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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
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<p>
I J <lb/>
mm <lb/>
. .- . I. I . <lb/>
Complete In All Details. <lb/>
BEAUTIFUL COLONIAL CITY. <lb/>
Come In and examine my <lb/>
CORN PLANTERS, GUANO SOWERS, DISC <lb/>
. . . . ONE <lb/>
FARM OR GARDEN AND MOW- <lb/>
MACHINES. <lb/>
HIS CHANCE IN LIFE <lb/>
Showing on What a <lb/>
Ha.- f at, May Han. <lb/>
if . <lb/>
A Dreamland to Visitor. <lb/>
In tho Matter of Features <lb/>
Jamestown Leads Ail Other <lb/>
and Navy Display, <lb/>
Never before in the history of <lb/>
baa there been I.-, an <lb/>
with c. v nines <lb/>
Jamestown Tercentennial now <lb/>
In on the historic whiten of <lb/>
Hampton Road. The Tercentennial la <lb/>
now ill all f Its and <lb/>
to the visitor a veritable <lb/>
he Immense exhibit pal- <lb/>
aces, and E building, <lb/>
all or <lb/>
m I off with the most <lb/>
trees foliage, to this <lb/>
an distinct from <lb/>
all of <lb/>
ii n h ii ; e by either boat <lb/>
or t ire v. <lb/>
where to the <lb/>
-.-m; army, and Jamestown la- <lb/>
in v- if v, ;.,,. <lb/>
now . the of <lb/>
rob across <lb/>
t I m are I at- <lb/>
. Una- <lb/>
we roost <lb/>
tar-l -y II , Atlantic <lb/>
v , . .,. .-.,, <lb/>
of most pi -tic. <lb/>
,. .-i in <lb/>
if trio Ii lore it <lb/>
f. to the <lb/>
in. it <lb/>
orate, -ii- anniversary <lb/>
of i i. <lb/>
Ins . the most <lb/>
h. t n tin o of mod- <lb/>
Your <lb/>
e, <lb/>
beg leave to an that we are <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
for <lb/>
White Lead, Paints <lb/>
and an <lb/>
v. Ready nixed Paints.<lb/>
f . <lb/>
tao<lb/>
Bear <lb/>
Ii;<lb/>
.- <lb/>
I . <lb/>
-v.<lb/>
v. T tills <lb/>
n .; spec- <lb/>
North <lb/>
r the i hi ml of <lb/>
-will n In<lb/>
. -st <lb/>
I.,. in There <lb/>
.- Hi rummer <lb/>
in of-v i III <lb/>
I'm mi . Is well <lb/>
i y Ii of <lb/>
i I be on <lb/>
one of the and <lb/>
i In <lb/>
. . on a <lb/>
ii I . <lb/>
of Mate Infantry, <lb/>
so.- of Twelfth Unit- <lb/>
ed Stub s cavalry and battery of <lb/>
Id artillery. Several <lb/>
nail of <lb/>
i i- s military <lb/>
organizations, are on- <lb/>
t from time to <lb/>
of them <lb/>
own which, lo- <lb/>
s a continual <lb/>
There is no line in the world better <lb/>
e n lire. It has behind it a century <lb/>
for honorable wares and<lb/>
use the Harrison Paints you need <lb/>
worry quality. <lb/>
i- you favor us with your <lb/>
whenever you want good paint tor any <lb/>
i-. Have a car load and <lb/>
will give Special Price. <lb/>
Baker Hart <lb/>
lie <lb/>
r- <lb/>
nap<lb/>
t- <lb/>
Th<lb/>
one i <lb/>
and . <lb/>
time. <lb/>
I i <lb/>
v. the <lb/>
. Tho I housed In <lb/>
four sir- mi water <lb/>
from of Hit- exposition, i one <lb/>
of n .-i <lb/>
. of ii., f <lb/>
arm of II i- <lb/>
ever The Individual <lb/>
. in for i <lb/>
lie i in and <lb/>
co-. . and have <lb/>
to at <lb/>
he I while <lb/>
every stale Is represented exhibit <lb/>
e industrial <lb/>
Tl. I on <lb/>
n . from <lb/>
the i . v. . rest <lb/>
an <lb/>
in be of n might <lb/>
Hi front <lb/>
u treat . a of <lb/>
and K-ho. <lb/>
ct <lb/>
North Carolina, Pitt county <lb/>
the r court term 1907. <lb/>
J. L. A. <lb/>
Vs <lb/>
K. K. A. H. and the <lb/>
Bank of <lb/>
The K. K. <lb/>
i r i the Bank of Lauderdale, in <lb/>
action will take notice <lb/>
n in <lb/>
county <lb/>
led . action is <lb/>
brought by a <lb/>
which will <lb/>
set out and described In the complain <lb/>
on real <lb/>
in the stale North Carolina <lb/>
And defendant will further <lb/>
take notice that they are requested to <lb/>
next torn, superior <lb/>
Pitt county, to b- on the <lb/>
2nd Monday before the 1st Monday <lb/>
r, it being the 19th of Au- <lb/>
in court House in said <lb/>
county, in Greenville, North Carolina, <lb/>
and answer or demur to the complaint <lb/>
in . id Action, or tin plaintiff will <lb/>
ply court the relief demand- <lb/>
ed in said complaint. <lb/>
the day of 1907. <lb/>
D. C, Moore, <lb/>
superior fount <lb/>
A Which Failed. <lb/>
of <lb/>
is i r.;. .<lb/>
not realize it. <lb/>
of a <lb/>
net. who strong <lb/>
t raj yellow streak <lb/>
felt one day about twenty years ago <lb/>
n Pan Francisco. <lb/>
stood outside of a restaurant <lb/>
without a dime, but was <lb/>
hi an optical toast, gazing at the <lb/>
of good things, garnished <lb/>
ind altogether lovely, in the win- <lb/>
low of shop. The song. <lb/>
r. rather, its refrain, Art So <lb/>
Hear and So was whisper <lb/>
J to me the gaunt brownie of <lb/>
lunger. Then a prosperous <lb/>
who was flipping a half <lb/>
in his hand dropped the coin, which <lb/>
an iron grate and <lb/>
fell into tho below. <lb/>
man g i o an almost <lb/>
in direction the <lb/>
coin had then walked <lb/>
hamming popular tune. <lb/>
was determined to have <lb/>
Tho occasion was one of those <lb/>
spoken of as a <lb/>
hog case. I was out of meat, also <lb/>
bread, needed that half dollar <lb/>
in my business, <lb/>
spoke lo proprietor of the j <lb/>
place, told him that had dropped <lb/>
five dollar through the <lb/>
and naked if might go and <lb/>
j retrieve i. <lb/>
I he raid, and he gave <lb/>
me a with which might re- <lb/>
move a wooden bar that had been <lb/>
nailed across a door leading from <lb/>
tho basement lo tho opening under <lb/>
the grate. <lb/>
was much litter and dust <lb/>
down there, and. scratching for the <lb/>
lost coin. I found many others that <lb/>
had been in a similar way. Thus <lb/>
cleaned up from the prospect <lb/>
amount supplied mo <lb/>
With o ll I could <lb/>
my also I <lb/>
gave mo entry to a clean shirt I <lb/>
ind a proportionate supply of self <lb/>
respect . reliance. visited <lb/>
of and ion e that <lb/>
I had been <lb/>
lo in the immediate <lb/>
I have not been <lb/>
I insolvent that dale. <lb/>
Thus yo i may see on what Blender <lb/>
thread oft hangs a chance in <lb/>
New York Tribune, <lb/>
DEPARTMENT <lb/>
This Department is in charge R. Parker who is <lb/>
in mix <lb/>
e r. <lb/>
DOINGS AROUND FARMVILLE. <lb/>
ti mi- <lb/>
lords. <lb/>
ages e <lb/>
crop <lb/>
they had <lb/>
point <lb/>
and I <lb/>
an <lb/>
no- <lb/>
held <lb/>
rights of <lb/>
d lo for the dam- <lb/>
by his deer to the turnip <lb/>
f nor n , <lb/>
broken. The bar <lb/>
that tie wore wild <lb/>
could not he <lb/>
. <lb/>
for them. The <lb/>
made short <lb/>
work of his pica. before tho <lb/>
cast- came on he must need- <lb/>
one of the deer shot by a keeper <lb/>
a haunch to judge who <lb/>
was to try the issue. Of lie <lb/>
gift ;. with a <lb/>
dear <lb/>
said Chief ice whoa <lb/>
the judge told him of tho <lb/>
affair, Ii mid have taken the <lb/>
scoundrel's haunch, eaten it and <lb/>
him t for contempt of <lb/>
j Standard. <lb/>
. Making Money. <lb/>
It is a curious coincidence that <lb/>
mo-; of money flashed <lb/>
var in am <lb/>
by villains in melodramas and for <lb/>
which there is so much blood letting j <lb/>
and in sensational plays is in <lb/>
made in Washington almost , <lb/>
the shadow of the of j, <lb/>
priming. The demand for <lb/>
it has caused it develop into quite <lb/>
is widely <lb/>
The of Wind on Lakes. <lb/>
Attention l-u.- called to tho <lb/>
remarkable i reel of the wind <lb/>
on <lb/>
It <lb/>
n little Ii <lb/>
for dramatic i yon <lb/>
and also for <lb/>
ills. It green <lb/>
of water. <lb/>
r tho <lb/>
of lakes to <lb/>
. provided <lb/>
lg i on- <lb/>
lime, <lb/>
l the . ii I ix <lb/>
of . hi f. e . <lb/>
i-<lb/>
A story told in the National <lb/>
Magazine of Senator Nelson, <lb/>
; who some of his early <lb/>
i in a logging camp, lie there <lb/>
the of certain em- <lb/>
in order to make <lb/>
mules move. of <lb/>
tongues wore in demand in that <lb/>
Gorman <lb/>
Italian- none of the words <lb/>
, used seemed to have the explosive <lb/>
, force to adjust tempo of tho <lb/>
I mule lo the pace. Alon- <lb/>
a Irishman, <lb/>
used some popular usual- <lb/>
indicate I print blank. <lb/>
blank, or mil lea <lb/>
moved I in i nil <lb/>
males the Irish- <lb/>
man. t. i me mother <lb/>
tongue <lb/>
N. C. Oct. 1st, <lb/>
The of the cotton pin is <lb/>
lending enchantment to the active <lb/>
element of our community at <lb/>
present, but many of farmer <lb/>
friends continue to pull in an <lb/>
occasional load of tobacco <lb/>
Mrs. W. B. Burnett is slowly <lb/>
improving. <lb/>
M. is <lb/>
not so favorable as <lb/>
weeks, <lb/>
R Lang, one of <lb/>
energetic young men. has gone <lb/>
to Greenville to take a position <lb/>
with the Bunk of Greenville. J. <lb/>
F Joyner has taken the <lb/>
with J. H. Harris vacated <lb/>
by Mr. Lang. <lb/>
thing must be doing <lb/>
among our young men. as we <lb/>
see an occasional new f rubber <lb/>
buggy on the streets. Well, <lb/>
boys, don't forget procure <lb/>
strong halt r, for . horses <lb/>
get very impatient on those long <lb/>
night stands. <lb/>
W. H. Wilkinson gave a bar- <lb/>
dinner last Saturday at <lb/>
home, complimentary to his <lb/>
and invited friends <lb/>
To and a <lb/>
happy band they were. <lb/>
Our town baa been exception- <lb/>
ally quiet the past week. The <lb/>
major only one before <lb/>
him Monday. Richard Knight. <lb/>
for being drunk and disorderly <lb/>
repeatedly, was sent to the roads <lb/>
for thirty days. <lb/>
Messrs. and Murphy <lb/>
have returned from Baltimore Every trace <lb/>
where they went to treated eliminated <lb/>
for mad dog bites. Both are <lb/>
looking well. <lb/>
Constable Smith, of Falkland <lb/>
township, Was in town <lb/>
r some <lb/>
J. P. TAYLOR. <lb/>
WILSON STREET. <lb/>
N. G. <lb/>
Fancy <lb/>
Groceries. <lb/>
COOL DRINKS AND REFRESH <lb/>
years in <lb/>
Artistic work guaranteed <lb/>
Enlarging <lb/>
Tonsorial <lb/>
Clark, Proprietor. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Satisfaction guaranteed. Strict- <lb/>
Experienced Bar- <lb/>
Sharp Resort, Clean Tow- <lb/>
el.-. <lb/>
; repaired, <lb/>
ed pressed, <lb/>
G. NORMS <lb/>
Parker's Old Stand, j <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
All kinds of Carts <lb/>
and Wagons. <lb/>
Ill fact any kind of work in <lb/>
wood and iron. <lb/>
All work guaranteed. <lb/>
Company will insure any on <lb/>
any trace of <lb/>
Kidney Trouble <lb/>
SOL <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
By virtue of a power of sale <lb/>
contained in a certain deed <lb/>
of mortgage from Mack Man- <lb/>
and wife, Manning <lb/>
and dated 15th day of October <lb/>
el duly recorded in the office of <lb/>
the Register of Deeds Pitt <lb/>
county in book P, a page <lb/>
we will on Monday Mill, day of <lb/>
at the Court house <lb/>
door of Pitt county at twelve <lb/>
o'clock noon, offer tor sale at <lb/>
public auction following de- <lb/>
scribed <lb/>
Adjoining the lands of L D. <lb/>
Jim Griffin, Hen <lb/>
Allen and Where and <lb/>
which he <lb/>
his v. <lb/>
s of<lb/>
altered <lb/>
leaving it <lb/>
n one in . iv.-;. -f <lb/>
o. r re . . i, <lb/>
sloop- paper, use , ,.; , ;. <lb/>
I . A mt of money i v <lb/>
l r <lb/>
. we so- , who-it financial i . i ,. . . , <lb/>
; tin th road, toward , . I <lb/>
Tobie. IS I ,. .,. I Hie J <lb/>
with salt tide of i bases,, , . .;. ., -a- <lb/>
may I the city of News, mil and tho pinch of I . ,, . . j . ;. f , <lb/>
greatest shipyards the I tho team was at bat. I on <lb/>
Kr Vi- <lb/>
A la or in a <lb/>
lied row ii.;. i <lb/>
the order. <lb/>
. lied upon <lb/>
to might <lb/>
made n for the or- <lb/>
j.- hat he- <lb/>
lore act. i <lb/>
r i ired lo <lb/>
know if the ,. i; <lb/>
a. <lb/>
f I , <lb/>
r. <lb/>
ii,,. woman in as-1 <lb/>
. never done <lb/>
lo church <lb/>
will he paid by I Inter- <lb/>
state Chemical Co. of Baltimore, <lb/>
Md. for case of kidney <lb/>
trouble SOL will not help. <lb/>
A word t- tho wise. <lb/>
For sale by <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
For Sal-One three <lb/>
years old, kind and gentle. Any <lb/>
j Lady can drive Apply to <lb/>
J. L.<lb/>
lied its on the north <lb/>
by L. on the <lb/>
east by J. A. Griffin, on the <lb/>
south by L. on <lb/>
the west by Ben Allen Jones; <lb/>
containing twenty one acres <lb/>
or less. <lb/>
Terms of sale cash. This 6th <lb/>
day of <lb/>
K. R. <lb/>
John Dennis. <lb/>
O. Moore <lb/>
NOTICE OF SEIZURE <lb/>
SALE- <lb/>
AND <lb/>
to b <lb/>
Ne <lb/>
may i <lb/>
world <lb/>
from <lb/>
saw, toward <lb/>
mingles its <lb/>
tide of <lb/>
in the city of News, WOK full and tho pinch hitter of <lb/>
greatest shipyards the tho team was at bat. <lb/>
the right the broad- Tho umpire had three balls I , <lb/>
a., ; and two strikes. <lb/>
from <lb/>
to broad mighty At- <lb/>
between the capes of Charles <lb/>
and Henry. <lb/>
The dilation at is a set <lb/>
In Itself a journey of a thou <lb/>
to witness, and, with ail <lb/>
outlines of the buildings aglow, <lb/>
the paths of i rail and <lb/>
Lane twinkling the myriads <lb/>
of little the War Path a i <lb/>
of electricity, the many powerful , <lb/>
playing the with <lb/>
messages and fifty <lb/>
miles of shore lines dotted with lbs I <lb/>
of n cities mid nestling <lb/>
towns, what spectacle more sublime <lb/>
beautiful could be Imagined f <lb/>
On section of the ex- j <lb/>
position, tho War Path, there j <lb/>
Is every conceivable amusement and <lb/>
diversion, where the visitor to the e- <lb/>
position, after n long day of <lb/>
can relax and let drift <lb/>
with the pleasure from one <lb/>
amusement to next on this <lb/>
While where the light ever <lb/>
twinkle and the noise of tho oriental <lb/>
la ever In the air. <lb/>
Tl, <lb/>
; . <lb/>
rock- re <lb/>
no feel cm <lb/>
.<lb/>
too ill for words, and when the <lb/>
pitcher began to wind himself g. x <lb/>
preparatory to ball v. -V. . ; <lb/>
was painful, . <lb/>
It was broken by a loud, , d true, hut <lb/>
, J., r . In dig <lb/>
i for had <lb/>
voice, wise u <lb/>
bag of this justly-r him at m c to <lb/>
After the house in had ex- <lb/>
voice in the grand <lb/>
of the <lb/>
He Wasn't Afraid <lb/>
Little Tommy up <lb/>
sinter were g. <lb/>
i light. The- <lb/>
bottom r. ached the <lb/>
after e hen Tommy. <lb/>
to pierce <lb/>
around <lb/>
;for <lb/>
to are, a lady when they have <lb/>
to <lb/>
replied the mother, <lb/>
should always take the <lb/>
I thought said do- <lb/>
ahead. <lb/>
Weekly. <lb/>
Revenue Service 4th <lb/>
of North Carolina <lb/>
N C-, Sept. 3rd 1007.1 <lb/>
virtue of authority given in sec- <lb/>
and acting under <lb/>
of issued thereunder against <lb/>
John for taxes assessed <lb/>
against him under the Internal <lb/>
law a have TWO and one half <lb/>
town in the town of Grifton <lb/>
N. C. being the same lots or parcel of <lb/>
land upon which is situated n store <lb/>
house occupied by Thompson ant <lb/>
a, in which they conduct a <lb/>
This lot or parcel of lend <lb/>
will be offered for to the highest <lb/>
bidder for cash on Tuesday the 1st tiny <lb/>
of October 1907 at o'clock m at <lb/>
Court house door in the town of Green- <lb/>
lie K. Lewis <lb/>
Deputy Collector <lb/>
well burned <lb/>
brick my factory now <lb/>
ready for at reasonable <lb/>
prices. V <lb/>
N C <lb/>
I have returned from the <lb/>
northern trunk, is. where I <lb/>
chased a superb and complete <lb/>
line of millinery, notions, sick <lb/>
wear, dress trimmings, <lb/>
and fins. Am prepared to suit all <lb/>
in quality and price- Will <lb/>
my same milliner, Miss <lb/>
Ella who can trim to <lb/>
suit the- The <lb/>
public invited to call <lb/>
and inspect my store. <lb/>
Mrs. J. F Joyner <lb/>
Opposite R. L. Davis and Bros <lb/>
store. <lb/>
lib him aid to th <lb/>
nurse <lb/>
abrasion not <lb/>
I is u think there <lb/>
of the <lb/>
Then, the patient, he <lb/>
asked do <lb/>
An Indian <lb/>
in Canada tho Q n- <lb/>
have some queer Indians <lb/>
delirium. in regard to <lb/>
chief a mo it day Cree <lb/>
rested Norway no man were <lb/>
for the House, think. <lb/>
to the of a squaw. Accord- Pat. a win- <lb/>
woman torn of the tribe, thought doctor. <lb/>
suffering t while she words out of my <lb/>
idea of ram delirium, with the mouth. That's just what I was <lb/>
preventing the evil spirit j to Weekly. <lb/>
japing. <lb/>
Bores. <lb/>
Not one man in BOO pictures <lb/>
future wife in the surroundings of <lb/>
ordinary girl. Where is the Ad- <lb/>
am who dreams of meeting his Eve, <lb/>
of skirt and strong arm, in <lb/>
the hockey Held or striding over the <lb/>
turf with a golf ball or plunging <lb/>
madly after a ball On the <lb/>
contrary, he pictures her clad in <lb/>
and a be- <lb/>
more than woman, who <lb/>
as a daily companion <lb/>
prove the most withering <lb/>
bore a man could be- cursed with. <lb/>
London Throne. <lb/>
NOTICE OF SEIZURE <lb/>
SALE <lb/>
AND <lb/>
Internal Revenue Service. <lb/>
District of North Carolina. <lb/>
Deputy Collector's Office. <lb/>
Littleton. N. C. Aug. 10th 1907 <lb/>
By virtue of n warrant of <lb/>
J. Manning for taxes as- <lb/>
against him under the Internal <lb/>
laws, I have seized the fol <lb/>
owing belonging to <lb/>
aid One horse, <lb/>
Mules and This property will <lb/>
i e sold under said at the farm <lb/>
f said Manning near Greenville N. C <lb/>
n the day of Sept. 1907 <lb/>
t o'clock m. to the highest bidder <lb/>
or Cash. <lb/>
R. J. Lewis, <lb/>
NOTICE- <lb/>
By virtue of a power of sale <lb/>
contained in a certain deed <lb/>
mortgage from C. A. <lb/>
Nellie E, Fair- his wife, to b K. <lb/>
and D. O. Moore dated <lb/>
18th day of October, 1906. and <lb/>
recorded in the office of the <lb/>
of county <lb/>
page I will on <lb/>
1907. at the court house door of <lb/>
Pitt county twelve o clock <lb/>
noon, offer for sale at public <lb/>
Son the following <lb/>
at <lb/>
southwest corner on Academy <lb/>
St and runs easterly with Jose- <lb/>
Cox's lino to his other <lb/>
parcel <lb/>
with Academy St., <lb/>
parallel with <lb/>
cox s line to Academy St, thence <lb/>
with Academy. St. to the <lb/>
containing one-half acre <lb/>
Sow or less. Terms of sale cash. <lb/>
D- O. Moore, <lb/>
Mortgagees.<lb/>
EASTERN <lb/>
D. J. Editor an i Owner. <lb/>
Truth In Preference to Fiction. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY. OCTOBER <lb/>
HAS A HOBO. <lb/>
Taken From the Tarboro Southerner. <lb/>
It would be more accurate to <lb/>
state that Tarboro has a citizen <lb/>
who a hobo, or one who <lb/>
most enacted that <lb/>
role- His name is John <lb/>
Hearing that the Southwest air <lb/>
cure i from which <lb/>
he was a sufferer, he determined <lb/>
to try it without, on hi. <lb/>
parents for the usual wherewith. <lb/>
He made the trip even to Los <lb/>
Angeles, and to San <lb/>
his way, doing odd <lb/>
jobs at places when hunger <lb/>
forced him to stop over. His <lb/>
experiences ware varied, exciting <lb/>
and caused him to see life and <lb/>
scenes in varying phases from <lb/>
the Atlantic to the Pacific in the <lb/>
moist verdure producing sections <lb/>
as well as in the arid homo of the <lb/>
cactus, the Llano <lb/>
Upon his return, hi- health <lb/>
much improved Mr. Peele has <lb/>
written and had published a very <lb/>
graphic, interesting and <lb/>
narration of his experiences <lb/>
embodied a book of <lb/>
pages with appropriate illus- <lb/>
It is well written and <lb/>
also well printed because Ed- <lb/>
wards Broughton, of Raleigh. <lb/>
the typographic artificers <lb/>
It is very readable book from <lb/>
to finis and can be read <lb/>
with profit. Price cents at all <lb/>
Drug Stores <lb/>
Mr. Peele was in Greenville <lb/>
Tuesday arranging to put his <lb/>
book on here. He is an in- <lb/>
talker as well as <lb/>
writer. <lb/>
CHAMBER OF <lb/>
New <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
Register of Heeds R. Williams <lb/>
has issued the following licenses <lb/>
since <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
Jesse Haddock and Annie <lb/>
Windley. <lb/>
Hannis Taylor Latham and <lb/>
Lorena Harding. <lb/>
John B. Hardy and Addie <lb/>
Harris <lb/>
W. H. Sutton and Hattie Ed- <lb/>
wards. <lb/>
Allie Davis ind Annie May. <lb/>
Shot Man; Killed <lb/>
A n Onslow cent who was <lb/>
in this city last night Informed <lb/>
that a shooting scrape <lb/>
at Verona, Onslow <lb/>
county, yesterday in which the <lb/>
of Ed Blake was <lb/>
of shot intended for Blake <lb/>
A row started bet wee <lb/>
the two men in a field where <lb/>
was being mowed, when <lb/>
threw his gun up to his <lb/>
shot, evidently intending the <lb/>
load for Blake. <lb/>
Shot did not reach Blake, bin <lb/>
Blake's horse instead, <lb/>
killing the Bern <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
Board <lb/>
Discussed <lb/>
There good attendance <lb/>
of business at the meeting <lb/>
of the Chamber C in <lb/>
mayor's office Monday night <lb/>
The meeting was presided over <lb/>
by Vice-President S T. White, <lb/>
and it being the annual meeting <lb/>
the election of a boar of <lb/>
tors, was gone into after routine <lb/>
business had been completed. <lb/>
constitution requires that <lb/>
three directors be elected to <lb/>
serve for two years and three for <lb/>
one year. The following were <lb/>
elected by <lb/>
For E. A. <lb/>
V, M. Woolen II. A. <lb/>
White. <lb/>
For one C. <lb/>
Dr- D. L. James a a D. J. <lb/>
The officers of the chamber <lb/>
will be elected by the board o; <lb/>
directors. <lb/>
The meeting-was then thrown <lb/>
op for suggestions and discus- <lb/>
and several s <lb/>
were made. One matter discuss- <lb/>
ed was Greenville as a cotton <lb/>
market and to a central <lb/>
place where bidders shall <lb/>
to cotton instead of it <lb/>
being sold up and down the <lb/>
street. The question had <lb/>
and opponents <lb/>
The question that <lb/>
greatest interest was street <lb/>
All were agreed that <lb/>
Greenville should be at work in <lb/>
this direction. The following <lb/>
resolution was offered by H. A. <lb/>
and unanimously <lb/>
That it is the sense <lb/>
of the of Commerce of <lb/>
Greenville that the board of Ai- <lb/>
use every effort to renew <lb/>
