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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 3 August 1892</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18920803</dc:date>
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Thoroughly Equipped <lb />
-WITH- <lb />
NEW MATERIAL. <lb />
Give Us Your Orders. <lb />
filled on short notice. <lb />
VOL. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor, <lb />
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb />
NM Sunday, morning and <lb />
Second Sunday morning at- <lb />
Mini <lb />
Third mid fourth at <lb />
morning and night, also second <lb />
S night, and Regular Wednesday <lb />
week. <lb />
Services at school house on <lb />
Tarboro road on night lief ore <lb />
each until April and then <lb />
on third Sunday evening. <lb />
Rev. R. F. Taylor's Appointments. <lb />
R. f. Taylor, pastor of <lb />
Circuit of the M. E. Church, South, <lb />
will preach at the following times and <lb />
places, regularly each <lb />
1st Sunday II o'clock A. M. <lb />
Sunday, Chapel, <lb />
P. M. , , <lb />
Sunday, Grove, o'clock <lb />
A M. <lb />
2nd Sunday, <lb />
miles west of <lb />
P. M. <lb />
3rd Sunday, Ayden or Spring <lb />
School House, k A. M. <lb />
3rd Sunday. Tripp's <lb />
o'clock M. <lb />
4th Sunday, o'clock <lb />
A. M. <lb />
4th Sunday. Land's School House, <lb />
o'clock M. <lb />
Jones Seminary for <lb />
Young Ladies. <lb />
Superior educational <lb />
location, mineral water, commodious <lb />
with Ore places, entire ex- <lb />
lot boarding and tuition S per <lb />
month. For circulars address. <lb />
Rev. C. A. HAMPTON, <lb />
All Healing Spring. N. C. <lb />
BECALMED. <lb />
SCHOOL, <lb />
SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. <lb />
Fall term begins Thursday, August <lb />
Slab, Location is famed for health. <lb />
Community i- moral and Dis- <lb />
is kind bin firm. Charges <lb />
low to suit the times. for <lb />
students. for <lb />
C. ALLEN, <lb />
lire <lb />
w, <lb />
Hamilton Institute. <lb />
HAMILTON. N. C. <lb />
The Fall Term of this school open <lb />
Monday, Aug. Enrollment last <lb />
session OS. Excellent advantages in a <lb />
regular Preparatory Course of study in <lb />
Music. Elocution, Panning and Draw- <lb />
Terms moderate. Pupils in <lb />
families or with Principal. For further <lb />
information address, <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
FEMALE SCHOOL <lb />
-Ill- <lb />
Mrs. V. L. Pendleton <lb />
will open a Select School for Young <lb />
Ladies Small Girls in Greenville on <lb />
Aligns She full Collegiate <lb />
Course taught. The 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 in <lb />
law. medicine and engineering. The <lb />
Faculty includes twenty teachers. <lb />
Scholarship- and loan funds are avail- <lb />
able for needy young men of talent and <lb />
character. The next session begins <lb />
Sept. 1st, For with full <lb />
address President Winston, <lb />
Chapel Hill, N. C. <lb />
Female <lb />
College, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
The next session of this well-known <lb />
. school will begin 1st. <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 teachers <lb />
from Academy of Arts. Teachers ex- <lb />
in their specialties. The whole <lb />
Course, Physical Culture and <lb />
and tires only <lb />
f or Special studies in <lb />
Send for to <lb />
S. D. President. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
An Announcement. <lb />
I am ready to treat baldness. I <lb />
have improved my preparation and have <lb />
observed in the last ninety days that it <lb />
will do I claim for it. Partial <lb />
baldness cam be treated by bottle <lb />
and the patient cam use it himself. <lb />
Total baldness must treat myself. I <lb />
invite correspondence in reference to <lb />
treatment Every one who tries <lb />
preparation will be thoroughly satisfied <lb />
with results. can refer you to a <lb />
number of men here in this town as ti <lb />
its merits. <lb />
N. C. April 5th, <lb />
HY <lb />
It was as calm as lie. <lb />
A death still night in June; <lb />
A silver sail on a silver sea <lb />
Under a silver moon. <lb />
Not the least air the still sea <lb />
But all on the dreaming deep <lb />
The white ship lay, like a white sea bird. <lb />
With folded wings <lb />
For a long, long month not a breath of air, <lb />
For a mouth not a drop of rain; <lb />
And the gaunt crew watched in wild de- <lb />
With a fever in throat and in brain. <lb />
And they saw the shore like a dim cloud <lb />
stand <lb />
On the far horizon sea ; <lb />
It was only a day's sail to the land, <lb />
And the haven where they would be. <lb />
Too faint to signal brought <lb />
An answer far or nigh ; <lb />
Father, have mercy, leave not <lb />
Alone on the deep to die <lb />
And the gaunt crew on the de <lb />
above <lb />
