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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
TWo <lb/>
Mi l fur <lb/>
I ONE DOLLAR. <lb/>
But in order to get it you <lb/>
------PAY X IN J ADVANCE.------ <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
A- <lb/>
JOB <lb/>
Department that can be surpassed no <lb/>
where in this section. Oar work always <lb/>
gives satisfaction. <lb/>
Bond tout orders. <lb/>
NOTES- <lb/>
The French have killed many <lb/>
in Africa.<lb/>
Tin; late extended From the <lb/>
Care Cod. <lb/>
The Eastern <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1891. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
Sixty-four earthquakes were re- <lb/>
ported in japan in March. <lb/>
The preachers have been <lb/>
a nets. <lb/>
have been driven <lb/>
mi ill by the natives. <lb/>
A buy in New Jersey broke his <lb/>
back while leap frog. <lb/>
Chinamen are entering the <lb/>
try by way of the Canadian border. <lb/>
The ice has nut yet gone out of <lb/>
Lake, Now <lb/>
The will attempt to <lb/>
breed reindeer on St. Lawrence Is- <lb/>
land. <lb/>
The Quaker. in a convention hi <lb/>
New York numbered about sis <lb/>
The women of Now York <lb/>
the erection of hotels for <lb/>
women. <lb/>
The l of a woman drowned <lb/>
forty years ago, in was <lb/>
William Stewart, a blind law <lb/>
heads bis class in the Ontario <lb/>
Law School. <lb/>
Nearly persons have died m <lb/>
New York city from the Grip with- <lb/>
in the last two mouths. <lb/>
At the annual police parade in <lb/>
New York city last Monday, there <lb/>
were men line. <lb/>
Thu to tobacco a <lb/>
crop in Florida is <lb/>
on a larger acreage and <lb/>
A heavy frost did much damage <lb/>
throughout Northern New York <lb/>
last week. Fruit vegetables <lb/>
suffered severely. <lb/>
The New York city school <lb/>
decided arbor day favor <lb/>
of the golden rod as the State low- <lb/>
by a majority of <lb/>
The forty-one survivors the <lb/>
Tenth New volunteers sailed <lb/>
to Norfolk to visit some of their <lb/>
battlefields in Virginia- <lb/>
Anna is reported as <lb/>
about to begin suit for <lb/>
damages against those who aided <lb/>
in her incarceration <lb/>
Portuguese immigrants have be- <lb/>
gun to arrive in considerable <lb/>
many of them bound for the <lb/>
growing districts of California. <lb/>
proctor has ordered <lb/>
the War Department to be draped <lb/>
in mourning for thirty days as a <lb/>
math of respect to the late Judge <lb/>
Tart. <lb/>
Professor Koch Is preparing a <lb/>
statement publication as to the <lb/>
results of the chemical analyses of <lb/>
the substances contained in tuber- <lb/>
There great destitution among <lb/>
tin- families of <lb/>
poke are on <lb/>
jut as having in the recent <lb/>
The university, <lb/>
in character, was organized <lb/>
at Washington, D. C, and is about <lb/>
to ask the public for a <lb/>
endowment. <lb/>
inventor of <lb/>
the ordered <lb/>
arrest <lb/>
the reset at Pro. <lb/>
The brass that are to fut- <lb/>
Ike music for Boston Common <lb/>
this are prohibited from <lb/>
sacred, <lb/>
on <lb/>
Ma- a <lb/>
woman, and her four children, <lb/>
range from to years <lb/>
were J hanging in the cellar of <lb/>
hone, near <lb/>
Northern New York i threaten- <lb/>
ed with a craze. Some <lb/>
valuable have recently been <lb/>
fount in mussels taken from the <lb/>
river. <lb/>
HISTORICAL FACTS CONCERN- <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
That most excellent paper, the <lb/>
Wilmington Messenger, contains the <lb/>
following editorial about North Car- <lb/>
Let students cut it out and <lb/>
paste it in their Let us all <lb/>
learn to think of the Tar State. <lb/>
The <lb/>
North Carolina has <lb/>
in her claims <lb/>
have been blatant and <lb/>
When applied to communities and <lb/>
commonwealths, it is not true that <lb/>
worth requires <lb/>
and that glorious deeds and noble <lb/>
words will secure proper recognition <lb/>
and from the of a State, <lb/>
whether asserted or not. is high <lb/>
that we should lake the velvet <lb/>
from our mouths, and speak out <lb/>
from rostrum and printing press <lb/>
boldly unmistakably in behalf <lb/>
our own people and State. We <lb/>
hesitatingly and positively assert <lb/>
that the truth of the history tally <lb/>
warrants us in claiming for out- <lb/>
North Carolina the following facts <lb/>
in which she is <lb/>
The first settlement <lb/>
made on the American continent was <lb/>
on Island on July <lb/>
The first Indian who ever re- <lb/>
Christian baptism was Man- <lb/>
a chief. lie was baptized Au- <lb/>
gust 1584. <lb/>
The first while child ever born <lb/>
on the American continent was <lb/>
Dare, Daughter of <lb/>
and Eleanor Dare. She was born <lb/>
on Island, August 175-t. <lb/>
The first revolution in America <lb/>
by which a tyrannical and <lb/>
government was overthrow, was <lb/>
in in <lb/>
The first or paper ever <lb/>
published in America in resistance to <lb/>
tyranny and oppression was written <lb/>
in Granville county, in and is <lb/>
mentioned by Herman Husband. <lb/>
The first blood shed on the <lb/>
American Continent in resistance to <lb/>
tyranny was at the battle of <lb/>
on May 1771, between <lb/>
the Regulators Tryon, the Royal <lb/>
Governor. <lb/>
First men who were hanged by <lb/>
British authority for up arms <lb/>
in of Liberty, was at Hills <lb/>
Orange county, in the year <lb/>
In the month of <lb/>
June. <lb/>
The first opposition offered by <lb/>
an organized assembly to the tax <lb/>
tea and the unjust rule of Great <lb/>
Britain, was made by the first Pro- <lb/>
Congress held New <lb/>
on August 1774- <lb/>
The first Declaration of <lb/>
ever made In America was <lb/>
at Charlotte, on May 20th, 1775. <lb/>
The first Convention of the <lb/>
People, to declare an open <lb/>
to British authority, was held at <lb/>
Charlotte on May. 1775, when a <lb/>
new government was set up. <lb/>
The first open resistance to <lb/>
British authority occurred on the <lb/>
Cape Fear river, Wilmington, <lb/>
under Colonels and <lb/>
The first Colony to instruct her <lb/>
delegates in the General Congress to <lb/>
declare independence the British <lb/>
Crown, was North Carolina. This <lb/>
was done on April at <lb/>
Halifax, where the Colonial Congress <lb/>
was then session. <lb/>
The important battle <lb/>
between British and <lb/>
can troops was at Moore's creek <lb/>
bridge, in the now of Pender, <lb/>
on February 1770, over four <lb/>
months before the National <lb/>
of was made. <lb/>
The in Hie <lb/>
troops furnished in proportion to <lb/>
the war between the <lb/>
South and the North, was North <lb/>
Carolina. She sent into service <lb/>
effective troops, besides nearly <lb/>
on other duty. The largest <lb/>
vote ever polled before the <lb/>
war <lb/>
these fourteen particulars <lb/>
North Carolina stands first. The <lb/>
events recorded antedated all other <lb/>
similar in any State. <lb/>
NEW YORK LETTER. <lb/>
Sunday Opening Novel <lb/>
Contest Latest. <lb/>
Regular of <lb/>
After long agitation on the <lb/>
part of the New York press and <lb/>
public, the trustees of the <lb/>
tan Museums of Art have at <lb/>
yielded to popular demand by <lb/>
to open the museum on Sundays. <lb/>
Accordingly, great collection of <lb/>
art works, paintings, statuary and <lb/>
ancient curies yesterday opened <lb/>
for the first time on Sunday, and was <lb/>
thronged with of sight- <lb/>
seers, who perhaps would never have <lb/>
had an Opportunity to visit it on <lb/>
week days. This is a very com- <lb/>
move on the part of the <lb/>
museum authorities and one will <lb/>
not only be appreciated by residents <lb/>
of the metropolis, but also by those <lb/>
who may wish to visit us and whose <lb/>
time may be limited. For these, as <lb/>
well as for the great majority of the <lb/>
people, who arc busily engaged six <lb/>
days of Hie week, the opening of the <lb/>
art treasures on is a boon <lb/>
whose cost bears no relation to the <lb/>
benefit derived. Our city is poor <lb/>
enough in places of interest, <lb/>
or recreation, but it is rich <lb/>
enough in money, and the few extra <lb/>
dollars spent for Sunday openings <lb/>
will never <lb/>
A most novel and interesting con- <lb/>
test of skill and endurance took place <lb/>
here a few days ago, which was <lb/>
else than an attempt by one man <lb/>
to catch another who was swimming <lb/>
in a tank as if he were a fish. The <lb/>
fisherman was Mr. William H. <lb/>
borough, an expert angler, while the <lb/>
man who acted as the human tarpon <lb/>
was Mr. F. J. Wells, who is widely <lb/>
known among amateur as a <lb/>
first class swimmer. A wager of a <lb/>
dinner for a party of club men was <lb/>
made by Mr. that he <lb/>
could reel in Mr. Wells an <lb/>
tarpon rod and line in thirty <lb/>
minutes. Mr. Wells wore a leather <lb/>
harness about his head, and the line <lb/>
was fastened to an eyelet at the top. <lb/>
He was not allowed to touch the line <lb/>
with his hands nor to touch the sides <lb/>
or bottom of the tank. The <lb/>
used all his arts to tire out the <lb/>
fish and laud him, but without <lb/>
After an exciting contest <lb/>
minutes, the man-fish <lb/>
in breaking the line and thus won <lb/>
the wager. He was still fresh, while <lb/>
tho fisherman was exhausted. <lb/>
AMUSEMENTS AT HOME. <lb/>
The is the name of <lb/>
Edison's latest wonder, aim of <lb/>
which is to enable a mail to sit in his <lb/>
own parlor and see reproduced on a <lb/>
screen the forms of players in a dis- <lb/>
and also to hear their <lb/>
voices at the same lime. The ma- <lb/>
chine is a combination of <lb/>
graph, camera, and by <lb/>
which photographs arc shown <lb/>
FARMViLLE COMMENCEMENT- <lb/>
The Sicilians at reported by <lb/>
tourists to have generally either not <lb/>
known or riot eared-anything about <lb/>
the killing of members of Mafia <lb/>
in New Orleans. <lb/>
The gun inventor, Maxims, is <lb/>
air and throwing dynamite In war <lb/>
which has attained decided success <lb/>
in the models. <lb/>
each second, thus presenting, <lb/>
patently, a movement of <lb/>
the actors and a perfect reproduction <lb/>
of their voices. Tho principal <lb/>
mechanism for making and <lb/>
tho photographs consists of a <lb/>
narrow film of of great <lb/>
wound upon a spool. When <lb/>
the machine if Bet in motion Ibis <lb/>
film is unwound from one spool, <lb/>
passes behind a and Is <lb/>
up on another. The photographs <lb/>
are taken on this rapidly moving <lb/>
strip of and afterwards re- <lb/>
produced by the<lb/>
to old Ago. <lb/>
Nothing is more remarkable than <lb/>
the fact that a medicine which is <lb/>
powerful enough to cure the most <lb/>
horrible form of blood poisoning can <lb/>
be given with impunity to a little <lb/>
child that is ailing; and yet this is <lb/>
the record of Swift's Specific S. <lb/>
It is a germ destroyer, a <lb/>
a great remedial agent; it is <lb/>
powerful, and yet harmless; it is a <lb/>
medicine that contains no mineral <lb/>
poisons; all its results sire bench-. <lb/>
cent; it is corn, pounded from nature's <lb/>
own laboratory and works on <lb/>
lines to cure disease; It re- <lb/>
stores, revives and the <lb/>
system; it be used as a tonic by <lb/>
the most delicate woman; it may be <lb/>
given to build up the constitution of <lb/>
a little child, or it may be employed <lb/>
to. to health, the <lb/>
victim poisoning, In each <lb/>
case it will work wonderful results. <lb/>
N. G , June 1801. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
It was our pleasant privilege to <lb/>
attend the closing exercises of the <lb/>
e Seminary on the 28th, <lb/>
In spite of the dump and <lb/>
rainy weather the spacious chap- <lb/>
was crowded with the patrons <lb/>
and friends of the before the <lb/>
hour to tho exercises, who <lb/>
were being entertained by tho <lb/>
Farmville String baud and whose <lb/>
music always charmed the gloomy <lb/>
and quiets tho restless. <lb/>
At o'clock Prof. W. J. I. <lb/>
announced that the exercises <lb/>
would begin by a <lb/>
the old by the <lb/>
school. Which was sung beautiful <lb/>
without a discord. Then came <lb/>
the speeches and recitations, two of <lb/>
which were so remarkably said <lb/>
we cannot fail lo mention them, <lb/>
and Willie's <lb/>
Miss Belcher was very beau- <lb/>
recited and the <lb/>
old by Bert Smith was <lb/>
spoken really an impressive man- <lb/>
others acquitted them- <lb/>
selves splendidly all did very- <lb/>
well, it consume too much <lb/>
time and space to mention <lb/>
personally. Tho exercises closed at <lb/>
but tho crowd re <lb/>
bled the following day to hear <lb/>
tho address by Mr. Geo. B. of <lb/>
Greenville, who was introduced by <lb/>
Mr. C. L. Barrett, language <lb/>
style well suited and appropriate <lb/>
for the occasion. Mr. very <lb/>
an air of <lb/>
calmness about his face, and after <lb/>
recognizing the large crowd thank- <lb/>
ed Mr. Barrett for his <lb/>
speech said that his praises <lb/>
were far more than be deserved or <lb/>
could take unto himself, and sec- <lb/>
that scenes re- <lb/>
called days and associations long <lb/>
since passed in placid <lb/>
walls he was taught his earlier <lb/>
sons by that noble self sacrificing <lb/>
Christian gentlemen, who was gone <lb/>
from among its to reap the rewards <lb/>
of his unceasing labors, the <lb/>
of which almost <lb/>
After these preliminary remarks <lb/>
Mr. King announced that he bad <lb/>
chosen for his subject on that <lb/>
Necessity of <lb/>
which subject ho treated all of <lb/>
of its varied forms with great <lb/>
in bis eloquent and impressive <lb/>
style. It has long been known by <lb/>
our people that the speaker is a <lb/>
talented man bat this last speech <lb/>
convinced every bearer that he is a <lb/>
man, and would bes- <lb/>
peak for him the dawning of a <lb/>
day. Spectator. <lb/>
Succession Lieutenant <lb/>
Winston Sentinel. <lb/>
The office of Lieutenant Governor <lb/>
not exist in this State until <lb/>
1868, and since that time the lieu <lb/>
have a lucky lot. <lb/>
In 1870 Caldwell succeeded <lb/>
served two years, was elected <lb/>
Governor in 1872, died 1874, and <lb/>
his lieutenant. Brogden served out <lb/>
the In 1879 Vance was <lb/>
to the Senate, and his <lb/>
Jarvis, served out the term, <lb/>
took a four years lease of his <lb/>
own. <lb/>
Lieutenant Governors <lb/>
and to Jarvis and Scales. <lb/>
respectively, never reached tho ex- <lb/>
chair. <lb/>
Brogden and Holt succeeded <lb/>
the death of Governors, <lb/>
well through impeachment <lb/>
and Jarvis by the promotion of <lb/>
Vance to the Senate. <lb/>
Thus six Governors have been <lb/>
elected since reconstruction, and <lb/>
four of the Lieutenant Governors <lb/>
have to t he officer of Gov- <lb/>
Should Governor Holt serve to <lb/>
the end of the term, January 1893 <lb/>
the four lieutenants will have served <lb/>
eight years altogether, or one third <lb/>
of period of twenty four years, <lb/>
the office of Lieutenant Gov- <lb/>
was created. <lb/>
Towns That la Advertising. <lb/>
Gen. Sherman never <lb/>
but Gen. Joe was wounded <lb/>
in nearly every fight, Some com- <lb/>
Danders take very great risks. It <lb/>
was most that Gen. <lb/>
was never wounded, as many times <lb/>
he exposed himself to great dangers. <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
Piper Picked a Peck of Pickled <lb/>
was a line of alliterative non- <lb/>
sense, that the children used to say. <lb/>
Nowadays they can practice one the Per- <lb/>
Painless, Powerful Properties of <lb/>
ft <lb/>
a fact which win be useful <lb/>
to know. These Pellet sick bead- <lb/>
ache, bilious attacks, indigestion, <lb/>
and all stomach, liver and bowel <lb/>
troubles. They are tiny, sugar-coasted <lb/>
plus, easy to take, and, as a laxative, one <lb/>
Is sufficient for a dose. No more groans <lb/>
and gripes from the old remedies <lb/>
Purgative Pellets are as painless <lb/>
as they are perfect in their <lb/>
An exchange people <lb/>
of Tuscon, by a, <lb/>
the purpose of sending it <lb/>
and addition pay <lb/>
a month for the expense attending <lb/>
