Eastern reflector, 9 July 1890


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





THE
your patronage
ill lo please every reader.
The Eastern Reflector
THE REFLECTOR
i JOB PRINTING
that can be surpassed no-
in this section. Our worn always
gives satisfaction.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
VOL. IX.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY
NO.
The Eastern Reflector Democratic Nominees.
GREENVILLE. N. C.
D. J.
For Judicial District
JOHN E. WOODARD,
of Wilson.
LONG AGO-
I n the sweet days of Long
little to me was given;
The love I gave her none may know-
But she is now in
Yet. oftentimes the thought will come.
When I am sitting all alone.
her pure heart, in that dear home,
A love for me still
GOVERNMENT.
Ci. of Wake,
M. Holt.
Secretary of
of Wake.
W. of Wake.
of Wayne,
Superintendent of Public Instruction
Sidney M. Finger of Catawba. wit,
Attorney F. David- Q
mm, of Buncombe. your griefs e'er caused my tears to start
Your Joys were always mine.
The day they hid you in the earth
Chief S. of I thought my heart would break.
Wake. For weary weeks it knew no mirth.
Associate of Ne'er ceased to throb and ache;
Wake; Joseph J. Davis,
James E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and And every day when school was done
C. of I used to wander to grave.
aw n r low bed
Mowers there brought-
Philips,
G. Connor, of methinks.
But youth to manhood quickly tied
hit I. All ,,.; how fleet Time
. To-day I stood low bowed head
Fifth . By low bed of
Chatham. To-day I carried Dowers there,
Sixth T. Boykin. of. As once a boy did long ago
Sampson. i whose curling, dark brown hair.
Seventh C. of Time's falling snow.
Eighth F. of Four hundred moons have come and gone
Iredell. O, little friend, since you were
Ninth F. Graves, of l Ten thousand suns shone down upon
Surry. Thy little grave so
Tenth of Oh. lonely grave pine,
I nevermore may gaze on thee.
Eleventh M. Shipp, of i Yet, sometime, in a fairer clinic,
that which other men had possessed.
The woman something in
that she implanted in the breasts of
the little ones given her the seeds of
truth and righteousness, and then
nurtured them until they had
into splendid manhood and
womanhood. The man acquires
cash, the woman builds character.
While the man engages in the
with his the woman is
laboring in the service of heaven it-
i self when she is bringing up a
of men and women who will be
i better than their predecessors. The
noblest, ambition of any generation is
to bring up their to a higher
conception of life and its purposes
than they themselves
Have we the right, to
the younger members of the human
family, that the older ones may be
made more com fort aide
Now let any intelligent person
consider the probable fate of society
I the young women of should
be encouraged to abandon the purer
the shelter of home life.
and engage in the strife for gain,
during the formative period of their
i lives. Their inevitable destiny is to
A Great Mistake.
Wilmington Star.
We published yesterday the let-
of Senator Vance to Elias Carr
President of the North Carolina
Alliance, a letter called
for by the numerous reports in
reference to his position on the
sub-treasury bill, and also by j
events which have taken i
Stray Bits of Fun.
Baked Together by the Bad Boy for
Those Who Love to
Marshall are my
dog howling
at the moon.
You give me a the
place in our State since the window-frame to the glazier,
treasury bill was introduced in ,, , ., , ,, ,,
Senate by him, at the request the cook-Hold the
representatives of the Alliance fork coming,
and the Industrial Union, one of, The Jew-S H is ancient,
which doubtless was the one
of the Alliance, presented
to candidates for . What is the most fashionable more
In this letter Senator Vance article in the world A masqueraded the garment
Strong Words on
Laws.
Charlotte Chronicle.
The annual meeting of the Phi
Beta Kappa chapter of Harvard Col-
was made interesting by a
address by Potter,
of New k, on Scholar and
the Bishop Potter
on subjects of current interest, being
particularly forcible when he came
OVER THE STATE. Dangerous Delusion.
Happenings of Interest Occur-1
ring in North Carolina.
AS EXCHANGES
A was run over and
smashed by a train near on
Monday.
has a new hook and
ladder truck that weighs
to deal with the subject of pensions, pounds
he said, there a
of philanthropy in which
There are newspapers in
North Carolina, only of which
are Republican.
Richmond State.
A paper commenting upon
j the craze in Boston over
asserts that there is
delusion among tho people of the
North than among tho of
South. It is now the fad in Boston
to hypnotized, and many young
ladies there ate eager for the ex-
Is this assertion of the
existence of more delusion in the
North than among the of
the South Hue At first glance it
appears
it will excite the ire of our Northern
brethren. To liken the cultivated
claims his sympathy with the aims whom did of a grateful patriotism than our Cook, a year-old I Bout
and objects of-the Alliance, but d of Congress have lately Georgia evangelist, has been Plantation
warns its leaders as a friend and the of the and the silence in I o , T
well-wisher, to keep politics out of to the and fl the
the organization and the What is the best way to keep ; which grotesque that they Salisbury people, guessing at its indeed exists then it
nation out of politics if they would fish from smelling Cut off their have long ago been laughed, population, go an high as
out of any intelligent public
have been received is one of the
most amazing fact of our political
experience.
as far apart in time as are
None so far have claimed as much
as
According to the Weldon
preserve it and not defeat the very noses,
objects which they have in view.
In an editorial on this thing did Israel
several days ago commenting upon when tired of wandering They
the test questions presented a rest.
Col H. C. and since then , st of
to other candidates for Congress,, is a chrome-i Home and America, we must needs
took substantially the same .; ,. . . .
position that Senator Vance takes of
in his letter, and we spoke sin- Why is base ball likely to be-1 once tragic and
become wives and mothers. the I as one wishing the come epidemic Because the j It was a hue his land.
gentlest, the tenderest, the most de- the is Aching. remember, which put the Roman
, , it had already conferred the . . , , , , . , , , ,
voted wives and mothers graduate ad the benefits it may How old is discord U is at auction and proposed
the store and workshop Is j yet if managed with originated at the time that j to knock it down to the highest
not the very atmosphere and wisdom. To-day it is in the air that it
it is a good organization and
Twelfth IT. Merrimon,
of Buncombe.
IX
Vance, of
Matt- W. Ransom, of
House of District
G. Skinner, of
Second P. col,
of Vance.
her face to see.
Tis True,
very atmosphere
to the higher sentiments of
manhood It is written that
man can serve two Neither
can man or woman develop their
qualifications for the holiest purposes
of lite in an atmosphere wherein
prevails.
There are isolated cases where the
young girl
commercial lire, but t are
culture with a strong
argument That delusion is strong
in the -North is line. That it is as
dangerously among the
more tobacco has been planted in people of the North M among the
Halifax county this year than ,.,. .
ever before. of tho South la not tree la
the sense of being injurious to the
Mr. John D. Com, of Homier- people of the North; but is true in
has discovered gold and the sense being to the
people of section, namely,
the South. The and
Cunningham, of Greens- ally the North looks
bore, was by a Texas pony will, horror upon what it delusively
on Sunday, June and died
Monday, from the injury received.
their little pistils.
. Why do birds
Chicago Specimen,
I low much it may be
by those who are disposed to not so plenty as many people imagine.
Third W. of woman a in business life, it The majority of girls and women
wisely conducted may become a
factor m directing public
thought and in shaping the public
policy this Government, but the
day it com in its itself as a political nests agree
organization that day the seeds fall out if they did not.
discord and of quick destruction ,, . , , ,
will be sown. is spoken of as early
Originally the organization as . 12,00, legendary
life of St. Christopher.
Do the flowers ever go into I which bide highest to a
tragic opera Yes, in dumb show precisely constituency that is
to be rewarded with symbols has sold his Asheville I compulsory ensures
in their little national and cash ,
considers the deplorable condition
Of the in the South. The
An exchange says M. j horror takes the shape of
enter the arena of j not a political one, nor intended
. , , ,. be a political one, as is shown by
but these cases are
II. Bunn.
W.
Rowland
of
of
is true that the commercial p- who engage in lucrative pursuits do
went women is not in so for the sake of the added comforts united by the , self Jonah, because he, went into within the control of partisan dicta-
the best interests of society. It and the by the
land faithful ties of j the water got whaled.
Fourth
Nash.
Fifth
Forsyth.
Sixth
Robeson.
S. Henderson,
of Rowan. j cases, get at the essence the sub- a livelihood. In very few instances lo strive to secure the establish
Eighth A. ; do greater difficulty light and justice to our
Anson. . .
Ninth G. Ewart of Hen-I That women are or may become than the other sex in
afloat, I'm she
the following declaration par- creamed. up sail and
pose., the National Alliance a tortured listener.
Declaration of
impressed that we, the Far Our neighbor's boy calls
they would j out of this it has come to
pass that not alone some scarred and
honorable veteran, brave and maimed
survivor of an charge, but
every skulking camp follower and
every and tinted
who has the to
demand his bribe, can have it, if only
his vote shall thus be a commodity
Thomas has sold his Asheville
cash
and each with interest for
is an unpleasant fact that people who possession a little not
I home interests,
or declaration
discos this question do not, in many because necessity forces them lo earn j therefore
should set forth
of intentions, we
able to nearly all Hens.
j the business duties men, provided It would be better
j they are entirely relieved from their I for the morality of the country if
natural duties, is readily susceptible those who are so industriously
of proof. They have both gaged, through mistaken zeal, in
GOVERNMENT,
Court A.
A. K. Tucker.
Register of II. James.
B.
S. L. Ward.
and strength already a opening the doors of commercial life
man, Mooring, C. V, Newton, beginning, and a few generations at to the young would seek
John Flanagan, Keel. i outdoor labor, office routine, and rather to instruct them in their
Board of , ,
J. S. Congleton and J. D. daily toil at trades, would develop j higher duties, and through such
Cox. their ability in every quality of mind , wise and ministrations
Public School , . , , l , , l . . ,. . , . ,.
and Mint .-in-. n. I. It; in making the homes this
Now doth the editor return
Thanks for all mercies past.
And wonders at the hot sun's burn
long will melon's
Au old-fashioned Christian
much singing in an
known tongue is what ails church
ten years.
instead of aiding the
make red the troubles now
nary, and increase the growth of
A. A. Watson, D. D., Dish- those delusions which are hurtful to
P of the Diocese of East Caro- the section in which he lives and is
was married to Miss Marv C. I ., , . , ., , ,
Lord St. Church,
on June 38th.
fling
of F. W. Brown.
Standard
TOWN.
G. James.
Greene.
It. Lang.
Chief T. Smith.
Asst B. Moore.
Ward, T. A.
col.; 2nd Ward. W. II. Smith, and K.
Greene. 3rd Ward, M. R. and
Allen Warren; 4th Ward, Joe col.
CHURCHES.
First and Third
Sundays, morning and night. Rev. N. C.
Hughes. D. V, Rector.
Sunday,
and night. Prayer Meeting every
Wednesday night. Rev. E. B. John.
Pastor.
and body that business demands.
I is because woman is not accustomed the moral bulwark of a virtuous
to business care that she seems so j and honorable nation,
unlit for it.
This kind of reasoning, however, j Advertising
There never was a time in the his.
of the that newspaper
does not reach the ital clement in-
in the question of woman's;
participation in commerce and trades.
The perpetuity of our present
depends upon the separate advertising was as effective in a bus-
and distinct maintenance of two re- j sense as it is at the present,
of life, viz., the commercial, j The tendency in this direction dates
and the public and the back a number of years, but has in-
world, and the homo creased of late in a most wonderful
the strife and rivalry on one ratio. In more primitive times, when
side, and the sweet peace of domestic business was far less than
second and fourth i . . ., ,, ,, ,
morning and night. on the other. Man never now it was comparatively easy for the
selves and our prosperity.
To labor for the education of the
agricultural classes in of
economical government in a strict-
spirit.
To the motto all things
essential, unity; in all char-
To secure purity of the elective
franchise and to introduce all voters
to intelligently it for the
act men t execution of
which will express the most
cod public upon all ones best
lions of la ; Henry-So you ask old Growler
state, W
tally, morally, socially and And
To con
I could do, though.
FROM HAND TO
Little Mary says. tan
Adair like any
Doubtless, for older ones have
done so.
which of his battles
was Gustavus Adolphus killed
Pupil, after think
it was the last one.
secure i a I
entire harmony and good will among Henry. That was the best
to
will
brotherly
love
Sn
Meeting every Wednesday night.
A. D. Hunter. Pastor.
approached civilization until he be-j memory of men to take and retain
all mankind, and
among ourselves.