And the women prayed In-low i <lb />
One drop of rain for God's great love <lb />
O God for a breeze to blow <lb />
never a shower from the skies <lb />
burst. <lb />
And never a breeze would conic; <lb />
O heaven to think that man can thirst <lb />
And starve in sight of home. <lb />
But out to sea with drifting tide. <lb />
The vessel drifted away ; <lb />
Till the far shore dim cloud died, <lb />
And the wild crew to prey. <lb />
Like fluids they glared, with their eves <lb />
aglow. <lb />
Like beasts with hunger <lb />
But a mother knelt in the cabin below <lb />
By the bed of her little child. <lb />
It slept, and lo, in its sleep it smiled. <lb />
A babe of summers three ; <lb />
O Father save my little child. <lb />
Whatever comes to me <lb />
Calm gleamed the sea; calm gleamed the <lb />
sky. <lb />
No ship, no sail in view. <lb />
And they cut them lots for who should die <lb />
To feed the starving crew. <lb />
Like beasts they glared with hunger wild. <lb />
And their red glazed eyes <lb />
But the death lot fell on the little child <lb />
That slept in the cabin below. <lb />
And the mother shrieked in wild despair; <lb />
my child my son <lb />
They will take hi- it is hard to bear; <lb />
Yet. Father, thy will be done <lb />
And she waked the child from its happy <lb />
sleep. <lb />
And she knelt by the cradle lied; <lb />
We thirst, we starve, on the lonely deep, <lb />
We are living, my child, for bread. <lb />
On I he lone, lone sea. no ship, no sail. <lb />
Not a drop of rain in the sky ; <lb />
We thirst, we starve, on lonely sea. <lb />
And thou, my child, must die <lb />
She what Ml her Wild soul shed. <lb />
Not but knows <lb />
And the child rose up from Its cradle bed <lb />
And its on its breast. <lb />
Father, he lisped, so good, so kind. <lb />
Have pity on other's pain <lb />
For mother's sake a little wind <lb />
a little rain <lb />
And -he heard them shout for the chili <lb />
from the deck. <lb />
And she knelt on the <lb />
The child the child they cry stand back <lb />
And a curse on your idiot prayers. <lb />
And the mother rose in wild despair. <lb />
And she bared her throat to the knife; <lb />
but spare, oh <lb />
spare <lb />
My child, dear son's life <lb />
O God it was a ghastly sight; <lb />
Bed eyes like flaring brands. <lb />
And a hundred belt knives flashing bright <lb />
In the clutch of hands. <lb />
death <lb />
But soft through the air <lb />
Whose tailing tear that whose breath <lb />
Waves through the mother's hair <lb />
A flutter of ripple of seals <lb />
A -peek the cabin pain <lb />
O God it is a breeze <lb />
And a drop of blessed rain <lb />
And the mother rushed to the cabin below <lb />
And she wept on the hair. <lb />
The sweet rain fa In- sweet wind blows; <lb />
Our Father has heard thy prayer <lb />
But the child had fallen asleep again. <lb />
And lo in its sleep it smiled. <lb />
Thank God she cried, for bis wind and <lb />
his rain <lb />
Thank God for my little child <lb />
PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
MARK. <lb />
Fifteen Democratic National <lb />
from to 1897. <lb />
Washington Post. <lb />
The sixteenth Democratic Na- <lb />
Convention will be called to <lb />
order to-day at noon in Chicago <lb />
by Senator Brice as <lb />
chairman of the Democratic Na- <lb />
Committee, and the name of <lb />
Hon. W C. Owens, of Kentucky, <lb />
will presented for temporary <lb />
chairman, after which the <lb />
will effect a permanent organ- <lb />
in the usual way. A his- <lb />
of Democratic conventions is <lb />
of interest- <lb />
Sixty years ago the of May <lb />
lust, the first Democratic Nation- <lb />
Convention was held in the city <lb />
of Baltimore, following the exam- <lb />
of its rivals, the <lb />
and Au- <lb />
Jackson was nominated for <lb />
and Martin Van <lb />
of New York, for Vice-President- <lb />
They were re- <lb />
electoral votes to <lb />
for ail others, Henry Clay <lb />
but Van however, <lb />
received but electoral votes. <lb />
SECOND CONVENTION. <lb />
The second convention mot at <lb />
Baltimore, May and <lb />
Martin Van for Pres- <lb />
and Richard M. Johnson for <lb />
Vice-President, a faction of the <lb />
party nominating Senator Hugh <lb />
L. White, of Tennessee. No plat- <lb />
form was <lb />
Mr. Van <lb />
electoral votes to for all <lb />
William H. Harrison, of Ohio, the <lb />
Whig candidate, receiving <lb />
The popular vote was for Van j <lb />
for Harrison, <lb />
THIRD CONVENTION. <lb />
The third convention of the <lb />
Democratic party was held at <lb />
May 1840- It <lb />
Van no <lb />
for Vice President, leaving <lb />
that to the several States. For the <lb />
John C. Kentucky, <lb />
for Vice-President The <lb />
can party in this <lb />
its first <lb />
The result was as follows j <lb />
a Fremont, <lb />
and electoral <lb />
votes. The popular vote resulted <lb />
Buchanan. Fremont, <lb />
