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THE REFLECTOR
-----Solicits your patronage
Its purpose will be Jo please every reader.
The Eastern Reflector
THE REFLECTOR
JOB PRINTING-
t Dill be -Ill no-
when; in -Our work always
given satisfaction.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
VOL. IX.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, 29.1890.
Per Year, in Advance.
NO.
C. A. YOUNG, of C. A. Young Bro. Wilson.
YOUNG
C. W. formerly of Richmond, Va
K mm
Are now open and beg to offer for your inspection one of the largest and best assorted stocks of
and Ties
General Merchandise, Groceries, Hardwares
ever brought to Greenville. They will make lower prices to the retail trade than was ever offered before. To the
jobbing trade they will give special terms and to duplicate Richmond, Baltimore and New York prices.
We beg to ask your consideration of the following
Suits to
Overcoats to
Hats cents to
J. F. JOYNER. of Greenville.
Capt J. II. BAKER, formerly
with Branch Co , Wilson.
Shoes cents to
Calicoes cents to 1-2 cents.
Tobacco cents to cents per pound.
Alpacas, Worsted, Cashmeres, Flannels all lines of Groceries and Cotton Bagging and
and other Dress Goods G cents to Ties we are prepared to make special low
All other lines in proportion. j prices.
Salesmen.
All we ask is that you will call, examine our stock and get prices and we are satisfied you will buy from us.
, RED BRICK FRONT, Greenville, N. O.
The Eastern Reflector
GREENVILLE. N. C.
Editorial Paragraphs.
The Egyptian cotton crop if es-
at about pounds.
D. J. Editor and
Published
An orange measuring a foot
circumference has been found
Fla.
Democratic Nominees.
For Chief Justice of th Supreme
HON.
A Missouri Pacific was rob-
bed by three highwaymen within
the limits of Kansas City.
November 13th. Allen G.
the old Roman of Ohio,
be years of age A great
banquet will be given him. The
red will triumphantly wave
in Columbus.
is, indeed, a grand old man.
For of the Supreme
HON. WALTER CLARK.
For Superior Court
1st G. H. Brown, Jr. of Beau-
fort.
District.
4th District.
5th
ville.
6th
7th
11th
Henry R. Bryan, of Craven
Spier Whitaker. of Wake.
R. Winston, of Gran-
E. T. Boykin, of Sampson
D. of Moore.
R. F. Armfield, of Iredell.
J. G. , of Burke.
W. A. of Lincoln.
For
W. A. B. BRANCH,
of Beaufort.
For Judicial
JOHN E.
of Wilson.
COUNTY TICKET.
For the
WILLIS R. WILLIAMS.
or of
HARRY SKINNER.
JOHN D. COX.
For Superior Court
ELBERT A. MOVE.
For
J. A. K. TUCKER.
For Register of Deeds
DAVID
For
JOHN FLANAGAN.
For
HENRY F. KEEL.
For
J. WARD.
Beaver Dam- W. B. Burnett.
J. F. Hodges.
G. W, Edmundson.
J. L. Roberson.
W. B. Buck.
Content E. S. Edwards.
D. J.
W H Wilkinson
O. W. Harrington.
D. S. Langley.
Swift Frank
Election Tuesday, Nov. 4th.
THE STORM.
U. J. K.
me lie in Thy bosom, my Father,
The storm is so fierce and
Tear not, I am with thee. In trouble
My arms are around my
I tremble the lightning is Vivid
The thunder is loud and
not. is not to harm thee;
Lie In My arms to
I hear in the forest the crashing
The wind leaves destruction
not, trust thy Father to guard thee
I hold In my fists the
me feel Thy presence my Father,
I'll be no longer
not, I am mighty to save thee,
Cling close till the storm be
in danger and trouble be with me.
Forever, as now. to
not, I am pledged to redeem thee,
every
T MM lie in Thy bosom, my Father,
Cry and hear Thee reply,
Fear to my trembling spirit,
when terror is nigh.
this life be en led.
Till sin
Till fearful tenter, my Father,
I gate o i f
A Congress hi and
have elect-d in Ida-
and the L e it over-
Republican.
One thousand acres in
the N. Y- been
by a syndicate,
R. C. a
king has failed, liabilities eat
at
Chief of Police Hennessey, of
New Orleans, was assassinated by
the gang of Italian
tors.
The Chicago will com-
the hanging of
Fischer, and Parsons, on the
of November; the graves of
the ho called will lie visited,
and speeches made m German, Bo
and English ; there will be a
big street parade.
Alter of year the
Franciscan have returned
Canada to reestablish their order
there.
A bed in which George Washing-
ton slept while in Trenton, N. J. in
1777, was sold at auction yesterday
for
Mary Elizabeth widow
the late St. Louis Millionaire died
the surgeon's knife in the
New York hospital.
The king and queen of Denmark
where entertained at luncheon on
board the American
more, now at Copenhagen.
The New York has
viewing the political situation and
figures out a Democratic majority
of eighteen in the nest Congress.
A train in the Czar was
on his return a
limiting trip to Portland, was fired
at from a railway station at Grad-
During the funeral services over
Robert J. water, in
the floor gave way,
the minister, the corpse and
several relatives into the cellar,
Ann Cooley, of Now
Me., is accused of keeping a
corpse the winter
in order to get extra pay from the
county for board.
Charles Miller, a year old boy,
of Kan. confesses to
have murdered two men while they
were asleep and to having taken
their money.
Efforts are being made to prevent
the Louisiana Lottery Company
using the express companies for
carrying on its business. May the
effort prove and suppress
the fraud.
Thomas Dixon, of Charlotte, N.
shot and killed Marshal Halsey,
whom be suspected of being too in-
with bis wife. Subsequent-
he killed Halsey's brother Chas.,
in a duel.
A miller at Ga.
found the wheels in the mill clogged
so that they would not work. After
taking pounds of e -Is the
wheels once
The United States Government
that hereafter no Italian
grants who have been under sen
in the their
will be to land
in America.
Joel Gordon an opera died
in Greenville, no, week. Bis
father, who it a wealthy s i;
of the toot ;
Who i to the stage, re-
fused to take re nuns.
of tinware will now go
up, since the pass-
ed the tariff bill. When
you goto buy tinware and the price
is more than yon expected just con-
sole yourself with the idea that the
Republican party is lot
that fearful tax on a prime
The Democrats to the
people of North Carolina for Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court, Judge
Augustus S. For the
same position t lie Republicans pres-
Capt. Charles Price. It riots
not occur-to u that the case calls
for any argument, but for the in-
New York Letter.
A GREAT CELEBRATION
EDISON'S
IT FROM CALIFORNIA.
New York, 20th, 1800.
of the most imposing
celebrations ever held in this
country was begun in Brooklyn on
Friday night in honor of the
den of Bishop
who has a priest for years.
Saturday morning the jubilee
mass was celebrated by the Bishops
in the same church in which hi; his
officiated for years ho has been a
bishop. The special feature of the
celebration was a great parade on
night which over
men took part.
was a parade of Sunday
School children, and on Monday
night the will close with
a dinner in honor the Bishop at,
the Academy of Music. Cardinal
Gibbons. Archbishop Ryan and
Archbishop will be pres j
together with priests and a j
large number of men
all denominations. Bishop
n is the bishop of
in the m States,
and has charge of over churches.
A purse of raised by i
been presented
him in honor of the occasion.
METHOD
That this is the age of
is a fact of which we are reminded
Stray Bits of Fun.
Moving Crops OVER THE STATE. Thoughts for Reflection.
of those who may have
who the candidates are
we mention their
ville
Mr. W. Y. Jones, the most papa-
la Republican lender
county, openly proclaims that if you
will show him three white
cans in the South he will show you
two scoundrels. Mr. is a
witness He has seen
the inner workings of the Radical
party in North Carolina and his
evidence is telling against the
fellows It
II the Republican tariff bill isn't
sectional, bow is it tint
that the Northern farmers use to
make sugar is free, while
the that the Southern
farmers use to make sugar is
taxed per cent
why Everything the Republican
party touches is sectional. It lives
on local prejudices. It draws its
life from the bloody shirt.
The Hodge Railroad Suit.
Ta County School Bond Will Pu. la a
Claim for the Honey.
Raleigh Chronicle.
More than a year ago Dr. Hodge,
of this county, entered suit against
forty railroads in the State for fail-
to make reports as required by
law.
The penalty against each railroad
tor failing to make report is
In case such failure can be
proven, and therefore the penalties
against the roads will aggregate
and this is the boons for
which Dr. Hodge brought the
The case was called in the
court and was ruled out by
Judge on the ground that
Hodge could not bring the suit.
An appeal was taken to the
com t, and yesterday
argument in the case was concluded
before that body. opinion of
the court will follow later.
Pending the hearing appeal
the Wake county school board has
found law seems to
latest in this line
is said to lie an invention by K
which t will revolution ii i
the telegraphic world. The new
discovery consists of a
of metals, known only to the
tor, which will, by with
the earth, carry sound a great dis-
without the aid wires. As
the earth is well to h a good
conductor of electricity an is now
in order to complete the
any two points
without running a double wire, the
new idea seems quite feasible. M
has experimented to
an extent that by standing out
bearing
can distinctly hear the faintest
whisper. If the idea is put in
working order there is no
but that it will greatly cheap
en telegraphic communication and
perhaps accomplish other wonders
not dreamed of.
CALIFORNIA ON WHEELS.
A California
consist of three cars of the South
Pacific railroad, is now on the
tracks of the Baltimore
Jersey The cars contain a
display of the products of California
collected sent by the Cali-
Board of Trade. The object
as explained by the managers, J. B.
Lank and S J. is to acquaint
Eastern people with the resources
of California and with the
already made in supplying the mar-
of the Bast with those
and nuts which formerly
most wholly imported. There is an
display of grapes, wine,
dried and preserved fruits, nuts,
oils, silks, grain and specimens
ore and wood. There are also black
and Egyptian corn. There is
an Irish potato weighing seven
and a sweet potato weigh-
pounds; a piece of bark
inches thick, bananas inches in
diameter and pears weighing five
each. In short,
is shown in a very small space.
Edwin
To most women marriage is a
i haven of rest where they will b free
from worry an care. But there arc
two cares in matrimony there
, is one in sin life. If the wife ac-
make all j u these
penal to., revert lo the public g , he,
school found, and m case the and the
court hall decide that will become
suit is legal, toe school board A . generally his wife
will enter a the penalties, j b there that
And so Dr. H will have i TO a min for b
mat- before gaining the , g a. limn .
. bar th sin mini.
to be
too
them to
O.
for
Who f.
It happened one time that a Mr.
Fell in love with a maiden and
Ami lie wife.
And bring joy to life
She said hut I will be your
A man of
hear yon have been getting mar
Yes.
did you
Jones, her mother,
her Stepfather, an I mil den
aunts.
The streets last week, owing to
the rainy weather, were
muddy and the probability is
ill-is of our pedestrians would
find their toes growing together,
duck fashion, they were
their feet, and no v the town
hive ordered the
streets with oysters shells
from the oyster factories in order to
prevent our turning to
City Economist-
A BANKER'S
It was a banker in
o lever made or saw a joke
cams in one day from dinner and
began to tell the cashier about see-
a man arrested in front of a
store for stealing a pair of
loons. He drawled the narrative
along in his hesitating way
an hour, till the cashier was ex-
when the book keeper,
having overheard the thrilling tale,
poked his head at the door and
asked
What did they do with him
arrested bun.
But can they do anything him
Certainly; bring suit against him.
Oh, they can I didn't know
they could make a suit out of a
pan of pants.
And the. old never
knew that anything bad happen -d.
A H AN.
and
both about half drunk, sat under a
tree. The Colonel took out a tot-
tie, drank and ban led it to Sandy.
drank and returned it to the
The Colonel wiped the
mouth of the bottle,
handed the bottle back to Sandy,
Sandy wiped the mouth the bot-
and drank. This made the Cal-
furious. You black scoundrel,
he exclaimed, how dare you to wipe
a bottle after me I
Who me t
Yes, you scoundrel can
yon have such impudence I
Wall, tell
tole me now to like white
I done now I wants j
know why got de
wipe bottle me.
Oh, I's want-
ed mi to way ought-
enter tole me.
THE SITUATION WANTED.
The young man handed bis letter
introduction to the merchant
and waited respectively, hat
in hand.
Ah This is Mr. is it I
am glad to see you sir. Take a chair.
So it appears are acquainted
with my niece, Miss Bessie, are
Yes, sir, said the young man, and
she was kind enough to say she was
certain I could fill acceptably any
position you pleased to give
me.
So I see, replied merchant,
referring to the note of introduction
again. Well have great
in judgment. Bessie is
my by way. As
to this what salary
you expect I
Salary would be
least just w,
see yon at
bottom a id work u,. Well it
kin of p I'd f
I sir, the youth.
hit in mi e massed
I would Ike. die position
nephew.
Sew Observer
We hear much in the
year of the money necessary to move
the and it is interest to get
an idea of the amount of currency
that is employed. It will be re-
membered that a part the
t system, and . very
part, too. makes provision
for their country banks keep a
part of reserve in what are
nailed the reserve cities being the
nineteen great which are the
trade of the Union. It th is
happens that a large part of the
reserve the country banks is kept
ill these large cities, as as might be
expected. New York gets the lion's
share. So when these bank need
currency to facilitate handling
of their local crops, mike de-
on the banks for
their money.
But as New York is the great
trade money Is constantly
flowing there, and that movement
I continues oil through the year,
is only when the country banks
need cash to move crops that
the outgo from York become
greater than the inflow of
but both movements are
always in progress.
In the mouth July the Men
York bank- gained from the noun
try banks live millions of dollars
In August th boot was mi the
leg and between August 1st and
October 10th, the movement
to the interior was
in of the movement to
New York.
In those week New
to the about
and received about
making the net, shipment
about
Last the eleven weeks
from October 10th to January 1-t,
few York sent out about
received back about 831-
making the net shipments
That we suppose
about end demand for more
for moving the crops, and
so we may say that it takes
for that of
which perhaps one half is used
the South, being about
When we consider that with this
mount worth of cotton
is marketed, we realize at ones th
importance, in an economical point
view, a banking system. The
money s paid out to the farmers
the small towns each day in the
sums aggregating from ten to
thousand dollars but, it almost
mediately gets back Into the
of trade and is again I
in the banks, so a
does a amount of
and the bulk crop is
thus apparently moved with only
about one-tenth of its value in cur-
Her Spare Room
ain't everybody put to sleep
in this said old Mrs. Jinks to
the fastidious and extremely nervous
minister who was spending
the night in U., at her house.
room is full of sacred
to she went on ;
first husband died in that bad with
his head on these very pillars, and
poor Mr. Jinks died right in
that corner. when I come
the room in the dark, I think I
see him there still. My own
father died laying right on that
lounge the win low. r pa
was a an all
said he'd in he
lied, an I'm
enough to lo for him. If v
should see anything of him to-night
I b not Ir it'd b; a
in th u w it t
in an PI hit-; t
think th it. My S n by my
fell where
vi He a an
there's two whole skeleton in that
closet that belonged to him ; and
half k skulls in
Haw We I. night, pi; ire
of Interest Occur-
ring in North Carolina.
FROM
Mr. Con
of this town, who has been a
supporter of the Republican party
for many years, has renounced it,
and signifies bis intent on of voting
the Democratic ticket.
u. Robins in. Commissioner
Agriculture, says it is now certain
the cotton crop in the State will
be far expectations. It will
be the biggest on record.
For the
time tn twenty-live years jail of
his county is without an
i- and it- doors
stand open. Is that
our masses of Wayne
getting
Sew Journal; Mr. P. .
u- have
b lbs of
for about month past by
eating their corn in the Ii and that
week Messrs. J. I
Cannon tiled two guns in
Held of Mr. It. Hodge and on
night one of the gens killed
a bear that I Is.
Dunn Last lay
week our efficient town Marshall,
Mr. J. II. Holland arrested John
on a
charge of an elicit
about four miles from town. On
Monday morning Mr. Holland
carried him to where
tried before Commissioner
an in default ball was put in
county jail await N iv. Court.
Last night just
at o'clock our people were awaken
el by a vigorous ringing of bells and
blowing of whistles. It was so n
discovered that s house was in
lines It was the house occupied
by J. J. Basil and owned by
situated near street
on the Cannon factory road. X one
was at and the origin of the
lire is a mystery. Soma of the
household effects were saved.
A cyclone near
county, Thursday evening
of last week. n the
path was completely demolished.
X lives lost.
Information
has just been from
in this county, of an attempted
there last week. Mr. II. Baker
attempted to kill himself by taking
laudanum. lie had been drinking
to some extent the week before, and
in that condition he abused his
to a great degree. Then he became
with his employer. Mr. El- ;
wards, for some cause and went to a
store procured a two ounce phial j
of laudanum. He drank the fluid
and wag afterwards found lying on a
bale of cotton sleeping very I
with the phial by bis A
was summoned, a crowd con-
I after some vigorous
pounding and pulling Baker
revived to consciousness is
now reported as being well.
Concord Mr. Jim Bus-
sell, whose house and barn the Ca-
j and Union line divides, met
I with a sad an fatal accident last
His sister and her
and son were in a hack drawn by
two horses. They were on their way
to relatives down in Union
county. The horses took fright, and
in running they crossed a big ditch,
wing Mr. and the boy
out. The ladles were not thrown
oil, t all. la the fall Mr.
Wis hurt. bid bruises W
oil tonal, nor
was he internally so Kr as
I In Bit body
p I. could move his
heal up to Sat
in-day at ft., when ha died. Mr.
R. was about years of age.
of From Authors
to use in
Moments,
If yon hate your enemies,
will contract such a vicious habit of
mind, as degrees will break out
upon those who are your friends, or
those who indifferent to you.
La
Happy he whose inward ear
Angels can bear
O'er the rabble's laughter.
And, while hatred's fagots burn.
through the smoke discern
Of good thereafter.