To suppress personal, local, sec- j at parting,
and national all And pressed their
healthful rivalry all i And satisfied not, as he bolder grew,
ambition- them to his lips.
To assuage The sufferings or a His grasp grew ardently closer,
brother and sister, the dead, And her face flushed rosily re ,
r , And he swept a kiss from the proper
care for the widows, educate K
the orphans; to -From baud to he said,
toward offenders.
To words purposes SAT down ox.
in most favorable light, you acquainted with
honesty of good Miss Schmidt
lion, he himself lo do Ins
cal bidding,
have nothing to say to those
who have devised this infamy and
it with the name of civil
gratitude, but for the manhood which
it is destined to corrupt and
no honorable man can feel, I think,
any other than the profound
sympathy and sorrow. This surely
supported. And these delusions
impair the ability the
whites to take care of the blacks,
for this ignorance is worked upon
by a depraved class of whites, called
because the title
peals to the fancy of the
Federal Election bill
That
bill
Mr. John Edwards, of
Lincoln county, dropped
dead at his residence on Tuesday
last, while sitting in a chair. He
died of heart disease.
j The Lodge
Mount Olive Our comes
townsman. Air. David L. Summer- ., , .
shipped a box of peaches North
Tuesday week, which is the first i inspiration from the deluded
shipment we have heard of this Northerner the bitter anti-
Northerner. This
Sanford Dr. V. X. . s as as is the delusion
Seawell is spoken of by some the A social
, the farmers as the probable lad is the thing of a but a
is a system Government de- date for the N. C. Senate from the political delusion is a menace full of
conspires to degrade men, I J
and no delicacy ought to consent to alliance. crimes deadly to the
excuse or condone mi .,,, ,. vitality justice, also deadly
It is not excused or ; to general
.,.,., of the w omen s Christian l l
, pension legislation is for North Carolina will
be in session in Concord July 17th, I
18th and 19th. Miss and
often leading workers from a dis-
will be present.
patty purposes, and it cannot
be long before it recoil upon
those who are responsible for it. In
tho North as well as the South public
sentiment is beginning to revolt
against the that at-
tempts to disguise itself as patriot-
ism.
A Surprised Clerk.
Charlotte Chronicle.
When the Democrats had the pres.
and the majority in the House,
New York Tribune.
Senator Harris, of Tennessee, had
Prof. Chas. an experience some j ears ago with
J. Parker late of the Raleigh A committee clerk at the
ed School, has just been f,, n i.
,, . i -I lie went into the room or tho
to the position of Superintendent .
of the Tarboro Graded committee on one afternoon
good selection. We congratulate I and asked the clerk to show him
a case under consider-
by the committee.
good selection. e congratulate anti tn
Don't KnOW Want. Tarboro on the acquisition of Mr. j the papers in
Parker. c
were continually by Be- J- Morris, daughter of Mr.
with betas incapable orris of county.
framing
Are you the claimant said the
clerk,
Senator Harris replied that he
was not the claimant.
Arc you the attorney in the case
Both are deaf mutes and graduates I said the clerk, with still greater ab-
Raleigh Mr.
Milton H. Johnson, of Ponder
county, was married to Miss Min-
any groat measure upon of the North Carolina Institution
which the party would unite. The for the Deaf and Dumb.
to others, and to protect I talked with her J familiarity of the Republicans with
Mr. Walker
Senator Harris replied that he
was not even the attorney.
Well, who in-------are you, then
Covenant Lodge. No. T. O. O. F. due more to this source than to the burden, and so ink and types i nothing in them that Senator Vance
T wise or great military I must come in as relief a burden I as a man, and Senator, could
Insurance Lodge. No. K. of H., achievements. j too to be born. Were a m endorse, and is nothing You
A BAD
a man
What's the matter, I of doing.
look dispirited. measure
meets every third Friday night.
D. D. D.
Pitt Conned
every
Pitt county r .
first Friday in April. July and the application as much people would in tho party,
and October. J. J. as civilization suspect him of being ignorant of the not endorse when
If, then, the home is such a now has a house to renter a farm
down the
could loll him where
. -r if, a j----.
A. H. and institution, is it not UP and
titled . as much ere and study, if any one co
them that ex Cleveland,
to whom the of fate again
points as the Democratic candidate
the Presidency, the most
E. A. Secretary.
Greenville Alliance meets store or
before the second Sunday In each j Admitting that woman is tho
o'clock, r m.
Fernando Ward, S. Spain, j of man mental qualities, what
Secretary. could be more proper than that
POST OFFICE.
Hours for all business from A.
M. to V. M. All mail distributed
on arrival. The general will
be kept open for minutes at night
after the Northern mail is distributed.
Northern Mail arrives daily
at P. M. and departs at
A. M.
Tar Old and Falkland
mails arrives at
If. and departs at P U. .--
Beads, and Grimesland
mails arrives daily at
P. M. and departs at A,
Bell's
Johnson's Mills. Beds
and Pullet mails arrive Tuesday
Thursday and Saturday at A. M. and-
M.
Vanceboro, Black Jack and
mails arrives ever Saturday at P. M
should have the sphere of home for
her especial care and responsibility
How could greater honor be
upon her than to make her the
siding genius of one of the two
stones of civilization
is a recognition of her superior
her innate refinement and gen-
that to her care is committed
the shaping of the domestic life of
both sexes, and the unfolding of
at its tenderest period.
Which stands in the more
the more glorious c
toward the man
who has had a successful business
career and has gained a fortune,
whose check is always honored and
whose name is a synonym for
and uprightness, or the woman
who has trained up a family of
Re. A- D.
Appointments.
1st and
2nd and 4th Sundays, morning
Greenville Baptist
Player Meeting every Wednesday night,
ltd and Beta
in the way of honor and
Which of them has conferred the
greater more lasting
the The man
reached and draw to himself of
value of what he had dispose
indeed, the suspicions would not
unreasonable i i the case of a man
who would spend a week in making
an which would be
more thoroughly given by tho news
paper In half an hour.
The advertisements In a newspaper
very generally represent not only
who are the business men, but the
men who are doing the most business
and are therefore the better prepared
to sell bargains. It is not true, as
some people imagine, that the man
who pays liberally for advertising
must put the so expended on
the price of hi goods to justify the
outlay, but on the contrary the man
who advertises liberally is the one
How does
I'm troubled with
mother-in-law.
That's bad, old boy.
she visit you
Twice a year.
That isn't often,
No, it that she stays
six months at a time.
they were presented to him. Such
an based these
principles and actuated by these
high resolves must become a power-
factor for good, but the very
moment if, as organization,
arena, and
mixes up in party contentions, it That U my
abandons to a great extent its high naked; this winsome maid.
moral ground, lowers its character,
its influence, is power-
only to the extent of tho votes it
may be able to control. It would
not be long before if, as a political
organization, would be on the same
plane with other political
aspiring with little
AND TRADE.
That are and Free
Of which I so much hear
What is
For answer, her waist laid
My arm. She blushed, and smiling,
politics, I think, dear Fred,
Are just perfection.
DIFFERENCE IN RAW MATERIAL.
Pa, inquired Bobby, are all
and great ambitions, would en- the people made of dust
to use It to further their am-
They would to a
greater or less extent unless that or-
was managed with more
wisdom than any
political in this country
who sell the lowest in be- ever was. Then jealousies, the
cause his increased trade enables him contentions rivalries would be-
to do so. Buyers ought to know, and gin, end its influence and
go mostly to the men who ad-
to get bargains and get
them, man who, saves the cost
of advertising has a chance to
give his customers the benefit of his
but the Cheap Johns of
do not come to
Yes, yes, replied his father, who
was reading.
And is everybody made of the
same kind continued Bobby.
No, no; some of them are made
of the cheapest kind of dust to he
had.
nest be destroyed forever. There
are the very best
of Carolina in Alliance,
the great body of them are true and
good men, love their State and
wish her well, and we cannot and
will not believe that they will
their great order to a course
which in the end be
to Mm State
that young Mr,
Sissy and Miss re
to be married.
that so
Yes. But the union will
be a happy one.
Why not
Because he parts his hair in the
middle and she hen on the
, ;
too much I that would revise the tariff, and
be conservative enough to be adopted.
The bill was what they of-
was a monstrosity that,
while it was forced through the
House, is opposed by great leaders of
the party, and is likely to
or changed in the Senate.
In such a tangle have they gotten
themselves over the tariff bill, that,
according lo a prominent Democrat,
the Senate hesitates to take it up
sonic sort of a compromise or
can be made with those
Republican Senators who are
ed to support Secretary rec-
They realize that
the position taken by Mr. Blaine has
made many converts.
The tariff is not the only subject
on which the Republican party does
not know its own mind. federal
election bill, hatched up, discussed
and deliberated for months before it
was sprung, is likely also to suffer
defeat in the Senate. The
can party is rapidly proving itself
incapable of getting together on any
measures of national interest.
The reason is plain. It is a party
without a purpose, except to main-
itself in power.
Only ten deaths in Wilmington
during the month of col-
AYCOCK ll CAMELS.
C. C. DANIEL
N. C
mm mm.
WILSON, N. C
Lexington Last Sun-
day morning, two Ab. j
Hargrove Frank Sullivan,
were locked up the calaboose
for disorderly conduct, both of
them drunK. Sunday even-.
they became tired of close
quarters, and with all their force
broke down the door, there-
by making good their escape.
Tarboro A gentle-
man who traveled
of Pitt county Sunday reports
crops better than in
Another accident occurred
Friday at the crossing of the Nor-
folk Carolina and Suffolk
Co., roads. Tho circumstances
were exactly similar to the one a
few weeks since. The Carolina ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
log train was crossing, the Suffolk G R E E N V I L I, E. N. C
D. L.
DENTIST. t
A LEX h. BLOW,
train ran into it throwing its en-
into the ditch and wrecking
twelve of its own care and four of
the Carolina. This time no one
was hurt.
J. RE. J. M. TUCKER.
TUCKER A Ml it
A W
; Heavy ship-1 N. C.
of logs are now being made
constantly over the A. N. C. R.
R., from down the hue, to the ex
tensive lumber mills of the Enter
prise Lumber Company in this
city, whoso business is simply
Two heavy train loads
came up to their mills yesterday.
Her many friends in this
as elsewhere throughout
Eastern North Carolina, will re-
Set exceedingly to learn that
Annie Harvey is lying
ill at her home in Greene
county, near Snow Hill, and that
little nope is entertained for her
recovery.
.;.
L. C LATHAM. HARRY SKINNER
SKINNER,
A AT-L A W,
N. C.
y JAMES,
N. C.
Practice In all the
a Specialty.
I B. YELLOWLEY.





EASTERN REFLECTOR,
Greenville, N. C.
I Her and Proprietor,
upward and thank God
I that the time already come
That was truly a strong and; when a worth of character
.,,.,.,, , . a nil the whites respect
beautiful editorial about Senator b- . is of
B. Vance in last Friday's petal religion, while v are
Chronicle. It was a not as as we be, still
did testimonial to the statesman- I chore statistics show a
Announcement.
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made by application to the office
in person or by letter.
tor Advertisements and
all changes of advertisements should be
handed hi by o'clock on Tuesday
mornings in order to prompt in-
the day following.
The having a large
will be found a medium
through which to reach the public.
at the office at
Mail Matter.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 0th, 1800.
That infernal election bill has
passed the to
At the Judicial Convention for
the Fourth District held last week
in Hon. Spier White
of Wake was nominated for
Judge of the Superior Court, and
Mr. E. W. Jr., of Johnston,
for Solicitor, both on the first
lot.
has disgraced
by granting a new charter to the
lottery. The concern bought up
her legislators and passed the bill
through. It is to pay
to the State annually for the
of carrying on its infamous
work.
To-morrow the Executive Com-
of the First Congressional
District will meet in Washington
for the purpose of selecting the
time and place for holding the
Congressional The
Reflector hopes Edenton will be
selected as the place.
To-day we publish a card from
Hon. E. A. in which he re-
fuses to allow his name to go be-
fore the Congressional
Our space for this issue was
so far taken up at the time the
card was handed in that comment
upon it must be deferred until
another issue.
The Alliance does not
take any stock in Independents.
The President of Rowan County
Alliance recently announced him-
self an Independent candidate for
Sheriff. Being a strong Alliance
he thought to use the order
as a tool to work himself into of-
The Alliance held a meeting
a few days later, part of their bus
was to elect new officers. The
President expected to be re elected
but very much to his surprise re-
only five votes and they
were said to have been cast by-
Republican members. A good
lesson to him, no doubt.
