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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                    <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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J THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
--------HAS A-------- <lb/>
I Job Printing Room<lb/>
can be surpassed no <lb/>
here in this section. <lb/>
u Our work always give sails- <lb/>
faction. <lb/>
S Tim I <lb/>
Good Presses <lb/>
e Material <lb/>
US YOUR ORDERS. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
VOL. XI. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY. MAY 1892. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN <lb/>
PREFERENCE <lb/>
TO FICTION. <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb/>
First Sunday, morning and night, <lb/>
Second Sunday morning at Antioch <lb/>
and Saturday night before. <lb/>
Third fourth <lb/>
morning and night, also second <lb/>
Sunday night, and Regular Wednesday <lb/>
night service each week. <lb/>
Services at school house on <lb/>
Tarboro road on Thurs lay night <lb/>
third Sunday until April and then <lb/>
on third Sunday evening. <lb/>
Rev. R. K. Taylor's Appointments. <lb/>
Rev. K. F. Taylor, pastor of Green- <lb/>
ville Circuit of the M. B. Church, South, <lb/>
will preach at the following times and <lb/>
places, regularly each <lb/>
1st Sunday at o'clock A. <lb/>
1st Sunday, Chapel, o <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
2nd Sunday, Grove. <lb/>
A H. <lb/>
2nd Sunday. School House, <lb/>
miles west of <lb/>
p. m. <lb/>
3rd Sunday. or Spring , <lb/>
School A. M. <lb/>
3rd Sunday, Tripp's <lb/>
o'clock I. M. <lb/>
4th Bethlehem, o'clock <lb/>
a. II. <lb/>
4th School House, <lb/>
o'clock r. Si. <lb/>
An Announcement. <lb/>
I MO n w ready to treat baldness. I <lb/>
have improved my preparation and have <lb/>
observed In the last ninety days that it <lb/>
will do I claim fur it. Partial <lb/>
baldness be treated by Hie bottle <lb/>
an I the patient can use it himself. <lb/>
Total baldness I must treat myself. I <lb/>
invite in reference to <lb/>
treatment Ac. Every one. who tries my <lb/>
preparation will in- thoroughly satisfied <lb/>
results. We refer you to a <lb/>
number of men here in this town as to <lb/>
its merits. Culley. <lb/>
X. April 5th, <lb/>
THE ONLY WAY TO <lb/>
MAKE <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
On In- 4th day of April, the <lb/>
Clerk of the Superior Court Pitt <lb/>
to the undersigned letters of <lb/>
administration as administrator de <lb/>
of the estate of L. R. Anderson, de- <lb/>
ceased, who duly and gave bond <lb/>
as such. Notice is now given to the <lb/>
of said L. It. Anderson to <lb/>
sent their claims to me for payment duly <lb/>
authenticated on or before the 13th day <lb/>
of April. or this notice will be <lb/>
plead in liar of their All per- <lb/>
sons indebted to said estate are request- <lb/>
ed to make immediate payment to me. <lb/>
This the 13th day of April. 1808. <lb/>
It. Conn, <lb/>
d. b. n. of 1.- It. Anderson. <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
By Virtue of a decree of the Superior <lb/>
Court of Pitt Comity at March Term <lb/>
Honor II. Bryan Judge <lb/>
presiding, in the cane of W. II. Cox vs. <lb/>
E. J. the <lb/>
will ell for before the Court <lb/>
House door in Greenville on <lb/>
the Sad day of May the following <lb/>
in the County of Pitt and <lb/>
in Township, a one fourth <lb/>
undivided interest in the land, known <lb/>
as the J. laud also a one fifth <lb/>
undivided interest in the lands F. <lb/>
the tract adjoin- the lands <lb/>
L. B. B. W. <lb/>
and others, containing acres, <lb/>
more or the other tract adjoin; the <lb/>
L. Nobles land <lb/>
and others containing acres, more or <lb/>
BY H. C. <lb/>
I used to wonder why <lb/>
As smart a man as I <lb/>
Could never make my business succeed, <lb/>
III spite of toil and care, <lb/>
And always being there, <lb/>
It wouldn't pay and worried me. indeed, <lb/>
deed. deed. <lb/>
While others all , <lb/>
The road to wealth bad found. <lb/>
I poorer got aboard sinking ship. -hip. <lb/>
ship. <lb/>
alas. I knew <lb/>
That In a month or two <lb/>
The sheriff sure would have me ill his <lb/>
grip, grip. grip. <lb/>
Each night, with aching head, <lb/>
I tensed upon my lied <lb/>
Endeavoring to think out my mi-take, <lb/>
take, take <lb/>
Why I With vim and health. <lb/>
And means Of gaining wealth. <lb/>
Could never, like my neighbors, money <lb/>
make, make, make. <lb/>
At last I thought it out. <lb/>
noticed tho-c about, <lb/>
Who advertised were getting lots of gold, <lb/>
gold. gold. <lb/>
While those afraid to try <lb/>
Were left the same as I, <lb/>
Because our business methods were <lb/>
old. old. old. <lb/>
I kicked myself at once <lb/>
For being such a dunce. <lb/>
Then in the papers kept a glowing ad., <lb/>
ail., ad. <lb/>
My business right away, <lb/>
Of course began to pay. <lb/>
Which makes my friend, the Sheriff, very- <lb/>
sad, -ad. sail. <lb/>
This April ISM. <lb/>
F. G. JAMES. <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
Sealed Proposals. <lb/>
The board of Commissioners of Pitt <lb/>
county will at their meeting on the 2nd <lb/>
day of May 1892, receive sealed bids for <lb/>
the construction of a dam for a public <lb/>
roadway commencing at the north end <lb/>
of the bridge across river at Green- <lb/>
ville, and running from thence north <lb/>
one and degree east one hundred <lb/>
and thirty-two poles to the public road. <lb/>
The dirt to be used in the construction <lb/>
of said dam is to lie taken from the land <lb/>
lying immediately the west side of <lb/>
the said proposed roadway. The bids <lb/>
are to, lie by the yard for <lb/>
the dirt used in sail dam, and successful <lb/>
bidder is to clear the land upon which <lb/>
the dam is to be constructed of trees, <lb/>
bushes and logs. The board of Com- <lb/>
missioners reserves the right to reject <lb/>
any and all bids. For further <lb/>
apply to R. or Leonidas <lb/>
Fleming at Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
By order of the hoard of Commission- <lb/>
of Pitt county. <lb/>
D- II. JAMES, <lb/>
Important Notice. <lb/>
Sale of Steamer Greenville. <lb/>
By authority conferred on me by <lb/>
Stockholders of the Tar <lb/>
Company, I will offer for sale at <lb/>
auction at the Clyde wharf in the <lb/>
town of Washington, N on Thursday. <lb/>
May 19th, at o'clock P. M., the <lb/>
l s. with all her <lb/>
tackle, apparel and furniture, together <lb/>
with one Barge of tons capacity decked <lb/>
all over. The is <lb/>
a light draft propeller, length of keel <lb/>
feet, length over all feet, width of <lb/>
bottom feet, feet over all. speed <lb/>
miles per hour, capacity <lb/>
bales Inspected March 20th, <lb/>
1893- Title guaranteed- For further in- <lb/>
formation in person or by letter to <lb/>
John Havens. Washington. N. C. J. J. <lb/>
Cherry, N. C, or N. M. <lb/>
Lawrence, Tarboro, N. C. <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
Tar River Transportation Co. <lb/>
A New Enterprise. <lb/>
Wishing to thank our patrons for the <lb/>
liberal patronage they have given us la <lb/>
the lines of our manufacturing, <lb/>
we also wish to let them know that we <lb/>
building Barrels for Potatoes <lb/>
would glad to furnish those in <lb/>
need of Barrels. We think we have as <lb/>
rd ml well ventilated Barrel as Will <lb/>
on the market or It has been so pron- <lb/>
by those acquainted with truck <lb/>
barrels. We sell for cents apiece. <lb/>
Id lots of barrels cents. As we <lb/>
have no idea of the demand we would <lb/>
thank those wishing to buy barrels to <lb/>
place orders with us as early a <lb/>
possible so we may have prepared timber <lb/>
to build the barrels when needed. Those <lb/>
who do give any notice of their order <lb/>
may not barrels hand when they <lb/>
need them. We are also prepared to <lb/>
furnish cotton planters or to do any repair <lb/>
Work on them or furnish any . Also <lb/>
we can furnish on short notice any <lb/>
for or anything in our <lb/>
line of manufacturing. <lb/>
We would also call attention to our <lb/>
new style circular seat for churches. <lb/>
Please address Win- <lb/>
WHAT AMAZING FOLLY. <lb/>
Wilmington Star. <lb/>
For fifty-two years out of the one <lb/>
hundred and three since the first <lb/>
President of the United States was <lb/>
inaugurated the party <lb/>
was in control of and shaped the <lb/>
policy of this government. Dur- <lb/>
those fifty-two years the Re- <lb/>
public achieved its greatest glories <lb/>
on land and on sea, and extended <lb/>
its domain from ocean to ocean. <lb/>
Up to 1860 there was no com- <lb/>
plaint of class legislation, no com- <lb/>
plaint of the government being <lb/>
administered in the interest of <lb/>
money lords or monopolists, there <lb/>
was no exacting of monstrous <lb/>
tribute from the people for the en- <lb/>
of the few, no special <lb/>
legislation in the interest of men <lb/>
who paid for it by liberal <lb/>
to campaign funds, no govern- <lb/>
mental paternalism to make men <lb/>
by law, no govern- <lb/>
mental with the <lb/>
business affairs of the people, or <lb/>
in the affairs of States. This has <lb/>
all come to pass within the past <lb/>
thirty years, since the Republican <lb/>
party came into power. <lb/>
Within these thirty years all the <lb/>
legislation which has been passed <lb/>
affecting the governmental policies <lb/>
of this country has sprung from j <lb/>
the Republican party, which is <lb/>
responsible, for every grievance of <lb/>
which the people complain, which j <lb/>
may be the result directly or in- <lb/>
directly of the governmental <lb/>
pursued. No living man can <lb/>
point to one single act of which <lb/>
the people or against <lb/>
which the statesmen of the third <lb/>
party so loudly protest, for which <lb/>
the Democratic party is <lb/>
The Democratic party is not re- <lb/>
for the so-called <lb/>
tariff, which is another name <lb/>
for legalized plunder. <lb/>
It is not responsible for the <lb/>
lavish donation of the public lands <lb/>
to railroad corporations. <lb/>
It is not responsible for the de- <lb/>
of our merchant marine- <lb/>
It is not responsible for trans- <lb/>
our commerce to British <lb/>
ships and for making the American <lb/>
flag a curiosity in a foreign port <lb/>
or on the high seas. <lb/>
It is not responsible for the <lb/>
financial system which locks up <lb/>
the money of the country in the <lb/>
money centers, enabling the money <lb/>
kings to control the volume of cur- <lb/>
and regulate the rate of in- <lb/>
It is not responsible for the <lb/>
tariff system and internal revenue <lb/>
system that draws the money from <lb/>
the people and sends it to these <lb/>
centers. <lb/>
It is not responsible for the tariff <lb/>
and financial discrimination <lb/>
against some sections in favor of <lb/>
others. <lb/>
It is not responsible for the pol- <lb/>
which have weighed so <lb/>
upon the farmers of this country <lb/>
and covered their farms with <lb/>
of millions of dollars of in- <lb/>
It is not responsible for destroy- <lb/>
the foreign market of the far- <lb/>
mer and compelling him to depend <lb/>
upon the delusive <lb/>
It is not responsible for the <lb/>
millionaires whose fortunes <lb/>
range from to <lb/>
each, who can and do control <lb/>
the legislation of this country. <lb/>
It is not responsible for making <lb/>
the talisman to a seat in <lb/>
the United States Senate. <lb/>
It is not responsible for the <lb/>
trusts, combines, rings and <lb/>
against which so much pro- <lb/>
test has been made, which are the <lb/>
outgrowth of the governmental <lb/>
policies which have prevailed with- <lb/>
in the past thirty years. <lb/>
All these things, and more, have <lb/>
happened since the Democratic <lb/>
party went out of power and since <lb/>
the party came into <lb/>
power. It alone is responsible. <lb/>
Where, then, is the sense or the <lb/>
justice in arraigning the Demo- <lb/>
party and charging it with <lb/>
responsibility for the ills resulting <lb/>
from blundering or corrupt <lb/>
when it had nothing to do <lb/>
with it, but bus fought against it <lb/>
constantly, resolutely and <lb/>
through all these years <lb/>
What folly is it that <lb/>
inspires men who for all these <lb/>
years, or the greater part of them <lb/>
have stood in the Democratic lines <lb/>
and under Democratic banners <lb/>
and fought against the combined <lb/>
powers of corruption and greed, <lb/>
to desert their colors now when <lb/>
we are on the eve of securing what <lb/>
we have struggled so long for, and <lb/>
when the Democratic party is <lb/>
stronger than it ever has been <lb/>
within thirty years <lb/>
What idiotic ambition, or <lb/>
treachery is it in the men <lb/>
once were who <lb/>
now labor to create dissension, <lb/>
and to destroy the party which <lb/>
for thirty years has stood between <lb/>
the people and oppression, and <lb/>
prevented the government from <lb/>
being converted into a centralized <lb/>
despotism I <lb/>
This is what some men who have <lb/>
once been Democrats are now <lb/>
doing in the South, and doing it <lb/>
JUST THE OF IT. <lb/>
ABOUT MEN. <lb/>
Plymouth Beacon. <lb/>
Often as we stand upon the <lb/>
banks of the Roanoke and see raft <lb/>
after raft of pine logs being taken <lb/>
out of the State to be manufactured, <lb/>
we hear men say that in a short <lb/>
time the wealth of our forests will <lb/>
be exhausted then the lumbermen <lb/>
will pull and go elsewhere and <lb/>
Plymouth will be left flat. <lb/>
So it is, and has been for many <lb/>
years, the supply of logs produced <lb/>
by our extensive forests is so great <lb/>
that the capacity is <lb/>
unable to handle it, hence it has <lb/>
to be shipped out of the State to <lb/>
be manufactured. While this is <lb/>
true, it is not a necessity. We <lb/>
have three mills that manufacture <lb/>
all the lumber they can, and now <lb/>
that this number is insufficient we <lb/>
should increase the manufacturing <lb/>
capacity to correspond with the <lb/>
supply, then if the supply of the <lb/>
manufactured is greater than the <lb/>
local demand, which it will be, let <lb/>
the lumber be shipped already <lb/>
manufactured. What the South, <lb/>
and especially this section, needs <lb/>
is manufacturing enterprises, then <lb/>
if the supply of the forest is ex- <lb/>
as is predicted, the South <lb/>
will have reaped the benefit of <lb/>
what has gone. <lb/>
What is true of the lumber inter- <lb/>
est is also true of all other inter- <lb/>
Cotton for instance, has to <lb/>
baled and shipped to some <lb/>
State north of us for <lb/>
We raise it, go through <lb/>
with all the trouble, then sell it at <lb/>
or cents, it is then shipped to <lb/>
the north, pay the <lb/>
manufactured into cloth and <lb/>
then shipped back to us again <lb/>
pay the that is the con- <lb/>
sumer does, and in this case the <lb/>
for the sole purpose of lifting, producer is really the consumer, <lb/>
themselves into position by taking but he has to pay two freights. If <lb/>
advantage of the confidence or j we had mills here at home the cot- <lb/>
credulity of the men who trust them j ton could be manufactured into <lb/>
In all the North no roan and sold a profit; lit. <lb/>
has ever been conspicuous enough the transportation expenses, <lb/>
to attract attention as a Democrat l then if the supply should be great- <lb/>
has been found to do this. It has than the local demand the goods <lb/>
been left to men in the South, could be shipped thus bringing <lb/>
where of all the sections, if a profit to the homo industry, <lb/>
and patriotism were not Again, there are many other <lb/>
the people should be united things of minor importance and at <lb/>
and solid as a stone wall for and the same time a necessity with us <lb/>
with the party which for twenty- which should be manufactured at <lb/>
five years has so heroically stood home. Look at the ax, hoe and <lb/>
in of the South when the scoop handles, tubs, buckets, <lb/>
arm of the sectional as-; would it not pay to make them <lb/>
and oppressor was raised j here at home where the material <lb/>
to strike. I is found in great abundance, as <lb/>
The innocent minded people; well as it does the northern <lb/>
who are duped into this may who sell them to us at a <lb/>
pitied f their credulity, but the j profit with freight added. . <lb/>
men who take advantage of And again, we buy all our flour <lb/>
can never rise above the suspicion , at the north or west, pay for <lb/>
of treachery, venality or demented <lb/>
ambition. <lb/>
A Remarkable Character. <lb/>
this necessary of life from to <lb/>
per Why is this <lb/>
There can be no other reason given <lb/>
than the fact that we have no mills <lb/>
in this section to manufacture the <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. flour. Perhaps some may argue <lb/>
Mr- Stinson, of Clear j that our farmers do not produce <lb/>
Creek, is a remarkable individual, the wheat, but they can and they <lb/>
He is years of age ; was born i would if the mills were here- The <lb/>
raised in the house he now soil of Eastern Carolina will pro- <lb/>
occupies, never having lived in <lb/>
any other; never was in any other <lb/>
county than this and Union, where <lb/>
he married. He has made <lb/>
coffins in his life. The first <lb/>
ever put in Philadelphia grave- <lb/>
yard was made by him. He was <lb/>
never on a jury in his life, and <lb/>
was a witness in court. He <lb/>
regulates his household by a clock <lb/>
years old, of the ancient <lb/>
style. Mr. Stinson <lb/>
never owned any slaves, but has <lb/>
been well off all his life- He had <lb/>
a great mania for hunting in <lb/>
lies for gold. Once after a heavy <lb/>
rain, while picking amongst some <lb/>
rocks in a near his house, <lb/>
he found a piece of gold which <lb/>
sold for The old man still <lb/>
has all his faculties, and is strong <lb/>
and hearty. <lb/>
Mr. J. W- Wharton, Jr., tells the <lb/>
Greensboro Record a snake story- <lb/>
He treed a huge snake, which he <lb/>
saw go into a hollow twenty feet <lb/>
from the ground. He cut the tree <lb/>
and in cutting into the hollow cut <lb/>
the snake in three pieces. When <lb/>
laid upon the ground it was over <lb/>
six feet long with an enormous <lb/>
body, and was known as the cow- <lb/>
sucker snake. <lb/>
When the Rev. Mr. <lb/>
prayed for the Ohio legislature <lb/>
I the other day he prayed that <lb/>
might be from the <lb/>
bribes, bribers and bribe-takers <lb/>
in our As he was praying <lb/>
for a Republican legislature the <lb/>
Rev. gentleman knew just what <lb/>
kind of a prayer was appropriate- <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
duce wheat equal to that of the <lb/>
west <lb/>
We cry when as <lb/>
a people are responsible for the <lb/>
one I hard times. The cause of hard <lb/>
times and the oppressed condition <lb/>
of this section of the country is <lb/>
said to be the result of political <lb/>
legislation, but we believe that the <lb/>
inactivity of our people has more <lb/>
to do with it than politics- <lb/>
Are northern capitalists and <lb/>
manufacturers to blame for the <lb/>
enormous prices charged us for <lb/>
supplies <lb/>
Are railroads to blame for <lb/>
charging us transportation on our <lb/>
supplies <lb/>
