Eastern reflector, 13 June 1894






DO
NO
That the place to
your
BOOKS
-ASP-
IS
AT
Reflector Bookstore.
The Eastern Reflector,
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year,
VOL. XIII.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1894.
NO.
Is place to find the
REFLECTOR OFFICE
Bring along ONE DOLLAR and
get your Home a year.
HP This Office for Job Printing
mt
IN ORDER TO OBTAIN THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICES, SHIP YOUR PRODUCE TO THE FOLLOWING OLD, LONG-ESTABLISHED AND THOROUGHLY RELIABLE COMMISSION
W. D. SONS,
WARREN ST., NEW YORK.
Shipping No. Established 1813- j
C. E. BARKER CO.
COMMERCE ST., NEWARK, N. J.
Established 1872.
DOCK ST., PHILADELPHIA.
Established 1871.
KINGSLEY CO.
LIGHT ST. WHARF, BALTIMORE.
They have been thoroughly tried, not by jury, but by majority of only of Eastern Carolina, but of the United States, and have
date of establishing to the present lime that they must have been guilty of square dealing, or they would not still be holding products
The above Commission Men are no to you.
than any men in the business. You can readily see from the date of establishing to the present . . . .
say ire have been in the market with these concerns for three years or more, and refer you to a few of our shippers at each point- Had we the entire space of the Reflector we could not name them all.
been found
as they die
WINCHESTER HUNT.
COMMERCIAL ST., BOSTON,
of returning as much or more for your products
to years age. Now, to verify statement, we
Chocowinity, N. C. H. H. Ross, Idalia, N. Aycock, A. E. Clark. Pantego, N. O C. G. New as spare has about given out m cannot mention more of our
v. m j -g j j J- O. Proctor Bro, N. C. J. B. Bonner, A. if you have a friend around Mills, City,
R. R. Geo. A Phillips, Dr. D T. Tayloe, H. Bland, W. C Hon. J. Marsh, J. E. Hughes, W. M. Marsh, N. C. Joseph Brothers, E. South Creek, N. C J. C New Bane, or any etas who raises track, we win deem it
Lodge, Lodge Morgan, S. R. Fowle, E. S. Simmons, H. Bath, N C. C. A. A. B. Jno. T. Gaylord, , Simmons, Fairfield, N. C. H. Hampton, Plymouth, N. C. favor to us if you will write and ask them abort our are not
W. H Stancill, Washington, N. J. E. Jones, S. L. B. Windley, N. C. W. Latham, M. D. M Edenton, N. E. E. Knight, I. L. Thigpen, J neither arc our houses, and you will have no trouble in finding out
Grist, J. J. B. A Turnage, Mrs. F. C Saunders, J Leggett, C. G. B. Topping, R. H. C , Mildred, N. C. about us both.
Thinking- last season that the Truckers would not want to confine themselves closely to eastern markets, we connected ourselves with the following houses further t
SOUTH WATER STREET, CHICAGO, ILL.
CLEVELAND, OHIO.
PITTSBURGH; PENNSYLVANIA.
We tent each of the houses above several cars of potatoes from the following
raiser. oblige us by writing them G. A. Phillips. T. and closely culled stock always top of the market. Be
T. H. E. s. T. If. Latham, J. B. O rimes and . .
J. J. and ask them who paid the most for their truck last season,
and let case re.-t them.
we want to give our shippers some good advice, M follows Now if
you want to obtain top market prices for your truck, pack it in well tilled
sound packages and see that it is closely culled, for you can't fool a Yankee. Well
I Remember W. E. shipping mark m
established 1843, the oldest in America and the best j
Stencils, Postals, etc, furnished from any of
I he above houses on application to us. If you are a trucker
and wish to be kept posted on the market daily from all the
leading cities in America, drop us a postal to that effect, and
we will see that you are kept well informed on the markets.
Write to us at once for stencils, etc.
Offices over Carter Store, WASHINGTON, N. C.
Produce Soliciting Agents for North Carolina.
of Town of Greenville.
The Board of of the
Town of Greenville do enact
that for the government of said
Town the following Ordinances
or By-Laws shall be in force
from and after the 15th day of
Jane 1894, and that all
or By-Laws heretofore
enacted for the government of
the said Town be and the same
are hereby repealed, from and
after the said d of Jane
1894.
Ordinance I.
It is hereby declared to be a
for an . person to fire a
pistol, gun or any other species of
fire arms, or air rifle, or the using
of sling shot within the limits of
the town, except in ease of
and all persons are forbidden
to tire off any pop roman
candles or any lire works,
except on Christmas or with per-
mission of the
The playing of foOt-LO or
throwing any upon
streets or public lots of the town
is hereby forbidden.
And any person violating this
Ordinance shall for each and
every pay a fine of Five
Dollars.
Ordinance a.
It be unlawful for any I
person to drive or ride a or
mule at a greater speed than
eight miles an hour, or to drive
or ride recklessly through any of
the streets of the Town, or to drive,
ride, or lead a horse or mute on
any of the sidewalks thereof. Any
person violating this Ordinance
shall for and every
pay a tine of Five Dollars.
Ordinance j.
All persons are prohibited from
leaving any filth or from washing
any at or near any of the
public pumps of the Town,
or to a horse or a mule in
the buckets attached to the wells,
or to willfully or carelessly turn
loose the buckets attached to any
wells so that they may violently
descend. Any person violating
this Ordinance shall for each and
every pay a fine Five
Dollars
Ordinance
Any and all persons are for-
to encamp during the
night with horses, or- oxen
within the corporate of the
Town. Any person violating this
Ordinance shall for each
every pa a Sue of Five
Dollars.
Ordinance
Any all persons are forbid-
den to cut or damage any of the
shade trees o-i the lots or
streets of the T n, nor shall any
person tack post
or notice of any kind
said or lamp posts of
Town, or to dig op or injure
any of the side wit ks or streets of
th Town. Any person violating
Ordinance shall for each and
f very pry a fine of Five
Dollars-
Ordinance
All persons owning or occupy-
any house o- lot in said Town
are required to cleanse such of
their lots, ho eel lira,
or stables e offensive odors
ard the event that
of and notice by the Town
to cleanse the they
fa-n, they shall n fine
of Dollar for each day said
i permitted t remain
after such notice is given.
Ordinance
A -y all persons are forbid-
den to allow his or her horse or
mule to at large or graze upon
tho streets or public lots of the
Town Any person violating this
Ordinance shall for each and
every pay a fine of Five
Dollars.
Ordinance
If any person or persons shall
within the corporate limits of tho
Town engage in. or encourage the
of dogs or chicken cocks
for sport, he or they shall pay a
fine of Five Dollars for each and
every such
Ordinance g.
It is hereby declared to be
lawful for any person owning or
having any bitch or bitches, to
permit the same knowingly to run
at large during the erratic state
of copulation in the Town and
should the of said bitch or
bitches, after one hours notice by
the Town refuse or neg
to confine the same at once,
then and in that event the Town
is hereby authorized
to destroy or kill such bitch at
once, and in case owner of such
bitch can be found within a
the Officer shall like-
wise kill or destroy the same-
Ordinance
Any and all persons hereby
forbidden to engage in any riot-
boisterous or any other dis-
orderly conduct either upon the
streets or In any public or private
or any other place in the
corporate of the Town.
Any person or persons violating
this Ordinance shall for each
every pay a of
five Dollars-
Ordinance
Any all persons are hereby
forbidden to keep on the public
lots, streets, or sidewalks of the
Town any obstructions, such as
boxes, barrels, bales of cotton,
work-bench,
lumber, show of merchandise, or
anything except for building or
purposes, while the
work is in progress- Any person
violating this Ordinance after
complaint having been made and
notice given by the Town Officer
to remove the same he or she
shall be fined One Dollar for each
day said obstruction is allowed to
remain after such notice is given.
Ordinance
Any person owning an animal
of any kind or description that
shall die within the corporate
limits of the Town of Greenville
neglecting or refusing to remove
the same within twelve hours
from its death, shall pay a of
Two Dollars for each and
Ordinance
The of horses or mules to
any of the shade trees or fences
the streets or public lots of
the Town is forbidden. Any per-
son violating this Ordinance shall
for and every such
pay a fine of Five Dollars.
Ordinance
All crowds or of
persons who shall congregate on
the sidewalks or streets of the
Town, thereby obstructing the
to the inconvenience of
pedestrians, shall be dispersed
by the Town Officer, and any
person or persons, who refuse to
obey warning of such Officer,
shall be deemed to have violated
this Ordinance- Any person or
persons this Ordinance
shall for each and even such
pay a tine of Five Dollars.
Ordinance
It is hereby declared to be a
nuisance for any person to be
found the streets or in any
place within the corporate
limits of the town in a State of
intoxication, or who shall or may
be heard using vulgar or profane
language, or who shall indecently
expose his or her nakedness.
Any person violating this
shall for each such
pay a fine of Ten Dollars.
Ordinance
Any meddling with the public
wells or pumps of the Town or
interference with the work there-
of unnecessarily is prohibited-
any person violating this
Ordinance shall for each and
every pay a of One
Dollar.
Ordinance
It is hereby declared unlawful
for any person or persons to re-
tail spirituous, vinous or malt
liquors by the drink or in
ties less than a gallon within the
corporate limits of the Town with-
out first obtaining from the
of the a license
signed by the Mayor counter-
signed by the of said Town
which license shall expire on the
30th day of April next succeeding
the day upon which it is granted.
Any person or violating
this Ordinance shall be fined Five
Dollars for each day or part of a
day he is guilty of its violation-
Ordinance iS.
It shall be unlawful for any
itinerant of goods, wares
or merchandise of any description,
and concerts or traveling
of any kind who charge an
admission fee, to pursue their
avocation within the corporate
limits of the Town without first
paying the Officer the tax
imposed therefor. Any person
violating this Ordinance shall tor
and every pay a fine
of Ten Dollars-
Ordinance
It shall be unlawful for any per-
son to exhibit any lottery or any
species of games of chance on the
public squares or streets of the
Any person violating this
Ordinance shall pay a fine of
Twenty-five Dollars for each day
or part of a day in which it is so
violated.
Ordinance
It is declared to be a
nuisance for any person to
bit a Stallion or Jack on any of
the public lots, streets or com-
mons within the limits of the
Town- It is also forbidden for
any person to put a Stallion or
Jack to a Mare within the
ate limits of the Town. It is also
declared to be a nuisance for any
to keep a Jack Ass enclosed
within a lot or stall within the
corporate limits of the Town.
Any person violating this
for each and every
pay a fine of Twenty-five
Dollars.
Ordinance
The storage of Guano or other
offensive Fertilizers within the
corporate limits of the Town, ex-
at or near the steamboat
or landings, is considered
to be a nuisance and is hereby
prohibited- Any person
this Ordinance shall for each
and every per day or part
of a day pay a fine of Five Dollars-
Ordinance
It is hereby declared unlawful
and is hereby forbidden for any
person to sell at auction any
goods, wares or merchandise of
any kind or description on any of
the streets, sidewalks or public
lots of the Town without
of the Mayor. Any person
violating this Ordinance shall for
each and every pay a fine
of Five Dollars for every sale
thereof.
Ordinance
It shall be unlawful and is here-
by forbidden for any circus to be
exhibited within the corporate
limits of the Town without pay-
to the Town Officer tho taxes
imposed therefor, and any per-
son violating this Ordinance shall
be fined Fifty Dollars for each
day or part of a day he is guilty
of its violation.
Ordinance
Any all are hereby
forbidden and prohibited from
emptying or pouring out any fish,
or pork pickle, or placing
any other offensive matters of
any kind in tho streets or
lots of the Town. And all
violating this Ordinance shall for
each every pay a fine
of Five Dollars.
Ordinance
All dealers in meats, beef, fish,
oysters, hides or other articles
subject to rapid decay are re-
quired to keep their premises
clear and free as possible of bad
odor, and any and all persons are
hereby strictly forbidden to cure
any green hides within the
limits between April 1st
and November 1st, and any per-
son violating this Ordinance shall
for each and every pay a
fine of Ten Dollars.
Ordinance
All persons having and using
stoves in any building within the
Town shall cause the pipe thereof
to a brick flue or chimney
built from the ground or upon the
joists of the building through tho
roof thereof. And in all cases
where the stove pipe may pass
through a wall or partition, a
stone or earthen pipe must be
placed in such wall or partition,
and the stove pipe made to pass
through the same. The condition
of all such stove pipes may be
examined and inspected by the
Mayor, or any one or more of the
Councilmen of the Town appoint-
ed by the Mayor to examine and
inspect the same and such
report they find any such stove
pipe is not arranged as required
above or in this Ordinance and
the owner thereof after due notice
of such deficiency refuses or neg-
so to arrange it in
dance with above requirements
for the protection of his or her
own property and the of
others near by, he or she shall for
each and every so com-
pay a fine of Twenty-five
Dollars.
Ordinance
No person shall throw or place
in any of the streets of the town
any filth, trash, timber, glass,
paper, boxes, or other things of
nuisance whatever, only at such
time and manner as may be
by the Town Officer for the
of removal. Any person
violating this Ordinance shall for
each and every pay a fine
of Five Dollars.