of their city. Lamar, <lb/>
Colorado, pays two thousand dollars <lb/>
for a pamphlet and 11.500 a month <lb/>
for in the <lb/>
The of Fort Scott, Kansas <lb/>
is paid tor talking up the ad <lb/>
vantages of that city. Hutchinson <lb/>
claims to pay the News <lb/>
running a morning pa- <lb/>
per, and Newton does bettor by <lb/>
subscribing to the <lb/>
publican boom place. Such as <lb/>
this is what made the <lb/>
WHY YOU SHOULD WORK FOR <lb/>
YOUR TOWN. <lb/>
Durham Sun. <lb/>
Because, first, you are citizens <lb/>
of the town and you devolves <lb/>
the task of making it a city. <lb/>
Upon the business you do is de- <lb/>
pendent your success and tho in- <lb/>
crease of that business is itself de- <lb/>
pendent upon the growth of the <lb/>
town. <lb/>
It is not high prices which make <lb/>
towns or a groat deal of speculation <lb/>
but actual settlers with the basis <lb/>
for them <lb/>
The words of the citizens of a <lb/>
town have much to do with the <lb/>
opinion formed by visitors. As cit- <lb/>
of tho town, tho benefit of its <lb/>
advance comes to you in dollars <lb/>
and cents directly and indirectly. <lb/>
The of your book for a <lb/>
year tell what tho increase of <lb/>
has done and this, <lb/>
the outside deals you have <lb/>
made and money expended, may <lb/>
based a good and sufficient reason <lb/>
why you should labor for her ad- <lb/>
It is not sufficient to sit down <lb/>
and advise. Advice, left simply <lb/>
advice, is more liable to do harm <lb/>
than good, harm in certain <lb/>
cases. can <lb/>
might well by a <lb/>
good many persons different <lb/>
towns. <lb/>
Work is tho thing that tells. <lb/>
Work will build your and <lb/>
in any way that you expect it will <lb/>
tell. Let tho citizens in all the <lb/>
towns be a band of and <lb/>
the result, will apparent to the <lb/>
world in the growth of their town, <lb/>
to themselves in the growth of their <lb/>
business well. Towns don't <lb/>
build themselves m this age. Men <lb/>
and money do it; the latter is forth- <lb/>
coming if the men arc there. <lb/>
It is to your interest to help your <lb/>
town forward and you are standing <lb/>
in your own light when you do not <lb/>
do so. <lb/>
The Landmark says <lb/>
General Wanamaker <lb/>
is trying the experiment of free <lb/>
mail delivery in small towns, nod <lb/>
has the system operation now at <lb/>
thirty these among these <lb/>
Weldon, N. C. a place of 1500 pop- <lb/>
Free mail delivery would <lb/>
of MUM be a groat convenience to <lb/>
all the of the <lb/>
should like to have it in <lb/>
for instance; but a more crying <lb/>
need is an of the star <lb/>
route new mail routes <lb/>
throughout the country and more <lb/>
frequent trips over many of those <lb/>
in existence. Many people <lb/>
in Carolina, it is doubt- <lb/>
less so other States, are from <lb/>
five lo miles from any post of- <lb/>
and until tho wants of these <lb/>
people in postal faculties are more <lb/>
met the people of small towns <lb/>
can very well afford to wait for <lb/>
mail delivery at their <lb/>
It is now the opinion of some of <lb/>
the press that President <lb/>
had visited South a <lb/>
year ago he would not hare favored <lb/>
the force bill. This is a very poor <lb/>
compliment to the extent of the <lb/>
President's information, or to his <lb/>
patriotism. The truth is another <lb/>
President will to be elected <lb/>
next year, wants to <lb/>
and is to <lb/>
act the part of a conservative <lb/>
statesman, which the results of the <lb/>
last Fall elections showed him was <lb/>
popular. Let him feel that he is <lb/>
securely in tho Presidential chair <lb/>
for another four years, and he will <lb/>
be the same bitter, sectional <lb/>
he was when he voted to <lb/>
pose penalties and limitations upon <lb/>
the best men the to <lb/>
destroy Southern prosperity by ad- <lb/>
tho passage of the fa- <lb/>
Force <lb/>
The Supreme Court of Nebraska <lb/>
has ousted Gov. because it <lb/>
held that he was not a citizen of the <lb/>
United States at the time of his <lb/>
election, lie has the <lb/>
States his early youth, <lb/>
having held important of- <lb/>
fices, before this, but had never <lb/>
ken the papers to make <lb/>
him a He labored <lb/>
misapprehension that be <lb/>
was a of Nebraska by the <lb/>
enabling that state to become a <lb/>
member of the Union. It is <lb/>
both himself and bis <lb/>
state that he was ignorant as to his <lb/>
defect of <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
. j . <lb/>
Haw Try <lb/>
It will cost you nothing and will sure- <lb/>
do you good, if you have a Cough. <lb/>
Cold, or any trouble with Throat, Chest <lb/>
or Lungs, Dr. King's New Discovery <lb/>
for Consumption. Coughs and <lb/>
guaranteed to give or money <lb/>
be paid back, Sufferers from La <lb/>
found It the tiling use <lb/>
had a speedy am. Try <lb/>
a bottle at. our expense and learn <lb/>
for yourself just how good a thing it is. <lb/>
Trial bottles free at John I. Woolens <lb/>
Drugstore. Large size and SI. <lb/>
TREAT FRIENDS FAIRLY. <lb/>
NUT CULTURE. <lb/>
Progressive Farmer. Wilmington Star. <lb/>
We arc sorry to see that bad feel j We have several times in these <lb/>
is being engendered in Alliance columns called attention lo the sub- <lb/>
circles, over discussion of Alliance- <lb/>
men and measures. Some of our <lb/>
brethren who from the majority <lb/>
Special Notice. <lb/>
In adopting the Advance Sys- <lb/>
for this year The Reflector will <lb/>
be continued to no one for a tints <lb/>
than it is paid for. If you find stamped <lb/>
just after your name on tho margin <lb/>
the paper the <lb/>
expires two weeks <lb/>
tills <lb/>
it is to give you notice at unless re- <lb/>
newed in that time The Reflector <lb/>
will cease going to you at the expiration <lb/>
of the two weeks. <lb/>
of nut culture, especially of the <lb/>
pecan, as Industry in which the <lb/>
farmers of this State, especially in <lb/>
of their associates upon some the eastern and central portions of it, <lb/>
of policy and principles are <lb/>
being denounced as confederates of <lb/>
Wall and traitors to the <lb/>
We protest most earnestly <lb/>
against these methods of attack. To <lb/>
might engage with profit, The pecan <lb/>
belongs really to the hickory nut <lb/>
and can be successfully grown <lb/>
wherever the hickory tree will grow. <lb/>
The culture of the pecan is now <lb/>
say a man is ill league with Wall engaged in to a limited extent in this <lb/>
street because he does not agree with State, in South Carolina, in Florida <lb/>
you about a matter of public concern i and in Texas, but the culture is yet <lb/>
is simply outrageous. Certain in its infancy and will never be very <lb/>
changes, which the character extensively engaged in because there <lb/>
and Standing of certain of our i are few persons who have patience to <lb/>
the Alliance, have been going wait seven or years to realize <lb/>
the rounds of the papers. These front a crop planted. This is one <lb/>
reason why there <lb/>
charges are vouched for by reputable <lb/>
brethren in the order. They cannot <lb/>
be successfully met, by raising <lb/>
cries of persecution. These <lb/>
charges should be examined into <lb/>
be no fear of <lb/>
the industry being overdone. <lb/>
We were very much interested in a <lb/>
letter published in the Charleston <lb/>
Sews a few days ago, <lb/>
with the greatest care and with the written by a gentleman at <lb/>
strictest impartiality. If the parties county, . C, who tells <lb/>
are found to be guilty, after a what hi about pecan growing <lb/>
investigation, they should the possibilities that arc in it as <lb/>
made lo take the consequences of la paying industry. <lb/>
their wrong. If, on the other hand j He began planting fifteen years <lb/>
the char-res turn out, upon j ago, has now a thirty-five acre <lb/>
to be without foundation in j orchard to which lie will add sixty- <lb/>
fact, those who have the i live acres more this winter. At ten <lb/>
characters of their brethren should j years his trees yielded at the of <lb/>
be held to a strict and severe at- to the acre, and at fifteen years <lb/>
the of to the acre. <lb/>
cause we anything of these <lb/>
matters can justify us in taking <lb/>
either side in this controversy. But <lb/>
There is only one crop in this <lb/>
try that will do that, and that is the <lb/>
finest kind of tobacco. It is from <lb/>
we write in the interests of simple; four lo eight limes as much as fair <lb/>
justice to all parties. We respect- cotton land will produce. It is five <lb/>
fully ask, nay, we respectfully limes as much as the average tobacco <lb/>
that these matters we have crop will yield, fifteen times as much <lb/>
laded to shall be investigated, and as the average wheat crop will yield, <lb/>
twenty times as much as the average <lb/>
corn crop. <lb/>
all the facts In ought out. <lb/>
Decision. <lb/>
The drummer has acquired a rep- <lb/>
all over the country, but the <lb/>
following comes as near giving him <lb/>
justice as anything <lb/>
The man who plants cotton, <lb/>
co. wheat, corn, etc, has to plow, <lb/>
plant, cultivate and harvest every <lb/>
I year, taking his chances on frosts, <lb/>
j floods, droughts, storms and insects, <lb/>
the queerest lawsuit on then when the gauntlet of grow- <lb/>
deserves a place in <lb/>
the legal records of <lb/>
that which was <lb/>
Morgan county. A drummer hired <lb/>
in and harvesting the crop is run, <lb/>
must take his on a market <lb/>
in which may be and the <lb/>
prices consequently low, too low lo <lb/>
a mule and buggy to go to the cost of <lb/>
try; the mole became contrary a <lb/>
backed into a fence, jam.; Will it The <lb/>
The drummer plied the whip and <lb/>
the mule kicked back. The mud <lb/>
flew but tho drummer held his own. <lb/>
When patience ceased to be a virtue, <lb/>
the commercial gentleman drew from <lb/>
his pocket a Smith and Wesson now- <lb/>
and killed long-cared <lb/>
source of danger. The owner of the <lb/>
mule brought suit against the drum- <lb/>
mer for the value his quadruped <lb/>
whereupon the jury brought in the <lb/>
following the jury, <lb/>
the defendant not guilty, and the <lb/>
planting once done the principal la- <lb/>
is over; there is no more plowing, <lb/>
no more cultivating, no fear of frosts, <lb/>
Hoods, droughts or insects, for the <lb/>
tree is a hardy one and will stand <lb/>
anything the hickory will stand. <lb/>
only labor after it is in bearing <lb/>
is the gathering the nuts, and the <lb/>
only labor before they come into <lb/>
bearing, which is usually about the <lb/>
year, yield increasing <lb/>
year until the tree reaches ma- <lb/>
is a little mulching or <lb/>
killing n case justifiable homicide. <lb/>
Specimen Cases. <lb/>
s. H. Clifford. New was <lb/>
troubled with Neuralgia and <lb/>
his Stomach was disordered, his <lb/>
was affected to an alarming degree, <lb/>
appetite fell away, and he was terribly <lb/>
reduced in flash and strength. Three <lb/>
bottle of Bitters cured him. <lb/>
Edward III., <lb/>
had a sore on his leg of eight <lb/>
standing. Used three bottles of <lb/>
Electric Hitters and seven boxes of <lb/>
Salve, and his leg Is <lb/>
Bound and well. John Speaker, Oats ; one year obi, never more than two <lb/>
O., had live large Fever sores on his leg, . because, he says, is not <lb/>
doctors said he was incurable. bot- i , <lb/>
tie Electric Bitten and one box Buck-j unusual for a tree at one year old to <lb/>
Salvo cured bun entirely, j a root twice us long as tree <lb/>
lie recommends good <lb/>
for the first yarn or two to help <lb/>
the growth. the <lb/>
ard is a permanent thing and a per- <lb/>
producer, which takes care of <lb/>
and will live as long as the <lb/>
hickory tree lives. <lb/>
The plan this <lb/>
is lo lay off the land checks <lb/>
by feel, which gives about <lb/>
trees to the acre, lie plants trees <lb/>
Sold John L. Wooten's Drugstore. <lb/>
A Ga., correspondent , log for tie first year or so, and after <lb/>
Atlanta has unearth- that any high grade will <lb/>
a man wile who are truly a produce astonishing results. His <lb/>
wonderful pair. They arc A. ML experience is that trees planted in <lb/>
Thomas and wife, natives of ; the fall will grow more in two years <lb/>
county, Ga., now living just than those planted the spring will <lb/>
Florida border. Mr. Thomas is <lb/>
years old, his wife is and they <lb/>
have been married just years. <lb/>
There is nothing remarkable in the <lb/>
above, but correspondent further <lb/>
asserts that the years of their <lb/>
married life Just children have <lb/>
in three, because form new <lb/>
roots in the fall and stand the fol- <lb/>
lowing summer <lb/>
Other crops, such as cotton, corn, <lb/>
grass, may grown on the land <lb/>
until the trees come bearing, or <lb/>
turned to pasture, as stock do not <lb/>
been born unto them, all of whom trouble the trees, so that the land <lb/>
arc alive and well. Now, unless this j devoted to the pecan trees is nearly <lb/>
correspondent has drawn upon a very i as useful as it was before for other <lb/>
fertile imagination for his story, until the become <lb/>
are the most remarkable in largo to so shade tho ground <lb/>
this Just think of it <lb/>
there would not be sunshine <lb/>
a year upon an average the <lb/>
whole time, and one a year for each <lb/>
year of tho mother's life. Great <lb/>
children in years More than enough for oilier crops, save grass, <lb/>
which might be grown all the time. <lb/>
In planting care should <lb/>
to secure the best kind of trees, those <lb/>
producing largest sweetest <lb/>
nut, kinds of trees producing <lb/>
small and nuts, with more <lb/>
wood than meat in them. <lb/>
There arc very farmers in <lb/>
North who couldn't spare a <lb/>
is superior in quality of meat and <lb/>
Barer lo the average pecan, and equal <lb/>
to the best, which if planted and <lb/>
cultivated would prove almost if not <lb/>
quite as profitable as the pecan. <lb/>
And there is the walnut, too, which <lb/>
in eight or ten years be <lb/>
able not only for the nut but for tho <lb/>
timber, becoming more valuable for <lb/>
boll; every year as the pecan and <lb/>
hickory do. <lb/>
There is an Inviting field open for <lb/>
nut culture in this Slate for the <lb/>
young man who will enter it. As a <lb/>
source of revenue, little labor or <lb/>
little risk, it holds out inducements <lb/>
that no other crop grown can offer. <lb/>
THE PAYS- <lb/>
Leader. <lb/>
If there is one more than <lb/>
another which causes the small pro- <lb/>
owner to feel sore, is the <lb/>
amount which he pays in taxes on the <lb/>
assessed valuation of his property, in <lb/>
proportion to that paid by his richer <lb/>
neighbor by the large <lb/>
and incorporated companies of <lb/>
his city or county. The small prop <lb/>
city owners the country can <lb/>
said to be the ones who pay the taxes, <lb/>
nor is it necessary to particularize <lb/>
any section where this is especially <lb/>
the case, for it can be said to prevail <lb/>
throughout the States, <lb/>
What is meant by small property <lb/>
owners paying the taxes is that <lb/>
proportion to their holdings, in real <lb/>
or personal property, the poor man <lb/>
pays taxes at a ratio or perhaps <lb/>
four to one as compared to the rich <lb/>
man, manufacturer and incorporated <lb/>
company. <lb/>
Nor will an increased tax <lb/>
make his situation any for ho <lb/>
is now paying taxes on his property <lb/>
at a rate near its real value, while <lb/>
the taxes of his more fortunate <lb/>
neighbor will not be increased pro- <lb/>
to make things equal. <lb/>
This unfairness in the amount of <lb/>
tax paid by the small and large pro- <lb/>
owner must continue to exist <lb/>
until all property shall be assessed <lb/>
at its real value, for it is hardly in <lb/>
nature of things to expect the great <lb/>
owners of property to declare their <lb/>
property at a rate higher than the <lb/>
average Is now. <lb/>
Because of the present existing <lb/>
state regard to taxes paid, its <lb/>
fairness small owners, it does not <lb/>
argue for the greater honesty of the <lb/>