Is it their fault that we buy our <lb/>
meat at the west instead of raising <lb/>
it <lb/>
Is it their fault that we our <lb/>
flour, corn, cloth, instead of <lb/>
producing it <lb/>
Not by any means. We, the <lb/>
Southern people, are responsible <lb/>
for this State of affairs, and we <lb/>
alone, and so long as we continue <lb/>
in the present way, there is no <lb/>
power under the sun that <lb/>
can bring us relief. We boast of <lb/>
being a free people, but to be free <lb/>
we must be independent, and so <lb/>
long as we have to depend upon <lb/>
other sections for daily sup- <lb/>
plies we are not a free people- <lb/>
If do not wish to see Eastern <lb/>
North Carolina go backward <lb/>
must awaken to our interest and <lb/>
strive to live at home, to raise and <lb/>
manufacture our own supplies, to <lb/>
to save the profit which now go to <lb/>
the middle men and railroads. <lb/>
us offer inducements to <lb/>
to come here and <lb/>
our product, so that we <lb/>
reap the benefit. <lb/>
We want to talk a little to our <lb/>
lady readers, especially the young <lb/>
girls. have a good time ; be <lb/>
merry, be gay ; ride, row and enjoy <lb/>
yourselves generally, but don't <lb/>
make a step in the wrong <lb/>
will bring sorrow to <lb/>
others or cause you in future years <lb/>
to blush over its memory. Now <lb/>
we are going to tell you about <lb/>
what we the think of the boys, for <lb/>
every wheel should have a <lb/>
and so should every girl. A most <lb/>
delightful fellow, who is handsome <lb/>
enough to cause many a maiden's <lb/>
heart to flutter and who is well <lb/>
enough off to be a suitable cause <lb/>
in mama's estimation, for the <lb/>
was modest enough to <lb/>
affirm he remained single <lb/>
owing to the fact that he did not <lb/>
feel capable of a woman <lb/>
happy. This very statement re- <lb/>
vealed the truth that he would in- <lb/>
deed the man to make one of <lb/>
the best of husbands, in con- <lb/>
sequence make a very happy <lb/>
woman of the girl he chose for his <lb/>
wife. <lb/>
It is not the man who is afraid <lb/>
he will not the bill in the mat- <lb/>
play that is the one that <lb/>
fails signally in the role. If he <lb/>
ever ventures so far asks a <lb/>
woman to be his wife she is pretty <lb/>
sure that her life will be pleasant <lb/>
so far as her domestic relations <lb/>
are concerned. If his modesty is <lb/>
not assumed he will never quite <lb/>
recover from the surprise at her <lb/>
accepting him and he will always <lb/>
regard her love as a possession <lb/>
that is exceedingly precious and <lb/>
must be carefully guarded lest it <lb/>
slip away from him. No mutter <lb/>
how many years they married <lb/>
it will always be the same the <lb/>
modest, unassuming bachelor will <lb/>
prove the devoted admiring <lb/>
band to the end. <lb/>
On the other hand, the superb <lb/>
who considers that ho be- <lb/>
stows a little of heaven with <lb/>
the giving of his name is the one <lb/>
that is going to make a girl <lb/>
wretched. He feels as though per- <lb/>
haps he were too precipitated in <lb/>
his wooing and shows her by his <lb/>
actions if he does not tell her in so <lb/>
many words that there were <lb/>
other girls just dying for him. <lb/>
If money is scarce it will not be <lb/>
he that will suffer. His glorious <lb/>
form must be arrayed in gorgeous <lb/>
apparel, his luncheons necessarily <lb/>
of the finest, and his cigars the <lb/>
best, though perhaps at home, his I <lb/>
wife in a garment that may have <lb/>
been one of the dresses of her <lb/>
trousseau many years ago, eats <lb/>
warmed over messes and does her <lb/>
own work He, in his pride, con- <lb/>
it enough honor for any <lb/>
woman simply to bear his name, <lb/>
and if it were suggested to him <lb/>
that his wife was miserable he <lb/>
would not credit such a ridiculous <lb/>
statement. <lb/>
Girls, do not be deceived by the <lb/>
gay, showy men, who are <lb/>
selfish who could never <lb/>
love any as well as their own <lb/>
charming selves. Do not let the <lb/>
fine figure, handsome face and <lb/>
dashing air make you snub the <lb/>
quiet, modest chap who blushes <lb/>
when you speak and appears a <lb/>
trifle stupid before the gay <lb/>
flow of talk of the more <lb/>
dashing rival. The modest man is <lb/>
the one for the long race and, if <lb/>
your head is level heart <lb/>
in the right place, the evanescent <lb/>
charms of the one will be complete- <lb/>
swallowed up and lost sight, of <lb/>
in the substantial lasting character <lb/>
of the other. <lb/>
SHALL CHURCHES ADVERTISE <lb/>
Somerville <lb/>
Mu. In reading your <lb/>
church column I have often won- <lb/>
why it is that there is so <lb/>
little in it about some of the <lb/>
churches. The activities of some <lb/>
of them are well reported. Take <lb/>
the Prospect Hill Congregational, <lb/>
for instance- No reader of your <lb/>
paper can help receiving the <lb/>
impression that it is a live, active <lb/>
institution that exists for the <lb/>
purpose of doing the greatest good <lb/>
to the greatest number. Into such <lb/>
a church people would naturally <lb/>
be attracted, and this leads me to <lb/>
tho matter about which I wanted <lb/>
to say just a word, namely, the <lb/>
value of advertising to churches. <lb/>
I may be a upon this sub <lb/>
but I do not believe that <lb/>
many things succeed in these days <lb/>
without being advertised. I don't <lb/>
mean advertised by displayed <lb/>
notices in advertising columns in <lb/>
all cases, but I do mean calling <lb/>
public attention to them by means <lb/>
of ink in some way. As <lb/>
I understand it you insert all these <lb/>
church notices without <lb/>
and that being the case I should <lb/>
think that the pastors would be <lb/>
swift to embrace the opportunity <lb/>
to keep tho activities of their <lb/>
respective churches before the <lb/>
public. A pastor could sit down <lb/>
and in fifteen minutes each week <lb/>
write out enough for a quarter of <lb/>
a column about his church, all <lb/>
good readable matter that would <lb/>
the . interest of his own <lb/>
flock and perhaps interest some- <lb/>
body else. I cannot conceive why <lb/>
that they should neglect such an <lb/>
opportunity of reaching the public. <lb/>
A even with its attractions, <lb/>
be accounted foolish should <lb/>
it neglect to tell the public what <lb/>
are upon its boards Why should <lb/>
not the church use the same <lb/>
in seeking to uplift and <lb/>
save men that the playhouses do <lb/>
in seeking to amuse them I <lb/>
think that pastors throw away one <lb/>
grand opportunity for helping <lb/>
their churches- by not keeping the <lb/>
public generally better posted <lb/>
about what is going on in the<lb/>
It don't often happen that a <lb/>
young man gets into luck by get- <lb/>
ting into the but that <lb/>
young man from Dubuque. Iowa, <lb/>
who got into the Wisconsin <lb/>
did. He was released a <lb/>
short while ago and shortly after- <lb/>
ward learned that he had been left <lb/>
thirty-six thousand dollars by a <lb/>
fellow convict who had become at- <lb/>
to him while in prison- <lb/>
But as these occurrences don't hap- <lb/>
pen often we wouldn't advise any <lb/>
young man to break into tho <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
Wire Fence Swindlers. <lb/>
Shelby Aurora. <lb/>
Two Cincinnati, Ohio, men came <lb/>
here ten days ago and sold the <lb/>
right to make a patent <lb/>
wire fence, almost similar to <lb/>
the fence made here two years ago. <lb/>
The two swindlers traveled in the <lb/>
country several days establishing <lb/>
so-called agencies for the N- a- W. <lb/>
combination wire and wood fence. <lb/>
Their soft talk and flattering lies <lb/>
induced a dozen men to sign these <lb/>
notes for the commission on the <lb/>
future-profits- The notes are for <lb/>
value received and amount to <lb/>
total. The little machine <lb/>
is all right and makes a good <lb/>
fence, but the men are frauds and <lb/>
have swindled Cleveland county <lb/>
out of as these notes were <lb/>
traded to innocent purchasers for <lb/>
value received. Other counties <lb/>
have been swindled by these <lb/>
men who ought to be in the <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
Happenings Here and There as Gathered <lb/>
Prom our Exchanges. <lb/>
The State Board of Medical Ex- <lb/>
will meet at Wilmington <lb/>
Monday, May <lb/>
A large and fast steamer will run <lb/>
between Elizabeth City and Nag's <lb/>
Head daring the coming season. <lb/>
Tho hotel at Morehead <lb/>
City will open June It will be <lb/>
repainted, largely refurnished and <lb/>
put in shape throughout. <lb/>
Gov. Holt will review the troops <lb/>
at Charlotte May There will <lb/>
be a sham battle in which ten <lb/>
companies will take part <lb/>
The Ninth Annual Council of <lb/>
the Protestant Episcopal church <lb/>
of East Carolina will meet in Christ <lb/>
Church, Elizabeth City on Wed- <lb/>
May 18th. <lb/>
Carthage A certain far- <lb/>
mer near Cameron is so absent- <lb/>
minded that he plowed half the <lb/>
day the other Sunday before he <lb/>
thought of it being the Sabbath. <lb/>
The North Carolina State <lb/>
cal Society will hold its 39th <lb/>
in Wilmington, on <lb/>
Monday, May 17th. The board of <lb/>
examiners will meet on May 16th- <lb/>
Washington A log <lb/>
fell from the slide at <lb/>
mill and crushed the cart attached <lb/>
to a horse, breaking the shafts <lb/>
short off, but not in the least <lb/>
tho horse. <lb/>
Mr. E. E- Billiard, of tho Scot- <lb/>
land Democrat, will deliver <lb/>
the commencement address at <lb/>
Female which <lb/>
takes place on June 1st. The <lb/>
address will be a good one- <lb/>
Rev. Dr. J. F- Crowell, president <lb/>
of Trinity College, will deliver the <lb/>
address July 23rd, before the local <lb/>
conference, at Raleigh, <lb/>
his subject being History of <lb/>
Local Preachers and its Bearing <lb/>
on Methodist <lb/>
Raleigh Mr- How- <lb/>
ard found two small <lb/>
of gold about three miles <lb/>
Raleigh. He believes there <lb/>
is considerable gold in the north- <lb/>
western part of the county, and <lb/>
intends to wash the gravel in some <lb/>
of the streams. <lb/>
The annual convention of the <lb/>
King's Daughters will be held in <lb/>
Wilmington, N. C, May 18th. 19th <lb/>
and 29th. Delegates expecting to <lb/>
attend should notify the President <lb/>
of the United Circle, Mrs- P. D. <lb/>
Swindell, Mulberry Street, or <lb/>
the Secretary, Mrs. S- H. Burt, <lb/>
Walnut Street. <lb/>
Statesville Motion <lb/>
was made by the <lb/>
in the Federal Court last week <lb/>
to remand the cases against the <lb/>
railroad company growing out of <lb/>
tho Bostian bridge wreck to the <lb/>
State court and the motion was <lb/>
granted by Judge. Dick. These <lb/>
cases had been docketed in the <lb/>
Federal Court by the defendant- <lb/>
Goldsboro Tho bean <lb/>
crop in this vicinity is taking on a <lb/>
more promising appearance under <lb/>
the influence of the present run of <lb/>
weather, and those of <lb/>
Miss Madge Williams, of <lb/>
Texas, has been selected favorable <lb/>
to christen the Texas, which is now truck farmers who have beans <lb/>
nearly ready for launching at the to hope <lb/>
, , .,. that, after all, they may come out <lb/>
navy yard here. Miss Williams least if not ahead. <lb/>
is a granddaughter of General j So mote it be- <lb/>
Sam Houston, and, by permission I , T . <lb/>
A company <lb/>
has been organized in our town to <lb/>
prepare a tar-kiln ready to be <lb/>
of Secretary Tracy, she was chosen <lb/>
by popular <lb/>
The managers of the <lb/>
Fair estimate tho gate receipts as man ago the building and <lb/>
expenses <lb/>
Net profit With such <lb/>
a nice thing in sight, why don't <lb/>
the hustling Chicagoans freeze to <lb/>
that thing quit asking Con- <lb/>
to bank for <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
law m <lb/>
The i <lb/>
whole for <lb/>
; only tine <lb/>
ill it roil <lb/>
iii , <lb/>
. If yon stamped <lb/>
after name <lb/>
on the of the <lb/>
paper the j <lb/>
; I <lb/>
Expire Two Week <lb/>
From This <lb/>
It is to yon no- ; <lb/>
re-1 <lb/>
Dewed in time H <lb/>
the will <lb/>
cease to you <lb/>
I at I he expiration of <lb/>
, the two <lb/>
nil. J. MARQUIS, <lb/>
, C, <lb/>
Office in Skinner upper <lb/>
opposite Photograph <lb/>
R. L. <lb/>
DENTIST, f<lb/>
I. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
attention to Office <lb/>
at Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb/>
HOS. J. <lb/>
ALEX. L. <lb/>
BLOW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
in all the Courts. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb/>
A T-LA <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
B. K. I--ON <lb/>
I. A. <lb/>
TYSON, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention given to <lb/>
II. <lb/>
Attorney-at-Law, <lb/>
K. C. <lb/>
Prompt and careful attention to <lb/>
Collection solicited. <lb/>
L. C. LATHAM, <lb/>
IV <lb/>
MARRY <lb/>
SKINNER. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
JAMES, <lb/>
P. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, M. I. <lb/>
Practice in all the <lb/>
a Specialty. <lb/>
m a <lb/>
H a<lb/>
T. <lb/>
r- <lb/>
y. <lb/>
a ; <lb/>
I -2 i <lb/>
IT <lb/>
Here is a scrap of law that may <lb/>
not be familiar to a great <lb/>
finder of is compelled <lb/>
to make diligent inquiry for the <lb/>
owner thereof and to restore the <lb/>
same. If on finding the property <lb/>
he attempts to conceal fact, <lb/>
ho may be prosecuted for larceny- <lb/>
The differences between Italy <lb/>
and the United States regarding <lb/>
the New Orleans lynching have <lb/>
been settled. The Government of <lb/>
the United States is to pay an <lb/>
indemnity of francs to the <lb/>
Italian Government. <lb/>
Don't to <lb/>
That impure blood in pres- <lb/>
hi all, and the direct cause of ninny <lb/>
from which we suffer, Scrofula, <lb/>
and Specific which <lb/>
have ravaged the earth and the <lb/>
blood of for are <lb/>
the evil parents of indescribable horrors <lb/>
arc under absolute control of P. P. P. <lb/>
the only infallible blood purifier known. <lb/>
The P. P. P. Blood Cure has <lb/>
cured numerous eases of Scrofula and <lb/>
Salt Rheum in a -hurt time, where <lb/>
all other blood purifiers failed. <lb/>
Pleasant to take ; applicable to diseases <lb/>
if infancy or old age. <lb/>
fired, to be taken to the World's <lb/>
World's Fair. An expert tar maker will <lb/>
of the kiln the fair. It is to be <lb/>
a perfect North Carolina Tar Kiln <lb/>
of ye olden times and will attract <lb/>
a large crowd and pay handsome- <lb/>
in our opinion. <lb/>
Weldon During the <lb/>
storm Friday there was <lb/>
hail near and a farmer <lb/>
who came to town reported a most <lb/>
singular phenomenon. An <lb/>
ally large hail stone fell in his yard <lb/>
which lie picked up. and to his <lb/>
great surprise, he discovered a <lb/>
tiny frog in the ice. He <lb/>
quickly liberated the little hopper, <lb/>
and to his still greater <lb/>
the frog hopped gaily <lb/>
Everybody in North Carolina <lb/>
will regret to hear that Senator <lb/>
Vance is suffering from an attack <lb/>
of facial paralysis. His face is <lb/>
much drawn and he speaks with <lb/>
difficulty and it requires much <lb/>
for him to This is <lb/>
the second attack, the first being <lb/>
in 1865 just before he was taken to <lb/>
the old capital prison. It is the <lb/>
earnest hope of his friends every- <lb/>
where that he will be speedily re- <lb/>
stored to health and to the service <lb/>
of his State and country. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1375. <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD BUCK STOKE <lb/>
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY <lb/>
their year's supplies will <lb/>
their interest to get our prices before pr<lb/>
n all its branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb/>
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb/>
at Lowest Market Prices. <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. A <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and sold at prices to <lb/>
the times. Out goods are all bought <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having mi risk <lb/>
to sell at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
S. If. SCHULTZ. <lb/>
W. <lb/>
Concord Last Friday, <lb/>
the 22nd, Mr- Thomas Hartsell, of <lb/>
Locust Level, Stanly county, met <lb/>
death in a very peculiar manner- <lb/>
He was the miller at Locust Level <lb/>
keeping a mill which was run by <lb/>
steam. On Friday the governor <lb/>
belt fell off. The engine became <lb/>
unmanageable and ran at such <lb/>
speed that the plastering new off <lb/>
the mill stone. Some of this struck <lb/>
Mr. Hartsell on the left side of the <lb/>
head and face, killing him in- <lb/>
Tar Sim <lb/>
Forbes, <lb/>
B. Cherry, <lb/>
J. S. Greenville, <lb/>
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, <lb/>
Capt. R. F. Jokes, <lb/>
The People's Line for travel on T <lb/>
The Steamer is the finest <lb/>
quickest boat the river. <lb/>
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb/>
and painted- <lb/>
Fitted up specially for tho comfort, e <lb/>
convenience of Ladles <lb/>
ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb/>
A Table furnished with th <lb/>
best the market affords. <lb/>
A trip on the Steamer Greenville <lb/>
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb/>
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday <lb/>
Friday at o'clock, a. m. <lb/>
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, <lb/>
and Saturday at o'clock, a. j, <lb/>
received dally and through <lb/>
Bills Lading to all points. <lb/>
J. J. At., <lb/>
N. N. O.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017545_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
F. G. James, A. L. Blow, J. G. <lb/>
Harry Skinner, E. O. <lb/>
trial of John C- Davis,, Ex. Committee. The following <lb/>
which we mentioned last week as were chosen as <lb/>
being in progress at Wilmington, j T. Wilson, G-. B. King, A. J. <lb/>
ended the jury bringing in J. D. Buck, H. C bridge and J. Smith. <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
our Regular <lb/>
TO THE VOTING PUBLIC. <lb/>
5.1 mm Biter <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, MAY 4th. MM. <lb/>
at at Greenville, <lb/>
N. a second-class mail matter. <lb/>
Publisher's <lb/>
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb/>
The Reflector ts SI per <lb/>
Rates.-One <lb/>
one year, ; one-half year. <lb/>
; one-quarter column one year, <lb/>
Transient inch <lb/>
one week, two weeks, one <lb/>
month Two inches one week. 81.50. <lb/>
two weeks, one month, <lb/>
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb/>
Column as reading items, cents per <lb/>
for each insertion. <lb/>
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad, <lb/>
and Notices- <lb/>
and <lb/>
Summons to Non-Residents, etc., will <lb/>
be charged for at legal rates and MUST <lb/>
DE PAID FOR IN ADVANCE. <lb/>
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb/>
above, for any length of time, can be <lb/>
made by application to the office either <lb/>
in person or by letter. <lb/>
Advertisements and <lb/>
all changes of should be <lb/>
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb/>
mornings in order to receive prompt in- <lb/>
