Eastern reflector, 4 November 1896






JOB PRINTING.
The Reflector is
pared to do all
of this
NEATLY,
FINEST
Eastern Reflector.
A. t Edit or, and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance.
Plenty of new mate
rial and the best
of Stationery. VOL. XV.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1896.
Two Papers for
We have made
to furnish-
the Reflector and
North Carolinian the
above amount, is
campaign year and you
should take the two
NO papers.
INCREASE OF RED MEN.
;, Have Good Schools There
Are Indians
The ms are too small per-
habits,
ml men are compelled to live
m entirely unsuited to the
. of their forefathers.
this changed condition, it has
u the Indian will
but information re-
-it the Indian bureau shows this
. en There are now
i in the States, and
that they arc increasing in
ere.
differ as to the past treat-
of Indians, and as to i
from them the mat
by he millions
. . . bat it
and no i u can doubt
. -r r it . In-
I i v take the
that form life he
r.
V.
. I
being l lit. i
. i make tray
in t in the
HE LOST HIS SAND.
QUITE ENJOYABLE.
boarding
I . i , on-
is p school
. II Indian boys and girls
an taught those brooches which our
own children learn grammar and
high hiring portions of
year these children are hired out to the
people of Pennsylvania in places
where they are required t.-. work on
and in families.
This, of course, is a great help to the
young Indians. It gives them an insight I
11- life, and ti aches i em
how toad r Tl
in a school like this are fitting not
ply to go on the reservations, but
scatter throughout th States
and take their chances with the rest of
1-. They are taught how to
and them by labor,
i a lesson which every child
learn, whether red, white or
Progress Is by many of the
Some of them now teach In-
school some follow various me-
pursuits; and many more
a to watch and herd cattle.
Indian- are still to be
Found in very great
By blanket Indians we mean those
Dot wear clothes, but
. clad in buckskin shoes and leg.
and wrap themselves in great
instead of wearing coats and
vests, while some them in warm
At a Detroit hotel the other day
was a guest whose countenance w re
such a frightened expression he
was an object of attention re-
mark from all others. Some said
he must have been thrown sky-high
by a Texas steer within the last day
or two; others that he had been rue
across a trestle-work by a
per train; others still that his
had suddenly pulled a on hint
and taken the reins of government
in her hands. It is easy to find out
all about people if have a
for it.
do I carry a wild,
I queried the man
reply, as he made himself
now I in a big arm-chair. Battered
I myself the expression bad I
worn off, bat I begin to doubt if ii
will ever pass away I've
been trying hard to look placid an
ten for the last hour, but i;
seems to have been a
a bear, panther, alligator,
Indian warrior or a ghost have any-
thing to do with asked the in.
of sort. Young
man, did ever ride on a
a railroad
perhaps you know that a
railroad snowplow is about the big-
strongest and ugliest looking
on wheels. Put
together and you've got o battering
which would go through a
brick house like a streak of hot lard
running down bill. Siding on a loco-
motive is a cradle compared to rid-
on a snowplow when out for
it shouldn't scare a man
of his
it me. and that's why I
carry the com do. It
15th of last, January that I took
little trip over a few miles of
northern Minnesota railroad, but I
r wear scarcely any clothing at got through shivering and
shaking and palpitating yet. was
a town called during a
three snowstorm, and when I
wanted to start for Morehead the
was blocked and all trains can-
celled. There was no reason why I
should hurry away, but as soon as I
found I couldn't go I wanted to be
That's human nature, vet
all.
Main- of them still know
civilization or of Christianity. Their
I ceremonies are too often still
and are regardless of
Secretary Smith.
in Youth's Companion.
ALBINO BIRDS AND BEASTS.
The Ides They Purr, n Seem
to II ,.
W. 1-. e, of
know. When told that
couple i
i. n. re- big snowplows were at the
ports while hunting miles to open the line to th
northwest the St. T . ,
., I went down and
v shot two albino . , , . . .
a Dock normally colored. They
were r than the ordinary bird, of
a cream color. with
but so dimly as to appear pure white
at a short distance, ago
an old quail with voting, nil i
were reported from California a
lent of same paper. Many
individual albino r are reported
and a f, w albino ruffed grouse. The
lately noted the finding of
albino and pit d rooks, crows a nil
I and a n bite U u. It
also i ii about a white r that was
taken in a weasel traps short time ago.
pure white deer and a d i
r d n
in Pa-, i sound, lately. Three or more
white wild are n
been killed during the past IS years.
Om l, was known as
the White Witch lie
may not been a bright bird
it. wasn't very long after be
was hatched that he learned that
white was not all comfort, The hen
turkeys liked him exceedingly, and one
his bird, was killed
in 1382, while others of light re
seen. Hundred of bullets were lived
at the witch bird, without
and he died a natural death
in some clump of
bushes.
For many years albinos were thought
barren, but observation has proved
this to be erroneous. One. a female
P. minds One.
Many of political
been made this cam-
remind of one of Mr.
Ha bad been
listening to a of
robin, reared of young for five
Reasons up tin- Hudson, and lung words few
a number of other robins were ideas. When he bad finished,
i young in the vicinity during
two or three mating seasons, young
often colored. Albino
robins are meat
of the small creatures, i , . . t. .
. . ; lit foot and a
while deer arc the most numerous of
f whistle, at. every the
whistle blew the boat
Abe -That
reminds me of a I
saw on the Ohio liver. It
larger albinos. An albino moose was
never and Stream.
A little in the of his
lesson came to the word
and called it a word more
to him The teacher, who was
examiner, em
and then, to improve the
put is
the difference between and
The answer began.
can sec w hut
and then stopped. The amusement
plainly visible on the teacher's face
this miniature Sam Weller
from completing the contrast.
the language of the prize
ON THE BIG BRIDGE,
The Man Who Would Ride on e
Snow Plow.
H- Out of His Experience a
lib Nerve Gave Oat lie
ii
with a Moral.
They Gray or Brown Dresses
and Quiz the Policemen.
there ever a bride that didn't
ring, whip before insist having in her trousseau
she n get into our class. gray or brown traveling
c Record. i New York Press-
If you want to answer this
A North man to your own satisfaction walk
been that had killed the across the Brooklyn bridge any day,
man, am sorry, especially in midsummer, and you
and if be only Hive I would w,
g i
ct s,
you take
fit n sixty co
The Will
tills tin in a-
the
tins iii-
III c
You can tell them at once by their
gray or brown dresses and their leis-
They stroll along with their
husbands and look at the river, mar-
at the statue of liberty and won-
whether Governor's island could
resist an invader, all with a delight-
that is restful to the
sight of a nervous metropolitan
dent.
The policemen on the bridge be-
come wonderfully softened in sum-
mer, for they many colloquies
with timid, blushing brides, who
, I he ; and
are animated guide books and ency-
LIGHTING PARLIAMENT.
Globe.
there a ball in
this hotel
Si I i down stalls
to left; o y w generally can
ii tin- in tin. part if
c Gazette.
Mai do like
then; photographs of In i-
ate
J prefer this
, so do I. She
looks well id a traveling
d New York
v did spot ed
the lei of who
Diddled R
is tie-
b to Caleb Ii
l said a tote
hod ii of
Ion ti
rolled into one. And
like the job of telling ail
the points of interest to be
seen from the bridge, and almost
wish that and ids bride had
nothing to do save to be astonished
on the Brooklyn bridge and store up
memories to be turned loose on the
community at or Spring
City.
One way that brides can be dis-
from ordinary people is
by their far-away look. They do not
seem to see the people near by. They
seem not to care what interest they
themselves excite. They are simply
ridiculously happy New York is
only pleasure ground
them.
The bridegroom Oh, yes; be is
there, of course, but he is only an
attendant of the bride and he doesn't
count for much on the Brooklyn
bridge.
SMALL PIECES.
Large Profit
TUB DISCOVERY hit LIFE.
Mr. C t
e. Ill D.-, V New
-COT I nit life. Was
with ; Grippe and tiled the
cl us for miles about, hut of no
in , was given up and t -Id coal-1 n--t
Having King's N-w
iii my .- re I for a
ii. i s use from the Iii -t do e b
loge Ii for. a d after q I'm- e
up an i it
w in gold We
, or house Without it a
f. e I M . L Drug
-i e
iii s-i Gave
what I thought was an awfully cub
It re n of
c l
tin III d the t ii
re. The too on your and
your own bod.- ; the same,
ct ween the the
t ion, the arbiter of growth or d,
or death.
We a diamond, we can-
not make IT.-h, blood and
but by of baker Die-i .
we can enable the
food would otherwise f
and pi o i the In ill
form- of -p. i con-i
m weakness, of flesh,
thin ii o
dial s the remedy.
wit i i it at It
aid as- st- to nourish
trial to show i
cent-,
i- be-t for
d's i it in pi e
Castor Oil.
A v
i in
. IV lie
f Mi
story s
recent
Ct- h b;
AL as
the r the
--e. is a blood or
o and in order to i ere it
you take Internal Wall's
Ci in in Cure is t Wen i and
on
Hall's Catarrh Cure is not i ck med-
It was prescribed by one of I
physicians in this v for
y. and is a
of best t- known. I
F J. Toledo.
.-. ti by
Boar, blunder here, so far it i lilt be t blood purifier,
was a blunder, was entirely due to the I on the
teacher, lie did not mean to impress . the
on his pupils the of a is what produces such
window as contrasted with a widow, ; d results in Bind
but the difference in spelling between
the two
Still It Pp.
Mrs. over the pa-
here is an article
about women One of them
have no idea of the nerve it
to shave the of a man who
has a Adam's
Mr. don't It
night to fill a woman with remorse
every time sees an Adam's apple.
Rooms,
f the
B way Ron s, of N.
Y k. her c M-
Mil L.-e, i I Maryland.
mouths ago Lei
i to Ni w York at d became
a d at in s
o Mr. II- As In
fain
mansion on avenue, ii it.
a the of the
in. elide to
ii be ado the
b was pi
the u cf cashier
mi bat the bus-
Laud t r of house-
bold.
The love affair developed from
the Hurt of
progressed
full was by
parental influence, as Mr
is Mrs. seems,
suspected nothing mo.-e than
Finally Mis Virginia
the secret to her mother and de
her mi nation to i v
her young poor ht
was
As thus en such
always forget ever loved
and lie men they loved
Mis. insisted upon the
and for
bade it.
Then the levers
powers that be, and last
drove to a quiet
and were married.
They I
to family, and after
the usual amending
such occasions, wore forgive
blessed and are happy in the
paternal home of Mr.
Rouse
COiNiNG
Sam Derives a
from the Occupation.
One of the most profitable
of the United States govern-
is found in the coinage of live-
rent nickel pieces and one-cent
bronze pieces. The cost of the
disks from which the cents
ire stamped is about twenty cent.
per pound, and a pound of pro-
one dollar and forty-six cents.