the present town loan of <lb/>
mu if successful, immediately <lb/>
after the of the bond to <lb/>
take steps towards paving Evans <lb/>
Street and Dickinson Avenue, or <lb/>
street, to the railroad <lb/>
The meeting adjourned subject <lb/>
to the call of the beard of <lb/>
rectors. <lb/>
shOT BY HIS YOUNG TARBORO AUTHOR. <lb/>
d Man from the New. Observer. <lb/>
Here to Hospital. <lb/>
A man the name or <lb/>
was brought to the <lb/>
Washington Hospital yesterday <lb/>
m a critical condition, from <lb/>
been shot through the <lb/>
by his brother-in-law. <lb/>
who lives at Stokes. <lb/>
a small station on the Coast Line <lb/>
in Pitt county, had some <lb/>
with his wife last Saturday <lb/>
night, and she left toe house, go- <lb/>
to her brother's, a short dis- <lb/>
away. <lb/>
Chauncey shortly afterward <lb/>
followed, and it is presumed had <lb/>
trouble with the man, with <lb/>
result that he was shot in <lb/>
the the ball passing through <lb/>
intestines three times. <lb/>
condition of wounded <lb/>
is very serious- <lb/>
Th particulars of the affair <lb/>
are very meager, and <lb/>
is unable to talk t -day-Wash- <lb/>
Messenger. <lb/>
Extensive Children <lb/>
Peter in Southern Farm <lb/>
of Baltimore, for <lb/>
Considerable dis has <lb/>
the announcement of a <lb/>
lecturer that it costs <lb/>
about to raise a child to <lb/>
j of independence in this <lb/>
and the subsequent <lb/>
statement abroad that it <lb/>
costs to do the same thing <lb/>
for a child in England, of <lb/>
the itemized account of child- <lb/>
England clearly proves <lb/>
that a comparatively small results Where <lb/>
children are being raised once or twice a week they do not <lb/>
KM ounCeS j a <lb/>
And even if they rave free ac- <lb/>
Raleigh N. C. <lb/>
His on North <lb/>
Carolina to Southern California <lb/>
without a Ticket and How I Did <lb/>
John Peele a man of <lb/>
has written a book en <lb/>
titled North Carolina to <lb/>
Southern California without a <lb/>
ticket and how I did The <lb/>
book is now sale at cents <lb/>
a copy, at all drug stores. <lb/>
Mr. Peele, who is nineteen <lb/>
years old, and in order to cure <lb/>
he started a trip <lb/>
America, beginning his <lb/>
journey with five dollars and his <lb/>
nerve. He made the trip, but <lb/>
there were trials and tribulations, <lb/>
and there were all kinds of ad <lb/>
ventures. He gives facts and <lb/>
figures about his trip, with names <lb/>
of towns and jails in which he <lb/>
stopped, and the book has in it <lb/>
many interest things that hap- <lb/>
to this Tarboro lad, thou- <lb/>
home with- <lb/>
out money and with no trade <lb/>
except the ability to <lb/>
He did all kinds of things but <lb/>
neither stole or starved, and his <lb/>
story is an interesting one of <lb/>
western life as he saw it in a trip <lb/>
was full of hardship and ad- <lb/>
venture, <lb/>
IN OPEN SWITCH.<lb/>
Train Wrecked at South Rocky by Greenville Lodge, No. <lb/>
Mount. <lb/>
Rocky Mount, N. C, Oct G.- <lb/>
The Atlantic Coast Line north <lb/>
bound train No. which <lb/>
es through here at <lb/>
o'clock in the morning, was <lb/>
wrecked on the lower part of th <lb/>
yard at South Rocky Mount ear- <lb/>
Sunday morning-. The shift <lb/>
engine was running up and <lb/>
down the yard as usual when <lb/>
head-on collision occurred lie <lb/>
tween it and The <lb/>
engine was smashed and the en <lb/>
No was derailed <lb/>
badly torn up. Five mail clerks <lb/>
had barely escaped by <lb/>
when car in which <lb/>
were at work was crushed into n <lb/>
thousand pieces. The engine-u <lb/>
on train, however, <lb/>
was not so fortunate, and his <lb/>
body was severely crushed and <lb/>
mangled, death occurring in <lb/>
His name is George <lb/>
and he is well known in <lb/>
Mount. His colored fire <lb/>
man was injured so that he died <lb/>
in a few h With the <lb/>
of these two deaths and <lb/>
Slight bruises to the mail clerks <lb/>
and a few of the passengers no <lb/>
other injuries were received <lb/>
Amount of Salt for Cows. <lb/>
Experiments go to show that <lb/>
average sized cow ought to <lb/>
have about two ounces of salt a <lb/>
day. Now am convinced that <lb/>
the average farmer does not feed <lb/>
his cows silt enough for the best <lb/>
are salted <lb/>
ti <lb/>
National Bank Declares Dividend. <lb/>
The directors of the National <lb/>
of Greenville met this <lb/>
morning and declared a semi- <lb/>
annual dividend of per cent <lb/>
which was carried to the surplus <lb/>
fund. This makes a total of <lb/>
per cent this bank has added to <lb/>
the surplus since it began bus. <lb/>
in April of last year. In the <lb/>
past month the deposits have in- <lb/>
creased per cent, This is a <lb/>
fine record for new bank and <lb/>
shows that it is well managed <lb/>
and has the confidence of tie <lb/>
people. <lb/>
Keep if Up. <lb/>
Paved streets really reached <lb/>
the point of enthusiasm at the <lb/>
meeting of the Chamber of Com- <lb/>
night. Keep this <lb/>
lick,, up, gentlemen, and you <lb/>
will soon see wonderful changes <lb/>
on Greenville's streets. <lb/>
The millinery today <lb/>
fine en far us displays ., <lb/>
the t as <lb/>
as is r-I on such <lb/>
Mr. L Griffin Co., <lb/>
Pulley and C T. <lb/>
had an <lb/>
which were <lb/>
m ch admired by all who visited <lb/>
deal <lb/>
era are always up with th <lb/>
stylos. <lb/>
expensively either in England <lb/>
w In this country. Further con- <lb/>
of the subject suggests <lb/>
that, judged by the in <lb/>
of cases, a deal <lb/>
f money spent in child raising <lb/>
s worse than wasted, and that if <lb/>
less attention was paid to the coot <lb/>
cannot be put into figures, <lb/>
the cost of developing good man- <lb/>
and common sense, the <lb/>
children of the present <lb/>
j far more <lb/>
and desirable members of society <lb/>
than they are. <lb/>
Bank of Grifton. <lb/>
A charter Has been issued for <lb/>
the Bank of Grifton, <lb/>
to begin business. This <lb/>
will make eight banks in <lb/>
Grifton is <lb/>
town and the bank there <lb/>
will Drove a great convenience. <lb/>
A boat <lb/>
A father, talking to his careless <lb/>
daughter, <lb/>
wan to to you of <lb/>
your mother It may be that you <lb/>
a care worn look upon <lb/>
her face. Of course it has not <lb/>
been brought there by act of <lb/>
still it is your duty to <lb/>
chase it away. <lb/>
want you to get up tomorrow <lb/>
morning and When <lb/>
your mother comes and begins to <lb/>
express her surprise go up <lb/>
her and kiss her on the <lb/>
You can't imagine how will <lb/>
brighten her dear face. Brides, <lb/>
yon owe her a kiss or two <lb/>
long while ago when you <lb/>
were a girl she kissed you. <lb/>
You were not as attractive then <lb/>
a i you are now <lb/>
years of childish <lb/>
sunshine and shadows she was <lb/>
rays ready to cure, by the <lb/>
of a mother's kiss, the <lb/>
little chubby hands when- <lb/>
they were injured <lb/>
with the <lb/>
rough old Exchange <lb/>
Waking Up <lb/>
night's meeting of the <lb/>
Chamber of shows <lb/>
what en be done when the <lb/>
men attend and take inter <lb/>
in what is going on, or <lb/>
to be going on, in the town. It <lb/>
much not result from <lb/>
in that meeting <lb/>
Reflector will be very much <lb/>
to salt I do not believe the <lb/>
eat as as that. i. <lb/>
only way to get cows to eat <lb/>
ounces of salt a day is to mix it <lb/>
with their ensilage and other feed <lb/>
then they will eat it and relish <lb/>
it. Now the need for so much <lb/>
salt in the ration is simply mat <lb/>
it assists in the assimilation of <lb/>
the food. After the food is <lb/>
it is held in solution by the <lb/>
digestive fluids and has to pass <lb/>
from the digestive tract the <lb/>
circulation. This absorption can- <lb/>
not take place regularly unless <lb/>
the solution is salty or saline. <lb/>
Some people claim that <lb/>
ought to have more two <lb/>
ounces salt a day. but I think <lb/>
two ounces is sufficient and the <lb/>
best way to feed it is to give an <lb/>
ounce at night. This is better <lb/>
than giving two ounces at one <lb/>
feed. Exchange. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
f. a M. <lb/>
We. the undersigned commit- <lb/>
tee, appointed draw suitable <lb/>
resolutions of aspect to the <lb/>
memory of our departed brother, <lb/>
J L. Sugg, beg have to report as <lb/>
Whereas, it has pleased the <lb/>
Supreme Architect of the <lb/>
from labor to rest <lb/>
our beloved brother, J. l Sugg <lb/>
Oct 4th. 1907, therefore be <lb/>
it resolved. <lb/>
First. That we most humbly <lb/>
bow in submission to will and <lb/>
more firmly trust in the hand <lb/>
that leads where we -an neither <lb/>
foresee nor prevent danger along <lb/>
the path of life. <lb/>
Second, that we strive to em <lb/>
u ate the example of our beloved <lb/>
b -other in dis fidelity and h- <lb/>
that, though dead, yet <lb/>
shall he aid to the ennobling f <lb/>
our character as men and <lb/>
Masons. <lb/>
Th rd. That we extend to his <lb/>
bereaved family our profound <lb/>
sympathy and deepest regret in <lb/>
t loss they have sustained, and <lb/>
to and His <lb/>
infinite wisdom and grace. <lb/>
That a copy these <lb/>
re-solutions be spread upon the <lb/>
minutes of this lodge, a cony . <lb/>
North <lb/>
Counts <lb/>
E. <lb/>
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE <lb/>
Board at Directors Elects Officers. <lb/>
The board of directors the <lb/>
Chamber of Commerce of Green- <lb/>
ville met Tuesday night in the <lb/>
office of Dr. D. L. James and <lb/>
elected following officers of <lb/>
President- D. J. Whichard, <lb/>
H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
E. Bradley. <lb/>
Treasurer-J. L. Little, <lb/>
Executive <lb/>
F. M. Wooten and L. <lb/>
Arthur. <lb/>
A. Bowen was elected a <lb/>
member of the board to fill a <lb/>
in the one year term. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Well I am grinding at Forbes <lb/>
water mill Tuesday and Fridays <lb/>
All who want bread come <lb/>
by o'clock if you can. I have <lb/>
plenty of water for grinding. <lb/>
J. E. Elks <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
Having duly before <lb/>
the court clerk of Pitt <lb/>
county administrator of <lb/>
estate of M-D, do- <lb/>
ceased, notice is hereby given to <lb/>
all persons indebted to the estate <lb/>
to immediate payment to <lb/>
the undersigned, and all <lb/>
having claims against st <lb/>
notified that they must <lb/>
sent tho same to the undersigned <lb/>
for payment on or before the 1st <lb/>
day of October, tins no- <lb/>
will in bar of <lb/>
This 1st day of October, <lb/>
J. H. <lb/>
of M. D. <lb/>
Carolina Pitt <lb/>
court <lb/>
and wife <lb/>
Dennis. <lb/>
VS <lb/>
R. J. E Jones D. O. <lb/>
Moore <lb/>
Tho E. R. <lb/>
and D. O. Moore above named <lb/>
ill u. o notice that an <lb/>
its been commenced in the <lb/>
court of Pitt county by th <lb/>
plan tiffs above named again-i <lb/>
th above <lb/>
of lining <lb/>
rest i the said <lb/>
foreclosing the <lb/>
collecting the notes Bet out <lb/>
and described in the comp <lb/>
tiled in this cause and for th <lb/>
of having the <lb/>
ed fraudulent and null and <lb/>
void, and the sued defendants E. <lb/>
R. and O. Moon <lb/>
will further take notice that they <lb/>
required to at <lb/>
ton-, of t <lb/>
Superior of Pi t county, <lb/>
to held on the <lb/>
lot y <lb/>
her, it being the day Nov- <lb/>
ember. the court <lb/>
in c Greenville, N c <lb/>
answer or to com <lb/>
plaint f the in <lb/>
a or plaintiffs <lb/>
t the court for the relief <lb/>
ed in sud complaint. <lb/>
Tins day of <lb/>
her, <lb/>
I C Moore <lb/>
c tun of county. <lb/>
Sent to his bereaved <lb/>
The Daily Reflector <lb/>
p ans Friend for <lb/>
R. m ., <lb/>
J- M. <lb/>
Or- <lb/>
r Com. <lb/>
Public Laws. <lb/>
Superior Court Clerk D. C <lb/>
Moore has received the public <lb/>
laws of 1907. Justices of the <lb/>
Peace of the county can get <lb/>
copies by calling on the clerk <lb/>
The Commerce and receipting for same, <lb/>
should have the interest and co- . <lb/>
of every business man R Johnston's- <lb/>
in the town to properly fill its I Meal at Johnston's. <lb/>
mission. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS <lb/>
Having duly qualified before Oh <lb/>
c of nil- <lb/>
of the M <lb/>
Smith, deceased, noticed i <lb/>
Riven to all persons Indebted to <lb/>
estate to make immediate payment t <lb/>
the undersigned, and all persons <lb/>
claims against said estate -re <lb/>
to present the same to the <lb/>
for payment on or before the 2-th tins <lb/>
of S- 1908, or this notice <lb/>
be plead in bur of recovery. <lb/>
This 28th of September, 1907. <lb/>
Jesse Cannon, <lb/>
Administrator of Cicero Al. smith. <lb/>
The Jamestown Reproduction <lb/>
Company gave a good moving <lb/>
picture show in the opera house <lb/>
Tuesday night. It was the best <lb/>
of its kind that has been her.-. <lb/>
A fair size audience witnessed it <lb/>
and all were pleased. <lb/>
Having decided to go out <lb/>
the stock business. have <lb/>
number of fine milk cows, which <lb/>
I will sell at reasonable prices <lb/>
Those interested better mi <lb/>
soon as I am going to sell <lb/>
stock before cold <lb/>
L. Joyner. <lb/>
Warning <lb/>
R cent statistic i of <lb/>
no little attn. <lb/>
the financial world. Lia- <lb/>
insolvents during the <lb/>
summer twice <lb/>
great as in either of the last <lb/>
summers, and now Dun's <lb/>
figures for September show an <lb/>
even worse situation. For <lb/>
three quarters of this <lb/>
year totals are the worst in a de- <lb/>
It is happily true, how- <lb/>
that the number of <lb/>
vent-- shows little and <lb/>
the in <lb/>
a chi fly from the failure <lb/>
of more manufacturing <lb/>
concerns th i Owing to <lb/>
in money market. <lb/>
these s were <lb/>
to accommodations upon <lb/>
n were accustomed to <lb/>
rely, and hence wen <lb/>
further damage the y <lb/>
protracted money <lb/>
before departing the <lb/>
question at present. Bountiful <lb/>
crops reasonable assurance <lb/>
for the time but the course <lb/>
f things later Hoes not yet <lb/>
If the c will only <lb/>
h j e for the best and prepare for <lb/>
something not quite so good, <lb/>
doubtless the present financial <lb/>
strain will disappear without <lb/>
working serious <lb/>
lotto Observer. <lb/>
More Peach Blossoms. <lb/>
A few days ago The Reflector <lb/>
d of peach blossoms on a tree <lb/>
in the yard of Senator J. L. <lb/>
Fleming, but Mr. W. H. Ricks <lb/>
c in go ahead of this. He tells <lb/>
us that he has several peach <lb/>
trees that are in bloom in <lb/>
and one of the trees has <lb/>
peaches, young peaches and <lb/>
blooms all on it at the same time. <lb/>
We have a wonderful climate <lb/>
this way. <lb/>
Wanted-A few boarders. <lb/>
location, nice rooms <lb/>
electric lights and bath <lb/>
Apply Reflector office. r, <lb/>
Do not fail to go to c ope <lb/>
tonight and see the gr <lb/>
Jamestown show.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019723_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
Tin. <lb/>
Greensboro, N. c. Oct. <lb/>
very <lb/>
time this morn ,. <lb/>
between two highly m d <lb/>
i e s. C <lb/>
RanKin and Major W. Vi. Allen. <lb/>
The two re neighbors for .- m <lb/>
month. Major Allen renting <lb/>
I to the <lb/>
by Capt. Kan on <lb/>
Allen had a <lb/>
place an., was . ii in <lb/>
Cant Rank <lb/>
over and informed the <lb/>
that several chickens, which <lb/>
were in the coop to be moved, <lb/>
were his. Major Allen denied <lb/>
this declaring that it would <lb/>
law to get them from him. <lb/>
raised Capt. ire o <lb/>
he told in major that he <lb/>
rather fight it out, than to go o <lb/>
law . v. r e chickens Tl <lb/>
two v it ;. <lb/>
first knock, bite. Berate <lb/>
and . n the <lb/>
of the <lb/>
male i. <lb/>
separate contestants <lb/>
men very bloody their face- <lb/>
looked the hens had had a <lb/>
Scratching b. e on and tin e <lb/>
are on foreheads as big s <lb/>
an egg. <lb/>
Mr D. II. an excel <lb/>
citizen of th; Staton mill <lb/>
about miles from <lb/>
died morning of <lb/>
fever. He leaves a will <lb/>
two children, both f th <lb/>
r grown. One of then <lb/>
i Mrs. S. I. Dudley, of <lb/>
. In his death the <lb/>
a and upright <lb/>
A l other Hen at the Age Mouth <lb/>
Mr. J- H. Guyer, who live <lb/>
four miles of <lb/>
Elkin, tills m that son e <lb/>
chick- rs hatched out in Ai <lb/>
and that some of the pullets <lb/>
began laying the earl <lb/>
of August. After laying <lb/>
about a dozen eggs one of there <lb/>
decided to hitch out a brood of <lb/>
her own- She went about the <lb/>
work as as <lb/>
About the of September <lb/>
work <lb/>
h is a brood of eight <lb/>
after. Being a mother hen at h <lb/>
than four <lb/>
beats Timer. <lb/>
The Only Vt Confederate Veteran <lb/>
ROW IN PULL SWING. <lb/>
Jamestown Tercentennial Expo- <lb/>
In All <lb/>
COLONIAL CITY. <lb/>
A Veritable Dreamland to the Visitor. <lb/>
In the Matter of Interesting Feature <lb/>
Jamestown Leads All Other <lb/>
and Navy Display. <lb/>
New r Before In the history of the <lb/>
ban there been hold an <lb/>
so man;, attractive feature <lb/>
as the Jamestown Tercentennial, now <lb/>
u roll historic waters of <lb/>
Beads. The i <lb/>
complete in all of it and <lb/>
to the visitor a veritable <lb/>
The Immense exhibit pal- <lb/>
aces, state and <lb/>
all of a permanent or <lb/>
set off with the most <lb/>
trees and foliage, to this <lb/>
exposition an distinct from <lb/>
all of Its predecessors. <lb/>
Within tin hour's ride by either boat <lb/>
or train suck places as York town, <lb/>
where surrendered to the <lb/>
army, and Jamestown Is- <lb/>
lam, the where <lb/>
now remain only the mine of the <lb/>
first church In America. -lust across <lb/>
waters of Hampton Bonds are <lb/>
ed Old Comfort and Fort Mon- <lb/>
roe, the strongest and most <lb/>
artillery station on the Atlantic <lb/>
whose prim walls and winding <lb/>
most make It one of the most <lb/>
spots In the These and <lb/>
many other of historic interest <lb/>
give an appropriate setting to the <lb/>
Jamestown exposition, <lb/>
orates the three hundredth anniversary <lb/>
of the first permanent English speak <lb/>
settlement in America, the most <lb/>
Important in the history of mod- <lb/>
times. <lb/>
to the fact that the James <lb/>
town Tercentennial Is the first <lb/>
on deep In this <lb/>
country, there has been going on <lb/>
most continually n grand naval spec <lb/>
fade, of a such as America has <lb/>
never, seen The entire North <lb/>
Atlantic fleet, under the command of <lb/>
Hear Admiral P. Brans, squad <lb/>
by squadron, will rendezvous In <lb/>
Hampton Bonds from time time <lb/>
the visitor to the <lb/>
ample opportunity to see the <lb/>
fleet of battleships In the world. The, <lb/>
will oil times the <lb/>
be at least six the 1- <lb/>
well as the navy is well <lb/>
.-,; .- the Tercentennial, an. <lb/>
daily by crack regiments <lb/>
United States troops are to be seen on <lb/>
Lee's Parade, one of the largest I <lb/>
best equipped drill plains In the conn <lb/>
try. Stationed at the exposition ground <lb/>
at present are the entire Twenty-third <lb/>
regiment Of States Infantry, the <lb/>
Second squadron of the Twelfth Unit <lb/>
ed States I buttery of the <lb/>
Third Held artillery. Several <lb/>
of the national guard of <lb/>
states, besides numerous <lb/>
and are en <lb/>
camped at the exposition from time t. <lb/>
time. Each of these military <lb/>
lions brings Its own band, which, to <lb/>
with the exposition orchestra. <lb/>
gives u ant <lb/>
varied musical <lb/>
The government exhibits, housed In <lb/>
four handsome structures en the waste <lb/>
front of the exposition, comprise one <lb/>
of the most complete and <lb/>
displays of the work of tin <lb/>
various departments of the government <lb/>
ever assembled. The individual states, <lb/>
have also come forward at this <lb/>
With their heartiest support <lb/>
twenty of then <lb/>
Greeted buildings to represent them <lb/>
the Tercentennial, while <lb/>
very state is represented exhibits <lb/>
historical, or industrial <lb/>
These state buildings are located on <lb/>
Boulevard, a grand avenue <lb/>
the water front, and from <lb/>
the broad piazzas of the state <lb/>
visitors may rest and view <lb/>
magnificent and historical <lb/>
whereon the vessels of the world <lb/>
rest at anchor. In the Immediate from <lb/>
appear the great white men-of-war <lb/>
our own and a foreign <lb/>
and yachts, sloops, schooners <lb/>
and vessels of every kind <lb/>
Beyond are the frowning walls <lb/>
Fort Monroe the beautiful so- <lb/>
retreat of the Old Point <lb/>
Comfort. To the left be seen the <lb/>
noted Industrial school Hampton. <lb/>
and still further up to roads, toward <lb/>
where the mighty Its <lb/>
waters with the suit tide of the Bea. <lb/>
may be seen the city of Newport News, <lb/>
with the greatest shipyards In the <lb/>
world. To the right appears the broad- <lb/>
Channel iron, roads to nay and <lb/>
from buy to broad and mighty At- <lb/>
out between the of <lb/>
and Henry. <lb/>
The Illumination night Is a <lb/>
in Itself worthy a journey of a thou <lb/>
solid miles to and. with nil <lb/>
the outlines of the buildings aglow, <lb/>
the paths of the Canoe Trail and <lb/>
Lane twinkling with the myriads <lb/>
of little lights, the War Path a <lb/>
of electricity, the many powerful <lb/>
COTTON MEETING <lb/>
President Moore Calls This for Raleigh <lb/>
Wednesday State Fair. <lb/>
A great meeting of cotton <lb/>
farmers of North Carolina is t <lb/>
he held in Raleigh on <lb/>
day, October this in the <lb/>
State Fair Week. Rail- <lb/>
road rates are especially low <lb/>
The meeting is to be an <lb/>
one and it should be attend- <lb/>
ed, by all cotton farmers who can <lb/>
come The Southern Cotton As- <lb/>
recently set cents a <lb/>
pound as price for cotton and <lb/>
it is now selling for less <lb/>
