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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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FIRST-CLASS <lb/>
JOB PRINTING <lb/>
EXECUTED ON <lb/>
SHORT NOTICE- <lb/>
SATISFACTION IS <lb/>
EVERY PARTICULAR. <lb/>
GIVE US <lb/>
YOUR ORDERS. <lb/>
WE CAN PLEASE YOU. <lb/>
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb/>
Sunday, and night, <lb/>
Second Sunday morning <lb/>
Saturday night before. <lb/>
Third MM Sundays Green- <lb/>
morning and night, also second <lb/>
mid Wednesday <lb/>
service each week. <lb/>
Service at school house on <lb/>
Tarboro mail on Thursday <lb/>
each Sunday until April and then <lb/>
on third Sunday evening. <lb/>
Rev. R. F. Taylor's Appointments. <lb/>
R. F. Taylor, pastor o Green- <lb/>
ville Circuit of the M. K. Church, South, <lb/>
will preach at the following times and <lb/>
places, regularly each <lb/>
1st Sunday at II o'clock A. M. <lb/>
1st Sunday, Chapel, 3.30 o <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
2nd Sunday. Shady Grove, o'clock <lb/>
A. H. <lb/>
2nd Sunday. School House, S <lb/>
miles west of Greenville, <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
3rd Sunday. Ayden or Spring <lb/>
School A. M. <lb/>
3rd Sunday, Tripp's Chapel, <lb/>
o'clock P. M. <lb/>
4th Sunday, o'clock <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
Lang's School House, <lb/>
O'clock P. M. <lb/>
An Announcement. <lb/>
I am n ready to treat baldness I <lb/>
have improved my and have <lb/>
observed in the hist ninety days that it <lb/>
will do I claim for it. Partial <lb/>
baldness can treated by Hie bottle <lb/>
the patient can use it himself. <lb/>
Total baldness must treat myself. I <lb/>
invite in reference to <lb/>
treatment Ac. Every one who my <lb/>
preparation will be thoroughly satisfied <lb/>
with results. We can refer you to a <lb/>
number of men in this town as to <lb/>
its merit. <lb/>
C April Kb, MM, <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
VOL. XI. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1892. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
B. k SEW LIKE. <lb/>
Preparing for tao <lb/>
dent to the World's Pair. <lb/>
The management of the <lb/>
Ohio Is preparing for Ml <lb/>
business in while the World's <lb/>
Fair Is open in Chicago. The terminals <lb/>
at Chicago arc capable of <lb/>
a much heavier than is now <lb/>
being done, and Important changes are <lb/>
being arranged for the handling of very <lb/>
heavy freight and passenger business to <lb/>
the West from New York. Philadelphia <lb/>
and New equipment for <lb/>
largely increased passenger business and <lb/>
an extensive stock of freight cars have <lb/>
been ordered. The various roads of the <lb/>
system will be improved by straightened <lb/>
lines, reduced rates, extra tracks <lb/>
-Mid interlocking switches. The new <lb/>
between Chicago Junction and <lb/>
Akron has shortened the distance be- <lb/>
tween Chicago and tide water <lb/>
miles, and between and <lb/>
Chicago fifty-eight miles. <lb/>
The distance between Chicago and <lb/>
and Chicago and Cleveland <lb/>
by the construction of the Akron line <lb/>
and the acquisition of the <lb/>
Western line and the Valley Railroad of <lb/>
Ohio, is about the same as via the Lake <lb/>
Shore from Cleveland to Chicago, and <lb/>
by the Pennsylvania from to <lb/>
Chicago The alignment is to be changed <lb/>
and reduced to a maximum of <lb/>
twenty-six feet. It Is that with- <lb/>
in twelve months the old Baltimore <lb/>
Ohio though between Chic and the <lb/>
Atlantic OHM will have passed away <lb/>
and the new line via be <lb/>
with i o greater grades or <lb/>
than on any of the trim, lines. <lb/>
Work has already east of Pitts- <lb/>
burgh to meet improvements making <lb/>
west of Pittsburgh. These improve- <lb/>
will consist of second <lb/>
third tracks, a general correction of <lb/>
the alignment, and completion of the <lb/>
double track on the Metropolitan Branch. <lb/>
It is expected that the new through line <lb/>
will b simultaneously with the <lb/>
completion of the Belt Line through the <lb/>
City of Baltimore, which is intended to <lb/>
the Washington Branch with the <lb/>
Philadelphia Division and do away with <lb/>
the present line via Locust Point. Forty <lb/>
new locomotive engines <lb/>
were added to the equipment during the <lb/>
lost two mouths, others are in pro- <lb/>
of construction. The permanent <lb/>
improvement now under way and in <lb/>
involve the <lb/>
of some live millions of <lb/>
more American. <lb/>
Democrat, Washington, D. C, for <lb/>
Tie Campaign of A clean, clear, <lb/>
honest Democratic campaign paper, <lb/>
with full campaign news, will be mailed <lb/>
to any address until November 10th for <lb/>
Fifty Cents Sample copies free. <lb/>
Agents wanted everywhere. Address, <lb/>
The Democrat. Box Washington, D <lb/>
C-, or the Eastern with <lb/>
which it will be clubbed for cents for <lb/>
both papers. <lb/>
The best salve In the world for Cuts, <lb/>
Bruises, Sores, Salt Rheum, <lb/>
Fever Sores, r, Chapped Hands. <lb/>
Chilblains, Corns and all Skin <lb/>
and positively cures Piles, or no <lb/>
pay required. It is guaranteed to give <lb/>
satisfaction, or money refunded, <lb/>
rice cents box. For sale at <lb/>
Drug Store. <lb/>
EVENING. <lb/>
urn shines <lb/>
Mid glories of the wast. <lb/>
Bat sapphire robes <lb/>
coach of gold to rest. <lb/>
The moon nod her seen <lb/>
Shod, an light, <lb/>
And the low lamp of the stars between <lb/>
the queen of night. <lb/>
Gertrude in Ledger. <lb/>
Cleverness. <lb/>
Sandy Macgregor was a shrewd, <lb/>
fond of a joke, and it <lb/>
was a difficult matter to catch him <lb/>
napping. <lb/>
One day several of the villagers <lb/>
hod assembled in the local inn to dis- <lb/>
cuss tho alarming influenza <lb/>
cations. An Englishman named Rob <lb/>
bins, who ran down cures for it, <lb/>
had decidedly tho worst of the <lb/>
with Sandy, and re- <lb/>
solved to touch Sandy on his tender <lb/>
point, namely, the pocket. <lb/>
said Bobbins, you <lb/>
to go outside and stick a blade <lb/>
of your knife in anything bet <lb/>
you five shillings I'll you what <lb/>
it is sticking in when you come <lb/>
bet, said Sandy. <lb/>
ye sic thing, <lb/>
table your <lb/>
said Bobbins, as he <lb/>
deposited his with a <lb/>
ion and gave a sly wink tho com- <lb/>
Sandy went out and in a short time <lb/>
returned. <lb/>
neighbor, an what is it <lb/>
in ho asked. <lb/>
the exclaimed Rob- <lb/>
bins, triumphantly, as he held out <lb/>
bis hand for the stakes. <lb/>
cried <lb/>
Sandy. wonder if that is one <lb/>
London tricks. But baud a woe, <lb/>
and ho held up <lb/>
tho handle of the knife minus the <lb/>
blade. yo gang find the <lb/>
blade in an ash <lb/>
Sandy of course won tho wager, <lb/>
and it was a sight to see the chagrin <lb/>
depicted on countenance. <lb/>
That wan his lost bet with Sandy. <lb/>
Spare Moments. <lb/>
When Kissing Was Unknown. <lb/>
We believe that kissing is an Eng- <lb/>
custom. We read in ancient his- <lb/>
of a knight who visited the <lb/>
Field of the Cloth of Gold, and who, <lb/>
on being invited to a local castle, <lb/>
was addressed by tho <lb/>
of the establishment, who <lb/>
as in England ye have <lb/>
such a as that a man may <lb/>
a woman, therefore I that <lb/>
yo shall me, and ye shall also <lb/>
odds the old his- <lb/>
straightway did, <lb/>
and <lb/>
What people did before kissing was <lb/>
discovered really cannot you, <lb/>
have we any notion of how tie <lb/>
engaged couples of the Middle Ages <lb/>
amused themselves when kissing was <lb/>
hardly known. <lb/>
We have no doubt, however, that <lb/>
Jack and Jill of the Thirteenth <lb/>
did pretty much as their de- <lb/>
in these days, and that the <lb/>
solitary walk, the squeezing of the <lb/>
hand, the kicking of the little boot <lb/>
under the table, the prolonged and <lb/>
cold-inducing good nights, etc., were <lb/>
general then as Globe. <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
MARK. <lb/>
tie Cm of Ska <lb/>
This has been in over <lb/>
fifty years, and wherever known has <lb/>
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb/>
by the leading physicians all over <lb/>
country, and cures where <lb/>
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb/>
most experienced physicians, have <lb/>
far years failed. This Is of <lb/>
long standing and the high reputation <lb/>
which it has obtained is owing entirely <lb/>
x Its own efficacy, as but little effort has <lb/>
ever been made to bring It before the <lb/>
public. One bottle of this Ointment <lb/>
be sent to address on receipt of One <lb/>
Dollar. Sample box Ira. The usual <lb/>
discount to Druggists. All Cash Orders <lb/>
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb/>
and communications to <lb/>
T. F. <lb/>
MM and Proprietor, <lb/>
Greenville. X. C. <lb/>
Ides of Africa. <lb/>
In times Africa was an <lb/>
unknown continent, as well as Asia. <lb/>
Until a few years after the discovery <lb/>
of no one had sailed <lb/>
around it, and it was quite generally <lb/>
thought, as it had previously been <lb/>
thought in regard to Asia, that tho <lb/>
African continent extended on and <lb/>
on indefinitely. It was supposed <lb/>
that far to the south was the of <lb/>
heat, in which no human being <lb/>
could live. was by no means <lb/>
an unreasonable inference to the an- <lb/>
They knew that the farther <lb/>
they sailed to the north the colder it <lb/>
grew, and that in the extreme north <lb/>
was a region of perpetual ice and <lb/>
snow. <lb/>
They also knew that the farther <lb/>
they sailed to the south the warmer <lb/>
it grew, and what was more natural <lb/>
than for them to suppose that, if <lb/>
they went far enough in that <lb/>
they would come upon lands <lb/>
that were parched and baked, and <lb/>
upon seas that boiled, where nothing <lb/>
could live but salamanders <lb/>
Blade. <lb/>
Modes of Speech. <lb/>
As Dr. Pierson traveled about the <lb/>
southwest many years was <lb/>
an agent of Bible <lb/>
often put up for the night at very <lb/>
humble cabins, and commonly, be- <lb/>
fore the family went to bed, he was <lb/>
invited to conduct family worship. <lb/>
The form of the invitation was <lb/>
liar and invariable. <lb/>
The bible and hymn book were <lb/>
brought forward and laid upon the <lb/>
table, and then the host turned to <lb/>
the preacher and said, you <lb/>
take the books, <lb/>
At table ho was expected to ask a <lb/>
blessing, and here, again, the phrase- <lb/>
employed was peculiar. When <lb/>
ill were seated the man of the <lb/>
would say, you make a begin- <lb/>
Then all heads were <lb/>
bowed, and the blessing was in- <lb/>
Companion. <lb/>
Episcopal Statistics. <lb/>
The Episcopal church in England <lb/>
has bishops and other <lb/>
clergymen; in the United States, <lb/>
bishops and clergymen; in Ire- <lb/>
land, bishops and 1,807 other <lb/>
clergymen, and in Canada bishops <lb/>
and 1.300 other clergymen-, in Asia, <lb/>
bishops and other clergymen; <lb/>
in Africa, bishops and other <lb/>
clergymen; in Australia, SI bishops <lb/>
and other clergymen, and m <lb/>
Scotland bishops and other <lb/>
clergymen; in scattered dioceses, <lb/>
bishops, and grand <lb/>
total at bishops and other <lb/>
Bee. <lb/>
SHE MAO A BARGAIN. <lb/>
A from the Rural Districts Moats <lb/>
with a Disappointment. <lb/>
It was noonday and lower Wash <lb/>
street was crowded with <lb/>
usual throng of hurrying pedestrians. <lb/>
At the corner of Milk street a young <lb/>
man with a satchel slung at his side <lb/>
was trying with some degree of <lb/>
to attract the attention of those <lb/>
who passed. In one band he held a <lb/>
pair of pantaloons with the heaviest <lb/>
part down, and as he swung them <lb/>
slowly and forth be called out <lb/>
at varying they <lb/>
are. now, only ten cents a pair; they <lb/>
remove wrinkles awl prevent baggy <lb/>
knees. Ten cents is all they <lb/>
These and kindred remarks he <lb/>
varied from time to time by asking <lb/>
loudly. tho next one to take <lb/>
a pair; only ton cents a <lb/>
Presently there appeared on tho <lb/>
scene a woman, somewhat post <lb/>
prime of life, and evidently from the <lb/>
rural districts, on a shopping ex <lb/>
She stopped and looked at <lb/>
the young man. fixing her eyes on <lb/>
the suspended garment with a <lb/>
curiosity. Just then the <lb/>
statements of the young man <lb/>
were renewed with fresh <lb/>
only ten cents-a dime I <lb/>
That's all they are. gents; only ten <lb/>
cents n <lb/>
He didn't notice tho woman, and <lb/>
while ho was looking tho other way <lb/>
she took advantage of her <lb/>
to examine the texture of <lb/>
cloth in the pantaloons. She felt of <lb/>
its thickness, adjusted <lb/>
to examine stitching and the <lb/>
color and seemed perfectly satisfied. <lb/>
take she said. <lb/>
young man, not quite catch <lb/>
the remark, turned around, and <lb/>
seeing the woman standing there, <lb/>
in hand, he opened bis <lb/>
satchel and handed her a pair of the <lb/>
curved wire that ho was try <lb/>
to sell. The woman looked at <lb/>
him in astonishment. As bent <lb/>
over with her eyes close to the <lb/>
she was very near- <lb/>
young man understood <lb/>
her mistake, and, half to her and <lb/>
half to the crowd, ho announced in <lb/>
the same tone that ho had used be- <lb/>
not selling pants, but the <lb/>
improved pants stretchers; <lb/>
only ten cents a pair; that's they <lb/>
arc; one ten and the <lb/>
woman, perplexed and disappointed, <lb/>
moved away and was borne along in <lb/>
the surging Journal <lb/>
They Took Mustard. <lb/>
An Englishman, fond of roaming <lb/>
about tho world, says that be was <lb/>
once on a large steamer where he <lb/>
had for his fellow passengers many <lb/>
Brazilians and Portuguese. <lb/>
It wan the first time that he had <lb/>
encountered individuals of either <lb/>
and ho was curious. <lb/>
sort of people do you find <lb/>
ho asked the captain one <lb/>
day as they paced the quarter deck <lb/>
together. <lb/>
ho answered, <lb/>
a queer lot, and that's truth of <lb/>
one said the captain, <lb/>
all of them, man, woman and <lb/>
child, squeeze feet into boots <lb/>
that it gives a man the cramp to <lb/>
look <lb/>
what <lb/>
The captain turned short upon the <lb/>
speaker, as if the second develop- <lb/>
of nationality was really <lb/>
most beyond his patience. <lb/>
they eat roast beef, air, <lb/>
they won't take a bit of mustard <lb/>
with it. Now, that's a fact <lb/>
don Tit-Bits. <lb/>
Anxious to Be Stopped. <lb/>
A man was trying to accustom a <lb/>
young steer to the use of the yoke. <lb/>
He had slipped tho beast's head <lb/>
through one side of it, and with a <lb/>
sudden impulse, to see what such <lb/>
bondage felt like, thrust his own <lb/>
head through the other side. The <lb/>
steer turned his head, and seeing a <lb/>
human face so dose to bis own took <lb/>
fright and started on a run, and with <lb/>
him, nilly, went the man. <lb/>
Down tho hill they raced toward a <lb/>
pond at the foot, the steer only in- <lb/>
tent upon ridding of his com- <lb/>
the man too absorbed in <lb/>
keeping pace to waste any breath <lb/>
in speech. But as they were within <lb/>
a few rods of the water his agony <lb/>
found words, and he shrieked de- <lb/>
us I Somebody stop us two <lb/>
blamed fools of <lb/>
The rest is York Re- <lb/>
corder. <lb/>
Importance of Cheap Paper. <lb/>
Without cheap paper the invention <lb/>
of printing would have benefited the <lb/>
world but little. <lb/>
The newspapers, read by every- <lb/>
body and contributing to the general <lb/>
intelligence and advancement, are <lb/>
enabled to exist only by means of the <lb/>
cheap cost of the millions of pounds <lb/>
of paper they use every year. So <lb/>
with the cheap and attractive look- <lb/>
school books to <lb/>
education. Our progress In <lb/>
art has been dependent upon <lb/>
the progress of <lb/>
Magazine. <lb/>
More Durable Than China. <lb/>
is one queer <lb/>
thing about silence. <lb/>
Name it <lb/>
silence falls it Is <lb/>
not necessarily broken. Free <lb/>
Press. <lb/>
It was a popular superstition in <lb/>
Norfolk that whatever you an doing <lb/>
the first time the cuckoo <lb/>
that you win do moat frequently all <lb/>
the year. Another is that an <lb/>
married will remain <lb/>
many years as the cuckoo, when first <lb/>
heard,<lb/>
Uniformity of spoiling is a strictly <lb/>
modern accomplishment. In the de- <lb/>
of early meeting <lb/>
square without <lb/>
with two on each <lb/>
means a roof without dormers <lb/>
or beams and with but <lb/>
who, unused to old records, would <lb/>
guess <lb/>
They had in those days <lb/>
and and and <lb/>
and and <lb/>
and and and <lb/>
which were one and tho <lb/>
thing. One church had orders <lb/>
for and and <lb/>
and and <lb/>
and be and a <lb/>
and three of a liberal <lb/>
supply of the man with the mind for de- <lb/>
Often hi the same entry one <lb/>
is spelled in three or four different <lb/>
ways. A portion of the contract hi <lb/>
the church records <lb/>
John is to fence in the Bur- <lb/>
Plan with a wall, <lb/>
don for and work- <lb/>
as also to mark a <lb/>
six or eight and to <lb/>
is <lb/>
and one can fancy the double <lb/>
gate all hinged, but who could guess <lb/>
that is or faced <lb/>
smoothly <lb/>
the <lb/>
A well known local minister, who <lb/>