the day following. <lb/>
The Reflector having a large <lb/>
will be found a profitable medium <lb/>
through which to reach the public. <lb/>
verdict that the prisoner was in- <lb/>
sane. He was taken to the asylum. <lb/>
Davis certainly perpetrated some <lb/>
huge swindles, and it is wonderful <lb/>
how easily he took in most every- <lb/>
body with whom he had any deal- <lb/>
The illustrations in May Wide <lb/>
J. J. Mills, J. J. Laughing-; On motion it was ordered that <lb/>
As there are a good many voters <lb/>
v-,.,,.,,.,.,,. n , . ,,., my neighborhood who take it <lb/>
Washington, D. for granted that the present <lb/>
Mr. Harrison did not return j Register of Deeds of our <lb/>
house, J. Wash. Smith, J. H-Gray, the proceedings of this convention i from his visit to New York feeling j has had the office now for two <lb/>
Cannon, Nash Edwards, <lb/>
J. Bryan Grimes, Jno. B. <lb/>
way, Jno. Elks, Jr., F. Carroll and <lb/>
J. A- Stocks. <lb/>
Alternates. J. O. Proctor, <lb/>
Macon Haddock, W. P. Buck, Win. j <lb/>
George Venters, Marshall <lb/>
be furnished to the Eastern in a very good humor. The and that by tho unwritten <lb/>
tor with the request to the of man is great he law of lie not offer <lb/>
expected to have secured pledges I himself again to the convention for <lb/>
a I of from the New York <lb/>
On the convention ad- bosses, and bis failure to do so <lb/>
his disappointment <lb/>
Leonidas great. The fact was <lb/>
are of peculiar interest and Cox, W. B- Edwards, Mills, <lb/>
E. J. Hale, the only surviving <lb/>
son of E. J. Hale. Sr., the original <lb/>
founder of the Ob- <lb/>
server, in 1825, has purchased an <lb/>
interest in that paper. Maj. Hale <lb/>
is a very strong and able inner <lb/>
and will be quite an addition to <lb/>
the editorial staff of the State. He <lb/>
was Consul to Eng- <lb/>
land, during Cleveland's <lb/>
Editor will <lb/>
also remain on the paper- <lb/>
excellence. The frontispiece by <lb/>
Burgess is full of Chinese <lb/>
sentiment; the profuse <lb/>
display illustrating the old time <lb/>
stronghold of is a <lb/>
practical aid to the text and so, <lb/>
throughout the number, the illus- <lb/>
end not <lb/>
ways achieved in magazine <lb/>
The number is permeated <lb/>
with the May flavor and the spirit <lb/>
cf Decoration Day, and is a <lb/>
cal spring number. Wide <lb/>
is a year. D. Com- <lb/>
publishers, Boston, Mass. <lb/>
A destructive fire occurred in <lb/>
Philadelphia last Wednesday <lb/>
night, in which property to the <lb/>
value f near a million dollars was <lb/>
destroyed- The fire originated in <lb/>
Central the <lb/>
of which was complete- From <lb/>
this building the fire was <lb/>
to the Time eight story <lb/>
building and only a shell of that <lb/>
structure was left. In the <lb/>
building six people perished and <lb/>
more than half a hundred were <lb/>
seriously injured. The fire a <lb/>
terrible one. <lb/>
Two years ago the South <lb/>
veiled in Richmond a handsome <lb/>
monument surmounted by an <lb/>
equestrian statue of Lee. the gal- <lb/>
leader and commander in-chief <lb/>
of the Confederate army- This <lb/>
monument was erected out of the <lb/>
voluntary contributions of the <lb/>
Southern people who <lb/>
were vanquished and despoiled <lb/>
and is very justly their pride. Not <lb/>
until last week, on a picturesque <lb/>
spot overlooking the Hudson, was <lb/>
the first stone laid upon which is to <lb/>
be reared a monument to Grant, the <lb/>
victorious leader and commander- <lb/>
in-chief of the Federal <lb/>
people who have since the war <lb/>
been drawers of pensions paid <lb/>
largely by a defeated, impoverish- <lb/>
ed South. And this first stone has <lb/>
only been laid after years of <lb/>
entreaty to Congress and <lb/>
tent importunity to every other <lb/>
source except their own full pocket- <lb/>
books. We have not a word to <lb/>
utter against a monument to Grant <lb/>
he ought to have had one long <lb/>
why did not the North <lb/>
o ahead and raise the marble <lb/>
shaft to the memory of its leader <lb/>
out of its own pocket, like the <lb/>
South did to her leader, instead of <lb/>
begging somebody else to erect it <lb/>
for them- What a picture this is <lb/>
of their patriotism and love for <lb/>
their distinguished leader. <lb/>
The Seaboard Ah- Line has com- <lb/>
its road to Atlanta and now <lb/>
has a great through line from <lb/>
north to south- It runs through <lb/>
trains between Portsmouth <lb/>
and Atlanta, the first trains under <lb/>
the through schedule starting <lb/>
Monday of this week- These <lb/>
trains have Pullman sleepers. <lb/>
The schedule between Portsmouth <lb/>
and Raleigh will be the same as <lb/>
heretofore, with a stop of min- <lb/>
at the latter place. Trains <lb/>
leaving Raleigh at r. ac. will <lb/>
reach Atlanta in time for breakfast <lb/>
next morning. The people of <lb/>
Raleigh are joyous over the ad- <lb/>
vantages the city obtains from this <lb/>
splendid through line- <lb/>
Verily some sections of North <lb/>
Carolina and occur- <lb/>
are sometimes reported, <lb/>
which in atrociousness would <lb/>
compare with early scenes in the <lb/>
wild or happenings in the <lb/>
alleys of highly civilized New <lb/>
York. Last Thursday night in the <lb/>
city of Charlotte, a young lady. <lb/>
Miss Inez Sikes, who wore a beau- <lb/>
suit of hair that was her pride <lb/>
and the admiration of friends, was <lb/>
knocked down by an unknown <lb/>
villain by whom her tresses were <lb/>
from her head. Miss Sikes <lb/>
had gone from the door of her <lb/>
home to the wood pile in the yard <lb/>
to get some wood to replenish the <lb/>
fire, when a man stepped from be- <lb/>
hind a tree and made the cowardly <lb/>
attack on her. <lb/>
The County Convention meets <lb/>
here on Saturday for the purpose <lb/>
delegates to the State <lb/>
Convention. The primaries were <lb/>
held in the county on last <lb/>
day and we are glad to learn that <lb/>
there was perfect harmony every- <lb/>
where. This is as it should have <lb/>
been. The white men of this State <lb/>
have everything to lose and <lb/>
to gain by any divisions that <lb/>
may arise in the Democratic party. <lb/>
The enemy is professedly <lb/>
cent, and yet they are on the alert <lb/>
watching and waiting, for aiding <lb/>
and abetting every effort however <lb/>
small to create dissatisfaction and <lb/>
dissensions in the ranks of Demo- <lb/>
We are now doing the <lb/>
most important work to be done <lb/>
during the campaign- If proper <lb/>
care is taken selection of <lb/>
delegates we may look for concert <lb/>
of action, and the removal of every <lb/>
cause for dissension- <lb/>
We predict that the convention <lb/>
here next Saturday will select rep- <lb/>
delegates and that its <lb/>
action will be ratified by the good <lb/>
of the Let us all <lb/>
remember that our reforms must <lb/>
TOWNSHIP PRIMARIES. <lb/>
The several townships of the <lb/>
county held primary meetings last <lb/>
Saturday for the purpose of <lb/>
delegates to the county <lb/>
convention which meets in Green- <lb/>
ville next Saturday, 7th- Below <lb/>
we publish proceedings of those <lb/>
of the primaries which <lb/>
report to the <lb/>
DAM. <lb/>
Pursuant to a call of the <lb/>
Committee of Pitt county the <lb/>
Democratic voters of Beaver Dam <lb/>
township met at May's Chapel and <lb/>
appointed tho following to the <lb/>
county convention to held in <lb/>
Greenville on May 7th, <lb/>
J. Anderson. G- <lb/>
T. Tyson, J. W- Smith and Amos <lb/>
Joyner. <lb/>
Alternates Harvey Tyson, <lb/>
T. A. Nichols, T. E Little and <lb/>
Thomas <lb/>
The following resolution was <lb/>
unanimously <lb/>
Resoled, That we applaud and <lb/>
approve the course of Col. Harry <lb/>
Skinner in his bold advocacy of <lb/>
financial relief. <lb/>
G. T. Tyson, Chm. <lb/>
Amos Joyner; Sec- <lb/>
The following were appointed as <lb/>
delegates from township <lb/>
to the county <lb/>
S- Spain, R. A. <lb/>
Parker, D. C T. A <lb/>
pen and J. R. <lb/>
T. Hodges, J. <lb/>
L. Hathaway, J. G- Sieves, <lb/>
Jenkins and W- H- <lb/>
J. T. Hodges, Chm- <lb/>
J. E. Sec. <lb/>
BETHEL. <lb/>
The people of Bethel township <lb/>
met on Saturday April the 30th., <lb/>
for the purpose of appointing <lb/>
to the county convention to <lb/>
be held in Greenville on the 7th <lb/>
of May, 1892- After several good <lb/>
speeches the delegates were <lb/>
pointed us follows <lb/>
C S Cherry, S- <lb/>
A. Gainer, S. M. Jones, J. E. <lb/>
Brown, G. W. Bullock, T M- Man- <lb/>
and D- C- Moore. <lb/>
Lloyd, F. C- <lb/>
Martin, J. S- L- Ward, Jas. H- <lb/>
Barnhill, B. M. Whitehurst, J. B. <lb/>
Barnhill and H. A- Rollins. <lb/>
B- M- Whitehurst. Soc <lb/>
CAROLINA. <lb/>
No report received up to the <lb/>
hour of going to press. <lb/>
Pursuant to the call of the <lb/>
County Executive Committee the <lb/>
Democrats of township <lb/>
met in convention at Block Jack <lb/>
to select to the <lb/>
L. H- White, J. T- <lb/>
M. G- Ross, W- B- <lb/>
Moore, Jno. Carroll and W- L. <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
By a unanimous vote the County <lb/>
Commissioners were requested to <lb/>
immediately established a ferry at <lb/>
Boyd's Ferry. <lb/>
J. Bryan Grimes, <lb/>
Jno. D. Buck, Sec <lb/>
The following is a list of <lb/>
gates and Alternates for Content- <lb/>
P. B. <lb/>
John Brooks, J- R. Johnson, John <lb/>
Pierce, R. C. Cannon, Arden Tuck- <lb/>
John J. May, A. G- Cox, W. J. <lb/>
Jackson, Jessie Cannon, J. D. Cox <lb/>
J. R. Smith, E- <lb/>
Lang and Charles <lb/>
Cox, P <lb/>
H. Kittrell, H- E. Ellis, Lafayette <lb/>
Cox, Asa Garris, L. A- Cobb, Tames <lb/>
Ira Eli Craft, John <lb/>
Nobles, P. J. B. Car- <lb/>
A- L. L- Stocks <lb/>
and R. R- Jackson. <lb/>
J. R. Forbes, Chm- <lb/>
J. D. Cox, Sec. <lb/>
FALKLAND. <lb/>
By a requirement of the chair- <lb/>
man of the Democratic executive <lb/>
committee of Pitt county, the <lb/>
Democrats of Falkland township <lb/>
met at Falkland on tho 30th day <lb/>
of April. 1892, at P- M. for the <lb/>
purpose of electing delegates to <lb/>
meet in Greenville on the 7th day <lb/>
of May, 1892. <lb/>
Capt. John King was elected <lb/>
permanent chairman and M. Z. <lb/>
Moore secretary. After a few very <lb/>
appropriate remarks for the ac- <lb/>
by the chairman, it was <lb/>
moved that the election of <lb/>
gates by ballot, the first <lb/>
receiving the largest number cf <lb/>
votes to be elected delegates, and <lb/>
the receiving the next largest <lb/>
number of votes to be alternates. <lb/>
The motion being carried voting <lb/>
was in order. <lb/>
King, R- R. <lb/>
Cotton, J. C Cook, R. Williams, <lb/>
Jr., E. F. Williams, John Peebles, <lb/>
Jonas <lb/>
M. Smith, B- <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Abrams, <lb/>
R. King, J. L. Fountain, <lb/>
Harriss. E- Forbes, J. T- <lb/>
and J. H. Smith. <lb/>
There being no further business <lb/>
it was moved and carried that we <lb/>
adjourn. Jno- King, Chm. <lb/>
M. Z. Moore, Sec. <lb/>
FARMVILLE. <lb/>
The Democratic primary of <lb/>
Farmville township, held on the <lb/>
30th day of April, 1892, was called <lb/>
to order by T. E. Keel, chairman <lb/>
of the Democratic executive com- <lb/>
of tho township, who in a <lb/>
few remarks explained tho <lb/>
of the meeting. A. J. was <lb/>
made permanent chairman of the <lb/>
meeting and J. A. Lang secretary. <lb/>
The following were then duly- <lb/>
elected to the county convention <lb/>
L- Joyner, W. <lb/>
H. Wilkinson. B. F. A. <lb/>
D. Hill. D. M- Edwards. J. H. <lb/>
Flanagan, T. E. and C F. <lb/>
Moore. <lb/>
W. R. Home, M. R. Turnage, R- <lb/>
P. Sugg, F. M. Whichard, R. L. <lb/>
Davis, B. M. Lewis and F. M <lb/>
Davis. <lb/>
The following resolution intro <lb/>
by C. L Barrett was passed <lb/>
Resolved, That the thanks of <lb/>
this convention are tendered to <lb/>
Col- Harry Skinner for his activity, <lb/>
zeal and ability displayed in be- <lb/>
half of the reform measures now <lb/>
so earnestly desired by the people. <lb/>
A. J. Move, <lb/>
J. A. Lang, Sec. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. <lb/>
Pursuant to the call of the <lb/>
County Executive Committee the <lb/>
Democratic voters of Greenville <lb/>
township met at the Court House <lb/>
on Saturday, April 30th, 1892, at <lb/>
o'clock P. M. <lb/>
Leonidas Fleming, chairman of <lb/>
the township committee, the <lb/>
convention to order and presided. <lb/>
On motion Alex L. Blow <lb/>
pointed Secretary. <lb/>
The following were elected as <lb/>
delegates and alternates to the <lb/>
county convention to be held in <lb/>
Greenville on Saturday, May 7th i <lb/>
A. Dudley, Ash- <lb/>
Whichard, H- B- Johnson, E- <lb/>
P. Fleming. L. A Mayo. W. M. <lb/>
Brown, L. F. Evans, G. M. Tucker, <lb/>
T. C- Bryant, W- H. Allen, B. W. <lb/>
Tucker. J. B. W. H. <lb/>
Tucker. W. B. James. E- A. <lb/>
R. W- King, W. H. Smith, Allen <lb/>
Warren, B. G Pearce, T. J. Jarvis <lb/>
and C. D- Rountree. <lb/>
H. Moore, S- <lb/>
Alex L. Blow, <lb/>
The meeting was called to order <lb/>
and its object explained by the <lb/>
chairman or the Township <lb/>
Committee. He was then <lb/>
made permanent chairman an R. <lb/>
W. W. Ward elected secretary. <lb/>
The following delegates <lb/>
elected i <lb/>
Fleming, J. <lb/>
J. Mason, E. P. Daniel. W. W. <lb/>
Little and S. R. Ross. <lb/>
Ward, E. N. <lb/>
Benjamin Abrams, Abram <lb/>
Baker and Beasley Danial. <lb/>
J. R. Davenport offered the fol- <lb/>
lowing <lb/>
That the chair appoint a com- <lb/>
of three to wait upon Col. <lb/>
Harry Skinner and request him to <lb/>
make or more public speech- <lb/>
es in the county of Pitt, with one <lb/>
appointment at for the <lb/>
purpose of giving his political <lb/>
views on matters in general. <lb/>
Adopted. <lb/>
The chair J. R. <lb/>
Davenport, W. H. Bagwell and <lb/>
T- H. as that committee. <lb/>
Upon motion of Dr. W- H. Bag <lb/>
well the sense sf the meeting was <lb/>
taken as to its choice for <lb/>
nor which resulted largely for <lb/>
Skinner. <lb/>
We had a good meeting and the <lb/>
best of harmony prevailed through- <lb/>
out. F. Ward, Chm. <lb/>
R. W. Ward, Sec. <lb/>
SWIFT creek. <lb/>
Pursuant to a call of the <lb/>
committee, the Democrats of <lb/>
Swift Ci township met in con- <lb/>
Cross roads, <lb/>
on April 30th, for the <lb/>
purpose of selecting delegates to <lb/>
attend the county convention in <lb/>
Greenville on Saturday, May 7th- <lb/>
Meeting was called to order by F. <lb/>
M. Kilpatrick, chairman of town- <lb/>
ship committee. On motion he <lb/>
was elected permanent chairman <lb/>
and W- S- Wooten elected sec <lb/>
On motion the following <lb/>
gates were elected to attend the <lb/>
county convention. <lb/>
R. Wilson, W. <lb/>
C Burney. N. R. Cory, J. M. Dix- <lb/>
on, S- Wooten, Israel Moore, <lb/>
C P. Gaskins, L- B. <lb/>
Lewis Wilson, Jr., and Fred <lb/>
Harding. <lb/>
Burney, J. <lb/>
W- Cannon, G. W. Gardner, Doc. <lb/>
Smith, J. A- Gardner, Calvin Had- <lb/>
dock, A- F. Pittman. J. P. <lb/>
R. H- Garris and J. Ma <lb/>
Dixon. <lb/>
Mr. Fred Johnson introduced <lb/>
the following resolution and plat- <lb/>
from, which was unanimously <lb/>
Whereas, We the Democratic <lb/>
voters of Swift Creek township in <lb/>
primary convention assembled, <lb/>
realizing tho urgent need for <lb/>
which will secure laborers <lb/>
and wealth producers the <lb/>
mate enjoyment of the fruits of <lb/>
their labor ; and knowing this to <lb/>
be the only political convention in <lb/>
which can give our individual <lb/>
commented on that on the <lb/>
day he was in the Metropolis the <lb/>
Republican dailies of that city, as <lb/>
if by agreement, were full of talk <lb/>
about the probability of <lb/>
after all becoming the candidate. <lb/>
Mr. Harrison must have <lb/>
this as significant; it was <lb/>
so regarded here. What- <lb/>
ever tho outcome, it is apparent to <lb/>
even the most casual observer that <lb/>
were the Harrison boom is rapidly <lb/>
ground here. <lb/>
The Naval appropriation bill, <lb/>
passed by the House, has <lb/>
been reported to the Senate with <lb/>
amendments largely increasing <lb/>
the appropriation for new ships. <lb/>
Senator Daniel's amendment <lb/>
appropriating for the <lb/>
international naval review next <lb/>
year was reduced to <lb/>
The substitute for the House <lb/>
Chinese exclusion bill, which was <lb/>
passed by the Senate early this <lb/>
week, is in the hands of a confer- <lb/>
committee, and although the <lb/>
sentiment of the House is strong- <lb/>
in favor of a more rigid <lb/>
than is possible under the <lb/>
present laws, which the Senate <lb/>
substitute extends for ten years <lb/>
from expiration, it is regard- <lb/>
ed as probable that tho House <lb/>
may accept it as the most that can <lb/>
be gotten from the Senate- <lb/>
CHERRY <lb/>
-DEALERS IN- <lb/>
Convention to be held in Green- j H- Spain, J. A- K. H. <lb/>
through the Democratic I May 7th- The meeting Fleming, E- B. Elihu <lb/>
party and let us not do or say called to order and the object of <lb/>
anything that <lb/>
one. <lb/>
may estrange any <lb/>
the convention stated by J. Bryan <lb/>
Joseph Nobles, J- Briley, <lb/>
L L. Kittrell, Joseph James <lb/>
Grimes, Chairman of Evans, H. F. Keel, H. J. Heater, <lb/>
a third nomination, I take great <lb/>
pleasure in presenting you tho <lb/>
name of C. L. Barrett for that <lb/>
The qualifications of Mr. <lb/>
Barrett are too well known to need <lb/>
any comment. <lb/>
His service to the party cannot <lb/>
be better illustrated than his <lb/>
to Democratic principle when <lb/>
in the campaign of 1884, when his <lb/>
uncle, Capt. L. J. Barrett, was a <lb/>
candidate for Congress he march- <lb/>
ed the polls and voted the <lb/>
straight Democratic ticket against <lb/>
him, whom he thought a great deal <lb/>
of, and in fact loved next to his <lb/>
father. Mr. Barrett has always <lb/>
been very active in every campaign, <lb/>
has made many sacrifices for the <lb/>
party, and while having been be- <lb/>
fore a candidate for Register of <lb/>
Deeds, always gave his successful <lb/>
rival his hearty support. His <lb/>
name too will bring to the party <lb/>
all the strength of the <lb/>
Democracy of Farmville, and if he <lb/>
is nominated his election will not <lb/>
only be assured, but the county of <lb/>
Pitt will have a Register that is <lb/>
competent, attentive and obliging, <lb/>
and I know will give perfect <lb/>
faction for tho next two years to <lb/>
come. Farmville <lb/>
The House Judiciary committee <lb/>
will report a resolution authorizing <lb/>
an investigation of tho Pinkerton <lb/>
detective agencies. The <lb/>
to be reported is a substitute <lb/>
for the one offered by <lb/>
Watson of Georgia, several <lb/>
months ago, which contained <lb/>
charges against the Pinkerton <lb/>
system. <lb/>
Bryan's bill <lb/>
placing lumber on the list, <lb/>
which is a duplication of the <lb/>
section of the old Mills tariff <lb/>
bill, have reported to <lb/>
the House this week by the Ways <lb/>
and Means committee, if the Re- <lb/>
publican members of that commit- <lb/>
tee had not requested a postpone- <lb/>
of final action until the next <lb/>
meeting of tho committee- <lb/>
James R- Young, tho deposed <lb/>
executive clerk of tho Senate, <lb/>
failed to get the Senate to in- <lb/>
the charges of betraying <lb/>
executive secrets under which he <lb/>