Ordinance ad.
It is hereby declared to be
lawful for any retailer of
or malt liquors to permit any
disorderly, obstreperous or
on their premises,
under the penalty of having their
license revoked.
It shall be unlawful for any
Hotel or Boarding House keeper,
or Horse or Male Dealer, Lawyer,
Auctioneer or any business where-
in a tax is required, to
pursue their avocations they
shall have obtained a license sign-
ed by the Mayor and countersign-
ed by the Clerk. Any person
this shall for
each and every pay a pen-
of Five Dollars.
Ordinance
No person shall deface, break
or in any manner any of
the lamps or lamp posts in the
any person who
may mutilate or otherwise injure
any building or enclosing
the public pound, shall forfeit
pay the sum of Ton Dollars,
for each every
fine or forfeiture to be collected
in the manner by law.
Ordinance
The congregating of
for tho purpose of swapping,
trading or selling horses or mules,
the streets or public lots of
the Town is declared to be a
and is hereby prohibited.
Any person violating this
shall for each and every
pay a of Ten Dollars
Ordinance
Any person or persons who fail
to pay fines costs imposed by
the Mayor, or any tax imposed by
the Board of shall
required to work on the streets
of the Town at such sum as may
be allowed by the authorities per
day until the of such
fine costs or tax is paid.
Ordinance
All shops or places for the
of spirituous, vinous or malt
liquors shall closed on each
Sabbath the year from
o'clock on Saturday night to
o'clock on Sunday night, and no
or persons shall during or
times, in any
liquor Bell or give
away any spirituous, or vinous, or
malt liquors, except in case of
sickness, and then only upon a
certificate of a practicing
and any one or more per-
sons seen going in or out of a
bar-room between said hours
above mentioned shall deemed
of the guilt
of the proprietor of said bar-room.
Any person violating this
shall for the first
pay a Five of Ten Dollars, for the
second pay a tine of
Twenty Dollars, for the third of-
fence have his license revoked.
Ordinance
Section No person shall
vend or sell within the corporate
limits of Greenville, except from
the stalls of tho Market House,
fresh pork, frosh beef, fresh
mutton, fresh or barbecue.
Provided, however, that after
o'clock, A- M- whole dressed
hogs, beef and mutton, in
ties not less than a quarter, may
be sold any where in said Town,
and that skimmers may sell fish
caught by themselves anywhere
in Town. Provided, further, that
desiring to sell fresh
fresh pork and fresh
ton may do so by obtaining a
license from tho Mayor by bay-
Four Dollars therefor per
month or part of a month in ad-
their places of
subject to the laws and
governing the market
house. Any violating this
Ordinance shall for each and
every pay a fine of Ten
Dollars.
Sec. No person shall sell
or vend any cakes or cider except
twenty feet of tho Market
House. Any one violating this
shall for each and
every pay a fine of Two
Dollars.
Sec. No stalls or stands for
the sale of said articles be
allowed to be erected within the
corporate limits. Any person
violating this Ordinance shall for
each and every a
of Two Dollars.
Sec. 4- No person shall sell
the corporate limits of the
Town any unwholesome food.
Any person violating this
shall for each every
pay a of Ten Dollars.
Sec. 5- The stalls of the Mar-
House shall be rented an-
on tho first day of January
at public outcry, but any vacant
stalls thereafter may be rented
out by the Town authorities
after said day, provided,
however, no stall be rented
for less than Four Dollars per
month payable in advance.
Sec. Any person renting a
stall the Market House shall
keep tho same clean,
of a failure to do so, and after no-
by the Town authorities
refuse or neglects to clean the
same shall forfeit the amount paid
and the further use of such stall.
Sec- 7- No barrels, tables or
obstructions shall be placed in the
passage way of said Market House
Sec. One stall of said Mar-
House shall kept for the
use of the public free of charge.
Ordinance
Section The running of
hogs, goats and at large in
the corporate limits is declared
to a nuisance and is
forbidden. every person
whether a citizen of the Town or
not is prohibited from permitting
his hogs, goats or from run-
on the of
Greenville, and the owner of each
animal or fowl whether a citizen
of tho Town or not shall for each
and every violation of this
pay a of Five Dollars
for each hog and One Dollar for
goat or goose-
Sec. 2- Whereas it has been
time again declared to be a
public nuisance for hogs to run
at large on tho streets of the
Town of Greenville and has been
prohibited by its Ordinances.
And whereas it is the purpose of
Board of Councilmen to use all
lawful means to abate such
and to enforce its Ordinances
the same. But where-
as the Board is forbidden, by an
act of the General Assembly
passed at a recent session to pass
any Ordinance directing the Town
Officers to impound any hog or
cattle, the property of a person
not a citizen of the Town, and
whereas the Board desires to con-
firm its action to the laws of the
State and to protect its officers
from prosecution. And whereas
it is utterly impossible for the
Officers of the Town to distinguish
the hogs of those who do not live
within the corporate limits of
Greenville from the hogs of those
who live in said limits- It is or-
That in order that Town
Officers may not, by mistake,
pound the hogs of any
dent it is ordered and made the
duty of all non-residents to mark
their hoes and to register with
the Clerk of this Board his or her
mark before the 15th day of June
1894, and he shall pay therefor a
tax of Five Dollars to Town
and a fee of Ono Dollar to the
Clerk.
That on and after the said
15th day of June, 1894, the Town
Officer shall impound all
marked hogs and all hogs whose
warns have not been registered
by their owners, unless he shall
otherwise know them to be the
property of a non resident, and
deal with them according to
Ordinances in force as to hogs
belonging to citizens of the town.
Provided, it shall be his duty to
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
release tho same to tho owner, if
he be a non-resident, upon his
calling for them within ton days
and with the
requiring them to be mark-
ed and registered.
The Town Officers shall not
impound any hog known to be
the property of a non resident,
but it shall be his duty to insert a
small ring the nose of the same,
and to report the name of the
owner thereof to the Mayor. It
shall likewise be his duty to make
a note of each hog found running
at large which ho is forbidden to
impound and report the name
thereof to the Mayor.
various
adopted to protect the citizens of
the Town against the nuisance of
the hogs from the country run-
at large in the town shall
not be considered as in any way
countenancing the or as
waiving any of the legal rights of
the Town to abate tho but
it shall be the duty of the Mayor
to proceed against the owners
whether a citizen of the Town or
not of all hogs running large
in the streets under tho
which forbid tho same,
and under any law of the State
which may be applicable thereto-
All hogs, goats and
running at large on the streets if
not known to be the property of a
non-resident shall be taken up by
the Town Officer and impounded,
and if not redeemed by the owner
thereof shall ton days notice
by advertising in three public
place giving a description of the
hog, goat or goose taken up, be
sold at public auction, the pro-
thereof to paid to tho
owner of said hog, gout or goose
after deducting the cost ex-
The Town Officer shall have
for feeding each hog, goat or
goose ten cents per day, for ad-
each hog, goat or goose
fifteen cents.
Ordinance
Section The running of cat-
at large in the corporate limits
of the town is declared to be a
nuisance and is forbidden-
Sec. All cattle, tho proper-
of residents, found running at
large shall be taken up by the
Town Officer, impounded, and
it not redeemed by the owner
thereof, shall after ten days no-
by advertising in three pub-
places giving a description of
the animal taken up be sold at
public auction, and the proceeds
arising from such Bale be paid to
the owner of said animal, after de-
ducting the cost and expenses.
Sec The Officer shall
have for taking up each animal
twenty-five cents, for feeding
each animal twenty five cents per
day, and for advertising each
fifteen cents-
Ordinance
It shall be unlawful for any
person to deface any monuments.
or in the cemetery or to
injure any shrubbery or flowers
or receptacle for flowers in it, or
to break or injure lock on the
gates or any fence around the
cemetery or to turn any cattle or
goats therein. Any person
this Ordinance shall pay a
fine of Twenty five Dollars, one
half to be paid tho informer
one half to the Town.
Ordinance
Section Every person own-
or keeping a dog or dogs
within the corporate limits of said
Town is hereby required to reg-
CONTINUED ON FOURTH
Reduced prices in
Watch
Have your Watches Cleaned for II
cents. Main Springs cents, all other
work as cheap in
Call me at corner store post-
office. Z. P.
Watchmaker Jeweler,
N. C,
tails
V.
Land Ami
Greenville. N. C.
at the House.
II.
. DENTIST.
i, C
K. L. I.
Greenville.
GORE
N. C
Opera House. Third
T FLEMING,
-AT-LAW
N. O.
Prompt attention to business.
at Tucker old
G. JAMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, N C.
Practice all the courts. Collection
J. JARVIS. 1-. BLOW
BLOW,
GREENVILLE,
r Practice in all the
s. r.
TYSON,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
N. O.
Prompt attention to
HARRY
T A
N. C-
HOTEL NICHOLSON,
WASHINGTON, N. C
Geo, A. Spencer, Mgr.
FIRST-GLASS IN
Special attention to Men.
Free Dual.





J.
CO TO preachers their denominations
n w lo He asked if doing all
N. C.
Editor d Proprietor
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 13th, 1804.
Entered at th- at Greenville,
N. C. at mail matter.
W.- Field, of Now York,
died last Saturday afternoon- In
July he was by
President Harrison to
Germany. In
he returned, a basing
been appointed, and while in
London ho cold which
terminated in his death.
their power to instruct these
brothers of theirs the
teachings of Christ, and to see
that they led upright lives which
were an example and help to
their congregations, and where
they knew the contrary to be true,
are they exposing the unworthy
and relieving the of a
pernicious and dangerous exam-
Give the a fair chance,
said he; them bettor homes,
better schools, better churches,
better teachers better preach-
and before many years you
will convert them into intelligent
law-abiding citizens, and
neither capital nor labor will
to come
There were other features of
Senator admit able paper
that are worthy special men
but we will not consider
General W. P. Roberts, of them now. All who are familiar
Gates former State Audi- with th races in the South must
, , be impressed with the honesty
tor. has been by Pros. , q
dent Cleveland to be at V subject,
British Columbia. The
is to which must ad-
fees. It is perhaps
the most important consulate of
the United States this
because of tho opium trade
and Chinese immigration
The Senate will have to select
committee of five to give hear-
to the representatives of all
the and other
cranks who have wild scheme to
air, a resolution to that effect
having this week been adopted.
WASHINGTON LETTER,
Ten young ladies of Charlotte
whose pictures appeared in a
group in the Sunday
ought to take their brooms and
go around the
entire office of that paper. An
ordinary newspaper cut never
does a handsome woman justice,
and it almost make a body weep
to see tho features of ten in a
all at one
grand sweep.
our Regular
Washington D. C- Juno
President Cleveland told a
Democratic member of the House
who asked him his opinion of the
Senate amendments to tho tariff
bill that his tho
of tariff reform should be
well enough Known without any
additional expression at this
time, and that he con-
prompt action on tho
subject by both and Sen-
ate of far more importance to
tho country than the more details
of this or that schedule in the
bill, provided, of course, that tho
bill as is kept line with
Democratic promises of tariff
reform- That strikes mo as the
proper position for every patriotic
Democrat to take at this time-
The bill to tin per Republican Senators
cent, tax the issue of on the old legal maxim-
banks was defeated in the
last Wednesday by a vote of
yeas to nays. Th votes in fa-
you have case abuse
; t lie Finding that
I they were on the sugar
of tho tariff bill, which
of repeal were by they had been for weeks claiming
Democrats. Of the neg vote-, to be confident of defeating with
were cast by D by the aid of Democratic votes they
T, ,,. i q i . have resorted to cry of sugar
Republicans and S by thinking o
All of tho North Carolina item- country to the fact that sugar
voted f of repeal. schedule this week adopted by
Thomas Settle, lone Democratic only
voted with his par- the sugar abort
. . , half of whit they are getting
against it. the law. Sena-
tor Jones is confident that all of
the amendments will be adopted
the tariff bill passed by the
close of next week, and
SENATOR AR VIS'S
The Augusta. Ga
in full Senator
Congress recently hold in that
city, and mikes tho following
strong editorial comment up
admit
can Senators privately
much.
The southern Democrats the
House were doubly disappointed
by the defeat of the bill for the
repeal of the tax State bank
currency- Tin y had confidently
of tho ablest papers read expected votes favor of the
during the of the J it only received
Congress, if not tho ablest, while the opposition
was by United States Senator They claim that men who;
UNIVERSITY COMMENCEMENT,
Correspondence
Chapel Hill, N. C- June
The University has just closed
its 99th session with the most
brilliant Commencement in its
history. Secretary Hoke Smith
orator was heard by more than
people in Memorial Hall-
He spoke with eloquence, wisdom
and power worthy of the great
occasion and the brilliant
The Faculty
Tuesday night was attended by
who amid strains of
delightful music were presented
to Secretary Smith and wife by
Winston. The Campus,
the College and the village of
Chapel Hill were packed for throe
days with hundred of visitors
from a distance and Is of
people from Orange, Wake,
Chatham, and Durham counties.
