Eastern reflector, 30 June 1897


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





. s
on Lookout Mountain.
wound way
op, up. Standing there on
. the tip-top rook, I m five
States of Union. Scenes
stupendous end overwhelming.
One almost is to take
off hie hat in the presence f
what seems to be the grandest
prospect of this continent.
There is Missionary
beach red
billows of Federal sod
courage and broke-
There are the bias of
and Carolina. with
of vision there Ken-
there Virginia. At
feet, Chattanooga and
the pronunciation of
proper names will thrill
ages to with thoughts of
valor and ration and agony
Looking way, and any way,
from top of that
earthworks,
winding
through the valley, curling and
coiling around making letter
after letter as if that letter
stood for brothers
should haTe gone into massacre
with each other, while God and
nations looked on- hare stood
on Mount Washington, and on
the Sierra aid on
Alps, but never saw so far as
from top of Lookout
Lookout Mountain is along
hue of Southern Railway en
route from New York to Nash-
ville nu the Tennessee
The Eastern Reflector.
D. J. Editor and Owner TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO per Year, in Advance.
VOL. XVI.
GREENVILLE, PITT C, WEDNESDAY JUNE
Jul These
Bub your on a stick of
celery after peeling onions.
Rob spoon with common salt
to remove egg stains.
Buttermilk will take out mil-
dew stains-
A drop of creosote will stop the
bleeding of a cut-
Chloride of lime will canst rats
to flee from the neighborhood in
a Inch it is exposed.
p eked fresh and rubbed
on the teeth, whitens and
serves them
fin.
Tue master was
are apt to
quo and so net i mis, and
answers are apt- q too,
was as follows
boys bow many months
have twenty-eight
of a
in f Francisco Ex-
a Monster
Pr E. E. Boyce believes that.
Mr. Harvey the
largest
measures seven feet and fire
inches in
Salvo.
best salve In the world for Cut
Bruises, Sores,
Fever Soles, Chapped Ha
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
and cures Piles or
-It to
cent, per box. For It
W. M. Bond. 3.1. Fleming
X. C
Practice in all courts.
. AT r-AT-LAW,
Greenville,
H. W. Whedbee
successors to Latham Skinner.
Greenville. N. C.
Swift Galloway. B. F. Tyson,
M- I. C
A ALLOW A
m C
notice in all Cowls.,
It. E L. Jambs.
J.
r. c.
Wilson, H, U. Greenville, N. i
Greenville, N.
given
and settle-went dates.
Lean short Um.
John H. W. B.
W N. C. Greenville, N. C,
Q and Counselors at Law
In all the Courts.
Death of a Ban an
of Hardware in His
Harry the
h was operated upon
at the German Hospital last Sat-
and from whose stomach
the surgeon took an assortment
cutlery and hardware, died at
o'clock this morning,
of the operation.
got into trouble by
swallowing a bi, Barlow knife,
in Pilot Grove, Mo . the other
day. When he was operated
at the German Hospital
these articles were removed from
h's
Two one three
inches long and other four
knife blades, from
one to three long thirty-
two wire nails, eight penny or
larger j six penny
nails, shingle nails.
sixteen carpet tacks and small
nails, one barbed wire staple,
horse shoe nail, three
three ounces of glass and several
bits of crockery.
was offering bets
at least nails and three
would be found in s
and if the referee decided
that five blades are t
lent to one be would have
won his bets. He a as a
showman. He began
swallowing glass and nails when
he was ten years old, and says
he has eaten a lamp chimney
nearly every during the
years he been at it,
but the Barlow knife, he
swallowed last week, was a little
too much, even tor his long
the surgeons operated
upon him stock of hardware
inventoried was found
in a solid mass in his stomach
and partially encysted. After it
was removed the stomach was
Florida pay.
Whales often travel in schools
there
considerable blubber among
them at limes.
most tremendous sigh
known to the world is sigh-
clone.
The human calf prefers
key to milk-
In traveling temper
as well as your trunk.
t man on a wheel can look
interesting, but never dignified.
The day laborer never has to
worry over increased price of
champagne.
Yon never beard of a dog
of alcoholism, and yet a dog
is called a beast.
Stewed liver is often a
diet.
If would only act
as nicely as it tastes, would
be well-
A jest is often bard to digest
Straws show way the
sherry cobbler
is Even art
has Jay,
in Times-Union.
THE
Speaking of The
Boston Transcript
few red students at
are a ways well
and they sit at table in Memorial
hall on equal terms with the
Ah ever body knows,
Harvard football team has
had a colored member -which
a a good deal. In pub-
restaurants of Boston colored
people seldom seen, though
we have a large colored
; yon can't kiss she
said.
think I he replied,
washed out and sew- proceeding to prove now at
ed
City Dispatch,
F the
The maiden's eyes gleamed
while the young man,
his bravado trembled for
the consequences of of his
A sort time ago a deputy
of county only be
short distance from here, bad a . a mean thing. That's
fr taxes against a n what you in But you do
of Mill Greek amounting to it again.
cents, and the citizen was a; Journal,
desperate character, the deputy i I'll be
induced a brave man to go with An ordinary vulgar expression,
him, both being armed to the yet especially appropriate be-
teeth. Arriving at their,
the deputy demanded his
money, but the informed
lie did not it
deputy proceeded, to levy a
COW, Started, to the
off, when the
wife prevailed op him to stay
take dinner with them After,
dinner, being in a happy and
kindly mood, he invited the
and wife to make him a visit,
and as he was about to take his
leave the gentle wife told him she
had a settlement to make with
him.
settlement do you,
refer to, madam
for
dinner, sir, replied-
I why,
bill, good woman
dollar, if yon
He wrote a receipt for the
taxes and gave it to her, with
pent an home a
but wiser
Echo.
two u the two.
The tire was speak-
and the small boy's tin
pet appreciated what it said--,
Commercial Tribune,
It Wasn't Lots.
Mi's Sanderson bas
such an
freedom from She
has a heart of
you tested it I
time. She refused me
icy chilliness. At length I met
her the open plateau at summit
of Pike's Peak. drew her
Others Twos
the I wasn't. J was telling
love. I excelled, myself
in eloquence, really seemed
snored, lips were slightly parted.
Her breath came in short gasp
I said do pity ass
Your heart is beating quicker
she said, breath
feats strung, your
voice I cried ; Ibis is
love she said and turned
away, just the altitude shan't
try it Plain Dealer.
farmers never seem think
manors summer; and yet
with proper care as he saved
sun months as daring those
of winter. Suppose yon think some-
what along this
it wouldn't We.
tiled Alter Tears
A ago John H.
Hughes, of Cedar Grove, Orange
county, mailed a latter be
had years. It was given
him in 1865 to mail. He wan
then a prisoner at Point Lookout.
In looking over some of bis pa
the other he found, the
letter wrote the sheriff of
Anson, to know if the man to
whom it addressed was
The sheriff replied yes and that,
strange to relate, he was in bis
office when the letter of inquiry
came. So the letter was sent, in
the
r-
Thought
rather pride myself on
treatment of said
give way no one in
matter of deep and sincere
he.
re-
for the sex in all relations
of Now, although Miss
Brown and I were thrown to-
almost constantly at the
seashore last summer, J never
took of the foot
by attempting to hies her pr treat
her in any but the most respect-
fol
know she replied.
he repented in
prise- she tell yon
dear, no; she said you
were of no gumption
Post.
OLD PEOPLE.
people who require medicine to
regulate the bowels and kidneys will
sad the true remedy In Electric Bitters.
This does not stimulate and
no whiskey nor other
cant, but acts s a tonic and
It acts mildly on the and bowels,
adding strength and giving tone to the
organs, thereby in
performance pf the
Bitters l an excellent and
ads Old People and it
tr-. floe and
To the of
Pitt County.