is in tho habit of making weekly <lb/>
calls at tho armory for tho purpose <lb/>
of distributing tracts and words of <lb/>
comfort to hearts bleeding with <lb/>
shame and sorrow, had on expert <lb/>
the other day which has fur <lb/>
excellent material for a story <lb/>
which ho tells with great gusto at <lb/>
tho dub. He made a visit to tho <lb/>
armory for tho purpose of speaking <lb/>
with some of the inmates. <lb/>
A brawny new policeman mot him <lb/>
at tho door. <lb/>
do yea he asked, <lb/>
with a dignified swelling of the <lb/>
chest. <lb/>
desire to get to prison- <lb/>
confined <lb/>
Axes, is it <lb/>
an ax will take to thorn <lb/>
varmints there. Out hero yeas <lb/>
or cut fur <lb/>
Luckily some of tho officers who <lb/>
were acquainted with the divine in- <lb/>
further discussion on this <lb/>
point.- Chicago <lb/>
THE STRAWS WE DRINK THROUGH. <lb/>
How They Come Into fee and How They <lb/>
Are <lb/>
He was a man with a mind for de- <lb/>
tails, and straws through which <lb/>
be was absorbing n mint julep at- <lb/>
his attention. <lb/>
Whose do you get thorn he asked <lb/>
of tho barkeeper, indicating tho lit- <lb/>
yellow tubes. <lb/>
from replied <lb/>
tho mixer of drinks. <lb/>
where do the peddlers get <lb/>
them <lb/>
Never asked What's <lb/>
yours, and barkeeper turned <lb/>
to a company of newcomers, who <lb/>
didn't ask fool questions about things <lb/>
that could not possibly help swell the <lb/>
What a Frog <lb/>
There are few things more amusing <lb/>
than to watch a toad submitting to <lb/>
tho operation of a back scratching. <lb/>
He will at first look somewhat <lb/>
at the twig which you are <lb/>
toward him. But after <lb/>
two or three passes down bis back <lb/>
his manner undergoes a marked <lb/>
change, his eyes close with an ex- <lb/>
of infinite rapture, he plants <lb/>
his feet wider apart and his body <lb/>
swells out to nearly double its <lb/>
nary size, if to obtain by these <lb/>
means more room for enjoyment. <lb/>
Thus ho will remain until you <lb/>
make some sudden movement which <lb/>
startles him, or until ho has had as. <lb/>
much petting as he wants, when, <lb/>
with a puff of regretful delight, he <lb/>
will reduce himself to his usual <lb/>
and hop away, bent once <lb/>
more on the pleasures of tho chose. <lb/>
Our Dumb Animals. <lb/>
The of Sloth. <lb/>
Those who are opposed to early <lb/>
as time goes on the <lb/>
seem to learn <lb/>
with interest the opinion of a Ger- <lb/>
man doctor, who has been collecting <lb/>
information about habits of long <lb/>
lived persons, and finds that the ma- <lb/>
of long livers indulged in Into <lb/>
hours. At least eight out of ten per- <lb/>
sons over eighty never went to bed <lb/>
till well into the small hours and did <lb/>
not get up again till bite in the day. <lb/>
He that getting up early <lb/>
tends to exhaust the physical power <lb/>
and to shorten life, while the so <lb/>
called invigorating early hours are, <lb/>
ho thinks, apt to produce lassitude, <lb/>
and are positively dangerous to some. <lb/>
constitutions. This explodes the old <lb/>
of early to bed and early to <lb/>
Court Journal. <lb/>
A Good Scheme. <lb/>
A druggist of Atlanta has in <lb/>
a contrivance to prevent serious mis- <lb/>
takes in fining prescriptions. His <lb/>
invention is a bottle, just like others, <lb/>
except in one particular. It has a <lb/>
glass stopper covered with <lb/>
able sharp points that sensibly prick <lb/>
the hand if one is not careful in re- <lb/>
moving ft from the bottle. All poi- <lb/>
and dangerous to <lb/>
be kept in bottles like this. The <lb/>
contrivance will make the <lb/>
druggist careful, no matter how <lb/>
great his hurry, and if he la made to <lb/>
be cautious hi handling bottles he <lb/>
will make no mistake in filling <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
Collectors of Cartons <lb/>
Collectors of curious pipes are as <lb/>
numerous nowadays as other people <lb/>
who find amusement in hunting <lb/>
after the quaint and antique. There <lb/>
are many enthusiastic smokers in <lb/>
New York who make it a point to <lb/>
cab regularly at their tobacco deal- <lb/>
and ask him if he has got any- <lb/>
thing new in the line of pipes or <lb/>
utensils. One of the most <lb/>
enthusiastic of these is Mr. J. Cole- <lb/>
man He has a magnificent <lb/>
assortment of meerschaum and brier <lb/>
wood pipes, and never loses a chance <lb/>
to add to his York <lb/>
Mortal, <lb/>
Visitor yon <lb/>
see that man dining on carpet tacks <lb/>
and nails and things t <lb/>
Second Bow I an- <lb/>
think how be must enjoy <lb/>
-had. York Weekly. <lb/>
tails had also more than the average <lb/>
amount of persistence. Having <lb/>
therefore determined to find out <lb/>
where the julep straws come from he <lb/>
went to work on the problem with <lb/>
the most commendable industry, and <lb/>
after several days spent in <lb/>
he learned all about them from <lb/>
the bead of an importing house in <lb/>
Barclay street This gentleman told <lb/>
him that the straws had been in use <lb/>
only about thirty-five or forty years. <lb/>
Previous to that time people who <lb/>
drank juleps, lemonades and other <lb/>
similar mixtures, took them <lb/>
best they could directly from the giant <lb/>
or employed little glass tubes which <lb/>
were kept for tho purpose. But those <lb/>
who attempted it con testify <lb/>
tho unsatisfactory results of trying <lb/>
to drink out of a gloss filled with a <lb/>
promiscuous assortment of ice, <lb/>
ons, strawberries, etc., and tho glass <lb/>
acted as a damper on drinkers <lb/>
who had advanced ideas on <lb/>
In this emergency an ingenious <lb/>
Yankee arose, as ingenious Yankee <lb/>
always do, and came to the rescue <lb/>
with the straws of today. It <lb/>
curred to this Yankee that there was <lb/>
a great deal of waste in rye straw <lb/>
that was raised at tho time in north- <lb/>
Now York and Massachusetts for <lb/>
braiding. The thick ends of the <lb/>
straw were useless in making braids, <lb/>
and were invariably thrown away. <lb/>
As an experiment a lot of these ends <lb/>
were handled and sent to the market <lb/>
for bar purposes. Their success was <lb/>
immediate. <lb/>
When the raising of rye straw for <lb/>
braiding purposes died out in this <lb/>
country because the grain crop was <lb/>
found to more valuable than the <lb/>
straw, the supply of julep straws of <lb/>
course went with the other industry. <lb/>
The saloon men thereupon turned to <lb/>
Switzerland, where straw braiding lg <lb/>
one of tho chief pursuits of tho peas- <lb/>
ants, and subsequently to England. <lb/>
The chief source of supply is now <lb/>
found in the latter country. <lb/>
The straws are cut green before <lb/>
tho grain matures and bleached with <lb/>
They pass from the hands <lb/>
of the producers to tho control of <lb/>
London commission houses, from <lb/>
which they are bought by importers <lb/>
in this and Philadelphia. It is <lb/>
said that there are not more than <lb/>
four houses in the trade, the straws <lb/>
being generally handled by firms en- <lb/>
gaged in the importation of china <lb/>
and glassware. The straws are put <lb/>
up in bundles of fastened to- <lb/>
with rubber bands. Forty <lb/>
dozens of these bundles are packed in <lb/>
a case, and in this shape they reach <lb/>
the United States. <lb/>
None of the straws, according to <lb/>
tho local importers, ore used abroad <lb/>
for drinking purposes, and none are <lb/>
produced here to speak of. The <lb/>
straws sell at retail for twenty-five <lb/>
cents per bundle of They are <lb/>
purchased from the importers by <lb/>
dealers in bar furnishings and <lb/>
the latter of whom take them <lb/>
around at regular intervals to the <lb/>
saloons on their York <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
Oils tor Lubricating Purposes. <lb/>
Experiments have been with <lb/>
a view to determine what fixed oils <lb/>
are best adapted for mixing the min- <lb/>
oils for lubricating purposes. <lb/>
The results were as Iron is <lb/>
least affected by seal oil and most by <lb/>
tallow oil. Lead is least affected by <lb/>
olive oil and most by whale oil; <lb/>
whale, lard and sperm oils all act to <lb/>
very near the same extent on lead. <lb/>
Brass is not affected by rape oil, least <lb/>
by seal oil and most by olive oil. <lb/>
Tin is not affected by rape oil, least <lb/>
by olive oil and most by cottonseed <lb/>
oil. Zinc seems not to be acted upon <lb/>
by mineral lubricating oil, least by <lb/>
lard oil and most by sperm oil. Cop- <lb/>
per is not affected by mineral <lb/>
oil least by bird oil and most <lb/>
by tallow From these results it <lb/>
will be seen that mineral lubricating <lb/>
oil has, on the whole, the least action <lb/>
on the metals employed in tho ex <lb/>
oil the <lb/>
Cheap la Wales, <lb/>
In Wales sermons are too cheap. <lb/>
The preachers are an underpaid <lb/>
clans, The very best known minis- <lb/>
in Wales will deliver five or six <lb/>
sermons for ten pounds. From this <lb/>
sum traveling expenses must be de- <lb/>
ducted. Under these <lb/>
ministers might well retaliate by <lb/>
preaching short sermons. But <lb/>
fortunately Welshmen expect a long <lb/>
they get <lb/>
Mercury. <lb/>
She Still <lb/>
Mr. Your wife used to <lb/>
before she was married; has she <lb/>
given it up now <lb/>
Mr. that is, <lb/>
in public. Exchange. <lb/>
SHILOH'S CATARRH REMEDY. <lb/>
A cure far Catarrh, <lb/>
Canker mouth and Headache. <lb/>
With each bottle there to an ingenious <lb/>
nasal Injector the more <lb/>
treatment of these complaints without <lb/>
extra charge, Sold at WOO <lb/>
no III. Father. <lb/>
While at the university <lb/>
used to boast that he <lb/>
allowed his studies to interfere with <lb/>
his He used to run up to <lb/>
London with re- <lb/>
markable frequency simply to get <lb/>
his hair cut On one occasion, it is <lb/>
said, young met his <lb/>
father in the Strand at a time he <lb/>
was supposed to be deep in his <lb/>
studies of the classics. Much to the <lb/>
old gentleman's astonishment bis <lb/>
son blankly denied his identity. <lb/>
Jumping into a cab ho dashed off to <lb/>
the railway station, caught a train <lb/>
in the act of leaving for Cambridge, <lb/>
and when his father arrived by the <lb/>
next was found almost buried in a <lb/>
mass of abstruse volumes, with a <lb/>
wet wrapped round his aching <lb/>
forehead. <lb/>
A dinner at the hotel and a ten <lb/>
pound note were the reward of the <lb/>
parent to this promising <lb/>
ion, but to bis dying day Mr. John <lb/>
was often heard relating <lb/>
this wonderful instance of the re- <lb/>
markable similarity of two persons. <lb/>
London New York World. <lb/>
of <lb/>
offset tho <lb/>
of organic matter from the akin, as <lb/>
well as from the lungs, occupied <lb/>
rooms should lie so arranged <lb/>
low a constant change of the con- <lb/>
in them. To meet this con- <lb/>
properly, an exit for air, as <lb/>
well as an inlet should be provided. <lb/>
A fireplace is ideal out- <lb/>
let, as it has a constant draft which <lb/>
assures an outgo of considerable <lb/>
power. <lb/>
As for a test of the quality of air <lb/>
its purity or has <lb/>
provided us with a most useful one, <lb/>
and in all ordinary cases the only <lb/>
necessary one, in the sense of smell. <lb/>
If this sense is offended by character- <lb/>
odor of an ill ventilated <lb/>
room, there is no appeal from its <lb/>
verdict, no matter how many <lb/>
In tors may in operation. This <lb/>
it should stated, can <lb/>
plied only by the of one <lb/>
just entering a room from the out- <lb/>
side. <lb/>
have heard from the lecture <lb/>
platform advice to an in- <lb/>
body of students in a <lb/>
school as to just how far <lb/>
windows of the sleeping apartment <lb/>
should raised each night to <lb/>
a wholesome air to tho occupant <lb/>
Tho distance given was exact, no <lb/>
being for variations <lb/>
of temperature, wind or weather. <lb/>
A single window opened at both top <lb/>
and bottom, but at distances varying <lb/>
according to tho temperature, the <lb/>
presence or absence of etc., is <lb/>
a suitable provision for ventilation. <lb/>
It is safe to say that if air in <lb/>
any room seems as pure to a person <lb/>
entering it from out of doors as the <lb/>
outdoor ah itself, that air is well fit- <lb/>
for breathing; such, at any rate, <lb/>
it should always lie, and such should <lb/>
tho applied by an intelligent <lb/>
observer. <lb/>
With such an ideal us, no <lb/>
hard and fast is called for. <lb/>
With this ideal in view, and with <lb/>
the homely quality of common sense <lb/>
in exercise, it is well also to <lb/>
tho following facts i <lb/>
A room is best for most of us at a <lb/>
temperature ranging from to <lb/>
a guard, be it of tho most <lb/>
construction, should be- <lb/>
tween a draft and ourselves; tho ah <lb/>
is not necessarily impure when <lb/>
worm nor when cold; tho <lb/>
smaller a room is, and tho more <lb/>
it has, the should <lb/>
the air renewed. Youth's Com-<lb/>
A Parrot. <lb/>
A friend of had a parrot that <lb/>
was forever getting into mischief <lb/>
whenever et out of his cage. If it <lb/>
wasn't flying around the room <lb/>
knocking down tho ornaments, he <lb/>
was down in the kitchen annoying <lb/>
the cook by tho way, was red- <lb/>
by calling out, the <lb/>
white <lb/>
One day when the cook was get- <lb/>
ting dinner ready, Polly hopped into <lb/>
the kitchen just as put a bowl <lb/>
of cream on table. Flying at the I <lb/>
edge of tho bowl it was overturned. <lb/>
Cook became enraged at this, and <lb/>
seizing a of boiling hot <lb/>
water threw it over Polly, scalding <lb/>
him so badly that all bin feathers <lb/>
dropped off. For a long time Polly <lb/>
went around lamenting the loss of <lb/>
his feathers, but ho never bothered j <lb/>
cook again. <lb/>
One day about three weeks after- j <lb/>
ward a clergyman came to dine with <lb/>
my friend, and Polly, noticing that <lb/>
he was seemed to <lb/>
over it, and just as they were <lb/>
sitting down to dinner, Polly, who <lb/>
had been sitting on the back of a <lb/>
chair, hopped up on the table close <lb/>
to the clergyman and, gazing sorrow- <lb/>
fully at his bald head, exclaimed i <lb/>
fellow, poor fellow; did the <lb/>
cook throw hot water on <lb/>
After this Polly was kept covered <lb/>
up in his cage whenever there were <lb/>
York Recorder. <lb/>
Military Stores. <lb/>
Military stores are now made as <lb/>
far as possible to uniform patterns, <lb/>
and the components are interchange- <lb/>
not only in each service, but <lb/>
Where practicable between the <lb/>
Various services, so that for exam- <lb/>
a ship might in the event of <lb/>
be armed with fortress guns <lb/>
TIP Dr <lb/>
from atone Intended for the lead <lb/>
York Times <lb/>
Answer This Question. <lb/>
Why do so many people we see around <lb/>
us teem to prefer to and be made <lb/>
by Indigestion, Constipation, <lb/>
Loss of Appetite, Coming <lb/>
of the Food, Yellow Skin, when <lb/>
we will sell them <lb/>
to cure, them Bold J. L. <lb/>
Wooten's Drat <lb/>
OWN LOVE STORY. <lb/>
flow Hi- Dramatist Met <lb/>
Ho U I. <lb/>
Tho family of the celebrated dram- <lb/>
tho author of <lb/>
and other plays, all more or less fa- <lb/>
and is a singularly <lb/>
interesting one. His father <lb/>
still survives him, and though the <lb/>
elder has celebrated his nine- <lb/>
birthday ho preserves his <lb/>
tics unimpaired. <lb/>
Tho marriage of M. <lb/>
was charming a love episode <lb/>
OS may be found in any of his play <lb/>
II- was approaching middle age and <lb/>
was considered as being wholly ob <lb/>
in bin literary the <lb/>
exclusion of any other paw-ion, when <lb/>
tho Parisian world was amazed <lb/>
the of his engagement. <lb/>
Mile. Anne daughter of M. <lb/>
chief director of the <lb/>
galleries and the palace of Versailles <lb/>
and also of the royal and the <lb/>
national archives contained therein. <lb/>
While working on a drama <lb/>
went frequently Versailles for the <lb/>
purpose f consulting the erudite <lb/>
rector of the palace on the different <lb/>
and events the reign <lb/>
of Louis XIV. M. on more <lb/>
than one occasion, took his celebrated <lb/>
guest home to lunch or dine with <lb/>
him and presented him to his <lb/>
who wen- delighted to make <lb/>
the acquaintance of tho famous <lb/>
of of and of <lb/>
The second daughter. Mile. Anne, <lb/>
was then in the first bloom of youth <lb/>
was o remarkably beautiful as <lb/>
well as a most intelligent girl. She <lb/>
hod profited by the teachings and ex- <lb/>
ample of her learned father and was <lb/>
well fitted to comprehend and <lb/>
brilliant talents of their <lb/>
guest. Mm was at that time a <lb/>
blond, tall remarkably <lb/>
graceful. Very soon the visits of M. <lb/>
to tho homo of tho erudite <lb/>
director increased and multiplied in <lb/>
an astonish ratio and it speedily <lb/>
evident that the fair <lb/>
and not tho learned father, was <lb/>
magnate that drew him so often <lb/>
from Morly to Versailles. In fact <lb/>
his historical studies were almost <lb/>
wholly laid aside in favor of tho fas- <lb/>
story that he read in the <lb/>
blue eyes of Mile. Anne. <lb/>
Tho marriage took place in 1872. <lb/>
M. and Mine. have seen <lb/>
grown up around them four children <lb/>
three sons and a daughter. The <lb/>
eldest, Pierre, is eighteen, and has <lb/>