The Judicial Convention for the
3rd District, which met at Rocky
Mount last Thursday, was a
one. Every county in the
district but Franklin and Greene
had their candidate, and Pitt had
two. Knowing there were many
nominating speeches to be made
the convention very wisely made a
five minute limit to them. Those
placed in nomination were A. L.
Blow and I. A. of Pitt; D.
Worthington, of Martin; J. E.
Woodard, of Wilson; Jacob Bat-
of Nash, and W. R. Henry, of
Vance. On the first ballot every
candidate carried his
and nobody had more than one-
third enough votes to nominate
him. The next ballot resulted
about the same way, and things
kept on with ballot after ballot
until midnight, at which hour the
convention adjourned, seeming to
be no nearer a nomination than
when it began voting. Friday
morning found the body ready for
business again. Balloting was
resumed and continued through
the forenoon with about the same
result as on the previous day and
night. In the afternoon got
well in the lead and it began to
look like he would be the
candidate. Not so, however,
for late in the the
delegates had become restless and
many of them
counties were casting about try-
the strength of the different
men, and when the 418th ballot
was called enough had come to-
to give Woodard votes
sufficient to he
warn duly declared Hie nominee of
the C i I C
ship and patriotism of that
ling Democrat and devoted friend
of the people, and not one word
was said in his praise but what
was richly deserved. Zeb. Vance
his name is an household word
in all North Carolina, and even
beyond her borders, the very
of truth, honesty,
valor, patriotism, and con-
devotion to principle
is the man everybody loves. The
Chronicle is urging his reelection
to the United States Senate, and
this it does well. True there
are other able men, but where is
the equal, where is the peer of
Vance Where is the
man to do so much the people
he can do These questions
will go down unanswered, and
verily, they cannot be. Right
here the Chronicle truthfully says
Senator Vance has been
throughout the constant and
ed champion of the rights and lib-
of the every day man.
and of the people, and deeply in
with in their
struggles against poverty and op-
legislation, he has never
tailed anywhere to be their
Then after speaking of certain
opposition that efforts have been
made to arouse against Senator
Vance the same paper says
view of the opposition, as yet
dormant, the Chronicle believes that
every county in the State ought to
follow the example the Wilson
county convention Instruct its
Senators Representatives to
support Senator Vance for
No risk ought to be The
return of Senator Vance is so vital
foe the best interests of the State
the ought to be made
doubly sure and his friends every
where to see to it that every
Democratic is an
Vance
The Negro in the South.
If some of the fire-eating South
haters of the are ever
ready to vilify our sunny clime
and accuse OS of
and taking away his
been in Greenville on
the 4th of July and witnessed the
celebration of that day by the col-
ed people of this section heard
some of their patriotic utterances
and learned of their satisfied con-
they would no doubt have
returned to their Northern homes
with heads hung in shame that
they had been so unjust to the
Southern States and would never
again take opportunity to
resent and slander us.
There had been some slight talk
in it had not
become the white
people would observe the 4th of
July, but when it was ascertained
that the colored people had
ready decided to celebrate it and
were taking steps in that direction,
the idea on the part of the white
people was at once abandoned.
Not only was there the disposition
on the part of the white citizens to
let the colored people go on with
their celebration undisturbed, but
they also contributed liberally to
make the occasion all the more en-
for them. The day came,
large numbers of colored people
from this and surrounding
ties came with it, they celebrated
the day of our Nation's
most creditably, behaved
themselves, enjoyed themselves,
and after the exercises were over
retired to their homes happy.
One feature of the day, and that
to which this article was intended
to refer, was the speech-making,
which occurred in tho afternoon
on tho Market square. A number
of speeches were made some of
them quite good. One of them
because of its extreme manliness
and patriotism is deserving of
special mention, and though other
matter must be crowded out to do
so. yield space for some ex-
tracts from it, which was noted
down here and there as the speak-
his remarks. The
speaker was Rev. W. J. Solomon,
pastor of the colored Methodist
church of this town. He is a man
of intellect and his speech was
clothed in chaste language, some
of the sentiments expressed by I
him being as patriotic as are heard
to fall from the lips of any man.
He
The of the growth or our
race since the in intellect and
wealth is in the annals
of the world. We were reared
among and by white people and
whatever good or evil there is in us
we owe it to them, oar friends and
our future is cast with for
weal or woe, and all we ask of
National government is to let u.
and white brethren alone and
permit us to dwell together in
and unity, and not continue under
a of favoritism to stir up
strife among us. We want no leg-
We need none. There la
no Force Bill necessary to give an
oar rights in North Carolina We
are satisfied with our condition.
Considering oar condition on
day, we challenge world
of races to straw greater progress
gen than we have
of who have con-
more than to
Foreign Missions. All e
line our progress is satisfactory.
Whatever interests the white man
now and
theirs are so that you
cannot afford to permit in
to enter that will tend to
disrupt our friendship, peace
prosperity. No, we are here and
here we will stay. Nothing can re-
move us from among white
Among with them every
i ins country has enraged in
tho blood has been
America's freedom, and we will
ever be true to Stripes
that float over us today
to the Tell mo that we can
be colonized and sent away to for
laud f Not the last drop
our blood is flowed from our veins
tor we are citizens of our own fair
and here will live and
die. Some of the restless may em-
it will be from State to State
but we will never leave the laud we
love so well. And us who
live in North Carolina, why
her lair borders f Here is the place
of your nativity-the laud of the free
the where justice
sirs to meet out her dues to all alike.
Here is peace and prosperity and
good among all And leave
this goodly laud for Mississippi
Why it is the most degraded hole
earth. In that State is
wickedness to the square inch
in the same space in hell Stay
here your hon-
est, truthful, sober, sincere, and tho
white man will respect help and you.
to our white friends I will
with our vices.
Many of the worst was inherited
it will take more than a
to purify our nice. You say we
steal. Many times our old masters
sent us to the pig pen the hen
roost. Do you say we lie I We had
to lie when the owner would ask us
about that or my white
friends it will take time, and
and religion to purge us from
those old sins you are not aid-
us when you send a poor old
to the penitentiary five
years for stealing a or a
a white steals
is only a es-
capes under some technicality of
the law. Are there more
sent to the penitentiary than
whites Well reverse the order
give us colored judges and colored
the j solicitors colored juries and col-
lawyers see if we don't
have more white men there than
But God forbid that we
should be prompted by in
the execution of our laws. Let all
prejudice the races
sections of our great and united
country die and into oblivion.
Did the white man fight to retain
slavery T You cannot
sure him. He was for his
property and State rights. Owe no
man prejudice because of your
condition of servitude but
rather lift up your heart to God
that you are American
with the rights privileges
and protection accorded her citizens
and while you live direct your
forts energy to the promotion
of race and of a
happy, prosperous united
try.
A Lawn Tennis tournament was
one of the features of the fourth.
Bids are now for construe i
a lighthouse on outer
diamond shoal off Gape Hatteras.
This is most important work
coming under supervision of the
United States Light Board ;
the matter will carefully c
The cost of construction is
not to exceed ad is
the most money ever expended by
the government for a lighthouse.
Trucking beau raising are
as profitable a business as one could
engage in ; there is always a de-
vegetables berries at.
good prices realize
profits- The strawberry
crop is especially a paying
trucker near made
on his strawberry crop year
according to his own statement and
have no doubt about the truth of
it. Tomatoes sell readily from
to dozen; beets doz.; and
other garden-truck at proportion-
ate prices. Poultry raising is also
a most profitable industry, the
prices ranging from to for
young chickens and the
diminishes. Our people should
engage these two occupations
more extensively ; it does cost
much to do it, and they yield hands
some returns.
The morning of the Fourth dawn-
ed bright and gloriously and at an
early hour people began to throng
the principal streets of our city and
by 10-30 o'clock the street that lead
to the south entrance of the Capital
the was to take
was almost impassable, so
had the crowd become.
processions were termed at the foot
of Fayetteville street marched
to the Capitol where the exercises
of tho day were formally opened by
Rev. Dr. Nash iD an appropriate
prayer, followed by Governor Fowle
a brief telling speech. Mayor
Thompson then presented
Vance, who arose and made a
a speech as only
can make. His
was hailed with shouts of delight.
He spoke of North Carolina as she
was just after the war and as she is
to-day, pointing out the great
strides progress made by her in
the last quarter of a century. The
are invincible and
thrive despite all adverse cir-
and in fact it is true.
If there is any man loved by
North Carolina and her people it is
Zeb. Vance. entire day
there was something to please
entertain the visitors, and at night
For Register of Deeds.
TWO ENDORSEMENTS FOR THE
SAME MAN.
Johnson's Mills, N. C.
July 4th, 1800.
Mr. Editor take this
to name a man for
of Deeds, who will, I believe, be
nominated by the county
He is well qualified to till the
position, and as Swift Creek town-
ship has been ignored for the past
ten years county conventions, be
should, as choice, be nominated.
I refer to L. a
Democrat and the Strongest rain in
the township. A Voter.
Johnson's Mills, N. C,
July 8th, 1800.
Editor
names for the various offices
to be tilled this fall is now in order,
I wish to present to people of
Pitt county the name of a young
man who is in every way fully com-
to discharge every duty
the office of Register of Deeds. It
is well known that he lives in the
midst of most all of the Republicans
in the county that have any
and be has through his mod-
fidelity made himself very
popular with all. Two years ago
he was on tho ticket for Constable,
and by his personal popularity and
prudence reduced the Republican
majority over a hundred in this
township. It the next county con-
will consider the interest
of the Democratic party and not
individual pets they will surely put
right man in the right
and that man is L. B. Of
Swift Creek township.
An Alliance Democrat.
Gossip.
THE VANCE HERE
A LARGE AND ORDERLY
EVENTS.
Correspondence to
G. R. Spikes, a white man living
near here, was arrested here on
Thursday for criminal assault on a
small colored girl.
Only accident here
on the 4th, which was Joe
a small white boy, had-his bands
badly by the explosion of a tin
can containing powder. His cloth-
took Are was extinguished.
Ed. W. has
been nominated for Solicitor of this
District. He is man of in-
and capability and will
make a good and
We to to be
reserving themselves for a spurt at
the end.
Before mill is reached
Leo is doing some One work
at the three quarters has reduced
the lead to a length
half. But Harris and know
their business and not inch near-
is allowed to come.
Fay is two lengths behind
Lee the Nell is for-
ward for tin cup.
But the railroad bridge is reached
and the real race
Leo by a tremendous spurt is rapid
closing the gap the Dix-
herself. Ed Harris gets
scared and his hair ends.
When Ed's hair stands up it means
and with one frightened
glance behind him be pulls the
harder. Will catches his
eye and gives one of those peculiar
winks. race is over. With
one defiant stroke they pass under
the bridge, leading the by two
lengths and a hall, with the Fay a
good two lengths behind. The
crowd gives one tremendous
all is over. The Dixie is
the champion, and her friends have
just cause to be proud of her
achievements.
Below we give the names of the
boats with their crews, also the
time
Dixie. W. A. B. Hearne, G.
Harris. Louis Lawrence, time 0.01.
Lee, R. L. Humber, J. S. C. Ben-
W. F. time
Fay, W. F. Harding, H. C. Hook-
John Williams, time 6-31.
Nell, Pat Foley, Chas, Barret,
Geo. Nelson, time 6.50.
Tho official record of the two
leaders is as
J m.
1.31 2.54
1.40 3.08
Cherry
IS
IT
It i
T,
hove It
-THAT-
I EVOLVING
Head Cotton
is THE BEST GIN IN THE SOUTH.
the grandest display of pyrotechnics
ever seen here took place at the
Capitol Square at
on Tuesday a Home
Fair was held each day
on the night of the 4th. The
fair was for tho benefit of the Sol-
Home, the proceeds will
net nearly thousand dollars, we
suppose. The crowd was one the
most orderly we ever saw. It was
a gala week and all regret that it
passed so
R. A.
Dixie Still Champion.
Leads the Lea an Exciting and
Crosses the Line a Winner By Fall
Two and a Half.
QUEEN OF THE WATER CRAFT.
Reported by Alex.
they go. Like a they
are off. Scarcely had the signal
been given when four fleet shells
bound away like so hounded
animals. It is a pretty sight. Eight
pairs of brawny arms with sinews
steel rise and fall
like tho throbbing of some monster
machinery, as regularly as clock
work they dip their long slender
oars in the water and pull with all
the skill and muscle that careful
training gives.