J. G.
lie that will often put eternity
I the world before him, and who
will dare to look steadfastly at both
of them, will find that more
often ho contemplates them the
former will grow greater and
latter Hall
I of me as your Mend. I pray,
for else my life i- little worth;
shall your memory light way,
Although we meet BO more earth
For while I know your faith secure,
ask no happier to
Thus to loved by one so pure
Is honor enough for me.
W. Winter.
Ob, the grave the grave It
buries every error, covers every
defect, extinguishes every resent-
From its peaceful bosom
bung none but loud regrets and
lender Washington
Irving.
lives there rest, my soul;
God hears him bow;
can control;
leads then follow tho-e
gives and loves.
Lord up shove
G heart, be done with all thy care
live with Him forever there.
AYCOCK
N. C.
C. C DANIELS
N. C
DANIELS DANIEL
n. c
L. JAMBS
DENTIST. i,
I. BLOW,
G RE E N V I L C
J. E. M RE J. m. TUCKER. J. D. MURPHY
TUCKER
A T-LA W
N. C.
L. C. LATHAM. MARRY
SKINNER,
n. c.
t. JAMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Practice all the courts.
B. YELLOWLEY,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
N.
R. J MARQUIS,
N. C.
of
hi Skinner Building, upper door,
opposite Photograph
THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
Greenville, N. C.
D, J. Editor and
Publisher's Announcement.
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICK OF
The REFLECTOR is per
ADVERTISING Bates.-One
one year, ; one-half column one year
one-quart column one year, p.
Transient inch
one week, ; two weeks. one
month Two inches one week,
two weeks, one month,
Advertisements inserted in Local
Column as reading items, cents per
line for each insertion.
Advertisements, such as Ad-
and Notices,
and Sales,
Summons to etc., will
be charged for at legal rates and MUST
BE PAID FOB IN ADVANCE. The RB-
has suffered some loss and
much because of having no
fixed rule as to the payment of this class
of advertisements, and in order to avoid
future trouble payment is advance
will he demanded.
Contracts for space not mentioned
above, for any length of time, can be
made by application to the office either
in person or by letter.
Copy for New Advertisements and
all changes of advertisements should be
handed in o'clock on Tuesday
mornings in order to prompt in-
the day following.
The Reflector having a large
will be found a prof table medium
through which to reach the public.
Entered at the Post Office at
C, as Second-Class
Mail
WEDNESDAY, 20th, 1890.
have had snow in Virgin-
The is the name of a
new paper that has come to hand
for exchange from Hertford. It
is published weekly with Rey.
W. Babb editor.
The small boy is having a hard
time in Cincinnati, all that are
caught smoking cigarettes are
rested. It would prove
here if we had such a law.
The Louisburg Times says that
ex-Gov. Jarvis made one of the
best Governors North Carolina
ever had. We agree with you
brother, and the best she ever will
have.
The is denouncing Q.
C. Kirkman, who is forcing him-
self upon the people as an
pendent candidate for the
See what the Carolina
Alliance has to say in this paper.
They have brought out what
they call a compromise
dent Republican ticket over in
Greene county to oppose the
Democratic ticket. White men
had best stand by their party and
beware of any such
The Democrats are very
sanguine of success there,
and we hope to hear of their get-
ting a large majority.
We urge upon every man in the
county who professes to be a
Democrat, not to scratch a single
name next Tuesday, but vote the
straight Democratic ticket. There
is too much at stake to run the
risk of such men as
and Kirkman in Legislative
halls. With these men in t he
State Senate and House of
and Claude Bernard in
Congress, and a Radical in Zeb
Vance's seat in the U. S. Senate,
matters would be in a deplorable
state. White men should arouse
to their full duty and not desert
their race by lending their sup
port to such advocates of
Senator Matt W. Ransom, Gen.
W. P. Roberts, and Hon. W. A. B.
Blanch, Democratic candidate for
Congress, all made speeches in
Greenville yesterday. It was too
late for us to make any comment
upon them, but all the speakers
the tariff and force bill due
attention and showed up the evils
in them. All the speeches were
good and listened to by a large
concourse of people.
Here is a brief tariff example
that shows how the iniquitous
bill put in force by a
Republican Congress
against the poor and in
favor of the rich man. Take
woolen goods, for The
tax on the cheapest grade of
goods is per cent., on
goods it is per cent., on
per cent, while on it is
only per cent. Thus the cheap
grade that the poor man has to
buy is taxed per cent, and the
best grade which the rich man
buys is taxed only per cent.,
a little over half as much. One
hundred years ago there was a
tariff tax of but per cent all
around on these goods making it
equal on both the rich and poor.
Then take hosiery cheap grades
costing cents per dozen are
taxed per cent., those costing
per dozen are taxed per
cent., and those costing per
dozen are taxed per cent., or
just a little more than half, as in
the other example; the poor
man paying the high tax and the
rich man the low tax. All other
goods will be found very much in
the same proportions.
Now look at the difference in
price paid by the home buyer and
the foreign buyer for
Take shovels for example
The home buyer pays 19.20 per
dozen for them while the foreign
buyer can get them at
Thus the manufacturer ships his
goods off from home to foreign
countries and sells them much
cheaper than he will sell them to
the home purchases- There is
about the proportionate difference
on other goods.
And this is protection It
should rather be robbery,
for it is robbing the farmer and
laboring man of their hard earned
dollars that the manufacturers of
the North may become rich. The
Republican party is responsible
for this state of affairs. Reader,
how will you vote next Tuesday,
for the party that is piling these
unjust burdens upon you, or for
the party that is seeking to re-
you should be no
hesitancy about deciding such a
question. Your only safety is in
the Democratic party.
Washington Letter.
From Our Correspondent.
You cannot always judge of i
thin by outward
This is very true as regards the
hotels of Oxford. A stranger upon
the streets of that town would be
impressed with the idea that it is
badly in need of a good hotel.
A large modern might
add to the general looks of things,
but it would hardly be possible
for one to be kept in better order
than is the Osborne Hotel there.
Outwardly it is a very
looking building, but in-
you find it as nicely and as
comfortably furnished as most of
the city inns, while the table it
spreads is a long way in the lead.
There is one item we had
to mention sooner by way of
comparison two railroads
of this State as regards the extend-
of courtesies to religious bod-
A short while before the
meeting of the Tar River
at this place the Clerk of the
Church here was instructed to
write the authorities of
ton Weldon and the Raleigh
Gaston railroads and request that
they give delegates to the
reduced rates. A letter was
to Mr. Emerson, of the
W. W. road, to which he very
promptly replied saying reduced
rates would be given and all
agents instructed accordingly.
Not so with Maj. Winder, of the
R. G. road, the letter to him be
treated with silent eon-
tempt not noticed at all.
Merely the facts are stated and the
reader left to draw his own cob-
Washington, D. C, Oct.
The republicans their
to save themselves from the
defeat which seems to be awaiting
them have thrown discretion to the
winds, and the scenes the
departments remind one of the
times when Jay Dorsey
Star route fame, others of the
stripe, were compelling the
in the service to
give up a regular percentage of
their to the corruption fund
the O. is being
i, demanded the clerks and
in plain language they are told that
if they fail to chip in will lose
their places. The Ohioans and Io-
have taken the lead in the
bull dozing of the helpless
Mr. is fully aware of what
is going on, and be says not a word
to stop this shameful and outrage-
violation of law; the members
of the Civil Service Commission
know all about it, and do nothing,
except to draw their It is
apparent that if enough votes can
be purchased the republicans will
retain their grip on the House of
Representatives, but it is the first
time that any political party has
been so open in showing its
to rely upon the purchase of
votes.
The advices received by the Dem-
Congressional committee
all sections show that it is their
unlimited supply of money upon
which the republicans depend to
carry the doubtful districts, but the
still hope that the honor
of the American voters will be
proof the bribery that will
be proffered by the republicans on
election day.
The Secretary of the Interior, who
is accused of being the
of the insulting letter sent
Mayor Grant, in answer to Mb re-
quest for a recount of population
of New York City, by chief
clerk of the Census Bureau, has
refused a second request made by
Mayor Grant for a recount, all
which makes it plain that it was
intention of the republicans
the start to steal at least one
Congressman from democrats of
New York City. The same policy
baa been pursued in Sooth
where every state is given a smaller
population than it have, in
order to keep down its
representation and its
In the electoral college.
republicans are playing a bold game
bat they may carry it too far. The
facts will be folly exposed by
democrats when the apportionment
bill cones up in Congress this win-
The patronage of the Internal
lie venue bureau is being in an
manner to defeat the
election of the democratic
nominees in Wast Virginia.
who has
pluck and ability, passed through
Washington this week. He
Internal Revenue gang are
hot after me, and the struggle as a
result is clone in my district. Men
are drawing salaries from Gov-
whose sole duties are to
work against me. I have the facts
in my possession, subscribed and
sworn to in some cases, and they
cannot be controverted, and in
other districts in the State it is
equally as It will not be
surprising if Mr. Wilson makes an
exposure of this whole business
when Congress meets, whatever
result his district may be. It
will be a national loss to the demo-
party if Mr. Wilson is defeat
ed.
It looks as though Mr. Harrison's
nerve bad failed him and that the
idea of calling an extra session of
Congress for the purpose of passing
Force bill and the apportion-
bill bad It
is still possible that issue
proclamation it alter the
election, and very should
the democrats carry the as
they will if there is an honest vote
cast, and their voters go to the
polls.
There are no new developments
in the scramble the place of the
late Justice Miller on the bench of
the Supreme Court. Attorney Gen-
Miller has returned from his
visit to Indiana, but it has not
transpired whether be succeeded in
bis effort to make a bargain that
would resale in the withdrawal of
the opposition of the republican
leaders of that State to his
to the vacancy. That
was strong enough last year to
his aspirations and if it
should be exerted it will do it again
out if a deal has been or can be
made the Attorney General will get
prise.
The republican District Attorney
here has decided that
of the recent republican Postmaster
of House, Wheat, taking
bribes, is not punishable under the
law, because the law does not
the status of Congressional
Queer isn't it t
Sparks From Grifton.
Mr. Allen Johnson wife visit-
ed relatives in town Sunday.
Prof. James has ordered
suits for his male students,
majority of cotton that is
sold in this marker is shipped by
rail.
The nice, cool fall weather is
upon us. A light frost Saturday
morning.
The series of religious meeting at
M. at this place closed
on Friday night.
Money plentiful, crops splendid,
labor rather scarce, health of town
and community good.
Our section was visited with quite
a heavy rain on night
and Thursday morning.
Quite a crowd of colored people
came down on Saturday night's
train from Greenville.
The depot, and warehouse at this
place is complete except the paint-
and it is a very nice depot.
Mr. T. J. Moore, of Washington
City, special agent of census of
fish department was town 23rd
and
There will be a grand at
Academy on Friday 31st
inst. Mr. F. G. James, of Green-
ville, will deliver a lecture. Ye
editor and everybody else is
ally invited.
After long waiting and wishing
the nice and most improved school
desks have arrived for the Male and
Female Academy at this place and
we can now boast of as well equip-
school buildings as can be found
in the State.
Prof. C- H. James has bad to em-
ploy assistant, and our
school is moving nicely. His
accomplished music teacher, Miss
Minnie Caraway, made a flying trip
to her home at Halifax Saturday,
and returned Monday night.
Prof. G. Maxwell delivered a
lecture at the Academy Monday
night on the science of
and on Tuesday an Wed-
nights. Prof. Maxwell comes
well recommended, and
respondent can say he masters his
profession.
There is some complaint about
discrimination in B freights, as
cotton sniped from Ayden cost more
than from this place, which, if true,
is very wrong, because the people
from here to Greenville gave
right of way, and they should have
justice done
It is our sad duty to announce the
death of Mr who
died of consumption on
inst., in bis 46th year. He leaves a
wife and nine children to mourn
their loss. May God in His good-
and mercy and protect
the bereaved family.
J. L. Winfield filled his
pit on last Sunday and preached a
very interesting sermon to a large
congregation Mr. Winfield is -a
self-made man and has entire
confidence of this community, and
our people always go to near him
preach when possible.
There will be a grand rally and
political speaking at this place next
Thursday, 30th inst. E. C.
field, Alliance man, and the
county candidates will be on hand.
on, and help us
take on a little barbecue. Every-
body is and Quay not
excepted.
J. L. Winfield did big-
day's work last Wednesday,
inst., perhaps be ever did in
matrimonial line. At o'clock
he married Mr. Albert Williams and
Miss Jen kins. At o'clock
be married Mr. J. B. Spier and Miss
Charity son, and at married
Mr. Watt and Miss
Tucker.
On Sunday 19th
about o'clock a large raccoon
to house of Mr. Allen
Johnson near and
pied bis front porch. dogs
rained s row over how
and Mr. up, mads far
Mr. Coos with a suck of
killed bias. Mr.
wife
Mrs. Nina E. Brown, daughter of Mr.
Junes B. Cherry, and wife of Dr. Zeno
Brown, died In Greenville. C, Oct.
aged years, month and
days. Barely does there occur in any
community a death so sad was this.
She was young and beautiful, devotedly
loved by her kindred, active and useful
as a church member, a most excellent
teacher In school, sought after
in society, and of great force of
character and influence in all the
relations of life. She had been extreme-
HI for three the great
suspense and anxiety of her
band and Immediate family
was shared by the whole
as was also the shock o grief when
the worst came. From childhood she
was a great favorite. When twelve years
age she joined the Methodist church
under the ministry of L. L. Nash.
D. D. We will miss her much in all
things pertaining to its good. On 28th
of May, 1888. she was graduated from
Greensboro Female College. The friends
of her school days, scattered throughout
the State, will be pained to learn of her
death. On the 14th of March, 1889, she
was married to Dr. Zeno Brown. Their
devotion to each their mutual
tender regard and intense affection
seemed to perfect. On a bright
lovely Sabbath morning, among a great
throng of sorrowing men and women
and children, we laid her away in our
cemetery to await the resurrection
morn. Peace to her ashes, and God's
blessings upon the stricken ones. J.
Resolutions Respect by the
King's Daughters.
As our Heavenly King and All-wise
Father hat called from her earthly labors
our beloved sister, Nina E. Brown,
Therefore be it
Resolved 1st. That we bow humble
submission to the sad death of our sister
whom we all loved.
Resolved 2nd. That we will ever cherish
her memory, and trust that this sad
of divine providence may be
overruled for our good and bring us all
nearer to God.
Resolved 3rd. That we tender our
heartfelt sympathies to the bereaved
and friends.
Resolved 4th, That these be
spread upon our minutes, and a copy be
sent to her loved ones also a copy be
sent to the Eastern Reflector and
the Silver Cross with a request to publish.
Mrs. R. B. John,
Mrs. J. S-
Mrs. R. M.
BY GOODS, NOTIONS, BOOTS SHOES
TRUNKS AND VALISES.
CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES
We sell low for cash.
ft Q.
Kirkman Denounced
Resolution of Carolina Alliance.
At a regular meeting of Carolina
Alliance, held on 25th,
tier, resolutions were
unanimously adopted.
WHEREAS, C. C. Kirkman, a
member of the Alliance,
has declared an
Alliance candidate for a seat in
Lower of the next
The re lb re be it
That members of
this Alliance hereby denounce his
course in present campaign and
take this method of showing their
disapproval of the same.
That a copy of these
resolutions be sent to Eastern
Reflector publication.
A. B Congleton, Sec'y
The National Democrat which
was established in Washington
one year ago by Edmund Hudson,
with the endorsement of many of
the great leaders of the party, has
entered upon its second year with
a circulation of copies each
week. This is perhaps the largest
circulation eyer attained by a
weekly newspaper during first
of its existence.
Democrat occupies a field of its
own, and that too long remained
unfilled. It gives a complete re-
cord of political information,
including the most important
speeches that are delivered by
Democratic leaders in
and on the stump. It is
the party an important
service, and should be read by all
who wish to keep fully informed
in regard to public affairs and who
mean to defeat the wicked scheme
of the Republican leaders to
cure permanent control of the
Government, in spite of the fact
that they are, and must remain
the minority party in this
try.
Oh Ho
The Little Committee Candidate Heard
am
Atlantic Seaside.
Bernardo,
candidate for Congress in this
district wiggled down here Tuesday
and spoke in Davis Hall
Wednesday at P. M. He made
it a point to come Court week hop-
to have a large audience but his
expectations were not bis
hearers were bat few.
He is not unlike nearly all other
Republicans he understands how to
distort things. He brought up
tariff system and endeavored to
show its beauties and that it was
the best means to collect lands to
ran the Government bat point
could not be seen. His opinion of
bis audience was very poor, as he
said that be did not believe there
were six men in crowd that
could give a correct definition of the
word tariff. His definition was
given, and we venture assertion
that there was not a man present
who could not have given a better.
He said be did not favor Force
bill, bat believed new election
law in North Carolina to be as ob-
noxious. He has one foot on
Republican platform and other
on Alliance or Democratic. Tis
sad we know, Claudio Bernardo, but
you are to see the handwriting on
wall.
Here is the way the Louisburg
speaks of
Gov. Jarvis, the man who made
one of the best Governors North
Carolina has had,
in
and at Franklin next Mon-
day.
Notice Notice
On Saturday Nov. 22nd 1890, I
offer for sale to the highest bidder for
cash at Court House door in Green-
ville N. C. that valuable house and lot In
F now occupied by Mr. E. A
Move. House contains eight rooms,
with all the necessary buildings.
The lot is a corner lot embracing acre.
J. T. Sledge, Agent.
WANTED
bushels of Cotton Seed for
which the highest cash price will be
paid or Cotton Meal given in ex-
change. Sacks furnished on application
Car load of Cotton Seed Meal and
Hulls on hand for sale at low
This Is the best feed for stock that is
known. Apply to
H. HARDING,
Greenville, N. C.
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES
MEAT and FLOUR-SPECIALTIES
Car Load Feed Oats, -Car load Corn, Car load No. Hay,
Car Load Rib Side Meat, Car Load Louis Flo all grades
Heavy Mesa Pork, Granulated Sugar.
