above named <lb/>
wear the above statement is true to the best of my <lb/>
edge and belief. H. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me, this h day of Nov <lb/>
T. Carson <lb/>
Votary Public <lb/>
P nil I'M <lb/>
M. O. <lb/>
R.<lb/>
WHICHARD, Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR<lb/>
COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA TUESDAY. NOV. <lb/>
Carriage of Popular Couple at Wilson. <lb/>
REMAINS AS <lb/>
SUPERINTENDENT. <lb/>
BOYS AND COGS. <lb/>
Written for the Reflector. <lb/>
At times this life, <lb/>
clouds of adversity hang darkly <lb/>
over us and seem to have no <lb/>
lining; but to him who has <lb/>
been crowned monarch over the <lb/>
realm of a pure and lovely <lb/>
man's heart, and has heard from <lb/>
her own lips, death do us <lb/>
must say. thy cup of <lb/>
happiness is filled and overflow- <lb/>
May the bitter drugs <lb/>
never be tasted but we hope <lb/>
these two young people may float <lb/>
down the stream of the <lb/>
bark of contentment with no <lb/>
of sorrow nor shoals of <lb/>
misfortune to threaten them. <lb/>
With the above as a preface, it <lb/>
is my delightful pleasure to an- <lb/>
the marriage of Mr. <lb/>
E. <lb/>
Greensboro, N. C. Nov. <lb/>
At a meeting of the board of <lb/>
re of the State Normal and <lb/>
Industrial College held yesterday <lb/>
afternoon to select a successor to <lb/>
Dr as president of the <lb/>
college, State Superintendent J. <lb/>
Y. who had been <lb/>
ally conceded as the next <lb/>
came before the board and <lb/>
stated that he could not accept <lb/>
the position, whereupon the <lb/>
board continued the <lb/>
of the college in the hands <lb/>
of the present superintendent, <lb/>
Dean J. I. Foust, until the close <lb/>
of the school year, June first, <lb/>
1907, and will provide as soon as <lb/>
possible an assistant to President <lb/>
Foust. <lb/>
had been known for some <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
N. C. Not. 24th, <lb/>
What fifth grade school Rev. J. A. of Green- <lb/>
never owned or kept a was here Thursday night to <lb/>
pointer, setter, gray hound, New I attend the Masonic meet g and <lb/>
collie or II. s was the guest of M. and Mrs <lb/>
an And you might H. Cole. His little son. L- <lb/>
as well undertake to find one who; lie. accompanied him. <lb/>
never baa a sweetheart three Mr. Robertson, of Peter-burg, <lb/>
times his age. or who docs not spent Thursday night and <lb/>
TRIP AROUND THE WORLD. <lb/>
i days that Mr. was in <lb/>
Howard and Miss Florence doubt as tn what his duty <lb/>
Gardner which charming event <lb/>
occurred in the Christian church <lb/>
here last evening at nine o'clock, <lb/>
the pastor, Rev. Boyd Jones, <lb/>
performing the ceremony in the <lb/>
simplest and most impressive <lb/>
manner. The church was packed <lb/>
by a host of admiring friends of <lb/>
the contracting parties The <lb/>
decorations were exceedingly <lb/>
indeed interior of <lb/>
the church looked as if their <lb/>
many friends had placed flowers <lb/>
there. The music was <lb/>
sweet, being rendered by <lb/>
Prof. Levine's orchestra from <lb/>
as <lb/>
to <lb/>
with reference to accepting the <lb/>
presidency. He went from a <lb/>
professorship in the college to <lb/>
the State Superintendency and <lb/>
all his associates in the faculty <lb/>
would have gladly welcomed <lb/>
him back as president. The <lb/>
pressure upon him from many <lb/>
sources to remain as State Super- <lb/>
of Schools has been <lb/>
very great, quite a number of <lb/>
county superintendents and <lb/>
others having urged upon <lb/>
that it was his duty to remain <lb/>
as State Mr. Joy- <lb/>
finally decided that he ought <lb/>
to remain in Raleigh. <lb/>
The Tendency to Ease. <lb/>
it would be <lb/>
fitting motto to furnish people <lb/>
At the conclusion of this with which to greet persons of <lb/>
the bridal party marched; of whom they ask or seek a job. <lb/>
down the to <lb/>
Wedding in the follow- <lb/>
Willis Hackney and J. <lb/>
I, Morgan, rs full dress. <lb/>
pearl . <lb/>
Miss Rosa Hooker, Greenville. <lb/>
N C , bridesmaid, white organdy <lb/>
over white taffeta; <lb/>
La Franc roses, <lb/>
tendency with most people is <lb/>
to look for an easy job, It is a <lb/>
question of great moment <lb/>
or not the people of <lb/>
try are losing much of their will <lb/>
power for hard work and with <lb/>
this the muscular hardness to en- <lb/>
it. In the early days of our <lb/>
pearls, pink history men took delight in being <lb/>
pink to endure hardships and to <lb/>
pearls and Diamonds. <lb/>
Messrs John Gorham and <lb/>
Edward Ferguson, ushers, full <lb/>
dress, pearl. <lb/>
Miss Gay. of Greenville. <lb/>
and Miss Bruce Evans, of <lb/>
do things that called for manly <lb/>
vigor in strength of body and <lb/>
pin pi of mind. It is different <lb/>
now. When you hire a man to <lb/>
i pile of wood he wants it to <lb/>
-aft wood and in the sun on <lb/>
son. bridesmaids, white organdy the south side of the wood shed <lb/>
over white taffeta; pink La <lb/>
France roes, pink ribbon, pearls. <lb/>
Miss Bruce Gardner, maid of <lb/>
honor, the lovely young sister of <lb/>
the ride, white net over pink <lb/>
taffeta, pink La France roses, <lb/>
pink ribbon, pearls. <lb/>
Next came the bride slowly <lb/>
down the aisle, the of <lb/>
all eyes, the bright particular <lb/>
star . entrancing <lb/>
beautiful queenly gowned in <lb/>
whit net over white taffeta, <lb/>
diamonds and pearls, bridal veil, <lb/>
where the wind can't strike <lb/>
f ii is some other job than cut- <lb/>
ling wood like conditions of ease <lb/>
must ace it to make it at- <lb/>
then it is not at- <lb/>
tractive. A like disposition to <lb/>
look for easy things clings to <lb/>
most all persons, of the white <lb/>
and colored races alike- It does <lb/>
like most people are looking <lb/>
or easy places and easy jobs and <lb/>
take any other <lb/>
kind Are our people loosing the <lb/>
snap and disposition of manly <lb/>
carrying in her hand a very hand-; toil <lb/>
Are we not trying to get <lb/>
some of of the val- -way from the Bible edict of <lb/>
Icy, ribbon. She was met I long standing, that in the sweat <lb/>
at the altar by the groom tho face shall man eat bread <lb/>
came in with Rev J Boyd Jones, <lb/>
when y were joined together <lb/>
in the bonds of matrimony, j <lb/>
while e played very <lb/>
softly and <lb/>
th VOWS lull been <lb/>
en the I was <lb/>
as a recessional, <lb/>
God had joined together these <lb/>
two people lime. <lb/>
Mr. d Howard left <lb/>
flU Lit- New York and <lb/>
other Northern points and carry <lb/>
w them the good wishes of <lb/>
our people for a long, happy and <lb/>
prosperous life. <lb/>
The bride is the lovely and at- <lb/>
tractive daughter of Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. J. W. Gardner, and a niece <lb/>
of the late T. J. Gardner, and <lb/>
one of Wilson's most beautiful <lb/>
young ladies. <lb/>
The groom is a son of the lat <lb/>
. <lb/>
The ordination of Messrs. W <lb/>
M. Pugh and J. C. Tyson, newly <lb/>
elected deacons, took place in <lb/>
the Baptist church Wednesday <lb/>
ht Rev. King, of La- . <lb/>
like watermelon. It does not mat- <lb/>
how homely are thinking <lb/>
about the dog of re <lb/>
is nothing like And <lb/>
a boy defend his favorite and <lb/>
at any extremity, even <lb/>
in the presence his mother. <lb/>
But notwithstanding the kicks <lb/>
and hard usage he is lied <lb/>
to submit to, Fido is pal <lb/>
and believes that it is all for <lb/>
and intended for his good, and <lb/>
coiled at his master's feet <lb/>
quiet summer evening, the <lb/>
youngster with his <lb/>
who not sing, and <lb/>
his friends Did Tray <lb/>
his whole heart, is not the <lb/>
kind of boy Deacon Whichard is <lb/>
looking for as a promising Sun- <lb/>
day school scholar. <lb/>
But in knee <lb/>
pants ever of Joe Davis <lb/>
and his famous rat terriers, Pink, <lb/>
and Ready, that exterminated <lb/>
Mr. rodents at the rate of <lb/>
forty every sixty seconds Ask <lb/>
Cousin Blount Pearce. <lb/>
Joe. as we remember him in <lb/>
his earliest years, was a small, <lb/>
white headed, near sighted boy. <lb/>
a talent for training <lb/>
birds. And because <lb/>
of this talent, like Saint Francis, <lb/>
he was able to communicate and <lb/>
commune with his silent friends <lb/>
and learn mysteries known only <lb/>
to the dumb. The birds and <lb/>
in fowls were always <lb/>
his pets, And in his way <lb/>
of the <lb/>
brutes the canine species. <lb/>
He would frequently go into an <lb/>
enclosure with a furious dog and <lb/>
reduce him to submission by <lb/>
soothing and kindness, and with <lb/>
a peculiar whistle he could sum- <lb/>
all the dogs in the town <lb/>
within the of his voice, <lb/>
when they would gather about <lb/>
him, all varieties, big and little, <lb/>
moving as they did together. <lb/>
the streets in the most <lb/>
perfect harmony and good <lb/>
a royal hunt, <lb/>
from which they quietly <lb/>
ed in the same way each to his <lb/>
own quarters. What do you <lb/>
Lewis Lawrence <lb/>
As a digression, who of us can <lb/>
the year of the great so- <lb/>
convention among the <lb/>
and bells of Greenville that be- <lb/>
about time Dr. <lb/>
ling proposed to a certain charm- <lb/>
widow Who As a silent <lb/>
witness of the pas; in the days <lb/>
of yore, there stands the <lb/>
long county bridge, the scene of <lb/>
many a moon ii; <lb/>
When the wee hours were wan- <lb/>
that suddenly awoke a <lb/>
warning, and good night. <lb/>
with the rumble and echo <lb/>
of a passing horse and on <lb/>
the old bridge <lb/>
Here i introduce Mr. Irvin <lb/>
Briley this horn <lb/>
and cart. And in his cart h <lb/>
Grange, who was present to as- <lb/>
the pastor, Rev. J, <lb/>
, in Lie ordination, preached <lb/>
sermon and delivered the <lb/>
charge to the new deacons. The; a are <lb/>
service was very impressive. <lb/>
had placed at least two dozen <lb/>
loggerhead turtles of all s <lb/>
eat glaring eyes, snap- <lb/>
h other in their efforts <lb/>
was guest of Calhoun. <lb/>
Mrs. F. G. Whaley returned <lb/>
from Greenville when <lb/>
has been for several days <lb/>
vi siting her many friends. <lb/>
Mr. Powers, of Wake county, <lb/>
was in town Friday selling maps <lb/>
f North and South Carolina <lb/>
Misses Bessie Hellen and Olive <lb/>
Woodard spent Saturday in <lb/>
Greenville shopping. <lb/>
Mrs. J. D. Cox and Miss Eliza- <lb/>
beth Boushall, of Winterville, <lb/>
were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
O. Bobbin Saturday Sun- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
B- P. Fanny has returned from <lb/>
Rocky Mount and resigned his <lb/>
position with the B. C. L. Co. <lb/>
Miss Lottie Dickens spent Fri- <lb/>
day in Greenville shopping, <lb/>
hotel is under- <lb/>
going considerable repairs. It <lb/>
is being newly painted and furn- <lb/>
Mrs. D A. Leggett, the <lb/>
former proprietress, has moved <lb/>
a residence on Pine street and <lb/>
as yet the hotel is a <lb/>
proprietor. <lb/>
school <lb/>
opened with a full at- <lb/>
Forty two pupils <lb/>
were present and the enrollment <lb/>
is now fifty three <lb/>
Prof. W. II. Bag dale, of <lb/>
Greenville, was here Monday <lb/>
night and received the handsome <lb/>
new school building. He also <lb/>
delivered a very beneficial ad- <lb/>
dress to a large and attentive <lb/>
audience, After the address a <lb/>
Woman's Betterment association <lb/>
was organized, and was <lb/>
mediately raised for a sf <lb/>
library Mr. Ripply, agent for <lb/>
no Southern Co., was pres- <lb/>
and donated quite a nice <lb/>
to the library. <lb/>
horse ran on the bridge turning <lb/>
over cart and rider, as well <lb/>
turtles, left to save themselves <lb/>
the scramble regardless of th <lb/>
danger of cracking their shells in <lb/>
the fearful fall to the low ground <lb/>
But of course our friend was <lb/>
neither killed nor maimed on the <lb/>
occasion, although he made a <lb/>
narrow escape, and seldom re- <lb/>
to the incident But it is <lb/>
possible he would sometimes <lb/>
turn a conversation at this point <lb/>
to the subject of his neighbor. <lb/>
Tom escapade and <lb/>
where he had been exhibiting <lb/>
his skill as an acrobat, especially <lb/>
to some sable maidens, showing <lb/>
how he turn a Burn- <lb/>
on the bridge banisters, <lb/>
when he slipped and was <lb/>
thirty feet into the middle <lb/>
of the dark and I river.; n I <lb/>
was only saved by clinging to a <lb/>
post at the water e. <lb/>
We remember poor Tom and <lb/>
can imagine his dripping clothes <lb/>
and thoroughly wilted appear- <lb/>
; s he emerged from I <lb/>
I evening, <lb/>
B. A. Howard and Mrs. M. C. <lb/>
and is one of Wilson's <lb/>
most prominent and popular <lb/>
business men and farmers. He is <lb/>
at the of the firm of How- <lb/>
ard, Williams Co- <lb/>
less now. think of Mr. <lb/>
with his wise looking old <lb/>
lowing on three legs who <lb/>
been bitten in the mud of Grin- <lb/>
creek, and held fast it is <lb/>
said, until it thundered, or he <lb/>
was relieved with the loss of his <lb/>
The presents were very costly fool How did you catch them <lb/>
and numerous, attesting the said a stranger said <lb/>
j popularity of the contracting Mr. B. in a surly mood, <lb/>
parties. A FRIEND. the accident in which his <lb/>
u there was Uncle <lb/>
said to have been <lb/>
a revolutionary soldier, <lb/>
his t int with Ins son, retinue, <lb/>
u had they been present as UP children as <lb/>
. nigger gal as the <lb/>