The sun is scorching hot. A
slight breeze makes the overhang-
mg trees rustle faintly. Their
fall on the muddy waters of the
old Tar, making a weirdly
beautiful, but they heed it not. Far
away at the goal they hear the
shouts of their friends them
on to more desperate efforts and
them to victory.
Swiftly, more swiftly they go
trees and on the river
banks seem to fly toward them. At
last the goal is sighted. Mid the
fluttering of the
of fans the of the
multitude gallant little Dixie
glides over the line, the
of 1890.
There were about five hundred
and one eyes watching this exciting
The one odd eye belonged
to the one eyed whom Ed
Harris bad with a nickel's
worth of peanuts to root for the
Dixie first, last and all time.
How he came no one knows; as the
boats passed Skinner's mill be was
observed on extreme right of
crowd munching peanuts
using bis vocal organs to their
most. However, the Dixie
bad passed under bridge, the
winner, be was nowhere to be seen,
disappeared as silently as be
bad come. As a Mascot be was a
success, Ed ought, to engage
him
The vast crowd assembled the
county bridge shows that our
are food of athletic sports and
are willing to encourage such.
When starter fired
starting signal at the four
boats were exactly on a line with
Untie Jehu six oared gig,
but only for a moment. In an in-
all was excitement on
lour racers. Benjamin, of the Lee,
missed his first stroke, and the
Dixie shot ahead by a quarter of a
length, closely followed by the Fay,
with the Lee a close third and
Nell bringing up rear.
Lee quickly regains lost
ground, and before the first quarter
is reached has passed the Fay,
Dixie still gains and at the
quarter is leading Lee by a
length and race la be-
the Lee and Fay at this
point. Lee is scarcely a quarter
of a length ahead both are
working like Tartars.
The Sell is not it.
At the half Me Dixie baa
Mr toad to two the
4.25
4.38
and
6.01
Alex.
Dixie,
Lee,
Starters, J. J
Judges, J. D. Williamson and
J. Whichard.
It was a race all were
A would-be wag remark-
ed that the Dixie should be named
the Yankee, upon being asked
why replied, the B. E.
Lee chased her
The first prize, won by the Dixie,
is a silver cup
high, bearing the following
River Boating Club.
Regatta Cup.
July The second and
prizes are boxes of
French confections friend
Van Stephens so well how to
prepare fourth or booby
prizes are a tin cup a turnip,
won by the Nell.
We understand the Lee is soon to
challenge tho Dixie, and if so our
look out for some good
racing.
BARGAINS I I
I am receiving every day my spring
--------stock of Dry Goods,
PRICES TO THE
RICES TO THE
Standard Calicoes, cunts pi-yd.
Homespun, cents pr yd.
Yard-wide line, cents pr yd.
and Children's Straw Hats
Trimmed in latest styles
in the cents to
I NO HUMBUG I
BIG BARGAINS NO HUMBUG
Flake Flour
Flake Flour
I have a Flour watch I guarantee for
84-75. Everything low down for cash.
Give me a trial.
W. STOKES, . W. G. STOKES.
X. C.
WE PREPARED
E OW X
To show the ladies tho very latest and best
styles
Milliner I
Oar stock just opened has the newest
shapes white black
trimmed and
Hats and Bonnets Bonnets and Hats
Hats and Bonnets Hats
We also have Ribbons and
Flowers of all kinds, Feather
Crepes.
Handkerchiefs. In-
Caps and Sacks, etc.
Greenville. X. C.
WHY IT THE BEST COTTON GIN IX SOUTH it it
J built upon Improved principles, having Revolving Heads in the ends of the
Cotton which revolve with the roll of seed cotton, thus preventing that
which occurs at the end of the cotton box all other gins. Hence the
PRATT GIN does not break nor choke, a harder rail of cotton on the
saws than other gins, and, In consequence of this, cleans the seed better and of
course, yields more lint cotton. Tills Is common sens.-, and if don't believe
what we say. write to any of the gentlemen whose names and appear be-
low, all of whom are using the Pratt Gin and will have no other.
F. F. F. Cherry. Jno. Pate
Aurora, N. B. Hooker, Idalia, N. If. It. Ross. T. R. Boyd Edwards
Mill, X. C; f. H. Fowler. Stonewall, N. C; J. A. G. Cox, Greenville,
N. U W. I,. Smith, Calico, N. E. S. Waters, Pantego, C.; J. T.
son, X. W. B. D. Banyan, X. C; IT. H. Hampton, Plymouth,
. M. A. Hath, X. S. M. Smith, Then. Bland, Mills.
X. W. T. X. C; j. t. Gaylord, N.
ORDER wall until the ginning season is upon you to order
your gin. It will cost no more early than late. We will take orders now or any
time this summer, at cash prices, and deliver on good notes, without interest
payable in November, 1800.
MOWING will sell the Buckeye on good
notes, to responsible parties, payable November, and November Order
at once-
It is well known to the people of
Pitt and other counties the First
District that I am a candidate
for Congressional honors. I have
not sought nomination, and
being desirous that there should be
harmony and unity the
especially among the farm-
and working men who are so
anxiously striving to secure a
who is in sympathy
with the toiling masses, I desire to
say to ray friends throughout the
District who have manifested such
an in my behalf, that while
I appreciate their efforts and
them for the compliment they would
pay me, that I shall allow my
name to go before the convention.
I do this believing it to be for the
best, and hope that the convention
will nominate a candidate
to all, and that he may able
to aid the great work of reform
that the Alliance has begun and
proposes to carry on to completion.
E. A.
Greenville, X. C, July 1800.
Arrivals at Seven Springs Hotel,
Miss Willie Peyton
Hooker, John Slaughter,
Misses Lizzie Kirby, May Kirby,
Kirby, Eva Mrs. T.
T. Dr. John L.
Borden, Rosenthal, Tims. F.
Hargett, W. S. Jones, Goldsboro;
Henry Archibald, J. J. J.
W. Grainger, S. Jas. A.
Kins ton ; W. T.
LaGrange; T. E. Hooker, H. S.
Coward and lady, Miss Lillie Hook-
Hookerton.
Notice.-
Tho Board of Commissioners for the
county of Pitt will meet at their office in
the Court House on Monday; July 14th,
for the purpose of revising
list for the year 1890. Every per-
son having to make of
valuation of their property here-
by notified to be present on that day as
required by AH persons who have
failed to list their taxes for the year
1890 will be permitted to Hat them on
the same day. D. II. JAMES,
Com.
at
From now on will make
the following low
Cigarettes
Cards
Boudoirs
or half life sue
Owing to low prices no proofs will he
shown of anything smaller than a
net. All those wishing pictures will do
well by calling early.
Respectfully.
Alley Hyman.
R. HYMAN, Manager.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
OF MB CAROLINA,
The Fall Term Opens Sept. Tuition,
four regular courses of study,
cal, Philosophical, Literary, Scientific.
Special courses In Chemistry, Civil
E Pharmacy,
and other studies.
Separate schools of Law and Medicine,
students may attend the University
Address
HON. KEMP P. BATTLE,
President. Chapel Hill. N. C.
Wilson Collegiate Institute,
Fall Session Sept
Wilson, N. C. For
Strictly non-sectarian. Thorough and
comprehensive course study. Mod-
charges. Healthful location.
surpassed borne advantages.
and successful teachers in every
department. departments of music
by
r oats end
The John Flanagan
COMPANY.
Are in business at the old Flanagan
Shops and are manufacturing
all kinds the best
VEHICLES.
------We also do------
REPAIRING OR SHORT NOTICE.
All Work guaranteed.
JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO.
Greenville, X. c.
COME IN
We want to have a talk
with you and tell
you now cheap
we can sell
you
HARDWARE
Dixie and
Tobacco Plows, Plow
Castings. The Famous
Elmo Cook Stoves.
Give us your orders
for
TOBACCO FLUES
early and you will be
sure to get them in time
LATHAM PENDER,
Greenville, N. C.
ANOTHER
Car Load of Fine
Horses
Mules,
--------Just received by-------
Greenville, N. C.
------Ind will be sold------
CHEAP FOR CASH,
or at reasonable terms on time on
proved security. I bought my stock for
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap as
anyone. Give me a call.
LIVERY SALE AND FEED
STABLES.
I have opened at the stables formerly
occupied by Dr. J. G. James,
and will keep a tine line of
Horses and Mules.
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for
the and can the most
I run in connection a
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of
your patronage. Call and be convinced.
GLASGOW EVANS.
U.
Salve-
The Be st Salve in the world for
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt
Fever Sores, Hands
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
turns, and positively cone Piles, or no
aired. It hi guaranteed to five
mM to
GINS
Having received from the Gin Factory the tool for
and training new saws on old gins, and also other repair work, I here
by announce to all that I can successfully repair their gins
here in Washington per cent, less than it will cost at
any factory, also save largely in freights to and from
the various factories. I can do any work your gin
may need. Semi your gin to the
WASHINGTON MACHINERY AGENCY
With freights prepared, and we will guarantee you
a good job. Don't wait, but send our gin once, at
tho last hour is always crowded, and you may be delayed. If
you can't spare the money now make special terms with us at once
and send your gin without delay. It will cost no more soon than late.
BE TB THEREFORE
AND WILL ENGINES AND
AND AND
All sizes and styles commonly used, at Low Prices and Reasonable Terms.
PAW
JAW
ILL FOR
ILL FOR
That will cut feet of per day. on good also larger sizes at such
rates of
SEED COTTON ELEVATORS.
That will raise 1.800 pounds of seed cotton from a wagon in minutes. No
can afford to do without one . Terms and prices satisfactory
3-TON WAGON SCALES, ONLY
Guaranteed correct or no Can weigh cotton or hay on the wagon, or
live stock on foot.
For prices, address,
WASHINGTON MACHINERY AGENCY.
O. K Washington, M C.
J. B. CHERRY.
J. R.
J. G.
SOLID CHUNKS OF TRUTHS
J. B. CHERRY CO.,
your careful attention to their large complete stock
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
-And of each and every one at least a share of their esteemed patronage.-v
The cry of hard times we hear constantly on every hand, but
--------wish to remind you that we have a--------
SPECIALLY SELECTED W GOODS
To meet not only competition, but to conquer the monster high prices.-
day is passed when the thought of friendship enters
buying of goods, why because every one must and
will buy where they can buy cheapest.
WE ARE PREPARED TO SERVE ALL
Who will favor us with their patronage. We will be glad to have you
and sec us and let us give you at least a hearty shake of
and a kindly greeting. Make our place your headquarters
in the town. Trices and quality what you want
your hard earned dollars and that is just what we
have got for you,
No mistake No Bragging No Back Down
mean every word of it and can and will do what tell you. Look.
down this column and sec if cannot interest you in bargains.
stock embraces
Dry Goods, Notions, Furnishing Goods, Hate; Caps, Boole,
Shoes, Hardware, Groceries, Provisions,
Valises, Wood and Willow Ware, Crockery and Glassware, Tinware,
Plows and Castings, Furniture, Mattresses, Bed Springs,
And easy and comfortable Lounges, also a line of Baby Carriages.
Look at these prices they arc not leaders but only sample prices through our
Calicoes at cents per yard. Ginghams at to cents per yard.
to cents pr yd. Elegant line of White Goods at to ct.
40-inch White Lawns at pr yd. Round thread X. C. Check et.
Piece from to
All wool, fashionable shades, single at cents per yards,
Nun's Veiling at cents per yard, standard goods and worth at least
Single Double width Cashmeres in leading shades, reduced.
-We have the best Hue of-
OUR DOLLAR SHOES
We have ever had, solid leather no mistake. Our line of shoes Is
men, boys and children we can suit you in
Give the tired mother a rest and the baby by It a nice Carriage.
want to talk to you about
f j
That necessary and essential element in every household We ace
for it in this market, and carry the largest line ever found here. We can save yon
money on small as well as large purchases.
Our parting Injunction to every consumer and buyer of of goods in this market la
to come in and look at our goods and compare them and our prices in all our
lines General Merchandise with goods and prices elsewhere, and remember we
meet competition by lowering the price and not the quality.
Yours truly,
J. B. CHERRY Sc CO.,





WEARING
APPAREL.
Make
yourself
comfortable
for the summer
months. Below we
quote quite an array of
hot weather goods for those who
wish to make the most of
life during the summer.
All our Lawns and re
to the uniform price of
CENTS. r
CENTS.
