Eastern reflector, 2 December 1896






JOB PRINTING.
Ike pro-
pared to do all wont
of
NEATLY,
of
rial and the best
of Stationery.
ASTERN
.
people i
a the A Lit
;. . HUM
pi i . .
. .
t., Of this
ration up
a i in t South
la k a i prove
to this
Ml
BO
. . Hi om-
t .
. . .
it to the best
i i work I I i
of it resources and
t . of
The i Air Line has
riven J i
So . Ir . e in
t i t. better and
bro v i . material
-.-
. pa t
ye ITS, i- I
Us a of I n i. v
; roads nave done
mole r treble the mileage.
D I its present manage it
i, . h Southern
. Y i H . i th I M tun
l ha
in
J. , Editor Owner TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance.
VOL. XV.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N, C, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1896.
NO
Two for
We have made
to furnish-
the Reflector and
North the
above amount, This is
campaign year and you
should take the two
leading papers.
had been The re to demand that th- flag
w b no for another I eh hangover It never
Tine In Advertising.
and none be bails, gave a cent to North
id be .; ; except to the Agriculture
ion nil colleges. I'M i
. ;. deception an I a to put
there. Ir the that
educ.
Sooth f ii . i
, never could
.--. ;.; ;
m u l
in l
at ea
h in
re d
i;. q-
mi
.- i
by l ins;
v E -on hits
it
Economy i;
th ice
a large
ore economical th .
or.-, ii may seem
1.111 of
u d bi
b more th
of I m
in re tunS
. .
. . . . .
Five a -y Hue
, I over
worth five t-
men . ,
, . . ,.
th- why
does north to with
in
A. to
I don; believe a man
. read his ballot b
wed . pal i-i tin
iii- sir.- oar
to of them. A little
more energy, a lilt-; may
doable School
.
He Not Know Etiquette of It OBSERVATION'S.
I hue overtaken old. in the An angelic many
road, a. we jugged together a thieving hand.
we turned a head came upon .,
b- r ;
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Govt Report
a prisoner in ;.
or men,
and were
to bang bin to the limb of a tr-.-e There i no particular h ii .
all asked the I other men have done.
a, we came to a halt. The man who la
the ., the a p g
lo
that bares over
The over wits lieu to a I
is re and took a look at him ;
and then the and naked of
fa tonne heart.
ABSOLUTELY PURE
. u.
dent op to date, and the dual ft
j I d. Now
more and the alb a j
Cannot t.
rigorous o the
it i stem ad
the of ownership to
K v York ton m r
i safety of .
. eel cf th ten
be ii i and E-
I a . m i . mt
or property
ed ;. lb. More-
over, interested in
n railroad s is
equally concerned, if be
to i . U
would prove to every
I wonder, if there is
any strictly lie
great bulk
a we regard the gen-
hon-
bot does
standard strict
Ly good deal.
. .
h-y cannot o. t.-e . .--
is a blood or
and in order to cure it
you must take internal Hall's
Ca arm Cure is internally, and
nets on the and
Hall's Cure is not i quack med-
by one o the
beet in in
years, and is a regular prescription. Ii
is best t inc.- known.
tin- be.-t
on
combination tile two
is such won
results in curing Catarrh. Send
h-
didn't you i along to my
place this
was the reply.
-And didn't sell you boas
am son
. . ii.-. . .,. I,
you .
The of does
I not at all milk made to-
day.
The maid n's happy, e-en while
the ordeal of a
V. Ii ii n
the then they can-
How i-;. i.
s . ,. .
ii of did I
; .-,
;. -iv.
Iv H
i o
this
A paper capes are
he the leader the band, j w So are
for testimonials, tree.
i re are plenty people j. Preps Toledo.
considerations would
money from your pocket,
who nut to skin
yon old Kick, ii. a swap,
Ly withholding the or
qualities their horse. There
gold by price la.
re . Sooth bi e to this J are people who if they fled they
pro e as a i to the the the received tao much from
this has the benefit of the or paid yon too little in a
u intended, n the i of independent transaction never lest an-
I they have seen
. would I it re- --e November 19th, I fit ; and yet many
by as the
of the i p .
do Ii i th
w old have ;
p i a
.
; e I i lay I i .
ll
F.
you l s
. ,. the .-; la am y . b
. j be
f as of th-m If yon can you can
ill i thus
oil
get a Prize. Bead the i
The the
great only weekly
., has
. . . Ma of ,. Lack a
B . to attract . . f the bill.
Bach la would not hesitate
yea did not the
. read a of
I Late for tine Norton
would sail yon i-.
thanksgiving dinner, as one
bi a it. that
bad garden
ea i the La.
ii ;. were tell one of
Pm ; that were not
you i have a row your
. if come
right down pare
v, . cord l enters
to
u . words South.-
of any com- I
Our recognized standard of hoar
is too low. The man who
and in the by
of from fleeces you in a baa but little
more to honesty, than the
one steals the watch or
d. fa get I from your
time company has shown each, A word,
m increase the it has two
be used but once.
of th road's a
of pis-
by the establish
of through Pullman trains
between Ports-
mouth and
ago there were
local and no through pas-
establishment
Foreign
word and proper
ed making a word, a letter
cannot be used oftener than it
appears in Sunny South. Use
in Sunbeam-
An exchange gives the follow-
unique description of the
who can drink or it
man who c n drink or let it
alone is again with us. He is a
sort of a fellow, and it
might be harsh to roll to-
as a scroll or to boil him in
oil, or bake him over a slow fire
any dictionary. Use plurals- In
to enter contest it is
to send cents for three
mouths subscription to
of the enlarge- if you make as , ,
m ,. of with j for the slave to rum. he
new office to South your j, ,,,;
enlarged water front, the j power. When I want to quit, I
raisin of the standard of the J compete sure, d m
stock very inferior con- when he will quit, sure
to its present high grade by. e h The coroner
the beat and
good cars. Ail these things have
been done, not, as is often
at the expense of net earn-
On the contrary, during
this three year period the gross
earnings have largely increased,
but Better far than that is the
fact that, this
very great advance in the physical
condition of the roads, the net
earnings have made a very
gain
With the announcement that
the S-aboard will continue as an
the people
of and of South
have an opportunity to stand by
o. complete novels by the , , .,
D, . i i . when the time coined,
No- complete i , ., . ,
r, , T and there be a inquest
novels by Jr. . , , , ,, ,
o t ix ,. i with comforts and all mod-
Select cue of the offers and it .
,, , . n and if our
will be sent you free and
paid.
Bran Pub. Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Sample sent free on application.
Special to
arrangements
with the Sunny South we will
oar own paper and the
Sunny South one year for only
allow you to enter above
contest, and you will receive one
of the offers enumerated
above- If you want to avail your-
friend is rich the verdict will be
that, be died of heart failure. If
he is poor, it will be that he died
of alcoholism. The man who
can drink or let it alone is worth
company make sure of of in
its perpetual independence by
Immediately after the election
the big newspapers printed col
of matter about the revival
of industries giving employment
to of idle laborers. In
short, we were told that the tide
of prosperity had set in with
election. That sort of
news, however, has about played
it the most liberal support
this need not be done any
hostility to any other company,
nor out of any sentimental con-
but purely in de-
for the future It scarce-
possible that any other
system between
more and the central South
ever be built. The territory is
practically occupied. The con-
hi of ownership of exist
list of words direct to us, let us. read
know which offer yon want, and failures, of industries suspend-
your order will receive prompt
attention.
Dr. Curry's Views.
Dr. J. L. ex-Minister to
Spain, and of the Pea-
body and funds, made an
address at University,
Thursday afternoon, in
which he quoted using this
lines into one management j startling
for all tin. make
more and the tern from h-re
It mid be t late
don't believe much in
idea of having the United States
flag over our I would
like to know what the United
i i of railroad j government has for
true or imaginary, after oar public schools North Car-
and laborers being thrown
out of employment. All of which
shows that the prosperity
yet covered the country- Serious-
though, we hope the pros-
will come soon. We
reed it in and we
suppose everybody else does- If
it comes the will
get credit for it, of course, and
from a partisan standpoint
we i egret this fact, yet we want
prosperity to come all the
to come
villa Landmark.
disc
for sour stomach.
one gives relief.
care
cure bad breath.
torpid liver-
Want no
gold organs seem to be
very much disturbed because Mr.
Bryan has announce that
eat the Lave
made the leader of i.- to go
on for next four years-
Some of go so far a to
the continuance
free But
do they chow some eon
in the matter an-
that has been made
Bryan's was some
days behind the happy declare
of the gold standard
that M A. had
engaged for another four years,
end that he immediately
to headquarters lo the
that people
some mote o the
question.
What is this an
that the is- to
continued by the money
When the gold men
propose to renew the
why should they blubbering
about in the prints de-
the of a
campaign that they themselves
boast of having
Why should the ridiculous Editor
in one column applaud
proposal to
in the other weep over the an-
of the free coinage
men that will meet Mr. Han
at or or
wherever the meeting is to be, and
help him
die noose. No inclinations, however.
surely did, and no doubt he's
my sale in Ids Yes I is said to be el we it is
i s that critter at o'clock tins j really far nay. We have the plainest
Horning. My name's Thompson, and I j end most explicit language in the
some of you know j
exclaimed he leader,
as he turned on the prisoner, you Let as live tar one another, as
bay that journey along life's road; helping
toil worn brother, we shall lighten our
not a i,. i . , ,
,,. own Observer.
why blazes didn't you
no when we run you down for a horse
replied the man as be looked
Why
Now and then yea will hear a
and as it bored with the j chant complain that advertising does
bin in I. . , . . , . , ,,
, . , i i . i . pa;, and the solicitor who calls on
but three or four days, and i attars I . .
what the eastern rt refusal.
They hauled him off his feet twice put so lines in your paper
lo him acquainted with the three times last week and I can't trace
of the and then rod. i b safe that p for my in-
So i have Thus
in-- argument runs ii you can dignify it
by that name.
in search
new
Flippancy is a woman's
N. can be a heartless mi-
she has had a real love affair.
a man a the
corner bis heart pekes
around in it and says this
you a
she you are hinting
around lb.- a guard made cf it.
