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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>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
BLOW, Manager and Authorized Agent. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
A- if the legislature is desirous of <lb/>
ii improving the jury system why <lb/>
not abolish it altogether jurors<lb/>
hi b. i artier <lb/>
r ; <lb/>
We <lb/>
gen <lb/>
PI <lb/>
Miss Mattie Hill, of <lb/>
came yesterday to visit; <lb/>
friends here. <lb/>
Miss Janie Kittrell, of Winter- <lb/>
ville, spent from Saturday until <lb/>
Monday with Mrs C A. Fair- <lb/>
Very many people from Winter- <lb/>
ville and Grifton came to attend <lb/>
the entertainment last week. <lb/>
We are I I i m a our little <lb/>
friend. Mica Sauls out <lb/>
purpose to fill space m the , a slight attack of the <lb/>
house, ii has . <lb/>
custom when a man is . . . . , I the -mire <lb/>
ranged i the court . . ., Taylor <lb/>
with an offense, a ; . . solicit the pat- <lb/>
the culprit declares of the public. C. E. <lb/>
for trial ind rs i <lb/>
; honor Watches, clocks and anything <lb/>
DISSOLUTION <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION<lb/>
THE BANK OF FARMVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
A I THE CLOSE OF J Of. 1908<lb/>
of Kilpatrick con- <lb/>
ducting a cotton and insurance business <lb/>
in the town of Grifton. N. C, has this <lb/>
dissolved co-partnership by mutual <lb/>
consent. Joel Patrick withdrawing from <lb/>
said firm. , <lb/>
Dec. 12th. 1906. <lb/>
W. H. Kilpatrick. <lb/>
Joel Patrick. <lb/>
l d Loans and Discounts Stock paid in <lb/>
Overdrafts Secured Fund <lb/>
Dr JOSeph Unsecured <lb/>
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. <lb/>
Undivided profits 2.713.79 <lb/>
of Deposit 2,537.75 <lb/>
Block, <lb/>
Kant <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
era .-. <lb/>
n e <lb/>
I needing attention in my line <lb/>
We . in the very <lb/>
.-.,. else takes . .,,. .,. <lb/>
e matter into his own I <lb/>
. after hearing a few witnesses I work entrusted <lb/>
. . he decides the case to suit him-to my care to give entire <lb/>
self The jury is the l <lb/>
Ma a inc . of I prisoner deprived of the greatest <lb/>
Net . a on American <lb/>
Mrs. Jack Smith. <lb/>
Mis N <lb/>
Smith I i, prisoner charged up I <lb/>
g. in the bill costs a five dollar I seed <lb/>
I solicit of the <lb/>
people Ayden and community <lb/>
accorded on American.;, . , , <lb/>
county taxed to death jewelry business Give me a <lb/>
to for something it never C-E Spier. <lb/>
tans cons <lb/>
Lilly Co <lb/>
Mrs. R. H. Garris, from the fee which he never received. If <lb/>
t lent one day have one man reign <lb/>
ii. v, . I let us know it, if we are to ad- <lb/>
, . E to the customs of our <lb/>
Carroll Hooks is visit- era than in the name of God <lb/>
grandparents in the let us get at it <lb/>
M. M Sauls ha the finest and <lb/>
If ; interested in Cook <lb/>
Stove, and Heaters it will pay <lb/>
you s <lb/>
that m <lb/>
The has been <lb/>
than bales of sold on <lb/>
the here this week. <lb/>
D u. Berry has moved <lb/>
into the E. S. Edwards house on <lb/>
the corner of Lee and Second <lb/>
abet <lb/>
. car loads <lb/>
id tor which we will <lb/>
cay highest cash price. Don't <lb/>
before seeing us- Y to<lb/>
T- Co w Com- <lb/>
came to us highly <lb/>
mend a II sustained <lb/>
their r For three con- <lb/>
fer- i the; gave as en- <lb/>
. of a clean and <lb/>
nigh order, were both <lb/>
ling. <lb/>
. . d those <lb/>
best <lb/>
Per. <lb/>
t brought to Av <lb/>
Sales Feed and Livery <lb/>
Stables. <lb/>
Nice Conveyances. <lb/>
Best <lb/>
Prices to suit the time. <lb/>
AYDEN, N. C. <lb/>
C. WILLIAMS, <lb/>
TRIPP. HART <lb/>
TO J. II. <lb/>
Dealers in Dry Goods, No- <lb/>
Light and Heavy <lb/>
etc <lb/>
Prices to suit the times. <lb/>
Tripp Hart Co <lb/>
Cash Items <lb/>
Gold Coin <lb/>
Silver Coin <lb/>
t 57,844.55 <lb/>
Cashiers u 124.25 <lb/>
1,050.00 <lb/>
124.25 <lb/>
if North Carolina, <lb/>
Pin. <lb/>
I, J. H. i-l , solemn- <lb/>
y Ii to b-t of my <lb/>
belief. J. R. DAVIS, f <lb/>
and <lb/>
fore me, this day of Feb. <lb/>
I 7- <lb/>
J. v. <lb/>
V. <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS. <lb/>
LITTLE FREDDIE SMITH. <lb/>
Freddie, the little t of <lb/>
Brother John and Sister Mary <lb/>
Sr th, passed away from this <lb/>
world to the beautiful home love <lb/>
o'clock, Si <lb/>
m Little Freddie was <lb/>
born Sept. 2nd, died Fob <lb/>
9th, 1907. of pneumonia. The <lb/>
family has our deepest sympathy <lb/>
in the loss of their dear little <lb/>
flower. We realize what it means <lb/>
to loose one of our dear . <lb/>
God best, and he doe; <lb/>
all thing- well. Freddie <lb/>
member of our Sunday school. <lb/>
though being small her sis r, <lb/>
May, a faithful member took her <lb/>
with every Sunday the <lb/>
weather b Favorable. We <lb/>
hope that each member of the <lb/>
Sunday especially, and <lb/>
every one remember the <lb/>
the bereaved family, and may <lb/>
the loved ones left behind strive <lb/>
to meet little Freddie in Heaven. <lb/>
Brother Smith is a faithful teach- <lb/>
r of our Sunday school, we <lb/>
A- OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
N. C.-r <lb/>
of business Jan. 1906. <lb/>
BETHEL BANKING AND TRUST COMPANY. <lb/>
AT N. U <lb/>
At the close of Jan. 26th, 1907. <lb/>
RESOURCES <lb/>
and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts <lb/>
Furniture Fixtures <lb/>
Due from Ranks and <lb/>
tankers <lb/>
Cash items <lb/>
Gold coin. <lb/>
bank <lb/>
ind other U S notes<lb/>
capital stock 5-00000 <lb/>
fund <lb/>
profits<lb/>
26,075.89 <lb/>
4.762,81 <lb/>
I Time of <lb/>
718.48 <lb/>
deposit 2.184.60 <lb/>
subj. to check <lb/>
Loans and 5.2 i <lb/>
Overdrafts n i <lb/>
and Fixtures <lb/>
Due from banks I bankers 25,828.51 <lb/>
Cash items 135.50 <lb/>
Gold coin 100.00 <lb/>
Silver coin 5.668.03 <lb/>
Nat. notes other 3,671.0 I <lb/>
checks out- <lb/>
standing <lb/>
i i <lb/>
Ti <lb/>
ti <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Capital stock <lb/>
i of Pitt, <lb/>
KW l W H <lb/>
960.25 <lb/>
named solemnly <lb/>
is true to the best of my <lb/>
and belief. W H <lb/>
Total <lb/>
H CA I <lb/>
COUNTY OF PIT f, <lb/>
I J. K. i i i r <lb/>
n in is hip to the bust of my and be- <lb/>
in f J. B. Cashier. <lb/>
J. Ii. SMITH <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
this 2nd day <lb/>
T. Cat son <lb/>
Notary Public <lb/>
I. BLOUNT, <lb/>
T. J. <lb/>
Hi STATON, <lb/>
m , hi 2nd day <lb/>
f Feb., <lb/>
ii Hun <lb/>
Notary <lb/>
Fish Bill. <lb/>
, J. <lb/>
. . victory i <lb/>
.; of his agreed fish bill <lb/>
by th The bill pro- <lb/>
I. C. ; such a change in the <lb/>
mesh of nets as to permit all <lb/>
to pass through and stop get more fish. <lb/>
wholesale destruction It also <lb/>
prohibits the use of nets within <lb/>
three miles Ocracoke inlet. <lb/>
This is not altogether as good a <lb/>
bill as Mr. Laughinghouse want- <lb/>
ed, but it will be a help in <lb/>
enabling up the river to <lb/>
h most <lb/>
attend were very much I M much on gun. <lb/>
please To Messrs. Hooks and <lb/>
this entire community <lb/>
is r privilege of <lb/>
op I . to attend am wit- <lb/>
n ii inter ting and <lb/>
perform <lb/>
n put <lb/>
then i to <lb/>
; iv been zealous and <lb/>
in th efforts to <lb/>
; and afford us <lb/>
rt i perhaps never <lb/>
have had to <lb/>
W hope and <lb/>
v. . the people of Ayden <lb/>
-v to it that these young <lb/>
i an n warded Tor <lb/>
an They <lb/>
in It. <lb/>
Go i E E. new <lb/>
. for beef, fresh meats, <lb/>
S l of deeds, <lb/>
of i county and <lb/>
Mar pent the day, <lb/>
Sunday with Mr and Mrs. R. C. <lb/>
Br carry <lb/>
a full line of Meat, Lard and Can <lb/>
D buy before giving <lb/>
me ;. trial. Frank Lilly Co. <lb/>
b Emma Kilpatrick, of <lb/>
Centerville, Mamie Dawson, <lb/>
A, and Mrs- Ma <lb/>
ware <lb/>
of Mrs. W. E. Hooks during the <lb/>
pa week. <lb/>
If y u need any Paint be sure <lb/>
and see E. E. Co. <lb/>
Cotton has been coming on our <lb/>
one of those <lb/>
N. J. Rouse, Counsel Gen. Han. <lb/>
day. Little Freddie was loved <lb/>
knew her- her face <lb/>
she so bright <lb/>
and active. Her Beat will be <lb/>
vacant, at Sunday school, and in <lb/>
the home, which can not be <lb/>
filled. May the Lord bless and <lb/>
direct the loved ones. Tho fun- <lb/>
took place ill Ayden <lb/>
tery Sunday i m. at at- <lb/>
tended by a large but <lb/>
owing to bad weather several <lb/>
were prevented from attending <lb/>
The pall bearers were Messrs. E. <lb/>
G. Cox, F. Lilly, S. S Hodges <lb/>
and F. Burney. The burial <lb/>
S were conducted by Brother <lb/>
R. H. Jones, assisted by Brother <lb/>
T. H King Little Freddie's <lb/>
memory will ever be sweet to us, <lb/>
we fee that Heaven is <lb/>
in that she <lb/>
on before. <lb/>
A precious one from us <lb/>
gone, <lb/>
W. Granger, <lb/>
, A. 1st Vice-Pres. <lb/>
lain Pens Sauls. and H.-D. Harper, Sr., 2nd JOHN F. STOKES, <lb/>
M. . J. V. 3rd Tice-President Manager Branch Office. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Foil lain pens on sale at Saul's <lb/>
drug st re at from to <lb/>
delight and a pleasure <lb/>
to <lb/>
Pen. Call at Drug <lb/>
Store and secure this much need <lb/>
article. <lb/>
W, B. Brown. Secretary <lb/>
E. Hood. Treasurer, <lb/>
J. J. ROGERS, Supt Agencies, <lb/>
James m. Parrott, <lb/>
Director <lb/>
It delight a i i <lb/>
to say of the A, J. <lb/>
NORTH <lb/>
Lo. <lb/>
any <lb/>
sale <lb/>
at <lb/>
Fountain Pens with <lb/>
all size points for <lb/>
Drugstore. <lb/>
Call <lb/>
cure one of excellent <lb/>
M, Sauls. <lb/>
All sizes and reasonable prices <lb/>
the y best Fountain Pens at <lb/>
Saul Drug Store. <lb/>
Clansman at IT'S <lb/>
on Return <lb/>
to Greenville <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. Feb. <lb/>
returned to If birth- <lb/>
place i. The play first saw <lb/>
has gone I the light in the Academy of <lb/>
I Music, Norfolk. 22nd, <lb/>
l i There was a tremendous display <lb/>
of enthusiasm on that memorable <lb/>
occasion, but not anymore than <lb/>
A voice we love is stilled; was evidenced tonight. The <lb/>
A place is vacant in hour home I was packed with the <lb/>
Which never can be filled- <lb/>
God in His wisdom, <lb/>
Has recalled <lb/>
His had <lb/>
the boon, <lb/>
THE BEST ORGANIZED. THE BEST FINANCED, <lb/>
THE BEST MANAGED, <lb/>
SELLS THE CLEANEST, CLEAREST, MOST LIBERAL, ATTRACTIVE. <lb/>
AND UP-TO-DATE POLICIES ON THE MARKET. <lb/>
HAVE TO DIE TO <lb/>
Hundreds were turned away <lb/>
able to gain admission. <lb/>
for political reasons <lb/>
had been made against the <lb/>
And though the body slumbers or the play. -Mayor <lb/>
, attended <lb/>
. . and said saw nothing <lb/>
The soul is safe in Heaven. objectionable, in fact was <lb/>
Little eyes so soft and gentle, much for himself. Th <lb/>
Little soul without a stain, , VS <lb/>
Little that smiled sweet-1 the of<lb/>
form that pain; Negotiations are on look- <lb/>
Little feet by angels guided to the presentation of <lb/>
for a long at <lb/>
, rapidly for the past To our Fathers mansion, fair, the exposition during <lb/>
few days it reminds one very Sad and sorrowful the parting, c present summer- <lb/>
for f the fall reason. Some But she found the gates ajar. <lb/>
bales have been sold within <lb/>
the last ten days. <lb/>
Claude Dawson, of Grifton, <lb/>
pent the past week with his. <lb/>
Mrs. F. G. lain arr. <lb/>
I , r fresh and cheap goods go <lb/>
to E. EL Co., they always <lb/>
have the best. <lb/>
Lizzie <lb/>
Ulla L. Hart. <lb/>
Lorena A. Dixon. <lb/>
Committees. <lb/>
I much to the <lb/>
delight of the people of this sec- <lb/>
will appear in Masonic <lb/>
Temple opera house, Greenville, <lb/>
on Tuesday night, 26th. <lb/>
W. H. has gone to house- seat sale will begin Monday <lb/>
keeping in new Cherry morning, 25th, at <lb/>
house on Greene street. o'clock, at Reflector Store. <lb/>
Total and Permanent Disability Protection. <lb/>
Temporary Disability Protection. <lb/>
ILLUSTRATION <lb/>
A Policy pays an indemnity of per week for temporary <lb/>
disability, or a year in case of total and permanent disability. <lb/>
Suppose you investigate our policy contracts right away, <lb/>
representatives are ever ready for a show down. <lb/>
A few substantial purchasers wanted at once. No better contracts offered. <lb/>
Communicate with <lb/>
J. F. STOKES, Manager, <lb/>
LE, N. C. <lb/>
Our <lb/>
EASTERN <lb/>
D. J. W Editor and Owner. <lb/>
Truth in P to Fiction. <lb/>
YEAR <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY NORTH CAROLINA. MA CU <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
FOUND BY DREAM. <lb/>
LITTLE THINGS HELP <lb/>
The little things in life are <lb/>
. Me by . lent Th <lb/>
Academy. aggregate, tell most for <lb/>
by W th. Jg An <lb/>
Media, of . and <lb/>
to Hate Been in Answer <lb/>
displayed there, a little self-re- <lb/>
on this or the <lb/>
to a Prayer. <lb/>
Wake Forest College, Feb. 23- a amount of pains <lb/>
A few days ago I was shown on another occasion these are <lb/>
a gold watch that has <lb/>
had a peculiar experience, and <lb/>
because of this the <lb/>
possessor s faith in prayer has <lb/>
been The affair <lb/>
is an interesting one and I give <lb/>
it below. <lb/>
Two years ago Mr. T. Y- <lb/>
of Chatham county, at <lb/>
present a student here was in <lb/>
school at Academy <lb/>
and while there boarded in a <lb/>
family. He bought a <lb/>
size gold watch, a few days <lb/>
later left the watch in his room, and <lb/>
and afterwards it was missing. <lb/>
A diligent search was made <lb/>
not be found The <lb/>
landlady, a Christian woman of <lb/>
high standing, was very much <lb/>
distressed that anything should <lb/>
be stolen, as was thought, from <lb/>
an occupant of her home, but <lb/>
there was no clue to the missing <lb/>
jewelry. <lb/>
A few days ago Mr. Seymour <lb/>
received a letter from a friend <lb/>
of his at Creek and I give <lb/>
a paragraph from it. <lb/>
the past night about <lb/>
o'clock in the Mrs <lb/>
Martha Johnson, or now Mrs. <lb/>
as she has recently <lb/>
married, came to my room, rap- <lb/>
on my door, and after com- <lb/>
in she told me she was <lb/>
lag i <lb/>
so troubled over a dream she <lb/>
could not sleep. She had <lb/>
dreams of late. In this one she <lb/>
dreamed where a lost watch was <lb/>
and wanted me to help her look <lb/>
for it. I dressed, all others <lb/>
were asleep, and went with her <lb/>
into your old room and tore oil <lb/>
the plastering and laths in the <lb/>
corner where she dreamed <lb/>
your watch was. After <lb/>
getting a hole large enough she <lb/>
put her hand in soon she <lb/>
believe that I have <lb/>
found it. She pulled out a little <lb/>
bag, pocket, and there it was <lb/>
nicely fitted in one corner. <lb/>
There was no sign a crystal <lb/>
about it- We carried it out to <lb/>
Prof. in the night, to see <lb/>
if it was yours. He said that he <lb/>
thought it Mrs. Martha <lb/>
seems to be very glad that it is <lb/>
found- She says that it s in an- <lb/>
to The letter is <lb/>
signed by D. B. Bryan <lb/>
This is a, remarkable answer to <lb/>
prayer Mr. Seymour says that <lb/>
the children in the neighborhood <lb/>
often came into his room at <lb/>
Creek and that he thinks <lb/>
one of them broke the crystal and <lb/>
in order to hide his or her guilt <lb/>
hid th- watch in a hole in the <lb/>
plastering of the room. Char- <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
Shy One Bull; <lb/>
The manager who would ad- <lb/>
his forty minstrels, <lb/>
in Mexico, and <lb/>
then put on his show with about <lb/>
what make such wonderful <lb/>
changes in life and bless both <lb/>
the doer of the act and the re- <lb/>
The Progressive Farmer for <lb/>
last week contains a list of <lb/>
in behalf of <lb/>
the rural carriers, men whose <lb/>
daily visits mean so much to <lb/>
many a country home. The list <lb/>
should be read, and attention to <lb/>
the advice given <lb/>
though each item is small in it- <lb/>
self to make the work <lb/>
the service better. <lb/>
The <lb/>
You will be doing your car- <lb/>
a great favor if you stamp <lb/>
your mail before same <lb/>
in box or use government <lb/>
stamped envelopes with return <lb/>
upon left-hand. This will <lb/>
guarantee delivery or return of <lb/>
letter. If you should not hap- <lb/>
pen to have stamps or stamped <lb/>
envelopes wrap mt in a <lb/>
paper. Remember that in cold <lb/>
weather, if the money is put in <lb/>
the box loose the carrier has to <lb/>
get off his gloves or to <lb/>
get hold of these loose pennies. <lb/>
Always stamp upon the upper <lb/>
right hand corner <lb/>
When addressing a letter to <lb/>
one who is not a regular patron <lb/>
of a rural route you <lb/>
should mark on the envelope in <lb/>
whose care the letter or package <lb/>
should <lb/>
In addressing your letter do <lb/>
not write above the middle of <lb/>
the envelope as the address <lb/>
be partially blurred by being <lb/>
struck with the post-marking <lb/>
stamp. <lb/>
In regard to boxes, help your <lb/>
carrier by having a good one in <lb/>
a good easy place to drive up to, <lb/>
and always have your mail <lb/>
ready. <lb/>
If you have visitors who are <lb/>
expecting mail you should give <lb/>
the carrier their <lb/>
Don't forget to nail your box <lb/>
on the post when your neigh- <lb/>
cow rubs it off <lb/>
Don't forget to haul a few <lb/>
loads of gravel and put around <lb/>
your box, so that the carrier can <lb/>
get to your box miring <lb/>
down <lb/>
Don't be afraid to meet your <lb/>
carrier a half mile and get your <lb/>
mail while the roads are bad <lb/>
he has to re- <lb/>
. He will more than repay <lb/>
you when you get busy with your <lb/>
crop. <lb/>
Any mail matter deposited in <lb/>
box is subject to ordinary postage <lb/>
rates. <lb/>
Packages should be well wrap- <lb/>
and securely tied, and all <lb/>
valuable letters and packages <lb/>
should be registered. <lb/>
The mail boxes are <lb/>
by the government- Any <lb/>
tampering with them not inter-1 <lb/>
should be reported at <lb/>
WAS IT TRAGEDY OR WHAT WAS <lb/>
IT <lb/>
Major Graham Mad Because He Wasn't <lb/>
Appointed on Conference <lb/>
The senate chamber was <lb/>
crowded yesterday at noon by <lb/>
reason of a report that Senator <lb/>
Graham, of Or was going <lb/>
question of personal <lb/>
privilege to the <lb/>
ant-governor for not g <lb/>
him on the conference committee <lb/>
on passenger rate reduction, and <lb/>
to threaten to resign his scat in <lb/>
the senate unless he were placed <lb/>
on that committee. The report <lb/>
spread quickly and when Mr. <lb/>
Graham was recognized there <lb/>
DISREGARD DANGER SIGNALS. <lb/>
Bis Engineers On Shore <lb/>
Demonstrated by by <lb/>
Huh Officials. <lb/>