The back of the Campus was full
of vehicles of all sizes, shapes
and descriptions.
The Commencement began
with the Baccalaureate Sermon
on It was preached by
Rev. Dr. F. J. Murdoch of
bury from the texts shall
do Lord course is
It was a manly appeal
young for a manly life ;
and was marked by strength,
The Literary Societies held
the annual meetings Monday
night, greeted old members and
initiated honorary
The Board of Trustees at then-
annual meeting a com-
of five to investigate and
report at the February mooting
concerning tho Greek letter
Life and Character of Dr.
Chas. F. was the subject
of the oration alumni
association Tuesday morning.
It was delivered by Dr. F. L.
and was a touching,
and masterly delineation
of one of North Carolina's most
gifted divines.
Tho Senior Class Day exercises
wore held Tuesday afternoon and
wore the occasion of much fun
merriment. Tho class orator
was U. H- Atkinson, of Asheville,
the poet Jan. Sawyer, of Asheville,
historian T- B. Lee, of Mocks-
tho prophet, L. E. Barnes,
of Wilson. The singing of the
class song closed the exercises-
The Representatives of the
and Philanthropic Literary
Societies held their con
test in oratory Tuesday
and the medal was won by H.
Borne of the Phi Society. The
other speakers were J. C-
of Ashe A. S- Dockery, of
Richmond county. Herbert Bin-
of a sou of Col.
Win. L C Brogden of
Wayne and J. O. Carr, from
A Peculiar
Periodic Attacks of Neuralgia In
the free.
I. Hood S Co., Lowell.
write to Unit I have been a sufferer for
four years with neuralgia In eyes. The pains
were severe at night, causing me to suffer
winter summer alike. Sometimes a mouth
would lapse between spells, then I would be
Troubled Every Week,
especially was up at night I am a man of
regular habits, years of age, and employed
for the past seven years by Heath, Springs Co.,
well-known merchants bankers of this place
and Camden. I bought a supply of Hood's Bar-
used four bottles and believe I am
W. J. Lancaster, South Carolina.
Hood's PHIS Constipation by Mats
the peristaltic action of the alimentary
USE
HORN
W. g. Greer,
Land Sale.
By virtue of a decree rendered in n
certain cause pending In the Superior
Court of county,
If. Co., are plaintiff and
Latham ft Skinner stall are defendants,
i he undersigned. Commissioner duly
authorized by said will
the Court House door in N.
C for cash, on Monday, July 2nd,
tin; following described
in the comity of a certain
tract of land lying in Falkland town-
ship, adjoining the land. of Margaret
Mathews, Willis It. Williams, Mrs.
Newton and containing by
acres, generally known an
the Adam Corbet t land; n certain lot or
parcel of laud lying in the town of
Greenville, designated a lot No In
plan of sari town and well known as
the old Thomas lot; a certain
other lot in town of Greenville, a
part f lot No. in the plan of said
town, and the same lot which wan
to Harry skinner by w. T.
Marsh and wife by deed recorded in
took II. pages and of the
public registry of Pitt county.
Commissioner.
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR
We will rill them QUICK
We will fill them CHEAP
We will fill them WELL
. -i is. of North on the
Obstacles to Southern
Senator Jarvis
tie it very with the sub-
and said a great many i
valuable things.
tho and its
en o in keeping out immigrants,
he took tho position that any dis.
of the that
six best orators of the
had allowed to be delivered graduating bra-
counted in favor of the bill voted , They
against it . Asheville. Subject.
Secretary waited until of Modern Civilization.
A. Eilis, Louisburg.
the fake story that ho was
for another of bonds
had advanced to the stage of
pretending to all the details
to the exact amount of
bonds to be issued, before be
Permanence
E. E. Subject, A Plea
for Education of
i he Teacher.
T. B. Lee, Subject,
The State tho Child.
C. L- Durham.
The Influence of
Rough Heart Framing,
Rough Sap ; 17.00
Rough Sap inches
Rough Sap Boards, A inches 7.00
Wait days for our Planing Mill and
we will tarnish you
as
Wood ti your door for SO
cents a load.
Terms cash.
Thanking yon for past patronage,
NOTICE
On Monday the 2nd of July. A.
1801. will sell at the Court House
door in the town of Greenville to die
highest bidder tor cash several tracts of
land in county
No. One tract on the south side of
Tar river near Grove ad-
joining the lands of G. W. Crawford,
the May land, the Nobles land, the
Simmons or Hart binds, A. C. Tucker,
L. Crawford and others containing
six I acres wore or less, mid
formerly known as the old Adams hind.
No. One other track, on the
south side of Tar river, upon e north
prong of Meeting House branch, begin-
at a nine in John Frye's line
runs south poles to u pine,
corner, thence with Frye's
line one hundred and sixty seven poles
to a pine on Frye's line thence
south thirty live polis to a pine, Vim.
Eastwood's corner, thence east one
and twenty-two poles, to a
light wood stump, the said Eastwood's
corner, thence with another of East-
wood's lines north seventy-eight poles
to an oak, on the side of branch,
another of the said Eastwood's corners,
thence to the beginning, containing
forty-live acres more or less. book
N. page Office, Pitt
No. One other tract, on the south
side of river, upon the north prong
of Mealing House brunch, beginning at
a pine, running west eighty poles to an
oak, north forty point to a pine, cast
eighty poles to a Mack jack,
poles to the beginning, containing
twenty acres more or less.
No. One other beginning
at a pine Slaughter's corner,
then north eighty, cast forty poles with
May's line to a pine, thence north thirty
east one hundred and twenty
pules to a pine line,
these, with his line north ten degrees
seventy-two poles to a maple, In
the Meeting House branch, and in Jesse
King's line, thence with Kings line
said branch, north degrees west
eighty pole- to a white oak, said King's
corner, thence with another of King's
lines north twenty-live degrees west,
one hundred and fifty three poles to a
red oak in a branch, thence with said
branch thirty poles to a red oak in John
Frye's line, thence south with Frye's
line seventy-eight poles to a
thence west one hundred and
thirty-seven poles to a pine thence south
two hundred and eighty-eight poles to
a pine in Sampson Slaughter's line,
then with said Slaughter's line to the
beginning, containing four hundred and
acres more or less, patented by
Win. Eastwood and Benjamin King.
K. page
The last three tracts to a de-
of four hundred and
seres of land by Win. Bast-
wood to David Book Q. page.
Said lands to the
y of North Carolina, and levied on as the
properly of the said University to
an in my hands for col-
issued by MM Clerk of the
Court of county in favor
of F. White collector S A. M.
of estate of Maria
Tills the 20th day of May,
It. W. Sheriff.
PIANOS
ORGANS
lit
N. C
it u American Institutions,
not con-, w. F. Harding, Green
the removal of the took the trouble to undo tho
front the South as the remedy Of the gifted writers Washing-
fort his obstacle was of fairy tales by officially
mark. Senator said that he was
is here Me is not to issue bonds, had not con-j Greenville.
to blame for it even, and know no Truth and Poetry,
can't leave if lie wants too and lie, reason why ho should consider it j modal for tho
not if lie Senator at this time or in the immediate j oration was by C L.
all schemes future.
for exportation or colonization, j been during his entire public life The presents I
either or in some known as a man who believes on various em- The handsomest line of
SPRING U
State of the Union its wild and the open and above board method bodying results of special re-1
and the people of the I of doing things, and
south as well meet the is-
squarely, and take the pres-
of the
in all plans for the d
of the station.
With e admitted,
S as a starting p tint,
then it clearly is the duty of the
whiles as well is our interest to
help tho in tho education
of In
order that, as lily
they may h law-abiding,
useful mid intelligent citizens.
He he whites
already in this but
lamented the fact that it is not
lie tho work of
ting the in scale of life
must begin at his home. If white
labor were used the South bet-
homes would have to
may rest assured at
necessity for an n issue of
arise it be duly and
officially announce by the Treas-
department not by
newspapers. It is not believed
that it will be necessary to issue
more bond-;, as there is no pro-
of the tho is-
reaching
low condition before August, and
by that time the increase in the
Government receipts under tho
new tariff law will probably be
great enough to furnish relief.
Tho claim for against
tho estate of tho late Senator
Stanford, which was filled Cal-
this week by direction of
Attorney-General has
been much talked about Wash-
pro-; The. claim is made to
v for our laborers. Let us protect the interests of tho
then, by doing for the eminent involved in tho
what we would have to do for I of the Central Pacific
successor- How where a
tan lives has much to do with
his characteristics and
and if houses provided
for laborers which the
Railroad to the States.
This stop is in line with a
introduced in tho House
sometime ago by Representative
of Louisiana, providing
sexes may be properly separated for the employment of counsel
and in which they pride, to bring suits against the original
search and Study ; some .
the i literary, some philosophical,
some historical. There were
era
honors were
awarded to the High-
est honors to H. H. Home of the
Junior Class and Darius Eat
man of Freshman Class. Bat-
man is a painter who has worked
his way to College, and both his
own character and the character
of tho University shown in
the fact ho was elected President
of the largest, smartest and strong-
est class in the University. Homo
too is a working boy, and ho has
literally mowed down honors for
throe years. Both boys
The medal f r best essay by a
graduate was awarded to G. R-
Little; D. G. Worth for
beat thesis in Moral Philosophy
to L. M. Swink; the W. C.
prize in Geology in
to H. White; the Holt
Mathematical modal to A. B. Kim-
ball; the magazine prize
H. H. Home; the Chas. G.
Hill History prize cash
M. Wilson. Tho subject of
Mr. Wilson's thesis the
Career of Ma-
they will influenced by Central
to better habits of iv-; posed of Stanford.,
and will become more speed Crocker, and Cotton j document
worthy desirable money divorced them for their, Hon. Smiths oration was on
con It is a valuable historical
After beginning this reform in own benefit from the earnings of
the homes of the it is j the railroad. claims
our duty according to Senator that the Govern neut get at
to be very careful of the least by these
character of the persons who tea suits. The bonds upon which
th m in the public schools. Too the railroad owes tho Government
teacher can great
in shaping character of the
growing generation of
can make them respectful
and in their bearing and
towards the whites, or
can make them rude and resent
fad. to the teacher tho
schools, the wields the
greatest in; u over
the whites owe it to them
to see that only intelligent
and respectable colored men,
whoso and
re for the betterment and
of the race should be a
lowed to their pulpits, lie
asked question, h- left
without ll.
this money are not yet but
claim is put in now so that
the statue of limitation cannot be
plea should the suits be enter-
ed after default the payment
of the bonds. It is expected that
this legislate upon
tin indebtedness of all of the
Pacific railroads to the govern-
and C P. is
now in Washington looking out
his end of matter.
Nothing startling has been
out Hun week by the
Senate commit too that is
gating the charges
tin alleged sugar trust scandal.
The morn testimony the
ts-e more it
of the u in We h
the South to a. , Oil
if were . .
the taut
the and
of He
delighted his large and
charmed them with his earnest,
eloquent and plea for
the material development of North
Carolina. He stud that slavery
popular ignorance bad re-
the State's growth. With
freedom had come free schools
and material progress. As soon
as North Carolina has a free
school for every square mile of
her territory she will be us rich
as Massachusetts. It was pro-
the best Commencement
oration over made at tho
Tho of LL. was
conferred upon Hon. Hoke
Smith, President J. H- Kirkland,
of and Judge A. S.
Seymour. The degree of D. D.
R. T. Bryan, Mission
to China and Rev. I. K Pit
of Raleigh.
R-. P D- GM pronounced
ever held
U Chapel Hill.
SPRING HATS
ever shown In
WHAT bright, dainty creatures of
beauty new style Spring lints
What skill, what taste, what in-
our mil liner artist has
What combination of feathers and
flowers and ribbons and straws can be
seen at
To Our
You want I T
mil
at It y ,
. at
our
RELIABLE,
MUSICALLY
sold at
la
, T
Everything to please. Call and exam-
and see for yourself. Prices to
suit the times.
A J
m know Q
an but own M v. A
under oar mi
-I In If, V
mi mm -riling on
t . pi
terms, mini
Ha van tin
III ill I I
era. Our A
to mm W
lo wit-rt
from
your for a
t In, W
nil i h.
Any In the
our A
mine is n V
Aft hi t d
profits J
Or y
front. All new I
ii w
i will v i-ii
It ran Mil you
BATES
Southern Music House.
Main House.
tr In
Churl It a I a
X. CM K. Or- m
lean. I-n. all under our direct rm
LL
IN AND OF-
Boilers, Saw Mills
O.
Celebrated
Machinery.
THE BEST IN THE WORLD.
Latest Head-
ME BROWN COTTON GIN.
Write for and prices.
TOWN REPORT.
Report of W. H. Treasurer of
the Town of Greenville, N. C.
May 1803.
HO. TO WHOM
T R Moore
D R
r,
Henry
Whichard
s ;
I T Smith
W ill
J T Smith
II Harding
I.
IS WU White
John L Daniel
July
Smith
T R Moore
Henry Sheppard
Williams
J C Cobb Sou
S K Fender Co
2-1 M R
Daniel i
W II White
J II
A It
II V Sugg
II White
August
John I. Daniel
J Smith
i in in-
J I.