twelve cents This will be one <lb/>
matter and President <lb/>
C. C. Moore of the Southern Cot- <lb/>
ton Association in his call for the <lb/>
c invention, published below, says <lb/>
will sell at cents before <lb/>
next crop is made. <lb/>
. GOO D EYESIGHT <lb/>
is a blessing. Have you it <lb/>
If not, you should wear glasses<lb/>
I I I <lb/>
Let me lit your eyes and the <lb/>
desired <lb/>
C. E. Rountree <lb/>
Optician and Jeweler <lb/>
Graduate Philadelphia College <lb/>
of Horology and Optics <lb/>
only woman who is a <lb/>
member of a Confederate <lb/>
Camp, and who march . <lb/>
for miles the camp at <lb/>
ions, joining them also in <lb/>
solemn funeral processions, i <lb/>
Miss Mary A. Hall of Augusta. <lb/>
No matter where she goes. <lb/>
Miss Hall invariably wears some- <lb/>
where about but never ob <lb/>
a tiny <lb/>
flag. For a long time the <lb/>
she affected was sill. <lb/>
which rolled in her hair, <lb/>
tastefully arranged in her hat. <lb/>
Now it is worn in a Confederate <lb/>
badge. <lb/>
Miss Hall recognized c is- <lb/>
of the Confederate fl if. <lb/>
She has personally placed no <lb/>
than of the emblem <lb/>
on the gr of i <lb/>
soldiers. <lb/>
Dressed in her walking <lb/>
and wearing the plain coat <lb/>
its brass and the cam <lb/>
with her close-cuter <lb/>
curls, the only woman veteran <lb/>
looks unlike her veteran <lb/>
Record searchlights, playing the heavens with <lb/>
their mysterious messages and fifty <lb/>
of shore lines dotted with the <lb/>
lights of a dozen cities an nestling <lb/>
towns, what spectacle more sublime <lb/>
beautiful could be Imagined <lb/>
On the amusement section of the ex <lb/>
position, called the War there <lb/>
Is every conceivable amusement and <lb/>
diversion, where the visitor to the ex- <lb/>
position, after a long day of <lb/>
can relax let drift <lb/>
with the pleasure seeking from one <lb/>
amusement to the next on this <lb/>
White where the lights ever <lb/>
twinkle end the of the oriental <lb/>
is ever in the sit. <lb/>
Call the Convention <lb/>
The call for convention is as <lb/>
The cotton farmers of North <lb/>
Carolina will hold the fall con- <lb/>
at Raleigh, on <lb/>
day, <lb/>
President Jordan will <lb/>
i resent and will address the <lb/>
on matters that will <lb/>
of interest to every man in the <lb/>
state. <lb/>
A call for from far- <lb/>
in every township where <lb/>
cotton is grown and from every <lb/>
town and city where cotton is <lb/>
marketed. Every section of the <lb/>
state where cotton is grown or <lb/>
marketed should at once select <lb/>
de . gates to represent their sec- <lb/>
at important meeting. <lb/>
Farmers, merchants, hold your <lb/>
it. hi from market when price is <lb/>
declining, do not depress price <lb/>
b; on market <lb/>
is worth cents cum- <lb/>
in and will sell for <lb/>
another crop is <lb/>
made. <lb/>
C. C. MOORE, <lb/>
Pres. N. C. Division S. C. A. <lb/>
Charlotte, N C <lb/>
The Beautiful <lb/>
If you love, love more. If you <lb/>
hate, hate less. Life is too short <lb/>
o in hating any one. <lb/>
Why war against a mortal who <lb/>
is going the same road with us <lb/>
not expand the flower of <lb/>
life and happiness by teaching <lb/>
those who are near and dear the <lb/>
beautiful Your hands <lb/>
may be hard, but your heart need <lb/>
not be. Your form may be bent <lb/>
r ugly, but do you not know <lb/>
tat the most beautiful flowers <lb/>
grow in the most rugged, <lb/>
places The palace for <lb/>
care, the cottage for love. Not <lb/>
that there is no love in a man- <lb/>
but somehow if we are not <lb/>
very careful, business will crowd <lb/>
all there is of beauty out of the <lb/>
hart. This is why God has <lb/>
given the Sabbaths and Saturday <lb/>
nights, that we may leave <lb/>
and have a little heart-clean <lb/>
NOTICE SEIZURE AND <lb/>
SALE <lb/>
Internal Revenue Service. <lb/>
4th. District of Norm Carolina. <lb/>
Collector's Office. <lb/>
Littleton, N. C. Aug. <lb/>
virtue of authority given in sec- <lb/>
R. S. and under war- <lb/>
rant of issued thereunder, <lb/>
W. J. Manning for taxes assess- <lb/>
ed against him under the Internal Rev- <lb/>
laws. I have seized one tract of <lb/>
land belonging to said Manning and <lb/>
known as the tract and contain <lb/>
acres more or less, the <lb/>
same tract of h <lb/>
and upon which he is now <lb/>
a crop. This t-act of land <lb/>
be sale to the highest bidder <lb/>
for cash on Monday Sept. at <lb/>
o'clock m. t the Court House door <lb/>
in the town of N. C. <lb/>
k. J. Lewis. <lb/>
Deputy Collector. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
-K <lb/>
THE BANK f f <lb/>
Al THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS. Aug.<lb/>
Loans and-Discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts-Secured <lb/>
Unsecured <lb/>
Due from. Banks <lb/>
Cash Items <lb/>
Gold Coin <lb/>
Silver <lb/>
125.-41 Undivided <lb/>
I- <lb/>
Deposits m i lint- i. <lb/>
1,241.0 <lb/>
Stat of <lb/>
ft <lb/>
I, <lb/>
y ii i <lb/>
n and . <lb/>
worn <lb/>
. of. <lb/>
ft <lb/>
It <lb/>
1907, <lb/>
J. V.<lb/>
Si <lb/>
sit 4737.51 <lb/>
ck 23,075.62 <lb/>
1,014.04 <lb/>
, lit <lb/>
my <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
THE BANKING T <lb/>
BETH C <lb/>
At o. bus <lb/>
SALE. <lb/>
By i a the <lb/>
Court Pitt county i. Special <lb/>
No J. K. <lb/>
the underpinned com-, <lb/>
mis loner -ill sell tor before <lb/>
court house door in Greenville <lb/>
t. the wing <lb/>
sir bed estate. Ii <lb/>
town of Heth the lot now <lb/>
J. If. Bu ting aid the. <lb/>
buildings said said lot <lb/>
the north by St. on <lb/>
east by lot owned M J <lb/>
Co. on the by Mack s <lb/>
and c- on the wet <lb/>
Blount store and hotel, <lb/>
that convened <lb/>
to cherry <lb/>
deeds, one from M I. T <lb/>
other deed f- nm Blount <lb/>
One in bounded on <lb/>
north by street, on east by rs <lb/>
W H Bullocks, on south Is the lot own- <lb/>
ed by co G <lb/>
and on b. J R <lb/>
A e or of tend <lb/>
bounded on north by <lb/>
and the Nelson on the est <lb/>
the property, o south the <lb/>
James, Alack <lb/>
on th.- west <lb/>
street, containing <lb/>
or F. G.<lb/>
a and <lb/>
items<lb/>
Vat bank <lb/>
U. <lb/>
U B<lb/>
1,032.86, H . <lb/>
its ,<lb/>
. v <lb/>
8.259,394 <lb/>
iii-pus <lb/>
38.154 <lb/>
sine of County op s- <lb/>
I. W s-o <lb/>
Use above in. ,. my<lb/>
M; <lb/>
that <lb/>
and <lb/>
to <lb/>
me, May <lb/>
M- C. B <lb/>
directors. <lb/>
Help <lb/>
This tight for is- <lb/>
a good time for every one to La <lb/>
helpful by <lb/>
money is it is <lb/>
for one to his ob <lb/>
but money <lb/>
lit is very <lb/>
one pays his little debts, his <lb/>
big ones if he can <lb/>
paid out in a <lb/>
debt may pay a dozen- in a <lb/>
day and so ease tile situation <lb/>
with as many persona- The truth <lb/>
is, no one has a moral to <lb/>
hold on t money if he owes it to <lb/>
some one Neck <lb/>
Commonwealth. <lb/>
FREE <lb/>
of or <lb/>
Troubles. Other <lb/>
y i if <lb/>
it w will refund <lb/>
full size bottle <lb/>
ant if it then <lb/>
use SOL. until <lb/>
This entitles yo <lb/>
to a at <lb/>
AND <lb/>
a limited number bottles <lb/>
given away. Don't this op <lb/>
to test <lb/>
SOL. <lb/>
SALE OP <lb/>
PERSONAL <lb/>
PROP-<lb/>
Rev. E. Cox returned W.- <lb/>
from a trip over in Ma-- <lb/>
tin county and a e <lb/>
bunch of squirrels with <lb/>
He and a friend went <lb/>
near Roanoke river, <lb/>
afternoon, and between <lb/>
and sunset they killed <lb/>
This Boy Starts Right. <lb/>
The youngest stock holder in <lb/>
The Home Building and Loan <lb/>
Association is Master Rogers <lb/>
Whichard, of Norfolk. Shares <lb/>
were taken for him at the organ- <lb/>
of association when he <lb/>
was but little more than three <lb/>
years old, and his payments of <lb/>
have come along regularly <lb/>
every month. He is now four- <lb/>
and a-half years and today <lb/>
Secretary N. G. White received a <lb/>
check from him by the <lb/>
little fellow The <lb/>
is all in capital letters with <lb/>
made but it <lb/>
is a good bit work for such a <lb/>
small boy. By the time Rogers <lb/>
is ten years old his building and <lb/>
ban stock will be matured and he <lb/>
will draw a good sum to add to <lb/>
his bank account.- This is a good <lb/>
way for a boy to start and lay the <lb/>
foundation for a successful <lb/>
Good Farm <lb/>
For rent, lease or sale on <lb/>
terms- the Latham farm, miles <lb/>
from Greenville on north side <lb/>
Tar river. Contains about <lb/>
six horse crop cleared. <lb/>
J. A. Andrews. <lb/>
Lee's Daughter Marries. <lb/>
Alexandria. Va., Sept. 25.- <lb/>
Miss Virginia Lee, daughter f <lb/>
the late General Lee <lb/>
was married here today to Lieu- <lb/>
tenant John Carter Montgomery, <lb/>
Seventh United States cavalry. <lb/>
The ceremony took place in <lb/>
Christ church and was <lb/>
by Rev. Dr. Morton, pastor of <lb/>
the church Miss Lee was given <lb/>
in marriage by her brother, Capt. <lb/>
Lee, U. S. A. <lb/>
Any Time of Year <lb/>
You will find me ready to supply all your needs in <lb/>
My stock is new and fresh at all times and I handle the <lb/>
best brands. Anything wanted in staple Groceries, <lb/>
Canned Goods, Pickles, etc. found <lb/>
at my store, and prices are right All kinds Fruits in <lb/>
season,. <lb/>
Greenville N <lb/>
October <lb/>
Everybody is looking forward to it. The wonderful of last year has led to <lb/>
plans for a greater Fair this year. Nothing like it. The best in all departments. <lb/>
AGRICULTURAL <lb/>
STOCK <lb/>
EXHIBITS <lb/>
BIG FREE SHOWS <lb/>
EVERY DAY <lb/>
IN PRIZES <lb/>
BEST MIDWAY <lb/>
ATTRACTIONS <lb/>
DISPLAYS <lb/>
SPECIAL SALES <lb/>
FACILITIES <lb/>
GREAT RACES <lb/>
ALL CLASSES <lb/>
A BIG TIME <lb/>
ALL WEEK <lb/>
RAILROADS-ASK YOUR AGENT <lb/>
at <lb/>
38,154.88 <lb/>
By virtue mortgage execute- <lb/>
deliver d to J. R. Smith Company <lb/>
C R. W the 2nd day o <lb/>
March I, which was ref <lb/>
he office of the register of <lb/>
deeds of F in book k-8 page <lb/>
the t will Bell for <lb/>
in the tot -n on Saturday the <lb/>
f the follow- <lb/>
s at personal property, to- <lb/>
bay mares, two dray <lb/>
one harness, <lb/>
one top buggy-, <lb/>
the sue purchased T. wT <lb/>
Hart; -also one small bay mare bough. <lb/>
J. Bit one other hay ant <lb/>
open buggies, one- top <lb/>
on dray wagon, five sets of <lb/>
last lot the same bought of <lb/>
J. E. the stable manure <lb/>
now in thus stables rented by the said <lb/>
C. It. Lorenzo <lb/>
E. said is satisfy <lb/>
said mortgage. This September 1907, <lb/>
J, R <lb/>
aw mi Arts <lb/>
at the <lb/>
Exposition <lb/>
e and ion- <lb/>
in the of <lb/>
liberal <lb/>
u m <lb/>
October 15th, as <lb/>
lib. arts <lb/>
The attendance in the <lb/>
history of the exposition is ex- <lb/>
as ten thousand <lb/>
worth c f prizes, inducing sh, <lb/>
will be away to -holders of <lb/>
ticket purchased on <lb/>
that y. <lb/>
mo to a <lb/>
; inaugurated <lb/>
days and in twenty <lb/>
over <lb/>
Suffer a word in defense the <lb/>
town pastor. We have seen them <lb/>
outrageously imposed upon by <lb/>
people, usually young <lb/>
men at school, who to town <lb/>
bocks or <lb/>
i i i them <lb/>
selves in the pastor's <lb/>
home, because he was a guest in <lb/>
the neighborhood last fall when <lb/>
he held a meeting there. Now of <lb/>
course cannot say a <lb/>
word, and no preacher ever <lb/>
opened in complaint to <lb/>
we have seen a <lb/>
few we jot down as <lb/>
we go We felt <lb/>
sorry for pastors who treat with <lb/>
decency people with no manners <lb/>
STATEMENT OP GREENVILLE DISPENSARY. <lb/>
Quarter Ending Sept 30th. 1907. <lb/>
To amount sales this quarter <lb/>
By inventor 4,704.76 <lb/>
purchases, whiskey, beer, etc., quarter <lb/>
Express, freight <lb/>
Bottles <lb/>
Labor <lb/>
Tax, proportionate paid <lb/>
Salaries <lb/>
General expenses <lb/>
Paid town <lb/>
Balance profits on hand <lb/>
for the <lb/>
3,600.66 <lb/>
14,396-12 <lb/>
529.05 <lb/>
520.00 <lb/>
506-15 <lb/>
5.000 <lb/>
302.4 <lb/>
of prize were received by one occasion a pastor's wife <lb/>
Wheeler , director of tie man and all his <lb/>
and liberal arts one of vis- <lb/>
at the and <lb/>
in, set <lb/>
his down and up his <lb/>
rut to day or And <lb/>
he bat <lb/>
ought<lb/>
pointed chairman, am H. P. <lb/>
Webster, cashier of the Atlantic <lb/>
Safe and Trust Company, <lb/>
treasurer, of this occasion. <lb/>
There be by wanted. ad was seriously in <lb/>
bands and the Tyrolean and Fiske the <lb/>
W. L Hall <lb/>
Warren Jr <lb/>
J C Lanier <lb/>
Commissioners. <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
jubilee singers. The soft, drink <lb/>
and -restaurant concessionaire <lb/>
will their wares Pt price <lb/>
on day. while the purchaser <lb/>
of the souvenir tickets will re- <lb/>
cards which will admit <lb/>
them u all shows on the war <lb/>
just half the regular <lb/>
price. The of these ticket- <lb/>
will receive cards the <lb/>
grand ball, which will be held in <lb/>
convention hall the following <lb/>
October <lb/>
Every souvenir ticket will bear <lb/>
the general's signature. <lb/>
showing, ii at the holder was a <lb/>
visitor b the <lb/>
These will bear a hand- <lb/>
Borne design on one while tin <lb/>
other will bear an advert <lb/>
This r will b <lb/>
bid th firm or person <lb/>
, highest bid <lb/>
East India exhibitors, in <lb/>
addition to donating several <lb/>
prizes, will give each and every <lb/>
visitor a cup of tea. <lb/>
Some of principal prizes <lb/>
rec to dale two <lb/>
valued at <lb/>
Roth and <lb/>
York gate, <lb/>
have mots per- <lb/>
to thus obtrude <lb/>
upon a family, ought <lb/>
to be step <lb/>
over to the tut nine out of, <lb/>
ten of our suffer <lb/>
injustice and save the dead beat a <lb/>
dollar a day. A who is <lb/>
business that will <lb/>
feed him to quit and try <lb/>
and if his <lb/>
w ill pay his board he ought not <lb/>
i make the preacher do it. I <lb/>
Sometime these are pet pie who <lb/>
thoughtlessly upon the <lb/>
pat tor who lives in town, we <lb/>
have no hope of reaching <lb/>
r class than these, dead <lb/>
has neither conscience j <lb/>
taste It is a very Ides <lb/>
when one goes to town to spend <lb/>
the to take money enough <lb/>
to pay his expenses. <lb/>
Charily and Children. <lb/>
Th Quarrel of Dandy <lb/>
What Cams of It. <lb/>
Dandy and Laddie were collie <lb/>
and brothers, and they were <lb/>
owned by brothers, too, farmers up <lb/>
in New Hampshire. The farms ad- <lb/>
joined, and the farmers <lb/>
their stock in common. The dogs <lb/>
visited other frequently and <lb/>
were great friends. One day when <lb/>
was gnawing Lone Dan- <lb/>
a pet kitten be aging to Dan- <lb/>
family came near, and Laddie <lb/>
snapped at her. Dandy <lb/>
flew at his throat, and they hod a <lb/>
hot fight before they could be <lb/>
It is said that neither dog ever <lb/>
crossed the boundary line between <lb/>
tin- two after thatdaily drove his flock sheep down <lb/>
the lane until he reached th.- <lb/>
wall, where Dandy solemnly <lb/>
took charge and drove them to pas- <lb/>
night Dandy brought back <lb/>
the and Laddie would be <lb/>
waiting for them at the regular <lb/>
place. once after their fight <lb/>
did they take the slightest notice of <lb/>
each <lb/>
AT N. C. <lb/>
An Interesting Experiment. <lb/>
. con posed ,; <lb/>
and hydrogen, hi <lb/>
two . unite when c <lb/>
of the , n o f <lb/>
. the oxygen of the air <lb/>
prove this a simple <lb/>
Hold n cool <lb/>
i r over a burr <lb/>
an I inner of i <lb/>
I soon . <lb/>
All the newest designs in <lb/>
Mil l <lb/>
And Ladies are Especially Invited <lb/>
THE BIG <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
STORE <lb/>
N. f. <lb/>
with <lb/>
drop- <lb/>
. ll <lb/>
I . . <lb/>
v will .-. ; eel on it, <lb/>
and it were to I <lb/>
i. nil the time you i <lb/>
. Ii . to trick, t it is n <lb/>
f nature. Tin j <lb/>
I into <lb/>
co act <lb/>
a Goo.-c.<lb/>
BROTHER SLAYS BROTHER. <lb/>
his Killed by Thomas <lb/>
Jefferson. <lb/>
Information reached here today <lb/>
NORFOLK <lb/>
TIME E i 1507 <lb/>
wood Jefferson was killed <lb/>
sewing machine one dozen <lb/>
ho.-. amber neck- <lb/>
lace, and jewelry, laces, <lb/>
from Japan, <lb/>
Austria. <lb/>
Never in the history of <lb/>
ti-n or fair had an array of <lb/>
prizes been e <lb/>
of cost. <lb/>
r. <lb/>
a Coe I Run. <lb/>
On Saturday one of Winter <lb/>
s good citizens, who is <lb/>
I that he is as high <lb/>
as he is up, came to <lb/>
Greenville to of the <lb/>
He wanted home <lb/>
-on midday train end on his <lb/>
the depot stopped to talk <lb/>
a friend. He apparent <lb/>
that time was slipping by <lb/>
until the whistle of the <lb/>
train far the station him <lb/>
there was yet considerable <lb/>
him and the <lb/>
depot, and he must be moving if <lb/>
he covered it in time. Not <lb/>
standing on ceremony he struck <lb/>
out at a gait, and his fat <lb/>
figure made a picture as he flew <lb/>
through the street. Everybody <lb/>
gave him right of way and he <lb/>
made it just in time to swing on <lb/>
the train as it started to pull out. <lb/>
Sunday night by his brother. <lb/>
Thomas Jefferson, at their home <lb/>
near Fountain in the western <lb/>
portion, of the county. The <lb/>
brothers were well to do men and <lb/>
lived on the Bynum <lb/>
plantation which they purchased <lb/>
years <lb/>
Tn- of the tragedy <lb/>
are the report being <lb/>
while supposed <lb/>
to iv; without warning <lb/>
made an assault upon his brother <lb/>
Thomas, and latter killed <lb/>
James in self <lb/>
Our informant also stated that <lb/>
insanity was in the <lb/>
family. The far.- of these men <lb/>
sprint several an asylum <lb/>
and another went insane last <lb/>
year <lb/>
A M<lb/>
Ii if <lb/>
ID <lb/>
STATIONS M <lb/>
Norfolk Ar . <lb/>
K. City 3.15 <lb/>
Hertford 2.41 <lb/>
Mack Kerry 12.45 in <lb/>
In<lb/>
New Bern Kinston SOU <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
P M A M <lb/>
New Bern Ar V <lb/>
M. City <lb/>
Hotel <lb/>
Ar Beaufort <lb/>
A M p <lb/>
Washington Ar <lb/>
Chocowinity <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Ar Farmville <lb/>
P, M P M <lb/>
to<lb/>
; I . <lb/>
ten<lb/>
I ; <lb/>
or . r, . <lb/>
ed th i <lb/>
on in <lb/>
i he following was issued <lb/>
the United States <lb/>
that toe proposed lo- <lb/>
of a over Content- <lb/>
Creek. Is. built by <lb/>
the commissioners of counts <lb/>
. C, would offer an <lb/>
obstruction to the free <lb/>
of said Content Creek <lb/>
a account of proximity to a <lb/>
in said Creek <lb/>
it is proposed to hold a public <lb/>
taring. <lb/>
order to give you an op- <lb/>
to be heard a.-- required <lb/>
-v the Act of Congress approved, <lb/>
-larch 1899, you are hereby, <lb/>
n that said public hear, <lb/>
be had before me. at <lb/>
in Lang's Hall <lb/>
1907. where and <lb/>
an op. <lb/>
to be heard <lb/>
the papers will <lb/>
before-th. secretary of war for <lb/>
it ,,. <lb/>
in <lb/>
.,; <lb/>
authority of th secretary <lb/>
,. . . ,. Brown.<lb/>
Army. <lb/>
i; Star. <lb/>
Red <lb/>
A, R i Men <lb/>
I,.<lb/>
. be <lb/>
sen<lb/>
S- <lb/>
O. Lin <lb/>
Fur fir. Sat <lb/>
nil Mr. L S <lb/>
yon I;, , . K i <lb/>
s ,.;. -.- , <lb/>
at his ., e by Kev. m. <lb/>
T. and at the grave in <lb/>
cemetery by the <lb/>
Mason-c fraternity. More than <lb/>
sixty Masons took pin in tie <lb/>
service, and the attendance upon <lb/>
the was very large. <lb/>
except Sunday other than between <lb/>
which art daily. <lb/>
R. U. L. H. C. <lb/>
Manager General Gen. Pass. Agent <lb/>
Chamber cf Meeting. <lb/>
There will be an annual meeting <lb/>
of the Chamber of Commerce <lb/>
night, Oct. 8th. at the <lb/>
mayor's office. This meeting <lb/>
should have the attention of <lb/>
every member and business man <lb/>
In Greenville. At this meeting <lb/>
your board cf directors elects <lb/>
president, vice president, <lb/>
and treasurer. Much de- <lb/>
pends on the action taken at <lb/>
Monday night's meeting for the <lb/>
working of the Chamber for the <lb/>
Do not overlook this<lb/>
as. <lb/>
a. <lb/>
A boy at seventeen can <lb/>
determine for himself <lb/>
whether he will be a simple bur- <lb/>
den bearer for others as long as <lb/>
lives, a leech on society or <lb/>
he will be a broad-minded, <lb/>
useful and successful man. If the <lb/>
boy at this age has no ambition <lb/>
to be anybody and is content to <lb/>
simply let things nicker and take <lb/>
his chance with others just like <lb/>
him, frittering away his <lb/>
to acquire knowledge and <lb/>
caring for the trivialities of life, <lb/>
he can make up his mind to carry <lb/>
a hod, ride the brake beam of a <lb/>
freight car or dodge the police as <lb/>
he lives, or he can resolve to be a <lb/>
man in the highest sense seek <lb/>
every means for physical, mental <lb/>
moral growth and develop- <lb/>
and must graduate into a I <lb/>
ever-widening field of utility and <lb/>
success. It matters little what <lb/>
his boyhood environment may be. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE OF <lb/>
THE GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST COMPLY <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
cf Aug 1907. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts secured and <lb/>
unsecured 11,018.35 <lb/>
All her Stocks, Bonds <lb/>
1,000.00 <lb/>
Furniture and Fixtures 2,688.64 <lb/>
Demand 10,000.00 <lb/>
Due from Banks 8.488,62 <lb/>
Cash Items 817.61 <lb/>
fold Coin <lb/>
Silver Coin 612.37 <lb/>
National bank notes and <lb/>
U. S. notes <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital Stock <lb/>
Undivided Profit less <lb/>
Expenses Mid <lb/>
Bills 85,000.00 <lb/>
Time 82,291.06 I. <lb/>
82,259.3 <lb/>
Due to a <lb/>
Cashier's checks <lb/>
outstanding 891.71 <lb/>
8,152.00 <lb/>
223,650.76 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
223.650. <lb/>
Total <lb/>
North of Pitt, <lb/>
I, C. S. Carr, Cashier of the above named b do <lb/>
swear that the above is true to the bot of my <lb/>