Nickel ready for coinage costs thirty-
cents per pound and a pound
produces four dollars and forty-three
cents in live-cent pieces. The
profit of on the
coinage of these minor coins for the
past few years has been about
hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
There is a profit, and a consider-
able, one, in of subsidiary
silver coin, but owing to the fact
that the United States owns several
ounces of bullion which was
purchased at the prevailing high
rate of 1890, the profit in that species
of coinage is not as great as it would
if the government should go into
the open market to-day and buy
silver at its market value for this
purpose.
There is a big demand at th-
treasury department for bright new
coins of all denominations. Almost
every request that is received from
banks In various sections of the
country for subsidiary coins ask
that bright new ones be sent.
month the street par companies and
banks of the turn into
treasury quantities of
nickels, dimes and quarters, for
which they receive in turn
money of large denominations. Of
the money thus redeemed la
not and there is no demand
for it. The result is that there are
large quantities of such subsidiary
coin the vaults of the treasury,
and it is impossible to get it into
Bring your Poultry and Win
for highest
I v and ship i i large
prepared y you as much
cash.
Consumption
Consumption or tuberculosis has
the subject of early and more
vigorous efforts to check its trails-
mission Prussia than elsewhere, as
is natural considering that Dr. Koch
is a Berlin professor. The result is
that while from to 1887, before
his discovery, the death's from
or consumption were in
since 1887 there has been a
gradual decrease to in
Elsewhere this decrease has not
place. Prussian prisons
insane asylums show a reduction in
I her death rate from tuberculosis,
since careful precautions were
adopted. The death rate from this
cause among religious nursing or-
was in 1881-2 per
In 1803-4 it had dropped to
most half. Facts like these show
the absolute necessity of careful
cautions for destroying the sputa
consumptive patients. Rigorous
care this direction would greatly
decrease a disease to which a large
proportion of deaths, are
Hotel Keepers of the Country.
According to tenth census
there were howl keepers with-
n the country, who are
II . Dr. New . said to have daily an
k owe life I was taken average of fifty guests.
s seen that the average
am was and told I limber cases per thousand of
Having Dr. King's population is in the neighborhood of
ii v my sent for i rod to The number of lawyers
United States is materially
th was up and shoot than In other country In the
U its weight in gild we
keep store or house without It.
J B. at K
Dru Store.
world, and amounts in dispute
here are much greater than else-
How th torrid A
Although gas, candles and oil
lamps nil- used to the
buildings, says the
Budget, incandescent lamps are
in most general use. The system of
lighting is controlled from
the basement, and throughout the
building the lamps themselves are
everywhere arranged with great care
and forethought. In the dining
rooms, for instance, they are placed
very high tip, so that while tho sup-
ply of light is is no
over the tables. In the tea-
rooms, besides tho lights from the
ceiling, there are wall brackets over
the tables and even movable table
lamps for who to use
j them. Ami in tho and tho
service room adjoining the com
dining room nil tho fittings
made of iron, rather than of
I brass, so that they may suffer as lit-
possible from tho steam.
With a staff of about SO men the
superintendent is able to all
sorts of ingenious and fit-
tings. And, as another specimen of
the economy which is everywhere
visible, it may ho mentioned that be
has succeeded in making many
out of the old gas fit-
tings. Tho big
that in the central ball, which
weighs hundredweight and boars
tho smaller ones in
tho St. Stephen's
hall and to he
raised and lowered for purposes of
cleaning or of replacing broken
lamps. This big has, high
up in tho dome, a crane, which
over it on tram lines, by
which it is raised and lowered, while
the electric wires carefully
drawn on another tramway so
that they may not damaged In
paying out while the is
lowered. And in the roof above
tho house of lords arc similar
arrangements, but with simply a
weight and a of earthenware
pulleys in place of the crane.
Tho commons chamber is not
lighted entirely by j
Round the arched doorway are ton
Incandescent lamps, which
required to up
carving and the clock and
tho side galleries there is a lamp
placed behind each pillar, so that;
it cannot itself ho it
vents tho members who may sit- j
ting from being in deep shade
and so invisible to tho speaker. The I
principal lighting hero,
comes through the painted glass
roof, behind powerful gas
lamps used, gas being preferred
to electricity hero both on account
of its superior spreading powers and
tho heat a draft,
and so assists ventilation.
tho glass is a wire net-
work, so that were a breakage to
there would no danger of a
cabinet minister being decapitated.
In lobbies and tho libraries
lighting is used, however.
In tho libraries and reading room
it is placed lower than in most parts
of tho building, for obvious reasons.
And in all tho larger the
lamps divided into
which light Independently of one
another. Thus, on a dull day one set
of lamps would ho in use; if it were
foggy, might two sots, and
at night all employed.
Science.
One of tho worst enemies of sci-
is Mr. Buskin. When
published his book on Fish-
which was deemed of such
In determining tho
ages of tho strata in which they
were found that tho United States
government contributed to tho ex-
of publication, Mr. Ruskin,
in volume page
says, was a more blockhead
to paid for all that good draw-
of tho nasty, ugly things, and
that it didn't matter a stale herring
whether they bad any names or
a piece of written
with the pen, of ignorance. But
what shall say when see the
same writer speaking of Mr, j
finding a hydrocarbon oil j
in heaven which makes a stink
from Surely, if
a man was great both as a man
and an explorer of nature's
it was tho blacksmith's son who
made his way from tho position of a
to I bat of tho great
experimentalist that ever lived
and Queries.
Genuine shawls are so
that measuring or
four square yards could stored
within tho shell of a small walnut.
But an oven more is
manufactured on the Philippine is-
lands from the fibers of pineapple
leaves. To properly prepare the
fibers for weaving involves
work. For instance, the tiny
fibers tied together by hand to
suitable lengths. The weaving of a
quantity sufficient for one shirt is
the work of several years, and so it
is no wonder that such a shirt costs
about but tho rich planters
of
afford to indulge in
extravagances.
Several whose odor Is
to western nostrils exceedingly re-
highly in the
as perfumes- In Persia and A.
is considered
a delicate perfume, and many
persons carry a quantity of it
in their pockets or in a bag suspend,
d from
of
Hero is a little story of the late
Charles Frederick Crisp In one
counties of his district
there was a little weekly
per lo
he would come
home from Washington he always
sought the editor and demanded
to know if bis subscription bad
not expired. one of
occasions, with the
tor, he him a
Highest of all in Leavening Power.-Latest U. S. Got Report
Baking
Powder
Absolutely
PURE
Notice to Creditors.
In with a d at
term of Pitt Superior
II say- I H which
of R. a. Bynum
, B. Bynum and others
have missed issues of mu, notice is hereby oven
my paper I am I
be arrears, that call estate, on or before
day of November It Is
,. ,, ,. y to report
. ,. , . . . I . I . till. , . .
It
said the
per is only a dollar a v
your subs,
until January
all light- replied Crisp,
keep in. and
then, a
saw an editor yet need
day of November it is
y to report r
pa amount of indebtedness
n and or each debt in
,,,,,,. Tho.-e desiring
be out, m the assets mu t their
. Claims Within the above specified time
cf
E A.
of the Superior
The solve in
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Fe-
Bores, Chapped Hands.
Mains, Corns, and all Skin
lion, and positively cures Piles, or no
remedy ail forms pay required, it b guaranteed to give
litters has proved to he the perfect satisfaction or money refunded
bet. It a cents per box. For
lid the dreaded L.
yield to its .
urge all who are afflicted to procure a
bottle, a nil give this remedy a
In cam of habitual constipation
cures by giving needed tone
the bowels, few hug red t
the of this medicine. Try H
cents L.
en's Drug More
it-
POLISHING
to in th
It is a most satisfactory of
affairs and an evidence of careful
and dainty if when en-
room it is evidenced that
the chairs, tables, cabinets and
polished furniture surfaces reflect I
the glistening as with much
Careful rubbing and showing ab-
sense of dust and grime.
There is no of the j
duties that requires care j
n than tho care of j
surfaces. Dust will settle,
dampness and steam moisten it, and j
though a room may carefully put
to rights day some dust is i
bound to adhere, especially in
and tho crevices of carvings
and that, if neglected,
anything but a lovely op-
If there children, tho
AT
.
BO, with lost
In hoar you M
Th an, mi to you;
is too.
Ami to
Is hill for
Tomorrow we say,
today
Oil quiet
The lonely it
For all the dim
want of only
What shall
you hand
We shall
Your help in that or
And treasure even trivial words yon said
Ah of tho dead.
You will with you thus
of us;
writing now then
Of lands and men,
Your tiding from afar us here
As sphere.
Just If you, at last,
That greater had passed
Whose winds and waters yearn
Outward and never turn,
And, looking through the waste of silence lone.
You culled from the unknown.
Even death Is nothing more
Than opt of a door
Through which men pass away
As into tho
And who see It not, blinded by tho light.
Cry, lost In
Thus ever, near or far,
Life but where we are;
Yet those hid
Imprints of tiny fingers, so hard to
keep from soil, sure to adorn
tho edges of tables and form
on chairs and other household goods.
The aid of a cabinet maker every
month or so to clean tho furniture
would too costly and tho
of articles
as require it too trouble.
Therefore a that will keep
tho looking remove
tho stains and soil and does not cost
a great in and is a
great boon to
To reach this end is nothing
better than a mixture of linseed oil
and deal-
linseed and but
it is not so satisfactory, as after re-
tho turpentine rough-
ens tho polished surface.
If tho article to polished is very
much soiled, wash thoroughly with
warm soapy water, drying as quick-
as possible. Then with a flannel
rag dipped in a mixture of two parts
linseed to of kerosene rub the
surface thoroughly. Let it stand
awhile until you rubbed
piece, and then with a perfectly
piece of from oil
polish it until it shines to your taste
This is an easy method of keeping
bright, and it docs not in-
tho wood, tho odor
soon evaporating if the window m
opened.
If is much furniture to clean
end it is badly soiled, mix a small
quantity of tho oils at a so that
it will be all used, and a very soiled
rag should not tolerated. Clean
rags and a clean oil at a time
much better results. Then be
careful to rub trace of the
cleaner from tho furniture, or the
result will not what yon
To clean fairly well tho arms and
backs of upholstered
dingy a lit I lo
line. clean for this also.
and after dusting briskly with a
whisk broom rub with flannel dip
in gasoline; then set in tho ail
until tho odor has evaporated. Pol-
or painted floors, grained or J
varnished doors, dingy baseboards
or any surface that requires polish-
or that tho housekeeper desires
to make shine, will do so most
agreeably if treated to a vigorous
rubbing linseed and
after first
soap and water.