and Fillmore 874.584. <lb />
EIGHTH CONVENTION. <lb />
The eighth convention met at <lb />
Charleston, S. O, April <lb />
The resulted in <lb />
a split in the convention, one <lb />
nominating Stephen A- Doug- <lb />
las, of Illinois, for President and <lb />
V. Johnson, of Georgia, <lb />
for Vice President, and the other <lb />
John C. of Ken- <lb />
for President and Joseph <lb />
Lane, of Oregon, for <lb />
dent. <lb />
The result of the election was as <lb />
Re- <lb />
publican, Dem- <lb />
; Douglas. Democrat, <lb />
and Bell. Whig, <lb />
Popular <lb />
Douglas, <lb />
and Bell, <lb />
President. The re- <lb />
in an overwhelming victory <lb />
for Republicans, who carried <lb />
every State but <lb />
Kentucky and Now Jersey, the <lb />
result being; Lincoln. and <lb />
electoral votes. <lb />
Lincoln, and <lb />
popular votes. <lb />
NINTH CONVENTION- <lb />
The ninth convention was held at <lb />
Chicago August <lb />
George B. of Now <lb />
Jersey, for President, and <lb />
H. of Ohio, for <lb />
TENTH CONVENTION. <lb />
The tenth convention met in New <lb />
York on July and after a weeks <lb />
session nominated Horatio <lb />
of New York, for President, <lb />
and Francis P. Blair, of Missouri, <lb />
for Vice President. Gov. Seymour <lb />
was the third of Demo <lb />
i conventions, was defeat- <lb />
Tho and <lb />
the <lb />
Will <lb />
H. Harrison, the Whig candidate, <lb />
received electoral votes to <lb />
, ,, I ed, Gen- Grant receiving to <lb />
, Mr. <lb />
.,,. tho vote being Grant, <lb />
campaign of the Whigs swept the n s <lb />
country a cyclone, and William <lb />
The eleventh convention met at <lb />
. . ,, Baltimore on July 1872, and rat- <lb />
cast for Van the popular of <lb />
Brown made by the Liberal <lb />
and for van . . ,, <lb />
Republican convention. <lb />
CONVENTION. , the electoral vote <lb />
The fourth convention was held was cast as follows ; Grant, <lb />
at Baltimore May and j not voting, <lb />
1844, and resulted in the <lb />
of James K- Polk, of <lb />
York Herald. <lb />
The or Farmers Alli- <lb />
party met in convention at <lb />
Omaha and nominated candidates <lb />
for president and vice president of <lb />
tho United States. <lb />
The leaders of this movement <lb />
can hardly hope to elect their can- <lb />
but they claim that the <lb />
party will carry enough States to <lb />
throw the election of <lb />
into the House of Representatives. <lb />
Whether it will or can do this is <lb />
a matter of speculation. The <lb />
party has developed strength in a <lb />
number of Southern States, <lb />
the Georgia and <lb />
Texas, and also in several Western <lb />
States, such as Kansas, Nebraska, <lb />
Minnesota and South Dakota. <lb />
Whether it will secure the <lb />
vote of all or any of these, <lb />
whether it will prevent either of <lb />
tho other parties from getting the <lb />
electoral majority, re- <lb />
mains to be seen- <lb />
But it cannot be that this <lb />
Third party movement, with the <lb />
strength it has accumulated and <lb />
the progress it may make, presents <lb />
tho possibility, if not the <lb />
of the of tho next <lb />
being thrown into the house. <lb />
It is, therefore, a matter of time- <lb />
interest to review the procedure <lb />
prescribed for such an emergency <lb />
by the constitution. <lb />
That instrument provides that <lb />
tho person who the great- <lb />
est of electoral votes for <lb />
President shall President, if <lb />
such number a majority of all <lb />
the doctors. If no one have such <lb />
majority from the persons <lb />
having tho highest number not ex- <lb />
throe on tho list of those <lb />
voted for as President, tho House <lb />
of Representatives shall choose <lb />
immediately by ballot the <lb />
Tho electoral college now con- <lb />
of four hundred forty- <lb />
four Votes. A majority necessary <lb />
to elect is two hundred and <lb />
If both Mr. Cleveland <lb />
and Mr- Harrison fail to got that <lb />
number, and assuming that the <lb />
Third party candidate will not get <lb />
it, there will no election by the <lb />
people, and it will devolve upon <lb />
tho House to choose a President <lb />
from those three candidates- The <lb />
voting in tho House will by <lb />
Stales and not by members. Tho <lb />
one Representative of Idaho will <lb />
a voice equal to tho thirty <lb />
The popular vote was For Grant, four of New York. <lb />
for Greeley <lb />
see, for and George M-1 35.297- <lb />
Dallas, of Pennsylvania, for Vice- twelfth convention. <lb />
President. Silas Wright, of New Tho twelfth convention was held <lb />
York, was first nominated at St. Louis, Mo., Juno 27th. 1876, <lb />
Vice President, but declined. Mr. nominated Samuel J. <lb />
for President and Thomas A. Hen- <lb />
for Vice-President. The <lb />
result as announced by tho <lb />
commission was as follows. <lb />