Sugar, Gail Ax Snuff, all
Rail Road Mills Snuff.
Rico Molasses, Tubs Boston Lard.
Cases Star Lye, Gross Matches.
Also full line Baking Powders, Soda, Soap, Starch, Tobacco. Cigars,
Cakes, Crackers, Candies, Canned Goods, Wrapping Paper, Paper Sacks.
Special prices given to the wholesale trade on large quantities of the
above goods.
J. A. ANDREWS. GREENVILLE. N. C.
FALL AND WINTER ANNOUNCEMENT
J. B. CHERRY CO.
LOW PRICE CASH STORE
-When in need of-
What Are You Waiting For
em
Our Stock is Goods Prices Low.
WE MAKE A BUSINESS OF MAKING IN
rm fouls Mi it,
The Latest in Styles, Finest in Quality, in Variety, have been combined by as in
ONE MIGHTY EFFORT FOR
Fall winter Stock Offerings fill Not and Can Not Be Surpassed.
There Limit Below which Honest Goods not be Sold. We Piece Price, et the Low Mi-.
GOODS, SOLD UNDER
INSPECT US. ITS. KNOW VS.
ass
AND YOU WILL FIND WE DEAL FAIR AND YOU DOLLARS.
to
HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK CO.
Manufacturers of Hall's Patent
BANK LOCKS VAULT WORK.
SAFES
FACTORY PRINCIPAL OFFICE
FOR Green county. N.
Cone of the finest farms for Cotton
Tobacco, Corn. Grain General Pro-
ducts of the soil in the State; known a-;
the Streeter Plantation. Th farm con-
of enough cleared land for horses
to cultivate, but only about horse
crops to be annually.
About half of the land has
year, a rule adopted a few years since.
I will rent this farm to any good man
on reasonable terms. Those wishing to
rent call on Dr. E. H.
tee, at Willow Green.
STOVES
-A full line of-
ANNOUNCEMENT
FANCY GOODS which we have added
-----to our stock of-----
Besides being able to suit your tastes in
styles of Hats and Bonnets, trimmed
and untrimmed we are now prepared to
furnish the very nicest articles in
sets, Ladies Hose, Gloves, Ties, hearts
Handkerchiefs, Dress
Wear Ac A skilled lady milliner.
Mrs. JOYNER,
Greenville, N. C.
WANTED.
Wanted at once to hands, white
or colored years up to work in
Canning Factory. Hands can make
1.00 to per day at piece work.
Apply at once.
J. CO.,
Washington, N, C.
COBB. C C COBB T. H.
Pitt Co. N. C. Pitt Co H. C. Co.
Cobb Bros-, Gilliam,
Cotton Factors,
-AND-
We have had many years e
at business and arc
prepared to handle Cotton to
advantage shippers.
All business entrusted to oar
hands will Motive and
Cooking and Heating
SO
Hardware and Tinware
A full line just received.
All to be sold low as can be
-------FOR CASH.------
We are ready to take orders for
TOBACCO
for next season.
LATH AM FENDER
GREENVILLE, N. C
STOVES. STOVES.
We are making a specialty of
COOKING A STOVES,
and are receiving the finest
line ever brought to Greenville
Our stock will be complete
embracing every size made.
Our popular
still stands at the head. Our
other brands are all good. We
have the heaviest Stove for
money ever on this
market. We carry a full line
of stove ware. Pipe and Fix-
Tinware, Hardware,
Saw Glimmers, Nails, Paints,
Oils, Doors and Sash, Glass
and Putty.
We want to see everybody
that wants a Cook Stove. We
are prepared to supply the
demand.
f i
GO
V.
D. HASKETT CO.
-0-
The leading General Merchandise dealers in
County.
A New Beef Market.
Opened in Greenville. Johnson, Nor-
Co. have opened a market at
their opposite Skinner's Opera
House We ask a liberal
share patronage of the citizens of
Greenville and the county generally.
Parties in the country having Beeves,
Haas, Goats, Sheep or Hides to sell will
call on selling else-
K,
We wish to say to our everywhere that we the
largest and best selected stock that it baa eyer been our pleas-
to place before you. And beg of you that you will
inspect our stock and compare quality, quantity and
prices given you anywhere else by first-class
house. We realize that competition is the
life of trade but we are fully abreast of
the times and feel able to meet any
competitor fairly and squarely.
We give our customers the
very best that can be
bought for the
MONEY
invested in that
article. We are with
the people in their de-
that they shall buy
goods cheap. And we promise all
who give us their patronage
that they shall have them cheap. If you
fail to get as good bargains, when you buy
of some one else, as your neighbor gets who buys
of us, yon have only yourself to blame, because we
have invited you time and again to come in and see us.
Our invitation to all people is LEA US, KNOW
US, BUY OF US. With these three injunctions ringing fresh in
your ears every week, we again ask you to come and examine the
following lines of General Merchandise
Staple Fancy Dry Goods
Motions,
Hats and Caps,
Boots and Shoes,
Hardware,
Farming Implements,
Heavy Fancy Groceries
Flour a Specialty,
Crockery
Wood Willow Ware,
Tinware,
Stationery,
Trunks and Valises,
Harness and Whips.
After a business
of twenty five
years we do not hesitate
to tell you that we can
and do offer you bargains
that have never before
been heard of in this
county, and each sue
season we are at
work trying to serve your
interests faithfully.
FURNITURE
We are headquarters in this market for Furniture and ask
to look at our line of Suits, both Walnut and cheaper woods.
Bureaus, Bedsteads, single and double, Mattresses and Bed
Springs, Children's Beds, Cribs and Cradles, Washstands, Cane
and Wood seat Chairs, and Rocking Chairs,
Children's and Dining Tables, Lounges and
lots other things too numerous to mention. We thank you for
past favors trust and believe that you will continue to
us, for we work not alone for our interest but also for yours.
WILSON-
WILSON, N. C.
Is now an established fact and commends it-
self to the readers of the We have
no enemies to punish, or friends to reward.
Don't pay one man as a means to rob his neigh-
buy Tobacco on its merits and stand ready
to compare sales with any market in the State.
Try us and be convinced, proof of the pudding it
the We will pay for all Hogs-
heads used in shipping to us. Prompt personal
attention given the sale of every pile of tobacco
on our floor, and SAVE you over a third in
charges of what you pay in other markets to
have your tobacco sold. Give us a trial.
Your friend,
Ed. M. PACK
Sales every day
HARRIS
much for
We make no loud advertisements but will pay as
all grades of tobacco---------
As any House Anywhere.
We guarantee all patrons the best possible attention
our personal attention
Every Lot Tobacco on Noon
We know that a poor sale means a loss of patronage and l
business men cannot afford
Empty Hogsheads furnished free. Find them with A.
Greenville, or with E. S. Harris, Falkland.
Our market is the best market for bright tobacco in the
and our facilities for handling tobacco as good as
we will do all we can to please you if you will give us a
Our house is the best lighted in town and we have every pi
advantage that can be had on a loose market. Give us
and be convinced.
EASTERN REFLECTOR.
THE NEWS.
and James were
sentenced to life in Chicago for
murder of Policeman
flouring mills in Marion, Ks., were wrecked
and two men were fatally injured, by an ex-
Chicago building
is Raid by Inspector of Buildings to be
beyond redemption.------A call has been issued
for a convention of the retail clerks of Amer-
stock holders of the Nashville.
Chattanooga and St. Loan Railroad have de-
to e the capital stock of the com-
ten per Matthews, of
Athens, Ala., shot a who assaulted her
He was found
Parker was sentenced to imprisonment for
life in Montgomery, Ala., for being an
to the murder of another woman's
T. of the New
York Cotton Exchange, killed himself in
Englewood, N. Mottling and
wife were asphyxiated by gas in their room in
a Pole, is missing
from Minneapolis. He left behind his wife
mistress.------Judge Hughes has given an
opinion in Richmond that Registration books
are public records, and registrars are required
to permit United States election supervisors
access to them.------An old man named Heller
dropped dead of heart disease, brought en by
political excitement, at a meeting in .
burg. Pa.------A heavy fall of snow on the Ten-
mountains.------By the overturning of
a vessel containing twenty tons of
metal in a foundry at Pa., six men
were horribly burned.------A Hungarian
man poured boiling water over two quarrel-
men at Pa., and badly scalded
them.------In a quarrel over taffy, fifteen-year-
old Johnnie shot his younger brother
in the head in their in New York.
Edward T. of Terre Indiana,
was killed by a train on the Pennsylvania
Railroad, near Philadelphia.------Fire in the
buildings of the Hubert Smith Brewing Com-
in Philadelphia, did damage.
Eight were
agent of a Hungarian colony of settlers at
N. W. T., committed suicide. He
was about to be arrested for shortage his
Roach,
was shot and killed at San Francisco by
James J. Allen, Democrat, during a political
quarrel.------Secretary Husk says that
has been stamped out in America.
Underwood, a prominent citizen of
Kansas City, was killed by a Chicago and
Alton train, near Sheffield, Mo.------Miss Lizzie
Phelps, a society belle worth of
X. Y., married the family
Swift, n pork packer and
merchant, of Cincinnati, is dead.------The
Edwards Hank, of Kansas, failed. No
has been made.------Frank Berg-
an expert Swedish forger, was arrested
in Chicago.------Diseased cattle have been
shipped from Canada to Scotland.-----Trinity
M. E. Church, of Cincinnati, has voted to
admit women as delegates General Con-
Oregon Pacific and the
Valley and Coast Railroad Companies
were put into the of a receiver.------
Heavy snow storms in H.
of New Philadelphia, O., who took an
of morphine and was supposed to
have die I, came to life in his coffin, and from
the scratches on his face and the broken
in the coffin lid he must have made a terrible
struggle to release himself from the grave.------
The cruiser Philadelphia collided with a tank
ship in New York harbor, but no damage was
done.-The Mutual Fire Insurance Com-
of Chicago made an assignment. Lia-
and of contested claims
the company.------A tobacco company,
with a capital stock o. has been
formed in Louisville and Cincinnati
A company has purchased five hundred
acres of land across the vet from Petersburg,
Va., and will establish a town.------The steam-
fitters of Chicago are on strike.------The Non-
partisan National Woman's Christian
Union has i sued a call for a
convention.------A section of circus
train was wrecked near Macon, Ga., and eight
horses killed.------W. S. Wharton, a Chicago
money lender, and also interested in the in-
business, has and it is
reported that bis indebtedness amounts to
Circuit Clerk E. Ward
Houston, of Parkersburg, was arrested,
barged with forging certificates of pay for
witnesses.------Judge Robert L. Johnson, of
county, Pa., died of
apoplexy, aged seventy-six years.------The
legality of Speaker Reed's quorum rulings is
to be tested in proceedings brought by a New
York importing firm against the
bill.------Lee Allen, a notorious horse thief,
was captured the country by
United States
an insane man, living near St. Louis, shot a
neighbor and brother, and while attempt-
to kill his father the latter split his skull
with a hoe.------Percale an two Flat-
head Indian murderers, were sentenced to
death in Helena, of
S. D., has confessed to
her a Chi-
thief recently released from prison, tried
to kill Miss Alice the girl whose
convicted him. He did not succeed.
------S. S. Cole, a freighter, was murdered by
Indians in the Big Bend country, Washing-
Watson, a Santa Fe section
hand, was murdered and his body secreted in
a closet the railroad station at Fort
son, an t
Tex., police officer, shot Maggie Null
then killed himself.------The steamer Alex-
near Pa.------
a son of ex-Mayor
Kansas City, committed suicide ban
Tag art, a Columbus,
Ind., farmer, confessed on his death be. to
having murdered Thomas Jameson, in 1885.
Tom Pays the Death Penalty
at Perry. Ga.
Ilia Horrible of His Step-
in and Avarice Alleged as
His Trials.
Thorn- s G. was hanged at Perry,
murdering nine persons, all member
of his father's family, on August 1857
The doomed man slept well from two o'clock
until tour. He got up at eight, and had a
interview a party of newspaper men
with whom he ed for half an hour,
laughing and exchanging jokes.
About one o'clock lie was conveyed, tinder
the escort the local military, to the gallows
which had been built in a little valley the
the town. Seven or eight thou-
sand people swarmed the hillsides around to
watch the execution. On the gallows Wool-
folk was cool and composed.
After the ministers had prayed, he himself
prayed fervently, declaring his innocence in
his invocation. A written statement, signed
by was read, in which he gave it as
his dying declaration he was innocent of
b crime which ho was being executed.
At the drop fell. The fall failed to
break his neck, and death resulted from
strangulation, his pulse continuing to beat for
eleven minutes a the fall. Twenty-five
minutes later the body was cut down.
The victims of the awful butchery
R V. his wife, Mrs.
tin children, Richard F.,
Jr., aged Susan Pearl, need Annie,
aged III; aired Charlie, aged
aged months, and Mrs. Temple West,
aged
The first alarm of the tragedy came from
k, the only survivor of the
Tom went to the house of a
tenant named Green Socket, not far from
house, about daybreak, and called
to that someone had killed his father.
ed investigations revealed that the
crime had not been exaggerated. Nine dead
bodies were lying in horrid confusion in the
house, everyone of t hem brained with an
nary that had evidently been
cured iron the yard. In the room occupied
by the parents were six bloody corpses. The
bodies of Captain his wife, their
infant and Miss Pearl lay on the
bed the corner, father and mother and
babe having been struck on the head with the
murderous apparently before they
while the eldest daughter's body had
been east upon the bed alter death. On the
floor were the lifeless bodies of Richard Wool-
folk and his younger brother, Charlie, welter-
in pools of blood. Death had been in-
in e.-ch case by blows with the butt of
an
Three other bodies lay stiff in death in the
room on the side of the corridor.
The corpse of Mrs. West and of Rosebud, the
daughter, reposed where they had
slept side by side in one of the two beds in the
room. The body of 10-year-old Annie Wool-
folk lay near the window, as if she had been
warned of the approach of the murderer and
had sought to escape by jumping out of the
window.
Suspicion quickly fell upon Tom as the
murderer, he was taken in custody. In-
showed that the only tracks about
the house, traced in blood from the blood-
bestrewn floor, were those of Tom
they were his, but said he made them
when lie went into the bloody room alone
after the murder. He was searched, and on
one leg about the knee was found the imprint
of a bloody hand. He had on a shirt much
too large for him when searched, and after-
ward his own shirt was found in the well,
lined and clotted with human brains.
The motive for the crime was found in Tom
Woo folk's enmity for his stepmother and his
desire to have undisputed possession of his
father's property.
was charged with murder of the
nine members of his lather's household by the
coroner's jury, and in December. 1887, he was
brought to trial in Macon before
of the County Superior Court The
theory the defense was that n crazy
of the neighborhood had committed the crime,
but the theory failed, and was practically
abandoned before, the trial ended. The jury
found guilty after being out but a
few minutes, and lie was sentenced to death.
The Supreme Court granted a new trial, how-
ever, and in March, 1889, he was tried at
Perry, Houston county, a change of venue
having been granted because a jury could not
be secured in Again was
convicted. Another appeal was taken, but
the Supreme Court sustained the court below,
and he was finally sentenced to be banged at
Perry.
A BAD GANG BROKEN UP.
The Career of Criminals
Cheeked by the Death.
The killing of the noted
in winds up the history
of one of the worst criminal gangs in the
South. Bob Redding was born in Georgia
thirty-five years ago, and in began his
criminal career in had a brother,
Wiley, a cousin, Emory, and an aunt, Mandy
the four constituting the Redding
gang. They fired upon a party of ladies and
gentlemen during a dance in Griffin, wound-
several. Coining Atlanta, a long career
of murder and was piled up, for
which they skillfully escaped punishment for
years. They stole, in one way and another,
over
When finally arrested Bob was sentenced
to twenty and Emery to fifteen
years each. exposed a plan to free the
prisoners, for which he was pardoned. He
then organized a new gang, the members of
which have since been given long terms in
the penitentiary. Wiley escaped to
where he still is. Three months ago
was arrested in Griffin in gold on
his person. He escaped and was not again
until killed Sunday.
Mrs. Mary A. a lawyer of Wichita
is said to be the greatest political power
the best within the ranks of the
Alliance in Kansas, which numbers
members.
LOTS TO HEALTH
Thirty Men Faint In a Land Company
Building out in Minn.
The excitement over the sale of lots, which
were to be sold here by a land company, was
so great that men crow jostled,
and pushed other in the hall of the com-
office from 5.30 in the evening until
the next morning, awaiting the opening
sale of There was no ventilation and
the team heat was intense. Over thirty men
were pulled out through the transom in a
tainting condition. The scene was horrible
and nauseating from the closeness and odor.
When the door was opened the men were
crowded between narrow railings, looking as
though they had passed through a pestilence
up to the counter to select lots.
The whole plat was sold, and men went
away without lots.
SOUTHERN ITEMS.
FROM MAX V SOURCES.
Two military companies are being organ-
at Buena Vista, Va.
The crop of Preston county, W.
Va., has already yielded a return of
The Ohio River Railroad Company is to
build an depot at Huntington, W. Va.
Roanoke has been chosen as the next place
of meeting of the Presbyterian
There are at Roanoke College this session
four Choctaw Indians and two Mexican
dents.
The Petersburg Grays have begun to col-
a fund to enable them to go into camp at
Virginia Beach next summer.
Fifty wagons are being turned out at the
wagon factory in Raleigh, N. C, daily, and
still the orders are kept up. The stock is ad-
The School Furniture
Company, which over men, has
signed a contract to remove its plant to Basic
City, Va.
The Wheeling, W. Va. Board of Health are
arranging to have built a second garbage
for the use of the city, which
is estimated at
The new bridge at W. Va
has been completed, as far as the iron work is
concerned, all that remains to be done is the
completion of the flooring.
A panther has been roaming through the
mountains near Keyser, W. Va., for several
weeks. One hunter reports having shot at it,
but did not succeed in killing it.