was dismissed, is now endeavoring <lb/>
to have an investigation of tho <lb/>
charges made by tho standing <lb/>
committee of newspaper <lb/>
in charge of the press <lb/>
galleries of Congress, the ground <lb/>
being that if the charges true <lb/>
he is not entitled to the privileges <lb/>
f those galleries, as a reputable <lb/>
newspaper correspondent. <lb/>
Senator Hill said, speaking of <lb/>
tho apportionment of New <lb/>
apportionment is both <lb/>
ally right and constitutionally <lb/>
correct. Tho of the re- <lb/>
publicans that it is unconstitutional <lb/>
will avail them nothing. The <lb/>
must and will decide against <lb/>
them, because their claims are <lb/>
frivolous ungrounded. For <lb/>
seven years the republicans refused <lb/>
to take an enumeration, to make <lb/>
an apportionment when they had <lb/>
an opportunity to do so themselves, <lb/>
and now they must suffer tho con- <lb/>
sequences of their <lb/>
Everyone regrets, and none more <lb/>
than the gentleman himself, that <lb/>
Representative Enloe, in a burst <lb/>
of temper, called Commissioner <lb/>
a liar. It was an <lb/>
occurrence, viewed from any <lb/>
standpoint. True, Mr. Enloe con- <lb/>
tends that Mr. had in a <lb/>
private conversation admitted do- <lb/>
that every party plat- <lb/>
form should represent as nearly as <lb/>
possible the views of the majority <lb/>
of the voters from whom it expects <lb/>
support, therefore be it <lb/>
Resolved, that our delegates to <lb/>
the county convention be request- <lb/>
ed to vote for men who are in <lb/>
favor of the following <lb/>
1st. We demand a national <lb/>
currency, sound flexible, <lb/>
issued by the general govern- <lb/>
only, a full legal tender <lb/>
for all debts, and that, without the <lb/>
of banking corporations, a <lb/>
just, equitable and efficient meaDs <lb/>
of distribution, direct to the people <lb/>
at a tax not to exceed per cent, <lb/>
be provided. <lb/>
a- We demand free and <lb/>
coinage of silver. <lb/>
b- We demand that the <lb/>
medium speedily increased <lb/>
to not less than per capita. <lb/>
c. We demand a graduated in <lb/>
come tax- <lb/>
d. We demand a revision of our <lb/>
tariff laws to the purpose that the <lb/>
necessaries of life shall <lb/>
taxed. <lb/>
e. We demand laws as will <lb/>
effectually crash trusts and all other <lb/>
combinations of capital formed for <lb/>
the purpose of extortion. <lb/>
2nd. We demand that the Pres- <lb/>
and Senators of the United <lb/>
States be elected be direct vote of <lb/>
the people. <lb/>
3rd. We demand govern- <lb/>
control of railroads, <lb/>
4th. We demand that the gov- <lb/>
secure and operate <lb/>
graph and telephone lines to be <lb/>
used in connection with the post <lb/>
office system fur the transmission <lb/>
of news. <lb/>
Moved and seconded that the <lb/>
proceedings of this meeting be sent <lb/>
the Eastern for <lb/>
cation. The meeting then ad- <lb/>
F. <lb/>
W- S. Wooten, Sec. <lb/>
The <lb/>
the campaign for cents. <lb/>
House Committee, but his <lb/>
could have been officially <lb/>
contradicted and disproved with- <lb/>
out the use of language that <lb/>
should never be permissible among <lb/>
gentlemen. <lb/>
Chairman Hatch of the House Ag- <lb/>
committee, to get <lb/>
his anti-option bill before the House <lb/>
as soon as the free binding twine bill <lb/>
is disposed of. He thinks the bill <lb/>
will pass, but its opponents are <lb/>
very active and say they expect to <lb/>
defeat it. <lb/>
Senator Sherman was <lb/>
acting under instructions when he <lb/>
amended Senator Teller's <lb/>
calling upon the President for <lb/>
information concerning the inter- <lb/>
national monetary conference, <lb/>
which rumor says has been <lb/>
ranged for, with the words not <lb/>
incompatible with the public in- <lb/>
for Mr. Harrison in his <lb/>
letter answer to the resolution <lb/>
my it would <lb/>
not be compatible with the public <lb/>
interest to lay before the Senate <lb/>
at this time tho information re- <lb/>
He promises that the <lb/>
Senate shall have the <lb/>
the earliest moment after de- <lb/>
finite information can properly be <lb/>
which probably means <lb/>
when it can best be used to aid <lb/>
Republican interests in the coming <lb/>
Presidential campaign. There <lb/>
will be some interesting talk in the <lb/>
Senate on Mr. Harrison's letter. <lb/>
Item. <lb/>
The farmers air up In <lb/>
this <lb/>
was a largo at this place <lb/>
last fourth EM. <lb/>
prom-hod MM. <lb/>
Ilka <lb/>
most ladies, was in our <lb/>
tho past visiting relative, <lb/>
fur the picnic and <lb/>
There is talk of starting a Sunday <lb/>
school at this place some time soon. It <lb/>
is a good thing. Why everybody <lb/>
do all they can for the good cause, <lb/>
We beg to announce to our many <lb/>
friends and customers that we <lb/>
have the largest and best selected <lb/>
stock of Goods to be found in our <lb/>
town. And while we are not sell- <lb/>
at cost we beg to announce <lb/>
that we think we and will <lb/>
PARK and OAKLAND. <lb/>
To those during the <lb/>
coming summer a trip to the mountains <lb/>
in search of health or pleasure. Deer <lb/>
Park, the dome the Alleghany <lb/>
Mountains. feet above the sea level. <lb/>
Offers such varied attractions as a delight- <lb/>
atmosphere during both day and <lb/>
night, pure water, smooth, winding <lb/>
roads through the and valleys <lb/>
and the most picturesque scenery in the <lb/>
range. The hotel is equip- <lb/>
with adjuncts to the entertain- <lb/>
pleasure and comfort of it <lb/>
guests, as and Bath, <lb/>
swimming for both ladles and <lb/>
gentlemen, rooms, superbly fur- <lb/>
parlors, and rooms single or en <lb/>
suite, an cuisine superior <lb/>
The surrounding grounds as well as <lb/>
the hotel are lighted with electricity, <lb/>
have cozy and shady nooks, meandering <lb/>
walks, lawn tennis courts and grassy <lb/>
play grounds for children within full <lb/>
view of the Six miles <lb/>
distant on the same mountain summit <lb/>
is Oakland, the twin resort of Deer Park <lb/>
and equally as well equipped for the <lb/>
ii and accommodation of its <lb/>
guests. Both hotels a-c upon the main <lb/>
line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, <lb/>
have the advantage of its splendid <lb/>
Limited Express trains between <lb/>
the and West, and are, therefore, <lb/>
readily accessible from all parts the <lb/>
the country. Season Excursion tickets, <lb/>
good for return passage until October <lb/>
31st, will be placed on sale at greatly <lb/>
reduced rates at all principal ticket <lb/>
offices throughout the country. One <lb/>
way tickets reading from St. Louis, <lb/>
Cincinnati, Columbus, Chi- <lb/>
and any point on I. system I <lb/>
Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia or <lb/>
New York, or vice verse, arc good <lb/>
stop off at either Deer Park or Oakland, <lb/>
and the lime limit will be extended <lb/>
agents at resort upon application. <lb/>
The season at these popular resorts <lb/>
commences June <lb/>
Tor full information M to rates, rooms, <lb/>
etc., address George D. Man- <lb/>
ager, Deer Park or Oakland, <lb/>
County, Maryland. <lb/>
Tobacco Growers <lb/>
Tobacco Furnace <lb/>
The best Invention ever mad.- for <lb/>
With it yon have absolute <lb/>
control over heating your barn, <lb/>
and it removes <lb/>
All Danger of Fire. <lb/>
Two cures per week can be <lb/>
made in the same barn- <lb/>
co of different degrees of ripe- <lb/>
can be at one time in <lb/>
the same barn. Saves labor and <lb/>
fuel. <lb/>
For further particulars ad- <lb/>
dress <lb/>
PHELPS, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
this paper when you write. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
I will sell at public sale in the <lb/>
Town of on Saturday, <lb/>
the 7th day of May. 1892, real <lb/>
estate to satisfy the taxes of the <lb/>
following persons for the year <lb/>
1891 and cost. <lb/>
D D Andrews, lot W James St, <lb/>
O C est, lot St, <lb/>
lots, V M R H, <lb/>
James St, <lb/>
hotel store. S H It, S <lb/>
m J. St, <lb/>
acres laud. Bethel. <lb/>
Mary E James lot, W Main St. <lb/>
lot, E James St, <lb/>
lot, E James St, <lb/>
J J, Nelson dwelling, N K R, <lb/>
t lot near Academy <lb/>
lot W Main St, <lb/>
J W Novell, lot, W Main St, <lb/>
Lewis lot, N St, <lb/>
SO <lb/>
Ml <lb/>
Hardy Bro, lot W Main St, <lb/>
l lot K st, <lb/>
W W Hunter, lot E Main St. <lb/>
W II Harrington, lot E Main St, <lb/>
lot K Main St, <lb/>
lot E Main St, <lb/>
St, <lb/>
J L lot K Main St, <lb/>
Bert lot James St, <lb/>
J S lot. X It R, <lb/>
Ham- Skinner, office K Main St, <lb/>
Pollard, store ft Main <lb/>
lot. R James St, <lb/>
lot N Pleasant St, <lb/>
lot W Main St. <lb/>
Robert Ward est, lot W Main St, <lb/>
O Jenkins. lot, E Andrews St, <lb/>
This April the 4th <lb/>
W. C. <lb/>
Town Collector. <lb/>
SHILOH-S CATARRH REMEDY. <lb/>
A cure for Catarrh, <lb/>
Canker mouth and Headache <lb/>
With each there U <lb/>
nasal Injector for the more successful <lb/>
treatment of these complaints without <lb/>
Price Sold at <lb/>
DRUG <lb/>
any prices on the different <lb/>
lines of Goods can-red by us. We <lb/>
throw out no baits to entrap <lb/>
To one and all we extend <lb/>
a cordial welcome to <lb/>
will be pleased to serve you with <lb/>
any goods in the following <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions, <lb/>
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Pants <lb/>
Goods, Eats, Shoes, Hardware, <lb/>
Cutlery, Nails, Tinware, Crockery, <lb/>
Glassware, Groceries, deg. <lb/>
White Oil cents per gallon, <lb/>
Wood and Willow Ware, Harness,<lb/>
Whips and Collars, Farming Tools <lb/>
of the improved makes, <lb/>
Trunks, Valises, Floor Matting, <lb/>
Oil Carriages, <lb/>
and the largest and best selected <lb/>
stock of FURNITURE ever kept <lb/>
in our town. When in need of <lb/>
anything in our line try us. <lb/>
Yours, anxious for trade, <lb/>
CHERRY CO. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb/>
CONTINUE THE MANUFACTURE OF <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory is well equipped with the best Mechanics. put up nothing <lb/>
but work. We keep up with the times and Improved styles <lb/>
material used In all work. All styles of Springs are you can select from <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ran. Horn, King <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full ready <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb/>
he year round, which we will sell as as <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we hope t <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
OFFICE SUGG k JAMES OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At current rates. <lb/>
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb/>
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
Alters to the buyers of Pitt and counties, a line of the following goo <lb/>
not to be excelled In this market. And to be an <lb/>
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and and QUEENS <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb/>
kinds, Gin and Mi Hay, Rock Plaster of and <lb/>
Hair. Harness, Bridles and addles <lb/>
HEAVY A SPECIALTY, <lb/>
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at <lb/>
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent for Cash. Hereford's Bread Prep <lb/>
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, Lead and pure <lb/>
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction, <lb/>
Mil <lb/>
A Writing <lb/>
AND IMPROVED. <lb/>
GOOD MANIFOLD. . <lb/>
The Rest Typewriter in World. <lb/>
Inexpensive, Portable. No Ink Ribbon, In- <lb/>
Type in all language. Easiest <lb/>
to learn, and rapid as <lb/>
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. <lb/>
as <lb/>
This Machine in <lb/>
body writing done on tin <lb/>
Typewriter. It always insures the most <lb/>
always insures <lb/>
attention. Address <lb/>
N. Washington, St., Boston, <lb/>
One of these machines can be at the Reflector office, where particulars and <lb/>
can had. <lb/>
For Accident Insurance the year in one of <lb/>
the best Companies existence, see <lb/>
Whichard.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017545_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
XI <lb/>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
H. C, MAY 1898. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
A Ohm f C. <lb/>
women at our hording house <lb/>
have taken little said a Mew <lb/>
fork wife the other day, which <lb/>
they derive considerable amusement. <lb/>
The men at on t house I am sorry to say <lb/>
are not very entertaining. Oar <lb/>
are deeply in and are <lb/>
generally too tired when they come <lb/>
borne to dinner to engage to small talk <lb/>
without a manifest effort. There are <lb/>
two or three unmarried men who are <lb/>
talkative enough, often too talkative in <lb/>
fact, bat their conversation is not half <lb/>
as entertaining to us as it is to them- <lb/>
selves. <lb/>
six of on this We <lb/>
gather in the parlor before going down <lb/>
to dinner, and there we agree upon some <lb/>
well known proverb or <lb/>
Our object is to bring the <lb/>
of these talkative young fellows <lb/>
around to a point where we can intro- <lb/>
duce this quotation appropriately. <lb/>
succeeds in getting off toe <lb/>
quotation first is the winner, and When <lb/>
each tries to win she also tries to hoed <lb/>
off the others, if she sees an opportunity <lb/>
coming. It is rare sport and afforest <lb/>
plenty of fan. To drag the quotation to <lb/>
badly, inappropriately, does not count; <lb/>
it moat come in aptly so as not to excite <lb/>
the suspicions of these youths that Ire <lb/>
are playing with them instead of at <lb/>
as they fondly imagine. Take, for in- <lb/>
stance, the primrose by <lb/>
the river's brim, a simple primrose Was <lb/>
to him, and it was nothing and <lb/>
try to bring around to that connection <lb/>
the conversation of a young man which <lb/>
begins with takes a flight into <lb/>
flirtation. and ends with the theaters or <lb/>
horses. <lb/>
takes some ingenuity, I tell yon. <lb/>
and the little mystery underlying all our <lb/>
remarks, which is known only to our- <lb/>
selves, gives the game additional inter- <lb/>
est for a woman, of York <lb/>
Tribune. <lb/>
i i. <lb/>
Living in Creeds is about W per cent <lb/>
higher than in an ordinary sown, ho <lb/>
meal lit to eat can be obtained for less <lb/>
than one dollar. A cot in a room with <lb/>
fifty or others cost from fifty cents <lb/>
to one dollar per night The water that <lb/>
courses through the town looks clear <lb/>
and sparkling, but it is need as <lb/>
sower the doctors warn every one not to <lb/>
drink it Beer costs teen a glass. <lb/>
or thirty or forty rents a bottle. <lb/>
that will not kill for lea <lb/>
toast twenty-five cents drink, and the <lb/>
bartender is careful that your <lb/>
is no t too Urge at that Horses and <lb/>
burros to ride over the am <lb/>
hired at fifty and an <lb/>
hour. <lb/>
The streets are so terribly that <lb/>
one dares not walk and a <lb/>
ride to any part of the city frill cost yon <lb/>
cents. have driven over <lb/>
from Pueblo, a distance of <lb/>
miles, with their n i <lb/>
richer harvest than the <lb/>
is high. Any man who can drive a <lb/>
nail can command four dollars a day, <lb/>
sad in some extreme cases they are paid <lb/>
one dollar on hour. Boos carpenters get <lb/>
eight dollars a day, and are talking of <lb/>
raising the scale of wages. Laundry <lb/>
posts three times as much in St Louis, <lb/>
and no Chinamen are allowed in cams. <lb/>
n a soon. <lb/>
Russell, the heir apparent of <lb/>
is a strict <lb/>
He a very lively interest the <lb/>
members of the to form a <lb/>
if somewhat biased, opinion of <lb/>
the <lb/>
and <lb/>
on election it was only <lb/>
after a good deal of persuasion and by <lb/>
The morning East, was <lb/>
op very early. He town the <lb/>
dining room and sat there very quietly <lb/>
alone. By and by his gubernatorial <lb/>
morning, but <lb/>
be heir apparent made no answer. In- <lb/>
stead he got gravely and circled <lb/>
about his astonished father, surveying <lb/>
him from head to foot. <lb/>
is the matter, asked <lb/>
toe governor there any- <lb/>
thing wrong with my coat Is my <lb/>
Do yen sen any <lb/>
smut on <lb/>
the eon. in a <lb/>
pointed tone. yon ain't any big- <lb/>
today yen were yesterday. <lb/>
Nurse said last night if went to bed <lb/>
early I'd wake this morning and fad <lb/>
you the loan to <lb/>
I think she fooled me. Herald. <lb/>
if early historians. <lb/>
are tabs <lb/>
tribe of American n- <lb/>
who had at the white <lb/>
of <lb/>
J and <lb/>
of Bat <lb/>
to to the story of creation, the <lb/>
Tower of Babel and the flood, many of <lb/>
them having history which <lb/>
almost exactly with the <lb/>
stories of these great events as related <lb/>
One day Davenport, the <lb/>
agent for the was <lb/>
telling some about Noah, the <lb/>
him with We know <lb/>
that long time. We was to canoes all <lb/>
tied together. We float on heap water. <lb/>
We send down one. <lb/>
times. Ha dive, come Last he go <lb/>
down and come up with in his <lb/>
claw. We know water going <lb/>
TUe wee all the Mr. Dav- <lb/>
could elicit from the seer. <lb/>
-St Loan. <lb/>
Cars few <lb/>
A ha <lb/>
been to Boston, brought back <lb/>
model of. seabed <lb/>
sample of the kind made in that city. <lb/>
The upper intended for the use of <lb/>
smokers and that portion of the female <lb/>
community who do not object <lb/>
of tobacco. The official who <lb/>
the model said it. would not be <lb/>
on one or two of the principal lines. <lb/>
Philadelphia <lb/>
The victims of the liquor habit, or <lb/>
disease, ore royal with the <lb/>
sufferers from They <lb/>
down from an admitted height on the <lb/>
slave of drugs. They do not want to b <lb/>
They are above <lb/>
them. The riotous, the <lb/>
way, are the sufferers. There <lb/>
is not a chamber of all the <lb/>
as <lb/>
for, <lb/>
am <lb/>
The at knot toe boys who <lb/>
read bad who swell the roll of <lb/>
youthful criminality, it U toe who <lb/>
do not read anything. Let any one look <lb/>
over toe police court of a busy morning <lb/>
and he see that the style of youth <lb/>
gathered there have not fallen into evil <lb/>
way through their depraved literary <lb/>
tendencies. They were not brought <lb/>
there by books, bat more probably by <lb/>
of books, with a <lb/>
of books of. all kinds. <lb/>
not a more perfect picture of <lb/>
in the world a boy buried <lb/>
to his favorite book. to all <lb/>
earthly sight end sounds, scarcely <lb/>
breathing as he follows the fortunes of <lb/>
the heroes and heroines of the story. <lb/>
Kansas Star. <lb/>
It is many years ago since Baron Lie- <lb/>
each hollow, hungry such roving, <lb/>
restless ayes; men fearful, <lb/>
England is robbing all other countries <lb/>
of the condition of their fertility. Al- <lb/>
ready. to her for bones, she <lb/>
has turned the battlefields of <lb/>
of Waterloo and of the Crimea; already <lb/>
the catacombs of Sicily she hoe <lb/>
Carried away the skeletons of several <lb/>
successive generations. Annually <lb/>
removes from the shore of other conn- <lb/>
tries to her own the equivalent <lb/>
of 8,500.000 men. whom she takes from us <lb/>
toe means of supporting, and squanders <lb/>