Bronzes and bent iron work, fen
and grate fixings all look
brighter and fresher for a little rob-
bing with the oily rags, and the room
and its furnishings you have
thus fronted present a of dam
cleanliness that is worth
a great deal of work and infinite
trouble to produce
In quills were
shipped from and Poland to
England, to say nothing of those
were sent to countries
Go from life to
Clasp and now
Tho word's a passing knell.
But ripening by year,
Life triumphs as here.
Nor dark nor silent . tho distance he
Could we but hour see.
A. St. John Adcock in Spectator.
Story of a Careful Man.
Bo was a and thoughtful
man. In fact, it may said that
he was an extremely careful and
thoughtful man.
Ho was resting comfortably in his
easy chair with his feet resting on a
when ho discovered that his
pencil needed sharpening. Any
other man would have taken out his
and begun work at once, but
he was too thoughtful for that, also
too careful.
Ho sighed, got up out of his chair
and wont across tho room for a lit-
tie waste paper basket that was
standing in the corner. Thon he re-
turned to his seat in tho chair
and placed tho basket on tho floor
between his logs.
His wife smiled approvingly, and
he felt proud of himself.
He opened his knife, leaned over
his basket and began work on the
is just as easy to
. and he said as he de-
tho first shaving from the
end of the pencil.
his wife as she fol-
lowed the shaving with her eye and
saw it go over bis shoulder and land
on the carpet behind him.
But why continue There are few
who not tried to sharpen a pen.
over a small basket in some mo-
of temporary insanity.
When he had finished, there were
three shavings in the basket, and
the rest were on tho floor.
That is usually the way it hap-
Post.
A Practical Doctor.
doctor, how is it with
my husband
to middling, so to
speak. Ho wants rest above all
things. I have written out a
for an opiate.
when must I him
Tho opiate is for
you, Hamburger
man of iron nerve I saw in
Sydney In said Mr. Chambers,
a beardless roan, scarcely more
than a boy, and I should judge had
not reached bis majority.
was a tough man even in Syd-
and bis reputation was sustain-
ed, for he always carried a revolver
and be would shoot at the drop of
the hat His name was Dough Reed.
was said around town that he
would never die a natural death.
turned out to be true, as he
was lynched by a mob one morning,
PENNSYLVANIA IN 1683.
an Latter
Ham Peon to
I thank god I am arrived
in the province that the
of god and Bounty of the King bath
made and the
and industry of the people
with me must render
Considerable. I was received by the
ancient Inhabitants with kind-
and respect and the rest
brought it with them j there may
about four thousand
in all, I speak, I think within
pass; an increase from
France, Holland and Germany, as
as our Native Country.
The land is Generally good, well
and not of wood as
there are also many open
places that have been old Indian
the trees that grow here are
the Mulberry, white and red,
nut, black, gray and Pop-
Cyprus, Ash,
Gum,
black, white, red
and Swamp which has a like a
willow, and is most lasting. The
food woods is your Elks,
Deer, Beaver, Rabbets,
Turkeys, heath-birds,
goons and innumerably;
need no dogs to ketch,
they run by droves Into the house in
cold weather. Our Rivers have also
of excellent fish and water
foul, Sturgeon, rook, shad, her-
ring, or
heads, and perch, and trout
in inland of the
Swan, white, gray, and black
goose, and brands, the best
duck tel I ever and
Snipe and the with the Snow-
bird are also excellent.
The is sweet and
makes a and steady
sky, a. in the more southern parts
of Franco. Our Summers and Win-
tors commonly in three
years in but
Seldom last above ten weeks and
begin till tho latter end of
the days above two
hours and tho Sun
hotter here then with you,
makes some recompense tor
nights of the Winter season,
as well as the woods that make
cheap and great We of
wheat, maize, rye,
oaten, excellent sorts of
beans and peas, water
and mus all roots
and Garden stuff, good fruit and ex-
Sider, the Peach we have in
divers kinds, and very good, and in
great The Vino
wall sorts and the with us of
is very and
not so sweet as some I have eaten in
Europe, yet It makes a good wine,
and the worst, good vinegar,
I have observed three sorts,
the Great grape that has green, red,
and black, all ripe on the same tree,
and black little grape,
which is tho best, and may
proved to an excellent wine. Thee
are spontaneous. Of Cattle, we
have the horse, not very handsome
but good. Cow Cattle and hogs in
much plenty, and sheep
apace.
Our town of Philadelphia is seat-
ed between two navigable rivers,
from to fathom
about houses up in one
and country settlements,
thus do we to render our.
selves an Colony, to
and of Crown,
as well as our own comfort and ad-
vantage, and not be
era say and Queries.
C.
Mr. smoked a cigar
except once, when he was a stripling
In He bad just left Yale
college and started a drug store in
this now famous town of Tioga
This was in the first days of the
Republican party. He then wrote
the songs for Fremont campaign,
later for Lincoln contests, and
later still for the Grant
He has two trunks at bis old home
in full of these campaign
songs. All through New York state
there are happy geniuses with a
for writing verses. But Mr.
has a record in this respect
which is marvelous. A few years
ago he was guest of news-
paper men of the club.
He was called upon for a speech
He looked round the board and saw
politicians of the two parties,
critics, artists and dramatists.
All expected a speech from him.
Instead be recited an original poem
he composed that afternoon
st his office, Broadway, telling of
the ultimate fate of a mischievous
pig. Mr.
poem was the of the evening
and was received with roars of
Above all things, raillery decline;
it is in ablest hands a dangerous
tool, but never fails to wound tho
meddling
Solomon, according to a Hebrew
and that is where he displayed his tradition, could repeat all the
orbs in his





THE REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
York Tribune gays
has carried New York county by
Times give it him by
Louisville, precinct in
S. f Kentucky to report
Bryan gain.
Entered post at G Ken
rill, H. C. u second cats mail ma tie
4TH, 1890
The Next Congress will
have a Large Anti-
Si Majority.
NORTH CAROLINA IN DOUBT.
Both Sides Claim the
Carrie Pitt
It news Democrats
that the takes to its read
today; The telegraph company,
through the exceeding inefficiency
the office, gave us a miserably
and rotten service, but such new
as route, indicates that Mark
nu's and I he trusts
he day and the country has gone over-
We have not
space at this time to comment further
upon the result, but in what follows
you will find the news as it came in
the bulletins from last night to
o'clock this morning.
New York districts give later
Bryan
to Chicago National Re-
publican committee gives
by odd.
New York city gives
Bryan
-New York city indicates a plurality
for New York Suite Chair.
claims at P. If, the
State tor by
he vote in West Virginia shows a
gain.
C, county gives
Bryan plurality. plural-
in this State conceded to be large.
in New York city indicate
a plurality in entire city.
Boston elects eleven Republican
Congressmen, one Democrat, John F
Fitzgerald. One district, tenth, in
doubt.
Richmond indicates that Bryan loss-
es heavily in all cities of the Slate.
close but vote in
favor.
New Orleans, precincts gives
Bryan
give Bryan
Levering Palmer
same districts gave Harrison
Cleveland
Republican chairman of Kentucky
wired at p. m. that the indications are
would carry the State
by
districts of outside of N e
York and Kings counties give Bryn
Same
districts in gave Cleveland
Harrison
districts out of
Bryan
In same districts gave
Harrison Cleveland
New York. districts gives
gain 1.280.
United Press says
a us carried this city by
districts out of
of tine gives
Bryan
New York Sun says return from
West show large vote for
Baltimore by
It gave Cleveland in 1802.
Boston Herald reports Maine
Republican, Brooklyn districts
of give
Palmer
Chicago, precincts give
Bryan Palmer
Levering
Bulletin says Virginia has gone for
Bryan by plurality.
N. Y. Bulletin says has
carried Massachusetts by over
New York World bulletin says
Kings county gives
majority.
New York Sun Bulletin says the
vote of Baltimore gives the State to
precinct gives
Bryan Palmer
Levering
districts out of
give Bryan
Palmer,
districts out of
Bryan
Palmer
New York Sun say has
Maine by
Canton, just re.
dispatches from Iowa and New
York stating New York State will give
precincts
Bryan Palmer
Levering 122-
precincts
Bryan Levering
Palmer
Chairman Curry Democrat says re-
port voting favorable for Democratic
success in Iowa and Wisconsin, show-
made in Des and Polk county
will carry State by upwards 25,000-
West returns coining in
show so far indication Republicans
gain.
Ne districts out 1,392
give Bryan
Palmer
New districts outside
New York and Kings county Bryan
precincts in Illinois
outside of Cook county gives
Bryan.
New out of districts
congressional gives Walsh, silver Dem-
1,534, Mitchel,
New York special says
South Carolina by
are that will
Chicago between and
Chattanooga, here is
greater than in 1892. The indications
are that the city will go for
by over
towns give
Bryan 1,708, Palmer
Same towns in 1892 gave
Cleveland
plurality in New York
City Kings
districts out of
Bryan
Boston Globe says carries
majority.
New North Car-
very close, both sides claim the
State by lo
New York Journal special says
Island gone by
over
Bryan
I Tribune says indications
that gone by
New York Herald says
carries by
New York Tribune claims Oregon
by small majority.
Detroit precincts
Detroit gives Bryan
Palmer
all
outside city Bryan
Palmer
N. Y. Herald says carries
Nebraska by
Hartford, towns g
Bryan
towns out of gives
Bryan 1,649,
New papers are claim
25.000 for Indiana
but there are no returns as yet.
Tennessee has gone Republican by
Massachusetts by and Ohio
will give the largest plurality
ever given in that
nets give
Bryan Lever-
Cincinnati, out of
Hamilton county gives
New West-
bowen, Secretary National Republican
Committee gives out the following.
The reports show we have carried
Maryland. We have carried est Va.
by
N.
in Camden county about
North point to
Bryan carrying State by to
Pennsylvania will give
plurality.
precincts in Illinois,
outside Cook county, give
Bryan
New says
will carry Kentucky by
majority.
New districts outside of
New and Kings county, gives
Bryan Pal-
mer
New districts, outside of
New York and King's county give
Black Porter Griffin
Atlanta, county,
Atlanta, except second ward, gives
Bryan a majority of Democratic
loss of
precincts in Minne-
including from St. Pauls, gives
Bryan
North are that
the State will go for Bryan by
Canton, O received con.
from Hobart.
precincts gives
Bryan
precincts show a Re-
publican gain
Wisconsin claimed for by
New outside of
has earned the Stats of
Nebraska by
claim tin
Slate for by 50-000,
districts in Cook
gives Bryan
vote in city of
ban Francisco, in precincts the
vote will compare with
New York Herald says
plurality in will reach
Kansas will carry
Kansas from to
precincts
Bryan
Raleigh, Reports timed p.
indicate Democratic pluralities
to on State National
ticket. Second, third, fourth and
ct districts Republican
by good majorities. Reports from sixth
and districts are not sufficient to
make a comparison up to this hour.