James M. Harlow, of Orange county, Va.
was shot while hunting birds-
Both eyes are destroyed, he is paralyzed on
the left side, and no hope is entertained of his
recovery.
Senator Plumb, of Kansas, is a large in-
Virginia properties of all kinds, and
predicts that the time is not far distant when
the State will be one of the most prosperous
in the Union. .
In Darlington, S. C, J. H. Witherspoon
shot and killed, in self-defense, his J.
G. Raines. The cause was an old quarrel re-
newed by settling their respective shares in
the cotton crop.
Mr. George D. while sawing at his
water mill in the Quantico district, in Mary-
land, found in the power wheel a mud turtle
two feet eleven inches long from the tip of
the nose to the tail.
j M. Kelly, or the firm of Kelly A Richard-
son, owners of a pinning mill at Buena Vista
Va., while sawing a piece of timber, his hand
slipped and came in contact with the saw, am-
all his fingers and thumb.
One postmaster in Georgia is now a firm
believer in the saying that in time
saves There was a hole in the roof of
his office, and rain getting through stuck
together about worth of stamps.
Mrs. J. of Md.,
last week on her farm a second crop of
raspberries, which were large, well formed,
perfectly ripe, and of fine flavor. Two of her
neighbors also gathered a small crop.
A fruit association has been or-
by the growers in the neighborhood
of Beaver Creek, Washington county. Md.
There are now two organizations of this kind
in the county, the other one being at Smiths-
burg.
As George St Myers and William Kelly
were walking in the streets of Wheeling, W.
latter pipe, a shot was fired
which struck the pipe and staggered Kelly,
but no clew could be found to source of
the
In the village of Westmoreland
county, Va., there lives a girl but sixteen
years of age who weighs four hundred and
fifty pounds, inches around
she waist, and bids fair to be the fattest woman
that ever lived.
While the two sons of Mr. George Bryant,
who resides near Lynchburg, Va., were out
hunting, the gun in the bands of Willie, the
older boy, was discharged, the
load taking effect in Edgar's left side, inflict-
a very painful and serious wound.
The ticket office of the Cumberland Valley
Railroad Depot at Bunker Hill, near Martins-
burg, W. Va., was broken into by burglars,
but they only succeeded in getting Mr.
Lemon, the agent, having taken in a large
sum of money, brought it away with him to
A Parkersburg dispatch states
that in Calhoun county two young men
named Richards fell out over a woman. One
of them stabbed the other to the heart and
escaped, was captured and confined in
jail. The men are said to be members of
good families.
A few days ago while Atkins, of
Charlotte county, Va., was attending to a
mill his head was caught by the lever
propelling the rollers, and before he could ex-
himself was brought in contact with
the upper part of the mil, crushing the skull,
and death was almost instantaneous.
---The financial success of the late fair at Ra-
N. C, has caused much talk favorable
to a grand exposition in 1891. A great deal
will depend on aid furnished by the state to
the scheme, but as the general assembly is
likely to be composed largely of the
element, that source
can be confidently expected.
Two weeks ago Mrs. Brannon, a half-de-
woman, traveling from St. Louis to
Philadelphia, jumped from a Baltimore and
Ohio train at W. Va., and fled to
the mountains, leaving seven small children
on the train. Hundreds of persons
to find her without avail, and the children ore
being cared for at
Fifteen thousand acres of the most valuable
coal lands in the new field now being opened
by the Camden system of railroads was sold
to outside corporations at large figures,
cash being the first payment. John
Barman bought acres, extending five
miles along the Railroad, in which
the coal is eight feet thick and of a fine
quality.
In 1864, while the Union army was lying in
front of Petersburg, Va., a gentleman, who is
now a Washington attorney, found an old
family bible, in which was a genealogical
tree of the Hatcher family. He did not
in locating the owner until a few days
ago, when he forwarded the prized volume to
Thomas C. Hatcher, of Chesterfield county,
Virginia.
Kenna Gentry, an eight-year-old nephew of
Senator John E. Kenna, met with a horrible
accident at Charleston, W. Va. He had
up into a tree, when he lost his foot-
and fell. He came down head first on a
picket fence, his mouth striking one of the
pickets. Nearly all of his teeth were knocked
out, and his month was split open to the mid-
of his cheek.
Henry near Terra Alta, W. Va, was
seriously gored by a bull which had escaped
from the car at the Snowy Creek wreck. The
animals, from fright and liberty, had gone
completely wild, and when Mr. and his
companions the brutes
charged with the of demons. Mr.
run down, painfully gored, and coming
within a hair's breadth of losing his life.
James of Indian Mills, W. Va,,
took a double-barreled shotgun to the black-
smith shop of H. F. Dillon to have the tubes
repaired. He shot off one barrel, and said
the other was not loaded. Mr. Dillon put the
end of the barrel in the to heat
to the work he had to do, when the fire
caused the discharge of the other barrel,
slightly wounding Dillon and Mr.
Great excitement prevails over the
of natural Ala., by H.
O. Weller and others. It has been known for
months past that gas existed in this section,
and several surveys have been made for this
One company has been at work for
months getting up options on land in this
neighborhood. Prominent geologists and ex-
perts have relied forcibly on the indications
for finding gas, which has at last been
ABOUT NOTED PEOPLE
Pope Leo speaks French fluently, but
knows no English.
M. Bullock, of Florida, who has thirteen
children, has the largest family of any member
of Congress.
Bret Harte has forsworn social pleasures
for the present, while finishing his literary
engagements.
Robert Sellers, the oldest Mason in
Canada, has just died in Out., at the
age of years.
Dom ex-Emperor of Brazil, has
his residence at Versailles, in the
villa
Signor the sculptor, has just
completed his for a marble bust of
Chauncey M.
H. C. of Sac
the largest farm in Iowa.
It comprises acres.
General Albert Pike, the aged chief of
Masons in America, is said to bean inveterate
smoker, having used tobacco for fifty years.
Mrs. Emma E. Forsyth, who has a
of acres on an island near New
Guinea, is one of the largest land owners
the world.
Governor Francis, of Missouri,
himself at Jefferson City the other
day by stopping a runaway team of horses
a crowded street
has refused to live in Africa,
and has persuaded her to decline the
Governorship of the Congo, offered to him by
the King of the Belgians.
Commodore John Page, of the Argentine
navy, who died recently near the Bolivian
frontier, was a native of Virginia, and had
served in the United States navy.
Miss Sanger, the President's stenographer,
is the first woman to act in that capacity at
the White House. She also fills the position
of private secretary to Mrs. Harrison.
Thomas the millionaire, who had
lived luxuriously, said on his deathbed, that
he would gladly give a million dollars to be
able to eat a piece of bread and butter.
Charles R. Bishop, general Eastern pas-
agent of the Chesapeake and Ohio
Railroad, who had charge of the presidential
tour through the West recently, has been
with a diamond-set gold locket for his
watch chain, in recognition of his vigilance
and efficiency.
a Russian Prince, was
hanged recently at He was a
captain in a regiment, and
murdered six persons in their sleep in revenge
for an injustice which he imagined had been
done him. The Prince, who had asked to be
shot, did not confess his guilt under the
gallows. He was only years of age.
Feodor a veteran of the
war of 1812, died recently at
the age of in He served
in the Russian army years, and
received a cross of St. George for his
At age of he married a 18-year-old
by whom he had two children For the last
fifty years he has made a daily practice of
drinking a pint of cognac just going to
bed.
NEWS NOTES.
The government of India has decided
discontinue the annual grant devoted to the
search for and purchase of Sanskrit
manuscripts.
the tenor, who has been farming
for some years past, has written the libretto
an opera entitled the and
has written the music. It is a
story.
Colonel Herbert, who has been appoint-
ed to command the Canadian militia as
to General Middleton, is a man of
and a favorite of Lord
The real name of John historian,
essayist and college is Edmund
Green. He changed his name when a
boy, upon the death of his father and the re-
marriage of his mother.
It is now more than two thousand years
since it was first proposed to cut a canal
through the Isthmus of Corinth, but the work
is at last under way, directed by a Polish
engineer, and promises to be completed in
A involving the possession of
worth of securities and gold, of
sheep and hundreds of thousands
acres of land in all parts of European Russia
will come to trial in St. Petersburg in about a
week.
In 1889 there were pounds of
tobacco consumed in the United States.
pounds of which was imported. There
were 4,000,000,000 cigars consumed here in the
same period, all but of which were
home made.
Col. Charles E. of New York
progress of has been
steady all along the line, both in Europe and
the United States. At a congress
of the universal language held in Paris
the exposition conversation was carried
on in it by Spaniards, Frenchmen,
cans, Russians, Greeks and
WASHED OUT THE TOWN.
By the Collapse Tons of
Water Pall In a Deluge.
Two hundred and eighty thousand gallons
of water, confined in the steel standpipe, broke
their confines o'clock A.
M. flooded Temple, Texas. Immense
sheets of boiler steel, hundreds of pieces of
scaffoldings, houses, barns, fences, all the
debris of the surrounding neighborhood wont
crashing in all directions.
The people of the town were awakened, and
stood in groups about the town
watching the destruction of their homes
property. The house or O. T. was
crushed as an egg-shell, and afterward
took tire from ad overturned lamp and was
was seriously burned and
his recovery is doubtful.
The accident is unaccountable. No flaws
are apparent in any of the pieces of
the workmanship shows it to be
The is still solid
unharmed except in one place where a gash
two feet long is cut through the bottOM ; a
couple of rocks washed away.
A BIG BLAZE IN COTTON.
Compresses, Warehouses and Steam-
boats Burned in Mobile, Ala
and
Cars Half
a Million.
Mobile, Ala., has just suffered severely by
fire, the buildings consumed being a shingle
mill, three cotton compresses and five cotton
warehouses with cotton, the
Gulf City Oil Mill, the Mobile lee Factory,
three steamboats, eleven loaded and five
freight cars, two coal and wood yards.
n freight depot with freight,
and six wharves. The fire was aided by a
strong northwest, wind, but, had it been a
point or two nearer north, pretty much all of
the town would have gone. The loss is
with about insurance.
The tire started Stewart Butt's spindle
mill, just beyond the e limits on the north,
and destroyed that large establishment. The
sparks fell in many of the warehouses within
a radius of half a mile to south, and
fires broke out simultaneously, the first
noticed being among the cotton on the Mobile
and Railroad wharf. This was
at once tumbled oft into the slip, and, though
scorched was saved.
Almost at the same time the Goodman and
were seen to be on fire.
All northern part of the town is taken up
with property devoted to the handling and
of cotton, the whole blocks being
occupied by brick
buildings, with dead walls on all sides except,
two, which are pierced with a single gate.
All are covered with slate, but have court-
yards in the the sheds being open to
the rt. Fire once introduced spreads with
marvelous rapidity from bale to bale.
There was a rain of sparks from the shingle
mill fire, and this accounts for the breaking
of the fire in several warehouses at once.
The dense smoke was blowing steadily down
streets and in the faces of the firemen,
to fight fire in front. Very little
be done, therefore, to stop the progress
of the flames, and it was not until an open
space of a quarter of a block was met at the
foot St street any success
was met with. There the southward progress
of the fire was stopped after sweeping away
five blocks along the river front, except one
Mobile and Birmingham Pas-
Depot.
The warehouses on the west side of Com-
street were burned from Beauregard
to State street, four blocks, except the
warehouse. The warehouses on Water
street, both sides between Lipscomb and
Adams, and partly both sides between
Adams and were burned; also, the
warehouse on the northeast corner of Mag-
Congress.
All the wharf property which was owned
by private parties along the river front, from
Lipscomb to State street, was burned, and a
small portion of one of the wharves belonging
to the city at the foot of St- Louis street
Lying in the slips were four steamboats.
Three of Ruth, the Mary Elizabeth
and the burned. Two were out
of commission, and of little value. The Ruth
was worth Several coal and wood
yards on the wharves were destroyed, and
sundry freight
There was passenger train in Commerce
street when the fire broke out, and a train
freight, all belonging to the Mobile and
Railway Company. All were saved
except five empty freight cars. Eleven cars
of corn belonging to Mobile Ohio
Railroad Company were on an adjacent track
and were burned. The losses foot up larger
than at first reported, amounting now to
IN OF THE INDIANS.
The Governor of Colorado Telegraph I
the Situation to the President.
Governor Cooper has received urgent
peals by from Glen wood Springs, asking
that he sonic steps to have the
driven out of Colorado to their reservation in
Utah. He at once dispatched the following
telegram to
the advices are
being received by me that lite Indians from
and Agencies are off
their reservations in large numbers and com-
depredations in the western part of
County, this State. Aside from damage
to private property interests of
game, their presence is a constant menace to
our people, and serious consequences are to
be feared from the present temper of the sett-
The case is an urgent one, and I
gently request immediate action for the pro-
of citizens and prompt return of the
Indians to their
The men who have wired to the Governor
arc heavy cattle owners. They rode forty or
fifty miles to Meeker to reach a
The territory invaded by the Indians is in the
western part of County, Pad as isolated
any in the country.
WITH HIS OWN WEAPON.
Threatened to Kill His Sic Wife, but
Got Brained Himself.
Edward Houck, residing in Sullivan, Ind.,
went home drunk the other night and began
to abuse his wife who was ill in bed, threaten-
to kill her with a hatchet While he was
standing over the bed where she lay four
masked men entered the room, took him out
and, with the same hatchet, beat his head into
a Houck died from the effects of his
injuries. No one saw the murder except
wife, who cannot describe the men
very accurately. No arrests have been made.
MARKETS.
Mills,
Wheats-Southern
White, Yellow,
and Pennsylvania
and Pennsylvania
and Pennsylvania
Straw Wheat,
Creamery, near-by
receipts Fancy
Cream,
Tobacco, Good
Common, Middling, Good
to fine red, Fancy 13.00.
New Southern Good to
choice extra, White
Rye-State Corn-South-
Yellow, State
Cheese-
State,
Philadelphia Flour Pennsylvania
fancy, Wheat, Pennsylvania and
Southern
Yellow,
York Factory, Eggs-
State,
CATTLE.
Sheep
N Sheep
East Sheep
SPARKS.
Cardinal of Turin,
living.
Italy has the government of
United States of Brazil.
The dew French tariff bill makes flax and
hemp free from import duty.
i no a recent journey Baroness Alphonse
Rothschild, of Paris, was robbed of jewelry
i valued at francs.
James Lawrence member of the
British Mouse of Commons for North
Ireland, is seriously ill.
The Parliament of Holland will meet to
decide in view of the King's health
a regency shall be appointed.
M. and M.
members of the French Chamber of
ties, a duel with pistols, but neither
was injured.
members of the party of the right in
Chamber of Deputies of France intend
discussing the proposal to place a poll-tax on
foreigners residing in that country.
Two thousand of the striking lace factory
of France, sent delegates
their number to the employers to
for the adoption of a sliding scale of
wages
liberal party in England won a decided
victory in the Lancashire district by electing
I heir candidate to Parliament by majority
id At the last election the
date was by
minister of
foreign affairs, will
nth the British minister at Lisbon, in regard
to t in which is in dispute be-
tween Portugal and England.
A CROWD of laborers at
that the board of
bread or work, on account of the failure
the crop. The board's reply was
that the law docs not permit outdoor relief
Till government denies the
statement published that the States is
to send a fleet of warships to Lisbon to
the payment of the claims for dam-
age arising from the seizure of the
Bay Railway.
The executive committee of the striking
at Melbourne, Australia, have sent
i cable message to London, saying that the
has not ceased, that the men will not
way, and that they have no doubt of the
ultimate success of the strikers.
Mr. Chaplin president of the British
of agriculture, speaking at Stafford.
raid that although the meat
inspection laws were intended to bring pres-
sure upon him to admit American cattle
lively it would he his duty to go straight on
s if these measures had never been passed.
The minister of commerce of France intro-
in the Chamber of Deputies of
country a general customs bill,
ding a maximum tariff applicable to products
imported from countries not conceding com-
advantages to
tariff reserved for countries consenting to
regulations calculated to benefit French
trade.
ONE of the defendants in the trial of the
Irish leaders at Tipperary, that
summons lie issued against Mr. chief
secretary for Ireland, compelling him to
pear before the court and state under oath
what he had said at Newcastle, Eng., but
judges declined, declaring that they refused
to be the medium anything illegal or
proper.
DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES.
The public library building in New Haven,
Conn., was struck by lightning, and a portion
the root was torn
The public schools in Blooming
Grove, and other villages in Orange county,
New York, have been because
There was a heavy storm,
by lightning, in Conn.
damage was done in and
surrounding towns.
A train on the and
Western Railway struck a wagon, near
The occupants, Isaac
wife and son, were killed.
An express train on Chesapeake and
Railroad ran into a rock that had
on the truck, near Va. Engineer
was badly injured.
bis son
George, and n man, are believed to have been
drowned while hooting coots near Hanover,
Mass. Their dory went ashore empty.
One the fulminate departments of
Union Company at Bridge-
port, Conn., blew up. George Baker, aged
years, employed the place, was killed.
A COLLISION occurred between a freight
and a construction train on the and
Eastern Railroad, near III. Thomas
was killed, and eight others were in-
Two children of Nicholas Brandt, aged
and years, upset the stove at their in
Dubuque, while playing. They were
so scalded by hot water they died
in u short, time.
Felix Young was killed. James Turner
fatally injured several others
bruised, by the fall of a on a
building Chicago. They were laying
bricks on the third floor.
the Chicago and Eastern Illinois
passenger train was Ind., a
rail broke, throwing two of the passenger
coaches on their sides. Several the pas-
were badly bruised, the
tor was hurt.
George aged years, died at
near West Point, N. Y.,
of a gun shot wound in the head. Before ex-
the boy said he had been shot by his
sister Ida, aged years. Whether the shoot-
was accidental or intentional is not known.