passed his examination as bachelor of <lb/>
letters. He is now for <lb/>
that of bachelor of science. Tho sec- <lb/>
child and only daughter, Mile. <lb/>
Genevieve, is not quite seventeen. <lb/>
She promises inherit much of her <lb/>
mother's beauty. John, aged <lb/>
teen, and Andre, who is twelve, com- <lb/>
the St. <lb/>
Louis Chronicle. <lb/>
A of Many. <lb/>
Every one knows the tab some <lb/>
people have for making the simplest <lb/>
assertion in such a way as to instant- <lb/>
arouse a spirit of opposition in the <lb/>
breast. <lb/>
reason none you <lb/>
children Sounders <lb/>
asked of his grand- <lb/>
son. <lb/>
said Tom, after a little <lb/>
reflection, he's got <lb/>
a gift fr <lb/>
asked his grand- <lb/>
father, sharply. shouldn't <lb/>
tetchy; leave that sort work <lb/>
fr women <lb/>
we ain't tetchy, <lb/>
said Tom, in some haste. don't <lb/>
you know is folks that can't <lb/>
seem say rain <lb/>
us if all <lb/>
their whatever <lb/>
happened, on any use fr <lb/>
other folks make any words <lb/>
it. <lb/>
added Tom. as <lb/>
his sharp eyes detected a slight re- <lb/>
of his grandfather's stern <lb/>
countenance, it does seem if <lb/>
nobody get along that <lb/>
boy. It's what a band <lb/>
he is Com- <lb/>
And lie Kept on Taming. <lb/>
A bishop was traveling along and <lb/>
encountered an old Irishman turning <lb/>
a windlass which turned up ore out <lb/>
of a shaft. It was bis work to do <lb/>
this all day long. His hat was off <lb/>
and sun was pouring down on <lb/>
his unprotected head. <lb/>
you know that the sun will <lb/>
injure your brain if you expose it in <lb/>
that said the good man. <lb/>
The Irishman wiped the sweat off <lb/>
his forehead and looked at the clergy- <lb/>
man. ye think I'd be this <lb/>
oil day long if I had any bruins be <lb/>
laid, and he gave the bundle another <lb/>
of the Cross. <lb/>
Both Similarly <lb/>
Miss Dearborn Chi- <lb/>
watch runs fast. <lb/>
Miss Dorchester <lb/>
also, is inclined <lb/>
to exercise too excessive an <lb/>
in the movements of the de- <lb/>
of its <lb/>
Circular <lb/>
A Thought. <lb/>
Friend railway say <lb/>
you are getting influenza from that <lb/>
lady's open window, and yet you <lb/>
seem to be very gleeful about some- <lb/>
thing. What is <lb/>
know she must be <lb/>
getting York <lb/>
Weekly. <lb/>
C. A. Seymour, I ml., <lb/>
sister Jennie, when she <lb/>
was a young girl, suffered from white <lb/>
swelling, which greatly Impaired her <lb/>
health and made her blood very Impure- <lb/>
In the spring was not able to do <lb/>
anything get about. <lb/>
More than a year ago she took three bot- <lb/>
Botanic Blood Balm, and now <lb/>
It perfectly <lb/>
Eastern <lb/>
TO <lb/>
FEBRUARY i, 1893, <lb/>
in <lb/>
is time to <lb/>
JUt. I MARQUIS, <lb/>
outrun, <lb/>
J, <lb/>
Office In upper <lb/>
opposite <lb/>
L. <lb/>
d r <lb/>
X. <lb/>
JAS. I,. FLEMING, <lb/>
N. <lb/>
attention to office <lb/>
at Tucker A Murphy's old <lb/>
Blow <lb/>
MOS. J. <lb/>
W, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
In nil tin. <lb/>
U. <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LA n <lb/>
N. IX <lb/>
I. A. .- 1.11. . K. <lb/>
A TYSON, <lb/>
W. C. <lb/>
attention given to <lb/>
M. II. LONG,<lb/>
Prompt mill careful attention to <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
L. C. LATHAM. HARRY <lb/>
AM A SKI Kit, <lb/>
N. <lb/>
. JAM KM. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. f. <lb/>
all the nun., <lb/>
a Specialty. <lb/>
Ti-j <lb/>
p.-<lb/>
y. <lb/>
if<lb/>
o o <lb/>
S a <lb/>
-n <lb/>
r- <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
obtained, and all business in S. <lb/>
Patent or in the Courts attended to <lb/>
for Moderate Fees. <lb/>
We are opposite the IT. S. Patent Of- <lb/>
engaged in Patents Exclusively, <lb/>
can obtain patents n less time than <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
the model or drawing is sent we <lb/>
advise as to free of <lb/>
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb/>
Patent. <lb/>
refer, here, to Post Master, the <lb/>
of the Money Order Old., and to <lb/>
of the U. S. Patent Office. <lb/>
advise terms and reference to <lb/>
act mil clients in your own State, or <lb/>
address, C. A. Snow A Co., <lb/>
Washing-toil. D. C. <lb/>
WATCH TOWER, <lb/>
Published <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR <lb/>
Devoted to Apostolic Christianity, <lb/>
cation. General Intelligence. Send <lb/>
for Sample Copy. Office of <lb/>
Greenville, N, <lb/>
Editorial Office, Wash- <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
J. L. Editor. <lb/>
O. W. DAVIS. Associate. <lb/>
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
For Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair <lb/>
AT THE GLASS FRONT <lb/>
the Opera noose, at which place <lb/>
I have located, and where I have <lb/>
everything In my <lb/>
NEW, CLEAN ANN ft, <lb/>
TO A <lb/>
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb/>
with the Improved appliances; <lb/>
comfortable chain. <lb/>
Razors sharpened at reasonable <lb/>
for work <lb/>
promptly executed. Very <lb/>
of my<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017556_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, JULY MM. <lb/>
, order of rated under the name o and the city Simon Elias <lb/>
I so full of to some old 5.00, F. 0.90, <lb/>
poison it should t tons that More Blow <lb/>
the vocabulary of ,. m t.-i 0.00, Brown 2.00, F. G, <lb/>
which <lb/>
; for a Prohibition of the <lb/>
and a Prohibition by law <lb/>
its and sale. <lb/>
We have the People's party <lb/>
whose platform <lb/>
and handed over to the <lb/>
have failed to I <lb/>
2.15, John Flanagan <lb/>
that it so fully now and in do- -wake up. The had a well j John Flanagan <lb/>
ill the past has electric street service 5.50, M-G 50-26, J. A. <lb/>
at the at G <lb/>
N. C. mail mutter. <lb/>
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET <lb/>
fob <lb/>
GROVER CLEVELAND. <lb/>
New York. <lb/>
all the past <lb/>
And this is n <lb/>
equipped <lb/>
t all- At another <lb/>
But, then, <lb/>
declares for the <lb/>
PUB <lb/>
ADLAI E- STEVENSON. <lb/>
electors AT <lb/>
CHARLES B. AYCOCK. <lb/>
ROBERT B. GLENN. <lb/>
burdens of the people- No <lb/>
man with brains enough to make <lb/>
figures can set down and calculate <lb/>
the costs to the people of the <lb/>
purchase and control of all the <lb/>
railroads of this country without <lb/>
standing amazed and horrified, <lb/>
when he sees this frightful array <lb/>
figures, that any man North <lb/>
Carolina can be found to his <lb/>
assent to so monstrous a <lb/>
That candidate of <lb/>
this party for the Presidency, <lb/>
should advocate such a monstrous <lb/>
which extended for two be- <lb/>
the limits to the of a <lb/>
poor, diseased, decrepit, <lb/>
dismal, damned old Democratic <lb/>
And yet some men say that a <lb/>
man may vote for this man and <lb/>
still a Democrat- The thing is <lb/>
If a man has yet been <lb/>
unable to determine his line of duty <lb/>
then he should, it <lb/>
away from all these party <lb/>
meetings till he has made up <lb/>
mind what his duty to himself and <lb/>
his country requires to do. <lb/>
We repeat the whole thing is <lb/>
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb/>
ELIAS CARR.<lb/>
R. A- <lb/>
.- <lb/>
I STATE <lb/>
COKE <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
TREASURER <lb/>
DONALD W. <lb/>
of Wake.<lb/>
K. M. FURMAN. <lb/>
of <lb/>
OF <lb/>
J. C- SCARBOROUGH. <lb/>
of John-ton. <lb/>
FRANK I. OSBORNE, <lb/>
of <lb/>
GEORGE A- SHUFFORD. <lb/>
the money in <lb/>
paid and gold- <lb/>
COUNTY <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC <lb/>
of the Democratic <lb/>
party of Pitt county will be held <lb/>
at the Court House in Greenville <lb/>
on Thursday the 28th day of July <lb/>
1892. at A. M-, for the <lb/>
purpose of nominating candidates <lb/>
for the Legislature and the <lb/>
county offices and to appoint <lb/>
delegates to the Congressional <lb/>
Convention, and such other <lb/>
as may properly come before <lb/>
it <lb/>
Township meetings are called <lb/>
to held on Saturday the 23rd <lb/>
day of July 1892. at o'clock P- M., <lb/>
at the usual places of meeting for <lb/>
the purpose of appointing <lb/>
gates to tho county convention <lb/>
and for the nomination of <lb/>
dates for Constable and the election <lb/>
of five Democrats to constitute an <lb/>
Executive for the town- <lb/>
ship- <lb/>
The several townships will be <lb/>
entitled to select the following <lb/>
number of delegates and the same <lb/>
number of alternates to represent <lb/>
them in the county convention to <lb/>
Beaver Dam. -t <lb/>
Bethel. <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
Falkland.<lb/>
Swift <lb/>
By order of the Democratic Ex- <lb/>
Committee of Pitt county- <lb/>
Alex L. Blow, <lb/>
R. Williams, Jr., Chairman <lb/>
Secretary. <lb/>
the burdens he would pile n <lb/>
mountain high upon the tax pay- <lb/>
people of this country, <lb/>
has been a member of Congress <lb/>
and there he made a record which <lb/>
should, of itself, be to <lb/>
drive away from him the <lb/>
of any support from the people <lb/>
who work in the fields and pay- <lb/>
taxes- On three separate <lb/>
s he introduced and tried to <lb/>
have passed into a law a <lb/>
to to <lb/>
pay tho Federal soldiers the <lb/>
between <lb/>
which were <lb/>
Three hundred millions of dollars <lb/>
is an immense sum of money and <lb/>
yet this is the additional burden <lb/>
he wished to place upon over <lb/>
beyond those under which we <lb/>
are already So the <lb/>
people can take <lb/>
Cleveland and economy and low <lb/>
taxes and the greatest freedom to <lb/>
the citizen. Or <lb/>
Harrison and extravagance and <lb/>
high taxes and Force Bills and a <lb/>
limited freedom to the citizen. <lb/>
Or <lb/>
and no whiskey. Or <lb/>
Weaver still heavier bur <lb/>
dens, and enlarged pensions and <lb/>
government ownership of railroads <lb/>
and other wild schemes. <lb/>
proposition is not a surprise to any pie easy too plain to ad- <lb/>
one familial with his record. He debate or mistake. Let the <lb/>
has no regard for the enormity f j Democrats attend their meetings, <lb/>
the Republicans theirs, the <lb/>
theirs <lb/>
theirs. Then we will know who is <lb/>
who and what is what, and <lb/>
will be no occasion for calling in <lb/>
question mens party fealty or <lb/>
rightful action. This every citizen <lb/>
has a right to do and no one dare <lb/>
molest him- If we know the self <lb/>
respecting people of Pitt as well as <lb/>
we think we do this is the course <lb/>
they will and our well at- <lb/>
tended Democratic primaries next <lb/>
Saturday will probably be the <lb/>
most orderly and loyal and patriot <lb/>
held in tho county. <lb/>
shall expect the spirit of to be <lb/>
among our people and stir them to <lb/>
a united and heroic effort to drive <lb/>
from power the party which then <lb/>
tried to fix upon us the horrors of <lb/>
Civil Rights in whoso rank <lb/>
Weaver was then fighting. <lb/>
TOWNSHIP DEMOCRATIC <lb/>
COM. <lb/>
The members of the several <lb/>
Township Democratic Committees. <lb/>
to be elected at the primaries on <lb/>
the 23rd inst, are requested to <lb/>
meet at the Court House on the <lb/>
28th inst, immediately after the ad- <lb/>
of the County <lb/>
for the purpose of electing <lb/>
an Executive Committee for the <lb/>
county. Alex- L. Blow, <lb/>
Dem. Com. <lb/>
Greenville, N- C, July 13th 1892. <lb/>
THE FOUR <lb/>
THEY STAND FOR. <lb/>
have presented to us this <lb/>
year four political parties with <lb/>
principles and men differing from <lb/>
each other so broadly that no man <lb/>
of ordinary intelligence or honesty <lb/>
can mistake the camp in which he <lb/>
belongs. <lb/>
1- We have the great Democratic <lb/>
party which stands for low taxes <lb/>
and equal rights to sections, to <lb/>
State and to individuals- It stands <lb/>
for economy in government and <lb/>
that taxation shall be limited to the <lb/>
actual support of the government <lb/>
and that the individual citizen <lb/>
shall be left as free as possible. <lb/>
The Republican party stands <lb/>
for just the opposite of these things. <lb/>
It levies high taxes and waste them <lb/>
in extravagant and <lb/>
wasteful schemes to make a pretext <lb/>
for making taxation still higher. <lb/>
It abridges the liberties of the in- <lb/>
by putting limitation upon <lb/>
his markets And by imposing <lb/>
burdens upon the great mass of <lb/>
the people to build up industries <lb/>
for the enrichment of the few- <lb/>
THE DEMOCRATIC PRIMARIES. <lb/>
The Democratic not the <lb/>
Primaries are called to meet at <lb/>
P. M. Saturday tho 23rd. Only <lb/>
are expected to <lb/>
pate in those primaries and these <lb/>
are all earnestly expected and re- <lb/>
quested to be present. There has <lb/>
been some talk, we hear, about <lb/>
our position on this important <lb/>
party question. It does not seem <lb/>
to that our position is open to <lb/>
criticism or debate- It is too <lb/>
plain for a man to make a mistake <lb/>
about. Some one has said we <lb/>
hear, that we are trying to read <lb/>
them out of tho party. beg <lb/>
to inform them this a mistake. <lb/>
We do not propose to read any <lb/>
one out. want all to <lb/>
stay with us and help win a great <lb/>
victory for us. for the farmers and <lb/>
laboring people of this country. <lb/>
It pains to our people <lb/>
up and turning against <lb/>
each other. Yet we admit that a <lb/>
man Las a right to vote for Harri- <lb/>
son if he desires to do so. Ho has <lb/>
no less the right to vote for <lb/>
or even for But we do <lb/>
insist and we do so in all kindness <lb/>
to our erring brethren that a man <lb/>
who supports Harrison has <lb/>
right or in a Democratic <lb/>
Primary. It is equally clear that <lb/>
those who support Weaver ought <lb/>
not to be hanging around a Demo <lb/>
Primary calling themselves <lb/>
Democrats. Is it possible that <lb/>
those who intend to support <lb/>
Weaver are ashamed to confess <lb/>
they belong to tho Peoples party <lb/>
so called Do they want to still <lb/>
retain the name of Democrat to <lb/>
give respectability to their <lb/>
of its candidates and <lb/>
If any one has made up his <lb/>
mind to vote for Cleveland he <lb/>
ought to attend tho Democrat <lb/>
primaries. If he expects to vote <lb/>
for Harrison he ought to attend <lb/>
the Republican primaries. If Bid- <lb/>
well is his man he ought to be <lb/>
present at the Prohibition <lb/>
when they are called. If he <lb/>
expects to vote for Weaver ho <lb/>
ought to attend the meetings of <lb/>
the Peoples party which are call- <lb/>
ed we hear for the GOth of this <lb/>
month- But before any man who <lb/>
has ever been a Democrat makes <lb/>
up his mind to vote for Weaver <lb/>
and commits himself <lb/>
one of his meetings we want him to <lb/>
read what Weaver has said of him. <lb/>
At one time he said of you in a <lb/>
public <lb/>
is the use of further <lb/>
tho Democracy with all <lb/>
hoary crime at the bar of public <lb/>
opinion know that its arts <lb/>
comprise murder, treason, theft, <lb/>
arson, fraud, perjury and all <lb/>
crimes possible for an organization <lb/>
to connive at. It would be a <lb/>
mercy to put its record a million <lb/>
miles deep in the pit that is men- <lb/>
in Holy and I may <lb/>
add that if a large and distinguish- <lb/>
ed assortment of its alleged state- <lb/>
men were sent along- it would be <lb/>
only common <lb/>
At another time he said, <lb/>
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. <lb/>
The State Capital and Things Seen <lb/>
After Leaving San Francisco. <lb/>
Republican can ever, under any <lb/>
circumstances, have any part or lot <lb/>
with the hungry, rebellious, man- <lb/>
hating, woman selling gang merits were in progress and <lb/>
It was on Saturday morning, <lb/>
May 28th. that we seven North <lb/>
Carolinians crossed the ferry from <lb/>
San Francisco to Oakland and <lb/>
took tho Southern Pacific train for <lb/>
Sacramento, the capital of Cali- <lb/>
The train was due to <lb/>
roach Sacramento by noon, and it <lb/>
was the purpose of our party to <lb/>
spend the of tho day <lb/>
there, depart on the P. AI. <lb/>
train with the regular excursion <lb/>
party duo to pass at that hour. <lb/>
Such a program was finally <lb/>
out, but at much later hours <lb/>
cause of freshets encountered. <lb/>
Arriving opposite whore <lb/>
our train should have crossed the <lb/>
ferry, it was found that high water <lb/>
has caused the ferry dock to sink <lb/>
and that a journey miles out of <lb/>
the way must be made. Getting <lb/>
back from tho ocean away from <lb/>
the delightful climate experienced <lb/>
close to tho coast we found the <lb/>
day growing exceedingly warm, <lb/>
being in a crowded car travel <lb/>
was anything else than <lb/>
table- <lb/>
The country along the valley of <lb/>
tho river is a tine <lb/>
farming and stock raising section- <lb/>
Grain and fruits are raised in <lb/>
abundance. Immediately near the <lb/>
river considerable damage was <lb/>
done by overflow, the water at this <lb/>
time being unusually high- <lb/>
tho city of Sacramento <lb/>
the damage by tho overflow was <lb/>
much greater than further down <lb/>
stream. The water front of the <lb/>
city was submerged, railroad <lb/>
tracks were covered, and in some <lb/>
places water was up to the floor of <lb/>