CENTS.
CENTS.
Many among them worth double
the money.
H ALL BLOUSE WAISTS
t AT COST.
Choice display
of Sateens,
hams, etc. New
lot Embroidered
Robes just received
which we are
ling for merely
cents on the dollar.
Nice line of Sun Umbrellas.
Nice line of Sun Umbrellas.
ATTRACTIVE
DISPLAY OF
t SHOES
Full line of Summer Coats.
SEERSUCKERS.
SERGES.
TE.
PONGEES.
For men of all sizes.
Special line for Clergymen and
Stout Men.
Stylish array
Clothing
of all styles
and qualities.
New stock
WORLD'S IT AT
Just received.
All these good must be sold
within days even at a
Our loss is your gain.
R.
Street near Telegraph Office,
Street near Telegraph Office.
X, C,
THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
C.
Mr. H. A. now serving as
Deputy Register or Deeds.
Rev. R of Washington,
is in Monday.
Mi Havens Cherry is at tilt; Boa
Local SparkS-i Music
Misses Forbes and
Fleming are visiting in Washington.
Mr. Wiley Powell, of Warrenton,
s visiting his sister. Mrs. H. Tack-
Painters are at work the new
depot.
Cheap- Car load solid Cora t
the Old Brick Store.
The Alliance had a meeting here
the
While Mountain Ice Cream
for sale by Latham
The seasons continue
the crops.
J. B. Cherry Co. carry a
Hue of Shoes, and sell cheap.
Four to six trains a day arc
unusual now.
lbs Beeswax wanted for
cash at the Old Brick Store.
Cut another in on
time Saturday evening.
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well
and sick at the Old Brick Store.
Latham k Pender continue to have
large sales tobacco tines.
Best Boom ever had for ft, both
Ladies and Men's, at. B. Cherry
Go's,
The colored folks had a good time
at their 4th of July celebration.
The finest loaf of bread I ever ate
was made of Point Lace Flour, at
the Old Brick Store.
Stephens had right much fun with
his apples and the boys, Saturday
afternoon.
Go to Brown Bros and sec their
cheap White Goods and Embroider-
Capt. White has just had a tin roof
put on the shed in float of his low of
brick stores.
A big lot of Sample Notions
received and will be sold at New
York cost at ft
The boat race and the July
have passed. What shall be the
next amusement
Sample lot of
Sample Notions just received and
will be sold at New York cost at
Higgs
Did the census miss
you in making his if so
the Reflector.
per lb for Sweet
Snuff. lb sold Pitt Co., which
is a of its superiority, at
the Old Brick Store.
Gus he could sing
down on the old Tar if he
could only get the pitch.
Walter A. Wood Mowers and
Horse Rakes. We just re-
a lot of these excellent
machines. Send for circular and
price. F. S. Co.,
Tarboro, N. C.
The editor thanks Mrs. W. R.
Whichard for a basket of nice apples
and other favors.
will change my grind-
days from Sat-
to Tuesday and Friday. Will
commence fourth in this
month. I am better prepared to
make good floor than heretofore.
Come and see. Bryant Tripp.
A squad of men were at work all
day Sunday on the draw of the rail
road bridge here.
Alley Hyman, Photographers,
have made some great reductions
in the price pictures- See
in this paper and avail
yourself of the opportunity to get
photographs low down.
We have received a of
Greenville Female Institute. Fall
session opens September 1st.
Watermelons are plentiful enough
to be no rarity now, but the price cf
them is something rare as yet
The Congressional Convention is
the next contest in which our section
is politically interested. Date not
set yet.
Lang has a large, new
to day. He is offering
in his lino of summer
apparel.
Mr. A. Forbes having the dwell-
on the corner of Washington and
Fifth streets repaired and
improved.
will be found the
of the University of North
Carolina. Fall term will begin
4th,
To-morrow and next day
county Superintendent of Education
will examine applicants for teach,,
certificates.
The association meets
next Saturday. It will be an inter-
session and every teacher who
can should be present.
Special services are being held in
the Episcopal church this week.
Mr. Arnold, of Wilmington, is
assisting Dr. Hughes.
A of Wilson Collegiate
Institute for young ladies has been
received. Fall session opens
1st. See advertisement.
The Greenville Guard received
their fatigue uniforms last week. The
boys have not been out in them yet
but Lieut. Smith says they are k.
Mr. T. A. Nichols tells us his crop
this rear is the best for the season
and his prospects for a large
vest the brightest he has had in
years.
The progressive business man says
tried it and
knows. The non-progressive man
don't try it, his business stands still
and he does the grumbling.
The last Scotland Neck
this to say about a Greenville boy
It is generally remarked by almost
everyone what a clever jeweler Mr.
Id.
Washington had another large fire
Monday night in which Farrow's
shipyard, machine shop
and a dwelling house belonging to a
colored man were burned.
Green vile has a depot
now, and pick the world over there
could not he a more
Miss of
is visiting Johnson,
town. .
Miss Mamie spending
this week with Lizzie Salisbury,
at Hassell.
Mr. C L. Tyson began leaching
Monday, i-i the school house at
Swamp.
Master Will Blow is performing the
telegraphic delivery service and
makes a good messenger.
Mr. W. R. Jr., opened
a school on Monday in Brown's
school house near Bethel.
Mr. M. R. Lang, accompanied by-
Mrs. Lang and Master Larry
Monday morning tor Nags
Head.
Mr. the tailor, left
Greenville last week and has located
in Washington. He is a splendid
workman.
Mr. Alex. is enjoying
the summer months at that popular
summer resort, Hotel Macon. And
Gus.
Mr. Morris Jacobs died in Tarboro
on the 2nd inst. He had friends
Greenville to whom the news of his
death was very sad.
Rev. J. L.
vices in the Baptist church last
Wednesday night and Mr.
on Sunday night.
Messrs. C. L. Whichard and O. L.
nor left this week for Lexington,
Ky., to take special courses in the
Business Colleges at that
place.
Mr. Richard Hosier, of Suffolk, Va.,
a weeks ago moved his family to
and is living at Mr. J. D.
Williamson's. Mr. Hosier is step-
I father Mr. Williamson.
Capt. Harry one of the
boys, leaves this morn-
for Nag's Head to spend the
summer. He and our Bad Boy will
he greatly missed from the office.
The small boys base ball club
played a game here Saturday eve-
with a club the country,
beating them in a score of Si to i,
The little fellows arc good players.
Some business men are trying to
get along on the advertising they did
last year or year before, They stand
still and see their always
competitors go right ahead of
Yesterday Mr. J. R.
brought us some beautiful specimens
of cured tobacco. He cured a barn
of primings last week and has an-
other barn ready for curing this
week
The work of repairing the Skinner
building across the street will soon
be finished. The building has been
greatly strengthened. The block did
not turn into a hotel as some predict-
ed.
Mr. W. F. Hart was in to see us
Friday and said old Content-
another blew her fine crops,
she is leading the In some
of the there cotton is
shoulder high.
Mr. force of hands arc at
work around the depot this week
up the yard and raising the
approaches to the freight platform.
The work adds much to the appear-
of the surroundings.
Mr. H. A. saved a barn
of tobacco last week, the first Pitt
county. Herbert says he has a fine
crop. We hope his sales will fine
also, for he is a hard-working young
man and deserves success,
On Saturday Mr. Willoughby
brought us some very nice sweet
the first of the season. He
also told us that he has now lifted
his egg sales to dozen for the
year. He sells about dozen per
month.
The County Commissioners were
in session Monday. They will hold
a special meeting on the 14th for the
revising of the tax list, hearing com-
plaints of over valuation, and allow-
those to list win have failed to
do so.
Since our Bad Boy has left us the
fun column, which appears on first
page, has been given over to the keep-
of Billie. He will mike his own
selections of the doses to be dished
out each week and does his own
if toes get mash-
ed. .
The most peculiar thing we have
seen of a melon nature was a twin
can brought us Monday by Mr.
J. T. Dunn. Two can exactly
the same size and as near alike as is
possible for them to be, had grown
together nearly their entire length
and formed the twin. The stems of
both were right together.
Yesterday Col. L A. Sugg left the
first ripe pod of the field pea at the
Reflector office. He said it was
the pea. the most prolific
variety known. They grow in
and he has been eating green
ones for three or four weeks. Two
crops of them can be made in one
season.
Daniel King, a hard working
prosperous colored man living near
Greenville, told us Saturday he was
curing a barn of primings and would
finish it that night. He has about
acres in tobacco this year, says
his crop is fine and at least days
ahead of last year. Daniel had four
acres last year and made per
it. We hope be will be that
u on his whole crop this year.
More money Is spent hi newspaper
advertising now than ever before
and la spent to better
Ho wide
Mort
more attention should be
given the public water supply of the
town was strongly exemplified last
Friday. The very large crowd in
town soon exhausted several of the
wells and there was some
in getting enough water to
If the supply be drank up so
easily what would become of us in
ease of a fire
Than
over heard a conversation be
tween two base ball boys the other
evening Mi at practice. The two
seemed to be rivals and they
concluded to settle the
agreeing that the first one that
muffed a ball should discontinue his
visits to a certain place. It is Med-
to say that every ball was
Is it Correct
The census enumerator for Green,
ville gives the town population.
There arc many who believe the pop-
of the town is above that
number by at least a hundred or so,
but the enumerator says to the con-
We had no figures to place
an estimate upon, but the Reflector
thought the town ought to have
inhabitants. However, we will go a
wager that the population of Green-
ville is no less than when the
next census is taken years hence.
Mr. C. L. Whichard, who for about
months has been the self-styled
of the Reflector
Monday for Smiths Business Col
University of Kentucky at Lex-
to take special courses in
telegraph, short hand and type
ting. While with us he learned
telegraphy and becoming more at-
to that than printing, decided
to go equip himself thoroughly
in the professions mentioned above.
His aptness in mastering
he undertakes leaves no doubt of his
becoming expert in these. While
called young
man was never connected with the
REFLECTOR, or one more upright and
manly in all his dealings It was
with many regrets that we gave him
up
Sal bat Trot
The pastors of the Methodist
and Baptist Churches here have re-
preached sermons bearing up-
on the relation between parents and
children. The people of Greenville
need any amount of preaching of that
kind. Taking for a guide the pro-
verb that the rod
his there must be a wonderful
lack of parental love in this and
The average boy of
to day appears to he under no pater-
control whatever, and some in-
stances hardly more can be said of
the girls.
Instantaneous Freezing.
The boss machine in the way of a
liquid freezer was exhibited here last
neck and Mr, A- N purchased
the county right for saw of the
machine. We saw the machine at
very simple looking
in were surprised
to sec how milk was poured
into a funnel at. one end and came
out ice steam at the other Water
was also tried and came out shaved
ice. The machine is a Georgia pat-
and will work a revolution in the
way of ice cream making.
Getting Beady.
On.- thing that Greenville needs to
give her a good bound forward is a
good crop or so in the country
One of these is already in
sight and the pulse of the town is
throbbing in expectation. The out-
look for a big business is bright and
now an important step for the
men to take is to begin
zing, to lay plans and get matters in
shape for the march of progress, The
old town cannot stand still much
and those not ready to
with her will be left, behind. Mark
the prediction
Come ion.
printing names of delegates
last week there were a few errors in
those to the Congressional
In township the name
J. C- Grimes should be J. B. Grimes.
the name B. F. Cox
should been B. T. Cox. In
Greenville the names of J. F. Joyner,
C. D. and J. J. Fleming
were omitted through oversight of
the printer. In Swift Creek, the
name of L. B. should have
been L. B. These are the
only errors found in comparing the
original list with the names publish-
ed.
Tea Are Wrong.
The Now Journal of tho
4th says, in speaking of the Star
ball club of Washington,
nine of tho RUM, w-
never be- beaten.
journal has not been given
all the games played this
by Stars, or else it would have known
that Greenville did the work
on the 0th of June by a score of tO
to in favor of Greenville.
Since writing the above sec in a
later issue of the that the
New club has also beaten the
Stars by a score of to
Bow in Heating.
Some of the firemen ha I a racket
at their meeting afternoon.
Two of the men fell out and
fighting right in the Mayor's office
and next door to the guard house.
Tho police went over looked into
the matter, put a guard at the door
and went to the Mayor after a war-
rant for the combatants. Mayor
James went over immediately for the
trial and fined them both One
arranged for the payment of his fine
and the other upon failure was put in
the lock-up, all transpiring in a very
brief time. Quick work, that. Next
time they go to the Mayor's office for
a fight they should remember the
guard house is next door.