might nave witnessed <lb/>
Most Successful Hit of the Season. <lb/>
For genuine interest and <lb/>
pleasure the trip around the <lb/>
world. Thursday <lb/>
rated and conducted by the <lb/>
of the Methodist church, <lb/>
was the success of the season. <lb/>
It was simply great, and the <lb/>
large crowd who made the trip <lb/>
g ; more than their money's <lb/>
worth. <lb/>
The union the starting <lb/>
point of the journey, was at <lb/>
Bender's store, from which car- <lb/>
took passengers on the <lb/>
tour. The first country visit d <lb/>
was Japan, at the home of Gov. <lb/>
and Mrs. T. J. Jarvis. Here <lb/>
everything was typical of the <lb/>
country represented, the parlor <lb/>
decorations being of Japanese <lb/>
flags and the dining room with <lb/>
Japanese draperies, table cover.-, <lb/>
and napkins. Mrs. Jarvis. <lb/>
dressed as a Japanese lady and <lb/>
in a brogue equal to a native, <lb/>
delivered an interesting lecture <lb/>
on the flag and customs of the <lb/>
The refreshments consist- <lb/>
ed of the national drink <lb/>
which the visitors were <lb/>
to take with straight <lb/>
lest offense be given, <lb/>
and rice a la Japanese <lb/>
and fruits. A large cluster of <lb/>
Japanese persimmons hung <lb/>
above the table. <lb/>
Next the passengers were <lb/>
to Greece at the home <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. S. T- Hook <lb/>
who cordially greeted the <lb/>
Mrs. Hooker being attired in <lb/>
ideal Grecian costume. The <lb/>
scene here was one of beauty, <lb/>
the decorations being in national <lb/>
colors and flags of the country. <lb/>
Ai the hall and rooms <lb/>
cozy ottomans on which . <lb/>
, a and their sup used <lb/>
overs gracefully reclined. A <lb/>
made merry music <lb/>
while the feast was going on. <lb/>
The refreshments here consisted, <lb/>
of . nil punch, stuffed dates and <lb/>
i; wafers The voyagers <lb/>
departed with pleasant <lb/>
of the beautiful scenes of <lb/>
Greece. <lb/>
The journey was then to <lb/>
pt at the home of Mr. and <lb/>
Wiley Brown. The <lb/>
were welcomed at the door by <lb/>
an Egyptian lady who turned <lb/>
them or to a black veiled sister <lb/>
to be presented to the noted per- <lb/>
of the court, the <lb/>
dive and his consort, the prince <lb/>
and princess After these in- <lb/>
the visitors were es- <lb/>
to a cozy corner in the <lb/>
hall where the fortune teller <lb/>
read their palms and unfolded <lb/>
the future- The male <lb/>
i of country used long <lb/>
I stem pipes and the ladies had <lb/>
their faces below the eyes hid <lb/>
behind black veils. Refresh- <lb/>
Intents consisting of coffee, <lb/>
I wafers and pickles were served. <lb/>
The decorations were in keeping <lb/>
with the country. <lb/>
From lure the course of <lb/>
was to Africa, <lb/>
at the home of Mr a id <lb/>
Mrs. W. B. Th de <lb/>
were very striking, <lb/>
l Hie red and colors there <lb/>
being numerous palms, <lb/>
Her <lb/>
was the r d fun of the voyage. <lb/>
Uncle Reuben and Aunt Judy <lb/>
were right there with their <lb/>
their grown <lb/>
Dinah. <lb/>
WHOLE WORLD SUFFER. <lb/>
Mo, <lb/>
of include in Up- <lb/>
A dispatch <lb/>
to the Richmond es <lb/>
of <lb/>
cities are doomed. Earthquake, <lb/>
flood and fire v III wreak th n- <lb/>
of God on the ts d <lb/>
their inhabitants within tie next <lb/>
twenty-four . <lb/>
wholesale he <lb/>
God's judgment on <lb/>
The doomed cities in this country <lb/>
are New York. Albany. Buffalo, <lb/>
Detroit, Lansing, Boston, <lb/>
Richmond, <lb/>
Lebanon. Pa., <lb/>
bus, polis, Cincinnati, <lb/>
Louisville, Na ville, Muskegon, <lb/>
Milwaukee. Chicago, St. Louis, <lb/>
Hannibal. Mo Joseph. M-.; <lb/>
Omaha, St. Paul, Minneapolis, <lb/>
and Denver <lb/>
The above prophecy is made <lb/>
by Edmund n r Stevens, <lb/>
years old. the well known <lb/>
of events and an as- <lb/>
of no mean ability. For <lb/>
more twelve years Mr <lb/>
Stevens has been ardent student <lb/>
of the of the world. <lb/>
Since last May he nave <lb/>
been the . <lb/>
mi a; have made <lb/>
true prophecies. <lb/>
Mr. . ; a <lb/>
r d i in the throes of <lb/>
upheaval, which eventually <lb/>
ill the earth d . the <lb/>
North Pole the <lb/>
South Pole South, i teal of <lb/>
having the earth's a <lb/>
Thai upheaval will dense <lb/>
flood, fire a . earthquake, and <lb/>
m t of the e s of the <lb/>
world are going to r; tome <lb/>
of them will be destroyed. <lb/>
the next two y <lb/>
twenty-sh cities in the <lb/>
States and London, Paris and <lb/>
ii destroyed. <lb/>
New City, the aged <lb/>
will be swallowed in <lb/>
the gaping maw of an earth- <lb/>
quake crack, and Chicago and <lb/>
Milwaukee will be wiped off the <lb/>
map. <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
recently obi n <lb/>
of <lb/>
e as a <lb/>
S ard <lb/>
You can unlock the coal <lb/>
and get kindling wood in <lb/>
again for colder weal <lb/>
roaring with laughter. Ambrosia <lb/>
and ginger cakes wen served <lb/>
with nigger t as souvenirs. <lb/>
The . loath to <lb/>
leave Africa but America, the <lb/>
garden spot of the earth, was <lb/>
y be visited. Tin's was at <lb/>
the ho of Mr. . C. T <lb/>
V. -v lid <lb/>
waved in . in d he <lb/>
of coin a <lb/>
and mad <lb/>
they tree an of ti <lb/>
is es of <lb/>
. f i <lb/>
n M <lb/>
likely a <lb/>
pro- <lb/>
was a regular <lb/>
exciting horror, as single file and Sam, who lit <lb/>
they always followed each other fer but to suck cheroots <lb/>
to and from the down through all to <lb/>
and where this most <lb/>
son would frequently say <lb/>
to his venerable <lb/>
Daddy you know you are telling I and cut all <lb/>
a Uncle Tom. I capers that <lb/>
veritable And they <lb/>
were every one <lb/>
of I hem. They played the <lb/>
and drum, sang, danced <lb/>
manner of funny <lb/>
kept the visitors <lb/>
and Vi <lb/>
resent<lb/>
y I <lb/>
Happy <lb/>
the c . n <lb/>
with open n <lb/>
In . were I lies of <lb/>
ante Hum one <lb/>
carding the <lb/>
other whirling <lb/>
ten spinning wheel. Sh be <lb/>
and iced cakes w a I <lb/>
sherbet cues . <lb/>
with tiny Am <lb/>
From America the <lb/>
the <lb/>
route desired at will. The <lb/>
trip was unique . , , <lb/>
Much i <lb/>
ladies planned <lb/>
it. and w are ow it <lb/>
. success<lb/>
mm<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019674_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
r-mm<lb/>
. -i <lb/>
Ladies Cloaks <lb/>
Ladies Long Rain Coats. <lb/>
Ladies Long Dress Oat-. <lb/>
Dress Oats. <lb/>
en's <lb/>
GO I . <lb/>
FALL <lb/>
u; <lb/>
.-, s <lb/>
lull ts i <lb/>
.- ate<lb/>
We guarantee a goods to <lb/>
be exactly as we represent. <lb/>
If you will avail of <lb/>
this you will re- <lb/>
a great saving. <lb/>
j Ladies Elbow cloves <lb/>
red. white and <lb/>
blue, golf gloves <lb/>
and cents. <lb/>
CHILD MUFFS. <lb/>
Angola <lb/>
CORSETS. <lb/>
A fine lot Corsets. Well <lb/>
made with tape to prevent <lb/>
ripping. cents. <lb/>
La die. and Gents fine Mer- <lb/>
fast black self openers, <lb/>
with fine trimmed bandies. <lb/>
each <lb/>
Ladies rubber inches <lb/>
Misses rubber <lb/>
inches 8.80. <lb/>
we can you <lb/>
excellent values <lb/>
in this lite. Big <lb/>
values in <lb/>
Pattern Hats and <lb/>
Novell- <lb/>
ties. Hats made <lb/>
to order. <lb/>
Non n <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 it. <lb/>
Brand Clothing for Youths and Boys. Cold Medal on every Suit. <lb/>
in Pants. Boys Knee Pants and 1.00 <lb/>
Specials in Pants. Mens Fancy Worsted. Quality. Dark <lb/>
Ground with Grey Stripes. eaT <lb/>
BRAND <lb/>
Gloves <lb/>
Mens all Wool Gloves <lb/>
kid <lb/>
kid <lb/>
Mens driving <lb/>
Mens driving <lb/>
Mens driving <lb/>
Mens driving <lb/>
Mens skin <lb/>
Boys <lb/>
Furniture. <lb/>
shirts <lb/>
A lot princely brand <lb/>
shirts ct Notice display <lb/>
in north window. <lb/>
Bi <lb/>
it- ii i s cents. Mens <lb/>
t. . . . four in ties <lb/>
i es and colors each <lb/>
Solid Oak Suit of Furniture <lb/>
Dining room Chairs, each <lb/>
Odd Bed Steads, Oak <lb/>
Oak rocking chairs. <lb/>
12.98 <lb/>
A t <lb/>
Easels, Solid oak and enamel and <lb/>
I .; la <lb/>
rill H <lb/>
III r <lb/>
j x. .<lb/>
Main Street, GREENVILLE, N. <lb/>
Ci <lb/>
P County.<lb/>
Shade H. <lb/>
Vs. Sale of <lb/>
P. W <lb/>
and Herbert K. <lb/>
Wooten. <lb/>
By an <lb/>
Moore. Wit of the Super- <lb/>
court, of Pitt i in the <lb/>
foregoing cause, on the day <lb/>
the under n <lb/>
pd commissioner will on V outlay <lb/>
day December; 1906 <lb/>
to pm lie bet re the <lb/>
the court door in -iv-n- <lb/>
ville, to the highest for <lb/>
cash, Ii tract or par <lb/>
eel of land to wit; Lying and be-l <lb/>
I i county of Pitt and <lb/>
State of North situate <lb/>
Eli in Creek adj in- <lb/>
Ins the lands of T H II. <lb/>
M. u, n <lb/>
c d known as <lb/>
M home ; .,. <lb/>
p a it or <lb/>
Terms of sale cash, hour f <lb/>
r Tins 30th, I <lb/>
i 1906 <lb/>
F Harding. C a <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
1- f. r. <lb/>
Merit of I'm as r of t he <lb/>
i. de aw-d. <lb/>
; iv u until on- <lb/>
f lo to <lb/>
mid nil <lb/>
that <lb/>
tr .-. re f or <lb/>
ins notice will .- Li t in <lb/>
Tin or. <lb/>
k, K, <lb/>
K. M <lb/>
HEALTH <lb/>
INSURANCE <lb/>
The man who life Is <lb/>
his <lb/>
The man who insures his health <lb/>
Is wise both for his and <lb/>
himself. <lb/>
You may Insure health by guard- <lb/>
Ins It Is worth guarding. <lb/>
At t h e first tack disease, <lb/>
which generally approaches <lb/>
through the and <lb/>
itself in Innumerable ways <lb/>
TAKE. <lb/>
And save your health.<lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.<lb/>
. i , n . <lb/>
ii d <lb/>
i .;,. r <lb/>
I II<lb/>
r Ml <lb/>
i i H by <lb/>
i. ii.- t. <lb/>
hi to ill.- p. .- I hi fl <lb/>
i. -i i it. ii o i <lb/>
I I. III- -Ill of <lb/>
will I. r.- <lb/>
I c- <lb/>
I. II I I <lb/>
if Minn- <lb/>
. t I ,. R W <lb/>
W. H O M II <lb/>
I . i . . . i . i , r i. <lb/>
Hi. Ii . .<lb/>
ii , <lb/>
I it. ii . <lb/>
. ;. f , <lb/>
i i l . . I . <lb/>
k. . . . -M <lb/>
lull k ands <lb/>
i d i <lb/>
This I <lb/>
r. v. ii K. M <lb/>
I. I . <lb/>
. . . , M <lb/>
n in- or <lb/>
i . i l lit- <lb/>
i I'll III <lb/>
ii In <lb/>
ill II <lb/>
ii-i <lb/>
in h i . place <lb/>
I I i. <lb/>
NOTICE OF SAL <lb/>
By virtue of an odor of the <lb/>
Super court of county <lb/>
made in the case i f Harvey <lb/>
i s a ii i the o <lb/>
i g II i OW <lb/>
I i iii said . under <lb/>
Mailed Receiver I sod at <lb/>
sale in highest r <lb/>
sh on S v <lb/>
of December, on lie <lb/>
l i in of The <lb/>
in the town <lb/>
Grifton, M. C , at of i- <lb/>
c i bed real and proper- <lb/>
I i <lb/>
1st. i . i n lie ; <lb/>
boiler, s. <lb/>
I j and d <lb/>
lion including an acre <lb/>
land on which the sit <lb/>
said land, buildings and <lb/>
ginning will b sold ii- <lb/>
said <lb/>
at said <lb/>
i sci In <lb/>
to <lb/>
All n <lb/>
Iii ll. <lb/>
fuel <lb/>
in- I., <lb/>
h v <lb/>
Mainline t en Is. <lb/>
iii ii ; duct <lb/>
i Grill i. <lb/>
y on mi other <lb/>
f buggies, bug <lb/>
id Al ma In ts, <lb/>
the lease In Id i id <lb/>
has <lb/>
year ye to run <lb/>
The Red r hen <lb/>
i Hie three las d <lb/>
I hi., i . i <lb/>
as a including build <lb/>
n d I a-c Id, and all the <lb/>
persona property, mentioned <lb/>
Purchaser or p u r n h a s- <lb/>
e s be required to deposit <lb/>
Receiver per cent, if the <lb/>
e of bid in money <lb/>
or titled i heck, as a <lb/>
i h. <lb/>
n Nov. t; <lb/>
Receiver. <lb/>
ore and Long, <lb/>
will II <lb/>
follow. <lb/>
lots I I p p. <lb/>
i rial on hand<lb/>
iii one lot; <lb/>
hubs, rims <lb/>
in ii I is is <lb/>
in hand for <lb/>
d. This is Worth ion <lb/>
Suppose You Stop<lb/>
in, N c <lb/>
I lake pleat. <lb/>
me i ii list Remedy <lb/>
i cured our little <lb/>
. i <lb/>
i i lier body. <lb/>
She ha ii from <lb/>
ii.- ii i at i r old, <lb/>
mil i ., Slit <lb/>
i c ., i i i l feel <lb/>
I III -pi ill. o i <lb/>
it I i i i in <lb/>
. COBB.<lb/>
I Publishers <lb/>
end Printers <lb/>
new <lb/>
iii patent <lb/>
i. . v. ii. we <lb/>
,,. old n Col <lb/>
Hi ad Rules, <lb/>
i. and thicker, make <lb/>
ti i now <lb/>
Ml i hot It <lb/>
eel nu hot <lb/>
ton,. <lb/>
Helm b <lb/>
Rules <lb/>
L, S. and la <lb/>
par <lb/>
A ad<lb/>
hits, will h <lb/>
h t on Pointers Co Type and High N. Ninth Street. <lb/>
is <lb/>
I Not Quite <lb/>
How you a <lb/>
mill or driver or an- <lb/>
gar Han- h good t; <lb/>
box In for <lb/>
Our <lb/>
in yo i and <lb/>
will your <lb/>
box ma lack a <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Of Course <lb/>
You get Harness, <lb/>
Horse <lb/>
of <lb/>
J. P. <lb/>
Corey <lb/>
For gentle ponies <lb/>
well broke. G, A Kittrell, <lb/>
Winterville, N. C. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
hi i IN <lb/>
I'll; <lb/>
i Groceries i <lb/>
in <lb/>
And Provisions <lb/>
i---------,; <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and m <lb/>
Ties always on hand <lb/>
. kept con- <lb/>
II in stock. Country <lb/>
Produce Bought and Sold <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
if <lb/>
We beg leave to t we are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for <lb/>
White Lead, Paints, <lb/>
Colors, and and <lb/>
Ready nixed Paints. <lb/>
There is no line in the world better than <lb/>
It ha it a <lb/>
reputation for honorable wares and honorable <lb/>
dealings. <lb/>
If you use the Harrison Paints you need <lb/>
never worry quality. <lb/>
We trust that you will favor us with your <lb/>
orders whenever you want good paint for any <lb/>
Have just a car load and <lb/>