cars and buildings. More than <lb/>
once water came half way to the <lb/>
axles of the car on which our party <lb/>
traveled. The river was higher <lb/>
than ever known tho rise <lb/>
being a little above feet- Seeing <lb/>
so much water here reminded me <lb/>
of the great flood at St. Lotus <lb/>
written about in a former letter, <lb/>
only hero there was not the slight- <lb/>
comparison to the destruction <lb/>
and devastation attendant upon tho <lb/>
overflow of the Mississippi. The <lb/>
reader may be wondering what <lb/>
causes such great freshets in a <lb/>
region I have been writing <lb/>
that rain falls but seldom if at all. <lb/>
Rain had nothing to do with this <lb/>
freshet in the Sacramento, but the <lb/>
water all came from snow <lb/>
in tho mountains. May is the <lb/>
mouth in which the bulk of the <lb/>
mountain snow melts and such a <lb/>
flood of water is sent down into <lb/>
the valleys as to fill tho rivers to <lb/>
overflowing. <lb/>
It was past when our <lb/>
train reached the depot at Sacra <lb/>
than two hours late <lb/>
but after getting dinner all set <lb/>
out to see as much of the city as <lb/>
possible during the remainder of <lb/>
the day. It struck us as being a <lb/>
very old town, not possessing in <lb/>
a very great degree the push and <lb/>
energy characteristic of a western <lb/>
city- While it had a few <lb/>
buildings, most of them were of a <lb/>
more or less ancient architectural <lb/>
design, low and The chief <lb/>
residence portions of the city were <lb/>
far in advance of the business <lb/>
streets, in them being many very <lb/>
handsome buildings surrounded <lb/>
by beautiful grounds. There were <lb/>
evidences however that improve- <lb/>
new spacious park- The <lb/>
house is a very grand in <lb/>
the midst of magnificent grounds, <lb/>
end near it was one of the hand, <lb/>
church edifices I saw any- <lb/>
where. two buildings would <lb/>
be a credit to any city. <lb/>
One-thing that made roe form an <lb/>
admiration for the <lb/>
people was to learn that they had <lb/>
much devotion and <lb/>
finer arts. There was a hand <lb/>
and well appointed building known <lb/>
as the Crocker art gallery. In a <lb/>
portion the building was an art <lb/>
school. The upper floor contained <lb/>
large halls hung in artistic <lb/>
with so fall sizes, <lb/>
some of them copies of the world's <lb/>
master productions. Those <lb/>
all numbered, and opposite- the <lb/>
corresponding number guide <lb/>
furnished the a brief history <lb/>
of each picture and its connection <lb/>
could be had. Some of us passed <lb/>
an hour profitably and pleasantly <lb/>
here, as through the vision <lb/>
spirits communed with those whose <lb/>
master touch had spread upon a <lb/>
lifeless canvass such vivid scenes <lb/>
of living beauty. This gallery was <lb/>
a donation from another of Cali- <lb/>
citizens, who gen- <lb/>
gave of his means for the <lb/>
blessing and comfort of his fellow <lb/>
man. <lb/>
The train upon which wore to <lb/>
leave Sacramento was duo at <lb/>
o'clock P M. but being also de- <lb/>
by the freshets had the <lb/>
pleasure of boarding the cars after <lb/>
a tiresome wait of nearly four <lb/>
hours- It was Sunday <lb/>
morning when we North <lb/>
ans took quarters the sleeping <lb/>
car occupied by tho Oregon and <lb/>
Washington delegations and went <lb/>
steaming away northward <lb/>
for Ore- Sometime <lb/>
night all tho cars containing <lb/>
the editors who to return homo <lb/>
by this route were brought to- <lb/>
and we awoke morn- <lb/>
to find ourselves in a solid <lb/>
train twelve Pullman cars filled <lb/>
with editors, their wives, <lb/>
cousins and sweethearts. <lb/>
Tho remainder of the trip to Port- <lb/>
land we were all together except <lb/>
once when the train had to divide <lb/>
two sections in order to make the <lb/>
heavy grades in crossing the <lb/>
mountains. <lb/>
Northern California is exceed- <lb/>
and, as the <lb/>
westerners term it. very scenic. <lb/>
Some of tho scenes passed through <lb/>
cannot be forgotten. Especially <lb/>
does old Mt Shasta impress itself <lb/>
upon the traveler, so <lb/>
much so as to frequently provoke <lb/>
the bard to sing its praise in <lb/>
verse. Through nearly a whole <lb/>
day's travel its lofty head, wearing <lb/>
a covering of glistening snow,, is <lb/>
seen towering far above all other <lb/>
in the Near <lb/>
is tho famous Shasta Soda <lb/>
Springs whoso waters are <lb/>
sought after- The train <lb/>
stops a short while here, giving tho <lb/>
passengers opportunity to quaff the <lb/>
sparkling water and drink in the <lb/>
of tho surroundings. At <lb/>
the highest town passed in <lb/>
crossing tho range, the <lb/>
view of Shasta was grand, tho <lb/>
great mountain standing in bold <lb/>
relief in front of town. All <lb/>
around the mountains wore cover- <lb/>
ed in At this place also <lb/>
was a brawn band out at tho <lb/>
depot to serenade the editors, <lb/>
notwithstanding the fact that it <lb/>
was Sunday. All through these <lb/>
mountains the engineering and <lb/>
construction of tho railroad was <lb/>
simply wonderful. <lb/>
26-00, Greenville Land A <lb/>
Improvement Company C. <lb/>
Blount 40.00, B- 10.55, <lb/>
E. A- 33.67, J. G. Woodard <lb/>
22.50, J. A. K. Tucker R. I <lb/>
B. <lb/>
S. Sheppard W. <lb/>
son G. A. B. S- <lb/>
Sheppard L- Fleming 5.00, <lb/>
Edwards 5.00, J- C. <lb/>
Cobb Son 36.25, C Dawson <lb/>
D. H. James 12.28, T. E. Keel, 3.70. <lb/>
C- V. Newton S. A. Gainer 3-60. <lb/>
and Swift Crook <lb/>
Stock Law P. Pitt- <lb/>
man <lb/>
License to retail liquor for six <lb/>
months from July 1st were granted <lb/>
to tho following Robert <lb/>
Staton, J. S. C D. Smith, <lb/>
J. R. Edwards, H. C L. <lb/>
N. Shelton, T. L. Turnage, <lb/>
H. L. N. Dudley, James <lb/>
Teel, B. F. Anderson, H. E Ed- <lb/>
wards, W- H. Smith. Andrew Moore <lb/>
k Co. J. J- Stokes, J. A- <lb/>
O. Hooker. E. Land, E. A. Bland, <lb/>
Brooks Tingle, J. O- Proctor <lb/>
Bra, C. P. Moore Co, S. S- <lb/>
Harris, W- S. Hicks. J. R. Daven- <lb/>
port, J. T. Mobley, F. <lb/>
In accordance with a petition <lb/>
from G. M- Mooring- others <lb/>
for a new road in Carolina town- <lb/>
ship across certain lands stated. <lb/>
tho Sheriff was ordered to summon <lb/>
a jury and lay out and establish <lb/>
said road as prayed for in the <lb/>
In accordance with a petition <lb/>
from John C. Dixon and others <lb/>
for a new road in township <lb/>
across certain lands stated, the <lb/>
Sheriff was ordered to summon a <lb/>
jury lay out and establish said <lb/>
road as prayed for in the petition. <lb/>
J. A. K. Sheriff, filed <lb/>
his report and tho report of the <lb/>
jury, showing that ho had duly <lb/>
laid out and established a public <lb/>
road in Greenville township ac- <lb/>
cording to an order issued by the <lb/>
Board on the 6th day of June, <lb/>
which was con firmed and tho Board <lb/>
of Supervisors notified of tho same <lb/>
The committee construction <lb/>
of the dam north of the river made <lb/>
a report showing their estimate of <lb/>
tho different sections of tho work, <lb/>
and recommended that the Board <lb/>
pay W. W. Harper k Co., <lb/>
tors, for work done up to <lb/>
July 4th. <lb/>
The Clerk of the Board was or- <lb/>
to advertise that tho Board <lb/>
would meet on Monday, July 11th, <lb/>
to revise tho tax list of 1892, <lb/>
hear all complaints of excessive <lb/>
valuations. <lb/>
too Dozen Pei- Month. <lb/>
Mr. Uriel of Beaver Dam j <lb/>
N brother <lb/>
it example that worthy of i <lb/>
imitation. Between of Jan <lb/>
and the of six <lb/>
months he bail to Greenville <lb/>
oM Hie product <lb/>
of own fart. We have no <lb/>
that the from these <lb/>
ha- what ready money he has <lb/>
cultivation of hi farm <lb/>
till- year, to nothing of the poultry <lb/>
and other thing he sold. This is the <lb/>
Way lo farm, having yon <lb/>
Midget money for every <lb/>
time <lb/>
CHERRY <lb/>
DEALERS IN-------- <lb/>
Attention, <lb/>
take this method of to <lb/>
that am a candidate the Demo- <lb/>
nomination for the of Begin- <lb/>
of Deeds of Pitt county. am a <lb/>
Democrat, atomic and pun-, and I believe <lb/>
interest of the people will be <lb/>
served by the election of to <lb/>
from to township <lb/>
D nominated and elected will be <lb/>
faithful in of all my duties, <lb/>
but whether nominated or not. I am a <lb/>
Democrat. It. M. <lb/>
MEETING. <lb/>
July <lb/>
Board of Commissioners of Pitt <lb/>
met thin day in regular <lb/>
session, present C- chair- <lb/>
man, S. A. Gainer, C V. Newton, <lb/>
T- E. Keel and Fleming. <lb/>
The following pauper orders <lb/>
were Winnifred Taylor <lb/>
Margaret Bryan 3.00, Alex <lb/>
Harris 12.00, H. D. Smith <lb/>
Daniel 2-00, Martha <lb/>
son Lydia Bryan 2.00. Jacob <lb/>
Susan Norris <lb/>
1.50, Nancy. <lb/>
Moore 3.00, Smith 1-50, <lb/>
Patsy 2.00, Harriett <lb/>
Henry Harris Em- <lb/>
Edwards 3.00, Benjamin Craw- <lb/>
ford Polly Adams An- <lb/>
Smith 1-TO, Easter Vines 1.50. <lb/>
Julia Dunn 4-50, Daniel <lb/>
Webster 10-00, <lb/>
Bryan George <lb/>
Turner 2.50- <lb/>
The general orders <lb/>
were J W- <lb/>
M. Phillip Fleming <lb/>
2.16, C. 80.60, Israel Ed- <lb/>
wards W. B- <lb/>
J. C- Cook B. L, <lb/>
H. F. Keel Noah 1-00, <lb/>
Dr. B- T- Cox 29-25, Kane- <lb/>
11-60, T. 1.50, <lb/>
Moore B- W- King J. A. <lb/>
K. Tucker T. A- <lb/>
28-00, E A- Moe. Jr., 11.51, J. A. <lb/>
K. Tucker 56.40, J- B. Little <lb/>
J. W- Smith E. A- <lb/>
4.46, Clark 6.10, J. A- K. <lb/>
Tucker <lb/>
W- H. Williams 28.00, E. F, <lb/>
28-06, J. 8- Keel 40-00, A- F- <lb/>
W- F- <lb/>
1.70, W. W- Harper Co. 280-00, <lb/>
C Haywood <lb/>
A Hogshead Story. <lb/>
with, by this means to tell the people <lb/>
that l have prepared and an still <lb/>
paring a largo lot of material for <lb/>
co Hogsheads. And to make It as con- <lb/>
s possible for my I <lb/>
have decided to ran two on the <lb/>
road to deliver them at. most convenient <lb/>
places. And I further promise that I <lb/>
will use beat efforts to put up such <lb/>
size and quality of Hogsheads as the de- <lb/>
may want. And think I com- <lb/>
In price with any. <lb/>
I will also pay special attention to <lb/>
making and for <lb/>
any house yon may build. <lb/>
Please see inc placing your or- <lb/>
or address me at Winterville, K. C. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
A. G. COX. <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 oar <lb/>
town. And while we are not sell <lb/>
at cost we beg to announce <lb/>
that we think we and will <lb/>
Adopted by Prosperity Alli- <lb/>
No. July <lb/>
We. members of <lb/>
perky Alliance, No deeply deplore <lb/>
the death of our esteemed and <lb/>
honored r sad <lb/>
lion. I. I. be t <lb/>
Resolved 1st. That bow with limn. <lb/>
i the will of who <lb/>
all bet <lb/>
of III- . <lb/>
2nd. we will ever hold la re. <lb/>
and esteem a a true, staunch <lb/>
and Indefatigable worker for the cause of <lb/>
reform and the solution of the same. <lb/>
3rd. Hurt we believe every effort made <lb/>
by him to ow demands was <lb/>
d and mo- <lb/>
That the-e lie <lb/>
upon our minutes and also be sent the <lb/>
Progressive <lb/>
Farmer for publication. <lb/>
D. <lb/>
M. Cox, <lb/>
New Officers. <lb/>
At he regular meeting of the Pit <lb/>
County Alliance held Thurs- <lb/>
day, H-h. <lb/>
were elected for the ensuing j <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
V A. Move. <lb/>
l. <lb/>
I., <lb/>
A. <lb/>
T. Tyson, <lb/>
V. <lb/>
Assistant <lb/>
D. ill. <lb/>
H. Moore. <lb/>
Executive <lb/>
I. T. Hon-e. A. <lb/>
Delegate to State A. Move <lb/>
Tobacco Growers <lb/>
-----1 <lb/>
Furnace <lb/>
The best ever ma-la for <lb/>
With it you have absolute <lb/>
control over beating your barn, <lb/>
and it removes <lb/>
All Danger Fire. <lb/>
Two cures per week can be <lb/>
made in the same barn <lb/>
co of different degrees of ripe- <lb/>
can be cured at time in <lb/>
the same barn Saves labor and <lb/>
fuel. <lb/>
For farther particulars ad- <lb/>
dress <lb/>
PHELPS, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
this paper when write. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
The undersigned will sell at public <lb/>
auction to the highest bidder for cash, at <lb/>
Pitt N. C. at o'clock <lb/>
A. II., the day of one <lb/>
Doable Barren Shot Gun, the property <lb/>
of Andrew Joyner. lo satisfy a claim of <lb/>
B. T. T. A Sons, amounting to <lb/>
Ten for and labor done, <lb/>
for material furnished In repairing said <lb/>
This 12th day of July, 1892. <lb/>
I. T. SONS. <lb/>
J. II. Ally. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
I expect to lie from my <lb/>
on the in next. <lb/>
The will be open, in charge of my <lb/>
deputy during my absence. <lb/>
E. A. <lb/>
Superior Court Pitt Co- <lb/>
TO <lb/>
-----If you want <lb/>
ill the of a PIANO from <lb/>
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb/>
in the purchase of an Organ address <lb/>
ADOLPH COHN, <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
Agent for Carolina, <lb/>
who is now handling goods direct from <lb/>
the manufacturers, as HIGH <lb/>
GRADE PIANOS, <lb/>
tone, workmanship and <lb/>
and endowed by nearly all the <lb/>
journals in the <lb/>
Made by Paul J. who Is at this <lb/>
time of mechanics and in- <lb/>
of the day. Thirteen new <lb/>
patents on this high grade Piano- <lb/>
the A UP. <lb/>
RIGHT PIANO which In fold by <lb/>
him for the past six years in the eastern <lb/>
part of this State and up to this time has <lb/>
given entire The <lb/>
Piano mentioned will he sold at from <lb/>
in Oak, <lb/>
Walnut or Mahogany cases. <lb/>
Also the <lb/>
from to flU in solid or Oak <lb/>
cases. <lb/>
Ten years experience in the music <lb/>
enabled him to handle <lb/>
ha docs <lb/>
not to that be sell any <lb/>
musical instrument par cent, <lb/>
than other agents arc now <lb/>
Refer lo all banks in Carolina. <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb/>
-AND BUYER Of- <lb/>
Country Produce <lb/>
Bring me all of your Chickens. Eggs, Ducks, <lb/>
Turkeys and Geese, I will Live you the <lb/>
highest market price for them pay spot <lb/>
cash. <lb/>
If you have anything to ship I will attend to It for you on a small commission. <lb/>
Call and see me. <lb/>
JNO. S. CONGLETON. <lb/>
G. E. HARRIS, <lb/>
-DEALER <lb/>
Si. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED <lb/>
Headquarters for the following lines of Goods <lb/>
Car load Mes Pork. Boxes <lb/>
Car load Side Meat. <lb/>
Car load Hour, all <lb/>
Car load White Oats. <lb/>
Case Star <lb/>
Oases Powders. <lb/>
Cat ea Soap. <lb/>
Case brandy cherries and Peaches. <lb/>
Full line <lb/>
Boxes Tobacco. <lb/>
Boxes Starch. <lb/>
Rico Molasses. <lb/>
Barrels Stick Candy. <lb/>
Barrel Gail Ax <lb/>
Barrels Railroad Mills <lb/>
Barrel Snuff. <lb/>
Paper Sacks, Cigarette, Ac.<lb/>
any prices on the different <lb/>
lines of Goods earned by us. We <lb/>
throw out no baits to entrap <lb/>
To one and all we extend <lb/>
a cordial welcome to our <lb/>
will be pleased to serve you with <lb/>
any in Hie following lines <lb/>
------o- <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions, <lb/>
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Pants <lb/>
Goods, Hats, Shoes, Hardware, <lb/>
Cutlery, Nails, Tinware, Crockery, <lb/>
Glassware, Groceries, deg. <lb/>
White Oil cents per gallon, <lb/>
Wood and Willow Ware, Harness, <lb/>
------0- <lb/>
and Collars, Farming Tools <lb/>
Plows of the improved makes, <lb/>
Trunks, Valises, Floor Matting, <lb/>
Oil Children's 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/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb/>
WILL TUB OF <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS-DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory is well with the best Mechanics, put up nothing <lb/>
but work. We keep up with the times and improved <lb/>
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are you can select from <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full lie of ready <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb/>
he year round, which will sell as as <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking the people this and surrounding counties for past favors we hope to <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same <lb/>
X. <lb/>
J. L, SUGG, <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE AGENT <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rates. <lb/>
AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb/>
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
to the of Pitt surrounding counties, a line of the following goo <lb/>
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be an <lb/>
straight goods, DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, <lb/>
GOODS. HATS CAPS, BOOTS and <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS, DOOR.-. WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb/>
kind. Gin and Mill Hay, Rock Limb, Plaster of Paris, and Flab <lb/>
Hair, Harness, Bridles and -addles <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the at <lb/>
Jobbers prices cents per loss per cent for Cash. Bread Prep- <lb/>
ration and Hall's Star Lye At jobbers Prices, and pure Lin- <lb/>
seed Oil. Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and <lb/>
Willow Warp. a Give me a call and I guarantee satisfaction, <lb/>
a Perfect Writing <lb/>