poor man, but the proportionate real <lb/>
valuation of the property is too great <lb/>
for the small holder to overcome, <lb/>
and this proportion increases as the <lb/>
value of the holdings increases, to <lb/>
the disadvantage of the small holder. <lb/>
A uniformity in the plan of assess- <lb/>
by taxing property at its real <lb/>
market value, would remove the dis- <lb/>
proportion now existing. The tax <lb/>
rate now existing everywhere is <lb/>
high enough to raise more <lb/>
than enough money to carry on <lb/>
State affairs, if a real value rate was <lb/>
assessed, instead of the present <lb/>
method of property at one- <lb/>
third or one-half its market value. <lb/>
In fact the tax rate would be lower- <lb/>
ed very soon for the increased <lb/>
amount collected, by taxing all at <lb/>
the real valuation, would amount to <lb/>
more then that collected under the <lb/>
present method. Under a real tax <lb/>
valuation assessment all property <lb/>
owners would stand equal, each bear- <lb/>
his proportionate part of the <lb/>
burden of maintaining the affairs of <lb/>
city, county, State and the <lb/>
Government. <lb/>
Assess property at its real value <lb/>
and give the small and great owners <lb/>
of properly the equality which should <lb/>
be due each, a standard of known <lb/>
values can also established in <lb/>
every locality, and will be <lb/>
found to be largely appreciated, re- <lb/>
in benefits now unknown.<lb/>
feds. <lb/>
II F. TYSON, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention given to collections. <lb/>
ii. long, <lb/>
c. <lb/>
Prompt and careful attention to <lb/>
Collection solicited. <lb/>
D. L. JAMES, <lb/>
Greenville, N . <lb/>
Some of the court house gentlemen <lb/>
while examining a map as- <lb/>
that is joined by <lb/>
more than any other county <lb/>
in the State. Nine counties Join it, <lb/>
as Lincoln, Alex- <lb/>
Wilkes, Yadkin, Rowan, few acres to the pecan, if he didn't <lb/>
L. C. LATHAM. <lb/>
X SKINNER, <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
l U. JAMES,<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. <lb/>
Practice In all the courts. <lb/>
a Specialty. <lb/>
Cabarrus and Mecklenburg. No <lb/>
other county in the State is touched <lb/>
by more than eight; and that is be-<lb/>
An agent is wanted in this lo- <lb/>
for the sale of Knight's Blood <lb/>
Gore, tho best known household <lb/>
medicine known. See <lb/>
other column. <lb/>
want to spare many, and to what <lb/>
better use could the old which <lb/>
there are thousands of lie put <lb/>
to re- <lb/>
claim them might be made the <lb/>
most productive and valuable part of <lb/>
the farm. <lb/>
There is growing in central North <lb/>
, ;. hickory which <lb/>
J. JARVIS. ALEX. L. BLOW <lb/>
BLOW, <lb/>
AW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
In all the Courts. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
MARQUIS. <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
of <lb/>
Office hi <lb/>
opposite Photograph Gallery.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017499_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
ft . <lb/>
AT OFFICE AT <lb/>
C., <lb/>
Mail <lb/>
Publisher's Announcement. <lb/>
THE SUBSCRIPTION OF <lb/>
Tho Reflector is 81.00 per <lb/>
Rate.-One <lb/>
one year, Si ; one-hall column one year. <lb/>
column one year, Si. <lb/>
Transient inch <lb/>
one two week. one <lb/>
month Two inches one week, <lb/>
two weeks, one month, <lb/>
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb/>
Column as reading items, cents per <lb/>
line for each insertion. <lb/>
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad, <lb/>
and Notices- <lb/>
and Trustees Sales <lb/>
Summons to etc. will <lb/>
be charged tor at rates and <lb/>
BE PAID FOB IN ADVANCE. <lb/>
has suffered some loss and <lb/>
much because of having no <lb/>
rule as to the payment class <lb/>
advertisements, and in order to avoid <lb/>
trouble payment in advance <lb/>
will be demanded. <lb/>
Contracts for not <lb/>
above, for any length of time, can be <lb/>
made by application to the <lb/>
In person or by letter. <lb/>
Copy tor Mr Advertisements and <lb/>
all changes of should lie <lb/>
handed In by o'clock on Tuesday <lb/>
mornings order to receive prompt in- <lb/>
the day following. <lb/>
The Reflector having a huge <lb/>
will be found a profitable medium <lb/>
through which to reach the public. <lb/>
would have done so. Then there <lb/>
has been a lack of an educational <lb/>
spirit in the community. No one <lb/>
has seemed to interest himself <lb/>
specially and work for the school <lb/>
in a manner calculated to awaken <lb/>
an enthusiasm in behalf of <lb/>
and good schools. Contrary <lb/>
to this there has been a lack of <lb/>
unity among our own people that <lb/>
has operated against the school. <lb/>
But despite the adverse <lb/>
stances, Greenville Institute has <lb/>
done a great deal of work here and <lb/>
has done more for the <lb/>
than any school ever before <lb/>
conducted here. The credit for <lb/>
this is due to Prof It is <lb/>
his energy and perseverance, and <lb/>
ability that has accomplished so <lb/>
much. His work here is <lb/>
proof of his thoroughness as <lb/>
an The Reflector <lb/>
thinks that Greenville is making a <lb/>
mistake allowing him to leave <lb/>
here without an effort being made <lb/>
to retain him as principal of tho <lb/>
Institute. know not to what <lb/>
extent his intentions to locate else- <lb/>
where have gone, but it is our <lb/>
opinion if a united effort were <lb/>
made he could influenced to <lb/>
remain Greenville. It is at <lb/>
least worth the effort. Tho com- <lb/>
can hardly afford to lose <lb/>
such citizens, and every reason- <lb/>
able inducement should be <lb/>
out for keeping him in our midst. <lb/>
For Newest Latest Styles Lowest Prices <lb/>
They the largest stock of <lb/>
HATS SHOES <lb/>
of any store in Greenville. Look over this <lb/>
J. B. Cherry. <lb/>
J. B. <lb/>
J. Ch <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
Boy's Suits <lb/>
Men's Suits <lb/>
Nice All Wool Pants <lb/>
Thin Coats i <lb/>
Silk Mohair coats and <lb/>
Gent's Low Quarter Shoes <lb/>
Flannel and Silk Shirts <lb/>
all styles and sizes <lb/>
Latest styles and best brands of <lb/>
Calicoes <lb/>
Gent's Wool Hats <lb/>
Straw Hats <lb/>
Ladies Slippers Check <lb/>
Ladies Low Quarter button Lawn in all styles <lb/>
I Nun's Veiling and many <lb/>
Ladies Oxford Ties other fabrics. <lb/>
Children's shoes to pr yd. <lb/>
Misses and Ladies shoes nice brown domestic yd <lb/>
GREENVILLE INSTITUTE- <lb/>
Tho closing exercises of the <lb/>
sixth annual session of Greenville <lb/>
Institute will take place to-day. <lb/>
This school was first opened for <lb/>
the reception of students in <lb/>
1885. Prof. John Duckett <lb/>
was tho first principal and has re- <lb/>
in charge until the present <lb/>
He has signified his <lb/>
to resign at tho close of this <lb/>
session. obtained from <lb/>
him some facts concerning tho <lb/>
school during those six years <lb/>
which deem worthy pub- <lb/>
The enrollment for these years <lb/>
been as 1st year <lb/>
2nd year year 4th <lb/>
year 5th year year <lb/>
Last September the school was <lb/>
changed from a mixed school to a <lb/>
female school, which caused the <lb/>
apparent falling off. Tho increase <lb/>
in the number of girls, especially <lb/>
boarding pupils, shows that it was <lb/>
wise to make the change. During <lb/>
the past year there have been <lb/>
boarders from Pitt, Lenoir, <lb/>
Greene, Martin Hal- <lb/>
counties. <lb/>
find also that Greenville, <lb/>
though the school has been situ- <lb/>
in our midst, has not been as <lb/>
liberal in its patronage as it <lb/>
should have The first year <lb/>
Greenville furnished pupils, <lb/>
Pitt county outside Greenville <lb/>
other counties The second <lb/>
year Greenville furnished Pitt <lb/>
county outside other counties <lb/>
Third year Greenville <lb/>
Pitt county other counties <lb/>
Fourth year Greenville Pitt <lb/>
county other counties <lb/>
Sixth year Greenville Pitt and <lb/>
ether counties <lb/>
About fifty young men and <lb/>
ladies, who have received most of <lb/>
their training in this school, have <lb/>
taught in this and other counties. <lb/>
Quite half of the public school <lb/>
teachers of this county have at <lb/>
tended this school. <lb/>
Their efficiency over the teach- <lb/>
trained at other schools was <lb/>
marked at the last In- <lb/>
We noticed even in the <lb/>
act of enrolling their names <lb/>
that they did it with so much more <lb/>
dispatch and system. <lb/>
Never in the history of the <lb/>
town, so far as the Reflector <lb/>
knows, has so large a school been <lb/>
kept up so long under manage- <lb/>
of the same principal. <lb/>
Never, as far as we know, has a <lb/>
school here been so wide in <lb/>
educational scope. About <lb/>
young men and ladies have been <lb/>
prepared college and several of <lb/>
them have graduated with dis- <lb/>
Dr. Crowell remarked <lb/>
last year, while in Greenville that <lb/>
no school in the eastern part of <lb/>
the was sending more well- <lb/>
prepared students to colleges than <lb/>
Greenville Institute. During the <lb/>
past year there were at Trinity <lb/>
three boys from this school and <lb/>
four at the University, besides <lb/>
several young ladies at different <lb/>
female colleges. <lb/>
Five or six assistant teachers <lb/>
have been employed every year, <lb/>
to whom good salaries have been <lb/>
paid. Nearly have been <lb/>
paid to assistants during these six <lb/>
years, besides what the principal <lb/>
himself and what was <lb/>
paid for other expenses. <lb/>
All this has been accomplished <lb/>
under somewhat adverse <lb/>
stances. In the first place there <lb/>
were bad crops every for the <lb/>
past six except last year. This, of <lb/>
course, caused more or less of a <lb/>
financial depression which <lb/>
Teated some people sending their <lb/>
to school who otherwise <lb/>
All we ask is that you call and examine our stock and prices <lb/>
SPRING <lb/>
We beg to inform our friends and patrons that we now the <lb/>
most complete stock we ever had. To our lady friends <lb/>
we wish to say that our stock of Dress Goods will com- <lb/>
------pare favorably with any line in town.------- <lb/>
DRY GOODS <lb/>
In Wool Fabrics we have Hen- <lb/>
Cashmeres, Albatross <lb/>
and in the leading <lb/>
Spring and Summer shades. <lb/>
In Cotton Fabrics we have <lb/>
Pine Apple Tissues, Swiss <lb/>
Zephyrs, Batiste, Out- <lb/>
Cloths, Lawns, <lb/>
Ginghams, a full line of White <lb/>
Dress Goods, In all of these <lb/>
lines you will find beautiful <lb/>
styles. No to found <lb/>
in town. <lb/>
In all grades of Men and <lb/>
. Boys Hats we have nice styles <lb/>
and will sell at prices to please <lb/>
our customers. <lb/>
We invite comparison of <lb/>
and prices of the following <lb/>
Notions, Gent's Furnish- <lb/>
Goods, Trunks, Valises, <lb/>
Hardware, Crockery, Tinware, <lb/>
Wood and Willow Ware, <lb/>
Provisions, and all <lb/>
kinds of Fanning <lb/>
and Furniture. <lb/>
Implement <lb/>
Judge Whitaker's charge to the <lb/>
grand jury last Monday ought to <lb/>
have been heard by man, <lb/>
woman and child in Pitt county <lb/>
who are capable of comprehend- <lb/>
it. It was a clear and concise <lb/>
discourse on the obligation of an <lb/>
oath. He showed how in times <lb/>
long past when a crime was com <lb/>
the as a whole as- <lb/>
and took the matter <lb/>
consideration. But since men <lb/>
have so multiplied this is <lb/>
and therefore juries are <lb/>
chosen who act as a whole and <lb/>
represent the people, act for the <lb/>
people and out tho laws <lb/>
made by the people. He impress <lb/>
ed upon them that oath was <lb/>
their best guide, that if they fol- <lb/>
lowed out the obligations of <lb/>
oath they would do their duty. <lb/>
An oath he said was one of the <lb/>
most solemn things and should <lb/>
not be looked upon, as it is by a <lb/>
great many, as a mere trifle and <lb/>
form, but should be kept <lb/>
and fulfilled in- the fear of God <lb/>
without any regard for the fear or <lb/>
favor of man or the hope of a re- <lb/>
ward. It should be kept as sacred <lb/>
to-day as it was in the days of <lb/>
who sacrificed his only <lb/>
daughter in compliance with the <lb/>
duty obligations of his oath. <lb/>
The best people have in all ages <lb/>
looked upon oaths as one duty <lb/>
that could not be violated. Per- <lb/>
jury is a crime and -is not <lb/>
only punished by law, but should <lb/>
be frowned upon by all men. <lb/>
Stringent laws might made, <lb/>
Statesmen might legislate, society <lb/>
might do its best, but until men <lb/>
have a proper regard for their <lb/>
oaths and order be <lb/>
had, and man's lives and pro- <lb/>
cannot be safe. Tho gov- <lb/>
is a failure without we <lb/>
can teach men to keep their <lb/>
in regard to their oaths. <lb/>
Tho law had made it tho duty of <lb/>
tho grand jury to present indict- <lb/>
men for crimes, <lb/>
and the duty of the jury to <lb/>
pronounce upon the truth of the <lb/>
charge, and unless they lived up <lb/>
to their requirements, justice <lb/>
could not be meted out. He did <lb/>
not to them their duty <lb/>
in regard to the jail and county <lb/>
home. The jail is a place of con- <lb/>
and not of punishment, <lb/>
and it was their duty to that it <lb/>
was properly kept and that those <lb/>
confined therein should be proper- <lb/>
cared for, inasmuch as the law <lb/>
looked upon them as innocent <lb/>
until pronounced by their <lb/>
fellowmen on oath as a jury. <lb/>
The support of the poor at the <lb/>
county home was a debt of the <lb/>
to them, and not a favor <lb/>
shown them in mercy. It is the <lb/>
duty of the jury to visit <lb/>
places and examine for themselves <lb/>
and see that everything is kept in <lb/>
order, that the inmates are treat- <lb/>
ed right, and that nothing <lb/>
moral is allowed. <lb/>
Soon after the beginning of the <lb/>
pursuit of tho ship <lb/>
by the United Cruiser Charleston, <lb/>
announced in dispatches from <lb/>
Paris that it would be peaceably <lb/>
surrendered to the Charleston. <lb/>
Whatever may have been tho <lb/>
for the report, it has <lb/>
proven to be true. The was <lb/>
or be at <lb/>
quo. It was thought once that it <lb/>
has completely eluded the <lb/>
and could not found. It is <lb/>
not yet known what will be done <lb/>
with tho but it is reasonable <lb/>
to suppose that everything will <lb/>
be settled with satisfaction to all. <lb/>
The Reflector that <lb/>
there is no Solicitor who takes <lb/>
greater interest in his work than <lb/>
does Solicitor Woodard. Some days <lb/>
after be was nominated for the <lb/>
use of this remark <lb/>
in our I am elected I <lb/>
shall make it my business to be in <lb/>
each county of the district as long <lb/>
as possible before the convening of <lb/>
court so as to ascertain what work <lb/>
there is to be done mod make <lb/>
ration for Of be was H <lb/>
elected by a large majority, wouldst suffer <lb/>
far as Pitt county is concerned we <lb/>
can say be Is keeping bis promise, <lb/>
lie comes down a day or two ahead <lb/>
of the court and begins his <lb/>
waiting to get here just in time for <lb/>
court to open and all bis work <lb/>
to do In a rash. He u an <lb/>
representative of tin State <lb/>
grow in popularity <lb/>
Col. Morrison, who is so well <lb/>
known throughout our whole <lb/>
country as a tariff Reformer, says <lb/>
the main fight in will be on tho <lb/>
tariff. There are but few if any <lb/>
better posted men in politics than <lb/>
Col. Morrison, and his opinion is <lb/>
entitled to consideration. Tariff <lb/>
reform has been the main discus- <lb/>
in politics for the last <lb/>
years, except in times of war, and <lb/>
will in all probability continue to <lb/>
be. Free silver and other things <lb/>
may for but tariff <lb/>
legislation is what more <lb/>
are interested in than any other <lb/>
one tiling. <lb/>
The of the University <lb/>
of North Carolina shows an excel- <lb/>
lent intellectual bill of fare <lb/>