Reports from all districts are coming in
very slow.
New
King county about
New World says Bryan has
carried Carolina.
Holton claims
the Stale f North Carolina by
returns put the State in doubt.
and Democrats
both claim
vote Bryan
New Sun says the Re-
have congressmen
Columbus,
can Committee says the Slate will
New York Herald says
plurality in Pennsylvania reaches
Philadelphia
New Sun out
says is elected beyond
doubt. Gives votes in
college.
Herald reports from Tennessee show
that State in doubt.
The returns so show
have elected congressmen,
Democrats Populists Sound
Money Democrat j-
The latest reports Indicate, that Me t and
has the following Iowa- j he
Pitt County Rifle at
On Tuesday a
happier and a more jolly company
never started on a with more
delightful anticipations than com
H. From start to finish
there went up a continual glee
from the boys, with corporal
John Evans and John Fleming
as chief fun makers.
Upon our arrival at the Union
depot we were met by that
gentleman, Maj Alfred
Williams and his
When we out of the
depot the first thing that greeted
our vision was Capt. W. L.
company strong, and at
the head of the company
landing a stone wall, firm
and erect with the company's
colors, the noble and year old
Capt. Tom one of
Franklin county's best men and
truest Confederate Veterans
When the command forward was
given, like a year old boy he
took his gallant company from
the depot to Fayetteville street,
up to the capital, down Hillsboro
street to Camp Came-
near the fair grounds, where
the troop were to be quartered.
One of the most lovely tor a
camp. The place was ft wise
and in front of
estate W view of
Association
whose we if ere. Every-
thing was as splendidly arranged
far convenience for
the men as could
Our noble and beloved
John W, supported by his
efficient staff and aids, made the
occasion one of great pleasure to
all concerned. On Thursday the
sham battle was executed to per
A. t M- College
boys, opposing the
by Major Williams under
General orders, made a
b acts and Figure.
It tons of paper to
make the postal cards used in the
U States each year.
In one week last summer
tons ice were used in New York
city.
The Coliseum at Rome seated 87.-
spectators, and more might
easily have found standing room.
With newspapers and
in America and Canada the
people ought not to suffer for
opinions.
The War Department estimates for
the next fiscal year aggregate
The time for the
at present is days.
Reliable statistics show that an aver-
age of strangers visit
New every day in the year.
The production of rubber bicycle
tires in this country is about 1,000.000
per year.
Tin is a comparatively
metal, being about a ton.
The production of steel
during 1895 amounted to
Ions.
W. HIGGS, HIGGS, Cashier
Maj. HENRY
Greenville, N. C.
Kentucky, Maine, Maryland
Michigan, Minnesota, New
Hampshire, Jersey, Ohio,
Island, Wisconsin
total of electoral vote.
fusion m
So fas as the come
from this county they indicate that the
ticket is elected, but by a con.
decreased majority from two
veins ago. All the had not
been heard from up to the time
went to Mess, but those
that came in show majorities about as
Gene fusion majority.
Gave fusion majority.
Skinner majority if,
Chapman Cox Harrington
Thigpen Perkins
Democrat majority
no, I.
majority Tucker,
sheriff, majority .-newborn J. L.
Little, Treas., majority
MO.
majority Tucker,
sheriff, newborn S. A. K- Tuck,
Com., majority
Majority for balance of D
ticket is from to
NO.
Gone
No
majority,
minority HO, Can-
non, commissioner,
FALKLAND.
Gone majority.
NO.
Russell plurality Skinner
majority
No.
plurality lo, Russell
Skinner majority More majority
Harrington majority Perkins
Thigpen
i u l SO.
majority, Harrington,
majority, ; Perkins, majority, ;
pen, majority,
NO.
Democratic majority.
SO.
Reported to be from to fusion
y.
No,
do j
Skinner, majority,
majority, ; Harrington, ma-
; Perkins, Thigpen,
majority,
majority, Perkins,
SWIFT CREEK No
Cave fusion majority.
SWIFT NO.
majority, ; Harrington, mi.
which was instantly re-
turned by General charge
which drove the College boys
works. Charge after
charge from each
in order made
one of great excitement
to the twenty
thousand people that it
in full view of both and
in all of this great excitement with
battle cry after battle cry, that
noble old Confederate and color
bearer, Tom
failed to hold high the battle flag
we all loved so well. And just
here I would not forget to say
that as he is
known among the boys has
sons in the Franklin Guards
of which W. L is
the u man beloved
by his men for high
character,
and strict discipline and like the
grand old Zeb Vance, he never
the comfort, pleasure land
of his men.
In all the roars to coin., and
whoa the enthusiasm of
life is passed,
of Camp Cameron
will ling r among
recollections of
in life. It has thrice been the
pleasure of company H- to par-
. of hospitality
which been of the highest
order and every beloved
and highly esteemed Alfred
Williams has the chief
rector excellent hospital-
and in of the
of company H. I most heartily ex-
tend to Williams and his
able committee their
thanks for the kind
they have extended to us,
and to that company H. will
ever this and will glad-
when ever an op-
is offered.
B. F.
Representing a Capital of More than a Hal
Million Dollars,
Win. T. President National
Exchange Baltimore, Md.
The Scotland Neck Bank,
Neck, N. C.
Scotland Neck, N. O
R. R. Fleming, N, C.
D. W. Higgs Bros.,
a, r
respectfully solicit the accounts
of firms, individuals and the general
Checks and Account Basks furnish
ed on application.
I I n
ii
We Otter a ,
REMEDY Which
INSURES Safety
of Life to Mother I
Child.
EXPECTANT
MOTHERS,
Robs Confinement of its Pain, Horror and Risk.
My wife used be-
fore birth of her first child, she did not
suffer from HUH or quickly
relieved at the critical hour but,
, had no afterward and her
recovery was rapid.
E. E. Johnston-, Ala.
Sent by Mail or Express, on receipt of J
price, if I no bottle. Book
, mailed Free.
REGULATOR CO., Atlanta,
BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Greenville Market.
by S. M.
Butter, to Si
Western
cured to
to
Corn
Flour, to 6.1.0
to K
to H
to G
Salt to
to m
Eggs per
Beeswax,
Below are puces of
and for
by Cobb Bros-
of
Good
Low-
Extra
-U
15-12
to To
J G.
Carolina,
Pitt the Court.
Moore
vs.
The defendant above named take
that action entitled a
has in
Court of Pitt County for a and
the said defendant will take
notice that she is to appear
he 1-t the of
to he held it
House Ii; Greenville on the 13th Mod,
day after the 1st Monday in September
and or to the
of the or the relief de-
will be granted.
This 24th October, IS u.
K A. MOVE,
Clerk Superior Court.
B. F. Attorney.
GREENVILLE, N.
Have just received an
of the latest style and are ready to
the want of the trade at Prices Low. e
than ever offered Small
and sales Is our motto. Our
are new and cheap to meet the
the misses. We are
goods at a price far below the usual
price.
casket we for
UM
12.50
All we ask is a trial and ill give en-
G. A. A CO.
Opposite Office,
B. f. Manager.
Constipation
Causes fully half the sickness in th world. It
retains the digested food too long in the bowels
and produces biliousness, torpid liver,
Hood's
had taste, coated
tongue, sick headache, in- m
etc. Hood's Pills W I IS
cure constipation and all Its
results, easily and thoroughly. All druggists.
Prepared by C. I. Hood Co., Lowell, Mass.
Ins only fills to take with Hood's
Sale of
Br the power rested n me by
a decree of the Court of Pitt
county made at September term ism in
a case in which J. T. Brown,
of L. F. Everett is and
Latham and Skinner are Defendant.
I will offer for sale at the Court
door In Greenville on Monday the 7th
day of December to the highest
bidder the following described tracts of
land situated in the county of Pitt.
One tract in Township on east
side of crick adjoining the land;,
Loni- Galloway, James Galloway, H.
T. Wilson and oilers containing live
hundred acres more or less mid
as the Smith place.
One tract in Township north
aide of Tar adjoining the land of
Moses Leggett, the Rives
land and others and known as the A. J.
land.
The terms are one third
one and two years, interest from of
sale, title r till all the purchase
money is paid with the privilege to the
to nay the whole and take his
J. JARVIS.
Commissioner.
A CARD.
It is a singular fact that loco-
motives destined for
fast runs require training as do
race horses. The locomotive
built speed is first put to
work on some small branch
with light tracks, until it becomes
accustomed to running, and all
the parts are brought down to
their proper bearings. Having
undergone this period of pro-
it is taken on to more of principles of Democracy to
To the Democratic Voters of the First
District of North Car-
The Free and Unlimited Coinage of
at the ratio of has been forced
on the American people as the one
paramount issue in the National Cam-
sorts of alliances and
have been and are being made to
force this measure upon the people, that
it may become the law of the land.
is not. a but an Eco-
-Measurer upon which individual
members of all parties
To all Democrats, who from principle,
this measure of free silver coin
age, who oppose the
and methods, and the surrender
Administrators Notice.
Having this day before E.
A. Clerk of Superior Court of
as administrator of ea-
st ate Francis
notice is hereby given to the creditors
of said estate lo present their claims
duly ed. to me for payment
on or before the 80th of September,
or notice will be plead in bar
of their All persona indebted
to Bald estate are requested to make
mediate payment thus save cost
expense.
This tin day of September
JOHN H. MANNING,
of W, F. Manning,
Jarvis Blow. Attorneys.
Notice to Creditors
The undersigned having duly quails
the Superior Court Clerk of
Pitt county as Executor of the Last
Will and Testament of
ard, deceased, notice is hereby given to
all persons to the to
make immediate payment to the under-
signed, and all persons having claims
said estate must the
same for payment on or before the 24th
day of October, 1897. or this notice will
be plead iii bar of recovery.
This 24th day
A.
of James
portions of the lines, and
gradually worked up by
speed until it is its
place on tho line of the great
To train a locomotive
takes about two weeks
majority.
Hartford, tot Black Porter Griffin
Bryan, 1.136, Palmer, M
towns Harrison Oregon by a small
New York and Kings counties Perkins, majority ;
The arc in co
about majority, it
the count to determine
what the actual majorities are.
Today is but 24-hours long, but
yesterday
It makes a man tired to have
somebody him.
In Holland thieves are
given three at bard labor-
Many of um are in life,
bat the hired girl lives all her
Men in prison could give some
good advice if they felt free to do
so. have inside facts.
Young people should remember
that too late hops means an
early bier.