can give you Special Prices. <lb/>
Baker Hart <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
INVALID<lb/>
OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE, <lb/>
At the Close of Business, Nov. 12th 1906. <lb/>
areas- <lb/>
iii<lb/>
Stocks, bond mortgages 2.400.00 <lb/>
S 3,872.83 <lb/>
Banking 4,100.00 <lb/>
L fr in<lb/>
Coin 1,65.1.26<lb/>
I paid in I <lb/>
25,000.11 <lb/>
Undivided Profits Bx- <lb/>
and Paid <lb/>
payable <lb/>
checks out <lb/>
standing <lb/>
North I <lb/>
County of Pitt. I <lb/>
L, L. Little, Canine.- of the above-named bank, do <lb/>
the to the best of my <lb/>
belief L. LITTLE. <lb/>
and w . <lb/>
this day, of Nov <lb/>
WALTER ii. <lb/>
Public. <lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
W. B. WILSON. <lb/>
K. W. <lb/>
Director <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST COMPANY <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At close of business Nov 12th, 1906. <lb/>
159.087,16 <lb/>
nu <lb/>
unsecured <lb/>
Bonds, <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
Cash item <lb/>
Gold Com <lb/>
Silver Coin <lb/>
National bank <lb/>
S notes <lb/>
Total <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital stock paid in <lb/>
Surplus 18,500.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits, <lb/>
Mills <lb/>
i Tit <lb/>
Due to <lb/>
ck <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
State of North Carolina. County of Pitt, <lb/>
S. Chit, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly <lb/>
swear that the above is true to the best of my <lb/>
and belief. C. S. CARR, Cashier. <lb/>
. and to <lb/>
me. Nov <lb/>
J. MOORE, <lb/>
Notary Public <lb/>
R. O. <lb/>
K. G. <lb/>
FLANAGAN <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
Great Men Who Did Ir <lb/>
cT <lb/>
A record of I <lb/>
courage of the world, invalid he. <lb/>
toes is Sophia <lb/>
r of <lb/>
there heroes as <lb/>
historian, who himself, <lb/>
wen . . d <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Another win <lb/>
Louis Steve n. ho wrote, <lb/>
miserable, snuffling, <lb/>
stricken, nightmare ridden. <lb/>
knee tottering, <lb/>
and remain of man. <lb/>
continues Stevenson, <lb/>
medicine bottles on my chimney <lb/>
and the blood on mi handkerchief <lb/>
are accidents. They <lb/>
my view of It an <lb/>
State <lb/>
when asked for rules for longevity, <lb/>
replied. a chronic ailment <lb/>
in youth, and nurse yourself <lb/>
through Kant <lb/>
furnishes a lesson of this kind. Al- <lb/>
though the was <lb/>
never entirely well, he performed <lb/>
a prodigious amount of intellectual <lb/>
and lived to he eighty <lb/>
of age. obtained such control <lb/>
over his writes Mrs. <lb/>
when suffering from <lb/>
a pain in his head lie could <lb/>
his mind so perfectly on a <lb/>
chosen subject that the pain <lb/>
treated as if it did not exist. <lb/>
sheer force of will he would <lb/>
overcome sleeplessness, caused <lb/>
rheumatic attacks. at hi; <lb/>
says, not imaginary pain- was <lb/>
proved by the glowing <lb/>
which was seen the next morning on <lb/>
the toes of my left <lb/>
That pitiful account which John- <lb/>
ion gives of Pope's <lb/>
rests upon the authority of an <lb/>
old servant of Lord Oxford, who <lb/>
knew him after middle age. <lb/>
was then so wink as to stand in per- <lb/>
need of attendance. He <lb/>
extremely to cold, so that <lb/>
he wore a kind of fur doublet under <lb/>
a shirt of coarse, warm linen, with <lb/>
tine sleeves. When he arose lie <lb/>
invented in bodice made of <lb/>
canvas, being scarcely able to hold <lb/>
erect till they were laced, <lb/>
then he put on a flannel waist- <lb/>
coat. One side of his body was con- <lb/>
His legs were so slender <lb/>
that he enlarged their bulk with <lb/>
two pairs of <lb/>
soldiers have borne <lb/>
they could neither overcome <lb/>
nor avoid. of the <lb/>
foremost <lb/>
Napoleon, the Duke of Welling- <lb/>
ton and Archduke Charles of <lb/>
to have been <lb/>
tics. At the battle of the <lb/>
archduke, it is said, had a seizure <lb/>
which lasted about an hour. It was <lb/>
then that Napoleon gained the as- <lb/>
At the critical moment <lb/>
the fate of two great armies was in <lb/>
the hands of two epileptics. Cam- <lb/>
the conqueror of Egypt; Al- <lb/>
the Great and two of the great- <lb/>
est poets of and <lb/>
subject to this disease, <lb/>
as was also the<lb/>
Many Language of <lb/>
There are few cities in the world <lb/>
having more newspapers of varied <lb/>
tongues than Alto- <lb/>
the number of dallies, week- <lb/>
lies, monthlies and irregulars pub- <lb/>
in the republic <lb/>
about Resides, of course, <lb/>
language, with its wide <lb/>
from Spanish, there <lb/>
are papers published in <lb/>
in Catalan, In Italian, French, Ger- <lb/>
man and in Basque, in <lb/>
Norwegian and in in Ara- <lb/>
Syrian, Hebraic; and in <lb/>
several dialects, while in the <lb/>
but territory the Welsh organ . <lb/>
a considerable sale influence. <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
Its Rigidity About Equal to That of <lb/>
Professor T. J. J. See of the <lb/>
States navy has <lb/>
ed the rigidity of the earth by <lb/>
pro, pages depend <lb/>
mi i tin i on. He <lb/>
if fluid, the g <lb/>
have a rigidity greater an <lb/>
to tie <lb/>
weight <lb/>
this great ire <lb/>
i I and so vibrates in an <lb/>
x I the average rigid <lb/>
r v hole mass i- near <lb/>
. nil steel. Nickel <lb/>
strongest and hardest <lb/>
a known. The i- thus <lb/>
to be capable of withstand- <lb/>
enormous strain. Ir. See <lb/>
the rigidity of the <lb/>
. ii- i-1 is about e to that <lb/>
if granite, which is one-sixth that <lb/>
steel, and toward the center <lb/>
rigidity rapidly increases. At <lb/>
earth's center the <lb/>
natter is at an enormously high <lb/>
yet under the great <lb/>
there at Murk it is <lb/>
times more rigid limn the <lb/>
nickel steel used in the am or of a <lb/>
i. <lb/>
This mil hod has been applied <lb/>
to the other planets. It turns <lb/>
jut that the rigidity of Venus is <lb/>
greater than that of platinum and <lb/>
about identical with that <lb/>
wrought iron. The rigidity of <lb/>
Mars is about equal to that of gold, <lb/>
the rigidity of Mercury, the <lb/>
moon and other satellites is about <lb/>
to that of glass. The average <lb/>
rigidity of the great <lb/>
Saturn. Uranus and Neptune <lb/>
between eighteen and three <lb/>
lime- that of nickel steel. The <lb/>
rigidity of these bodies is due <lb/>
the great pressure acting <lb/>
such large masses. <lb/>
In the case of the sun the result <lb/>
s more The average <lb/>
of all the s layers is <lb/>
times nickel <lb/>
This re the effect <lb/>
if in aid hard- <lb/>
a mass even when it is self <lb/>
luminous and at enormously high <lb/>
News. <lb/>
Balloon Accent. <lb/>
The first public ascent by the <lb/>
balloon was made June <lb/>
178.1. It was a spherical <lb/>
consisting of pieces of linen but- <lb/>
toned together, suspended from <lb/>
poles. A fire was kindled <lb/>
it. and the flames were fed with <lb/>
of chopped straw. The <lb/>
loose bag filled out, assumed a <lb/>
form and in a short time <lb/>
was completely distended. At a <lb/>
en signal the stays were slipped, <lb/>
ind the balloon instantly ascended. <lb/>
velocity accelerated until it <lb/>
reached some height, then became <lb/>
and curried it to an <lb/>
of more than a mile. Tor ten <lb/>
minutes it remained <lb/>
fell gently in a vineyard nearly two <lb/>
miles distant from the place of its <lb/>
ascension. The first adventurers <lb/>
to make an ascent in a balloon were <lb/>
at, de and the Mar- <lb/>
In the basket of <lb/>
i balloon they on Nov. <lb/>
rose to a height, of about feet. <lb/>
Outfit. <lb/>
it was noised about Bey <lb/>
mouth that Aims was <lb/>
to marry Corn Black one of <lb/>
the summer residents thought to <lb/>
have some fun with him. <lb/>
going to get married, <lb/>
what lore <lb/>
I suppose made all <lb/>
the your <lb/>
did not balk at the <lb/>
unusual word, as expected. <lb/>
he returned; Lin <lb/>
she bound my Sunday coat and put <lb/>
a new collar and I've had my <lb/>
shoes <lb/>
ion. <lb/>
Quite a Difference. <lb/>
a lady to her <lb/>
ant, strongly object to your copy- <lb/>
M is In <lb/>
what way do I OBJ <lb/>
Wu <lb/>
h, I raw <lb/>
K lent. <lb/>
am Vis to <lb/>
eat h<lb/>
The Problem. <lb/>
once lost an Irish re- <lb/>
marked u German lady who was re- <lb/>
the trouble she had in keep- <lb/>
domestics, I could not <lb/>
her that i- a tier- <lb/>
man name for a fly. One day my <lb/>
little baby daughter was seated in <lb/>
i chair near n window which open- <lb/>
ed on the piazza, where Bridget was <lb/>
it work. The window was closed, <lb/>
and a number of flies were busy <lb/>
humping their heads against the <lb/>
panes in an endeavor to escape to <lb/>
the outside. They attracted <lb/>
attention, who called out to me to <lb/>
look at them, at the same time say- <lb/>
then <lb/>
Bridget turned to to ll e baby <lb/>
mil heard these word-. And i <lb/>
Bridget is firmly convinced <lb/>
that I instructed the to make <lb/>
fun of York Herald. <lb/>
The word i- real- <lb/>
the name of a people. II is <lb/>
with many of the <lb/>
who formerly flourished in the <lb/>
West Indies, having been <lb/>
of human flesh The letters <lb/>
are Interchangeable in <lb/>
aboriginal American Ian- <lb/>
so that Columbus found one <lb/>
West Indian island saying <lb/>
where another said <lb/>
while Shakespeare's Caliban is an- <lb/>
other variety of the same. <lb/>
Tho Word <lb/>
Originally the word <lb/>
signified merely belong- <lb/>
When said that <lb/>
More men in this world <lb/>
wore to earthly <lb/>
f Aid not mean that they <lb/>
hat that they <lb/>
had Then as used by <lb/>
came <lb/>
to mean <lb/>
ago was defined as <lb/>
silly, <lb/>
The Holidays <lb/>
Arc Coming <lb/>
Mr Merchant <lb/>
The Columns of the <lb/>
Mt n <lb/>
Reflector, <lb/>
Will Sell More goods <lb/>
for you than any other <lb/>
TRY THEM <lb/>
Job <lb/>
Printing <lb/>
IN ALL BRANCHES <lb/>
Send your Orders to the- <lb/>
Reflector Office <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019674_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
II I .<lb/>
in th- p.-i at N. us second <lb/>
upon application <lb/>
at every post office in and adjoining . <lb/>
in to fiction <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA TUESDAY NOV. <lb/>
The charge is made against <lb/>
of <lb/>
members of the Asheville<lb/>
When the was recently on <lb/>
V a a rifle and <lb/>
using the weapon with such <lb/>
deadly effect Ordinarily police- <lb/>
men are expected to be brave <lb/>
men and ready to face danger, <lb/>
but when they had seen the <lb/>
shoot down live men in <lb/>
quick succession and at <lb/>
everybody el who got in his <lb/>
path it is no wonder that pool <lb/>
were scared, and in this re.-, set <lb/>
the policemen in question w.-re <lb/>
like the rest of the folks. But <lb/>
policemen are paid to r <lb/>
and more is expected of tin m <lb/>
then of others. <lb/>
every campaign there are <lb/>
no more earnest workers for the <lb/>
success of the party than the ed- <lb/>
and they do more in <lb/>
the result than any other <lb/>
class. This they do cheerfully, <lb/>
and in with out <lb/>
reward or the hope of reward, <lb/>
for it is rare is <lb/>
found who asks for or expects an <lb/>
office. But when one dues Beck <lb/>
a position no one has a, stronger <lb/>
the party. For that <lb/>
reason W. C. <lb/>
Dowd, of Charlotte News, <lb/>
should be be chosen speaker of <lb/>
next house of representatives <lb/>
has already served his <lb/>
a term in the legislature and hi <lb/>
again elected. In point of <lb/>
ability he is surpassed by no <lb/>
member of the body, and to <lb/>
elect him speaker would be a <lb/>
recognition of the valuable <lb/>
vice he has rendered the party. <lb/>
Judging from what we read in <lb/>
the Snow Hill Laconic, the wash- <lb/>
machine right schemers have <lb/>
also been working Greene county <lb/>
and found victims plentiful. <lb/>
ready to part wit. <lb/>
heir money when a stranger <lb/>
along with a smooth look- <lb/>
proposition. <lb/>
If the next legislature will put <lb/>
a lax on dogs sufficient to raise <lb/>
the funds that would be required <lb/>
to establish a we <lb/>
will withdraw our objection to it, <lb/>
even if only about five per cent <lb/>
of the appropriation would go to <lb/>
the care of white youths. <lb/>
Whether or not the matter of <lb/>
roads reaches the voting <lb/>
in Pitt county within the <lb/>
next two years, the coming <lb/>
should be asked to pass ;. <lb/>
bill giving the county the <lb/>
of voting on the question of <lb/>
issuing bonds purpose. <lb/>
If the president brings success <lb/>
out of his Panama canal trip, he <lb/>
might next try his hand looking <lb/>
f r the North pole. His <lb/>
there might be warmer <lb/>
its frigidity implies. <lb/>
The turkeys must have had a <lb/>
presentment that Thanksgiving <lb/>
is coming, or else read read it in <lb/>
the newspapers, and token to <lb/>
the woods. They do not appear <lb/>
on the market. <lb/>
The value of a system i f <lb/>
water works to Greenville was <lb/>
again demonstrated when e <lb/>
fire alarm was sounded Wed no. <lb/>
day night hydrant <lb/>
hos reel station near at hand <lb/>
they are conveniently <lb/>
located in different sections of <lb/>
the the firemen were not <lb/>
in a c <lb/>
putting fin . Tl e <lb/>
works n d fire <lb/>
are a good investment for <lb/>
the town. <lb/>