down her sewers to the sea. Like a <lb/>
she tongs upon toe neck of <lb/>
of the satire world, and <lb/>
sucks the heart blood from nations with- <lb/>
out a thought of justice toward, without <lb/>
a shadow of lasting advantage to, I <lb/>
talk They <lb/>
not follow yon two They will <lb/>
move away and walk with frightened <lb/>
haste up and down the hall. They win <lb/>
harry and prepare for the injection. <lb/>
They will crowd and quarrel tor first <lb/>
the line. They are unstrung <lb/>
and Chicago Herald. <lb/>
w vi <lb/>
not long ago in Philadelphia, and <lb/>
at a luncheon given to her honor re- <lb/>
marked in an affable tone to a bright <lb/>
girl on her right have yon anyone <lb/>
here who fills the somewhat important <lb/>
place in society that papa does In New <lb/>
yes. sweetly re- <lb/>
plied toe girl addressed, they're all <lb/>
colored Tribune. <lb/>
From the side of religion many pro- <lb/>
have been made against the present <lb/>
of popular education. The clergy <lb/>
of the different churches cannot help <lb/>
thinking that at least the more <lb/>
doctrines of toe Christian faith <lb/>
should be officially taught; they <lb/>
draw most discouraging pictures of <lb/>
who the moral future of the youth of <lb/>
this country will be if their counsels <lb/>
are net heeded. All sound and <lb/>
moral teaching, they contend, must <lb/>
upon a basis of theology, and to <lb/>
stoical to the region of <lb/>
toe to deprive it of all war- <lb/>
rant, of all authority, of all coercive <lb/>
If these views were correct it would <lb/>
difficult to see how the weakness of our <lb/>
schools on the moral side could ever be <lb/>
remedied, for nothing is more <lb/>
than that any attempt to teach theology <lb/>
them would be predestined failure. <lb/>
The people some will pay for <lb/>
theology to the pulpit, but they are not <lb/>
willing to pay for it in the schools, and <lb/>
have shown n most unmistakable ways <lb/>
that they do not want it there. The <lb/>
question, then, Shall all attempts at <lb/>
moral teaching in the public school <lb/>
abandoned, seeing that it cannot ad- <lb/>
ministered an adjunct of theology. <lb/>
or shall a brave effort be made to give <lb/>
it independent statue of its own and <lb/>
a fair chance to show what It can ac- <lb/>
when conducted on purely <lb/>
Science Monthly. <lb/>
of Seeker. <lb/>
Alexander H. B. Stuart, who lately <lb/>
died at Vs., secretary of the in- <lb/>
under President used to <lb/>
the following good story of bow be <lb/>
got rid of an office seeker shortly after <lb/>
assuming the office. Said hat was <lb/>
very much annoyed by a persistent <lb/>
for the post of messenger. The <lb/>
man came in regularly every day for <lb/>
several weeks, until be became an <lb/>
bearable bore. Finally one day <lb/>
the man had gone out asked the mes- <lb/>
then in office if he knew what <lb/>
that man was after. He said <lb/>
said I, wants your place, and <lb/>
if ever sec him again be shall have <lb/>
never saw the man <lb/>
ton Post. <lb/>
This story is told of one of the toad- <lb/>
tag dry goods men of Mew He <lb/>
was currying a heavy stock of line mil- <lb/>
goods when the round topped <lb/>
derby hat for women became <lb/>
The market was flooded <lb/>
with them, and they were regarded as <lb/>
only tiling to be worn on the bead. <lb/>
This foresaw a great lose on <lb/>
his stock of millinery, and decided to <lb/>
prevent It He Bret bought all the <lb/>
derby hate he and then <lb/>
them extensively, offering <lb/>
for at raw <lb/>
The result was that the derby fell <lb/>
Into disfavor among women <lb/>
at ones, and saved his market tor <lb/>
more good. It is <lb/>
stroke such as this and the <lb/>
watching of the market and reeling of <lb/>
the popular pole that fortunes <lb/>
made by toe tow extremely <lb/>
Ufa.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017545_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
COURSE WE'LL LET GO. <lb/>
All Reserve at Cost for tie Cash Only.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017545_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
A Remarkable Clubbing Rate. <lb/>
a few Mere Weeks in Which to Take <lb/>
Advantage of t- <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Keys Found. <lb/>
RESOLUTION. <lb/>
By mortal arrangement that <lb/>
greater of all American weekly news- <lb/>
paper, the Atlanta Constitution, we <lb/>
are enabled t offer our paper with it for <lb/>
the low rate of for <lb/>
one <lb/>
The Constitution a weekly <lb/>
of and is the model weekly <lb/>
of America- Hill Joel <lb/>
Chandler Harris. MM, Or. <lb/>
Betsy Hamilton, <lb/>
and a of other of <lb/>
national reputation contribute to its <lb/>
columns. <lb/>
Its farm and department is <lb/>
the ablest of that of any American news- <lb/>
paper, women's and <lb/>
department is conducted with a special <lb/>
view to interest and instruct those for <lb/>
whom it is prepared. <lb/>
Its news department is the most com- <lb/>
of any weekly newspaper publish- <lb/>
ed- This great paper has correspondent <lb/>
in all parts of the world, and covers the <lb/>
news or the Southern States in every <lb/>
detail. <lb/>
This clubbing not last after <lb/>
the 1st of as by an arrangement <lb/>
with the Constitution we cannot it <lb/>
after this time. <lb/>
Every of our have a <lb/>
splendid chance to get the Weekly Con- <lb/>
this paper for only a <lb/>
sum. Our clubbing offer for the two <lb/>
papers is open to everybody, but the <lb/>
cash must be sent with every <lb/>
can do without a complete <lb/>
newspaper during the next few months. <lb/>
Every Important office in the country is <lb/>
to be rilled, and the Constitution will <lb/>
give the most complete reports from <lb/>
section of any southern paper. <lb/>
The paper should be in every southern <lb/>
and we <lb/>
mend the acceptance of this remarkably <lb/>
low offer for your local paper, and the <lb/>
American weekly newspaper <lb/>
at almost the price of one paper. <lb/>
Mrs. Ellis, of is Two keys have beer left at the KB-1 <lb/>
lug Mrs. C A. White. office for One was Adopted by the Guard, at a <lb/>
Mis spent a few day of left in the Methodist church during the Regular Meeting on the Third <lb/>
the past week with Mrs. J. R. Moore. I recent revival there. The other was Friday in April. <lb/>
Mr. W. F. has moved into the . found in Mr. II. B. Tucker's buggy while <lb/>
house, earner and Reedy Branch Sunday. <lb/>
streets. <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
May. <lb/>
Fifth month. <lb/>
Moonlight nights. <lb/>
The river is much lower. <lb/>
The bad colds are hard to shake off. <lb/>
Days length hours and minute-. <lb/>
C- B. Corsets at J- Cherry <lb/>
Co-s. <lb/>
Setting out plants goes brave- <lb/>
on. <lb/>
Cakes at Shel- <lb/>
ls urn's. <lb/>
Rats are about to take possession of the <lb/>
town. <lb/>
A handsome display of Parlor <lb/>
Lamps at J- B. Cherry Cos. <lb/>
The green, green grass is getting <lb/>
greener. <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the <lb/>
Old Store. <lb/>
Monday was a line day. and how every- <lb/>
body did enjoy it. <lb/>
Cheap Irish Potatoes cents <lb/>
a peck at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The primary brought a good crowd <lb/>
town Saturday. <lb/>
The New Home Sewing Ma- <lb/>
chines for at Brown Bros. <lb/>
This month has live each of Sunday. <lb/>
Monday and Tuesday. <lb/>
Try a pair J. B. Cherry <lb/>
Ladies Button Shoes. <lb/>
Ripe strawberries were being sold on <lb/>
the streets last Friday. <lb/>
line of Lounges at <lb/>
o. . Cherry <lb/>
All vegetation has done some rapid <lb/>
growing the past week. <lb/>
Try Cardenas, the best cent <lb/>
smoke, at Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
Greenville has no bicycles. Good <lb/>
streets would bring them. <lb/>
Cash given for Hides, <lb/>
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Raleigh papers say the next State fair <lb/>
will be the best ever held. <lb/>
The New Home Sewing Ma- <lb/>
chines and all parts at Brown <lb/>
Bros. <lb/>
The more the farmer make- of his home <lb/>
supplies the less he will have to buy. <lb/>
J. B- Cherry Co. have a nice <lb/>
Line of Ladies Slippers <lb/>
Shoes. <lb/>
Base ball practice is hi vogue but no <lb/>
games announced on the program yet. <lb/>
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads <lb/>
and Mattresses at the Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
We have just emptied our waste basket <lb/>
and put it in readiness for the spring <lb/>
poet. <lb/>
M. Ferry Cos <lb/>
new Garden See J, at the Old Brick <lb/>
Stow. <lb/>
Excursions and picnics are beginning <lb/>
to occupy the mind of the Sunday School <lb/>
scholar. <lb/>
For cheap Bureaus, Bedsteads. <lb/>
Mattresses, chairs Ac, go to J. B. <lb/>
Cherry Co. <lb/>
If the weather has settled you may- <lb/>
look out for the temper-tester-house <lb/>
cleaning. <lb/>
A nice and cheap line of <lb/>
Carriages at J. B. Cherry <lb/>
Co's. <lb/>
The past week has given us some <lb/>
weather more in keeping with the season <lb/>
of the year. <lb/>
Fish Hooks and lines post <lb/>
Slid Address, W. E- <lb/>
N- C <lb/>
The fawn just elected are <lb/>
popular with the candidates for the <lb/>
offices <lb/>
A handsome line of Parlor <lb/>
Chairs at J. B. Cherry Co's. <lb/>
The. pleasant weather and new clothes <lb/>
combined helps to make larger <lb/>
at the churches on <lb/>
From cotton Is planted <lb/>
It is the decrease in the acreage <lb/>
will be quite or near M per cent. <lb/>
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will <lb/>
your appetite when nothing <lb/>
else will. At the Brick Store. <lb/>
The railroad U completed from the <lb/>
to Washington, and the people <lb/>
of our neighbor town are happy. <lb/>
When in want of a suit of Fur- <lb/>
go to J. B- Cherry Co's. <lb/>
Mr. A. has established a saw <lb/>
mill at We learn that he starts <lb/>
hi with a good business down there. <lb/>
lighted their big can- <lb/>
at o'clock Monday. watch it <lb/>
bum. So more gulling on it, however. <lb/>
Mrs. M. I. Wood and two children, of <lb/>
Bertie, are Mis. Chariot Skinner <lb/>
at Hotel Macon. <lb/>
The three younger children of Mr-. R. <lb/>
II. went to the Episcopal orphan- <lb/>
age at Charlotte last Wednesday. <lb/>
Miss Annie Brown has <lb/>
I he past week. That she may soon re- <lb/>
cover is the w lab of her many lends. <lb/>
After to his room I few <lb/>
days with jovial Bob was <lb/>
smiling on his friends again on Monday. <lb/>
Mr. J. I. Harris was called home by <lb/>
telegram from Scotland last Wed- <lb/>
to sec his mother who is very <lb/>
It is learned with pleasure by his host <lb/>
of friends that the condition of Dr. W. M. <lb/>
B. Brow ii has improved considerably in <lb/>
the last few days. <lb/>
Mr. II. C. Hooker, who has been spend- <lb/>
the last few mouths in <lb/>
returned home last week. Greenville <lb/>
has too many charms for any other town <lb/>
to hold him. <lb/>
Sites Ella who for the past <lb/>
several weeks has been visiting in Ala- <lb/>
and Mississippi, where she made <lb/>
such brilliant social conquests, retained <lb/>
home last v eek. <lb/>
Our talented young townsman. Mr. <lb/>
I. Fleming, made an educational address <lb/>
before the -lames at on <lb/>
Thursday lie had a large <lb/>
we hear that his effort was a <lb/>
brilliant one. <lb/>
Mrs. . Greensboro, <lb/>
in company with Mrs. Charles Price, of <lb/>
Salisbury. They will visit Charlotte and <lb/>
in the of <lb/>
Carolina building for the World's Fair. <lb/>
Raleigh Chronicle. <lb/>
Mrs. C. A. H. of Columbus. <lb/>
Miss., who been visiting her sister, <lb/>
Mrs. E. A. Move, and oilier relatives, <lb/>
left yesterday for her home, in <lb/>
accompanied by her bright little <lb/>
boy. Master Burton <lb/>
Lang and Skinner would <lb/>
make a line couplet to compose the street <lb/>
committee. In wet weather just start <lb/>
the two down the street together see <lb/>
what line mud dispatchers their feet will <lb/>
make. A street roller won't be needed. <lb/>
had the pleasure of meeting in Ox- <lb/>
ford Thursday, Mr. C. M. Bernard, a <lb/>
prominent member of the Greenville bar, <lb/>
who was in upon the meeting <lb/>
of the Oxford Land Com- <lb/>
We were glad to learn from him <lb/>
that our friend. W. II. Esq. <lb/>
enjoyed a nourishing and ranked <lb/>
among the best teachers of the Stale. <lb/>
Oxford Ledger. <lb/>
Be Ready. <lb/>
As Greenville is to be <lb/>
organization how it <lb/>
a lire company If a big fire should <lb/>
cur, the smoke would not clear away be- <lb/>
fore you would hear on every ham <lb/>
organize a Too <lb/>
late to the stable after the horse is <lb/>
gone. Better get up a Hist. <lb/>
To the Ladies of <lb/>
In behalf of my Club, permit me to re- <lb/>
turn thanks for your kind at <lb/>
the riding gallery Monday. We trust to <lb/>
over merit your patronage. <lb/>
Gratefully, <lb/>
for Greenville Base Ball Club. <lb/>
The measles seems to have taken a <lb/>
fresh hold upon our from the <lb/>
number of case that are heard of. <lb/>
see it stated that engagement cups <lb/>
and saucers are a new fad. To say the <lb/>
least they arc quite suggestive, so easily <lb/>
broken. <lb/>
A number of people settled with the <lb/>
Sheriff Monday and saved their laud <lb/>
being sold for taxes. many tract <lb/>
had to be sold. <lb/>
Washington is expecting a big time on <lb/>
next Tuesday, Henry Blount will <lb/>
be there to deliver the memorial oration. <lb/>
Excursions will be run. <lb/>
The first kiln of lumber was dried out <lb/>
at the mill last week. The planing <lb/>
machinery is now in readiness for opera <lb/>
Things keep moving out there. <lb/>
We rise to ask if this weather can be <lb/>
taken to indicate that Miss Spring has <lb/>
slapped old man Winter out of her lap <lb/>
with the injunction that he may go to <lb/>
grass <lb/>
Early cabbage raised an truck farms <lb/>
near Borne won being sold here <lb/>
last week. Another rebuke to our home. <lb/>
people, that they ought to raise such in <lb/>
this section. <lb/>
Last Friday night rats killed fourteen <lb/>
nice Cochin chickens for Larry <lb/>
and Larry was sorely grieved over the <lb/>
loss. He had a chance of the <lb/>
young fowls. <lb/>
An exchange says the man who no <lb/>
business of his own to attend to always <lb/>
goes to bed tired. Perhaps it breaks him <lb/>
down trying to look after the affairs of <lb/>
everybody else. <lb/>
Large crowd exacted in town to attend <lb/>
the county convention next Saturday. <lb/>
Bring along an extra dollar with you to <lb/>
get the for a year. <lb/>
to get it for the campaign. <lb/>
B. C. Smith calls attention to the and <lb/>
cent counters in his store. He has an <lb/>
endless variety of goods on these <lb/>
and you will be surprised to know- <lb/>
how cheap they are. Go look at them. <lb/>
The town authorities arc hating the <lb/>
large sewer en Washington street and <lb/>
through the Academy grove rebuilt. It <lb/>
ought to have been done earlier in the <lb/>
season, but far better now than not at <lb/>
all. <lb/>
Quite a crowd saw the match applied <lb/>
to Young ft big candle on Mon- <lb/>
day. It is burning away and the end is <lb/>
waited for with much anxiety. Of course <lb/>
every guesser expects their number will <lb/>
win the prize. <lb/>
Mr. Andrew tells us that one <lb/>
of his tenants killed a mad dog on his <lb/>
place Saturday. Fortunately it was dis- <lb/>
covered that the dog had hydrophobia <lb/>
and the animal killed before any <lb/>
was done by him. <lb/>
The Irish potatoes hardly had time to <lb/>
recover from the shocks given by the <lb/>
frosts before the potato bug was on them <lb/>
both feet. We hear some people <lb/>
saying the bugs are unusually <lb/>
and troublesome. <lb/>
The inauguration of a swimming school <lb/>
at this summer Is proposed. <lb/>
This will probably give renewed vitality <lb/>
to the slang phrase the at <lb/>
least among the pupils of the school. <lb/>
Verily they will be <lb/>
The clubbing by which <lb/>
both the Eastern and At- <lb/>
ion can be had a year for <lb/>
61.50. only holds good until June 1st. <lb/>
Don't miss such an opportunity to get <lb/>
both papers for almost the price of one. <lb/>
The hopes the newly <lb/>
elected Town will not <lb/>
to tackle the dog. <lb/>
She's a Ticker, and Strikes. <lb/>
One or two friends have endeavored to <lb/>
make a little fun at us for what was said <lb/>
about that last week. Per- <lb/>
haps the reference was not as clear as it <lb/>
should have been. We meant to say that <lb/>
we had a than la-fore, etc. <lb/>
The ticker will do to count on at any <lb/>
rate. <lb/>
Life of <lb/>
Every man should buy. The great <lb/>
of Religious Warfare is dead. <lb/>
Buy the work for your boy save his <lb/>
character by encouraging him to read <lb/>
lives of great and good men. C. L. Ab- <lb/>
is now ill tow n taking orders for <lb/>
of Life <lb/>
of <lb/>
The Dam Contract Awarded. <lb/>
On Monday the Board of Commissioners <lb/>
awarded the contract for building the <lb/>
roadway from the north end of the Green- <lb/>
ville bridge out to high land to Ward <lb/>
of Bethel, who were the lowest <lb/>
bidders. Their bid was at S-J cents a <lb/>
cubit yard. It is understood that they <lb/>
will begin work on it at once. <lb/>
We the members of Co. <lb/>
First Regiment, X. C. S. Guards, after <lb/>
without a eight years of willing service to the State <lb/>
ready to the orders of our <lb/>
in command, and alway i <lb/>
zing the high moral standard which should <lb/>
ever characterize our <lb/>
have CO maintain the <lb/>
same, but feeling that have been 011- <lb/>
treated by Inspector-Genera <lb/>
Smith, we cannot in honor to ourselves <lb/>
anger continue our organization under <lb/>
the present Regime of management. <lb/>
Therefore <lb/>
Resolved That we now disband our <lb/>
organization, and turn over to our Captain, <lb/>
S. T. Hooker, all our Equipments. <lb/>
Uniforms, and all other military supplies <lb/>
of every kind, to do with as he thinks N-st. <lb/>
s. T. Hooker, <lb/>
C C. Vines, 1st Lt. R. W. <lb/>
O. Hooker. 1st E. C. King 2nd <lb/>
L. It. W. Ward <lb/>
R. Greene Ensign. A. <lb/>
Ted. 1st Corp. J. R- Cory. Corp. <lb/>
B. F. Sugg. 3rd Corp., W. R. Smith. 4th <lb/>
Corp., J. B. Fleming. J. O. Briley. J. I. <lb/>
Harrington. O. L. Joyner. O. W. <lb/>
C. C. Joyner. S. I. Dudley, II. <lb/>
C. J. A. Dudley. C. <lb/>
E. Fleming. L. X. Briley. Win. O. <lb/>
Little, Harry Harding. E. X. <lb/>
C. Smith W. F. Burch. R. <lb/>
Ola. Forbes, Ernest Forbes, <lb/>
others. <lb/>
Read It. <lb/>
To-day B. Cherry Co. have a new <lb/>
ail. Their amok of dry goods is the <lb/>
t in this market and they are ready to <lb/>
offer you reliable goods at prices <lb/>
low to cause you to buy. They <lb/>
throw out BO baits to customers but give <lb/>
an honest dollar's worth of <lb/>
f goods for each dollar left w it Is them. <lb/>
Troublesome Curs, <lb/>
Moses King's ferocious bull dogs made <lb/>
an attack on another cow, Thursday <lb/>
night, and alarmed the Southern portions <lb/>
of the town. The cow was almost ruined. <lb/>
We arc told one of the dogs attacked two <lb/>
young men a few days ago and gave them <lb/>
a narrow escape from injury. <lb/>
dogs are a nuisance and ought to be kept <lb/>
or exterminated. <lb/>