by a vote of to Electoral vote <lb />
Hayes, ; <lb />
; Hayes, <lb />
; scattering, <lb />
Polk, the first <lb />
received and Mr. Clay <lb />
electoral votes, the popular <lb />
vote For Polk, <lb />
for Clay, <lb />
FIFTH CONVENTION. <lb />
For the Cuts alt Diseases <lb />
Tills been in use over <lb />
fifty years, wherever known has <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
country, and ha effected cures where <lb />
all other with the attention <lb />
the meet experienced physicians, <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is of <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which It has obtained is entirely <lb />
a its own as but little effort has <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
public One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. Sample box Tho usual <lb />
Druggists. All Cash Orders <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
and communications to<lb />
Bole Proprietor, <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
The Washington, D. C, for <lb />
hi A <lb />
honest Democratic campaign paper, <lb />
full news, will lie mailed <lb />
to any address or <lb />
Sample copies free. <lb />
bU everywhere. Address, <lb />
Box Washington, <lb />
or with <lb />
which it will clubbed for cents for <lb />
both papers. <lb />
What the Silver Question Is. <lb />
Baltimore Sun. <lb />
A correspondent asks for <lb />
common-sense every-day school- <lb />
boy explanation of the silver <lb />
The at <lb />
present is whether the mints of the <lb />
United States shall coin silver <lb />
dollars weighing grains as <lb />
freely as they coin gold money. <lb />
Any owner of gold bullion can take <lb />
it to tho mint and have it coined <lb />
into gold twenty, ton, five and two <lb />
and a-half dollar pieces at his <lb />
option and to any amount. The <lb />
same is sought by the <lb />
silver men for the holders of silver <lb />
bullion. The objection made to <lb />
this free of silver is that <lb />
grains of silver are not now <lb />
worth grains of gold, as the <lb />
once were In other words, the <lb />
quantity of silver it is proposed to <lb />
put in the silver <lb />
coinage is to be made not <lb />
now worth cents, but is worth <lb />
only cents. All free coinage <lb />
bills make the silver dollar of <lb />
grains legal tender in payments- of <lb />
debts for obviously <lb />
unjust thing to do. If free coinage, <lb />
as advocated in Congress, meant <lb />
putting worth of silver <lb />
over a dollar no- <lb />
body object to it, but there <lb />
is decided objection to making <lb />
worth of silver to pass for <lb />
cents. The silver men insist <lb />
on the free coinage of the light <lb />
dollar <lb />
Tho fifth convention met at <lb />
on May 22,18-48, and was in <lb />
session five days. After a <lb />
contest Lewis Cass, of <lb />
was nominated for President <lb />
and William O. Butler, of Ken- <lb />
for Vice-President. <lb />
The swept <lb />
Zachary Taylor, the Whig <lb />
date into the White House, he re- <lb />
to electoral votes <lb />
for Cass, the popular vote <lb />
Taylor Whig, Cass, Dem- <lb />
Van Free <lb />
Soil, <lb />
SIXTH CONVENTION. <lb />
The sixth convention was held at <lb />
Baltimore on June 1st and lasted <lb />
four days. After a bitter contest, <lb />
the second in the <lb />
person of Franklin Pierce, of New <lb />
Hampshire, appeared, who, on the <lb />
forty-ninth ballot, was nominated <lb />
for President, defeating Cass, <lb />
Douglas, Marcy and other <lb />
veteran leaders. <lb />
William B. King, of Alabama, <lb />
was nominated for Vice-Preside 111- <lb />
spite of tho fact that the <lb />
Whigs had nominated a popular <lb />
candidate in the person of Gen. <lb />
Whitfield Scott. Pierce and King <lb />
were overwhelmingly elected, re- <lb />
to electoral votes <lb />
for Scott and Graham, the <lb />
vote being for Pierce, <lb />
for Scott, and for <lb />
Hale. <lb />
SEVENTH CONVENTION. <lb />
The seventh convention was <lb />
held at Cincinnati, Ohio, on June <lb />
and lasted four -lays. Its <lb />
nominees were Buchanan, <lb />
of Pennsylvania, for President and <lb />
THIRTEENTH CONVENTION. <lb />
The thirteenth convention <lb />
held at Cincinnati, Ohio, and <lb />
S- Hancock, of <lb />
Pennsylvania, for President, and <lb />
William H. English, of Indiana, <lb />
for Vice-President The result <lb />
Electoral <lb />
Hancock, Popular <lb />
field, Hancock, <lb />
scattering, <lb />
FOURTEENTH CONVENTION. <lb />
The fourteenth convention met <lb />
at Chicago, 111-. July 1884, and <lb />
nominated Grover Cleveland, of <lb />
New York, for President, and <lb />
Thomas A Hendricks, of Indiana, <lb />
for Vice President. <lb />
Tho result of the election was as <lb />
Electoral ; <lb />
Blaine, <lb />
Popular <lb />
; Blaine, scattering, <lb />
FIFTEENTH CONVENTION. <lb />