H T R Moore
Henry
R L
Lawrence
D J
O S S Co
D D
S K r in
J Cobb Son
w II White
J T
T R Moore
L Daniel
Henry
Mn-i Will in
J C Cobb Son
O D J W
A B
J L Fleming
SB Dudley
M W H White
October
T Smith
T R Moore
L Daniel
Motes William
Henry
W F
S E Sh, n
J C A Son
B Cherry Co
J C Cobb Son
Henry
November
J T Smith
T R Moore
Daniel
Moses William
Lawrence Hooker
E Fender Co
W II White
December
T R Moore
Henry
J I. I in
Mi.- Williams
J T,
J T Smith
D J Whichard
J C Cobb Son
W II White
January 1804.
J I. Fleming
J T Smith
L Daniel
Henry Sheppard
Mose Williams
T R Moore
E Harris
Hooker
Alfred Forbes
E Fender Co
C Cobb A Son
D i
W II White
so
OS
February
Smith
J L Daniel
Williams
Dudley
Moore
Henry
S E
J L Fleming
S E render Co
D J Whichard
W II W bite
March
Smith
lit T B Moore
J D Daniel
Henry
m Williams
J L Fleming
J T Smith
J C Cobb Son
April
J T Smith
T B Moore
Henry
J I. Daniel
Moses William
Lawrence Hooker
D D I
S E
S E
W H White
May
J I, Fleming
T Smith
T B Moore
Henry Sheppard
John L Daniel
Moses Williams
John Collins
J T
Amie Williams
Forbes
III W II White
May
G E Harris
W White
AMOUNT.
SO
I Ml
MOO
RU
SO
ASK
YOU ARE INTERESTED IN LOOKING FOR
to go straight to them, stock is now complete, their store
full of choice
Merchandise
Prom which genuine bargain- cm be hail.
We buy for Cash. We sell for Cash, or on
approved credit. We carry the stock. We
do the business. We fear no legitimate
competition, dread no
stock, quality prices. Our store Is Ilia
plane for you to buy goods at right prices,
for the following We buy for
Cash. We seek for quality and durability.
deal squarely with you. We carry the
largest stock to be found In our
from to make your select ions. We
do not seek to take advantage of you. We
an responsible fur all errors or mistakes that
may occur on our part. We do not carry
a John stock of fob lots and Inferior
goods and push off on you things you do not
want. Once out customer you will remain
our friend. Hundreds of customers visit
our store, buy their goods right price
are well pleased with pi rebuses, go home Now why don't you do
the same thing and receive your money's worth. One hundred cents on the dollar.
Look here did you know that you could buy us almost any
article you may need in the following lines
Dry Goods, Notions, Hats,
Furnishing Goods,
Caps, Shoes for Everybody, Ladies, Misses and
Oxfords, Men's Fine and Heavy Shoes, Crockery and Glassware,
Tinware, Hardware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings, Groceries,
and Flour, Mattings, Curtain Poles and Lace Curtains.
Furniture Furniture,
Cheap and Medium Grades, Chairs, Bedsteads, Lounges, Tables,
Sideboards, Tin Safes, Mattresses, Bed Springs, Children's Beds,
Cradles, Bureaus and Full Suits of Bed Room Furniture.
Take a look at our stock it will cost you nothing and may
save you dollars. We are agents for J. P. SPOOL
COTTON at jobbers prices.
Come One. Come All.
ESTABLISHED 1883.
J- A. Andrews,
HT. C.
have stock and to arrive
Cases Sardines,
. Bread Preparation.
Soap.
Star Lye.
Boxes Cakes and Crackers,
Stick Candy,
Cases Matches,
Gold Dust,
Good Luck Baking r.
Sacks Coffee,
BO Molasses.
Tons Shot,
Kegs
Cars Flour.
Meat.
I Hay,
Tubs Laid,
Granulated Sugar.
P. Snuff,
SO Ax Snuff,
SO R. K. Mills Snug.
M Three Thistle Snuff,
Boxes Tobacco,
Dukes V. M. P. Cigarettes.
Old Va. Cheroots,
Cases Oysters,
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES
-IN-
PR.
G K Harris tax Hi
fines A costs
market rents
Bee fr former treasurer
-I I
July
Nov.
Dec.
Jan
Jan.
April
May
May
12.1
hand GO
s. . W II White, i. ft. John
J C Cobb Son D D Haskett Mrs. Jarvis W White
Cl.
May Bee fr former
K Harris
Amount now on hand
my Friends and Customers of and adjoining
I wish to say that I have made preparation In preparing
HEAD MATERIAL and propose giving with inside dressed
smooth which will prevent or scrubbing your Tobacco when parking
Also I have made special to use best Hoops made White
Oak. The special advantages have In outline my own timber places me In a
position to meet all competition. cheerfully promise you that I will strive to
make it to your interest to use my Hogsheads and you can find them any time
either my factory or at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. C.
Sawing,
And Turned for a Specialty.
f am prepared to do any kind of Sawing for Brackets or anything in the
line, or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, Picket for Stairways. Mendings of
any kind, including Piazza Hailing, and would be pleased to name you prices
anything la the above upon application.
GENERAL REPAIR
done on short notice. Thanking you Mr your past patronage, lam willing to
lo meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you me a trial
here. Respectful
Winterville, N.
COBB BROS, CO.,
AND-
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA
and Solicited.
RELIABLE
Oilers to the buyers Pitt and surrounding counties, of the folio win
stare not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be
pure straight goods, DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING,
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS, SHOE.-., LA
and CHILDREN'S FURNITURE, HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH, BLINDS, CROCKERY
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of
Hat, Bock op Paris,
rhino Hats, and addles
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent for Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
jobber cents per ll per cent for Bread
ration and Star Lye-it Jobber ices. While Lead and
ii pure Ll
Red Paint Wood and Wood
Willow Ware. specialty





USELESS KNOWLEDGE.
Is a Charm In
tao Pursuit of It
And Some Day Fart Will Br
to In
Work
In spite of the teaching of school
and of the of the
man, says Engineering,
still remains a marvelous
in the pursuit of that kind of
often denominated use-
Is. Possibly no knowledge is ab-
useless, tut for the present
lines of -h yield so small
harvest of result to which a com-
can be assigned that
i gain they offer is infinitesimal,
with the labor they de-
ad. As an example, we may
astronomy. By the aid of its
the mariner navigates
I ocean and the explorer in foreign
ids determines his position.
matters of great importance,;
Mainly, but they ore concerned
with the fringe of the subject.
fan ago these operations could be i
with almost the same fa-
as to-day, and yet during that
many wonderful secrets
wrested from the heavens,
ch of the work has been done by
In who followed other objects for
and who sought rest and
creation in intellectual problems
I great complexity. Not only in
but also in other sciences
I arts, are researches being con-
carried on without thought
hope of reward. Men who spend
days in offices and works
arrow hours from the night to en-
gage in the pursuit of knowledge,
it more absorbing than all
the seductions of pleasure. In
I whose volumes have been col-
by painstaking care and some
self denial, and in laboratories
cent of the glittering toys of the in-
maker, but filled with ad-
home-made appliances, work
is done that would fill volumes if
properly recorded.
What is the practical value of
these brilliant phenomena Frank-
we know of none. The true lover
of science does not ask such a
He finds his reward in master-
such a wayward erratic force as
electricity, and causing it to display
its activity in many and varied
forms. Every time he is able to
evoke a new phenomenon his insight
into the operation of nature is in-
creased. His knowledge grows with
each development, and the thirst for
knowledge is an appetite that is in-
creased by each attempt to appease
Had it not been for this our race
would still have been enveloped in
the obscurity of the dark ages, and
we should have been shut to ma-
pursuits. The possessions
which the world holds dearest are
pursued useless The
monks who copied the manuscripts
of earls t and so preserved them
to posterity, the astrologers who
observed the stars and left some
of their motions, the his-
collected traditions and
the painters and sculptors
from whose works we learn the beau-
of earlier peoples; all these fol-
lowed pursuits of little or no
value. Yet every atom of their
work which has survived the
ages of is immensely precious,
and not only do its lessons become
clearer, but it sheds light in
ways on kindred subjects. So
it is iii science. Some day every
fact will be found to have a niche in
the cosmos, and many that are
now merely sources of intellectual
pleasure will become of great ma-
importance. Faraday's dis-
in electro-magnetic
were once regarded by the
as curious and strange, but
of no practical value. Yet in com-
few years there has been
built upon them a new engineering
industry, the result of which no one
can venture to predict.
PATHOS OF SEA ISLAND STORM.
answered, laughing. The intonation
of her voice was indescribable.
de she said, after a pause,
with a gesture that explained how
he saved them.
de The
woman turned and pointed to
her woman who was standing
apart by the water's edge, looking
out over the lonely marshes.
She have
But what this
woman said did not run in the
of grief. glad to God I got
two one
TOO MUCH TEMPTATION.
One Woman Happy Because Goa
Left Two of Her Little Ones.
many lives lost around
an old man was asked. He
stood with his hands folded in front
of him and his eyes seeking the
ground, writes Joel Chandler Harris
in Scribner's. If he had held his
faded and flabby hat in his hands
bis attitude would have been that of
the peasant in Millet's picture of
He stood stock still,
his hare feet placed close together.
gone deaf, said a
an standing near.
She touched him gently on the
arm and instantly he was alert. The
question was repeated.
many lives lost around
yes,
voice came from far away.
two, held up the
fingers of one thin hand.
He
turned to the woman to confirm his
figures, but she merely smiled.
no count he went on, shaking
his head and shutting his eyes.
Then the old roan relapsed into hit
former attitude. His eyes sought
the ground, his hands clasped in
front of him, his bare feet close to-
The woman who had spoken for
him formed part of a little group
standing near. She was rubbing the
head of a four-year-old
many children have
she was asked.
Two one HY
any of them
Am drown, she
SELF-POSSESSION.
How It Helped a Young Woman on
Delicate Occasion.
The most self-possessed woman I
ever saw is just now one of the belles
down at Old Point Comfort, says a
correspondent of the Washington
Post. She is a perfect Juno as to
figure, and half the manly heads of
the place have been turned by her,
and the other half would give all
their hopes of the hereafter to be
called as she calls her spaniel
The young lady has
played no favorites among her ad-,
however, and an examination
of her card at any of the dances
would show a list of names as differ-1
as those on the register yonder, i
The other day she went up for her
usual promenade on the ramparts of
the forts, and, as usual, was
by her aunt, who is her chap-
one of her rigid rules being to
allow no man to escort her when she
takes her morning constitutional.
By some aggravating cause she lost
an article which is an important
part of the feminine apparel. It
happened that a bright young devil
of an army officer came along and
picked it up. He caressed the
row strip of blue silk, admired the
artistic workmanship of the gold
contraptions on either end of it, and,
upon closer examination, deciphered
those initials that agreed with those
borne by the charming creature who
was swaying along the path a
front of him.
honesty he hurried after
her, and, catching up, handed out
the article, with a bow of
mate grace, B------,
pardon me, but I believe this prop-
is
She thanked him with a cordiality
that made him almost stutter, and,
turning to her aunt, remarked, with
apparent unconscious
is such a careless
low. . Come here, you Then.
as the spaniel responded to her call,
she fastened the dainty creation
around his neck, and, bowing sweet-
to the officer, passed on with the
wondering animal scampering in
front of her. If her pet had been a
toy terrier she would have been lost.
It is scarcely necessary to add that
when Sweetheart returned to the
hotel he was not sporting a blue
with sold clasps on It.
A Suspicious Room-Mate and His
Idea of Honesty.
I arrived in a small town in Ken-
late at with three other
men. and when we reached the hotel
two of us were assigned to a room.
The one I got had two beds in It,
however, and I was not disposed to
find fault. My room-mate seemed
to be a suspicious kind of a chap
and when I tumbled into bed with a
good night to him he scarcely
deigned to reply. I was asleep in
ten minutes, but two hours later I
awoke to find him still up and wide
awake.
What ails I asked.
with
all
of
be honest with you, stranger,
I he admitted.
seems funny.
Do look like a
you don't; but I've done some
figuring on this. You gave the
landlord your wallet and watch,
didn't
there's more value in them
than he's ever seen before. He'll
skip with your stuff before
then you'll have to rob me
to get on. Stranger, I'm a man as
don't take no chances. I have a re-
here, and the first move you
make to get out of bed I'll plug
I turn
but be powerful careful
about it, for I'm up to
I turned over and went to sleep
again, and when morning came his
moving around awoke me. I tried
to him, but he was sour and
morose and wouldn't take it. When
went downstairs it was to find
the colored help sitting in the early
sun with no move toward breakfast.
the I asked.
has done de
place In de night, no-
body to boss dis he re-
plied.
My room-mate had figured right
smart the night
A willing Subject
A recent issue of the Medical
printed the following remark-
able desiring to
obtain a subject on which to observe
the process of digestion or other
workings cf the vital organs, or on
whom to try the effects of poisons
and their antidotes, may probably
do so by communicating with the
editor of the Bulletin. Subject is
unmarried and
ties or f acting
in this matter as he chooses, and
does not object to a pro. able fatal
termination of the





AX AWFUL FIX.