Five Durham young men <lb/>
down to Raleigh and <lb/>
to th town, one of the test <lb/>
the l I of <lb/>
result was the j men ape <lb/>
in th lock up and p id <lb/>
liberal in the police co t <lb/>
next morning. The fact is <lb/>
but we suppose th i i <lb/>
claim can be made that tr <lb/>
young men are of good families <lb/>
and claim to be gentlemen. <lb/>
It cost. Hearst over ti <lb/>
get defeated for governor <lb/>
York, while Hughes <lb/>
on an outlay of So would seem that money does I <lb/>
always count. <lb/>
The the <lb/>
country have jumped on <lb/>
president so hard about <lb/>
the three companies of o <lb/>
soldiers, that he is about to o <lb/>
water. <lb/>
BROTHERLY LOVE. <lb/>
A Non-Member Narrates Some Ex- <lb/>
net s Wherein the <lb/>
of Church Members it Brought <lb/>
Compared <lb/>
Chicago. <lb/>
Knowing your paper is <lb/>
in the welfare and good o- <lb/>
the community, perhaps a few <lb/>
through your columns in <lb/>
reference to the sociability o. <lb/>
Charlotte folk will tend to <lb/>
n a spirit of brotherly <lb/>
which seems lacking. <lb/>
Having listened to a <lb/>
his evening n <lb/>
ford where needed, and me j <lb/>
he it in the . <lb/>
state as ; <lb/>
been about one that <lb/>
the privilege of cal <lb/>
myself a n of Chariot <lb/>
during that period haw ., <lb/>
services at five differ <lb/>
different <lb/>
During this time one e <lb/>
o my <lb/>
v is the . <lb/>
On all other <lb/>
e have entered a i <lb/>
church as strangers, <lb/>
and enjoying the discourse <lb/>
music but always departing <lb/>
strangers. How much <lb/>
mockery it seems for a topic o <lb/>
fellowship and i <lb/>
discussed at the same time <lb/>
ii noticing one who ha. <lb/>
. . <lb/>
eSt . . <lb/>
in; b o . i had <lb/>
. s me t . fifteen, <lb/>
n of friend- <lb/>
i the entire <lb/>
i. ii Sunday I was a <lb/>
. club <lb/>
Th lib . i to think, <lb/>
the <lb/>
is I of fellowship <lb/>
is brotherly love, <lb/>
i we so freely hear dis- <lb/>
ed from the pulpit, but <lb/>
h. Do <lb/>
it mean anything to a <lb/>
to hear words of advice on his <lb/>
brotherly love and be made to <lb/>
make his withdrawal without an <lb/>
expression of that which is <lb/>
taught <lb/>
would not have the <lb/>
of Charlotte that I <lb/>
speak of this for my own inter <lb/>
est, just for the sake of a hand <lb/>
shake, but I do feel that there <lb/>
are those who would profit by <lb/>
a welcome an invitation <lb/>
If church ever hopes <lb/>
to uplift humanity or do a com <lb/>
any good whatever, it <lb/>
must start with the teachings of <lb/>
brotherly love, possibly first <lb/>
among themselves, then to those <lb/>
with whom they come in contact. <lb/>
Let us all do unto ethers as <lb/>
would that they should do <lb/>
us, even in the little things <lb/>
it least. <lb/>
When I shall find a set of <lb/>
. people who thoroughly <lb/>
convince me that they are <lb/>
in the true sense of the <lb/>
word, I shall place my name on <lb/>
its roll and take a pride in being <lb/>
classed as one of them. Until <lb/>
the views of socialism <lb/>
are erased I shall feel that more <lb/>
can be accomplished by my <lb/>
being outside of its membership, <lb/>
in contact with non- <lb/>
church member as one not in <lb/>
any way superior to them, but <lb/>
on the same plane as themselves. <lb/>
is from the hear., <lb/>
and whether within or without <lb/>
the church we can be Christians. <lb/>
Non-Member. <lb/>
THE DAY YEAR. <lb/>
Boy on Ran Over Streets <lb/>
by Mail Wagon. <lb/>
Wiley Jones, aged about <lb/>
years, son of Mr Henry Jones, <lb/>
who lives in was run <lb/>
down at the Citizens Bank <lb/>
Tuesday evening at by <lb/>
the mail wagon, which was being <lb/>
driven pretty fast to the post- <lb/>
office for the mail for the <lb/>
o'clock western train. Jones, <lb/>
who was riding a bicycle, was <lb/>
knocked to the pavement and <lb/>
unconscious when picked <lb/>
p. The boy soon came around <lb/>
from the shock and went out in <lb/>
east Kinston to his home <lb/>
boy, named Tom, <lb/>
the mail wagon <lb/>
Mrs. Harper, and he <lb/>
arrested reckless driving in <lb/>
turning a corner at such speed <lb/>
as V was making. <lb/>
Free Press- <lb/>
why It Had to to the <lb/>
Now In <lb/>
There story in Plutarch <lb/>
which must convince every reader <lb/>
that one myth least relates to an j <lb/>
alteration made in the Egyptian cal- j <lb/>
to extend the length of the <lb/>
from days to A year <lb/>
of days existed in Egypt at an <lb/>
early period. The lunar month, <lb/>
from new moon to new moon, be- <lb/>
twenty-nine and one-half days <lb/>
in length, the convenient round <lb/>
number of thirty days was taken as <lb/>
r. and twelve months, of <lb/>
thirty days each, made up the Year. <lb/>
The year is more difficult to <lb/>
than the lunar in the <lb/>
being longer, and a year <lb/>
days was a very convenient <lb/>
and reasonable approximation to <lb/>
it. At any rate, the year of <lb/>
days came into use, and a curious <lb/>
custom near Memphis, <lb/>
seems to allude to it. A perforated <lb/>
vessel was tilled with water by <lb/>
priests on each day of the year. <lb/>
the island of again, <lb/>
pitchers were placed around the <lb/>
of Osiris, for making funeral <lb/>
libations, and were filled every <lb/>
by the priests with milk. With <lb/>
days in the year the ecliptic <lb/>
circle of the heavens, as represented <lb/>
in the charts, would be divided into <lb/>
equal parts, and we must re- <lb/>
it as a relic of this time that <lb/>
the circle is still made to consist of <lb/>
degrees. But so erroneous an <lb/>
estimate of the length of the year <lb/>
would soon be corrected by <lb/>
It is evident that in about seven- <lb/>
years a cycle would be ac- <lb/>
in which the <lb/>
Year's day would sweep through all <lb/>
the months, remaining only sis <lb/>
years in each. The same month, <lb/>
so far us its name was concerned, <lb/>
would now be in the inundation <lb/>
time, now in the season of sowing <lb/>
and anon in the time of reaping, <lb/>
and the agriculturist must have <lb/>
been perplexed. A text in the pa- <lb/>
makes reference to <lb/>
such perplexity and may receive its <lb/>
explanation here. Goodwin trans- <lb/>
lated Amen deliver me <lb/>
from the cold season, when the sun <lb/>
does not shine, the winter conies <lb/>
instead of the summer, the month <lb/>
is stormy, the hours <lb/>
Similar confusion would overtake <lb/>
the religious festivals, the <lb/>
Year, for example, coming five days <lb/>
before its proper time, and then ten <lb/>
days before, aid so on, and it might <lb/>
be thought that its observance at <lb/>
the wrong season would displease <lb/>
the gods. The year of days <lb/>
had to give way and ultimately did <lb/>
so in favor of one of days. The <lb/>
precise date of the change is not <lb/>
known, but it is referred to in in- <lb/>
of the time of <lb/>
I. and may of <lb/>
course have been introduced much <lb/>
earlier. When this was done the <lb/>
original months were not altered, <lb/>
but n of five days <lb/>
was interpolated at the end of the <lb/>
year between the month of <lb/>
one year and the Thoth of the next. <lb/>
Westminster Gazette. <lb/>
Ready for <lb/>
st <lb/>
y Dressing isn't half as important as Dressing <lb/>
the turkey and the Festive Occasion, when <lb/>
liable bird is the central attraction <lb/>
Our business is dressing Men Boys- <lb/>
from the sack suit for to t Evening Dress <lb/>
We Have Everything in Tip-. <lb/>
that Man could ask for <lb/>
And it is ready for you at a minute's notice; Ready to put <lb/>
on and wear without any more delay than to find your fit <lb/>
and please your fancy. Quality and style harmoniously <lb/>
Perhaps you are <lb/>
Somewhat Shy in <lb/>
A new Hat, may- <lb/>
need- <lb/>
new <lb/>
Shirt or the <lb/>
and Cuff stock <lb/>
needs <lb/>
etc., etc. <lb/>
New <lb/>
Gloves, Tics, <lb/>
Dress Shirts <lb/>
Collars and <lb/>
Cuffs. <lb/>
In fact if you <lb/>
are any- <lb/>
thing in Clothes or <lb/>
we are at <lb/>
service with <lb/>
the in the <lb/>
city and at a moder- <lb/>
ate price. <lb/>
WILSON <lb/>
The King <lb/>
in the Superior <lb/>
Court. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
made an attempt to live up t <lb/>
he teachings given when enter <lb/>
tag their midst <lb/>
What it difference in <lb/>
i's what a difference in <lb/>
a difference in we <lb/>
in different churches. I <lb/>
can but cite an instance not long <lb/>
since in Chicago, that dreadful <lb/>
city of all cities, where I made <lb/>
my first appearance in that God- <lb/>
little <lb/>
on the north side. <lb/>
Immediately after the <lb/>
concluded a member next to <lb/>
me arose, shook hands and in- <lb/>
North <lb/>
Pitt County <lb/>
i. W. <lb/>
Vs. <lb/>
ye, <lb/>
The defendant above named will take <lb/>
that a-i action entitled as above <lb/>
in commenced in the <lb/>
u i Pitt county for a divorce <lb/>
of matrimony, and tin- raid <lb/>
n will further take notice th <lb/>
i required to appear at the nest <lb/>
the Superior Court of .; <lb/>
t,, be held on the Mon- <lb/>
of January, 1907. it the i <lb/>
of January, at the courthouse <lb/>
laid in Greenville, N. <lb/>
or demur to the complaint in <lb/>
action or the plaintiff will apply t <lb/>
for the relief demanded . <lb/>
aid complaint. This the day o <lb/>
mix r. 1906. <lb/>
D MOORE, C S. C <lb/>
Julius Brown. Atty. for plaintiff. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
The agency existing between <lb/>
J. E. Winslow and J, W. Mill- <lb/>
from Sept. 1st, 1904 to this date- <lb/>
is hereby discontinued. All per- <lb/>
sons owing notes or accounts <lb/>
said agency for <lb/>
or mules, are hereby requested to <lb/>
come in at one- and settle <lb/>
All notes and accounts will be <lb/>
found at my in i <lb/>
Thin Oct. <lb/>
J. E. WINSLOW. <lb/>
Two of c Kind. <lb/>
The Rev, Mr. was called <lb/>
upon to attend to workers who <lb/>
hail received fatal injuries in a riot. <lb/>
The reverend was most <lb/>
anxious that I he men should eon- <lb/>
who had been their <lb/>
One of them died without <lb/>
ii. a word the . A; <lb/>
th the point of death <lb/>
hi Mr. who <lb/>
o hi- side in the full ex- <lb/>
that he was about to learn <lb/>
the fateful tidings. This belief was <lb/>
strengthened the first words of <lb/>
the sufferer. Can you keep a <lb/>
In- <lb/>
was the caper response <lb/>
of the clergyman. <lb/>
ran said the ma-, <lb/>
and immediately afterward he calm- <lb/>
awn--. -We Re- <lb/>
view. <lb/>
Two . <lb/>
Have heard <lb/>
that awful <lb/>
. awful <lb/>
the man swallowing the <lb/>
a girl Go <lb/>
Couldn't be <lb/>
fact. Swallowed a little <lb/>
milk made <lb/>
Well, rood Rut, look; <lb/>
pal, what about the <lb/>
way man that swallowed his mate, <lb/>
eh<lb/>
he swallowed a little Dub- <lb/>
porter Mail. <lb/>
Correct Count. <lb/>
As a prisoner was brought before <lb/>
Judge Sherman for the <lb/>
clerk happened to be absent. Judge <lb/>
of the the <lb/>
was he <lb/>
-try, beta <lb/>
married th <lb/>
officer, not said tin <lb/>
Jas F Davenport, <lb/>
New, latest, and up-to-date Fall and Winter Dr <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 headquarters <lb/>
Dress goods in solid colors. <lb/>
Plaids mixed, the <lb/>
newest thing <lb/>
1.00,1.25,1.50 per yaM. <lb/>
SHOES AT <lb/>
e. and Shoes for Ladies the <lb/>
n- and the most comfortable made 3.00 <lb/>
3.50 and <lb/>
Percales and <lb/>
school dresses in figures <lb/>
plaids. <lb/>
ire and c-t <lb/>
our underwear ii complete.<lb/>
WIN <lb/>
This department is in of P. C. who is authorized to rep- <lb/>
resent the Easter in and territory<lb/>
the fall of the year come j <lb/>
plow is the <lb/>
money is in greater circulation. thing for up rough land. <lb/>
You can find them at Harrington <lb/>
Bar her Co. <lb/>
Ernest Manning of Greenville, <lb/>
was here Friday evening. <lb/>
Nice sun dried apples fresh <lb/>
and bright at -I. B. Carroll Co. <lb/>
Hiss Anna and <lb/>
those in mid or. the <lb/>
mutes leading out from here, <lb/>
who are in arrears on subscription <lb/>
to the Daily ad Eastern -et-r <lb/>
will confer a favor upon u <lb/>
by handing the amount. me i <lb/>
your <lb/>
will be promptly. Friday. <lb/>
also SALE. One-half <lb/>
P C corner lot with three room <lb/>
Dent, conveniently located to school <lb/>
Emma Hicks returned to <lb/>
her home at Conetoe Wednesday <lb/>
evening after having spent <lb/>
several days with her sister Mrs. <lb/>
J. L. Jackson <lb/>
and business part of town- For <lb/>
particulars see <lb/>
J. A. Manning. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C <lb/>
Richard aged seventy- <lb/>
seven years, after several days <lb/>
away brings suffering, died Thursday and <lb/>
was buried Friday evening. He <lb/>
was one of our oldest and most <lb/>
income to you. If you put it in- <lb/>
to the Bank of Winterville, it <lb/>
i respected citizens, leaving seven <lb/>
will not only yield you an income, , , . <lb/>
, t i i . t to mourn the loss of a <lb/>
but it will also be put into cir- <lb/>
and will benefit <lb/>
Do you see this advantage <lb/>
l. <lb/>
Miss I Cox who is one of <lb/>
tender and devoted father. <lb/>
Go to the drag Store of B. T. <lb/>
Oat for T Wood ft <lb/>
high grade turnip <lb/>
-sea seed <lb/>
Call and see the large line of Thursday All are invited to call <lb/>
ladies and cloaks at B. at our new with the J. <lb/>
the teachers in ch range Manning They are off- R. Smith <lb/>
Come and examine the large <lb/>