Our energies have never relaxed. Our
torts have never ceased to the best
stock of
MERCHANDISE
from which to select your purchases,
confidently believe unhesitatingly claim
that ours is the store of all stores in our
from which to buy your goods for the
coining year. Goods are sold on time at close
credit prices to customers approved credit.
Goods sold for cash at figures that tell of the
wonderful influence of gold, silver or greens-
When enter into our possession
they are again converted into the best bar-
gains we can buy for the benefit our many
friends and customers. Do not hesitate or be
led away but cone straight back to your
friends who will take care of your interests
and work harder make of you a
stronger customer and better friend of
straight honest dealing between man
and man. We are the friend of th poor
man, we are the friend of the rich man, we
are friend of you all. Come to see us, we
will serve you to the best of o ability. Po-
lite attention, best of service and honest
forts shall be yours to command at the
I.
An
Northern, of Georgia,
has hit upon a i Ian of farming
that undoubtedly recommends it-
self to the consideration of t very
farmer and business man of
Sou It is true that there is
nothing new it but wholly
unpracticed in this so far
as we lire aware. His plan is to
a large tract of
divide it into of
each, locate a large town in the
of it and graded
r streets connecting each
farm with town. It is
a fact that much of the
aversion to farm life in day
is due to a lack of church,
and social
This plan would apparently do
with objection- Tim
I plan has
in c. no-
tries for years, and we see no
lesson why it could not be
adopted in this
try- It is an
lessening size of
farms, for day large
j is over in south nod
we and need more
that anything is the small
farmer who will raise diversified
I'll all the gills this heaven
That were to mortals i
The to have, the worst to miss,
The sweetest source bliss
The one rail Eden's fence
Stands the pure of common
sense.
To our right to
To no- when time is tied.
Tc . act and think,
Tc k. p life's boat from ruin's brink.
To i- expense
need aid common sense.
Sometime, nu doubt, we need to view
The bobs some genius
But now we need, well
stirred,
With silent thought or spoken
A sort human defense
The wholesome common sense.
Some things, still be
taught,
Where mighty minds their power in-
wrought;
But to guard the priceless
Of peace and love, health,
And how to our own few
Is taught alone by common sense.
ray for faith, and and peace,
For sin's remove, and lore's increase,
For strength
power,
For race fr
right the louse,
us, good sense.
keep from jar and strife.
And bless the path of life;
To make each fountain purer still.
To take from loss its chill,
A bring thy own sweet
We bow to thee common sense.
O. S. Kick, in Boston Transcript.
the prevailing
as to I be highest speed ever
attained by expert shorthand
writers, there is a going the
round of fen of a
idol, by
long odds i re-
cord in that line a-.
It was when t hi
the lute
was presiding in the Atlanta
Superior
One of most remarkable
murder trials was in progress.
evidence was
the Judge was called upon
to charge the jury on de-
new and interesting legal
points. Now the Judge was a
rapid talker. In this instance it
was very important every
word he spoke should be
recorded, god he so
cautioned the stenographer.
Then Judge Clark began- As
he warmed up to his charge he
at rate or
words a minute. Once he
towards the stenographer-
That worthy seemed to be
hall sleeping his work and
apparently very slowly.
yon getting my
words down
Judge,
At this the stenographer seem-
ed to wake up. With con-
he replied i
all right Judge, fire
away. I am about fifteen words
ahead of yon now
Post,
and Statistical-
A Madras dentist it is
received a .-inn of
for the
of Hyderabad with a row
of false teeth-
London stretches too to twelve
miles from east to west and eight
wiles from north to south. Two
thousand omnibuses, I tram
carp, nearly cabs, and
railways are required to car-
people to from
places of business to the
for making calls, etc.
Au electric box is
the Connecticut invention-
minister touches button
small silver curs, lined with
velvet, visit each pew
running on a rail
pew. Etch car re-
turns to a lock box at the pow
entrance, the deacons collect
the receipts slier service-
Eleven years first a
were made to raise fruit
in Italy from the seed of Florida
in was
experiment a success- This
the yield is about boxes, of
recently arrived
New York, the fruit ripens
Italy after Florida pro-
duct has marketed-
A ROMANCE.
at
Pretty dear
fellow
Drawing near.
I -s him
Sn . ;
Looks M wave
saddened
I'll tumble
III the ;
lie will save
And y me
Plunges
The for my save;
For him to save
-Man sf nils still,
With
asks,
water
Atlanta
or pill, let your
out tie told through
The people
paper.
Out by
With
A recent issue of
Banker furnishes a list of the hanks
Stales which have
deposits or over. They
evenly one. Their combined
to
exception the hanks in the
list are New York banks. Boston
doesn't appear before No. The
Boston bank has in
the largest Philadelphia bank
largest St- Louis
bank the largest San
F hank The
In list is the National
City Bank of New York, with
deposits ; the second, the
National Bank, with
the third, First National Chicago,
Gage's Bank,
The next are New York
banks, deposits ranging down in
A y o Stamps.
Firemen expect of course to be
called out to fight tire ; but
firemen of , were
called to fight gnats. A
swarm, in which there must
millions of the little while
winged out from
under house roof.
Passer by gave alarm of fire
and the clerks hurriedly removed
their records, thinking the build-
was in flames. The firemen
didn't discover that there was no
fire until turned u stream
i i the they be-
to fall by thou
Ex-
Want a Cyclone.
During a former earthquake
that shook the State a colored
parson was in i south-
west Georgia revival meeting.
He said i
come down en
shake sinners up
ketch
the earth trembled,
the building rocked, and the
lamp tipped over
shattered on the floor. The par-
son lilted bis eyes to the reeling
roof continued
; do now.
Dis here building's mighty
Constitution-
London, June The rabid
Globe, that favors annexation
of about
says on Hawaiian annexation.
American navy
unfit protect the islands
which lie at the mercy any
Spanish war ships appearing at
Honolulu, while Japan's sea pow-
is so immeasurably to
that of the United States that a
Japanese naval demonstration
would place President
a difficult and perilous
the great strategic
value of group to it
is a matter of regret the
islands were not added to the
British Empire long ago- Lord
Salisbury should stiffen his back
and tell plainly that
Britain claims the light to
annexation is
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
Celebrated f-r its crest leave ins
strength and Assures
food alum nil of
to tin- brands.
York
We Undertake Too Much.
best regulate the world
by minding thine own little part of
was well paid. Many a man tries to
develop the world too much, and neg-
developing himself and s Bill
Morgan slid some time ago about Ins
State, the great Stale of Kansas,
have been occupied with
systems of . when we should
have been digging ditches. We have
our wind when we should
have been setting up wind mills. We
have in minds, Canada,
and Spain when we should
per bottle at
drugstore.
John I.
TOO.
Is
pared especially for stock, as well a
man, and tor that purpose Is sold in tin
cans, holding one-half pound of
cine for U cents.
Lambert. Franklin Co. Tenn.
used all kinds of medicine, bu
oh not one package
on V. for the others I ever saw
the for horses or In
i, year, an I will t ire
oh time.
H.
a poor man in North Caro-
who is just as honest as any
of the hist Legislature, hut on
account bard times can't pay his poll
tax, never dreamed that lie voting
for a set who would be
so so heartless as to pass a
law to pat him in jail II be did not pay
his poll or property tax by a certain
date. did this and it is today
the law the land. None are excused.
It is tax or the Dis-
P-h.
i June
Secretary today advised
the Bureau c-f
and Printing probable require- have been tattling with the
Department J Can thistle,
stamps during fiscal year, end-
June 1898. These
based upon the number in
years, are as follows
Ordinary stamps, 3,444,167,000;
newspaper and periodical stamps,
pottage due stamps,
Of the ordinary stamps two
and a half billions if
denomination, and millions are of
the cent special delivery series. As
compared with the requirements of the
present year, these estimates are an
increase in the
number of ordinary stamps; an
increase of in the special
delivery ; in
and periodicals, and a decrease
in postage due acnes.