It was Kitty who first suggested
to that our proscription was not
working well. As soon as she spoke
I was hound to admit it. had
that Jack would easily get I
over his unfortunate attachment; f
expected that, after a quiet i
weeks with us. he would forget Clara
Wilkinson and her disgraceful treat-1
meat of him.
is setting no good at all
she said most positively.
bis own interest must, ask you to
send him
girl has spoiled his whole
I cried, angrily.
Kitty looked at me for B moment,
but said nothing.
suppose you are right.
would he better in a livelier
course he would, you dear oM
said Kitty.
I did Dot see that had been
stupid.
nothing to distract his
thoughts said.
you speak to him,
asked Kitty, anxiously.
She was very much in earnest.
woman does these tilings so
delicately and I
couldn't think of it,
said Kitty, blushing.
I admired her delicacy.
He was pacing up and down the
walk, hitting at my flowers
with his stick, and smoking one of
cigars. When I joined him and
ed arm through his he
started.
I, you be
better away from here Come, you
know what mean. You are no
great hand at a
he began, stammering,
and in great confusion.
know all about said en-
thought you'd get
good out of the place, but it's clear
you the contrary.
You want to see new things and
new people and forget I
paused a word, and ended
unhappy mistake of
my honor, you are a good
he exclaimed. don't
know another man who would have
treated me a- you have, be
i r Ids eyes with his hand.
Oh. nonsense; it's nothing. I
I'm always willing to do my
friends a turn. But it's no use, is
ii It gets worse and
said with a sigh;
won't stay a minute. After
you say I couldn't. And, old man.
don't know how to thank you. Many
fellows would have taken the way I
have been going on badly; most
M allowance for you.
Young men mustn't be judged too
a true friend. It
makes me feel bad. can tell you,
you'll soon forget it when
you're on the
try. By Jove, I he ex-
claimed, earnestly.
it only needs a little
Because, between ourselves, .
you know, you ought n t to be . .
Except before strangers
and now you Keep IT
think to see you well, it is brave.
It would kill me in a month. It's
brave, that's what it
are you talking about, lad
I spoken to her for three
my opinion, Jack, you've had
an escape. And you can take my
word for it. Remember, know the
pretty
you mustn't say a word
at all. I
here she comes II can't
meet her
here
I turned around my
wife. With a gasp I fell back a step,
against her, he protested; she s . . , . ,
tore past Kitty and vanished
through the open window of the
room.
he asked
tty
I could say nothing.
been all that's good, kind,
course, say I
. , drawing-room
impatiently, i suppose ,,.,. ,
bound to, but it won't go. l
.
down with me. If ever there was a
heartless, worthless
lie started away from me.
he cried.
But I was determined he should
hear the unvarnished truth.
ever a I pursued,
a young fellow on deliberately.
hope you were gentle with him.
He is a nice boy. though a
silly one. He meant no harm.
I stammered.
the dickens does it
that he has quite forgotten
never meaning anything Wilkinson,
except to get him in her tons and
turn him adrift with a laugh
that's what she meant with you. Oh,
I know one
The unhappy young man turned
pale and his lips trembled.
you know the truth about
I hope you'll proceed to
put b r image out of your I
said.
nave staked my life on
be murmured. seemed
so different, Bob, I could not help it.
n.-v
that you have got rather a
she whispered.
you say anything about
I looked at her for a moment.
anything about I re-
I didn't know whether he
very sorry at thought of
leaving she stammered, flush-
course he
a foolish boy he is to fall
love with a woman who
with a sore, bleeding heart. Think-
constantly of the bliss he had
lost, he began to watch our
Suddenly he made a startling
He found that he was in
love with another woman. That
woman was I. But he was a loyal
friend, and I a true, loving
thought her husband the best,
and noblest of men. Of course, yon
understand that he didn't tell
that he had made such an awful
but trust a woman
out that a man is fond of
. I cried,
rushed Into the
That young man would go and
all the club that my wife and I-
Lord.
Jack, Jack; you you
I yelled despairingly.
The butler appeared.
Vincent, sir, has just jump
into the dog-cart, was at t
door by your driven
like mad. Hi-said he was summon
to town,
I sank
Kitty earn- in, laughing.
she said,
thought you were so very nice
considerate in pretending not I
see
Then the silly little woman
. into a tit of
her,
of her i out
Vincent carried
with we began to
But the young ruffian
he may Break his heart next
and i bad gone straight.
. ., ,, . . . t love with a who cares ,, , .
were the victim, I in- .,. , . , , , ., club. I
, , . ,. , ,, nothing for him, and who, besides ,,., , . . ,
patting his shoulder. n. . ,, , , ,, When there now
in t That woman should herself ,, . ., .,. ,,
shall go at once. I cant , , , ,. ,. . matters a--,
. , . to have won his esteem, I , . , ,
star here. This . better. . they mean.
. ,, . cried. v , ,
telling me the truth, aren't you,
to the best of my
I answered, firmly.
said he
are you Why, any
of the fellows at the club could have
told you the same old
he murmured, gazing at
said i.
to make too much of such a
trouble as this. When one's eyes
are once opt and I ended
with a shrug of the shoulders.
Suddenly he held out his hand.
hands, old he said
I shook bands. He was much
moved and I didn't wish to ,
shall
morning will him
to-night; the next t rain. And
she said Kitty,
softly. can
there a better fellow I
demanded.
great deal,
N. Y. Journal
; a be that the man
who ranch over night t
heavy II In his face, and becomes
. , , , . , . .-it the brows and
What to do with ,; ., .,.,
i that has done as
i over things that are
Why I am not in the position to ., . ,.,,.,.;. r.
stand between Jack and his love. . . . ,. , . . , f;, u
Oh, indeed pouting M fr. m the lines of thought and
Of coarse not. If I could e f the
him to the arms of then man he ,, . wt
I would do so with a glad .,,.,. . v of his I
van. But you say he has forgot- ;. , it never an-
ten Clara Wilkinson utterly has a little
am sure that he his. . ., ,. , , . ;
am glad of it. would rather ;., and
love with any woman ,. , . . ion
is . . i s. and be has an
you you must stay you foolish old i .- . disinclination to
course I must stay I my v. really believe . If, He is not much
said, staring in my turn. don't know who the new love i though for a
bad for me, old he I don't. It a to visit t
said, laying a hand on my shoulder, i she said, laying one or three time
by Jove, what must it be for hand upon arm. seen about
you dear old fellow, J thought you ,
exclaimed. in all about it Now, don't in
do you once until I have bold
he all about it. Jack here
am Not-
. and his
-N. Y.





REFLECTOR
r t
Local Reflections
Potato buyers are thick and
hustling.
Tobacco Flues are now read,
for delivery by S- E- Fender Co
The boys seem to be enjoying
vacation.
Blank tax notices for
tale at Reflector office.
A club will be organized
hero this week.
Oblique cents
Reflector Book Store-
For good reliable Shoes go
Wile Brown.
at
Poor make vegetables
scarce this season.
Standard Music only cents
a copy at Reflector Book Store-
Blackberry dumplings and
plum pie are in order.
If you wish to save MONEY
to store, he is soiling
Clothing at Cost.
Mr. R. Greene moved into
new yesterday.
The Reflector and Atlanta
Constitution both for
See Notice to Creditors in this
issue by W. E-
to improved
Real Estate in sums from to
Apply to,
F. G. James.
cents gets the Reflector
until the first of January.
New assortment of Bibles from
American B. S-, just received.
Wiley Brown, Depositor.
See land sale by Mrs. Mattie
Vines, mortgagee, in this issue.
Summer stock is the best
prices are correct. Come
us.
this issue by the
eh f Police regard to gates.
Clipper, Atlas, Boy
lei
Stonewall and Climax
is offered for sale by
and Castings for sale by J.
IT
mew and of Victor
can be had at Reflector
largest and best assorted
General Merchandise in
dis,
Ian
Wake Forest com-
both in progress this
pert Sweet Fresh
yet its all right at the
Store.
machines from to
Mi improved New Home
Wiley Brown.
re, were shown a radish by
last week
pounds.
Mechanics and Labor-
all professions, when in
goods of any kind, call on
J. B. Cherry Co.
e young folks of the town
had several storm
es.
New at the Old
ck Pickled
if Grated
received a new lot of
a Carriages and Cribs.
J. B. Co.
f you let these June days go
without listing your taxes the
at is with you.
When in want of good shoes go to
I. B. Cherry Co.
Minors should observe that one
of the new town ordinance forbids
their entering barrooms-
L. M. Reynold-. Mens and Boy
i are the best. For tale by J. B.
Cherry Co
Mr. L. H. Pender received a
new model Rambler bicycle
week- It is a handsome wheel.
A- G Cox can furnish you good
Potato at low prices and
you would do well to send in
your orders as early as possible.
It does not look like Greenville
is to L a game of ball this sea-
son. The town is without a club.
Go to J. B. Cherry Co when in need
Furniture, they keep a stock and
sell at prices that will please you.
Clarence was the first
to report ripe pea-mes th b season.
He had some very nice ones last
Wednesday.
A -tuck of nice Furniture cheap
M th e Old Brick Store.
Mr. A. Sutton begins this
week the erection of a neat cot-
on the remainder of the lot
opposite his residence
Remember I you cash for Chicken
Eggs and Count iv Produce at the Old
Brick Mm
day was certainly a hot
day, yesterday also, there is
no tolling how the weather will be
by the time this item is read.
For A- G. Cox's celebrated
Back call on J. B- Cherry
ft Co .
The es of the town are
published on the outside pages
of the to-day. These
should be carefully read and at-
given to their observance
Complete line of Dry Goods at
Wiley Brown's-
The outlook doe a not indicate
a decline in the potato market
and the planters should not be in
too great hurry to dig them-
Let fully mature. The
stock prices
Can be had.
Personal. .
Mr- Ed Greene is in Kinston.
Mr. L. I. Moore returned Fri-
day a visit to Wilson.
Mr. J. C. Lanier, of Wilson,
spent part of last week here.
Miss Becky of
Farmville, is visiting relatives
here.
Mr. J. D. Williamson has gone
to to spend several
weeks.
Mr. E A. clerk of Sup-
court, left yesterday for a
trip north-
Mrs. Susan Proctor, of Wash-
is visiting her son, Mr
R. J. Proctor.
Mr. Larry has been
spending the past week with re-
in Tarboro-
Rev. J. H. left yes-
to attend the Forest
commencement.
The editor left yesterday morn-
to attend the Press
at Morganton.
Misses May Murray and
left Friday to visit re-
at Trenton.
Mrs. Charles Skinner and two
children returned Friday from a
visit to Bertie county.
His many friends are glad to
see Mr. H. Rountree out again
after his recent illness.
Misses Ada and Mattie
arrived bore Friday from
Littleton Female College.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Crow, of
Goldsboro, is visiting the family
of W. H. Cox in
Mrs. S- M- and children
returned yesterday from visit
her parents in Rocky Mount-
Mr. J. I. Faust, wife and child,
of Wilson, visiting Capt. and
Mrs. H. F. Price, at the King
House.
Mr- J. T. came home
Monday from Elm City, where he
ha been conducting a
school.
Mr. Richard Hosier returned
last week from Suffolk, Va.,
whore he has for several
months.
Mrs. J. W. Gardner Mrs.
John Hutchins, of came
down last week to visit Mrs. S- T.
Hooker.
Miss Julia of Mt. Olive,
and Miss Pearl of
Greene county, visiting the
family Mr. B. F.
Miss Lola White reached home
Friday evening from In-
Virginia, which she has
been attending the past
Misses Addie Johnson and
Bertha of Grifton, and
Miss Viola Davis, of Warren,
are visiting Miss Rosalind
tree.
OTHER LOCALS.
Fenders are being built above
each side of the draw arch at the
bridge to protect it against the
rafts of logs coming
down the river. A raft passed
through the other day that con-
over seven hundred logs-
Col. W. E. Williamson, of Ashe-
the champion big fish catch-
es at last season, was
on the Washington train Friday
to that resort.
He sent word over to us that he
was on the way, and to come
down and him. We will try
to get with Colonel, in a few
weeks, and then lookout for big
fish.
It gives us pleasure to note
the high standing and prominent
mention of Pitt boys
who were members of the
class at the State University
last week. They are Mr. W. F.
of Greenville, and Mr.
G. R. Little, of Bethel. Old Pitt
held her own wherever she
this year.
The Teachers Assembly meets
at Morehead City next
day. The Coast Line is selling
tickets from via Kin-
at from House
from from Which-
Ayden Grifton
Parmele The rate
from Greenville via Goldsboro is
from Bethel
We understand that the rumor
has been circulated throughout
the country that was
epidemic in Greenville. The
rumor is untrue and does
to the business of the town.
There were two cases here, but
those were promptly and proper
quarantined and kept so until
entirely removed. There is not
a trace of it here now, and Green-
ville keeps up record of be
the healthiest towns
in North Carolina.