The fifteenth convention met at <lb />
St- Louis Mo., on June and <lb />
Grover Cleveland for <lb />
President and nominated Allen G <lb />
Thurman, of Ohio, for Vice <lb />
dent The election resulted <lb />
Electoral <lb />
Cleveland, <lb />
Popular <lb />
Cleveland, ; scatter- <lb />
Patten Argus. <lb />
A exchange has been <lb />
looking up the history of tho third <lb />
parties for tho education of its <lb />
friends who have strayed away <lb />
with tho People's party, so-called. <lb />
Here is the <lb />
The Clinton Democracy, born <lb />
1826, and died the same year. <lb />
The anti-Masonic party, born <lb />
1826, and such as <lb />
Seward, Filmore, Weed, Clay and <lb />
were identified with it its ex- <lb />
ceased in 1832- <lb />
3- The Liberty party, born in <lb />
1840. died 1844 <lb />
The Free Soil or Abolition <lb />
party, in 1848, died 1852. <lb />
The Southern States rights <lb />
party, born in 1852, the <lb />
same year. <lb />
The American or <lb />
party, in 1857, died in <lb />
7- The Liberal Republican party, <lb />
born in 1872, died the same year. <lb />
The Temperance party's birth <lb />
and death occurred in 1872. <lb />
Labor Reform party <lb />
into and wont of existence in <lb />
1862- <lb />
The National par- <lb />
was born in 1875 and in <lb />
1876. <lb />
The Greenback party was <lb />
born in 1875 and died in 1880. <lb />
12- The Prohibition party, as a <lb />
national party, was born in 1879 <lb />
and has been dying a slow death <lb />
over since. <lb />
13- The National party was born <lb />
in 1878 and died tho same year. <lb />
Tho National Liberal party <lb />
breathed its first and last breath <lb />
in 1879. <lb />
15- The Greenback Labor party <lb />
was born in 1882 and died so <lb />
quietly that the exact time of its <lb />
demise is not known. <lb />
Since 1882 probably a dozen <lb />
different parties, all more or less <lb />
tinctured with communism or so- <lb />
have flourished for a short <lb />
time- <lb />
So it will seen that tho Dem- <lb />
have danced at tho funerals <lb />
of more than a score of parties. <lb />
Tho Democratic party is your <lb />
party; it is in your it is a <lb />
thing of your own shaping, it is a <lb />
medium through which you can <lb />
force any reasonable <lb />
demand. It is yours a <lb />
single rudder that yon cannot <lb />
guide. It is the party that offers <lb />
the broadest of freedom, <lb />
and stands for the people in all of <lb />
its grandest <lb />
It is a mistake to suppose <lb />
that mere talk is teaching- <lb />
It is n mistake to think that <lb />
hearing a lesson recited, or <lb />
the reading of questions from a <lb />
book, or telling stories, is good <lb />
teaching. <lb />
3- It is a mistake to think that <lb />
one who in manner and temper is <lb />
impatient, dogmatic, <lb />
slow, heavy or dull, be a good <lb />
Sunday school teacher. <lb />
It is a mistake to suppose that <lb />
one who is not understood, or is <lb />
misunderstood, is a good teacher. <lb />
It is n mistake to suppose that <lb />
he who gossips with his class is a <lb />
good teacher. <lb />
6- It is a mistake to suppose, <lb />
we a idea be- <lb />
forehand, that shall be able to <lb />
supply tho details and illustrations <lb />
as go along. <lb />
It is a great to under- <lb />
rate oral teaching, and overrate <lb />
merely reading and reciting from <lb />
tho Bible. <lb />
It is a great mistake to think <lb />
that our scholars are too young to <lb />
appreciate a well prepared lesson <lb />
or a school <lb />
It is a mistake of to <lb />
expect from motives of <lb />
duty, or the of tho day, <lb />
or importance of <lb />
but real interest will secure it <lb />
It is a great mistake for <lb />
teachers to think that giving good <lb />
advice or exhortation to children <lb />
is as good as <lb />
truths with questions and <lb />
answer. <lb />
It is a groat mistake of <lb />
day-school teachers to suppose <lb />
that their work is that of a mere <lb />
a moral <lb />
tor, or raising up of good citizens <lb />
and children. <lb />
HOS. J. <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
in all the Courts. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-L A <lb />
Greenville, N. U. <lb />
I. A. V. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
N. <lb />
attention given to collections <lb />
II. LONG, <lb />
B at- La w, <lb />
C. <lb />
careful attention to<lb />
HARRY <lb />
I AT HAM <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Make Your Choice. <lb />
Southerner. <lb />
the <lb />
Prof. Chas. D. suggests <lb />
a change concerning the public <lb />
schools. He thinks it would be <lb />
better to have the superintendents <lb />
of public instruction devote their <lb />
entire time to the work, pay them <lb />
a larger salary and give them a <lb />
district containing several <lb />
tie. The suggestion Is a good <lb />