line of couches Just at <lb/>
A- W. Ange Co. They are going. <lb/>
Leon who lives near <lb/>
Greenville, spent Friday at the <lb/>
home of L. L. Kittrell. <lb/>
Plaid belts of all grades <lb/>
at B. F. Manning Co. <lb/>
The moving picture concert <lb/>
was well attended Thursday <lb/>
night and all seemed to enjoy it. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Co. has <lb/>
just shipped pair of their Tar <lb/>
Heel cart wheel to one of our <lb/>
counties. <lb/>
Miss Lydia Roberson is visit- <lb/>
Mrs. J. D. Cox- <lb/>
Chas. Smith and two little sons, <lb/>
went to Greenville today. <lb/>
Miss Cox came in Fri- <lb/>
day night to spend Sunday at <lb/>
home. <lb/>
Our line of Fall and <lb/>
Winter millinery goods <lb/>
for inspection -t nine <lb/>
o'clock Wednesday morning Oct. <lb/>
10th 1906 through <lb/>
In <lb/>
Notice of Sale. <lb/>
North Carolina i <lb/>
Pitt Count, i <lb/>
H. W <lb/>
Vs. <lb/>
James <lb/>
and W. A. <lb/>
Stokes. I <lb/>
By i of an order -f the <lb/>
Si e of Pitt county <lb/>
made in <lb/>
he n Jame I, <lb/>
c i ill <lb/>
ii public before the r <lb/>
of Pi t county i- <lb/>
Greenville, X. C to the bighorn <lb/>
on Monday, <lb/>
h day i r Den m ti- <lb/>
following tractor par- <lb/>
I to-wit; I <lb/>
on the New Bern <lb/>
road at the corn r cf th- color d <lb/>
school house acre, thence <lb/>
ii west to a stake three <lb/>
foot from W A <lb/>
thence with the fence to Ed <lb/>
ward's comer, thence Ed- <lb/>
wards line O u he <lb/>
on the New rad, <lb/>
with the begin- <lb/>
containing acres more <lb/>
or This day of <lb/>
November, <lb/>
J. Fleming. C <lb/>
A. H. TAFT <lb/>
W. H <lb/>
Problem <lb/>
We can solve it for <lb/>
graded school came- in Friday them at a bargain, <lb/>
afternoon to spend several days <lb/>
at home. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Co., has <lb/>
on hand a full of their <lb/>
Tar Heel carts and wagons. <lb/>
see or write before you <lb/>
buy. <lb/>
Go and examine that new line <lb/>
of and gent line shoes <lb/>
just at B. P. Manning <lb/>
Company <lb/>
nature- <lb/>
a con<lb/>
. from e- ii dig- <lb/>
. , com <lb/>
. , <lb/>
etc. din <lb/>
T. . <lb/>
l f V c <lb/>
l- U i <lb/>
-o the vary <lb/>
s, B. T ft <lb/>
i and Company. <lb/>
The Misses Morrison. <lb/>
Ayden N C <lb/>
WHAT THE SOUTH CAN <lb/>
CATE <lb/>
Each setting sun sees the <lb/>
South richer by over in <lb/>
actual wealth, but even this is <lb/>
not more important than the ac- <lb/>
cumulation of experience the <lb/>
utilization of our resources which <lb/>
V e III ii III <lb/>
g flannels tut -urn Recent prove how is now in progress and the <lb/>
lUng we ever saw f-r unmet-. unsafe it is to keep your money entire country to <lb/>
Harrington Barber and Co. at home. Deposit it in the Bank the fact that in the South is to <lb/>
of of Winterville where it will be in center in the mightiest industrial <lb/>
was cotton B burglar proof safe. and commercial forces of the <lb/>
Faro delightful and refreshing A Urge line of plaids of all world. This action can duplicate <lb/>
smoke, goto J. B. Carroll the coal and iron and steel <lb/>
for best cigars and cheroots. I y of the North and West, it <lb/>
Mrs. J. B. Little and little A carload of fresh flower f cotton spin- <lb/>
daughters and Emily, <lb/>
went home Friday evening to duplicate <lb/>
visit relatives. woodworking interests of the en- <lb/>
A full line of Plenty of best always on tire it can duplicate the <lb/>
and fruit, B Carroll hand at A. W. Ange Co. oil trade of America, if not the <lb/>
Th Farm for <lb/>
The entire in <lb/>
which KM. David House lived <lb/>
Boated at Station, will <lb/>
for rent the year 1907. par- <lb/>
t-,. <lb/>
L. Little, Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
I ltd if . <lb/>
and fifty -.- i- and <lb/>
. in in h w knitting <lb/>
hi . S. Good <lb/>
e- O. WN. <lb/>
NO -FOLK CO <lb/>
N. Si S.<lb/>
Steamer L. leaves <lb/>
Washington daily <lb/>
in for leaves <lb/>
Greenville daily <lb/>
at Washington. <lb/>
Co at Washington <lb/>
Norfolk a it, for <lb/>
Norfolk, Baltimore. <lb/>
New York. all Other <lb/>
North. Connects at Nor- <lb/>
folk Ii all West. <lb/>
should order their <lb/>
f eight via Norfolk, Nor <lb/>
A It. B <lb/>
S ding h u--.-, subject to <lb/>
without notice. <lb/>
CHERRY, <lb/>
ville, N. C <lb/>
H. C- T <lb/>
M. K V P G. M. <lb/>
Furniture Sale is Brisk <lb/>
Furniture Sale Claims arc many an i loud <lb/>
WHY <lb/>
What decide it, mere one <lb/>
test. That sale jest and most important <lb/>
that offers you <lb/>
he Prices on the Furniture Yon N <lb/>
Come and be convinced. Yours to please. <lb/>
H. TIP <lb/>
Pictures Framed to Order. <lb/>
Try delicious apples at J. <lb/>
B. Carroll Co. <lb/>
The cold rains and snows are world's; it can to mo- <lb/>
coming soon and you will need the world's cotton pro- <lb/>
., good foot wear. See Harrington it can produce all the <lb/>
tines needed in America, nearly <lb/>
daily at Harrington; Barber Co., for rubber much of the <lb/>
We saw to-day five of the n-i it can duplicate ail of the <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
One hundred dollars worth of <lb/>
and most up to date citrus fruit and trucking <lb/>
poultry Thursday and . <lb/>
bales of cotton tell what from A- G. Cox try of the country; it can double <lb/>
the market of Winterville is do- shops being crop of 800- <lb/>
. o k e -ii . bushels, and quad <lb/>
me activity are to one of our neighbor counties. . , . , ,its cotton crop, duplicate <lb/>
Cox ,. nice line glass and through its rivers <lb/>
still out their nice and up i crockery wares, flowerpots and splendid harbors the <lb/>
to i Hunsucker buggies. stone jars at Harrington <lb/>
o q . It can and will do all these things <lb/>
, . .,,,, , and even then not have <lb/>
are q fa <lb/>
Manufacturers Record, Haiti- <lb/>
Thanksgiving must be near at <lb/>
hand from the large number of <lb/>
turkeys being bought by Tucker <lb/>
and Kittrell. <lb/>
Mrs. Jones of <lb/>
county came up Friday evening <lb/>
to visit relatives near here. <lb/>
The school is here- and <lb/>
your hoy will need a good com- <lb/>
winter suit. B. F. Man- <lb/>
Co., have of all <lb/>
Pee them for prices. <lb/>
Claude Chapman, of <lb/>
dine, came in on his automobile <lb/>
Friday, to spend awhile with <lb/>
relatives. <lb/>
Hunters in need of best loaded <lb/>
shells can get them at J. B. Car- <lb/>
roll Co, <lb/>
Miss Julia who is <lb/>
in the Red Banks sec- <lb/>
passed through Friday even- <lb/>
en route to Ayden, to spend <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday at the <lb/>
C A. Fair. <lb/>
Anybody in need of a stylish <lb/>
up to date dress will see A. W. <lb/>
Ange Co. before buying. They <lb/>
are over stocked with mohair <lb/>
goods, silks and nice shirt, waist <lb/>
goods. <lb/>
TheA. G. Cox have <lb/>
completed for pair <lb/>
of their old reliable tar cart <lb/>
Co. School Desk. See or <lb/>
write them before you buy. <lb/>
more. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF <lb/>
WINTERVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At the Close of Business, Nov. 12th 1906. <lb/>
Capital Stock paid in <lb/>
Undivided profits, less <lb/>
currant expenses 47.51 <lb/>
payable <lb/>
of deposit 1,285.00 <lb/>
subject to ck. <lb/>
i- <lb/>
117.345.76 <lb/>
State of North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt. <lb/>
I, J. L. Jackson, of the above named bank, do solemnly <lb/>
swear that the above statement is true to the beat of my <lb/>
and belief. J. L. JACKSON, Cashier. <lb/>
Loins and <lb/>
Overdrafts <lb/>
Furniture and Fixtures <lb/>
Demand on <lb/>
Due from Hanks <lb/>
Sold <lb/>
Silver <lb/>
Nat. Bk and other <lb/>
IMPORTANT LAND SALE <lb/>
virtue of the <lb/>
me by the will and <lb/>
of R. M. I <lb/>
shall offer at public salt-at the <lb/>
court house in town of <lb/>
Greenville, on Monday. Dec 3rd, <lb/>
valuable building iota <lb/>
situated in West Greenville, on <lb/>
the square lying con R. M <lb/>
late and A F <lb/>
Kennedy's and in front of <lb/>
Ki <lb/>
and m j i Is can be <lb/>
seen at Dr K A office. <lb/>
ins sale of <lb/>
sale Dec <lb/>
E A <lb/>
Executor of Ii. M. Move, <lb/>
Greenville Lifer aid <lb/>
Transfer <lb/>
nice car <lb/>
all <lb/>
boarded the week <lb/>
ii month. <lb/>
Bo we A <lb/>
THE HOME OF WOMAN'S FASHIONS. <lb/>
PULLEY <lb/>
N. G <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before <lb/>
me, this of Sept. 1908. <lb/>
JAMES R. JOHNSON. <lb/>
Notary Public- <lb/>
J. F. HARRINGTON, <lb/>
J J. MAY, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
Notice, <lb/>
All persons tire hereby <lb/>
not to buy or trade for my three <lb/>
to C. A. Fair, for <lb/>
one to O Moore for <lb/>
one to E. R. for <lb/>
a right to sell the 1904 <lb/>
Swift Company right. <lb/>
C R- Williams. Ayden. N. C. <lb/>
Nov. 19th, 1906. <lb/>
No Recital. <lb/>
There was not a sufficient <lb/>
in the opera house, Friday <lb/>
night, to justify the <lb/>
Reed company in giving the re- <lb/>
advertised. The people <lb/>
missed an opportunity of attend- <lb/>
a real high class entertain- <lb/>
WHAT A <lb/>
WATER <lb/>
REFER TO THE <lb/>
Prof H. B. Smith, Messrs L. Little, W. cock. Wiley <lb/>
Brown. R. S. Evans. Herbert A. Ii J. Y. Monk <lb/>
and many others of Greenville, <lb/>
Send orders to <lb/>
Geo. S. <lb/>
Save the Worry <lb/>
The hot weather brings you <lb/>
Is enough discomfort without worrying over what you shall <lb/>
for dinner and with such a large tine c <lb/>
Canned Goods, Package <lb/>
Goods, Pickles, Butter Cheese, Coffee, <lb/>
Tea, Fruits, as I carry, selecting and buy- <lb/>
are easy and tho all saved It will take do argument to <lb/>
you of if you visit my store and what I carry. <lb/>
You can find me one door North of <lb/>
J. B <lb/>
Mi<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019674_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
mm <lb/>
Hands Across the Sea <lb/>
From International Sleeves<lb/>
John Bull reaches <lb/>
out from the London <lb/>
NATIONAL <lb/>
TAILORING CO. <lb/>
to shake <lb/>
cousin, L Sain, <lb/>
a his New York <lb/>
headquarter.-. is <lb/>
him on his <lb/>
purchases <lb/>
of L n i s h <lb/>
woolens <lb/>
Tailoring Co. <lb/>
POPULAR PRICES <lb/>
York Chicago San Francisco <lb/>
They maintain office in Berlin, also, where their buyers up the choicest products <lb/>
the mills. Altogether, the INTERNATIONAL is one of the heaviest woolen <lb/>
buyers in Europe and America to-day. stocks have to be enormous to meet the de- <lb/>
created Dy million garment a The International Enterprise Reflect <lb/>
Credit on all American. You can more of it by becoming an International man. <lb/>
We show and measures Here. <lb/>
l ,. .- <lb/>
HE MAN'S III <lb/>
TO SOLVE THE NEGRO PROBLEM. <lb/>
Governor-elect Hoke Smith, of <lb/>
Georgia, is of opinion that a large <lb/>
influx foreign immigration to <lb/>
the South would go fir toward <lb/>
s the race problem. He <lb/>
says the. t in cast the <lb/>
who are now segregated in the <lb/>
South, would scatter themselves <lb/>
over th country, which in his <lb/>
Opinion, would be better for the <lb/>
South and the both. The; <lb/>
Richmond Times-Dispatch, which <lb/>
knowledge of everything, <lb/>
passes upon this <lb/>
approves it, and presents a <lb/>
modern instance, h <lb/>
well the idea work, a <lb/>
its own State. We <lb/>
Springfield Republican, <lb/>
which has a very tender regard <lb/>
for the in the South, com- <lb/>
mends this saying of Mr Smith's, <lb/>
and chinks that there is much <lb/>
reason This least is <lb/>
if population is <lb/>
distribute throughout the whole <lb/>
i country, so to give to each <lb/>
and every State its fair <lb/>
; of the black race; the <lb/>
problem will then become a <lb/>
and a sectional prob- <lb/>
The South is quite willing <lb/>
that oilier sections shall have <lb/>
their just proportion of <lb/>
if other sections can induce them <lb/>
to emigrate from the South and <lb/>
settle In the North and West- <lb/>
There is one Northern man. at <lb/>
any who has shown a dis- <lb/>
position to do his part in <lb/>
the from the South to <lb/>
the North, and all Northerners <lb/>
who are like-minded may, if <lb/>
they choose, follow his exam- <lb/>
with the full consent of the <lb/>
South. We refer to the <lb/>
gent who came down to <lb/>
Danville, Va., captured a <lb/>
woman, of whose charms he had <lb/>
become enamored, and took her <lb/>
. home to become his wife. This <lb/>
i incident may afford our Spring- <lb/>
; field contemporary a text for <lb/>
I further observations on the <lb/>
prob <lb/>
of <lb/>
FLUE CURING IMPROVES TOBACCO LIKE <lb/>
ROASTING IMPROVES GREEN COFFEE <lb/>
Flue Curing Develops the Stimulating Aroma and Taste <lb/>
Found In Schnapps that Satisfies Tobacco Hunger <lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
SMALL FIRE. <lb/>
BLOW, Manager and <lb/>
. -a <lb/>
a we the w <lb/>
, I away, <lb/>
Pat Oat Without Much Damage. <lb/>
Just before o'clock <lb/>
day night people returning home <lb/>
from the opera house saw flames <lb/>
out the roof of a pantry <lb/>
between the kitchen and dining <lb/>
room of the home of Mrs. C J <lb/>
on Evans street. An<lb/>
There are three ways used by far- <lb/>
for curing and preparing their <lb/>
tobacco for the market; namely, sun <lb/>
cured, air cured and flue cured. The <lb/>
old and cheap way is called air cured; <lb/>
the later discovery and improved way <lb/>
is called flue cured. In flue-curing <lb/>