There has been so much talk <lb/>
about the effectiveness the <lb/>
block system, automatic and <lb/>
manual, that laws have been and <lb/>
are being placed requiring all <lb/>
railroads to add the equipment <lb/>
for the protection of the travel- <lb/>
public. When the rubs are <lb/>
observed, when <lb/>
alive to their duties, there is <lb/>
but a small chance of accident <lb/>
The Lake Shore is one of the <lb/>
great railway systems of the <lb/>
country It has it.-, share f <lb/>
trouble, but to ascertain the <lb/>
was strained attention to hear all the management <lb/>
that he say. The rumor recently decided to test the nun- <lb/>
was in error as to the threat of which the signals <lb/>
resigning his seat in the senate, regarded. At Connecticut Ohio, <lb/>
but in other ways the incident, the other i party of hi <lb/>
was more sensational than had officiate Stood the com pa- <lb/>
been rumored. Senator Graham track and purposely <lb/>
denounced the action of darkened the <lb/>
lieutenant-governor as <lb/>
ranted, an insult to the senate, l'S that the line . I was not <lb/>
and passionately clear for traffic. a few <lb/>
what meat doth trains <lb/>
our Caesar feed that he one stoP- <lb/>
grown so He declared course, had made <lb/>
that he would be a coward if he to safeguard <lb/>
submitted to the that <lb/>
act which was done to humiliate harm- but the <lb/>
him the Senate. From were naturally startled <lb/>
start to the speech that <lb/>
hot and dramatic. The Senator I without paying the least heed to <lb/>
referred to his record when he The engineer of the <lb/>
moved to impeach the Governor the <lb/>
of North in the was complimented <lb/>
ties, and said this was not the and promoted, but the names of <lb/>
st time that he had refused to the offenders were taken and a <lb/>
Le ruled by servant of the dispatch adds that all will <lb/>
he characterized the from service of the <lb/>
place of the Lake Times, <lb/>
nor. He closed by reading a <lb/>
resolution discharging the con- Organ to Save Woodpile. <lb/>
committee. a number of years ago a <lb/>
The crowds present expected luge in the eastern part of the <lb/>
something sensational to follow, town of was very <lb/>
but Major Graham did not ask much wrought up over the Intro <lb/>
consideration of his resolution, musical instrument <lb/>
After he had resumed his seat in their church service. <lb/>
President arose as quiet- final meeting when the matter <lb/>
as if nothing unusual has hap- was to be settled excitement ran <lb/>
and recognized the Sena- high. <lb/>
tor from upon a bill that One man whose reputation for <lb/>
he had been advocating when honest dealings was not always <lb/>
Major Graham had obtained suspicion made a <lb/>
floor on a question of personal speech in opposition. A neigh- <lb/>
privilege. And the proceedings whose back yard joined the <lb/>
continued in tho usual way, speaker's could hardly wait for <lb/>
soon the galleries and the close of the remarks. Then <lb/>
HEIRLOOMS. <lb/>
FINDING LONGITUDE. <lb/>
Colonial tad Relic, <lb/>
for the Cent Exposition. <lb/>
Va. V b. The <lb/>
p m E th <lb/>
ion , <lb/>
way as latitude, a <lb/>
history will be a . . ,. , ,. , <lb/>
ting a on <lb/>
graduate institute for s u-. , <lb/>
equator some <lb/>
m on i horizon due <lb/>
if he traveled to- <lb/>
w r I it, see it rise in <lb/>
How it is by a Sailor's <lb/>
or on Ship. <lb/>
If the earth did not rotate, <lb/>
says Prof. H. Turner <lb/>
t. have taken inter- . . ,,, , ., , , , . f. <lb/>
i . found in exactly <lb/>
n j. <lb/>
and the hall of <lb/>
. institute for <lb/>
d of American history. TI <lb/>
re lyes of the original <lb/>
c the private <lb/>
from the homes, historical so-. <lb/>
and associations and he the <lb/>
must ins, have been searched for by traveling due <lb/>
in this department, height to which <lb/>
which rill bring clearly to the length <lb/>
In ind of every observer the the t <lb/>
. s of our nation's his- <lb/>
. pivotal events of the But the rotation of the earth <lb/>
viral eras; the factors, which o; on carrying him east- <lb/>
combining germinated the seed w n that even if <lb/>
I pi lilted at until it, he remained in the spot the <lb/>
b a colonial grove which -tar would still rise and its <lb/>
his developed into a mighty then indicate the <lb/>
. of lapsed since he first ob- <lb/>
Jamestown w served it, as he could readily <lb/>
than any if he possessed a watch <lb/>
exposition and as an keeping correct tone. If, <lb/>
factor along this and with such a watch, he <lb/>
many other lines it will be set on a the <lb/>
surpassed. From the Virginia at any would due to <lb/>
were vacant. Several of the <lb/>
leaders of the Senate were soon <lb/>
in the rear of the <lb/>
Senate chamber and it was re- <lb/>
ported that a caucus of the Dem- <lb/>
Senators had been cal- <lb/>
led for eight o'clock last night- <lb/>
The public then understood why <lb/>
no senator had replied to Major <lb/>
Graham and that the matter <lb/>
would be discussed behind closed <lb/>
News and Ob- <lb/>
server. <lb/>
jumping to his feet without wait- <lb/>
to address the chairman, he <lb/>
sir. if I had known the <lb/>
was so afraid of an <lb/>
organ I should have had one <lb/>
hung on my woodpile years <lb/>
ten men all told would not your postmaster. <lb/>
Cape as easily as in the J Don't let your neighbor hitch <lb/>
States- horse to your mail-box post, <lb/>
Because the number of so that the carrier has to get out <lb/>
produced a bull fight in his wagon to put mail in. <lb/>
the other Sunday were j Don't forget to clean snow- <lb/>
one short of the advertise from your box. <lb/>
the manager was fined <lb/>
There are but few editors in <lb/>
our State who have not made f <lb/>
and continuous fight <lb/>
against the city mail order <lb/>
house. This been done in <lb/>
the interest of the home mer- <lb/>
chant, and without money and Lowe and Ethel Carr. <lb/>
without If the editors of Claude Vines and <lb/>
the land had received regular ad- Ward, <lb/>
rates for all they have <lb/>
Licenses. <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
Wiley Jones and Jane Kit troll. <lb/>
Fredrick Moore and M. <lb/>
COLORED. <lb/>
Christopher and <lb/>
Knight. <lb/>
Edwards and Carr. <lb/>
Will Moss and Adelaide <lb/>
Church Cherry and Sarah <lb/>
Ward. <lb/>
by the municipal authorities. <lb/>
The <lb/>
First Shad, <lb/>
first white shad caught <lb/>
post <lb/>
Don't let your mailbox <lb/>
lean halfway over. <lb/>
Don't set your box in your <lb/>
If you do. don't <lb/>
lame the carrier if he hubs <lb/>
your fence and tears off a dozen <lb/>
or more pickets. <lb/>
Don't put letters in box and <lb/>
this far the river thin to raise <lb/>
was a <lb/>
n. <lb/>
said against enemies of <lb/>
he country merchant they could <lb/>
now be wearing diamonds. Now <lb/>
the department store man <lb/>
advertising space and <lb/>
is willing to take all the average <lb/>
country editor has for sale, and <lb/>
at a good price. What other <lb/>
class of business or professional <lb/>
men would refuse business to <lb/>
help their friends, especially as <lb/>
many of said friends never seem <lb/>
. o <lb/>
Trips to Jr. Exposition. <lb/>
number of Plan- <lb/>
Life announces that it <lb/>
will give four free trips to the <lb/>
Jamestown exposition to persons <lb/>
who get the largest number of <lb/>
subscribers to that magazine by <lb/>
July 1st. This is <lb/>
to get a to the <lb/>
greatest of modern <lb/>
terms. Plantation Life is such <lb/>
an excellent magazine that it <lb/>
to n <lb/>
State library will come the <lb/>
traits of v i. governors and <lb/>
old documents and <lb/>
scripts; from the Jamestown <lb/>
Island collection come the <lb/>
silver service once used iii the <lb/>
church and f every section of <lb/>
the State will come colonial heir- <lb/>
looms and war relics of many <lb/>
Ii. the Carolina <lb/>
exhibit will be the valuable col- <lb/>
of the Guilford Battle- <lb/>
ground Company, the Con- <lb/>
display will be an <lb/>
bit of colonial clocks, the p <lb/>
collection of historical <lb/>
pictures and the Guilford anti- <lb/>
rues the latter comprising the <lb/>
st pieces of furniture in <lb/>
America, a thousand-leg table, a <lb/>
Hepplewhite sofa, m hi e <lb/>
chairs tables, etc. <lb/>
setts will contribute a fine his <lb/>
exhibit of portraits, I <lb/>
laces samplers, silver <lb/>
and books, manuscripts, <lb/>
furniture and china. <lb/>
Pennsylvania and Mary- <lb/>
land will each send a valuable <lb/>
collection of treasured <lb/>
Each of the original colonies will <lb/>
contribute largely to this <lb/>
but it will not be confined <lb/>
this territory by any cans for <lb/>
from nearly every State will <lb/>
come contribution- to this mos <lb/>
interesting exhibit. <lb/>
Among the special historical <lb/>
exhibits will be the great <lb/>
eagle which, as a figurehead, <lb/>
graced the bow of Commodore <lb/>
flagship, the <lb/>
John Smith rock upon which <lb/>
head of the colonist was laid <lb/>
rescued by Pocahontas, the an- <lb/>
of the Merrimac which <lb/>
lost during the engagement with <lb/>
the Monitor and which was but <lb/>
recently recovered; the Lil <lb/>
Bell; a tree from which Daniel <lb/>
Boone once snot a bear; i can- <lb/>
non captured at Yorktown and <lb/>
thousands of other relics and his- <lb/>
articles. <lb/>
The collection for this exhibit <lb/>
are being made by the <lb/>
of the American Revolution, <lb/>
the Colonial Dames, the Society <lb/>
for the Preservation of Virginia <lb/>
Antiquities, the Daughters of <lb/>
the Confederacy, <lb/>
Colonial Wars, the Sons of the <lb/>
American Revolution t in- <lb/>
various historical societies of the <lb/>
several States. <lb/>
a two <lb/>
First, the rotation of the earth, <lb/>
for which he cold make allow- <lb/>
by consulting watch; <lb/>
the second, his journey eastward <lb/>
the length of which he could ac- <lb/>
Calculate. <lb/>
Nowadays the sailor finds his <lb/>
longitude just in way, by <lb/>
c a watch or chronometer <lb/>
with hi -i on board ship. Bat to <lb/>
that would <lb/>
correctly at different <lb/>
and in the other <lb/>
varying circumstances of a sea <lb/>
voyage, was regarded in Flam- <lb/>
s as <lb/>
t as the least feasible of <lb/>
for finding lo <lb/>
There i-. however, a <lb/>
cl in t e sky which is <lb/>
pendent of the of <lb/>
indeed <lb/>
there are . planet a <lb/>
among the n . <lb/>
A Former Citizen Here. <lb/>
of the corr <lb/>
to re <lb/>
serious <lb/>
ii- too . <lb/>
tor every<lb/>
on <lb/>
. are <lb/>
all <lb/>
--y move <lb/>
lading. <lb/>
tor convenient <lb/>
ins A <lb/>
; moon its. <lb/>
month i c circuit of <lb/>
the dial, and to read the time <lb/>
correctly is thus sixty times as <lb/>
difficult to as the ordinary <lb/>
clock, which performs its circuit <lb/>
ii twelve hours. To road seconds <lb/>
from a clock we arrange <lb/>
ism to the motions of <lb/>
this hour hand <lb/>
fort minute hand, for the <lb/>
hand; and yet, though <lb/>
the sailor is especially anxious to <lb/>
read seconds, the moo-i pro- <lb/>
him with a click moving <lb/>
times slowly, rather <lb/>
than times more <lb/>
in spite of this <lb/>
-rums defect the advantage of <lb/>
. o the time given is <lb/>
y . if can <lb/>
only prop the <lb/>
i . e clock, be.-ides <lb/>
illy of reading <lb/>
the when moves so <lb/>
re t <lb/>
if a grave kind in inter- <lb/>
pr. indications. The <lb/>
move uniformly, <lb/>
I .; or <lb/>
t . calculations; <lb/>
but these require <lb/>
well as <lb/>
to provide a <lb/>
starting point. But <lb/>
d the <lb/>
Greenwich, <lb/>
had not yet an his great <lb/>
law, and it was only surmised by <lb/>
that if sufficient ob- <lb/>
of the moon were <lb/>
made, some general law would <lb/>
be four. r inequalities. <lb/>
know now that can all be <lb/>
deduced form Newton's great <lb/>
law of to enable sailors <lb/>
to read the clock. <lb/>
It must have required immense <lb/>
courage to set out on such a cam- <lb/>
Linking, back on the <lb/>
history of our Royal <lb/>
we may say that there was <lb/>
of saving time. <lb/>
compliment or even list of rs. Get to work <lb/>
ate and win one of these free trips <lb/>
The Reflector was glad to have <lb/>
a call from Mr. Gib Cherry, of <lb/>
Pamlico county. He once lived <lb/>
here but moved away years ago. <lb/>
He said this was his first visit to <lb/>
Greenville in twenty-five I no that <lb/>
that he could hardly rec g. i.-. ,,,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019690_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
STORIES OF DR. HOLMES. <lb/>
A Young Woman Didn't Hi. <lb/>
Literary <lb/>
The story is recalled of a young <lb/>
Virginia country girl dining in <lb/>
ton some ago, in the days <lb/>
when Dr. Holmes wont to dinner.-. <lb/>
Seated next to her was a homely <lb/>
little gentleman name <lb/>
she did not lie to talk <lb/>
wit In i how she <lb/>
her t in lite i <lb/>
c my father and <lb/>
she <lb/>
what do you asked <lb/>
the little man. <lb/>
the of the <lb/>
Breakfast for one <lb/>
lie <lb/>
should think you not <lb/>
care to read more I <lb/>
the . with a <lb/>
ii in his tone. <lb/>
fa I and <lb/>
judges of . <lb/>
and .-. cent <lb/>
of m I we gel to the <lb/>
end of the we generally <lb/>
turn back to the beginning and <lb/>
read over <lb/>
The little old n in at this <lb/>
and was ed be friendly, but <lb/>
Miss was i displeased with <lb/>
hi.-- e concerning the <lb/>
that she met him with chilly <lb/>
An as the guests went into <lb/>
the drawing room her hostess <lb/>
to <lb/>
didn't seem to Dr. I <lb/>
as i n I b <lb/>
Holm Miss <lb/>
. Tl ere was a tab -n an <lb/>
r of wit <lb/>
told, t .- i's; Peabody was <lb/>
t r. at . place. <lb/>
The rode in a <lb/>
c. he got there he <lb/>
was n el by Holmes, who had walk- <lb/>
ed. Near by a statue i <lb/>
ice. And Holmes <lb/>
you I <lb/>
Peabody. <lb/>
Thai night he went l I mo <lb/>
and said i, <lb/>
got off a good juke to- <lb/>
His wife asked him what it was. <lb/>
was to meet him down <lb/>
at the statue of Eurydice, and when <lb/>
I he said quite happily, <lb/>
you came in a carriage <lb/>
And then the genial professor <lb/>
wondered his wife didn't laugh. <lb/>
A BASEBALL STORY. <lb/>
Pictures of a That War <lb/>
on Exhibition. <lb/>
Dad Clark, once a pitcher of the <lb/>
New York club, who was perhaps <lb/>
the most unconscious humorist the <lb/>
game ever known, could be <lb/>
made to believe the tallest story <lb/>
ever told, provided the teller <lb/>
. hi . and this sublime faith <lb/>
of Clark's in ed him to be <lb/>
OP. inn c. I <lb/>
One most notable eases <lb/>
rein Dad got happened <lb/>
n that genial <lb/>
of go fellows, Parke <lb/>
the New York catcher at <lb/>
time, no hurriedly into the <lb/>
when the fellows <lb/>
v n to d n their baseball <lb/>
. lot for i practice <lb/>
wen, do you <lb/>
the park this <lb/>
i Co <lb/>
i gathered <lb/>
n nit r largest show window. <lb/>
curious myself. I went <lb/>
up to I the trouble was. and <lb/>
what imagine caused the <lb/>
street I i blockaded Why, <lb/>
. than have <lb/>
the filled with canned <lb/>
,. . I on psi can is the <lb/>
of i shouted Parke. <lb/>
Dad a he be- <lb/>
his street clothes. <lb/>
i . in Siegel-Coop- <lb/>
window you fat heads, <lb/>
see v . popular of dis <lb/>
punk outfit I'm do little hoy who's <lb/>
dis park every day. <lb/>
strike <lb/>
dollar in me <lb/>
Me i s In <lb/>
win de folks<lb/>
f p <lb/>
.<lb/>
. IV ; . <lb/>
. . i Of ;. ; tat red i <lb/>
About Home <lb/>
Do You Contemplate <lb/>
Owning One <lb/>
If so the first thing to consider is a good <lb/>
lot in a desirable location and you can- <lb/>
not better suited in a lot than the <lb/>
Sam White Property. <lb/>
No proper surpasses this for a desirable <lb/>
home. Lots can be bought there now at <lb/>
reasonable prices and on easy terms. There <lb/>
is every indication that property around <lb/>
is going to be higher, and the <lb/>
linger you defer buying the lot the <lb/>
it will <lb/>
This properly is located only minutes <lb/>
walk from business part the town. <lb/>
See Sam White and let him explain prices <lb/>
and terms. <lb/>
Themistocles, the hero of <lb/>
mis, was sent into banishment by <lb/>
the practice of ostracism. This was <lb/>
a purely Athenian device to <lb/>
vent any citizen becoming too great. <lb/>
When any man acquired such prom- <lb/>
as to be unsafe to the state, <lb/>
a number of citizens demanded a <lb/>
vote, which was taken by writing on <lb/>
shells the name of the too <lb/>
citizen. If a majority voted <lb/>
against him, he was sent into exile <lb/>
not because be had ii anything, <lb/>
but for fear he do <lb/>
He stayed away from live to ten <lb/>
years, then resumed <lb/>
his standing as a citizen <lb/>
of property or <lb/>
was ostracized and went into <lb/>
exile, where he soon of <lb/>
Hi. correspondence w <lb/>
Persians. Ho was about to be <lb/>
arrested, but to Per lie <lb/>
pained great influence at the Per- <lb/>
c and an invasion <lb/>
i f e, but i I, it is supposed <lb/>
by poison, fore his could be <lb/>
realized. <lb/>
JOB <lb/>
I hub w, -1 -hum. i <lb/>
A POINTER <lb/>
AN OLD ADAGE <lb/>
SAYS. <lb/>
A panels a heavy cars <lb/>
a tight parse <lb/>
The LIVER U the scat of <lb/>
tenths of all disease. <lb/>
to to the root of the whole mat- <lb/>
thoroughly, quickly safely <lb/>
and restore the action of <lb/>
LIVER to normal condition. <lb/>
Give to the system and <lb/>
flesh to the body. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
I Not Quite if <lb/>
How often you can get a <lb/>
XI <lb/>
nail or driver or <lb/>
lacking. Have a good <lb/>
tool box and be prepared for <lb/>
emergencies. Our line of tools <lb/>
tis a yo i could desire, and <lb/>
we will sec that your tool <lb/>
box dues not lack a single <lb/>
useful article. <lb/>
I Of Course <lb/>
You get Harness, <lb/>
Horse Goods, <lb/>
J P <lb/>
Corey <lb/>
aim<lb/>
Michael Angels. <lb/>
was e <lb/>
great <lb/>
painter, sculptor and architect. <lb/>
In order to <lb/>
mint figures properly <lb/>
he devoted twelve years to the stud; <lb/>
of anatomy alone. His monument <lb/>
to Pope Julius was grand <lb/>
a scale that the church of St. Peter <lb/>
in Home was altered with a view to <lb/>
affording a suitable plate for its re- <lb/>
The tomb was afterward <lb/>
modified in plan and placed in an- <lb/>
other church. His <lb/>
required seven years to ex- <lb/>
and was finished when the <lb/>
artist was nearly sixty-eight. A few <lb/>
weeks before his death the aged art- <lb/>
was met one day in the street <lb/>
walking through the snow with <lb/>
great When asked where <lb/>
ho was going, he replied, school <lb/>
to try learn <lb/>
Satisfied <lb/>
Time. p. m. <lb/>
HI me your gait was es- <lb/>
teemed o of the finest in the reg- <lb/>