Captain Nicholas J. of the Brit-
army, his wife, fell from the railroad
bridge to the rocks, feet below, The
Oregon. Both were dangerously in-
who is about years of age,
perhaps fatally.
Captain John a mysterious sort
sf a character, perished in a fire in a Front
street in Brooklyn, N. Y. He was
an officer in the Fenian invasion of Canada,
and was afterwards an officer regular
of the United States.
boiler of a shifting engine, at Eliza
Furnace, near exploded, killing
engineer John and fireman Thomas
Pieces of the flying boiler struck
injured Joseph and John Clark,
at the furnace. The cause of the
explosion is not
BOOTH is to be putting the fin-
strokes on a tragedy upon which he
has been working for five years. From the
same source comes the information that at
the close of the present season Mr. Booth will
retire permanently from the
daughter is an
who, until
to the convent at Santa Rosa, Cal. Fifteen
years ago she was one of most charming
and most popular of the ladies of
Cincinnati.
WHALING ON ICE.
HOW ESKIMOS CAPTURE
TIC SEA MONSTERS.
An Interesting Account of
Hunting in the Ire-Bound North-
west -A Native Outfit
The Eskimos mainly on catch-
whales for a in which
business they become very expert,
especially since improved craft has been
introduced among them; generally they j
are very successful, having taken during
Finally they succeeded In cutting
track out and obtained supplies.
WHISTLING MARMOTS.
NOTES AND COMMENTS.
Strange Animals That Infest the
Olympic Mountains.
After, lunch we passed through a
beautiful bottom land, teeming with
flowers, red and yellow monthly musk,
fringing the banks of the stream where it
spread out over the meadow in a dozen
different channels. Charlie wanted to
stop and take up Campbell
told him much plenty snow in win-
and after vainly trying to drink the
whales between these three-named
Besides these several were taken
by the whites here and at Point Hope,
and others were captured by the natives
of the numerous villages scattered along
the coast.
About the middle of the month of
April, though much depends on the con- j
of the winds and currents, a lead
usually opens on the ice from five to ten
miles out from shore, and allows the
whales to come along. Soon as the lead
opens whales can be seen, sometimes
pushing their way through quite heavy
drift ice on their migratory journey
northward. In general they move along
quite rapidly, seldom showing them-
selves more than one rising.
By the time the lead opens the natives
are supposed to have everything ready
for a start after whales. Canoes over-
hauled, fresh skins of walrus, or seal,
have been prepared and put on the canoes
where needed, seal pokes have been made,
guns, lances, bombs, lines and harpoons
looked prepared and ready for
the great work of the season.
The ordinary outfit for a canoe is one
darting gun, carrying harpoon and
bomb; one shoulder gun, for bomb, car-
and other ammunition; three or
four rifles and fowling piece; a furnace,
with few splints of wood to start the fire;
food, blubber, clothing, etc., etc.; snow
sled, and a crew of eight or ten, men
Mid women, boys and girls. Thus fully
equipped, the starts out to remain
on the floe five or six weeks, or during
the entire whaling season. They take
out but little food, depending on seals,
ducks, bear or walrus, when they cannot
get whale. Their food is eaten raw. and
of any quality or condition it may be in. j
They sleep without shelter on the ice or
in the or whenever
sleep overtakes them. The furnace is
more for melting snow for drink than
for cooking; tho they have no j
to cooked food, yet they eat it raw
from sheer laziness. With a few splints
of wood a fire can be started, and when I j
fed with blubber it is surprising how-
rapid snow enough can be melted to
satisfy the thirst of forty or fifty people.
in the winter months,
shooting whatever may come along, but
always keeping a sharp lookout for the
Skirting
over some big rocks, we suddenly
came into a lovely grass country. Like
the prairie in summer, every conceivable
flower seemed to bloom and blossom in
the grass; the place was ablaze with red,
white. We must have gone
through or acres of it, and every
a rippling stream ran
j widely through it. The place was a per-
I feet paradise, and thank goodness we had
i got out of the dark valley, and stood in
; the bright, warm sunshine. We were
now close to the head of the
j and we eagerly pressed on. Presently
we met a dog, and after him his master,
who turned out to be Mr. Ransom, going
from the head of the to Port
Townsend. He gave us cheerful accounts
of the elk, and also kindly took a letter
into town for us. At 5.30 we camped
under Sentinel rock, about a mile from
the divide. This rock stands out
alone, like a massive fortress guarding
the entrance to the valley of the Dun-
Suddenly the mountain sides seemed
to be alive with men whistling to one an-
other, one would turn sharp
I round only to hear another and a shriller
; the other side; and soon we
saw lots of animals, about the size of a
j fox, with long bushy tails, running about
from rock to rock, sometimes lying down
but. more often sitting bolt up, erect, as
a ferret does. We shot a couple of small
that night and afterward shot several
more, larger ones. Campbell called them
whistling dogs, and declared they were
good to eat; but the smell was enough
for us. Their odor is peculiar, but not
fragrant. They have two long teeth in
front like a beaver, and feet almost
shaped like squirrel's feet. I believe their
right name is mountain beaver.
went afterwards in the mountains,
as long as there was grass, we saw these
whistling dogs, as we got to call them. I
liked to see them; they seemed to make the
place cheerful and lively, and were very
amusing to watch. In winter they have
burrows under the snow, and their
coats get a dark gray; in summer they are
yellow. Their skins should make good fur,
Once out on the ice they wander about, I
valuable the
larger and more
whale.
The canoes are at all times kept in
readiness, either on the ice or in the
water, to shove off at a moment's notice.
Should a whale come along near the floe
he is approached from the ice, and, if
within striking distance, struck and
bombed both at the same time, perhaps
instantly killed, as frequently happens,
without using the canoe. Attached to
the line, three or four fathoms from
the harpoon, are two seal pokes, and at
the end another. The two first pokes
seem to worry and perplex the whale, if
he is not at once killed, so the canoe can
come up and
on the end of
Our altitude this
night was feet, and we christened
the place from the
stony ground had to sleep on.
The night was warm until about a. m.,
it got fearfully cold, and we were
almost Re-
Maimed Lawmakers.
Three United States Senators lack a
limb apiece. Butler and Wade Hampton,
both of South Carolina, have but two
legs between them to represent the
of the delegation from that
State. Both wear wooden limbs, though
in Butler's case you would never suspect
dispatch him. The poke j it. He lost his on the field of battle,
the lines shows the while Hampton, who fought all through
the whale takes while under water, the war without receiving a wound,
as it remains on the top and points out; amputation on account of a kick
the in case of his sinking. Whales by a mule. Berry, of Arkansas, lost a leg
often find breathing holes in the ice, and in fighting for the Confederacy at the
ore approached, struck and ; battle of Corinth.
killed and cut up without the aid of a
canoe. Darting guns, bombs and
breech-loaders arc all the rage now among
the Eskimos, yet, in accordance with an
old superstitious custom among them,
the first whale of the season must be
A few members of the have to
get along without a leg or an arm. Gen-
Henderson, of Iowa, of
Ohio, and Laws, of Nebraska, are each
minus a leg on the Republican side.
They, together with Lynn, of Minnesota,
struck with a native slate-pointed I who has only one arm left, are entitled
After the first, then the Yankee
harpoons, guns and bombs will do.
But more and more, year by year, the
natives are using improved implements.
Naturally good hunters and
they readily perceive the advantages of
our superior craft, in the use of which
they have become very expert. The first
report of whales seen here this season was
on the of last month, in an open
lead, two miles wide and ten miles off
shore. At once everybody was excited
and on the move; a track commenced
to an artificial limb every five years from
the government. On the Democratic side
General Hooker, of Mississippi, and
Oates, of Alabama, have each lost an arm
and Stone, of Kentucky, a leg; but
Uncle Sam does not provide them with
any Star.
An Electrified Tree.
out over the rough ice, which was filled
up ridges, parallel with the shore,
thirty or feet high, for and
miles seaward. To get their canoes out
with their outfit over the ice, so filled .
with ridges, appeared a terribly
able undertaking, but many hands made
light work, and all went at with a will
Every pick, and t-hovel that could
be found was brought into use and kept
in constant motion until the open water
was reached by the first canoe on the
27th, and this w. s only accomplished by
the most persevering energy and
try in constant hard labor. After the
first canoe cut her way out the rest
followed with comparatively lighter
work; so, one after another, nineteen in
all with their crews, numbering
persons, were out on the floe ice.
and now appeared another
There was a strange sight at the
of Washington Hunter streets
the other night.
A large water oak tree, growing on the
Capitol grounds, was the center of the
sensation, which attracted the
of citizens in the and pas-
About two feet from the base of the
tree, the exterior of which was blackened
and the leaves and branches drooping
and wilted, a sunken-in place shaped
like a needle's eye, the center of the eye
extending almost to the heart of the tree,
was an opening. From this aperture a
volume of hot steam belched forth, and
the sound of boiling sap could be heard
distinctly. In places the hot sap oozed
through the bark in long seams. It was
a strange sight, and for a good while its
cause was unaccountable. To the touch
the tree was unbearably hot.
The only cause that could be assigned
to overcome. A wall of for the freak was a stray wire, which was
rough ice. very much resembling
of all sizes and forms, from tons in
weight to bullets, round, square and
oval, as if worn away in battling for ages
with winds and waves, piled up twenty
feet or more, extended for miles all along
the edge of the floe. To launch a canoe
over this wall into the open lead, filled
with floating ice would be but a trifling
job, but to get back again or to land on
the floe ice was the great difficulty.
Along the floe the currents were running
about four knots an hour. No boat with-
out steam could make headway in the
drift ice. One canoe, however, made
the attempt, but was swept helplessly
away. The crew found, when too late,
amid the whirling ice that their efforts
to stem the current was powerless, but
after a severe fight for life they managed
to land on the Here was a new
difficulty to surmount. They were en-
beset in and cut off from all com-
for several days. They were
fortunate enough to shoot a couple of I
Seals, which alone them from i
tied from the tree to an light
pole on the corner, crossed
with a main current wire imperfectly in-
Constitution.
The Biggest Check.
The controversy as to the largest check
ever drawn has broken out in the
English newspapers. The
says that it was a check for
to pay an arbitration award, and
other checks for
and are mentioned
as in it, all being English checks, except
one drawn here by a A
larger check, however, than any of these,
except the first, was drawn in 1881 by
President Roberts of the Pennsylvania
Railroad in payment of a share for
nearly shares of Philadelphia,
Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad
stock, when Mr. Thayer of sold
the interest to the
Baltimore Ohio, and Bob
i ii.-. l-----1
A farmer near Atlanta, Ga., not
i coffin he bought for his sick child, the
after getting well, mounted it on four
and used it as a watering trough for
cows. With the lid. he his
fence.
The speed of American railroad trains
reached the limit of safety on roads
with frequent curves, and it will never
any higher. The passenger who can't
along fast enough at fifty or sixty
an hour had better arrange for
wings, and a long pair at that.
Bears and wolves in all Russia killed
year only horses, oxen and
other domestic
gate achievement which makes statistical
y a poor show alongside of the vast
sheep slaughter in
America by dogs, our petted beasts of
The earth appears to be still in a state
incompleteness. Down in Honolulu a
volcano is in operation, a now lava lake
las been formed, and cones which sank
tome years ago have bobbed up again
feet in one day. All this shows that
things are not yet quite settled, and that
world still wags.
The German Government proposes to
have its women telegraph and telephone
wear blue
fairs, with gilt collar and facings and
bright buttons. In this way each girl
will be as it were, and it is
claimed that the costume will protect
her from insult as she passes to and from
her work.
A pet kitten was found dead at Hood
River, Oregon, examination showed
that a lizard was fast in the kitten's
throat, its tail and hind legs being in
vigorous motion in an effort to free itself.
It is supposed the kitten caught the
little saurian, which in its effort to escape
made a dart down the kitten's throat, but
that being too small for it, the strangling
of both kitten and lizard followed.
In New York City the estimated pop-
between five and years of
age is greater than the seating
capacity of the public schools. The
deficiency is in the primary depart-
where it is whereas it is
only in the higher departments of
public education. If accommodations
are lacking anywhere the deficiency
should be at the top and not at the bot-
tom of the public educational course.
Remarkable facts concerning the in-
condition of women have been
collected by Mr. statistician of
the Massachusetts Labor Bureau. In
1885 the female population was some-
thing over of whom
were actually engaged in twenty-one in-
There were music teach-
1885, as against 1395, ten years
previous; 1357 shopkeepers, against
Teachers have increased in number from
to Accountants from
to A great decrease is
shown in the number of those employed
at home, there being but 1885,
as compared with in 1875.
It is curious to observe in some of the
big New York City and notions
houses the measures of protection that are
taken against loss of any kind. They arc
so many that they suggest that it is a
burden to own Mich property. The water
pipes and contrivances to attack tire auto-
the burglar alarms, the iron
shutters, the private watchman, the in-
the credit man at a big salary,
things animate and inanimate go to swell
the cost of taking care of what is in
hand. The danger of burglary by night
is small, but there is one enemy that
hides himself in every establishment,
concealing himself by day in the cellar,
so that the hatchways on each floor arc
fastened down to baffle the rats. Rats
are specially fond of kid gloves. Among
the employees of some firms are ferrets,
but they frequently get very tired of a
war to which there is no end.
A new expedition to the North Pole
for which the Norwegian National As-
voted two hundred thousand
kroner, will sail from Norway in
1892, under the direction of M.
Nansen. A specially constructed boat is
being built for the undertaking, and fuel
and provisions to last five years will be
taken, though it is expected that only
two years will be necessary for the
age. The discovery of certain relics of
the and the identification of
certain weapons found on the coast of
Greenland with those found by the
Eskimo in the vicinity of Straits
at Port Clarence, Norton Sound and the
mouth of the Yukon River, lead to the
supposition that there is a route,
short and direct, across the Arctic
Ocean by way of the North Pole. This
route M. Nansen and the ten or twelve
men who will accompany him on the
perilous journey propose to discover.
Says an American lady, who has just
passed through the Suez
no longer have to tie up for the but
go up and come down by electric light,
the effect of which, once seen, can
never be forgotten. There is a rule of
the road by which one or the other of
the vessels going or coming down to
tie while they are actually passing each
other. I think we were fastened two
or three times, and it was most interest-
watching the steamers coming in
from the next station. . In tho
bow of each was an electric light of
enormous power, supplied by the canal
company. The company charges ten
guineas for each lamp. I hear it reported
that the British Government to
withdraw from Egypt. I sincerely hope
the rumor is not true. It is pitiable to
see how concerned the poorer classes of
the community are over the intelligence.
They dread a return to the and
exactions of the and besiege one
with questions about the truth of the
rumor. It would be a disgrace to Eng-
land if she abandons this poor, trustful
People to the cruelties of
rule, after having given them a taste of
real .
asserts the
Record, study the combination of
advantages possessed by the with-
out amazed at the possibilities of
the future. Cotton, of which it
holds the monopoly of the world, is
a wonderful wealth producer, that has
no equal in the agricultural products of
this or any other country. This crop
alone, raised on 19,00.1,000 will
this year be worth, including the seed,
.,,.
value the total corn crop of the United
States, raised on acres, and is
about greater than the
value of the wheat crop of the whole
country, raised on acres. This
is a basis of wealth for Southern
interests that promises greater pros-
than the farmers of any other sec-
of the country can ever hope to
enjoy. Added to the cotton crop, are
the rice, sugar and tobacco crops, all
sources of great wealth which the farm-
of the North and West do not have.
Then there are the early vegetable
which is assuming such large pro-
portions and which already reaches not
less than a year; tho fruit-
growing industry, including the raising
of oranges, grape, early peaches, etc., in
addition to the usual farm crops of wheat,
corn and oats, the three staples upon
which Western farmers must almost
wholly
FOOD FOB THE FAT.
being
A Course of Diet That Will
the Most Obstinate.
A certain celebrated woman doctor,
who knows all the fat women in London
and New York, and is considered one of
the best authorities on obesity in the
country, is just home from England. It
is rumored that she went abroad on a
special commission Blavatsky,
but no sooner was she summoned than
the esoteric priestess received a message
from the occult world forbidding her to
tamper with her pounds of
loveliness.
When asked about the matter the doc-
tor refused to talk.
Here is a dietary prescription for
obesity which has the merits of
curative as well as
lamb chops or
fish, broiled, boiled or baked, and served
without any butter, gravy, or sauce;
sliced tomatoes, lettuce or celery in
season and coffee with saccharine, which
is a tar and sugar product, and has none
of the ill effects of pure sugar on obesity.
meat and a salad.
soup, shell fish, or a
plainly cooked fish; a choice of roast
meats or game, minus gravies, sauces and
condiments, and any non-starch
table, such as lettuce, spinach, asparagus,
tomatoes, and for dessert a small
quantity of raw fruit or stewed fruit.
This diet is for the reduction of adipose
tissue, but if tho patient is subject to
gout, rheumatism, kidney troubles,
and wants to cure them she must resort
to a strict diet of beef and hot water.
The meat must be minced and can be
broiled or baked. The hot water is to
be taken in pint one and a half,
hours before the meat.
With a person who has not reduced
the first dietary will produce a
rapid reduction of flesh, but if previous
experiments have been made and the
system has become used to a nitrogenous
diet, it will be necessary to become more
rigid, and not only the food allowance
diminished but systematic fasting
New York World.
Tho Apple.
The virtues of the apple as a fruit have
been celebrated from time immemorial,
i and few fruits have so many legends as-
with them. The garden of the
was me garden of the golden
; apple, just as our on is the Isle of
j Apples. all it has been
written, apple seems to have had
the widest and most mystical history.