I beseech you as men who have
the courage of honest convictions,
to enter your solemn protest, to that
Cheap threat-
ens ix overthrow American
and disaster to the great
interest of the country. It is a
lack of courage to passively acquiesce
in an hour of such peril, but to vote the
Honest Convictions of your best
the and
most sacred privilege by the
Cons to every American citizen.
call on you to let no sickly sentiment
of majority influence you in the dis-
charge of this one great privilege, but
as brave men exercise courage of
your convictions. ISAAC A
Elector. National Democratic Party
First District.
N 1896.
Notice.
The Tax Lists for the county Pit
for the year 1696 been placed in my
bands for collection. Ad owing
taxes are hereby notified to come for-
ward and settle promptly and save
trouble and cos .
K, W. NO,
Have opened up a new
ad large stock
STOVES, TINWARE
BICYCLES, Ac, in
the store next
door to j. c. and
Son
call on us everybody
we are selling goods
very cheap
Respectfully,
you Are tho bent qualities y
in and sec our new stock
Is the lowest price any object to yon
inducements If so come and see our new stock
which we have just received. Oar store is
full of New Goods and pi ices
never lower-
To the
ladies we extend invitation t examine our of
Dress Goods
Trimmings
We have a beautiful and up-to-date You will Had the
styles and we know we please you. lovely, how
beautiful, the prettiest I have ever is what our friend
say of We have a large both colors and and
can please yon.
In and Gents FOB
GOODS we have a
Mini line.
In CLOTH for Wraps
have what want
and Boys PANTS
GOODS we have the best
stock to he found prices were
never lower.
WOOD and WILLOW
HARNESS ii COLLARS.
TRUNKS, GROCERIES,
PROVISIONS. FURNITURE,
CHILDREN'S CARRIAGES,
CARPETS, CARPET PAPER,
RUGS, LACK CURTAINS.
OUR LAIN POLES,
and any yon need for your
-elf and family come to see us.
shoes v. e
or to buy Mich as Will please the
the pi ices Shoes are
much lower last season. Give
us a trial when you Shoes
for or any member of
family. We tit the small-
est or largest foot in the county.
L M Reynolds A; Shoes
for Men and Boys are warranted
to give good service. We have
Our object is to sell
goods at the lowest pi ices.
We have a of
FURNITURE
give yon anything j
may need at tho lowest prices
ever heard of. and e
112.60 Solid Oak Bedroom Bails,
To pass us by would tin
baa biz years experience with injustice to pocket
this hue and know them to all e
we claim for th-m. gay oar goods
prices make it so Hero is a
fair If we deceive
HARDWARE. GUNS, us nothing,
you our goods and prices sat
GUN IMPLEMENTS, acknowledge it with
LOADED SHELLS, CROCK- your patronage. Hoping to see
GLASSWARE, HALL n
. T tr make your coming
LAMPS, j. w, we are
LAMPS,
FIXTURES,
J. B. CHERRY CO.
ft
I z i
Ill
Ii
c-o
Z P
S O A i
c s.-;
o s.
-1
-S
a -i X s
O m
s e
B, f. b p
Elf
o-
rs
B g
o o
Ill
B- Z.
B g
I -I
I. c
Ml
s z
a o
CD
B Z.
s a
Zs
C I
5-
cs
s S
So,
B .
g X t
CO
ill
B-3
tr
CO
ti
-i
AND CAPES.
values in department
We've plumed ourselves tor the biggest
business eyer produced- by magnificent
money's-worth. The stock is in prune con.
The season has just buyer
is just back from the markets, where he
all the weaves that you are now wanting
Everything as fresh as the first breath of a rose
H. M.
i At





Frank
Wilson
WHO'S ELECTED P
Local Reflections.
Mens and Boys
WINTER
CLOTHING.
November.
Eleventh
J. C sell goods cheap.
is drug on the market
Tie little child of B. T. Bailey
sick.
Greenville is lull folks and
the circus.
Grass widows make hay while the
s in shines.
Fresh Better
at S. M. Schultz.
at S. M
Dying by who
lowed a tape measure.
Fresh Mountain Batter, -0
per at S. M. Shalt.
No, Wiley, people are not sent
Slug voice culture.
The man who has been in
Deader w in a
sheriff.
am no bell on de bun
my a brother
am no reason fur
neck.
coot
Mat
a chicken's
These People Are Whether Anyone
Else is or Not.
Cant G. J. of Washington,
is here.
Ur. L. of Raleigh, is in
town.
C. M. Bernard returned Lime Fri-
day evening.
Lula White is visiting
in Washington.
J. W. Wiggins returned from
Mount Monday evening.
j. J. Cherry cane down
Monday
Gwynn returned from
Mount Friday evening.
Charlie Hams, of spent
Sunday with here.
J. W. left this
Monday morning Littleton.
Mrs. C. D. Rountree returned this
Monday morning
K. M. returned from
Washington Toe. day evening.
J A. of Raleigh, is greeting
his many friends here.
Mrs, A. is
visiting her son, I.,
the
Mr Sylvester Boyd and
A. buck, both or
came to Greenville Friday as two people
but returned home us one. A visit in
their b-half was made to the Register
Deeds a marriage license pro-
cured. Th-y then went to the store of
H. C. Hooker where by the aid of R.
Williams, Esq., they were made man
and wife. Henry Hooker was best man.
Bernard Greene, bearing a bunch of
feathers, as flower girl and
Simon Congleton gave the wedding
march on the stove pipe. The reporter
up in time to see Bernard
pass the bride a bottle of cologne as he
expressed his best wishes for a long and
nappy life. After supplying themselves
with articles to begin life together
they as as two in
spring time.
A Wonderful Kind of Cotton
Han ., Am
Money Fa t.
Finn to
.- l will enable
Atlanta, received from African you to make from to a day at
two or three years ago some and pleasant work Come to see
STORE BROKEN INTO
and
Lee. won
looker's
races
mount lair Wednesday.
horse, Mary
R. L. Smith returned from
Rocky Mount fair Friday evening.
Miss Lizzie Blow returned home
And People are Wondering
the Watchman Was.
Where
Friday
Ail in and the Assort-
is greater than
ever. The price
has been greatly
and
the
is just
the
same All colors,
and makes select
from Give me a trial,
will be satisfied
The. Greenville Driving Association
have postponed t date tor their next
races to
Sportsmen can start out after birds
We bet Bub brings
down the first partridge.
Succotash, just what oil
Soups, at . S.
A Mrs. Hopkins
Dry Goods,
NOTIONS,
GENTS FURNISHINGS
HATS.
in abundance and
will suit you in price.
Don't forget me
when
want goods
Frank
A number
. me the Christina h
at 1-
son's New is
now delivered to subscribers
Others. Every business man the
State should us it. Price 13.00, order
of hew Raleigh, C
Something a v in season,
Oat at
S. M.
e the and am of
J. s. six miles below
were destroyed by fire Wednesday night
Particulars i-f the lire and extent of
could not learned up to the
going to press,
Mrs. W, A. Fleming, of is
visiting Mrs. Andrew
Allen Warren is in on
for Nurseries.
W M. returned Friday
from the Federal court at New.
Mrs. T. J. Jarvis returned home
Wednesday evening the Western
part of stale.
Mrs. M, Edward,
who have been visiting relatives here,
returned home.
Mrs. M. of Kinston
who has lief re-
turned home Monday evening.
K. K. Tunstall, of Greene count-,
has taken a position here with his
brother, S. Tunstall
Mrs. J. It. Cherry reached home
evening from N. x.
she been several weeks.
On Thursday night some ope en-
the hardware store of D. D.
Haskett and stole a quantity of goods.
The thief an by
open shutters to one of the
rear windows and breaking a glass so
as to remove the inner fastenings.
With a hammer and file the money I
drawer was broken
. and what
money had been left in the drawer
the evening before, about in small
change, was taken. The thief went
through the show cases and took a
dozen or so of pocket knives, razors
and some other cutlery, and a
axes are missing. A lot of door
keys kept in a box in one of the show
cases were scattered about as if the
thief had picked over to get ill
as he a bunch
and lock keys were also missing
Mi. cannot how much his
loss and doubtless never knew,
but so tar be has missed about
worth of goods.
Next morning after the robbery a
bed straw was found under a counter
in one the store of
ahem, going on, and by thin
bed was an empty whiskey flask a
cotton of a kind which the ex-
said, grew to the height of
feet, an average stalk bearing
sixty-five bolls of cotton as line and long
as that of the Sea Islands. Jackson
planted the seeds and they did all that
had been promised. He repeated the
operation and now has eighteen bushels
of seed with which to begin cultivation
season on a large scale.
the planters of Southern Georgia
heard of his experiment, and it the At-
correspondent the Baltimore
American is to bi they have
offered Jackson if he
give them all the seed in his n
and let them destroy it. They fear, it
alleged, increased over production
and still low prices if the variety
conies into general
York rimes.
me to see
me and I will tell you how it can be
done. November 12th, 13th and
I shall be at the King House, Green-
ville, N. C. G. W.
Gen. Agent Imp. Pub. Co.
How's This Prices.
Win. sold on the floor of
Warehouse, Tuesday,
October 27th, the following lots of to-
and we challenge the Suite to
heat it.
The cry Row
a back seat until the next campaign,
Two Flour, ear H, Dry
Goods and Shoes at J, C, Son's
There a time when the pool
man, a well as the rich nun, can pass
in their checks.
reaping blade, the latter b.
among
Establish a; u
Ml
Off
1896. Fail Winter 1896
C. T
CLOTHING
the lead and the price is no
Come and see me.
are out of sight in style and color and below
par in price.
Every thing cheap.
crop on
An average
our
see it will he to your interest to
carry your tobacco to the
Warehouse, where Forbes S
guarantee to get you the highest mark-
et prices every time.
Merit
On Sin day Fred
married couple. The
parties were Mi. K. T. Goodrich and
Miss Mollie Move. No use of the old
folks objecting the young folks
make up their Blinds to get married.
Noah the man to advertise-
lie advertised the Hood, and it came
through all right. The fellows who
laughed at the got drowned,
and it served them us right. Ever
since Joan's time advertiser
been prospering, while the other fellow
has been swallowed up in flood of
Advertising.
Now For
Winter Cabbage Early Jet-
Id. Charleston
Hyacinths, Tulips, Narcissus,
Fruit
plants, free.
it Son,
Greenville, N. C.
J. II.
Airy, a former pastor of the Baptist
church here, has accepted a call to
Lexington.
S. J. Mason arrived home Tuesday
evening where he through and picked
has been taking if business and short
course.
the articles taken front Mr. Q Merit the H
This leads to the Intrinsic value of M
. C
J. ll- ho the past
year at hi old home this county,
left Monday to return to Montana, lie
the West.
Mr. W. W Little, of
Wednesday night, lie was about
years old and among the men
the count, lie several
week-.