mo. Miss <lb/>
Lieutenant said <lb/>
you marched <lb/>
lieutenant may not be a <lb/>
good <lb/>
fancy he if. To my mind <lb/>
i.-i nothing that makes a man <lb/>
more presentable and really <lb/>
a graceful walk. <lb/>
curiosity is greatly aroused. <lb/>
ask a favor of <lb/>
t I would ii In <lb/>
And she handed him<lb/>
When you wart send <lb/>
t orders to <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR<lb/>
TO <lb/>
MEN. <lb/>
LARGE QUANTITY OF NEW TYPE AND STOCK RECENTLY <lb/>
ADDED TO THIS <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
and Weekly, <lb/>
in. <lb/>
Oscar Hooker having with, <lb/>
drawn from the dim of R. L, <lb/>
Smith Co, composed of R L. <lb/>
Smith and Oscar Hooker, which <lb/>
has Heretofore existed and had <lb/>
its principle place of business in <lb/>
the town of Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
the said firm is hereby <lb/>
by mutual consent, from and <lb/>
this date. <lb/>
In the the said <lb/>
Oscar Hooker lakes all the note <lb/>
and which were <lb/>
i acted their Greenville, <lb/>
Farmville and S ow hill places <lb/>
of business and all persons ow- <lb/>
said firm debts contracted at <lb/>
said p w II, <lb/>
i lease make payment to sad <lb/>
Oscar Hooker. <lb/>
And said R. L. Smith takes <lb/>
the notes and accounts which <lb/>
were at lien Wash- <lb/>
V paces of <lb/>
business, and all persons owing <lb/>
said firm d bis at <lb/>
aid Washington and <lb/>
.-e m , men t <lb/>
to L <lb/>
Witness our bands and <lb/>
Hi's 7th day of <lb/>
L. Smith, <lb/>
O. Hooker. <lb/>
R L having purchased <lb/>
the interest of Oscar Hooker in <lb/>
ail mules by <lb/>
the firm of L Smith <lb/>
the R L. will <lb/>
to run Sale mid Exchange Stan, <lb/>
at the same will be <lb/>
to live the patrons the <lb/>
former favor him with a<lb/>
This the day of January <lb/>
1907. R. L. Smith <lb/>
Having sold to R. L. Smith all <lb/>
my interest in the and <lb/>
mules ed by the firm of R. <lb/>
L. Smith and Company, he will <lb/>
continue to run Sale Ex- <lb/>
change Stables at the same old <lb/>
stand, and I take pleasure in <lb/>
commending him to the favor <lb/>
and the public. <lb/>
This the 7th day of <lb/>
1907 o. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
Offers advantage <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
in <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions j <lb/>
for reaching the public. <lb/>
Cotton <lb/>
Ties always on <lb/>
Fresh kept ton- <lb/>
in stock. Country <lb/>
Produce Bought and Sold <lb/>
I a V L I I <lb/>
North Carol int. <lb/>
REPORT OF CONDITION OF <lb/>
GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST COMPANY <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At close of business 26th, 1907. <lb/>
rafts <lb/>
unsecured <lb/>
All other Stocks, Bonds <lb/>
and 10.000.00 <lb/>
25.950,62<lb/>
Gold Com <lb/>
Oliver <lb/>
bank <lb/>
rt notes <lb/>
8.526,00 <lb/>
-200,187.53 <lb/>
Capital aloe paid in<lb/>
profits, <lb/>
Bills payable <lb/>
Deposits <lb/>
; j v <lb/>
Due to k <lb/>
Cashiers ck <lb/>
RESOLUTION ON 1907 <lb/>
COTTON <lb/>
FAVORS <lb/>
SCHOOL. <lb/>
EASTERN <lb/>
Total, <lb/>
200.186,5 <lb/>
f Pit. <lb/>
of above bank, do <lb/>
true to the best of my <lb/>
C. CARR, Cashier. <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
R, O- <lb/>
J. <lb/>
-i. f <lb/>
,. I S <lb/>
ad <lb/>
and to before <lb/>
tins of Feb 1907. <lb/>
J. MOO <lb/>
Public <lb/>
The following resolution was Sod Special Message ts <lb/>
passed by the great convention I Urging hat it be Established, <lb/>
of the Southern Cotton On Tuesday Gov. R, B. Glenn <lb/>
held in Birmingham. i special the leg <lb/>
view of the fact that a touching a number of <lb/>
great many farmers have adopted subjects One of these <lb/>
the intensive system of farming was <lb/>
increasing the yield per acre and , for n <lb/>
new territory each j ear is being Carolina That of tho mes-, <lb/>
planted in cotton that <lb/>
has not grown cotton, thereby <lb/>
increasing the production, there- <lb/>
fore in order to maintain <lb/>
and remunerative prices, we <lb/>
urge and recommend a full re- <lb/>
of per cent, of cotton <lb/>
the Normal, would be of <lb/>
benefit to the cause of education <lb/>
No friction or ill-will seems to <lb/>
exist against the Normal, but <lb/>
only the kindest of feelings. <lb/>
There is however one If <lb/>
the eastern people i to <lb/>
come as they do session Her <lb/>
session, asking an re- <lb/>
fused because of Normal, <lb/>
then human nature assert <lb/>
itself and friction will occur that <lb/>
may prove injurious It is my <lb/>
FIGHT OVER. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
TH HANK OF <lb/>
At the Close of Business, Jan. 26th 1907. <lb/>
. .<lb/>
red <lb/>
Stocks, <lb/>
Capitol Stock paid lo <lb/>
undivided Profits <lb/>
126,000.00 <lb/>
25.000.00<lb/>
j out- <lb/>
1241.673,611 <lb/>
t M <lb/>
of Pitt f <lb/>
I, L. Little. the above-named <lb/>
that the is <lb/>
belief <lb/>
166.7,3 <lb/>
241,578.52 <lb/>
province only lay th facts <lb/>
you. Your-, to decide w <lb/>
fronted at the end of the courage enter prises and develop- <lb/>
with equally bad. if not to <lb/>
.-. ., growth of our I <lb/>
and sworn to before <lb/>
u 1st of Jan <lb/>
D. C. MOORE, <lb/>
bank., do solemn <lb/>
e to the best of my <lb/>
L. LITTLE.<lb/>
W- B WILSON. <lb/>
E. <lb/>
Come In and examine my <lb/>
CORN PLANTERS, SOWERS, DISC <lb/>
HARROW SMOOTHING HARROWS, ONE <lb/>
AND HORSE STEEL PLOWS, WIRE <lb/>
FARM OR AND WASH- <lb/>
MA CHINES. <lb/>
acreage for the year <lb/>
further recommend that <lb/>
he acreage so reduced be plant- <lb/>
ed in food <lb/>
are sure that unless the <lb/>
farmers unitedly reduce their <lb/>
acreage cotton that they will <lb/>
be con <lb/>
season <lb/>
worse conditions than they were <lb/>
in 1904, when cotton went down <lb/>
to cents per pound. <lb/>
Respectfully submitted by the <lb/>
committee on <lb/>
r. G, Hudson, Chairman, <lb/>
W S Pharr, Secretary. <lb/>
The executive committee of the <lb/>
North Carolina division of the <lb/>
Southern Cotton Association, <lb/>
earnestly solicit the aid of every <lb/>
farmer, merchant, banker and <lb/>
men of the State who are in <lb/>
in maintaining a fair <lb/>
price for cotton, to their in- <lb/>
to reduce the acreage for <lb/>
1907 full per cent, from the <lb/>
acreage planted in 1906. <lb/>
We also call for help in our <lb/>
effort to produce on y farm <lb/>
in the State, sufficient food and <lb/>
feed crops for the of man <lb/>
and beast on our farms. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
C. C. Moore, Pres. <lb/>
N. C Div. S. C. <lb/>
Executive <lb/>
A. J. <lb/>
T. J. W Broom, <lb/>
J. H. Currie. <lb/>
s relating to the school is <lb/>
I was the petition asked <lb/>
governor of the <lb/>
two tilings I promised faithfully <lb/>
to First, to see to it that no <lb/>
backward step was taken in the <lb/>
cause of education, but that <lb/>
everything possible would be <lb/>
done to advance the great work <lb/>
begun by my predecessor, Hon. <lb/>
C. B. cock, and second that <lb/>
in all things I would try to en <lb/>
should be <lb/>
granted i then fore that <lb/>
you will hear all that <lb/>
may be j by the parties inter- <lb/>
then give them the re- <lb/>
lief asked for, if in your <lb/>
it is a reasonable request <lb/>
and will result in ultimate good. <lb/>
The request strikes me as <lb/>
Agreement for Eastern Training School <lb/>
At the joint meeting <lb/>
committee on education held in <lb/>
ate chamber last night, the <lb/>
report of the sub committee on <lb/>
the Eastern North Carolina <lb/>
training school teachers was <lb/>
presented, and was unanimously <lb/>
adopted. The bill approved was <lb/>
the result of confer between <lb/>
and the <lb/>
of the bill, and <lb/>
these who opposed the <lb/>
to establish another normal. <lb/>
The substitute is a part of <lb/>
the high school bill <lb/>
the . use by <lb/>
Blount, lying the <lb/>
of Superintendent <lb/>
endorsed by the State <lb/>
sup of county <lb/>
the North <lb/>
Your <lb/>
i-J <lb/>
DID f <lb/>
Announcement <lb/>
We beg leave to announce that we are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for <lb/>
White Lead, Paints <lb/>
Colors, and ant <lb/>
, Ready nixed Paints. <lb/>
There is no line in the world better <lb/>
Una. It has behind it a <lb/>
reputation for honorable wares and honorable <lb/>
dealings. <lb/>
If you use the Harrison Paints you need <lb/>
never worry quality. <lb/>
We trust that you will favor us with your <lb/>
orders whenever you want good paint for any <lb/>
Have just a car load and <lb/>
can give you Special Prices. <lb/>
ft <lb/>
Baker Hart <lb/>
G V-. T, <lb/>
Gen. Beverly S. Royster. <lb/>
The newspaper people of the <lb/>
state ought not to forget Gen. <lb/>
Beverly S. Royster, of Granville, <lb/>
who so eloquently eulogized and <lb/>
defended the editors North <lb/>
Carolina from the implied charge <lb/>
that they were bought an <lb/>
owned by the railroads He <lb/>
not only secured the passage of <lb/>
his amendment leaving the law <lb/>
relating to contracts as it now <lb/>
stands, but said among other <lb/>
cannot be bought, <lb/>
subsidized or muzzled. They <lb/>
are on a higher plane. They <lb/>
have don., more than any other <lb/>
class of for North Caro- <lb/>
They stand for the moral <lb/>
uplift and make fewer mistakes <lb/>
than any otter class of our <lb/>
His tribute to the said <lb/>
the News and Observer, <lb/>
warm, glowing and <lb/>
Gen. Royster is easily a leader <lb/>
in the house and one of the big- <lb/>
men in the legislature- If <lb/>
there were more of him down <lb/>
there, there would be more <lb/>
brains mixed up with our laws. <lb/>
Under Gov. Aycock he was ad- <lb/>
for four <lb/>
He is a prominent Mason <lb/>
has been Grand Master of the <lb/>
Grand Lodge of North Carolina. <lb/>
He is a Baptist and in his home <lb/>
town of Oxford he stands high <lb/>
with his people. The most re- <lb/>
markable thing about him is <lb/>
that, although a very able law- <lb/>
with a tine practice, withal <lb/>
a highly educated man, he never <lb/>
spent an hour in a college, had to <lb/>
leave even the field schools <lb/>
at the age of He educated <lb/>
himself, and is a <lb/>
man. The fifth <lb/>
district has no bigger, better <lb/>
man in it and the people over <lb/>
there ought to be proud of him. <lb/>
I He is a clean, honorable, able <lb/>
Christian with the <lb/>
gt <lb/>
therefore send you this special <lb/>
message regard to these two <lb/>
vital interests of the State. <lb/>
from Eastern North <lb/>
Carolina are now before you. <lb/>
the establishment of a train- <lb/>
school for girls, at some <lb/>
east of Raleigh They stale with <lb/>
great force the need of efficient <lb/>
white teachers for their public <lb/>
schools, claiming that out of three <lb/>
thousand white teachers east of <lb/>
Raleigh, over one third have <lb/>
had any -h as fits them <lb/>
to be teachers, say they <lb/>
are making no war on the State <lb/>
Normal and Industrial college at <lb/>
Greensboro. On the contrary <lb/>
that every advantage possible <lb/>
should U given that institution <lb/>
by the State, in order to insure <lb/>
the better and higher education <lb/>
of our but they claim <lb/>
on account of expense other <lb/>
causes, very few of Eastern <lb/>
girls can attend Normal, and <lb/>
that of those that do <lb/>
per cent, in the cities and <lb/>
towns and only per cent in the <lb/>
rural districts. They likewise <lb/>
show that the wester l girls are <lb/>
afraid of the climate and will not <lb/>
great merit. Our State is <lb/>
large enough to keep up the the <lb/>
Normal to its present high stand- . <lb/>
ard and still have training high school B <lb/>
schools scattered over the State, appropriation , for the <lb/>
that will remedy the wrong now establishment i one to <lb/>
Buff, r. through incompetent j four . <lb/>
our public schools, county, the State tog as much <lb/>
and though a man my he <lb/>
i,. i . i i o- for each I being the <lb/>
self, and deeply in love with the . . , .,.,, , . ., <lb/>
vi j t ,. i i a being the <lb/>
Normal and its great work in ., ., . <lb/>
maximum .-am available from <lb/>
nesting women. I can see no <lb/>
menace to that institution by <lb/>
ranting a reasonable <lb/>
for a lust-class training <lb/>
school somewhere in Eastern <lb/>
GOV. <lb/>
Because Governor Glenn is a j <lb/>
popular man with the masses; <lb/>
because he is full of those gen- <lb/>
and humanitarian impulses <lb/>
that draw men to him; because <lb/>
he has never taken a stand on <lb/>
great questions on any other side <lb/>
than the side of the Christian I <lb/>
people and of the masses; <lb/>
because a United States Sen- <lb/>
is to to be chosen by the <lb/>
next legislature and some men . <lb/>
are standing with fear and <lb/>
lest the Governor <lb/>
be a candidate--because <lb/>
things, certain newspaper men , <lb/>
instruction in tie <lb/>
and county respectively. <lb/>
Th appropriation for the <lb/>
tern training school is <lb/>
for building in the next <lb/>
years conditioned upon the <lb/>
of not less than <lb/>
the town in whim or near which <lb/>
it may be established, <lb/>
illy the high school <lb/>
appropriation for maintenance. <lb/>
The school is to be for both <lb/>
sexes and is t be located by the <lb/>
State board of m, who <lb/>
are to take into consideration <lb/>
tie convenience and desirability <lb/>
of the location and the amounts <lb/>
offered by various towns for <lb/>
bull ling and Tie <lb/>
study is It <lb/>
for entrance int the <lb/>
freshman class of the <lb/>
to training in the sci <lb/>
newspaper men <lb/>
are trying to belittle him by cit- <lb/>
go east, thus causing a great, his bold stand for <lb/>
lack of teachers in that <lb/>
section. They here urging <lb/>
the of a school of <lb/>
a lower standard than the Nor- <lb/>
and yet of i <lb/>
than the country sen <lb/>
v. <lb/>
any body cm boo is i man, <lb/>
Lexington Dispatch <lb/>
therefore ask for a <lb/>
school where women <lb/>
taught how to teach, as well as <lb/>
be thoroughly grounded the <lb/>
elements of a good practical ed- <lb/>
Th y urge that they <lb/>
have paid, and still are paying <lb/>
a large per cent of the taxes <lb/>
to properly equip and <lb/>
support the State Normal, and <lb/>
while not asking that one dollar <lb/>
be taken from its appropriation <lb/>
for their training school, yet <lb/>
they do ask that the rest of the <lb/>
State hear their petition, and <lb/>
grant them some relief from the <lb/>
conditions that now surround <lb/>
them- <lb/>
Carolina is growing <lb/>
rapidly, especially educationally. <lb/>
The demand for teachers is in- <lb/>
creasing every day, and our <lb/>
country schools must be taught <lb/>
by competent or incompetent <lb/>
teachers, the only way to <lb/>
insure competent teachers is to <lb/>
have them properly trained. <lb/>
Read my message to you at the <lb/>
beginning of this session, and <lb/>
you will see my estimate of the <lb/>
usefulness of the State Nor- <lb/>
and my earnest desire to <lb/>
give it all that is needed to <lb/>
it one of the foremost if not the <lb/>
foremost educational institution <lb/>
in the South but while this is <lb/>
true, I can see no hurt to this <lb/>
great college In having another <lb/>
of a lower grade where <lb/>
instruction in practical teaching <lb/>
ma. be given, to the end that our <lb/>
public schools in the east be bet <lb/>
equipped with <lb/>
teachers. <lb/>
I understand, they only <lb/>
ask for this training <lb/>
school, and this amount, in my <lb/>
be advantageous- <lb/>
spent the east a <lb/>
and for the <lb/>
of a Christian land We thank <lb/>
God that we have a governor <lb/>
that goes to to <lb/>
v church, to the Y. M. C. A ; a <lb/>
and who is at home b <lb/>
the people and is a lover of <lb/>
people, and who is not <lb/>
ready to defend them politically, <lb/>
but to exhort them religiously <lb/>
to encourage i.; the <lb/>
of both the Divine and <lb/>
human The little jabs <lb/>
cf at his speech- <lb/>
es on religious topics and in Y. <lb/>
C. church es and Sunday- <lb/>
schools betray the moral <lb/>
of the jabbers themselves. <lb/>
They are not near so wise, even <lb/>
in this day, as Gamaliel was in <lb/>
the darker days when he refused <lb/>
to condemn Peter and John lest <lb/>
he be found lighting against God. <lb/>
We are not at all concerned <lb/>
about Governor Glenn's political <lb/>
future. The people will see to <lb/>
that. that he Ins <lb/>
not yet told his most intimate <lb/>
friends what he expects to do <lb/>
with reference to the Senator- <lb/>
ship, and a man of his type, who <lb/>
has done as m i alias he has for <lb/>
the party, should not he the sub- <lb/>
of continuous assault by <lb/>
those who are lying awake at <lb/>
night trembling for fear he will <lb/>
be a candidate. <lb/>
have long <lb/>
Sentinel. <lb/>
Lost Sow weighing about <lb/>
pounds, white black spotted. <lb/>
unmarked, live shoats <lb/>
weighing about pounds, each, <lb/>
three of them white- and black <lb/>
spotted, and one brown <lb/>
and black spotted, unmarked; <lb/>
and black. marked slit and <lb/>
in left ear, Bern gone <lb/>
it-about three weeks. Any <lb/>
leading to recovery will <lb/>
be appreciated. <lb/>
J K. <lb/>
R F. D. No. N. C. <lb/>
Two trios voting M. B. <lb/>
keys for sale per trio. <lb/>
of study re <lb/>
in the public <lb/>
ginning of a lated <lb/>
plan for <lb/>
and teach i the <lb/>
State Ne id <lb/>
College mi j<lb/>
East- <lb/>
training teachers <lb/>
was there sail cone <lb/>
I; will not <lb/>
Normal and Industrial or <lb/>
its appropriation-- sigh News <lb/>
and Observer. <lb/>
Before buying your so- oats <lb/>
see F. V. Johnston. <lb/>
Notice to <lb/>
Having qualified the Superior <lb/>
clerk if Pitt county as <lb/>
of last will and testament of J. M. <lb/>
Fulford, notice is <lb/>
given to all parsons indebted to the es- <lb/>
to make immediate <lb/>
the undersigned, and all persons <lb/>
having claims against said estate are <lb/>
d that they mus present the same <lb/>
pi, the <lb/>
or notice <lb/>
be p i ad in bar of recover <lb/>
This day of Feb. <lb/>
I., A. <lb/>
KS. <lb/>
J. M. . <lb/>
NOTICE DISSOLUTION. <lb/>
By mutual an. c o j will C, <lb/>
E Bradley W. I. dong <lb/>
u Bradly Best, <lb/>
j dissolved <lb/>
, Qr i i having out the <lb/>
, ,, of w. L. B it and will settle all <lb/>
lie <lb/>
that in no sense crippling ltd N. C. <lb/>
,. the firm w II <lb/>
. , i , P. E. II; y. <lb/>
witness our hands this 20th lei. <lb/>
1907 Bradly, <lb/>
T, U Best. <lb/>
Having purchased the interest of w, <lb/>
I, Bast in the of Best, <lb/>
and sold Best ail of tho <lb/>
d optical line In the old bust. <lb/>
II., will carry u complete line, <lb/>