The Teachers
and Summer School will begin
its first session at Littleton Fe-
mate College July 2nd, and con-
four weeks. There will be
four Departments of Instruction,
a of subjects will be
taught. Board may be secured at
the College, or at any one of the
hotels or private boarding house
at rates For further
information address J. M.
Rhodes, Littleton, N- C
COMMISSIONERS O.
Greenville, N. C June 1894-
The Board of Commissioners
for Pitt met this day,
sent G Dawson, chairman, Jesse
L Smith, Leonidas Fleming, T-
E Keel and S. A. Gainer.
The following pauper orders
were
Martha Nelson 2.00, Margaret
Bryan H D Smith Lydia
Bryan Jacob
1-50, Nancy Moore Susan
Norris Susan
Smith 1.50, Patsy Lock
2-00, Henry Harris
Crawford Smith
1-50, Hettie 3-00, Ken-
Henderson 2-00
Parmele Items.
June 11th, 1894.
Miss James spent
day in the city.
No applicants for lodging at the
station house last week.
We are glad to see W. C
man again, after an illness of
two weeks with chronic malaria-
Misses Dora of Grin-
and Bettie Craft, of
are the of Mrs. D. S-
Mrs. D. S- Harper has returned
from Bethel her health is
Items.
June 11th, 1894.
Rev. filled
appointment at St. Johns last
Sunday,
The farmers are very busy just
now shipping A good
crop is reported.
Mr. Frank Hill, of Lenoir
spent last Saturday and Sun-
day at Mr. L. B. Cox's.
Messrs. B. F. and J. L. Sugg,
of Greenville, were down here
Wednesday on
Myrtle Taylor returned
home to-day after spending a
wards 1-50, Carlos Gorham
J H Henry
imProved time visiting relatives here.
Married.
the
of Mrs. Quinn, on Wednesday
at o'clock, June 1894,
Mr. Thomas R. Moore, and Miss
Ida I Moore, were united in mar-
. Quite a crowd of relatives,
friends, and boarders, assembled
in the parlor, to witness tho
performed by the bride's
pastor, J. H. May
they be as happy as it is their
privilege to be.
Prof Silas E- Warren, principal
of Wilson Collegiate Institute,
died in that town on last Friday
night. He had relatives in Green-
ville.
Mrs- L. C- King, of Norfolk,
has been spending some days
with relatives in this section.
Her daughters, Misses Alice and
Helen, who been at school
near Clinton, met her here Friday.
Mr. F. C- Harding, librarian of
the University came home Friday
to spend a few days with his
His brother, Mr. W. F.
who graduated last
week, will remain at the
until he returns there.
Isadore Lichtenstein, a
former citizen and merchant of
Greenville, was married in New
York, last Wednesday, to Miss
Goodman. They are now on a
bridal tour through Canada.
Mr- Lichtenstein has the
wishes of his many friends here.
Another sudden change tho
weather last Wednesday. The
temperature was in the eighties
during the morning and fires were
comfortable before night.
Weather prophet Hicks says
June is to be such a stormy
month that it will bear watching
all through. Tho first half of the
month has been somewhat that
way.
We were glad see Mr. Harry
Boyd in town Sunday evening.
He recently returned to his home
in this county after spending
three years in the western part
of the State
Seeing a gathering of them
around the depot, Monday after-
noon, a gentleman remarked
are more pretty girls in
Greenville than any town the
same size in the world.
Died.
At the family about
ten miles from Greenville, on last
Saturday night at o'clock,
Mrs- L- Little, consort of
Mr. W. G. Little, aged years,
she was a consistent member of
the Great Swamp Primitive
church- She leaves a
band four children, Mess.
James L. and W. O. Little, Mrs.
Barnhill and Mrs.
Frank Thigpen. to mourn her
lost. She had been a great
for about years but bore
it with Christian fortitude- A
good woman has gone to reap
her reward and the Reflector
extends deepest sympathies to
the bereaved family. She was
buried on Monday evening at
o'clock at tho family
grounds.
They Aggregate 1886 Pounds.
The item the pub
last week in reference to
the weight of Capt- W. H-
and two of his boys has made
some of our readers anxious to
know what the whole family
weigh, and the Captain, always
being accommodating, has given
the weight of his entire outfit.
Capt. Bill himself holds the beam
at pounds; Mrs. is
a small woman and weighs exactly
six daughters weigh respect-
and
four sons respectively
and making an
gate of 1886 pounds for the
of twelve people or an average
of a fraction over pounds
each- If there is another large
family that can beat this the Re-
would be glad to hear
from them.
Sam and Amy Cherry Fan
Tucker 1.50, J O Proctor 6.00,
Alice Corbett 6.00, Easter Vines
1.50, Alex Harris 1200, Winnifred
Taylor 6.00, Mary
Lydia Staton 1.50, John Ham
2.00, W H Parker J G
son Daniel Webster 2-00.
Winnie Chapman Henry
Funk James Long 14.00.
The following orders for
county purposes were issued
W S Manning A M Joyner
5.10, H T King Edwards
Broughton 7.55, J M 2.35,
J F Miller 2-25, A D Johnson
35.75, C 24.00, D C Smith
Chas Tyson H T King
E A W F Harrington
G M Smith 1.50, W T
Smith 206.53, G W Edmundson
1.30, J J Elks 2.00, R T Hodges
3-79, R W King D J Which,
ard H W Howell, 1.00, F G
Andrews 1.00, John R Jenkins
2.50, H Harding 23.56, T E Keel
3.70, Andrew Robinson 15.50, C
Dawson Leonidas Fleming
S A Gainer 9.20, Jesse L
Smith Dr W H Bagwell
32.75.
and Swift Creek
Stock Law Laugh-
C M Smith
Ordered that Susan Norris and
John Ham each be allowed to
draw per month as pauper in-
stead of
Ordered that B F Jolly be re-
of poll tax, tho same
wrongfully charged on
delinquent list and taxed.
Ordered that G A Stancill be
relieved of double tax allowed
to p iv single tax acres of
land listed Bethel township on
delinquent list.
John Hall and James F.
caster were relieved of poll tax
upon petition it was ordered that
B. F- Bryan and J. C W. A.
be relieved of the tax on
town lot Bethel, the same hay-
been listed by B. F. Bryan.
A petition to remove the
place in Carolina from
to store was deferred
next meeting.
S- A. Gainer Jesse L.
Smith, who were appointed to
settle with the Sheriff reported
that they were unable to settle
with the Sheriff until the solvent
tax list was allowed, and asked
for further time to make a final
report.
Dr. W.
dent of Health, made his
report which was ordered filed.
A petition was filed asking for
a public road from Ayden to the
Snow Hill and Washington road
via. Carolina Christian College
over the lands of J. S. W-
H. and W. H. Harris,
and deferred until next meeting
for proper to be made.
Good Reading at Small Cost.
Public Opinion, published at
D. Rountree received a Washington. D. C, is a weekly
letter last week stating that his
father, Mr- Charles Rountree, of
Charlotte, is in very feeble health.
He has not been well enough to
leave his house in several months-
His many here will regret
to learn of his poor health.
Many people always ready
journal devoted to the
is condensed form, of care-
fully selected magazine articles
and of editorial comment from
the representative daily and
weekly press of all political par-
ties and from all parts of the
country- The readers of Public
Opinion get sides of every
to bite at every swindle that j question, it is just the paper
comes along and are easy prey that the farmer and villager need
for general reading. It keeps
for the sharpers. An evidence
of this is the way a large number
were taken in here, Saturday
afternoon, by a quack medicine
Rev. W. D. Morton, D. D.
rived yesterday evening to con-
duct the series of meetings in
the Presbyterian church. Rev.
Mr. Hines preached Sunday
morning and evening and Rev-
Mr. preached Monday
night. Dr. Morton will hold
vices twice each day in after-
noon at night. AH Christians
in the community should work
and pray earnestly for the success
of the meeting. There are many
unconverted here, and they can
be reached through
prayer.
It
its readers fully abreast of the
times and supplies them with the
best thought of the day in the
fields of Polities, Foreign Affairs,
Sociology, Commerce, Finance,
Religion, Science, Education, Art,
and New Books- Public Opinion
and the rural weekly supplement
each other admirably. Together
they give the farmer or villager
and his family more of current
news, editorial comment, and
magazine literature than can be
had in any other way for five
times their cost The price of
Public Opinion has been reduced
from to per year. We
have just completed arrangements
by which we can offer Public
Opinion and the for
cash per year.
Notice.
All property owners are hereby
to their rates on or
before the but, as required in
W.
Chief Police.
Notice to Creditors.
Letters of administration u the
estate of Sherrod Belcher deceased
been issued to the undersigned, on
the 4th day of June 1891, by the Clerk
of the Superior Court of Pitt County,
notice is hereby given to all persons
haying claim- against said estate to
present them to the undersigned on or
before the 13th day of June 1895 or this
notice will be plead bar of their re-
All persons indebted to said
estate are requested to make immediate
payment to me. This the 13th day of
June 1894. W. E. BELCHER,
Adm. of Sherrod Belcher.
Misses Claude
Vesta Whichard, of Palmyra,
visiting Miss Isabella Whichard
last week.
Miss Verna Little returned
from LaG range last week, bring-
with tho charming Miss
ton, of Kinston.
Messrs. H. G- Burton, Hughes
Mayo and F. G. spent
Sunday in Mildred. They report
a charming pleasant trip.
Mr. Wm. Bland died on tho
night of the 5th after a con-
illness. We extend the
bereaved husband and children
our warmest sympathy.
The conversation party given
complimentary to Misses John-
son and Bowen, at Mr. Win.
Powell's last Friday night, was
with of the colored serenade, quite
an enjoyable affair.
Mr. G. R. Little, who
with distinction at the
of North Carolina, came
home last Friday. We extend
our best wishes for a successful
life to Mr. Little.
Miss Nettie Kilpatrick left yes-
morning to spend some
time visiting
A hail storm passed through
this section last Wednesday do-
to tho
stops.
Bethel Items
June 1891.
Crops are suffering for want of
rain this section.
Mr. Graham Guilford, of Rob-
is in town to-day.
Mr. F. S. Gardner and wife, of
Parmele, in town to-day.
Miss Emily Cobb, of Great
Swamp, is visiting her sister, Mrs.
F. B. Knight.
Mr. W. W. Thomas a fly
business trip to one
day last week-
Mr. Peal, of Berkley,
Va., was here last week visiting
his mother, Mr. J. H Johnson.
There were two cases up before
Mayor Moore last week and throe
cases wore disposed of in Justices
court.
Everybody invited to and look at the greatest values ever
offered to the people of North Carolina.
-IS OFFERING ALL--
Summer DRESS GOODS
We received through
Congressman W. A. B. Branch a
large volume entitled of
Industrial It is a very in-
document, showing by
illustrations the progress that has here last business,
been made in almost every
industry.
Wm. Ha slip, of Hamil-
ton, and R. L. Roberson, of Rob-
two of the
of Martin were
Cotton and Peanuts.
Below are Norfolk prices of cotton
peanuts for yesterday, as furnished
by Cobb Bros. Co., Commission Mer-
chants of
cotton.
Good Mi Ml 7-11;
Middling
Low Middling 11-16
Good Ordinary
Prime
Extra Prime
Fancy
Spanish
Mrs. Bettie Manning, wife of
Herbert Manning, died last Fri-
day night. Funeral services at
the residence, after which she was
buried at family burying ground.
The grief stricken husband has
our heartfelt, sympathy.
The requiring
to be hung so to swing inside
on the premises when open will
require lots of changes to be
made during tho next few days.
i; i None of our should ob-
to making the change, for
gates should not stand out and
obstruct tho sidewalk.
at greatly reduced puces for the next days.
Yard-Ward good and only per yard.
Standard brands of Calico, all kinds, only cents per yard.
Shoes from cents up, wt can suit everybody.
MENS WOOL SUITS REGULAR PRICE 6.00
4.98,
7.59,
Come bring tho hard cash and be-convinced,
Your friend,
C. T.
FINE CLOTHING
A few more o For the our sum they can-
of nice o thirty be ex-
o we will fit, style
cheap suits, o special it.
DRY GOODS,
Gents Furnishing Goods
-I RECEIVED A COMPLETE LINE OF-
NOVELTIES,
and would earnestly solicit your examination.
Shoes
Embroideries, White Goods
and Laces.
I need not say anything except that I received a new
line. Prices lower than over. I for your past favors
and if close puces will avail me anything I will merit a continuance
Sowing Machines from up. Now Home latest improved f 35.00
Respectfully,
WILEY BROWN,
Ne Home Sewing; Machines and Depositor American Bible So
Land Sale.
By of two mortgages
ed to the by J. R.
Cobb an. Laura his wife, dated
1890 an I recorded in the
o Mice of the Register of Deeds of Pitt
County in Book pages
a the other executed by W,
H. Dunn, dated February 4th 1893 and
recorded in the said Registers office in
Book page t will on
July 1891, sell at public sale before
the Court House door in Greenville, to
the highest for cash, a certain piece or
parcel of land County situated
on the waters of Meadow Branch, ad-
joining the lands of G. Cobb, Ben-
M. and others, contain-
acres more or less. This the 6th
day June 1894.
we i stock i m i
AND GOES WITHOUT
SAYING THAT WE
HAVE THE LARGEST
AND MOST STYLISH
STOCK IN TOWN.