J. A. Andrews and bride -Miss
Maud Moo returned Monday even-
from Washington City. They
make the King House
after committing the robbery the
fixed this straw bed and took a nap be-
fore going off with his plunder,
The goods, gone
taken and he
had a light. It locks like the
night watchman must not have been
his duty or he certainly
could have found out that the robbery
was on.
Merit in medicine means the power to
their year's supplies will possesses actual
MARRIED.
the home
Died.
The is pained to
of the death of Mrs. W. S. Fleming
which occurred Friday afternoon at her
home, about two miles from Greenville
She leaves a husband and four small
children who have our
Sad Accident.
At Thursday a son
of Dr. was playing on a pile
cotton seed in the gin-house. The lit-
fellow dug a well in the pile seed
in which he tell head first and was
He had been some
time before the sad discovery was
made.
All For
Morris Meyer thought lie would suit
all sides, so laid in a supply of Bryan
and cigarettes. The
is that the Bryan sUck was rapidly
sold cut, while the stack is
left on hand. This shows which way
the smoke
New Houses.
Mrs. A. Griffin is having lumber
handed to another cottage in
C. is also
building in and T. A.
math of the town limits-
Workmen have commenced on W
ii. Brown's house, comer of
and Fourth streets.
The building removed from the
opposite Dr. W. M. Brown's has
been placed on the corner lot at Co-
and Third streets and is being
up for a dwelling.
The town of has pasted
an prohibiting dealing in
or under a penalty
of dollars fine. The city of
ville has passed an ordinance prohibit-
any person from expectorating on
the In
an of the towns northeastern
part of the State it a misdemeanor to
around a railroad
you have specific business there.
And In Charlotte It is unlawful for a
man to have his boots blacked on a
street after ten o'clock Sunday
Nows.
the bride a few miles from Scotland
Neck, Oct. 21st, Miss Ella House
married to Mr. W. J. Briley, of Pitt
county. The bride is v ell known here
and her going will be a loss to the com-
but Halifax's loss will be Pitt
county's gain, and The. Commonwealth
congratulates the happy groom
joins the many friends of both in wish-
in l hem great success and much hap-
Neck Common-
wealth.
at the home of Mr. A. J. Out-
set en miles from Mr.
J. A. Andrews and Miss Maud E.
were married by Rev. J. W.
The couple took the
train at House for Washington City to
a few days there. a
of from town went out to
attend the marriage. Mr. Andrews
one of I be most popular and prosperous
merchants of Greenville, and his bride
is one of Pitt's most charming young
women. They received a number of
very handsome bridal presents.
o'clock
this afternoon, at the home of the bride
just west of Greenville, Mr.
of and Miss Jennie
lid were married by Rev. D. W.
Davis. Immediately after the ceremony
the couple left for the home of the
groom at Grimesland.
To both these couples Rev tor
extends best wishes.
beau-
wedding took place at the residence
of the bride's father, Elder Fred
on Sunday, November 1st.
Mr. J. E. Hobgood and Miss Rosa E.
were married. Elder C.
L. Little, of the Free Will Baptist
officiated-
Sal Season.
Here is n sale the old Greenville
Warehouse made for Bowen Co b
at at
at at 10.75, at
at
at at
at ; an average all through f
Do you want to et prices like
that If so sell your tobacco at th
Greenville Warehouse.
Others have found health, vigor and
Vitality in Hood's Sarsaparilla, and It
surely power to help you also. Why
not try if.
i i.-, t our prices before
all its branches.
J i
TEA, Ac.
at Lowest
we buy direct
SOU to buy at profit. A com
stock of
FURNITURE
and sold at prices to suit
the t tun goods bought and
soil therefore, having no e V.
to sell at a close margin,
. M. i.
and curative power and there-
fore it has true merit. When you buy
Hood's Sarsaparilla, and take it according
to directions, to purify your blood, or
cure any of the many blood diseases, you
are morally certain to receive benefit.
The power to cure is there. You are not
trying an experiment. It will make your
blood pure, rich and nourishing, and thus
drive out the germs of disease, strengthen
the nerves and build up the whole system.
Sarsaparilla
Is the best In One True Blood Purifier.
Prepared only by C. I. Hood Co., Lowell, Mass.
Hood's Pills
Another Store Bobbed-
Sunday night about o'clock
one broke into the store of J. L Star-
by prizing open the shutter
to one the rear windows and
out part of the sash. As Mr.
was returning from with a friend
be concluded go the store and
some cigars, and us they went the
trout door the rushed out of the
rear window. It seems that this par-
thief was after fire-arms, as an
investigation disclosed that he had
taken about a dozen pistols and a lot
cartridge.
The thief might have other
goods also but for the unexpected
rival of Mr. Starkey which routed him.
We are authorized to say that a liberal
reward will be paid for evidence to con-
the thief.
MISS LIZA.
Going Ahead With.
The AN Tobacco Journal con-
the following of interest to
people i
I. N. G Co's factory,
was gutted by fire some weeks back,
has been restored and refitted, and this
well-known and enterprising firm is
prosecuting its business the old
time A satisfactory settlement
has been nude with the instance
all of the stock saved being
posed of at one of the Richmond sale
warehouses. J. N. Gorman Co,
make a fresh start and are in position to
give customers better service than ever
before.
i.
Miss Liza walk
You'll blue;
En goodness knows
De rose
Hit go long way, too,
Oh, Miss Liza.
Sweet as honeycomb,
Dar's always some one at de gate
Lisa, is you home
lime Miss Liza sing
You mocking
up en
de way
En try de words.
Miss
Sweet as honeycomb.
Dar's always one at the gate,
.-Miss Lisa, is you
Frank L.
LL
the gainer if you take advantage of the
low prices we are making from
Monday, the 26th inst., on before
to our new store.
Dress Goods
Trimmings.
Capes Jackets.
Carpets and
Matting.
Ladies and
Men Shoes.
Notion all kinds
All have
been marked
down.
Our stock embraces all
Stylish Effects and the
prices are sure to make
you HAPPY. Call and
let us show you that we
mean what we say.
LANG SELLS CHEAP.
Prices Be ow
Mens Split Boots, to
Good Boots, to
Boys Boots, to
Mens Plow Shoes,
Mens
W omens Good Shoes,
8.19
CHICAGO MEAT AND
W 8.00 3.95
yd
IS
5.00
Wool Dress Goods,
1.25 line of Serges, Cash-
1.00 mores and Flannel all
wool, double
1-00 pounds good
Whole Grain
Children Shoes, to English Island Molasses
Ladies to Salt, pounds,
Ladies Goat Button, to 1.00 Good Buggy Harness,
Children Boys Hats to 1.00 Furniture in
Mens and Boys Hats to 3-00 Good Patent Floor
Boys all-wool Suits Clothes Old Men, and Ladies
Mens all-wool Suits
2.50 to Largo stock Lard, Pork and
Overcoats to Sides always on
Highest cash prices paid
J. R DAVENPORT,
N. C September 22nd, 1896.
L. F. EVANS.
R- S. EVANS.
A. H. CRITCHER
EVANS CO., Props.
The old Greenville Warehouse is being en
and more lights added which makes i
the best lighted Warehouse in the State. With
plenty money and no pets, fair dealings and
hard work, we are going to sell Tobacco; as high
as any one. Give us a trial and we will show
you. Your friends,
EVANS Greenville, N. C.
FIVE POINTERS.
Ox
CD
o c o
s i o o
i H s . Sugar, C a. f cheap o o a CD
l-Z en o o
rt
TAR.
We Sell Goods Cheaper Than
Any Other House.
DRESS GOODS.
It gives us pleasure to announce that
we are now displaying the most extensive
and attractive stock of wool Dress Fabrics
ever imported by us. selected with the
most care as to desirability of weaver beauty
of effect and excellence of quality; the re-
has been to enable us to present a
variety of superior grade goods in a
truly wonderful assortment of the most
recent of wool and silk and wool
Handsome materials and fashionable
fabrics will be difficult to obtain this sea
sou, for the reason that importation are
much below particularly in
fine silks and dress fabrics, and the Amer-
manufacturers have been obliged to
their productions,
department of our business is
prepared to show the newest and
styles and colorings for tall
and winter, and we strongly recommend an
early examination of the various departs
RICKS TAFT;
The Money Savers,





BUSY VESUVIUS.
AN INDIAN POMPEII.
the of India, bat Now
Nothing sadder or more beautiful
exists in India than the
of There it
stands, some miles from Agra,
much as it stood years ago when
Akbar decreed the stately pleasure
It was built to
rate the blessing of the holy
the hermit, who dwelt
among the wild boasts in his cave
at and who had foretold that
Akbar's son, horn on that spot,
should live to succeed him on the
splendid throne. The saint did not
foresee that the infant would grow
up into that unmitigated debauchee
whose orgies amazed Sir
Thomas Roe, and potent
liquor caused that virtuous
to incontinently, to the
delight of the whole court. But the
toper did not defile his fa-
palace city, which must have
been deserted soon after its found-
death, for when William Finch
visited in 1610 he it
lying like a waste district very
dangerous to pass through at night
it has remained ever since,
i desolate and abandoned. No later
cooled off crater. Of late they have . ,. ,, . . a.--a
., . , . J, ., . ruler of India has ever dared to
gone mode the boundaries of the
old crater to get a good look at the
new cone, from the summit
which, at intervals of a
there is a gust of steam, laden with
red hot ashes, which are sent into j
the air feet or more. Before the
of tent An the
Ur. Height.
Year after year and after
Vesuvius puffs away. The
first recorded eruption of Vesuvius
was in A. D., when Pompeii and
Herculaneum were overwhelmed.
Between th first and sixth centuries
nine eruptions recorded, and
since that epoch there have been
great ones
last destructive eruption ma
on April 1872, when about
sightseers were killed and more than
people fled from Naples. Of
the present condition of the ominous
the Paris
is feet higher than it was
nine months ago. constant
showers of porous lava have filled in
one side of tho old hollow crater
and have up the new cone,
which, from its bold outlines, has
greatly changed the appearance of
the summit and is still changing it
lightly day. Formerly the
volcano, as seen from Naples, had a
rounded top, but now it comes to a
wedge point
A year ago visitors looked into the
hollow of the old and somewhat
steam drifted away is an-
other rumble, sound of watery ex-
and another shower of ashes.
Thus from a distance in the day-
time there seems to be a constant
curl of white vapor from the sum-
but at night each separate
eruption throws up a vivid light,
which then fades away in a dull
glow.
The natives who live on tho slope
of the mountain say that after the
new cone has been built somewhat
higher it will fall in of its own
weight and close tho present breath-
hole. tho mountain will
a tip bottle. A new
Tent will have to be made, and in
tho making of this vent will
a fierce eruption, an overflow of
lava and formation of a new
crater.