HE MODELED AND <lb/>
The Rest Standard Typewriter in the World, <lb/>
Inexpensive. Portable, No Ink Ribbon, In- <lb/>
Type in all language, Easiest <lb/>
to learn, and rapid as any. <lb/>
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE, <lb/>
Warranted as Represented. <lb/>
This Machine is everybody's friend. <lb/>
body should have their writing done on tho <lb/>
Typewriter. It always insures the most <lb/>
prompt attention. Address <lb/>
N. TYPEWRITER COMPANY, Washington, St., <lb/>
One of these machines can be seen at the Reflector office, where particulars and <lb/>
can had.<lb/>
mm <lb/>
For Accident Insurance by the year in one of <lb/>
the best Companies in existence, <lb/>
Whichard.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017556_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
.- <lb/>
A Startling Fact<lb/>
WONDERFUL <lb/>
T, <lb/>
STILL RUNNING <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
COST SALE. <lb/>
THE<lb/>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
for Cleveland and Carr <lb/>
is the season usually called dog <lb/>
days. <lb/>
The past week has given us some warm <lb/>
weather. <lb/>
A join township primaries <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
Mason's Porcelain Fruit Jars at <lb/>
A; <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the Old <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
Cleveland <lb/>
and <lb/>
Put your name on the <lb/>
Can roll. <lb/>
V loads of watermelons came hi <lb/>
town Saturday. <lb/>
The New Home Sewing Machine for <lb/>
at Brown <lb/>
The best Lanterns in town can be found <lb/>
at Young A <lb/>
The new Methodist at <lb/>
will be dedicated nest Sunday. <lb/>
The New Home Sewing Machine and <lb/>
all at Brown Bros. <lb/>
New Cream Cheese and X. Y. State <lb/>
Batter at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Want to eat something good Boss <lb/>
Biscuits at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Cash given for Produce. Hides. <lb/>
and Furs at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Cheapest Furniture. Bedsteads and <lb/>
Mattresses at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Prof. C. H. has decided to move <lb/>
hi school from to Beaufort. <lb/>
The Knights of Honor makes three <lb/>
upon its members for-Inly. <lb/>
For tobacco knives. lantern, <lb/>
and fruit jars go lo Young<lb/>
A question asked among the <lb/>
farmers of late is i What did you get for <lb/>
your f <lb/>
We have the best kind of <lb/>
Tobacco Knives and Lanterns. <lb/>
Crops are badly in the grass, the con- <lb/>
wet weather making the soil too <lb/>
wet for plowing. <lb/>
Quite a number from Greenville <lb/>
up to the picnic in grove, near <lb/>
Farmville to-day. <lb/>
Monday Mr. K. A. Move a <lb/>
beautiful specimen of some tobacco just- <lb/>
cured on his farm. <lb/>
The thanks Mr. T. A. <lb/>
for a basket of nice squash <lb/>
brought us Friday. <lb/>
town- <lb/>
that you can choice <lb/>
DRY GOODS <lb/>
DRESS <lb/>
Clothing, <lb/>
NOTIONS, <lb/>
BOOTS AND SHOE <lb/>
cost for cash at <lb/>
M. R. LANG'S. <lb/>
a rolls <lb/>
club. organize one <lb/>
ship in the county. <lb/>
The fall session of Greenville Mule. <lb/>
Academy will begin Monday. Aug. h. <lb/>
Lookout for advertisement. <lb/>
There is a demand for carpenters in <lb/>
Greenville. So much work going on that <lb/>
all here have their hands full. <lb/>
have been coming into <lb/>
market for a week, lint continued wet <lb/>
weather on them make- the quality in- <lb/>
The number of people writing to <lb/>
Greenville to secure homos here brings <lb/>
out the fact that more dwelling homes <lb/>
are needed. <lb/>
The hot makes people long for <lb/>
the seashore. There is no more delight- <lb/>
place than Morehead, and a nice time <lb/>
can always be had there <lb/>
We understand that cigar an- being <lb/>
sold on Sunday, contrary to a town <lb/>
governing the same. Names of <lb/>
the parties are withheld for the present. <lb/>
energetic honest man <lb/>
to represent the. Equitable Life Assurance <lb/>
Society of York. Address T. II. <lb/>
Dick. Jr. District Manager Tarboro, <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
A large audience was out at the <lb/>
meeting in the Court House <lb/>
Sunday afternoon. Addresses were made <lb/>
by Prof. Andrew Joyner Mr. W. II. <lb/>
Allen. <lb/>
Work moves along well on the new <lb/>
building being erected by Mrs. Taft on <lb/>
the site of her recently home. <lb/>
The frame of <lb/>
shut in. <lb/>
a day passes but what Greenville's <lb/>
need of a modem hotel is felt. However <lb/>
the need docs not seem to impress itself <lb/>
upon our people with such force as to <lb/>
them to action. <lb/>
Hooker Brothers and Greene received <lb/>
their new merry-go-round Saturday <lb/>
have put it up on Third <lb/>
streets. It is a handsome machine and <lb/>
they have a fine organ with it. <lb/>
Thursday, Friday and Saturday of last <lb/>
week were examination days of public <lb/>
school teachers by the county <lb/>
of Public Instruction. Quite a <lb/>
number were in to apply for certificates. <lb/>
The has received the <lb/>
premium list of the thirty-second annual <lb/>
X. C. State fair to be held at Raleigh <lb/>
Oct to Very liberal premiums are <lb/>
offered and the fair promises many at- <lb/>
tractions. <lb/>
A number of colored came up <lb/>
on an excursion from Washington on Wed- <lb/>
and returned Thursday. A base <lb/>
ball club was with them and played a <lb/>
game with the Greenville colored nine, <lb/>
the visitors coming out second best. <lb/>
Something will sell hats, <lb/>
flowers, gauze ribbons, pictures, easels <lb/>
and fancy wares tight down at cost. Also <lb/>
a beautiful line of laces, etc. <lb/>
Give me a call before going elsewhere <lb/>
and be convinced of great reduction <lb/>
in prices. Mrs. Fannie Joyner. <lb/>
Secretaries of the various town-hip <lb/>
primaries next Saturday, confer a <lb/>
favor upon the Reflector if they will <lb/>
furnish us with the proceedings of their <lb/>
as early as possible. <lb/>
wish to publish a full list of the <lb/>
gates to the county convention in next <lb/>
issue. <lb/>
It was a gay party of com- <lb/>
posed of young gentlemen and ladies, <lb/>
with flute and guitar, who delighted the <lb/>
denizens of Saturday eve- <lb/>
with sweetest strains of music, vocal <lb/>
and instrumental. The editor makes ac- <lb/>
for his share of the <lb/>
pleasure. <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Mr. Robt Cox, is visiting In Goldsboro. <lb/>
Miss Lena Harris is in Scotland <lb/>
Neck. <lb/>
Mr. B. S. and family are at <lb/>
Seven Springs. <lb/>
Mrs. C. of Wilson, is visit- <lb/>
her her and sister here. <lb/>
Miss Nannie King left last Wednesday <lb/>
to visit relatives at Rocky Mount and <lb/>
Mr. I. Hudson and family, of <lb/>
have been spending some with <lb/>
his <lb/>
Mr. B. F. Sugg is in <lb/>
and con nth-.- in the Interest of the <lb/>
Eastern Warehouse. <lb/>
Mr. K. II. and family return- <lb/>
ed home Friday a visit to relatives <lb/>
at Gary, Durham and Burlington. <lb/>
John Duckett, of Hamilton <lb/>
the last few days lien. <lb/>
were glad to have a call from him. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Edwards of Scot- <lb/>
laud have been here the past week <lb/>
visiting relatives of Mrs. Edwards. <lb/>
Prof. Andrew Joyner, the successful <lb/>
Keely evangelist, came home Friday eve- <lb/>
lo spend a few days with his family. <lb/>
Kev. O. F. Smith returned home from <lb/>
Beaufort in time to occupy his pulpit in <lb/>
the Methodist church Sunday <lb/>
and night. <lb/>
Mr. Harry Is visiting at his <lb/>
old home, Hertford. the children <lb/>
of Mr. Charles Skinner accompanied him <lb/>
over there. <lb/>
Mess. S. Thomas and C. <lb/>
of New spent two days here <lb/>
week. Both were on <lb/>
of a different both will <lb/>
again. <lb/>
Mr. J. M. Latham has closed out his <lb/>
stock of and left on Saturday <lb/>
with bis family for He <lb/>
moved here that town two or three <lb/>
years ago. <lb/>
Mrs. L. K. and her sister. Mis. <lb/>
M. M. Nelson, of who <lb/>
been visiting here, left to sister, <lb/>
Mrs. V. N. Seawell, of Moore <lb/>
Journal. <lb/>
Mr. II. II. Wilson, postal clerk on this <lb/>
branch of the W. A W. road, moved his <lb/>
family from this place to Kinston last <lb/>
Thursday. The mail now going through <lb/>
to that town made it necessary for him to <lb/>
change his residence. <lb/>
Miss Novella Higgs was painfully hurt <lb/>
one day last thrusting <lb/>
a hot fork in one of her eyes. For a <lb/>
while there was apprehension that her <lb/>
eyesight was in danger, but her friends <lb/>
rejoice with her that the trouble soon <lb/>
passed away. <lb/>
Hindi, the foreman of <lb/>
the office, leaves this morn- <lb/>
for a few sojourn at Wilmington <lb/>
and lie will for the time <lb/>
forget the printing office technical- <lb/>
but will distribute smiles by show- <lb/>
a proof of bis countenance to the <lb/>
many friend- of his boyhood days by <lb/>
locking his form in the bosom of old ocean <lb/>
will wash off the patent outside and come <lb/>
out in a clean home edition. The entire <lb/>
force hopes Ids trip will double leaded <lb/>
with fun and pleasure. <lb/>
A Good Yield. <lb/>
Mr. of Beaver Dam, <lb/>
told us Thursday he harvested Ibis <lb/>
bushels of wheat from bush- <lb/>
els of seed sown. This is by no means a <lb/>
yield, lie also told us that the late <lb/>
wet weather seriously damaged all <lb/>
crops now growing, and in some instances <lb/>
the yield will hardly be more than half <lb/>
a crop. <lb/>
Thought it was Heavy. <lb/>
heard of an amusing incident hap- <lb/>
over near the new railroad, the <lb/>
other day. A farmer was sending a load <lb/>
of potatoes to the nearest depot tor ship- <lb/>
told the colored man in charge <lb/>
of the cart to brink back a bill of lading <lb/>
with him. Very much to the planter <lb/>
amusement the colored man turned and <lb/>
innocently asked <lb/>
I kin git it on de kart by <lb/>
For Democrats. <lb/>
They are Democratic primaries to be <lb/>
held in the several townships next Sat- <lb/>
and these are to select delegates <lb/>
to attend a Democratic county convention <lb/>
and the delegates in that Democratic <lb/>
convention are to nominate <lb/>
candidates for the various offices to be <lb/>
filled. This being so, none but Democrats <lb/>
have any right to participate either in <lb/>
the primaries or the county convention. <lb/>
Died. . <lb/>
Mrs. M. E. Jones, a most excellent and <lb/>
highly esteemed woman, and one of love- <lb/>
Christian character, passed quietly <lb/>
away at her home this town, on <lb/>
Thursday, 7th inst. Her remains were <lb/>
interred in the Episcopal cemetery Fri- <lb/>
day afternoon, funeral services conducted <lb/>
by Rev. J. X. II. of Tarboro. <lb/>
Mrs. Jones was about years old and <lb/>
leaves three children and many friends to <lb/>
mourn her death.<lb/>
OPEN Or EASTERN. <lb/>
The Date sat for September too in <lb/>
Prises for a Couple to be Married <lb/>
in the Warehouse. <lb/>
have decided upon <lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 1st, as the grand open- <lb/>
day for their new mammoth ware- <lb/>
house, the Eastern. The warehouse and <lb/>
stables will all be completed In ample <lb/>
time and they have secured a large <lb/>
of buyers to operate on this market. <lb/>
It Is their Intention hi show to the world <lb/>
that this section raises the finest tobacco on <lb/>
the continent, and they want every farm- <lb/>
to bring a load of his very best to the <lb/>
opening break. Yon will get the highest <lb/>
prices for it. <lb/>
This opening break is going to be u <lb/>
gala day for Greenville, and it promise <lb/>
also to lie a happy day for any couple <lb/>
who will take advantage of tile occasion <lb/>
and get married in the Eastern Ware- <lb/>
house on Sept. 1st. The managers have <lb/>
secured over worth of presents to be <lb/>
given to the bride and groom of the <lb/>
the first couple making it <lb/>
known that they will accept the <lb/>
t ion and be present will take the prizes <lb/>
home with them. A list of the presents <lb/>
and contributors appears in the <lb/>
advertising columns to-day. <lb/>
n word as to the proprietors of <lb/>
the Eastern. O. L. Joyner is years <lb/>
old, and the eldest son of Mr. Jacob Joy- <lb/>
He has had a liberal academic <lb/>
cation followed this with a thorough <lb/>
business course at the Kentucky <lb/>
He has been Identified with the to- <lb/>
industry since its first introduction <lb/>
into Pitt county and has acquired an ex- <lb/>
tended knowledge of the weed. He has <lb/>
had experience upon warehouse floors <lb/>
and will he perfectly at home as one of <lb/>
the managers of the Eastern. As to his <lb/>
reliability we would not presume to offer <lb/>
a word, as lie is too well known all over <lb/>
this and adjoining counties. <lb/>
Alex the junior partner, <lb/>
just turning hi- majority, and for his <lb/>
years a business experience and <lb/>
capacity seldom found in a man <lb/>
He is second sou of Mr. L. of <lb/>
Tarboro, and since early has <lb/>
lived with his uncle. Mr. M. K. Lang, in <lb/>
For several years he had <lb/>
most the cut ire management of his uncle's <lb/>
immense business, and as a successful <lb/>
financier stands at the head of the list. <lb/>
His tobacco experience dates back only <lb/>
one year, but always with the art <lb/>
of mastering whatever lie undertook in <lb/>
an unusually brief time, he has learned <lb/>
as much about it in the one year as many <lb/>
older heads in the business know. Ills <lb/>
character and integrity stand without a <lb/>
blemish. He will have charge of the <lb/>
office work and hook-keeping. <lb/>
These young men have the necessary <lb/>
capital lo back then and will see that <lb/>
every one dealing with them is treated <lb/>
fairly. <lb/>
the opening break. <lb/>
1st. <lb/>
RARE BARGAINS <lb/>
Bargains are being offered by the low pi iced merchant of Greenville <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
o- <lb/>
Watch Out. <lb/>
A gentleman living southwest of town <lb/>
told the Reflector to warn the people <lb/>
of the community to be careful from <lb/>
whom they purchased any fresh meat. <lb/>
The farmers living along the swamp <lb/>
three miles from town have recently been <lb/>
troubled considerably by some thief or <lb/>
thieves stealing their hogs, and in order <lb/>
to stop the losses by stopping the thieves <lb/>
fed strychnine to some of their hogs. It <lb/>
was thought that the hogs were stolen <lb/>
sold dressed, hence the warning that <lb/>
purchasers should know of whom they <lb/>
buy. <lb/>
The Days of Miracles not Passed. <lb/>
During the storm last Sunday, lightning <lb/>
struck cue chimney of Mr. L. A. <lb/>
house, from I here it ran down the <lb/>
front wall of the house tearing up the <lb/>
windows and doors and going out through <lb/>
the floor, but traced some conductor from <lb/>
front to back of Louse and to the kitchen <lb/>
chimney, but the miraculous thing about <lb/>
it was that their child was saved unhurt. <lb/>
He was la the cradle not over one foot <lb/>
from the wall, where the lightning went <lb/>
to the floor and heavy pieces of timber <lb/>
passed over the cradle and were driven <lb/>
through the door on opposite fide of room, <lb/>
the plastering and fell in the cradle <lb/>
sufficient to wrap him up, but die hand of <lb/>
God was about him, and he did not so <lb/>
much as a shook. damage <lb/>
done to the house to estimated at about <lb/>
and Is covered by <lb/>
too <lb/>
Cleveland and Carr Club. <lb/>
There was a liberal turn out of <lb/>
at the Court House last Thursday eve- <lb/>
the occasion of the organization of <lb/>
the Cleveland and Carr Club. The large <lb/>
number present showed that the <lb/>
are realizing the importance of taking an <lb/>
active interest in the present campaign. <lb/>
A. L. Mow, chairman of the county <lb/>
executive committee, railed the meeting <lb/>
to order and stated its object. Ills refer- <lb/>
to drover Cleveland, the Democrat- <lb/>
nominee for President, and Carr, <lb/>
the Democratic nominee for Governor, <lb/>
was greeted with a burst of applause as <lb/>
he mentioned each name. <lb/>
Maj. Latham moved that that life-long <lb/>
Democrat, Dr. C. J. I r I be made <lb/>
temporary chairman of the meeting. In <lb/>
taking the chair Dr. staled that <lb/>
for years he had identified with <lb/>
the Democracy of Pitt county. The <lb/>
principles of party had stood the <lb/>
onslaught of war, of and of every <lb/>
kind of combination against it, but it <lb/>
stood to-day the same as always, while <lb/>
the Republican party had been forced lo <lb/>
change its name time and again to de- <lb/>
the people under a new guise. He <lb/>
wanted the Democracy to make no com- <lb/>
promises, as he had rather see it meet <lb/>
defeat fighting for principle than to sec <lb/>
it victorious at a sacrifice of principle. <lb/>
His remarks were frequently cheered. <lb/>
D. J. Whichard was made temporary <lb/>
secretary of the meeting. <lb/>
The rolls were opened for the <lb/>
of persons wishing to join the club <lb/>
and work for the success of the party, <lb/>
and names were enrolled. <lb/>
It was moved by Gov. that the <lb/>
chair appoint three committees, consist- <lb/>