one, we <lb />
Press. <lb />
A majority of the States, twenty <lb />
throe of tho forty four, is <lb />
to a choice- <lb />
As tho Democrats control tho <lb />
representation of a majority of <lb />
tho States Mr. Cleveland would <lb />
tho choice of tho House- <lb />
If tho election of President <lb />
should be thrown into the House <lb />
the choice of would <lb />
by tho constitution go to the Sen- <lb />
is, assuming that no <lb />
candidate got a majority of tho <lb />
electoral votes. While the House <lb />
is directed to choose a President <lb />
from the three highest candidates <lb />
the Senate is required to select a <lb />
Vice-President from the two high- <lb />
est. While tho vote is by States <lb />
in tho House it is by Senators in <lb />
the Senate. A majority of all the <lb />
Senators elects- <lb />
Should the contingency we have <lb />
been considering arise a very re- <lb />
markable situation and a <lb />
question be <lb />
The House, as we have <lb />
seen, Democratic, would <lb />
elect Mr. Cleveland; the Senate, <lb />
being Republican, would natural- <lb />
choose Mr. Reid- <lb />
But would Mr. Reid be <lb />
eligible to the <lb />
with Mr. Cleveland as <lb />
That is, could a President <lb />
and Vice-President be chosen from <lb />
the same State <lb />
On this point the meaning of <lb />
the constitution is open to debate- <lb />
Its words are. electors shall <lb />
meet in their respective States and <lb />
vote by ballot for President and <lb />
of whom at <lb />
least shall not be an inhabitant of <lb />
the same State with <lb />
That is an express limitation on <lb />
the electors. It is not an express <lb />
limitation on Congress. <lb />
On the one hand it may said <lb />
that the purpose of the <lb />
is to prevent in any ease the <lb />
election of two persons from the <lb />
same State to the highest offices <lb />
of the government On the other <lb />
it may be argued that as the Sen- <lb />
ate and House are not expressly <lb />
enjoined, the prohibition does not <lb />
extend to them, and hence they <lb />
are free to choose both <lb />
and Vice-President from the same <lb />
State. <lb />
It is. an interesting question that <lb />
must giro rise to vital discussion <lb />
whenever the occasion comes. <lb />
Gen. Weaver's Pension Record. <lb />
Chatham <lb />
The platform at <lb />
is almost tho as that adopted <lb />
at St- Louis, much of it in tho same <lb />
words. The most notable differ- <lb />
is tho of tho demand <lb />
to pay the Union soldiers. But <lb />
this was probably omitted because <lb />
tho nomination of Weaver <lb />
was itself an endorsement of that <lb />
demand, ho having limes in- <lb />
into Congress a bill to <lb />
pay Union soldiers the difference <lb />
between the currency in which they <lb />
were paid and its value in gold- <lb />
Yes. Gen- Weaver introduced into <lb />
the Forty-sixth, tho Forty-ninth <lb />
and the Fiftieth Congress the fol- <lb />
lowing <lb />
it enacted by tho Senate <lb />
House of Representatives of the <lb />
United States of America in Con- <lb />
assembled, That there shall <lb />
be paid to each private soldier, <lb />
non-commissioned officer, sailor, <lb />
teamster or musician regularly <lb />
mustered into the service of the <lb />
United States during the late war <lb />
for tho suppression of the rebellion, <lb />
or to his or their legal <lb />
in case of death, as soon as <lb />
his or their claim shall be <lb />
ed and audited by tho Second <lb />
Auditor of the Treasury, the sum <lb />
found due him or them, the amount <lb />
thereof to be ascertained as fol- <lb />
The Second Auditor shall <lb />
ascertain the amount of currency <lb />
paid said soldier or sailor at each <lb />
date of payment during his term <lb />
of office, and shall ascertain the <lb />
gold value of said currency pay- <lb />
at the time, by reference to <lb />
the quotations of gold, as <lb />
ed with the currency in which said <lb />
soldier or sailor was paid, at the <lb />
city of New York at that date; and <lb />
said soldier, sailor, or his legal <lb />
representatives shall be allowed <lb />
and paid the difference in value <lb />
between the currency which he <lb />
received and tho standard gold coin <lb />
of the United States in which he <lb />
should have been <lb />
Now what have the Third party <lb />
people got to say about this <lb />
Lot us look some facts <lb />
face. <lb />
The third party has not one <lb />
third of the votes in tho State. <lb />
No man, the least bit informed, <lb />
contends that it <lb />
Further, there are not a half a <lb />
counties in tho State in <lb />
which the third comprise <lb />
one-third of the voters. <lb />
The conclusion that any reason- <lb />
able mind must reach, therefore, is <lb />
that there is absolutely no hope for <lb />
the party in <lb />
Having arrived at these <lb />