Last year the value of the pearls has.
vested in Lower California was alone
In addition, tons of
shells were exported, which Won val-
at more. Pearl fish-
is the entire occupation of the
natives, and La Paz, the headquarters,
a city the with about
inhabitants, is dependent
upon the industry. The business is
one of chance, and the pursuit is a
fascinating one to the natives, who are
born gamblers. oyster docs not
contain its pearl, and only at intervals
and rare at that, is a really
valuable pears discovered. The largest
one found was about three quartets
an inch in diameter, and was sold in
Paris to the of Austria for
Suicide Bluff Called.
thought I was going to sell
a casket to of my neighbors
a low days said the
certain young man
who has been dissipating con-
of late, and has gotten
into debt, became
ate several
occasions to commit bis
widowed mother did not give
him of the money she
borrowed their little homo in
Not long ago he won,
home with a look
his face, sud calling his mother
parlor said as he
a revolver from bis hip
I will have the money
hire I will end miserable
I screamed bis
mother, as she rushed from
room. A look of
overspread the young man's face
as lie mumbled to himself about
knowing he would get it, but ho
was destined to disappointment.
a moment bis mother re-
turned, currying a large
Quietly it down on
the carpet, and then straighten
up,
George, go ahead- I
was afraid you would spoil my
carpet with
boy Io the
floor in his astonishment
He was sure if
be made a bluff at shooting him
self his mother aid accede to
demands and give the
little she was to
buy the necessaries of life with,
but on day before had
come over to my told
my wife about bis threats- My
wile put the idea into her head to
bluff her son the time he
threatened to commit suicide- She
was afraid to try, summoning
up her nerve, she carried out
instructions and succeeded.
boy hasn't sail a word
about dying City
Times-
A Mutual
said the lady Io
the man who gave his seat in
the street car.
You surprise replied the
man-
do you mean
smiled.
have surprised yon
more than you surprised me by
offering me your
The stand off was thus com-
Free
for Texas.
Grand old is very kind
to her children- This
product will give six bushels of
forty bushels of corn,
one fat bog, two bushels of
peaches, twenty of
one quarter of beef, thirty dozen
eggs, ten chickens, one turkey,
two pounds of honey, ten pounds
of wool, half a mutton, half a
bushel of potatoes, twenty
and many things
to
Tex., News.
Is It that ha filled
cm hi l- nervous d
that the flesh off their the
vitality from their blood, makes
them feeble, emaciated and inefficient
No. It bad cooking, of
Indigestible stuff, and other
habits.
The remedy is artificially digested
food such as the Shaker Digestive
dial, of Irritating the already
inflamed stomach the Cordial g a
chance to rest by nourishing the system
itself and digesting other food taken
with It. So flesh
la not, the idea ration-11
Is palatable and relieves
No money risked to decide on ll value.
A cent trial bottle that.
LAX Of, is the best medicine for
Doctors It in
of Castor





THE. REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
fife at
at post at
M. v., at matter.
ANOTHER TO foul than they were in
X. ,;,.,,,. .,. of ft, ell
J, N. Will we w have
Greatest of All Physicians.
The beard of education, clerk
of the court and register of deeds
will elect a county supervisor cl
public schools for each county on
the first Monday in July State
Superintendent
that he not officially
recognize any one to the
position of supervisor who is not
a practical teacher, that if
other than a practical is
elected be will to secure
recognition lite c if
at all.
OW Li.
Our
-Tame It i
Hon. Wm. J- net
considerable attention in the Sen
ate this week- Abet
started it by rising to a
tad denying- in the
most positive terms the charge
that Mr- Bryan's oiler of
from the of his book,
was accompanied by a stipulation
that the nest National
Convention should take action
against a fusion of the
c-rs of silver- He added
draft for t lie money had been
sent to him personally, and after
Senator Butler. Chairman of the
Populist National
to accept it he at
tho suggestion of Mr. Bryan.
invested the to used
the interest Ben
Butler the
of Senator Allen the
money been without
and said that while be
Mr. Bryan's motive he
felt that the acceptance of
money might be open to
and Lad
declined it. Later that
the-wool Hi
Hour good
of respect for Mr. Bryan-
character Las impressed me j
favorable, and I have never join
criticisms
things
is no
Bryan, as he's going to be
tho next
There were no new develop-
connected with either the
annexation treaty or the
Cuban policy this he
treaty has been protected against
by Japan and referred to a
of tho Senate Commit
tee on Foreign
time probably
favorably
Senator Morgan has intro-
a bill for annexation.
in the was talk of u
in the Senate to hang
tire tariff bill until Czar
allowed the House to vote the
Morgan resolution, it
is not likely that anything
of it-
Nothing aura amusing than
Senator forcing c-f
Senator Allison and
the Republican steering com-
to meet the demands of
wool-growing states in tho
wool of the tariff
has occurred during the coif
of the bill. And it
was done on float tho tn-
open session, u. . in
the of a men
Allison seldom looses hi temper
but when ed him of
dealing and trickery, Le
Double
B, O. I. J IV
v . lilt-
an in
j ills
ac i a
l year ;
lone I . Ill . lit; ;.
r Nearly nil i
have built
in one were
by
This
die buyers m .;
own in ;.
use. very
conclusively these have
confidence in lite future mark
In a kit t m writer J. X. Gorman
iV Co. they will enlarge their inc-
y m double
accurate we quota their
answer to ;. say
our factory tony five
feet in . h
S ii
i and We
i . an ;. i-
o in. in . Is
. .- . require the o
lie bill g. but I;.
when nun .;
. ii is
ready in keeping order.
The a will be in your be
, mid will then work
as we bare ck
i e
U Will r. in
J. X. Gorman iV. Co. were the
here. This factory
lacy bought u and since
of this
Aspect of r public
who efforts
to preaching the
There is no class of lot wham
J Bare
than or the of the
;. but we do not want
What
life and
to come from a
who will a day
of tit now than t school
aid What
expect if this life inspiration
must from a mad
in general mercantile
mind i his
should b. Such a
the
forces of a and yet
have had men many
of our If we hare no
no educators
Discoverer of Paine's Celery Compound
to whom Thousands Owe Their
and Happiness.
BAKER HART
Life
time b. y been
iii.
. . Ml.
i- the
1- look
iii en--. d
those rat's
with bu iii
Loud ;
hi lire
If we ha
school men, no
important offices, then ii .-
a tho
as tho official
in. d school system,
say w he
bare practical fill
these a. . i say
. mat We most
men these
i a
culling a o
N C r-
. a i-r
i ,. . .
in.,
-C
1-j
I i u -i
et
o; o is iii
to do lie k
mi
. I
. the
I-,
the
all
H is
it
the
it
their
no
of
. an
did- Senator of Conn. a
member of the
Committee, to
go the rescue of but
Former quickly disposed of him
b him had him-
self, at s dictation, writ-
ten the very amendment which
he ever heard of.
This so crushed that he
that
be might have been mistaken
Vest rubbed it in on the
by insisting that
bill be with, and
Senator expressed
Senator Mantle
I were to search
through tho whole domain of
poetry and nothing could
found that would en
characterize the wool schedule as
Mich familiar words of lire.