both Witch id I will <lb/>
l, j , ,. . patrons of the former <lb/>
firm to favor him with a continuance of <lb/>
their patronage, He will carry on <lb/>
department in same building with my- <lb/>
E. Bradley. <lb/>
This 20th of <lb/>
r sold my interest In the firm of <lb/>
to Bradley. <lb/>
he will j we i y lino with <lb/>
the exception the lines in I handle. <lb/>
take pleasure in common in him to <lb/>
our patrons and ask you <lb/>
him a continuance of your patronage, <lb/>
w. L. Bust <lb/>
This Feb. <lb/>
-aw -M <lb/>
. .,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019690_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Till <lb/>
PUBLISHED <lb/>
second at the at Green <lb/>
N. C, Act of con.-r of S. <lb/>
ram made upon application. <lb/>
A desired port in and adjoining <lb/>
is certainly letting <lb/>
outside world know that it is <lb/>
a the map. <lb/>
in to <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY. MAR. 1907 <lb/>
ABOUT SCHOOL. <lb/>
for a training school for <lb/>
teachers in the east is not the <lb/>
th Politicians, bat is to meet <lb/>
necessity that confronts us. <lb/>
burn and <lb/>
are both in danger of getting <lb/>
lost to memory. <lb/>
Sampson county with a default- <lb/>
rap sheriff to the amount of <lb/>
is dearly for <lb/>
A party of ninety-two business <lb/>
of Chicago. St. Louis, <lb/>
tn and Cincinnati, sailed from <lb/>
Charleston Wednesday night for <lb/>
a trip to the West Indies and the <lb/>
Isthmus of Panama. We think <lb/>
they are going to see things about <lb/>
the canal different from what the <lb/>
president did. <lb/>
Some of the in <lb/>
section of the <lb/>
, . of the east pay a <lb/>
seem to nave a poor en of <lb/>
. ,, . the taxes <lb/>
the sincerity rd nor <lb/>
people in the <lb/>
blind or prejudice. <lb/>
Milwaukee might settle the <lb/>
dispute over the for a <lb/>
by putting a kg if <lb/>
beer on it <lb/>
State and they see no <lb/>
I benefit worth mentioning <lb/>
return. <lb/>
ever my call it. tn y <lb/>
. . ., This movement for a training <lb/>
the in <lb/>
, p teachers never had in <lb/>
motive of and costing slurs at <lb/>
, , . it .-. motive to <lb/>
v. i one more for , <lb/>
,,,,.,, ., Normal at <lb/>
North other I <lb/>
. ,. . ,,, nor to even in <lb/>
now living. And it is n I because . <lb/>
, , . , compel with It On <lb/>
the people of the east have <lb/>
The who says it is <lb/>
easy tiling to get a million <lb/>
ought to be willing i <lb/>
few of u; how it done. <lb/>
rights, and in their <lb/>
to ask a of these <lb/>
rights. <lb/>
Here comes Cr n <lb/>
Record which <lb/>
friends of the <lb/>
Normal did what <lb/>
deemed best in matter <lb/>
establishing r <lb/>
kills the plan first c <lb/>
but even this <lb/>
an entering w <lb/>
some day this same wedge will <lb/>
he driven r. The <lb/>
warts a Normal <lb/>
i c . . or <lb/>
section of the State, his one. <lb/>
Other considerations are <lb/>
tr of heaven But <lb/>
let's say they will n r be <lb/>
able th <lb/>
r i f these high <lb/>
there will and m r <lb/>
j n I <lb/>
f re i <lb/>
making it more difficult to obtain <lb/>
the Normal <lb/>
We are no speaking from a <lb/>
standpoint at all. but our <lb/>
idea is h-t would be to <lb/>
let those high wait a <lb/>
while longer. W. are too apt <lb/>
two birds while trying t <lb/>
catch a i- words, zeal f- r <lb/>
r th <lb/>
T- i sight <lb/>
all is to see the and of the poll, <lb/>
in all th d i. These <lb/>
gentlemen like dignified <lb/>
man o is always two-third <lb/>
he-o gets down in the <lb/>
r a id h I thinks h is f i- <lb/>
his most intimate friends, <lb/>
when even a blind man knows <lb/>
about his <lb/>
The Charlotte falls <lb/>
in line with The Record <lb/>
backs it up <lb/>
friends if the State Nor- <lb/>
and Industrial College art <lb/>
missing the services of the late <lb/>
Dr. Charles D. in the <lb/>
Legislature. He was always <lb/>
to the needs of the <lb/>
ion and always succeeded in get- <lb/>
ting what he wanted from the <lb/>
Legislature. The Greensboro <lb/>
Record seems to think that, the <lb/>
interests of the Normal are <lb/>
menaced It looks like <lb/>
friends of the State Normal, <lb/>
some of whom are supposed to <lb/>
be in Raleigh about this time, <lb/>
have gone to sleep or sold out. <lb/>
It strikes us that it is about tine <lb/>
people up this way <lb/>
understand the tricks of those <lb/>
eastern politicians, but they m <lb/>
unable to We had i <lb/>
why the friends of <lb/>
State Normal had not made <lb/>
some of a defense of that in <lb/>
against the onslaughts <lb/>
of the eastern politicians, <lb/>
not a voice is raised. Thing <lb/>
would have different were <lb/>
herd <lb/>
You brethren would do well to <lb/>
cut out this kind of talk If you <lb/>
knew the needs of the eastern <lb/>
The two cent bill <lb/>
its third reading In tin <lb/>
the by a vote of to and <lb/>
people of the east j is now with the s ban <lb/>
f ii doing <lb/>
Greensboro in-1 Congress trying to keep <lb/>
but at the same time with our State legislature in th <lb/>
All Pitt county sympathizes <lb/>
with the people of Grifton in the <lb/>
lire that visited that town Friday <lb/>
morning, and especially with <lb/>
County Commissioner I, Z. <lb/>
who was the heaviest <lb/>
laser Grifton has several times <lb/>
from fire, but the plucky <lb/>
people show a determination to <lb/>
from the ashes and come <lb/>
gain. <lb/>
Senator Fleming has this week <lb/>
introduced bills in the legislature <lb/>
to extend the corporate limits and <lb/>
amend the charter of the town of <lb/>
Grifton. to extend the corporate <lb/>
of work and gone to hold <lb/>
night sessions. <lb/>
rant must have some <lb/>
or <lb/>
insinuations as are ex- <lb/>
. sod in the above utterances The present congress is <lb/>
Greensboro and Charlotte the record of beating any of. <lb/>
net to its predecessors in the way <lb/>
among the eastern people <lb/>
r the they over zealously <lb/>
use <lb/>
FINDING NEW PASTURE <lb/>
. of the <lb/>
tune w to have it in <lb/>
hard tor the newspapers may <lb/>
never want the <lb/>
papers to <lb/>
Judging from the last issue of I them get elected c. more. <lb/>
he Progress, wash <lb/>
machine right sellers fa wisely <lb/>
in that I a thing that net <lb/>
and finding numerous in making ample <lb/>
to their endless chain insane and <lb/>
me In addition to a persons of the State. <lb/>
rial on the subject The <lb/>
as has another squib in Adv of the bill to <lb/>
i as Lee county are <lb/>
Is it false or is it real that in bi cause the <lb/>
more the washing defeated it by one vote, but <lb/>
men were out of <lb/>
And <lb/>
simply MO. <lb/>
Those expecting the senate to <lb/>
stand by the house in the rail- <lb/>
road rat matter have been dis- <lb/>
appointed, while those expecting <lb/>
the senate to go contrary to what <lb/>
the had done have got what <lb/>
limits and amend the charter of they were for The <lb/>
the town of Greenville, and to house passed a bill for a two cent <lb/>
give Greenville authority to issue passenger fare, while the senate <lb/>
bonds. All of which goes to one for a two-and-a-half <lb/>
show that the towns down in the fare- what win th <lb/>
c t; outcome of this is not to <lb/>
of Pitt believe in going j- , r. . <lb/>
. . thing is The <lb/>
for adjournment of the leg- <lb/>
is drawing near, and <lb/>
., . two branches are quick <lb/>
have witnessed i <lb/>
get together on a rate measure <lb/>
and failed to see in the session will end with nothing <lb/>
it anything whatever that done in that direction. <lb/>
fies the cry raised against it in <lb/>
some cities and towns- There <lb/>
was nothing objectionable about Complimentary to Mary <lb/>
it. nothing that could be off en- N. C. Feb <lb/>
she to anyone or stir up any evening the home to <lb/>
race strife. On the it Steele <lb/>
The Durham Herald w. says, , . the scene of one of the most en- <lb/>
.,., , , , was a production of such excel- social functions of the <lb/>
the people of the town are that , g of season, when Miss <lb/>
willing to vote for a bond issue <lb/>
for n ads. the people of the, <lb/>
should grab at the <lb/>
That should be true; <lb/>
an opportunity to witness it. <lb/>
entertained thirty <lb/>
of the Pleasure at pro- <lb/>
games, in honor of her <lb/>
; Miss Mary Higgs. of Groan <lb/>
Graham of games were <lb/>
played, among which wore the <lb/>
The people of the made a grave mistake in his old favorites, domino and trail. <lb/>
We think Senator <lb/>
a grave <lb/>
country are th ones to reap the speech in the Senate attacking The for the evening. <lb/>
Washington e are <lb/>
for inf <lb/>
We carrot answer as to <lb/>
so far as the question <lb/>
P lies to Greenville But there <lb/>
. to be <lb/>
mm <lb/>
it <lb/>
marriage <lb/>
man who hasn't got ens <lb/>
i court and all of a sudden the advice how to raise <lb/>
I I business d- <lb/>
o of sight And <lb/>
be added that there an ; <lb/>
left who would <lb/>
kicking for <lb/>
by such a scheme. <lb/>
West Virginia must be yet out <lb/>
side the borders of civilization, if <lb/>
one can judge from what trans- <lb/>
and should be glad when the the failure to appoint who presented t to the guest of <lb/>
o willing to be taxed to him on the conference committee l- the <lb/>
. . gentleman prize, a handsome <lb/>
to consider the railroad rate bill, burnt leather case containing <lb/>
Lieutenant Governor Winston a of hangers <lb/>
i -u o was <lb/>
was entirely right Senator ed for the occasion and the color <lb/>
Graham introduced the bill him- scheme, pink and white, was <lb/>
self and went so far declare The <lb/>
he would not support any other, games a course of refreshments <lb/>
Having thus expressed his of and rake. <lb/>
. , , , ,, . coffee and almonds etc. was <lb/>
in advance he should not ed <lb/>
have been appointed on the; Th affair was a very pleasant <lb/>
m every particular. Miss <lb/>
committee. is a young <lb/>
I an who has won the friendship <lb/>
of all who had the pleasure of <lb/>
In the senate Tuesday the bill meeting her. mo.-e <lb/>
bird to fund of the of to penalize <lb/>
help build roads. <lb/>
The introduced by <lb/>
Jones to establish a <lb/>
a dispensary in Bethel has <lb/>
the h A feat- <lb/>
this bill that would be a <lb/>
good one for all dispensaries, is <lb/>
one-third of the net pro <lb/>
Math go to the graded school of <lb/>
town, one-third to the gen- <lb/>
fund of town and one <lb/>
; telegraph companies was tabled. Observer. <lb/>
That was a proper disposition of <lb/>
The recent letter in the Raleigh it. and it never come Honor of Mr- <lb/>
News and Observer from Dr L Mrs. J. Bryan Grimes <lb/>
Crawford, of Greensboro, re.; <lb/>
ex-Gov. Jarvis and the has been presented to the present Just return d from her <lb/>
proposed Eastern training school. than to enact such law. <lb/>
hows how much even a very entirely with Senator Mrs. George L. Morton, <lb/>
smart man can say on , matter speech opposing <lb/>
which he knows nothing, the bill had come to W. Riddick, Mrs, Alfred <lb/>
is surprising that <lb/>
a man conclusion that the penalty Winer Jet-man, <lb/>
of vi n u i i rs Owens- H a <lb/>
. i., m North had been Mrs. Hi <lb/>
should assume to overdone. <lb/>
about u- <lb/>
the <lb/>
rt <lb/>
He did not know of I The color scheme in tie dining <lb/>
room was pink and white. The <lb/>
by <lb/>
would pa s <lb/>
When he knows nothing litigation than j dainty bearing bunches <lb/>
the re <lb/>
A little reform in the govern- <lb/>
printing bill is going to <lb/>
an annual saving of <lb/>
COO. How much would <lb/>
from a general reform in the gov- <lb/>
But Mr. Rockefeller <lb/>
a nave <lb/>
Charleston, the that thirty-two million and <lb/>
From a copy of oil the <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
Sure, but in that event he <lb/>
not have had the credit for <lb/>
away so much. <lb/>
conditions that exist, bill, and he believed it would of fees served <lb/>
effect it <lb/>
far in passing judgment. enacted into and Observer. <lb/>
Hi <lb/>
of that State <lb/>
the Gazette published in that <lb/>
sent us by a friend residing <lb/>
account of the <lb/>
t liter being dragged from his <lb/>
office and assaulted by two <lb/>
icemen and locked up in the <lb/>
station house, without a warrant <lb/>
or without any charge being <lb/>
against him. From an <lb/>
editorial in the same paper it is <lb/>
inferred that the editor had been <lb/>
exposing some of the rottenness <lb/>
of the city Such <lb/>
an assault is an outrage, and <lb/>
might have been in <lb/>
Russia The editor of the Ga- <lb/>
is a North Carolina, Mr. J. <lb/>
whose nativity <lb/>
may account for his readiness to <lb/>
expose corruption in high places <lb/>
Messer, of Haywood <lb/>
the oldest white man ii. <lb/>
North Carolina, died <lb/>
He born August 12th. <lb/>
1792, making him year. <lb/>
months and days old at the <lb/>
of his death. <lb/>
section of this great <lb/>
would be that the contemplation. <lb/>
Representative Laughinghouse <lb/>
introduced a bill in the <lb/>
Wednesday to allow Cr a- <lb/>
bug bond. Thia town<lb/>
The president has been keep- <lb/>
real quiet for a longer period <lb/>
than usual. But so many other <lb/>
things have been going on that <lb/>
the people have not had time to <lb/>
think about him. He be <lb/>
expected soon to break out again. <lb/>
March 1st the Wes- <lb/>
tern Union Telegraph <lb/>
win make a <lb/>
employees at <lb/>
off c <lb/>
make of the t reel JO i <lb/>
cent happier each month<lb/>
C. .<lb/>
f . <lb/>
R-v <lb/>
F. S.<lb/>
. W <lb/>
the Cotton and <lb/>
guanos in the South <lb/>
in the <lb/>
v. Se- that <lb/>
on every bag. <lb/>
j. . . .- <lb/>
WINTERVILLE <lb/>
at-O <lb/>
This is in charge of F. C. who is authorized to rep- <lb/>
resent the Eastern Reflector in Winterville and territory <lb/>
Oats, corn and hay just <lb/>
at <lb/>
A. W. Ange t Co. <lb/>
to i B. T <lb/>
Ox . B- for T. <lb/>
huh <lb/>
ton Friday. <lb/>
J. R. Turnage and <lb/>
Mumford of were here at <lb/>
the debate last night- <lb/>
Mrs. cf <lb/>
Stokes came in Friday night to <lb/>
spend sometime at the home of <lb/>
M Bryan. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. R F. Tucker <lb/>
went to Greene Friday <lb/>
to visit relatives for a few days. <lb/>
Miss Mellie left Friday <lb/>
afternoon for Bethel where she <lb/>
will spend Saturday and Sunday <lb/>
with and friends. <lb/>
of the <lb/>
from came over to the <lb/>
debate Friday night <lb/>
For gentle ponies, <lb/>
well broke. A- Kittrell. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C. <lb/>
The time of th year has <lb/>
when you farmers are <lb/>
to think about breaking your <lb/>
land. Come and the <lb/>
disk at <lb/>
Barber Co. They do <lb/>
excellent work. <lb/>
About twenty-five of the <lb/>
of Winterville of <lb/>
Jr. O. V. A kt, <lb/>
school Friday, where they <lb/>
presented to that school a flag <lb/>
and a Bible which represent the <lb/>
principles of this noble order- <lb/>
virtue, liberty and patriotisms <lb/>
three of the grandest principle <lb/>
that are able to be conceived by <lb/>
the human mind. <lb/>
Those who are exposed to the <lb/>
cold rains and snows need to pro- <lb/>
yourselves with good <lb/>
coats, rubber boots, rubber shoes <lb/>
and Get them at <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
S. J. of Grifton. <lb/>
was hero today. <lb/>
We no i n hand f <lb/>
lee of Bibles we fT- <lb/>
the trade at very lo <lb/>
price <lb/>
-Rm. <lb/>
The A. G. OX M Co. has <lb/>
still on hand a full of <lb/>
their Tar Heel Cart wheels. <lb/>
Send us your order we assure <lb/>
prompt shipments. <lb/>
Prof. G. E was at <lb/>
his best and delivered a most ex- <lb/>
address in presenting the <lb/>
Bible and flag. Prof. W. H. <lb/>
was present also and <lb/>
in behalf of the teachers, pupils <lb/>
and community extended to the <lb/>
Juniors their sincere thanks and <lb/>
appreciation of the flag, and <lb/>
Rev. W. E. Cox delivered an ad- <lb/>
dress thanking them for the <lb/>
Bible. <lb/>
We are looking for some largo j church <lb/>
snows yet. Be prepared f-r morning, <lb/>
by rubber storm.-. Sunday <lb/>
coat, and a pair of rubber the inclement weather, <lb/>
or These your He returned to Mon- <lb/>
health as well added <lb/>
THE EASTERN SCHOOL <lb/>
Will Supply the <lb/>
If there are young women w ho <lb/>
are the of a n <lb/>
and industrial school it seems to <lb/>
J. R. Johnson went to that it be cheaper to <lb/>
enlarge the one already have <lb/>
than to build a new one <lb/>
v hero else. Durham Herald. <lb/>
But the trouble com s right <lb/>
there, Those working u get the <lb/>
legislature tr- make a large <lb/>
appropriation to the <lb/>
Greensboro school admitted pub<lb/>
was present- <lb/>
ed in opera house <lb/>
Tuesday night to an immense <lb/>
Owing to the late <lb/>
I he special train bringing <lb/>
thee of their ix-st <lb/>
st i; be trans <lb/>
and put up in time for use. <lb/>
but oven with this the <lb/>
play was thrilling and rendered <lb/>
with good affect There were in <lb/>
the audience a number of ex-Con- <lb/>
soldiers to whom were <lb/>
brought back vivid recollections <lb/>
of the trying reconstruction <lb/>
through which they passed, <lb/>
and they were most generous in <lb/>
applause given throughout the <lb/>
drama. The play gave much sat- <lb/>
The management of the opera <lb/>
CAN STILL TAKE <lb/>
YOUR MEASURE.<lb/>
So the idea seemed a desire to <lb/>
raise the and standing <lb/>
of that school more than <lb/>
to increase its accommodating <lb/>
capacity. There is no special ob- <lb/>
to the rank of the <lb/>
Greensboro school being thus <lb/>
raised and we hope it will get <lb/>
the appropriation, but what the <lb/>
east wants and must have is a <lb/>
training school that will train <lb/>
teachers that will teach in <lb/>
the public schools of east. <lb/>
The Greensboro does <lb/>
not supply these, hence the lack <lb/>
of teachers for the schools of the <lb/>
east makes necessary the steps <lb/>
the eastern people are taking. <lb/>
the people of the community for <lb/>
the liberal patronage given, Get- <lb/>
ting here was <lb/>
the ; venture that has neon <lb/>
made for t he house and pub- <lb/>
appreciation was shown in the <lb/>
large attendance. It was an <lb/>
that would have done <lb/>
it to much <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
larger towns than <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Co-, tie that the appropriation would <lb/>
still receiving orders for their enable the institution to take <lb/>
nice ard most up to girl more than it already has. grateful to <lb/>
sucker buggies. <lb/>
The debate given by the Vance <lb/>
society Friday night was <lb/>
one of the best ever given <lb/>
this excellent society. The affirm- <lb/>