the tobacco is taken from the field <lb/>
and suspended over intensely hot <lb/>
flues in especially built to re- <lb/>
the heat, and there kept in the <lb/>
proper temperature until this curing <lb/>
process in the tobacco the <lb/>
stimulating taste and fragrant aroma <lb/>
found in Schnapps tobacco, just as <lb/>
green coffee is made fragrant and <lb/>
stimulating by the roasting process. <lb/>
Only choice selections of this ripe, <lb/>
juicy flue cured leaf, grown in the <lb/>
famous Piedmont country, where the <lb/>
best tobacco grows, are used in <lb/>
Schnapps and other brands <lb/>
of high grade, flue cured tobaccos. <lb/>
Hundreds of imitation brands are <lb/>
on sale that look like Schnapps; the <lb/>
outside of the imitation plugs of to- <lb/>
is flue cured, but the inside is <lb/>
filled with cheap, flimsy, heavily <lb/>
sweetened air cured tobacco; one <lb/>
chew of Schnapps will satisfy tobacco <lb/>
hunger longer than two chews of <lb/>
such tobacco. <lb/>
Expert tests prove that this flue . <lb/>
cured tobacco, grown in the famous <lb/>
Piedmont region, requires and takes <lb/>
less sweetening than any other kind, <lb/>
and has a wholesome, stimulating, <lb/>
satisfying effect on chewers. If the <lb/>
kind of tobacco you are chewing don't <lb/>
satisfy, more than the mere habit of <lb/>
expectorating, stop fooling yourself <lb/>
and chew Schnapps tobacco. <lb/>
Schnapps is like the tobacco chew- . <lb/>
formerly bought costing from I <lb/>
to per pound; Schnapps is sold I <lb/>
at per pound in cuts, strictly <lb/>
and cent plugs. .<lb/>
it,<lb/>
hi- <lb/>
for job <lb/>
r ting receipts <lb/>
then went on <lb/>
a short distance. <lb/>
magic the incident was to which the <lb/>
was wafted up town and then responded and <lb/>
pshaw it was were not putting out <lb/>
arrears. haves from the real old man to th much of a tin <lb/>
the lad of ten it was who roof had to torn off to <lb/>
should and shouldn't catch the <lb/>
gang. All night the town was <lb/>
paraded, valuables were placed <lb/>
. receive <lb/>
t, Mir mail at<lb/>
Mrs. Lou Nichols, of in safety, babes were tucked <lb/>
m is here on a visit to her beds, wives sought refuge in <lb/>
Mrs Hemby. while their liege lords<lb/>
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, N. C. <lb/>
r, were on the warpath in defense <lb/>
We are displaying a very of home and Next <lb/>
pretty hue tut squares was serene, the rob- <lb/>
rugs. Cannon m t e.-s gone, the valuables replaced, <lb/>
Mrs E S. left Tues- the babes once again in the <lb/>
day for Williamston where she mother's arm the mother <lb/>
.;, from her closet at her <lb/>
household affair and our <lb/>
If at an interested in cool; man hod back to usual <lb/>
Stoves and heaters it will pay avocations of life and every- <lb/>
you to and calm awaiting later <lb/>
prices that Cannon to chronicle, and <lb/>
making make our place in history <lb/>
Ida G. Edwards is visa- and our people as subjects to <lb/>
. , . . be admired and spoken of men. <lb/>
relatives m Kinston. So he second in <lb/>
W. B. Greenville, Burglary hue. <lb/>
was here on business Tuesday. I Miss Olivia Cox left on the <lb/>
., train yesterday for school at <lb/>
.,. . . , Winterville. <lb/>
If you need any paint be sure <lb/>
to call on E. E. Co. They <lb/>
have a paint will cover over <lb/>
y as much suffice and wear as long <lb/>
as any and a good price. <lb/>
We regret to learn B. S. Sum- Miss Stancill, of Washington, <lb/>
and family anticipate has been here on a visit to <lb/>
leaving den and making their <lb/>
home at liar ton. This is an, Our moat go, h <lb/>
excellent family and our people j is well advanced. The now <lb/>
are give them Up. interest the most economic Inn- <lb/>
Cannon and Tyson. <lb/>
The following is a statement <lb/>
it- Just how the fire started can- <lb/>
not be explained, though Mrs. <lb/>
Forbes thinks it may have caught <lb/>
from a lamp carried in the pantry <lb/>
early in the night It had evidently <lb/>
been burning sometime under <lb/>
the tin before disco. <lb/>
J. HI<lb/>
nun <lb/>
age, <lb/>
Hi <lb/>
at COST <lb/>
James who has been <lb/>
visiting his brother M. M. Sauls <lb/>
as rendered by the Dispensary <lb/>
last report. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
v m n they To- <lb/>
higher ii a <lb/>
Farmers movement working to the <lb/>
Or <lb/>
A-STRAY UP <lb/>
I have n up a cow and calf <lb/>
Cow is in good condition, black <lb/>
with white list across shoulders. <lb/>
nearly white Calf about <lb/>
five old, dark color. <lb/>
Owner can get same by proving <lb/>
property and paying costs. <lb/>
Near School House, West <lb/>
of <lb/>
LOST.-On the railroad yard at <lb/>
Greenville, a pocket book con- <lb/>
about a trunk check <lb/>
small ring. A liberal <lb/>
Win De paid finder by <lb/>
leaving at Reflector office- <lb/>
Mrs. C T. Gardner, <lb/>
Salisbury, N C <lb/>
SALE OF PERSONAL PROP- <lb/>
Dec I <lb/>
to public sale, to <lb/>
bidder for all my <lb/>
cattle, hogs, farming <lb/>
utensils and household and <lb/>
en This sale will be <lb/>
at my borne place Great, <lb/>
Swamp. <lb/>
Make his <lb/>
Christmas <lb/>
The finest CHRISTMAS <lb/>
r you can make is a <lb/>
PIANO <lb/>
Our artistic pianos bear <lb/>
our v. e c old net <lb/>
put t on any bu- the best. <lb/>
We make and . in to <lb/>
you <lb/>
dealer's prices, and on ea- <lb/>
terms <lb/>
Drop us a line let u <lb/>
Veil you It.<lb/>
Mi. <lb/>
street<lb/>
TO <lb/>
in of q <lb/>
of Mary A <lb/>
this day been <lb/>
issued to mi- of <lb/>
of Pi t to <lb/>
is y given to all per- <lb/>
holding claims against the <lb/>
THE ENTIRE I OF <lb/>
Clothing, Dress goods, Notions, <lb/>
Hats, caps, Boots, shoes, and <lb/>
Fancy groceries and store fix- <lb/>
Must be by the <lb/>
First day of <lb/>
We publish our cost mark as we mean business we say <lb/>
at Cost. <lb/>
HA G L BO B M QT S <lb/>
Come one, come all and examine cur stock no goods <lb/>
on credit. <lb/>
sold <lb/>
for Cash. <lb/>
in <lb/>
Total resources <lb/>
Net profits <lb/>
has returned to hi <lb/>
cordially in-j <lb/>
to call hand <lb/>
up-to-date cl acct. others <lb/>
coal. Stock on hand <lb/>
Fixtures <lb/>
W. E. Hooks wont to Green- <lb/>
ville Wednesday. <lb/>
Mrs. F. G. and <lb/>
Miss Isabella Dawson have come <lb/>
and ch go <lb/>
E. Co, always have <lb/>
fresh goods on hand. <lb/>
Norfolk <lb/>
B. F and family who <lb/>
lave been on a visit to Fort <lb/>
came home this week. <lb/>
James Sauls, of Fremont, <lb/>
from Saturday until <lb/>
y here with brother, M. M. <lb/>
807.62 <lb/>
28.44 <lb/>
1798.06 <lb/>
1493.11 <lb/>
1309.21 <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
j Stock on hand Aug. <lb/>
18th- 1906 less out- <lb/>
standing <lb/>
Cash on hand <lb/>
Rills payable <lb/>
S 975.45 <lb/>
136.42 <lb/>
381.24 <lb/>
fa <lb/>
Bale;. <lb/>
The government rt issued <lb/>
Wednesday of the amount f <lb/>
cotton ginned out of this season's <lb/>
crop up to Nov. places <lb/>
8,531.486 bales. This is about <lb/>
a million hales in excess <lb/>
year. <lb/>
last<lb/>
METEORIC <lb/>
A full line of Meg and Dry Goods, <lb/>
The agency existing between <lb/>
J. E. Winslow and J. Mills <lb/>
from Sept. 1st, 1904 to this date <lb/>
is hereby discontinued. All <lb/>
sons owing notes or accounts <lb/>
through said agency <lb/>
or mules, are hereby requested to----- <lb/>
come in at once and settle same. <lb/>
All notes and accounts will be <lb/>
f at my office in <lb/>
This Oct. <lb/>
J. E. WINSLOW. <lb/>
Everything needed for the house and i make a <lb/>
p in lit suits to order. <lb/>
H I IN E <lb/>
Ml N. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
BETHEL <lb/>
Interesting Recent Event . <lb/>
Bethel, N C Nov- <lb/>
Effie Grimes i <lb/>
a night, <lb/>
Nov. in of <lb/>
All persons are hereby notified Watson . ., <lb/>
not to buy or trade my two , , , .,, <lb/>
notes for each -one given v <lb/>
and one to E. R joyed the hospitality th <lb/>
-for a right to sell the charming ho.-.; . 1- <lb/>
1904 Swift Washer Company Die and Etta <lb/>
J. A. Griffin, id n, W. <lb/>
II. ; EL <lb/>
Miss Lucy Manning gave a <lb/>
Nov. 19th, 1900. <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. ; <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
house party at her hospital <lb/>
home B last <lb/>
All persons are hereby notified Th ,. were among the <lb/>
not buy or trade .,. ,. ,, D <lb/>
given and O. Bryan. <lb/>
Moore for each for a right Winterville; <lb/>
to sell the 1904 Swift <lb/>
Company right. <lb/>
AYDEN, N. C. <lb/>
Nov. 17th, 1906. <lb/>
C. A. Fair. <lb/>
Panacea water is highly rec- <lb/>
Orders can be left <lb/>
or said Mary A. Turnage with G. S. <lb/>
to present them lo mo for <lb/>
duly on or <lb/>
before the 80th of November <lb/>
or I be plead <lb/>
in bar of their recovery. -II <lb/>
persons to said estate <lb/>
will to <lb/>
me. This the of No. <lb/>
J A. Harrington, <lb/>
of Mary A. <lb/>
and Blow, <lb/>
Stray Taken <lb/>
I have taken up one male hog <lb/>
has been running with my <lb/>
hogs for sometime. The hog is <lb/>
a blue sandy color with neither <lb/>
ear marked, weighs about <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
Tile Clerk of Superior <lb/>
Court of Pitt county having is- <lb/>
sued loiters testamentary to mo, <lb/>
the J, on the <lb/>
of . 1906, on I p <lb/>
Iv Victor <lb/>
hereby given to all per- <lb/>
indebted to the estate u <lb/>
make immediate payment the <lb/>
an I to an creditor <lb/>
of said estate to their <lb/>
claims properly <lb/>
to the undersigned, within <lb/>
months after the date of this no- <lb/>
or this notice will he plead <lb/>
in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
pounds. Owner can get same Mt of November <lb/>
Come in and my <lb/>
CORN PLANTERS, SOWERS, DISC <lb/>
HARROW SMOOTHING HARROWS, ONE <lb/>
AND HORSE STEEL PLOWS, WIRE <lb/>
FENCE N ii I- <lb/>
MACHINES. <lb/>
proving property and paying <lb/>
Elbert Cox, <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
D. No. Id St <lb/>
F. G. JAMES. <lb/>
on of E. <lb/>
Cox. <lb/>
Hardware <lb/>
Will Ormond of <lb/>
a pleasant visitor at <lb/>
office during the week. <lb/>
I Capt. D. G. Berry, William <lb/>
Zeb Bland, Ollie <lb/>
Move and Joe Blow <lb/>
to Greenville today. <lb/>
We handle Goldman's shoes <lb/>
or women, Misses and children. <lb/>
Every pair sold under strict <lb/>
On overcoats and <lb/>
Cannon Tyson can <lb/>
you in both quality and <lb/>
Mr. Moon a brother of Mrs. <lb/>
I it for his home <lb/>
n Washington City today. <lb/>
Burglars <lb/>
a phone message was <lb/>
here conveying the <lb/>
that two very suspicious <lb/>
looking chi we <lb/>
hair way in this direction and <lb/>
the to be on <lb/>
he OUt. This created no <lb/>
ripple of excitement, and <lb/>
; for short while were <lb/>
at on the live <lb/>
sure enough, two <lb/>
presenting the <lb/>
ranee of the road pro- <lb/>
came and found quarters <lb/>
t a bearding house In <lb/>
careful investigation <lb/>
definite could be learned <lb/>
f them and they for awhile were <lb/>
L-ft to their own meditation. <lb/>
ratter upon arrival of a <lb/>
Her dark IT said t be <lb/>
re f <lb/>
by th n <lb/>
. . halted an <lb/>
I. rep on<lb/>
h bay, <lb/>
mm and <lb/>
l Lilly <lb/>
A Hire one <lb/>
more <lb/>
Ayden. Good well <lb/>
and out in <lb/>
Apply lo <lb/>
A n. K. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
I have out two notes for <lb/>
each for half a Swifts 1901 Wash- <lb/>
Machine right. As these <lb/>
notes were obtained from me by <lb/>
misrepresentation I shall refuse <lb/>
to pay them, and all persons are <lb/>
hereby warned against buying <lb/>
or trading for them. <lb/>
Nov. 15th, 1906 J. H. Harris. <lb/>
Ayden, N, C, <lb/>
School <lb/>
Stationery <lb/>
Me <lb/>
Or Joseph Dixon <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. <lb/>
Brick St <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
M, <lb/>
Now is your time lo save <lb/>
money by coming us for <lb/>
children s school <lb/>
pens, era <lb/>
we have also a great assort- <lb/>
of AI <lb/>
note paper for use State is in <lb/>
all tints plain or hemstitch- <lb/>
ed <lb/>
The mat of social <lb/>
lend <lb/>
If. SAULS. <lb/>
Moore, <lb/>
Bell; and Mayne <lb/>
I. ; Minnie <lb/>
Dave in of Tori Barbara <lb/>
Manning, of Bethel; and <lb/>
Lee Stewart and W. C. Harris- <lb/>
son, and Harbert <lb/>
of Hassell, <lb/>
On Friday . Nov. 23rd, <lb/>
Mr. Thomas II Lindsey, A. M. <lb/>
B. ., of Durham, will give an <lb/>
entertainment In the graded <lb/>
auditorium for the benefit <lb/>
of the school. Mr. Lindsey <lb/>
c highly recommended by <lb/>
the first school men of this and <lb/>
other states as a monologue and <lb/>
character sketch artist of <lb/>
ability. The <lb/>
will be varied and will consist of <lb/>
character ski and <lb/>
Admission cents, <lb/>
children <lb/>
The annual conference of the <lb/>
E. church, this <lb/>
session here. Quite <lb/>
a large number of delegates are <lb/>
in at <lb/>
OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF <lb/>
N. <lb/>
At of <lb/>
All person her <lb/>
not to buy or trade Tor my two <lb/>
For one <lb/>
to Ella ail and one Lo E. R, <lb/>
for h right I ell the <lb/>
Swift Washer Company <lb/>
t, R. I. <lb/>
N . 17th. . i. M. C.<lb/>
Pr of <lb/>
Students. <lb/>
A canvass of the students body <lb/>
has recently been made wit ha <lb/>
vii n of determining in what <lb/>
proportions the different <lb/>
are represent- <lb/>
ed in the I y. It has <lb/>
been found that the Methodist <lb/>