to the young men of tho country. <lb/>
The University is well equipped <lb/>
books and apparatus for in- <lb/>
and has a full corps of <lb/>
professors. The Law School and <lb/>
the Medical School are flourishing. <lb/>
There matriculates. We <lb/>
note that President Battle has <lb/>
resigned in order to accept the <lb/>
Chair of History, recently <lb/>
His successor is shortly <lb/>
to be elected. Prof. de- <lb/>
is also to be provided for <lb/>
as he has accepted the office of <lb/>
State <lb/>
MILL ITEMS. <lb/>
Mb. Editor. Your <lb/>
dent bas been quite ill for a few <lb/>
days. If there Is a feeling upon <lb/>
earth, which is delightful, elevating <lb/>
which calls forth totes of peace and <lb/>
joy it w that which we experience <lb/>
after of pain and sickness, <lb/>
when we return again to life. <lb/>
A few more days of warm <lb/>
is making the grass get up <lb/>
and hustle as well as everything <lb/>
else. While at same time the <lb/>
farmers have to hustle too. <lb/>
Charlie may have the finest corn <lb/>
but we will bet a that Blue <lb/>
Bird can show him the finest water- <lb/>
melon crop that be bas ever seen at <lb/>
this season. Young watermelons <lb/>
now as large as a egg. Mr. <lb/>
Editor, would you like to stick your <lb/>
in one. It yon would pucker <lb/>
lips. I Here's the pucker <lb/>
Ed. <lb/>
Mr. Edwards, says that be can <lb/>
beat W. K. Home, the to- <lb/>
question. We beard <lb/>
one day to is week that if Mr, <lb/>
would come to see him, be would <lb/>
show some tobacco fourteen <lb/>
leaves high besides two bud <lb/>
leaves. <lb/>
Charlie says garden city can <lb/>
boast of prettiest girls in East-, <lb/>
Carolina. Well then that is <lb/>
all right. <lb/>
s Mill section can boast of <lb/>
most industrious man in <lb/>
United States of America. Why <lb/>
do we say so because he is the only <lb/>
man we ever knew or beard of that <lb/>
could fish nine days in each week <lb/>
and do all his work at home. -We <lb/>
the world to beat <lb/>
Mr. Editor, In response to <lb/>
Charlie's question I will to my <lb/>
friend that the reality proceeds in <lb/>
another manner. Barely comes the <lb/>
great events, powerful scenes of <lb/>
passion. They belong In every day <lb/>
life, not to rule but the <lb/>
On that account my good <lb/>
Sit not and wail or <lb/>
urn. Birdie does <lb/>
not propose to give any individual <lb/>
publicity. Birdie thinks a man bas <lb/>
no more God like than love for <lb/>
his beet girl. And It always raises <lb/>
a man in his estimation to know <lb/>
that is not ashamed to display <lb/>
public were It <lb/>
to do No Charlie Birdie <lb/>
chinks it beat sot <lb/>
sprouts. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
Being a constant reader of the <lb/>
can but notice as <lb/>
well as enjoy letters published <lb/>
therein from different parts of <lb/>
seeing that Beaver <lb/>
Dam is lacking for a representative <lb/>
in your columns, we beg space for a <lb/>
few dots. <lb/>
While Beaver Dam is one of the <lb/>
smallest townships in the county <lb/>
she has within her borders some as <lb/>
whole-souled, public and <lb/>
prosperous farmers as any section <lb/>
dare produce. So if Uncle Sam did <lb/>
discontinue our post office we are not <lb/>
quite outside of the world yet. <lb/>
We occasionally have a marriage <lb/>
after which everything wags along <lb/>
as smoothly as before. Some of our <lb/>
magistrates have built up quite a <lb/>
reputation as being expert <lb/>
tors on these occasions. Should <lb/>
one be so busily engaged along <lb/>
another line of work that lie cannot <lb/>
comply called upon there is <lb/>
always another who will cheerfully <lb/>
respond. <lb/>
to the heavy rains this <lb/>
spring Gen. Greene has been a bit- <lb/>
enemy to the tanners, but since <lb/>
the weather settled everybody bas <lb/>
linked down to bard work, the re- <lb/>
result of which is crops are in <lb/>
much better condition. <lb/>
I our people have planted <lb/>
twice as much tobacco as last year. <lb/>
Many predict that in of <lb/>
a few years this plant will be <lb/>
chief moneyed crop of Pitt county. <lb/>
Who to see it as <lb/>
when we take into consideration <lb/>
present prices or cotton, <lb/>
even the prospects for this crop <lb/>
All earnestly that efforts <lb/>
of Mr. B. J. Cobb, our former <lb/>
dent, regard to pushing to com- <lb/>
a tobacco warehouse in <lb/>
Greenville, will be crowned with <lb/>
success. By this means we have a <lb/>
home market, which will necessarily <lb/>
benefit every tobacco raiser in Pitt <lb/>
comity. and others <lb/>
will be sure to follow. <lb/>
Mr. Thomas E. Little <lb/>
tends a large Sunday School at <lb/>
Smith's School House, which con- <lb/>
regularly every Sunday eve- <lb/>
Although school is made <lb/>
up of different denominations, still <lb/>
there is not a discord, everything <lb/>
working in perfect harmony. All <lb/>
who attend spend a pleasant eve- <lb/>
as well as an instructive one. <lb/>
Uncle Tommie is as clever as <lb/>
days are long, any way. <lb/>
farmer friends are on <lb/>
the jury for this term court re- <lb/>
very much having to be absent <lb/>
from their farms at this season of <lb/>
the year when their attention at <lb/>
home is so much needed. <lb/>
Miss Victoria Joyner, who bas <lb/>
been spending some time with her <lb/>
aunt, Mrs, T, A. Nichols, has re <lb/>
turned. Miss is a charming <lb/>
young lady and was center of <lb/>
attraction while over here. <lb/>
Mr. J. Anderson received a <lb/>
letter other day stating his <lb/>
daughter, Miss who is in <lb/>
school at the Seminary, La- <lb/>
Grange, was confined to her room <lb/>
with sickness. mother and <lb/>
grandmother went tr bed side <lb/>
at once. <lb/>
Misses and Alice Nichols <lb/>
are visiting relatives in Wayne <lb/>
county. Somebody is sad. <lb/>
Mr. Isaac Nichols is back <lb/>
BeD <lb/>
not failed to do her duty. The fol- <lb/>
lowing named pupils averaging <lb/>
on examination were entitled to <lb/>
first distinctions, viz, Jodie Mayo <lb/>
lira Essie <lb/>
ton Bullock Theo Brit- <lb/>
ton Bullock Holly <lb/>
Andrews The medal offered <lb/>
for best deportment was awarded to <lb/>
Master Hugh Mayo. <lb/>
performance was extraordinary, <lb/>
each scene being with <lb/>
elegant instrumental music made <lb/>
by Miss Lorena Daily on the organ. <lb/>
Mr. S. T- Carson on the violin and <lb/>
Mr. J. J. Johnston on the <lb/>
After the exercises, beautiful <lb/>
were appropriately presented <lb/>
to Misses Lucy Knight Lorena <lb/>
Daily, are wild waves <lb/>
saying sang by Mr. S. T. Carson <lb/>
and Lorena Daily was elegant. We <lb/>
would like to mention ail char- <lb/>
but that would take too much <lb/>
of your space; so we they will <lb/>
pardon us for mentioning Miss Ma- <lb/>
Flowers as her <lb/>
appearance was beautiful and ma- <lb/>
and we shall not be surprised <lb/>
if sovereignty in hearts of <lb/>
some of our young men this concert <lb/>
and instead of changing mortals to <lb/>
fairies she will be be caught <lb/>
some one of from a single <lb/>
to a married <lb/>
Miss Lucy Knight is a hard work- <lb/>
in school room and her work <lb/>
tells with her pupils. She gets a <lb/>
liberal patronage and deserves it. <lb/>
If our school committeemen would <lb/>
employ such teachers, as she is in- <lb/>
stead of who are not <lb/>
so competent and giving <lb/>
them forty dollars per month, they <lb/>
would do a great deal for our free <lb/>
J. II. J. <lb/>
School. <lb/>
For Sale and Rent. <lb/>
I We the following property for <lb/>
HUB and rent. <lb/>
1- One two-third lot with two <lb/>
four rooms, good <lb/>
house, and stables for live horses. For <lb/>
sale cheap; or rent per month, with <lb/>
stables <lb/>
Two good building lots in Skinner- <lb/>
ville. Desirable locations. <lb/>
One house and halt lot, live rooms, <lb/>
garden and stables, good well water. <lb/>
One house and lot, rive rooms be- <lb/>
sides cook-room and dining room. Two <lb/>
story house, good well of water. <lb/>
For sale or house and lot <lb/>
in single story, six rooms, <lb/>
cook-room and dining room attached; <lb/>
Bent for month. <lb/>
t. acres of land adjoining the Fe- <lb/>
male Institute, property lying on each <lb/>
side of the railroad and near the depot. <lb/>
Good location for dwellings and <lb/>
establishments. <lb/>
Prices of any of the above property <lb/>
made known on application. <lb/>
The two corner stores in the Tyson <lb/>
Building, also severe rooms In the upper <lb/>
story of same building. <lb/>
One house on Pitt Street owned by <lb/>
Mrs. P. E. Dancy. Has eight rooms, <lb/>
good yard and garden. For rout per <lb/>
month. Nicely finished house, <lb/>
location. <lb/>
We make the collection of rents a <lb/>
If you contemplate buying, <lb/>
ling, or renting, call and sec us, or <lb/>
respond with us. <lb/>
Whichard, <lb/>
Estate Agents, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
BETHEL ITEMS. <lb/>
Bethel, N. June 8th, <lb/>
Messrs Little and Mark <lb/>
Cherry returned home from Chapel <lb/>
Hill last Saturday morning to spend <lb/>
vacation. <lb/>
Quite a number of drummers were <lb/>
in Bethel during the last week. <lb/>
Cool nights and excessive rains <lb/>
make crops in this vicinity look <lb/>
very bad. <lb/>
The friends of Mrs. J, L. Nelson <lb/>
are glad u welcome her home again <lb/>
where she been <lb/>
staving with Prof. for <lb/>
the last six months. <lb/>
Prof. and family are <lb/>
expected here in a few days on a <lb/>
visit. <lb/>
A little four year old girl of Mr. <lb/>
Mack Bullock, was playing with a <lb/>
eat one day last week when the cat <lb/>
got away from her and ran into the <lb/>
smoke house, and in order to run <lb/>
eat oat, she procured a match <lb/>
and art the on fire and burned <lb/>
it <lb/>
closing exercises of Miss <lb/>
Lucy Knight's school took place <lb/>
last Friday night. There was m <lb/>
large crowd people in attendance <lb/>
and all wore highly entertained. <lb/>
by the <lb/>
that the had <lb/>
HAMILTON COMMENCEMENT. <lb/>
Wednesday, the day of June, <lb/>
bright and beautiful and as <lb/>
early as nine o'clock, people from <lb/>
every direction might be seen wend- <lb/>
their way into the prosperous <lb/>
and beautiful little of Hamil- <lb/>
ton, N. C. to attend the annual com- <lb/>
of J. L, <lb/>
school, for they well knew that be <lb/>
had treat store for them <lb/>
At ten o'clock academy bell <lb/>
and in a short time the <lb/>
was full with the elite and <lb/>
beautiful of this and adjoining <lb/>
ties. At eleven o'clock the orator <lb/>
of the day, Mr. Geo. B. King, of <lb/>
Greenville, entered hall. He <lb/>
was introduced to- the audience by <lb/>
Dr. H. J. Clark few chaste and <lb/>
elegant remarks. His subject was <lb/>
education and we never heard it <lb/>
handled in a more masterly manner. <lb/>
His tribute to our beloved Vance <lb/>
was grand and beautiful. We <lb/>
think he sowed good seed in Ham- <lb/>
which will eventually bear <lb/>
much fruit. The ladies especially <lb/>
admired him, for by his remarks be <lb/>
seemed to know their true worth. <lb/>
After Mr. King closed his address <lb/>
Mr. Harry Stubbs, of Williamston, <lb/>
in bis usual flow of oratory present- <lb/>
ed the medals to two successful <lb/>
pupils, Mist Doughty and <lb/>
Master Gordon <lb/>
This is the second time Miss <lb/>
Doughty baa received the medal, <lb/>
but she came very near losing it <lb/>
this time in person Miss Car- <lb/>
Howard, of who <lb/>
stood second. This ended the <lb/>
the morning. Mr. Flem <lb/>
ming extended a cordial invitation <lb/>
to all to come to tee concert at <lb/>
night. As early as sunset the <lb/>
began to assemble at the <lb/>
academy. Promptly at eight <lb/>
o'clock exercises were opened <lb/>
an interesting <lb/>
It If bard to discriminate when <lb/>
m . we, J men- <lb/>
all did so v. <lb/>
a Arc. . <lb/>
by Miss Daisy who is <lb/>
fair representative of flower <lb/>
whose name she bears, was <lb/>
rendered. <lb/>
played by Misses Nannie <lb/>
and Lizzie Howell was well <lb/>
Mr. Walter Howard's speech <lb/>
was without a flaw. <lb/>
bury brought the house down <lb/>
his nigger and the mule. The mu- <lb/>
sic reflected great honor on Miss <lb/>
Pearce, the teacher, she bas only <lb/>
had charge the pupils for ten <lb/>
months and we never saw such pro- <lb/>
We are sorry to bear she <lb/>
will not return again and envy the <lb/>
school that will be so fortunate as <lb/>
to secure her services. <lb/>
citizens Hamilton are sore <lb/>
over Mr. Flemming's departure for <lb/>
be will not return again. He is a <lb/>
young of push, pluck and <lb/>
and has been most successful in <lb/>
bis efforts to instruct of <lb/>
our town. understand he con- <lb/>
templates the practice of law and <lb/>
if he wields the legal as <lb/>
well as be knows bow to teach the <lb/>
idea at the older <lb/>
heads at the bar may well look to <lb/>
their laurels. We wish him every <lb/>
N. <lb/>
REWARD. <lb/>
State of Carolina, <lb/>
Executive Department. <lb/>
Whereas, official information has been <lb/>
received, at this department that John <lb/>
it. Moore, late of the County of <lb/>
Pitt stands charged with Shooting <lb/>
William Moore from ambush. And <lb/>
whereas, it appears that the said John K. <lb/>
Moore has fled the State, or so conceals <lb/>
himself that the ordinary process of law <lb/>
cannot be served upon <lb/>
Now, Therefore, I, Thomas M. Holt, <lb/>
Governor of the State of North Carolina, <lb/>
by virtue of authority In me vested by <lb/>
law, do issue this my Proclamation, <lb/>
offering a reward of Two Hundred Dollars <lb/>
for the apprehension and delivery of the <lb/>
John H. Moore to the Sheriff of <lb/>
Pitt county, at the Court in <lb/>
Greenville, and I do enjoin all officers <lb/>
the State, and all good citizens, to assist <lb/>
in bringing said criminal to justice. <lb/>
Done at our City of Raleigh, <lb/>
the 28th day of May, in the <lb/>
year of Lord one thous- <lb/>
and eight hundred and nine- <lb/>
one, and in the one <lb/>
and fifteenth year of our <lb/>
American Independence. <lb/>
M. Holt. <lb/>
By the <lb/>
S. F. Private Sec. <lb/>
S v yea <lb/>
f HEAL am <lb/>
DESCRIPTION. <lb/>
A dark complected white man <lb/>
old, black hair streaked with gray, blue <lb/>
eyes, height feet inches, weight <lb/>
about pounds, wears a No. shoe <lb/>
hat, has gold fillings In his front . <lb/>
very prominent. <lb/>
PLANTERS HOES, <lb/>
Hardware of <lb/>
PLOWS. <lb/>
All for sale cheap for <lb/>
CASH <lb/>
Latham <lb/>
Greenville, V, o. <lb/>
GENTS FURNISHING GOODS, <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
Our stock of <lb/>
is very <lb/>
Shoes and Slip- <lb/>
attractive. We <lb/>
think we can suit you both in <lb/>
quality and fit. One of the lead- <lb/>
Shoes with us is our Opera <lb/>
Toe with Common Sense Heel. <lb/>
This is a long felt want with the <lb/>
ladies. <lb/>
In Men and Boys Shoes we <lb/>
have in stock and to arrive the <lb/>
best line eyer carried by us. <lb/>
We carry the largest and beat <lb/>
selected stock of Furniture <lb/>
our town and will sell at price <lb/>
to please. <lb/>
We hare a nice lino of Mat- <lb/>
tings which we will sell at low <lb/>
figures. <lb/>
In Children Carriages we <lb/>
the best and prettiest line ever <lb/>
We have sold L. M. Reynold's <lb/>
Shoes for the past two years and <lb/>
find them to be the best line ever <lb/>
handled by us. This spring we <lb/>
will have a complete line of <lb/>
these Shoes and when our friends <lb/>
are in need of good shoes we <lb/>
will be pleased to serve them. <lb/>
carried us <lb/>
We realize the importance of <lb/>
selling goods at a small profit. <lb/>
We do not claim to sell goods <lb/>
at cost, but do claim and back <lb/>
up our assertion, that we will <lb/>
you honest goods for <lb/>
honest money. <lb/>
See Us Talk With Us Try Us <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
BROWN BROS., <lb/>
SELLING----- <lb/>
SHOES. SHOES, <lb/>
AT REDUCED <lb/>
an <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
MILLINERY <lb/>
I take pleasure In announcing to the <lb/>
people of and the <lb/>