able conclusions tho patriotic <lb />
will then determine whose <lb />
success ho prefers, tho Democrats <lb />
or Republicans. <lb />
This is the in this cam <lb />
Either Cleveland or <lb />
will a plurality of the <lb />
votes in North Carolina. <lb />
A vote for Weaver is not a vote <lb />
thrown away entirely, it is a half n <lb />
vote for Harrison, or equal to no <lb />
at all- <lb />
Do the people of North Cat <lb />
d tho partisans <lb />
Republican success If they do <lb />
can achieve it in two ways, <lb />
voting for the South hater and <lb />
cursor, or voting for Harrison, <lb />
twice the surest and tho <lb />
direct way. <lb />
It is not a theory, but a <lb />
which confronts us. We may <lb />
prefer any one to Harrison and <lb />
some to Cleveland, but the <lb />
choice lies between these two. <lb />
Good requires that we <lb />
so choose. <lb />
ft. JAM has. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
Practice in all the courts. <lb />
n Specialty. <lb />
Grammatically Considered. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, all in the V. S. <lb />
Patent or In the Courts attended to <lb />
for Moderate Fees. <lb />
We are opposite the V. S. Patent Of- <lb />
engaged In Patents Exclusively, and <lb />
obtain patents In less time than <lb />
more remote from Washington. <lb />
the model or drawing is sent we <lb />
advise as to free of charge, <lb />
I and we make no change unless we ob- <lb />
Patent. <lb />
refer, here, to the Master, the <lb />
of the Money Order Hid., and to <lb />
Is of the V. S. Patent Office <lb />
advise terms and reference to <lb />
actual clients in your own or <lb />
address, O. A. Co., <lb />
Washington, D. C. <lb />
Rev. J. H. in Louis <lb />
ville Commercial says Tho fol- <lb />
lowing are some of the <lb />
rules for considering women gram <lb />
As a noun is-in the <lb />
case- <lb />
As a pronoun stands for <lb />
herself. <lb />
As a verb, mood, <lb />
present tense, when she <lb />
yon to serve her, mood <lb />
and future tense when you ask her <lb />
to marry you. <lb />
As an adjective she is in the <lb />
superlative degree. <lb />
As a conjunction she is a failure <lb />
for her sentences not con- <lb />
As an <lb />
I cannot say is an adverb, <lb />
for does not modify anything- <lb />
As an article, indefinite, bat <lb />
worthy tho world to any man. <lb />
I love her in any mood or case, <lb />
especially tho individual mood <lb />
and possessive but always in <lb />
the feminine gender <lb />
TH S <lb />
WATCH TOWER, <lb />
Published <lb />
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR <lb />
Devoted to Apostolic Christianity, <lb />
cation, General Intelligence. <lb />
for Sample Copy. Office of Pub- <lb />
N, O. <lb />
Editorial Wash- <lb />
N. C. <lb />
J. L. Editor. <lb />
U. W. DAVIS, Associate. <lb />
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb />
For Shaving, and Dressing Hair<lb />
AT THE -GLASS FRONT <lb />
the Opera House, at which place <lb />
I have recently located, and where I have <lb />
everything in my line <lb />
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb />
TO MAKE A <lb />
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb />
with all the Improved appliances; <lb />
and comfortable chairs. <lb />
Razors sharpened at reasonable figures <lb />
for work outside of m v <lb />
promptly executed. Very respectfully,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017558_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
, . <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville. N. I . <lb />
J- j <lb />
this will be Hone, and f. Davenport <lb />
There can be no opposition worthy S E- <lb />
i; of note nave from Republican H. J- L Tucker, GK B- <lb />
I party. and H. J. Williams- <lb />
, y n P. Moore. J. P <lb />
never vote it. and this is only L- J- Chapman, N. H- <lb />
WEDNESDAY, fed, M <lb />
Entered at G <lb />
K. C. as second-class mail matter. <lb />
that will tell the end. Go and ST. R. Corry. <lb />
to work at fellow democrats The following were reported on <lb />
and convince every white man in <lb />
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET <lb />
l-oil <lb />
CLEVELAND. <lb />
Of York.<lb />
E. STEVENSON. <lb />
Of Illinois. <lb />
mi at i . <lb />
CHARLES AYCOCK, <lb />
ROBERT B GLENN- <lb />
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb />
MB <lb />
GABS. <lb />
of <lb />
FOR <lb />
R. A- <lb />
of Alleghany.<lb />
COKE <lb />
of Wake. <lb />
Kill <lb />
DONALD W. <lb />
of Wake. <lb />
R. M. <lb />
BUR. <lb />
j. c Scarborough. <lb />
Of <lb />
MB <lb />
FRANK I. <lb />
of Mecklenburg.<lb />
GEORGE A. <lb />
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb />
W THE <lb />
F. G. JAMES <lb />
FREDERICK <lb />
I. K- <lb />
RICHARD W. KING. <lb />
FOR Of <lb />
HENRY HARDING <lb />
FOR <lb />
DR- WM E. WARREN. <lb />
FOR <lb />