church heat the list with <lb/>
members. The have <lb/>
the and <lb/>
the Episcopalians Then <lb/>
are U Lutherans, members <lb/>
the Christian n <lb/>
Catholics, -1 <lb/>
members of Gen. n <lb/>
church, while the <lb/>
Disciples and the Friends are <lb/>
represented. Tho total church <lb/>
membership amounts to . <lb/>
There are students enroll d <lb/>
in tho university at present. <lb/>
Heel. <lb/>
That Ar Whirling <lb/>
Th . <lb/>
Tin- of space <lb/>
probably masses of <lb/>
iron or other minerals which <lb/>
arc <lb/>
rate. these <lb/>
few<lb/>
and id of crashing to the <lb/>
devastation in <lb/>
. id <lb/>
. a <lb/>
an ill i- what <lb/>
n a n sec <lb/>
-I it <lb/>
Slur- not hi The <lb/>
It <lb/>
I h and <lb/>
r r. The former rave at such <lb/>
B ; , an on <lb/>
. . r, solid <lb/>
II to <lb/>
fell If <lb/>
tho r. <lb/>
tin <lb/>
all i <lb/>
I .- I and <lb/>
as a i rue divinity come fro hi iv- <lb/>
n. Tl <lb/>
. day warlike <lb/>
M I and <lb/>
in, u tho <lb/>
survivors Ins th i I <lb/>
and old ; lie M h -an. <lb/>
Al Wold S a, ire, <lb/>
land, a fell over <lb/>
century ago. . only <lb/>
then . pi <lb/>
falls, after . flee. <lb/>
ii mi I ea <lb/>
thunder and light at <lb/>
suddenly there like an <lb/>
j on. f <lb/>
near th it he was e of <lb/>
the earth throw a up by <lb/>
ii pi lo . r d. Ii <lb/>
I re <lb/>
feel in . . id <lb/>
tin . <lb/>
, . <lb/>
fill n <lb/>
the . pa-s <lb/>
with , <lb/>
of t; . A c <lb/>
lite falls i- n v red J <lb/>
as ii . ; j, <lb/>
fin <lb/>
it descends lo ti <lb/>
and <lb/>
Overdraft Secured <lb/>
and <lb/>
from <lb/>
old Coin, <lb/>
. Loin, <lb/>
Hank notes and <lb/>
notes <lb/>
568.21 <lb/>
t j in, j <lb/>
Sin pin fund <lb/>
IT v profits lens<lb/>
Dividends unpaid <lb/>
200.110 <lb/>
1,238 <lb/>
Cashier's <lb/>
5,045.00 <lb/>
Just a <lb/>
Those who have not responded <lb/>
lion due The Reflector must <lb/>
think they were sent out merely <lb/>
for the fun of the thing But <lb/>
seriously, we need the money. <lb/>
and wish every one who <lb/>
; i statement would send <lb/>
us the int. <lb/>
Office Well Equipped. <lb/>
The of the county board <lb/>
of education and superintendent <lb/>
of in Masonic temple <lb/>
building, has been handsomely <lb/>
with a new desk, book <lb/>
case, cabinet, table and <lb/>
chairs. The office is now well <lb/>
, and a credit to the <lb/>
county. <lb/>
I have cut three notes- one for <lb/>
and two for each for <lb/>
1904 Washing <lb/>
right. ob- <lb/>
from me through <lb/>
re tin I shall refuse to pay <lb/>
the ti persons are j <lb/>
notified no; to buy or for <lb/>
M. N well, <lb/>
X Ayden, N. <lb/>
Phi <lb/>
The <lb/>
of the Dan <lb/>
he wan h <lb/>
wit i <lb/>
be <lb/>
of it. <lb/>
in<lb/>
I f you an . <lb/>
a stump -1 f to <lb/>
address a lot of talk <lb/>
farm unless . op. <lb/>
Don't be r <lb/>
know who yelled 11- <lb/>
M ho i Id. d lo lie <lb/>
plow 11111-1 not ha <lb/>
I e to do. tin ho <lb/>
to the end tie <lb/>
shouted hired in I. over- <lb/>
-i . v. <lb/>
in <lb/>
. to U <lb/>
Mot C <lb/>
The tin <lb/>
El .- D <lb/>
me. <lb/>
A ill us ea on n <lb/>
devoted old pie v i <lb/>
comforts as the do tor <lb/>
were for I who <lb/>
was dying and being nursed <lb/>
by hi- consort. Entering the cot- <lb/>
-he saw the old dame leaning <lb/>
over I lie fire. she <lb/>
aid. how's <lb/>
inn he In <lb/>
muttered the o lady. <lb/>
I en f. r -1 s ti . ;. it <lb/>
he a-gM just <lb/>
there, it's that p <lb/>
I to <lb/>
1-<lb/>
Deposits subject to check, <lb/>
A Iconic ii n D.- j There i <lb/>
l but goods where you can <lb/>
102.00 j yet theme <lb/>
seed and Hulls <lb/>
Did I j R <lb/>
The late II <lb/>
was <lb/>
his I <lb/>
to <lb/>
Tl . <lb/>
. V<lb/>
Total, <lb/>
.-7 <lb/>
OF <lb/>
COUNTY OP PUT, <lb/>
I, H. Smith, of the <lb/>
tint the above is Hue to Hie of my and be <lb/>
J. K. SMITH,<lb/>
. . t <lb/>
line <lb/>
i carry a <lb/>
In <lb/>
Subscribed and to <lb/>
day f <lb/>
Public <lb/>
SMITH <lb/>
B. C. <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
f- . Lab. <lb/>
and can save mini these.<lb/>
. <lb/>
LEAD LOW FOR CASH <lb/>
pr <lb/>
i in Out <lb/>
I- . <lb/>
lit a you<lb/>
in, . <lb/>
That v., ma <lb/>
l had <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019674_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
virtue of a mortgage executed <lb/>
and delivered to Window Mills by <lb/>
John R. Braxton and wife. <lb/>
ton. on the 23rd day of November. 1904 <lb/>
the undersigned will sell for cash <lb/>
the Court house in Greenville <lb/>
d Thursday, December the 1906 <lb/>
the parcel or lot of <lb/>
land, the town Ayden and <lb/>
the north side of First Street, be- <lb/>
ginning a point on First Street at a <lb/>
take in the ditch and running a north- <lb/>
course with the ditch <lb/>
S. Haifa line, thence t <lb/>
course with J. S. Hart's line <lb/>
feet to a ditch, thence a <lb/>
with said ditch feet to First <lb/>
an course <lb/>
with First Street feet to the begin- <lb/>
about one third of an <lb/>
acre more or and the lot <lb/>
from J. H. This <lb/>
20th day of r, <lb/>
MILLS, <lb/>
F. G. Jan-es. Atty. <lb/>
TL I <lb/>
f U ii day re D. <lb/>
C. Mn ;. t of the r <lb/>
of Pitt County, executor to <lb/>
. i K <lb/>
Tan i U herd y given U <lb/>
all holding claims against <lb/>
; i in <lb/>
i . them to me tor i a; n did <lb/>
authenticated, on or <lb/>
day i I i r 1907, or <lb/>
will I bar of r recovery. <lb/>
All i to u <lb/>
mi mi o <lb/>
the i i November IS I . <lb/>
C. L. <lb/>
Ll ran. <lb/>
Execute <lb/>
-v Blow, <lb/>
Dr. A. Fitts. of Charlotte, <lb/>
was killed while out hunting by <lb/>
the accidental discharge <lb/>
gun <lb/>
Mr. Moore Coating Next Saturday. <lb/>
Mr. Chas C. Moore, the <lb/>
president of the North Carolina <lb/>
Division of the Southern Cotton <lb/>
Association, sends the Reflector <lb/>
a card in which he says <lb/>
meetings were held this <lb/>
week at Monroe. Wadesboro and <lb/>
Lumberton and the farmers were <lb/>
greatly interested in the <lb/>
company that will be <lb/>
organized to buy weak cotton <lb/>
Mr. Moore says he hopes to meet <lb/>
at least Pitt county farmers <lb/>
in Greenville on next Saturday, <lb/>
Dec. 1st. He will be here <lb/>
day and all farmers interested in <lb/>
getting better prices for their <lb/>
cotton should be present. <lb/>
ALE OF PERSONALTY. <lb/>
Or. Monday the 17th of December <lb/>
US, on the farm of the late Alfred <lb/>
Forbes in Beaver Dan. Township, <lb/>
county, known as Williams <lb/>
i will sell at public sale the <lb/>
. i ; i . i i i j I <lb/>
A deceased, co <lb/>
of mules, wagons, farm- <lb/>
com, fodder, hay. cotton <lb/>
n., etc. Terms of sale, cash. <lb/>
his the 21st of November <lb/>
FORBES <lb/>
of will and <lb/>
Alfred Forbes. <lb/>
Todd. who has <lb/>
been out at attending <lb/>
the Cotten nuptials. <lb/>
left Friday afternoon for her <lb/>
home in Atlanta. <lb/>
J BANKING AND TRUST COMPANY, <lb/>
AT BETHEL, C. <lb/>
At the close o business Nov. <lb/>
RESOURCES. LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Loans and discount <lb/>
Overdrafts <lb/>
Furniture Fixtures <lb/>
Due from Hanks and <lb/>
Bankers <lb/>
Cash items <lb/>
Gold coin, <lb/>
in bank V <lb/>
and other U. notes <lb/>
as Surplus fund <lb/>
Undivided profits <lb/>
Total <lb/>
B II- <lb/>
Time certificates of <lb/>
deposit <lb/>
Deposits to check <lb/>
checks out- <lb/>
standing <lb/>
Certified d eeks <lb/>
Total <lb/>
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt, <lb/>
r. W H -lard Cash, the above named solemnly <lb/>
wear that the above statement is true to the best my <lb/>
W. H <lb/>
and belief. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me. this day of<lb/>
H T. Ca son <lb/>
Votary Public <lb/>
M. BLOUNT. <lb/>
R. J. GRIMES, <lb/>
STATON. <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION <lb/>
BANK OF FARMVILLE, FARMVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
OF NO v. 12th,<lb/>
I- <lb/>
Ca k pa ii, <lb/>
Sn plus Fund.<lb/>
Time d <lb/>
40.69 <lb/>
r- <lb/>
d, .- u <lb/>
i x <lb/>
u . B inks<lb/>
Id coin <lb/>
i I <lb/>
note--, <lb/>
St, I <lb/>
Pitt. <lb/>
R. Davis Cashier of named bank, do solemn <lb/>
or swear is true to the best of <lb/>
knowledge J. r. DAVIS, <lb/>
. sworn <lb/>
me, h day I Nov <lb/>
WOO. <lb/>
J. V JOHNSTON,<lb/>
Correct--Attest <lb/>
W. <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS, <lb/>
E. E. A. Manage; <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Manufacturers of <lb/>
Sash, Doors, Blinds, <lb/>
And all Kinds of Turned Work. <lb/>
Also Dealers n <lb/>
AND LUMBER, CEILING, Flooring <lb/>
etc. <lb/>
ASSORTMENT OP SASH, DOORS <lb/>
BLINDS ALWAYS ON HAND <lb/>
Till rs will receive prompt attention. <lb/>
guaranteed. <lb/>
Such Com- <lb/>
In every department, of the <lb/>
Best and Goods, is <lb/>
timely tempting proof <lb/>
we are prepared to <lb/>
perfect satisfaction to <lb/>
It he most critical and <lb/>
buyers. <lb/>
Editor and Owner. <lb/>
and Friday. <lb/>
DOLLAR PER YEAR <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE PITT NO <lb/>
THE GARDEN OF EDEN. <lb/>
Aid History of The Bible. <lb/>
Rev. Ada C. <lb/>
delivered two interesting dis- <lb/>
courses here Sunday in <lb/>
Mo e Chapel. The sub- <lb/>
Garden of <lb/>
end as a foundation she used <lb/>
this is the man <lb/>
as one of us o know <lb/>
and evil <lb/>
The story of is full of <lb/>
beautiful meaning, but has been <lb/>
robbed of all its strength and <lb/>
beaut by blind leaders of the <lb/>
blind for ages. Rightly under-j <lb/>
stood, it is the olden objective <lb/>
of all bing was <lb/>
as protected within the <lb/>
of the serpent. Serpents <lb/>
are sculptured by thousands on <lb/>
the temples of India, of <lb/>
and Central America. To <lb/>
Greeks the serpent was the <lb/>
of health and good fortune. <lb/>
It was also the symbol of <lb/>
and It is still <lb/>
a household deity fed with <lb/>
milk in many parts of the <lb/>
East and in India If a dead <lb/>
is found a coin is placid <lb/>
in its mouth and the cat care- <lb/>
CAROLINA FRIDAY. <lb/>
1906 <lb/>
SALARY OF <lb/>
Fear-Dollar <lb/>
heat for <lb/>
H. C. Nov. <lb/>
Incidentally growing out of a <lb/>
charge Solicitor <lb/>
Brown of the Fifteenth Judicial <lb/>
District was collecting illegally <lb/>
One Pension <lb/>
For the first time in her his- <lb/>
the United Slates has closed <lb/>
one of her many p n-ion ac- <lb/>
counts; that is of widows of vet- <lb/>
of the Revolutionary war. <lb/>
The last Revolutionary soldier's <lb/>
widow drawing a pension died in <lb/>
HE STOCK FOOD WARN- TWENTY <lb/>
INC OUR FARMERS AGAINST <lb/>
A COMMON SWINDLE. <lb/>
NOT <lb/>
earns, So- Vermont a few days ago, aged <lb/>
Court will he called upon j years. She was the widow <lb/>
to determine whether or not Damon who was re spent every year in <lb/>
solicitor in this district or when she. at the age j era thousand dollars a year <lb/>
The Ohio News, <lb/>
The Raleigh Progressive Par- a famous and <lb/>
mer prints a notable article ex- bing daily paper published <lb/>
posing the stock food b ., has <lb/>
which it pronounces the most . . , <lb/>
stupendous swindle now being for e very good reason <lb/>
practiced upon American I re is not <lb/>
Millions and millions of , . a man <lb/>
haps in very y <lb/>
gaudily advertised <lb/>
etc, <lb/>
.-, <lb/>
Every quality and grade is a warrant of Excellence. <lb/>
every Price an object lesson In the economy of buying <lb/>
The Fair Price Banner Waves Over AH<lb/>
With pride and confidence In the variety richness, <lb/>
completeness, and cheapness of our beaut i u <lb/>
stock, we Invite you to come <lb/>
examine our seasonable line. <lb/>
I A <lb/>
, I u <lb/>
Groceries Clothing, <lb/>
Boots and <lb/>
-.- n <lb/>
Hats, Cap, Notions etc, etc. <lb/>
The ore <lb/>
Unquestioned the Styles, and <lb/>
Variety and Range for and Prices Right <lb/>
There in in buying Here <lb/>
Remember i s OH <lb/>
lit i. canals v t <lb/>
fully buried. But you say these <lb/>
people were had <lb/>
n physical and spiritual K , ,, , . , . <lb/>
. not Moses and the prophets, <lb/>
Science today tells us that <lb/>
history of one of a certain species <lb/>
is the history of the species as a <lb/>
whole- If we will then apply <lb/>
this fa to the story of he Gar-1 <lb/>
den of we will see its, <lb/>
force. Every child born, is born . <lb/>
into a Paradise of innocence <lb/>
The fir t demand is for food. I,. <lb/>
representing the race, is ts a brazen serpent upon <lb/>
nor <lb/>
The Hebrews were <lb/>
DO in reverence for the <lb/>
serpent. The rod of Moses is <lb/>
turned by God into a serpent <lb/>
which swallows other rods so <lb/>
transformed and becomes a <lb/>
mighty rod to <lb/>
and work wonders. And when a <lb/>
fatal disease strikes the nation <lb/>
a pole for their healing which is <lb/>
reverently cherished for <lb/>
I of years in the Be <lb/>
supplied first with food as a <lb/>
primal need. intelligence <lb/>
in the child is it dis-, <lb/>
objects, is able so . f J <lb/>
speak, to give names to things no John says as Moses <lb/>
Adam Next do., up the Serpent so must the <lb/>
companionship; and I son of man be lifted up But <lb/>
BOW must come that higher not the Serpent cured Yes <lb/>
of the spirit, the is to be put under <lb/>
ethical sense, and here in <lb/>
home y .;, every <lb/>
acted Eden experience <lb/>
The mother places a fine vase <lb/>
of on bracket aid warns <lb/>
the children not to touch it while <lb/>
she is absent. The girl is drawn <lb/>