belief. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to <lb/>
me, this 31st day of Aug 1907. f <lb/>
ANDREW. MOORE. I <lb/>
Notary Public <lb/>
C. S. CARR, Cashier <lb/>
J. L WOOTEN <lb/>
R. C. FLANAGAN <lb/>
R. <lb/>
ext year, am <lb/>
meeting and remember the has the ambition and <lb/>
eight o'clock, p. m. grounded purpose he will <lb/>
C. E- Bradley, climb out of Press. <lb/>
Taft Vandyke <lb/>
House Furnishings, <lb/>
lucky r k-it his um- <lb/>
this. It makes a nice <lb/>
for <lb/>
of Air. <lb/>
The scientists tell that <lb/>
procure at sea level is <lb/>
teen pounds to the square Es- <lb/>
that the earth's <lb/>
miles up <lb/>
into it may extend a <lb/>
deal higher <lb/>
square inch that air, reaching <lb/>
from the earth's surface to the top <lb/>
of the atmosphere, weighs therefore <lb/>
about fifteen pounds. Now, if we <lb/>
could gather up all that atmosphere <lb/>
put it into a balance, <lb/>
we should have to put into the op- <lb/>
a solid globe of lead <lb/>
sixty in diameter to equalize <lb/>
tho weight. Air is not so light as <lb/>
some persons tiling it is, you, sec- <lb/>
Chicago Newt, <lb/>
The Rainbow Road. <lb/>
followed tho mad <lb/>
tho atom had crumbled by. <lb/>
rainbow ,,, y <lb/>
A. nil sky. <lb/>
r.-t and <lb/>
doc curly <lb/>
And a fr b, <lb/>
A and a now tin rail. <lb/>
was th. I In command, <lb/>
won, I Sunday evening. <lb/>
down to tho ground. <lb/>
told u . <lb/>
s told how n pot of <lb/>
hid at and tho bow. <lb/>
hurried a-row, <lb/>
R.-ally V. and <lb/>
I lot next cam riot. <lb/>
tho early tailed dos behind. <lb/>
Pot was a In <lb/>
or danger, I tier <lb/>
Oil. we almost there. <lb/>
And ire would been rich, no doubt. <lb/>
Put tho wind by with a <lb/>
And OUt. <lb/>
Whee tea ed look about <lb/>
The .-. d irk had come, <lb/>
rim feat that lost <lb/>
And the dun KM tho Drat <lb/>
And the om and the <lb/>
But Do end th. and I- <lb/>
All pare <lb/>
under penally of the <lb/>
hunting or dog, or in <lb/>
upon our <lb/>
lands, kn as the J- <lb/>
-arm. <lb/>
J. B Cherry. <lb/>
J. Cherry. <lb/>
Minister Dead. <lb/>
Dr. A. H. Moment, pastor of <lb/>
the First . c. <lb/>
Raleigh, died in that city <lb/>
day, lie was well known <lb/>
throughout the State. <lb/>
OF THE PEOPLE. <lb/>
hose Who Come aid Go Knew <lb/>
You Know. <lb/>
E. B. went to Williams- <lb/>
ton today. <lb/>
L. P. Lawrence left this morn- <lb/>
for Panacea Springs. <lb/>
Miss Lula Taylor returned to- <lb/>
day from a visit to Snow Hill. <lb/>
Mrs- Nana Brown returned <lb/>
Sunday evening from Norfolk. <lb/>
F. M. Hodges went to Kinston <lb/>
T. L. Bland, of Rocky Mount, <lb/>
came in Sunday evening. <lb/>
Miss Virgie Hart, of Virginia, <lb/>
is visiting her brother, J. N <lb/>
Hart. <lb/>
Miss Eliza Harding returned <lb/>
to Grifton Sunday evening. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Johnson, <lb/>
of Winterville, spent; Sunday <lb/>
here. I <lb/>
returned <lb/>
this a <lb/>
Snow Hill.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019723_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
J. v. <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
PUBLISHED <lb/>
, AND PR <lb/>
M cU. r t the at Greenville. N <lb/>
C March 1879 <lb/>
will in la <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY, OCT. <lb/>
n p men only get their m <lb/>
in papers by <lb/>
An want to know <lb/>
what this world be with <lb/>
out girls It would be a stag- <lb/>
nation. <lb/>
riv Clarkton says that <lb/>
if the Republicans do nominate <lb/>
a third term, there <lb/>
are Democrats can <lb/>
him. IVe hoy the is <lb/>
This has been B line <lb/>
fall f. <lb/>
hay, but we feel quit, <lb/>
-re are many farmers in <lb/>
Pitt who will continue <lb/>
paying their money for th. <lb/>
Wee urn product. There <lb/>
not U a bale hi hay snipped <lb/>
county <lb/>
The Raleigh N and <lb/>
owes to its enemies <lb/>
the liberal advertising they give <lb/>
it <lb/>
may be a success ran- <lb/>
a railroad, but he is not a <lb/>
in a newspaper <lb/>
numerous or her interest- <lb/>
topics i in <lb/>
of lite, the <lb/>
for governor have been lost <lb/>
sight of for time being. They <lb/>
could not attention with <lb/>
A town dots not as much <lb/>
by comp neighboring <lb/>
as it do,. through lack cf <lb/>
public i pint among its own <lb/>
pie. town that sits still ad <lb/>
just w alts t to come its <lb/>
way does not much coming. <lb/>
while the town that gets up and <lb/>
after things finds them. <lb/>
Every business man in Green- <lb/>
ville should feel an in the <lb/>
a meeting of the Chamber <lb/>
of Commerce to be held Monday <lb/>
night, and should manifest that <lb/>
interest by his presence. While <lb/>
the organization has not been as <lb/>
active as it might have been <lb/>
since it started a year ago, yet it <lb/>
has done much good. It did a <lb/>
work in helping to secure <lb/>
the training school, and there <lb/>
other things in which it has been <lb/>
beneficial- In fact it should be <lb/>
alive at all times with an eye <lb/>
constantly looking to those things <lb/>
that mean development and <lb/>
progress. Going after a thing <lb/>
with an organization behind you <lb/>
will be much more fruitful of re- <lb/>
than individual effort. Come <lb/>
out Monday night. <lb/>
They are making a <lb/>
of that Rowland trial at Raleigh. <lb/>
If there was a game warden it <lb/>
Pitt county he could <lb/>
thing to <lb/>
county has more cotton <lb/>
factories than any county <lb/>
in North Carolina, and the Gas <lb/>
Gazette recently issued a <lb/>
handsome page illustrated <lb/>
telling these forty-odd <lb/>
and the other advantages <lb/>
i county. <lb/>
file Charlotte News says that <lb/>
rive time there will not <lb/>
ya whiskey in North <lb/>
and we believe the News <lb/>
a safe prediction. At <lb/>
time it is noticeable <lb/>
yet engaged in the saloon <lb/>
fail to see the growth <lb/>
against the traffic and <lb/>
not get out of the business <lb/>
are driven out. <lb/>
The course of the Raleigh Times <lb/>
is redacting no credit upon <lb/>
Croat paper, be Times is certain- <lb/>
in no position to be <lb/>
at others. <lb/>
w . <lb/>
for street and other improve <lb/>
shows mat <lb/>
there believe progress. <lb/>
may not find any <lb/>
bears in the hut he <lb/>
rind without looking far. <lb/>
Civilization is certainly c <lb/>
when the college get <lb/>
to passing against <lb/>
hazing <lb/>
SHALL BETAKEN <lb/>
The newspapers that are not <lb/>
going to be caught by a show- <lb/>
of the books have no uneasy <lb/>
feelings about the investigation. <lb/>
Let it go on <lb/>
Sentiment expressed in the <lb/>
meeting of the Chamber of Com- <lb/>
Monday was wry <lb/>
much against the demands k <lb/>
by property owners along Di. k <lb/>
avenue for payment <lb/>
little strips across the front <lb/>
the lots to straighten and beau- <lb/>
that street. The question <lb/>
was brought up some years <lb/>
and has at intervals since been <lb/>
more or less discussed in meet- <lb/>
of the aldermen, but every <lb/>
to do anything toward <lb/>
proving Dickinson avenue has <lb/>
en by the attitude i <lb/>
the property owners It is be- <lb/>
argument that the properly <lb/>
owners themselves would be the <lb/>
greatest beneficiaries, by many <lb/>
fold, for this street to be straight- <lb/>
and paved, but people of all <lb/>
other sections of the <lb/>
see the justness of having to pay <lb/>
large sums for the little strips of <lb/>
property in question and then <lb/>
improving the street mainly <lb/>
the benefit of those living on it <lb/>
Another point that does not <lb/>
need arguing now to convince <lb/>
anybody, is that Greenville is <lb/>
going to begin paving Th t <lb/>
seem to be a settled <lb/>
It is certain that the g <lb/>
will begin on the business section <lb/>
of Evans street and then go to <lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Line depot. <lb/>
Toe thing that brings Did <lb/>
into any <lb/>
whatever as the route to <lb/>
follow from street to the <lb/>
depot is it is a little shorter <lb/>
ranee than to go by way I <lb/>
street Evans and Ninth <lb/>
ore already the standard <lb/>
width of streets of the town, <lb/>
i here be no property to <lb/>
pay for on this route, and <lb/>
cost of paving the small differ- <lb/>
in distance will be <lb/>
as compared with what the <lb/>
of property on Dickinson <lb/>
want for sufficient front- <lb/>
age to make that street the prop <lb/>
r width. <lb/>
The situation is just <lb/>
things being the people <lb/>
had rather see Dickinson avenue <lb/>
made the route to the depot, but <lb/>
unless the attitude of the prop- <lb/>
owners is changed the other <lb/>
route will be selected. <lb/>
RANDOM REFLECTIONS. <lb/>
B- a <lb/>
As long as ft typewriter is <lb/>
h- oily weapon by <lb/>
. . in their fight, -.-Hi t. necessary to all the <lb/>
i he <lb/>
With the of pie n-. the <lb/>
cost of is again ad- <lb/>
if continues it will <lb/>
won be so that no one can <lb/>
to have it. <lb/>
Mr. Win. R. Hearst is making <lb/>
en's nominate <lb/>
himself for president. <lb/>
Reforming Tammany from the <lb/>
is another one of <lb/>
cent in politics. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs William E. Corey <lb/>
seem determined to shed both <lb/>
families. <lb/>
Senator thinks the <lb/>
try has enough of Roosevelt- <lb/>
A; whom else, did he say <lb/>
Lillian Russell denies at she <lb/>
is h r face was <lb/>
but has had <lb/>
money, fr r years <lb/>
No doubt Brother Fairbanks <lb/>
never dreamed they had put so <lb/>
much in his cocktail. <lb/>
Mexico is getting enthusiastic <lb/>
Secretary Root, even if he <lb/>
isn't a hot <lb/>
A has sued the city <lb/>
of Parkersburg, W. V. for <lb/>
tor a monkey bite. If the <lb/>
been nit-size, <lb/>
night the damages nave ban- <lb/>
i city. <lb/>
Mrs. Carrie N had to I <lb/>
Ii. before sh i genin <lb/>
. t o it nil <lb/>
another h e Wu <lb/>
to th.- <lb/>
S picking up, u <lb/>
few ovations himself in old <lb/>
THE SHOEMAKER SAINTS. <lb/>
Some folks can't sleep when <lb/>
they get the chance, and <lb/>
folks can hardly get a chance to <lb/>
sleep. And it is a matter in <lb/>
which they can neither swap <lb/>
places nor divide. <lb/>
Did they try to lose the <lb/>
dent in the Louisiana hunting <lb/>
trip <lb/>
a decided dry <lb/>
look. The prohibitionists carried <lb/>
the election in that city Tuesday <lb/>
by about a thousand majority <lb/>
and Wilmington should <lb/>
sit up and take notice. <lb/>
There are a lot of good things <lb/>
in store for Greenville, that is if <lb/>
we go right down ; them- <lb/>
Keep street paving in your <lb/>
mind and it will be no great while <lb/>
before Greenville into the <lb/>
paving business, <lb/>
The General Convention of th <lb/>
Episcopal Church, in <lb/>
Richmond, is having trouble <lb/>
the race question. The South- <lb/>
bishops want a separation so <lb/>
that each race have <lb/>
churches and its own bishop, <lb/>
while th Northern and Western <lb/>
bishops oppose such division. <lb/>
A Problem For <lb/>
of the most serious <lb/>
problem that confronts <lb/>
newspaper publishers of she <lb/>
country, those of the <lb/>
smaller dailies and is <lb/>
the impending increase in the <lb/>
price of print paper, which will <lb/>
be double what it <lb/>
now is. There l-e <lb/>
few outside the strongest of the <lb/>
minor publications that will, be <lb/>
able to weather the storm and <lb/>
continue the present price- <lb/>
The greatest to <lb/>
Suffer will undoubtedly be <lb/>
weeklies whose several <lb/>
years ago injudiciously reduced, <lb/>
price of subscription from <lb/>
and 91.80 to says <lb/>
Decatur <lb/>
This unfortunate cut in price <lb/>
occurred when the country was <lb/>
in the clutches of hard, times. <lb/>
and the people were not able to, <lb/>
pay their bills. When <lb/>
struck the country, and prices <lb/>
f commodities naturally <lb/>
op, the price of the country <lb/>
weekly was kept at one dollar, <lb/>
and now every subscription <lb/>
en at that price well-nigh a <lb/>
financial It will be at a loss <lb/>
when the new price of paper <lb/>
goes into effect. <lb/>
There is but one thins for <lb/>
small publishers to d and that is <lb/>
to increase the price of their pa- <lb/>
They should not expect to <lb/>
make the advance less than fifty <lb/>
cent on subscriptions, and <lb/>
the same amount on rates. <lb/>
No man can publish a decent <lb/>
weekly newspaper nowadays at <lb/>
and no subscriber ought to <lb/>
expect to get a paper for that <lb/>
th. Trick by NUS <lb/>
It m in that Thoma. <lb/>
Gregory joined the London metro- <lb/>
force. In hit time Gregory <lb/>
arrested many notorious criminals. <lb/>
He captured a gang who were <lb/>
known as the of <lb/>
and under whose guidance all big <lb/>
robberies were carried out. Gregory <lb/>
was gifted with a faculty for <lb/>
and he appeared in many <lb/>
characters. In order to enter and <lb/>
raid a club in Soho lie was given the <lb/>
task of gaining admittance to the <lb/>
At an appointed time, <lb/>
dressed as a poor old man, he <lb/>
lurching up against the door <lb/>
with a basket of The <lb/>
doorkeeper, a pugilist, knocked him <lb/>
over into the road, but this gave the <lb/>
waiting an opportunity for <lb/>
getting inside and effecting their <lb/>
mission. <lb/>
One summer for weeks he might <lb/>
have been seen daily outside the <lb/>
general as a boot cleaner, <lb/>
and eventually he brought off the <lb/>
arrest of a pang. <lb/>
Obtaining the position of valet to <lb/>
a wealthy who kept a man- <lb/>
in Gregory, with <lb/>
other officers, a big coup, <lb/>
four confederates being sent to <lb/>
penal servitude. <lb/>
An emoting story is told of one <lb/>
of Gregory adventures. He was <lb/>
keeping on the corner <lb/>
of Dean street west and had adopt- <lb/>
ed the plan of selling matches, lie <lb/>
had only two a large and a <lb/>
small one. A Scotchman went tip <lb/>
to and offered halfpenny <lb/>
the largo box, at the same lime <lb/>
officer penny. Gregory <lb/>
said could not let him have that <lb/>
one, would try to get one for <lb/>
him. at Ibis moment the man <lb/>
he was watching by, and <lb/>
Gregory went after and located I <lb/>
Some forty minutes i <lb/>
afterward Gregory returned to the <lb/>
conn r of Dean street and found the <lb/>
Scotchman awaiting for his <lb/>
matches and change <lb/>
A Bond street capture is quite a <lb/>
dramatic little story. One morning <lb/>
Gregory noticed in Bond street a <lb/>
landau stop outside Jeweler's shop. <lb/>
A woman dressed in the height of <lb/>
fashion slighted into the . <lb/>
window. She somehow attracted <lb/>
the detective's and was i <lb/>
teen to drop her parasol through <lb/>
the grating under the window. <lb/>
The shop assistants noticed her <lb/>
trouble and out to help her <lb/>
recover the article. No sooner had <lb/>
they left the shop than two <lb/>
entered and proceeded to <lb/>
fill their pockets with jewelry. The <lb/>
detective got assistance and j <lb/>
ed all three, out to <lb/>
old Weekly. <lb/>
Th life a n man is <lb/>
often far from being a bed of <lb/>
roses. Pittman. of the <lb/>
Dunn Weekly Guide, was <lb/>
rested other day for having <lb/>
four cords of wood sawed on a <lb/>
sidewalk of a back street in <lb/>
town, and was fined He <lb/>
took an appeal to the Superior <lb/>
court. It. does look like if ; <lb/>
newspaper man is fortunate <lb/>
enough to own four cords of wood <lb/>
at one time, he should be d <lb/>
to have it sawed almost anywhere <lb/>
he Sun. <lb/>
With the Drewry matter <lb/>
and the Rowland <lb/>
trial of band, Raleigh can <lb/>
take a tiny rest before <lb/>
pulling off the fair. <lb/>
The city Bern held an <lb/>
on the question <lb/>
of issuing bonds for <lb/>
street improvements, and the <lb/>
was overwhelming in favor <lb/>
of bonds. Good for New P <lb/>
Next Week. <lb/>
Those favorites with Greenville <lb/>
the Four <lb/>
will begin a three engage- <lb/>
in Masonic opera <lb/>
next Monday night The com- <lb/>
this season is stronger and <lb/>
better than ever, and pres <lb/>
notices show trey are playing to <lb/>
large houses. All who witness <lb/>
their performances are well <lb/>
pleased- <lb/>
Food For <lb/>
The best of food for young <lb/>
is hard boiled egg mixed with a <lb/>
little wheat bread. Cut up the egg <lb/>
fine and add ti it ft part of a roll <lb/>
that has been soaked in water for a <lb/>
few minutes and then squeeze dry. <lb/>
Great care must be taken that the <lb/>
food fresh, for if it be the least <lb/>
sour it will kill the birds. The <lb/>
young ones are nearly always fed by <lb/>
male bird, but in about two <lb/>
weeks they will food themselves, <lb/>
When they are a month old put <lb/>
them in a cage by themselves, Feed <lb/>
them mi the and bread mixed <lb/>
with some of the seed that you give <lb/>
the old birds, and, having continued <lb/>
this diet for four or live weeks, you <lb/>
may treat them as yon do the old <lb/>
ones. Keep your cage perfectly <lb/>
clean, give the birds plenty of light <lb/>
and fresh air and keep them out of <lb/>
drafts. Sudden changes of temper- <lb/>
will be to make them <lb/>
church is earnestly requested to <lb/>
be present at the meeting <lb/>
eastern towns are taking service tonight. Important <lb/>
in front of the to be attended to- Let <lb/>
J. N, H. <lb/>
Friends throughout the State <lb/>
will s with Rev. <lb/>
I N. H. and Mrs. <lb/>
Summers, of Norfolk, because <lb/>
if an injury to their son. who is <lb/>
i nephew of Mrs. J- R. <lb/>
of this city. Of the <lb/>
accident the Norfolk Landmark <lb/>
of Sunday the result <lb/>
n injuries sustained by being <lb/>
struck on the head by a piece of <lb/>
timber, while he was at play at <lb/>
Atlantic City school No. How- <lb/>
Important Business. ard son of Rev. J. <lb/>
member of N painfully <lb/>
injured. The boy <lb/>
for probably half an hour <lb/>
um-. of progress. <lb/>
every one be there. <lb/>
but rallied an was much o <lb/>
yesterday afternoon <lb/>
News and Observer. <lb/>
Funny <lb/>
Here are a few Irish bulls; An <lb/>
Irish member of the <lb/>
board some years ago <lb/>
ed that St. Boniface down should <lb/>
be planted with some line old <lb/>
Horace Walpole records one <lb/>
which he pronounces the best he <lb/>
ever met with. hate that <lb/>
said a gentleman, looking at a <lb/>
person who had been his nurse. <lb/>
her, for when I was a child <lb/>
changed me at <lb/>
This was a perplexing assertion, <lb/>
but a similar instance is recorded <lb/>
in the autobiography of an Irish- <lb/>
man, who gravely informs us that <lb/>
he sway early in life from his <lb/>
father on discovering he was only <lb/>
his Telegraph. <lb/>
Try This. <lb/>
Without any preliminary ask a <lb/>
number of persons to kindly draw <lb/>
from memory the figure which <lb/>
G o'clock exactly as it appears <lb/>
on the dials of their watches. Now <lb/>
ask them to take out their <lb/>
and look at them. Most of thorn <lb/>
will discover that the character <lb/>
they saw so clearly the foot of <lb/>
the imaginary watch floating before <lb/>
their mind's eye no <lb/>
at all on the dial of the real <lb/>
where its place is taken by the small <lb/>
seconds hand <lb/>
riB <lb/>
f Um Who <lb/>
by Um Sward. <lb/>
St. and his brother, Cris. <lb/>
associated together <lb/>
in the were two native <lb/>
of who, having become con- <lb/>
to Christianity, set out for <lb/>
to preach the faith about the <lb/>
middle of the third century along <lb/>
with St. Quintin and others. The <lb/>
brothers fettled at where, <lb/>
in imitation of the apostle Paul, <lb/>
they publicly in the day- <lb/>
time and worked with their hands <lb/>
at night, earning their own sub- <lb/>
by making shoes, <lb/>
nobly born. They supplied the poor <lb/>
at a low price, and u tells us <lb/>
that an supplied them with, <lb/>
leather. Th heathen listened to <lb/>
their instructions and were <lb/>
at the charity, disinterested- <lb/>
piety and contempt of glory <lb/>
displayed in their lives, and many <lb/>
were converted to the Christian <lb/>
faith. <lb/>
After they been thus engaged <lb/>
for several years the Emperor Max- <lb/>
fame into <lb/>
and a complaint was mode to <lb/>
the brothers. He, de- <lb/>
siring to gratify their accusers as <lb/>
well as to indulge his own savage <lb/>
gave, onion- tin t t <lb/>
should be brought be; <lb/>
the most in -humble enemy <lb/>
of the Christians of time. The <lb/>
saints bore with patience and con- <lb/>
the most cruel torments and <lb/>
at length finished their course by <lb/>
beheaded with the sword <lb/>
A. D. <lb/>
According to n tradition, <lb/>
their remains, being east into the <lb/>
sea, were washed <lb/>
marsh. In the sixth century n <lb/>
greet church was built in their hon- <lb/>
or at a nil St. richly <lb/>
ornamented the shrine. <lb/>
from their martyrdom to the <lb/>
present time they have been re- <lb/>
as the patron faints of shoe- <lb/>
makers, who were accustomed to <lb/>
honor their day are yet in <lb/>
some by great festivity. One <lb/>
special ceremony was a procession <lb/>
of the brethren of the craft with <lb/>
banners and music, while various <lb/>
characters representing King Cris- <lb/>
pin and his court were sustained by <lb/>
different Ga- <lb/>
Th Laurel and <lb/>
The laurel and the sunflower <lb/>
have been found, according to <lb/>
Country Life, to be of the greatest <lb/>
use in damp situations. People who <lb/>
live in such spots, especially near <lb/>
undrained land, think there is no <lb/>
help for them but by removal. <lb/>
experiments have shown <lb/>
that it is possible materially to <lb/>
prove the atmosphere in such neigh- <lb/>
by the planting of laurels <lb/>
and sunflowers. The former <lb/>
off an abundance of ozone, while the <lb/>
latter in destroying the <lb/>
malarial conditions. These two, if <lb/>
planted even on the most restricted <lb/>