country that my <lb/>
-SPRING STOCK <lb/>
is now arriving and ready for <lb/>
I have secured the f a <lb/>
City will execute work to <lb/>
suit the fastidious taste. The new <lb/>
stock will be sold at the lowest margin <lb/>
that millinery goods have ever been <lb/>
handled before in this market, <lb/>
Ann a splendid line of Fancy Goods, <lb/>
consisting of Steel Engravings, <lb/>
Paintings, Picture ramp <lb/>
Tablets, Goods, China and <lb/>
Vases, Jewelry, Lace Curtains, <lb/>
Linen Shades. Ac These will be sold <lb/>
out a cost as they must be disposed of <lb/>
by the lost of June. All who wish to <lb/>
make great bargains for <lb/>
should call at once and see m before <lb/>
purchasing elsewhere. <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in STAPLE AND FANCY <lb/>
and FLOUR-SPECIALTIES <lb/>
g Car Load Peed Oats. Car load Corn, Car load No. Hay, <lb/>
Sm Car Load Rib Side Meat, Car Load St. Louis <lb/>
Heavy Mess Pork, Granulated Sugar. <lb/>
Sugar. Ax Snuff, all <lb/>
Bail Road Mills Snuff. Snuff. <lb/>
Rico Molasses, Tubs Boston Lard. <lb/>
Star Lye, Gross Matches. <lb/>
Also full Use Raking Powders, Soda, Soap, Starch, Tobacco, Cigars, <lb/>
Cairo, Crackers, Candles, Canned Goods, Wrapping Paper, Paper <lb/>
Special prices given to the wholesale trade on large quantities of tan <lb/>
above <lb/>
J. A. GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Wire Tobacco <lb/>
CAN BE USED IN ANY BARN. <lb/>
Win t rm and <lb/>
laths Market. <lb/>
when Om <lb/>
t . . <lb/>
wins BUm. <lb/>
ration on t <lb/>
per . <lb/>
Stick ass <lb/>
tr Treatise Tobacco <lb/>
AGENT <lb/>
TOBACCO Houston, Halifax to., to. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017499_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
M. R. LANG'S COLUMN. <lb/>
M. R. LANG. <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Sparks <lb/>
THIS WEEK. <lb/>
We offer <lb/>
25.000<lb/>
25.000 <lb/>
14.000 <lb/>
23.000 <lb/>
25.000 <lb/>
25.000 <lb/>
YARDS <lb/>
various styles wash <lb/>
including, <lb/>
Ginghams, <lb/>
Gingham, Ginghams <lb/>
Ginghams. Ginghams, <lb/>
Ginghams, Ginghams, <lb/>
Gingham. Ginghams, <lb/>
Ginghams, Ginghams, <lb/>
Ginghams, Ginghams, <lb/>
Ginghams, Ginghams, <lb/>
Ginghams, Ginghams, <lb/>
Ginghams, Ginghams <lb/>
Ginghams. <lb/>
Lawn <lb/>
La<lb/>
Outings, <lb/>
-AT <lb/>
REDUCED PRICES <lb/>
Vacation. <lb/>
Granulated Sugar per <lb/>
pound at Young <lb/>
Court is in session. <lb/>
The New Home Sewing Machine <lb/>
for Halo by J. C Lanier, <lb/>
Wedding near by to-night. <lb/>
Granulated Sugar cents per <lb/>
pound at Young <lb/>
Don't forget to list your taxes. <lb/>
are in market. <lb/>
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well <lb/>
and sick at the Old Crick Store. <lb/>
There is a great deal of sickness. <lb/>
Granulated Sugar cents per <lb/>
pound at Young <lb/>
Ointment will care <lb/>
any skin disease on man or beast. <lb/>
Greenville Institute commence- <lb/>
to-day. <lb/>
Granulated Sugar cents per <lb/>
pound at Young <lb/>
Point Flour is always uniform <lb/>
in quality at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Washington is preparing to <lb/>
the 4th of July. <lb/>
Granulated Sugar cents per <lb/>
pound at Young <lb/>
Ob, my those pretty ties for <lb/>
Gents and Ladies at <lb/>
Apple Cider Vinegar for <lb/>
cents per gallon at Young <lb/>
Next week the <lb/>
meets at Morehead. <lb/>
bushels Jersey Yellow Po- <lb/>
Slips, for sale, apply to <lb/>
H. <lb/>
Apple Cigar Vinegar for <lb/>
cents pr gallon at Young <lb/>
Wanted fob Bees- <lb/>
wax and Bides, at Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Last week brought a large <lb/>
drummers in town. <lb/>
They are K <lb/>
Go's fine Shoes for Ladies at Higgs <lb/>
Pare Apple Cigar Vinegar for <lb/>
cents pr gallon at Young <lb/>
is nourishing <lb/>
and strengthening, at Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Miss. Lizzie Bedding is visiting is <lb/>
Wilson. <lb/>
Miss Purvis of Hamilton <lb/>
is visiting friends in town. <lb/>
Mr. R. F. Patrick has the prettiest <lb/>
patch of cotton the county. <lb/>
Mrs. Grifton, is vis- <lb/>
father Mr. W. M. King. <lb/>
Friend Joe Blow was on the sick <lb/>
list last week but is now out again- <lb/>
M. T of Virginia is <lb/>
visiting Superior Court Clerk E. A. <lb/>
Miss Clark, Washington <lb/>
is visiting Misses Lillie and <lb/>
Carrie Cobb. <lb/>
A BIG HAUL. <lb/>
a Ban to <lb/>
Attract the Inmate- Their <lb/>
Emus tad Plunder the Rout <lb/>
Two Arrested <lb/>
sat Barely Escape <lb/>
Lynching. <lb/>
Fob Spanish Pea- <lb/>
nuts and Cow Peas at the Old Brick <lb/>
Stone- <lb/>
Friday and Saturday last were <lb/>
most cool enough for fires again. <lb/>
Pure Apple Vinegar for <lb/>
cents pr gallon at Young <lb/>
If has weak eyes or <lb/>
scratches, <lb/>
Bedsteads, Bureaus, <lb/>
Mattresses at the Old <lb/>
Our Summer Stock. <lb/>
Mens, Youths, and Boys <lb/>
READY MADE CLOTHING, <lb/>
At Greatly Reduced Prices. <lb/>
O- <lb/>
Every Department <lb/>
will the effect <lb/>
sale <lb/>
Don't Fail to Come, <lb/>
H. R LANG. <lb/>
M. B COLUMN <lb/>
Cheapest <lb/>
Cradles <lb/>
Brick <lb/>
G. E. new advertisement <lb/>
in this issue must be read by all. <lb/>
Pure Apple Vinegar for <lb/>
pr gallon at Young <lb/>
A handsome line of Sample No- <lb/>
at almost one-half value at <lb/>
Higgs <lb/>
Just received New Spring Butter <lb/>
and finest Cream Cheese at the Old <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
The best in town can be <lb/>
had at the Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
have just re- <lb/>
anew stock Colored Mulls, <lb/>
White and Black Lawns, and other <lb/>
Summer Dress Goods of latest <lb/>
styles and patterns. <lb/>
For sale tons of cotton seed <lb/>
meal. Apply to Tarboro Oil Mills, <lb/>
Tarboro, N. C. <lb/>
Go to Tyson's if you <lb/>
want a good smoke and get a <lb/>
den Seal Cigar. <lb/>
Hear inimitable Henry Blount <lb/>
to-day at the Opera House, o'clock. <lb/>
Young have re- <lb/>
a new stock of Colored Mulls, <lb/>
White and Black Lawns, and other <lb/>
Summer Dress Goods of the latest <lb/>
styles and patterns. <lb/>
Con file ton Tyson keep a fine <lb/>
line of California fruits and other <lb/>
fine canned goods. <lb/>
Go's fine <lb/>
grade Celebrated Coffee <lb/>
kept by Congleton Tyson. <lb/>
it a trial. <lb/>
Young hare just re- <lb/>
a new Colored Malls, <lb/>
White and Black Lawns, and other <lb/>
Summer Dress Goods of latest <lb/>
styles and patterns. <lb/>
Greenville was well represented at <lb/>
the James School commencement at <lb/>
Grifton. <lb/>
If yon. want something nice go to <lb/>
Congleton and get some <lb/>
of their New Spring Batter <lb/>
rived to-day. <lb/>
Fob third interest <lb/>
the Greenville Institute property. <lb/>
For terms apply to. <lb/>
John Docket t <lb/>
Wishing to dispose of oar cheap- <lb/>
brands of Floor we will sell them <lb/>
at cost for next thirty days. <lb/>
Yon on bar just re- <lb/>
a new stock of Colored Mails, <lb/>
White and Black Lawns, and other <lb/>
Summer Goods of latest <lb/>
styles and patterns. <lb/>
have re- <lb/>
a new stock of Colored Malls, <lb/>
White and Black Lawns, and other <lb/>
Dress Goods of the latest <lb/>
styles and patterns. <lb/>
have <lb/>
received a car load of <lb/>
Walter A. Wood Mowing <lb/>
Machines Horse Bakes which <lb/>
we will sell Write as tor <lb/>
circular and price. P. <lb/>
k CO., Tarboro. . <lb/>
Don't fail to call inspect the <lb/>
goods no my cent counters. <lb/>
Things that will surprise you. A <lb/>
beautiful line of bridal presents just <lb/>
arrived. Picture frames of all site <lb/>
and shapes a specialty. Art mate- <lb/>
rial kept constantly on hand. <lb/>
Prof. W. J. Matthews left yesterday <lb/>
morning to attend Wake Forest com- <lb/>
Dr. Charles return- <lb/>
ed last week from attending lectures <lb/>
in New York. <lb/>
Mr. J. D. Murphy, of Asheville, <lb/>
came down Friday to be present at <lb/>
this term of court. <lb/>
The editors household thanks Mrs. <lb/>
Emily Harris for a basket of snap <lb/>
beans sent us Monday. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. V. L Stephens and <lb/>
child of Wilson, spent part of last <lb/>
week with Mr. and Mrs Cornelius <lb/>
Stephens. <lb/>
Messrs. E. A. Jr., H. W. <lb/>
W. F. and F. C. Harding <lb/>
returned home last week from <lb/>
State University. <lb/>
Friend Alex wan con- <lb/>
fined at home with sickness a few <lb/>
days of last week. We were glad to <lb/>
see him at the store again Monday. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. of Dur <lb/>
ham have made Greenville their <lb/>
home. Mr. has accepted a <lb/>
position with the Greenville Marble <lb/>
Works. <lb/>
Prof. J. L. Fleming, an excellent <lb/>
young roan of this county, who since <lb/>
graduating at Wake Forest has been <lb/>
principal of Hamilton Institute, is <lb/>
now reading law in Greenville under <lb/>
Messrs. Latham Skinner. <lb/>
Col. Harry Skinner, of town, <lb/>
recently made addresses at <lb/>
cements in <lb/>
an Oxford. We hare seen the <lb/>
papers speaking very highly of him. <lb/>
As an orator the Colonel is seldom <lb/>
surpassed. <lb/>
The interest at Court brings money <lb/>
people to town this week. <lb/>
The is <lb/>
warehouse. All talk has not been <lb/>
in vain. <lb/>
If you want a good home paper <lb/>
take the Reflector. All it costs is <lb/>
a dollar a year. <lb/>
There arc still several bad places <lb/>
in some of the plank pavements in <lb/>
front of the business houses. <lb/>
Read the double advertisement on <lb/>
page of this issue of Jas. L. Lit <lb/>
tie Co., and abide by what it tells <lb/>
you. <lb/>
Render, help us Reflector <lb/>
list. Say a word to your <lb/>
neighbor and tell him it costs only <lb/>
a dollar. <lb/>
M. B. Lang has a new advertise- <lb/>
in issue and we call your <lb/>
attention to it. He is making the <lb/>
prices hum. <lb/>
If any person desires to procure <lb/>
the services of a good white woman <lb/>
for or weeks please report to the <lb/>
Reflector office. <lb/>
This is the happiest season the <lb/>
year for the boys and girls just out <lb/>
of school. The Reflector hopes <lb/>
they will have an i <lb/>
vacation. <lb/>
The Bible depositary at Brown <lb/>
store has just received a large <lb/>
lot of Bibles and Testaments. They <lb/>
are at the lowest price ever offered in <lb/>
country. <lb/>
Dr. Marquis the dentist informs <lb/>
us that in side of a week he will have <lb/>
a new remedy of his own to extract <lb/>
teeth with out pain with out the use <lb/>
of Gas or either. <lb/>
At the meeting of the Town <lb/>
last Tuesday night, complaints <lb/>
were made about the offensiveness of <lb/>
certain stables and lots in town. No <lb/>
doubt the evil will be remedied. <lb/>
We had some talks with farmers <lb/>
this week but the Reflector is so <lb/>
crowded to-day that we have not <lb/>
space to publish them. There has <lb/>
been much rain and cool the <lb/>
past week and crop prospects are not <lb/>
much improved. <lb/>
Our Grifton readers and probably <lb/>
some others may wonder why <lb/>
appears in this issue of the <lb/>
about the James School <lb/>
Commencement last Friday. The <lb/>
reason is Just as we were in <lb/>
midst of the write of the com- <lb/>
we were called elsewhere <lb/>
to attend upon matters which could <lb/>
not be postponed, and this <lb/>
stance prevented the article being <lb/>
finished in time for this paper. So <lb/>
rather than let part of It appear we <lb/>
decided to leave the whole article over <lb/>
until next issue. <lb/>
New Schedule. <lb/>
On Monday of this week <lb/>
road authorities began a new schedule <lb/>
freight trains on this branch <lb/>
of the road that will prove a great <lb/>
convenience to people along the line. <lb/>
The freight will passenger ac- <lb/>
and on Mondays. <lb/>
Wednesdays and Fridays, going <lb/>
South, the train will pass Greenville <lb/>
at r. n, reaching Kinston in <lb/>
time to connect with the East bound <lb/>
A. A N. C. train for Morehead. On <lb/>
Tuesdays, and Saturdays <lb/>
the accommodation freight will leave <lb/>
Kinston at . after the arrival <lb/>
of the train from Morehead, end <lb/>
reach Greenville at noon. <lb/>
think of Our Greenville people <lb/>
can leave their homes at r. m. and <lb/>
reach in for sapper, <lb/>
and returning can take breakfast at <lb/>
and be home in time for <lb/>
dinner. A more convenient <lb/>
could not be asked for. Since the <lb/>
change Agent Moore has written to <lb/>
the general office asking for a new <lb/>
rate over this route which will be <lb/>
much lower than that around the <lb/>
other way. The company are en <lb/>
titled to thanks for this <lb/>
did . <lb/>
There was no little excitement in <lb/>
Greenville, last Friday evening, when <lb/>
it was learned that on the night <lb/>
some one had fired n of <lb/>
Mr. Joel Gardner, a wealthy farmer, <lb/>
and while his family were out at <lb/>
fire stole a trunk from bis house <lb/>
which contained in money and <lb/>
in notes and papers. <lb/>
Early Friday morning an <lb/>
of surroundings was com- <lb/>
and following up some tracks <lb/>
led to suspicion and subsequent <lb/>
arrest of two colored men, Moses <lb/>
Stancill end Bryant Atkinson. In a <lb/>
canoe, which belonged to one of them <lb/>
in a creek near by and toward which <lb/>
tracks lead, were found pieces of <lb/>
paper and scraps of the trunk lining. <lb/>
Floating in the creek were some <lb/>
pieces of paper, a small tin <lb/>
and a cigar box which were in the <lb/>
large trunk before it was stolen. <lb/>
The two were taken to <lb/>
Penny Hill late in the evening, and <lb/>
an examination held before Justice <lb/>
L Sufficient evidence was <lb/>
found against them and the Justice <lb/>
ordered that they be brought to <lb/>
Greenville and committed to jail to <lb/>
await the Court. It was sometime <lb/>
after night when officers-------Hodges <lb/>
and D. C. Barrow left Penny Hill <lb/>
with the two prisoners, each officer <lb/>
having a prisoner in his buggy. <lb/>
After traveling a mile or two the I <lb/>
lead horse suddenly stopped and <lb/>
could not be urged forward. An in- <lb/>
showed that the floor of a <lb/>
bridge just ahead of them had been <lb/>
torn up. It is supposed that friends <lb/>
of prisoners had done this, think- <lb/>
that one officer would bring both <lb/>
prisoners and that while the officer <lb/>
was replacing the bridge the prison- <lb/>
might be able to effect an escape. <lb/>
As it happened, however, one officer <lb/>
guarded the prisoners while the <lb/>
other repaired the bridge and they <lb/>
went on their way again. <lb/>
The buggies kept about a hundred <lb/>
yards apart, officer Barrow in the <lb/>
lead. A few miles further, when <lb/>
about two miles below the scene of <lb/>
the robbery, both buggies were stop- <lb/>
again, this time by squads of <lb/>
men at each buggy. Officer Hodges <lb/>
to a Reflector reporter that he did <lb/>
not know what was going on at <lb/>
front buggy except that he heard <lb/>
prisoner being dragged out and taken <lb/>
in the wot Is. At his buggy the <lb/>
same thing was going on, two men <lb/>
taking charge of the officer and ad- <lb/>
him to keep bis mouth <lb/>
shut while several others were taking <lb/>
bis prisoner, Bryant Atkinson, a few <lb/>
yards in the woods. He heard them <lb/>
preparing rape and bending down a <lb/>
tree. When they were swinging <lb/>
Atkinson he said if they would not <lb/>
kill him he would find the money. <lb/>
They took him back to where he said <lb/>
the money was hid, but he was so <lb/>
frightened and so tied with ropes <lb/>
that he could net find it. However, <lb/>
he Skid he would go with anybody <lb/>
next day or any time after the money. <lb/>
The crowd again placed the prisoners <lb/>
in charge of the officers to be brought <lb/>
on to town. <lb/>
Next morning <lb/>
Sheriff King to carry him out <lb/>
there and he would find the money. <lb/>
The Deputy carried him out and <lb/>
some searching scratched out a <lb/>
shot bag that had been buried beside <lb/>
an old log near the creek. The <lb/>