There was, indeed, a general be-
lief that tho renewed and growing
activity of volcano would lead
to some sort of eruption, but it was
hoped that it would be nothing more
serious than a flow of lava down
over the old and hardened beds. The
last outbreak and flow toward
in the direction of the buried
of Herculaneum, was, there-
fore, not unexpected.
The cone is simply a heap of
cinders dignified by size. The
to the foot of tho cone consumes five
hours, but it requires only ten min-
to reach tho top of the funicular
railway. Then there is a walk of ten
Akbar's Versailles, just as no
of India has over climbed to the
heights of Akbar's genius. In the
empty palaces, the wonderful
mosque, the sacred tomb, tho baths,
tho every turn recognize
some memory of the greatest of In-
emperors. We may oven en-
his or
of -and see the very
of beautiful tracery,
the very Persian couplets, tho
decoration in gold and ultra-
upon which Akbar feasted
his eyes during the long sultry aft-
cf tho Indian plains. We
may walk into the houses of
and tho laureate and the
premier of his empire, who sang his
glory and chronicled his reign. We
may see that strange building, the
with its pillar
throne and odd galleries, which some
have sought to identify with the
famous hall where metaphysical de-
bates took place Friday night
under tho emperor's personal
and philosopher and
orthodox and skeptic, did
battle for their creeds or
till they ended, long after the
by bandying and
to the disgust of an
willing austere Ba-
The associations of
of are not its only
claims to our interest and respect
Its beauty in desolation excited the
poetic imagination of and
stirred the critical enthusiasm of
who says of tho
which still over-
looks the court where
i bar is fabled to have played his
I games of living chess, that it
up edges of the -We anything SO
huge crater to bowl, and in this I or any building
I richly and carved
without tho least exaggeration or
bad taste. is the
celebrated shrine cf St. Salim
ti, built in with its pure white
Is the little thrown up by the
Inter
Ocean.
and Huxley.
Like Huxley, his English
type, was also an admirable
lecturer. never allowed the
opportunity of a pun to escape him,
and his were at times
hardly more elegant than they were
appropriate, but, for all that, he was
very and equally so with
tho few women students of his class
as with the men. Ho spoke in
French with a decided German in-
frequently relieving him-
self of a sigh brought about by an
uncomfortably condition.
His powerful bodily frame,
shortened through a
generous development of tissue
about tho equatorial region, was in
marked contrast to the tall and
nearly upright of Professor
whose slightly stooping
head and shoulders reduced some-
what what might have
been considered a more than average
height. Huxley never entered the
marble cenotaph, its rod sandstone
dome and its veranda by
delicately pierced of fair
marble, like fine lace set in
And for grandeur what can compare
to the stately
of tho mosque which
crowns the and
tho historian of architecture cites a.-
beyond portal in India,
perhaps in the whole
The Poor Poet.
return of contributions will
be if a stamped envelope
is read the poet sardonic-
ally from the printed slip which ac-
companied his rejected manuscript.
Scott Who wants to
their return I'm sure mine
couldn't come back any faster than
they do if I had a private carrier
pigeon And he gloomily
tucked the five sonnets, the ballade
class lecture room except in a dress and the into a fresh
in which he was immediately and them on nine-
pared to go to tho street; rare-
appeared without a coat which did
not in or more places show
signs of underlying shirt sleeves.
Popular Science Monthly.
The Fate of Menage
We weighed anchor on Oct.
and when close to the south shore
sent off two boats in of seals.
On this occasion one of the boats,
being swamped in the surf, was
mediately crushed against the rocks,
its crew having a rather narrow es-
cape from drowning. One of the
men fought bravely in the breakers
for half an hour, without relinquish-
bis grasp on bis rifle.
With scrupulous care we now
composed a letter upon which each
of us carefully inscribed his
Having placed it in a small
bladder which had been given to us
for the purpose by Norwegian
Consul in Melbourne, consigned
It to waves and leaned over
bulwarks to see tho mail depart.
Much to our chagrin, a large alba-
hove in sight, and before our
had gone many yards the
huge bird gobbled it up First
Landing on Antarctic
by C. E. in
Century.
Two girl friends met on the street
and stopped to hands.
glad to see you, said
the tailor made Alice. just on
my way to ask you, as my oldest
friend, to be one of my brides,
How lovely I did
not know you were re-
plied tho fin de Grace.
sudden, very sudden, but
he's awfully in love and is just too
lovely to live. Will you
Of course.
moving forward and speaking
in an undertone, come round
the corner and tell me all about it
There comes that idiotic,
donkey, Jim Berton. He's grin-
as though he meant to stop,
and I don't care to be seen talking
to
Berton the man I'm
to
round Nov.- York
a Ml k.
Perhaps among tho manifold con-
to tho commissariat of
London that of milk asserts itself
most loudly. there is
rumbling transfer at railway
of those truncated tin cones
containing it which have arrived by
night trains from the country into
carts, whose jangling
cans add to the rattle they make as
drive furiously to the various
where it is distributed by
thick soled, white aproned women,
who, in filling the household jug,
also leave a of it on the door-
libation resented by tidy
mistresses. Tho noise of its arrival
before the London milkmaid fills her
pail might well lead one to wish that
its transporting carts were fitted
with tires. No other
makes such a seemingly need-
less row in going about its business.
But every Londoner must have his
supply of milk betimes, and in this
respect the poor townsman is better
off than bis mate in the country.
There a peasant, daily working in
the midst of cow pastured fields, is
often unable to get a jug of it for bis
family. It is sent away to the city,
in whose meanest streets the house-
wife can always buy a
em.
The egg of the ant is uniform,
smooth, tight and bright, without
any division. When the larva has
come from it, only a very thin
membrane is left, which rolls up
and is reduced to an imperceptible
point, and even if the egg does not
hatch it is so small as to escape
the eyes. This is why these eggs
are so known, for what is com-
and improperly called the
egg is really the larva and is endow-
ed with life and motion.
or rather these larvae, of ants are
very much sought after by barnyard
Monthly.
A shoemaker was fitting a
with a pair of boots when the
buyer that he had but one
objection to them, which was that
the soles wore too thick. that
is replied on the
boots, and the objection will grad-
MATTER OF FACT ANTS.
la With Them, and They
Intelligence.
T. T. of this who
recently returned from tho
railway survey through
Central and Sooth says one
of the most interesting things to be
seen In the tropics is the leaf carry-
ant.
leaf carrying ant is peculiar
to tropical America. The two species
occupy different They are
never tho same roadways,
and they always enter different
boles, but these ants arc such great
burro that one not say
positively that tho do
not communicate with each other
under ground. holes do not
cross, and there is no communication
between holes above ground. As
an experiment, members of col-
were transferred by band to the
of another. There was no con-
Tho strangers merely
baste to get away.
continued Mr.
Lovelace, the habits,
save that the rod fellows are the
most industrious. Tho black ones
ways in tho heat
of the afternoon, while the reel
struggled along all day, although
there fewer workers to be seen
in tho paths between and
o'clock. There being no trees on
Moro island to supply leaves for the
nuts, gathered hay instead. A
grass that grew close to the earth
and produced short seed stalks was
tassel. Tho seed heads
were just peeping out from their in-
folding leaves when I was there, and
heads of seed tho favor-
harvest.
saw half inch ants carrying
seed stalks an inch long and of twice
the weight of the carrier. They also
cut off the grass leaves and carried
in, moist crumbs
bread and vegetables cut op
and carried also. Very dry crumbs
were ignored. I did not see them
carry meat of any kind, and when I
put a piece of freshly killed grass-
hopper in their path refused
it. But certain bits of damp,
rotten wood carried into the
nests as quickly as soft bread.
peon who came to see what
found of interest in the work-
dropped a flaming wax match
among them. They did not seem
see it, for they rushed into the flame
as they would have crossed a bit of
paper. A number I anted to
death, many of them wore
crippled before tho was
Tho dead and the crippled
remained in tho path perhaps
minutes at a spot five feet from the
nest entrance. Then came a gang
workers from nest, who picked
tho dead and tho crippled and
carried them several inches away in
to tho grass at right to the
path. Tho wounded were left
tended, as were the dead. The work-
then attacked the extinguished
match taper. It was nearly an inch
long, and a dozen took
hold of it, pulled it in all directions
at once, rolled it and another
over, stood on their heads and crawl-
ed under it, the leaf carriers
streamed by and over them,
heedless of their presence
It was a case of wholly undirected
labor, for any two, possibly any one,
have dragged it from the path,
bat it took tho dozen minutes
tumble it across two inches of th
path.
in an
cold me that the loaf cutting
to blame much of tho laziness of
tho natives, who do not try to make
gardens or cultivate fruit trees
cause destroy everything
that kind. However, tho American
the problem of keeping these
ants away from his garden by dig-
a ditch around it and keeping
water running through it, an effect
City Star.
Poor
A is not a happy
one. While the self satisfied con-
is chinking the coin in his
jangling tho register,
the bell cord or blithely
street names, the motor-
man is silently grinding out his life
at the brake, his mind strung to its
utmost tension, and his hands and
arms never for a moment idle. Yet
he's the one to blamed whenever
an accident happens, without a
thought being given to the many
calamities i have been avoided
through his alertness and
A Bird Catching Insect.
In this country talk of
or insect eating birds, and
few of us ever heard or read of
a country where tho tables are turn-
ed to such a that they speak
of a bird eating insect, but that is
the exact condition of affairs in
southern Brazil and Venezuela.
those countries have an intact
called the great mantis, which is
some four or five inches in length,
not including his strong jaws and
immense fore legs.
This pair of enormous
are equal in strength to those of a
or a crab and are used by
the giant mantis in capturing it
prey. The food of this
insect consists of spiders,
small snakes and lizards, and,
according to the most
robust specimens of the genus will
not stand aside with an empty
if he can manage to got bis nip.
on a bird of size of a canary
warbler or chickadee. The great-
mantis resembles a combined leaf
and twig both in color and snap
and being aided by this resemblance
is able to stealthily approach its
prey, whether it be reptile, insect
or bird, and the unsuspecting
creature with its claws.
St Louis Republic.
Of what consequence is it that
anything should be concealed from
man Nothing is hidden from God;
be is present in our minds and
into the midst of our thoughts.
Comes, do I say As if ho wore ever
Yard was once any stick, rod or
polo. The expression is still used
with this meaning applied to
various parts of a ship's equipment
as and the like
Mr.
It soon became a habit to watch I
for the familiar carriage and
to Mrs. for a visit
or to go with her for a drive. She
often came to me on Sunday after-
One wot and dreary day I i
was sitting alone when the bell
rang. I gladly ran to answer it and
saw a strange standing
but looking beyond him I saw
the dear face smiling the
window. I was eagerly
dashing forward, but was
waved back, with orders to get
ray bonnet and come out. Mr.