of five persons on <lb/>
organization, one constitution <lb/>
and by-laws, and one soliciting <lb/>
The chair suggested that the <lb/>
also include a committee to raise <lb/>
a flag on the public square, which was <lb/>
agreed to and the adopted The <lb/>
following are the <lb/>
On G. Move. John <lb/>
Flanagan, J. Tripp, Q. B. King, J. <lb/>
A. K. Tucker. <lb/>
On constitution and L. <lb/>
Fleming, A. L. Blow, S. T. Hooker. J. <lb/>
D. Williamson, J. S. <lb/>
On soliciting II. Smith, <lb/>
C. D. W. Brooks, <lb/>
W. S. Fleming. <lb/>
On r. W. L. Dudley, C. <lb/>
F. White, J. J. Dancy, J. S. Smith. <lb/>
Gov. was called for and made a <lb/>
strong speech. He spoke at length of the <lb/>
record of Grover Cleveland and showed <lb/>
that he had done more for the nation and <lb/>
for the South than any man who had been <lb/>
President since the war. He was follow- <lb/>
ed by Mai Latham who also put in some <lb/>
good words for the party its leaders. <lb/>
G. B. King was called, but owing to <lb/>
the lateness of the hour excused himself <lb/>
with only a few remarks. H. j, <lb/>
D. H- James and R. W. were ca ed <lb/>
for and while neither made a speech each <lb/>
declared himself solid for Cleveland and <lb/>
Democracy. <lb/>
Maj. Latham offered the motion that <lb/>
every member of the club attend <lb/>
Democratic primary on the 43rd. Car- <lb/>
On motion the club adjourned to meet <lb/>
again night, 21st. <lb/>
A Voice from the Medical Fraternity. <lb/>
Mrs. Job <lb/>
April, 1887, I treated Sam Privett for <lb/>
Scrofula, affecting the glands of the neck, <lb/>
causing which finally <lb/>
in running sores. I had done for <lb/>
him all that I and considered Ids <lb/>
chances for life very small, and told <lb/>
so, and that if yon would benefit him with <lb/>
your Remedy, would give you <lb/>
of the fact. That yon have done <lb/>
your part, the boy to now a <lb/>
and I shall sot hesitate to prescribe <lb/>
in any similar case I may be called upon <lb/>
to treat. Very . <lb/>
Una,, M. D, <lb/>
Prices are reduced on all Sum- <lb/>
mer Goods in order to close out <lb/>
by SEPTEMBER 1st to make <lb/>
room for Fall Stock. Warm <lb/>
weather coupled with low prices <lb/>
makes them go in a rush. <lb/>
Those beautiful Embroidered <lb/>
Black Mull Dress Patterns, only <lb/>
a few left, reduced to <lb/>
White Goods, former price <lb/>
and reduced to and <lb/>
40-inch White Lawn and <lb/>
Dress Styles Outing and <lb/>
Beautiful French Taffetas worth <lb/>
now Scotch Zephyr <lb/>
hams worth Best <lb/>
Ginghams worth to <lb/>
now selling at and Bleach- <lb/>
ed and Unbleached Domestics <lb/>
at any price- All our line Sum- <lb/>
mer Wooled Dress Goods at <lb/>
own price. All of our <lb/>
Summer Clothing to be sold at <lb/>
cost. Don't forget our Sample <lb/>
Notions, such as Shirts, Sus- <lb/>
Collars, Hand <lb/>
Kerchiefs, Gloves, <lb/>
Mitts, Fans, Umbrellas, A <lb/>
large lot of Sample Shoes and <lb/>
Slippers at factory prices, there- <lb/>
by saving you the middle man's <lb/>
profit. <lb/>
mm mum <lb/>
Bring a load of your best tobacco and <lb/>
we will show everybody that we <lb/>
have the best tobacco in the <lb/>
GOLDEN BELT. <lb/>
large number of buyers have de- <lb/>
their intentions of <lb/>
-coming to- <lb/>
To our many customers we say inspect our <lb/>
goods before buying. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
Opposite Old Brick Store. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Ion to lot In It <lb/>
Jones Seminary for <lb/>
Young Ladies. <lb/>
Superior <lb/>
location, mineral water, commodious <lb/>
j new stock of <lb/>
For circulars address. <lb/>
Rev. C. A. <lb/>
All Healing Spring. <lb/>
SCHOOL, <lb/>
SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. <lb/>
Fall term Thursday, August <lb/>
25th, 1802. Location is famed for health. <lb/>
Community is moral and Dis- <lb/>
is kind but firm. Charge arc <lb/>
low to suit the limes Room for <lb/>
students Apply for <lb/>
W. C. ALLEN, <lb/>
Hamilton Institute. <lb/>
HAMILTON, N. C. <lb/>
The Fall Term of this school will open <lb/>
Monday. Aug. Enrollment lust <lb/>
Excellent advantages in a <lb/>
regular Preparatory Course of study lo <lb/>
Music, Elocution, and Draw- <lb/>
Terms moderate. Pupil <lb/>
families or with Principal. For further <lb/>
information address, <lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
-----that being offered by------ <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
. tar just the to suit----- <lb/>
GENTLEMEN, <lb/>
LADY. <lb/>
HOUSEKEEPER. <lb/>
FA <lb/>
BODY ELSE <lb/>
If you want <lb/>
to cut, or article to go in the house, <lb/>
call on inc. 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 lie sold at. <lb/>
W. LT. WHITE. <lb/>
Two doors from C. A. <lb/>
near Five Points- <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
Mrs V. L. <lb/>
Will open a School for Young <lb/>
Ladies and Small Girls in Greenville on <lb/>
August 1802. The full Collegiate <lb/>
taught. Tho usual <lb/>
prices for tuition in Greenville will be <lb/>
charged. <lb/>
University of N. C. <lb/>
Instruction is offered in four general <lb/>
courses of study, six brief courses, a <lb/>
large number of special and <lb/>
law, medicine and engineering. The <lb/>
Faculty includes twenty teachers. <lb/>
Scholarship's and loan funds arc avail- <lb/>
able for needy young men of talent and <lb/>
character. The next session begins <lb/>
Sept. 1st, For with full <lb/>
address Winston, <lb/>
Chapel Hill, N. C. <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
By virtue of an order of the Clerk of <lb/>
the of Pitt county <lb/>
case of James, administrator of G. <lb/>
Johnston, Johnston <lb/>
and Mary Johnston, the <lb/>
administrator will sell for cash before <lb/>
the Court House door In Greenville on <lb/>
Monday the 1st day of August, 1892. the <lb/>
following piece or parcel of <lb/>
land, situated in the county of Pitt, and <lb/>
In township, lying <lb/>
side of Tar river, the lands of <lb/>
Mrs. A. J. Johnston, Miss S. O. Brown <lb/>
and others, containing acres, more or <lb/>
less. F. G. JAMES, <lb/>
Administrator. <lb/>
This June 27th, 1802. <lb/>
LOOK HERE. <lb/>
The Hoard of of Pitt <lb/>
county will. In accordance with law, <lb/>
meet at the Court House In Greenville, <lb/>
on Monday, July 1802, for the <lb/>
pose of revising tho tax list of 1892, and <lb/>
will hear all complaints concerning ex- <lb/>
valuation of property. Any per- <lb/>
son who has lulled to list taxes can <lb/>
do so at said meeting. <lb/>
By of Board, <lb/>
D. II. JAMES, Clerk. <lb/>
Louisburg <lb/>
Female <lb/>
College, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
The next session of this well-known <lb/>
school will begin September 1st, 1802. <lb/>
Pure water, no sickness, thorough in- <lb/>
Brick building with rooms. <lb/>
Campus of acres well shaded by <lb/>
gigantic oaks. Conservatory music <lb/>
teachers. Art and Elocution teachers <lb/>
from of Arts. Teachers ex- <lb/>
In specialties. The whole <lb/>
Course, Physical Culture and <lb/>
fires only <lb/>
for the year. Special studies In <lb/>
Send for to <lb/>
S. D. President, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
WALTER'S <lb/>
Street, in rear of Dr. D. L. <lb/>
, office. <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. C, <lb/>
I take great pleasure in Informing my <lb/>
friends and the public generally <lb/>
that my. <lb/>
Is now open. A successful career of <lb/>
YEARS .-. <lb/>
Is a proof of the I always give. <lb/>
My, Work Speaks for Itself; <lb/>
Cat early and examine <lb/>
Roping to gain your confidence, and <lb/>
merit your favor, l am <lb/>
Very respectfully, <lb/>
Notice to Shippers. <lb/>
In order to make more convenient and <lb/>
economical use of the vessels now em- <lb/>
ployed in the North Carolina service <lb/>
and thus to better serve the inter- <lb/>
of shipper, the undersigned <lb/>
have decided to their <lb/>
respective lines between Nor <lb/>
folk and <lb/>
Washington, N. C, Into <lb/>
one line, to be known as <lb/>
GREENVILLE. <lb/>
Our new Warehouse has just been <lb/>
completed and is one of the best <lb/>
equipped warehouses in the State. <lb/>
We have free Stables for your <lb/>
teams. <lb/>
charge you nothing for <lb/>
and storage. <lb/>
We have an experienced force to <lb/>
handle your tobacco and will see that <lb/>
you get lull value for every pound. <lb/>
Presents in household kitchen <lb/>
furniture and provisions <lb/>
Given Away <lb/>
on our opening day to any worthy <lb/>
white couple that will be married pub- <lb/>
in our house on September 1st. <lb/>
The list of present and donors <lb/>
pear below. <lb/>
Remember the day and date and <lb/>
come all to see the Knot Tied. <lb/>
j Eastern Warehouse, <lb/>
O L. Joyner Al.-x. A Props. <lb/>
GREEN N.<lb/>
-o- <lb/>
Bed Boom Set. c. <lb/>
Chamber Bet. H. K. Handsome Banging Lamp. D. D. <lb/>
Basket, Complete Kitchen M. is. Lang. Conn- <lb/>
Dr. Martinis, Window Shades. A. J. Berg, <lb/>
Smyrna Bug, C T. Oil Painting. Mrs. Fannie lap <lb/>
Luce Pillow shams. W. or Towels. <lb/>
Brown Hooker, l Set s. It. l Mirror, it- <lb/>
I Photos of each <lb/>
subscription to Reflector, dog Spool <lb/>
Cotton. Miss Forbes, Coffee Pot. Starker, <lb/>
Pie-tin, l L. C. Leap. <lb/>
in I W. II. White, Water <lb/>
Bucket J. T. P. l <lb/>
Tins. B. Harris, Bat Hay. II. Wilson. IS pound <lb/>
In the Flour. W . Brown, i pound Sugar. J, <lb/>
Cobb St Son. S pounds Coffee. It. C Smith, <lb/>
W. II. Cox, pounds Flour, in pounds Flour. <lb/>
S. Smith. pounds Coffee. D. W. to pounds Floor, <lb/>
Long, pound French Candy. Tyson Rawls, Check <lb/>
A. Marriage License. <lb/>
Ceremony to take place at o'clock It, Ceremony will <lb/>
performed by any minister the couple may lions . The re- <lb/>
for the couple is to make known their intentions to <lb/>
Mr. Alex. one before September 1st, who <lb/>
will keep the Butter a profound secret that day. Call early <lb/>
avoid the <lb/>
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS- <lb/>
There is a great 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/>
Paints, Oils. <lb/>
LINE. <lb/>
Connecting at Norfolk with <lb/>
The Bay line, for <lb/>
The Clyde Line, for Philadelphia. <lb/>
The Old Dominion Line, for New <lb/>
York. <lb/>
The Merchants A Miners Line for <lb/>
and Providence. <lb/>
The Water Lines for Va., <lb/>
and Washington, <lb/>
with <lb/>
The Atlantic North Carolina It. R. <lb/>
At Washington with <lb/>
The Tar Steamers. <lb/>
Also Calling at Island, N. C. <lb/>
The new line will <lb/>
Service, with such additional sailings a <lb/>
will best suit the needs of tho business. <lb/>
MO IN RATES. <lb/>
The direct service of these steamers, <lb/>
and the freedom from handling, are <lb/>
among the advantages this Line <lb/>
often. The following gentlemen have <lb/>
been appointed Agent of tho New I <lb/>
John E, at Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
John Son, at <lb/>
S. H. Cray, at <lb/>
S. C. Whitehurst. at Roanoke Island. <lb/>
J. J. Cherry, at Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
The first steamer win leave Norfolk <lb/>
on May 16th, from wharf <lb/>
oil Water street. Clyde <lb/>
and between the piers of tho Clyde <lb/>
Line and Did Dominion Steamship Co. <lb/>
H. A. BOURNE, <lb/>
V. P. G. M. Old Dominion 8.8. Co. <lb/>
W. P. CLYDE CO., <lb/>
OF- <lb/>
TOBACCO FLUES. <lb/>
We are now ready to supply Fines to the farmers who <lb/>
have placed their orders for <lb/>
Don't Buy a Cook Stove <lb/>
until yon have seen ours. We still handle the famous ELMO <lb/>
Stoves and the LIBERTY. They are low priced stoves and have <lb/>
never failed to give satisfaction. <lb/>
Repairing promptly done and guaranteed. <lb/>
S. E. RENDER CO., <lb/>
June 16th, 1892. <lb/>
O;<lb/>
i a<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017556_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
YOUR <lb/>
IS NOT <lb/>
HOPELESS <lb/>
AIDS NATURE <lb/>
IN NATURES OWN WAY. <lb/>
IT TOO TO <lb/>
A MAILED <lb/>
ATLANTIC CO <lb/>
1406 Mi kn. P. <lb/>
MANHOOD <lb/>
How Lost <lb/>
m ma <lb/>
THYSELF. .- <lb/>
S K. and only <lb/>
u with I SEND <lb/>
of tin ft <lb/>
of tho cared. <lb/>
bu many <lb/>
bat no equal. <lb/>
Th Science of Self <lb/>
more than Has It <lb/>
every lean. lo <lb/>
h. . <lb/>
HOW TO BE HAPPY THOUGH SINGLE. <lb/>
I draw m t-hair <lb/>
My <lb/>
The who never lire <lb/>
My book- arc around <lb/>
The mood. <lb/>
No o well at cane. <lb/>
With one thing- my were <lb/>
And that I Mo- my own, my <lb/>
The Banal X Is mar. <lb/>
And <lb/>
There- in the re-r; <lb/>
Here and <lb/>
here <lb/>
The frolic Mi <lb/>
lacker and stand. <lb/>
And DAM ready to my hand. <lb/>
bleak wind shrills the street. <lb/>
The fire hums more cheerfully. <lb/>
What I. love's <lb/>
I mil not <lb/>
We'll rest content with one <lb/>
i Ion-, thanks, for me. <lb/>
Or only hilled by your peer <lb/>
To my mm and of her. <lb/>
t . <lb/>
Tis I lie fire Is <lb/>
after my thought will <lb/>
And l.-ave my y <lb/>
well way. <lb/>
Tis better thus, no doubt, <lb/>
write in the self game <lb/>
won't say again. <lb/>
Temple liar. <lb/>
the scar <lb/>
winded said was on <lb/>
horse right. cheek. For an instant he did <lb/>
be to it <lb/>
A Family Affair <lb/>
Health for the Baby, <lb/>
Pleasure the Parents, <lb/>
New Life for Old Folks. <lb/>
Beer <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
TEMPERANCE DRINK <lb/>
s a family requisite <lb/>
of the home. A cent <lb/>
maker gallons of <lb/>
ft delicious, <lb/>
effervescent beverage. <lb/>
Don't be f for <lb/>
of <lb/>
kind tis <lb/>
No Imitation <lb/>
Scientific American <lb/>
Agency for <lb/>
CAVEATS. <lb/>
TRADE MARKS <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
COPYRIGHTS, etc. <lb/>
For inform n i <lb/>
A V. <lb/>
In America. <lb/>
token nut n <lb/>
the public by h e free -i <lb/>
of any rarer in <lb/>
world. No <lb/>
should be It. a <lb/>
nor; Address t CO. <lb/>
Kl No- York. <lb/>
WILMINGTON B. U. <lb/>
and Schedule <lb/>
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb/>
No No-T. No <lb/>
Apr. 19th. daily Fast Mail, dally <lb/>
ex him <lb/>
Lt Weldon pin pm <lb/>
Ar am <lb/>
L Tarboro <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Lt Wilson <lb/>
Ar Sell ma <lb/>
Ar Fayetteville <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
Lt Warsaw <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
1808 am <lb/>
p m N pm S am <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ly Warsaw <lb/>
Ar Goldsboro <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Oil am<lb/>
TRAINS <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
daily daily daily <lb/>
ex Sun.<lb/>
Wilson am pm pm <lb/>
Ai Rocky Mount <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Lt Tarboro am <lb/>
Daily except <lb/>
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Raid <lb/>
leaves Halifax 4.22 arrives <lb/>
land Neck at 6.15 P. M. Greenville 6.52 <lb/>
P. M., Kinston 8.00 p. m. Returning, <lb/>
leaves Kinston 7.10 a. in. Greenville <lb/>
8.2 a. m. Arriving Halifax a. m. <lb/>
Weldon 11.23 a. at., daily except Sun- <lb/>
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb/>
Washington 7.00 a. m. arrives A. R. <lb/>
Junction a. in., leaves A. <lb/>
A R. Junction p. m., arrives <lb/>
8.45 p. m. Daily except Sunday. <lb/>
Connects with trains on <lb/>
Raleigh R. R. and Nick <lb/>
Branch. <lb/>
Local freight train leaves Weldon <lb/>
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at <lb/>
10.16 a. m., arriving Scotland Neck 1.05 <lb/>
a. in. Greenville 5.80 p. in., <lb/>
7.40 p. m. Returning leaves Kinston <lb/>
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at <lb/>
7.20 a. m., arriving Greenville 9.55 <lb/>
a. m., Scotland Neck 2.20 p. m., Weldon <lb/>
6.15 p. m. <lb/>
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb/>
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb/>
day, P M. P M, arrive <lb/>
N C, P M, P M. <lb/>
8.30 p. m., 5.22 p. m <lb/>
Retaining leaves Plymouth daily except <lb/>
Sunday 6.00 a. m., Sunday a. m- <lb/>
C, 7.30 a m, 9.58 am. <lb/>
Tarboro. N A M <lb/>
Trains on Division, Wilson <lb/>
and Branch leave Fayette- <lb/>
ville a m. arrive Rowland p in. <lb/>
leave Rowland p <lb/>
arrive Fayetteville p in. Dally ex- <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Midland X C Branch leave <lb/>
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M <lb/>
Smithfield, N C, A M. Re <lb/>
turning leaves Smithfield, t C AM <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro. NO SO A M. <lb/>
Train <lb/>
Monet at P M, arrive Nashville <lb/>
P Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
leaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb/>
A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton except Sunday, Of <lb/>
and <lb/>
ton at A M, and P. M. <lb/>
at Warsaw with No. And <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson m <lb/>
Branch to No. SI. Northbound Is <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train No. South and North will <lb/>
atop only at Rocky Mount, Wilson, <lb/>
Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection a <lb/>
Weldon for all points North daily. Al <lb/>
rail via Richmond, and daily except Sun <lb/>
via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb/>
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb/>
railroad for Norfolk and all <lb/>