teals in a garden or any ground <lb/>
close to the house, will be found to <lb/>
increase speedily the <lb/>
salubrity of the atmosphere. <lb/>
From <lb/>
There was a young maiden of <lb/>
Leigh. A talented Lady was <lb/>
She baked some mince pies as a <lb/>
pleasant surprise for her bough, <lb/>
who was coming to <lb/>
But when the youth tasted her <lb/>
dough ho groaned out a terrible <lb/>
In anguish bawled. <lb/>
Then the doctor was to <lb/>
what Mabel's bough. <lb/>
Said the doctor in accents most <lb/>
gruff, afraid this man's <lb/>
hod it <lb/>
Cried my had <lb/>
only one <lb/>
Quoth the off <lb/>
That's Answers. <lb/>
A Financial <lb/>
An old gentleman who had dis- <lb/>
mo from his horse walked into <lb/>
a wayside inn at <lb/>
dale and left the animal in charge <lb/>
of a scantily clad urchin. On re- <lb/>
turning he found another poverty <lb/>
stricken boy holding the horse. Ex- <lb/>
the little lad through his <lb/>
he <lb/>
not the boy I left with <lb/>
replied the boy; just <lb/>
and bought him from <lb/>
t other lad for a <lb/>
For his candor the boy received <lb/>
sixpence. London Penny<lb/>
Domestic Courtesy. <lb/>
At a Lambeth and of- <lb/>
dinner Mr. Frank Bryant told <lb/>
a story of a Lambeth lad who <lb/>
questioned by his schoolteacher as. <lb/>
to his father's Christian name. <lb/>
your name <lb/>
our father's name <lb/>
his other <lb/>
What does your moth- <lb/>
call him r <lb/>
fat London <lb/>
press. j <lb/>
it Is In F. C. NYE, who is authorized to rep- <lb/>
resent the Eastern Reflector in Winterville and territory <lb/>
sell Eclipse and <lb/>
fountain pens. <lb/>
B. T. <lb/>
Co <lb/>
We on hand copies <lb/>
of the history of are p to <lb/>
PB T Cox rind first meal f u at <lb/>
Root paint, varnish, stain. Rubber shoes of all sizes <lb/>
etc, at Harrington, Bar- coats at B. F Manning <lb/>
Carolina Milling <lb/>
Our price, <lb/>
Bring your chickens and eggs <lb/>
to Harrington, Co. <lb/>
Highest prices paid for them. <lb/>
The famous Hawks glasses at <lb/>
B. T. Cox Bro Don't neglect <lb/>
your eye.-- <lb/>
. Mrs. W. M- Moore, of Grime s <lb/>
land, spent Thursday night here. <lb/>
She came Up with her daughter, <lb/>
Miss Ward, who has entered <lb/>
school again. <lb/>
Harrington have <lb/>
a complete stock of ready made- <lb/>
clothing see him before you get <lb/>
your next suit. <lb/>
Miss Laura Cox. who is Reach- <lb/>
in the graded school of <lb/>
den, came in Friday evening to <lb/>
spend Saturday at home. <lb/>
You want a buggy and we <lb/>
have them. When you <lb/>
load of tobacco come by Winter <lb/>
buy that buggy until you see <lb/>
him. He can make it to your <lb/>
interest and he do it, <lb/>
here <lb/>
FOR two <lb/>
wagon and a disc harrow- Mrs. <lb/>
J. L. Butt, one mile from Win- <lb/>
Dr. Cox and family, Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. J. D. Cox, Bennett <lb/>
and daughter. Miss Alma, Misses <lb/>
Maggie Hudson, Annie Carroll <lb/>
and Chapman <lb/>
from the exposition last <lb/>
Another large shipment of <lb/>
of all sizes just received <lb/>
at A. W. Co <lb/>
There- will be a moving picture <lb/>
entertainment Monday night at <lb/>
th j academy. This company has <lb/>
given several entertainments <lb/>
her of a high order. <lb/>
They an entirely <lb/>
st of pictures. <lb/>
Our fall stock cf dry good, <lb/>
shoes, notions are for in- <lb/>
Come and see us be- <lb/>
fore buying elsewhere. W are <lb/>
prepared to give you <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
Rowan Cooper Son <lb/>
tie recently vacated <lb/>
by Taylor Co. <lb/>
Heaters of all grades and <lb/>
just received at A. W. v. <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Wild grapes are <lb/>
and the are getting <lb/>
fat- In of this, the <lb/>
sound of the horn and <lb/>
the glad yelp of the hound <lb/>
familiar sounds to our ears of <lb/>
late. Last night Prof. Li <lb/>
and a crowd of the school boys <lb/>
went out on an expedition this <lb/>
kind. We have not heard the <lb/>
extent, of the catch. The last we <lb/>
saw of them they were put tin <lb/>
with great expectations. We <lb/>
hope they were <lb/>
The residence being erected <lb/>
by Miss Alice Tripp is going <lb/>
L. L. and Miss Rosa <lb/>
Smith Louise Satterthwaite <lb/>
went to Greenville today- <lb/>
We regret very much to lose <lb/>
B- G. Taylor and Frank <lb/>
White, who have gone to Ayden <lb/>
to mercantile business <lb/>
We never met two more clever <lb/>
and straight forward young men, <lb/>
and our loss is gain. <lb/>
Our best wishes for their success <lb/>
go with them. <lb/>
have tried the rest, now <lb/>
try the best, tho Hunsucker bug- <lb/>
sold by the A- G- Cox Mfg. <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
of all kinds prepared <lb/>
at the Carolina Milling mfg. <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Nice dress shoes for ladies and <lb/>
gentlemen just in at Harrington, <lb/>
Co <lb/>
Now is the time to purchase <lb/>
any time- Wood also a <lb/>
specialty. <lb/>
stock of static-i <lb/>
must go. We must make <lb/>
room for our immense stock of <lb/>
new goods now coming During <lb/>
the next forty days we will make <lb/>
special prices to all our customers <lb/>
on our box papers <lb/>
B. T. Cox Bro. <lb/>
T. W. Wood Sons 1907 <lb/>
nips and can now <lb/>
be had at the drug store of Dr <lb/>
T. Cox Bro. <lb/>
Guaranteed Rubber, <lb/>
weight rain coats at B. F. Man- <lb/>
Co <lb/>
Look-out for our immense fall <lb/>
which will be here in s <lb/>
few days. <lb/>
Have all your wood turning <lb/>
work done at Carolina Milling <lb/>
Mfg. cg- First class work <lb/>
done <lb/>
Mrs. J. H. Mitchell, of New <lb/>
Bern, came in Friday afternoon <lb/>
visit her son, who is in . <lb/>
Remember that the A Q-s <lb/>
Manufacturing Co. are still <lb/>
the well known Tar <lb/>
wagons at their usual low price <lb/>
Hunsucker buggies are still g <lb/>
if you want a nice up to <lb/>
date you had <lb/>
better give him an early call <lb/>
Ward-robe, tables, safes <lb/>
made to order. Carolina Milling <lb/>
Mfg. co. <lb/>
School children cannot get th <lb/>
proper training unless <lb/>
The <lb/>
Pitt school k <lb/>
by the A. G. Cox Mfg <lb/>
are especially noted for <lb/>
comfort, besides being the <lb/>
et desk on the market. Every <lb/>
school house in N. C. <lb/>
should not be without them. <lb/>
Try a tree brand pocket knife. <lb/>
under guarantor. <lb/>
They are kept in stock B T <lb/>
Bro. <lb/>
The ladies and the girls all <lb/>
candy. The kind <lb/>
at Saul's drug store. <lb/>
hams and shoulders <lb/>
at J. R. Smith co. <lb/>
A specialty of stationery at <lb/>
Saul's drug store. <lb/>
MUST <lb/>
CHANGE HER <lb/>
BELIEF. <lb/>
RELIGIOUS <lb/>
Will Not Miss Vanderbilt <lb/>
Unless She Catholic Church <lb/>
A New York dispatch <lb/>
Gladys Vanderbilt must change <lb/>
her religion when she becomes <lb/>
the bride of Count <lb/>
or the Austrian autocracy <lb/>
will not the marriage. <lb/>
The so-called <lb/>
of Vienna has become <lb/>
scandalized of the engagement <lb/>
and unless the young woman be- <lb/>
comes a Catholic the marriage <lb/>
will not be legally recognized in <lb/>
Austria. The Count being a <lb/>
Catholic, Miss will <lb/>
continue to remain Miss Vander- <lb/>
in Austria unless she changes <lb/>
her religion, although in the <lb/>
country, proper, the <lb/>
marriage will be considered per- <lb/>
legal and the young <lb/>
man's name will be as <lb/>
a full-fledged countess in the <lb/>
roster of Hungarian nobility. <lb/>
Issue of the marriage of the <lb/>
would be looked upon <lb/>
as illegal in Austria. Hence the <lb/>
is convinced <lb/>
that Miss Vanderbilt, in order to <lb/>
gain a standing in Austria, as <lb/>
well as in Hungary must em- <lb/>
brace the Catholic faith, as Anna <lb/>
Gould did when she married <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Men's fancy silk mufflers for <lb/>
the cold winter wind at B. F <lb/>
Mi n ling Co. <lb/>
When in need of rice kid <lb/>
driving and work <lb/>
gloves, see B. F Co. <lb/>
Dress a specialty, at <lb/>
B. F. Manning Co <lb/>
Men's fancy all sizes at <lb/>
B. F. Manning Co. <lb/>
A new lot of beat Hour at <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
sacks of salt at Harrington <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
We happened to go around to <lb/>
the A G. Cox manufacturing <lb/>
Co's place today and found that <lb/>
they had shipped almost a car <lb/>
load of their Tar Heel Cart <lb/>
bodies today. Good <lb/>
will <lb/>
There Trouble at Home. <lb/>
odd a client as you can <lb/>
imagine said Jerome K. Jerome <lb/>
at a dinner, <lb/>
m a legal friend of mine <lb/>
Rye one morning. <lb/>
was an extremely pretty <lb/>
but her clear, soft eyes <lb/>
ere red with Indeed, <lb/>
-he was in tears as she entered <lb/>
my friend's office. Her little <lb/>
form shook with sobs. <lb/>
my said he <lb/>
I should explain that this <lb/>
client hardly more than <lb/>
seven or eight years well, <lb/>
dear, what can I do for <lb/>
sir, said the child, <lb/>
want to get <lb/>
a divorce from my papa and <lb/>
mama Home Com- <lb/>
THE AYDEN DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
J. M.-BLOW, Manager and <lb/>
Urn take <lb/>
two story derailing <lb/>
at One four room <lb/>
an-1 for ; at One nine r, two story <lb/>
m- n h list j dwelling at Six vacant <lb/>
all who receive m the town N <lb/>
take <lb/>
for i <lb/>
Tuesday night sometime after <lb/>
and Mrs of <lb/>
i are visiting the latter's <lb/>
Mr <lb/>
mother, Mrs. SacS . <lb/>
In a trial here Saturday before<lb/>
turned to her homo in the <lb/>
Dry. <lb/>
Asheville, N. C, Oct. <lb/>
Asheville has gone and <lb/>
the prohibitionists are tonight <lb/>
wildly enthusiastic The <lb/>
of the people today was rendered <lb/>
in language plain- They literally <lb/>
swept the city clean and sent the <lb/>
saloon to its death beneath an <lb/>
avalanche of votes The <lb/>
carried every voting <lb/>
precinct in the city and won by <lb/>
of eight hundred and <lb/>
eight. <lb/>
While the voting continued all <lb/>
this afternoon the tale <lb/>
practically told at noon. In fact <lb/>
before o'clock this morning <lb/>
the saloon advocates saw the <lb/>
on the wall and <lb/>
realized that the tide had set <lb/>
against them. After the first <lb/>
four hours of balloting was <lb/>
simply a question of majority. <lb/>
The total number of votes polled <lb/>
was 1,700. <lb/>
The A G. Cox Manufacturing <lb/>
Co have just received a car <lb/>
of the Pittsburgh welded <lb/>
fence of the most popular heights. <lb/>
Prices are nothing but rock bot- <lb/>
tom- Call and see them before <lb/>
you buy. <lb/>
Nice juniper tubs of all sizes <lb/>
at Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
Bagging and ties at Harrington, <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
Money is a burden when it has <lb/>
to be carried around in a purpose <lb/>
if we do not have immediate use <lb/>
o'clock someone set fire to and <lb/>
up the large tobacco pack- <lb/>
house of Mr, Caleb Cannon, who <lb/>
lives about seven mile <lb/>
Ayden. The loss was several <lb/>
thousand dollars and there was <lb/>
no insurance. <lb/>
For fresh and cheap goods co <lb/>
to E. E. Co., they <lb/>
have the best. <lb/>
C. G. Moore has been elected <lb/>
chief of police of Ayden in place <lb/>
of J. W. Alexander. <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co. have just re- <lb/>
a ear load of lime. <lb/>
J. N. Alexander has gone north <lb/>
to purchase his fall goods- <lb/>
Mrs. Betsy Case died at the <lb/>
home of her son-in-law, John <lb/>
Dennis, who lives near here, last <lb/>
Tuesday and was buried the fol- <lb/>
lowing afternoon. <lb/>
direct from <lb/>
factory at Saul's drug s tore. <lb/>
W. J. Boyd is at Richmond on <lb/>
business. <lb/>
Go to E E. new <lb/>
market for beef, fresh meats, <lb/>
and fresh <lb/>
Miss Arab Davis has accepted <lb/>
a position as teacher in a school <lb/>
at Old Ford. Beaufort county. <lb/>
Tuesday was a courting <lb/>
The wash tub men <lb/>
a case before Esquire <lb/>
and a jury down at the rink as- <lb/>
by Senator Fleming, who <lb/>
delivered himself of much Black- <lb/>
stone and declared he was a <lb/>
hater of all things <lb/>
of any and all who treated <lb/>
the poor farmer, whom he the <lb/>
Senator loved so truly and so <lb/>
well, as to sell him. the farmers, <lb/>
something the Senator declared a <lb/>
fraud and so decided the jury. <lb/>
At Squire Blows there were <lb/>
proceedings but no jury, <lb/>
however, a plain, simple old <lb/>
try break down with Judge Blow <lb/>
in the chair and Col. F. G. James <lb/>
on the floor narrating the needs <lb/>
and wherefores why a poor devil <lb/>
of a tenant shouldn't quit his <lb/>
crop when he wanted to. The <lb/>
colonel and the senator both won <lb/>
out- <lb/>
It is a delight and a pleasure <lb/>
to say nothing of the <lb/>
in having a first class <lb/>
Pen. Call at Drug <lb/>
Store secure this much need- <lb/>
ed article. <lb/>
Mrs. B. F. Early has returned <lb/>
from her visit to Norfolk, <lb/>
Everybody hat <lb/>
buys candy from <lb/>
drug store. <lb/>
Rev. Marvin Ormond will <lb/>
in the Methodist church <lb/>
here Sunday night, Oct. 6th. All <lb/>
are invited to attend- <lb/>
Big lot cots latest styles, very <lb/>
comfortable at J. R. Smith Co <lb/>
Ice cream salt at J. R. Smith <lb/>
and <lb/>
Pneumonia Cure at J. R. Smith <lb/>
J. J. Edwards Son have just <lb/>
received a car load of Ellwood <lb/>
wire fence. Can furnish any <lb/>
Big lot of calico, best grade <lb/>
cents per yard at J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
The very best and cheapest <lb/>
hair brushes, combs, and <lb/>
at Saul's drug store, <lb/>
If you wish something nice <lb/>
r two kind friends i <lb/>
aid, one by pull- and <lb/>
Company. <lb/>
try. <lb/>
BARGAINS IN REAL <lb/>
One thirty-seven acre f. rm <lb/>
outside corporation at <lb/>
nM n Ms .,.,, <lb/>
Ayden Loan a Ins. Co. <lb/>
This scribe went out in the <lb/>
country Monday and in walking <lb/>
across the fields fell in a <lb/>
about ton feet deep, and <lb/>
not been for <lb/>
who lent their aid, one by <lb/>
and the other by pushing, <lb/>
the probability is he would have <lb/>
been in that ditch right now <lb/>
a ramble across the field <lb/>
and a fall in a ditch w sincerely <lb/>
hope we may always hereafter <lb/>
be delivered. Those kind <lb/>
who so greatly aided us will live- <lb/>
in our memory so long as <lb/>
shall last and <lb/>
ditches are never <lb/>
patterns at J. R. Smith <lb/>
co. <lb/>
Mrs. F. Lilly left Tuesday to <lb/>
visit friends at Maple Cypress. <lb/>
Washing machines and wring- <lb/>
at J. R. Smith co. <lb/>
The whole generation <lb/>
were here from <lb/>
in attendance upon a <lb/>
court. <lb/>
Bring us your beeswax, woo, <lb/>
hams, shoulders, chickens and <lb/>
eggs to J. K. Smith Co. <lb/>
J. T. Smith. Sr., has been con <lb/>
fined at his home several days <lb/>
with sickness. He is very much <lb/>
improved at this time. <lb/>
Sauls guarantees all he sells, <lb/>
especially candy. <lb/>
Mason fruit jars, taps and rub- <lb/>
at I. R. Smith co. <lb/>
Keen cutlery and hard- <lb/>
ware at J. R. Smith co- <lb/>
Riyal flour, always good and <lb/>
good always at J. R. Smith co. <lb/>
Two prominent families firm <lb/>
Winterville have moved to Ayden <lb/>
and will make this their home. <lb/>
We extend them a hearty <lb/>
come. <lb/>
We h the sermon of Rev. <lb/>
Marvin Ormond, in the <lb/>
dist church last Sunday night, <lb/>
very highly complimented. <lb/>
Many say he is destined to fill a <lb/>
high place in his noble calling. <lb/>
The last quarterly meeting of <lb/>
the Baptist Association of this <lb/>
section will be held in the church <lb/>
at this place next Saturday and <lb/>
Sunday. All members are es- <lb/>
invited to be present at <lb/>
the Saturday meeting as much <lb/>
important business is to be trans <lb/>
acted. <lb/>
There were several families <lb/>
from to leave <lb/>
Tuesday for the exposition. <lb/>
George and Fred Worthington <lb/>
are at Scotland filling a <lb/>
large contract for tinning. <lb/>
Their's is good work and is <lb/>
meeting a steady demand. <lb/>
last week of<lb/>
ii i <lb/>
in a ii.-,.; ; , , <lb/>
v of court <lb/>
same party was given a hear <lb/>
for . .,, ,. ,; t <lb/>
i bond ; <lb/>
to . i <lb/>
jail. <lb/>
lie <lb/>
of <lb/>
r. <lb/>
up . , <lb/>
; to <lb/>
i n a id <lb/>
at a bargain HI. <lb/>
just S. our ;, . <lb/>
fore you buy. J. R <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Now for a neW s <lb/>
to see before y <lb/>
Bay r. of r <lb/>
leather shoes for <lb/>
patent <lb/>
, .,.,,,. j <lb/>
R. Turnage and Company. <lb/>
Our line Haw's Hat <lb/>
rev <lb/>
Guaranteed. J. R, <lb/>
I COM<lb/>
l.-f. iv yon bu J. <lb/>
R. Turn-i em I <lb/>
If you want a fall ; <lb/>
have them, Latest sty <lb/>
prices r j j , <lb/>
and company <lb/>
Overcoats and rain coat <lb/>
bargains Don't fail to s <lb/>
R and <lb/>
and <lb/>
age <lb/>
at <lb/>
em <lb/>
n . SALE. <lb/>
virtue of., ,.,,,.,.,,, <lb/>
Pitt county i. . , <lb/>
No 1488, J. It. <lb/>
.-tat-n. <lb/>
will sail for cash <lb/>
court house door in Greenville on Mon- <lb/>
t. the <lb/>
estate. One lot i the <lb/>
town of Beth I being tho store lot now <lb/>
Mowed b; J. R. Bu ting and the <lb/>
on said lot. it h mod <lb/>
tho north by I -i., on <lb/>
east the owned by M <lb/>
Co., the south by Mack G R ran <lb/>
and Bros, an I on the wed <lb/>
mount s-. r and h I <lb/>
prone that was <lb/>
to cherry <lb/>
rid the <lb/>
other a <lb/>
One other I a in Beth I bounded <lb/>
on , Mrs <lb/>
Bullocks, on <lb/>
ed by K c-. .-, ,. m <lb/>
Also one piece or pan-el at land <lb/>
bounded on the by Railroad <lb/>
e on the east <lb/>
the Nelson property, on south the <lb/>
Orson, Mm <lb/>
S an th- <lb/>
, -i .-. , <lb/>
P. G. commission <lb/>
tr <lb/>
or <lb/>
H. <lb/>
COTTON BUYER <lb/>
Office in<lb/>
Dr Joseph Dixon <lb/>
Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF <lb/>
AYDEN. N. <lb/>
the of business 1900. <lb/>
for it. Then you run a risk of j buy a box of candy from <lb/>
losing u while if it was in the at store. <lb/>
bank it. would be perfectly sale. <lb/>
J. L. Jackson cashier of the <lb/>
Bank of Winterville.<lb/>
your Box Carts while they <lb/>
are cheap The A. G. Cox Man- <lb/>
Co. have plenty It is understood, however, that <lb/>
them on hand. Call and see them. I Emperor I Joseph not <lb/>
Have your carts, wagons and share in the extreme the . i in v <lb/>
buggies put in good trim for the j on marriage, <lb/>
fall use. All kinds of repair j and that as long as he lives he <lb/>
work done promptly. Carolina I will insist that the American <lb/>
Milling Mfg. Co. <lb/>
too <lb/>
to <lb/>
i in ho <lb/>
in have hi.-i <lb/>
Smith marrying n <lb/>
maker got to do with h F <lb/>
his mind spurs <lb/>
. and make it over <lb/>
woman gets full recognition of <lb/>
i laws notwithstanding. <lb/>
i- <lb/>
Call at the Drug Store <lb/>
cure one of those excellent <lb/>
Pens. M. M, Sauls. <lb/>
The Woman's Foreign Mission- <lb/>
Society will hold a public <lb/>
meeting in the Methodist church <lb/>
in Ayden the third Sunday after- <lb/>
noon in October, at o'clock All <lb/>
are invited and a warm welcome <lb/>
will be extended. <lb/>
R. W. Smith W. F. Hart <lb/>
went to Grifton Thursday en <lb/>
i business. <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts secured 11.1 <lb/>
Furniture and Fixtures <lb/>
Due from banks and bankers I <lb/>
items 9.80 <lb/>
coin 120.00 <lb/>
coin 1.872,06 <lb/>
Nat. bk notes other 1,386 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Capital stock f <lb/>
surplus fund <lb/>
i profits <lb/>
Payable <lb/>
Deposits subject to <lb/>
Cashier's checks outstanding <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, <lb/>
I J. It. Smith, Cashier of the above-named Co v , <lb/>
the above statement is true to the beet of my an <lb/>
Bribed and to <lb/>
27th of,, Aug<lb/>
in , <lb/>
J. B. SMITH, Cashier. <lb/>
JOSEPH <lb/>
Notary Public <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019723_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
year In the <lb/>
history of county, <lb/>
there has no more <lb/>
factor i our <lb/>
t an <lb/>
now a history <lb/>
years duration Last year <lb/>
bast of the six. Too <lb/>
daring <lb/>
entire was m re than <lb/>
with In the <lb/>
c u <lb/>
i on Oct. <lb/>
to for <lb/>
year's work There will <lb/>
be no regular program. <lb/>
the prominent citizens of tin <lb/>
will he present shew <lb/>
their interest in us and in <lb/>
w few words of <lb/>
n training <lb/>
school Boon to be <lb/>
t . midst, with life <lb/>
, la in. <lb/>
. v,c i with the best c ; <lb/>
, I ; in th <lb/>
South., with the ; cop i . <lb/>
i,. . .; . on <lb/>
to f i ml of every u , <lb/>
teacher i patriotic cit i .- <lb/>
tie <lb/>
in i g that <lb/>
our go <lb/>
e i <lb/>
. r with <lb/>
. . . . , y <lb/>
VI <lb/>
fails in the same month and only <lb/>
a day apart, hence they had a <lb/>
joint observance of their <lb/>
Quite a number of <lb/>
their friends were with <lb/>
them to enjoy the afternoon. <lb/>
The cotton now <lb/>
gathered is likely to be <lb/>
than the last, notwithstanding <lb/>
all the handicaps under which <lb/>
war grown; but the demand for <lb/>
it u b i hilly greater than <lb/>
fur the crop of year, and <lb/>
the price be higher-not <lb/>
low hi is reason <lb/>
the v. for the rec <lb/>
o; cent a Ob <lb/>
server <lb/>
I ;. i ,. , ,, <lb/>
Mai ii i i tie, <lb/>
M. mine <lb/>
pi Moore. <lb/>
Car.--i <lb/>
i i Or. n i-. . l <lb/>
HEALTH. <lb/>
Arc you <lb/>
Indication <lb/>
ANY of these and other <lb/>
I of the LIVER. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
r I . <lb/>
iv nor <lb/>
the <lb/>
E. <lb/>
that n <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
By virtue the power of sale con <lb/>