George was our companion,
and in spite of tho wind and rain
were all very bright and merry,
Mrs. taking my band and
holding it in hers for a great part of
the time.
Tho day she and Miss
came I had seen Punch's
on its cover wore like-
of all the principal
very and funny,
with absurd doggerel couplets de-
scribing them. Among I spied
and together. Car-
was in full Scotch costume.
In one bond ho carried a child's
and pail, and with the other
ho was throwing pens and ink over
his shoulder, and tho lines were
Carlyle, finished alto-
U off to to upend the
Oh, how she laughed, and how de-
lighted she was first time
Punch has taken any notice of
said. Another time Mrs. Carlyle
is something in tho car-
for you. Run and I
found a largo blue china plate,
still happily in my possession.
Black wood's
I K. K
V-l
-i.
J .
a K
Pills
Cure All
Liver Ills.
. . Wilson r no Oft i
v r. J
II
v. M
I . a
. ti
. .
. lo
AND ITS
To Editor have an absolute
remedy for Consumption. By its timely use ;
thousands of hopeless cases have been already i
permanently cured. So proof-positive am i
of its power that I consider it my duty to I
send free to those of your read.-rs , ,
who have Bronchial or Bilious and I I-
Lung if they will write me , . . , . , , ,,
express and address. Sincerely, Which prevail in
arc invariably
s j by derangements of the
Stomach Liver and Bowels.
The Secret of Health.
The liver is the great
a.
US I
VT w,
N. .
t in ell Ion
H . V
i . i
in the mechanism of ;,
man, and when it is out of
the whole system becomes de-
ranged and disease is the t.
Liver Pits
Cure all Liver Troubles.
Haled
SO,
i;.
Galloway,
Snow Hill. V-
B.
i i N-
V.
LA. M. p. M
Hi
. AM ft
SB
A Keen
Waterfowl need to toll some
good stories of experience as an
Irish magistrate. Ono of re-
to tho case of a whom
ho had to for a breach of
tho peace Ho let her off on
that found two securities
of each that she would keep the
peace for six months.
ye, said she,
moving toward tho door.
said Lord
must name your securities
that I may see whether they are sat-
and who would I
she your lordship's
good enough for a
retort which not only showed the
sprightliness of the character,
but in addition tho feeling of friend-
confidence which tho Irish peas-
who know him cherished for
the Lord of
son's Weekly.
Too skin of a rattlesnake exhibit-
ed Jefferson, Ga., inches in
length and has rattles attached.
of
Mother of hard,
very, brilliant which
forms the internal layers of several
kinds of shells. The interior of our
common oyster shells is of this
but the mother of pearl used in
the arts is much more variegated
with a play of colors. Tho largo
shells cf the Indian Bean have
this pearly of
thickness to o
V Tarboro
A.
Practice in tin- s
f H. L.
ill
Wilson
Ar
L Ml
Ar Weld ii
C a
SC-
P. II.
I a
II
ll
is
I for stock, well a-
k man, and for that purpose Bold in tin
; cans, holding one-hail
, cine -5 eels.
Lambert. Franklin Co., Ten a.,
March
i have used all kinds of medicine, but
I w not out- package Bin- k
u the ever .-;.
Ii is iii- best t iv horses or cuttle
of the year, end will cure
ch time.
-------A fresh i f------
Family
Neck at p
------Cons
Notice to Creditors.
this day duly
qua I Ii l Coir
Administrator
t ill I de
notice i- Riven
in estate to make
e am . d,
v. against
estate for
twelve flow
ii or this will plead In
of n c
X i- h October, 1890.
D. J. I POUT.
of Davenport,
Administrators Notice.
Having according n
of Brown
lute Put County mid Stale of North
Carolina, ail parties having claims
are lo
them me for i lit
from the of 110-
, , ii will pie in bar f r
And ail to
ii i- ate are to m
n x ii Hie
I in 1- I
Cox,
land
By virtue f a of the
of I'll In i
and r. II.
T. K. Din.
It- w. 1- the
I will i-u l fore
the court In on
Monday, 2nd day of Nov. is
to- real el
t part lot in lb
town of upon which the
Mere J by Mrs. K. U.
Borne, now by M. B.
now mis, th old
formerly icing
ii- Hi n h f of s i I lot.
I of ha No In
own -f Greenville upon will h he
it.- pied by Mia. M D.
II
It, in m stands, b
hall of Id I t,
Thai i in ck of land Iv .
in in- n joining
lands of Ins, Men. I
and and kn n the
containing acre
more in-
Said K for division.
This i I. ISM.
i .
Flour,
Meat,
costs cotton planters more
than five million dollars an-
This is an enormous
waste, and can be prevented.
Practical experiments at Ala-
Experiment Station show
conclusively that the use of
will prevent that dreaded plant
disease.
All remits of in w by dual n
pertinent on best farm. In the United
told la a little book which we publish and will gladly
to any in America who will write for it.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
St., New York,
on SC M k
eaves Weldon i.
arrives p
p, .
p. m. Returning, 7.1
a. m., Greenville 8.28 m. I
H at a. m., .
Trains on
Washington 8.00 a, ., and p . m.
a. m. and p. ll.
m., Tarboro a. m.,
Tarboro 3.80 p. m., a. in.
p. arrives
11.50 a. m., and 7.10 p. m. i-x-
Sunday. trains on
c I ml he
Tram leaves tan C, via Ale-
A It. i-i. daily
at p. DU M;
Plymouth 8.00 P. M., p. in.
8.00 a. Mind a m.,
10.26 and
Train on Midland N. C, branch leaves
daily, except Sunday, a
m. arriving SO u. m.
leaves S a. m.,
rives at t-30 a. m.
in N n i iv
Mount at p. m,. arrive
Nashville p. Spring Hope 5.40
p. ave Hope
a. m., Nash a m, at
Mount m.
Trains on Latta branch, Florence R
leave p m, I
in, Clio p in.
save a m. a m,
7.50 a in. daily
Train leaves War-
f.-r except
8.80 p,
in. i,.
close connection
points all rail
n. s
Lard,
Coffee
H-
Ac,
Belling B low
that it
surprise,
will
at yon fair
and
v , -v -W-i
FOB
Will open
Oct. Soda t I s.
ion St ears of N i 1-
limited to
Mrs. A. L.
P. O Nelson C
IS AS GOOD LI C,
WARRANTED. PRICE ere.
Ii i. .,
v-i- Mn.
mM lost
TA TONIC mid
this year.
poi -I H the ti
u it tr ,
till SB SI
All
m stow
nip
G X C
His Worst Enemy Defeated by
P. P. P.,
Great Remedy.
at druggists.
curt -i.----.
cure dyspepsia.
D RELIABLE.
--------IS STILL AT THE FRONT WITH A
TEARS EXPERIENCE has taught me that best is the
Hemp Building Pumps, r every
ting necessary for Millers, and general purposes, as a
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress I have on hand. Am head
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing agent for Clark's O. N. T,
Cotton, and keep courteous and clerks.
C . C.
T. J. in C .
CO.
AND
Stock, Cotton, Grain and Provision Brokers.
Offices an Progress Water Street.
Bagging, Ties Peanut Sacks at Lowest Prices.
and Consignments Solicit
All editions Codes used telegraphing.
J, L. SUGG.
Fire and Mot Insurance.
GREENVILLE, K. C.
ICE AT THE
All Risks placed in strictly
ASS COMPANIES
At lo current rates.
M AGENT FOE FIRE PROOF
dealers in all
kinds
m m
PI E a r V
All kind if done
We labor mil
material and
Ai
N-0
and Iron Fencing
I . a work
pi-ices c
w ill
P i
we Iron i
Wins you to it one profit. CO
plate stock of
FURNITURE
Obi I- a
tor CASH
to r sell
j. l. .- N
THE MOBBING STAR
Daily of
its Class State.
Favors Limited Ewe
of American Silver and Repeal
of the Ten Per Gent. Tax on
Banks.
per month. per
j, BERNARD
HITTER SERVICE
Steamers f
villa Tarboro touch at all inn
lust- on we In
and at rt A. M.
Ht A. M.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and
i JO A. M. same
of waif r on Tar
at Washington
steamers Norfolk, Baltimore,
Philadelphia. Ne York and Bo-ton.
Shippers should
via Dominion n
Sock.
Nor
Baltimore Steamboat
from Baltimore, Miners
Boston.
Agent,
n ,
J. J. A-rent.
X-
Wanted-An Idea
ran think
or tome
to
Idea.; may wealth.
Write JOHN CO.,
Washington. D.
and ct two hundred
cure torpid liver-
for sour stomach.
The modern stand-
ard Family
cine Cures the
common every-day
ills of humanity.
I ME
AT M
NOSTRIL CLOSED FOR
Mr. A. M. of Texas
j's a
Truly, his of
In
of conch. for
coming, he went to It with terror.
another lone;, weary, wake
fill a to breathe was
In-fore him. lie not sleep on either
for two fears. P. P. P.,
In quick time.
I have used nearly four-
of P. r. was from the crown
of my head to tho of my feet. Your
T. r. has cured my of breath-
Ilia. of heart,
and has me of all pain. One nos-
was closed for ten years, but now
can breathe
have not on either aide for
In fact, I dreaded lo see
WOW I sleep soundly In any nil
night.
I am old. but Boon
he lo take hold of the
I feel that I lucky t
P. I. I., find I l
lay the generally.
Yours respect fully.
A. M.
or County of
the
on this day,
A. being duly
nay on that the foregoing
made him relative to tic
virtue of P. medicine
A. M.
Sworn t-i before me
J M. N. P.
Texan
Catarrh Cured by P. P. P.
Croat where nil other
twists your
and Ir
lint relief and a i
is trained by the of p. p. p.
Woman's weakness, whether nervous or
otherwise, ma be the
built by P. P. P. A healthy woman
a If woman.
Pimples, blotches, and nil dis-
of the are and
cured by P. I. I.
P. T. T. build
up your system and you In every
way. P. P. P. removed that heavy, down
the-mouth feeling.
For and Pimples on face,
take P. P P.
for natural and thorough
take P. P. P. Great
Remedy, and pet well at once.
SOLD BY ALL
BROTHERS, APOTHECARIES,
Block.
For by
Caveats, and TradeMarks obtained and all Pat-
for
C- is. u. s.
patent i lets
from
Send model, drawing or photo.,
tin. We it or m t, e
Our fee not due till
A with
cost lame the U. b. f
sent free. A s
a Ore. Office, D. O.
Tho of
on
SEPT. 1896.
ii for months.
The are a
Primary f per
Tn work
Will as
We ask a past
Ural
W. II.


Title
Eastern reflector, 4 November 1896
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
November 04, 1896
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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