first to the flowers, suggests that <lb/>
they stand upon a chair <lb/>
smell the Then <lb/>
tween them the vase fall.- <lb/>
is not a printer in the<lb/>
Bankers are there in plenty. <lb/>
M i than are there, and <lb/>
more are on the way. Several <lb/>
c be operated, <lb/>
with men to spare, <lb/>
i . y i's there to <lb/>
of a n amount <lb/>
of legal business. <lb/>
Doctors, brokers and <lb/>
n citizens <lb/>
are lacking. <lb/>
Business men. farmers, me- <lb/>
and representatives of <lb/>
almost every other department <lb/>
surviving and sold to gullible are common <lb/>
But there is not one printer. <lb/>
other I in the State is married him. <lb/>
titled to collect the fee on sci-; Soon after the <lb/>
fa. question of costs was closed young women went <lb/>
heard by Judge Allen this after- the marriage speculation, while the invest <lb/>
noon on motion of Col. Lusk, to marrying old pensioners so they and made by the <lb/>
the in a certain case. secure a life pension after Experiment Stations have <lb/>
CoL Lusk argued that the death f their husbands, and <lb/>
costs and the solicitor's j many young women all over the are nothing more than common <lb/>
fee were illegal. The solicitors have carried on this species meal, bran, etc., with a little <lb/>
fee and the clerk's marriage speculation after cheap, salt. Epsom <lb/>
the same in the case at issue as every war our country has had. pepper, saltpeter, etc., added to <lb/>
have been taxed in other cases. The pension office records change the taste, and the mix- <lb/>
After hearing argument Judge showed last June that there were more valuable than <lb/>
Allen held that the solicitor's fee still living pensioned widows I ordinary ship stuff put up in <lb/>
of was illegal. He said the war of 1812; of the Indian j flaming packages, advertised in <lb/>
there was a decision of the I wars widows, while there j big illustrated ads in farm pa <lb/>
Court that so held. Judge were <lb/>
Allen said that he was those wars; of the war j at rates ranging from to <lb/>
he had wen this decision Mexico, widows, with a ton. <lb/>
many years ago. but admitting I only pensioned soldiers. These stock foods, which can <lb/>
number of pensioned soldiers I be found in almost any country <lb/>
in the war between the States I store, have recently been tested <lb/>
be too numerous to in seven different Experiment <lb/>
Stations, and our farmers who <lb/>
While the pension has paying such enormous prices for <lb/>
closed the pension list of widows the mixtures, should be interest- <lb/>
and if you have temp- <lb/>
then fight it. <lb/>
broken, and the children <lb/>
away, me mother comes <lb/>
calls. Th; little culprits <lb/>
to w <lb/>
The naughty impulse cooled <lb/>
down, the God walks in the <lb/>
cool of the day In their little <lb/>
e prom- <lb/>
to the serpent I will put <lb/>
enmity between thee and the <lb/>
woman, between her seed and; <lb/>
thy seed It shall bruise thy <lb/>
head and thou shall bruise his; <lb/>
Do you ask what of <lb/>
l. j flaming sword turning every way <lb/>
J to keep the way of the tree of <lb/>
Life This is the great primal I <lb/>
j law of self preservation which <lb/>
forbids suicide, but holds a man <lb/>
is; <lb/>
run <lb/>
and <lb/>
are <lb/>
that in looking into the matter be <lb/>
was unable to find it. He held <lb/>
however, that the fee was not <lb/>
legal, and <lb/>
for Solicitor appeal <lb/>
Supreme Court. It is <lb/>
pr i hat the ease on appeal <lb/>
will rd at once. <lb/>
Rel to the clerk's costs <lb/>
taxed e case at issue, Col. <lb/>
Lusk that the bill of <lb/>
cots of 815.55 was not legal; <lb/>
that only should have been <lb/>
taxed. Judge Allen held that <lb/>
the clerk was entitled to all the <lb/>
cost-- i Col, <lb/>
ed that he would appeal, where- <lb/>
n J Allen said he thought <lb/>
ed in the results as reported by <lb/>
The Progressive <lb/>
In Minnesota steers <lb/>
stock food gave better suits <lb/>
specie act of Congress. A the than those using the stock Is. <lb/>
youngest of these is years old In Kansas two lot of sheep W e <lb/>
it is most likely that there will i fed. and those without k <lb/>
of Revolutionary war soldiers, it <lb/>
not that of the <lb/>
There are three living <lb/>
who are drawing pensions by <lb/>
soon be the second closing of a <lb/>
pension lit by our government <lb/>
Judging by th length of time <lb/>
it takes to close the pen-1 an increased price of <lb/>
list of our curlier wars it is I pound Of nineteen <lb/>
foods made pounds <lb/>
gain. In Massachusetts a slight <lb/>
gain in butter was at <lb/>
cents expert- <lb/>
spiritual <lb/>
., <lb/>
in <lb/>
n, and they heard <lb/>
j to die battle, however hard, or j <lb/>
brands a coward. <lb/>
So far then from the story of <lb/>
I Edi n's teaching a of ; <lb/>
teaches the rise of man, fro <lb/>
innocence to virtue; from <lb/>
cry to civilization. And in that <lb/>
beginning gives to woman a <lb/>
the false theology of an <lb/>
e lightened age has long denied <lb/>
h r. <lb/>
THE OP THE <lb/>
By means of a diagram, en- <lb/>
Col. Lu <lb/>
lied. <lb/>
Th- final <lb/>
question will be <lb/>
client should be sat- probable that the one for the in New Jersey sixteen <lb/>
war between Slates will not <lb/>
lion of the the be closed until toward the end <lb/>
of interest the <lb/>
Stale. The matter came <lb/>
up during the last election when <lb/>
Democrats charged that Solicitor <lb/>
Messenger. <lb/>
Tit. Harper, of Kinston Dead. <lb/>
Dr. U. Harper Sr. one of <lb/>
snowed no gain--, a no in <lb/>
cases where gains were made <lb/>
from foods, their cost was <lb/>
so great to make their use <lb/>
The fact throws new light on <lb/>
a character that has long been <lb/>
commonly misjudged. <lb/>
printer today is a hi me- <lb/>
owner. He is of fixed employ- <lb/>
and is head of <lb/>
tie always was-far <lb/>
, I above the average man in <lb/>
and intelligence All the <lb/>
events of human life <lb/>
i s through his hands and <lb/>
a impress on bis brain. <lb/>
The fact that more than <lb/>
bankers are in the <lb/>
penitentiary, and not one <lb/>
printer, tells of the relative hon- <lb/>
of the printer of today <lb/>
ti more. <lb/>
It tells us that th .-, st com- <lb/>
and most danger a-, crimes <lb/>
of today being committed <lb/>
n it by <lb/>
Nobody has any 11- <lb/>
his call fore they heard the <lb/>
Mary, <lb/>
are were afraid and <lb/>
Have you troubled <lb/>
the Then John will lay <lb/>
the blame on Mary and Mary <lb/>
will lay n serpent of <lb/>
Each will seek to shirk <lb/>
the moral responsibility laid upon from the Teach- <lb/>
In that first act of Bible. <lb/>
It has brought pain and The history of the Bible from <lb/>
shame to them, but the wise beginning of the fourth can <lb/>
mother If lad that they feel the to the revised version of the <lb/>
shame. . knows they will century was clearly <lb/>
next tempted to disobey, shown. <lb/>
hesitate longer, and perhaps All original manuscripts being <lb/>
Conquer the impulse. What if lost in the century and oral <lb/>
they <lb/>
Brown in fees on most prominent citizens of <lb/>
was accepting illegal fees. Kinston. and ho was well <lb/>
The Solicitor contended that known and had many warm <lb/>
that Democratic Solicitors all over Eastern North <lb/>
taking the same fees that he Carolina, died in Wilson <lb/>
was, and that there was law for day morning. His daughter was <lb/>
such sick in the sanitarium at Wilson <lb/>
profitable, in Iowa a steer j kicker the one is down his <lb/>
was lost by using these high- town least of all. Be <lb/>
what you say. Don't Kick. Put <lb/>
And so it goes. The Progress-your shoulder to the <lb/>
Farmer gives instance after push Your little <lb/>
we mention kicking can't st p the of <lb/>
examples merely to warn It rely the <lb/>
our farmer readers against wast- wheels with a little the <lb/>
further the many hard earn- ti.; This win soon . <lb/>
ed dollars that go out from our out you will b. left the <lb/>
and he went to see her. am. <lb/>
MERGER IS COMPLETE. ; s n after arriving there he was. for these much lurch, looking way ahead at the <lb/>
frauds I procession which has cast you <lb/>
T e pi kicker is <lb/>
can <lb/>
and <lb/>
and <lb/>
; to do wrong b depended <lb/>
y could difference not until the close- of the <lb/>
right and wrong, century that the gospels were <lb/>
Then they would be collected as writing.- <lb/>
I in that is idiots. The sources of Bible m <lb/>
her heart would break at were the manuscripts in the <lb/>
stricken with pneumonia <lb/>
fatten Carolina File caused his <lb/>
With Secretary of <lb/>
State in Raleigh. <lb/>
The agreement of <lb/>
between the Norfolk <lb/>
thorn. But if tongues, reaching into <lb/>
there is no power to distinguish, the third century, versions i.; <lb/>
then is no temptation, an other languages and writings of <lb/>
I i as the Christian fathers from the <lb/>
With <lb/>
this Gil <lb/>
why <lb/>
God I i <lb/>
Cod . . has the scowl <lb/>
of th- U is all <lb/>
wise tor ii The <lb/>
is the of <lb/>
. .- it provided temptation <lb/>
as a means to open man's eyes to students today <lb/>
that he might become as the gods J <lb/>
knowing good and evil. <lb/>
Among the earliest forms of <lb/>
worship was tree and serpent <lb/>
worship. The tree represents <lb/>
life, its roots v n deep in the <lb/>
t kingdom of death, as the old <lb/>
Nome mythology maintained. <lb/>
The serpent to the Egyptian <lb/>
.- <lb/>
second t I tn.- century. <lb/>
Not until the versions of the <lb/>
century was the <lb/>
perfect Bible made, <lb/>
c ireful study and comp u of <lb/>
ii three sources wore be- <lb/>
so c imps red. <lb/>
Knowing the cost of its <lb/>
i r. the blood and tears <lb/>
it should doubly <lb/>
Southern Virginia and Carolina <lb/>
Coast, A. Cm and Raleigh <lb/>
and Pamlico railroads was <lb/>
today with the Secretary of <lb/>
late, the capital being <lb/>
at 25.000,00 . of which <lb/>
million is in d <lb/>
stock and twenty million is in <lb/>
common stock, system will <lb/>
race miles of I in <lb/>
Eastern Carolina and Virginia, <lb/>
The and Southern ex- <lb/>
A Bachelor's Philosophy. <lb/>
Love makes the world <lb/>
round, but it isn't always able to <lb/>
make the girl's father come <lb/>
round. <lb/>
If a man wishes to convince <lb/>
his wife that he is a genius, he <lb/>
I must do it during the courtship <lb/>
A man loves a woman because <lb/>
she a woman. A woman loves <lb/>
a . inn for want of something <lb/>
to <lb/>
Love is a sea of trouble upon <lb/>
which wants to launch <lb/>
I, <lb/>
they are, although so . <lb/>
advertised in many farm j an incubus. He is a millstone <lb/>
and the The Progressive the neck. Get <lb/>
I Farmer reports that it loses out of the rut. Stop looking for <lb/>
a year, in advertising little how <lb/>
by exposing them good things you can <lb/>
its farmer readers. and then turn around and tell <lb/>
Here is one little leak which I the other fellow about Its <lb/>
may stop and keep I the right the only way. <lb/>
some good money at home Let Gastonia Gazette. <lb/>
foods alone. <lb/>
ends from Norfolk to Belhaven t. oven though he knows <lb/>
ind lackey's Ferry Washing- swamp. <lb/>
Term Nearing End. <lb/>
This week will con the <lb/>
fiscal year of the county. The <lb/>
new board of county commission- <lb/>
will lake charge <lb/>
and the various county- officers <lb/>
will inaugurated for a new <lb/>
arm. <lb/>
ton, besides branch lines, <lb/>
. The Virginia and Caro- <lb/>
extends i Si Ii <lb/>
to Edenton and from <lb/>
to Elizabeth City, <lb/>
The A. N. C. extends to to that <lb/>
Respect and esteem are the <lb/>
d lily bread of matrimony; a little <lb/>
it now and then <lb/>
d a . <lb/>
. eA v love a man enough <lb/>
to <lb/>
sue is not so sure about it as she <lb/>
like to be. <lb/>
miles. <lb/>
from Goldsboro <lb/>
m ;. with <lb/>
from Bayboro. be <lb/>
Pamlico from Raleigh f V <lb/>
miles to Wendell and will be advertisements of bargains <lb/>
extended miles to n begins. <lb/>
Junction with branch lines from A s <lb/>
Farmville to Snow Hill miles woman is to kiss her <lb/>
I and On how lovely that <lb/>
You can unlock the coal knows <lb/>
and get kindling wood in has had In her possession <lb/>
again for colder weather- at least twelve <lb/>
License. <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
Register of Deeds R Williams <lb/>
issued the following licenses <lb/>
since last <lb/>
Russell B. and Salli <lb/>
Cotten. <lb/>
IV. H. Boyette and Hettie <lb/>
Briley <lb/>
Bailey and <lb/>
aid. <lb/>
COLORED. <lb/>
Thad and Mary Lang- <lb/>
Wm. Williams and Cora Du- <lb/>
Henry Evans and Jen- <lb/>
kins. <lb/>
Jar vis Moore and Rosa Brown. <lb/>
Frank Wilkins and Emma <lb/>
The Snow Hill Association will <lb/>
have another series of races on <lb/>
Thur; day. 29th. <lb/>
Miss Fay of Kinston. <lb/>
d in I at <lb/>
M id Her r, Dr. <lb/>
I p w . Ii re to see <lb/>
ii . ii . r. <lb/>
C Co <lb/>
a w -i k <lb/>
i a w <lb/>
of R <lb/>
. away by <lb/>
i V and <lb/>
Farmers Meet. <lb/>
Mr. C. Moore, president of <lb/>
the North Carolina Division of <lb/>
the Southern Cotton Association <lb/>
in Greenville <lb/>
day. Dec. 1st. Every farmer <lb/>
interested in better prices for <lb/>
his cotton should be present- <lb/>
The Kentucky man who has <lb/>
been asleep for oust <lb/>
be in a serious . when <lb/>
Kentucky no <lb/>
on <lb/>
; . <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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