The myths concerning it meet us in
every age and country. Aphrodite bears
it in her hand, as well as Eve. The
pent guards it; the dragon watches it. It
is celebrated by Solomon; is the healing
j fruit of Arabian tales. Ulysses longs for
it in the gardens of Tantalus
grasps vainly for it in Hades. In the
prose Edda it is keeps
in a box apples, which the Gods, when
they feel old age approaching, have only
to taste to become young again. It is in
this manner that they will be kept in re-
youth until gen-
destruction. the Angel of
Death, accomplished his mission by hold-
it to his nostrils; and in folk-lore
Snowdrop is tempted to her death by an
apple, half of which a crone has pois-
but recovers life when the
falls from her lips. The
seeks the Golden Apples of the King's
garden in many a Norse story; and when
the tree bears no more, Frau Bertha re-
veals to her favorite that it is because a
mouse gnaws at the tree's root. Indeed,
the kind mother goddess is sometimes
personified as an apple tree, but
the apple is the tempter in northern my-
and sometimes makes the nose
grow, so that the pear alone can bring it
to moderate the Year Round.
History of Pen Making.
A Roman metal pen is said
have been found at a mere
stylus, but a pen, slit, and there
is evidence of a pen or reed of bronze
nearly as late as the invention of printing,
in the fifteenth century.
A hundred years ago, some steel pens
were made in Birmingham, England,
Mr. Harrison for Dr. Priestly, and some
of these passed into the hands of Sit
Joseph Mason, in his early days with Mr.
Harrison, but all of them have been lost.
The first pen of metal, of a date beyond
all question, is one in a Dutch patent
book of 1717. At the same time a polite
ode by Pope refers to a and gold
but these were evidently luxuries
only.
It was about 1823 or 1824 that
great revolution in making pens by s
cheaper hand screw press,
which pierced the pens from sheet steel
began. Previously pens had been
made from steel or gold rolled into tubes
and with a joint forming the slit. These
required considerable labor to shape them
into a pen form. The use of u screw
press belongs to the period of John
Mitchell, Joseph and Joseph
Mason; but on a careful review of the
facts it seems to be Clear that John
Mitchell has the best claim to be con-
as the introducer of press made
pens. Skinner, of Sheffield, England,
was apparently one of the to cheapen
the production of pens, but his
surpassed when the screw
press was York
THE BUDGET.
YARNS BY
MEN OF THE
Planted a
Lesson from
Remarkable, Etc., Etc.
WANTED A COUPLE.
said a man, entering a cater-
establishment, you advertise
weddings
replied the
wish you'd send a couple to my
louse right away. I've two daughters
I'd like to get off my
you and the handsome
Bramble girl are one
what I thought
hen the minister married us, but I have
concluded that are ten.
Duncan- -What do you mean
is one and I'm
Epoch.
A VALUABLE FAMILY RELIC.
have taken a fancy to that
cane you sport, Would you
sell it
dispose of it for
my consideration. It's an old family
heirloom; my great-grandfather used to
my great-grandmother with it.
Circular.
A FALLACY.
In Washington.
I suppose necessity
U the mother of invention.
Patent Office wouldn't
think so if you worked in the Patent Of-
Bin pies.
got into my
house last night and got away with six of
my wife's pies
in the world did they
pet in
isn't the question. How did
they get out after eating the pies, I won-
Statesman.
THE BAND QUICKSTEP.
Arabella, alone with her beau,
In the dim light of gas burning lean,
Heard a step on the stair,
Turned the gas up full flare,
A said to her worshiper, J
Papa has his boots on, I
New York Herald.
NO CHANGE.
I can't stand objected
the young wife to her mother,
keeping me up this way till or o'clock
almost every night since we've been mar-
might have expected it of
was the reply.
should like to
because it is his nature. What
he did before marriage he is not likely
to change
Times.
now HE KNEW.
said Billy Blossom, of St.
Louis, seed a dude down
know he was a dude,
he had a collar
a bold
give me a kiss, my
annoy me, sir. and let me tell
all that if you ask for such a
favor again I'll have you arrested for
begging without a
DIFFICULTY.
it terrible that ice should be
so dear in the summer and coal so dear
in the winter
Now, if we could
only have the in the
time and in the every-
thing would be just right, Bah Jove
New York Herald.
AS THEY IT.
fine pair of bays you
have there, Mr. Horsey. Raised in Mas-
I suppose.
do you suppose they
were raised in Massachusetts
is the Bay State, isn't
see you a nag, Mr.
one would take you for a
Green Siftings.
SWEETLY FEMININE.
my dress hang all right,
dear
certainly deserves to. The
style is positively criminal
AN IMPOSSIBILITY.
understand that Bullion, tho rich
banker, used to write
Bullion prides himself up-
on being a self-undo man, and poets arc
born, not made,
A LESSON FROM EXPERIENCE.
HE PROBABLY DESERVED HIS
think I shall sign as catcher
with some base-ball team next
my
what put that into
your head
I think I'm splendidly
qualified. Almost everywhere I've called
I've caught the people out. Hal
Magazine.
EXCEPTIONS.
Johnny don't like Freddy
He talks too much out of
mouth.
Mrs.
ever know people to talk except with
their mouths
Johnny Deaf and
dumb people talk with their hand.
nor.
Musical you like to
be able to and play, my little man
wouldn't like to
have folks say such menu things about
me as they do about
Weekly.
A DIFFERENCE OPINION.
Miss had a
about art with Miss tho
other evening, and her so
thoroughly stupid.
Mr. surprise me
talked the other evening for an hour,
and I thought she was remarkably in-
Miss did you talk
about
Mr. Epoch.
DONE PRETTY WELL.
my son. is
ways the best policy.
His may be it is, pa, but
still you've done pretty well.
POISONED DAVES.
Great Belle presume
you are going to Miss outing
party
Rival season I
wasn't invited.
Great
I How very strange I am going.
Rival heard they had
finally secured York
Weekly.
TOOT DO NOT SPEAK NOW.
said draining
glass, bottle's empty. It doesn't
take me long to make a quart of
look
returned it
doesn't take the quart long to
the attention, New York Her-
HE HAVE DIED
don't believe in the Darwinian
theory, the survival of the all
that.
him carefully I The
survival of the fittest neither do I.
THE Flit MADE LIMP.
First What makes you
limp
Second result of a fire.
F.
S. tired
Journal.
MO It KM ARK ABLE.
seem quite struck
with my idea.
not so much with
i the idea as with the fact that you had
one.
like IT.
writer in the Other Monthly claims
; that woman has entered every field of in-
i said still we never
sec nor hear of women
are replied
because so many are engaged
in matchmaking which differs from the
other but in one letter, and is far more
pleasant and interesting to
Circular.
QUITE WORTHLESS.
I have a fearful cold what do
you think I had better take for it
nothing; just give it
York Mercury.
A PECULIARITY IT HAS.
bad habit is like a person's
on
Hair and Other.
Young want a family
jar.
Crockery long have
you been married
a visit from your wife's mother
coming next
Crockery Denier a fatherly
Then I wouldn't buy one now, my son.
Maybe the old lady will bring one when
she comes. My wife's mother has been
visiting us regularly for the last fifteen
years, and she never has failed to bring
one
MEASURING BY THE EYE.
Young want a pair of shoes,
large and comfortable. Two will do.
New Boy at her
Leather, the lady wants two shoes, large
and comfortable. Where's that box of
News.
didn't work.
hero, You
told me the way to win a girl was to de-
vote myself to her mother.
that will do it
very------
I wanted to win
Miss and I took your advice, and
devoted myself to Mrs. and now
the old lady, who is a widow, wants to
It was announced a little time ago on
high authority that was going
out of The right dye seems to
I have been a difficulty, the difficulty
j in some cases seems to have been almost
j Those whose taste for
I beauty is incurably active will
have prejudices so far considered
that color will be interposed
between yellow and the dark brown
or darker brown f the future.
is a which is almost as
satisfactory as the On
the whole, it is wisest to wear natural
hair. And so the market has become a
little upset. We shall not get our
supplies henceforth from Germany and
Switzerland. The maids of
will be allowed to consume
their own crops. Dark beauties are to
have their turn. As a result the Chinese
have suddenly developed a new com-
At Marseilles they are now ship-
ping bales of woman's hair sent across
the Pacific. Cathay is supplying tho
deficiencies of News.
History of Electric Lighting.
Electric lighting, says M. Fontaine,
did not make its appearance until near
the close of the year 1878. It was
Paris, in November, 1873, in the work-
shop of M. Gramme, that the first install-
i on a really industrial scale of
j lighting took place by means of a
continuous current dynamo and
I regulators. It was also in Paris, in 1877,
that the candle was first em-
ployed; sixteen lights, distributed over a
distance of about yards, being sup-
plied by a single alternate current Gramme
machine. Paris, therefore, had the hon-
or of possessing the first public and
lighting produced by means of
currents. M. Fontaine thinks that
in 1890 or th e electric lighting in
Paris will require for its production mo-
force equal, in round numbers, to
Greenville, N. C
I Sparks
Cooper's
Warehouse
N. G.
Is the leading place
For farmers to sell tobacco.
If yon want the highest prices
Don't to ship your tobacco
To Cooper's, N. O.
Cotton to
Go Brown Bros, for Shoes.
A good Dray for sale. Apply to
C. Stephens.
Highest cash prices paid for cot-
ton H. F. Keel
Best in the world Flour at J B
Cherry Co's.
Nice and Shoes
Brown Bros.
Last of October.
Ladies, examine Brown line
of Dress Goods.
bags cheap at the
Old Brick Store.
A few shares of Logan City Stock
for sale by J. J. Cherry.
The most excellent Boss Biscuits
at the Old Brick Store.
Brown Bros, are selling good
Calico for per yard.
Election next Tuesday.
For your bargains tore
go to j B Cherry Co's.
Try some of the new corned
lets at the Old Brick Store.
A Dice line of crockery etc. cheap
and low at J B. Cherry Co's.
For Latest Style Hats and low
price go to J. B. Cherry Co's.
Tarboro Fair this week.
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well
and sick at the Old Brick Store.
Dixon's custom made Shoes for
children and ladies, at Brown Bros.
I and cheapest line of
Shoes at J. B. Cherry
On.
A box of nice paper and envelopes
for cents, at Book
Store.
North Carolina Flair
at j cents Per yard at J. B. Cherry
Co's.
Thanksgiving Day not
Glasgow Evans has just received
a fine load of horses direct from
It you want to insure lite in
the best company in the United
States go to J. J. Cherry.
Davis and New Home
Machines for sale by J. C. Lamer,
office at Brown Bros. Store.
For a line drive or work horse
call on Glasgow A new lot
just arrived.
Oh thanksgiving turkey.
Brown Bros, don't sell at cost nor
below cost, but as near to it as any
reliable firm in
The finest loaf of bread I ever ate
was made of Lace Flour, at
the Old Brick Store-
Our one dollar Solid Leather
Shoes for man or woman give entire
satisfaction. J. B. Cherry Co.
Vote Democrats, vote to a man.
What, a Solid Leather Shoe for
one dollar for either man or
Where At J. B. Cherry Co's.
The ladies who have examined
the stationery at the Reflector
Bock Store are delighted with it.
The Weldon Fair is in progress.
Purchasers wan tad for
of nice paper and envelopes to
match, at the Reflector Book
Store.
The largest, best and cheapest
Writing Tablets in town can be
at the Reflector Book
Store.
The usual crowd in town last Sat-
Why is it that one who
goes to J. B. Cherry Co's are
happy Because they are pleased
with their Bargains.
per lb for Sweet Scot
lb sold in Pitt Co., which
is a of its superiority, at
the Old Brick Store.
The moon was on the full last
Monday.
The latest books, magazines and
illustrated papers can be at
the Book Store. Also
the finest Stationery and best
Cigars in town.
White man, do your duty when
yon vote next Tuesday.
School children should see the
novelty Pencil Sharpener and Slate
Sponge at the Reflector Book
Store. We carry a nice line of
school supplies.
Lone, light weight garments will be
much worn.
Subscriptions for all the leading
papers and magazines are taken at
the Reflector Book Store.
Save yourself trouble by leaving
your order with us.
Even a dead duck can claim that
be died game.
Beautify Tour
bare a nice lot of Hyacinth and
Tulip bulbs direct from Holland for
ale cheap, apply to Alien Warren
Son, Greenville, N. C.
People are paying debts and
bur for cash.
For The Farm
on Tar River for 1891. or longer on
certain conditions. Apply to J .
at Pitt Co. N. C.
R. S. Tucker
fault finder can only see the
defects in mankind.
Anything yon bay oar mar-
if not satisfactory you may re-
turn it and your will be re-
funded. We keep fresh beet, pork,
station, kid. poultry, , and solicit
your
Personal
Master James Cherry left Monday
morning for School at Win-
A. D. Hunter is attending
the Atlantic Baptist at
Kinston.
Mrs W. M. King and daughter,
Miss Ella, were visiting in Wilson
last week.
Mrs. L. E. Cleve, who was visiting
relatives here, has returned to her
home in New
Mr. J. W. Higgs, of the firm of
Higgs is North this week
buying new goods for the second
time this season.
Hon. L. C. Latham attended
county Superior Court
at Plymouth last week. His family
went over with him for a few days
visit to relatives there.
Gov. T. J. Jarvis left last week for
a campaign tour through the central
and western part of the State. He
makes telling speeches that do good
whenever the people hear him.
Mrs. J. Marquis and child, of
Philadelphia, came to Greenville
Monday to join her husband, Dr.
Marquis. We are glad to know they
will make this town their home.
It will afford pleasure to his
of friends to learn that Mr. J. J.
Laughinghouse has so far recovered
from his recent sickness to be en-
to return to his home on Sat-
Mr. A. P. of Raleigh,
State agent of the Manhattan Life
Insurance Co., was in town part of
the past week. The
knows him and was glad to have
calls for him.
Mr. M. R. Lang returned Monday-
evening from the North. Mrs. Lang
returned home with him. She has
i been spending several months in
Atlantic City and Philadelphia, and
her many friends are glad to know
she has been entirely restored to
health.
We are glad to learn that Miss
Rosa Forbes, who is now at Staunton
Female College passed creditable en-
trance examinations and entered four
senior classes. She was a student
of the Female Institute for the last
five years, and her entering such
high classes shows that she was well
prepared for college before leaving
our home school.
The editor made a harried trip to
Henderson and Oxford week.
Will have more to say later about the
tobacco warehouses visited.
Friday will be last day of
The Atlantic Association is
in Kinston.
Merchants are placing their orders
for holiday goods.
If you are a Democrat vote Demo-
ticket, straight out.
Weldon is to have a balloon as-
cent ion during the Fair.
Let every white man rote the
straight Democratic ticket.
Build more dwelling houses. It
will tend to build up Greenville.
Oysters scarce for a few days.
None at all could be had Monday.
The wind Sunday night brought
us a cold snap for Monday morning.
Senator Ransom's speech
day is praised by very body who heard
it.
Every man on the Democratic
ticket in Pitt county should be
The hunters are searching the
woods for the and
The County Candidates will speak
in the Court House Friday night. Go
hear
Parties hearing of any news at all
would greatly oblige us if they would
hand it in.
For the past week drummers have
just swarmed our town. They report
business good.
Now if you failed to register you
cannot vote. That is just the fix
negligence has placed you in.
Single roses having buds, foliage
and a long stem are the preferred
corsage bouquet.
Some of the porkers will doubtless
feel the cold steel now since the cold
wave has struck us.
Master James Moore gave a party
at the depot last Saturday night.
They had a big time.
A few of our citizens went over to
Hookerton, Sunday, to the Christian
Missionary Convention.
The weather is very fine now
much cooler. We have had a frost
and fires are a necessity.
We here of no marriages to take
place in the city, but in the country
it is lively, four on last Wednesday.
The colored may call it
but be got his name on
the book and will vote all the same.
The cornet band was out on a
Monday night for the first time.
They make good music for a young
band.
Mr. Arden Tucker's gin house was
destroyed by fire on the night of 17th.
About ten bales of cotton also de-
Mr. L. F. Evans sold some tobacco
at Bullock A Mitchell's Banner
Warehouse, last Friday at
good prices.
The Reflector was in luck Mons
day. Mr. J. S. Smith presented u-
five partridges which we
bad a feast.
Vote the straight Democratic tick-
et and thereby discharge the duty
yon owe your country,
children.
This is the last chance we will
have before election to Dem-
and white men to do their
duty next Tuesday.
We don't want to know our
Annie by she
might no by mouth when we pop
the
By request Mr. G. B. King will
address citizens of
township next Saturday at
ville at o'clock.
Pitt county's cotton crop is
largest this season that it has been fa
years. C. L. Patrick says his
crop is best he has had since the
war.
Ac last the blinds and window
fixtures for Academy have arrived
and been placed in position. They
were two months in coming.
What is use of going to other
markets when you can get what you
want right here in the county and at
figures as low as other markets.
The James School, at Grifton, will
give an entertainment next Friday
night. Mayor F. G. James, of
Greenville, will deliver an address.
Go up to Weldon to morrow and
hear Rev. Thomas Dixon. He will
deliver an address at the Fairgrounds
in the day and lecture in the town at
night.
Delayed mails are getting trouble-
some again. Raleigh and
ton papers frequently fail to come on
time and letters get badly the
schedule.
The merchant who advertises does
the equivalent of sending his four-
in hand to your door for what he has
he is not, afraid to let you know it
is good.
H. Harding will pay cash for cot-
ton seed or give cotton seed meal
exchange for same. He also has
cotton seed meal and hulls for sale.
See advertisement.
The Board of County Commission-
will be in monthly session next
Monday. It will be the last regular
session of the fiscal year, as their
new year begins the first of
The farmers who so wisely
crops this year have made
money. Let the system thus
he kept up from year to year
and the cry of hard times will be
heard no more.
We are glad to know that Dr.
Marquis is meeting with such success
here in his dental profession that he
will locate permanently. Bringing
his family here means that he has
come to
Messrs. Bill Smith and Ed. Ran-
Sr, went out hunting Monday
and killed partridges. They never
went out until after o'clock and
the only dog they had was a puppy
belonging to Mr. Smith. There are
some crack shots among our
sportsmen.
On last Thursday week Miss
Naoma House, daughter of Elder
David House, near Greenville, was
married to Elder M. T. Lawrence, of
Hamilton. The bride's father per-
formed the ceremony. The
tor extends best wishes.