points via Norfolk. <lb/>
P JOHN F. <lb/>
General <lb/>
J. R. ONLY, <lb/>
T. M. <lb/>
That Mat a. laid <lb/>
if n fellow could catch him, <lb/>
he would make good wages. <lb/>
Lot's the <lb/>
began to rend the postal card that <lb/>
the sit Hard had <lb/>
to the door of the <lb/>
that constituted the so that <lb/>
every might <lb/>
TANK HIM IN <lb/>
M will e for the arrest and <lb/>
of to lit of <lb/>
pal He Is years old. <lb/>
six feet tall, and slim, with Unlit complexion, <lb/>
and has a on t he right side of hi face. <lb/>
He Is wanted for robbery and other crimes. If <lb/>
killed in arrest Ike reward will be <lb/>
paid on satisfactory of his Identity. <lb/>
When la-i heard from was making for lb <lb/>
By the time the reader fin- <lb/>
a crowd of half a dozen or <lb/>
more men him. <lb/>
if that feller is headed for <lb/>
the Tonto country it wouldn't <lb/>
If of trick to take <lb/>
the first reflectively, as if do- <lb/>
with himself the advisability <lb/>
of making the attempt <lb/>
If yon hear he ain't going to <lb/>
taken in. and the feller that tries <lb/>
it is ROWS to have his hands full. <lb/>
have been after him for two or <lb/>
three and ain't got him yet. <lb/>
on <lb/>
remarked of the crowd. <lb/>
Well, a feller ought to know <lb/>
as soon as he him from that de- <lb/>
hazarded the first <lb/>
if he enough to see the <lb/>
scar, flam all he'd Lave to do <lb/>
would be to turn loose at him if he <lb/>
throw up his hand when you <lb/>
told him. Besides, nobody but him <lb/>
would try to cross over the <lb/>
into the with this snow <lb/>
on the ground. Blamed if don't <lb/>
think go after <lb/>
-Well, somebody -ought to round <lb/>
him asserted some one in the <lb/>
crowd; been by ah <lb/>
long enough, his own way, <lb/>
sorter as if the country to <lb/>
him. Darned if I wouldn't go with <lb/>
yon. Hi. if I didn't have to take this <lb/>
grub over to the in <lb/>
if any of you want, to go, <lb/>
all right. I replied the <lb/>
man addressed as Hi. <lb/>
It was not the time that Hi <lb/>
Lansing had been on such <lb/>
Ho was one of those men for <lb/>
whom danger seems to have a fas- <lb/>
At his remark Frank <lb/>
Crandall. a young fellow who had <lb/>
been standing quietly by. volunteer- <lb/>
ed to The crowd <lb/>
turned toward with more inter- <lb/>
est than they had thus far evinced <lb/>
during the entire proceedings. It <lb/>
was but a few months since he bad <lb/>
come among them, fresh from the <lb/>
east, to take charge of of the <lb/>
mines which been closed down <lb/>
by the winter's storms. For weeks <lb/>
he had been cooped up in the isolated <lb/>
settlement, and he longed for some- <lb/>
thing to break its monotony. <lb/>
get your horse and gun and <lb/>
replied Hi, and in an <lb/>
the two men bad left the room to <lb/>
and equip themselves for the <lb/>
chase, while the loungers gathered <lb/>
around the stove to the prob- <lb/>
abilities of their success. In a few <lb/>
minutes the two men past the <lb/>
door, each armed with a rifle and six- <lb/>
shooter, and the crowd, stepping <lb/>
out, bade them with the oft <lb/>
repeated warning. and <lb/>
let him get the drop on <lb/>
The crust of the unbroken snow <lb/>
cracked crisply under foot as the two <lb/>
rode on fast, leaving the little settle- <lb/>
in their rear. For some time <lb/>
neither spoke, but at last the silence <lb/>
was broken by Lansing asking his <lb/>
young you ever <lb/>
try this kind of thing before <lb/>
replied the man, <lb/>
never <lb/>
-Well, then, you want to lie <lb/>
If you don't lose head, <lb/>
you're all right. The only danger is <lb/>
that we may run on him before we <lb/>
know <lb/>
if we do, what then asked <lb/>
the young man. <lb/>
Well, he will probably commence <lb/>
shooting, and if he does, and yon <lb/>
hit the first rattle out of the <lb/>
box, why you want to git off n your <lb/>
and git behind something and <lb/>
shoot hack. If ain't anything <lb/>
to git behind, keep your horse be- <lb/>
tween yon and and keep a-shoot- <lb/>
in. Whatever you do, don't let go of <lb/>
your But what we want to do <lb/>
is to see him first, and then we're gal <lb/>
the play on him, and all yon have to <lb/>
do is to tell him to throw <lb/>
if don't throw asked <lb/>
Crandall. <lb/>
then you let him have it. <lb/>
The reward will be paid just the <lb/>
The apparent indifference with <lb/>
Lansing spoke of the entire <lb/>
matter, much as if he were- discuss- <lb/>
the best method of hunting a <lb/>
wild animal, shocked the young man; <lb/>
but he had committed himself too <lb/>
far to withdraw. Besides, he had <lb/>
that feeling that all men have when <lb/>
they are curiosity to <lb/>
know whether or not he could rely <lb/>
on himself when danger threatened. <lb/>
should strike his trail on the <lb/>
hills here, if he is really headed for <lb/>
the basin said Lansing. <lb/>
They had been riding for several <lb/>
hours in silence through the snow, <lb/>
unbroken by aught save the scat- <lb/>
pines that here and there dot- <lb/>
the mesa. Before them towered <lb/>
the mountains through whose passes <lb/>
the man whom they were after would <lb/>
have to pass in his search for safety <lb/>
in the half settled wilds beyond. <lb/>
men <lb/>
his <lb/>
narrow trail where two <lb/>
passed through the snow. <lb/>
him. He's driving <lb/>
horse and leading another, <lb/>
hasn't named by very <lb/>
Bee, the snow hail to <lb/>
drift hi said he. <lb/>
With the-discovery h-j whole de- <lb/>
had change. A new look <lb/>
came into bis and his voice <lb/>
sounded strange. He even <lb/>
his weapons in n manner different t <lb/>
that ho had heretofore displayed. <lb/>
right ahead, want to <lb/>
look the older man continued <lb/>
as they began to follow the trail. As <lb/>
they approached the summit of each <lb/>
hill they would stop their horses, <lb/>
and Lansing would dismount <lb/>
crawl to the top so that ho <lb/>
look, without into <lb/>
the valley beyond, in order that they <lb/>
might dome on fugitive too <lb/>
suddenly. <lb/>
They had traveled this way. for <lb/>
miles, whim, reining in bis <lb/>
horse. Lansing to what <lb/>
seemed an old road leading off to the <lb/>
right of one they were following, <lb/>
and -aid i <lb/>
the cutoff into the basin. <lb/>
I thought he take it, ho <lb/>
i probably doesn't know the country. <lb/>
You had bettor take it and ride on <lb/>
ahead until you strike the road we're <lb/>
on again. Then, if you can't find his <lb/>
tracks, you had ride to <lb/>
meet me until you do. I will follow <lb/>
the trail <lb/>
The young man tried to <lb/>
late with Lansing for the great risk <lb/>
he was in thus following <lb/>
the trail alone, but his <lb/>
was obdurate, and cutting the <lb/>
short by again warning the <lb/>
young man to be on his guard, <lb/>
rode on. following the trail in the <lb/>
snow, while the younger man, find- <lb/>
objection took tho <lb/>
road. He had no difficulty in <lb/>
following it. and wondered why the <lb/>
man wore in pursuit of had not <lb/>
taken of it. Tho whole <lb/>
pursuit seemed almost like a dream <lb/>
to The snow, unbroken save <lb/>
by his footfall, stretched away <lb/>
mile after mile in every direction, <lb/>
with here and there a pine through <lb/>
whose brunches the wind to <lb/>
sob and sigh, making the only noise <lb/>
that broke he illness of the wintry <lb/>
afternoon. It added to this fooling. <lb/>
Not a thing in sight. He began to <lb/>
depict in his own mind the manner <lb/>
of man they were pursuing. He had <lb/>
almost forgotten his mime. <lb/>
After all, what had the man done <lb/>
that he. Frank should lie <lb/>
seeking his blood Perhaps, like <lb/>
himself, the man bad mother and <lb/>
sisters to grieve over any misfortune <lb/>
that would overtake him. These <lb/>
and a hundred thoughts <lb/>
Hissed through his mind. The sun <lb/>
was fast declining as be from <lb/>
the the main road <lb/>
again. air was getting chilly <lb/>
with the coming of evening, and the <lb/>
snow in t took on colors <lb/>
of pink and purple where the rays of <lb/>
the setting sun touched the <lb/>
peaks. He scanned the main <lb/>
road eagerly to see if the man they <lb/>
were in pursuit of bad passed, but <lb/>
the snow covered it was <lb/>
broken. <lb/>
Then rode back on the main <lb/>
road in the direction from which he <lb/>
had come, to meet bis comrade and <lb/>
fugitive. He had just ascended <lb/>
one of the many rolling hills when <lb/>
distance ho dis a man <lb/>
riding one horse and driving another. <lb/>
At the sight his heart almost stood <lb/>
He dismounted, and leading <lb/>
his to one side concealed him <lb/>
in a dump of young pines. Then he <lb/>
returned to the roadside and waited. <lb/>
Tho man was urging his horses for- <lb/>
ward, but they seemed to It- wearied <lb/>
and Blow progress. <lb/>
felt his heart beat Easter, and <lb/>
faster at the length of rime it took <lb/>
the man to reach him. <lb/>
He examined revolver and rifle, <lb/>
cocking each, to see that they were <lb/>
in order. It seemed to relieve <lb/>
tension of his nerves. After he had <lb/>
done this, he knelt down so that ho <lb/>
could fire with surer aim, and wait- <lb/>
ed. He did not care much now <lb/>
whether the man resisted or not. <lb/>
If the fugitive resisted, he would <lb/>
have to stand the consequence of re- <lb/>
It was nothing to him. <lb/>
He could hear the footfall of the <lb/>
horses in the snow, and <lb/>
lie cocked his rifle so as to ready. <lb/>
The setting sun shone full the <lb/>
man's face, but Crandall forgot to <lb/>
look for the sear that the notice had <lb/>
said was on the right cheek, although <lb/>
he bad resolved to do so <lb/>
When he first discovered tho <lb/>
he scanned the road <lb/>
him to discover Lansing, but the <lb/>
nearer the man approached the less <lb/>
Crandall carol whether Lansing <lb/>
came or not. He let the man <lb/>
nearer and nearer, so that <lb/>
his aim would lie tho more accurate. <lb/>
He could not to throw away <lb/>
the first shot. The face of the man <lb/>
grew more and more distinct. He <lb/>
seemed to lie oblivion- to his <lb/>
Crandall felt almost dis- <lb/>
posed to let him pass, but the thought <lb/>
that every one would think a <lb/>
coward if he did so spurred him on, <lb/>
and, rising erect, he ordered the man <lb/>
to surrender. <lb/>
horse that the man was <lb/>
in front of him, frightened at <lb/>
Crandall's appearance, swerved from <lb/>
the road, leaving the two men facing <lb/>
each other. For an instant Crandall <lb/>
looked straight into the other's eyes. <lb/>
Then man raised his rifle from <lb/>
the pommel of the saddle, and <lb/>
fired. horse which the man <lb/>
was riding sprang from the road <lb/>
and at the same moment its rider's <lb/>
gun was discharged. The smoke <lb/>
from Crandall's own gun blew back <lb/>
into his eyes, and he turned from it <lb/>
to follow the movements of the man <lb/>
at whom he had fired. <lb/>
As he saw the man still erect in his <lb/>
saddle, ho folk the feverish haste to <lb/>
fire again come over him that men <lb/>
feel whoa they shot and miss- <lb/>
ed, and know that their life may be <lb/>
the forfeit of their failure. He threw <lb/>
another cartridge into the chamber <lb/>
of his rifle, and raised it to his <lb/>
but before he could fire the <lb/>
man reeled from his saddle and fell <lb/>
while his frightened home galloped <lb/>
off through the pines. <lb/>
stepped toward him, hold- <lb/>
his rifle to fire again, if <lb/>
necessary. As he did so the man <lb/>
raised hi; hand and said <lb/>
got <lb/>
The was already -ed with <lb/>
hf <lb/>
not it. his heart seemed to <lb/>
stop hearing with the fear of <lb/>
made a mistake, and when on draw- <lb/>
nearer be that it was there, <lb/>
that only r which had spread <lb/>
over the man's had made it in- <lb/>
distinct, he could have cried I with <lb/>
joy at the feeling, f relief that <lb/>
aver Mm <lb/>
v-en badly be. <lb/>
asked. <lb/>
don't know b bad it is. It is <lb/>
hero the man said, <lb/>
placing hi t hand on his breast as if <lb/>
not of the exact spot. <lb/>
feels ho added. <lb/>
down Crandall unbuckled and <lb/>
tool; man's pistol and <lb/>
threw it lay <lb/>
bis rifle, and tore ope tho <lb/>
man's Shirt. As did so fin <lb/>
came in tout art with tho warm <lb/>
blood, and involuntarily drew <lb/>
back with a feeling of disgust. <lb/>
you find asked the man, <lb/>
who was watching him cl and <lb/>
who had the movement. <lb/>
Recalled to himself by the <lb/>
Crandall again tore at tho shirt, <lb/>
the breast. Where tho <lb/>
blood did not cover it it looked like <lb/>
marble, despite tho dark hair on it. <lb/>
He could not see the wound on ac- <lb/>
count of the blood until ho had <lb/>
wiped tho hitter from the breast, and <lb/>
then he found it. <lb/>
What do you think of tho <lb/>
man asked. <lb/>
There i t r plied Crandall. He <lb/>
not say more. The appealing <lb/>
tone in the man's voice for some <lb/>
made <lb/>
him faint and sick. <lb/>
do you think of the <lb/>
man repeated in a querulous voice, <lb/>
and as he did so ho roughed until his <lb/>
mouth filled with blood, and he spat <lb/>
it out tho white snow. <lb/>
Crandall shook his head and walked <lb/>
toward where his horse was tied. <lb/>
He felt that if ho watched the wound- <lb/>
ed man any longer he would faint. <lb/>
Noticing his walking away, the <lb/>
wounded man <lb/>
sake, don't leave mo. <lb/>
Now you have killed me, stay <lb/>
with me. and don't let me die like a <lb/>
The voice was entreaty, and <lb/>
Crandall returned and seated himself <lb/>
in the snow by man's side. The <lb/>
rain had ROBe down and tho twilight <lb/>
bad come on. bringing with it <lb/>
of night. Crandall covered the <lb/>
wounded man's body with his over- <lb/>
and his head from the <lb/>
; now. Almost unconsciously he not- <lb/>
i d that as the patch of red made by <lb/>
grew larger and larger, the <lb/>
face of the wounded man grew <lb/>
whiter. He never took his <lb/>
eyes from fans, while his <lb/>
came quicker and shorter, as <lb/>
if he breathed with labor. With <lb/>
each breath the blood seemed to bub- <lb/>
tram the wound in the breast. <lb/>
due of the man's hands fell from <lb/>
under tho coat that covered him. As <lb/>
Crandall raised it from tho snow its <lb/>
sent a chill through <lb/>
Once he had naked man <lb/>
if he could do anything for him. but <lb/>
the man bad only shaken his head in <lb/>
reply. felt like reviling <lb/>
himself for what he had done, and <lb/>
wondered why the wounded man did <lb/>
not reproach him. Even when he <lb/>
expressed his sorrow at having shot <lb/>
him. the dying man said <lb/>
mind it. It's too late <lb/>
twilight gave way to darkness, <lb/>
and still he sat there. He could not <lb/>
hear the- dying man breathe without <lb/>
leaning over his face. He did not do <lb/>
this but once, though, and then the <lb/>
dying man had opened his eyes and <lb/>
looked up into his face inquiringly. <lb/>
Crandall would rather have staid <lb/>
there until morning than to have <lb/>
caught that look again. <lb/>
Suddenly he heard a voice call to <lb/>
him. He started as if had been <lb/>
abed at. but it was only Lansing. As <lb/>
he answered the call Lansing rode <lb/>
forward, and seeing the outstretched <lb/>
form on tho snow <lb/>
yon got <lb/>
replied Crandall, fearful <lb/>
lest the wounded man would hear <lb/>
the exulting tone which grated on <lb/>
his own earn as nothing ever be- <lb/>
fore done. But not minding the ad- <lb/>
monition. Lansing dismounted, and <lb/>
striking a match held it close to the <lb/>
man's face. It. was pale and cold <lb/>
and tho half eyes were <lb/>
glazed. They did not oven reflect <lb/>
the light made from the match, but <lb/>
from the putty mouth a <lb/>
tiny stream of half congealed blood <lb/>
seemed to lie still flowing down over <lb/>
the board. <lb/>
him, and it's a pretty good <lb/>
day's work have done by earning <lb/>
that Lansing coolly as <lb/>
the match went out. <lb/>
though, as Crandall lay <lb/>
awake through the night within a <lb/>
few yards of the body, to keep the <lb/>
wolves from it so that it would be <lb/>
in the morning when <lb/>
they would lash it to a horse and <lb/>
take it into the settlements for <lb/>
he wondered why Lansing <lb/>
could sleep so soundly. As for him- <lb/>
self, the rigid form covered with <lb/>
only a saddle blanket, lying where <lb/>
the snow was red instead of white, <lb/>
was always before his eyes, even <lb/>
when he closed them. <lb/>
in Argonaut. <lb/>
Pit- Knew What to Do. <lb/>
Mrs. writing of her ex- <lb/>
as a nurse in army <lb/>
tells this <lb/>
I was passing through one of the <lb/>
words when I came upon a young <lb/>
Philadelphia in a perfect par- <lb/>
of anguish. Three nurses <lb/>
stood around him, and to my in- <lb/>
is tho they <lb/>
replied by dumb show that coming <lb/>
death was tho matter, and that all <lb/>
would soon be over, while in words <lb/>
they told me that he had not slept <lb/>
for forty-eight hours. <lb/>
I had one of them place a chair <lb/>
me, sat down, and with my long, <lb/>
thin hands grasped the thigh stump, <lb/>
which was making all the trouble, <lb/>
drew and pressed the muscles into a <lb/>
natural, easy position, cooed and <lb/>
talked comforted tho sufferer <lb/>
I should have done a sick baby, and <lb/>
in ten minutes he was asleep. <lb/>