No matter
Ii seldom occurs to the
advertiser that the fault is in himself.
delayed writing his
until the last urinate. Then in
, a he dashes a string
id adjectives prices-
lie dues act devote this vitally
mailer half the attention be
would gr-e to examining into
of a new boy. The
MOTHER, DEAR MOTHER, COKE
HOME.
Mother, dear mother, come home with
me now,
The clock in the steeple strikes ;
You said you were coming right home
from the club
As soon as the session was dope.
The baby has spasm and father's worn
out
By long nights of watching and
care,
1- i i h terrible to behold,
a week's growth of i
there.
Mother, dear Brother, come home right
away,
The clock in the steeple strikes two ;
The country will wobble along for a
while
Without assistance from you.
The borne you've deserted is chilly and
bare,
There is nothing left in it to cat,
And farther, poor father's converted
the last
Clean tablecloth into a sheet.
Mother, mother, come home with
me now,
The clock in the steeple strikes
three ;
The hired man's wearing bloom
era, and, oh,
He's a horrible object to see.
Come home with m. mother, before
its too late,
For father s losing bis grip,
We've ran on the rocks and the
is to play
Since you have deserted the
Come home, dear mother, come home,
come home
Oh, mother, dear mother, come
home
THE DISCOVERY SAVED his LIFE
Mr. C.
III., says. Dr, hint's Ne
Discovery I owe my life. Was taken
with and tried the
for miles about, but no avail
aim was given up and I could not
. Having Dr King's New
in my store I tent for a e and
began use and from the first dose be-
to gel better, after three
bottles was up and about It is
worth Its weight in gold We won't
keep or house without Get a
free trial at L. Drug
Store
The Drift of the Corn Trifle.
ow a gin advertisement brings him no
the first time she kisses a man, it never n of
occurs to her that the may fee chant's neighbors nave the same arid
j and uninteresting style of advertisement
in the paper. They all grumble
W hen a girl has a grudge against a
man, she gives a dialing party
and makes him hold while
she splashes little dab. all over his
clothes,
A girl who doesn't like a ought
to be treated for it.
Most men could bear it if they
weren't expected to grin.
A woman can never sit in the
with her husband without trying to get
romantic
often turnout lo
be a hall bedroom.
The deepest thing the heart of an
old is an tor a little child.
When a girl has kinky, black
hair, it is called
tine of the queerest things is that a
nagging woman often loves her husband.
women's idea of taking care of
men is by fussing with them when they
sit in a draft.
Some men don't discover that they
arc fond of their wives till their wives
have got through being fond of them.
If all memory of the past could lie
blotted out every night, married folk
would be a good deal happier.
Some time In-fore she is every
girl determines either to be a foreign
missionary or to spend her life washing
dirty babies.
When all the women callers insist
that his first baby is the perfect imagine
of himself, a man sneaks up in the
garret and looks in a looking glass.
Carolina's Presidential Vote.
the official canvass of the State,
selecting Craig's and votes,
respectively as basis of the count
Bryan received votes in
North Ci and
total or more
the total in 1892.
Government returns of corn ex-
ports tor ten months of the
ca year show that the
shipments have amounted to
bushels, against
bushels for the
ponding period last year. The
increase of about bush-
els total exports tor ten
months has gone chiefly to
Southern ports. The gain at New
Orleans, which leads all ports in
the volume of its shipments of
corn, has been bushels-
Baltimore has been second, with
an increase of bushels;
Norfolk and Portsmouth together
have had an increase of
bushels; a gain of 1.-
bushels, and Newport
News a gain of bushels.
New York Boston shipments
have the same as
they were in 1895, Philadelphia is the best for chit
bas had an increase of Doctors recommend it in place
bushels of Castor Oil.
Here is a diamond here a piece o ,
charcoal. Both carbon y
them stands the mightiest
food on your and
your own body ; the same,
vet between I he two stands the
ion, the arbiter of growth or decline,
or death.
cannot make a diamond, we can-
not make flesh, blood and bone. No.
But by means of the Shaker Digestive
Cordial we can enable the stomach to
digest food which would otherwise fer
and poison the In
forms of dyspepsia and incipient con-
with weakness, loss of flesh,
thin blood, nervous prostration the
dial is the successful remedy. Taken
food it relieves at once. It
and assists nature to nourish A
trial to show its merit
cents.
and vole to be little bet-
tor than a humbug.
It may be to these gen-
that their advertising would be
more profitable if they would be con-
tent to less in any one advertise-
and to say it better. Do not
give the bargain-hunting shopper more
than she can digest. This is the
followed out in the great depart-
stores, which never dream of ad-
more than a small portion of
their stock at any one time.
A deep and varied knowledge of I
man nature is the first requisite in ad-1
attract I hold the t-
to persuade, to convince-
these are the problem to
be grappled with. A merchant who does
not give his advertising the closest and
hardest study has no good reason to
complain of
CURE FOR HEAD
As a remedy for forms of Headache
Electric Hitters has proved to be the
very best. It effects a permanent cine
and most dreaded
headaches yield to its influence. We
urge ail who are afflicted to procure a
and this remedy a fair ti
In case of habitual constipation Electric
Bitters cuTes by giving the ton
to and few cases
the use of medicine. Try it once
Fifty cents and ft 1.00 at John L.
First Taste of Russell ism.
N. C, Nov. white
people of this county have recently had
another example of and
supremacy. About three weeks
ago John M. of Churchill,
this county, was grossly insulted by
John in consequence of
which J. M. Coleman immediately
knocked the down with his fist
Several days ago the made com-
plaint to John Wright, a
of the peace, a for the
rest -f J. M. Coleman was issued, and
a deputized to serve it. Mr. Cole-
man was arrested by the
in the m
at Churchill. He is the sou of
Capt. W. G. formerly a
of the Board of Commissioners
this county. This is a second case of
this kind which ha, occurred in this
county in the last six weeks. And yet
this is reform.
Lie, and carried to a for trial.
Mr. John M. Coleman is a young man
of most excellent character, is
sally popular, and is a Christian gen-
is that
school
New Didn't you
I could whistle
Figure.
in here
five wives.
are yon enjoying
you Figure.
is a world of
try in the solemn night
just bet there is; it
excites the mews of a thousand
cats in our neighborhood every
The Philosopher in Bags
Weary, did ye not notice by th,
papers that of men
back to work
that'll be a good thing for
our
reduces
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Her is a
compromise of the woman-
suffrage question.
The Advanced
Her is a
to allow the women to take
all the straw
Aunt I
heaven a mm come out of the
bushes, and I ran, and
Tommy really ought to be
at did you catch
him, auntie Fun-
Their Inter its
The Wilmington Messenger is
to get a parcel
of politicians cut of their
Hear it.
Let us have a very active cam-
in this State for tho next
years cf food raising. Let
be a regular campaign for
pork and beans, hog and hominy,
meat and greens. Make your
home supplies if you do not
make You will not starve
gold B high tariff tax
if you industriously, save
can, all eat, and
keep out of debt. Give politics a
rest and keep to the and
the hoe.
If this were taken a
of leeches who have fas-
the people and are
fattening upon their discontent
would have to stop making
speeches for a living and knuckle
down to honest labor themselves.
Industry and economy avert debt
and insures to him who practices
enough to eat and wear and
a shelter for bis head. This is
about the most that affords
to anybody, and he who is
rounded by these conditions
ought not to be an easy victim of
demagogue. The truth is, he
will not be for long; the cry of
calamity will fall on dull ears in
his case; and that is why we say
he Wilmington Messenger in ad-
vising folks to brace up and go to
work, support themselves and
keep out of debt, is operating
very against the inter-
eat the latter day politician,
who will have to go out of
the people become
contented again Charlotte Ob.
server.
ALL SORTS.
at
cure dyspepsia.
cure indigestion.
assist
Dr. G. Druggist. Beavers-
ville. Ill, says. Dr. King's New
Discovery I owe my life I was taken
with and all the
for miles about, but of no avail
and was up and told I could not
live. Having Dr. King's New
in my store sent for a bottle
began use and from the dose
began to get better, and after using
three bottle was up and about again.
It Is worth weight in gold We
won't keep store or house without It.
Get a free at John L. Woolen
Drug Store.
How It Happened.
Did ever tell you how I got lick-
ed in
I got it. You half a doz-
en of us boys arranged to jump on the
teacher at a given signal,
were the only one that jump-
Bring your Poultry and to Win
e 111- for the highest price
Buy and In large an
m lo you as much as an
n cash.
J B. TRIPP
Now for the opera season.
Dressed to football
player.
The pigskin will soon be placed
on the shelf.
The stationery business is said
to b at a stand still.
The polish salesman scours the
country in search of customers.
girls are as meek as
Iambs, and yet they make them-
selves heard.
Sixteen women and one man
a Chestnut street smoking
car yesterday.
Noah take bees
into the ark
Didn't yon
ever hear of the archives
con-
powers are
know, but money
man should tell
his wife everything that hap-
pens
a lot of things
that
boss shoe am an
ob good says Brother Wat-
kins, when it am nailed
to de hoof ob a
here I You've
owed me this bill for three
Hard u all right,
old man. Let's let bygones be by-
isn't that I am afraid to
wailed pious turkey,
j it's the thought that I may
be null d off that makes me
is only one fault with
this rabbit remarked the
i boarder.
is snapped the
landlady.
has a hare in responded
the facetious boarder.
Notice to Creditors.
In accordance with a decree made at
September term 1896 of Pitt Superior
Court In a case therein pending which
J. N, Bynum, Executor of R. A.
is plaintiff and R. B. Bynum and others
are defendants, notice Is hereby given
to the creditors of R. A. Bynum,
ed to file with me the evidence of their
claims against said estate, on or before
the 16th day of November 1896. It Is
made my duty to report to December
term the amount of the Indebtedness
and the pro share of each debt In
the assets. Those creditors desiring
to share In the assets must present their
claims within the above specified time
S. A. MOTE,
Clerk of the Court.
Greenville, N. C, October 1896.





THE REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
U Editor and
Entered t the post office at Green-
ville, N. C. m c ass mail matter
Wednesday, December 2nd, 1896.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
Our Regular
Washington, Nov. 27th 1896.