Harte's
Yet the cards they were stocked
In a way that grieve,
And my feelings were
At the Slate of sleeve,
at full of aces and
bowers.
interest to de-
think the bill, continued
so far as it
relates to the wool is
Bluffed fall of aces and bowers
the full intent
of the wool or
the country Luter on the same
day Senator Allison, on behalf of
tho made an abject
surrender offered
and was
adopted by a vote cf to
although the preview
bad so d the wool men had
U to lo.
it is under c
that am o to yen
this morning. I to have
something to say regard -u a
of officers that s in
The county
will come into
Monday While
to deal that
does BOW i-s et
be to prison., yon, topic
in North
tho character
tics and
to have in tho who ant
to is-
First make the m
hat we Lave a n, U; to expect
from th
the our public
super-
visor, thin we over received from
county or
examiner. by do say
this . Last
expectations it- this,
. of the g. school
law by the last t. i i
Assembly r. ya y
Baal b-i n
ac-
i.-
men for
i Sic k,
whose and u
are fr lb he
c i b. a man nu
and will a in close touch v h
pet. who Wall
S . i.- tho
then- and will show
the -i
the
w t in the and
the
, t of school
want I
and to the
school m, w.
and i
who are striving
to mote
man
. i
J'S HI
o. lei U
ii-g. man. who, when
and rinds poor i
pot r teaching
have the tact a d
make order sad
school teacher. What
school teacher
a n whose
of a
ii is of tea hi I
school man and
who two . mi
has m
bi as a profession
not call him a practice
but I shall a
Ill
t hi i
mas
. i
tuber,
ma
i.-j
Day friends,
Law calls a practical
o the office of
and we
North bow it
under OUT school laws
our
While we bad
for name
for
schools, i . w in
work men by
the stand-
ard of was raised
among their man who
teachers bus
who gave lite
schools over winch
had control ; while we had s. tut
such men as these, also had
very lawyers,
who would f
v i .-,
in
engaged. Ibo nut
With the office, Lilt W h the
o;
Lu me u in
and
days they could
an
chaos My friends
ii yon can these
county we
stay and will have them
beards of education and
the of to tad
registers of
I court es v have be
Sue a I d-
be I.
s nip I -t
my l
s- th e
cum in ii is -n
fur tin i i i s. in t.- me
for cue
it t our en
to m i go .
;,,,. ., ,. U u lie j a
of ;
X I who ab
.,.,; j, ll ti e Voters
, ,.,. n e. l
row, it one
men; in
whom p.
and respect;
x men . Hit
c . rage if. e people
w.
and on B of g out
u d cl
m ii w. no-
their tin j c it -vi r the
things f- the
but n take up
work vi i day, men who w i act
II tin present i do
something dive
I j
ii feed
u- v t n-l
a; ids cl mil
in North . -1 v
to persuade bow the
to
sending their children b
men the i
in
i. mi gel v
within
the State of North
compel them u send
die
The perhaps
of all is m-u
who will carry 11-
No ii. Carolina or local
--.-; on at Angus,
sad Sta s n-
dent sue v i
f-T the , m ii
.
in
the mm
Ha hope, how -i
many townships these s
or even thus
Excepting its handful of
mid
A .
any one mini
In
i. , Hi.-
lb
i. iii.
the v,
I;
urn
Ii
i iii i w mi
-i i i-. . n ,,,.
I . t i- w .- .
I ;. o j
u u i
was Celery Co.-.-mini bus
bilious-
I liver in.
II ii. all nervous and
I all such
. i
ii- in . i-
,;
ail V d 1.- in and again
y has
hand M could not,
wished;
oil
.; In
t V
hi
of
an- In i
have u, whom
Compound bees a In .- .
he .
. ii . . ;
is r . h o e
In. em i ; .,.,. .
y ; d.
as . t.-- . r.-
a . ;. chair
iii vi -I. Sc-
sir,
lit. -1 rein
j.-.
In
Pro
in
lie
line-1 I Iii
till d
ills
i. I.
HI II
.;. . .
i-i.
., . i ,
. 1.1
. hi
. .
1.1 . . . i
was ever so highly
ever
Celery
st without competition for feeding
up
jun-ii ,. It
e .-. n a The nervous
and general Iron
K of women
V long finally gets to
ibis
be. very soon
not a ;.; ii is rein veil by properly, feeding
it l t H in m mid
ii. . a -hit. more highly
A I., alley
of t lie
the
us
II
. .
I .
. . . I J
., . . i.-
i-U
a gain
good Mis use
Cell id.
I lie
; it
U.-t hall of the
e.-
I for or
s-i-ii mi I in . oil
short e.
x.
Hardware,
Tinware,
Hubs, Building Paint.
Oils and Stoves.
Fair Dealings
Bottom Prices.
MAIN
and Honest at Rock
GREENVILLE, N. C
pr Id
a by which Farmers can get
FREE
oho I
. . build n Tim-.- t.-.-om and
., Ma. I
R. R. FLEMING. E. B
A. G. COX, . HENRY
CHERRY,
Organized June
The Bank of Pitt County,
We solicit your account. We offer every
and accommodation consistent with sound
Banking.
FUR
CM CAP,
II
tin- in i- or A Moore in
k I
n u on Band very can deliver
abort notice at any on
one
Lulu iii
Liter ma, v, c. A m r nil com
H to
l . i. X.
The pioneer of the
it
Will by time i i .
let., are t
have of
iv A up.
Experienced Force. Room,
i i
Ah h inn SH
I,, i.
i .-
Us-
total of
for the public
SAVED
t run u in K find
made. Tho
n i Id
many
make thin
MM
on
14-K
S. E PANDER CO.
N-
-----DEALER IN-----
HEAVY AND FANCY GROCERIES
N. C.
I will carry the best goods and
will sell at the lowest price possible. I
will do all i can to obtain and hold your pat-
Come and see me.
m. H.
door to Griffin Jeweler. THE LIVE
Dealers, Tobacco Hue Makers
and Bicycle Dealers and Repair
offer their services to public- We re Orders
Tobacco Flues
you we will is the
for price. All our is we to
repair our line s to bicycle- We will
to
WM-
AT
Mr HARDENS
ALL
MUST





f-
experience Lard cash
i every time. You are invited
to an early inspection of low priced
and very complete stock of
CLOTHING
but
r i- Williams U
Us Furnishing
Trade with means sure
success in securing tor yourselves
the widest range for selection.
Frank Wilson,
THE KING
MY LIN
Dress Shoes
Gents
is superb and year in is invited.
FRANK WILSON
The King- Clothier,
.-
J. K. t
W
Miss Alt
. ;.;
Mrs. O.
Li tilt-ton. ,, . .,
J. B. Jr., home
Friday evening.
W. H. Cox returned to Kim-ton
Friday evening.
M. Owens and wile have gone u
visit to
Mr. M. E. left Friday
morning
W. F. Freddy
evening Oxford.
Mrs. F. Sugg returned Saturday
t. Wilkinson returned
evening from
lieu went to
day Jo visit
is visiting
Ferry
Miss Collie returned
from a visit to
Miss Hooker returned Friday
City.
Moore i-as moved back to Lie
residence Dickinson avenue.
returned Saturday
morning a to
Mrs. E. to
a visit to relatives.
Miss May
is her C. E.
Mrs. Moore and returned
F. It, I lodges Saturday to
a mouth at South Va.
. came home
hum a to
Mis It am Belle
i I
pen.
someone passed a i
dime on Clerk K.
A. Finding the dime was
made pewter Mr. it-
He said it a imitation the
genuine
One
Tho marriage license business will
Register Deeds came near
striking last
was issued during week, that
was for J. S.
Daniel.
DEATH.
v el
X. C
o'clock la-; guard
here was set I'll tire and
down. km local d a
GALA AT
MM In ard
If You want a Nice
Tin
n-May M n day long M
the infill was so Hint 1.11 vim at
MM were endangered. I Fa the
This the was of
land F. A. M
Wilson, Frank
Charlie went to
laud Thursday wheels. These
little fellows made the
hour a quarter.
Much the road Very sandy,
too.
mini that kerosene oil i
new guard
and an lo j u
also, but did not succeed. The old nay. Visiting , re
house was not hi
use, the new one having
built.
SUIT OF CLOTHES
I r lodges to
Wot Coming Mow,
lie letter which N. M.
wrote to W. V File,
inviting the latter to hold a meeting
here, to him, Mr.
having gone elsewhere. So it is not
likely that the Evangelist will visit
U soon.
Peculiar
. i Lee met with a peculiar
dent lie and David Jar-
vis throwing a ball to each other
and us Mr. Lee threw ball he in
someway so twisted his aim as to
break it between the elbow and
Try It.