was represented by J. D. <lb/>
W. L. Gav and D R. <lb/>
Jackson; the negative by W. A <lb/>
C. F. Perry, and <lb/>
R. T. Cox. The query <lb/>
That the government <lb/>
should own and control it i rail- <lb/>
The contest was close <lb/>
and exciting through the entire <lb/>
debate but the judges rendered a <lb/>
decision in favor of the <lb/>
after much difficulty. <lb/>
There were several of the old <lb/>
pupils present always <lb/>
make a pleasant reunion and <lb/>
adds no little pleasure to <lb/>
occasions. <lb/>
Among the pupils present <lb/>
Misses Louise Fleming <lb/>
and Nannie House of House. R <lb/>
H Parker of Conetoe. <lb/>
Moore, of mid Miss <lb/>
Manning, of <lb/>
Rapids- <lb/>
Secure a at Bar <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
Miss Nannie House returned <lb/>
her home near House Monday <lb/>
morning after spending a day or <lb/>
two visiting friend here <lb/>
Th- A. G. Cox has <lb/>
o- a full supply of their <lb/>
T r Heels Carts and would do <lb/>
glad to supply your needs. <lb/>
Rev. T. H. King filled his reg- <lb/>
appointment at the Baptist <lb/>
afternoon and <lb/>
There was <lb/>
The expert cutter and fitter <lb/>
did good business for us on <lb/>
Saturday. He left Monday <lb/>
but we have a man who will <lb/>
take your measure if you. <lb/>
didn't get here in time. <lb/>
A Baltimore when <lb/>
on the charge of stealing <lb/>
thirteen chickens, was asked <lb/>
he did not know thirteen was an <lb/>
number and ho had <lb/>
n that number of chickens. <lb/>
replied that he did so because <lb/>
there were not in the <lb/>
coon. That will take his <lb/>
against luck the very- <lb/>
next time he runs upon a coop <lb/>
with thirteen chickens in it- <lb/>
Wilmington Messenger. <lb/>
Prof. Brother Dead. <lb/>
A telephone message from <lb/>
Louisburg Tuesday evening an- <lb/>
the death of Mr. George <lb/>
A. brother of our <lb/>
townsman. Prof. W. H. Rags- <lb/>
dale. The Litter was at his bed- <lb/>
side when the end came. <lb/>
pork Sausage at S. M. <lb/>
For all kinds of feed Stuff at <lb/>
lowest prices see F. V. Johnston. <lb/>
to <lb/>
com tort. A. w. Ange A Co., has <lb/>
them cheap. <lb/>
The boys last night wore in <lb/>
excellent spirits when they <lb/>
came in and were speaking in <lb/>
the highest terms of praise <lb/>
of the people for their <lb/>
kind hospitality and <lb/>
shown them while there. <lb/>
She teachers and pupils of this <lb/>
school may rest assured that <lb/>
Winterville Council No. <lb/>
stands ready to lend them a <lb/>
helping hand if possible. <lb/>
The wise man begins early to <lb/>
build a reputation at his home <lb/>
bank. Readily and steadily <lb/>
deposits even though they <lb/>
be small will establish a record <lb/>
for him on the banker's books <lb/>
and in the bankers mind be of <lb/>
greater value in later years <lb/>
than all endorsements and <lb/>
his friends can give <lb/>
him. Deposit your savings in <lb/>
the Bank of Winterville. <lb/>
suits of all sizes are <lb/>
at cost at B F. Manning <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
The famous dress <lb/>
shoe for ladies and gentlemen at <lb/>
B. F. Manning Co. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox M Co., has <lb/>
just received a full Car Load of <lb/>
the welded fence of <lb/>
different heights. We feel sure <lb/>
it would to your best interest ti, <lb/>
call to see us and lotus q. S <lb/>
you prices that will be <lb/>
your <lb/>
your i day morning. <lb/>
A large shipment of best <lb/>
flour just received at Harrington <lb/>
Barber A Co. <lb/>
Mr. and C. Manning <lb/>
of Greenville spent Sunday here <lb/>
visiting relatives- <lb/>
Keep your horses, boys, and <lb/>
chickens in a healthy condition <lb/>
by giving them Pratt's food. <lb/>
B. F. Manning Co. <lb/>
The Pitt County Oil Co., is <lb/>
putting in a dynamo for its <lb/>
use. Mr. D- Job of Green- <lb/>
ville is here installing it. <lb/>
American Herbs is the thing for <lb/>
indigestion and the purification <lb/>
of the blood. A. W- Ange <lb/>
can supply you. <lb/>
An up line of large rugs <lb/>
just received by A. W. Ange <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Mrs. J. Bobbitt and Miss <lb/>
Bessie Helen, who attended the <lb/>
debate returned to <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
Several of our people went to <lb/>
Greenville Tuesday evening to <lb/>
see the <lb/>
Mr. B. D. Forest returned <lb/>
home Saturday after spending <lb/>
several days her father's in <lb/>
the country. <lb/>
Miss Mollie Bryan returned <lb/>
m Bethel Sunday afternoon. <lb/>
Stray Taker. Up. <lb/>
I have taken up one yellow and <lb/>
black spotted sow, marked <lb/>
low fork and hole in right <lb/>
evening on Jeer and split in left. Now has <lb/>
nix pigs. Owner can get same <lb/>
by proving property and paying <lb/>
costs. W. H. Roberson, <lb/>
R. F. D No. Winterville. N. C. <lb/>
THE BOARD OF <lb/>
GOVERNORS <lb/>
of this <lb/>
JAMESTOWN <lb/>
selected for the official pi- <lb/>
of the Exposition, the <lb/>
sweet toned <lb/>
PIANO. <lb/>
Those grand instruments <lb/>
will be used exclusively <lb/>
in the Music Hall and <lb/>
other Music rooms. <lb/>
This selection did credit <lb/>
to the of the <lb/>
Board of Governors. <lb/>
You will show like good <lb/>
discernment if you <lb/>
select the <lb/>
PIANO. <lb/>
Write for particulars and <lb/>
Piano with the <lb/>
Sweet <lb/>
CHAS. M. <lb/>
S ti <lb/>
N VA. <lb/>
Call in and let us take your <lb/>
measure for a Spring Suit <lb/>
Fit and finish guaranteed. <lb/>
THE MAN'S OUTFITTER. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF WINTERVILLE, <lb/>
WINTERVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At Business, Jan. 86th 1906. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and SIS. 116.00 <lb/>
Overdrafts 287.81 <lb/>
Furniture fixtures <lb/>
Due from banks and bankers 8,625.42 <lb/>
Cash items <lb/>
Gold Coin 6.00 <lb/>
Silver coin 87.80 <lb/>
Nut. bk 1,107.00 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
818,988.61 <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital stock 86,000.00 <lb/>
Undivided <lb/>
Time of deposit 1,385.00 <lb/>
subject to 18,184.96 <lb/>
Total 818,986.61 <lb/>
State of North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, J, j. Jackson, Cashier of the above named bank, <lb/>
swear that the above is true lo best of <lb/>
and belief. L. JACKSON, <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn Correct <lb/>
The Department Stores <lb/>
OFFER THE <lb/>
LINE <lb/>
PRETTIEST <lb/>
OF <lb/>
me, this Mil day of Feb-, <lb/>
JAMES B. <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
P. HARRINGTON, <lb/>
M . B. <lb/>
A. O. COX, <lb/>
The New Year<lb/>
Miss Louise Pie returned <lb/>
to her home near House Monday, <lb/>
Satterwhite attending the debate here- <lb/>
this morning to spend Sunday at I <lb/>
home seed outs <lb/>
and Mottle Wiggins Johnston s. <lb/>
left to spend Sunday in Green-j <lb/>
vi V. Johnston's. <lb/>
Bl P V. <lb/>
at <lb/>
; no<lb/>
no-th i<lb/>
ll, cake Ca n k. , <lb/>
TS, TOBACCO, CLOAKS, Etc <lb/>
i tot hi- during <lb/>
past year u may id. <lb/>
It u visiting my <lb/>
EVER SHOWN HERE <lb/>
IN VIEW OF THE FACT THAT THE LADIES <lb/>
OF THE TOWN ARE GOING TO HAVE SHIRT <lb/>
WAIST SALES IN THE NEAR FUTURE WE <lb/>
OFFER THE FULLEST LINE EVER <lb/>
HERE. WE OFFER FOR <lb/>
THE WAIST <lb/>
i LINEN at per yard. <lb/>
MADRAS from to per yard. <lb/>
The Waist <lb/>
LINEN LA at <lb/>
N at per yard <lb/>
N lawn from Ute. par <lb/>
the <lb/>
J. B. j <lb/>
Drop in down town an <lb/>
line before it is can <lb/>
male up ready for the Bales, <lb/>
i let us show you our elegant <lb/>
purchase now and have them <lb/>
J. R. A, J, I<lb/>
. , v<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019690_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
-ii v<lb/>
. .<lb/>
MUST <lb/>
THEMSELVES. <lb/>
Last issue of the Progressive <lb/>
contained men- <lb/>
FiRE AT GRIFTON.<lb/>
THE TRAIN-A <lb/>
DREAM. <lb/>
Three Store and De- <lb/>
I The following poem was found on <lb/>
I the street between Spencer and <lb/>
K is to nave been <lb/>
1.1 reD. mat unknown traveler on his <lb/>
th Constitutional morning fire Visited the new from tho latter place to Spencer. <lb/>
Amendment which we think business section of ton Tom Gray lay down on the bar-room <lb/>
, impressed i destroyed three of the brick M ,,.,, h drink <lb/>
I white voters s tores that were built only a few more. <lb/>
hi <lb/>
The Con- ago. <lb/>
Amendment of The about <lb/>
St-u U <lb/>
e it <lb/>
To dream that he rode on a hell-bound <lb/>
o'clock, from some Unknown U with was red and <lb/>
rob might in tho A. L <lb/>
reason Bro., and hail , ., <lb/>
was i <lb/>
Thai <lb/>
. <lb/>
this amendment provided such headway that it not b, <lb/>
for t be checked This budding and <lb/>
m , i rand contents; together with the <lb/>
clause. d stores K. C Bra, <lb/>
Brooks with their con- <lb/>
H, he n i. tents were burned- <lb/>
registered to the I of his By hard work the t re was <lb/>
end of the eight checked at the thick wall between <lb/>
years i i near at hand. store and ;. <lb/>
But for this <lb/>
las, i . re that will sit <lb/>
years is now in <lb/>
Th has been some <lb/>
as to whether the <lb/>
tin-. t extended or <lb/>
But then ; no longer any <lb/>
u point. In a <lb/>
la; k the Democrats <lb/>
controlling the Legislature, after <lb/>
discussion voted to let the <lb/>
date and all. <lb/>
star la y now are in the <lb/>
Constitution, one more <lb/>
year the white man who votes <lb/>
must prepare himself for the <lb/>
high, of voting by learn- <lb/>
to read and write. Tie <lb/>
time will not be he U <lb/>
fact to Cd with an educational <lb/>
suffrage i and must <lb/>
prepare himself for it or accept <lb/>
the consequences And this is <lb/>
well. With our present <lb/>
facilities any white boy <lb/>
n. himself engineer, j <lb/>
Th, made such a motley <lb/>
atheist, Gentile and <lb/>
store. But tins <lb/>
other buildings would also <lb/>
been destroyed. <lb/>
Individual losses cannot be <lb/>
given at this time, but the total <lb/>
loss is about with <lb/>
Mr. Brooks was <lb/>
the heaviest individual loser- <lb/>
The Grifton Drug Co. also lost <lb/>
considerably by moving stock. <lb/>
but this was covered by <lb/>
CARD FROM PROF. <lb/>
Appreciation of What Has <lb/>
Been Done. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
know do, and I am sure <lb/>
Governor Jarvis does, appreciate <lb/>
the kind expression your paper <lb/>
h id of us in Friday's issue. As <lb/>
Chairman of the Committee of <lb/>
from Greenville and- Pitt <lb/>
opportunity of any man in <lb/>
town to what ha been <lb/>
done In winning the <lb/>
Training for the Bast <lb/>
I desire to say that but for the <lb/>
i . re. <lb/>
Jew. <lb/>
Rich men in broadcloth and beggar in <lb/>
young ladies with withered <lb/>
old hags, <lb/>
Yellows red. brown and white, <lb/>
together, what a horrible <lb/>
While the train dashed on at an awful <lb/>
The h scorched their hands and <lb/>
face. <lb/>
v. k and the country grew. <lb/>
faster and faster the engine Hew-. <lb/>
-anti crashed. <lb/>
, . i- and brighter the lightning <lb/>
Hashed; <lb/>
Hotter and hotter the air became. <lb/>
Till the clothes were burned from each <lb/>
quivering frame. <lb/>
Then in the distance there rose such a <lb/>
veil , , , <lb/>
Ha croaked the Devil. e re <lb/>
Hearing <lb/>
O. how the passengers shrieked <lb/>
with pain. I <lb/>
And bunged the Devil to stop the trainhe capered about and sang with glee <lb/>
And laughed and joked at their agony. I <lb/>
faithful friend you have done my i <lb/>
work- u- i <lb/>
Ami the Devil can never a pay day <lb/>
You have bullied th weak and robbed <lb/>
the poor, , <lb/>
And the starving brother turned <lb/>
your door; <lb/>
You have laid up gold where the canker <lb/>
rusts. Stories Sanford Brought <lb/>
MS; Out by Shooting Results in Objection <lb/>
This man bought a supply of tobacco with- <lb/>
out acquainting himself with the distinctive taste <lb/>
of SCHNAPPS Tobacco, which has the cheering <lb/>
qualities that gratify his desire to chew, and at <lb/>
less expense than cheap tobacco. <lb/>
SCHNAPPS has been advertised in this <lb/>
paper So that every chewer has had an <lb/>
opportunity V get acquainted with the <lb/>
facts and know that drugs are not used <lb/>
to produce the cheering quality found in <lb/>
the famous Piedmont country flue-cured <lb/>
tobaccos, and that SCHNAPPS is what he <lb/>
ought to chew. Still there are chewers <lb/>
who accept other and cheaper tobaccos <lb/>
that do not give the same pleasure. <lb/>
Some day they'll get a taste of the <lb/>
realize what enjoyment <lb/>
they've missed by not getting SCHNAPPS <lb/>
long they'll feel like kicking <lb/>
themselves. <lb/>
SCHNAPPS is sold everywhere in S <lb/>
cent cuts, and and IS cent plugs. Be <lb/>
sure you get genuine. <lb/>
CAUSED CLASH IN A CHURCH. <lb/>
RUNAWAY VIRGINIA COUPLE. <lb/>
, Panama Canst Erie Canal. <lb/>
is digging <lb/>
canal a thousand times quicker than <lb/>
the Erie. <lb/>
he L- u. . <lb/>
less cost labor, <lb/>
his ea I i an learn to read <lb/>
, . , , ,,,,, I have hail the <lb/>
write before he becomes <lb/>
age. To say to the shiftless u <lb/>
careless that we would take <lb/>
of them while at the <lb/>
time spurring the to <lb/>
take advantage of ii.; school, by <lb/>
reason of I educational re- <lb/>
would help nobody <lb/>
worth the hell would <lb/>
,. i my appreciation of the sup- <lb/>
encourage white ignorance, , , <lb/>
would of weakness <lb/>
You have justice scorned <lb/>
sown. <lb/>
And trampled the laws of nature downCome to Greenville and Get Married. ; <lb/>
I was made <lb/>
paint at times <lb/>
than if made by <lb/>
n i for a couple of The I. ft M. gives the best job in the <lb/>
to HIS WorK. . because I M. Zinc hardens <lb/>
, p. , from across the border in White make. L. ft M. <lb/>
rioted and murder-i Episcopal Church at j ; g t d The like Iron for yew <lb/>
L. I., in which Mrs. .; a . requires gallons <lb/>
i i- in quite a ., Linseed <lb/>
Clarence I worships, man and young Oil t a mod- <lb/>
. i and lied <lb/>
And mocked at Hod <lb/>
i ride <lb/>
work nun <lb/>
the <lb/>
guns we carried never would <lb/>
have won. desire to <lb/>
fare, so carry lost last night the Rev. Isaac Peck took a carriage at the in L. M. Paint. <lb/>
your rector for Mn Station and drove to hotel Macon. will repaint house tor <lb/>
it is j , and , t , . . . S H I., Greenville. <lb/>
due; ,. vestrymen, Wishing to lose time the <lb/>
Why. the laborer alway expects while declared hunted up of NOTICE OF SALE. <lb/>
f I If ll i-a I <lb/>
s expects while declared <lb/>
land you sate in the lake of fire, loudly that they were <lb/>
worthy of our <lb/>
Don't Side-line Your F g <lb/>
port that has bee n giver, b <lb/>
every man both in and <lb/>
Greenville in this magnificent <lb/>
and to to these men <lb/>
t hat the committee has not gone <lb/>
into winter quarters but is doing <lb/>
at the same old stand. <lb/>
A recruiting officer will be on <lb/>
hand every day to enlist <lb/>
for the battle which <lb/>
is yet to come and in which <lb/>
We a farmer who for- <lb/>
regarded his a side <lb/>
line to his business of grain <lb/>
He raised a number <lb/>
every year, they were very <lb/>
yet he always <lb/>
lo, . for taxes. <lb/>
f repairs, etc . <lb/>
Ba; Fireside. An old <lb/>
gel . on him one day, <lb/>
an their chats he <lb/>
poi;. to him how he <lb/>
an hunted up Register of <lb/>
me iv, I-;. Williams and went with county- In Court <lb/>
Where your shall roast in minister, considered it house for the Sallie E and G <lb/>
you more and wise not to discuss his goingI Mr. Peck was at his mother-in-1 When the was <lb/>
Of tie Keel and II P Keel. <lb/>
Then Tom a with an cry. law's funeral when his letter of ;, identity <lb/>
soaked with sweat and his .,.,,.,., and , , , <lb/>
hair resignation was accept parties as Frederick M <lb/>
and By virtue of a decree made by <lb/>
, . Moore, clerk of Superior court o Pitt <lb/>
M. Blanche Lu both in the above entitled special <lb/>
Then he prayed a he never prayed <lb/>
,. . . .-,. It was last summer that <lb/>
To U saved from drink and the devils <lb/>
and prayers were not trinity's dove of was <lb/>
its that all was not was sent for, and mar- <lb/>
Petersburg E P-ding t. I land for partition. <lb/>
M . i i i <lb/>
t. pastor of the Memorial Baptist Monday, the is <lb/>
r Pan I 1- to sell <lb/>
first discovered that Petersburg, J. e. <lb/>
day of March 1907, <lb/>
I the court <lb/>
the high- <lb/>
honors than have have already <lb/>
c me to her. To one and to all Greenville <lb/>
would a word of cheer and <lb/>
say that we will not cease our <lb/>
efforts until there shall bees- <lb/>
fact a training school <lb/>
such <lb/>
in Eastern tin other <lb/>
church, a gift of Mrs to left on the bound train <lb/>
Pitt County Staid the in memory her <lb/>
Shoulder to Shoulder for Progress. I mother, the late Mrs. William <lb/>
a of hogs- He <lb/>
toll. I n t have a <lb/>
on on I m that <lb/>
was. . the best quality. <lb/>
The i well and sold <lb/>
well i and <lb/>
topped the market <lb/>
. . He advised him <lb/>
to sell all and <lb/>
buy e or four first-class <lb/>
your.- bows i I raise pigs he <lb/>
I Alexander <lb/>
for Greenville and. Soon after Mrs. came <lb/>
Pitt county The people have to live at Roslyn she became <lb/>
together like men in the affairs of <lb/>
With her wealth she was <lb/>
of. He said <lb/>
words in Pitt that shall <lb/>
, every woman an opportunity <lb/>
I and prepare herself well to <lb/>
teach the thousands of boys and <lb/>
girls that are and ought to be in <lb/>
the schools of this great section <lb/>
t beloved State. <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Chairman of Com. of SO. <lb/>
We are not given to boasting <lb/>
the legislature in behalf of the <lb/>
training school for teachers in <lb/>
Eastern North Carolina and they <lb/>
will keep right on working to- <lb/>
for schools, for bridges, <lb/>
for good roads, and for all other <lb/>
measures looking to the <lb/>
betterment of the people. There <lb/>
never before was such a spirit <lb/>
of between the <lb/>
people of the town and country <lb/>
as now exists, and the continua- <lb/>
. v pigs any <lb/>
more, but ma <lb/>
pro,; quality, intelligent and happy class of <lb/>
and will you We fed like taking <lb/>
I fit than the best <lb/>
but we are proud of the f -t t <lb/>
boys of this vicinity. They are. <lb/>
with rare a healthy. in the rank of <lb/>
D ed only to improve <lb/>
our opportunities to be the <lb/>
it clear off when we meet greatest county in North Caro- <lb/>
This <lb/>
them upon the and A <lb/>
class is more welcome to our <lb/>
gr <lb/>