There is at least one Republican
Senator who thinks that
administration will have to borrow
very early in its career, not-
withstanding the assertions of the party
stump speakers and editors during the
campaign that it would never, under
any circumstances, such a thing.
Senator not only thinks that
the administration will have
to borrow money, but he has prepared
a plan for it to do so, and it is sup-
that he will put it in the form
a bill, lie will introduce in Con-
His plan is in short to authorize
the Secretary of the Treasury to
row as much money as may needed
to make up the between the
government receipts and expenditures
so long as their is a deficit, the loans to
be made payable in a short period. Mr.
Chandler seems to agree with the state-
made on the stump by silver
men, that the election of
would mean among other things a
further increase in the National debt by
the Government borrowing more
but other Republicans will favor
exhausting all other methods of trying
to pull through before to an-
other loan in any shape.
Even if there was a Republican mi
the Senate, could not
accomplish any legislation this
session Congress, unless some way
could devised of reconciling the wide
difference of opinion among them as
to what ought to be done. There is
some talk of an attempt U add to the
government revenues by internal rev-
legislation, and the project of
adding a barrel to the tax on beer,
which came so near i ting incorporated
in the Wilson tariff bill by the Demo-
Ways and Means committee of
the last House, has been revived
may be recommended in President
Cleveland's annual message. The in-
of the brewers killed it when it
was proposed before, and now in ad-
to that it will have to contend
the opposition of the high tariff
Republicans who want to leave the
whole revenue question just where it is
in order to have an an extra
session of Congress.
The vacant seat on the bench of th
Court Claims which gossip had as-
signed to one the members of
dent Cleveland's cabinet went to
Attorney General whose
official duties have made him thorough-
familiar with the business of this
court. Judge legal attain-
are high and there is no personal
objection to him, but if the idea
by a considerable number of silver
men, hanging up all of Mr. Cleveland's
nominations in the Senate, be carried
out, his nomination will fail with all the
rest.
Whatever be one's
it is clearly apparent that the
action of gold Democrats, in trying to
get the administration to remove Dem-
in a number of States
because they supported Bryan, is not
calculated to wipe out the existing bit
between the regular Democrats
and the In the Post Office
department alone attacks are being
made by the upon more than
Presidential postmasters. It is
not likely that any c
of these, or any other officials the
of whose successors has to
e confirmed by the Senate, will be
removed, because, whatever may be the
result the proposition to take no
action upon any nominations, it is
that the Senate as at present con-
will not confirm the nomination
any gold Democrat for a position
from which a man removed for no
other reason than that he followed his
End supported silver. That
knowledge will probably prevent action
by the administration on the complaints
the gold Democrats.
The four democratic Senators who
bolted the nomination of
mer, of III.; of Wis.; Gray, of
Del., and of not be
to the caucus of democratic
Senators which wilt be held as soon as
Congress meets, for the purpose of de-
upon a line of party policy
the In addition to the par-
caucus there will be a silver caucus,
attended by the populists, the silver re
and the democrats, and it is
that an agreement will be
. under which the Sen-
will act in all matters
concerning finance. While it is not
that the bolting gold democrat-
Senators will caucus with the
cans it is believed that they will vote
them upon financial questions
The republicans of Washington are
i a state mind a go
rat has been slated tor chairman of
he inauguration
Mid they have made a vigorous protest
his being given the place, both
Mark llama and to and
he local republicans are right, too; but
as the gold democrat who has
promised the place was a big con-
to Mark Hanna's campaign
f their protest will probably count
t r It is customary to have
parties represented on the
committee, but if this gold
. rat gets what he paid tor it will be
first time that a chairman of the
tee has not been a member of
party which elected the President
The foot ball clubs of North Carolina.
d played a
in Richmond on Thanks
Day, and the result was a com-
defeat for the North Carolinians,
score being to against
r boys better clip their hair and look
their books, and by so doing they
j be able to make a better record
h for their school and for themselves
n on the sporting field.
LETTER FROM TEXAS.
Ancient Mission
Oct. 23rd
To the Eastern Reflector,
Mr. have written
times to the Reflector in 1892
and 1893, and my letters had appeared
in its columns.
To-day I am standing on historical
ground, sacred especially to the
heroic and his
the Mission of on the south
side of the charming and p
San Antonio river. the other side
a little to the north west the city of
is perched on the height. La-
Bahia, as a mission, was founded early
in the 18th century by Don
Ramon. Franciscan Friars
evangelized the adjacent Indian tribes.
The ruins upon which I and
write these lines, still give evidence of
those glorious times
by the Spaniards.
This mission was founded on n point
of strategic value, a square or
about acres, which surrounded by
massive stonewalls feet high, at
the corners bastions or turret had beep
erected for a was indeed
a powerful fortification. I had said
the walls are partly fallen, cacti, shrubs
and wild growing now en top
them, but the venerable church is still
standing and divine services are
held within its sacred walls.
It withstood the storms of
the walls are perforated by many a can
non ball fired at the building during
the gallant that gave Tea
the final liberation from Santa Anna's
rule.
The church served in times of war
as a last the and the
people that lived In and near the mis-
It is still a formidable building
towering high above the walls the
tort In front of the church yet inside
wall is a small square
that served as place according
to the customs of those days few
crosses mark the last resting place of
some of those early Among
the mission a number of Mexican hut
are scattered, inhabited by
of many a noble Spanish family, but
they are yet din tenaciously
to the few acres of land which were left
them by their ancestors.
linger and linger, I cannot leave
the place, it seems to me as if an in-
ward voice is telling me is the
last time yon will behold this beautiful
romantic, historic and venerable
Like this spot lies in ruins, so my life
is a ruin, my r is check mate yet
while this place lives forever in history
I shall be by those that
were so dear to me. This is, I think,
the last message I send to North Car-
to my beloved ones and to my few
friends,
San Diego, Tex., Nov.
After I left the Mission I traveled
southward through the counties of
Bee, Live Oak, and
In the latter county I was suddenly
seized by a violent fever on a Mexican
ranch. For several days I in
great danger and had not the Mexicans
nursed me so tenderly, I think I would
not be any more among the living. I
am gradually improving and it is my
resolution to stay here until my earthly
career will end and a solitary grave re-
my remains. I most heartily
wish that North Carolina will prosper,
but I also would like to see that some
enterprising and old North Car-
would come out here and settle
on the thousand and thousand
wild lands of Texas, where now
so many families from the old States
have found good where cattle,
horses, and sheep are roaming about
the whole year without need of a
where corn planting begins in Jan-
where corn matures in June,
cotton picking likewise begins in June.
There arc thousands of so called State
school lands that can be bought from
the State at per acre on
lime at par t.
interest, so that the first payment on a
acre tract is but
the same sum every year until paid in
full. Of course if any one wishes to pay
the whole amount at once, he may do
so.
Where can a poor, starving man find
better inducements
My best wishes to the
Respectfully,
J. A. Lorenzo
There are insurance cam panic
doing business in North Carolina.
The frontispiece of the December
Review of Reviews is a reproduction
beautiful painting, Lit
tie Children to Come unto
Mr. Warren G. President o
the Atlantic Coast Line, and Mrs. El-
have issued invitations to their
wedding, which will be celebrated
on December 5th at the Live Oak
Point Club, near Wilmington, N. C.
The Kansas Legislature is about to
declare war on foot ball. A
has introduced a bill to send to jail any
person caught playing the The
insane asylum would be a more fit place
for some the long-haired enthusiasts
than would a prison.
Following is the official vote for
State Russell
Watson Guthrie
scattering Lieutenant
Reynolds Mason
Dockery Secretary of
Thompson Cooke
Ayer Furman
Worth
cock Attorney
Super-
of Public Me-j
bane Scarborough
I FAKIRS AND THE FAKED.
It is strange, but true, that
of people in an
age and country can be taken in
daily by fakirs. It is always safe
to follow the road of truth and
when you turn from that toad
yon are apt to be caught in a
trap. The that the best is
always cheapest is well worth re-
This is a day of
cheap things. On the corners of
our streets stands be licensed
physicians ready and willing to
you good service if sou are
sick. While he stands there and
waits for a call he sees in the
streets of the city a crowd around
the fakir- The fakir has h-s oily
tongue and great of
words to convince the able-bodied
man that he a tonic in the
shape of some pleasant liquid or
small palatable pill; to the
weak man or weak woman he can
administer drugs that will be
pleasant to take and certain to
cure, for the small sum of
cents. So it goes, the
flows ea--y and the fakir's mind
runs loose; all in a day. The
medicine is taken home by
purchaser and stored away to
evaporate. That is the way of
the world. papers in a town
may write and advise, the preach
in the pulpit may warn
exhort the people to beware of
the fakir, but the fakir still comes
and goes enriched by the money
of the innocent. The skilled
with his superior training
and years of experience cuts no
figure when the fakir comes
around. That is the curse that
pervades our country. Beware of
the fakir. Tour friends are the
ones to stand by and they, will
fake you. It you need a doc-
tor call a man who is trained
skilled. Gall on the wan
who has come among you to make
a living for himself and to be
service to you. Don't spend your
money on stuff that you know
nothing of. If we were all doc-
tors hard study and
we could the
pain found the streets.
But we are not. Everybody can-
not be skilled in the art of
medicines, that is left to
the learned men and women who
are devoting their lives to the
study of the human body and its
needs. So the best thing for
man or woman to do, who feels
the need of medicine is to go to
a physician that is known per-
or by
will by process where
you lose by patronizing a fakir.
This not only
cal fakirs, but it should apply
all business. It a merchant, who
had never been in the country,
wished to buy a farm, a a
hog or a cow, who would he
The man for him to see
would be a first class farmer
the section where he wished to
purchase the land, etc It would
be a piece of superb folly for him
to go to some little merchant
who never lived in the country.
So it i about a suit of clothes.
Go to the fakir and get a cheap
suit and you will Buffer from the
mistake, Go to the merchant
that you know is honest and buy
the at as low a price as he can
sell it and if it does not come up
to expectation the merchant will
make it good-
There has gotten to be a great
deal of selling below cost the
like. men wishing to
go out of business do sell below
cost. When a man makes a habit
of buying bankrupt goods at low
figures he can sell goods
the original c s but to see a
man selling out below cost
now and then, he is a bad to
buy from. The thing to do is to
trust your merchant. Stand by
him through thick and thin. If
he bites you he will make it good.