Gone. <lb/>
has left us. Yes- <lb/>
Hooker Bros, fl Greene moved <lb/>
their machine to Scotland and tor a <lb/>
week at two will afford amusement to the <lb/>
people of that tow ii. Monday was their <lb/>
last day here, and the proceeds of that <lb/>
day wore divided with the <lb/>
base ball club. Last week they ran it a <lb/>
day each for the churches. The Rb- <lb/>
commends these young men to <lb/>
the people of Scotland who will <lb/>
find them to be gentlemen, clever in their <lb/>
dealings and liberal with their machine. <lb/>
The Meetings. <lb/>
The meeting which Rev. M. Rose. <lb/>
Presbyterian evangelist, conducted in <lb/>
Elliott Hull last week, closed with the <lb/>
Sunday night service. At that <lb/>
vice the doom of the church were opened <lb/>
and one person was received into <lb/>
Mr. Rose is a thoroughly good <lb/>
preacher, an earnest and forcible <lb/>
and preached a number of excellent <lb/>
sermons during his week of labor here. <lb/>
Rev. J. E. of Richmond, was <lb/>
prevented from coming Saturday and be- <lb/>
the meeting In the Baptist <lb/>
church, as previously announced, but he <lb/>
will conic certain some time tills week. <lb/>
O HUE <lb/>
RESOLUTIONS. <lb/>
Adopted by Grimesland Alliance No. 1389 <lb/>
We believe the de- <lb/>
as re-affirmed at Indianapolis ably <lb/>
and clearly express the needs and <lb/>
of the Alliance, it <lb/>
Resolved 1st. That we find no warrant <lb/>
for Alliance action In regard to the St. <lb/>
Louis demands, as the State Alliance has <lb/>
not adopted them and we have seen no <lb/>
official action of the Executive Committee <lb/>
of the State Alliance towards <lb/>
endorsing such revolutionary measures. <lb/>
Resolved and, That we deplore and de- <lb/>
the arbitrary and dictatorial <lb/>
stand assumed by President Butler in <lb/>
taking the support of the St. Louis de- <lb/>
a test of good fellowship in the <lb/>
Alliance by proscribing all such as will <lb/>
not stand by St. Louis demands in <lb/>
the Conference at Raleigh May 17th. <lb/>
Resolved 3rd, That we regard such ac- <lb/>
as officious and culpable in the ex- <lb/>
as well as prejudicial to the best <lb/>
interest of the order, and question Mr. <lb/>
Butler's authority hi this presumptions <lb/>
and overbearing course. <lb/>
Resolved 4th. That we commend the <lb/>
action of County Alliance in de- <lb/>
representation hi this confer- <lb/>
in defiance of tills proscription and <lb/>
in opposition to the St. Louis demands. <lb/>
Resolved That ask the Pro- <lb/>
State Chronicle and <lb/>
to publish those <lb/>
resolutions. J. J. ELKS <lb/>
Secretary Alliance. <lb/>
Married. <lb/>
Vines-Ma the resilience of Mrs. <lb/>
S. E. Mayo, of Falkland, quite a large <lb/>
party last Wednesday evening <lb/>
to witness the ceremony uniting in mar- <lb/>
Mr. Charles C. Vines and Miss <lb/>
Mattie E. Mayo. The couple took their <lb/>
places in front of the officiating minister. <lb/>
Rev. J. X. II. exactly at <lb/>
and in a few minutes were declared <lb/>
husband and wife. The bride was dressed <lb/>
in handsome drab cloth with hat to match <lb/>
The groom in the regulation suit. After <lb/>
the ceremony the happy party repaired <lb/>
to the home which the bridegroom had <lb/>
freed up for his bride, where a most <lb/>
sumptuous supper was served. At a late <lb/>
hour the company dispersed, many of <lb/>
the couples determining to go and do <lb/>
likewise before many days. <lb/>
The verdict Is, well-mated and well- <lb/>
matched ; the sentence, life long joy. <lb/>
At the home of the in <lb/>
county, on Wednesday, 27th of April <lb/>
Mr. Moses L. and <lb/>
were united in marriage, M. T. <lb/>
officiating. <lb/>
At the residence of Mr. T. J. <lb/>
hi township, Sunday, the 1st <lb/>
Inst., Mr. C. II. Johnston, of <lb/>
and Mrs. Isabella L. Maiming were mar- <lb/>
Pulls Them In, <lb/>
Sheriff Tucker made a big haul last <lb/>
Friday, and one trip added throe <lb/>
guests to the county hotel. For some- <lb/>
time Messrs. Vines Fountain, of Falk- <lb/>
land, had been losing meat from their <lb/>
warehouse at the river landing. On one <lb/>
night last week they lost half a box of <lb/>
side meat. Suspicion resting upon <lb/>
in the they got <lb/>
out a search warrant,. it for the Sheriff <lb/>
and a hunt for meat begun. And, verily, <lb/>
they found it. The first they found was <lb/>
hid away In the barn of Corbett. <lb/>
In trying to straighten up his side of <lb/>
account for the. presence of the meat <lb/>
he implicated Barnes, and at the <lb/>
house meat was found buried in <lb/>
a potato bed in the garden. It leaked <lb/>
out hat Corbett also had too much <lb/>
meat, in his house some pieces were <lb/>
found sewed up In a bed, one piece in a <lb/>
mattress and some had also been in a <lb/>
trunk. Suspicion also rested strongly on <lb/>
From the East, West, and Come from the four <lb/>
winds of the earth. Come from rope, and <lb/>
Asia, and whole of North South America. Come in <lb/>
wagons. Come on Come in carriages. Come in <lb/>
buggies. Come on telephones, Come in balloons. Come <lb/>
on railroads. Come on foot. Come on <lb/>
back, hog-back, cat back, dog-back, cow <lb/>
back, green-hack, or Run up, walk <lb/>
up, hobble up, limp up, roll up, tumble up, slide <lb/>
push up, crowd up, jam up. climb <lb/>
up, jump up, up, tease up, Hare <lb/>
up, tear up, rise up, rear up, square up, <lb/>
back up, waltz up, bear up, flip up, and <lb/>
any in creation to get up, so <lb/>
you will be sure to be on hand at the <lb/>
-----GRAND RUSH FOR----- <lb/>
NEW SPRING GOODS, <lb/>
SHOES, HATS, <lb/>
Not at cost but as low as any competitor. <lb/>
C. T. M U N F O R D, <lb/>
Opposite Old Brick Store. n. c. <lb/>
OLD CURIOSITY SHOP. <lb/>
Call and look over wonderful bargains on our <lb/>
and see how much money yon can save. <lb/>
While in our store don't forget to cast your eye over our <lb/>
BASE BALL SUPPLIES. <lb/>
BALLS, BATS, MASKS AND GLOVES. <lb/>
B. ft Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
mother but the old fellow had <lb/>
A law should covered up tracks and hid the meat so <lb/>
be passed at prohibiting any dogs well that they could not get <lb/>
at large on the street unless wearing a j it is thought this by the Sheriff has <lb/>
muzzle. To kill about four-thirds of up a band of thieves who had been <lb/>
those In town would be a Nesting. the Falkland neighborhood. <lb/>
Base Ball. <lb/>
This item taken from the <lb/>
Chronicle will be of interest to our <lb/>
from the fact that a Greenville boy is <lb/>
It. <lb/>
At Winston Wednesday the <lb/>
base hail team defeated the Davis <lb/>
team. to Th compose the <lb/>
. A. Jr. is <lb/>
manager. S. T. <lb/>
W. II. Wood, short <lb/>
catcher Thornton first base ; <lb/>
right Held Mike Hoke. third <lb/>
base . II. center Held W. R, <lb/>
base; K. <lb/>
left Held B. pitcher. <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
During April marriage were <lb/>
issued by Register of Deeds of Pill <lb/>
county to the following persons <lb/>
W. Arnold and Susan <lb/>
II. M. lingers mid L. Hester, <lb/>
Phillips and Annie Drury <lb/>
S. Spain and Fannie Johnston. Sylvester <lb/>
Williams and Bell, Charlie C. <lb/>
Vines and Mattie E. B. Craw- <lb/>
ford and Button, Henry D. <lb/>
and Julia C. II. John- <lb/>
I-ah.-Ha I. Manning. <lb/>
Porter and Delia Ann <lb/>
Johnson, John II. Moore <lb/>
Henry Tyson Cox, <lb/>
Jim Brown Mary Warren <lb/>
Whichard Cherry Ann Carney, Hen- <lb/>
Jenkins and Martha Julius <lb/>
Black and Mary Ward, Thomas Williams <lb/>
and John Reed and Mary <lb/>
Mitchell, C. and Laura Bell. <lb/>
Town Election. <lb/>
The municipal election was so <lb/>
quiet that many would not have thought <lb/>
an election was in progress but for being <lb/>
reminded of the fact. A nomination now <lb/>
equivalent to an election, it has <lb/>
been known since the ward meetings <lb/>
were held to nominate candidates who <lb/>
the would he. <lb/>
In the ward the colored folks ran <lb/>
C. C. Forbes, colored, and elected him. <lb/>
In the second ward the Democrats ran <lb/>
S. T. Hooker and Charles and <lb/>
elected them without opposition. In the <lb/>
third ward the Democrats did the same <lb/>
thing for M. K. Lang and II. <lb/>
In the fourth ward the folks put in <lb/>
one of their number. Austin <lb/>
So the new Council Is four white Dem- <lb/>
and two colored Republicans, At <lb/>
this writing we have not heard when they <lb/>
will meet to choose a Mayor and qualify. <lb/>
We suppose Mayor James will he his own <lb/>
The Reflector suggests the new <lb/>
Council try one for awhile and <lb/>
see if they cannot save enough to make <lb/>
some permanent improvements about <lb/>
town. And don't fail to go for the dogs <lb/>
early and cause them to be kept off the <lb/>
streets or muzzled. <lb/>
Col. John Cunningham says take <lb/>
great pleasure in recommending Mrs. Joe <lb/>
Person's valuable Remedy. I have known <lb/>
several persons who have suffered from <lb/>
dyspepsia to have been entirely relieved <lb/>
by taking this excellent vegetable Tonic. <lb/>
One of my who was a great <lb/>
sufferer from scrofula used the Remedy, <lb/>
and is now a well man. I believe we <lb/>
should patronize home Industries, and <lb/>
especially those which have been so well <lb/>
and favorably known for years to merit <lb/>
public approval. For her personal <lb/>
Mrs. Person is endorsed by the best <lb/>
citizens of our<lb/>
Cunningham, Person county, X. C, <lb/>
16th, 1801. <lb/>
L W. DAVIS. <lb/>
FINE------- <lb/>
HAVANA CIGARS <lb/>
-AND- <lb/>
Roanoke Avenue, <lb/>
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA. <lb/>
You Are Not In It <lb/>
If you fail to sec the brand new stock of <lb/>
GENERAL <lb/>
-----that is now offered by----- <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
-----1 have just the to suit <lb/>
f GENTLEMEN. <lb/>
LADY, <lb/>
HOUSEKEEPER, <lb/>
FARMER. <lb/>
BODY ELSE <lb/>
If you want anything t o wear or anything <lb/>
to cat, or any article to go in the <lb/>
call on me. Goods all new, not a piece <lb/>
of old stock in the house. <lb/>
My prices will be found as low as <lb/>
able goods can be sold at. <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
Two doors from U. A. <lb/>
near Five Points <lb/>
TO THE PUBLIC. <lb/>
Printers and Binders <lb/>
1ST. C <lb/>
-----If you want to save----- <lb/>
Unify <lb/>
in the a PIANO and from <lb/>
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb/>
in the of Organ address <lb/>
ADOLPH COHN, <lb/>
NEW X. C. <lb/>
Agent for Carolina, <lb/>
who is now handling goods direct from <lb/>
the manufacturers. HIGH <lb/>
PIANOS, <lb/>
for tone, workmanship <lb/>
and endorsed by nearly all <lb/>
journals In the I <lb/>
Made by Paul O. who is at this <lb/>
time of the l. -f mid in- <lb/>
the day. Thirteen new <lb/>
patents on this high grade <lb/>
Also the NEWBY UP. <lb/>
RIGHT PIANO which has been sold by <lb/>
him for the past six years In the eastern <lb/>
part of this State and up to this time hits <lb/>
given entire Tho <lb/>
Piano just mentioned will be from <lb/>
to In Oak, <lb/>
Or Mahogany cases. <lb/>
Also the PARLOR <lb/>
from to In solid or <lb/>
cases. <lb/>
Ten years In the music <lb/>
business, has him to handle <lb/>
nothing but standard goods and he does <lb/>
not hesitate to say th-it he can sell any <lb/>
musical Instrument about per cent, <lb/>
cheaper than agents are now offer- <lb/>
We have the largest and most complete <lb/>
establishment of the kind to be found in <lb/>
the State, and solicit orders for all classes <lb/>
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb/>
road or School Print- <lb/>
or Binding. <lb/>
WEDDING STATIONERY READY <lb/>
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb/>
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND <lb/>
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb/>
us your orders. <lb/>
ft<lb/>
N. <lb/>
To the West in Through Cars. <lb/>
If you are going to Arkansas, Texas <lb/>
or West, it will lie money In your pocket <lb/>
to boar in mind that the <lb/>
St. I,. offers <lb/>
facilities to all classes of <lb/>
fewer changes, cleaner and <lb/>
more comfortable cars, and sure <lb/>
Elegant Coaches Atlanta <lb/>
Ga. to Memphis without change, making <lb/>
direct connection there with trains, <lb/>
requiring en one change for <lb/>
and Texas. For reliable Information, <lb/>
rates, routes, schedules and maps write <lb/>
to or call on undersigned. <lb/>
we can give you the very lowest rates, and <lb/>
that we make no extra charge for seals <lb/>
in our through Cars. Call on or address <lb/>
J. W. Hicks; Pass. Aft, Charlotte N. C, <lb/>
Jas Malay, Pass No <lb/>
Atlanta W. T. T. P. <lb/>
A. Chattanooga. <lb/>
Refer <lb/>
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS <lb/>
to all banks In Eastern Carolina. <lb/>
I have latest designs in <lb/>
LADIES, MISSES AND <lb/>
Hats and Trimmings <lb/>
to suit most <lb/>
Our Spring Goods <lb/>
are now open and ready for Inspection. <lb/>
Come make a before the <lb/>
stock Is broken. Prices to suit hard <lb/>
times. <lb/>
Mrs. M. D. HIGGS, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. <lb/>
OTHERS <lb/>
There is a deal of satisfaction in leading- <lb/>
we are still in that position. Rivals at- <lb/>
tempt to follow our methods but find that we <lb/>
lead them a merry chase and they finally give <lb/>
it up or come to grief. <lb/>
Elegance and durability, coupled with low <lb/>
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods <lb/>
and Notions in the lead. <lb/>
BROWN BROTHERS. <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb/>
------AND OF------ <lb/>
Country Produce. <lb/>
Bring me all of your Chickens, Eggs, Ducks, <lb/>
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the <lb/>
highest market price for them and pay in spot <lb/>
cash. <lb/>
If yon have anything to ship I ill attend lo it for you on a small <lb/>
Call see me. <lb/>
JNO. S. <lb/>
READ IT ALL. <lb/>
Sheet Iron Flues for Curing can be had of us during <lb/>
the months of June. July and August. We now our order <lb/>
in at the Mills for Elbow Iron and our order for Pipe Iron will be <lb/>
placed a little later. It is very important for us to hare <lb/>
orders for Flues at once so we can place our order for iron <lb/>
there may be some in getting it. Our terms on Flues will <lb/>
be invariably cash-on-delivery, and the juice cents per pound. <lb/>
We can make Phelps Patent or any other kind you order <lb/>
Our factory is opposite Dr. Wooten's Drugstore. <lb/>
S- E. PENDER CO., <lb/>
o. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb/>
Headquarters for the following lines of Goods <lb/>
Cm Kid Pork. <lb/>
tar load Rib Side Meat. <lb/>
Car load Flour, nil grades. <lb/>
Car load Seed <lb/>
Star Lye. <lb/>
Cases Bread Powders. <lb/>
Cat et loan. <lb/>
ion Crackers. <lb/>
Boxes Tobacco. <lb/>
SO Boxes Starch. <lb/>
Barrels Rico Molasses. <lb/>
Barrels Stick Candy. <lb/>
Barrels A Ax Snuff. <lb/>
-i Railroad Mills Snuff. <lb/>
Cherries and Poaches. Barrels P. Snuff. <lb/>
Full line Good. Paper Sacks. Cigarette, tut. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
G. E. HARRIS, <lb/>
DEALER IN-<lb/>
CO <lb/>
For sample of work we refer you to the editor of<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017545_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
SIMPLE IN <lb/>
PERMANENT IN DURATION. <lb/>
EASILY ITS SKILL- <lb/>
USE QUICKLY <lb/>
The is an Instrument for <lb/>
Cars of Without <lb/>
on new theories or f <lb/>
of it deal with the <lb/>
electric d -n- <lb/>
the gases it in the <lb/>
atmosphere, continuing <lb/>
at will. It is not electricity- DISEASE <lb/>
is simply impaired vitality. The <lb/>
adds to the vitality <lb/>
and assists nature, la <lb/>
to throw trouble. <lb/>
A book, describing treatment <lb/>
and all <lb/>
lions, and no cure of all disease <lb/>
mailed free on Address, <lb/>
ATLANTIC CO , <lb/>
Washington, C. Charleston, S. <lb/>
Ga- <lb/>
THE TRAIL On THE MESA. <lb/>
Over the mesa, arm and brows. <lb/>
Under lbs Maze ; <lb/>
A worn oM trail I J, <lb/>
To <lb/>
A little cluster of graves, forlorn. <lb/>
lonely. Mill; <lb/>
While round end <lb/>
The narrow trail over the hill. <lb/>
lover, <lb/>
Under lies; <lb/>
drama lo <lb/>
To mortal or <lb/>
Sin and sorrow love, past. <lb/>
to and to <lb/>
These they have known; then, last. <lb/>
The slow, sad journey over the trail. <lb/>
Is riding home to his rest; <lb/>
The of the corral wide; <lb/>
The trail leads on to the ha art of the west. <lb/>
Over the of the divide. <lb/>
E. Pratt. <lb/>
AS THE FALLS. <lb/>
THYSELF. <lb/>
Or new <lb/>
or. <lb/>
oil <lb/>
WEAKNESSES of MAN. <lb/>
invaluable BUM <lb/>
scaled. <lb/>
is with endorsements I SEND <lb/>
of the and , <lb/>
of tin <lb/>
Consultation in person or by Expert <lb/>
and CElt- <lb/>
W. IT. or <lb/>
The Medical Institute, No. el., <lb/>
, . <lb/>
The Medical Institute <lb/>
latent, but no equal. <lb/>
The of or i- a <lb/>
more than gold. it n-. <lb/>
vary man, and u, <lb/>
be <lb/>
and R, <lb/>
NO <lb/>
No <lb/>
Apr mill. Fast Mail, daily <lb/>
eX Sun <lb/>
pin <lb/>
Ar am V, <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
am i <lb/>
Ar m m B <lb/>
SO <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
to am <lb/>
in mi <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
TRAINS GOING <lb/>
No X. H <lb/>
daily <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
loam 0-1<lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar Set <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
lam V pm pm <lb/>
Ai Mount <lb/>
Ar<lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Scotland <lb/>
leaves 4.22 arrives <lb/>
land Neck at M., Greenville 6.92 <lb/>
P. M. Kinston p. in. <lb/>
Kinston 7.10 a. in., Greenville <lb/>
Arrives a. ID. <lb/>
Weldon 11.25 a. m. daily except Sun- <lb/>
Local train leaves Weldon <lb/>
and Friday <lb/>
in., Neck <lb/>
a. m. Greenville p. <lb/>
7.40 . m. Returning Kinston <lb/>
Tuesday. and <lb/>
7.20 a. in., arriving Greenville 6.6 <lb/>
a. m., p. m., <lb/>
5.15 p. in. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro, N , via <lb/>
A Raleigh R. daily except <lb/>
H M. M, <lb/>
X C, is I M, P <lb/>
Plymouth 8.30 p. in., 5.22 p. in. <lb/>
leaves daily except <lb/>
0.00 a. in. Sunday a. in <lb/>
Williamston, N C, a m, an. <lb/>
arrive Tarboro, N C, A V <lb/>
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb/>
and Branch leave Fayette- <lb/>
ville SO a m. arrive p in. <lb/>
leave Rowland p m. <lb/>
arrive p m Dally ex- <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch n-av. <lb/>
Goldsboro daily except OnO A M <lb/>
N C. A M. <lb/>
leaves S C S AM <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro, N A M. <lb/>
Train <lb/>
at P M, arrive S-i <lb/>
P Hope r M. <lb/>
Hone A M, <lb/>
S. AM, an Rocky Mount A <lb/>
Train on Clinton leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for except a <lb/>
ton at A M, and lo Connor <lb/>
ins at Warsaw witH Nos. and <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson A <lb/>
Is No. Northbound it <lb/>
No. except Sunday. <lb/>
. No. South and North will <lb/>
atop sally at Rocky Mount, Wilson, <lb/>
Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train makes close connection a <lb/>
all North daily. Al <lb/>