Art Exhibit
The art exhibit last Friday
by Miss Mollie Rouse and her pupils
was a highly creditable one and
forded much enjoyment to the large
number of- persons who visited the
hall. The room was one vast
of beauty, the many styles and
sizes of themselves
being so well executed were so
arranged as to render a
most pleasing effect. There were
large folding screens, handsome wall
paintings, beautiful vases,
cushions, scarfs, tambourines, banjos,
fiddles, eggs, etc., giving the display
much variety as well as attractive-
Those making exhibits were
Mrs. C- pieces, Miss Leta
pieces. Miss Lillie
Cherry pieces, Miss Nannie King
pieces, Miss Rosa Forbes
pieces, Miss Ore Whichard pieces,
Mrs. Dr. Zeno Brown pieces. Miss
Carrie Cobb pieces, Miss Bettie
Tyson pieces. Miss Susie Brown
pieces, Miss Alice Atkinson pieces,
Mrs. John pieces. Miss
Aylmer Sugg pieces, Mrs. T. B.
Cherry pieces. Mrs. I C Latham
o S. C Glenn pieces,
Master Willie Ryan piece. Master
Louis Ryan piece. A vote of
thanks is due Boas sad her
pupils tar she they afforded
V with ear-
A Warning
The railroad agent here has asked
us to request the parents and
of Greenville to keep their
children away from the depot unless
accompanied by persons who will
keep them from danger. There are
j several boys who arc around the
I depot most of the running over
the on and off trains,
and hoed not the warnings Of agent
or train men It is useless to argue
the danger that surrounds this
and if it is continued there need
be no surprise if one or more of the
boys get killed by the trains. Only
last Friday a little boy was killed in
in just this way, the train
completely severing his body in
twain. Parents in Greenville your
boy might be the next to get killed.
Would it not be better on your part
to compel your boy to keep away
the depot rather than run the
risk of his being brought home a
mangled corpse
Good Service.
Greenville certainly ought to
proud of tho railroad facilities and
accommodations the has. A
superb road, the prettiest depot on
the line, the most obliging depot
agent, and just the best conductors
that ever carried a punch. Capt.
Whitaker on the passenger and mail
just captures everybody who rides
with him, he is that clever and
to his passengers, and
Williford on the grows in
popularity every day. Both of them
are whole-souled men and generally
liked. And the engineers should not
be forgotten, for to sec Capt. George
Smith at the throttle is all the
the passengers need that
are in the best, of hands and will
reach their destination in safety.
And Mr. handles his freight
train like he knows his business.
The service here is admirably con-
ducted, and if the railroad
ties would only change the A. R.
schedule or make some arrangement
whereby the passenger train for
Greenville not have to wait an
hour or so at the junction every even-
they would hoar no more
plaints from the
On Monday morning we saw
F. A. foreman of the work
at the depot here, who gave us some
points about the He said
the of building is what is term
ed a strictly first class depot, and he
added, is not a better one any-
where on the The
main front of the building is facing
Avenue, the reception
rooms and offices in that end, with
the large freight room extending
back to the South parallel with the
railroad track. This warehouse is
feet with baggage room in one
corner, the ticket office and telegraph
office is feet, and the two re-
rooms each feet. The
front of the building is two, stories
high with two rooms above the re-
rooms the of those below
There are largo platform , ,
whole . f
i . the room
with immense platform
scales. There is a hood on both sides
the warehouse and also around the
passenger rooms. The design of the
building is excellent and the finish is
to be beautiful. The offices and re-
rooms arc to be left in
wood, hand smoothed and finished
in Tin outside of the building
will be handsomely painted. There
arc about feet of lumber in the
structure, in the chimneys and
foundations were used
nary brick and pressed brick.
Work commenced on the 15th
April, and the carpenters will be
through this week. An average of
carpenters have been upon the build-
and some days when the ma-
sons and day workmen were all en-
gaged there would be men at work
As we stated last week the building
is a most substantial one. The arch
of it can nowhere be surpass
ed. It is the admiration of all who
visit it. Surely it is a credit to
Greenville, and our people ought to
feel thankful to the railroad author-
for giving us such a beautiful
depot.
Died from His Wound.
Mr. John M. King, who on the
28th April was shot in an
with Messrs. Joseph and
W. A. died on Friday morn-
July 4th, after nearly ten weeks
most intense suffering, blood poison
and heart failure resulting from the
Mr. King was shot twice
with a pistol, one ball
going through the flesh of his arm
and spending its force against an
account book in his breast pocket,
other striking inside his left
thigh, breaking the bone n pieces.
The latter wound caused his death.
Mr. King was not quite Al roars
old at death. In September,
1807, ho was married to Miss Lucy
Jones, of Farmville. She died in
1884, and in 1887 he was married
again to Mrs. L. C. Atkinson. Eight
children by bis first wile and one by
his second wife are now living. He
was a brother of Deputy Sheriff B.
W. King of this town, or Mr. B. R-
King, a merchant of Falkland, and
Mr. H. T. King editor of the Tar-
Banner- He was buried near
Farmville on Saturday.
Bawls, who was charged with
shooting and who was also wounded
m the altercation, left county
soon after difficulty and his
whereabouts are unknown.
SPRING GOODS JUST ARRIVED
M. CONGLETON CO.,
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand.
Dry Hoods, Notions, Boots, Shoes and
J. A. ANDREWS,
g. o
We have just received and opened a beautiful line of
Spring and Summer Goods.
I be glad to have my old friends and customers come to
see us, and assure them that we can sell the goods
For
Give us a trial and be convinced that the way to buy goods is for
the spot cash.
JOHN S. CONGLETON.
N. C, January, 1890.
CO
GO
W , M
Reduction I.
EDUCTION i EDUCTION
THE FALL
T I
t i t
WHITE GOODS AND
WHITE GOODS AND EDGING
WHITE GOODS AND IN J
GOODS AND EDGING
been selling this season been reduced in price and it is need
less to say how cheap when before the reduction we
heard several
never saw such
White Goods y Edging
in all my life where did
you get them from
Hamburg Edging in. wide in. wide els. in. wide
Hamburg in- wide wide -.-. in. wide
White Goods from cuts to cents per yard-
White Goods from cents to cents per yard.
and see if they are not what w represent in price,
BROW
ROW
row IN
GREENVILLE, X. C GREENVILLE, X. C.
INTERESTING INFORMATION
That Man Stephens
-------WHO KEEPS SUCH A NICK ASSORTMENT OF-------
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS
Says there Is never any doubt of his you entire satisfaction
if you just give him a call when needing goods in his line.
He keeps Nice Goods, Fresh Goods and Cheap Goods. He also
keeps the best- Cigars and Cigarettes. Remember the place.
Grocer, Confectioner and Fruiterer.
G. E. HARRIS,
TO
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
-------AND DEALER IN-------
The steamer Beaufort
tram Haw
Greenville, N. C.
COBB, C C COBB, T. H. GILLIAM
Pitt Co. N C. Co.
Cobb Bros., Gilliam
Cotton Factors,
Commission Merchants,
solicit of
We have had many years ex-
at the business are
prepared to handle -Cotton to
advantage of shippers.
All business entrusted to our
hands will receive prompt and
careful attention
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
AT THE
OLD BRICK STOKE.
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT-
their year's will find
their interest to get our before
elsewhere. Is complete
in all its branches.
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS,
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
TEAS,
always at Lowest Market
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy one profit. A com
stock of
always on band and sold at prices to suit
the times. Our goods are all bought and
sold for CASH, therefore, no risk
to run, sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. M.
Greenville.
undertaking
ALFRED FORBES.
THE RELIABLE OF C
to the of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following
not to belied in this market. And
and
run huh r
MOM SASH and BLINDS. and OWNS-
PLOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of different
and Mill Hay, Rock Lime, Paris, and
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles.
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
mark's O. TS. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
Prices, dozen, less G per cent for Cash Bread Prep-
st . P rices, bite Lead and pure
Wood Pep Salt and Wood and
Nails a specialty. Give me a and guarantee satisfaction.
J. L. SUGG,
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE JAMES OLD STAND
All kind, Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE.
Having associated B.
with me in the Undertaking business
are ready to serve the people in that
capacity. All notes and accounts due
me for past services have been placed In
the hands of Mr. for collection
Respectfully,
JOHN FLANAGAN.
We been on hand at all times a nice
stock of Burial Cases and Caskets of all
kinds and can furnish anything desired
from Case down to a
Pitt county Pine Coffin. We are fitted
up with all conveniences and can
satisfactory services to all who
us FLANAGAN A
Feb. 22nd. 1888.
J. It.
Portsmouth. Va. Greenville, N. C
Bridgers White,
High Street.
Portsmouth, Va.
Solicit consignment of Cotton,
nuts. Poultry. and all
Country Reference. Mer-
chants and Farmers Bank, Portsmouth,
Va.
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
STILL TO THE FRONT
J. D. Williamson,
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN FLANAGAN.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Has Moved to One Door North Court House
WILL CONTINUE THE MANUFACTURE OP
PHOTONS, BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS.
My Factory is well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing
but We keep op with the times and improved styles.
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are fee can select from
Brewster, Coil, Ban. Horn, King.
Also keep on hand a full ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
the year which we will sell as low as the lowest.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
past Km hope
TYSON RAWLS,
BANKERS,
C . INT. O.
We have opened for the purpose or con-
ducting a general
Basking, Exchange and Collecting
Money Loan Approved
Collections solicited and
made promptly.
The Tar Transportation
Alfred Forbes, Greenville.
J. B.
J. S. Greenville,
X. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gen Ag
The People's Line for travel on
River.
The Steamer Greenville is the finest
and quickest boat on the river.
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished
and painted.
Fitted up specially for the comfort, ac-
and convenience of Ladies.
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS
A first-class Table furnished
best the market affords.
A trip on the Steamer
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday
and at o'clock, a. X.
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday at S o'clock, a. at.
Freights received daily sad
Lading given to Mints.
a. r I. J.
, C. N. C





THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
N. C
page life's great book.
Is for our
White as the driven mow.
Ami bettor affording.
Another as the lake
On summer day
failures past lie all forget.
And jangling chords be
Another as light
Of sun
The strains and blots of other days
Are with the dead enshrouded.
We start a new, and bless the love
Which hides from sight, forever.
The blotted page o'er which we weep
For every poor endeavor.
Life. flitting fast, will soon be o'er,
And ere tin sun declining.
to the west, we'll strive to do
Some deed unselfish, shining.
Some act. for which 1.0 tint of shame
Will stain our recalling;
deed, at which we will not fear
To look, when night is lulling.
An Important Decision.
Chatham Record.
The newspapers of the Slate
ought to call the their
readers to a decision of our Supreme
Court, that shows importance of
administrators and executors pub-
the notice to creditors re
Alliance has reached that
point now that it will have either to
fight or hold oat white flag.
Those hostile to order are
and concentrating their
forces to defeat great object
Ml in was instituted.
unity action and co-operation
quired by section 1421 of the Code.; work these goDS of e
decision was in the t, w to
case of Love vs Ingram, reported except
in the volume cUss give the and
Reports, which was an action IO ,,, is
brought by creditors deceased move with the Alli-
against Ins executor for the for mm
money. defendant j Watch
pleaded the statute limitation, be-
cause had not
seven years after his
de
against bun, however, because
Seemingly Liberal.
in the opinion; a. P. Atlanta, Ga
said that this notice to creditors . had running ulcers on one leg and
was reasonable and just, and I he IS on the other, and felt greatly
Statute expressly provides that it believe I actually swallowed a
I ii i . in . . barrel of medicine, in vain efforts
shall be published. he statute ill, , With lit,,.
not help the executor or finally acted on the urgent advice of a
be fails to observe its and got a bottle of D,
i experienced a change, and my despoil-j
was somewhat dispelled. I kept
I using it until I had taken sixteen bottles
and all ulcers, rheumatism and all
Arsenic o poison
appealed, and at hist am sound and
Three a for again, after an experience of
i years of
Ward,
Tarboro Southerner.
since the W. W.
railroad announced to the
committee which was
investigating roads in State
for payment of taxes, that it
m i . i , deranged, lost and
would make a proposition and be relieved life a burden. All said I
that by its char , had suffered must surely die. but nevertheless, when
was exempt taxation, , had used ten bottles B. B. B. I was
would submit to be tax- a long time, with what the , well. Hundreds of scars
ed. i doctors called Herpes, an now be seen on me. have now
That proposition has been made j of j been well over
and accepted by the sub-1 ,, , to en Jay Gould has resumed h is Corner
jeer of coarse to the ratification i
next Assembly.