Mr. John u highly cults
citizen, died bis home t
Monday. He was years and
and three
Sum tor
Hon. Muck Kitchin, is here to ans-
a summons in which he H u
Skinner sued a
man named who
charged stealing their money and
some articles apparel while
St. Louis last year,
the Mr.
t om mute and
says his conduct MM such a
alter
missed their money that had every
reason to make the charges
him
G. T.
the
The first . in their
hall and alter
marched to W
church where
took place in public.
n--a a I tin pr.-
man, ii the
and .
line i
Reading
For more than a year it has t.-en i
earnest desire some of the
the order the King's
mid Sons, to lake
cur work I he establishment a
Library and in
Co opera m
use the as lo d o, re.
and a
and by T TIT
Music, S ll OP
others were
Furnishings,
to select from.
Here is said to shall me y.
Km. Take a i
ground black pepper mix h with
. i shall see with sorrow that
two o. -u . . .
will lo the ll- arts
mo the with Bad loose know the
place where arc rays light. The redeemed
will generally be j f love will
to it and eat II do it J
. , . I us a n,. , and t
be last meal, the hast Mora can he I
i. lo j-
has
THE.
Local Reflections
apple pie is ripe.
are plentiful.
Hard graph wire.-.
Did you list your taxes
in the
this
ch
sounds high
-V lam horse for sale by
J. C.
lie. work rebuilding
ville tobacco warehouse is being pushed
i rapidly. A hands is on
A guest at a hotel desires four things
meals, clean beds, service
low MM. All these can be bad
Attached to his work-l. t a K, ,
convict.
,. . The people in
I are the c . , ,
hell due
record wonderful
are drooping lots .
I. Us in low n. A picnic was had out near Smith's
in Dam township, on
The undertaker can always up a We hear that it was an
still argument. affair.
. . i.
peaches are
prices asked
the Cast your eye about Greenville and
you will see many Improvements are
. , , . on. now a dozen
I be d el.-r are , u
tumble to himself.
At Friday
MI-s to leave
next Saturday, July for
sloop, to of several days.
cycler climbing a account of the coil weather the
Who is going to have a
melon bribe July up hangers to till
boarder.
burglar who a usu-1
ally the owner. i s that already
I your midst, and use your b-.
to get new
The mining through I
a trying or. you doing something
It seems Color, J
be ones won't run. Mayor's has
Divorce lawyers obliged to
many Knotty
The man refine
in a
benches for spectators
next to the wall, mid a
seldom the room tailed prevent crowd-
around the desk.
Beat on getting
rider an I the contortionist. .
John But of died
Nashville on In the last
made several
a man w bid a number
bent on carrying bin. every , .
No where U- hides, the
is sure to be spot-
Mr. C. D. is giving his
residence street a new dress
of paint.
Two good sets second hand Tobacco
Flues for sale cheap. . ,
T. F. Li
A man may hare o
the and never be a
N. C, June
Key. W. E of
The devil, in town.
W, G. L and son,
n.
HuG. Bryan
Saturday
Back Ho
With exceptions the
d tilt, to Morehead returned home
Saturday. It was crowd and
start to they had a good
They fished, bathed.
they limited,
it.- had one of these all round
limes that Atlantic Hotel is
he last gen-
era social our crowd was a
sail -veiling by M.-.-sis.
J. White and G. A. Woodward
to 1-
and The
whole crowd and
Were invited and they h-d a de-
sail.
a sue
Mis. F. C of Bethel, who
was visiting D. L. James returned
home Saturday.
Mrs. S. D. Lee let Thursday
Macon, W county, to spend
summer.
Miss Abram, Mi
is her Mrs. S. M.
C. and re-
turned home Friday evening from
A. T. of
home Tuesday evening after a
visit hire.
Washington, was
here and gave the BO
full a call.
W. M King returned
Wednesday a visit to
and
Mrs. II. Ii. Wilson and
who have visiting
home evening.
Mrs. G; V. and child,
Tuesday u
H. L.
Dr. cam
down evening and out to
Kings X id. where he
W. F. one the
went to Oxford Wednesday
to tend a at the Orphan
Asylum the
Mr. J. XI. of
township, brought a cotton blossom to i
ever his wife's safely
and That is a tribute of
which even the President United
States may well proud, and the
President's is one which every
man who is blessed with a good wile
emulate. It is not the lavish
expenditure of money nor homage,
nor the respect a husband that
makes the w happy. Nor is- his love
enough of itself. It is the constant
of his
love in hundreds little delicate
attentions that fills the longings of her
A pretty her
a kiss w-hen you to the
and when you
her a bunch
of when you go home, just to
show her that you were
her when you -re down
of ibis
r which should suggest them-
selves every man who is in love
his wife are things that she looks
and which, reciprocal, make
married life grand sweet
A. Roach. . A
S. W.
U. E. J. W.
I. O. liens.
II. Davis.
W, II. Gall way, S. I. j
. H. Jones and M. Ward. Stew.
, t
ants.
Tiler.
After . were .;.;
J. In a
I tin
. ;, .
tale, lets of
Mr. ii.-
us. . ,,,. .,;.,.,,,,.,,,
ii-. in at, r .
u M. . ah eh
had r It
and pi it.--i I e . j
i r the
The was then invited tO the j
mar . at r. I
and ti y
thing, six p op
hast an i
I or all v
to s-r. .
C. T
A Great Redaction Sale.
If good people tip- will
co-opera with
Mr. Will ml, gin any in-
needed to any one who may
wish to ill our
work. He has been our
most an I gives us in Mason,
every encouragement I a. in
oil.
Aha or die me,
In
.-, mi
of the wagon
and I a rarely
we propose to a
week continuing a
sale over
rated We lo I
on
invitation is extended to all to om
.-lore a visit, and examine -i-
Secretary ct the of
the King's Daughters of
N. C.
j A
has had a rest
alarms for some weeks, just before
o'clock on night the be J
began ringing mid ex-
a short while. he a in
came from me nor Mrs. Mary
Bernard, L.-ans A
lighted lamp in the story was
showing a disposition to explode and
was thrown out the It on
on the mot t.- porch below when
the oil ran out and caused a high blaze.
The lamp was knocked of roof
the turning oil smothered out be-
fore any damage was done to the build
A Husband.
We lean, News and
appointed I
Col. I. A. one if the
to the National lotion Growers Con-
lo be held at Galveston. s
This appointment is an
excellent one and will meet
hearty th; people of the
eastern part of our State, M
which is to in
Col. Sugg they have a
Man one who is fully alive to the
interests the St u. is a n
and i.-, has a. a
energy are always or
enterprise the nutate
Col. Sugg lits or a tug
.
lie Will go
with the ,.; n
observer linen the
and we id in spying
No Carolina will not
sutler his We o
111.11 .
sailed pi .
Every bin; in
occasion was
the order a ;. it.-.
and lies.; .
.-
Sells
Tuesday. It is the first reported
Mr. who can talk Groves
Chill us fast as a can
wits here Friday. Clever fellow,
and he a good medicine.
Mrs. F, C . Miss Louise
and the children of Congress-
man Harry
evening from Washington City.
Caps. C. A. and wile, H. L.
Coward wile, T. L. Hooker and
wile, J. Cobb, Mrs. D. J.
Misses King, Ada
Woolen, Nannie Fleming,
Lula White and Emma
Key. A. W. Sewer, W.
L. Moore, J. L. Fleming,
H. T. King, J. B. White, C. S.
Forbes, G. J. Woodward and Jar vis
A horrible crime was
in Greene county Saturday night.
Joe Black, a from
A later from Nashville informs us
that women Tennessee were . ,
completely captured by Mrs. K-d-m. n old lady
near Snow Hill, and M M
Stepp, a maiden lady aged about
Miss St-pp fought
but was overpowered and choked
the
The was tracked
and y There
was excitement, a id people
would surely have bed him if he
had been Sunday to
county fir sale keeping
ii-l
Ml . -1
and . 1--. In.