Give a call and look for yourself and you cannot go away
without
FRANK WILSON,
THE LEADING CLOTHIER.
J. L
ii lire Mi,
GREENVILLE, N. C
U AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All placed in
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At cu rates.
AGENT FOE FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE
Don't
Miss to j
CHEAP
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ.
AT TUB
OLD BRICK STORE
their interest to get our prices before pat
chasing elsewhere stock is
n all its branches.
-NOT TO THE-
RAMBLER
For by
N. C.
The K AM It took five of the high-
est awards at the Fair and
holds World's Records. The
pion rider of the South rides the Ram-
1883 make at reduced price. 1894
8.135.00. all strictly highest
grade. We mike
and do all kinds of Tin work. Roofing.
S. E. PENDER CO.
---------BUT TO SEE THE--------
BARGAIN COUNTER OFFER
by
CO.,
For the month of June we are offering many Attractive Bargains.
Ladies White Slippers worth 81.25 for Indies Red Slip err for
Ladies Black Slippers at own price almost
In fact all our SHOES and SLIPPERS for Ladies, Men and Children are
remarkably cheap.
DRESS GOODS of all kinds are being offered at much
less than the real
Gingham worth and for Silk worth for
Wool worth for Lawns, On lugs and many other things
sold same way. Several styles of Lawns and you can buy for I
cents per yard. Every yard is worth and will cost you elsewhere yard.
Our prices on are of they are so
low. See
Mens Suits for 83.50 worth 8-00. Boys Suits for cents. Pants for II
cents worth cents. Straw Hats cheaper than over.
Straw Matting, Curtain Goods and Mull at less than their value. Good
Coffee cent, cents. Best Granulated Sugar cents, Good Chewing
Tobacco at cents a plug, cents per
Come and spend your Cash where you can get the moat for It.
A BARGAIN COUNTER FOR ALL.
Yours to please.
BOSWELL, CO.,
Cr R I FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT
I am sidling the best
Leghorn and White
Chipped
at reduced prices.
FLOOR, COFFEE, SUGAR,
RICE, TEA, Ac.
west M
TOBACCO SNUFF k
we buy direct from ens
Wing yon to buy at one profit. A com
stock of
Have also just received a new of
Moire Ribbons, Laces, Insertions, Ac.,
that will be sold cheap. All these goods
arc very desirable and you should cal
early if to get the benefit of
the low prices.
M, T. Co.
Notice to Farmers.
If all nelson who lilt
MILLS and EVAPORATORS ,
fall will file their mo at. an hand sold at prices to suit
early day, I will be able to get th Our goods are all bought and
ordering CASH therefore, having no risk
purchaser to at a close margin.
Mill- at a liberal discount by
i at once and will give the
the of the discount.
H. HARM NO,
Manufacture Agent.
Respectfully,
S. M.
Greenville. N.
WILLIAMSON,
-MANUFACTURER OF-
-ALL KIND; OF
REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE
workmen and material allowed in my The ma
who used my work testify the MM and
out at ray Every vehicle guaranteed.
of bur
carry a
HARNESS 5- WHIPS.





I buying your new bicycle look
the field over carefully. The superiority
of Victor Bicycles was never so fully
demonstrated as at present. Our line
will bear the most scrutiny, and we
challenge comparison.
There's but one
OVERMAN WHEEL CO,
NEW
PHILADELPHIA.
CHICAGO.
SAN FRANCISCO.
DETROIT.
DENVER.
WILMINGTON B. B.
AND BRANCHES.
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD.
Condensed Schedule.
TRAINS SOOTH.
May
I.
Leave
Ar. Mt
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro
A. M.
A. M.
Rocky Lr Wilson Ar. OS c a
Thia remedy is so well
known and so popular as to
special All Who have used
Hitters the same of
purer medicine does not ex-
and it is guaranteed to do all that is
claimed. Elect i; Bitten will cure all
I diseases of the Kidneys, will
remove Pimple. Bob. Salt Rheum
other affections by Impure
d Malaria from the
system and prevent m all
Malarial cure of
Constipation and Indigestion try
satisfaction
guaranteed or money
and per bottle at John L.
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT.
O- L. Proprietor
LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO
JOTTINGS.
WASHINGTON IN
Now is tho plow tobacco
deep
place of some souls. All its
buildings were of wood except
the Tryon Palace, which was built
of imported bricks at a cost of
Town Ordinances.
Mr. Irving Allen, in the
number the New England
Magazine, has happily recalled and was regarded by the
cultivation of tobacco I the incidents of General Washing- masses of the population as a
at this season of the year will pay ton's visit to the New England grievous tax and a wanton piece
a per cent, dividend in States in October, 1789, while ho of extravagance. The main
was first President of the United was destroyed by fire soon
States. Possibly an episode which after tho ball, but the right wing
occurred in the course of his con-
tour through the Son Ii At-
Seaboard fifteen mo
later, will be graciously
through an antipodal medium.
It was in the city of New
N. G, whore a reception was given
him April 1791, with which
his diary declares he was well
October.
Work is rapidly progressing on
the now tobacco houses- Quite
a number of hands are employed
they make, things lively
around the tobacco quarters.
Greenville N. C-, is working
hard to build a tobacco market
It takes time and energy to build
up a good To-
Grocer.
have plenty of down pleased. This was just years
hero and father times seems to j ago. As in the Eastern States he
be dealing with us very well. in his private carriage
handsome buildings by bis
now the laud which five
p. V.
i W
OB
Magnolia I
Ar Wilmington
P.
and
i ALLEN'S Advertising
Indexed
RECORD, to enter on
I the left hand page the Advertiser's name
I alphabetically, commission,
. vi -in., e. rate, number of
j- j trails, beginning, date ending
when
Dated
May
1804.
it
and end. Prices, pages, or one
to the letter, flexible,
pages. to a letter, hall roan
82.00; pages, SOU pages, 61.00
pages, s
A. M
Flora ; SO S
MM
l-
Ar n
A. If.
Magnolia
Ar Wilson ; -10
Circuit.
on the drat Sunday eleven
and Jones Chapel at three
Shady Grove second Sunday at
eleven o'clock and
Horse at o'clock.
on third Sunday at eleven
o'clock and el at three
o'clock.
the fourth Sun-lay at
eleven
and Lang's School
Wilson
Ar Rocky
tit
IS
Ar Tarboro W
Mt
Ar ,
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Boat
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. Halifax
arrives Scotland Neck at . p.
n., Greenville p. m., Kinston
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20
a. Greenville a. n.
Halifax at a. m . Weldon 11.30 a.
m., daily except Sunday.
Trains on hue
Washington Parmele
8.40 a. m. Tarboro
leaves 4.- p. m. Parmele
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.83 p. m.
except
trains on Neck Branch.
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via
ft K. R. daily
day, at p. in. S X;
arrive P. M. 5.20 p. in.
Plymouth
MO a. m. Sunday 0.30
arrive Tarboro n. m. and
a.
Train on Midland X C Branch
daily except Sou lay, SOS a.
m. K-
leaves f a. in
v II a. m.
Train- on Nashville lea-.-
at p. in., arrive
p- m-, spring Hope 5.30,
p. in. leaves Spring
S a. in. a. n-. arrive
at Rocky Mount in.
Sun
Trains on U.
R. 8.3 i. arrive
bar p.-i leave l-.-
i. in. arrive a. m.
Daily
rail oil h Hi it leaven War-
saw. X
a. in. in tun
at . .
ma a line .
Train No. -t-
at Weldon for all
via except
Sunday via and Bay Line
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk
railroad to.- Norfolk daily and
all via Norfolk, daily ex-
Sunday.
JOHN V DIVINE,
General
House at e o'clock.
Everybody Invite I to
U. F. Smith,
J.
Baptist Services.
are appointments
of Rev. II. pastor of
Baptist church
Second and
In each month, night,
and every I
At Sunday i I each
morning and night.
At Person
Sunday in each month and Saturday be-
fore.
Episcopal Services.
Below are the appointments
A. av .-.
Kinston Sir days in
.; morning arid evening.
Sunday in each
in morning and evening.
v--e.- Sunday
S . Johns, Sun-
day in each morning and evening
Innocents,
Sunday
Services.
Every morning and
alternating between Rev. J. N.
II. and J. W.
Sunday School every Sabbath morn-
at D. S
years ago, when were a school
boy, was a blooming corn field
closed in by a jagged fence row.
The town is rapidly building out
this way and in ten years from
now no doubt but that South
Greenville will tho center of
business-
The Tobacco Review which for
some time was published Dur-
ham has been succeeded by The
National Tobacco Grocer a six-
teen page journal
It is neat in bright
newsy and very in-
deed. Durham ought to have a
trade Tobacco
Grocer rills the bill,
Mr. Mrs. J. W. Morgan
loft last week for N- C-,
where they will spend some time
with his relations and friends,
they will go to Greenville
the home of Mrs- Morgan,
They will leave there in time to
reach Greenville N- C. for the
opening of the tobacco market-
No tobacco buyer has ever lo-
in Greenville that has
a more intense in the
than has Mr- Morgan and
it can Lo truthfully said that tho
American Tobacco Company
had a gentleman their
employ who takes a greater inter
i the protection of their
every interest than J. Morgan.
We see that J- Redding,
director of the Georgia state ex
station, has given his
testimonial to X. S. I. Co of
Richmond. N. S. I. as it is called
is North State Insecticide and
up in pound packages. It is a
powder said to kill the horn
which is so to
tobacco. If this powder is really
what it is claimed to be to
farmer ought to provide
with a fall supply of it.
Some time ago procured a
the same with the Town
Tax Collector, pay the tax hereto
fore imposed upon them and re-
from the said Tax Collector
a collar with the Town device
upon it on or before the 1st day
of July, and for every day
thereafter the tax remains unpaid
and any dog remains in said Town
without the said collar the owner
or keeper, if a resident of said
Town, shall pay a fine of Ono
Dollar, and the absence of the
said collar upon any dog shall be
evidence of the viola-
of this Ordinance by the
owner or keeper.
Sec. It is hereby declared
lawful for any bull dog or other
always was a vicious dog to at large in said
It was settled by keeper of-
such dog or dogs found so running
still stands, and is used as a chap
el and schoolhouse-
New
country place.
Baron de and re- j ft of Five
official private secretaries
six servants. At the Neuse-
river crossing he was met by a
small party of horse, the Dis-
Judge, and the principal
residents, who took him to the
Stanly Mansion, exceedingly
good by his own ac-
count, where he was feasted in
good style, but noted the absence
of griddle cakes. This
building is now owned and
pied by James A Bryan, Esq.,
the president of the First Nation-
Bank, and is in excellent repair
with broad concrete walls and
grounds stocked with
exotics and semi tropical plants
and fruit trees, the blooms of
honeysuckles, cape
roses mingling with figs,
and magnolias.
The mansion is of wood,
though much over a century old,
remains of the chief
ornaments of the town, with
its imposing square front and its
interior decorations, rich with
and wainscoting. It
is invariably out to
strangers.
AND
In tho evening of the eventful
day there was a supper and a
JACKSON
MANUFACTURERS OF
AND
at tho Tryon Palace, at
foot of George street, which was
still social rendezvous of the
quality people of tho period,
it may be remarked right
that the memorable affair
was faithfully reproduced three
years ago on the 24th of April
1891, on the occasion of its
anniversary, the invitation
cards and orders cf dancing be-
in simile, and even some
of the identical dresses being
worn which appeared the
century. General Wash-
and Lady Washington
were by Mr. W. P. M.
and Miss M T. Oliver,
package of it sent it to
H. B. Battle, director of the citizens re-
experiment station asked . .
him to it write us if
J. K. Coal Manager. I fl j fl TI
I. V, Manager U j U I K H
NORTH L I
A R. R. TIMETABLE.
Effect 1888.
GOING
GOING V
P.
Pat- Dally
Sun.
M. I. M ,
t I Ki
ft
P.
Train h Wilmington
train North, leaving
a, and with D.
train West,
Train
Danville train, arriving at Goldsboro
p. in., and with W. A W. train
the North at p.
S. L. DILL,
Superintendent.
Schools and seated
in the best Offices
furnished. Send for
A. M.
A. M
OINTMENT
there was any poisonous
to tobacco in it. He wrote
immediately that he had received
tin. package and as soon as the
busy guano season was over ho
would report on it, but as yet we
have heard nothing from him-
D. L- Taylor, of Wadesboro.
formerly of Lancaster county
. in the May number of the
Southern States Magazine, gives
quite a detailed treatise of the
cultivation and management of
bright tobacco in North Carolina.