To day the Reflector sends out a
large news supplement filled with
good reading matter. We will here-
after send out supplements every
week so long as our advertising pat-
is so large. We want to give
patrons all the reading matter
hie.
It was real amusing to sec the two
police trying to persuade an old hog
in the pound the other day. The
old had been there before
and would just approach near enough
to eat up all the corn they threw out
but would not enter the gate. The
officers finally gave it up as a bad job.
The mammoth double stores J.
B. Cherry Co., are enjoying a
tremendous rush of trade now. Such
an elegant line of goods as they car-
is bound to draw, the people to
them. The stock of furniture that
they carry is well worth going to
look at, even if you should not want
to buy anything.
Orphan Entertainment.
A chapter of Orphans from the
Oxford Orphan Asylum will reach
here on the steamer to-day
and give an entertainment to- night.
They should be liberally patronized
and given a large fund to take home
with them from Greenville.
Should at the Depot.
Grifton correspondent was a
little unjust to Capt. Whitaker, con-
on the train, in his comments
last week. We have inquired into
the matter and learn that the parties
who got left were off up town instead
of at the depot. Capt. Whitaker
says the trains stop there amply
long to give all passengers time to
get on or off the train.
Large Potatoes.
Mr. John Flanagan is a champion
potato raiser. Early in the season
he brought the Reflector one that
weighed pounds. On Monday he
dug a hill that produced pounds
of potatoes, and were only
three of them. The largest weighed
pounds, another was almost as
large and the last was a very small
one. This beats the record.
Who to Vote for Vest Tuesday,
The whole Democratic Judicial
ticket
Branch for Congress.
Williams for the Senate.
Skinner and Cox for the House.
for Clerk.
Tucker for Sheriff.
James for Register.
Flanagan for Treasurer.
Keel for Coroner.
Ward for Surveyor.
The Democratic nominee for Con
stable.
The white man in Pitt county who
fails to vote the above tickets is a
to his race.
Truth, Toe.
a matter to down the
Old Brick Store with
remarked a gentleman in Re-
hearing, when be saw a
two-horse wagon being loaded with
goods that establishment on
Monday. And he spoke the truth.
The Old Brick Store enjoys a pat-
of no small proportions from
the people of Pitt county, and it even
extends out into surrounding
ties.
Death of Vincent White.
A letter from Coventry, N. Y.,
brings us the information that Mr.
Vincent White died there on the 9th
inst. He was once a of
Greenville but left here just after the
war and made his home in New York
State. He never forgot bis Southern
home, however, and delighted in
reading the Reflector each week
and learning what was going on
down here. There are some of our
citizens who remember him.
Lang's Column-Read it.
Died
Mr. John Randolph, a very highly
esteemed citizen of this township,
died at his home five miles above
Greenville, on Sunday evening at
o'clock, fie was about years old
and bad been in declining health
during the last few years. He was
an excellent gentleman and had a
large circle of friends. Monday
afternoon the remains were interred
in the family cemetery, funeral
vices being conducted by Rev. A. D.
Hunter, pastor of the Greenville
Baptist church, of which deceased
was a faithful member. A wife and
five children are left to mourn the
severe loss of husband and father.
They have the sympathy of the com-
Death of Mrs.
From a recent issue of the States-
vi lie Landmark we clip the following
in reference to the death of a lady
who was well known here and for
whom our people had high
Mrs. Emily E. Lewis died at her
home on street at an early
hour last Friday morning, in the
year of her age. She came here
or years ago, as the wife of the
late Col. W. A. Lewis, and had
for herself a permanent place in the
affection and esteem of all knew
her. She was a woman of line sense,
strong character and many Christian
virtues. Mrs. Lewis was a member
of the Baptist church and the
exercises were conducted,
day, by her pastor, Rev. A. Pool,
after which her were
Oak wood cemetery alongside
those of her late husband. Mrs.
Lewis was of a Pitt was twice
married but left no children, these
having died. She left a valuable es-
composed in part of real proper-
here and in Pitt county.
D. Y. Cooper.
His Mammoth Tobacco Warehouse.
Smith's
James Smith, barber, bas re-
another one of those handsome
barber chairs. It is a No.
and is considered by
as the best the make.
When one gets into it a spring is
touched and yon are laid in a pleas-
ant position for a clean shave and a
quiet nap. This is the second one
that Jim has awl V; ,
friends and patrons to call feel
the gentle touch of his keen razors,
the dry shampoo that he always
throw, in, once tried will be
sire and call again, John says he
ham dope away with aid straight
back, neck carver, nose twister,
can yon with Mo.
he speak.
TEE THINS IN
writer not recall an
a more pleasantly spent
was passed in Henderson last
Thursday. Henderson is one of
most prosperous and go ahead
towns in North Carolina, and the
way new buildings are going op is
just wonderful to behold. But what
interested us most while there was
the mammoth tobacco warehouse
Y. Cooper. in the
State is there a warehouse that is
more convenient, better managed
or has better facilities than this. Of
course we have not seen all in the
State, but don't believe it possible
that can be surpassed. It
is building and mod-
after the most improved plan.
It large basement in which are
hundreds of graders and tiers busy
at work. Just this work alone
Cooper pays out from to
per week. Many farmers
who ship tobacco to him
to send it in bulk and then get ex-
graders to handle it,
knowing this will enable them to
get better prices. Between this
floor and the sales room is a large
elevator to facilitate handling
tobacco. To look over that large
sales floor one who does not know
much about tobacco warehouses
would hardly believe there is ever
enough of weed earned there
at one time to cover it. But
just wait tor the
sale and yon will not only see
the floor full, but also wagon loads
and hogsheads waiting to get on
floor. Never a day goes by
that does not see Cooper's Ware-
house with a big roan. big
prices he gets for tobacco makes
it go to him. The warehouse is
fitted with a double office splendid-
furnished. Above these offices
and extending across one end of
the building are a number of rooms,
comfortably arranged, in which
farmers have to stay over night
may have good to sleep.
This shows that Cooper looks after
personal comforts of those who
sell with him as well as after
their tobacco bring the highest
prices.
Now a few words about Dave
Cooper personally. Of course
tobacco planter in Caro-
many outside of North
Carolina, have beard of him and his
mammoth warehouse, bat he most
be seen to be known well. He is
one of the cleverest and most social
men you ever act. He makes a
friend of a man the very first thing
after meeting him. Ed Barnes
even came with him and
those acquainted with Ed know
that is saying Iota,
While at this warehouse we
two Pitt county farmers, Messrs. F-
tobacco and left
highly pleated with prices received
for it Other Pitt farmers up
to Henderson Monday and hen w
way a telegram received by the
editor from L A.
Sugg
leads market. sold at
D. Y. Cooper's to-day sixty,
eighty, per
Her Pitt I
law
LANG
Is now in-
Northern Markets
the-
SECOND-TIME
this season making
--for his--
MAMMOTH STORE.
He will add to his stock the
Styles and Fashions
in every department.
you see some
of his selections be-
fore making purchases.
GOODS
Etc.
Our Mammoth Stock of Stylish
urn .; mm ; mods
Just received. never been a
better selection brought to this market.
Will lead in Style and
Sell at Low Prices.
CAN SUIT THE MOST FASTIDIOUS.
We have none but the best Milliners.
Higgs Sisters,
Fall Styles. Greenville, X.
ESTABLISH ID
S. M. SCHULTZ.
OLD BRICK STORE.
AND
their will find it
their interest to gel w teen before par-
chasing elsewhere, i- complete
in all its branches.
PORK SIDES
FLOUR, SUGAR.
SPICES, TEAS,
always at Lowest Market is.
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from fur.--.
you to buy one A
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices to suit
the times. Our goods ate all
sold for CASH, therefore, having no
to run, we sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. M.
Greenville. N. V.
OUT
It is to the interest i every lady mat-
Stylish to sea
Mrs. E. A. Sheppard,
before making purchases. She is still
to the front with a beautiful and
defies competition In styles and prices.
i with her large In the
she is prepared to Bull the
j every purchaser. Call her residence
Avenue.
NEW
M. CONGLETON CO.,
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand.
-DEALERS IN-
Dry Notions, Boots, Shoes and
GROCERIES.
We have just received and opened a now
Fall and Winter Goods.
I be glad to my old friends come lo
see and assure them that we can sell the goods
Low 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,
w in i.
OXFORD, N. C.
Bullock Mitchell,
OWNERS PROPRIETORS.
------FOR THE SALE
LEAF TOBACCO.
TOBACCO A SPECIALTY.
We beat the world on high averages. With ample capital, one
of the best houses in the State and a good working force
we competition. WE PU HOGSHEADS
PLICATION . The Oxford tobacco market is as and as solid
as foundations, of the everlasting and we
say to the handed sons of of Eastern Carolina
that we will to get for them as much money for their
Tobacco as any other on this or any oilier market.
Every lot entrusted to our care shall have our personal attention.
All we ask is a trial. truly.
STOCK
Reliable Goods.
The above is what
the people need and not so
much cheap goods which
prove be costly.
We carry a full line of
mi
k Shoes,
HATS AND CAPS.
Full assortment and many
other minor lines that are
carried by dry goods stores
BROWN BROS.,
. C .
BOOTS SHOES, HA CAPS,
. K.
fl FEW LEADERS.
Calicoes ct. Cheeked Home-
span f White
Worsted to 81.00.
Shoes to
R and more
tor Cakes Soap
Caps to cents,
to Goods
to and many older
things in proportion.
A FEW LEADERS.
Calicoes Checked
spun White Homespun t I
S et. Worsted to
Shoes to Brat
lets. Needle papers i
besides for
Caps to
to Pants I
and many other thine;
proportion.
G. E. HARRIS
TO
C-
MISSION MERCHANT,
-AND IN-
Greenville, N.
ALFRED FORBES,
THE RELIABLE OF C
to the of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following good
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be and
n GOODS of all kinds NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN
Furnishing goods, hats and caps, boots and shoes, la
and DUES-S and HOUSE
WINDOWS, SASH and BI and
II PLOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of different
kind- Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Lime. Plaster of Paris, and
Hair. Harness, Bridles and addles.
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Clark's N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
Jobbed prices. cents per doze., less per cent for Cash Bread
d Star Lye at jobbers Prices, lute Lead and pure
Oil and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and and
Willow- Ware Nails a special.-. Give me a and guarantee satisfaction.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE JAMES OLD STANK
All placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rate.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE.
THE OLD CARRIAGE FACTORY
THE FRONT
D. Williamson,
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN FLANAGAN.
GREENVILLE, X. C.
Has Moved to One Door Court House
WILL THE M OF
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS.
My Factory is well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing
but FIRST-CLASS WORK. We keep up with the times and improved styles.
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are use., you can from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Horn, King.
Also keep on hand a full of ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
year round, which we will sell AS LOW AS THE LOWEST.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favor hops
merit a continuance of the same
Short.
Scotland Neck
The postmistress at Halifax, Mrs.
E. Davis, colored, has fallen
more than a thousand dollars short.
Her bondsmen had fork over the
money a few day ago for the deficit
and vet Mrs. Davis is kept in office.
What reasonable man, white or
that keeps in office persons who
handle public money so carelessly
still retain their positions as
trusted servants
That public office is a pubic
seems not to have become
pressed upon the minds of Mr.
postmasters at all If Mr.
is a good man,
such an exemplary gentle
man, why does he not see to it that
when a postmaster proves unfaithful
in handling public money, he is put
Wonder if he upon
his Sunday-school class the great
I stall not
steal It he does he would do well
to let teaching be followed by
example and put out the
who fail to keep it.
Neuralgic Persons
And troubled with nervousness
from care or overwork will be relieved by taking
Brown's Iron Genuine
baa trade mark and erase J red I Ices on
storm Calendar and Weather
for 1800, by Roe. R. Hicks, mailed
to any address on receipt of a two-cent
postage stamp. The Dr. J. II.
Medicine Co. St. Louis, Mo.
THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
N. C.
R. L HUMBER,
Steam Engines Boilers
Improved Brown Gin.
Saw, Grist and Mills.
Hancock Cotton Gin,
Cotton Seed Crashers,
Pulleys. and Hangings,
Also dealer in Steam Fittings.
Orders for any kind of machinery
will be promptly tilled at very lowest.
prices. Repairing a
H. L. Ill
Greenville, N. C.
ft. Tar j
Alfred Greenville,
I. B. CHERRY,
J. S. CONGLETON. Greenville, Seed
N. M. Lawrence. Tarboro.
Cape. It. V. Jones, Ag
The Line for travel on Tat
River.
The Steamer Greenville is the finest
and quickest boat on the river.
been thoroughly repaired,
and painted.
Kitted up specially for the comfort, ac
and convenience of Ladies.
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS
A first-class Table furnished with th
best the market affords.
A trip on the Steamer Greenville Is
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday
and Friday at o'clock, A. M.
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday,
and Saturday at o'clock. a. M.
Freights received daily and through
fills Lading given to all points.
R- r. treat, I. J. elicit it V.
Washington N, C. Greenville. N. C
O.
w. E.
J. PROCTOR BRO,
Merchandise,
K. C.
We came before our patrons again this
Season and invite their attention
to the largest
Stock of New Goods
ever brought Space will
not permit telling all we have in
but if you want anything in the way of
CLOTHING, HOOTS.
GROCERIES,
TOBACCO.
Come to us. We have the
CHEAPEST CLOTHING
in county. Can give you bargains
on any goods in our store. Highest
prices paid for Seed or Lint Cotton.
Persons owing us are requested
to make settlements as as possible.
J. O. PROCTOR BRO.
TOBACCO HOGSHEADS,
GIVEN AWAY.
We are pleased to announce to the to-
growers of Pitt and adjoining
counties that we are prepared to give
Hogsheads free to any person who
will use them to ship their tobacco in
provided they will ship It to Messrs.
Davis Gregory, of Oxford, X. C.
Davis Gregory are very large
tobacco dealers and the high-
est prices for all tobaccos shipped to
them. And since they offer this favor of
furnishing hogsheads and have shown
such interest in the tobacco growing of
our section we hope our tobacco growers
will And it their interest to give them
a most liberal patronage.
Persons desiring to ship to other par-
ties can obtain hogsheads of size
at a piece.
We promise prompt attention to all or-
sent to at Greenville, K. C.
Respectfully,
COX
The John Flanagan
BUGGY COMPANY.
Are in business at the old
Shops and are manufacturing
all kinds of the best
VEHICLES.
-We also do-
ON
AH Work guaranteed.
JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO.
Greenville, N. C.
TYSON BAWLS,
BANKERS,
We have opened for the purpose or con-
ducting a general
Collecting
Money to Loan on Approved Security.
Collections solicited and remittance
made promptly.
UNDERTAKING.
To cure Sick Headache,
Malaria, Liver Complaint, take
the sale and certain rented,
BILE BEANS
In Om ALL Bean to the
the hurt
oil
el. aver
B. S.
with me in the Undertaking business we
I are ready to serve the people In that
; capacity. All sate and due
me for have brew placed ill
the n
We keep on hand at all times a nice
of Cases of all
; kinds and can furnish anything desired
, from the Case down to a
Pitt county Pine Coffin. We arc fitted
up with all and can
satisfactory to all who
as
The Rest Salve in the world
Sores, Salt Rheum
Fever Sores. Tatter Hands
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Imp
and positively cures Piles, or no
ray required. It is guaranteed to give
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded
Price seats box. For said by J,
L.
Mind nil.
in T- all
of the
i la
A.
PHOTO-ENGRAVING-
n tats TO
and cuts hotels,
machinery, made to order from
Um specimen
Press Agency,
, New York City.
KNIGHT'S
Blood Cure,
A standard household remedy
in successful use more than years. A
cure for Dyspepsia, Scrofula, Nervous
Prostration, Constipation and all diseases of
the Blood, Stomach and Liver.
a Clear
A botanical compound, put up in
and sent by mail at the cost of
medicine. Large sufficient for
quarts, f 1.00; half-size packages, sufficient
for pints, sample packages,
A reliable Agent wanted in locality.
BOTANICAL CO.,
THE
Two lovers by a spring;
They leaned soft cheeks together there.
Mingled the dark and sunny hair.
And heard the wooing thrushes sing.
Oh. budding time
Oh, love's best prime
Two wedded from the portal slept;
The bell made
The air was soft as fanning wings.
White petals on the pathway slept.
Oh, pure eyed bride
Oh, tender pride
Two faces o'er a bent;
Two hands above the other locked
These pressed each other while they
rocked.
Those watched a life that love had sent.
solemn it
Oh, hidden power.
Two parents by the evening
The red light fell their knees.
On heads that rose by degrees
Like buds upon the lily spire.
Oh. patient life
Oh, tender strife
The two still sat together
The led light shone about their knees,
lint all the heads by slow degrees
Had gone and left that lonely pair.
Oh, voyage fast
Oh. vanished past
The red light shone upon the floor
And made the space between them
wide.
They drew chairs up side by side,
Their pale cheeks joined, and said
Oh, memories
Oh, past that is
Railroad Matters.
Neck Democrat.
The railroad authorities of the
Weldon railroad are
responsible several very great
wrongs that the public are compelled
to
In the first place, they ought to
put on better cars for the pas-
train. We ashamed of
the road recently when we heard a
lady that she thought she
in a smoking oar. The
BUSINESS EDUCATION.
Of Kentucky University, LEXINGTON, KY.
Corner
opposite Court
WILBUR R. SMITH, President.
Heat and
r. W, ft B. Smith. of the
V. an or II at v I for
S t f h. 1-.
aM In year,
ft -ii M
la I Course
M Commercial
Law. Joint
it V.
i- a. n. -r
i i B a m
and arc
-a-h. , an at. can taken alone or the
i -i. i -1.
of
h taken alone.