The to
great many . . a
SOU
Lang
MANY THINK
IN THE SWIM.
In sorrow shall , V e M T -n a
a lien e
when the Creator
now
but the fell by every -1
when she fit-t hear
her babe, proves the contrary.;
Danger
the pathway of the Expectant
Mother, X
that she reach the
the hope of her heart m re
in and strength.
MOTHER'S FRIEND
vow in
and
sic
me. I
CUM
live
takes a is always
there, getting in his work.
A large number of Ma-
to Thursday in town.
to j died hen.
may be no chicken, but I've James street, last
en at o M. Funeral a
in the M E. choral at
Exchange Growing.
The telephone line has been com-
to Stokes and
both those places are now connected
with Greenville exchange.
Atkins ha pat in so many i.-
recently th it
lo print a new directory.
is not a or more
managed exchange in the State
thin we
been
as lie the
made
ft pawn cork logs V Hobbling
told me
s ate
We got of temper and wonder
were ever born; than get
a good temper and wonder why
we over have to
lock M. by II. b,
alter which her remains were S d to
tit the cemetery beside late
husband, B. F. an, the midst of
a large people.
D. Canon in eighty
yea.-, pi his s-n,
T. ti. on June
at i I. M. He was buried
at o'clock F. if. There will he
just me
were
eh V
The country editor way not know
it long in a com
without knowing a wall
his next
-at
W. K. Tucker C
a stock of at
i two weeks.
a large store
e. there for Ibis purpose.
more h publish.
Mail.
he k of lie
has suffered exceedingly
.; ii, last week hail the
rain ha fallen down there
in in re than a limit Mr. J. B.
Ct who was here
Sold as be
elm st a and
ruined the corn. He said the
Declined.
readers remember the
case at a few weeks ago, in
which a man Fred Keel
was killed by drinking poisoned
key given him by a the
a-re telling
white man named hired
him to poison Keel.
and the were both
placed in jail Turin Alford
denied the story and recently
instituted habeas proceedings
to get released from J bond. Both
w,, I the s were taken to Durham a
few ago . and the case at
chambers l .-lore
bearing the facts in the case the
judge the habeas corpus and
bath the prisoners to jail
to await the action-of the grand in
Health Was C-c-.- But
Hood's Built It Up-
ores Have Ail
was on my
which appeared My
health was so much Chat I was
advised to take s to
build me up, I bottles.
Before I bad hi this amount I
found that I was improving. I could rest
better at night, r-in . in the
morning. I gained flesh and when I
had six the on
my lace had all J. ft.
DIE, No.
from a let for
years, four of Hood's
It la years
Since I took Hood's but I
have not suffered. W It h any or
In that MRS. M. J.
Lovett, Georgia.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Wood Purifier. Bo
sure to net Hood's only Hood's.
and Hut- S
at S. M. to
Much in Little
cine
so
Hood's I'll a, for as
o great
e ever so great sower Us
are
always
ways
prevent a cold
or lever, an Ills,
sick headache, Jaundice, etc.
if he only fills to take with Hood a
I Pills
. see take, easy to buy,
HOOd S easy Mo,
Tor Sale.
S NEW GROCERY STORE
c T and bate I full
so t-. he
system no-,
Nat
that the
canary e.
takes
without is
Nervous or,
Gloomy f
boding Jan
per,
hour is of its
suffering, as so many j
mother s have ex per i e n I
but flow
this. Don't be or i- from Beery I Ina an-l
to use to
I M ii-
In it r I
. Co., lbs.
Of or nil l
Write fur . .
Lie for all
U.,
km F h
SUBS
CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
cot
Land Sale.
of the
I in the of
Jesse P. v.- pit.
and
to sell r don,
will sell for snail be
Court lit In
day of July,
par
eel or of land In
of I if II
j. . in ; . V.
. It H t , Or. ;
I. and an . . I j
I ll
late i-. .
tin e tie
This it.
-l
. .
J.
-------1
A stock of
a is. hit
sawed I-1 of laud lit r.
leg earls, oxen, log engine and t.
The be to
up the of II. lad
.-oils. For further Informs ;
to M.
C.
June
The University.
total . I
a three Brief
three Full Con Law stud
and of ;
Graduate Open
So inner for
to m- for the Needy.
Address, n r
N. Ca
will ionic p
JAMES B. WHITE.
Great Reduction
Summer Goods
Under the
A Horse
Millinery.
Also a
Groceries.
I can now be found in
brick store for-
occupied
W. Brown.
Come to
are prices on all Summer
Goods far we are determine to clean
out. So reasonable Come before
ll too
TAFT
Emporium
A.





Hr. III.
Hon. was on bis
way borne from and
was interviewed by a reporter-
silver in-
creasing
from my observation,
which baa been very extensive,
should say it certainly i Id
abort men oat
every ten you meet are for silver.
the growth el the silver
is necessarily slow, but
it
Mr. be the Demo- i
do not then, is any
doubt of it the world. If he is
rolls he
will head the I Why, my
friend, Mr. Bryan H
the the
American i , d
there is a revolution till n-sent
I s. e w he
help being
is Of
tell what I be the result
of the present
So fur see
improved. As bus
MM I can discern to
for the in the business
-Oh, the next
will Mr- Bryan. in
the last it will be the
people who will have the choice
and he is the of the pet-
Virginian.
Two million worth cl
Gorman s in
every year-
Mania s
New June
c persons who formed part
of the sect to by the
International Emigration Society
arrived this
port today, aboard the steamship
Liberia- They say the scheme
has a total failure that
of died Of
starvation and that the
society did cot fulfill the contract
and many members of the
are stranded in E
unable to back to their
homes.
The the African
was early in
1894, the of Bishop
who was traveling in
It was formulated and
carried effect by
a white man of
ham, Ala , who founded what was
known as the
Society. It was claimed
that the of Liberia had
the colonies the land
and farming implements. The
guard in charge of D- L-
an intelligent
of Hot Springs, Ark., in
November, started for Li-
b-Tic- With him a commit-
t to mate arrangements for the
c It was estimated at
that there were
c persons who were ready
the colony. They expect
el to build a town which would
be in a
Each was to pay
for his and
was expected to have in gold
with to lay the cf
his in the new land.
The first large party of
numbering left
March for their new-
Lome, and after that several
smaller parties them.
twenty-five acres of land for
each adult acres each
child was promised, on
lauding each person was to be
provided with a barrel of flour,
barrels of meat, t quantity of
and a complete set of
implements. D- K.
Planner, of the
accompanied the emigrants.
According to the stories told by
those who have returned, when
landed in Liberia.
deserted them, taking whatever
was provided for except the
laud, which found miles
from town, which was
incapable of growing
but Even to grow this
successfully- would take to
years.
Charles Peterson, of Madison.
with his wife and family,
are among those returned. He
says that he lost all he bad in
going over, was nearly dead
of starvation before he could
raise enough money return.
Charles Moore, family
lives in said the
emigrants could find nothing to
do. The natives who no
clothes, and live on little or
did all the work for
wages-
Ole de Styx
D; cum
Dal board
de ;
nigger has place,
his heel, fling hi lint.
cut de pigeon wing.
lie right on star,
grab hit by de tail,
An
lat peaceful vale.
I do
Will hi hat
r lick
wake de In billy MM.
St U-r dance
J lie leave do
I's watch, an el lie do,
slip in,
A Tobacco a-a Spits-
who in Scotch-
Irish township, this county, ha a
mule which and
spits like a man. Hi- will
allow anyone but his owner
low h'm and when the
lo a the mule Knows it
and mule like,
he a step until lie s
l en r. chew.
who informed the
Sim human-like mule, is a
church and is a
He w not the story
until he had given mule a
piece of tobacco and him chew it
and spit. Salisbury Sun.
The Man.
