Newspapers / The Eastern Reflector (Greenville, … / Oct. 9, 1914, edition 1 / Page 4
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CMh muBt Mcompany orden for waat «U, except trom thoM bavlas reculM adTertWng m- eouaU. The rate ta • centa v«r line, six word* to the line. Tel ephone No. 74. : ANN BOSTWIGK’S LUNCHES: By GRIFFIN BARRY. I MBRKLLi EX( H.VXGED—SOME one leaving services at Episcopal church Sunday night took umbrella with straight crook wood, metal bound handle leaving one with plain handle. I’arty wil please exchange same with. F. M. Wooten. 10-5-lt. Ask Tear Grocer for WHITE SWAN FLOnS—Eat the best. 4 2S d FOR 8.\LE—SAC K HULLS AT GREEN villa for 40 cents a sack. Farmville on & Fertilizer. 9-24-tf. FOR KK\T—Two Furnished Uoonis suitable for men apply to Mrs. C. B Whichard 10-5-3t I AM I'KErARKl) TO DO SEW1>« Mrs. J. F. Smith, 1215 Washington, Street. 10-5-4td lYEW MULLETS. 8. M. Schnlti. FOR SAI.K AT OXCE—AT A BAR- gain, one Stieff Upright Piano. Ad dress “Piano” care Reflector. 9-29-Ctd. W.1>TEI»—TO Fl’RMSH STOVE pipes, elbows, lire boards, and put up your stoves. S. T. Hicks, 10-1-tf lOST-SI KDAY MGHT, 0( T. 4TH. cr.e small male setter dog, 15 mouths old. Color white and lemon. About B lemon spots on body. Answer to name of “Baa” reward if returned to G. W. [’rescott, Ayden, \. C. 10-5-tf. FiKOFflSfiltfBiiX H. W. CARTER, M. D. Practice limited to diseases of th^ Eye, Ear, >'ose and fhroat —and— The fitting of Glasses Office with Ur. D. L. James, Green- ^lille, X. C., every Monday. Home Office. Washington, N. C. A\>0l>CE3IE>T Dr. H. W. Carter announces that spectacles and eye glasses are furnish ed free to all who pay his regulai' tee of ten dollars for the examination of their eyes. ALBIOK BI7H1I Attera«7 at Law OBt)« ta ■taa:Harn Builiiat, VMrV • PiM«d«w wbwreeTer hia a«»/(a«a iealretf IrawTlUe, p No^th Carc^Ua. B. M. CLAMl Attome; at Law C.As;l jL£<l Dralnao Cases l 7« nflee fonnerlr o*>saipt4C Itrri* and WHw DS. PAUL FITZ«E8Ai.:» Deatlft. Otlce over Frank Wl.toux »r. VeleiHlione 4t7. (Sreenrtlle. : • !f i.aif/crj ia *!■ tin .... .I'i..' CiSiw* X ■>»: 'k‘\ 1,fyc.rsiQik DB, J E. MAfiSH Veterinary Sorgeon und DeatltS treat all animals. Calla prompti) xiswered day or night. Office at S . Smith's stables with hospital ec.'- Tice. Day phone 304; night 28>-L. 20 14 Imo. DR. A>'ME L. JOYSER Osteopahthic Physician Office in the Brown Building on Dlcli- inson avenue. Office hours 10 to 12 and 2 to 4. T-IO-t! Metro^Utaa Life latataaM iA of New York Aueta 447.82t.III.: I. Georga A. Horrest, Sptcial ITf Kvana «t «re«iTHl#. t* D& JOHN F. rMIQPlH. Tetenary SBifMi. baa moved hia office from 014 Ka. Bow lUblea to Dr. Seno Bi?awa‘i ■tablea on reartb Street. Pt«ae H4 I>a7 or Nicht. Im t and w. B. F. TTiBB laMraaee Ufa, Rra, nek sad m Voutb etraMf >.• WUaoa% B. MIHTLBT BUUIM StOl Wttfc *piiD BlMABLl" Tha Miilul Ufa I—rata Ce« •f !T. T. (('opyrlBht.) When Ann Bostwick’s funds fell to a certain very low level, she could see Giant Despair in the corner of her patch of hall bedroom. She tried to cover him up by banging certain "honora ble mentions" in that corner, and later she was able to add one draw ing with a blue ribbon on its edge; but when she opened her flat purse he was inside that, as grim as ever. To make it worse, a career was not all she would leave behind when she had spent all her money—all of it, that is, except the price of a ticket to her home in a certain New Eng land village. Even to herself she would not admit It, but there would be another wrench when she saw the last of a certain wearer of corduroy breeches, who, for all the air of him, might never have worn anything near er creased trousers tn his life. He was a Westerner, and the critics said that h» painted "freer and bolder" than any student In the big school. Tom Graham and she had a paint- Ing-room acquaintance which extend ed to lunch-time, when they usually nodded shortly to each other from op posite ends of the same soda-fountain. He lunched on egg concoctions, with hot chocolate and crackers to l)oot; she, on malted milk. There had been a time when Ann used to have a