Then I whispered to the nurses to <lb/>
bring cotton and oakum and little <lb/>
cushions, made them put the cotton <lb/>
and oakum in small tufts to my in- <lb/>
finger, and while I crooned my <lb/>
directions in a sing song, lullaby ah, <lb/>
I worked in ibis support, gradually <lb/>
and imperceptibly withdrawing my <lb/>
bonds until I could substitute the lit- <lb/>
cushions for the force by which I <lb/>
had been holding tho muscles in <lb/>
proper position. This done, my I y <lb/>
soldier slept as sweetly he ever <lb/>
had done his crib. <lb/>
The next morning a nurse came <lb/>
running for mo to hurry to him. He <lb/>
had slept for six hours, waked, had <lb/>
his breakfast and bad his wound <lb/>
dressed, and now pain was back <lb/>
as bad as ever. I wont, fixed the <lb/>
mangled muscle with reference to <lb/>
his change of position, made a half <lb/>
mold to hold it there, and before I <lb/>
had finished ho began an eight hour <lb/>
sleep. <lb/>
Ten days afterward he was sent <lb/>
home to his mother, and I heard of <lb/>
him no more. <lb/>
Female Positive Care. <lb/>
To the inform your <lb/>
readers that I have a positive remedy <lb/>
tor the thousand and one ills which <lb/>
arise from deranged female organs. I <lb/>
shall be glad to send two bottles of my <lb/>
remedy FREE to any lady who will send <lb/>
their Express and P. O. address. <lb/>
Yours respectfully. <lb/>
Or. A. C. Ma K <lb/>
N. T. <lb/>
Carrying One-. Own <lb/>
Before the revolution Franco it <lb/>
was customary when a gentleman <lb/>
had been invited out to dinner to <lb/>
send his servant in advance with his <lb/>
knife, fork and spoon If he had no <lb/>
servant he carried them with him in <lb/>
h is pocket Some of the peasantry <lb/>
in certain parts of Germany and <lb/>
Switzerland today carry a case in <lb/>
their pockets containing a knife, fork <lb/>
and York World. <lb/>
Owe. <lb/>
This to beyond question the most <lb/>
Cough Medicine we ever <lb/>
laid, a few doses invariably the <lb/>
worst cases of Cough, Croup and <lb/>
while it wonderful success in the <lb/>
cure of Consumption to without a <lb/>
in the history of Since its <lb/>
first discovery baa been sold on a <lb/>
a test which no other medicine <lb/>
can stand. If yon have a cough we earn- <lb/>
ask you to try It. Price <lb/>
and If your are chest, or <lb/>
lame, use Planter. <lb/>
Star <lb/>
Jogged Memory. <lb/>
The nine lives of a cat are often a <lb/>
difficult subject to deal with. Uncle <lb/>
John had a number of <lb/>
rats as his only in the <lb/>
little farmhouse, and finally decided <lb/>
that of them must disposed <lb/>
of. His In-other, who lived on the <lb/>
adjoining farm, offered to kill it for <lb/>
him. <lb/>
now. Aimer, I calculate <lb/>
have yon kill that black rat. He <lb/>
ain't no except to oat He <lb/>
won't hunt, and I won't have <lb/>
that can't earn its own <lb/>
so yon jest take him <lb/>
So said Undo John on tho morn- <lb/>
that Aimer to fulfill his <lb/>
promise. <lb/>
of a likely <lb/>
any memory for re- <lb/>
plied Uncle John; jest take <lb/>
him <lb/>
departed with the cat and a <lb/>
shotgun. At night over <lb/>
again. <lb/>
tho old cat, did asked <lb/>
his brother. <lb/>
reckon I replied <lb/>
won't lo troubled about rat <lb/>
after <lb/>
Uncle John made no reply, but <lb/>
pointed toward tho hearthstone, <lb/>
where sat old as well <lb/>
as ever. <lb/>
ejaculated Abner in <lb/>
prise. Then, after a moment's <lb/>
ho turned toward his brother <lb/>
and a likely cat. Kin- <lb/>
forgetful, maybe, but I reckon <lb/>
boll-hunt all right now. I didn't <lb/>
kill him. but I sort of jogged his <lb/>
Companion. <lb/>
No I . for a Circulation <lb/>
A London insurance man said yes- <lb/>
have London one <lb/>
of tho most unique newspapers in <lb/>
the world, for, while it is published <lb/>
every day in the year except Sun- <lb/>
days, a copy of it is never sold or <lb/>
circulated. The Evening Telegraph <lb/>
of London is issued each afternoon <lb/>
from the office of Tho Daily <lb/>
graph, which paper is a morning <lb/>
daily issued six times a week, and <lb/>
has tho largest circulation of any <lb/>
paper in England, and with one ex- <lb/>
tho largest in the world. <lb/>
proprietors of Tho Daily <lb/>
Telegraph, in printing the evening <lb/>
edition, which is copyrighted, do so <lb/>
merely in order to protect them- <lb/>
selves in tho right to the use of tho <lb/>
name in case they ever car to issue <lb/>
an edition, and also to <lb/>
vent any one else from starting such <lb/>
a sheet and gaining the great <lb/>
which the use of the title, Even- <lb/>
Telegraph, would <lb/>
Record. <lb/>
Hair In Time. <lb/>
Queen Elizabeth had eighty wigs <lb/>
in her collection, and her cousin, <lb/>
Mary Queen of Scots, had many <lb/>
as a and among the <lb/>
presents made her while con- <lb/>
fined a prisoner in gloomy Loch- <lb/>
previous to her being behead- <lb/>
ed, wigs were numerous Gentle- <lb/>
men who particularly wished to <lb/>
please their lady friends presented <lb/>
them with wigs of the latest <lb/>
of hair and style of <lb/>
Fancy a gentleman of today <lb/>
presenting his sweetheart the new- <lb/>
est thing in ventilated bangs or the <lb/>
last idea in back <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
Connection. <lb/>
hear that the executed <lb/>
man was quite well connected. <lb/>
right The <lb/>
circuit was very complete. <lb/>
Kate Field's Washington.<lb/>
Hi. Wife <lb/>
a woman out- <lb/>
side wants to see you <lb/>
Business agent <lb/>
she ain't polite <lb/>
enough fer that. She acts as if she <lb/>
owned the hull building. Guess she's <lb/>
some News. <lb/>
CHILD BIRTH <lb/>
MADE EASY <lb/>
is a <lb/>
ally prepared Liniment, every <lb/>
of recognized value and in <lb/>
constant use by the medical pro- <lb/>
These ingredients are com- <lb/>
in a manner hitherto unknown <lb/>
Why Hat I <lb/>
Time was when the owl, the <lb/>
tho hawk and tho weasel, all <lb/>
enemies of the field mouse, were <lb/>
numerous and gave if little chance <lb/>
to Increase and multiply, but for <lb/>
some time there bun been a scarcity <lb/>
of these safeguards and the mice <lb/>
have prospered. With the germs of <lb/>
a deadly among <lb/>
them millions of little pilferers and <lb/>
destroyers of man's in the <lb/>
field, who knows but that ere long <lb/>
we shall receive the startling news <lb/>
of an epidemic raging whore afore- <lb/>
disease wax almost unknown <lb/>
Tho hordes of mice migrate to <lb/>
other localities and the disease breaks <lb/>
out in distant places, and tho <lb/>
cal world, while laboring to dissipate <lb/>
the plague, struggles in vain to trace <lb/>
it to its source, falling back at last <lb/>
upon the convenient that <lb/>
it started in tho Punjab or was <lb/>
wafted westward from the tablelands <lb/>
of or drifted ashore with <lb/>
the woods borne by the Gulf Stream <lb/>
from the or was pro- <lb/>
in some mysterious way by <lb/>
the of sun spots. <lb/>
Dr. E. Wooers Lecture. <lb/>
Headache <lb/>
Indigestion, <lb/>
Dyspepsia <lb/>
And all stomach Troubles arc cure I by <lb/>
P. P. P. <lb/>
Ask, Poke Boot and <lb/>
is cured by P. P. <lb/>
Pains and in the back, shoulders, <lb/>
knees, ankles and wrists are all attacked <lb/>
and conquered by P. P. P. This great <lb/>
medicine, my Its proper- <lb/>
ties, up and lbs whole <lb/>
body. <lb/>
is so P. P. P. <lb/>
at this season, and for toning up. <lb/>
orating, and as a and <lb/>
take P. P. P. It. throws tie <lb/>
malaria end pate you in good condition, <lb/>
French <lb/>
During the Franco German war. <lb/>
when many French prisoners were <lb/>
at the Countess Zeppelin <lb/>
was a real mother to <lb/>
Every morning, says Chaplain <lb/>
came with cartloads of linen, <lb/>
clothing, medicine and other stores, <lb/>
and as divided them among <lb/>
men she had a kind word for each. <lb/>
One day, after distributing all she I <lb/>
had brought, stopped before a I <lb/>
subaltern just deprived of a limb. <lb/>
my said she <lb/>
is nothing left for <lb/>
replied tho soldier, <lb/>
smile from you will content <lb/>
Hero was French gallantry, crop <lb/>
ping out amid the most <lb/>
rounding- <lb/>
How Try This. <lb/>
It will nothing will sure- <lb/>
do yon good, if you have a Cough, <lb/>
Cold, or any trouble with Throat, Chest <lb/>
or bungs. Dr. King's New Discovery <lb/>
for Consumption, Coughs and Colds is <lb/>
guaranteed to give relief, or money will <lb/>
lie paid back. Sufferers from <lb/>
found it just the thing and under I <lb/>
had a speedy and perfect recovery. Try <lb/>
a sample our expense learn <lb/>
for just how a tiling it is. <lb/>
Trial hot Its free at Wooten's Drug <lb/>
Store. Large size and <lb/>
A Weapon. <lb/>
Tho or <lb/>
of the <lb/>
It is a heavy thick <lb/>
m, from twenty to thirty <lb/>
Inches and edge is ground <lb/>
Cram the right aids only, the left side <lb/>
forged slightly concave. The <lb/>
is also slightly curved to the <lb/>
right no that cutting action of <lb/>
the is like that of an <lb/>
gouge, only two strokes on <lb/>
dealt with the team <lb/>
right to left downward and left to <lb/>
right Journal. <lb/>
A;. judge an- <lb/>
by loud conversation in the <lb/>
courtroom cried <lb/>
the court <lb/>
Hero decided a dozen cases this <lb/>
morning without hearing what <lb/>
of was Harper's <lb/>
SPECIFIC <lb/>
renovating <lb/>
entire eliminating <lb/>
all from the Blood, <lb/>
whether of or <lb/>
malarial origin, this prep- <lb/>
has no equal. . <lb/>
For eighteen I had on <lb/>
eating tore en my tongue. I <lb/>
treated best heat <lb/>
but ho the sere <lb/>
grew worse. I finally <lb/>
S. S. and was entirety <lb/>
after using a few bottles <lb/>
C. B. <lb/>
Henderson, <lb/>
TREATISE on Blood and Skin <lb/>
Dhow mailed free. <lb/>
Ha Swift Co, <lb/>
Atlanta. Ga, <lb/>
60.513 <lb/>
I ; t o <lb/>
S J fl <lb/>
i gs a u.<lb/>
Pi <lb/>
5-ST <lb/>
j-, <lb/>
V O S <lb/>
c xi <lb/>
stiff <lb/>
fl <lb/>
gr <lb/>
rs -X be g c Q<lb/>
m a <lb/>
c-Z <lb/>
k- <lb/>
II<lb/>
CO <lb/>
GO <lb/>
An H III to <lb/>
A score of ministers had met in <lb/>
Mr. C. H. vestry and had <lb/>
Ken telling their experiences. <lb/>
is just like a Methodist class meet- <lb/>
said Mr. a <lb/>
said Mr. is as- <lb/>
how Christians, when they <lb/>
mi-d together, fall into the use of <lb/>
one another's theological language. <lb/>
Our brother, tho Primitive <lb/>
minister, who prayed last, <lb/>
was saying just now, <lb/>
If you will allow me, I'll help <lb/>
the Lord to answer that prayer. If <lb/>
the whole lot of you will go down <lb/>
stairs into my tank, my brother will <lb/>
l delighted to you <lb/>
New York <lb/>
Good Looks- <lb/>
Good looks are more than akin deep. <lb/>
depending upon a healthy condition of <lb/>
all the vital organs. It the Liver Is- in- <lb/>
active, you have a Look. If your <lb/>
stomach be disordered you have u <lb/>
peptic Look and if your Kidneys be <lb/>
affected you have a Pinched Looks <lb/>
Electric Bitters is great <lb/>
and Tonic acts directly on these vital <lb/>
Cures Pimples, Blotches, Boils <lb/>
and gives a good complexion. Mild <lb/>
Drugstore, per <lb/>
A Compliment on <lb/>
Mrs. Gadd Yon do not show your <lb/>
at all. <lb/>
Mrs. I <lb/>
Mrs. Gadd No; I see you've <lb/>
it out of your family Bible. <lb/>
-New York Weekly. <lb/>
i I ad if <lb/>
S Ha. Z <lb/>
it if. e r <lb/>
For sample f our work we refer you to the editor of tho <lb/>
CURES SYPHILIS <lb/>
sod <lb/>
p. u. <lb/>
It c-t <lb/>
tam of <lb/>
Tertiary <lb/>
F HP-. <lb/>
Cures scrofula.<lb/>
Patent medicine has <lb/>
another has not. One <lb/>
reputation, another has not. One has <lb/>
confidence, born of success, another has <lb/>
only <lb/>
Don't take it for granted all pat- <lb/>
medicines arc alike. They not. <lb/>
Let the years of uninterrupted <lb/>
and the tens of thousands of cured and <lb/>
happy men and women, place Dr. <lb/>
Golden Medical and <lb/>
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription on <lb/>
the side of the comparison to which they <lb/>
belong. And isn't a State of <lb/>
hardly a country the <lb/>
world, whether its people realize it or <lb/>
not. hut have men and women in them <lb/>
happier because of their <lb/>
cry and their effects. <lb/>
Think this in health. Think It <lb/>
in sickness. And then think whether <lb/>
you can afford to make the trial if the <lb/>
makers can afford to take the risk to <lb/>
give your money back, as they do, if <lb/>
they do not benefit or cure you. <lb/>
When cutting open the trunk of an <lb/>
a live toad was found lying con- <lb/>
about feet from the root <lb/>
It skipped away very alertly, yet, we <lb/>
are told, no tree was more sound, nor <lb/>
could any aperture discovered <lb/>
through which the little captive could <lb/>
have penetrated. It is supposed that <lb/>
the spawn from which it originated <lb/>
must have accidentally been treas- <lb/>
up in the tree from the first mo <lb/>
sect of its vegetation.- <lb/>
ts <lb/>
R R p.<lb/>
are Mm. M U Mood <lb/>
due lo are <lb/>
CURES<lb/>
l-f-i <lb/>
P. P. P. Prickly Ash. t <lb/>
Whichard, <lb/>
.-. ESTATE <lb/>
O. <lb/>
f real <lb/>
for sale. over the lilt <lb/>
below call on or them. <lb/>
A l lot m Third street below <lb/>
BA lot on <lb/>
Front Second, hits nice <lb/>
FRIEND<lb/>
WILL DO ill that is claimed for <lb/>
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb/>
Lessens Pain, Danger to <lb/>
Life of Mother and Book <lb/>
to mailed FREE, <lb/>
valuable information and <lb/>
voluntary <lb/>
pM <lb/>
CO., <lb/>
sou <lb/>
Household Remedy <lb/>
FOR ALL <lb/>
BLOOD SKIN <lb/>
Di Di Di <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
FREE <lb/>
CO., Miami. . <lb/>
Co- <lb/>
iii town Greenville, <lb/>
good house with four <lb/>
kitchen and BOOM convenient <lb/>
bugs stables on the <lb/>
Two good building In <lb/>
if villi- <lb/>
reel, between <lb/>
house of <lb/>
rooms, good well of water, large gar- <lb/>
den plot and stables. <lb/>
A half acre lot In <lb/>
t. large single story house <lb/>
of U rooms, cook and dining moms at- <lb/>
all necessary out buildings and <lb/>
stable.-, good water <lb/>
A fine farm containing <lb/>
H mile. from Greenville on Mt <lb/>
Pleasant road, house, stables, <lb/>
barns, two room tenant houses; <lb/>
acres cleared, balance well wooded, <lb/>
good water. This land is excellent for <lb/>
the cultivation of fine tobacco. <lb/>
One farm lying on branch of the <lb/>
W. St w. railroad about hall way be- <lb/>
tween Grifton and Kinston and within i <lb/>
mile of a new depot, contains acres. <lb/>
CO cleared and balance heavily timbered <lb/>
with pine, oak, hickory, as and cypress; <lb/>
has good tenant houses; railroad <lb/>
nearly through of this farm. The <lb/>
land has clay subsoil with sandy loam. <lb/>
Is in good state of cultivation and highly <lb/>
improved; is fine trucking <lb/>
A farm miles from Greenville on <lb/>
Kinston road known as the Jackson <lb/>
farm; contains acres, cleared; has <lb/>
good dwelling house and all necessary <lb/>
out buildings. This is a first-class to- <lb/>
farm. <lb/>
A house and lot Greenville on <lb/>
corner near J. II. Cherry and W, <lb/>
, Bawls, now occupied by the family of <lb/>
tho late W. A. Stocks, house contains <lb/>
. rooms, kitchen convenient. Is convenient <lb/>
location, only half a block from main <lb/>
street of the town. Possession <lb/>
cap be given January 1st, <lb/>
A good building lot on <lb/>
t street, between Third and Fourth <lb/>
streets, splendid location. <lb/>
SI A The house and lot on Pitt <lb/>
, J street near Avenue, <lb/>
v nil ill kw of lot <lb/>
I I stables and out buildings. <lb/>
Ni house and <lb/>
II. n<lb/>
Proprietors, <lb/>
Blank, <lb/>
sale at J. L. Wooten's Drug Store <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1375. <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
. , . . street, adjoining lot of B. <lb/>
K and the lot described in No. <lb/>
fit dwelling <lb/>
AND BUT of four rooms, dining and cook rooms, <lb/>
their year's supplies will find I plenty of room for garden, <lb/>
their interest to get our prices before j Valuable Steam Corn and Flour <lb/>
Is complete j cotton and Store -This <lb/>
n all branches. j property located at a X Road <lb/>
i ft yards of a R. R. is alt. <lb/>
of the best <lb/>
Sections of Pitt county. The mills are <lb/>
fitted up with the best machinery. Bolt <lb/>
big cloths, smelter and are in full <lb/>
operation. The store house is a two <lb/>
story building with dwelling attacked <lb/>
also a kitchen and warehouse in rear. <lb/>
The store la kept constantly supplied <lb/>
with general merchandise salted to a <lb/>
country store and is doing a good <lb/>
The mills are beat known in <lb/>
this section. <lb/>
This property is offered far Bale <lb/>
owners wish to withdraw from <lb/>
Term on any of the above property <lb/>
can be had on application to <lb/>
WHICHARD. <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb/>
KICK, TEA, c. <lb/>
Pricks. <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF A <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
yon to boy at one profit. A com <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and told at prices to <lb/>
the times. Our goods are all bought an I <lb/>
sold for therefore, having risk <lb/>
to sell at a close margin. <lb/>
S. M- SCHULTZ. <lb/>
ft. <lb/>
<lb/>
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