Lave been taking S. S. I disease was pronounced a tertiary form
mil feel to lie poison. My face, head and
and it to in, j a mass of corruption,
to state its that others who nail finally the disease began eating my
are similarly affected may profit by skull bones. My bones ray
i General Assembly. the advice of
of being allowed took M drops of Fowler's
habit of spending one or two even
each week in the crowd of Wall
Street men at an uptown Hotel, lie
increase its capital stock to ten j Solution of Arsenic every day for ; not ., ,
millions of dollars, to change name ; himself, but he is a close listener to
to Atlantic Coast Line, to buy, without a cure. what others have to say.
lease and own other roads and mil-
to consolidate with other have been taking b. t. S. for about
road or lines it may own, and be two months, the eruption and
exempt from ail town and city tax- unpleasant symptoms hare all dis-
How Duluth Glows.
Wis., June
The the
I, allege that liter so-
evidence of
the part of Duluth persons in the
census count. Andrew
says that he was the
en u in era tor a district
of
If one wants to get a lively of
what it means to rush through space at
fifty or sixty miles an hour he must
get on a locomotive. Then only does
he begin to realize what trifles stand
between him and destruction. A few
Weeks ago a lady sat an hour in the cab
of a lee motive hauling a fast express
train over a mountain road. She saw
the narrow bright line of the rails and
the slender points of the switches.
heard the thunder of the bridges, and
Saw the track shut in by rocky bluffs
; and new perils sudden v revealed as
. K. K. Dealer in
SI and Maryland Street, The experience was to her magnificent,
but the sense of danger was most
palling. To have made her
complete she should have taken
one engine ride on a dark and
night.
In a daylight ride on a locomotive
we come to realize how slender is the
rail and how fragile its fastenings
compared with the ma-
chines which they carry. We see what
a trifling movement of a switch makes,
the difference between life and death.
We learn how short the look ahead
must often be and how close danger
sits on either band. But it is only in
a night ride learn how dependent
the engineer must be, after all, upon
the faithful of others. The
head light reveals a few yards of
rail and ghostly telegraph poles
and switch targets. Were a switch
open, a rail taken up. or a pile of ties
on the track, we could not possibly see
the danger in time to G.
Front Scribner's.
it to be taxed on ., , to
and rolling stock State and ,., . , . ,
county no. more than root it out blood,
els on worth which it will and
the road bed lo be valued for tax what it has stone for me I am sure
not more than per mile; for there are
not to per;. . . . .
mile. This would add to rev- thousands all over the
of the State and other
which Mad have lived here in
annually. So far the road i vat business for years,
has not paid a cent to the State or
counties since built.
So the benefit to the
people. Indianapolis, Indiana.
The conditions upon which on Blood and Skin Di-
agreement is to be made, a-e mailed free.
to the road.
How much will save by being ex-
CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
The and the Stage-
Rev. F. Pastor
Blue Kan.,
feel it my duty to tell what
j wonders Dr. King's New has
from municipal taxation we
bu the right to
increase capital stuck and to buy,
lease and run other roads, is highly
important, and it attained will make
the Coast Line in a years
of the most important railroad j done for me- My Lanes dis-
tors in the over- eased, and my parishioners thought I
even West Point j I took live
i of New Discovery and
terminal o lbs
It is well we think, the State j
road to come to some Arthur Love. Manager Love's Funny
and we are not disposed to j Folks Combination, a
deny to the road all due praise for thorough trial and convincing
a submission to tUb
but we are the opinion that when everything else fails. The
road will receive what it Barren- greatest kindness I can do my many
two or more to , thousand friends is to urge them to tit
Free trial bottles at Wooten's
Drug Store. Regular sizes and SI.
a New Mash.
Old at his Same
together other
and
that
the Chamber and census
enumerators discus.-ed means of
securing an raw-case in the
of names to be by the census
of the city Duluth beyond the
reports then made; that it was then
and there that
reports should be to
C. F. in Wilson Advance.
Born of the South wind and
sun, she flits, a dainty, rosy,
dimpled apparition, clad in gowns
that disclose and yet conceal
myriad the
rd
on
we
for inking at the census of I summer. As wayward
. . , . . , ., and capricious as are the fire on
he on June as present , J of
in j f an April day, she beckons and we
follow, she smiles worship,
she frowns and we despair Rare
product of our Sunny Southland, she
stands among her sex. Like
and unlike her sisters of other climes
and countries, she fills a niche
her own. All hail, the South-
fear her, and love
her
This is what you ought to have, in fact
have it to fully enjoy life.
, are searching for it daily, and
elude additional names; that they it not.
Jr.,
, , --pent annually by our people the hop.
one at a mm, m go
with him into an room; j jet be had all. We guarantee
increase the number as for Dyspepsia and all diseases of
shown the census reports, and l at
. . . , I and per bottle by L. Moot-
that in order do so be, the en, Druggist.
We see from the State papers
that there is a growing desire for a
of North Carolina.
experience an a teacher justifies as
saying that the history of the
United States and of North
is very inferior. No text book
should be introduced in schools
unless it is written by a historian,
and he be a good
and also rhetorician
The histories recommended by the
State Board of are want-
in these essential particulars.
We need a history that will be a
book free from glaring errors.
Watch
Using
W. C. Andrews, of the steam
told me of n marvelous double
use of steam which his company has
been making. Said have long
contended that steam could be used
twice, but the engineers have been
against me in opinion. But it is de-
now by practical opera-
From our station at Fifty-
eighth street and avenue we
supply steam for electric lights
at the Lyceum. This steam is
supplied to the engines at pounds
pressure, and after it passes through
the cylinders the exhaust is passed at
a pressure of sixty pounds into oar
street mains, where it serves to run el-
heat houses, cook food
perform other functions as re-
quire of it.
. steam thus does its work twice
over. The saving is about SO per cent.,
which is a clear net gain. Very few
people know, although it is a fact, that
of the steam that goes from a boiler
into an engine only about or at
the most per cent., is actually
to create power. The other to
per cent, is exhaust goes off
into the air, where it is wasted. Now
we have discovered that this waste
product can be made to serve just as
perfect a purpose as ii it were made
means a
steam
must include m his report fictitious
names, and suggested that names
be included in of boarding
and lodging houses purporting to
he of male adults who had been j
absent from city when ac-
count was After this
meeting two members of the
of Commerce, Frank Burke,
and M. O. Hall, came to
and requested him to
pare fictitious names on a blank
provided the Census Depart
and Hall agreed to pay for
said tames at the rate four cents
per name. Pursuant to such agree
filled up blanks
with about fictitious names.
Consumption Incurable.
Three
weeks ago the grown daughter of
Newark, Ark., of Concord,
Abscess of Lungs, and friend and j V
roe an Incurable Con-
Began taking Dr. King's New
Discovery lot-Consumption an now on
third bottle, and am able to operate
work on nay farm. It U finest med-
Jesse
it net been far Dr. Staff's
New for I would
wife died, leaving the family without
a female member, the death of Miss
Minnie Harris, Monday morning,
leaves the family of Mr. Win. Harris
in the neighborhood, in the
same situation.
It Flat.
One day, as a Sixth Avenue barber
shop had but one empty chair, a man
wearing a very big hat and walking
with a great deal of swagger entered,
hung his hat on a peg, and then draw-
a revolver he turned to the idle
man and
want a a common
shave. I want no talk. Don't ask me
if I want a hair cut or a shampoo.
Don't speak of the weather or politics.
If you speak tome
He took the chair, held the revolver
across his legs, and was shaved with
promptness and dispatch. When he
got up he returned the shooter to his
hip pocket, put on his hat, and after
a broad chuckle he the
the way to keep a barber
quiet He didn't utter a
sir; he's deaf and
New York Sun.
Skating ob Suite.
A new mode of utilizing the
of stilts tor locomotion has bee
patented. The action of propelling is
that of skating on ice, and for-
ward figure that can be
an with
machines. Each wheel is
of the otter, and travel is
ha
the difference in the figures o , .
and those who do not use modern labor-saving devices.
Convincing Proof-
In many Instances it has been proven
B. B. Blood I
he did not allege prove that he made Blood Balm Co., Atlanta. Ga.,,
had advertised for creditors, as re- blood
. , . , ,,,. ,,, ., . I phases, even when all other treatment
quired by law. Mei
MORE BACKS are drawn out of shape by
old-fashioned see-saw, rubbing, twisting, wrecking
way of washing clothes and cleaning house than by any
other means. You ruin your health, form, clothes,
paint, and don't get the best results.
Try the greatest invention of this Century in the
way of Pyle's PEARLINE. It docs away
with the rubbing, hence there is no wear and tear on
body or fabric. You don't have to bob up and
over a tub of soiled clothing and dirty water, inhaling
poisonous odors and steam; hence you save your
health. Its success is Millions use it Millions
more will use it.
Every grocer sells Pyle's Pearline. Beware of peddled
imitations, they're dangerous. James New York.
JESSE PRISON LIFE.
Studying Chemistry and Trying to Con-
n Self Sharpening
An pamphlet on
prepared by Dr. Charles D. Saw-
in, for five veal's at tho
Massachusetts prison, contains
authoritative statements concerning
Jesse Pomeroy. Dr.
public estimate of his char-
as revealed in the newspaper ac-
counts of his actions in prison, is with-
out in fact. The
hoy
however applicable they may have
been to a former state, are
able at the present time. The various
stories circulated about his
a up mice and are
absolutely without
Dr. gives a of the
circumstances of conviction
of the expert opinions given to
his sanity at his trial for the murder
of a boy years and months old, and
then
entered the. prison, his
sentence having been commuted to
solitary imprisonment for life, Sept.
1877. when he was years old. Dur-
a portion of his term he has been
permitted many privileges diver-
as reading and painting.
At one time he evinced a strong desire
to improve his mind, and he
French, German and Latin. His
knowledge of the languages is, how-
ever, only a smattering one. Of late
he has taken a special liking to chem-
a slight spark of inventive
genius has been manifested in his en-
to construct a hollow self
sharpening lead pencil, which he
takes great pride. His paintings are
hardly worth admiring, but he looks
upon them as works of art, this fact
demonstrating to tho observer that his
Standard is not very high.
doubt his intellect and
moral sense must have improved to a
certain degree, since lie has not been
associated with other prisoners, and
he hasn't passed through any stage of
His first punishment in
prison was four and a half days in a
dark cell on Nov. , for
to escape, digging a
On tho average lie has received six and
one-half punishment each year,
in most cases for tampering with his
cell structure in attempting to escape.
Ho on one occasion was punished for
to an once re-
fusing to obey an and once
writing an insolent letter to the war-
Not very serious offenses these.
He has never exhibited his former love
to torture at any time during his
in prison, rather
strange were lie insane at the time of
the murder. Ho is remarkably
clever quick to sec the drift
of any conversation, logical and clear
in understanding, but notably self
willed and persistent, His bodily
health been remarkably good, eat-
and sleeping well, seldom com-
plaining of his diet, and never asking
for favors of extra rations.
a recent interview he stated that
ho thought his memory was very good
in regard to some occurrences; as, for
instance, his life in jail and his first
four years in prison, but lie had no rec-
of ever meeting Dr. Folsom.
only an indistinct remembrance of
his
A Superb
One day, when off the island
of Mala of the Solomon group. Mr.
Wood ford others, under the pro-
of sentries, went to bathe a
pool. While the water he saw a
huge butterfly coming slowly along
tho beach, and, hurrying out as he
was, he seized his net, dashed off, fell
over stones, rose again, just in
time to catch the fly. What a picture I
leave it to any ardent
he says, imagine my feel-
Ho had the long
lost and why
should he not feel like Alexander on
tho or Hannibal
These butterflies are
some nine inches across the wings.
One is blue with a yellow body, an-
other is velvety black and metallic
green. They excel in size, but other
kinds wear equally magnificent
and make the glorious forest
For practical purposes clouds are
into four
stratus, cirrus and nimbus.
gists, however, many differ-
of form in each class. Amber-
gives these ten principal
with their mean height in sum-
mar at Cirrus
wispy
high, wispy or sheet
of all feet;
at high
feat; similar
loud to bat at a low
feet;
feet;
FEMALE INSTITUTE.
Fall Term Opens Sept.
TEACHERS
John Principal,
Miss Maggie Smith,
Mrs. Irene Hunter.