.-lined ill n certain deed <lb/>
and delivered John Dennis and <lb/>
wife Sarah Dennis to E. K. <lb/>
the day of September 1906, and <lb/>
duly recorded in the Register of deeds <lb/>
office of Pitt county. North Carolina. <lb/>
in P s, page the undersign, d <lb/>
will expose to public sale, before the <lb/>
door in Greenville, to lie <lb/>
highest bidder on Saturday; October P. <lb/>
1907. ii tract or parcH of land <lb/>
lying and being in the county of Pitt <lb/>
and state of North and de- <lb/>
scribed as foil to <lb/>
In township and <lb/>
ed follow; Situate near <lb/>
known as e Bowen tract of I mil and <lb/>
owned by Dennis, and <lb/>
the lands of Cox, <lb/>
Frank Hart, John Cox and Joe <lb/>
Containing acres more or less. <lb/>
it-7 of the acres formerly owned <lb/>
I the Jordan heirs and Aaron <lb/>
horn heirs, Dixon and th <lb/>
. . Jackson land, to <lb/>
n the <lb/>
y I---. in, ,,. <lb/>
u. <lb/>
deed <lb/>
lams <lb/>
Mil. la <lb/>
. h e. <lb/>
vile. N C. <lb/>
t; is i tea <lb/>
the . , <lb/>
. not, <lb/>
i. .w on Si<lb/>
ear. I <lb/>
c iv-, en .-.;. . r.  <lb/>
the v iv I fails to <lb/>
i i . . . <lb/>
. i . <lb/>
; a <lb/>
nil teach in the co i <lb/>
with the number . <lb/>
they a tend so that th <lb/>
may o. .-. to are bearing the bur-1 <lb/>
den of l hi- work in this county I <lb/>
hall make to e Board of <lb/>
cation some recommendation as <lb/>
to y next year based <lb/>
upon your record of attendance <lb/>
upon <lb/>
The Woman's Betterment As- <lb/>
i will also have a meeting <lb/>
the same day and organize for <lb/>
tin- year's Last year their <lb/>
efforts resulted in raising and <lb/>
pending in the improvement of <lb/>
school grounds and school houses <lb/>
the sun <lb/>
a step higher this <lb/>
We cordially invite the people <lb/>
of the county, whether you live <lb/>
in town or country, to meet with <lb/>
gatherings. We are <lb/>
doing this as a mere matter <lb/>
of courtesy, but we real- <lb/>
want you with us. <lb/>
I beg you to show <lb/>
your interest in the work, and <lb/>
what you propose to do in your <lb/>
school chis year by present <lb/>
at this first meeting We desire <lb/>
to meet at a- m , and ad- <lb/>
at p. m Let's show to <lb/>
the i. f the county that we <lb/>
are In earnest in our work and <lb/>
our profession by this <lb/>
meeting the largest and best that <lb/>
the ass has ever held. <lb/>
You know my faith in you and <lb/>
I shall surely look for- <lb/>
ward with pleasure to meeting <lb/>
ea ii and every one of you on <lb/>
Saturday, Oct. 12th. <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Co. Supt Schools. <lb/>
Kl <lb/>
r, vi M <lb/>
the do I end <lb/>
. e j <lb/>
; OF LAND, <lb/>
. i <lb/>
tin i <lb/>
It. <lb/>
I . <lb/>
i ,. <lb/>
I . i . <lb/>
i . . <lb/>
I S <lb/>
W i . . i<lb/>
I. HI i Ill p <lb/>
r .This Ii u <lb/>
c M oh-, <lb/>
or . i I'd I Co. <lb/>
J, enters <lb/>
more i r <lb/>
. u land yin.- in <lb/>
I -.-. Pitt <lb/>
C, on north side of I. r, <lb/>
tin . <lb/>
inch <lb/>
o J. K. I e <lb/>
-Villi i . i- <lb/>
. well <lb/>
. <lb/>
1907. <lb/>
F. i i I. <lb/>
i r <lb/>
pi i <lb/>
title to or in the fore <lb/>
going described inns; ; <lb/>
their protest in writing with me <lb/>
within the next thirty days, or <lb/>
they will be barred v law. <lb/>
R. Williams.<lb/>
I. b. v w, <lb/>
present, two absent. <lb/>
The street committee <lb/>
that much was being <lb/>
made on work on the streets, <lb/>
especially in the part of the town <lb/>
last taken in the corporate limits. <lb/>
The street committee was to proceed to open a new <lb/>
street from Dickinson avenue to <lb/>
Eighth street the Corey <lb/>
and Sutton property. <lb/>
The cemetery was reported in <lb/>
bed condition from weeds and <lb/>
grass and a man was employed <lb/>
to clean it out. It was also or <lb/>
a house for keeping <lb/>
tools be built in cemetery at <lb/>
a cost not exceeding <lb/>
The clerk was instructed to <lb/>
notify the two white com <lb/>
of the town to appoint a <lb/>
committee of two members from <lb/>
each company to confer with the <lb/>
lire committee of the board <lb/>
to consolidating into one <lb/>
company. <lb/>
. The board decided to dispense <lb/>
the services of one police- <lb/>
man after the of November, <lb/>
ranking the force <lb/>
time <lb/>
W. H. Johnson was refunded <lb/>
paid for dray license tax, Iv <lb/>
being liable <lb/>
The superintendent of the <lb/>
and light plants was in- <lb/>
to place <lb/>
on in the new <lb/>
pan of the to. e deemed <lb/>
Mr R. W. King, chairman of <lb/>
the board of county commission- <lb/>
returned today from his <lb/>
f . J ,. i U- l ll . -ill <lb/>
one day squirrel hunting <lb/>
over there and killed <lb/>
Dr. <lb/>
N. C , Oct. 3.-At <lb/>
a special meeting of the board of <lb/>
directors at N. <lb/>
Dr. John was <lb/>
elected superintendent of the <lb/>
State Hospital for the <lb/>
succeed Dr. P L Murphy, the <lb/>
noted alienist, died ten days <lb/>
ago Dr. was first <lb/>
assistant physician of <lb/>
-1------11 <lb/>
Peach Blossoms. <lb/>
In Senator <lb/>
near the Baptist church, is a <lb/>
peach tree a number of <lb/>
blooms on it. Who ever saw <lb/>
peach in October before <lb/>
Mere Houses <lb/>
are seldom <lb/>
reason being that it is so <lb/>
unusual in <lb/>
Greenville,, i,. h. i The <lb/>
town as it <lb/>
might because of the difficulty to <lb/>
get houses want to <lb/>
.-. lie. <lb/>
By a <lb/>
Burton is still <lb/>
i T i m ii is; a job in is worth <lb/>
two in the bush. <lb/>
oil octopus should have <lb/>
fined says a <lb/>
contemporary. Still, if it would <lb/>
come up with that <lb/>
all would be forgiven. <lb/>
Perhaps they might at it <lb/>
easier in Kentucky, by to <lb/>
who didn't <lb/>
czar certainly has a hard <lb/>
time of it He went out yachting <lb/>
one day and his Rot stuck in <lb/>
the mud; he went out again, and <lb/>
Emperor William met him and <lb/>
preached a sermon. <lb/>
what you advises <lb/>
the Philadelphia Inquirer. And <lb/>
so we should if the butcher, the <lb/>
baker and the candle-stick maker <lb/>
did not show such an ugly and <lb/>
vulgar disposition to haggle over <lb/>
the price of things. <lb/>
woman, decided she his <lb/>
a thought <lb/>
it over and remarried And <lb/>
still, people talk about a Woman's <lb/>
predilection for changing her <lb/>
mind. <lb/>
General, says the <lb/>
United States dies too much on <lb/>
its The General doesn't <lb/>
understand; our fleet not of the <lb/>
style he has been used to. <lb/>
The Glided i <lb/>
In one alter the opening <lb/>
the graded school has reached an enrollment of and there are <lb/>
others yet to come in. <lb/>
music department, which is a <lb/>
no a- this session, is prov- <lb/>
a decided success. <lb/>
good reliable white <lb/>
to and live ii. home <lb/>
family. Address Re- <lb/>
Hector. <lb/>
ii . and <lb/>
. C ard u I <lb/>
e to <lb/>
purchase i . uniforms for i c <lb/>
. <lb/>
i salary of the c . of p <lb/>
ii d . p. i <lb/>
month from Sept first. <lb/>
the chairman <lb/>
coin, <lb/>
was increased to <lb/>
per year <lb/>
J. was i <lb/>
to barbecue in a building in <lb/>
front of the warehouse. <lb/>
The several officers made <lb/>
reports for the past month- <lb/>
Accounts allowed and or <lb/>
paid amounting to <lb/>
How you rail get a <lb/>
nail or screw driver or <lb/>
lacking. Have a good <lb/>
tool box and he prepared for <lb/>
emergencies. Our <lb/>
is a foil could desire, and <lb/>
we will your <lb/>
box dues not lack a tingle <lb/>
article. <lb/>
toads for Sale. <lb/>
For Sale acres wood land, <lb/>
on outer edge of ad- <lb/>
joining lands Parker, <lb/>
Tyson and <lb/>
tenant house. Now owned <lb/>
by Fulford. Terms <lb/>
Apply to C. S. Carr. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
COX MILL ITEMS. <lb/>
Cox Mill, Oct. 3rd, 1907. <lb/>
Oscar Evans and H. A- Moore <lb/>
returned from Norfolk Monday. <lb/>
Miss Kizzie, who has been sick <lb/>
with typhoid fever at the home <lb/>
of S. S. Wilson, has recovered <lb/>
and returned home. <lb/>
We have something new here <lb/>
some of our people claiming to <lb/>
have the Holy Ghost I don't <lb/>
know what they will get next <lb/>
J. W. Porter died Sunday, <lb/>
was a member of the Will <lb/>
I Of <lb/>
You get s <lb/>
g Horse Goods c <lb/>
I Corey <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
At the meeting of the board BaPtist church a Jack. <lb/>
Aldermen Thursday night it Miss Hollie Page, who has been <lb/>
bonds by the election <lb/>
held in May. Of these bonds <lb/>
will apply to the Eastern <lb/>
Carolina Training <lb/>
School and to public <lb/>
November 4th has <lb/>
been set as the date for receiving <lb/>
and opening the bonds- <lb/>
in Greenville, has returned <lb/>
home <lb/>
Misses Jennie and Allie Cox, <lb/>
of Haddock's X. Roods, spent last <lb/>
week with Miss Bessie Moore <lb/>
Charlie Evans has bought a <lb/>
new buggy. j <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions <lb/>
Cotton Bagging and <lb/>
Ties always on <lb/>
I Fresh kept con <lb/>
I In stock. Country <lb/>
Produce Bought and Sold<lb/>
y North Carolina. <lb/>
JESSE SUGG. <lb/>
Death of an Citizen <lb/>
Friday night the at n <lb/>
few minutes after o'clock, Mr, <lb/>
Jesse Lemuel Sugg passed <lb/>
at his residence on Filth street <lb/>
He had been sick some months <lb/>
and the end was not unexpected, <lb/>
yet his death brings great son ow <lb/>
to many hearts. <lb/>
Mr Sugg was some past <lb/>
years of age, having been born <lb/>
in Greene county April 1850. <lb/>
He moved to Greenville <lb/>
and engaged in the insurance <lb/>
business here, conducting a <lb/>
agency for twenty-live <lb/>
He was popular as an <lb/>
agent, and enjoyed the highest <lb/>
esteem and confidence of our p o- <lb/>
November 14th, 1894, he <lb/>
Miss Minnie Exum, and is <lb/>
survived by the wife and three <lb/>
little daughters He also leaves <lb/>
two brothers. Col. I- A. Sugg, of <lb/>
Greenville and Mr. B. F. Sugg, <lb/>
of Washington, and one sister, <lb/>
Mrs. Henry Harding, of Green- <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
Mr. Sugg made Greenville a <lb/>
useful citizen, and once served <lb/>
as a member of the board of <lb/>
aldermen. He was public spirit- <lb/>
ed, generous, a good <lb/>
and a warm friend, <lb/>
He was a member of the <lb/>
Methodist church and also of the <lb/>
Masonic fraternity, and was <lb/>
faithful in his duties to both. <lb/>
The funeral will take place Sun- <lb/>
day afternoon, the remains <lb/>
his late residence at o'clock. <lb/>
Services will be held at the <lb/>
church and at Cherry Hill <lb/>
the interment being <lb/>
with Masonic honors. <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Office in Hank. Building <lb/>
North The Standard Oil Company is <lb/>
Superior preparing to exploit the oil fields <lb/>
A Fair Japan, After a while, <lb/>
and ill be permitted to <lb/>
aside and <lb/>
l, . rum <lb/>
v i that, the <lb/>
h s been <lb/>
I The argument <lb/>
purpose . warm, too. <lb/>
,. ; , Mr <lb/>
i ; , ,. a <lb/>
. the i <lb/>
n. In Well, <lb/>
in this j t . it touch up <lb/>
purpose or de from nature <lb/>
no, the tariff. <lb/>
u, and. he -I ,, . K K an. D o. . . Mp- <lb/>
will take, .-. <lb/>
to t the <lb/>
re nib r up <lb/>
.-I to he <lb/>
i l Monday m <lb/>
it being the day <lb/>
at he <lb/>
louse in said n y In Green- <lb/>
11-. N. G., t on <lb/>
i. <lb/>
in end action, the plaintiff-. <lb/>
i ply tn o f-r Una <lb/>
re i--i in Said com- <lb/>
he of <lb/>
C. M. cue. <lb/>
super <lb/>
t. <lb/>
that he should die on <lb/>
old of ; but he <lb/>
doesn't seem to care particularly <lb/>
to have the tax <lb/>
got there. <lb/>
A number of people so dis- <lb/>
tressed g the business <lb/>
morals Mr. John D. <lb/>
that they actually would do <lb/>
those things themselves if they <lb/>
had the chance, just to keep the <lb/>
old fellow in the straight <lb/>
narrow path. <lb/>
Attorney Genera Bonaparte <lb/>
will now try to the shingle <lb/>
to the r ii oh. <lb/>
Company to <lb/>
United States. Dr. To one fine <lb/>
Please Uncle <lb/>
Sam. <lb/>
Some vaudeville <lb/>
isn't Make Money <lb/>
Did you know there was only a <lb/>
supply of <lb/>
bills in the United Slates paid a minute, <lb/>
only a two supply of, The managers must want them <lb/>
two-dollar bills, and only a ten j to it <lb/>
supply of five dollar hills double <lb/>
. ,, ., . , ,, . , of ours, stirred up the <lb/>
Well. it s a and United <lb/>
Treat announced <lb/>
that, in spite of every- <lb/>
thing he can do, ho can't make <lb/>
enough small bills to keep pace <lb/>
with the demand. <lb/>
The treasurer fears that in the <lb/>
course of the next three or four <lb/>
weeks the supply of ones, twos <lb/>
and fives will run out and the <lb/>
trading at stores with ten <lb/>
twenty and fifty dollar bids will <lb/>
nave <lb/>
in change. <lb/>
Mr. Treat says that the cause <lb/>
of the scarcity is his inability to <lb/>
hire enough skilled laborers at <lb/>
government wages to make the <lb/>
notes N w York American. <lb/>
Governor Glenn Coming <lb/>
Governor R. B. Glenn will <lb/>
speak in the Jarvis Memorial <lb/>
church Sunday, November 24th- <lb/>
both morning and He <lb/>
will discuss themes appropriate to <lb/>
the day, looking to the welfare <lb/>
of the people. town is for- <lb/>
in securing the governor <lb/>
for two addresses. Doubtless he <lb/>
will have a great hearing. <lb/>
pi until it felt like bid times on <lb/>
the river. <lb/>
A large steel plant has been <lb/>
located in China, and that <lb/>
try is destined to discover that <lb/>
for ways that are dark, and tricks <lb/>
that are vain, a large steel plant <lb/>
is peculiar. <lb/>
STATE NEWS <lb/>
Tuesday morning, while Guss- <lb/>
Sears and his wife, Ella, colored, <lb/>
who lived on Mr. George West's <lb/>
farm, in Sand Hill township, <lb/>
were picking cotton in the field <lb/>
some their home, <lb/>
their house caught on fire and <lb/>
burned to the ground. Their two- <lb/>
youngest children, a boy and a <lb/>
girl, who were in the house, both <lb/>
died from suffocation and burns <lb/>
before any one could reach the <lb/>
get them out. every <lb/>
thing in the house was destroyed <lb/>
The cause of the fire is unknown- <lb/>
Kinston Free Press. <lb/>
few boarders. <lb/>
Convenient location, nice rooms, <lb/>
electric lights and bath room. <lb/>
Apply Reflector office.<lb/>
The Whole Wilkinson Co Stock <lb/>
Of Grade Dry Goods, Clothing, <lb/>
TRUNKS, ETC <lb/>
AMT. <lb/>
Will be on the market <lb/>
At Cost for Days <lb/>
The few articles added to this stock will be sold at a small advance <lb/>
Stetson 1.50 Mens and Hats IS cents <lb/>
NAPPER BROWN <lb/>
Was Only Serving Tn r <lb/>
Just <lb/>
The of morals is not the <lb/>
same all the world over. In <lb/>
for conduct in seen <lb/>
from another point i <lb/>
among lends inter- <lb/>
est to a report in Lend of the <lb/>
k as to in that <lb/>
little iii of the . ;. airy of Eu- <lb/>
rope. The author visited the <lb/>
prison of the land. <lb/>
Only three nun chained, <lb/>
f remained moodily <lb/>
to d. Flaring on the ground before <lb/>
formed n to <lb/>
his . i . <lb/>
v. observed him <lb/>
H . that hi- Io <lb/>
as the officials class, <lb/>
wear. i <lb/>
is I asked. <lb/>
government clerk convicted <lb/>
of was the answer. <lb/>
weeks in chains is his sen- <lb/>
what have the other <lb/>
was oar next query. <lb/>
they have most; <lb/>
themselves. They arc net <lb/>
criminals. We have v few thieves <lb/>
and robber in Montenegro. This <lb/>
went on informant, <lb/>
pointing to a young man with a <lb/>
pleasant face grinned with <lb/>
he noticed-the attention with <lb/>
which we favored him. a ton <lb/>
sentence for <lb/>
we repeated, <lb/>
it punishable to quarrel <lb/>
Too many lives are <lb/>
was the- laconic reply. <lb/>
we exclaimed, a light <lb/>
breaking in upon mean <lb/>
murder They arc all <lb/>
We no tunic <lb/>
the indignant response. land <lb/>
is safe from murder as any other <lb/>
in the world. one kills rob or <lb/>
steal in Montenegro. But we just <lb/>
quarrel among ourselves. We <lb/>
hot blooded and shoot quickly, that <lb/>
is <lb/>
an <lb/>
For the Vies Pi . , i . f <lb/>
Few lave i closer to be- <lb/>
than i <lb/>
ruff of .-. <lb/>
backing for a <lb/>
i in I lie <lb/>
of but . <lb/>
I . a . <lb/>
rider hat, A . an <lb/>
ii was nil off with W ., lib. , <lb/>
ti m Had it I n . hat <lb/>
it, V , <lb/>
. . , <lb/>
ha h -lie <lb/>
, ., ii a . . . .-v <lb/>
was shot. <lb/>
Senator Marl; . . was , <lb/>
then . i <lb/>
publican did f. <lb/>
When They Know It All. <lb/>
The proud father includes among <lb/>
his boasts the following school es- <lb/>
say of his young <lb/>
horse gets up by giving a sud- <lb/>
Hen jump to its front legs and then <lb/>
gets on its hind low. <lb/>
cow drinks by putting its <lb/>
mouth in the bucket and sucks the <lb/>
water. <lb/>
duck picks up the food by its <lb/>
bill, then throws his back. <lb/>
leaves begin to bloom <lb/>
about the 1st of Slav, <lb/>
locomotive while going around <lb/>
corner bends very much to the in- <lb/>
side. <lb/>
passenger train when about to <lb/>
stop too wheels of the locomotive <lb/>
stop revolving and slides along <lb/>
tracks. <lb/>
locomotive has to be very <lb/>
much heavier than the train to <lb/>
overcome the weight of the train <lb/>
against it. when a body <lb/>
gets n-moving it has a tendency h <lb/>
keep York Post.<lb/>
Every lovely, kindly grace is <lb/>
worth will add much <lb/>
to your happiness and usefulness <lb/>
when you are older. A rude, ill <lb/>
mannered person is shunned and <lb/>
disliked in every circle, and unless <lb/>
the opposite habits are formed <lb/>
early life they are seldom formed <lb/>
at all. <lb/>
Keeping Potted. <lb/>
To Butter. <lb/>
If the butter loses its flavor, put <lb/>
it in a bowl or water, salt and stir <lb/>
with a wooden it <lb/>
for about five minutes <lb/>
two or three may <lb/>
add a little baking soda. <lb/>
Stuff dales with fresh cream <lb/>
dip in n thin sugar <lb/>
and roll in freshly grated <lb/>
and you have a wholesome <lb/>
suitable for a dessert with <lb/>
crackers and<lb/>
A Hint. <lb/>
Try dinning stale cake in milk <lb/>
and it in a moderate oven. <lb/>
It is said to taste as if newly baked. <lb/>
To <lb/>
Emery paper, if tacked upon <lb/>
is for smoothing <lb/>
slightly broken edges of thin turn- <lb/>
New, By carefully rubbing the <lb/>
back and forth, a smooth <lb/>
face is but not if the <lb/>
benched <lb/>
Even- day, n a <lb/>
I grown up no you <lb/>
r reads <lb/>
Quit,, h.-a not <lb/>
or ii. that grow, <lb/>
Nor the of th <lb/>
a if it ruin or mow. <lb/>
it can but be. to me. <lb/>
s- or two. <lb/>
the <lb/>
n n <lb/>
or.- to <lb/>
i i I i-v notion, <lb/>
Hie i Dial jun <lb/>
her I <lb/>
the stovepipe <lb/>
inquired the first <lb/>
didn't have the nerve to <lb/>
it down responded i i <lb/>
second mi i r. <lb/>
hat of mobile <lb/>
working on the new n <lb/>
i the <lb/>
. in than ever i <lb/>
cut it <lb/>
An Idea. <lb/>
said a fat man, <lb/>
the makers of underwear, of socks, <lb/>
drawers and shirts. Why do they <lb/>
put the thick seams and and <lb/>
roughness inside, next to the <lb/>
skin, instead of outside, where <lb/>
they would not be felt <lb/>
you not often had your <lb/>
underwear prick you, the knots <lb/>
bruise you, the seams set up an <lb/>
itching Well, all that could be <lb/>
abolished. The inside of underwear <lb/>
should be turned outside. <lb/>
is the only possible ob-, <lb/>
to my idea. But, after all, <lb/>
underwear, which is invisible, <lb/>
comfort means more than <lb/>
New Orleans Times-Democrat. <lb/>
The of <lb/>
Much controversy has taken place <lb/>
on the question of the sense of hear- <lb/>
in fish, and many <lb/>
have been tried with view of set- <lb/>
it. Some of the latest of these <lb/>
are those of which M. Mirage has <lb/>
given an account in the Paris <lb/>
The fish <lb/>
with were carp, tench, <lb/>
eel and Others, and the author finds <lb/>
no evidence of a sense of hearing. <lb/>
Sounds were transmitted into the <lb/>
waler close to the with an en- <lb/>
capable of affecting deaf <lb/>
mutes. effect was produced on <lb/>
the and Si ream. <lb/>
Abbreviated. <lb/>
Carrie Nation, the smasher, did; <lb/>
tome smashing in Washington not <lb/>
long ago and was arrested and taken I <lb/>
the police station. <lb/>
said the desk <lb/>
is your <lb/>
Mrs. Ration assumed a dramatic <lb/>
and am a <lb/>
of the <lb/>
the unemotional <lb/>
sergeant. take <lb/>
Leader. <lb/>
A LITTLE NONSENSE. <lb/>
Troubles a of One of <lb/>
Public c <lb/>
A principal of one of the Detroit <lb/>
public bus sitting at <lb/>
desk, talking to a friend, the other <lb/>
day. <lb/>
The telephone bill interrupted <lb/>
the conversation, the principal <lb/>
took down the <lb/>
After a few minutes of iron <lb/>
talk over the wire he slammed down <lb/>
the reviver and turned to his <lb/>
with a scowl. <lb/>
the queried the <lb/>
visitor. <lb/>
the repeated <lb/>
the principal. it's just <lb/>
of those loving mothers. <lb/>
make mo p , ailing <lb/>
up nil day long and treat <lb/>
though I were the boy or <lb/>
did this one want <lb/>
the friend. <lb/>
do-you asked the <lb/>
principal, breaking into n <lb/>
em the reply. <lb/>
explained the <lb/>
n daughter in the fourth <lb/>
grade, and she rails me i , least <lb/>
once a tiny. This time she o, me <lb/>
at length with much led- <lb/>
her little daughter had <lb/>
gone to without her rubbers <lb/>
on and mo if would please, <lb/>
go down and feel of her feet <lb/>
send her home if they wen- wet. <lb/>
how, what do you think of <lb/>
Harper's Weekly. <lb/>
The English <lb/>
The man from London paused in <lb/>
front of the little shop and read and <lb/>
reread the mysterious sign that was <lb/>
suspended from the wall. It <lb/>
will please not <lb/>
stand over this grating while talk <lb/>
The more the Londoner read the <lb/>