sustaining egg put in her thin drink: but that was In the days of her father’s remittances— prodigal days, when she spent as much as twenty cents in carfare, on a Sunday, to fill her lungs with God's fresh air as it blew across the Hud son. W'hen the remittances ceased, instead of eggs and car rides, she bought baked beans and fresh paint- tiibes. In fact, she kept reducing her food outlay, nickel by nickel, until sometimes she weakly wondered if after all courage doesn’t depend on diet. She ought to have been told that a tumbler of malted milk Isn't enough to keep the blood in your cheeks at noon, when your breakfast has been two cold squares of choco late. following a 15-cent dinner the night before. Then something strange happened. Everybody noticed that Ann perked up—especially the “mixologist” before the fountain, who had often slipped a little more than a fair ten-cents’ worth Into her tumbler. Rut this was different: for now an egg appeared dally, and sometimes two. while the check she paid was the same. ■\nn hated faking charity, even while she swallowed it. She hated it only whllo she WHS before the counter, how ever. She forgot everything she want ed to forget In the resulting power It leaked from her finger-ends to the canvas Tit hours, on the day when she had two eggs. About this time she sold a drawing to a magazine, and in cani(' another prize for her work in oils. One fall day. however, the keen wind that raked Broadway helped .Vnn through the door bodily The mixol ogist looked her coat up and down, then caught it between his fingers to feel how thin It was. "Pretty sharp breeze, miss,”he said. "You need a fur coat—one o’ them new dog-skins, now.” He stopped In the face of Tom Gra ham, who had come In for his lunch. Ann, sensitivp ahout her shabbiness, choked over her egg and got out quickly. T.nter—an hour after Tom Graham had left the con liter--she came hack with 2') nlck*'l.« In her humpy, frayed black purse. It was nearly all the mnnoy sh'' h?.d. Slie talked to the inixolosist with a rod fare, “Here is the money for the eggs. Of course T expected to pay It as soon as I could. Very, very much obliged. I know there were just 20, for 1 kept track.” Thp mixer turned away. “I didn’t mean any offense about that coat.” he said over his shoulder. “Of course not. It Is getting cold.” “Well, and I wasn’t responsible for those eggs, either. It was the man with the velveteen pants. He paid me for ’em.” Ann’s finance*? were In that critical state when the loss of a dollar makes the whole difference; so she closed “honorable mentions,” blue ribbons, and wrecked hopes Into a homo bound trunk that evening, and thought out a note to Tom Graham meanwhile. She lacked tlie nerve to go and thank him. When she opened the door to a man’s thumping, late In the evening, she even lacked the nerve—or the food—to stand up. Tom Graham was breathless after a climb of three flights, but he caught hereto save a fall, and then, to save an explanation, he told her ho loved her. It was enough for Ann when he said passionately that he couldn't see her grow pinched for food any longer If he had tried, for “women of your sort don't go hungry where I came from." Then he drew hasty eketchea of tba mooBtalns on bis Colorado ranch all over her white paper. 7%«)r haen built a atndlo there now. I H I V S I \ J K \ 1 (. \ }< Touring Cars $490.00, F. 0. B. Detroit Rounabouts $440.00, F. 0. i, Detroit. We have several seeoiid baud Ford and othei: Cars, almost as good as uew, for sale cheap. Ford Supply Go. Phone 237. Greenville, N, C. SOTICE ! Xorth Carolina In The Superior Court Pitt County J. J. Kvaus, James Kvans, W. F. Kvans, James L. Evans, W. M. Curtis and wife, Lcttia Curtis, D. W. Davis, and wife, A. Maude Davis Glasgow Kvans, William Kvans, Susan Evans, Della Evans, Adrian Savege and wife Mittie Savage, G. A. Evans, G. T. Evans, William H. Forbes and wife Pearl Forbes, Jessie Kennedy, Joseph M. Kennedy, Charlie Klttrell and wife .