Don't try every new thing that
yon see and desert your former
friends. Honest goads bought
with honest money, from
merchants by honest customers
is always the best. Keep your
eye open and watch the
out Don't buy goods from
a store that is selling out, just
because is selling you
may get bit. Stand by your
friends and they will stand by
Democrat.
Make Way For
Mr. J. L. Ramsey, the editor of the
Progressive Farmer, has announced
a candidate for the United
States Senate to succeed the Rt. Hon.
Constant Pritchard, a former
printer's devil. We are for Ramsey.
We are for him hard. We never heard
of anybody else who is him, but
that cuts no figure with us. We have
a soft feeling tor any man who has
aver been tinkering a print shop,
end it who once Mulled water
and pied type for weekly
must step down, we, at would
like to see bin succeeded by some
other fellow who has smelt ink, even
though he did nothing more than write
the wholly foolish editorials of the es-
teemed Farmer.
But Ramsey has other points in his
favor, which just at this time are
weighty. He belongs to the
He was born on the opposite
side. It maKe a bit of differ-
what it is, Ramsey is it. He
s inharmonious. He swims only up
stream. When he was born the signs
w re all in h el and Ramsey can't
help kicking. On the natal day the
heavenly bodies were not singing to-
mus was a
discord. The star of Ramsey's nativity
is the lost which shoots about
alone, and has nothing to do with the
other six. Even so does Ramsey stand
in isolated but fitful grandeur his
companions. Cynical old lex. Pope
is is Ramsey
says is is dead To
him earth is flat, the sun moves
and lack is white. Ramsey wants
silver, but he won't have it unless
it comes by his route. He is for the
Alliance, but he get
for it until everybody else was down
on it. He wears his left shoe on his
lit foot and would walk on head
It he could. He sleeps in the day and
works at night and drinks and eats
water Ramsey gloats over hard time
because other folks like food ones.
He is not even so good a calamity
bowler as before, the crowd of like
faith and order getting too big tor
Ramsey is a big He never
agreed with anybody in his life.
Let it be Ramsey. The Senate
needs a good, all-round opposition.
Ramsey is the man. He rip
dignity up lie back and run
senatorial courtesy down at the heel.
Monroe Journal.
Notes.
dollar never buys much for a
man.
and are of-
ten twins.
It is better to be right and poor than
wrong and rich.
Better be a lamp in the house than
try to be a star in the sly.
There is no virtue in doing right
simply because we have to.
How many times good fortune has
come to us through our mistakes
If we try to please everybody we
shall soon have the respect of nobody.
Do what you can do well and you
will soon be able to do much better.
Time is wasted trying to make a
out of a horse with a broken
leg.
The man who thinks bis sin will
never find him out has deceived him-
self.
The man dies well who dies with
the co that he has done his
best,
he man who loafs when he should
be at work will have to work when he
might
people who would to
do good it it could be done without
effort or sacrifice.
a mar. grove's in the lust who
has an aim long enough to reach the
sky it he would put it out.
Many a man is screening gravel
who might be dressing diamonds had he
properly improved his
Horn.
When malice-tinctured tongues speak
unkind things about you, hide
j in the veil gloom
but lift it up in the comforting
of the fact that the finest trees,
with the most luscious fruit, are those
which are flung at and polled at most.
Remember, also, it is the tall giant
oak, the monarch of the forest, that
the burling blasts cf the de-
lightnings, while worthless
brambles upon the are spared.
Soldiers do not shoot at dead men on n
field of
The North Carolina Conference
meets in Kinston, next week, beginning
on the 9th.
It is now thought that in his coming
message to Congress President Cleve-
land will make no recommendations
affecting the war Cuba.
ORIGINAL OBSERVATIONS.
The Democrats gave thanks on
Thursday because the political cyclone
was no worse.
will graduate from the
electoral college with votes.
an gets votes.
The more we do to add to the
of others the more sunshine and
contentment to us.
There is but little difference the
ways of runs after a dollar
while the dog follows a scent.
Lives of great men oft remind us
that you can have a nerve sublime,
and refusing to pay promptly, get your
roods on six months time.
Yon can't get into heaven with a
or a hand that robs, and as
the way to heaven is by tho golden
the you drop your misery
making and devote your life to help-
those who are weary and heavy
laden and add to the happiness of the
entire world, faster will you climb,
the higher you can go, and the less
your joints will ache as you climb up
Observer.
A Fellow Feeling.
don't look said the
poet, you say you are Those
cried the tramp. have
been trying to make a living by selling
your
Then the put his arm around
and they went in and ordered
dinner.
Congress meets next Monday. Then
the country will have something else
to about. Perhaps more about
what Congress does not do than what
it does, however.
President Cleveland has bought a
house in Princeton, N. J., and will live
there after March 4th. Probably real
estate in the region of his purchase will
take a spasmodic
Trustworthy Friends
The Richmond Times pays a
ed tribute to the fidelity of newspaper
people. It Is based upon the incident
at Jacksonville, Fla., last week, when
a reporter went to jail rather than dis-
close the source of a piece of
about the court which h.
ten hold of and printed. A member of
the grand jury appeared
and told the court that he had given
the news items to the reporter, not
meaning to do anything wrong, and
asked that its be directed to-
ward him. The reporter was therefore
discharged from custody. This gives
our contemporary occasion
to say
while it is the business of the
reporter to print news, he is the
last mini in the world to violate con-
The public docs not seem to
understand that a reporter has a
lent and that the only safe way
of keening a news ten out of print
to confide it to the reporter, you
try to hide it away from him, the
chances arc ninety-nine a hundred
that he will it. If he receive
it you confidence, he will
up his job or go to jail before he
betray you. Tho lion. . Taylor Elly
son, who has been active in politics
many years, and who has had to lb as
much as any man in the Slate-, per-
haps, with newspaper men, said some
time ago, in talking on this subject
that he had never in all his experience,
had a newspaper man to violate his
There is a silent g
g newspaper people that n
to the-., is snored. If they
print it alter having
it is ninety-nine limes in
hundred because they did not
hat it was given
deuce; and it they give th promise
not to betray the source of an item
they never do it. Wise public men
quickly learn, therefore, to take news-
paper people into their confidence and
to deal candidly with them at all times.
There a e newspaper men in North
Carolina to-day who know enough to
ruin many a public man an
but i hey became possessed the
knowledge in such a way that those
whom it would affect are as safe as if
the custodians of these secrets were
Observer.
Hints to Advertisers.
W soever lives in a place where a
newspaper is published will find its col
the cheapest through
which to address the public.
An article once advertised begins to
loose place in public favor as soon as
the advertising ceases, and the longer it
is allowed to remain public view
the harder it will be to restore it to its
favor.
What is called the of
a business is merely the cumulative
effect continuity. So with an
the longer it runs the greater its value.
A business had been
tor fifty years would lose its good-will
in twelve months if once stopped, and
very few men would rare to pay much
for it. Once, advertising is stopped its
cumulative effect is lost, and the longer
it remains dead the harder i will be to
make it effective when started again.
Results the Kindergarten.
The results of kindergarten
education
tens this country have
noble harvests from good seed.
It has been stated on authority
that out of children who
received education
in one of our largest cities many
years ago, only one has been
rested, that was
This is the education of the
whole mass that educates.
Any one who has means and
the time go on a of
humanity in this way. It offers
open door where the need is
tho greatest, and the influence the
longest and the most evolution-
Every street in America
where there are friendless
needs a kindergarten school
to little ones sympathy,
protection, a home, and to bring
to society.
The old nations which are Bar-
prising the world by new
as Japan, Mexico, and
oral of the South American re-
publics, are accepting the facts
that primary school is the
foundation of national
Tins is notably in Japan
where a few years ago the
kindergarten school was opened
under the patronage of
the poets, music, and flowers and
now in its branches
Dearly pupils. From
Kindergarten
in December Re-
view of Reviews.
J. B. CHERRY.
J. R.
J G.
Is the lowest price an object to you Are the best
inducements If so come in pee our new stock
which we have just received. Our store is
full of New Goods prices
were never lower.
To the
ladies we extend invitation to examine our of
Dress Goods
Trimmings
We have a beautiful and up-to-date lint. You will find th
styles and we know we can please you. Oh, lovely, how
beautiful, the prettiest line I have ever is what our lady friend
say of thorn have a large both in colors blacks and
can please you.
Ladies and Gents
GOODS we have a
splendid
In LADIES CLOTH for Wraps
have what want
WOOD and WILLOW WAKE
HARNESS COLLARS,
TRUNKS,
PROVISIONS, FURNITURE
CHILDREN'S CARRIAGES,
CARPETS, CARPET PAPER,
RUGS, LACK CURTAINS.
CURTAIN POLES.
The fellow who went off Saturday
takings both a linen duster and an
overcoat struck it
MOTHERS,
We Offer
REMEDY Which
INSURES Safety
Life to Mother
And Child.
ii
I Robs Confinement of its Pain, Horror and Risk.,
My wife used be- I
tore birth her first d. did not
suffer from champs i
I relieved at the hour offering but.
I had no afterward and her
recovery was rapid.
E. E. Johnston. Ala.
Sent by Mall or Express, on receipt of ,
price, per tattle. Book Moth-
i era Free.
CO., Atlanta,
BOLD BY ALL
CO., Atlanta, J
WE PAY POSTAGE.
Free of ail Charges, ; will mail to
anyone our advance Illustrated
for 1897 It contains
of ore. Carpets,
Curtains, Bedding. Stoves, Lamps
Carriages, etc. You
save the middle man's profits by trading
With manufacturer, as are pay-
lug local dealers our op
a postal now our mopey-saver.
Julius Sou.
Baltimore, Md.
Nothing is taught with greater
or more constant emphasis
throughout the Scriptures than
that God expects man to do some-
thing to bear fruit. No man has
a right to be useless. is
only one thing to do with the use-
less and that is to destroy it.