Deputy brought the prisoner and <lb/>
money back to town. When <lb/>
money was counted the sack con- <lb/>
in gold, something over <lb/>
in currency and enough silver <lb/>
to make the total amount 93,325.26. <lb/>
Both of the in jail told <lb/>
tales about how the money <lb/>
came to be where it was found. <lb/>
Mr. Gardner lives about miles <lb/>
from Greenville, on the North side of <lb/>
the river toward Penny Hill, and it <lb/>
was known that he was wealthy. He <lb/>
kept his money and valuable papers <lb/>
in an old trunk in his bed room. <lb/>
After this part of the stolen money <lb/>
was found word was sent to him and <lb/>
be came to town Saturday afternoon. <lb/>
In reply to a question from the re- <lb/>
porter as to how much money he <lb/>
thought was lost, he said he could <lb/>
not say positively, but he <lb/>
had little more than cash in <lb/>
the trunk and or in <lb/>
notes. In the money he knew of one <lb/>
particular package containing <lb/>
composed entirely of bills and <lb/>
bills, in that which was <lb/>
found there was no bill a larger <lb/>
denomination than In reference <lb/>
to the loss by fire he said the barn <lb/>
contained barrels of corn, bales <lb/>
of cotton, bushels cotton seed and <lb/>
farming implements. Of the cotton <lb/>
bales were and about or <lb/>
barrels of corn, though the lat- <lb/>
is badly damage. <lb/>
Mr Gardner seemed to take bis <lb/>
loss very cheerfully and was thank <lb/>
that so much of the money had <lb/>
been found. His daughter at or <lb/>
near the house and saw the robbers <lb/>
when they wore running away with <lb/>
the <lb/>
It the largest and boldest rob <lb/>
that has ever occurred in the <lb/>
county. <lb/>
Friday evening another colored <lb/>
man, Sam was taken before <lb/>
Justice and there <lb/>
evidence him for <lb/>
to be committed to Jail. <lb/>
GREEN VI LE MALE ACADEMY. <lb/>
Local Awarded, <lb/>
The exercises of the first <lb/>
session of C Male Academy, <lb/>
under the of Prof. W. J. <lb/>
Matthews, M the Opera House last <lb/>
Thursday night, afforded our people <lb/>
an evening of splendid <lb/>
In order to give the exercises a <lb/>
version from only declamations, Prof. <lb/>
Matthews secured the assistance of <lb/>
some of our young ladies who render- <lb/>
ed several delightful songs. He also <lb/>
stated that at the close of <lb/>
a gold medal would be awarded <lb/>
the student making best <lb/>
a committee having been <lb/>
chosen who would pass upon them. <lb/>
. The hall was filled with a large <lb/>
audience and they listened <lb/>
to the <lb/>
Opening and go a <lb/>
Misses Annie <lb/>
Lillie Wilson, Carrie Latham, Annie <lb/>
Barnhill, I me r Sugg and Lula <lb/>
White. <lb/>
Louis <lb/>
Ashley Reformers <lb/>
are <lb/>
Marion <lb/>
J. B. White and T. E. Randolph <lb/>
Rival <lb/>
B, Pittman on <lb/>
the <lb/>
John Great- <lb/>
Charles <lb/>
A, W. Begin- <lb/>
Vocal Sister <lb/>
Misses Carrie Latham and Annie <lb/>
Sheppard. <lb/>
O. E. Warren and R E. Cox <lb/>
English <lb/>
T. E. and Times <lb/>
of the <lb/>
W. B. of Flat- <lb/>
L. H. I <lb/>
Thunk a <lb/>
O. E. South Faith- <lb/>
to her <lb/>
J. B. San Francisco <lb/>
J. B. Yellowley, <lb/>
Vocal Harp of the <lb/>
Misses Annie and <lb/>
Carrie Latham. <lb/>
After was through, <lb/>
the committee, Messrs. Henry Hard- <lb/>
E. A. and A. L. Blow, held <lb/>
a consultation and awarded the <lb/>
medal to Mr. O. E. Warren. It was <lb/>
presented by Maj. Harding in some <lb/>
well chosen words. <lb/>
Prof. John surprised <lb/>
Prof. Matthews, and the audience as <lb/>
well, by stepping upon stage <lb/>
with a large box in bis hand neatly <lb/>
done up. He said this box contain- <lb/>
ed he knew not what, but it bore fin <lb/>
express and also a request that <lb/>
it be delivered to Prof. Matthews <lb/>
immediately after be clone of the <lb/>
exercises, and the pleasure of <lb/>
it had fallen upon him. In his <lb/>
remarks Prof. Duckett made a very <lb/>
nice pun which we will not give away <lb/>
even if we are more that a <lb/>
throw out of the way. Prof. Mat- <lb/>
thews opened the box in the presence <lb/>
of the audience and exhibited to <lb/>
their view a lovely of ex- <lb/>
flowers, for which he express- <lb/>
ed many thanks to the sender. <lb/>
Prof. Matthews announced that <lb/>
the date for opening the fall session <lb/>
had not been definitely fixed as yet, <lb/>
but would be latter part of Au- <lb/>
gust or early in September. <lb/>
Prof. Matthews has been in Green- <lb/>
ville not quite a year but has made <lb/>
hosts of here We hope the <lb/>
patronage of his school will be large- <lb/>
increased next session. <lb/>
The Reflector has not space to <lb/>
comment separately upon all the <lb/>
declamations in the above <lb/>
and will only mention two. While <lb/>
Mr. Warren's was the best <lb/>
of the evening and reflected <lb/>
much credit him for the ex- <lb/>
manner in which it was <lb/>
one of little <lb/>
IS deserving of special men- <lb/>
For a boy of his age it was <lb/>
just splendid and we have heard a <lb/>
large number of compliments paid <lb/>
him. The singing also must be <lb/>
mentioned, especially the duels by <lb/>
Misses Carrie Latham and Annie <lb/>
Their selections were <lb/>
beautiful and they sang so sweetly as <lb/>
to give much delight to audience. <lb/>
HUM <lb/>
Warehouse Meeting--The <lb/>
Meeting <lb/>
row sad the Work <lb/>
According to previous notice the <lb/>
subscribers to the tobacco warehouse <lb/>
met in the Court House, last Friday, <lb/>
for the purpose of electing officers <lb/>
taking such other steps as were <lb/>
necessary for organization. A com- <lb/>
consisting of C. W. <lb/>
G T. Tyson, R. J. W. <lb/>
Allen, J. It. Williams, R. J. Cobb, I. <lb/>
A. Sugg and Harry Skinner was <lb/>
pointed to select officers and prepare <lb/>
suitable by-laws. The following <lb/>
officers were <lb/>
R. J. <lb/>
C. W. <lb/>
J. B. <lb/>
J. L. <lb/>
meeting then-adjourned to as- <lb/>
again to morrow morning at <lb/>
o'clock to receive the report of the <lb/>
on by-laws. Let there be <lb/>
a full attendance. <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
The Register of Deeds for Pitt <lb/>
county issued marriage licenses to <lb/>
the following couples during the <lb/>
month of <lb/>
and Mag <lb/>
Jones, John Windham and Emily <lb/>
Thomas, Jesse Warren and Helen <lb/>
Ricks, J. W. Duncan and Clara Nora <lb/>
Joyner, Reuben Mayo and Nannie <lb/>
A. George Harris and Katie <lb/>
Harris, Hugh Cobb and Bettie <lb/>
Thomas A. Carson and Cora <lb/>
Highsmith, Andrews and Eve- <lb/>
line Nelson, J. B. Edwards and Ella <lb/>
Harrington. J T. Dixon and Lula E. <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
Lewis and Lucy <lb/>
Ward, and Maggie <lb/>
Gorham, Mark Thomas and Olivia <lb/>
Whitehurst, Joshua and Ollie <lb/>
Cannon Wilson Mary <lb/>
Peyton Nettle and Susan <lb/>
Hardy, Rufus Phillips and <lb/>
Randolph. <lb/>
done Meet Elate. <lb/>
Weather unfavorable. <lb/>
Farmers are badly behind. <lb/>
Crops are very poor except pea- <lb/>
nuts which are looking well. <lb/>
Farmers are and <lb/>
cents per day for hands. <lb/>
It is talked that Mr. Frank Hitch <lb/>
will take his road from the <lb/>
branch to Tarboro. Mr. <lb/>
J. B. Edgerton was in town last <lb/>
week looking after property belong- <lb/>
to railroad company. <lb/>
Mrs. H. James, of Greenville, <lb/>
and Mrs. J. B. Andrews, of <lb/>
ville, are visiting Mr. J. H. Wain- <lb/>
right, their brother, near place. <lb/>
A mad dog was killed in town <lb/>
Saturday. It was shot several <lb/>
times by Mr. M. Whitehurst <lb/>
finally killed by a piece of rail. <lb/>
Blue Jay. <lb/>
-Having just purchased two big lots of- <lb/>
Sample Notions <lb/>
Comprising everything in <lb/>
the notion <lb/>
-them at <lb/>
line, we to sell <lb/>
NEW YORK COST <lb/>
We are now making an extra effort to close out our entire sum- <lb/>
mer stock, which we propose to do, at less than their <lb/>
value. Also propose to sell our entire stock of <lb/>
at cost to make room for fall stock. sure to Come <lb/>
when in need of anything in the way of Dress Goods, <lb/>
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, <lb/>
Yours truly, <lb/>
In front Old Brick Store. <lb/>
to Bee us <lb/>
Notions, <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
OCRACOKE. <lb/>
Most Popular Summer <lb/>
We arc authorized to say that <lb/>
Hotel will be open for <lb/>
guests on June 15th, and that <lb/>
passengers will be transported on sail <lb/>
vessels until July 1st, when <lb/>
steamboat will make regular <lb/>
trips to and from Washington. <lb/>
The management will be in the <lb/>
hands of Spencer Bros., who have <lb/>
cured a caterer of years experience <lb/>
to look after the table. <lb/>
A band has also been provided and a <lb/>
piano for the use of the ladies will be <lb/>
in place. There will be dances, sail- <lb/>
fishing and bathing in abundance, <lb/>
and Ocracoke will be a popular resort <lb/>
this summer. Spencer Bros, have <lb/>
large experience will <lb/>
make it. comfortable and pleasant for <lb/>
all. <lb/>
Many Persons <lb/>
An broken down from overwork or <lb/>
Brown's Iron Bitters <lb/>
the system, remove ox- <lb/>
of bile, and cores malaria. G el <lb/>
A Broad Assertion. <lb/>
Simmer Bate. <lb/>
The following railroad rates will <lb/>
prevail through the summer. Tickets <lb/>
for trip will be Mile from <lb/>
June let until September good <lb/>
to return until October <lb/>
Asheville, via Gold shore, or <lb/>
Selma, <lb/>
Hot Springs, Goldsboro <lb/>
or Selma, 18.50 <lb/>
Black Mountain, via Golds- <lb/>
ox Selma, <lb/>
Waynesville, via Goldsboro or <lb/>
or Selma, 13.20 <lb/>
Morehead, via 8.90 <lb/>
Virginia Beach, via Weldon, <lb/>
or Hobgood, and N. A- 6.65 <lb/>
7.76 <lb/>
lino Beach, <lb/>
Bates to are <lb/>
at to toe above, <lb/>
i. ft. Agent <lb/>
For <lb/>
A letter from Spencer Bros., pro- <lb/>
informs us that they have <lb/>
secured the splendid and safe steam- <lb/>
Alpha from J. K. Clark, for <lb/>
the run between Washington and <lb/>
Ocracoke this summer. A large <lb/>
house sufficient to accommodate <lb/>
passengers will be built on the <lb/>
steamer. Her first trip to <lb/>
will be made Saturday night, June <lb/>
20th, at which time the hotel will be <lb/>
opened. As soon the regular <lb/>
schedule of the Alpha and river <lb/>
steamers can be made up we will give <lb/>
it to our readers. Ocracoke lovers <lb/>
hereabout will be delighted at <lb/>
excellent arrangement for reaching <lb/>
that splendid resort. <lb/>
St. Vest Week. <lb/>
The ladies of the Church <lb/>
have been so fortunate as to secure <lb/>
the services of Rev. Dr. John J. <lb/>
for a lecture for the benefit of <lb/>
their parsonage. The posters are <lb/>
out and the face of this great South- <lb/>
humorist may be seen in our <lb/>
windows, with most eulogistic <lb/>
from very highest sources <lb/>
of his rare power on the platform. <lb/>
The gifted and W. <lb/>
Grady, after him In Atlanta, <lb/>
said In editorial in the Atlanta <lb/>
who heard <lb/>
him will make affidavit that there is <lb/>
nothing funnier in Cervantes, Mark <lb/>
Twain, Bill Nye, or any humorist <lb/>
living dead. A more amused or <lb/>
interested audience never heard a <lb/>
more original man. they were <lb/>
not laughing they were applauding, <lb/>
and when they were not applauding <lb/>
they were listening as If their lives <lb/>
were depending upon what he <lb/>
Of a recent lecture in Weldon, the <lb/>
lecture of Dr. <lb/>
last week was the most en- <lb/>
we have ever hoard. His <lb/>
subject was old the new, and <lb/>
showed too comparative advantages <lb/>
of the present period over a <lb/>
ago. Dr. is finest <lb/>
in toe Sooth, and for two <lb/>
hours he held the close attention of <lb/>
the The lecture will be <lb/>
in the Opera neat Tuesday <lb/>
night at o'clock. Doors open at <lb/>
Admission cents; children <lb/>
wader twelve years of age cents, <lb/>
Special rates for families. Tickets <lb/>
will Tyson's <lb/>
We have invented a Hanger suitable <lb/>
for curing tobacco in the leaf and take <lb/>
the of announcing that we be- <lb/>
it to be the best and cheapest <lb/>
for hanging tobacco leaves <lb/>
In and that as much tobacco can <lb/>
be put In the barn by using our hangers <lb/>
as by any other plan now before the pub- <lb/>
By using our hangers you can use <lb/>
any kind of stick from a round pole to a <lb/>
common split lath with perfect <lb/>
We will furnish a hanger free to any <lb/>
person who will apply. Price cents <lb/>
per hundred. <lb/>
Any person wishing Information con- <lb/>
hangers or tobacco sticks will do <lb/>
well to with us or Mr. A. Forbes, <lb/>
of Greenville, K. C. <lb/>
COX A <lb/>
Greenville, n. C. <lb/>
CaSh L LITTLE CO., <lb/>
tin <lb/>
KT. C. <lb/>
ea-M <lb/>
MUST GO. <lb/>
WHITE GOODS, <lb/>
AND MULLS. <lb/>
MUST GO. <lb/>
The Season is waning and will sell these Goods at a sacrifice rather than curry <lb/>
them over. <lb/>
HAMBURG AND EMBROIDERIES <lb/>
place on the same list. Somethings In this line are a job and we can give you a <lb/>
bargain that will please you. <lb/>
STRAW <lb/>
STRAW <lb/>
STRAW <lb/>
STRAW <lb/>
STRAW <lb/>
STRAW <lb/>
STRAW <lb/>
STRAW <lb/>
STRAW <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS, <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
HATS. <lb/>
We will also sell Straw Hats at reduced prices. Don't forget us when you <lb/>
something In this line. <lb/>
want <lb/>
--------Ladies desiring a perfect fitting try a-------- <lb/>
------294 C-B a la Spirits.------ <lb/>
JAS. L. LITTLE CO. <lb/>
EDMUND ALEXANDER, MORGAN, L. P. <lb/>
Washington, N. C. Norfolk, Va. N. C. <lb/>
SHIP TOUR PRODUCE TO <lb/>
ALEXANDER, MORGAN CO., <lb/>
COTTON FACTORS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, <lb/>
NORFOLK. VA. <lb/>
Ami receive highest market prices, full Weight and measure <lb/>
COTTON, GRAIN. PEANUTS AND TRUCK. <lb/>
Will advance value of any shipment, charging i interest, for <lb/>
wishing to hold. Owners can receive in cash on day of shipping, to value of <lb/>
crop f any local banker; by attaching bill of lading to draft or check on us. <lb/>
Reference Norfolk National Hank <lb/>
G. E. HARRIS, <lb/>
DEALER IN- <lb/>
J. L. <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. G <lb/>
OFFICE JAMES OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rates. <lb/>
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE. <lb/>
For Sale. <lb/>
On Saturday, June 27th. 1801, at <lb/>
Machine Shop, in I will <lb/>
at public auction for one Horse <lb/>
Power Vertical Steam <lb/>
Said engine is sold for <lb/>
repairs. It is in splendid working order <lb/>
and almost as Rood as a now engine. <lb/>
It. I- <lb/>
1891. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
FANNIE JOYNER. <lb/>
Is now receiving her summer stock of fine <lb/>
mi <lb/>
Also a line of Gilt and Silver Braids, <lb/>
and Satin Fans. <lb/>
We are prepared to sell coeds cheaper <lb/>
and give better than <lb/>
any other place In town. <lb/>
We trim to suit the most fast idiom, even <lb/>
it their taste be at <lb/>
This season have secured as <lb/>
Milliners Mis. K. A. and Mrs. <lb/>
M. T. both ladles of large ex- <lb/>
end well-known to the people of <lb/>
Pitt county. <lb/>
Your patronage is solicited and <lb/>
faction promised on every purchase made <lb/>
me. MRS. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
D. D. HASKETT, <lb/>
Fashion Bazaar. <lb/>
I have just returned from the Northern <lb/>
markets where I purchased a <lb/>
complete stock of <lb/>
In every conceivable style mid in <lb/>
Hats Trimmings. Also have In <lb/>
Stock to he disposed Flowers, Os- <lb/>
Tips, Cape. Mull and Silk <lb/>
Hats, Kid Gloves. <lb/>
Notions, Ac., Ac. I keep con- <lb/>
star, hand Trimmed aid <lb/>
Hats. <lb/>
Call and examine my stock, I <lb/>
tee satisfaction. <lb/>
Respectfully. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Greenville, H. <lb/>
Stove Pipe, Tin- <lb/>
ware. Nails, Doors, Sash. <lb/>
Butts and Hinges, Glass, <lb/>
Paints and Oils, <lb/>