sign the more he was mystified. <lb/>
Finally he summoned up his <lb/>
age and entered the shop. <lb/>
he greeted <lb/>
you tell me why you <lb/>
have that sign out there which <lb/>
reads, will please not <lb/>
stand over this grating while talk- <lb/>
can, <lb/>
keeper. <lb/>
why, my good man <lb/>
you see, if stood there <lb/>
talking they would drop their h's, <lb/>
and the porter would have to lose <lb/>
time going down in the basement <lb/>
looking for <lb/>
And the man from London walk- <lb/>
ed away after remarking that Amer- <lb/>
was a queer <lb/>
Brooklyn Citizen. <lb/>
replied the shop- <lb/>
it Did Not Fit <lb/>
The were entertaining <lb/>
a distant relative, a man of ponder- <lb/>
physical attainments, <lb/>
weighed nearly pounds. On the <lb/>
morning after his arrival he came <lb/>
down to breakfast rather late and <lb/>
looking as if he had not bad a good <lb/>
night's rest. <lb/>
are not feeling well this <lb/>
morning, are Mr. ii. <lb/>
ed his host, with some anxiety. <lb/>
it's nothing said <lb/>
the guest. have u little <lb/>
cold, that is <lb/>
whispered Bobby, the <lb/>
youngest member of the family, <lb/>
loudly enough to he bend by the <lb/>
visitor, can a men as big as he <lb/>
is have a little Youth's <lb/>
Companion. <lb/>
for vice . did he <lb/>
want. <lb/>
on the nomination of Cornelius N. <lb/>
Bliss. <lb/>
One day. Hie eon- <lb/>
Woodruff r.-i <lb/>
ton, and sent for <lb/>
hear, said the Ohio son- <lb/>
want to lice<lb/>
my friend.- been <lb/>
of me for the <lb/>
plied the New Yorker. <lb/>
you're too young, Tim; e <lb/>
declared <lb/>
you carry that of <lb/>
yours into the senate chamber, <lb/>
would take you for a <lb/>
Woodruff pointed out that be was <lb/>
several month older than Governor <lb/>
Roosevelt and also that he was old <lb/>
enough to have a son- in the <lb/>
class at Yale. <lb/>
I J Man- <lb/>
if we were to put you to <lb/>
the job of bossing those <lb/>
old senators one of them would be <lb/>
sure to turn you across his knee and <lb/>
spank <lb/>
A Pertinent Query. <lb/>
pardon, began the beg- <lb/>
gar, stopping a at the <lb/>
ferry. you spare a few cents <lb/>
to help me across the <lb/>
you any money at <lb/>
inquired the pedestrian. <lb/>
a replied the beggar. <lb/>
equated the pedestrian. <lb/>
What difference does it make <lb/>
which side of the river you're <lb/>
It Wouldn't Work. <lb/>
The old doctor was <lb/>
pressing upon bis little patient the <lb/>
of mastication. <lb/>
he advised, matter <lb/>
what, you eat, always chew each <lb/>
mouthful thirty <lb/>
But Jimmy shook bis bend <lb/>
wouldn't do at our <lb/>
why not. <lb/>
I'd always be hungry <lb/>
The rest of the kids would clean <lb/>
Vie table off before got through <lb/>
with that one <lb/>
City Independent. <lb/>
Harking Back. <lb/>
Mrs. don't want to be <lb/>
Impertinent, but how old are you <lb/>
anyway Some of the ladies were <lb/>
discussing your ago at the club the <lb/>
other day. and several of them <lb/>
claimed that yon were least <lb/>
but I insisted that you were <lb/>
hot more than <lb/>
Mrs. glad you were <lb/>
so kind. Of course you didn't men- <lb/>
the fact that you were ready to <lb/>
leave the grammar grade when <lb/>
was in the primary class at school, <lb/>
did you <lb/>
Grammar and Glory. <lb/>
lb K. Hedges was one of the <lb/>
students at Princeton. <lb/>
Mayor Strong's secretary he was <lb/>
compelled to prepare in a jiffy a <lb/>
mayor's -message to the board of es- <lb/>
and apportionment. In th <lb/>
rush and tear one glaring <lb/>
and two or ex- <lb/>
of doubtful V ac- <lb/>
curacy appeared in ,. ,. . , .,, <lb/>
The following day a New York city <lb/>
newspaper severely <lb/>
his incoherent use the <lb/>
language. The mayor and Mr. <lb/>
Hedges were rather chagrined. <lb/>
here, Mr. said Mr. <lb/>
Hedges, know can write and <lb/>
speak grammatical English, mid I <lb/>
know you can, I want you to let <lb/>
me tell the newspaper boys that I <lb/>
was the villain in this ease. I don't <lb/>
want you he the victim for my <lb/>
replied Strong, <lb/>
this newspaper had said <lb/>
that that message was the most <lb/>
brilliant message ever issued by a <lb/>
officer, do you . ,. . Yd <lb/>
come nut say ; <lb/>
Not by . , Hp. <lb/>
all the keep <lb/>
York Sun. <lb/>
Castro's Conceit. <lb/>
Many stories have been told of <lb/>
Castro, president of <lb/>
and of his monumental con- <lb/>
During the <lb/>
war the full of Port Arthur was be- <lb/>
explained Io him. <lb/>
he exclaimed. <lb/>
1500 could have taken <lb/>
it in four <lb/>
a thousand in one <lb/>
your said the diplomat <lb/>
representative of a Europe <lb/>
power. <lb/>
Castro was so pleased <lb/>
was intended to be sari n that, it <lb/>
is said, the diplomat . next <lb/>
day in securing , a of <lb/>
claim that his govern,,,, , bad been <lb/>
vainly pressing for <lb/>
r.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019723_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
in nil I sue, <lb/>
Complete In All DetailsBEAUTIFUL COLONIAL CITY. <lb/>
A Dreamland to the <lb/>
the of Feature <lb/>
Leads All <lb/>
and Navy <lb/>
Never before In history of the <lb/>
been bolt u <lb/>
with so many attractive features <lb/>
AM the <lb/>
SB, full swing on the historic of <lb/>
Hamilton The is <lb/>
ow complete in ail of its detail, and <lb/>
to the visitor <lb/>
The exhibit <lb/>
state mil <lb/>
of a permanent or <lb/>
constriction, set off with tin most <lb/>
trees and to this <lb/>
an distinct from <lb/>
all of predecessors. <lb/>
hour's ride either <lb/>
ear a-. places Yorktown, <lb/>
C to the <lb/>
is- <lb/>
land, of where <lb/>
now the old rains of the <lb/>
first church In America. Just across <lb/>
he of Hampton are <lb/>
ed Point Comfort and. <lb/>
me. t strongest and moat <lb/>
taut station on the Atlantic <lb/>
whose prim walls and winding . <lb/>
make It one of riot <lb/>
In the country. These and <lb/>
Other places of historic Interest <lb/>
to the <lb/>
Which <lb/>
rates tho hundredth <lb/>
of the English speak- <lb/>
tap settlement la America, the roost <lb/>
the history of <lb/>
tithe. <lb/>
f- the fact that the James- <lb/>
town Tercentennial is the first j <lb/>
Don c hold on deep waler this <lb/>
there has been going ea <lb/>
t a grand naval spec- , <lb/>
tart. of a kind such as America has <lb/>
seen before. The entire North <lb/>
fleet, under the command of <lb/>
Rear Admiral p. squad- <lb/>
by in. will rendezvous in <lb/>
Hampton from time to time, <lb/>
the visitor to Use exposition <lb/>
simple opportunity to see the strongest <lb/>
sleet of battleships In the world. There <lb/>
will at all times during the summer <lb/>
be at least six men-of-war roads. <lb/>
The army as well tho navy la well <lb/>
at the Tercentennial, and <lb/>
parades by crack regiments of <lb/>
United States troops are to be seen on <lb/>
one of the largest and <lb/>
equipped drill plains In the <lb/>
try at the ex position <lb/>
t present are toe entire Twenty-third <lb/>
of United the <lb/>
Second squadron of the Twelfth <lb/>
States cavalry and D battery of the <lb/>
Held artillery. Several <lb/>
of the national guard of <lb/>
states, besides numerous military <lb/>
and are en- <lb/>
at exposition from time <lb/>
time. of these military organize <lb/>
brings Its own band, which, to- <lb/>
with the exposition orchestras <lb/>
and bands, a continual and <lb/>
musical <lb/>
government exhibits, housed In <lb/>
four h structures en tho water <lb/>
front of the exposition, one <lb/>
of the most complete and <lb/>
displays of the work of the <lb/>
Various departments of he government <lb/>
ewer .- The Individual states <lb/>
forward at <lb/>
with their heartiest support and <lb/>
and twenty of them have <lb/>
to represent them at <lb/>
the Tercentennial, while practically <lb/>
very state Is represented in exhibits <lb/>
historical, or Industrial <lb/>
These slate buildings are located on <lb/>
Boulevard, a grand avenue <lb/>
paralleling the water from, and from <lb/>
tile . id of the State <lb/>
visitors may rest and view the <lb/>
and <lb/>
whereon vessels of the world might <lb/>
rest at anchor. In the immediate front <lb/>
appear tilt great white men-of-war of <lb/>
our own and a foreign <lb/>
and yachts, sloops, schooners <lb/>
and merchant of every kind. <lb/>
Beyond are the walls of <lb/>
Port Monroe and the beautiful so- <lb/>
retreat of coast. Old Point <lb/>
Comfort. To left may be seen the <lb/>
Come In and examine my <lb/>
SMOOTHING v , oN <lb/>
HORSE <lb/>
FARM OR GARDEN AND MOW- <lb/>
MACHINES. <lb/>
Your; c <lb/>
beg leave that we are <lb/>
and Retail <lb/>
for N <lb/>
Paints <lb/>
and <lb/>
Ready Paints. <lb/>
is no line in the world better <lb/>
vie line. It has behind it a century <lb/>
for honorable wares and <lb/>
dealings. <lb/>
If you use the Harrison <lb/>
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/>
will ice. <lb/>
Hart <lb/>
Paints you need <lb/>
with <lb/>
WALRUS. <lb/>
REPROOFS IN BUSINESS. <lb/>
Guards of Arc <lb/>
Axes. <lb/>
to <lb/>
to is c. <lb/>
e r-t par <lb/>
every there i- <lb/>
to they <lb/>
icy <lb/>
arm r. A a l tile <lb/>
July An- <lb/>
to <lb/>
ruses. <lb/>
Men would landed on <lb/>
lea Juno and left to watch <lb/>
for tho animals to haul up on the <lb/>
beach at certain points, <lb/>
to the government <lb/>
1st come or <lb/>
the ice sleep. <lb/>
is well one or two <lb/>
are rally h. <lb/>
The Ne-t <lb/>
now creeps up and n <lb/>
r He or two kills th.; <lb/>
Owing to their very defective hear- <lb/>
mode the rifle <lb/>
not then. The pat <lb/>
aside each hunter, united with <lb/>
sharp ax, approaches the Bleeping <lb/>
cuts the f as <lb/>
That Calls For tho <lb/>
of Much Tact. <lb/>
there's one said the <lb/>
man reflectively calls <lb/>
for the of infinite tact it i.- <lb/>
giving of reproof.;. There are of <lb/>
course some occasion when the <lb/>
manner of rebuking have to <lb/>
he taken into <lb/>
when reprimand should <lb/>
lie as decisive and -harp as you can <lb/>
But there are other times <lb/>
plenty of a quick <lb/>
is the worst possible medicine <lb/>
to administer. An employer or a <lb/>
superintendent owe it to his <lb/>
to nothing of what ho owe- <lb/>
to tho men him, to take into <lb/>
consideration the kind of man to <lb/>
whom ho Personally <lb/>
don't believe in but <lb/>
know that imitation in reproof <lb/>
give weight to those I want to <lb/>
emphatic. <lb/>
one <lb/>
one or another, think it's <lb/>
only fair to he charitable to the cm- <lb/>
who errs through zeal or as <lb/>
result of ignorance. If a man <lb/>
is trying to do his heat know it <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
By virtue of a power of <lb/>
contained in a certain deed <lb/>
f from Mack Man- <lb/>
wife. <lb/>
duly in. <lb/>
the r of <lb/>
county in book P, at page <lb/>
we will on Monday 14th. day of <lb/>
1907, at the Court house <lb/>
door of Pict county at twelve <lb/>
o'clock noon, offer for sale at <lb/>
public auction following de- <lb/>
scribed <lb/>
Adjoining the lands of L. D. <lb/>
, Mo Law horn, Jim Griffin, Ben <lb/>
Allen Jones and others and <lb/>
bounded as fallows; on the north <lb/>
by L. D. on the <lb/>
east by J. A. Griffin, on th <lb/>
south by L. on <lb/>
the west by Ben Allen Jones; <lb/>
containing twenty one acres <lb/>
more or less. <lb/>
Terms of sale cash. This 6th <lb/>
cay September, 1907. <lb/>
E. R. <lb/>
John Dennis, <lb/>
O. Moore<lb/>
of <lb/>
North Carolina, Pitt <lb/>
the court August torn 1907. <lb/>
J. L, Bland and wife M. A. Bland. <lb/>
Vs <lb/>
E. R. A. B. and the <lb/>
Bank of <lb/>
The defendants, E. K. <lb/>
and the Bank of in <lb/>
the above entitled action will take notice <lb/>
that action has been commenced in <lb/>
the superior Court of Pitt county <lb/>
led us above, which said action is <lb/>
the a <lb/>
which will be specifically <lb/>
set out and described in the <lb/>
tiled in said action, on real <lb/>
situate in the state of North Carolina <lb/>
defendants will further <lb/>
take notice that they are requested to <lb/>
appear at the next term of the superior <lb/>
court of Pitt county, to b- held on the <lb/>
2nd Monday before the 1st Monday in <lb/>
September, it being the 19th of Au- <lb/>
gust 1907, at the court House in said <lb/>
County, in Greenville, North Carolina, <lb/>
and answer or demur to the complaint <lb/>
in said Action, or the plaintiff will <lb/>
ply to the court tho relief demand- <lb/>
d in said complaint. <lb/>
This the of July 1907. <lb/>
D. c. Moore, <lb/>
clerk superior court. Pitt count <lb/>
many of then as possible before the or you to and such a man in- <lb/>
become alarmed and <lb/>
for the water escape. <lb/>
The while hunters rarely make <lb/>
use of anything but the two long,; <lb/>
curved tusks with which the- <lb/>
lose. <lb/>
In <lb/>
us interest in his <lb/>
work when h- is subjected to any- <lb/>
thing that looks to him like <lb/>
this <lb/>
is equipped and which average <lb/>
about live pounds to the pair. If <lb/>
time permits, however, tho flesh is <lb/>
boiled and the oil saved. To many <lb/>
of the Eskimos, especially on the <lb/>
arctic shore, the walrus is almost a <lb/>
necessity of life, and the <lb/>
wrought among the herds by <lb/>
the whalers has been is vet the <lb/>
cause of fearful suffering and death <lb/>
i to many of the natives. <lb/>
The flesh is fond for men am <lb/>
dogs. The oil is used for <lb/>
for lighting and heating lite <lb/>
noted school Hampton, houses. skin when <lb/>
ant tardier op the roods, toward oiled makes n durable cover the <lb/>
the might; mingles its <lb/>
Hi- salt tide of the sea, <lb/>
may be city of Newport News, <lb/>
includes one or two by whom <lb/>
been employed <lb/>
the greatest shipyards la the <lb/>
To tin- right appears the broad- <lb/>
channel r. to bay and <lb/>
from bay to bread and mighty At <lb/>
out between Hie of Charles <lb/>
and Henry. <lb/>
Tie- I at is a scone <lb/>
in worthy a or u thou <lb/>
sand miles to with nil <lb/>
the of the aglow, <lb/>
the of the Canoe Trail mid <lb/>
Lane lug the myriads <lb/>
of War Path a <lb/>
of electricity, the powerful <lb/>
playing with <lb/>
their <lb/>
miles of shore dotted with the <lb/>
of a dozen cities and nestling <lb/>
towns, what spectacle men sublime or <lb/>
could be Imagined <lb/>
the amusement section of the ex- <lb/>
the War Path, there <lb/>
la every amusement <lb/>
diversion, where visitor to the ex- <lb/>
position, after a long day of sightsee- <lb/>
eon relax let drift <lb/>
with the pleasure seeking from one <lb/>
amusement to the next on this <lb/>
White where the lights ever <lb/>
and the noise of the oriental <lb/>
Is ever in the sir. <lb/>
skin boats. The . <lb/>
make water roof clothing, window <lb/>
covers and floats. Tho tusks <lb/>
used for or spear points or ire <lb/>
carved into a great variety of useful <lb/>
and ornamental objects, and the <lb/>
bones are used to make heads for <lb/>
spears and for other purposes. <lb/>
In addition to hunting the <lb/>
j ms themselves the whalers <lb/>
. chase from the Eskimos the tusks, <lb/>
or ivory, that they have secured. <lb/>
New York Sun. <lb/>
Always <lb/>
Renowned for caution in <lb/>
for bis <lb/>
to <lb/>
Boyd <lb/>
of the <lb/>
a walked <lb/>
n Senator <lb/>
e day lot<lb/>
. . .-, <lb/>
1-1. <lb/>
I've <lb/>
seem to realize that feelings aren't <lb/>
entirely eliminated in business deal- <lb/>
They are hard taskmasters; <lb/>
their method of riding is roughshod. <lb/>
They'd get more help on the way if <lb/>
they used different tactics. <lb/>
the of co-operation <lb/>
that I'm trying to hold up as an <lb/>
ideal. The moment the head of an <lb/>
establishment gets his associates to <lb/>
tho fact that they are all pull- <lb/>
oil her for a common end ho <lb/>
has Ions way toward <lb/>
That needn't detract <lb/>
from position as director, ruler <lb/>
whatever you want to call <lb/>
th least. insistence on <lb/>
ploy, and it is by team play <lb/>
. n and commercial <lb/>
are <lb/>
ti.-- <lb/>
Pi the youngest grand <lb/>
mother of we have record <lb/>
n Lady Child of Shropshire <lb/>
She had married at <lb/>
of ago and a child <lb/>
her thirteenth year was completed <lb/>
child in turn married <lb/>
very with the <lb/>
that was a <lb/>
at The most <lb/>
cases of <lb/>
of Mrs. Honey wood of Char <lb/>
Kent, Temple <lb/>
Stow. the former died, of <lb/>
May aged ninety-three <lb/>
he as her descendants six <lb/>
teen children, grandchildren. <lb/>
great-grandchildren and nine <lb/>
The <lb/>
case was even remarkable <lb/>
Lady Temple, who died in <lb/>
had given birth to four sons and <lb/>
nine daughters and lived to see <lb/>
more than descendants. <lb/>
Reporters Gallery <lb/>
It was my privilege once to wit- <lb/>
statesmen absolutely refusing <lb/>
to allow the great machinery of par- <lb/>
to be put in motion in the <lb/>
absence of the reporters. It was <lb/>
Dec. 1902, when the education <lb/>
bill was before the house of lords. <lb/>
Tho Marquis of Londonderry, pres- <lb/>
of the council of education, <lb/>
refused to address the house until <lb/>
the arrived. What an ab- <lb/>
solute change in the point of view <lb/>
of statesmen since William Wood- <lb/>
fall sat in the gallery of <lb/>
tho house of commons with <lb/>
eyes, endeavoring to fix on his <lb/>
the points of the <lb/>
later still Charles Dickens stood <lb/>
for hours with tired feet among the <lb/>
crowd at the bar of the house of <lb/>
lords furtively <lb/>
Magazine. <lb/>
Air Hoes. <lb/>
hog is tho epithet applied by <lb/>
tho author of one of the typical <lb/>
growls the English send to the ed- <lb/>
of the London Times. The <lb/>
respondent was sitting reading in <lb/>
his garden, he says, when he no- <lb/>
a balloon pass overhead and <lb/>
pretty soon after received a <lb/>
of the ballast that was nothing <lb/>
or less than dirt. He goes on <lb/>
work up indignation against tin <lb/>
time when air travel becomes a fad <lb/>
of the vulgar rich. I am <lb/>
peacefully tracking a to its <lb/>
lair and I am suddenly assailed with <lb/>
the tea slops and heel taps of a mil- <lb/>
tea party. Multiply the <lb/>
instance and you have a country <lb/>
oppressed as if under tho <lb/>
of the Boston <lb/>
Transcript. <lb/>
Bo Not Afraid. <lb/>
He has not learned the lesson of <lb/>
his life who docs not every day <lb/>
mount a fear. If you have no faith <lb/>
in a beneficent power above yon, <lb/>
but see only on <lb/>
coiling its folds about nature and <lb/>
man, then reflect that the best use <lb/>
of fate is to teach us courage. If <lb/>
you have no confidence In any for- <lb/>
mind, then be bravo because <lb/>
there is always one opinion <lb/>
which must always of importance <lb/>
to your <lb/>
Waldo Emerson. <lb/>
my said the old gentle <lb/>
man solemnly, you know it h <lb/>
a brier in my side every time I <lb/>
you smoking that pipe Do <lb/>
know <lb/>
chuckled tho <lb/>
youth, it is <lb/>
happens to be a brier <lb/>
Tribune. <lb/>
DEPARTMENT <lb/>
This Department is in charge of W. R. Parker who is <lb/>
in <lb/>
to It CM lit I lit- <lb/>
DOINGS AROUND FARMVILLE. <lb/>
Advice to a <lb/>
kind of views would <lb/>
advise mo to set forth in my <lb/>
lecture tour inquired the habitual <lb/>
orator. <lb/>
answered the <lb/>
theorist, I were I'd gel <lb/>
some <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
Farmville, N. C. Oct 1907 <lb/>
W R. Home and W M. Lang <lb/>
to Kinston on a business <lb/>
trip last Thursday and returned <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
Reid and Lady <lb/>
who are attending <lb/>
school at Atlantic Christian Col- <lb/>
at Wilson, came home Sat- <lb/>
on a visit to their parents <lb/>
and returned Monday. They re- <lb/>
port a very full school. <lb/>
The Woman's Betterment As- <lb/>
of the graded school had <lb/>
a rummage sale Saturday after- <lb/>
noon and cleared for the <lb/>
of the building and <lb/>
grounds of the school- <lb/>
Mrs;. John Barrett departed <lb/>
this life last Saturday morning. <lb/>
had been in poor health <lb/>
months and went to the <lb/>
hospital in Tarboro hoping to be <lb/>
but the grim <lb/>
death, who calls the fairest <lb/>
called her <lb/>
child died only a <lb/>
minutes previous and was <lb/>
bin led with her. <lb/>
She was a faithful of <lb/>
the A- E church and her friends <lb/>
numbered by her acquaint- <lb/>
am small- children to <lb/>
we extend our deepest <lb/>
sympathy. <lb/>
The youngest child of Mrs. <lb/>
who died a few <lb/>
weeks ago, died last Sunday. <lb/>
Farmville, N. C. Oct. 3rd, <lb/>
Mrs. J. T. Joyner's <lb/>
with all the latest stylos <lb/>
for the fall and winter was great- <lb/>
admired by the fair sex on <lb/>
Tuesday and Wednesday. <lb/>
Mrs. J. Stanley Smith enter- <lb/>
the Woman's Magazine <lb/>
Club on Wednesday evening at <lb/>
her home on street. <lb/>
A most enjoyable program was <lb/>
carried out and all enjoyed the <lb/>
evening very much, this being <lb/>
the first meeting they have had <lb/>
with their president, Mrs. Smith <lb/>
present for some time Those <lb/>
present were Mesdames W. C <lb/>
Askew. W. R. J. F. Joy- <lb/>
W. M. Lang, Edgar Warren, <lb/>
S M. Hard. Sue M. <lb/>
Misses Annie Perkins. <lb/>
Mollie E. Rouse. <lb/>
The men save a <lb/>
on in Turnage <lb/>
hall that was most highly enjoyed <lb/>
by those dancing. Quite a <lb/>
out of town were present. <lb/>
W. M. Lang's fall opening is <lb/>
and surpasses any of the <lb/>
ever here before. <lb/>
NOTICE OF SEIZURE AND <lb/>
SALE. <lb/>
Internal Revenue Service 4th <lb/>
District of North Carolina <lb/>
N C-, Sept. 3rd 1907. <lb/>
By virtue of authority given in sec- <lb/>
RS and acting under warrant <lb/>
issued thereunder against <lb/>
John Thompson for tuxes assessed <lb/>
him under the Internal <lb/>
laws I have seized Two and one half <lb/>
town in the town of Grifton <lb/>
N. C. being the same lots or parcel of <lb/>