^Jeulah Klttrell, Leon P. Kvans, A. H. Critcher and wife Lillie L. Crltcher, ’ohn R, Forbes, Robt. Vainwright and ■wife Lula Vainwright, W. G. Stokes and wife Annie Stokes, Adolph Gar ris and wife Cornelia Garris, C. H. Forbes. B. P. Jolly and wife Nannie E. Jolly, Elias Crawford and wife Clara J. Crawford, W Harvey Allen and wife Bettie Allen, A.M. Allen and i\i£e Bertha E. Allen, Tiiomas Alien and wife Neva Allen, A. B. Moye and wife Pearl Moye, and J. L. Harris and wife -\ora Harris. Versus R. A. Forbes. H. C. Evans and wife Hattie Evans, Bessie Forbes, Rosa Forbeo, Allen Forbes, William I. Kvans, Hattie May Evans, Nannie E. Evans, Gordon Evans, Edrward Evans, kubell Evans, Elizabteh Evans, the' last ten being minors, and other un known persons, hlers at law of Rich aid Evans, deceased. children and descendants of Elias Kvaus of Alabama and Ira Kvans of Tennessee, both formerly form N. C., will further take notice that they are required to appear before th clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt County, N. C., at his office in Greenville, N. C., on the 19th day of October 1914, i>i:d answer the petition in said action cr the plaintiffs will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said petition. This Aug. 2Sth 1914. A. T. MOORE, Clerk Superior Court Pitt County. James L. £>ans, Atty. ll-15-5t. r.-onMon.-a.-tdy. DR. T. H. MEWBORX Optometrist Will be at Ayden Monday and Tues day, Oct. 12 and 13. Eyes examined and glasses fitted Office at J. R. Smith & Bro., store Ayden, N. C, Home offive. Washington, N. G E^xcept Monday’s and Tuesday’s. The poor man’s Joy ride la by tra^ toy. The defendants above named and all ether persons, the heirs at law of Richard Evans, (who died in I860) whatever may be their name and whatever may be their residence will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Pitt County, N. C., to have the land of the late said Rich ard Evans, in accordance with his will sold and proceeds from said sale divid ed among his heirs; and the said de fendants and all other heirs at law of Richard E^'ans whatever may be their residence, and especially the tCMBDDILB OF FA9SCM«B1I TBIJIII Atfantie Cossi jjb*. North Bound South Bound No. S8<8:18 a. m. No. 71 1:18 p. n No. 71 i:22 p. m. No. fl (ilO p. m JXorfolk Soattaern. Bast Bound West Bound No. 4 1:02 a. m. No. I l:ll a. ir No. t P:S2 a. m. No. 17 7.14 a. m Mo. II l:W p. m. No 1 i:M p. « CKOICS C€T FBOWIBB For all occasions, Koass, Ca.'w tions, Tlolets and TaHles tba laa« ars. Our art In wedding arraag* Bents are of the latest toneh. NoCii Ing Mner«fea floral oSe^gs to be ha« Blooming pot plants, asallaa. Ht aclq^s, p'alms, ferns, Norfolk pla«> at 4 many other nice pot plants. Rose bushes, evergreens, shrub errles, hedge plants an4 shade trea^ Vail, telegraph and feleFboaa ef'de*' isromptlv executed b*- jr. L. O’OilH A Ca., Pbonea; Store 42. 9reenhoD«« RALEIGH. N. C Some GOOD .Buys 225 Acres near Stokes. 40 Acres near Stokes. 110 Acres near Bethel. •y 50 Acres near Winterville. 170 Acres near Arthur. 10 Small Farms near Chocowinity. House and Lot 4th Street. House and Lot Evans Street. Five Building lots 4th. Street. Two Building lots Dickinson Ave; Two Building lots Paris Ave. We will be pleased to show any of these properties at any time. If you have Farms or City property to sell. CaU on or write Standard Realty Company, ROY FLANAGAN, MANAGER. Office Greenville Banking & Trust Co. Building. DON’T FAIL TO ATTEND The Great Eastern Carolina FAIR NKW BERN N. C. Oct. 27-30, ’14 IT WIL liE lU(i(IER AND BLTTER THAN EVER MAUNJFICANl’ DISPLAYS OF AGRICUL TURAL PJiODUCTS, FINE STOCK', AND POULTRY SPLENDID RACING Purses Aggregating $2,000.00 SPECIAl. TRAINS EVERY HOUR FROM THE UNION PASS1:NGER station AT NEW BERN TO THE FAIR GOUNDS Cheap Excursion Rates Over All Railroads. for I^REMIUM list, or other INFORMA TION, ADDRESS: CLYDE EBY, GENERAL MANAGER, NEW BERN, N. C. Just unloaded an extra good load ot well broke horses, direct from stock farm of Middle West. It in need of stock come to see me. CASH OR TERMS TO SUIT J. E. Winslow Greenville, N. Carolina.
The Eastern Reflector (Greenville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 9, 1914, edition 1
4
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