The increased stove trade <lb/>
season is the best evidence that <lb/>
the stove I sell is the stove lot <lb/>
the people. public are in <lb/>
to examine my stock <lb/>
fore purchasing. j <lb/>
D. D. HASKETT.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017499_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
N. C <lb/>
ANNE <lb/>
that tired Mrs. in the kitchen <lb/>
topped to listen, while the old man, put <lb/>
ting bit brown, crooked hand up to hit <lb/>
good ear, did likewise <lb/>
be said <lb/>
to herself as she went slowly up stairs. <lb/>
make friends as easy as water <lb/>
runs down hill. Father always said we <lb/>
must distrust easy popularity. do <lb/>
hope he'll through Anne If <lb/>
her mother had any Judgment with the <lb/>
she wouldn't let her throw herself <lb/>
at that man's <lb/>
Miss Carver spent most of the after- <lb/>
noon spying out of the window to sue <lb/>
the doctor's office furniture <lb/>
mahogany and rosewood, all the best <lb/>
and handsomest; desks, chairs, cabinets <lb/>
and pictures, implying the cultivated <lb/>
and rather luxurious tastes of a young <lb/>
man of pretty good length of purse. <lb/>
Miss Carver opened her eyes when she <lb/>
remembered the depths of poverty to <lb/>
which he had declared himself reduced <lb/>
by the unnatural healthfulness of <lb/>
Guess he's extravagant, she <lb/>
thought to herself, as she tied on her <lb/>
bonnet at nightfall to go and call on her <lb/>
particular friend, the Widow <lb/>
and, though the widow was deaf of one <lb/>
ear and partly blind, before the next <lb/>
night the whole of knew that <lb/>
young Dr. was a humorist; that <lb/>
ho had been frozen out of by <lb/>
the longevity of the people, and had <lb/>
scribed with the words la. <lb/>
Miss Carver flew out to the pas- <lb/>
sage and called down, come, Mrs. <lb/>
in a hysterical voice. <lb/>
The horsehair sofa still blocked tho <lb/>
hall, and a large easy chair filled the <lb/>
front door. what shall I doT <lb/>
exclaimed Mrs. Anne rushed <lb/>
out from the dining room letting, down <lb/>
the sleeves of lie-, pink morning <lb/>
and with a pretty blush oil her fair face. <lb/>
right in, Miss Carver <lb/>
heard her say. is a little be- <lb/>
lated about your office; but step into the <lb/>
parlor if you can manage to climb over <lb/>
these <lb/>
The doctor replied in an easy, good <lb/>
natured, languid voice, and Miss Carver <lb/>
thought to herself inner New England <lb/>
fashion of weighing and measuring, <lb/>
hasn't got much The doc- <lb/>
tor was telling Anne that his <lb/>
had left by mistake at the <lb/>
where he had taken the <lb/>
branch line, and would not arrive for <lb/>
some hours. therefore appeared <lb/>
with sign in bis hand <lb/>
as proof The young people <lb/>
into the parlor, and in a few mo- <lb/>
Miss Carver heard sounds of <lb/>
laughter, the doctor's easy voice and <lb/>
girlish staccato notes. <lb/>
What confidence the girl <lb/>
though Miss Carver. be on without any visible <lb/>
like that the very first minute I should, La hand- <lb/>
right In, doctor. <lb/>
Mrs. cottage windows stood <lb/>
open, and the Nottingham lace cur- <lb/>
flew out of the south room, where <lb/>
the toast of the damask roses old <lb/>
fashioned an in warm puffs from <lb/>
the pretty garden. Mrs. a <lb/>
chocked handkerchief over her <lb/>
head, was briskly sweeping the ingrain <lb/>
carpet with a short motion of tho <lb/>
broom; tho narrow hall was <lb/>
with chairs and tables, and a horsehair <lb/>
sofa blocked the front door. The honey- <lb/>
vine above the porch was thickly <lb/>
hung with blossoms, and piazza chairs <lb/>
with scarlet cushions were set out in the <lb/>
shade, with tho inviting air of summer <lb/>
A door through into tho back <lb/>
regions was also open, and a delicious <lb/>
odor of baking bread COM from the <lb/>
kitchen. From tho dining room a <lb/>
slight clatter of dishes, tho sound of <lb/>
clearing away after breakfast, the trip <lb/>
of girlish feet, and n pleasant young <lb/>
voice humming a tune. <lb/>
shrilled Mrs. from tho <lb/>
south room, out for the bread in <lb/>
the oven and see that it don't get a <lb/>
must make responded <lb/>
Anne from tho dining room, still <lb/>
he will be here before the room <lb/>
is <lb/>
I making piped <lb/>
also invisible, on her side and <lb/>
with a touch of asperity-in her voice. <lb/>
A woman of Mrs. active <lb/>
never likes to be es- <lb/>
by her own daughter, an <lb/>
slip of a girl, with no <lb/>
idea of turning off work.- guess it <lb/>
won't hurt him to wait a few minutes if <lb/>
his room ain't she added, <lb/>
her broom fly a more rapid rate. <lb/>
didn't say it retorted Anne <lb/>
on her side, interrupting a snatch <lb/>
of song on her lips, as put the blue <lb/>
edged plates on tho cupboard shelf. <lb/>
Miss Carver's room door was also open <lb/>
just at the head of tho stairs. had <lb/>
heard every word that passed between <lb/>
Anne and her mother, for the little house <lb/>
was like a sounding board, and Miss Car- <lb/>
could absorb its without <lb/>
the slightest effort to listen. It <lb/>
to her now, as it often did, that <lb/>
was rather impertinent to her <lb/>
mother. Miss Carver gave a little <lb/>
patient sigh over tho degeneracy <lb/>
modem youth. was one of the old <lb/>
inhabitants of born and <lb/>
brought there, every family <lb/>
history from immemorial, every <lb/>
mote in a neighbor's eye, all the town <lb/>
affairs, to the probable amount of change <lb/>
that people carried about in their purses. <lb/>
consulted her about the past as <lb/>
they would go to a gazetteer or town <lb/>
history, and tho present itself <lb/>
into her ears. <lb/>
She had bearded many years with Mrs. <lb/>
so exactly calculating her ex- <lb/>
that they came to within <lb/>
fifty cents of her income every 1st of <lb/>
January. invariably allowed for a <lb/>
month of visits to friends during tho <lb/>
twelve, and if she was invited for only <lb/>
three weeks it involved a little extract <lb/>
pinching, and if for or six weeks <lb/>
corresponding financial ease. Miss Car- <lb/>
had a little industry by which <lb/>
occasionally earned a trifle. She made <lb/>
paper flowers and sold them for the <lb/>
adornment of Christmas trees, children's <lb/>
festivals and church fairs. It was easy <lb/>
work cf a clean kind, such as a gentle- <lb/>
woman do whose father had been <lb/>
high of the county without de- <lb/>
from her social position in Lit- <lb/>
She called herself an artist in <lb/>
flower work, and on this particular <lb/>
morning she arranged her little <lb/>
bright tissue paper, fine wire, <lb/>
scissors and pot, but it was <lb/>
for Miss Carver to settle to any- <lb/>
thing. She silt by the window, and <lb/>
through her spectacles spied the coming <lb/>
of the new boarder, gazing out <lb/>
the elm trees that shaded the brown <lb/>
road in front of the cottage. <lb/>
It was not a matter of small <lb/>
to Miss Carver that a new doctor <lb/>
wan coining to Tho old doc- <lb/>
tor, whose place ho was taking, had <lb/>
been a great friend of Miss Carver and <lb/>
of her family, when she had a family, <lb/>
for now was all alone in tho <lb/>
with no kin nearer than cousins. <lb/>
The cottage, a boarding house of <lb/>
the and humblest sort, gained <lb/>
a kind of importance from the fact that <lb/>
tho new doctor was to establish himself <lb/>
for tho first experimental months <lb/>
of his stay in Miss Carver <lb/>
felt tins added importance as a slight in- <lb/>
crease of her own individual <lb/>
She would no longer feel obliged <lb/>
to herself for living at Mrs. Bis- <lb/>
by the fact that she liked the air of <lb/>
t hat end of the town, leaving it to be in- <lb/>
that she could if she chose live at <lb/>
the Oak Hill hotel or any of the more <lb/>
fashionable places. <lb/>
She had talked the young doctor over <lb/>
at many tea tables. In her set be bad <lb/>
almost Mrs. and her <lb/>
lapses in management, tho inefficiency <lb/>
and tho independent, slightly <lb/>
impotent air assumed by Anne in the <lb/>
household. <lb/>
was only one thing that <lb/>
bled the doctor belonged <lb/>
to the wrong medical school. She had <lb/>
always been very stanch in her orthodox <lb/>
medical views. A doctor in the house <lb/>
certainly be a convenience, for <lb/>
Miss Carver had her pet infirmities, and <lb/>
she regretted the expensive luxury of <lb/>
talking them over with a regular <lb/>
But a doctor in the house, <lb/>
whom one met familiarly at meals, <lb/>
hardly estimate his professional <lb/>
talk as Dr. did. She <lb/>
would doubtless be able to pick up a good <lb/>
deal that might be useful to her gratis. <lb/>
Bat, he was of the wrong school. <lb/>
She could not in all conscience ever <lb/>
bring herself to take those absurd little <lb/>
pills, even if they were given away. <lb/>
Miss Carver had been going over these <lb/>
questions In her mind when a station <lb/>
hack drew to the front gate and a <lb/>
of fair complexion, <lb/>
set as English say, and <lb/>
think her mother would try and check <lb/>
her; it looks so The risk <lb/>
that poor, in- <lb/>
curred in coming into the family <lb/>
filled her with a kind of pity, She was <lb/>
glad Providence had so arranged things <lb/>
that at her age she did not find any f or- <lb/>
ward, pert girls on her hands to man- <lb/>
age. Surely the state has its ad- <lb/>
vantages. It at least affords one a lofty <lb/>
pedestal for one's neighbors. <lb/>
Miss Carver could see in many ways <lb/>
BOW Mrs. had missed it, and how <lb/>
differently she would have done in her <lb/>
place. <lb/>
There was an old Grandfather <lb/>
a stone deaf old man, who sat in the <lb/>
kitchen in a rocking chair close to the <lb/>
stove, with bis hat on even in warm <lb/>
weather. Sometimes he worked a <lb/>
in the or pottered about on <lb/>
errands in the town, assisted at the <lb/>
cooking when a crisis occurred in the <lb/>
hap- <lb/>
means, but with a large amount of hand <lb/>
some office furniture, and that Anne <lb/>
it is easy to conjecture <lb/>
what was whispered about Anne <lb/>
The office was all in apple pie order <lb/>
when Miss Carver reached home at tea <lb/>
time. The office door stood open, and <lb/>
there was the doctor with his coat off <lb/>
arranging his medical cabinets and <lb/>
whistling softly to himself. Mrs. Bis- <lb/>
sell had put new muslin curtains to <lb/>
windows, and Anne had filled a vase <lb/>
with moss roses for the center table <lb/>
those precious roses cherished like <lb/>
attention Miss Carver never <lb/>
had received in all tho years she had <lb/>
lived in Mrs. house. <lb/>
sun is going to rise and set on <lb/>
Iris thought Miss Carver as she <lb/>
took her way up to her room, smelling <lb/>
tho tea biscuits from the open kitchen <lb/>
door. But she could not hate the <lb/>
doc-tor. was something engaging <lb/>
about tho creature, she acknowledged <lb/>
III <lb/>
P. P. P. <lb/>
Cures<lb/>
LEGAL <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
Executrix the <lb/>
last Will testament of James A. <lb/>
deceased, on the 2nd day <lb/>
April, 1891. notice is hereby given to all <lb/>
persons Indebted to the estate of the said <lb/>
dames A. to make immediate <lb/>
payment to the undersigned; and nil <lb/>
persons having chums against said es- <lb/>
present them for payment to <lb/>
the on or before the 10th <lb/>
of or this will be <lb/>
In bar of their recovery. This <lb/>
, of April, 1801. <lb/>
m. <lb/>
Executrix of A. <lb/>
CURES <lb/>
HI,<lb/>
S U-1 <lb/>
Cures rheumatism<lb/>
domestic arrangements, as often nap- he laid off her things, <lb/>
But in a general way ho was of certainly was a cheery <lb/>
no another mouth to feed. <lb/>
The old man had married daughters far <lb/>
better off than Mrs. who refused <lb/>
to keep him on tho ground that he was <lb/>
hard to get along with, though <lb/>
a more harmless old soul did not <lb/>
live. was strenuous on tho <lb/>
fact of If she <lb/>
have had her way the old man would <lb/>
have been sent packing, and tho <lb/>
hearted daughters brought to terms. <lb/>
Then there was himself, part <lb/>
carpenter and part teamster; but both <lb/>
teaming and carpentry were now at a <lb/>
low ebb and as there was <lb/>
nothing for to do he did nothing, <lb/>
and let his wife support him. The sight <lb/>
of hanging when <lb/>
there was n mortgage on the property <lb/>
filled Miss Carver with suppressed rage. <lb/>
If was he husband she knew she <lb/>
would And some way of making him <lb/>
earn his salt. dared not hint of her <lb/>
feelings to Mrs. for tho little <lb/>
woman was very touchy and truculent <lb/>
about her She said she <lb/>
she had a right to keep as many <lb/>
men folks as she pleased, and tho neigh- <lb/>
might just talking. They sat <lb/>
back in their easy chairs doing fancy <lb/>
work and crochet, and saw her digging <lb/>
away for dear life, and could find <lb/>
better to than her ways <lb/>
of managing her affairs. They had Bet- <lb/>
look to the beam in their own <lb/>
Dr. certainly <lb/>
soul, and he seemed to a breezy <lb/>
life and temper into the rather distracted <lb/>
menage. Mrs. felt her <lb/>
work lighter, and Anne seemed to take <lb/>
a now interest in home and to talk less <lb/>
about the dullness of Some <lb/>
people pitied Anne and felt that <lb/>
a false position. had been <lb/>
graduated at tho normal school, and had <lb/>
a year or two in a country town, <lb/>
but it was beside all tho traditions of <lb/>
the to take a mechanic's <lb/>
daughter, whoso mother kept a cheap <lb/>
boarding house, into the best set. She <lb/>
was prettier than most of the daughters <lb/>
of the wealthy old families, but Anne's <lb/>
did not seem an in the <lb/>
yes of tho dowagers, and <lb/>
her independent, free ways appeared <lb/>
rather lacking in reverence to the pure <lb/>
blue blood, whose pretensions <lb/>
did not hesitate to laugh at in <lb/>
Miss Carver's presence. <lb/>
TO BE CONTINUED- <lb/>
CURES <lb/>
ALARM <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having qualified as <lb/>
upon I be of c before <lb/>
A. Mme. clerk of the Superior Court <lb/>
of Pitt county, tills is lo notify all per- <lb/>
sons who arc Indented lo the aid estate <lb/>
to make payment. All persons having <lb/>
claims the said estate will <lb/>
sent them twelve months from <lb/>
this date Of this will lie plead In <lb/>
bar of their This April <lb/>
C. L. Perkins. <lb/>
A. Atty. <lb/>
bawls, <lb/>
BANKERS, <lb/>
for the purpose or con- <lb/>
ducting a general <lb/>
ml Mm <lb/>
Money to Loan on Approved <lb/>
Collections solicited and remittances <lb/>
made promptly. <lb/>
A MM. net <lb/>
on my Corsets Bells, <lb/>
Brushes. Curlers, Medicine, Samples <lb/>
Write now. Dr. <lb/>
Broadway, X. Y. <lb/>
j Sup. <lb/>
Court <lb/>
Jr. r. r. a. <lb/>
P. P. P. <lb/>
CURES DYSPEPSIA <lb/>
Block, <lb/>
For sale at T. U Ortiz Store <lb/>
A MM had fitted a vane Kith moss rote for <lb/>
the center <lb/>
The dinner was late day, and the <lb/>
meal had the air of to- <lb/>
which sometimes happens in tho <lb/>
best regulated houses. Things <lb/>
had early in tho morning, and <lb/>
poor Mrs-. had striven in vain to <lb/>
natch with her work. She did not <lb/>
at the dinner table, for her <lb/>
maid, Bridget, seemed to have complete- <lb/>
lost her head, and the kitchen was up- <lb/>
side down. Mrs. dished up tho <lb/>
food, and the old man carried the plat- <lb/>
and dishes to the dining <lb/>
room door, whom Anne received them. <lb/>
You could hear the scuffling his <lb/>
feet as he went to and fro in tho passage. <lb/>
Mrs. other boarders, the Holmes <lb/>
family, had been waiting round hungry <lb/>
for half an hour. They were slow, silent <lb/>
people, even to boy and girl, <lb/>
who, with down close to <lb/>
their tho upward turn of <lb/>
the eyes and rather flat noses, had a <lb/>
Mongolian cast of countenance. When <lb/>
the bell rang Miss Carver came in with <lb/>
mat irritated pinch of the thin they <lb/>
always wore when dinner was late. But <lb/>
as Mrs. kept her for a dollar a <lb/>