And God teaches that the useless
shall be destroyed- No amount
of will ever, can ever wipe
out truth. God does in
Gospel of Jesus save the useless
and worthless, but He saves them
by making them useful and
But if He cannot do
that He must destroy them. But
many men take eternal risks
worthless. They gather
fruit of indolence and ease
from a tree hang full of poison-
serpents. They sleep in
den of the asp it would
take a little energy to move along
to more safe and
s. l m
Have opened up a new
a d large stock of
STOVES, TINWARE
BICYCLES, c, in
the new store next
door to j. c. and
Son
call on us everybody
we are selling goods
Respectfully,
Harrington-
Barber,
Liver Ills
Like biliousness, dyspepsia, headache,
sour stomach, Indigestion
cared by Hood's Pius. They do their work
Hood's
easily and thoroughly. I
Best after dinner plus. W Ilia
ascents. All druggists.
,. Prepared by C. I. Hood Co-
eon
Successors to A. G. Cox,
N.
We have purchased the
of Groceries of A- J. at
and will continue
business at the same stand he
We take pleasure inform
our and the public
that they will find us ready at
all times to their needs
in line
In Men and Boys PANTS
GOODS we have just the best
stock to found prices were yon need for your
never lower.
and family to us.
Our object is to sell
est goods at the lowest
We have a line of
SHOES. we
to buy will please the
Wearer, pi ices on Shoes are
lower than season. Give
a when you need Shoes
for yourself or any member of
your family. We can the small-
est or largest foot in county.
Cm . y, Reynolds Shoes and can give you anything
for Men and are may need at the lowest prices . on
give good service. We have ever heard of. Come and sen our
FURNITURE
fears experience with
line know to be all
ii HARDWARE, GUNS,
LOADED SHELLS, CROCK-
GLASS WARE, HALL
LAMPS, LIBRARY LAMPS,
PARLOR LAMPS, LAMP
FIXTURES, TINWARE,
Solid Oak Bedroom Suits,
To pass us by would an
injustice to your pocket
book. Tins id not so because we
say so, but because our goods
prices make it so. Hem is a
fair If deserve
give us nothing, but if
rind our goods and prices it
acknowledge it
your patronage. Hoping to . e
you soon promising our bi
efforts to make your coming
pleasant had profitable, we are
Your friends.
J. B. CHERRY CO.
M o
a X
S Si
-c
IS
I y
II
CO
Co C
To the Sports.
are now headquarters for all kinds of
Vt
and defy all competitors as to price
and high grade goods.
cents per box.-
in abundance and low in price.
Special Inducements
offered on U ll O.
A D HARDWARE.
At Lowest Prices.
We handle the brands of all
staple goods. We will give the
highest market prices for all
kinds of country produce. Call
on us when
in line.
HARRINGTON BARBER
WE HAVE just
a complete line of
Ladies Underwear Capes
and the prices are very low
Overcoats and Rubber
Shoes. A complete stock
to select from and your
inspection is invited.
trices lower than ever.
At Higgs Bros- old stand
Leader





WILSON,
The King Clothier.
THE REFLECTOR
Local Reflections.
December.
Last in the year.
Court at Snow Hill this week.
Court in this week.
Hie next g date is Christmas.
too works deal
You don't hear any about
dust now.
When winter did it used both
at once.
Ye before you .,.,;
grandest display
g-
the sins are the proper
g, now.
FOLKS.
Few Brave Enough to Face Thia
V. S. Forbes returned Saturday from
Ex-Senator T. J. Jarvis went to Nor-
folk
V. J. Friday evening
from Wilson.
W, II. Cox returned from Virginia
Wednesday evening.
Col. I. A. Sugg returned from Kin-
Saturday
R. Fleming and wife, of
spent Saturday here.
L. I. returned t White.
evening.
hunks-tiring Day
warm an summer.
was almost as
says turkeys arc
fox
barrels
at Shall.
choice Apples,
Notions,
in Greenville. Our
prices are the lowest--
compare quality and
prices. That's the test.
A Mrs. Hopkins Boy
the largest buy-
or Fine Clothing,
Shoes, in Green-
ville we buy lower than
anybody else. Being
the Largest Sellers, it
naturally follows that
we can and do sell low-
than anybody else.
Plain English enough.
ii bold good Christmas
will be on 25th.
The young folks have count-
the nays to Christmas.
girls should take
is the la.-l mouth leap year.
Fresh Sweet Mountain Batter,
a pound at S. M.
Next the newly elected
county officers be inaugurated.
Thursday then was many a house
that had a skeleton a it.
The turkey had hie revenge on the
fellow who tried to eat
him. I
Thanksgiving was too
the hunters to meet with much sue- ,
c .-.-.
i Ins been I
ed at . F. Manning
agent.
Don't dally with in. Purify
j our cure it at once
a of Hood's
The was to bad Sunday
night tor services be in the
churches.
The rain Sunday sounded
it was trying to make up the long
dry spell.
A little girl of the editor is
-irk. making two sick ones in his
lions hold.
There just a little hit snow
early Monday night with plenty sleet
and ice to follow it.
My holiday goods are arriving. Call
and make your selection.
Mrs. M. D. Higgs
Pitt Superior Court for the trial
civil eases will convene next Monday,
Judge Graham
The business men should now turn
their attention to ads.
holidays are almost with us.
lie sure that you see Mrs. D.
stock of holiday goods before
making your selection.
Superior Court Clerk E. A.
has moved into his new residence on
Dickinson avenue, above the depot.
The nice along the front of
the building are quite n
over the old wood
S. M. Daniel is preparing to open
a stock of grace in the
building, next door to the Greenville
Bank.
Five Tuesdays, five Wednesdays
five Thursdays, live weekly
and all come in this
month.
In Hi Dates,
Currents, Seeded liaising, Citron, Note
Evaporated Apples and reaches at
S. M-
fine black horse,
will be sold at once for a
vision. For terms AW, apply to G. M,
Tucker or Marshall U turkey.
The batten of the Baptist church will
ha e a bazaar next week. They are
making extensive preparation tor it and
it promises to be very interesting.
A. B. Ellington is preparing to open
a five and ten cent store in the
building. This fills up the building,
every store being occupied as last us
one could be completed.
The telephone exchange is proving
so great a convenience that our people
arc wondering hew they got along so
many years without it. That is usually
the way with all good improvements.
A new supply of the celebrated Par
Ker Fountain Pen, also a pretty line of
handle gold pens, ladies size, at
Reflector Book Store. The very thing
Christmas presents. Come make
your selection
With the exception f barrooms
being open, Greenville had a decided
Sunday on Thanksgiving
Day. All the other business houses
wane closed throughout the day, which
speaks well our people.
J. Blount went to
y to attend court.
Washington
E- Warren and wife returned
Saturday evening from Salisbury.
Mrs. Mosley, Is visiting
T. Lipscomb.
N. EL W and A. A. Andrews
went to Monday on a tobacco
bunt
Frank
Miss Ella King returned Monday
evening from a visit to relatives at
Wilson.
Misses Nannie and Laura
Jordan, are visiting Mrs.
L. Griffin.
C. T. wife, and
little -Hi retained tram
a trip up the road.
J. S. Owens, of Norfolk, who at one
lime lived in Greenville, came in on
Friday evening's train.
J. B. and wife, of Morehead,
arrived of last week to visit
the family of Dr. D. L. James.
A. of
who has been visiting her sou here,
left Friday evening for
Miss who has been
visiting her aunt, . Parker,
returned home Sunday evening.
Miss Nannie Coffield spent Thanks
giving here with her sister, Airs. W. G.
Smith, and returned home Friday.
Miss Stella Fountain,
Mount, spent Thanksgiving with Mrs.
and home
Z no Moore went to Littleton Friday
to spend sometime for his health. We
hope the trip will prove beneficial to
him.
G. E. Harrison to Rich-
Wednesday after spending a
days with friends. He is always a
welcome visitor to our town.
Mrs. Matthews received a
gram Thursday evening from her broth-
Peyton Fort, calling her to Kinston
to the his child.
We regret to learn of of
Mr. H. A. Rountree, which occurred
about a quarter past o'clock
at the home his mother
Mrs. L. C. Rountree, in this town.
Door Open
Some who were not present at the
Thanksgiving Service at the Methodist
church, will doubtless desire to
to the Masonic Orphanage, at Ox-
ford, N. C. They can do so by hand-
money to me, or to Mr. Jarvis
Harding at the any day be-
fore Dec 8th. N. H. D. Wilson.
Thanksgiving Wedding.
Thursday evening at o'clock at
Hotel Macon, Mr. W. B. James and
Mrs. Georgia Pearce were united in
marriage by Rev. N. H. D. Wilson.
The marriage took their host of friends
somewhat by surprise, but nevertheless
congratulations are hearty and
Bun Together.
Wednesday night as was
driving down Dickinson avenue towards
Five Points, near Sheriff King's
he was met by the King House
they locked wheels. The
right hand horse to the bus kick-
and crime near demolishing the bug-
It ma very dark there were
no st lamps burning and it was
almost impossible to see.
ALMOST A FIRE.
and Pieces of Boxes Found
Under a Building.
., ,. . a very piece of work. The danger
the store. Opening the I .
. having posts set up in the middle of
u a Mass leaping up from . , . .
for a timely discovery early Fri-
day mowing Greenville might have had
another serious conflagration. Louis
Meyer treat down just before o'clock
to open his brother's confection store,
and as he walked through and opened
the shutter to the rear window he no-
smoke arising in the small
lutes of
door he found a blaze leaping up from
under the edge of the old build-
adjoining. He quickly procured a
bucket of water and the Hie
without giving any alarm.
An investigation showed that some
straw and pieces of boxes were burning
bu. building bud not caught. It
was evidently an attempt on
of some miscreant burn the building.
It is remembered that some mouths
ago on a Sunday some burn-
straw was found under another part
of the same building. At the time
there was a opinion as to
whether it was accidental or an attempt
at but this second occur
leads lo the belief now that
were attempts to burn the building.
Dangerous Obstruction
Some of the hauling to the
depot have been using a portion of the
sidewalk between the Farmers Home
and the corner of Forbes
prize Friday Policeman Cox
bad several hands filling up the sink in
the and to prevent further
driving on it a fence was built to
street and two posts were set up,
one of them almost in the middle
walk. It strikes us that this last was
such a frequently used sidewalk can be
seen at a glance. a light is
placed on or near the posts there is
danger of people going to and from th e
depot at night running against them
We can't see that the town has any
mo re right to place a dangerous ob-
on a sidewalk an
has, and it anyone gets hurt
over those posts it will give occasion
a damage suit.