fan beginning of office, many boys leave th <lb/>
hi, P from the visit of farm where they have <lb/>
that Id When he made substantial and good <lb/>
. i . , , ,; and go the city where only <lb/>
he one thousand succeed in <lb/>
providing it with battle There are farmers <lb/>
the . quarters drive their boys away, <lb/>
and the best care, and There is no excuse for this. <lb/>
the n easily be guessed. The farmer boy is entitled to his <lb/>
As have paid One vacations, to several relaxations, <lb/>
I make Pitt the <lb/>
the State. <lb/>
and let's <lb/>
banner county of <lb/>
Sunday morning, presumably to partition. <lb/>
tho of 1907. <lb/>
Julius mer. <lb/>
return to Petersburg. <lb/>
. <lb/>
of Pitt county, North t in <lb/>
book L-8 page the undersigned <lb/>
Will expose to public sale before the <lb/>
court house door in Greenville, to the <lb/>
highest bidder on Monday the 4th day <lb/>
of March 1907 at o'clock noon, three <lb/>
Certain tracts or parcels of land lying <lb/>
and being ill the county of and <lb/>
State of North Carolina and described as <lb/>
who a a small sum lying idle <lb/>
can find a place on the <lb/>
farm where it can I e employed <lb/>
toga I it will <lb/>
earn much more than three to <lb/>
five per cent. Interest Ex. <lb/>
WINS BEFORE COMMITTEE. <lb/>
Congressman voted themselves <lb/>
percent, increase in salaries <lb/>
to mo t the increased cost of <lb/>
living brought about by <lb/>
their legislation for special in- <lb/>
The people have to <lb/>
o,. g d bearing the In- <lb/>
I i <lb/>
Congress eel <lb/>
burden of unreasonable <lb/>
tariff taxes. Wilmington Star. <lb/>
his visits to the city, good books, <lb/>
magazines and Vis home paper. <lb/>
To the observing one it is plain <lb/>
to be seen that the old farm is <lb/>
the best place in the world for <lb/>
the average young man and <lb/>
never fails to bring a happier <lb/>
and more useful life than the <lb/>
city. Young men, who till <lb/>
the soil and earn your bread by <lb/>
the at of your brow, we are <lb/>
proud of our is <lb/>
always out to you and will <lb/>
always have a friend in this <lb/>
paper. Come and see us and <lb/>
give us the news from your <lb/>
neighborhood. Gastonia Ga- <lb/>
Favorable Report for <lb/>
School <lb/>
There never was better planned <lb/>
or bettor executed work than <lb/>
that done by the people of this <lb/>
section toward getting a teach- <lb/>
training school <lb/>
North Carolina, The good re- <lb/>
of this work is shown in a <lb/>
telegram received from <lb/>
th s morning stating that the <lb/>
joint legislative committee on <lb/>
education at a meeting last <lb/>
gave the bill unanimous <lb/>
favorable <lb/>
The matter now goes to the <lb/>
senate and house and there is <lb/>
every reason to believe the <lb/>
authorizing the establishment <lb/>
of the school will <lb/>
enabled to meet its needs as no <lb/>
other parishioner could. A year <lb/>
and a half ago she gladdened the <lb/>
congregation with the announce- <lb/>
that she intended to give <lb/>
for a new church build- <lb/>
and replace the <lb/>
weather beaten parish house- <lb/>
When she said that she had en- <lb/>
gaged Stanford White to be the <lb/>
architect of the building every- <lb/>
body was sure that Roslyn would follow, <lb/>
two of which One tract at a stake <lb/>
have to Structures or , runs with <lb/>
her people could boast line S. E. 13-1-2 poles, thence N. <lb/>
Until June last all went to feat to a thence North <lb/>
smoothly in the planning for the W. poles to the middle the <lb/>
now Mrs and street, with the middle of the <lb/>
Airs, . , s m W. feet to the begin- <lb/>
the rector wire apparently in <lb/>
accord. Then came the Madison j an undivided one half interest In <lb/>
Square Garden shooting, with land I <lb/>
its aftermath of sensational tea, <lb/>
charges against White. <lb/>
dent with these <lb/>
became know <lb/>
had objected <lb/>
Perhaps he had objected to them <lb/>
before the shooting, but Roslyn <lb/>
Stray Taken Up. <lb/>
NOTICE. I I have taken up three red and <lb/>
. j white cows, one unmarked, wear- <lb/>
yoke two marked smooth <lb/>
ex. and delivered by A. L. Jack- in left car. SWalloW fork Ht <lb/>
right Owner can get same by <lb/>
Long on the day March 1906 and and paying <lb/>
, recorded in the register <lb/>
, bounded as Begin- <lb/>
at a stake on Pitt street feet <lb/>
, from corner of Pitt and Queen <lb/>
disclosures it running N. W. a distance of ltd <lb/>
that Mr. Peck feet to A. U Jackson's line, thence <lb/>
to with A. L. B. i i a <lb/>
r distance of feet, thence E, a <lb/>
costs. W E. Nichols, <lb/>
Near Race Track, <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
ever since has wondered why he <lb/>
never heard of it until the <lb/>
had been killed. <lb/>
After tho discord between <lb/>
Mrs. and the minister <lb/>
was first discussed the Rev H <lb/>
Hut ton, rector of the Church <lb/>
of the Nativity, at vis- <lb/>
Mrs. It was re- <lb/>
ported that she introduced him <lb/>
to friends as new rec- <lb/>
tor Mr. Hutton denied that <lb/>
then and wrote to Mr. Peck that <lb/>
there was no ground for any- <lb/>
saying that he was to be <lb/>
his Trinity s vestry- <lb/>
men said Mr. Pack was going to <lb/>
stay at Roslyn and that they <lb/>
would stand by him to last ditch. <lb/>
Mr. Peck would not say any- <lb/>
thing about his <lb/>
nation. Nor would Mrs. <lb/>
New York World. <lb/>
distant of feet to street, <lb/>
thence East fee with <lb/>
to the beginning. <lb/>
Also one other tract of land in the <lb/>
town of Beginning at a stake <lb/>
on Queen street feet from corner of <lb/>
Queen and Pitt streets N- <lb/>
W, feet to a stake, thence North <lb/>
E, feet to a stake, thence S, <lb/>
E, feet to corner of J. <lb/>
F R B E <lb/>
To sufferers of Kidney, Liver or <lb/>
Bladder Other <lb/>
say a bottle and if <lb/>
it we will refund <lb/>
your say a <lb/>
full 11.00 size free bottle of <lb/>
and if it benefits then <lb/>
use SOL until <lb/>
entitles you <lb/>
to a bottle SOL at , <lb/>
PARAMOUR <lb/>
Only a limited number bottles <lb/>
given away. Don't miss this op <lb/>
to test <lb/>
SOL. <lb/>
Steamer L leaves <lb/>
Washington daily <lb/>
m for <lb/>
daily Sundays<lb/>
lib <lb/>
K. feet to corner J t , at. <lb/>
Norfolk for <lb/>
Norfolk, Baltimore, Philadelphia <lb/>
Terms <lb/>
the beginning. <lb/>
To satisfy said dead in trust. <lb/>
of sale cash. <lb/>
This the 1st day 1901. <lb/>
Trustee <lb/>
for Trouble. <lb/>
lived in California years, and <lb/>
am still tinting for trouble in the way <lb/>
of, wound;., boll, cut <lb/>
sprains, or a case of piles that <lb/>
cur. <lb/>
cf . i <lb/>
in. Mi. .- <lb/>
cum s every cats, I, <lb/>
drug <lb/>
New York, Boston all other <lb/>
points North. Connects at Nor- <lb/>
folk with all point West. <lb/>
shippers should order <lb/>
freight via Norfolk, care Norfolk; <lb/>
Southern Ry. Co. <lb/>
Sailing boa's subject to change <lb/>
without notice. <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, Agent, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
. I <lb/>
. Vi i . <lb/>
A I. , Supt.<lb/>
Report of the condition <lb/>
NATIONAL BANK <lb/>
OF GREENVILLE <lb/>
JARVIS AND HONORED. <lb/>
At Greenville, in Ninth <lb/>
Car the of business, <lb/>
Jan. 1907. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and Discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts <lb/>
cured <lb/>
U. Bonds to secure <lb/>
Premiums on U. S. Bond <lb/>
Banking house <lb/>
and <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
Due from State <lb/>
Bankers <lb/>
Exchange for 240.76 <lb/>
Notes other National <lb/>
Banks <lb/>
Fractional <lb/>
and <lb/>
Lawful money I <lb/>
Bank, <lb/>
Specie <lb/>
notes <lb/>
Redemption S. <lb/>
Treasurer per <lb/>
14,698.58 <lb/>
8.745.01 <lb/>
7,825.00 <lb/>
Capital stock I <lb/>
profits. x- <lb/>
taxes paid <lb/>
National bank <lb/>
Standing <lb/>
Individual <lb/>
84,926.0 <lb/>
Time of <lb/>
deposit 7,586.50 <lb/>
Cashier's <lb/>
19.63 92,562.20 <lb/>
Notes and bills 5,173.02 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
County of <lb/>
W, Aye Cashier of the above <lb/>
bank, do solemnly swear <lb/>
the is true to the best <lb/>
Of my e and <lb/>
J. W. AYCOCK. Cashier <lb/>
and sworn to h fore me <lb/>
of Jan., <lb/>
J MOORE, <lb/>
Notary <lb/>
Correct Attest <lb/>
J. E. WINSLOW, <lb/>
I. W. <lb/>
G. E. HARRIS <lb/>
Citizen Extend Them an Ovation <lb/>
As it was known that Prof W. <lb/>
H. was to leave for <lb/>
Grifton on Thursday evening's <lb/>
train to participate in the flag <lb/>
raising exercises at <lb/>
school, and that ex-Gov. T. J. <lb/>
Jarvis was expected home from <lb/>
Raleigh on the same train, the <lb/>
i citizens of Greenville planned a <lb/>
surprise for these gentlemen by <lb/>
of expressing appreciation <lb/>
of the work they had done to- <lb/>
ward inducing the legislature to <lb/>
establish a training school for <lb/>
teachers in Eastern North Caro- <lb/>
A number of citizens went to <lb/>
175.15 the station in carriages, and a <lb/>
special carriage with committee <lb/>
went by Prof. home <lb/>
to take him to the station, the <lb/>
same carriage to take Governor <lb/>
to his home. <lb/>
As the train came in and Gov- <lb/>
or nor Jarvis was alighting Mayor <lb/>
Wooten proposed <lb/>
for him which were given with <lb/>
enthusiasm- was followed <lb/>
by three cheers for Prof. Rags- <lb/>
dale was equally as en- <lb/>
Governor Jarvis was escorted <lb/>
NIGHT VIEW OF A CITY. <lb/>
WAVES. <lb/>
And Bible Rest on <lb/>
True to the principles of the <lb/>
patriotic and moral teachings of <lb/>
the noble order, the Junior Order <lb/>
of United American Mechanics <lb/>
believe the American flag <lb/>
should float over every public <lb/>
exhalation, mine fathoms into the <lb/>
the Word of God should have a I ancient reign of night, what thinks <lb/>
prominent on the desk of them s ho his <lb/>
, , , , , . ., dogs over the zenith in their <lb/>
in each school. In keeping with g <lb/>
this principle, the lodge of that stifled hum of midnight, <lb/>
order at celebrated when traffic lain down to rest. <lb/>
of Its Pathos <lb/>
and Its Tragedy. <lb/>
my dear said ho <lb/>
once midnight when he had re- <lb/>
turned from the coffee house in <lb/>
earnest talk, is a true <lb/>
sublimity to dwell here. These <lb/>
fringes of lamplight, up <lb/>
through smoke and thousandfold <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Contractor, Builder, Tile Setter. <lb/>
Plans and estimates <lb/>
on application. All work <lb/>
Tern key job when ever de- <lb/>
sired. <lb/>
C Sweet to Eat <lb/>
O A Candy towel <lb/>
625.00 <lb/>
5162,997.36 <lb/>
2,762.14 <lb/>
12.500.00 <lb/>
Washington's birthday by <lb/>
a and a Bible to the <lb/>
school near Centerville. <lb/>
This is one of the best rural <lb/>
schools in the county, and <lb/>
located in as fine a section and <lb/>
people as can be shown any- <lb/>
where. They had a nice school <lb/>
building which was destroyed <lb/>
fire about a year ago, but not <lb/>
undaunted by the loss the people <lb/>
Came together and rebuilt on a <lb/>
larger plan ever before. The <lb/>
three cheers school now has three teachers <lb/>
Miss Bettie right, principal, <lb/>
and Mis Lillie Pair and <lb/>
Morris is the <lb/>
pride of all that section and a <lb/>
credit to the county. <lb/>
and the chariot wheels of vanity, j <lb/>
still rolling here and there through <lb/>
distant roots, are bearing her to i <lb/>
halls roofed and lighted to the <lb/>
due pitch for her, and only vice and I <lb/>
misery, to prowl or to moan like <lb/>
night birds, arc hum, <lb/>
I say, like the stertorous, unquiet <lb/>
slumber of sick life, is heard in <lb/>
heaven Oh, under that hideous <lb/>
coverlet of vapor putrefactions <lb/>
and unimaginable gases, what a fer- <lb/>
vat lies simmering and hid <lb/>
joyful and the sorrowful <lb/>
are there; men are living there, men <lb/>
arc being men are praying; <lb/>
on the other side of a <lb/>
men are cursing, around <lb/>
them all is tho vast, night. <lb/>
proud grandee still lingers <lb/>
in his perfumed saloon or reposes <lb/>
within damask curtains. Wretch- <lb/>
cower into truckle beds or <lb/>
Established in 1866. <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
Cotton tors and handlers of <lb/>
Bagging. Ties and Bags. <lb/>
Correspondence and shipments <lb/>
solicited- <lb/>
Counsel From the South <lb/>
When the cold wind dry and rack the <lb/>
the skin a box of can save <lb/>
discomfort. In buying salve look for <lb/>
the name on the to <lb/>
and be sure you original <lb/>
Witch Hazel Salve. Sold <lb/>
I. <lb/>
Clear up the complexion, <lb/>
em. V beat <lb/>
do do or two <lb/>
Little Early Rim H <lb/>
pills with a I hi that <lb/>
i . <lb/>
Jno. i. i i n. <lb/>
Dentist. <lb/>
Greenville, N, <lb/>
like the well <lb/>
is what . n of <lb/>
Laxative <lb/>
. modern coup <lb/>
From any opiate or . m t-tin <lb/>
conform I . <lb/>
Pure and Drug Law. So <lb/>
Jno, i. an. <lb/>
who ti ac- <lb/>
l ac trow I he i h i from a <lb/>
morbid of a I t <lb/>
. is three on. <lb/>
and . On the <lb/>
and can eat a <lb/>
m in- <lb/>
is much you <lb/>
take a little for i H- <lb/>
after your meals. Li <lb/>
what you eat; sold by Jno. L. <lb/>
1875. <lb/>
S. I. SCHULTZ. <lb/>
to the station where he was Jr., U- A. M. <lb/>
ed by Prof. H. B. Smith and in- went in a body to honor with <lb/>
as man who helped j their presence and present the <lb/>
save the day in Gov-J emblems of patriotism and <lb/>
Jarvis responded in a brief A large crowd was in at- <lb/>
and the exercises gave <lb/>
keen delight to all- The follow- <lb/>
program was carried out in <lb/>
the school building; <lb/>
speech in which he expressed <lb/>
of this demonstration <lb/>
by his townsmen, but said he <lb/>
could not take unto himself the <lb/>
honor for the great achievement I <lb/>
This, he said, be-1 Announcement of work of Bet- <lb/>
to the delegation I termed Association. <lb/>
of citizens of Greenville and Pitt j , , , ., . I Addresses and of <lb/>
county who had gone there with E. Lineberry. <lb/>
their claims and made such pro-; Address accepting H- <lb/>
LAST CALL FOR TAXES. found impression on the <lb/>
I will attend the following tare. Song White and <lb/>
times and places for the purpose He said he now had no doubt, Presenting Bible-G. E. Line- <lb/>
if the for --J I opting Bible-Rev. <lb/>
taxes for that year and persons be established, though the fight W- E. Cox. <lb/>
was not yet ended. However. of National <lb/>
if the people of Pitt continue Following this the flag was <lb/>
their earnest efforts as they raised over the building and a <lb/>
have heretofore, he had every I shout arose from the multitude <lb/>
reason to believe the unfurled its <lb/>
would be located in our folds to the breezes. <lb/>
At the conclusion of his re- j An elegant dinner w. s spread <lb/>
marks there were calls for a the grove near the building <lb/>
speech from Prof. but afforded a good finale to the <lb/>
this gentleman had gone aboard exercises. <lb/>
Dealer. Cash Bid tor <lb/>
Hides. Fur, Heed, <lb/>
Turkeys, etc. <lb/>
steads, Mattresses, Oak <lb/>
It was to this school that the shivers hunger stricken into its lair I <lb/>
of straw. In obscure cellars rouge- j Table.-. Safes <lb/>
languidly emits it voice of j and Gail Ax Snuff, <lb/>
destiny to haggard, hungry villains, <lb/>
while of state sit plotting <lb/>
and playing their high game, <lb/>
the pawns being men. <lb/>
lover whisper; hi <lb/>
that the coach is ready, and she, <lb/>
full of hope and fear, glide down <lb/>
to fly with him over the borders. <lb/>
The thief still more silently sets to <lb/>
his pick locks and crowbars or lurks <lb/>
in wait till the watchmen snore I china <lb/>
owing should meet me and settle <lb/>
or costs will be added. <lb/>
L. W. TUCKER, Sheriff. <lb/>
Ayden, township, <lb/>
Saturday, March 2nd. 1907. <lb/>
Grimesland, township, <lb/>
Saturday. March 2nd, 1907. <lb/>
Stokes. Carolina township. Sat- <lb/>
March 2nd. <lb/>
Fountain, Falkland township, <lb/>
Monday, March 4th. 1907. <lb/>
township, <lb/>
Tuesday March 1907. <lb/>
Bell's X Roads, town- <lb/>
ship, Wednesday, Mar. 6th. 1907. <lb/>
C. D. Smith's Store, Beaver <lb/>
Dam township, Thursday, March <lb/>
7th, 1907. <lb/>
Bethel. Bethel township, Sat- <lb/>
March 9th, 1907. <lb/>
Grifton, township, <lb/>
Saturday, March 9th. <lb/>
Falkland, Falkland township, <lb/>
Monday, March 11th. 1907. <lb/>
Farmville Farmville township. <lb/>
March 12th, <lb/>
B GOOD <lb/>
IS A AND A <lb/>
GOOD WORK HORSE <lb/>
A TREASURE, <lb/>
I have both these kind for sale a <lb/>
reasonable prices. At my stables <lb/>
opposite the court house can be <lb/>
found at all times a lot of good <lb/>
HORSES AND MULES <lb/>
Call and see them <lb/>
a good animal. <lb/>
W. H. WHITE <lb/>
COBB BROS. CO <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Cotton Buyers and Brokers <lb/>
and <lb/>
to X- <lb/>
Ml H <lb/>
l. <lb/>
MOORE LONG, <lb/>
Attorneys-at-Law, <lb/>
N. C; <lb/>
in Civil only <lb/>
the train which was about to de- <lb/>
part and could not respond. <lb/>
Governor Jarvis was es- <lb/>
to home <lb/>
These two honored men have <lb/>
h i leading spirits in the <lb/>
for th.- establishment of <lb/>
this school, and Eastern <lb/>
Several persons from Green- <lb/>
ville were present and speak in <lb/>
highest terms of the occasion. <lb/>
The editor of The Reflector in- <lb/>
tended o be with the people of <lb/>
Centerville that day, but sick- <lb/>
among the office help made <lb/>
it impossible for him to get away, <lb/>
hence we can only give a report <lb/>
North Carolina can never do of the exercises from facts told us <lb/>
enough to repay the debt it owes by others <lb/>
of appreciation <lb/>
PERMANENT ORGANIZATION. <lb/>
Adopted by Mt. Herman Lodge, F. <lb/>
A A. M. <lb/>
Th <lb/>
Pitt Association of Rural Let- <lb/>
A meeting of the rural free <lb/>
passing of John Quince delivery mail carriers of Pitt <lb/>
J. <lb/>
LEADING FLORISTS, <lb/>
Jackson brings to view the was held in the court <lb/>
and beautiful that is in the <lb/>
hearts of the advanced white <lb/>
of our Southland. <lb/>
The white man best equipped <lb/>
for being the benefactor <lb/>
is the man who knows him. <lb/>
Could we burn this truth into <lb/>
the hearts of white and black <lb/>
alike, that the Southern white <lb/>
in their boxes, <lb/>
mansions, with supper i <lb/>
rooms darning rooms, are full j <lb/>
of light and music high -well- <lb/>
hearts, but in the condemned j <lb/>
cells the pulse of life beats <lb/>
Ions and faint, and bloodshot <lb/>
look out through the darkness i <lb/>
which is around and within for the <lb/>
light of a stern last morning. Sill <lb/>
men are to he hanged on the <lb/>
row. Comes no hammering from I <lb/>