land upon which is situated a store <lb/>
house occupied by and Bro. <lb/>
which they conduct a <lb/>
business. This lot or parcel of <lb/>
will be to the highest <lb/>
bidder for cash on Tuesday the 1st day <lb/>
of October at o'clock m at <lb/>
Court door in town of <lb/>
N. C R. J. Lewis <lb/>
Deputy Collector <lb/>
NOTICE OF SEIZURE AND <lb/>
SALE. <lb/>
Internal Revenue Service. <lb/>
4th Carolina. <lb/>
Deputy Collector's Office. <lb/>
Littleton, N. C. Aug. 10th 1907. <lb/>
By virtue of a warrant of <lb/>
against W. J. Manning for taxes as- <lb/>
him under the Internal <lb/>
Revenue laws, have seized the fol- <lb/>
I. P- TAYLOR. <lb/>
WILSON STREET. <lb/>
Farmville. N. C. <lb/>
Groceries. <lb/>
DRINKS AND REFRESH <lb/>
years in <lb/>
Artistic work guaranteed <lb/>
Enlarging a<lb/>
Clark, Proprietor. <lb/>
Farmville, N. C. <lb/>
Satisfaction guaranteed. Strict- <lb/>
Experienced Bar- <lb/>
Sharp Razor, Clean Tow- <lb/>
els. <lb/>
ts repaired, clean- <lb/>
ed and pressed. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
G. <lb/>
Parker's Old <lb/>
M STREET. <lb/>
Farmville. N. C. <lb/>
All kinds of repairing of Carts <lb/>
and Wagons. <lb/>
In fact any kind of work in <lb/>
wood and iron. <lb/>
All work guaranteed. <lb/>
Company will insure any on <lb/>
any trace of <lb/>
Kidney T rube <lb/>
Every trace of kidney trouble I is <lb/>
eliminated <lb/>
SOL <lb/>
will be paid by Inter- <lb/>
state Chemical Co., of Baltimore, <lb/>
Md., for any case of kidney <lb/>
trouble SOL will not help. <lb/>
A word to the wise. <lb/>
For sale by <lb/>
THRONE <lb/>
Farmville, N. C. <lb/>
For three <lb/>
years old, kind and gentle. Any <lb/>
Lady can drive Apply to <lb/>
J. L. Flanagan, <lb/>
J Farmville, N. C. <lb/>
thousand well burned <lb/>
slop brick at my factory now <lb/>
ready for -ale at reasonable <lb/>
prices, P. E <lb/>
Farmville N C <lb/>
I have just r d from the <lb/>
northern markets, where I <lb/>
chased a superb and complete <lb/>
line of millinery, notions, sick <lb/>
wear, dress trimmings, <lb/>
and furs. Am prepared to suit all <lb/>
in quality and price- Will <lb/>
my same milliner, Miss <lb/>
Ella Watson; who can trim to <lb/>
suit th. The <lb/>
public invited to call <lb/>
and Inspect my store. <lb/>
Mrs J. F Joyner <lb/>
Opposite R. L. Davis Bros <lb/>
store. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
By virtue of a power of sale <lb/>
contained in a certain deed of <lb/>
mortgage from C. A. Fair and <lb/>
Nellie E, Fair his wife, to E. R. <lb/>
D. Moore, dated <lb/>
13th day of October, 1906, and <lb/>
duly recorded in the office of the <lb/>
register of of Pitt, county <lb/>
k P. page I will on <lb/>
Monday, Men day October, <lb/>
1907, the court house door of <lb/>
Pitt at twelve o'clock <lb/>
noon, offer for at public <lb/>
auction the following described <lb/>
land. <lb/>
Beginning at Cox's <lb/>
southwest corner on Academy <lb/>
St., and runs easterly with Jose- <lb/>
Cox's line to his other <lb/>
thence parallel <lb/>
with Academy St. yards, <lb/>
thence parallel with Josephus <lb/>
line to Academy St., thence <lb/>
with Academy St. to begin- <lb/>
containing ore-half acre <lb/>
lowing personal property belonging to <lb/>
said Manning Viz. One bay horse, <lb/>
Mules and This property will . <lb/>
he sold under said warrant, at the farm more or less. I of sale Cash. <lb/>
of Manning near Greenville N. C 1907 <lb/>
on Thursday the day of Sept. 1907 A <lb/>
at m. to the highest bidder <lb/>
B. J. Lewis, <lb/>
E. R. <lb/>
D O. Moore, <lb/>
Mortgagees, <lb/>
D J. Editor and Owner. <lb/>
STERN <lb/>
Truth In s I <lb/>
w i <lb/>
DOLLAR PER <lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY. <lb/>
MEETING. <lb/>
Red Men <lb/>
Closes With <lb/>
The district meeting of <lb/>
fourth district of the Great <lb/>
of North Carolina I. O. R <lb/>
M. was held in the Masonic Torn <lb/>
pie in Greenville on Thursday <lb/>
evening b ginning at o'clock <lb/>
The supervisor of the district <lb/>
Great Junior S. T. <lb/>
White acting called the <lb/>
meeting to order filled the <lb/>
stumps as follows. <lb/>
S. M- Pollard, of Farmville, <lb/>
Senior <lb/>
W. H- Moore, of Falkland, <lb/>
Rev. J. E. of Green- <lb/>
ville, Prophet. <lb/>
W. Ben Goodwin, of Elizabeth <lb/>
City, Chief of Records <lb/>
E. A Beaman, 1st <lb/>
J R. Cooper, of Winterville, <lb/>
id <lb/>
Guy V. Smith, of Falkland, 3rd <lb/>
E Moore, 4th <lb/>
Willis Dix n, of <lb/>
Guard of Wigwam- <lb/>
W. J. of Saratoga, <lb/>
Guard of Forest. <lb/>
Past Sachem, Roy C. Flanagan <lb/>
of Tribe No. <lb/>
delivered the address of welcome <lb/>
which was to by Dr. <lb/>
Morrill on behalf of the <lb/>
visitors. <lb/>
Under the head of roll call of <lb/>
Tribes the following brothers re- <lb/>
Saratoga No. of Saratoga, <lb/>
by D. A. Windham- <lb/>
No. of <lb/>
Greenville, by S. T. White. <lb/>
No. of Falkland, <lb/>
by W. H- Moore. <lb/>
No. of Farm- <lb/>
ville, by C. <lb/>
No. of Winterville, <lb/>
by O. W. Rollins. <lb/>
Shawnee No. Grimesland, <lb/>
D. Tucker. <lb/>
No. of <lb/>
ville, by Willis Dixon. <lb/>
No of Snow <lb/>
Hill, by J. Ashley <lb/>
The following Tribes of the <lb/>
district mt represented <lb/>
No. of Hookerton. <lb/>
Nahunta No- of Rocky <lb/>
Mount. <lb/>
of Tarboro. <lb/>
This was followed by an ex- <lb/>
of the unwritten <lb/>
work by Great Chief of Records, <lb/>
W. Ben Goodwin, of Elizabeth <lb/>
City. <lb/>
Under of the <lb/>
Dr. D. L. James delivered the <lb/>
of the evening which <lb/>
was received by deafening <lb/>
The degree staff of <lb/>
Tribe No. of Green- <lb/>
e, conferred the adoption de- <lb/>
in a very meritorious man- <lb/>
The election of District chiefs <lb/>
for the next meeting resulted as <lb/>
J. A. Hill, <lb/>
District Sachem. <lb/>
Roy Flanagan, Greenville, <lb/>
District Senior <lb/>
Morrill, Falkland, Dis- <lb/>
Junior <lb/>
Willis <lb/>
District <lb/>
J N. Edwards, <lb/>
District Chief of Records. <lb/>
Farmville was selected as the <lb/>
next place of meeting t such <lb/>
time as may be arranged by the <lb/>
executive committee. <lb/>
A unanimous vote of thanks <lb/>
was tender d the Masons, Odd <lb/>
Fellows Knight of Pythias <lb/>
for the us of tails. <lb/>
A vote of thanks was tendered <lb/>
by the visiting to <lb/>
Tribe No. if <lb/>
u the district meeting <lb/>
i temple a delightful <lb/>
banquet was given in <lb/>
opera house, which was an en- <lb/>
finale to the <lb/>
True to their nature the Red <lb/>
Men were hungry at this lute <lb/>
hour after returning from their <lb/>
hunt, and the way the good <lb/>
things disappeared before them <lb/>
was pleasant to behold- The <lb/>
menu consisted of sliced turkey, <lb/>
chicken salad, ham <lb/>
cheese straws, beaten biscuits, <lb/>
crackers, coffee <lb/>
with whipped cream, cream, <lb/>
cake and cigars. <lb/>
The menu was prepared by the <lb/>
Ladies Aid Society of the Baptist <lb/>
church, and the ladies received <lb/>
many compliments upon its ex <lb/>
There were Red <lb/>
Men in <lb/>
The I. O R. M is a flourishing <lb/>
order and the largest in this sec- <lb/>
It is accomplishing much <lb/>
good for humanity. <lb/>
College. <lb/>
Its many friends will be <lb/>
to learn that Littleton Col- <lb/>
an advertisement of which <lb/>
appeared in this paper during <lb/>
the summer, has bad the largest <lb/>
opening in its history. The <lb/>
growth of this school has been <lb/>
almost phenomenal, the total en- <lb/>
last year showing an <lb/>
increase about per cent over <lb/>
the previous year. <lb/>
This institution is doing a most <lb/>
for the young <lb/>
women of the South and richly <lb/>
merits the esteem in which i <lb/>
is held by the public. <lb/>
Any parent having a daughter <lb/>
to send off to school would do <lb/>
well to correspond with the man- <lb/>
of Littleton college- <lb/>
List cf Jurors for November Court <lb/>
The following is the list of <lb/>
Jurors for November term of <lb/>
Pitt Superior court as drawn by <lb/>
the bard of county <lb/>
First A. White, J i <lb/>
Brown. J. B. Little, Ed. H. <lb/>
burn, Oscar Tucker, D S <lb/>
J If Cox, Jr. C M fucker, W C <lb/>
Moore, H E Ellis, J S Allen, J L <lb/>
Henry Hardy, J ML <lb/>
J L lay <lb/>
L Cox, C A Tucker <lb/>
Second J Lang, D N <lb/>
Nobles J F Ira J <lb/>
J D Smith, Frank Wilson, <lb/>
it J Cobb, C G Moore, R L John <lb/>
son, T E Langley, J B White <lb/>
Eugene J B Pat <lb/>
rick, F V Johnston, W R Smith, <lb/>
W T Forest, J S Rollins, <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
List of Jurors for December Court. <lb/>
The following is the list of <lb/>
for December term of Pitt <lb/>
Superior court as drawn by <lb/>
board of county commissioners <lb/>
First, week. -I N J <lb/>
G M Shirley, J R <lb/>
H P Brown, Adrian <lb/>
age, James Long, John E King, <lb/>
D E House, J L R- L <lb/>
Bomber, F J R Turn- <lb/>
age, W I W B Greene, <lb/>
Alfred Moore, John S Smith, C L <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
Second week W D White- <lb/>
N G White, J D Jones R <lb/>
II Keel, W j Sermons. W H <lb/>
Jenkins. W H Smith, E C <lb/>
Tims, J G Taylor, W E Moore, <lb/>
E Boyce, J E Cannon, H C <lb/>
Cannon, J H Hardy, R A <lb/>
M L R C Cannon, <lb/>
L Joyner. <lb/>
Mr. <lb/>
Mrs, G. M. Mooring <lb/>
invite you to be <lb/>
at the marriage of their daughter <lb/>
Ida Gertrude <lb/>
to <lb/>
Mr. Ernest Bryant <lb/>
Tuesday October 22nd <lb/>
nineteen hundred and seven <lb/>
at three o'clock <lb/>
at home <lb/>
near N. C. <lb/>
Weighing El <lb/>
Two men entered a <lb/>
restaurant and alter putting a <lb/>
to the head waiter went <lb/>
out. <lb/>
did they asked <lb/>
a customer. <lb/>
wanted to know if we <lb/>
have scales here so they could <lb/>
Weigh themselves before begin- <lb/>
to eat. That seems to be a fad <lb/>
nowadays with <lb/>
concerned as much with the <lb/>
quantity as well as the quality of <lb/>
the food <lb/>
solves a certain number of <lb/>
es each me . not con- <lb/>
tent with v. th food, but <lb/>
jump in u <lb/>
before tor to make <lb/>
sure ;, n i ; overdo or <lb/>
of feeding. <lb/>
to <lb/>
assurer <lb/>
s ells- <lb/>
th <lb/>
they went on to <lb/>
New V k Sim. <lb/>
not prepared <lb/>
j th <lb/>
They <lb/>
so <lb/>
I, f. r <lb/>
S Lay Up. <lb/>
About August 1st there took <lb/>
up h my stock a main hog. <lb/>
weighing or GO pounds, <lb/>
marked, white with black <lb/>
rump and head. I now have this <lb/>
hug up and held for owner <lb/>
who can got same by proving <lb/>
property and paying charges. <lb/>
This Oct. 10th, 1907. <lb/>
B. T. <lb/>
R. F. D. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
links to th.- of <lb/>
Divine Providence bestows no <lb/>
greater blessing on man than the <lb/>
ladies. <lb/>
Life without women is not <lb/>
worth living, or a home without <lb/>
on is no home at all. The world <lb/>
without them would not be com- <lb/>
The perfect lady is next <lb/>
in the universe to the angels of <lb/>
God The sweet, char- <lb/>
of a gentle, loving, and <lb/>
kind-hearted, woman is a mag- <lb/>
that draws the love and <lb/>
sympathy of all men. What a <lb/>
wonderful blessing they are <lb/>
The men of are <lb/>
wonderfully blessed along this <lb/>
lire. They have a host of charm- <lb/>
w men. Even the smiles are <lb/>
enough to check the dreadful <lb/>
march of Sherman or Napoleon, <lb/>
or soften the heart the worst <lb/>
infidel. <lb/>
but such women as those who <lb/>
co faithfully prepared the ban- <lb/>
supper at the district meet- <lb/>
of the Improved Order of Red <lb/>
Men when they met with Green- <lb/>
ville Tribe, have done the good <lb/>
put and will occupy a special <lb/>
place in our wherever <lb/>
we go, <lb/>
Without hesitating I the <lb/>
authority of speaking for th <lb/>
meeting at large. No woman <lb/>
can surpass the women of Green- <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
The meeting was a good one <lb/>
but the part most enjoyed, as is <lb/>
alway- the case, part in <lb/>
which the women assisted <lb/>
After the meeting was over <lb/>
and thought the pleasure for <lb/>
the night was ended, realized <lb/>
the of joy was just <lb/>
rising. <lb/>
We were escorted from tie <lb/>
ball to a large banquet room <lb/>
where we enjoyed the <lb/>
blessing prepared by the <lb/>
I of Greenville. <lb/>
Sun we enjoy d our visit t <lb/>
I Greenville, but a good per cent <lb/>
of our moat sincere thanks are <lb/>
extended to the good women for <lb/>
their during the <lb/>
Rev L. A Windham. <lb/>
N- C- <lb/>
REV. W. E. COX CALLED. <lb/>
pi. Church, <lb/>
have <lb/>
sortie days to the jet <lb/>
E- Cox, of Greenville. <lb/>
. had accepted the call to <lb/>
parish of St. John's <lb/>
Church in this city, were <lb/>
confirmed yesterday by <lb/>
f the vestry upon receipt of a <lb/>
of acceptance from the <lb/>
reverend gentleman. Mr. Cox is <lb/>
to arrive in the city to <lb/>
up his duties as rector of the <lb/>
on the first of November. <lb/>
He is one of the ablest of the <lb/>
younger members of the <lb/>
ind the parish accounts it sell . <lb/>
in <lb/>
He will be given a cordial <lb/>
welcome to Wilmington, where <lb/>
is already well known and <lb/>
popular. Wilmington <lb/>
All that The Star soys about <lb/>
Mr- C x is true, and <lb/>
will with him very <lb/>
yet wishes him <lb/>
in larger field of labor <lb/>
He is a Pitt county hoy of whom <lb/>
his county justly proud, and <lb/>
will make his mark anywhere. <lb/>
The old lady has struck it <lb/>
and struck it right, at last Mrs. <lb/>
Carrie Nation is now the <lb/>
of a theatrical com- <lb/>
touring the West in a play <lb/>
Nights in a Bar <lb/>
and that was first put on <lb/>
when Noah found a spot of <lb/>
ground dry enough to <lb/>
date the play and the audience. <lb/>
The star gets a week which <lb/>
is no sufficient to over- <lb/>
come her prejudices against the <lb/>
wickedness of the stage. But <lb/>
we must give her her due With <lb/>
the money she makes she pro- <lb/>
poses to establish a shop <lb/>
in Washington where the <lb/>
may be made over a <lb/>
small Chronicle. <lb/>
The oldest living brother and <lb/>
we are Mr <lb/>
Oliver and hi; sister <lb/>
Nancey the widow of <lb/>
the late William T. Mr <lb/>
will be years old next <lb/>
December and Mrs. <lb/>
be next May. Both of them <lb/>
arc well preserved, <lb/>
and we hope may live several <lb/>
years longer. Mrs. is <lb/>
the mother of our good old friend <lb/>
Manly who la over <lb/>
years Record. <lb/>
cox <lb/>
Cox Mill, N. C, Oct <lb/>
II. A Moore Bro. <lb/>
a dry goods and grocery store <lb/>
here. We hope they will have <lb/>
Carroll and W. F. Car- <lb/>
roll and little son left today for <lb/>
the exposition at Norfolk. <lb/>
of our people who claim <lb/>
to hive received the Holy Ghost, <lb/>
passed through Sunday going to <lb/>
their meeting near Simpson. <lb/>
J. D and A. E. Evans and F <lb/>
L. spent Saturday night<lb/>
and Mrs. H L Forties, of <lb/>
spent Saturday night <lb/>
and Sunday with Guilford Page- <lb/>
Mrs. W- S. Cox is on the sick <lb/>
this week. <lb/>
Evans went to <lb/>
today <lb/>
Avery sold tobacco in <lb/>
Greenville Monday at an average <lb/>
of and returned home <lb/>
all smiles- <lb/>
Harvey Stokes has bought a <lb/>
new buggy. <lb/>
We were glad to see John <lb/>
Moore out Sunday <lb/>
OAKLEY ITEMS. <lb/>
Oakley, N. C. Oct. <lb/>
School has again opened at <lb/>
Piney Green with Miss Everett as <lb/>
teacher. <lb/>
capt. Frank Warren, of Tillery, <lb/>
is f pending a few days in this <lb/>
section with friends. <lb/>
Mrs. T- F. Nelson visited in <lb/>
Bethel last week. <lb/>
Yearly meetings are over, so <lb/>
we have settled down on every <lb/>
day rations once more. <lb/>
Good many attended church at <lb/>
Swamp Sunday <lb/>
fine sermon and good dinner. <lb/>
Most of the farmers from <lb/>
section are selling tobacco <lb/>
All <lb/>
come <lb/>
norm <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
North Carolina Pitt county <lb/>
court <lb/>
Dennis wife <lb/>
Dennis. <lb/>
VS <lb/>
J. E Jones D. <lb/>
Moore <lb/>
The defendants E. R. <lb/>
and D Moore above named <lb/>
will notice that an action <lb/>
has been commenced in the <lb/>
court of Pitt county by the <lb/>
above name I against <lb/>
the defendants above a I for <lb/>
the of enjoining and <lb/>
the said milts <lb/>
from foreclosing the montage <lb/>
and tho notes bet <lb/>
and described in the complaint <lb/>
tiled in this and for the <lb/>
of having the <lb/>
ed fraudulent and and <lb/>
void, and the defendants E. <lb/>
K. and , Moo it <lb/>
w II further take notion that they <lb/>
are required i at <lb/>
November of t <lb/>
Superior of county, <lb/>
to be held on the Monday <lb/>
after the 1st in <lb/>
It being the day Nov <lb/>
amber. 1907, t be court <lb/>
in said e in Greenville, N <lb/>
or demur to com- <lb/>
plain, f the mitt's in <lb/>
Hie plaintiffs will apply <lb/>
l the court relief <lb/>
ed in <lb/>
the Both day of <lb/>
7- <lb/>
II Moo c k superior <lb/>
o Pitt <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
pleased. <lb/>
Forty fifty of our at- <lb/>
tended church at Parmele Sun- <lb/>
day evening. <lb/>
Frost came on the 14th, one <lb/>
day later than last year, it came <lb/>
on Oct 18th last year, <lb/>
J. Williams made business <lb/>
in Saturday. <lb/>
J. S. I family, of <lb/>
Stoke, visited in this section <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
J. E. Hines, of Wilmington, <lb/>
spent a few days here this week. <lb/>
GRADED SCHOOL NOTES. <lb/>
Took Friends By Surprise- <lb/>
Mr, Adrian and Miss <lb/>
Lacy White took their friends by <lb/>
surprise Monday, by making it <lb/>
known that they were married. <lb/>
They were both in last <lb/>
week attending the exposition, <lb/>
and were married in that city <lb/>
evening came <lb/>
Sunday as fir as <lb/>
from re th-y drove to the <lb/>
home of Mr. <lb/>
miles from town. They came <lb/>
over to Monday and <lb/>
informed the bride's mother, <lb/>
Mrs. M. A White, of the par<lb/>
SALE OF PERSONAL PROP- <lb/>
By vi tie of mortgage <lb/>
ard delivered to J. a. Smith <lb/>
by C B. the End day <lb/>
M which mortgage <lb/>
curded in of the m <lb/>
county in book k- <lb/>
will Bell r cash <lb/>
in the town Ayden v i. <lb/>
I i -1-1 His follow- <lb/>
articles of u r property, <lb/>
writ. Throe two dray <lb/>
earl four sot<lb/>
he same based . T. w. <lb/>
id n; small bay <lb/>
J. one other an <lb/>
top <lb/>
buggy, iv . i-t <lb/>
h bought <lb/>
i. e, j . manure <lb/>
now hi by said <lb/>
k. <lb/>
K. Pall, mi if In <lb/>
said <lb/>
By F. G. James Atty. <lb/>
-t i <lb/>
The senior class of the graded, <lb/>
school <lb/>
elected for the year. <lb/>
president is Conrad Lanier; <lb/>
vice-president Miss Lucille Cob,. <lb/>
secretary. Miss Lillie <lb/>
Committees were appointed to <lb/>
select class colors, also to choose <lb/>
a suitable class pin. The class <lb/>
colors are yellow and the <lb/>
class pin will be diamond shaped <lb/>
of geld, and will have a black <lb/>
l front with engraved <lb/>
upon it, very handsome <lb/>
pin. <lb/>
The graduating class of this <lb/>
year is a most excellent one. both <lb/>
in preparation and in numbers, <lb/>
should all graduate, they will <lb/>
number fifteen, the largest class <lb/>
by far in the history of the school. <lb/>
The names of the members are <lb/>
as <lb/>
Conrad Lanier. Wiley Brown, <lb/>
Bruce Hooker,. John Bagwell, <lb/>
George Jr., <lb/>
Tucker, David Watson; t Cecil <lb/>
Cobb, Ethel Skinner, Jamie <lb/>
an, Margaret Blow, Lillie Tucker, <lb/>
Lillian Burch, Essie <lb/>
and Lucille Cobb. <lb/>
A number of the class will <lb/>
compete for the scholarships to <lb/>
University and to Trinity college. <lb/>
Both scholarships are quite <lb/>
able, and the of them <lb/>
may feel with certainty that they <lb/>
have something of which they <lb/>
may justly feel gratified Supt. <lb/>
Smith hopes to be able to capture <lb/>
one or two more scholarships at <lb/>
an early date. <lb/>
The literary societies <lb/>
last Friday for the year be- <lb/>
fore them. The boys chose of- <lb/>
as President, <lb/>
Wiley J. vice-president, <lb/>
Bruce Ho ; secretary, Royce <lb/>
The first debate will be <lb/>
h one week from next Friday, <lb/>
the query being That <lb/>
Abraham Lincoln was a friend <lb/>
to the The boys are <lb/>
ready at work on their speeches, <lb/>
and doubt they will have a <lb/>
lively discussion. <lb/>
The chose officers for the <lb/>
first term as follows President <lb/>
Miss Jamb Bryan ; . <lb/>
dent Miss Ethel -Skinner; <lb/>
Miss Essie It is <lb/>
the purpose of the girls to spend <lb/>
time studying tho history <lb/>
and literature of North Carolina. <lb/>
At some time during the year <lb/>
the societies of the school hope to <lb/>
have Dr- Alphonso Smith of the <lb/>
State University, and some of the <lb/>
other leading professors and ed- <lb/>
to speak before them and <lb/>
their friends. It is confidently <lb/>
that this will a most <lb/>
excellent feature of school life, <lb/>
it will also be a valuable con- <lb/>
to the refinement and <lb/>
culture of ti e community. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
virtue the power of sale <lb/>
in a mortgage deed and <lb/>
ox and delivered by <lb/>
Everett to Webb <lb/>
White on the day of <lb/>
i, and duly recorded in <lb/>
1.-1 r of office of <lb/>
county, North Carolina, in <lb/>
N S, page the under- <lb/>
ed will expose to public sale, <lb/>
before t he court house door in <lb/>
Greenville, for cash, to the- <lb/>
highest id on the <lb/>
lorn of November <lb/>
owing real property to wit; <lb/>
A or parcel of land lying <lb/>
in Pitt county <lb/>
N h Carolina, containing one <lb/>
d acres more or less, <lb/>
and the lands of A- <lb/>
B. Harry <lb/>
an rs being a part of <lb/>
J. C Keel land, to satisfy <lb/>
mo deed. <lb/>
14th day of October 1907. <lb/>
Mortgagees. <lb/>
J L Fleming, <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>