Among other things he says
Golden leaf is a distinct species
as much so as the seed
leaf. It is a small variety seldom
yielding more than a thousand
pounds to the acre. The soil
best adopted to bright tobacco
growing is comparatively poor
land The finest soil so tar dis-
covered is on the Raleigh t Gas
rail road the counties of
Vance and If this
respondent of of the most
journals that circulates
in the South could see
Eastern North Carolina pro-
duct placed down by the sine of
Vi and Warren co it
co and could also see the lands
on which our tobacco is grown
are of tho that he
would grow enthusiastic and
write again from adopted
homo that in the
ties of Pitt. Green and
can be found the finest soil in the
United States for the production
of the golden weed- It is true in
Vance Warren very
tine tobacco with plenty of body
and oil can be grown but as to
color everyone that knows any
thing about our Eastern N. C-
says it is the they
have ever seen grown anywhere,
and white is the kind
wanted.
presented tho republican court
The ceremonies took the
spacious hall of the new court
house, which was tastefully
orated with flowers, flags, and
evergreens. After a few
introductory remarks by
Mayor Battle, the ladies
and gentlemen of the court, in
s of olden were
ushered tho room and took
positions on either side of a dais,
General and Lady Washing-
ton followed and took places on
the platform, the latter in
attire.
OLD
Under strains of sweet music
from the Italian band, the
formally presented themselves
and were received in the most
dignified and courtly manner,
tho approved regime. Then
the court minuet was by
ten couples of the city's elite
The Spangled and
Old North were
sung by thirty trained voices; a
solo followed, and then a flower
cc by young ladies in fancy
each bearing a colored
and a basket of flowers.
Supper ensued, and the novel
affair concluded with the
Virginia which nearly
every one present participated.
The occasion was most enjoyable
and the instructive
and impressive. Next morning,
after the night
of the Earl of Craven,
from whom the county was named,
and these were followed by thrifty
Huguenots and Scotch
in after years. Her
had always beep, well to do.
From 1738 until 1747 it the
seat of the provincial government
and subsequently, in 1777, of the
State Legislature, and from
when Sir Arthur Dobbs, the first
Governor, took up his
residence there until the
of tho pompous Lord Tryon
in 1771 it was the of re-
beauty, and groat dis-
1791, not only Gen-
Washington, but his com-
patriot-. General Greene, honored
it with a visit, holding republican
levees at the house of the patriot,
John Stanly, as above stated, to
whom the country was but
debtor for in good
money loaned in its hour of need
And subsequently
broke bread at tho
residence of Judge
on the east front, which still
IX ENVIABLE PLACES.
During the Revolution several
wealthy citizens fitted out
and brought in much prize
money; and atone time, during the
flush period of her West India
trade, no less than forty square-rig
vessels and seventy coasters
were owned and employed
Even to this day many of the
private dwellings re-
main, crowned with the railed
platforms, built between the
chimneys, which served as look-
outs for incoming argosies. In-
deed New Berne's lines have
always fallen in enviable places-
The tenor of her life has been as
smooth the flow of the broad
on her eastern front.
Even the civil war did not mar her
actual beauty. a wisp of
her charming frontage was dis-
arranged. Only a few suburban
residences on the Trent, which
chanced to be within tho lines of
investment, were destroyed, while
tho earthworks, gracefully
which environ the
city, constitute no eyesore, but,
brush-grown and tapestried with
and sweet serve
to vary the whilom monotony of
a dead level traced with rows of
garden peas and cabbage
in Southern
States Magazine.
W,
Rev. Dr. F. L. REID
AS
CHRISTIAN
publish In till- throe
., at to tho
by that tho
Its Is .-m-.,. y m-v-el-
h . It In our
to pretty to It, and
we had of
to Justify us Id
ft in I. it-o
to We on
of our has made almost
new man, physically of him. We know
others who hare It thoroughly, and
speak In the praise of It, We
every afflicted person who can would do well
to Eire It r.
Such testimony Is ab-
unimpeachable
If you desire to
i gate further, write to us.
Cure
ATLANTIC CO.,
D. C. SI
wills U absolutely tin
us a purifier strength-
It is I spring
medicine. Try it.
Dollars, and in the event that no
owner can be found, or the owner
after notice neglects or to
confine dog, the police shall
kill or destroy the same, and this
last clause shall not be construed
to relieve the owner or keeper
from penalty herein imposed.
Ordinance
It shall be the duty of all land
owners to put and keep in good
repair tho sidewalks adjoining
their property, and if any one
shall fail to do so after being no-
by the street committee of
the Town, it shall be the duty
said committee to have the
work done and to charge
the thereof to such land
owner, and if such owner fails to
pay the same thirty days,
lie or she shall pay a fine of
double such charge.
Ordinance
The street and drains
shall be kept up by the Town
of the street
committee and paid for out of the
the treasury.
Ordinance
Any person who shall keep any
shop or store open on Sunday
shall to a fine of Ten
Dollars. Provided, that this does
not apply to drug stores, and ice
dealers, sales for burial put-
poses.
Ordinance
Section That any
keeping a disorderly shall
be to a of Twenty
Dollars, and the occupants of any
disorderly house or house of ill
fame, who shall refuse to open
the door of the same to tho Town
Officer when commanded so
in his official capacity, shall
subject to n tine Twenty Dollars.
Sec. 2- That any female per-
son of suspicious virtue found
loitering around tho streets by
the Town Officer shall be subject
to a fine of Five Dollars.
any such female so found loiter-
around the streets
be guilty.
Ordinance
All residents of the
Town of Greenville are hereby
forbidden entering any bar-room
or unless employed there-
in, under a penalty of Two
for each
Ordinance
That any engineer or other
officer of a railroad company
which shall run any train through
the Town a speed exceeding
ten miles per hour, or shall fail
to ring the bell while running in
the Town, or shall permit any
train to stop across the street for
a longer time than ten minutes,
shah subject to a fine of Ten
Dollars.
Ordinance
That any one keeping a hog
pen within bundled of
any occupied building, after due
notice of objection by the
pant of the Building shall sub-
to a of Dollar for
remain
IT COMES TO-
STATIONERY
You miss it time if you fail to
-what you want in this line at
make a specialty of this class of goods and if
Quantity
count for anything with yon, come to us.
a pack up
Noe Paper a quite up.
Letter, Fools Cap and
Legal Cap equally low.
from cent up.
cents per
dozen up.
Lend Pencils doz. up.
Pen Points in cents
i per dozen up.
A FEW SPECIALTIES
are agents for A M
the very beat for school and
m-
INKS,
Care ts, and obtained and n Pat-J
cm b I r Et
our u. a.
i c on in ks
mow Washington.
Stud model, or photo., will
don. advise. or not, tree
doe till patent a
a How to Obtain
oil of the U. S. and foreign J
free,
or. D-f
tis Cure all Skin
Tills has been In use
and wherever know ha
Steady demand. It has been en
lending physicians all
and I ins effected cures
. oilier with the attention
be experienced physicians,
far is
and the high reputation
U obtained Is owing entirely
j- r- v, as but lit lie ha
v en before th
One of this Ointment will
ii tn y on receipt of
promptly St
all orders and
to
r-
WOMB
afflicted and remain so, sin
ring untold miseries from a
ii delicacy they cannot overcome.
FEMALE REGULATOR.
by stimulating and arousing to
healthy action all her organs,
It causes health to bloom on th
cheek, and joy to reign
the frame. It never fails to core.
He Bed mm
hat treatment of
i. .
N.
CO.,
Manifold
Disorders
A-e y an impure and fan-
of the blood. MM
impurities, if not develop Into i
serious mAladies, such as
SCROFULA,
RHEUMATISM
an diseases. To cure
i rt ,
free from any ingredient,
J purely vegetable. Such
It all
f rot-1 the blood r d t Eh-
the of
c the forms dis-
ease have b-n
Curd h-j S. S. S,
Tr- I
X CO., Atlanta, Ga.
f as
r,
purposes. Our beats
on the market Our Diamond
and Magic will mend anything but broken
hearts.
Every business man should have a A O
KER
last a life and are sold nowhere in
town.
Our Box Paper for polite correspondence are
th prettiest in town. We also keep Mourning
Paper. Then we Slates, Blank Books,
Memorandum Books, Time Books, Erasers, Rub-
Bands, Pencil Holder. Automatic Pencils,
Sponge Cups, Ink Stands, Paper Cutters, Book
Marks, Pen Holders and lots of other things-
BOOKS AND NOVELS.
If you want, anything to read come look over
our supply. book not on hand will or-
for you.
Now remember tho tho only place
at which you can got these goods at such low
prices.
STORK.
shall
The render of this paper will be pleas-
ed to learn that is at least one
dreaded that has been
lo cure in its stages and that is
Catarrh, Hall's Cure is the
only positive c known to tho medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a
n constitutional
treatment. Catarrh Cure Is
taken internally, directly en the
blood and of the sys-
of visitation, a item, thereby the foundation
. , ., I of the disease, and the patient
select party of horse escorted Dy up the
guest out of town,; and nature in doing its
Ma . The proprietors s
In Its curative powers, that II
and the President continued his
tour. His diary mentions
that at seventy ladies
met him on horseback and the
ovations went on.
NOW A
New at this time was a
Two Lives
Mrs- Thomas, of
III., was told by her doctors she
had and that was
no hope for lies but two of Dr,
King's New Discovery com pie cured
her and she says It saved her life.
The. peers. Florida San Fran-
Buffered from a dreadful cold,
Consumption, tried without
result raw then bought one
bottle of New
in two weeks was cured. He m
It of
samples, prove the won-
efficacy I In
and Free trial bottle at
John Drug Store. Regular
size and
offer One Dollars any
that It to ems. Send for Hat of
Address, F. J. A CO.,
Sol I by Druggist, Toledo, O
best Salve In the world for Cut
Salt
Fever Sores, Chapped
Chilblains, Corns, and
and positively cures Files, or no
pay required. It B guaranteed la give
P inn or money refunded
Price cents par For sale by
John b Wooten,
HERBERT
TONSORIAL
Under Opera e,
; N. C.
Call In when you want good
each day the
after such
All property owners are hereby
required to their gates hung
so as to on the inside of
their lots and any property owner
having a gate Dinged so as to
open on t sidewalk and failing
b name after three days
notice shall to a lino of
One Dollar for each day or part
of a day that the gate is so allow-
ed to n main. ,
Ordinance
It is hereby declared unlawful
for v person or persons owning
a building in the thickly settled
portions of the town to allow such
. to in such bad
repair as to endanger from fire
that Lie. neighboring buildings
and any net-son or persons owning
such in bad repair upon
failing to repair tho thirty
days after being notified to do so
shad pay a fine of Twenty-five
Dollars and the Board of Conn-
shall condemn such build-
cause it to be
Ordinance
It is hereby declared unlawful
for any person to ride a bicycle
on tho sidewalks of Evans street
between the Court House and
Five Points or to ride on any
sidewalk of tho Town after
night without a lighted lantern,
and in all on tho bicycle rider
give of way to
A violating
Ordinance shall pay a lino of
Five Dollars for each
Ordinance
That the before whom
action for of any
Town Ordinance may be tried,
may after due consideration of,
an judgment Laving been en-
against such offender,
for violating or
Ordinances of said Town of
Greenville, have power to re-
duce or hue imposed
therein to a sum not loss than one
penny costs.
The Is a true cop, of
the Ordinances for the govern
of the Town of Green
from and after the 15th day of
as passed and ratified
by tho Board of
for Town of
thin 1st day of June,
J. L. FLEMING,
G E. HARRIS, Mayor.
Clerk-
DOUGLAS
3.50 Dress Shoe.
Soles,
for Workingmen.
1.70 for Boys.
AND MISSES,
, 82.50
if hot dealer
j on W. I-.
hoer At B
-r nays he has them with-
out name
n tit bottom, pat him
down as a f
Shoe are and belief
advertised than oilier make. OM pair and be con-
W. L. name price on the bottom, which
, saves thousand of to those who wear them,
W. I-. I . Shoes rain customers, which helps to
r full line of . . tr, at m profit.
ire . -of
upon r
BOWELL, CO., Greenville.
R. L. DAVIS BRO., Farmville N. C.
Every Man
A Capitalist.
You can become a capitalist at
once by laying by a small part of
your yearly income and
it in a policy of the
Equitable Life
For you can instantly
cure a capital of for
a capital of thus
acquiring an estate which you
may leave to your heirs, or re-
as a fund for your own
support in old if your life
be prolonged.
Such a step will prompt you
to save, will strengthen your
credit, will increase your con-
will preserve you from
care and will give you lasting
satisfaction
The Wan is
The Security Absolute.
It is the perfect development
of life policy. To-day is
the right time to get facts and
Address
W. J. Manager,
For the
ROCK HILL. C
LOTION LINE.
TAR RIVER SERVICE
leave Washington for
ville and touching at all
on Tar
and Friday at A. M.
Tarboro at A if.
Thursdays and Saturdays
Greenville A. M. same day.
These rt are subject to t ago of
water on Tar River.
Connecting at Washington with
erg of The Norfolk, and Wash-
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore
Philadelphia. New York and Boston.
Shippers should order their
marked via Dominion Iron
New York. from
Norfolk A
more Steamboat from
more. S Miners from
Boston.
JNO. SON.
Agent,
Washington N.
Agent,
Greenville, N C.


Title
Eastern reflector, 13 June 1894
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
June 13, 1894
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17697
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