Off The
Little Patrick Cob, of Grifton, has
been spending a few days with Percy
Forbes, a little son of Mayor Forbes,
and returned home Monday. Percy
accompanied him home and remarked
just before taking the train, going
to stay just as long as I want too.
Here's my at the same time
holding up a ard. But the
fellow that loses Percy has got to make
a soon start in the morning.
These Prices
Here is the way they do things at
Star Warehouse.
hat today sold several of
tobacco E F. at the follow.
114.76,
The moral in getting such prices as
the above is your tobacco
to the Star Warehouse.
She Orphans Remembered.
Appropriate services were held
Thanksgiving morning
Baptist and Episcopal churches. While
the congregations at each church were
smaller than they should have
the men the most
collections for the or-
were very At the Methodist
church the amount was something over
at the Baptist church and
at the church The
Masons and Odd made
donations to their respective orphan.
ages, so that upon the whole Greenville
remembered the fatherless ones very
gen
Not Pictures Enough for Him
Little Alfred Schultz, lour -year-old
son of our townsman S. M. Schultz, is
a little fellow who shows quite a
fondness for newspapers. Over at n
neighbors, the other day, he was
himself with a pile of papers en the
j floor and coining across a copy of
i Daily which he at once
recognized, tossed the paper from him
j with the remark don't want
Daily is the
with was as
i him, it got any pictures
in he replied
MARRIED.
U. G. Smith, a popular member
of the I County Buggy Co.,
by J. S. C. Benjamin and D. .
Prophet Prediction-
Rev. Ira P. Hicks, the famous
prophet, has made the following
month of
will be one of the most severe that
we have experienced in years. It is
not likely that the storms will be
because they not come at
the periods of the year when dangerous
storms arc to be expected. But you
will get all the old blizzards
you want during the last part of that
month. Things will grow interesting
about the 10th of the month and will
continue until December 30th. W
will have a good sprinkling bad
weather that, for the winter will
begin early and be a cold one, but the
of the worst period begins De-
19th. During this time the in-
Mars t. ill be added to others,
producing a commotion on the earth's
atmosphere which will be felt by all in-
Walking Money.
We heard a man say that one day
hut week he a tied up in
a handkerchief walking up from the
wharf, and on Sunday he a cent
going home from church. We didn't
know money had got to walking around
like that. The cent in question ought
to have got m the contribution plate in-
stead of walking away church
after the service was over, then it left Wednesday for Martin
1896. Fall Winter 1896
i.
C. T,
CLOTHING
lakes the lead and the price is no object.
and see me.
dry m
are out of sight in style and color and below
par in price.
Every thing cheap.
I test prove
st, Greatest Merit
severest trial and test prove
In recant lo Hood's Sarsaparilla
by a peculiar
Proportion and
unknown to others which
naturally and actually produces
would not have been caught loafing on
the t and pulled
Marriage Licenses;
For the last halt of November Reg-
of Deeds King issued only six
marriage licenses, tour or and
About two weeks or more ago he had a j two for colored couples,
yellow chill but had so far recovered as
to be able get up and walk about in
home. Last Monday be had an-
other chill and was very sick from it,
but again rallied and was thought to be
doing very well, when today he had a
sudden and passed away. He
was nearly years and leaves a
wife and two children. To these and
his mother and brothers we extend
sympathy.
Killed Over Cards.
Bethel
Ames Lane and George Taylor, both
colored, went with some other
to an unoccupied house to indulge a
rounds of Lane and
Taylor were in the of a game
and had a dispute as to which one was
Lane quit the game and left
the room. A few moments later he
appeared at a window and called
out that light in No- one put
out the and he fired shots
through the window, one of them
Taylor and killing him almost in-
Lane made his escape.
is the second man killed by Lane.
These facts were brought out at the
held by Coroner
New Short Line.
The statement is made that the At-
Coast Line planning a new
short route between and
N. C., and that surveys are
now being made an extension of its
system from Washington, N. C, to
a distance of thirty-six miles.
At the extension would con-
with the Wilmington.
and Norfolk giving a route
much shorter than by the present At-
Coast system between Nor-
folk and Wilmington. The new road
would enter the trucking section
L stern Carolina and compete
with Norfolk and Southern rail-
Virginian.
Bethel Items.
N. C, Dec. 1st, 1896
Miss Jenkins, of Tarboro,
visiting relatives here this week.
James Green, of Williamston,
last Tuesday here.
Mr. Mrs. G. W. Blount,
Williamston, spent Sunday here.
Rev. G. L. Finch spent today
J. T. Ward and Miss were
married in Tarboro, They
returned to Bethel Sunday g-
May their journey through life be a
happy one,
J. S. will move his family to
Tarboro this week.
Prof. B. F. Hassell has moved to the
Peal residence near the Baptist church
Rev. D. B. Ricard is conducting
the protracted meeting in the Baptist
church. He has good congregations
to hear him and preaches very interest-
and impressive sermons.
J. A. Williams and Mary IT. Sutton.
W. S. B. Noble and M.
Braxton.
W. B. James and Georgia
Barley Phillips and Allie
COLORED.
May and Elizabeth Patrick.
n Smith and Smith.
This made a total of seventeen for
the eight whites and nine col-
A Pony For Cents.
Saturday J. R did not own
anything in the shape of horse flesh,
but before he went to bed that, night
he found himself the possessor of a fine
pony, and the best part of it is the
cost him only cents. It came
about this way Rice Gwynn owned
the pony and wanted to sell. To make
a quick sale at a good price he adopted
the envelope plan. When all the
lopes were sold the one containing the
winning number v as opened, and it was
No. Mr. Basher held the
ponding the only one he
bought, and he with the
pony Some others who had gone in
heavier bought from to
worth of envelopes in the
and still further down in pock-
et.
county, where at o'clock Mr. Smith
was married to Miss Coffield,
that The returned
Greenville that evening the happy
couple make their home at Mr.
in The
extends congratulations.
Greatest Cures
Shown by thousands of hottest,
voluntary
naturally and actually produce
Greatest Sales
According to the statements of
druggists all over the country.
In these three points Hood's
Sarsaparilla is peculiar to itself.
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
Is the best It Is the One True Blood Purifier.
the only pills to take
S with Hood's Sarsaparilla.
why waste words
the speak so well for
It is conceded that oar line of
Trimmings,
Carpets,
Shoes, Notions,
Capes, Jackets,
and Novelties,
WHY PAY BIG PRICES
Cheap low grade groceries, when you can buy
strictly first class fro m
at prices way down. We are offering special
prices and Coffee as well as a lot of
goods. Come to see us and be convinced that
we are the people to buy your Groceries from.
We lead others try to follow.
ED. H. CO.
FIVE POINTERS.
O. K
j c -1 -r a o c o p-co
c CO
CO
o g CM B O
CO
To the little folks Christmas yet
a great way after De-
sets in. But with the older
ones among us to whom the days fly by
more swiftly it seems near at hand.
The Vote tor Congressmen.
Below is the official vote as returned
from the several Congressional districts
in the
First Harry Pop-
W. H. Lucas
Second George H. White,
colored, Republican, Woodard,
Moss, Populist,
Third John E. Fowler,
Populist, Frank Thompson,
Fourth W. F.
Populist, Banks,
Independent Republican,
Fifth Kitchen, Dem-
Settle, Dalby,
Populist,
Sixth C. H. Martin, Pop-
Lockhart,
Seventh A. C.
Populist, Pemberton,
Eighth R. Z. Linney,
Republican,
Ninth Richmond Pearson,
Republican, Adams,
Miss Helen Lewis, This is the
first vote cast in North Carolina for a
i woman.
arc the finest and cheapest ever here. We
can tit suit yon in every including
your No matter what you want we can
fill them at our New Store. Come make
your before is upon yon.
LANG'S CASH HOUSE.
BARGAINS.
Examine prices below.
Mens Split Boots, to
Good Boots, to
Boys Boots, to
Mens Plow Shoes,
Mens
W omens Good Shoes,
One half Wool Dress Goods,
1-25 Big- line of Serges, Cash-
1.00 meres and Flannels all
wool, double
1.00 pounds good
Whole Grain Rice
Shoes, to English Inland Molasses
Ladies Don to Sack Salt, pounds,
Ladies Goat Button, to 1.50 Good Buggy Harness,
Children Boys Hats to 1.00 in
Mens and Boys Hats to Good Patent
Boys all-wool Suits Clothes Old stock Men and Ladies
Mens all-wool Suits Shoes,
Clothes 2.50 to 1800 Large stock Lard, Pork and
Mens Overcoats to Sides always on hand,
Highest cash prices paid
yd
1.00
5.00
J. R DAVENPORT
N. September 22nd, 1806.
I The
People's
Sp Store.
The Growth
our departments of------
and
are due to the character of the goods
Avoiding sensational methods, displaying
proper fabrics, selling worthy and dependable
goods at the very lowest prices.
The Suits, Hats
Shoes,
Goods
we are selling you give a moments
worry. The prices are the most astonishing
thing,
RICKS TAFT.
The Ladies Palace Royal,





CAMEO
Each state is supposed to have a
militia, composed of men from to
of bearing arms, but in
nearly all states militia or-
number of militia actually
not far from
but In la
Simple Operation.
Gravers an . yo t
mysterious ms.-i m, ,
crept into modern maiden's dun.
It sounds
in it is
First yon yourself with ft
working table; it not be large.
Then, at any art I B to, half a
dozen gravers and of vary-
degrees of fineness. The nest
outlay is for a shell upon
ore to cut cameo. Black, red
and yellow s the shells
are called, are required, and
cost from to each, but from a
good shell several ovals or rounds
can be cut.
After it has been cut tho required
size and shape, it is fixed with
hot upon a little
block that can be held in the band.
upper surface cf the shell is
made sufficiently to
President Wright, of the
Georgia State Agricultural college
has this told of At
tho of war General Harris
addressed of a
school in Atlanta. shall I tell
them in tho north when I go
he said. A boy sitting in
front row jumped to his feet and
cried, thorn we are
ho is P .