the Raven's Rock Their gallows, <lb/>
must even now be <lb/>
of two Legged <lb/>
animals without feather lie around <lb/>
us in horizontal positions, their <lb/>
heads all in nightcaps and full of <lb/>
the foolishest dreams. cries <lb/>
aloud and sluggers and swaggers in <lb/>
his rank dens of theme, and the <lb/>
mother, with streaming hair, knee; <lb/>
over her dying infant, whoso <lb/>
cracked only her tears now <lb/>
these heaped and <lb/>
r. with nothing but ear- <lb/>
and between <lb/>
crammed i fish in <lb/>
barrel, or . ball I . like <lb/>
an Egyptian <lb/>
Life Tobacco, Key West <lb/>
George Cigars, <lb/>
Cherries, Peaches, <lb/>
pies. Pine apples, Syrup, <lb/>
Meat Flour, Sugar, Coffee, Meat <lb/>
Soup, Food, Matches <lb/>
Meal and Hulls, <lb/>
Seeds, Oranges, <lb/>
Nuts. ; Dried <lb/>
Peaches, Prunes, currants, <lb/>
warn Tip <lb/>
Wooden ware, cakes and <lb/>
crackers, Macaroni, <lb/>
i-r, Ma <lb/>
numerous other go <lb/>
Quality and chip fur <lb/>
c sh. come see me. <lb/>
digest Became i <lb/>
lacks some of the ti I <lb/>
the digestive re m <lb/>
properly balanced. Then, too, <lb/>
rood that and <lb/>
painful indigestion. <lb/>
relief, it <lb/>
a solution of vegetable acids, i <lb/>
and correct the <lb/>
conforms <lb/>
the National Food and Drug Law, <lb/>
here by Jno. L. Woolen <lb/>
s. <lb/>
Phone <lb/>
Schultz. <lb/>
hers. Such work <lb/>
house on Friday, 22nd. <lb/>
organization was effected <lb/>
with C. L. Barrett, of Farmville, <lb/>
president; C. T. Gaskins, of <lb/>
ton, vice president; J. W. Brown, <lb/>
of Greenville, <lb/>
The meeting was enthusiastic out. <lb/>
and all expressed themselves as <lb/>
on under bi i o mo <lb/>
But I ii am alone <lb/>
with the <lb/>
Faithful <lb/>
southern lady h- a letter writ- <lb/>
ten after the close of the civil war <lb/>
told her have <lb/>
something strange loll you. <lb/>
Mammy has been free sin o before <lb/>
was horn. never know till <lb/>
She goes on to tell how she <lb/>
the fact. Tho account is <lb/>
en from After the <lb/>
I was wretched and exclaimed, <lb/>
mammy, reckon you'll go <lb/>
She it a a in- <lb/>
had to humble myself. <lb/>
While she was the secret burst <lb/>
Just <lb/>
Think <lb/>
The Whole Town <lb/>
at Your Elbow for <lb/>
cents <lb/>
Per Day <lb/>
man is the teacher, , prospects. The <lb/>
leader of the . . .They know other and <lb/>
each other. No member of the <lb/>
to an encouraging talk from <lb/>
Postmaster R. C. Flanagan, of <lb/>
Greenville, which was much en- <lb/>
joyed. J. W. Brown, <lb/>
human race is more tractable, <lb/>
docile and plastic- He is rich in <lb/>
imagination, his reason and <lb/>
faculties of mental life are <lb/>
as strong as could be expected of <lb/>
one in his state of development. <lb/>
And the beautiful evidences <lb/>
of esteem shown by you, Messrs. <lb/>
Flanagan, Greene o, to our <lb/>
late craftsman, bespeaks a fact <lb/>
incontrovertible that for his j Only Two Democratic ex-Gov- <lb/>
needs a sympathetic <lb/>
hand, the guidance of an <lb/>
life. You and your <lb/>
gave this to John Q. <lb/>
Jackson, and his life was that of <lb/>
many In this Southern country, <lb/>
be of duty, <lb/>
we to tender yon by his <lb/>
j ledge a vote of sincere j ex-Governor <lb/>
Bran and ship stuff at Frank <lb/>
AYCOCK AND JARVIS <lb/>
Travel Together- <lb/>
The only two living Demo- <lb/>
I'd wanted to go. I con <lb/>
pone time ago. <lb/>
free. sot mo <lb/>
A Telephone <lb/>
your residence <lb/>
That's AB f <lb/>
For .-ates <lb/>
APPLY I ; <lb/>
and<lb/>
Dyspeptics <lb/>
If you are t-n fat it is your food <lb/>
turns to fat instead of muscle strength. <lb/>
If you are too lean tho fat producing food <lb/>
that you eat not properly and <lb/>
assimilated. <lb/>
Lean, thin, people do not <lb/>
Pepsin in tho stomach, while fat <lb/>
people have too much Pepsin and not <lb/>
Dyspepsia Cure <lb/>
contains all tho digestive juices that <lb/>
found in a healthy stomach, and ill <lb/>
those proportions necessary to <lb/>
enable the stomach and organ <lb/>
to digest and assimilate all foods that may <lb/>
be eaten. not only a <lb/>
but it is a tis- <lb/>
sue building tonic as well. cur <lb/>
Indigestion, Dyspepsia. Sour Stomach, <lb/>
Heartburn, Palpitation of the Heart and <lb/>
Constipation. You will like it <lb/>
Digests What You Eat <lb/>
Rests tho stomach, rebuilds th <lb/>
tissues and gives firm <lb/>
ft, M lb <lb/>
or SO cat <lb/>
at th, I <lb/>
me <lb/>
She showed Die her <lb/>
papers in hand, which <lb/>
she had worn for know ho <lb/>
long in n oil ilk bag <lb/>
never to use them. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
All claims against the <lb/>
partnership firm f Coward Wooten, <lb/>
which wherein on the <lb/>
19th day f 1907 <lb/>
lo the to P. <lb/>
it, i <lb/>
i rt of. no <lb/>
limn bum, m i-. l <lb/>
i; It <lb/>
i . .- <lb/>
v win V. Ill I <lb/>
um, yet <lb/>
. . had <lb/>
. . j <lb/>
; . i i q r <lb/>
. I j . -J <lb/>
M. Wooten, partner. <lb/>
within twelve months from the date of <lb/>
this notice. F. M. WOOTEN. <lb/>
Surviving partner of v <lb/>
Woolen. <lb/>
TI- . 1907. <lb/>
Got Foaled. <lb/>
literally coughing myself to <lb/>
and become to weak to leave <lb/>
my predicted I <lb/>
would r leave it alive; but they got <lb/>
fooled, be to God, I was In- <lb/>
l King's New Discovery. <lb/>
It took I it one dollar bottles t <lb/>
p poverty of completely cough and restore <lb/>
style. The dexterity -f w of-1 me I writes Mrs. <lb/>
ten i embroider n <lb/>
What the Cay. <lb/>
U always <lb/>
f r ho than for <lb/>
the manner in he lays it. <lb/>
orchestration <lb/>
Hi i com <lb/>
. i r <lb/>
I. .- <lb/>
hi ; ii i. n <lb/>
i., it . . id hi <lb/>
.- , I. .<lb/>
c. <lb/>
iterative <lb/>
J. W. BRYAN. <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN <lb/>
AT LAW. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Practices in State and Federal <lb/>
woven <lb/>
of choice cut rt <lb/>
era in attention patronage its <lb/>
kindly i of his <lb/>
Bull -to-k, Pol Winter . <lb/>
inK, <lb/>
. Shade trees<lb/>
Phone 149.1 W. P <lb/>
of North <lb/>
Carolina yesterday Raleigh <lb/>
or. the same car. <lb/>
B. and i <lb/>
Jarvis. Hi <lb/>
ti i <lb/>
II <lb/>
your business had been hero a day <lb/>
I and The Ranee- on an-l v <lb/>
kindly o <lb/>
th. <lb/>
C. H. W. M. i <lb/>
C M E J. W. f Com <lb/>
Raleigh, N. C. <lb/>
In <lb/>
their homes nM <lb/>
and Greenville, respectively. <lb/>
Raleigh Nows Mn <lb/>
And those two are the kind t . t c. <lb/>
who are the salt of the earth. <lb/>
Even <lb/>
their won- <lb/>
or <lb/>
-1<lb/>
i i .<lb/>
if , <lb/>
v red <lb/>
i . pa-<lb/>
ill Eve i or, i i <lb/>
in i,, , i ., <lb/>
t o., ind. n i <lb/>
cures, and he t <lb/>
is guarantee by <lb/>
gist. i. <lb/>
Stark <lb/>
X of cough cold <lb/>
and lungs. <lb/>
Drug- <lb/>
bottle <lb/>
JAMES L. FLEMING, <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Rising Crave. <lb/>
A prominent ct. A. <lb/>
K of i a, i a <lb/>
most <lb/>
i than three bottle at <lb/>
i. i <lb/>
from the grave. trouble u <lb/>
Diabetes singe <lb/>
Electric will cure me <lb/>
permanently, fur it. ha i pad <lb/>
. liver Compile <lb/>
which troubled me fur <lb/>
I Guaranteed at J, L. Wooten Druggist. <lb/>
Price only <lb/>
Hurry Marry Skinner. Jr. <lb/>
II. W. <lb/>
SKINNER WHEDBEE, <lb/>
LAWYERS Greenville, N. <lb/>
Practice in all <lb/>
Livery and <lb/>
Transfer <lb/>
fan furnish nice as <lb/>
all <lb/>
ii-, week <lb/>
or month.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019690_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
J M. Manager and Authorized Agent. <lb/>
. C. <lb/>
A- authorized cent tor Daily e Hardy and wife, of Greene <lb/>
lake county, are visiting at H- C. <lb/>
trip writing receipt <lb/>
. e<lb/>
this tab <lb/>
ON ROLL OF FAME. <lb/>
Mil Wax well Die far Little Children. <lb/>
Montreal, Que. Feb <lb/>
Maxwell and sixteen <lb/>
perished in a fire which <lb/>
this afternoon in the <lb/>
building of the <lb/>
School. The school was <lb/>
located in a brick two-story <lb/>
building in the east end of the <lb/>
u The pupils out at the graded <lb/>
school observed Washington's, <lb/>
birthday last Friday. and a by two <lb/>
speeches, and other whose parents are <lb/>
ENTRY VACANT LAND. <lb/>
Oliver Smith enters and <lb/>
claims acres more or less, of <lb/>
vacant land in Swift Creek <lb/>
LET <lb/>
THAT DOLLAR <lb/>
AROUND. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
From time to time we have in- <lb/>
Haddock corner side column that <lb/>
Isaac Mill's patent, up Long are few reasons, and Dec- <lb/>
b i oil. <lb/>
The lire started <lb/>
r I sources of amusement were very <lb/>
We an pleased t- learn that instructive and interesting. We <lb/>
J. A. who has been con are informed the occasion was <lb/>
fined to his room Tor sometime, very pleasant indeed. <lb/>
is to be out Mrs G F Marion left Friday <lb/>
If you are interested in Cook for High Point to join her <lb/>
.- I Heaters it will pay band, Mr. Marion, who is in bus- <lb/>
yon quality and prices there. <lb/>
that i n arc making H, Ormond left , <lb/>
Several from here expect to day to visit relatives at <lb/>
The teachers were <lb/>
and work of getting the <lb/>
ii out of the building be- <lb/>
an. The kindergarten depart- <lb/>
Isaac Mills patent, up Long are few reasons, and i <lb/>
Branch, adjoining the lands of them u <lb/>
Fred Haddock's and , pow any <lb/>
mans money should be idle <lb/>
This day of Feb. 1907. single day <lb/>
. Any person or persons claim who owe <lb/>
title to or interested in i . money they get to some <lb/>
described land must We insist again-and <lb/>
file their protest writing so only in the hope of <lb/>
Patrick<lb/>
in the Town of N. C <lb/>
withdrawing froS <lb/>
j St d H <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
i .-, <lb/>
lay And this is i-v . <lb/>
of persons <lb/>
what money <lb/>
I . <lb/>
AND SURGEON. <lb/>
Mock, H <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
B. Williams. <lb/>
Entry Taker <lb/>
at for several days <lb/>
next Tuesday even- Richard Wingate went to <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
has been something morel G. and Gideon <lb/>
than bales of cotton sold two well known traveling <lb/>
the mark t here this week. finer, spent Wednesday in town <lb/>
W. E. Ho ks l ft yesterday We are glad to know that Mr <lb/>
. , . , . hi act- <lb/>
his debts as fast as he can- <lb/>
One dollar properly <lb/>
ENTRY VACANT LAND. discharge ten one dollar <lb/>
George Washington Smith i n- every day; and this <lb/>
seated on the second and claims acres more o, makes it do the work of a ten <lb/>
was b re that loss land in <lb/>
occurred. The children j ten times A <lb/>
out <lb/>
is improving. <lb/>
The Odd Fellow and <lb/>
for <lb/>
For fresh and cheap goods go . <lb/>
to E. E. Co., they always lodges are in flourishing <lb/>
, , ill. i . t I, I ti . . J . <lb/>
nave the best. <lb/>
man Smith has accepted a <lb/>
posit,., with J. It- Turnage <lb/>
Co <lb/>
car loads of <lb/>
for which we will <lb/>
Day highest cash price. Don't <lb/>
ell before seeing us- Yours to <lb/>
serve. f. Lilly Co. <lb/>
There arc still some streets in <lb/>
that a little repair work <lb/>
upon them would not be very <lb/>
much OUt of <lb/>
Go to E E new <lb/>
market beef, fresh meats, <lb/>
Sausage and fresh <lb/>
with an entire <lb/>
new company and new plays will <lb/>
be here 13th and 14th. <lb/>
Merchandise Broker I carry <lb/>
a full line of Mint. Lard Can <lb/>
Don't buy before giving <lb/>
me a trial. Frank Lilly Co. <lb/>
If you d any Paint be sure <lb/>
and see E. E. D. Co <lb/>
The Disciple church <lb/>
dedicated first Sunday in April, <lb/>
Rev. C. v.- Howard, of Kinston, <lb/>
ii g the dedicatory <lb/>
; he church is a hand- <lb/>
some brick building and is a <lb/>
credit to our a <lb/>
friend and the community, <lb/>
k the debate at the <lb/>
Sen st Wednesday even- <lb/>
, We are <lb/>
v. ho w re present <lb/>
i . a high order and <lb/>
. . ch credit upon the <lb/>
. . pi d, as <lb/>
we'll the faculty of this<lb/>
U. . , of Greenville, <lb/>
J. R Turnage has been to <lb/>
Nov. i this week on a visit <lb/>
conditions, they have to do <lb/>
at every meeting. <lb/>
I have bought the entire <lb/>
business of Taylor <lb/>
and respectfully solicit the pat- <lb/>
of the public. C. E. <lb/>
Moore is at home from <lb/>
Oxford on a visit to his family. <lb/>
II L. Sauls, of Fremont, came <lb/>
Monday to visit his brother, M- <lb/>
M. Sauls. <lb/>
W, E. Hooks returned from <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
Watches, clocks and anything <lb/>
needing attention in <lb/>
will to in the very <lb/>
and latest style C. E <lb/>
Spier. <lb/>
Mr.-. B, E. received a <lb/>
telegram yesterday morning an- <lb/>
the serious of <lb/>
her daughter, at <lb/>
Monroe. <lb/>
I all work entrusted <lb/>
to my care to give entire <lb/>
faction, me. C. E. Spier. <lb/>
Sheriff L W. Tucker of <lb/>
Washington Mills. Sallie Cox, W. <lb/>
ii. Haddock and others. <lb/>
Washington Smith <lb/>
This 23rd of Feb. 1907. <lb/>
the Ian ling found the <lb/>
lower hall full of smoke. Into <lb/>
this they refused to descend, <lb/>
though the this time was <lb/>
Huddled together on <lb/>
the stairway at first they re- <lb/>
treated to the rooms from which <lb/>
I hey had come. When lire. <lb/>
men arrived an ext ladder <lb/>
was placed in position and a <lb/>
large number of children were <lb/>
rescued in this way u. <lb/>
. . . . m things to do when <lb/>
Assisting In the work -Mis.-, you are down and out is to <lb/>
Maxwell. The lire by this come in. <lb/>
was making its way upwards, Probably one reason why mis- <lb/>
and the smoke was growing so loves company it because it <lb/>
dense that even the experienced ls no drink alone. <lb/>
fireman not stand it. Cap- <lb/>
and then C can <lb/>
pay and s, the circle <lb/>
winch a dollar may make in one <lb/>
Any person or claim- X If <lb/>
interest in the fol- ;, State would <lb/>
lowing described land must file J principle one year <lb/>
their protest in writing financial of our <lb/>
-m V or <lb/>
they . HI be barred by law ; Put your dollar on the rounds at <lb/>
j . to best.- <lb/>
Scotland Neck Commonwealth. <lb/>
Feed lid Livery <lb/>
Nice <lb/>
to mil the tint <lb/>
AYDEN, N. C <lb/>
TRIPP, HART m. <lb/>
H. <lb/>
in- Dry No- <lb/>
and <lb/>
etc <lb/>
Prices to suit the times. <lb/>
Hart Co <lb/>
OF <lb/>
Carson endeavored to get <lb/>
Miss Maxwell to go down the <lb/>
ladder but she refused and <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
to Creditor. <lb/>
she was found lying on <lb/>
the floor with a little ones beside <lb/>
he. All those who perished <lb/>
died from asphyxiation. <lb/>
I building was unprovided <lb/>
with lire escapes, <lb/>
Greenville, has been i. our town <lb/>
luring the week <lb/>
Will Alexander tried his darn <lb/>
to kick up the entire cement <lb/>
walk in front of the drug store <lb/>
Saturday morning and it was all <lb/>
Miss Daisy of Richmond, <lb/>
Becomes Bride of Rev. A. T. <lb/>
t m or recovery. <lb/>
This 7th, <lb/>
Willis Dixon, <lb/>
If P n toward. <lb/>
ltd rt w N- <lb/>
NORTH ; <lb/>
fry of put, <lb/>
I J Ii. ti. I., <lb/>
U m U . h ,, <lb/>
H HI, cashier.<lb/>
if Wilmington. <lb/>
TI wedding of Daisy <lb/>
Hancock, daughter of Mr. W T. <lb/>
Hancock, of North Twenty <lb/>
ninth street to the Rev <lb/>
N; C but more , <lb/>
city, took place quietly at o'clock <lb/>
he patronage of the afternoon in the home <lb/>
bride the Rev. Calving. <lb/>
. , ;, <lb/>
Notary lei <lb/>
up. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
it -on in <lb/>
to in . <lb/>
F. went to Hookerton <lb/>
and Hill Tuesday on <lb/>
to <lb/>
is firm and he informs <lb/>
hi d . trip His <lb/>
is a good firm and n for- <lb/>
to the point as one of the <lb/>
best b houses in our <lb/>
town. <lb/>
W. has moved his <lb/>
; to the house former <lb/>
w . S. II <lb/>
. re <lb/>
having a banquet sometime In <lb/>
April A big time is in view Ii <lb/>
first year of the or- <lb/>
. The order has <lb/>
and is <lb/>
with only nine <lb/>
. h <lb/>
re <lb/>
the w <lb/>
the om. unity. <lb/>
w exchange corn <lb/>
I Lean, Healthy Shoats <lb/>
to pound. <lb/>
If preferred I will pay cash mark- <lb/>
et for same W. A. Harden, <lb/>
ltd Ayden. N. <lb/>
K. W. -Smith went to Green-1 <lb/>
vi Thursday. <lb/>
It. vi. president of <lb/>
thy Music of <lb/>
Tennessee, has been spending a <lb/>
pertaining to the <lb/>
. business Give me a <lb/>
. , CB Spier. <lb/>
I . and Miss <lb/>
Anna Belle Kim-ell spent <lb/>
and Sunday at H. <lb/>
n the country. <lb/>
cons cotton <lb/>
F Lilly Co <lb/>
H, -M Sauls has the finest and <lb/>
r supply of Fountain Pens <lb/>
ever brought to Ayden. <lb/>
Owing to the inclemency of <lb/>
the weather Rev W-K. Cox was <lb/>
regular services <lb/>
in Hi i Episcopal church here <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
For the first time in a long <lb/>
while there are one or two <lb/>
cant residence in Ayden. <lb/>
Rev. Mr. a <lb/>
minister will preach in <lb/>
nary Ba church here next <lb/>
night. <lb/>
Mrs. W. J. Jackson after a <lb/>
visit to her son, w. C. <lb/>
Jackson, has returned to <lb/>
home in the country. <lb/>
Stancill Hodges and wife were <lb/>
on a visit to relatives In Beau- <lb/>
fort county last Saturday. <lb/>
Miss Louise Fleming Of House, <lb/>
spent tin with Miss <lb/>
Lee Nichols, <lb/>
In to a telegram Sat- <lb/>
announcing the death of <lb/>
an aunt in Nashville Miss Nannie <lb/>
Nichols left Saturday morning <lb/>
for that place to be present at <lb/>
the funeral. <lb/>
Blackwell, of the First Baptist <lb/>
church. No Va., <lb/>
The announcement of mar <lb/>
c mes in the nature of a <lb/>
i. many friends of <lb/>
bride, who is prominent in <lb/>
i. a <lb/>
Mr. King, who is now engaged <lb/>
in educational work, was, before <lb/>
he took it up, pastor of Fairmont i <lb/>
Baptist church, He took his <lb/>
degree Richmond <lb/>
college, and also the master of I <lb/>
theology degree at Southern <lb/>
Baptist logical seminary In <lb/>
Lou Ky,, and now pas- <lb/>
tor of <lb/>
ea in King a <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs King, alter <lb/>
return from a trip, <lb/>
be at home at M Nona Twenty <lb/>
th street Richmond <lb/>
he most will be <lb/>
pleased with one of those <lb/>
Pens at Saul's. and <lb/>
see. <lb/>
pens on Saul's <lb/>
drug store at to <lb/>
It is a delight and a pleasure <lb/>
to say the <lb/>
in having a first d <lb/>
Call at Drug <lb/>
this much need <lb/>
id article. <lb/>
Fountain Pens with any and <lb/>
size points for sale at <lb/>
Sauls Drugstore. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION <lb/>
-----OF---- <lb/>
THE BANK Or FARMVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