Va Richmond, and daily except Sun <lb/>
day via Bay Line, also at. Rocky Mount <lb/>
daily except with Norfolk <lb/>
Carolina for Norfolk and all <lb/>
points Tin Norfolk. <lb/>
General <lb/>
J. R- Transportation <lb/>
T. M <lb/>
Noon <lb/>
Night <lb/>
time. It <lb/>
the languor of morning, bus- <lb/>
J energies of noon, lulls <lb/>
the weariness of night. <lb/>
sparkling, appetizing. <lb/>
Don't be if a <lb/>
larger other kind <lb/>
s as good false. No <lb/>
it m god<lb/>
In tins woods, as time <lb/>
goes on, and Monday morning conies <lb/>
with all its depressing blueness to <lb/>
as have the hours <lb/>
since Saturday night in riotous living. <lb/>
For once Franks appetite failed <lb/>
him. The work ox beefsteak and de- <lb/>
flapjack were not to his <lb/>
His muscular neighbor noticed <lb/>
it and said. eat or <lb/>
you'll never stand it till <lb/>
Frank felt grateful for the consider- <lb/>
but did not act upon the ad- <lb/>
vice; whereupon his friend <lb/>
hint with the coffeepot saying, <lb/>
then, drink some this to <lb/>
scald oat But no; the <lb/>
pains of a racking headache and dis- <lb/>
ordered were not to <lb/>
soothed by much <lb/>
and many times warmed up so <lb/>
Frank got up and went out. <lb/>
Ho seated himself on the in <lb/>
front of the to wait for <lb/>
the others. The morning air was re- <lb/>
freshing, and it enabled him to think <lb/>
coherently of the recent woeful <lb/>
Ho remembered it ail <lb/>
white fronted saloon at the forks in <lb/>
the road; the dingy, smelling <lb/>
the cheap mirror fix- <lb/>
and tho audacious pictures on <lb/>
the walls; the card littered floor <lb/>
the reeking spittoons; the click of <lb/>
the poker chips and the quaint origin- <lb/>
of some of the blasphemy. <lb/>
Then the game. How he did win <lb/>
at the beginning, and how the on- <lb/>
lookers craned their necks to see <lb/>
how he discarded; and when he <lb/>
his whole on three jacks, <lb/>
and some one behind remarked, <lb/>
in a low tone, blooded, you <lb/>
bet how a feeling of confidence <lb/>
crept over him. a home <lb/>
stake to be won right hero and <lb/>
he said to But the <lb/>
fates willed it otherwise, for Lucky <lb/>
Bob him, raid the <lb/>
displayed three queens from <lb/>
the hand of the latter, which ended <lb/>
the game for Frank. But they filled <lb/>
him up with way of <lb/>
consolation, and he struck out for <lb/>
camp by the light of the moon. <lb/>
Tho track, he remembered <lb/>
thinking, must lie narrower <lb/>
than standard and the ties <lb/>
necessarily close together, and there <lb/>
was something wrong with the moon, <lb/>
for she hid herself behind a cloud <lb/>
until he reached the high trestle, <lb/>
when suddenly she her <lb/>
peerless that, glittering in tho <lb/>
creek below, startled and perplexed <lb/>
him. He had sat him down to con- <lb/>
sider all those matters, there <lb/>
they had found him soliloquizing, <lb/>
with many gestures and an occasion- <lb/>
apostrophe, to the inconstant <lb/>
moon. He remembered their help- <lb/>
him and putting him to <lb/>
alas to lo aroused in too short a <lb/>
time by tho tooting of the relentless <lb/>
horn. <lb/>
Tho retrospect ceased as the crew <lb/>
filed out from breakfast. The fore- <lb/>
man stood by the door, and with <lb/>
that strangely retentive memory <lb/>
which many unlettered people <lb/>
mentally registered each who <lb/>
went to work. Among tho first <lb/>
was old Josh, the filer, who took <lb/>
his position behind his bench, and <lb/>
arms folded and pipe <lb/>
alight waited for the sun to climb a <lb/>
little before beginning his doily task <lb/>
of teeth and <lb/>
The crew, apart from the choppers <lb/>
and peelers, was into two <lb/>
gangs. Each gang its <lb/>
of sawyers, chain enders and <lb/>
and each had a donkey <lb/>
engine to haul tho logs from their <lb/>
beds, where the sawyers left them, <lb/>
into the The team <lb/>
took charge of them from there <lb/>
hauling from the two engines alter- <lb/>
Farther back in the forest <lb/>
the choppers and peelers worked col- <lb/>
for the two <lb/>
For one of these Frank <lb/>
sawed chunks. A <lb/>
is by no means an exalted position <lb/>
in the wood butcher brotherhood; <lb/>
still, it often serves as a stepping <lb/>
stone for something better. The <lb/>
ties are to cut into movable <lb/>
any windfalls or worthless tree <lb/>
may ho in the way of the <lb/>
and to remove the <lb/>
lighter obstructing debris by hand. <lb/>
He needed sharpened saw. Josh <lb/>
must be interviewed. With a long <lb/>
drawn sigh, he arose and. walking <lb/>
wearily across the track to where <lb/>
the bench stood, made known his <lb/>
wants. <lb/>
the country where you're <lb/>
now asked the old man. <lb/>
was the brief reply. <lb/>
what you want, <lb/>
handing down the implement from <lb/>
its resting place against a huge <lb/>
saw for a side- <lb/>
ling <lb/>
Just then the came and <lb/>
you won't need that <lb/>
today. Big John's partner's in town, <lb/>
sick, or drunk, or an you'd <lb/>
better go an work in his place. <lb/>
No further instructions were need- <lb/>
ed. The opportunity had come at <lb/>
last To fell a redwood had been <lb/>
Frank's aim over since he hired out. <lb/>
Dropping tho <lb/>
and all his <lb/>
woes, he hurried off to overtake his <lb/>
big friend of tho breakfast table. <lb/>
It is expedient to adopt, for the <lb/>
time being and to a reasonable ex- <lb/>
tent, speech and manners of <lb/>
those with whom our lot is cast. <lb/>
Frank learned this bitter ex- <lb/>
His and <lb/>
bad but u subjected to much ridicule <lb/>
when he came. Ho had long <lb/>
since with both, end <lb/>
he now could wipe his <lb/>
mouth with the back of his hand <lb/>
after a meal and chew <lb/>
with tho best of them. <lb/>
He overtook his big friend at the <lb/>
brow of the hill among tho logs and <lb/>
rigging. The donkey driver, or j <lb/>
him- <lb/>
as he <lb/>
sen, wan gutting up steam, <lb/>
the poising of the pomp <lb/>
strangely with the of the <lb/>
stillness that the <lb/>
smoke from the little engine wont <lb/>
straight up in a bright blue cloud. <lb/>
Over tho divide, in the region beyond <lb/>
Jordan, the pare morning light her- <lb/>
the sunrise. <lb/>
Out of breath, he began with tho <lb/>
colloquial <lb/>
it me <lb/>
says for me to work in <lb/>
place of Alec, who ain't up <lb/>
this morning. was a <lb/>
nickname applied to the foreman, on <lb/>
account of his ability to lure high <lb/>
priced men for less than standard <lb/>
wages. <lb/>
After an inquiry or two concern- <lb/>
his absent partner, John said <lb/>
earnestly, mo son, did ever <lb/>
chop any <lb/>
for skids, stringers, and <lb/>
the <lb/>
a big difference between <lb/>
down poles and rid <lb/>
Frank knew,, but he said nothing. <lb/>
The conversation as <lb/>
they had now to walk in <lb/>
along the and all <lb/>
signs of road work were left behind. <lb/>
The way was over fallen trees and <lb/>
around stumps, down of a <lb/>
canyon and up tho other, ending, at <lb/>
last, in the chopping at tho edge of <lb/>
the green timber. <lb/>
be the said <lb/>
John, pointing to an eight foot tree <lb/>
of surpassing beauty. mid- <lb/>
soft, on the grain is straight <lb/>
you can tell that by the bark; an <lb/>
she's sound as a green <lb/>
top shows <lb/>
premeditated <lb/>
Frank said to himself, and then <lb/>
aloud, way are you to <lb/>
send <lb/>
them two point- <lb/>
across the lull. ain't no <lb/>
room to spare; but if as near <lb/>
plumb as I think She is, I can land <lb/>
her safe He took a plumb <lb/>
from his pocket, squinted up along <lb/>
the extended line at tho bee, and <lb/>
was satisfied for ho said, Alec's <lb/>
ax and snipe off the inner corners of <lb/>
both them stump. while I fix tho <lb/>
Both were soon busy, John felling <lb/>
a couple of which he <lb/>
afterward cut up into movable <lb/>
lengths to lie used in filling up a <lb/>
low that was in the line of direction, <lb/>
while Frank rounded off tho stumps <lb/>
as instructed. <lb/>
The next thing, after the bed was <lb/>
made, was tho construction of the <lb/>
staging or scaffold. They cut socket <lb/>
holes in the tree and inserted the <lb/>
supports known as Across, <lb/>
from driver to driver, the stage <lb/>
were placed, and on these the <lb/>
men now stood. The undercutting <lb/>
began when tho big man, with tho <lb/>
corner of his ax, bad scratched a lino <lb/>
on the face of the tree to indicate the <lb/>
height and extent of the notch. Tho <lb/>
fibrous, springy bark is hard to cut, <lb/>
and keen axes will often <lb/>
without making a visible incision, <lb/>
have to hit a more slanting <lb/>
lick to get into John said. Tho <lb/>
effect was almost disastrous. Frank <lb/>
made a swipe at the tree, the ax <lb/>
glanced and hid itself between Ids <lb/>
feet. John Stopped me <lb/>
said be, mast hit where <lb/>
you look, an take your time, or you'll <lb/>
cut damn feet <lb/>
By noon the undercut was put in <lb/>
and tins tree A tree is <lb/>
when a line drawn across <lb/>
the stump from corner to corner of <lb/>
the undercut notch will be, at i's <lb/>
center, at right angles to the <lb/>
where the top of the tree is intended <lb/>
to fall. <lb/>
A chopper's geometrical methods <lb/>
are simple. Stripping a fern of its <lb/>
leaves and using tho stem as a meas- <lb/>
he finds center of the line <lb/>
aforesaid, from point ex- <lb/>
tends a at right angles. <lb/>
The is straight and <lb/>
slender and about four feet long. A <lb/>
square is not used to find the right <lb/>
angle. Fern stalk measurement an- <lb/>
the purpose fully as well Ho <lb/>
then sights along the slick, and. if it <lb/>
points exactly in the intended <lb/>
tho work on the front of tho <lb/>
tree is complete. If not, the notch <lb/>
must be chipped into until it con- <lb/>
forms to tho mathematical require- <lb/>
After dinner they moved their <lb/>
Staging to the back of the tree and <lb/>
began sawing. This work came to <lb/>
Frank naturally. Ho was as limber <lb/>
as an eel, and tho swaying motion <lb/>
suited him. They rested occasional- <lb/>
During one of them spells John <lb/>
said, you as much sleight <lb/>
with the ax as you have the <lb/>
saw I'd rather have you for a <lb/>
When the saw was well buried <lb/>
they drove wedges the to <lb/>
keep the tree from g down, <lb/>
and then worked on until were <lb/>
but a few inches of timber be- <lb/>
tween the saw the under- <lb/>
cut. me son, you kin i <lb/>
off your handle. Tho wedges do <lb/>
the said John. <lb/>
done and tho saw with- <lb/>
drawn and carefully bidder, away, <lb/>
and in a the woods ring- <lb/>
with tho that <lb/>
sledges make when hammering <lb/>
wedges into the body a tree <lb/>
to break its heart. was get- <lb/>
ting a little nervous, and his blows <lb/>
were uncertain and poorly directed, <lb/>
and the big man i <lb/>
there's been a many wedges <lb/>
you've never and, to atone <lb/>
for his sarcasm and the <lb/>
boy, time, me <lb/>
son. Make every lick count one, and <lb/>
don't try to hit too hard. <lb/>
that little blows kill tho devil <lb/>
We've raised her some already. See <lb/>
you km stuff your fingers in gap <lb/>
A wind had sprung up, and <lb/>
was gently swaying the green top. <lb/>
watch when tho swings <lb/>
her from us and tap the wedges in <lb/>
lively. She must have leaned back a <lb/>
little, or she would have gone before <lb/>
now. And say, when she does get <lb/>
ready to go, don't get excited, but <lb/>
just watch your movements and take <lb/>
along that fallen tree yonder, and <lb/>
don't look behind until under <lb/>
tho shelter of the big stub. look <lb/>
ant for Then he made a <lb/>
trumpet of his hands and <lb/>
across the hill <lb/>
Two peelers heard tho warning, <lb/>
dropped their bars and made off out <lb/>
of reach of limbs. <lb/>
The went on, and there <lb/>
were a few snapping cracks, each of <lb/>
which made Frank's heart jump, <lb/>
he staid until the last loud breaking <lb/>
boom, when they both jumped from <lb/>
nod <lb/>
sue began to sou, a Let every enfeebled woman <lb/>
wider gap for tho sky to seen There's a medicine that'll cine <lb/>
through; quickening by degrees, her the proof a <lb/>
top made a swishing sound it <lb/>
tho ah-, faster and faster, <lb/>
noisier noisier, grazing the stand- <lb/>
trees nearly and causing a shower <lb/>
of limbs. But fell at length, with <lb/>
a crash that shook tho earth, into tho <lb/>
bed they had made for at <lb/>
know it <lb/>
tier, and <lb/>
the it doesn't do yon <lb/>
good within reasonable time, report tile <lb/>
fact its make is and get your <lb/>
without a won't do <lb/>
it <lb/>
The remedy Is Dr. Favorite <lb/>
ban proved itself the <lb/>
right remedy in nearly even- <lb/>
tho same time tho butt ed off I <lb/>
n i-.-. won t cure it has done <lb/>
more to build-up tired, enfeebled and <lb/>
lier from to I broken-down women than any other <lb/>
and from heart to by the great I medicine known. <lb/>
exclaimed the big man, I Hie woman not ready <lb/>
when the commotion of swaying All that we've to do Is lo get <lb/>
trees and falling limbs had , <lb/>
and he was pacing back and forth on First lo <lb/>
tho trunk. how pretty . Second to it. Third to cured <lb/>
between tho There a It. The one comes of the oilier. <lb/>
foot of room on either i neat of nick headache is not in <lb/>
Frank was elated, and that Regulate the and yon <lb/>
tho absent partner would st. in i c, are the <lb/>
town, or drunk or <lb/>
for the remainder of tho season. Per- <lb/>
Ho the <lb/>
know <lb/>
by <lb/>
haps followed was a judgment <lb/>
upon him for the wickedness of tho <lb/>
I must toll the story. <lb/>
In a week Alec had not j <lb/>
and Frank was learning tho craft i <lb/>
rapidly. They moved to a steep <lb/>
country, where tho timber was small j <lb/>
and scattering. They felled most of <lb/>
the trees that is, tho tops <lb/>
pointed up the hill and the butts j <lb/>
rested on or against the stump. <lb/>
on to tho is <lb/>
tho way John expressed it when tho <lb/>
butts rested on the stump. <lb/>
They several, and Frank <lb/>
had asked him i <lb/>
they ever take a notion to slip <lb/>
down <lb/>
was the reply. <lb/>
a feller to do to get <lb/>
out the way They might roll <lb/>
over or flip up and come clear back <lb/>
over tho <lb/>
so, but you've got to <lb/>
chances, as in all tho work in <lb/>
bloody <lb/>
They hail shouted tho warning, for <lb/>
tho tree was to topple <lb/>
over. Both men jumped. Frank ran <lb/>
to the right and John to the left. <lb/>
Tho tree, but a small one, fell; its <lb/>
top broke off about two-thirds up, <lb/>
and tho bull; of trunk balanced <lb/>
or seemed to a knoll <lb/>
above Then a strange tiling <lb/>
happened. She swung to the right, <lb/>
her bark dropped and in her <lb/>
nakedness, like p. yellow snake, <lb/>
slid down hill. John shouted, <lb/>
hut it was too late. His saw tho ex- <lb/>
tended arms and he heard the <lb/>
groan, and the thought of it all <lb/>
made tho strong man sick. <lb/>
That evening they held a meeting <lb/>
in the bull pen to talk tho matter <lb/>
over. was appointed <lb/>
He fortified himself With an <lb/>
unusually largo chew of tobacco, ad- <lb/>
justed his spectacles very carefully, <lb/>
and then reverently examined the <lb/>
boy's effects. He found a photograph <lb/>
of tho girl at home, of course, a <lb/>
few letters. Ho read tho <lb/>
himself, then addressed the as- <lb/>
Hie trembled a <lb/>
here, said he. <lb/>
no scrub, lit; <lb/>
In-en foolish and reckless <lb/>
God knows what all, bat, by the <lb/>
Eternal, he was white Now, <lb/>
these letters, which I <lb/>
read to myself, are too sacred to lie <lb/>
handed around ox even read aloud. <lb/>
Some from his mother <lb/>
a widow, I from <lb/>
his sweetheart; an if you'll agree to <lb/>
let me take care of I'll see that <lb/>
his folks get the news as gently as <lb/>
He paused and looked <lb/>
around. <lb/>
There were no dissenting voices, so <lb/>
he resumed thing is to <lb/>
raise fluids for a hangup <lb/>
Tho old man, with his spectacles <lb/>
dimmed, picked up a battered hat <lb/>
from of the bunks, dropped a <lb/>
five dollar piece in it byway of a <lb/>
and then passed tho lint <lb/>
around. <lb/>
The next issue of the local weekly <lb/>
fly recorded the event under the <lb/>
headline, Death at Rocky <lb/>
The woods claim their <lb/>
so often but little attention <lb/>
is paid to an occurrence of this kind. <lb/>
But Josh could toll an eloquent story. <lb/>
Barn Savage in Argonaut. <lb/>
Vet <lb/>
Prom a letter written by Mrs. Ada E. <lb/>
if S. <lb/>
with a bad cold, which settled on <lb/>
my cough set and finally <lb/>
ed in Consumption. Four doctors <lb/>
gave up, I could live but a <lb/>
short lime. I gave up Co my <lb/>
i r, determined if i could not stay <lb/>
with n y friends on earth, would meet <lb/>
my absent ones above. and was <lb/>
to get lit. Sew Discovery <lb/>
for C Coughs and fold-. I <lb/>
a trial, took in eight <lb/>
ii bus cured lam <lb/>
now i well an hearty Trial <lb/>
s free at Drug reg- <lb/>
and ft 1.00. <lb/>
Won't Rabbit. <lb/>
Living almost wholly upon game <lb/>
as do, the Navajos cannot lie <lb/>
tiled upon to either fish or <lb/>
rabbit. I have known some very <lb/>
ludicrous things to happen when <lb/>
meanly mischievous Americans de- <lb/>
Navajos into eating either of <lb/>
these forbidden dishes; and some- <lb/>
there have been very serious <lb/>
for the ill mannered joke. <lb/>
Rabbits are numerous <lb/>
in tho country, being mo- <lb/>
only by feathered and four <lb/>
footed enemies; but the Indian who <lb/>
d fight to the death sooner than <lb/>
a rabbit stew is greed- <lb/>
fond of the fat and querulous <lb/>
prairie dog. That whole region <lb/>
abounds in and they <lb/>
are frequently besieged by their <lb/>
swarthy F. in St. <lb/>
Nicholas. <lb/>
On. What a Cough- <lb/>
Will you the warning The <lb/>
of the sore approach of that <lb/>
more terrible Consumption. Ask <lb/>
yourselves if yon can for the sake <lb/>
of saving to run the risk and do <lb/>
for it. We know from experience <lb/>
that Cure will cure your cough <lb/>
fails. This explains why more <lb/>
than a million bottles were sold the past <lb/>
year. It relieves croup and whooping <lb/>
cough do not be with- <lb/>
out. For lame back, side or cheat use <lb/>
Porous Plaster Sold at Wool- <lb/>
en's Store. <lb/>
Drinking Cup. <lb/>
Learn to drink from a public <lb/>
cup, if you must do this, without <lb/>
touching the rim. Put the lower lip <lb/>
in the water first and tilt the cup <lb/>
higher than usual. When children <lb/>
Did you read in the news columns that <lb/>
W. O. was elected president of <lb/>
the Richmond Terminal road the other <lb/>
day Well, be was. I'll tell you a story <lb/>
about him. lie is tho son-in-law of <lb/>
coo At the time of his mar- <lb/>
to Bessie her Esther op- <lb/>
posed the mating, and so accustomed <lb/>
was Mr. to have his own way <lb/>
about what concerned him that ho never <lb/>
forgave his daughter until he came to <lb/>
die for thwarting his wishes. The ob- <lb/>
to the match was <lb/>
simply because of the obscurity of Oak- <lb/>
man, who at tho was a <lb/>
superintendent of a minor division of <lb/>
tho Delaware, and West- <lb/>
railway, probably did not show <lb/>
up on tho pay roll for more than twenty- <lb/>
five dollars a week. <lb/>
was always a popular young <lb/>