. l on pa-
meat. C T male Railroad Cans
a cheap put to attend this Collete. No
f pan. fa
U. .
OF H. WITH
IS A. CO.,
GENERAL
Commission Merchants
Roanoke Dock,
NORFOLK. YA.
Special attention given to Sales l f
ion, Grain, and Country Pro-
duce generally. Liberal Cash Advances
on Consignments, returns and
highest market prices guaranteed.
O T I O
------When want a good------
--------Call on--------
ALLEY
They make the best. if you want
------your old------
Family Pictures
carry them to Alley Hyman, they ill
enlarge them In Crayon. Pastel, India
Ink or Water Colors. All work
teed. Call and see them.
Alley .
H HYMAN, Manager.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
LIVERY SALE AND FEED
I have opened at the stables formerly
occupied by Dr. J. G. James,
and will keep a line of
Horses and Mules.
I have beautiful and fancy turnouts for
the livery and can suit the most
I will run in connection a DRAY-
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of
four patronage. Call and be con vi need.
GLASGOW EVANS.
Greenville, N. C.
MILKMAID BRAND
CONDENSED MILK
better far
foil Cream. Fall
For
a. a.
Greenville, N.
What to Teach Young
Women.
Dr. in Home Journal.
A mother writes to
shall I teach my daughters This
one important and tremulous fact,
my That there is no
in this world for an idle woman.
It may be with hand, it be with
brain, it may be with but
she must, or wretched for ever.
The little girls of our families mils
lie started with that idea The
carat of our American that
our young women are that
first, second, third, fifth,
sixth, seventh, tenth, fiftieth, thous-
things in their life is to get
somebody to take care of them. In-
stead of the first lesson be how.
under God, they may take care of
themselves. The simple tact is that
a majority them do have to take
care of themselves, and that, too,
alter having. the false no
of their parents, the
years in which they ought to have
learned how successfully to maintain
themselves. It is inhuman and cruel
for any father or mother who pass
their daughters into womanhood
having given them no facility for
earning their livelihood. Madame de
is not these writings
that I am proud of, hut the fact that
I have facility in ten occupations, in
any one of which I could make a
We should teach our
daughters that work any kind,
necessary, is a credit and hon-
or to them. It is a shame For a
young woman, belonging to a largo
family, to be inefficient when mother
and father toils their away for
her support. It is a shame for a
daughter to be idle while her mother
Old Sore Healed.
I had a painful, sore on
my leg, near the knee, that
led me for over two years. I tried
various
Ins,
the sore, in-
of healing an, con tinned to
prow larger and lo cause more
pain until to look for a
crutch. Through advice of a
friend, who was cured a
trouble, I took s. s. S , and in a
weeks was cured entirely. The
sore healed up, and lucre is not
even a Near left to mark the place.
A.
Mount Vernon, Ohio.
May 10th., 1800.
Treatise on Blood Skin Di-
mailed free.
SWIFTS CO.,
Atlanta On.
The most heartless pair of brutes
that we have of for some time
was a rich old scoundrel and his wife
who went before a Brooklyn justice
a few days ago and applied f r a
writ to eject their widowed daughter,
who with her children occupied an
upper room in one of their tenement
house, and was unable to the
rent when demanded. Tiny gut it.
too, and refused to give her more
then days to out. In he
I disposition of Providence how do
people like that to keep out
of the way of dead telegraph wires,
falling buildings, or something of
that son, which some times kill
blood must be pure for tire body
to be In perfect condition. Dr. J. II.
Me Lean makes pure blood
and imparts the rich bloom of health
and vigor to the whole body.
The quality of the blood depends much
upon good or bad digestion and
To make the blood rich in life
and strength-giving constituents use
Dr. J. Sarsaparilla. It
will nourish the properties of the blood,
from which the elements of vitality are
drawn.
Children who are troubled with worms
may be quickly relieved by giving them
Dr. J. II. Liquid
It kills and expels worms.
The of the
and life and
to every portion of the body;
the hour of rest brings with it
sound repose. This can be seemed In-
taking Dr. J. II. Sarsaparilla.
For rheumatic and pains,
rub in Dr. J. II. Volcanic Oil
Liniment, and take Dr. II.
Sarsaparilla. Yen will not suffer long,
but will be gratified with a and
effective cure.
JAMES A. SMITH,
TONSORIAL ARTIST,
Greenville N C.
We have the the
Chair ever used in the Clean towels,
sharp razors, and satisfaction guarantee
In every instance. Call and be con
waited on at their real
Cleaning clothes a specialty.
ANOTHER
Car Load or Fine
Horses
Whiskey
cured at home
pain.
Hook of particulars sent HIKE,
n. M. M. Atlanta.
I'M Whitehall St.
C. M.
N. B.
AND
toils tit the wash tub. It i as lion
sweep house, make beds or man Star.
trim hats, as it is to twist a watch
chain or a slipper.
The annoyance occasioned by the con
crying of the baby, at once ceases
when the cause is promptly removed by
Dr. Bull's Baby
t ii
remedies is Old Saul
Price only cents
It is n sad that while aged
lawyers and doctors are receiving
Hie largest fees their
One of the most popular household men ate often neglected.
Mules,
received
Greenville, N. C.
will be sold-----
CHEAP FOR CASH,
or at reasonable terms on time on
proved security. I bought my stock
Cash and can afford to sell as
anyone. Give me a call.
Catarrh Cure Possibly in the advance of human
education the lime may come when
aged clergymen will from all
RALEIGH
BUSINESS COLLEGE
V. B. Pits.
Edwards
Printers and
KT. C-
We have the largest and most complete
the kind in be found In
the Slate, and for
Of Commercial, Rail-
road or School Print-
or Binding-.
heady
for printing invitations
BLANKS Foil AND
COUNTY Kits.
Send us your orders.
EDWARDS k
PRINTERS AND its.
RALEIGH. N. C.
PATENTS
all business In the V.
Patent office or In the Courts attended I
for Moderate Fats.
We are opposite the S. Patent
lice engaged in Patents Exclusively, as
can obtain patents In less time than
remote from Washington.
the model or m is sent I
advise to Ires of
and we make no change unless -e
Patents.
We refer, here, to the Master. His
Of the tinier Did., and to
the I. s. patent
advise terms and reference to
actual clients in your own State, or conn
c. A. Snow .,
Washington, D. C
BOARD
are not commensurate in re- tO a Can- the kind I B. Pres.
with the travel that daily n. consideration and to Hank U
them. The people
Eastern Carolina arc as good and
respectable people as there are in the
State, and they pay the same fare
that is paid on other roads are
entitled to as good accommodations
as other people.
In the second place, the passenger
trains are all the lime behind. From
one to two hours behind the printed
schedule is the running schedule.
There was a whisper a days ago
that some were ready to sue
the company if proper connection
was not made with other trains at
Weldon. Persons go to the depot at
Scotland Neck at a. m., the ad-
schedule, and sit there wait-
for the train until nearly
o'clock frequently. Now, this is
simply an outrage. It is not in
with the usual courtesies of one
gentleman towards another. A man's
time is his money in this country,
and no man has any right lo make
another wait for him it it can
be avoided. All this delay is
caused by the passenger train having
to handle freights.
A passenger train on a railroad
line nearly miles long has no
right to be fooling with freight ears.
When men get on a freight ear to
ride they the chances better
or for worse; but when they get on a
regular passenger train, they always
calculate for a ride accord-
to schedule. The authorities
ought have more self-respect than
to have every man and woman that
travels over the line continually
grumbling at out slow schedules.
And then freights are handled ton
carelessly If things are smashed
up much longer as have boon of
late the road will be the loser. The
train hands have so much work to
do that they can not do it well.
Another daily freight train would
cure the whole thins;.
Old Favorite.
There was Tom, the Son of the Piper,
Sprat, and Merry King Cole.
And the Three Wise Men of Gotham,
Who went to sea in a bowl;
The woman who rode on a broomstick,
And swept the cobwebbed sky,
And the boy who sat in the corner,
his Christmas pie.
These were some of the old favorites,
but they have been supplanted by the
and stories.
Lord and Lit-
Peppers The Old fashioned Pills
and physics have been superseded, and
wisely, too, by
lets, a mild, harmless and effective ca-
They are pleasant to
gentle in their action that the moat deli-
child can take them, yet so
that they will cure most obstinate
cases of constipation, stomach, liver and
bowel troubles. They should be In every
nursery. As a gentle laxative, only one
for a dose.
Statesville There Is a
yellow jacket's nest on the farm of
Mr. William Johnston, near
ville, which is estimated to be feet
in diameter and high-
has had enough to
go up to it to measure it with rule or
tape-line, but it is the beat judgment
of who have surveyed it from a
safe distance that it is at least this
large.
A young man in Savannah tried to
play smart with a street car conduct-
tor by presenting a hundred-dollar
bill in payment of his fare. The
conductor, who was an
sort of a fellow, took the bill,
stopped the car, stepped into a
store and brought back the young
man in silver and nickels, and
the young man had to hire a cart to
haul it Star.
is pushing ahead
with a vim. The Land and Improve-
company which was
there some time ago and which has
opened up an attractive suburban
addition t Twit-City, been
by of in--
, which me
of
Li.,,
houses, etc.
is m n e f
Want I
i I
u-all . . , I
her business,
Tm u grind boom. I
dictate for Congress.
they are entitled.
Two rears B, , , ,
. , , ,. m . , If you feel of sorts. cross
John M. Clayton. Re ,.;,,,,,., ,,,
publican, were the rival Candidates cheerfulness will return and
tor Congress in the second district of I life will acquire new zest.
Arkansas. was elected ; irritate your lungs with a stub
but gave notice of contest, i cough when a
and between the election and the as- live may he found In Dr. II.
ambling of Congress was
in a and brutal manner.
having bean shot through a window
at night. always de-
the assassination but be-
that the motive for it was per-
and not political, lie took his
seat in the Fifty-first Congress and
was tamed out by the Republicans
near the close of the recent session,
the allegation being that Clayton had
received a majority of the votes cast.
He at once home, offered for re-
election and began a canvass of his
district. Monday night of last week,
while he was speaking at
Ridge, Conway county, a cap was
snapped at his back outside the win-
where a large crowd had gather-
ed. He completed his speech, how-
and on his return to his hotel
Mr. Norman, a citizen of
was knocked down from
If you are all run no
strength, no energy, and feel very tired
all the time-take Dr. II
Sarsaparilla. It will impart strength
and vitality to your
LEGAL NOTICES
A Farm
A small farm, containing acres
cleared land miles from Washington,
to lease for live year free of charge to
any one who will improve it.
Apply to BURGESS,
Washington, N. C
Notice.
The notes, account books and other
evidences of debt due K. Glenn
been placed In my hands for
I hereby request all persons
de to him to call at my Office within next
be- M and make settlement.
hind with a This blow, it
is believed, was Intended for Mr.
a sufferer from rheumatism
This Oct. 1900. P.
Notice to Creditors.
The undersigned having duly qualified
as Executor of Spain,
for and have unable to obtain i hereby gives notice to
relief at all. Salvation Oil gave me sous w the estate l make
per-
I II
entire relict and I heartily recommend ; payment, and all having
it. Baltimore, Md. , said estate ire notified to
What so wonderful, as a cough present the same for payment on or lie-
cured by Dr. Hull's Cough Syrup for tore the day of October, 1891, or
cents. Try it
His De-Q
netted Him.
Pitt Dispatch.
A clergyman was lamenting the
fact that Ins congregation appeared
to be restless during his sermons,
and declared that many of the
of his flock would get up right
a time when he fancied himself
most impressive, and would leave
the house.
answered a young
preacher, I must say I do
not experience such annoyance.
Hot a single member of my
gets up and goes out during
say first speaker
exclaimed. do you
don't manage it at
to manage
they complain when you
a long
I've never heard a word of
is indeed singular. Your
people must have been exceptionally
well brought
I think
you must be one of the most
eloquent of men. What is the style
of your
rather dry, I am to
admit, I do not possess the faculty
of drawing an interesting illustration
or of throwing out a bright
well, I have never heard of
anything so wonderful. And you
tell mo that no one ever gets up an I
that's what I tell
I don't understand it at
it is easy enough to explain.
I am chaplain at the
FOR BLOOD,
Malaria, and
.,.,.
It For Bale by la
Get
this notice will be plead in bar of
Tiffs 90th October, 1800.
William Spain.
Ex. of Spain.
Notice to
Having on the day
of as Executrix of the
last will and testament of John A.
Mainline;, deceased, notice u hereby
given tO all persons Indebted to the es-
state to make payment at once, and per-
sons having claims against the estate
must present them, properly
to the undersigned on or be lore the
day of October, or this notice
will be plead in bar of recovery.
This 20th or October. 1880.
I x of John A. Manning.
Notice to Creditors.
The Superior Court Clerk of Pitt
county having Issued Letters of Ad-
to the undersigned, on the
25th day of September, upon the
estate of deceased, no-
Is hereby given to persons
ed to the estate to make Immediate pay-
to the undersigned, and all persona
having claims against the estate must
present the same properly authenticated
before the day of September,
or this notice will be plead in bar of
recovery.
25th day of Sept. 1800.
It. K.
of Fleming,
Notice.
On Monday the 3rd day of November,
A. 1800, I will sell at the House
door In the town of to the
highest bidder for cash one tract of land
In Pitt county containing about two
acres and bounded as Situated
In township, adjoining the lands
of J II. Mills, Hair
and others and known as the Mill Lands
and being the land on which H. Dix-
Mill now to satisfy an
n my for collect Ion against
E. S. Dixon, and which has been levied
on said land as the property of said E.
S. Dixon. J. A. K. TUCKER.
R. W. Sheriff.
Dept, Sheriff.
Oct. 1890.
Raleigh,
Matt. K. O. Sec N. C.
Assembly.
Editor
Chronicle.
DB, II. II. Director N.
Type-writing,
Hanking.
Penmanship Md are
in the Haleigh Col
Send for of terms.
J. E. Md TEENY,
N. C
In
-per
in
It-id
ran
fr--. With I
n, i a
are you who eel
sod n
W- nay all
like a
r-f I in
rare
mm.,.,, . -I vi. in. Mil,
Tin
Why another new discovery by Alfred
Culley in the way of helping the
ed. calling on or addressing the
above named barber, you can procure a
bottle of that is
and causing the
hair I lie soft and
only r three a
week is a common hair
brush i all to lie used after the
scalp vigorously for a few minutes with
the Preparation. Try a and
convinced, cents.
Respectfully,
ALFRED CULLEY,
Barber,
N. C.
WILMINGTON WELDON II. It.
and Schedule
No No No
Sept. 10th, dally Past Mall, dally
dally ex Sun.
Weldon 18,80 pm pm
Ar am in
A r Tarboro
Tarboro
Ar Wilson
Wilson
Ar
Ar
Warsaw
Av Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
am
p in pin
i.;
. Mil- ; I
. II
, ,. . i r . .
,, . . i.
in
. d
. huh
DR. N i
PLASTERS.
THE
riVe ii inn
Of.
III
TRAINS NORTH
No No Mo
dally dally
ex Sun.
Wilmington pm
Magnolia I
Warsaw
v S
Ar Wilson IS
Wilson am If pm pm
Ai Mount
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro am
Ar Weldon pm pm
Daily except Sunday.
Train on Scotland Neck Road
leaves Halifax 3.87 P. M., arrives Scot-
land Neck at 4.23 P. Greenville
Returning leaves Greenville 7.20
A. M., Halite at 10.10 A. M.
P M., dally except Sunday.
On Monday, Wednesday and Friday
Local Freight leaves Weldon a in
Halifax 11.80 a m. Scotland Neck 2.00 p
in. Arriving Greenville 8.10 p m.
turning, leave Greenville Tuesday
Thursday and Saturday a m., Scot-
land Neck 1.00 p m. Halifax 8.35 p in,
Arriving Weldon 4.00 p m.
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via
A Raleigh It. R. dally except Sun-
day. P M. Similar I M, arrive
N C, P M, P M.
Plymouth 7.50 p. in., 5.20 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
6.30 a. m., Sunday a. m .
N C, m, 0.58 a m.
arrive Tarboro, N C, A W
Train on Midland N C Branch leave
dally except Sunday. A M,
N C, A M. Re-
turning leaves N C AM,
arrive NO, A M.
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky
at P M, arrives Nashville
P Hope P M. Returning
loaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville
M, arrives Rocky Mount Ai
except
Train on Clinton Branch Warsaw
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at
and A M Returning leave
ton A M, and P. M. connect-
at Warsaw with and
Southbound train on Wilson A Fayette-
Branch la No. Northbound I
No. except Sunday.
Train No. will atop only
Wilson, and Magnolia.
Train No. makes close connection at
Weldon for all points North dally. All
-nil via and dally except Sun-
lay via Bay Line.
Trains make connection for
North via and
AH trains run between
um and Pullman
JOHN F.
I. R.
f. M.
Shaving, Cutting and Hair.
AT THE GLASS FRONT-
the Opera House. Hi which place
I have when. I have
everything in line
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE,
TO MARK A
MODEL BARBERSHOP
with all the Improved appliances;
comfortable
Razors sharpened at
for work
promptly Very
Organs Fur
Mayor Daniel K.
N.
Ml
Ml;,
r.
A Month
in
W. iV Co.,
HAIR BALSAM
Clear-. ii
i . a
to
o it Youthful
hair
CONSUMPTIVE
COCOA.
knowledge of the
laws which govern
digestion nutrition, and by
application of the Hue at
well rm-mi, Mi. has
our table-, with a
my
many heavy
la by the of at
diet that a l- gradual
built until strong enough t
every tendency a-.-
of maladies are around
ll ready attack wherever I here Is a
weak We may escape a fatal
by keeping .-ll
with pure and a properly n
Made
water , milk.
Sold only In half-pound Una, by ,
JAMES CO,
Chemist.
If You Haw
BRONCHITIS Throat
SCROFULA I Wasting of
Or any
r f
you t
PURE COD LIVER
with
PALATABLE At MILK.
Sold by all Druggist.
SCOTT I