J H.<lb/>
Loans and Discounts Stock paid in <lb/>
alts Secured Fund <lb/>
. I. <lb/>
Unsecured <lb/>
profits <lb/>
g g <lb/>
H o <lb/>
I- <lb/>
.------M <lb/>
Fixtures Deposit <lb/>
from Hanks 84,515.42 subject to check <lb/>
ash Items <lb/>
Gold Coin <lb/>
Silver Coin<lb/>
2,713.79 <lb/>
State of North Carolina, <lb/>
County of Pitt. f <lb/>
w the bank, do <lb/>
ti true to the beat of my <lb/>
and belief. j. K. DAVIS, Cashier <lb/>
and sworn to be. <lb/>
fore me, this day of Feb <lb/>
J. V. JOHNSTON. <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
B. L. , S, <lb/>
BETHEL BANKING AND TRUST COMPANY <lb/>
AT N. O, <lb/>
the of business Jan. 1907. <lb/>
Call at the Drug and <lb/>
cure one of those excellent <lb/>
Pens.- M. M, Sauls. <lb/>
All sizes and reasonable prices <lb/>
Misses Grimes, Blanche <lb/>
Mayo. Elizabeth Jones and Ber- <lb/>
came over from <lb/>
Tuesday evening toad <lb/>
I he and were <lb/>
Tennessee, been spent a prices  were <lb/>
the past week in Ayden <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
from <lb/>
Bankers <lb/>
Cash Items <lb/>
Gold coin. i <lb/>
bank V <lb/>
ii id other U. S. notes <lb/>
Total <lb/>
LIABILITIES,<lb/>
profits <lb/>
KIN <lb/>
Time <lb/>
deposit o CD <lb/>
subj, to chock <lb/>
a is out- <lb/>
or <lb/>
Total <lb/>
State of North Carolina, Pitt <lb/>
I. H of tho ., i u , , <lb/>
wear that the above statement , T <lb/>
edge and belief. beat of my <lb/>
H. Cashier <lb/>
BLOUNT<lb/>
Votary <lb/>
I GRIMES <lb/>
.-T. STATION, <lb/>
Director <lb/>
DEFLECTOR <lb/>
D. i. W Owner. <lb/>
in to<lb/>
VOL. Mo. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY. MARCH <lb/>
NO <lb/>
THE FOR <lb/>
EASTERN SCHOOL <lb/>
C, March 5th. <lb/>
be of Eastern training <lb/>
mum <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
Hid Murder <lb/>
Oakley, N- C. March <lb/>
P. S. of Robersonville, <lb/>
Two were hanged in was with us last Sunday. <lb/>
F bra -y at Farmville, Va., Section went to <lb/>
, One of these, Washington Saturday. <lb/>
of North Carolina, I wish toM gone <lb/>
of a number of burglaries he had <lb/>
A REVIEW OF WORK. I CHIEF <lb/>
I LIVES, f PASSED AMID <lb/>
to nay a few words. <lb/>
more needed at this time <lb/>
than a training school in our <lb/>
own locality. Every citizen <lb/>
in this part of State <lb/>
ought to become thoroughly <lb/>
aroused and enthusiastic and <lb/>
help support B <lb/>
good mean <lb/>
the and uplifting of <lb/>
every one of its citizens. Our <lb/>
people do not want to be the <lb/>
illiterate class of people in <lb/>
the State, in order to <lb/>
vent this, we must fight faith- <lb/>
fully for our as our fore- <lb/>
lathers did in g our <lb/>
Education of the children <lb/>
so badly n today There <lb/>
are two great reasons for <lb/>
The tee make <lb/>
mistake in teacher <lb/>
from part of the State <lb/>
or perhaps another State, whose <lb/>
chief object is to teach for <lb/>
not that she has <lb/>
the slightest interest in <lb/>
child, or even tries to pro note or <lb/>
advance the child; thus, this is <lb/>
one great reason we <lb/>
need an Eastern training school, <lb/>
s that we may educate our o . n <lb/>
girls who understand and who <lb/>
are in sympathy with the child. <lb/>
2nd. Another reason that the <lb/>
child doesn't advance as rap- <lb/>
idly as he should, -o doesn't re- <lb/>
th. proper encouragement <lb/>
from the parents. Parents, you <lb/>
who read this, think of it in- <lb/>
quire about your children, <lb/>
fest some Interest, and you will <lb/>
great and marked <lb/>
So many of our citizen enter- <lb/>
th wrong idea concerning <lb/>
our training The object <lb/>
of this school is not to i age <lb/>
any other school, nor by any <lb/>
means to damage the grand and <lb/>
noble work of Dr. Charles <lb/>
Iver, memory w II ever <lb/>
be loved and cherished, but it is <lb/>
for this; to train and to educate <lb/>
properly and thoroughly our <lb/>
own girls. <lb/>
So many of our are <lb/>
greatly annoyed and troubled in <lb/>
securing their teachers. Why is <lb/>
this Because many of our girls <lb/>
who are anxious to teach, are <lb/>
not competent. Quite naturally <lb/>
those living nearest colleges <lb/>
have the best advantages, and <lb/>
are more in demand. Feeling <lb/>
their importance, they flatly re- <lb/>
fuse to come East, saying that <lb/>
our climate is unhealthful, thus <lb/>
if we had a training school of our <lb/>
own; we should be independent, <lb/>
and could furnish our own <lb/>
who are anxious, ambitious <lb/>
and competent. It is now to the <lb/>
every citizen of North <lb/>
Carolina, as well as Eastern Car- <lb/>
to become interested, and <lb/>
educate your children, as the day <lb/>
is now at hand when a person is <lb/>
judged and valued what he <lb/>
knows, and not by what he is <lb/>
worth, and it should be constant- <lb/>
borne in mind that the child- <lb/>
bis covering <lb/>
portions of West Virginia, <lb/>
and North Carol a. <lb/>
Among North Carolina towns <lb/>
mentioned he said he broke in <lb/>
four at Ayden. While <lb/>
lie did not mention Greenville. <lb/>
hi might have been the same <lb/>
party a burglary <lb/>
in this town, as it is recalled that <lb/>
a house was broken into here a <lb/>
few nights after the burglaries <lb/>
in Ayden. This was followed <lb/>
by reported burglaries at points <lb/>
above here, indicating that the <lb/>
of them was moving <lb/>
up the railroad Robersonville. <lb/>
Williamston, Tarboro. Enfield, <lb/>
Halifax and Weldon and other <lb/>
places were named by Ruffin as <lb/>
towns where he had broken in <lb/>
house.--, and alter leaving this <lb/>
road he visited towns between <lb/>
Weldon and Durham. <lb/>
Uncle Salary. <lb/>
The National Magazine under <lb/>
a title of Sam's <lb/>
salary of the president, <lb/>
vice president and entire cabinet <lb/>
for the year is collected from the <lb/>
beer drinkers in one day. <lb/>
January 1st the <lb/>
smokers of cigars and cigarette <lb/>
have provided for the salary of <lb/>
the supreme court of the United <lb/>
States, for the ensuing year. <lb/>
snuff consumers <lb/>
the public health and marine <lb/>
hospital service. <lb/>
tax on oleomargarine <lb/>
and renovated butter pays the <lb/>
expenses of th. national <lb/>
I homes. <lb/>
players West <lb/>
Point military <lb/>
tax on same <lb/>
es paid percent of the Span<lb/>
MORE GOOD NEWS. <lb/>
Bill Passes House Unanimously. <lb/>
The following telegram re- <lb/>
here a little past noon <lb/>
today, brought more good news <lb/>
to the people interested in the <lb/>
training school for teachers in <lb/>
E stern North <lb/>
Raleigh, N, C, March <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Greenville, N- C <lb/>
within last five minutes school <lb/>
bill passed third reading in house <lb/>
unanimously. <lb/>
Alex L. Blow. <lb/>
Nothing else is looked for now <lb/>
but for the senate pass <lb/>
the bill, and then the school is a <lb/>
certainty. <lb/>
Did you ever notice that the <lb/>
colder it gets the more inclined <lb/>
is the door to stay open <lb/>
more for its progress than the <lb/>
people of surrounding <lb/>
counties. Those of you who have <lb/>
daughters whom you are con- <lb/>
J L. Corey and wife, of Keels- <lb/>
spent Sunday here with Mr- <lb/>
and Mrs. J O. Williams. <lb/>
J. R Williams spent <lb/>
and Sunday at <lb/>
The basket party last <lb/>
week for the church was a <lb/>
all denominations taking <lb/>
part, and baskets was pretty <lb/>
boys bid lively, and all en- <lb/>
joyed it very much, ail <lb/>
well pleased by having spent a <lb/>
delightful evening and helped a <lb/>
noble cause <lb/>
Rev. J. D. Bryant his <lb/>
Sunday p. m to a <lb/>
crowded congregation. He <lb/>
preached an eloquent i. <lb/>
We are glad to state that W <lb/>
E. Homing, several weeks <lb/>
of sickness, to be out <lb/>
Miss Mary Taylor visited at <lb/>
many from <lb/>
ville Stokes Sunday to <lb/>
church. <lb/>
The weather is delightful; our <lb/>
farmers are putting in good time <lb/>
tilling the soil and planting <lb/>
A. Hare <lb/>
Did you ever hear anything <lb/>
like this Does it tit your case <lb/>
If so, there is f r improve-<lb/>
When does your Lodge <lb/>
don't <lb/>
are your <lb/>
don't <lb/>
many have <lb/>
don't <lb/>
petitions before tie <lb/>
Lodge <lb/>
don't <lb/>
your Lodge in a good <lb/>
don't <lb/>
your your in a <lb/>
financial <lb/>
much are your annual <lb/>
dues to the <lb/>
T don't <lb/>
are your duties as a <lb/>
M don't <lb/>
you suspended for non- <lb/>
payment of dues, or are they <lb/>
paid in <lb/>
don't <lb/>
induced you to become <lb/>
don't <lb/>
are you to a <lb/>
Appropriation During Short Session <lb/>
Approximate a Billion Dollars. <lb/>
Washington, 4.-More <lb/>
money has been appropriated <lb/>
during the short session of the <lb/>
digress, which pa- <lb/>
at today th . during <lb/>
any previous session <lb/>
mount, as near as can be <lb/>
mated, approximates a billion <lb/>
battleships were <lb/>
for th navy and <lb/>
corps of th- army was <lb/>
reorganized and enlarged A <lb/>
service was <lb/>
granted to the <lb/>
can and civil and like <lb/>
provision was made for army condition. <lb/>
nurses. For riv r and barb <lb/>
improvements the appropriation- <lb/>
aggregate <lb/>
Increased were . <lb/>
r. vie pr <lb/>
dent and t h . <lb/>
I of Hot ,.,, Bill. <lb/>
March Th. -a <lb/>
o Police and Officer I from the N. <lb/>
who were . h rep-r .- <lb/>
night by th h -the <lb/>
Com Walker, at the tun- that Assembly on Tuesday <lb/>
,. m <lb/>
resisting the of h . training <lb/>
contraband r, a o <lb/>
Hospital in a Ph house went into consider. <lb/>
precarious condition, really a i,,; <lb/>
between life and death. <lb/>
The attending <lb/>
to hold out much hope for <lb/>
t recovery of of t i <lb/>
wounded man, it will <lb/>
a be th can <lb/>
i opinion of th <lb/>
providing for <lb/>
the <lb/>
if <lb/>
in it r i Car- <lb/>
o I <lb/>
Bl it, the <lb/>
I. it w s a <lb/>
b intro- <lb/>
. c I rec .-d the <lb/>
arrest of Walker, the m support senate <lb/>
at Dunn last night about house , j <lb/>
effected by and had received the <lb/>
K. endorsement of the senate <lb/>
Smith <lb/>
M L. n . n <lb/>
I Ill u <lb/>
house of representatives Atlantic Ca <lb/>
its members, ambassadors, <lb/>
ministers and <lb/>
office clerks and <lb/>
The public made . <lb/>
i f <lb/>
i i Line in search <lb/>
had heat his <lb/>
s committees on <lb/>
u but a small <lb/>
a pr but in other re <lb/>
ts, was of the <lb/>
him. <lb/>
. pas- i freight f. hit had passed the <lb/>
r an ticket for <lb/>
. i j Inquires in b , ; <lb/>
fir information from the Mr Smith <lb/>
in <lb/>
Trowel. <lb/>
knows. <lb/>
to educate for <lb/>
of day will make the men j prepare to send them to the <lb/>
and women of tomorrow- As our training school. and <lb/>
so will our State be. <lb/>
In order to enjoy good govern- <lb/>
and prosperity the <lb/>
of each and <lb/>
should be <lb/>
considered. <lb/>
become interested and remember <lb/>
you are living in a wonderful age <lb/>
prosperity. Those of you who <lb/>
child; haven't thought to this matter in <lb/>
noticed and the proper light, consider it care- <lb/>
fully, and although your <lb/>
It is my earnest desire, that an may have been scant and <lb/>
Eastern training school may be limited ought to make you <lb/>
established at an early and the more anxious about <lb/>
that Greenville may be the for children, realizing the time is at <lb/>
town. No people will be hand when a good, thorough,<lb/>
more t tn i o <lb/>
id no <lb/>
when a <lb/>
i-e. <lb/>
Will a merchant who is wise <lb/>
ever cease to advertise Yes <lb/>
when the grow upside <lb/>
down; when the beggar wears a <lb/>
crown; when ice forms on the <lb/>
sun, when the sparrow weighs a <lb/>
ton; when gold dollars get too <lb/>
cheap; when women s <lb/>
keep; when a fish forgets to swim; <lb/>
when Satan sings a hymn; when <lb/>
girls go I on gum; when the <lb/>
small boy hates a drum; when <lb/>
no politician schemes; when <lb/>
mince p e makes pleasant dreams; <lb/>
when it's fun to break a tooth; <lb/>
when all lawyers tell the truth; <lb/>
when cold water makes you <lb/>
drunk; when you love to smell a <lb/>
skunk; when the drummer has <lb/>
no these things all <lb/>
come to pass; then man that's <lb/>
wise will neglect to advertise- <lb/>
rooms of congress regard- <lb/>
the ship subsidy the <lb/>
currency measure and the bill <lb/>
the hours of <lb/>
than any other pend- <lb/>
legislation Ship subsidy <lb/>
lied hard in the lat hours. <lb/>
other two measures became laws <lb/>
as the session closed <lb/>
The immigration bill, one of <lb/>
the measures over <lb/>
the long session, was completed <lb/>
under the spur of t u president <lb/>
he might t the a <lb/>
Japanese .- by riving the <lb/>
imp . u. ti y <lb/>
The r the ad- <lb/>
mission o lie .- to the country. <lb/>
A for the <lb/>
of an a- <lb/>
bank in the The free alcohol law la t <lb/>
session was modified lac <lb/>
distill the waste pr C- <lb/>
of the farm to be debar, v d <lb/>
and d for arts science. <lb/>
The right of. appeal <lb/>
cases was th gov- <lb/>
a measure I to <lb/>
strengthen tie anti-trust <lb/>
by affording a <lb/>
whereby the Supreme court <lb/>
pi.-s upon the constitutionality <lb/>
and construction of such laws. <lb/>
An investigation was author- <lb/>
regarding the condition of <lb/>
women and child workers. <lb/>
The inter State commerce <lb/>
commerce commission was <lb/>
to ascertain if the ex- <lb/>
press companies of the <lb/>
country <lb/>
road rate law of last <lb/>
by selling and <lb/>
handling on consignment fruit, <lb/>
vegetables and oysters. <lb/>
Reed Smoot was retained by <lb/>
the senate as a senator from <lb/>
Utah, ending a four con- <lb/>
The senate ratified treaties <lb/>
with Santo Domingo and <lb/>
The president was <lb/>
to use his good offices to <lb/>
prevent atrocities in the Congo. <lb/>
The sen also launch d an <lb/>
exhaustive investigation of the <lb/>
affray.<lb/>
him with a re- <lb/>
Walker had shaved off <lb/>
in a . <lb/>
The bid the endorsement <lb/>
f the governor, t.-e council of <lb/>
state the superintendent of <lb/>
his mustache and his face blacked.; instruction, and <lb/>
He was taken in charge <lb/>
Sheriff Watson, of this county, <lb/>
and J. B. of Fay- <lb/>
an t <lb/>
for safe keeping- <lb/>
Excitement was intense <lb/>
all night, but all is quiet today. <lb/>
Puzzle .- Clerks. <lb/>
Cleverness is one of the <lb/>
necessary for every man <lb/>
who is employed in <lb/>
for he meets with <lb/>
kinds of freaks in the shape <lb/>
letters peculiarly addressed. <lb/>
jokers appear to think <lb/>
I that all the postal clerk has to do <lb/>
i; to solve ea <lb/>
Recently at the Boston office <lb/>
received ed <lb/>
with a line <lb/>
drawn under the <lb/>
over the The letter <lb/>
i went out the same day it was re- <lb/>
and reached Mark Under- <lb/>
id, Andover, for whom <lb/>
j it was intended, and the postal <lb/>
who solved the riddle did <lb/>
not he had done anything <lb/>
brilliant. It was all in his day's <lb/>
work. Boston Journal. <lb/>
Heartily Endorsed. <lb/>
With all heartiness The <lb/>
commends to the people of <lb/>
the State the Richardson Trio, of <lb/>
Charlotte, which is about enter- <lb/>
e a tour- composed <lb/>
of a delightful of gentle- <lb/>
men, with Prof. Don A. Richard- <lb/>
son at its head, and will not fail <lb/>
to entertain any audience which <lb/>
how to appreciate music. <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
Greenville is to have the pleas- <lb/>
of hearing the Richardson <lb/>
Trio in Masonic Temple opera <lb/>
house Thursday night, March <lb/>
25th. <lb/>
he act- <lb/>
i president of the State nor- <lb/>
c at Greens <lb/>
Mr Blount d the bill on <lb/>
ii; ground that the establish- <lb/>
of a training school in the <lb/>
east might damage the Greens <lb/>
b school, and several is- <lb/>
normal graduates in his <lb/>
e u bed written him and <lb/>
u g id that he opposed the b ii. <lb/>
Blount further explain d <lb/>
t at tho bill hid the cordial <lb/>
of if me <lb/>
was so drawn i ti r i <lb/>
all parties, . <lb/>
not central G ire. <lb/>
Tho bill pas- , i . <lb/>
by an i -on r <lb/>
i third re <lb/>
.,.;,. <lb/>
Mr. . of All <lb/>
i the bill j,, <lb/>
said the -of east <lb/>
were to it. had <lb/>
always and far in <lb/>
supporting <lb/>
and all parties had agree . n <lb/>
bill. Mr, of l <lb/>
the I ill and said he <lb/>
hoped it would pass without a <lb/>
dissenting Mr. Remedy, <lb/>
of Sampson, also spoke for the <lb/>
nil, and Mr. Dilling, of Gaston, <lb/>
in urging it said it ought to pass <lb/>
the house unanimously. Messrs. <lb/>
Haywood, and <lb/>
Swam, supported the <lb/>
bill, Mr. down <lb/>
the House by he stood <lb/>
read- <lb/>
us <lb/>
ah <lb/>
Kill <lb/>
at S. M. <lb/>
The kickers on the farm are <lb/>
not so hard to get along with as <lb/>
the kickers in town. On the <lb/>
farm there is the kicking cow, <lb/>
and our long eared friend, the <lb/>
mule, while in town there is the <lb/>
old mossback who wants all the <lb/>
municipal improvements without <lb/>
paying for them. The cow may <lb/>
be sold for beef, the mule traded <lb/>
o r-u-, hut but a <lb/>
f I rid of she Kicker, j <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
What is Love <lb/>
Ask not of me. Love what is <lb/>
Ask what is good above; <lb/>
Ask of the great sun what is <lb/>
light; <lb/>
flat footed for and was going <lb/>
to vote himself u for <lb/>
it. for the west aim t had it all, <lb/>
and he thought it was time the <lb/>
east was getting a little bit. <lb/>
Mr Stephens withdrew de- <lb/>
for a i- and the bill <lb/>
passed its third reading almost <lb/>
unanimously, amid loud applause <lb/>
and hand slapping. <lb/>
Cm Write OB Post Cards. <lb/>
By an order the <lb/>
issued a . months <lb/>
go, and which into <lb/>
rt M Is . cards <lb/>
are at liberty to Bend a written <lb/>
on the left half of the <lb/>
front, tin- right half being re- <lb/>
served instead of the whole face <lb/>
of the card the address <lb/>
This may done on any <lb/>
Ask what is darkness of card, whether it be one of <lb/>
night; the old which bears <lb/>
Ask sin of what may be forgiven;, notice side for the address <lb/>
or not; and without the <lb/>
Ask what is happiness of heaven j <lb/>
Ask what is folly of the crowd; <lb/>
Ask what is fashion of the <lb/>
shroud; <lb/>
Ask what is sweetness of thy <lb/>
kiss; <lb/>
Ask of thyself what beauty is.<lb/>
prepayment of anything more <lb/>
than the rate applicable to post- <lb/>
cards, which is one cent within <lb/>
the United States or its island <lb/>
possessions, and Panama, Cuba, <lb/>
Canada and Mexico, and for <lb/>
other counties two <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>