The- man with honest heart,
sincere purpose, whose word is his
who will pay his debts, whore
are never broken, whose re-
him into his every
day life Be he poor, uncouth,
rant, low born, unnoticed
by the gaudy throng, not admitted into
the gay crowds, it matters not, such is
the man. He is to be sought
and honored and emulated Pis value
H a ; hi deeds are ; his
conversation is an inspiration. His
lifer is a sweet song ; his character a
sunbeam ; his every act a
jewel. We repeat, such is the ideal
Sun.
lie that
a few dollars
in income ought not to make one
miserable That defends. With most
it menus actual distress. It menus
new for the children or
none, the hill paid or not paid,
taxes met or not met, interest satisfied
or no, so it means quiet of soul or
res. A hoy met n on the
street the other day and asked a
nickel. It would have been mockery
to Lave asked him, what difference it
would with him whether he
received the pennies or not when
we know that it meant the difference
between s and no loaf, hunger or
satisfying mi Sun.
KNEW HIS OWN VALUE.
rot Hot
Before the war, in the days of
slavery, a New York Jeweler of a
prominent family, who can be called
Mr. X., bad owing to him a bill of
from a reputedly wealthy
family in the south. Time after
time the bill was rendered, but there
was no response, and finally Mr. X,
as he chanced to have other
taking him beyond the Mason
and Dixon line, decided to call at
the house of debtor in New Or-
leans and see if he could get some
satisfaction for claim.
On arrival there he found that
his debtor was in a bad way
and had little money,
though running an expensive
A proposition was made
that Mr. X take in payment of his
bin a Jim, a very
bright fellow and considered to be
worth tally Jim was an ex-
pert horseman, and through all his
life had been working in the stables
of master.
Mr. X was in a quandary. His
abolitionist ideas prevented him
from being a slave owner, but his
natural anxiety to receive
for the bill due him almost demand-
ed that he should accept the slave
as payment. Finally a bright idea
suggested itself, and he called the
to him.
said he, am going
to be your new master. I do not
want to live here in the south and
look after you, nor do I wish to take
you to the north with me. Now I've
been thinking of this Will
you be honest, sober and attentive
to business if I set you up In the cab
trade in this city Will you turn
over every cent to me and not steal
from me If you promise, I will set
you up in business, and when you
send me the money that you earn I
will credit half of it to you. When
your half of the money above all
the expenses amounts to you
can buy your freedom, and then
can continue partners in the
or you can buy me If yon
do not want to make any promises
or if you will not keep the promises
that you may make, I will sell you,
and then you may get a hard mas-
Jim, of course, promised, and
what is morn remarkable, he kept
his word. Mr. X. bought for him
three cabs and as many teams, and
allowed him full management of
the business.
So well did Jim take care of the
enterprise that within a year he had
charge of nine cabs and several
teams of horses for each cab. He
sent his money regularly to New
York, and within two years his
share of the profits amounted to
over But still he made no
suggestion that any of his
. river for
Mr. X did not w to speak about
the matter to Jim, but he was
to get some cash value for the
slave. He accordingly sent a friend
to see Jim and find what was
the matter. The friend went to Jim
and said to
you have sent to Mr. X
nearly haven't
Maid Jim.
of that money will
be yours if you buy your freedom,
won't
said Jim again.
it will only cost your
to buy your freedom, and when you
do you will have left, and
can still continue in partnership
with Mr. X Why don't you buy
your freedom
said Jim sol-
; ketch
din chicken in a
has
.
The Pearl Farm la th World.
There is said to be only one pearl
farm in the world, but that pays its
proprietor handsomely. This farm
is in the Torres strait, at the north-
extremity of Australia, and be-
longs to Clark of Queensland.
Mr. Clark, who is known as
king of the pearl original-
stocked it with pearl
Now 1,500 men, of whom
are divers, and are em-
ployed in harvesting the crop.
have been years engaged in pearl
Mr. Clark told a
of the Melbourne Age.
experience has led me to the
belief that, with proper intelligence
in the selection of a place, one can
raise pearls shells as
as one can raise oysters. I start-
ed my farm three years ago and
have stocked it with shells which I
obtained in many instances far out
at sea. My pearl shell farm covers
miles. Over most it
the water is shallow. In shallow
water shells attain the largest size.
I ship my pearls to London in my
own vessels. The catch each year
runs, roughly speaking, from
worth up to almost five times
that
B On will to
did you manage to get
my bicycle home through
all this storm and not a spot on it
was nothing, my dear. I
put my overcoat over one wheel,
lashed my umbrella over the other
and then carried the wheel. I only
did my duty.
heroic devotion has
conquered, Harold. May it
you through an interview with pa-
pa Free Press.
Th of Who
is bound to get mar-
and he'll be bound
an infernal sight tighter after he is
Free Press.
WOODS USED IN FURNITURE.
SEE THAT
What Is It
MONTHLY
SUFFERING.
of
women are
troubled at
monthly inter-
with pains
in the head,
back, breasts,
sides
hips limbs.
But they
not suffer.
These pains symptoms of
dangerous derangements that
can be corrected. The men- I
function should operate I
painlessly. I
It is a picture toe celebrated
PARKER FOUNTAIN
Best in use. The outfit no business man is
complete without one.
The Reflector Book Store
has a nice assortment these Fountain Pens
also a beautiful line of Pearl Handle Gold Pens,
You will be astonished when you see them and
earn how very cheap the v are.
You may never,
But should you ever
makes menstruation painless,
mid regular. It puts the deli-
organs in
to their work properly.
And that stops all this pain.
Why will any woman suffer
month after month when Wine
of will relieve her It
costs at the store.
Why you get a bottle
to-day
For advice, in
special directions.
symptoms, The
Advisory Department,
Chattanooga Medicine
Chattanooga, Tenn.
The
Co.
rs. LEWIS.
I as it
SB haM
To
raise a bear, fin t get
yo u
The readers Ibis paper will he
leased that there i at least
one dreaded d that science has
been able t en e in all its stages
is Hall's Catarrh Care is
the positive cure now to
the medical Catarrh being
a constitutional disease, requires a con-
treatment. Ball's
Cure is taken internally, acting directly
upon the blood and surfaces of
the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving
the patient by up
and nature do-
its k. The proprietors have so
much faith in its curative powers that
they offer One for any
case that It fall to cure. Send for list
of
r. J.
is a
vigorous feeder and re-
well to liberal
On corn lands the yield
increases and the soil improves
if properly treated with fer-
containing not under
actual
Potash,
A trial of this plan costs but
little and is sure to lead to
profitable culture.
Ail in aw by actual
on la th. United I
Toledo I
old by druggist c- works,
Hall's Family aw the bot. St, Na
Want Job Printing
bat Haw.
Experts in furniture are much
guided in their judgment to par-
by the wood which
are made. Mahogany furniture,
purporting to be much as two
centuries old, is subject to
mahogany was little
used in until about the
middle of the eighteenth
A colonial New England piece i
much more likely to tie of oak than
of mahogany, unless it belong to the
late colonial period. Mahogany was
a luxury even then, and oak was
used in ordinary households sat be-
at once moderate in
durable.
It is easy to tell whether a pro-
fessed European piece of walnut fur-
is genuine, by the quality of
the walnut. European walnut is a
denser and finer wood than moat of
our walnut. A piece of furniture
made of ash at points
is almost certain to be of American
manufacture, but a baring
beech at such points is likely to be
of European manufacture. Beech
is plentiful in Europe and relatively
scarce in this country, and with
American makers of furniture ash
la a cheap substitute for beech and
oak. A chair made entirely of beech
is almost certain to be of European
manufacture. Such chairs are often
beautiful in form and extremely
durable. Modern taste demands,
however, that the be stained
to imitate mahogany.