week less than any of her other boarders <lb/>
tho privilege of open complaint was <lb/>
taken away. <lb/>
The young doctor occupied the head of <lb/>
the and Anne filled her mother's <lb/>
place with easy assurance, as if nothing <lb/>
ever went wrong in the establish- <lb/>
It was a shame. Miss Carver <lb/>
thought, for Anne to look cool and <lb/>
unruffled as cream while her mother <lb/>
was stewing over the kitchen fire. And <lb/>
then she was so undeniably, so <lb/>
pretty. Her auburn <lb/>
called red hair red when Miss <lb/>
was in a mass across bee <lb/>
white forehead and down slope of <lb/>
her round neck, and was gathered in a <lb/>
great fluffy, curly neat at the back, just <lb/>
defining itself in loose coils. The pals <lb/>
pink of her gown suited well with her <lb/>
dazzling complexion and dark hazel eyes, <lb/>
dancing in the light of innocent mis- <lb/>
chief. , She talked all the time, as if the <lb/>
light flow of her girlish chatter could <lb/>
cover up the of table <lb/>
vice and tho Irregularity with which the <lb/>
courses came in. Miss Carver, <lb/>
in aggressive silence, felt that Anne was <lb/>
a sham and how far she <lb/>
in pulling the wool over the <lb/>
young doctor's eyes. <lb/>
But the doctor had no starch <lb/>
him. He seemed to find some amuse- <lb/>
in the difficulties of the situation. <lb/>
Be himself thoroughly at home <lb/>
and told so many fanny stories about a <lb/>
healthy old town where he had tried to <lb/>
establish himself, and hod been starved <lb/>
out for lack of patients, that Miss Carver <lb/>
found herself until the tears <lb/>
decidedly good stepped out and The <lb/>
the i. He no Ins-, <lb/>
children were grinning from ear to ear <lb/>
their months like <lb/>
rubber band over the doctor's <lb/>
A V <lb/>
Printers and Binders, <lb/>
A Household Remedy j <lb/>
re ALL <lb/>
i BLOOD and SKIN i <lb/>
i Botanic Blood Balm <lb/>
lA ULCER, SALT <lb/>
I l IT. Hires RHEUM. ECZEMA, tr <lb/>
B. B. B. <lb/>
malignant SKIN ERUPTION, <lb/>
being In t-------- <lb/>
in <lb/>
ken any v. . <lb/>
supernatural Keeling properties <lb/>
In guaranteeing a cars, II , i <lb/>
are <lb/>
FREE <lb/>
BALM CO. <lb/>
We haW the largest and most complete <lb/>
of Mod lo be found In <lb/>
the State, and toilet order for all clause <lb/>
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb/>
road or School Print- <lb/>
or<lb/>
FOB <lb/>
BLANKS <lb/>
COUNTY <lb/>
us your orders. <lb/>
ft <lb/>
AND <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
North <lb/>
Martin <lb/>
If, T. Cloak. <lb/>
B. I. C. Bryan <lb/>
To the defendant, lit my you <lb/>
arc notified appear me at my <lb/>
In N. C., on June th <lb/>
at M. and If <lb/>
any you have why executions should not <lb/>
issued you In favor of II. I,, <lb/>
Bryan on two several Judgments each <lb/>
for the sum of two hundred dollars, <lb/>
in the Mar- <lb/>
tin County on the 17th February 1887. <lb/>
Numbered respect lye on <lb/>
docket and Witness my <lb/>
hand and official <lb/>
18th of April 1881. <lb/>
I,. S. <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court.<lb/>
. Land Sale. <lb/>
ON the 8th of June, A. <lb/>
1801, will at the Court House <lb/>
door In the town of to the <lb/>
bidder for cash, the following <lb/>
lands in Pitt One tract In Pie. <lb/>
township adjoining the lands of <lb/>
Mrs. Mary Daniel. M. U. Moore, the <lb/>
George Daniel farm, Fernando Wan <lb/>
and wife mid Mrs . Daniel, con- <lb/>
about two hundred and thirteen <lb/>
acres. in tho town of Green- <lb/>
ville and known in the plot of said town <lb/>
as lot No. lot in the town <lb/>
Greenville and known in the plot of <lb/>
town lot No. One lot in the <lb/>
town of Greenville and known in the <lb/>
pf as lot No. to satisfy <lb/>
m execution In my <lb/>
against Germain which <lb/>
has been levied on said land Hie prop- <lb/>
of said Germain Bernard, <lb/>
J. A. K. Sheriff. <lb/>
B. W. King, D. S. <lb/>
1881. <lb/>
CONDENSE <lb/>
Nothing better for <lb/>
Cream. Full <lb/>
Best on Earth. <lb/>
For by <lb/>
S. Bi <lb/>
N. <lb/>
LIVERY SALE AND FEED <lb/>
f have removed to the few stables on <lb/>
Fifth street In roar White's <lb/>
Store, where I will constantly <lb/>
keep on hand a line Hue of <lb/>
Horses and Mules. <lb/>
I have beautiful and fanny turnouts for <lb/>
the livery and can suit the most <lb/>
I will run in connection a <lb/>
BUSINESS, and solicit a share of <lb/>
patronage. Call and lie need. <lb/>
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
UNDERTAKING. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS, <lb/>
My Factory Is well equipped with the best My put up <lb/>
but ass work. We keep up with the time and the nest Improved <lb/>
Host material in all work. All styles Springs are run select from <lb/>
Also keep on a full of ready nude <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb/>
year round, which we will as ah <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking the people of this and surrounding enmities for past favors w e hops to <lb/>
merit of <lb/>
Many Persons <lb/>
Are broken down from or household <lb/>
same Brown's Iron <lb/>
rebuilds tho removes- <lb/>
; j bile, col cures is. bet <lb/>
Salts <lb/>
The beat salve in world for cuts, <lb/>
sores, ulcers, stilt fever <lb/>
sores, chapped hands, <lb/>
and all tun eruptions, mid <lb/>
-S piles, or no required. It <lb/>
is to give <lb/>
or money refunded. M per <lb/>
For sale by L <lb/>
P. P. makes positive cures of nil <lb/>
stages of Syphilis. Wood <lb/>
Scrofula, Old Sores, Eczema. <lb/>
Malaria and Female Complaints. P. r. <lb/>
I. is a powerful tonic, and an excellent <lb/>
appetizer, building up lite system rap- <lb/>
idly. <lb/>
Skin and scalp the head, at <lb/>
times, a sore, the body entirely <lb/>
covered with as large a quarter <lb/>
of a dollar, no medicine hail the de- <lb/>
sired effect until-P. P. P. was taken. <lb/>
The disease yielded at one, mid P. P. P. <lb/>
proved tho blood purifier of the <lb/>
Erysipelas, bail <lb/>
M-ales crabs on the left have been <lb/>
entirely cured by P. V. P., the most <lb/>
wonderful blood medicine of day. <lb/>
have in my employ a who <lb/>
n of periodic head- <lb/>
aches for years, baa tried kinds <lb/>
treatment, I have tried various <lb/>
remedies on him. Your <lb/>
tine dim more than <lb/>
ever 0- M. <lb/>
N. Y. <lb/>
Advice to <lb/>
K you would protect yourself <lb/>
from Painful, Profuse, <lb/>
Suppressed or Irregular <lb/>
you must UM <lb/>
FEMALE <lb/>
REGULATOR <lb/>
April M, <lb/>
that two <lb/>
tow family. after harlot <lb/>
wen a <lb/>
I truly <lb/>
nook to <lb/>
cow<lb/>
ATLANTA, <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
It <lb/>
An <lb/>
sat and <lb/>
K. B. <lb/>
A. B. <lb/>
I in <lb/>
Wholesale and <lb/>
A Good on Haul <lb/>
Fine Horses a specialty. <lb/>
Ho, and -i Union Va <lb/>
Smith's Shaving Parlor. <lb/>
A. SMITH, Prop. <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
We have the the easiest <lb/>
Chair ever used in the art. Clean towels, <lb/>
sharp satisfaction <lb/>
In instance. Call and be con- <lb/>
waited at their <lb/>
Cleaning clothe,<lb/>
County <lb/>
M. O. Blount <lb/>
If. W. and Andrews. <lb/>
lie above named will take <lb/>
notion that an action entitled as above <lb/>
been commenced by tie plaintiffs In <lb/>
the Superior Court of county to re- <lb/>
cover judgment upon a bond executed by <lb/>
the defendants in the plaintiff on the <lb/>
day of October for ii of <lb/>
six hundred dollars. A said de- <lb/>
will further take notice that <lb/>
they are required to appear the next <lb/>
term of the Superior Court for said <lb/>
county, to be held on the fourteenth <lb/>
Monday after the first In March 1891, at <lb/>
the Court House In Greenville, and de- <lb/>
o.- Hied in <lb/>
tin- cause within by <lb/>
law, or the plaintiff ill apply to too <lb/>
Court for the relief demanded in their <lb/>
complaint. <lb/>
This the of April 1801. <lb/>
K. A. <lb/>
Cerf of Court. <lb/>
B. S. <lb/>
me in the Undertaking business we <lb/>
lire ready to serve the people In that <lb/>
a All notes and accounts due <lb/>
me for pas services have been placed in <lb/>
the hands of Mr. n <lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
I in <lb/>
h aw <lb/>
fr far . <lb/>
Chemic <lb/>
r-M all<lb/>
; flower south ; <lb/>
Every care in the selection, is we <lb/>
We keep on hand at all times a <lb/>
of Cases and Caskets of all <lb/>
kinds and can anything desired <lb/>
finest down tn n <lb/>
county Pine We arc <lb/>
with all conveniences and can re <lb/>
services to all who pr.- <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
all business in the U. <lb/>
Patent the Courts attended to <lb/>
for Moderate Fees. <lb/>
We arc opposite the U. S. Patent Of- <lb/>
In Exclusively, and <lb/>
can obtain patents in less time than <lb/>
more remote from Washington, <lb/>
the model or drawing Is sent we <lb/>
advise as to free of <lb/>
and make no change unless we ob- <lb/>
11-. <lb/>
We refer, here, to the Post Master, the <lb/>
of the Order Old., and to <lb/>
the LT. H. Patent For <lb/>
advise terms and reference to <lb/>
actual clients in your own State, or conn- <lb/>
c c Coos, <lb/>
pill Co. n c. Co <lb/>
. N r <lb/>
Cobb Bros., Gilliam, <lb/>
Cotton Factors, <lb/>
-AND- <lb/>
SOLICIT SKa of <lb/>
We have Lad many <lb/>
at the and are <lb/>
to handle to <lb/>
advantage <lb/>
Notice Notice <lb/>
On Wednesday the day of June A. <lb/>
I will sell at the Court House <lb/>
Me In town of to the <lb/>
highest bidder for Cash, following <lb/>
tracts of land in Pitt county and <lb/>
One tract lying partly <lb/>
in and partly In <lb/>
Townships the lands of John <lb/>
Cory others con- <lb/>
acres or lags; <lb/>
rate sec deed from John <lb/>
Branch wife to A. In <lb/>
Deeds page <lb/>
One other tract adjoining the <lb/>
lands of Burton <lb/>
the County Poor House land <lb/>
containing acres more or less. Sec <lb/>
deed In of Deeds office from E. <lb/>
C. Glenn and wire to P. <lb/>
better description. One tract <lb/>
fully in a deed from M. A. M <lb/>
to Alfred <lb/>
aim in <lb/>
the of Deeds Hook Pi, <lb/>
Cane H tun more or <lb/>
less, to satisfy Sundry executions in my <lb/>
hands for collection against Alfred <lb/>
and which <lb/>
on land OS the property of said <lb/>
May nth 1891. <lb/>
at, A. K. <lb/>
H. W. D. I. <lb/>
AH entrusted <lb/>
hands will prompt <lb/>
careful attention <lb/>
to <lb/>
and <lb/>
OINTMENT. <lb/>
A PURE AND HIGHLY <lb/>
rated Preparation most <lb/>
; remedies known to science for <lb/>
cure of Tills Preparation <lb/>
been in use over fifty years, and where, <lb/>
ever known been in steady demand. <lb/>
Once used in a family it become the <lb/>
household remedy. It been <lb/>
by leading all over the <lb/>
country, and bus effected cure where all <lb/>
other remedies, with attention of <lb/>
the most experienced physicians, <lb/>
for failed. Tills Ointment la not <lb/>
just gotten up for the purpose of making <lb/>
money, but is of long standing and the <lb/>
high reputation which It has obtained Is <lb/>
owing entirely to Its own a but <lb/>
little has ever made lo bring <lb/>
It before tho One bottle of this <lb/>
Ointment will be sent to any address on <lb/>
receipt of One Dollar. The usual <lb/>
to Druggists. All Cash Order <lb/>
attended to. Address ail or- <lb/>
to <lb/>
T. T. <lb/>
Solo and Proprietor, <lb/>
Greenville. K. C. <lb/>
a tin n <lb/>
and factor- <lb/>
lea, machinery, made mien pair <lb/>
I for <lb/>
Metropolitan <lb/>
Now York City. <lb/>
KNIGHTS <lb/>
Blood Cure. <lb/>
mm inn , <lb/>
for <lb/>
m, and ail <lb/>
, Stomach and Liver. <lb/>
A standard remedy <lb/>
In more than o A peat- <lb/>
lire con lo <lb/>
Prostration, <lb/>
Blood, <lb/>
ml mall <lb/>
Unit fa <lb/>
f CO., HI 1.1. <lb/>
Health <lb/>
WATER OR <lb/>
I- LB. TINS <lb/>
AGAIN HERB. <lb/>
I have opened a-------- <lb/>
and Invite my old <lb/>
and former patron to Rive me a call. <lb/>
can all your wants In the way <lb/>
a clean shave, a stylish hair <lb/>
or else In the <lb/>
only sand out Seeds as will produce <lb/>
SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS. <lb/>
Of In o m <lb/>
will of order to It- <lb/>
A two fie. of r <lb/>
to for you mention <lb/>
Z DESCRIPTIVE valuable information <lb/>
about Farm Garden Seeds mailed free upon application. <lb/>
T. W. WOOD SONS, South Street, RICHMOND, VA.<lb/>
HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK CO. <lb/>
of Hall's Patent <lb/>
BANK LOCKS VAULT WORK. <lb/>
SAFES <lb/>
FACTORY PRINCIPAL OFFICE <lb/>
C. A. Snow A <lb/>
D. <lb/>
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
Cutting <lb/>
AT THE MONT <lb/>
the Opera House, at which place <lb/>
I have recently located, and where I <lb/>
everything in my line <lb/>
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO A <lb/>
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb/>
appliances; <lb/>
and <lb/>
at <lb/>
for work outside of <lb/>
promptly executed. Very respectfully, <lb/>
A EDMONDS <lb/>
Company <lb/>
1.13. <lb/>
J. H. Greenville, <lb/>
M. <lb/>
B- P. Ag <lb/>
People's Dine for travel on <lb/>
Elver. <lb/>
The Steamer is the finest <lb/>
and boat on this river. <lb/>
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb/>
and <lb/>
Fitted up comfort, <lb/>
and <lb/>
POLITE k ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb/>
A first-class Table furnished <lb/>
beat the market Affords. <lb/>
A trip on Is <lb/>
not only <lb/>
Leaves Washington Monday, <lb/>
Friday at o'clock, A. M. <lb/>
Leaves <lb/>
and Saturday at o'clock, A. M. <lb/>
Freights received dally and <lb/>
to all points. <lb/>
it- r. i. <lb/>
N, Greenville, N. <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
AT TUB <lb/>
OLD BRICK <lb/>
MERCHANTS BUt <lb/>
supplies will find <lb/>
their Interest to get our prices before <lb/>
chasing else where. complete <lb/>
In branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES <lb/>
FLOUR, <lb/>
RICE, TEA, c. <lb/>
at Low <lb/>
SNUFF <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturer, <lb/>
buy at gr profit. A roan <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and sold at sulk <lb/>
the times. goods are all bought and <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb/>
to soil at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
M. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Pianos Organs Furniture <lb/>
Baby Carriage <lb/>
AT YOU MONEY <lb/>
--------u <lb/>
Largest House and Largest Stock in the South. <lb/>
matter what Piano or Organ you want write to tis for <lb/>
prices and we will save yon money. <lb/>
J. S. AMES, <lb/>
Opposite Main t., Norfolk. Va. <lb/>
ALFRED FORBES, <lb/>
THE RELIABLE <lb/>
to buyers of and counties, a line tho following <lb/>
not to be excelled in tills market. And and <lb/>
GOODS of all kind. NOTIONS. <lb/>
HATS HOOFS and <lb/>
GOODS, WiNDOW,. and an <lb/>
WAKE, and of <lb/>
kinds, Gin and Hay, Hock LOU, and n <lb/>
and <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
at <lb/>
T. Spool to <lb/>
r loss G cent for <lb/>
lot N. . <lb/>
Jobbers prices, coins per dozen, loss C per cent for <lb/>
ration and Hairs Star t jobbers Load and pure <lb/>
seed Oil, Taint Colon, Salt Wood <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nail a Give mo a and I <lb/>
POLE TO POLE<lb/>
Beware <lb/>
fire not, and besides <lb/>
are <lb/>
i Imitations Which they claim f o fie <lb/>
or same a IT'S <lb/>
fire not, and besides are dangerous. Is never sole <lb/>
M- <lb/>
board <lb/>
Voting at <lb/>
in <lb/>
W. r A Co., Pa. <lb/>
Ready <lb/>
--To show the finest at <lb/>
Horsey <lb/>
ALLEY <lb/>
FINE PORTRAIT AND VIEW <lb/>
Views of Animal. <lb/>
cu, family c., town at <lb/>
Short <lb/>
to life In Ink, Crayon qr <lb/>
Colon. <lb/>
Head quarter for lino <lb/>
Call tee u. <lb/>
rT. C. <lb/>
Mules, <lb/>
over to <lb/>
If good Drive <lb/>
Draft or a <lb/>
Mule don't fail to Me roe. <lb/>
I can yon at <lb/>
reasonable <lb/>
My Feed tables <lb/>
have been, <lb/>
nil <lb/>
attention given. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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