BED FRANKLIN'S KITE.
The With Which the Great
Philosopher Faced risible Death.
It was a square kite, not tho
fin shaped shewn story book
pictures. To the upright stick of
the cross Franklin attached his
pointed sharp wire about a
foot provided himself
with a silk ribbon and a key.
ribbon to fasten to string after
he had raised the kite as some
much ho did
not lightning en-
his body, and key to
secured to the junction of tho rib-
and siring to servo as a con-
from which he might draw
it came.
When the thunderstorm broke, he
wont out on the common near
Philadelphia and faced
the tremendous power of tho light
stroke, before which nil
of all ages bad quailed in terror,
faced what most, of tho world then
believed to be the avenging blow
an angered God. True, be believed
that electricity and lightning were
tho same thing and had no
different properties or effects, but be
did not know it.
best theory which
accounted for electrical phenomena
at that time was bis own. laws
of electrical conduction or resist-
now so familiar, were not even
suspected. Who could predict that
lightning would obey any law
Besides he bad produced tremendous
shocks with bis Leyden in series
and bad killed birds with them
More than that, he had been
shocked himself by same
into insensibility
and nearly killed. He bad said
again and again that an
shock, if strong enough, would blot
out life, though without a pang. If
his idea was correct, if his
was true, ho was now about to
face an electric discharge
which that of tho most powerful of
man made batteries would seem
weak and insignificant.
All the world knows what
kite scared up into
black while the philosopher
stood calmly in tho drenching rain
watching the string until finally he
saw fibers of tho
raise themselves. Then a
tremor ho touched his knuckle to
the lived. For spark
crackled and leaped to his finger as
as did that from bis old
familiar electrical machine and
lowed him to charge his jars with it
with the same impunity.
He sent the story of what ho had
done abroad without a particle of
trumpeting. He was not a
for revenue. No stock markets
awaited the announcement of hie
claims; no newspaper stood ready t
blaze forth his achievement in the
interest of the money jugglers. His
own narrative fills one of the
little columns of The
Magazine for Oct. 1752, and if
has at its end only the initials B. F.
Park Benjamin in
sine.
Diana de
While abbess of being
still untried by the stress of battle,
went sinless upon her still orthodox
way there lived just across the river
on manor of a sinner of
a gayer de
Tho castle of the Star dates from the
fifteenth century, Louis XI
dwelt there as governor of
and was lessons in bow to be
a king. Diane
most as I gal-
called
fortress into a bower and gave to it
accepted for appropriate-
airy name of the
There she lived long aft-
her butterfly days were over.
There, even, she received the visits
of Henry II, her dead lover's son.
And in a way, although the Castle
of the Butterfly is a silk factory
now, she lives there still, just as an-
other light lady beautiful, Queen
Jeanne of Naples, lives on in nearby
Provence, for Diane's legend still is
vital in countryside, and the old
people still talk about he- as though
she wore alive among them and call
always, not by her formal title
of the de but
by her love title of belle dame
do A. in
Century. m
If ever household and
loves are graceful things, they are
graceful in poor. The ties that
bind wealthy and the proud to
borne may be forged on earth, but
those link poor man to
his humble hearth are of the true
metal, and bear the stamp of
Hill's Glory Departed.
Who among the prophets could
have foretold years ago that real
estate on far famed Beacon hill
would have depreciated in value
more than in any other section of
Boston And there is the fat
and it illustrates how tho whims of
fashion dominate over all things
WOMEN DISLIKE STINGY MEN.
When the
to a
If there is object of to
a woman, it is a stingy man. Now,
by we do not mean that, the fair
sex are anxious for a man to spend
than ho can afford, tat
do feel that it is due to when
am invited out to the
privilege of t want
from a menu being prompt-
ed by their host to what lie
prefers.
The man doesn't have to say,
must take this, or you mustn't
A woman is quick to
recognize tho saving keynote when
be will you have I
think I will have a and
though may loathe sandwiches
feels it duty to any,
then, I will have Some
mean men know that can easily
bulldoze a woman this way, and it
would serve them right if their
guest were to say, for my
part, I prefer terrapin, some fresh
mushrooms, a Lorenzo and
some
Oh, no, we never do say that. We
are guided by the inflection in the
man's voice and take whatever he
wants us to, whether we like it or
not. Now, don't object bit
to a man being economical. It is a
praiseworthy trait, but for goodness
him practice it when
be takes a woman out to luncheon,
dinner or supper. If really can't
afford anything might ask for,
has no right to invite her. Let
do the less frequently
and do it right when he is about it
Tho woman of the world will per-
haps order a more extravagant meal
than he would desire, but she won't
break him if ho entertains her but
once in decent style, instead of
or four times in poverty stricken
fashion that makes his guest want
to pass her purse across the table to
to help him out of his difficulty.
There is no pleasure in eating under
such circumstances, and a woman
would feel much pleased with
a man if no such suggestion were
made and thus escaped an ex
of his meanness. Let it be
said right here that tho really pool
man is not the one to get into
a predicament. He knows ho can't
It pays read the m
i I lid i in
bey just an j
t .- read the r part
1.1 kind f
In speech at
Senator is as
said that
voted the democratic ticket in Hickory
that they ought to be
kid out ti bed by their
The around Hickory get
mad and seem to want-to fight when
u mentions in
presence, but it is all right for one, f
their leaden and try to stir up
prejudice. Conceding a
who votes the Democratic should
kicked out of bed by wife, what
should be done the white man
voted the ticket with
And three
m who voted
are a to the
and thirty c r more i race,
voted for what are the
comparatively sir-nil of wine
men who voted their color and
kindred and with the As long
an the are solidly arrayed in
one political party the whites should be
united against them, and the
r lire is draw n by them or
leaders should be drawn by the
j he t is a while man's
paper, is a w Lite man's
and in politics is against the all
the time. He is temporarily on top
row, and is gloating over his triumph,
but it will be short
Times.
Log Cabin
No matter how big do
won't be happy tie,
fish
De reason people paler
rainy w k.
ain't
When yen h near , i,;.
aw
de forks , , ,
.- de i ad,
do is
way
go n way.
A I
L- I. special
. f
i FOR ADULTS.
NOV.
Co.
trill
Co-
d J.
and he stays out of by not
inviting you to a swell
and then looking pained if you
something beyond ho had ex
It is tho roan who wants
a show of being a
who too proves
by some of this sort
that ho is not.
boy will know how to
grows said a young
mother other day, I have
write out tho menu for him every
time he takes a young lady out.
There won't he will yon
about it, but will select a
dainty meal that will relieve
from embarrassment of so-
but won't be made up of the
cheapest things in sight, and
therefore, give her n. chance, if she
does not care to make
a change in one or more dishes with-
out feeling that she is an up to date
Jack has lured an
victim into a restaurant
to rob
THE VOTE.
Returns Ail In and It Will Stand
as
returns of recent
are all in and it appears that
the vote in the electoral college
will stand as follows.
tho 19th says
There was an mar-
here today. Knight,
a retired Vermont far was
wedded to Mrs. of
this village. The om i
years of age, bride
baa just passed her birthday
Knight is the
He is an anew
f Judge O-o. p. and
ii, was noon u visit to him
that he met Mr;. The
was brief and
soon made for the wedding.
When be started Vermont
ho took tho usual route
to Now London, whore he planned
to take She steamer o Green-
port, to arrive
on day bet mo
When New London dock was
reached much to the disappoint-
cf the old man he found the
i onto to Long Island had been
discontinued- How to reach
in time for wed-
ding puzzled hint. He thought
of hiring a tug, but ad
found a of a sloop, bow
as the wind was fair, agreed to
across the sound
Knight was landed at Now but-
folk, a distance of fifteen miles
from Hero word was
to the of
the delay, and just at dark Knight
arrived town in a beak. A few
J. Howard
the officiating clergyman of
the Methodist Episcopal church,
and arrived and tied
the knot. Knight is to do,
in i is bis wife.
s Pills
Cure All
Liver Ills.
Twenty Years Proof.
Liver Pills keep the bow-
els in natural motion and cleanse
the system of all impurities An
absolute cure for sick headache,
dyspepsia, sour stomach, con-
and kindred diseases.
With careful rotation of do without
crops and liberal fertilizations, R- p- Smith, Va.
cotton lands will improve. The writes I don't know how I could
three in nil oar ex- ,. r ., , T, ,,
application of a proper do them. I have had
containing sufficient Pot- Liver disease for over twenty
Am now entirely cured.
Liv-r Pills
re two In
v. fin
t la- occupation A v
s ago i I
be road Bay
and when i v twenty-
an they . ere
even for Tho cf
the c k h at tine cf
tin- and did not
particularly to m
tramp on a hot day, and they
wailed in it for minutes and
after their of
shoes they proceeded their
tin
In a d i-u n
On a recent on
i that
into , on fa
and this
carried with them and put
I bey considered a use-
went into i ad
banding demijohn over the
counter, asked
tor to fill it with
keeper obliged them
and was rendered a dollar in
return- Ho at ouch refused i
a ii was debased- Tho tramps
bad no more mono a-id there
being Ii
man emptied back
into cask and tramps left
with their
A few minutes later same
tramps broke into a vacant lot
and carefully broke demijohn.
From delicately
lifted cut bath sponge,
was thoroughly
with whiskey. After squealing
into an tomato can and
over the relative sixes
alternate tramps
marched on wiser but Dot quite
Call.
ITS
To editor haw an absolute
remedy for i y use
thousands of less already
cured. So am I
cf its power I consider it duty to
two Mate free to those of your readers
have Bronchial or
Lung Trouble, if they write me
I express address. Sincerely,
T. A. M. C, Pearl St,
r id
I inter tis j Jon-
ash often makes the difference
between a profitable crop and
failure. Use fertilizers contain-
not less than to
Actual Potash.
Sale of Valuable Land.
of the i vested in me
is a complete specific decree of the Court
county made September tern
against
North Carolina has a mica output
of pounds a year. New
Hampshire produces about
pounds. South Dakota pounds
and New Mexico pounds.
mica of North Carolina is of best
Duality and
S.