New woods have come into use of
late years, partly timber of
the sort long used in furniture
has become scarce, partly be-
cause modern machinery makes it
possible to work woods that in ear-
lier times could not be profitably
worked. Birch, which is tough,
crooked and difficult to work, is
coming into use for factory made
furniture. This wood warps easily,
but it looks well and serves the
needs of the factory makers. Aspen
also is coming into use for the man-
of furniture, though it,
too, is a crabbed wood, unfit to be
worked save by modern cutting
machinery. Another of the woods
that the furniture makers have been
driven to use is sycamore. It is fair-
abundant and cheap in tho United
States, and its markings are dis-
and beautiful, but it la
trustworthy because of its tendency
to warp. It is sometimes used a
veneer over less but more
trustworthy wood. Some of the
North river ferryboats are veneered
with sycamore. All of these
woods have been improved
for use in furniture -y
methods of rapid
Birch, sycamore and the other
crabbed woods a not used by the
cabinet makers because their
is made, and the labor and
expense of working these woods
tho aid of make
unprofitable for
furniture. Mahogany is much softer
and more easily worked than these
woods. Some New England folks
before the middle of the present
had a craze for furniture made
of ironwood, otherwise known
hornbeam, and cabinet made fund.
of this material is found now
and then in Connecticut The wood
Is regarded by modern wood work-
era as utterly unfit for working into
furniture. New York cabinet
avoid the use of beech, and it is
used in this country mainly for fine
tool handles, in planes and tho like,
just lignum is in furniture
casters, blocks for pulleys and other
small articles.
Very old furniture in cherry is
most as highly prized as mahogany,
and fine old in
high prices, Tho walnut
of good old pattern Is also In
prized by the cabinet
walnut baa become a very
wood in this York
Fits
car-
ad casts
la
hoard at SB
by
hiss, Hi
work on
this dis.
which
with a
large hot.
Ho of to
woo sand p. o. Express
a cur.
tat W. B. J. Color at- BOW Tort
There Is no single sympathy,
accomplishment, no physical
which may not contribute
to the success of the bead of a bank.
The friends be made at college a
generation back, bis at
the club, vacation, even in
bis church, are factors used with
consummate skill and
courtesy which characterizes the
higher types of successful business
men. There is no quality of alert-
or adaptability which does not
aid in the work of making friends
for the e., depositors. A
perfect bank president should be
one who can hold his own with zest
and yet with dignity among
roistering class of Wall street men
in their late suppers at the club, who
can shout with them, fish with
drive with them, and who
can also impress the staid and strait-
laced citizens who are bis fellow
vestrymen as a pillar
D. Lanier in
Pills
Cure All
Liver Ills.
Secret of Beauty
is health. The secret is
the power to digest and
a proper of food.
This can never be done when
the liver does not act it's part.
know this
s Liver Pills are an
lute cure for sick headache,
sour stomach, malaria,
constipation, torpid liver, piles,
jaundice, bilious fever, bilious-
and kindred diseases.
Liver Pills
ears
laxative.
tor soar stomach.
E E
-------A line of------
Family GROCERIES,
------Consisting of
Flour,
Meat,
Meal,
Ac.,
c.,
Lard,
Coffee
Sugar
which I am
selling so low
that it
surprise.
Come see me
and I will
treat yon fair
and
w.
EMBALMERS.
We have t
ire nave t received a
hearse and the line of
fins and in wood, metal-
and cloth ever brought to
Green ilia.
to embalm-
in all its i
1878.
SAM. M.
c-oaK , R
Ins; their year's will ,
their interest toot our price r.-
l-
all Its
SUGAR
AT ST MAI KIT
Tobacco. Snuff,
we buy from at i mi fact-. ,. en
co i or; pi It. A
c e stock of
FURNITURE
always on hand sad sold at
Hold for CASH therefore,
the tunes. Our i
ids are
it prices to suit
all bought and
to run we soil at a close
H. Greenville
Personal attention given to con
funeral and bodies en-
trusted to oar care will receive
every mark of respect
Our prices are lower ever.
We do not vent monopoly
invite
We can be found at any and all
, r Mo Flanagan
Go's Building-
BOB
-Come to see
Job Printing Office.
Anything from a
-TO A-
The Daily
Gives the home news
every afternoon at the
small price of a
month. Are you a sub-
scriber If Dot you
ought to be.
The Eastern
is only a year.
contains the news every
week, and gives
to the farmers, es-
those growing
tobacco, that is worth
many times more than
the subscription price.
TO DEPEND ON.
Mr. Jam's Jones, of the drug Ann
Jones A Son, III., In speaking
of Dr. flings New Discovery, says that
last winter his If attacked with
La and her case grew so serf.
that physicians at and
Pans could do untiling for her. It
to develop into Hasty
Dr. Kings Sew
In sod lots of it, be
took a home, and to the surprise
of all she begin to get better the
first dose, and half dollar bottles
her sound and well.
New for Con rapt
Col us Is to
good work Try It. Free trial bottles
B J Dim L.
core Dad breath.
at
ears
care dyspepsia.
as
ear
GROVES
THE STAR
Oldest
Newspaper ii
Carolina.
its Class in the State
w h,
SMITH k Props.
A, the tats store
House.
GREENVILLE, N, C
Manufacturers and in all
kinds of
BIDING VEHICLES
mm mm
specialty
Al I kinds of repairing done
We skilled labor and good
and are prepared to give
yon
CO.
GREENVILLE. N. C
IN--------
MARBLE
Wire
sold work
reasonable.
CHILL
It MOO
WARRANTED.
ITS .
THE OLD RELIABLE.
------IS STILL AT TH FRONT WITH A
YEARS me s
Hemp Rope, Pomps, Farming Implements, and Ml
necessary tor Millers, and general house purposes, as well
Cloth Ins;, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods I have always on hand. Am
quarters for Heavy Groceries, jobbing ages for Clark's O. N. T.
Cotton, and keep courteous and attentive clerks.
J L SUGG
The modern stand-
ard Family
cine Cures the
common every-day
ills of humanity.
r .
a.
lass
or
U or . ht
Oar tea not la
or.
I r.
I U. a.
HOC
C. A. SNOW. CO,
Or. om. a. a.
A R. R
AND BRANCH RS.
AND ROAD
it.
m a
A. M.
Weldon
ft Mt r.
A. kt
II
ill
Cr Rocky Mt
Wilson
Kt. Florence
ii
Wilson
Ar
P. M.
SOB
IS
P. M.
I AM
Dated
May 27th,
Selma
Ar
Goldsboro
V Tarboro
A. M.
II i
II
A. M
to
i n
ii
Wilson
Ar Rocky Mt
tr Tarboro
L Mi
Ar Weldon
P. M
I IT
Train on
saves Weldon 4.10 p. at.
p. arrives Neck at 4.10 d
m. leaves
a. m., 8.82 a.
at a. m.,
daily except
a. m.
Train loaves C, vis Albs.
toy, at M p. ., OS P. M I
Plymouth 7.40 P. M., p. m.
leaves Plymouth Sally except
Sunday, a. a m.,
Tarboro 10.14 and
Train Midland N. C. branch
dally, except Sunday,
a. 7-0 a. Re
8.00
t . a,
Trains on Latta
A, leave 9.40 p m, arrive
p m, 8.08 p m.
, Z
i m
Train leaves War-
saw for Clinton except Sunday
8.80 p. m
lave m. and
Va. ii
R for
; all North via Norfolk.
JOHN f. DIVINE,
General Supt.
r. M.
GREENVILLE, N. C
NEAR COURT HOUSE.
All Risks placed in strictly
COMPANIES
t rates,
I AM FOB FIRE PROOF
leave tor a
ville and Tarboro stall land-
on Tar River Monday, Wednesday
Friday at
A,
Tuesdays, and
Those are subject to staff
of water on Tar River.
Connecting at with
steamers for ,
Philadelphia. New York and Boston.
Shippers should their
marked via Dominion
New York.
folk A Baltimore Steamboat
from Minors
. n .
J J. A m
a-4


Title
Eastern reflector, 30 June 1897
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
June 30, 1897
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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