man and was thought by his friends to <lb/>
have some future. Mr. did <lb/>
not think so. On the occasion of tho <lb/>
wedding Horatio Seymour, of the <lb/>
bride, threw open tho doors of his house <lb/>
in Utica and gave tin; young woman an <lb/>
opportunity Of making a social stir <lb/>
which her father's purse would not have <lb/>
permitted, though he had been willing <lb/>
to the match. Mr. never <lb/>
to his daughter after until he was on <lb/>
his deathbed i-i the House. He <lb/>
sent tot her, and the supposition has <lb/>
ways been that was a <lb/>
Interview in Chicago Tribune. <lb/>
are million.-in said a dealer <lb/>
when linked about Cough nip. <lb/>
Price eta. <lb/>
For some paused been a <lb/>
rheumatic. I recently tried Salvation <lb/>
which gave me almost Instant relief. <lb/>
I since recommend it. <lb/>
Gordon. Baltimore. M. D. <lb/>
He said love I am sorry to dis- <lb/>
appoint you about picnic, but <lb/>
trotter ha-a lame That's nothing <lb/>
We've got plenty of Salvation Oil. <lb/>
The Detroit Free Press Fiend has been <lb/>
punning Cough Hi <lb/>
i only gratitude, for all thinking men <lb/>
know Us <lb/>
Tho of Eel's <lb/>
If the conclusions drawn by <lb/>
men tors are sound it would <lb/>
seem that were an eel provided with <lb/>
on apparatus to inject its own blood <lb/>
into a wound as tho serpent injects <lb/>
his venom, an eel hi the mud would <lb/>
even objectionable than a <lb/>
snake in tho grass. Prof <lb/>
the Italian scientist, in experiment- <lb/>
with tho blood of eels has dis- <lb/>
covered by injecting it under tho <lb/>
.-kin of rabbits, frogs, mice, <lb/>
pigs, etc., that it is a rank poison, <lb/>
being similar in action to the venom <lb/>
of of the viper kind <lb/>
Tho viper's bite, it is well known, <lb/>
causes death by paralyzing tho action <lb/>
of the respiratory organs; death from <lb/>
eel blood poison is similar in nearly <lb/>
every detail. In regard to tho of <lb/>
a person or animal injected with eel's <lb/>
blood Professor says that <lb/>
usually given are wholly use- <lb/>
less, and that the only hone of a cure <lb/>
lies in tracheotomy and the artificial <lb/>
pumping of air into the <lb/>
Louis Republic. <lb/>
N. C June JO, 1800. <lb/>
Last October I indescribable <lb/>
pain- with what the doctors said was <lb/>
gravel. As soon as I could get an <lb/>
I applied it every night for two <lb/>
week-, and am happy to state have hail <lb/>
no recurrence of pain, and from present <lb/>
appearances never will. When you hear <lb/>
of one louder In the praise of the <lb/>
than myself, -cud me bis <lb/>
graph. <lb/>
ED. M. Pack, <lb/>
of Danville, Va.<lb/>
Colonel of Nevada, <lb/>
tells this was With Judge <lb/>
Patrick Duffy, of the Essex Market <lb/>
court, day on Eighth street, in <lb/>
Now said he, it <lb/>
curred to the judge that something I <lb/>
wanted to know got from a <lb/>
Nevada paper up at tho Cooper In- <lb/>
library. I offered to wager <lb/>
that they t have a Nevada <lb/>
paper there. He said oh, yes, they <lb/>
did, and laughingly took me up, say- <lb/>
at length more seriously, that <lb/>
I they had many of them there. <lb/>
hod just got to the steps, were <lb/>
beginning to go up, when I said, <lb/>
Judge, I want to give you a show <lb/>
for your white alley; I'll bet you the <lb/>
they don't know where Ne- <lb/>
accepted it and went up. <lb/>
you got a Nevada paper <lb/>
asked I. have said one of <lb/>
tho several attendants, and then ho <lb/>
turned in a perplexed way and said, <lb/>
the first thing after, is No- <lb/>
None of tho others <lb/>
could answer, and the walked <lb/>
down, convinced that after all there <lb/>
were many things tho average per- <lb/>
son didn't know, especially about <lb/>
Francisco Examiner. <lb/>
Dyspepsia sad Liver Complaint- <lb/>
Is it not worth the small price of <lb/>
to free yourself of every symptom of <lb/>
these distressing complaints. If you think <lb/>
so at our stoic and get a bottle <lb/>
every bottle has a <lb/>
printed guarantee on it, use accordingly <lb/>
and if it does you no good it will cost you <lb/>
nothing. Sold Drug Store. <lb/>
Feathers Heavier Than <lb/>
In one of Charles Reade's novels a <lb/>
Jewish trader i, made to ask, <lb/>
is tho heavier, a pound of feathers or <lb/>
a pound of After a while he <lb/>
explains, to the satisfaction of his <lb/>
audience of mi sere, that the feathers <lb/>
are the heavier <lb/>
, Gold, he say.-, is weighed by troy <lb/>
want dunks from the railway mug, weight, while leathers are <lb/>
pass a clean cambric handkerchief ; by avoirdupois; and as the twelve <lb/>
over the rim,, next the ounces in a pound troy contain but <lb/>
grains, while the avoirdupois j <lb/>
pound contains grains, the pound <lb/>
of feathers is of course 1,240 grains <lb/>
heavier than the pound of gold <lb/>
Youth's Companion. <lb/>
your another know <lb/>
boy to hi- little brother. <lb/>
he was the answer, one <lb/>
bottle of Dr. Bull's Cough has <lb/>
knot my cold Into a cocked <lb/>
w nibbing- of Salvation oil will <lb/>
Instantly relieve hi the neck or <lb/>
joints. <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE C THE INDIANS. <lb/>
A Simple off Many <lb/>
Hie or Word. <lb/>
Make a letter A with your hands <lb/>
and tho i-nils of your fingers; that is <lb/>
a tepee or tent. Keep your hands in <lb/>
that bend them down so <lb/>
that your fingers point away from <lb/>
you; that's a house, a very good <lb/>
one, too, because it shows how the <lb/>
logs are interlocked at the corners of <lb/>
tho sort of houses sees on the <lb/>
frontier. If you want to cay you <lb/>
saw something, point to your eyes. <lb/>
Companion Sea. <lb/>
Ocean rat -s have become us mi <lb/>
avoidable i as storms and <lb/>
and a plurality of passenger <lb/>
may continue to them as prof- <lb/>
J but considering <lb/>
tho protest of an influential minority <lb/>
; it seems hard to understand why <lb/>
their risk has not at last been <lb/>
Soil in the way proposed by Pro- <lb/>
I of Hamburg, and <lb/>
Captain do la of the Belgian <lb/>
navy, viz , tho use of <lb/>
In nine out of ten cases <lb/>
the wont consequences of shipwreck <lb/>
could have been averted if more <lb/>
; than that of frail , all oilier remedies, with <lb/>
had ls-i neat at hand, and as tho <lb/>
chance against the of <lb/>
; both vessels icing wrecked at tho <lb/>
same time would a thousand to <lb/>
; one, the popularity of tho fleetest <lb/>
could be eclipsed <lb/>
MARK. <lb/>
over <lb/>
known <lb/>
To say you heard something, point to <lb/>
your ears. To say you slept or arc I by rS <lb/>
sleepy, put up one hand with the ; start and keep up <lb/>
palm side toward your head communications by means of signal <lb/>
your head as if you wore going to lay ; ,., f, <lb/>
it on that hand. i <lb/>
To say that you saw some one who <lb/>
was beautiful, pot your between <lb/>
this thumb and fingers of one hand <lb/>
and draw your hand softly down <lb/>
from your forehead to your chin. <lb/>
A faint smirk or mode at tho <lb/>
same time greatly helps tho sign. If <lb/>
the you tell about was a <lb/>
woman, make believe take bold of a <lb/>
mass of hair on tho right of <lb/>
your head and follow it down past <lb/>
tho shoulder with your hand, as you <lb/>
see women do when they dress their <lb/>
hair. signs for seeing, hear- <lb/>
sleep, and women are <lb/>
exactly tho same as those used by <lb/>
George L. Fox. the famous clown, <lb/>
when he played <lb/>
I have no doubt that the <lb/>
great English clown, also used them, <lb/>
for they are the natural motions for <lb/>
expressing those terms. <lb/>
Did you ever notice how tho paws <lb/>
of small animals are curled in when <lb/>
they are dead; That is the sign for <lb/>
or Hold one hand <lb/>
out with the finger bent toward the <lb/>
thumb to make the sign. But if you <lb/>
would say some was killed, hold <lb/>
out n fist with the knuckles away <lb/>
from you, and move tho wrist slowly <lb/>
so as to force the knuckles down as <lb/>
if tho person was struck down. To <lb/>
tell about a child, hold your hand as <lb/>
far from the ground as its head <lb/>
would reach. Put a finger up to <lb/>
either side of tho head to say <lb/>
to say put up all your fingers <lb/>
like branching horns. But another <lb/>
way to tell about a deer is to imitate <lb/>
his loping with one of your hands. <lb/>
To tell of a snake, wiggle fin- <lb/>
in tho air as a snake would move <lb/>
on the ground. sign is the name <lb/>
for two tribes of Indians. Tho sign <lb/>
for a Sioux is to make believe cut <lb/>
your throat with one finger; for a <lb/>
Blackfoot, point to your foot; for a <lb/>
Blood, your fingers across your <lb/>
mouth; for a white man. nib yon <lb/>
hand across your forehead to show <lb/>
how white our foreheads are; for a <lb/>
rub one check. <lb/>
The sign for water is to make n <lb/>
scoop of your hand and put it to your <lb/>
mouth as you would if yon were <lb/>
drinking at a stream. To tell of a <lb/>
lake make that sign and spread out <lb/>
your to cover a big space. To <lb/>
tell of a river tho water sign <lb/>
and then trace the meandering course <lb/>
of a river with your finger. But the <lb/>
sign for is made by doubling <lb/>
one fist and drinking out of the <lb/>
top of it as if it were a bottle. If <lb/>
you do that mid make to stir <lb/>
up your brains with finger, or <lb/>
reel a little, you will describe a tipsy <lb/>
man. Nearly all signs in the <lb/>
are mode with tho right baud. <lb/>
Julian Harper's Young <lb/>
People. <lb/>
in <lb/>
The Puritan Fathers were <lb/>
addicted to smoking; indeed, the <lb/>
practice became so common <lb/>
oven the straitlaced of <lb/>
times and seasons actually smoked <lb/>
in church. This custom soon <lb/>
very considerable annoyance, an tho <lb/>
religious exercises were greatly dis- <lb/>
by the clinking of flints and <lb/>
steels to light their pipes and the <lb/>
clouds of smoke in church. <lb/>
in the year 1669 tho colony passed <lb/>
this law, is enacted that any per- <lb/>
son or that found <lb/>
smoking of tobacco on tho Lord's <lb/>
day. going to or coming from tho <lb/>
meetings, within two miles of meet- <lb/>
house, shall pay twelve for <lb/>
such Under this law <lb/>
several persons were actually fined; <lb/>
but the punishment failed to secure <lb/>
tho carrying out of tho arbitrary sec- <lb/>
portion of tho <lb/>
tho Year Bound. <lb/>
in <lb/>
Ibis ha been <lb/>
rears, wherever <lb/>
been .-lead demand. It bun en- <lb/>
In I lending nil over <lb/>
led t tires where <lb/>
the <lb/>
s. I mi- <lb/>
years failed. la <lb/>
long standing Irish mutation <lb/>
inch ii baa obtained i, <lb/>
Its as bin little <lb/>
been made to It the <lb/>
public. this Ointment will <lb/>
be sent to any on receipt One <lb/>
Hollar, box lice. usual <lb/>
to All Orders <lb/>
promptly to. Address all or- <lb/>
rs communications to <lb/>
CHILD BIRTH <lb/>
MADE EASY <lb/>
Friend is a scientific- <lb/>
ally prepared every <lb/>
of recognized value and in <lb/>
constant use by the medical pro- <lb/>
These are com- <lb/>
a manner hitherto unknown<lb/>
WILL DO all that is claimed for <lb/>
HAND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb/>
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb/>
Life of Mother and Child. Book <lb/>
to Mothers mailed con- <lb/>
valuable information and <lb/>
voluntary testimonials. <lb/>
express on receipt of price per <lb/>
REGULATOR CO., <lb/>
BY ALL <lb/>
Mai ,, <lb/>
P. <lb/>
i r and <lb/>
N. .<lb/>
I I I free <lb/>
n, N. J.<lb/>
Pm .-. ESTATE AGENTS, <lb/>
O. <lb/>
estate ale. <lb/>
below Call on <lb/>
I i arm f real <lb/>
Look over list <lb/>
r w lite them. <lb/>
A i lot on rd street below Co- <lb/>
in <lb/>
A lot on street. <lb/>
Front, and has nice <lb/>
It farm on <lb/>
W. A <lb/>
r. r. r. u <lb/>
Proprietors, <lb/>
Block, GA. <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
Milk. <lb/>
Machines arc in use in Paris and <lb/>
some other cities which will heat <lb/>
great quantities of milk to a tempera- <lb/>
of about US for a few <lb/>
minutes, and then cool it rapidly to <lb/>
a low temperature. The method has <lb/>
been called tho pasteurization of <lb/>
milk. It does not kill all tho <lb/>
hut it does destroy so many of <lb/>
them that it greatly increases tho <lb/>
properties of the milk. <lb/>
Moreover, it almost entirely destroys <lb/>
tho danger from disease germs in <lb/>
milk, since nearly all forms likely to <lb/>
occur hi milk are killed by this <lb/>
Tho advantage of this <lb/>
method is that the of <lb/>
docs not give to tho milk <lb/>
tho of boiled milk, which most <lb/>
find unpleasant, and does not <lb/>
render the milk difficult of digestion. <lb/>
Professor H. Conn in Popular <lb/>
Monthly. <lb/>
York Journal. <lb/>
Looks. <lb/>
Good looks are more than skin deep, <lb/>
upon a healthy condition of <lb/>
all the organs, if the be In- <lb/>
active, you have Billions your <lb/>
stomach-he disordered you have a Dy <lb/>
peptic and if your Kidneys be <lb/>
yon have a Pinched <lb/>
is the <lb/>
and Tonic acts directly on these vital <lb/>
organs. Cures Pimples. Blotches, Bolls <lb/>
and gives a good complexion, bold at <lb/>
Drag Store, per beetle. <lb/>
It is hard to rely on portraits, i <lb/>
have seen, in an exhibition in Paris, <lb/>
a portrait of at tho <lb/>
max of his influence, and he looked <lb/>
like a placid provincial practitioner <lb/>
whoso brow had not broadened with <lb/>
power or wrinkled with <lb/>
I saw at tho same time two con <lb/>
temporary portraits of Louis XVI, <lb/>
borrowed from historic <lb/>
as little like each other as <lb/>
lot and In one of them <lb/>
tho artist had idealized the king's <lb/>
face into certain strength and <lb/>
tho other might be taken as tho <lb/>
caricature of a constitutional king <lb/>
it was such a coarse, <lb/>
countenance as tho <lb/>
sometimes unexpectedly reveals, and <lb/>
a clumsy figure on which royal mil- <lb/>
looked quite out of <lb/>
C. Duffy in Contemporary <lb/>
Be view, <lb/>
I've been s <lb/>
obtained, and all ill the r. S <lb/>
Patent or the Courts <lb/>
for ate Fees. <lb/>
We are opposite the u. Patent <lb/>
lice engaged in Patents Exclusively, and <lb/>
can obtain patents Id less time than those <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
the model or drawing is sent we <lb/>
advise to free charge, <lb/>
and are make no change unless we ob- <lb/>
Patents, <lb/>
refer, here, to <lb/>
Supt. the Money Order Did., and to <lb/>
earns toot the Patent For <lb/>
term and reference to <lb/>
actual clients ill your own State, or <lb/>
address, C. A. CO., <lb/>
Washington, D. <lb/>
ion holies with lour <lb/>
kitchen and Brooke convenient <lb/>
large stables on tin premises. <lb/>
Two good building lots Skinner <lb/>
-i desirable <lb/>
location. <lb/>
between <lb/>
of <lb/>
rooms, good well water, large gar <lb/>
If n plot and <lb/>
I A ball acre lot in <lb/>
I r. I story house <lb/>
rooms, cook and dining rooms st- <lb/>
all out buildings <lb/>
stables, good water <lb/>
A line containing acres, <lb/>
t. about miles from Greenville on it. <lb/>
road, baa gin house, stables, <lb/>
barns, two room tenant houses; ab <lb/>
SI acres cleared, balance well wooded. <lb/>
good water. his land i- excellent foe <lb/>
tin cultivation of i tobacco. <lb/>
branch of the <lb/>
ball way be- <lb/>
tween and Kin-Ion aid Within i <lb/>
mile depot, contains mi acres, <lb/>
and balance heavily timbered <lb/>
pine, oak, hickory, and cypress; <lb/>
as goo I tenant I railroad passes <lb/>
nearly through farm. The <lb/>
land clay subsoil with sandy loam, <lb/>
in good state of cultivation and highly <lb/>
Improved; Is fine trucking land. <lb/>
A farm miles from on <lb/>
i. Kinston road known as the <lb/>
farm; contains acres, has <lb/>
good dwelling and all necessary <lb/>
out buildings, ibis is a to- <lb/>
farm. <lb/>
A and lot In Greenville on <lb/>
corner Is. Cherry and W, S, <lb/>
Bawls, by the family of <lb/>
the late W. A. contains fl <lb/>
rooms, kitchen convenient, is convenient <lb/>
half a block from main <lb/>
of the town. Possession <lb/>
an be given Jane 1st. <lb/>
A good let <lb/>
street, between Third and Fourth <lb/>
streets, splendid location. <lb/>
and let on <lb/>
street near Avenue, <lb/>
good house Of looms, large lot with <lb/>
buildings. <lb/>
The and on <lb/>
1- Pitt adjoining the of H. <lb/>
s. sin and the lot described In <lb/>
large, comfortable one-story dwelling <lb/>
of four rooms, dining and cook rooms, <lb/>
plenty room for garden. <lb/>
IS. Valuable Steam Corn and Moor <lb/>
Mills, Cotton Gin and <lb/>
property located at a X Road <lb/>
within u hundred yards of a I,. R. u <lb/>
i is beet <lb/>
Sections of Pitt county, The mill- are <lb/>
lilted up with the best machinery. Sort- <lb/>
cloths, smeller etc., and ire In full <lb/>
Tile store house la it two <lb/>
building with dwelling attacked <lb/>
also a kitchen and warehouse in rear. <lb/>
I he store is kept constantly supplied <lb/>
with general salted to a <lb/>
country store and is a good <lb/>
The mills the best known in <lb/>
This properly is Tor sale Hie <lb/>
OS wish to withdraw from business. <lb/>
Terms on any of the above property <lb/>
can be had on application m <lb/>
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
For Shaving, Gutting and Dressing Malt <lb/>
AT THE GLASS FRONT <lb/>
the Open at which place <lb/>
I have recently and where I have <lb/>
everything la my Una <lb/>
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO A <lb/>
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb/>
the Improved appliances; <lb/>
and comfortable chairs. <lb/>
r . . ,, i at reasonable figures <lb/>
DOLLAR A <lb/>
THE <lb/>
WATCH TOWER, <lb/>
Published Semi Monthly. <lb/>
Devoted lo Apostolic Christianity, <lb/>
Cation, Intelligence Send <lb/>
tor Sample Copy. Office of <lb/>
Greenville, O. <lb/>
Editorial Office, Wash- <lb/>
. <lb/>
i. L. WIN FIELD, Editor. <lb/>
W. DAVIS. Associate. <lb/>
promptly- executed. Very respectfully, <lb/>
Scientific <lb/>
Agency fop <lb/>
Hi <lb/>
i. l. L. -.-I <lb/>
HAIR BALSAM<lb/>
Promote a. growth. <lb/>
Hewer Fails to Gray. <lb/>
to it Color. <lb/>
hair<lb/>
Ml INN i ., M ,; <lb/>
for <lb/>
UM bf It Turtle, <lb/>
MARKS. <lb/>
tON PATENTS <lb/>
T, NEW <lb/>
patent In <lb/>
, In for <lb/>
i i in the <lb/>
from <lb/>
We have a speedy cure <lb/>
for any at Oil <lb/>
relief <lb/>
A free with it. Mil. <lb/>
i am <lb/>
s. .-- . <lb/>
tore for <lb/>
n, or A CO M. Y. <lb/>
r . In th <lb/>
ii. a <lb/>
silt AV k CO- <lb/>
. New <lb/>
each Use it If you desire <lb/>
and sweet breath. Price bold at <lb/>
store. <lb/>
What so wonderful, as a severe cough i <lb/>
cured Dr. Bull's Cough for <lb/>
cents, . <lb/>
s m PIANOS <lb/>
FOR EASIEST PAYMENTS. <lb/>
The MASON HAMLIN CO. now offer to rent any one of their <lb/>
Organs or Pianos for three months, giving the person <lb/>
hiring full opportunity to test it thoroughly his own home, <lb/>
and return if he does not longer want it. If he continues to hire <lb/>
it until tho aggregate of rent paid amounts to the price the <lb/>
instrument, it becomes his properly without further payment;. <lb/>
Illustrated with net prices, free. <lb/>
Mason Organ and Piano Co, <lb/>
BOSTON. <lb/>
NEW YORK. <lb/>
CHICAGO. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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