New
New
New
North
North
South Can
South
West
Necessary for
All about results of its use by
penmen on the bee arms in United States-
told in a little book which we publish and will gladly
mail free to any farmer in America who will write for it.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
Nassau St., New York.
PORK
lag year's supplies will Ind
their interest to get our prices before
ii all its
RICE, TEA,
ALWAYS AT LOWEST MARKET
Tobacco, Snuff
we bay from Manna en-
to buy a one profit. A corn-
FURNITURE
always on and sold at t suit
the times. Our goods are all bought and
sold having i
to run, we sell at a
S- M. Z.
Administrators Notice
Having this day before E.
A. Clerk of Court of
Pitt county, as administrator of the es-
state Francis
notice hereby given to the creditors
of said estate to present their claims
duly authenticated, to me for payment
on or before the 80th September,
f, or notice will be plead in bar
their All m indebted
to suit are to make
mediate payment and cost and
expenses.
This tin. Slat day of September
JOHN H. MANNING,
W. F. Manning,
Jarvis A Blow. Attorney;.
Land Sale.
By virtue of a decree of Pitt
Superior Court in the case of J. B.
Cherry and the heir at Law T. B.
Cherry against T. J. H. E. Dan-
and L. Elliott, the undersigned
Commissioner will sell for cash before
the court house door In Greenville on
Monday, the 14th day of Dec the
following described piece or parcel or
lot land situated In town of Green-
ville, and being half of
lot No. and being same upon which
the store now occupied by Proctor
A Co. and J. B, Cory now stands. Same
being gold for a division.
property was sold on
Nov. but me bid having been raised
a re-ale is necessary.
This November
F. G. JAMES,
Commissioner.
to Creditors
The having duly
before the Superior Court Clerk of
county as Executor of the Last
Will and Testament of
Ii hereby given to
all indebted to tho to
n immediate to under-
signed, and all baying
said estate must present the
same for payment on or before, the ,
day if October. 1897. o this w ill till all the purchase
be plead in bar of recovery. money is paid with the privilege to the
This day of t r i purchaser to pay the whole and take
THUS. J. JAB VIS.
of
Orson X. C. October 7th,
.,
1891 in
which Brown,
L P. Everett Is n and
Skinner are
I will offer for sale
In on Monday the
to the
bidder described tracts of
land in county
due tract iii on east
e of I crick adjoining the lands
Galloway, James Galloway, H-
T. Wilson inn live
hundred more or less and k
as the Smith place-
One tract iii Township north
side of Tar River adjoining the lad of
Uriah Leggett, the
land and others and known as the A. J.
i obi land.
The terms are one third cash, balance
one and two years. Interest from day of
-IS STILL AT THE WITH A
YEARS EXPERIENCE has taught me that the best is the cheap
Hemp Rope, Building Pumps, Farming Implements, and every
necessary for Millers, and general house purposes, as well a
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods I have always on hand. Am head
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and jobbing agent for Clark's O. N. T.
Cotton, and keep and attentive clerks.
Ville. n.
C. C. COBB, Pitt Co. N C.
T. J. ;
COBB BROS CO.
COTTON AND PEANUT MERCHANTS,
Stock, Cotton, Grain and Provision Brokers.
and Progress Building, Water Street.
Ties and Peanut Sacks at Lowest Prices.
and Consignments Solicit
All editions Codes used
J, L.
Fire and Insurance,
N. C
AT
All kill us Risks placed in strictly
ASS COMPANIES
At lower; current
I AM AGENT FIRE PROOF
Pitt County, J in the
Moore
vs. .
above named will take
lottos action entitled a- above
has commenced In the Superior
for i divorce and
t . defendant will lake
, iii t i I to appear .-it
next of the
j PKt C to be held at lb
. on 13th Mop.
i a -t f i mix r
. a ; o the
of tiff, or the relief de-
will be .
This -in f i IS
E v.
Clerk Superior Court.
. Attorney.
Or m
I N. I
KAI I IX
lift
W . e Iron
work
prices reasonable
Ike
RIP-A-N-S
The modern stand-
ard
cine Cures the
a cry-day
ills of humanity.
. . i I
t I . i l
K. W. V . i
IN i .
. I I t II i
. .
l lo It. on
Snow El ill, N. X.
f Al A- TYSON,
e, .
Practice in the
DR. D. L. JAMES,
X C,
FOR K .,
TOO.
Is
especially tor stuck, well n-
and for that Is sold in tin
holding pound of
cine for
Lambert, Franklin o.,
March
i liars used all bi t
I would t one if
for all the is ever saw
ii ; thing f
ii . year i u i w iii
i Iii ;,. . tin, i,
. .
JUST
Di III . .
Flour, Lard,
Meat, Coffee
Meal, Sugar
g SO low
Hi s
mm i.
see me
and I will
you fair
HOME SC FOB
Will open n;
Oct. 2nd a Home School Gil is.
to years of age. Nun-
limited to Address
Mrs.
P. O Nelson C .
I . H on In On
. Ii
ii Monday. W
i v n A. M.
leave . S M.
.- i d i i-I
ii are i I
of I River.
i -nil I i n
line for Norfolk, B
York r i i,
i; era sin tin Ir
via Dominion
s p from
i ; . , Nor-
k Bali
n i .
i ii
. .
J. J. CHERRY, A
run x. .
idea
your way bring
Write JOHN CO.
D.
Hat of two wanted.
r-. . ;
AN
. II I i
a i n
i i
ct,
Iii -i. V, j .- v
cot
sent free. t
The i I
op
DAY ; ,
e I
.
Primary per
I run dial
t .
V I- ii nu I
. .
,.
Ir. i
. W
ma
; on
Vi
j ; ; j
i .
. M
His Worst Enemy Defeated by
P. P, P.,
Great Remedy.
. M
I I
i i
u . . .
i .
SMITH ED WARD Props.
lite ii a
Court
n o
and in all
kinds of
FINE BUGGIES a SPECIALTY
All of done
We skilled labor and good
material and are prepared to
factory work.
A. . .
. t, I
. . ; I
hi ;,
u i i
l ii,.
Hi
i i
I .
in s;
I o
mo
P. M.,
It sky Ml -i
Mi
At
P. M f. M.
Ill V m
U t
II
GREENVILLE, N. it.
Have just an
ii m m.
of latest style are ready to
the wants of the trade at Prices Lower
than ever off-re I before.
and sales is our Our
ave new and to meet the
wants of the misses. We are
goods at a price far below the usual
price.
casket we sell for
-15
-0
45.60
SI
12.50
All ask is a ti and will give en-
tire satisfaction.
G. A. CO-
o Ute
B. F.
i y ii
eases Weldon ;. n ,. u 4.10
arrives Scotland I p
p, m., Kinston 7.44
a. in. Returning, 7.2
i. a, m,
at a. m., am
except
Trains on Branch
a, in., 8.00 p . m,
ii lives Parmele 8.60 a. p.
m., Tarboro 0.15 a. m.,
p. m., 10.20 a. in.
tad p. m strives
11.60 a. in., mid 7.10 p. Daly ex-
Connects with trains on
a oil ml Neck Branch.
leaves O, via
A Raleigh It. R. sun-
p. m., a P. M;
8.00 P. 8.20 p. m.
leaves Plymouth daily except
COO a. Sunday 9.80 a m.,
10.25 and
Midland N. C. branch leaves
daily, except 0.0 a
m. arriving a. in. Re-
turning leaves a.
rives 1,311 a. m.
r i .
R j m,.
N Ht Hope
p in. are
Mount 9.0 a in, daily except
d av.
Trains on Latta branch, Florence R
leave Latta 0.40 p m, Dunbar
p m, Clio 8.05 p m. Returning
a m, Dunbar 0.30 a
Latta 7.50 a m, daily except Sun-
Train Branch leaves
aw for
a. in. and 8.50 p, in- Returning
m. j,
Train No. makes close connection
it Weldon points all rail via
also at Mount with
Norfolk and Carolina R R for
M all points North via Norfolk.
JOHN r.
T. i. EM Manager.
K. Man- . r.
TAX NOTICE.
The of Pitt county will
please lake notice that my term of
us Sheriff expires on the first
in and all owing taxes for
the year 1806 are to come for-
ward and settle at once. Those
fail pay by the 7th of December will
proceeded against as law directs,
as I will be compelled to close up the
b tho of
Pay your taxes and save the costs.
R. W. Sheriff.
FOR MB .
HARDLY AT
CLOSED
Mr. A. M. of T--.-
nu s Catarrh in its
Truly, his of
short f la
of all glad Hi-
be want to n
fill breathe was
Hi- on
for P. P.,
in
have
of P. P, P. was tin-
my head to mil's of fast
P. P. P. my f
I- of
null relieved of all Hoe
closed for ten but in I
mi It readily.
bin not slept either aide f.-r a
In fuel, I dreaded to see .
SOW I sleep soundly In any i all
t.
M old. bat expect
be hold of p
i that t enough la
r. p., and I heartily mend
my friend, and the
A.
TUB or of
the d in
on this day. personally
A. M. Ramsey, who, being
sworn, on th Hie
by
virtue of P. I. P. Is trite
m. B
Sworn to
J K. N P.,
County.
Catarrh Cured by P. P. P.
where all other
failed.
and your
and feet. agonies
hut relief and a
la by the of P. p. p.
Woman's weakness, whether nervous or
ran lie mid the system
op by P. P. P. A healthy h
a woman.
Pimples, id nil
of the akin are and
by P. P. P.
P. P. P. will restore you build
up your system and yon In
way. P. P. P. removes heavy, down-
In feeling.
For and on the
take P. P. P.
for natural and thorough
take P. P. p.,
Remedy, and get at
SOLD BY ALL
BROTHERS, APOTHECARIES,
SOLE
Block. in.
For by Ii.
THE
Oldest
Daily in
Only Daily o
its Glass in the State.
Favors Limited Free Coinage
American Silver and Repeal
of the Ten Per Tax on
State Banks. Daily cents
per month. pet
K to Creditors.
mull
the
perk county as
I t lie of de-
i lo all
to estate to make
to the
U claims
the must the same
hi late or this notice Le plead In
bar of very-
T of October.
D. J.
of Charity


Title
Eastern reflector, 2 December 1896
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
December 02, 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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