Mrs. la W.
DEPARTMENTS.
Primary. Academic.
and Mathematical. Music.
Painting and Drawing,
ADVANTAGES.
Lane, comfortable buildings.
location and good water.
Plenty of well prepared food for boarders
A corps of good teachers. Nor-
Department for young teachers.
Music
New pianos and organs. A library
of more than volumes purchased re-
for the school.
Hates moderate, from to for
board and tuition, including music.
Tuition and terms for day pupils the
same as advertised in Girls
do not board with the Principal
should consult him before
board elsewhere.
For further particulars address.
LEGAL NOTICES
Notice.
All persons having claims against the.
estate of T. Ii. Cherry, hereby
notified to exhibit the game on or before
the 7th day of May. to the under-
signed, who has duly qualified as the ex-
of the, but will and testament of
the said Cherry, or this notice will be
plead in bar of their recovery.
All persons indebted to slid es-
are notified to come for war I prompt-
and settle the Same.
John
Ex. of H. Cherry,
May 1st.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly as
tor with the will annexed of
Mrs. Sallie K. on the 30th day of
April. 1890, hereby notify all persons
having claims against the said estate to
present them to me duly authenticated
en or before the day of May, 1801,
or this notice will be plead in bar Of their
recovery.
All person- indebted t estate are
likewise notified to make immediate
of the same.
John
Administrator with will annex-
ed of Mrs Sallie B.
Greenville, X. ;. May 7th.
If You Have
JAMES A. SMITH,
TONSORIAL ARTIST,
CONSUMPTION COUGH or COLD
SCROFULA
Notice I
Notion to Creditors.
The undersigned having duly
before the Superior Clerk of put
county, on the day of June.
as Executor to last Will and
of Rogers, deceased,
notice is hereby given to all persons in-
to the estate to make immediate
payment, and lo all creditors of said es-
to present their claims properly
to the undersigned before
Hie 4th day of June, or this notice
will be plead in bar of their recovery.
Jas. r.
of Harriett Rogers,
Greenville N C.
We have the the easiest
i Chair ever used in the art. Clean
cf Flesh ion guaranteed
I In every instance. Call com
Or any Throat and ft I. waited on at their
are Inflamed, of Strength or i Cleaning clothes S specialty.
you can b relieved and Cured bu
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
PURE COD LIVER OIL
With
PALATABLE AS MILK.
Ask for and let no eat.
or induce yon to
Sold by all
SCOTT II
RALEIGH
BUSINESS COLLEGE
B,
OF
Hon. K. Pro.-, National
Bank
Maj. O. Sec. N. C.
Assembly.
, Editor
State
II. B. Director
Experiment Station.
PREPARATION for baldness
falling out of hair, end eradication
I dandruff Is before the public.
Among the many who have it with
wonderful success I refer you to
lowing named gentlemen who will
I lo the truth of my assertion
Greenville.
i Mr. O.
Greene, Sr.,
I Any one wishing to give it a trial let
the above named procure
it from at my place business, fat
Respectfully,
ALFRED CULLEY, Barber.
Greenville. M I C ,
It. It.
bile
WILMINGTON ft It.
and
TRAINS SOUTH.
No No No
daily Fast Mail, dally
Sim.
pm .-,
Ar Mount Hi am
Greenville, X. C,
JOHN
Principal.
R. L. HUM BER,
Steam Engines Boilers
Improved Brown Cotton Gin,
Saw, Grist and Mills.
Hancock Cotton Gin,
Cotton Seed Crushers,
Hangings,
Also dealer Steam Fittings.
Orders any kind of machinery
will be promptly filled at very lowest-
prices.
R. I
Greenville, X. C.
MILKMAID BRAND
CONDENSED MILK
None Richer in
BEST ON EARTH,
Sold by S. K.
Greenville, N. C.
Greensboro, X. C.
The Seventy-Ant Session of this well-
known Institution will begin on the
27th Day of
In addition to thorough instruction in
Literary Course, special advantages are
offered in the departments of
and Vocal Mode, Art, and
Physical Training. Charges moderate.
For apply to
Pres.
The Sparta Hills
Ha just been retailed and are
A full head of water. Send your
Corn and Wheat in them you
trill get good and Meal.
E. L. O O R E,
OLD SPARTA, N. G.
Notice.
All persons having claims against the
estate of Harriet A.
arc hereby notified to exhibit the same
on or before the 20th day of Juno, 1891,
to the undersigned, who has duly
as the of last will and
testament t the said Harriet A. Yellow-
or this notice be plead in bar of
their recovery.
All persons indebted to the said estate
are notified to come forward promptly
and settle the same.
I. Ii.
Ex. of Harriett A.
Administrator's Notice
The undersigned having been appoint-
ed by the Clerk of the Superior Court of
Pitt County as administrator of the es-
of William Mills having
as inch. Notice is hereby given
to all persons holding claims against
said estate b present them lo the under-
signed duly authenticated for
on or before day of May 1800,
or this notice plead in bar of
their recovery. All persons indebted to
said estate are requested to make
This the St of
May 1890
T. C. Cannon.
of Win. Mills
Rev. E. C. Glenn's
Bethlehem, 1st Sunday at o'clock.
School House, 1st Sunday at
o'clock
Sparta, 2nd Sunday at o'clock.
Shady Grove, 2nd Sunday at o'clock.
Sunday at o'clock.
Temperance Hall Sunday at o'clock
Salem Sunday at o'clock.
Chapel, 4th Sunday at o'clock.
Jones Chapel Saturday before Sun-
day at o'clock.
Hi- Tire public invited.
If you feel unable lo do your
have that tired feeling, t Dr. II.
it will make you
bright active and vigorous.
The most popular liniment, is the old
reliable. Dr. II.
Oil Liniment.
One of Dr. II. Little Liv-
and Kidney taken at night lie
fore doing to bed, will move the
the effect will astonish you.
Pimples, boils and other humors, are
able to appear when the blood gets
Sarsaparilla
the best remedy.
Many people habitually endure a feel-
of lassitude, because they think they
have to. If they would take Dr. J.
Sarsaparilla this feeling of
weariness would place to vigor and
vitality.
No liniment is in better repute or more
widely known than Dr. J.
Volcanic Oil Liniment. It is a wonder-
remedy.
Persons advanced In years feel young-
stronger, as well as freer from the
infirmities of age, by taking Dr. J. ii.
Sarsaparilla.
sick headache is the of many
lives. This annoying complaint, maybe
eared prevented by the occasional
use of Dr. II. Liver and
Kidney
Disease lies in ambush for the weak; a
feeble constitution Is ill adapted to en-
counter a malarious atmosphere and -Mid-
den changes of temperature, and the
least robust are usually the easiest
Dr. J. H. Sarsaparilla
will give tone, vitality and strength to
the entire body.
Distress after eating, heartburn, sick
headache, and Indigestion are cured by
II. Liver
Ar Wilson
Wilson
Ar
Ar
Goldsboro
Warsaw
Av Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
am
p m nil pm
. s m
l in M
Am
Mm A Tumult
I.
I Writ, I
DETECTIVES
la . , ,., .,
to Mir Ii -.- v in r . . i,, ,
it to.
Typewriting,
Banking,
Penmanship and Mathematics are
taught in the Business Cot-
Send for of terms.
J. E. TEENY,
Box Raleigh, N.
FOR MEN ONLY
or FAILING MANHOOD;
and NERVOUS DEBILITY
of Body and Mind. Effect
L--i red. Ho- to
la a day.
Hen t Mr-.-
proof
ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N. V.
EMORY
Mind
in one all
the
mm, en to
A. MM Are. New York.
C, M. N. B.
Edwards ,
Printers and Binders,
c-
have the compute
of the kind to be found in
the State, and solicit orders for
Commercial, Rail-
road or School Print-
or Binding.
STATIONERY
INVITATIONS
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Send us your orders.
EDWARDS
RALEIGH, N. C.
PATENTS
obtained, and all business in the U. S.
Patent the Courts attended to
lot Moderate Fees.
We are opposite the S. Patent Of-
engaged Patents
can obtain patents In less time than most
mom remote from Washington.
the model or drawing i sent we
as to free of charge,
and make no change ob-
Patents.
refer, here, to the Post Master,
Supt. of the Money Order Hid., and to
the t. S. Patent
advise terms and reference to
actual clients in your own Slate,
Magnolia
ill -aw
Fayetteville
Ar Senna
Ar Wilson
Wilson
A, Rocky
Ar Tarboro
No I I. No It
daily daily
ex Sue.
am
am
U 5.1
s HI
SO
it pa
address,
C. A. Snow Co.,
Washington, D. C
HEW
SI .
Ii in
i-i hr.
cM.
. Ml.
work, M
i One
with our large
wall
All o reel
w. you lo who -fear
in a., for when on-
ii I -1. e repaid. We pay all lit.
v.-u know all, If w-nM Ilka lo to work for oak
earn from U
Co.
.-
la
and lo
II in each
a. a Only w ho w rite
to Be make of
e All roe have
Hood .
and Th.
of
the end of the
cat r Ml-
Whiskey
st home
pal n.
Book particulars sent HIKE.
M. M. D., Atlanta. Ga.
Office St.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
. .-ii-l hair.
i. -t n
N.-. -r i to Restore
Color.
ill heir filling
e.-.
Me IMPROVED Mel
ROOT BEER
nm rive
ROOT BEER.
IT.
IT.
Ask far II.
HIRES.
To Sick Headache,
Malaria. Liver Complaint, take
and certain remedy,
BILE BEANS
that MB MM k
A TUB MOST
m the mm mm M
I-.
GRAND
Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair.
S TOP
AT THE GLASS FRONT
the Opera House, at which place
I have recently located, and where I have
everything In my
CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE,
TO MAKE A
MODEL BARBERSHOP
with all the Improved appliance;
and chairs.
Razors sharpened at reasonable figures
for work outside of shop
promptly executed. Very respectfully,
EDMONDS
PHOTO-ENGRAVING-
IT PATS TO
and of hotels, factor-
ice, machinery, to order from
Ma specimen shall.
Press Agency,
New York City.
KNIGHT'S
Blood Cure.
am
Ar i pin pM
Sunday.
Train on
leaves Halifax M,. arrives
land Neck at 4.25 M. .
A. M. Halifax at A. M. Web
don 1.80 P M. daily except Sunday.
On Monday, and
Local Freight
Halifax 11.30 a in. p
in. p in. M
leave
Thursday and m.,
land Neck p in. Halifax p at.
Arriving 4.00 p in.
Train leave- Ta i X via Alba
at Raleigh It. It. except Sail
M. I M.
Williamston. X P M, P
Plymouth p. in . 5.20 p.
Returning leave daily
a. in. a. mi
William-ton. X in. a a.
arrive Tarboro, N c, n A M
on Midland N
Sunday. A IS
arrive X a M. mi
turning leave- N S All
arrive Goldsboro. X C. A M.
Train on leaves
Monet at P N, rive-
V Hope I M. i
A M.
arrives Mount
except
Train on Clinton leave-
for Clinton except Sunday, at f
and A M leave CM
ton A M, and to p. M.
Warsaw
train on
i- No. H
No. GO. Sunday.
Train No. South will stop only
and Magnolia.
Train Xi. make-
for all points North daily. AI
ail via Richmond, and daily except Ml
lay via Hay Cine.
Trains make close connection for
points North via Richmond and
All trains run solid
ton and and have
Palace attached.
F. I
I. It. J
l.
Atlantic N. C.
TIME
In A. M.
1st. ISA.
EAST.
No.
Ar. Ar.
grange
Kinston M
New Heine S
an,
I i
Kinston
Dover
ore Creek
Croat an
Wild wood W
Atlantic
City I
Atlantic Hotel
Thursday and
t Monday, Wednesday and
Train connects with
Train bound North,
Goldsboro a. m., and
at Danville Train West,
Train connects with
Danville Train, arriving at Ga
3-10 p. in., and with
Train from North at
Train connects with
Through Freight Train,
Goldsboro at in and
at Danville Through
at
in
Mixed
4-5
1-2
A household
In Oil than o A
tin core for
and all at
lie What's
Why another new discovery
Culler in the way of helping
ed. on or
above you can
of is
for eradicating and fl
hair t lie
glossy, only two r three
week it necessary, and a con
is all to lie used after rt
scalp vigorously for a few
Preparation. Try a
only cent,,
ALFRED
Barber,
Ki


Title
Eastern reflector, 9 July 1890
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
July 09, 1890
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/18995
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