J. B. KILPATRICK <lb />
COUNTY CONVENTION. <lb />
Thursday the 28th was a <lb />
day that was looked to <lb />
with much interest in Pitt county- <lb />
It was the day that the Democrat <lb />
county convention to be <lb />
held- Many were anxious as to <lb />
the interest to be manifested that <lb />
day. Den. were expecting <lb />
the masses to be out- Third party <lb />
men and radicals were professing <lb />
not to expect this, and were <lb />
most dieing with the desire that <lb />
there might not be a corporal's <lb />
guard present. They had actually <lb />
professed to that there <lb />
no Democrats now. It is <lb />
quite evident now to every <lb />
body from the manifestations of <lb />
Thursday that the Democrats of <lb />
Pitt county have do thought of <lb />
leaving the old party flag, or of <lb />
deserting that glorious political <lb />
organization which has for more <lb />
than one hundred years <lb />
the purest patriotism, the <lb />
best thought and the highest <lb />
pulses of the country that <lb />
cal party which has ever opposed <lb />
monopolies and trusts in every <lb />
form, and the concentration of <lb />
power and wealth, and on the <lb />
other hand advocated the Cause of <lb />
the toiling Why should <lb />
they desert a party which em <lb />
bodies the principles laid down <lb />
in the great Declaration of <lb />
in Washington's fare- <lb />
well address and in the various <lb />
State papers of Thomas J. flex-son <lb />
the great expounder of Democrat- <lb />
principles, and in the utterances <lb />
of Grover Cleveland the greatest <lb />
living advocate of these pure doc- <lb />
I The great gathering here <lb />
on Thursday of the citizens of the <lb />
the large-c ever <lb />
seen <lb />
as false the idea and report that <lb />
the people of Pitt county are will- <lb />
that its interests shall be <lb />
turned over to the Republicans, for <lb />
this party is the only that his <lb />
any prospect of controlling it if <lb />
the Democrats do not. The <lb />
earnestness, enthusiasm, and the <lb />
character of the men who com- <lb />
posed this convention is a <lb />
tee that the interests of the white <lb />
people of this great country and of <lb />
good government everywhere are <lb />
still in the hands of the honest men, <lb />
who were Democrats, who <lb />
have lived Democrats, and who will <lb />
be found nobly for the <lb />
principles of Democracy when they <lb />
shall be summoned to lay aside <lb />
earth's wearisome struggles. The <lb />
men nominated are men worthy <lb />
the support of every man in Pitt <lb />
county, and unless we are sadly <lb />
mistaken they will receive the <lb />
votes of nineteen twentieths of the <lb />
truly white men of the county. A <lb />
vote for the third party a <lb />
vote for the radical party and the <lb />
Reflector is fully persuaded that <lb />
when the few men who are now <lb />
seemingly advocating a third <lb />
party see this they will at once re- <lb />
to the Democratic, We <lb />
trust we may feel otherwise <lb />
in reference to white men of <lb />
this county- The Convention was <lb />
large, enthusiastic and purely <lb />
fact every thing we <lb />
could ask- It remains now that we <lb />
Pitt county that this means <lb />
Democratic or Republican J <lb />
supremacy not only county i <lb />
but in the entire State, and every ; <lb />
white man who loves his country, <lb />
his State, his county, his liberty, <lb />
his wife, and his daughters will <lb />
rally to the support of the <lb />
ticket and the 8th of next <lb />
November will crown our efforts <lb />
Ml success, and keep all the in <lb />
that we hold dear in the <lb />
hands of that <lb />
has been the <lb />
people. <lb />
L Full proceeding of the <lb />
will be in this issue- <lb />
Read carefully what the party has <lb />
to say, and plant yourself firmly <lb />
upon the principles it advocates- <lb />
resolved that come what may I give <lb />
my hand, my heart. lay effort and <lb />
my vote to this is my <lb />
living sentiment, and by tho help <lb />
of it shall be my dieing <lb />
Democratic principles, <lb />
now and Democratic principles <lb />
forever. <lb />
J. Anderson. <lb />
A- Thigpen. <lb />
Bethel-A. B. Cherry. <lb />
R. <lb />
B. Grimes- <lb />
P. B. <lb />
R- Cotton. . <lb />
M. Lang. <lb />
B King <lb />
R- <lb />
Swift Harding. <lb />
On motion all of the above <lb />
party which alone j Ml rut Hi id by tho con- <lb />
true friend of the <lb />
The convention then adjourned <lb />
for fifteen minutes to give commit- <lb />
tee on Resolutions time to report- <lb />
On the reassembling of the con- <lb />
the committee offered the <lb />
We- the chosen representatives <lb />
of the Democratic party in con- <lb />
assembled, earnestly <lb />
desirous to reclaim the bust one of <lb />
our erring brethren, make the <lb />
following statement of facts <lb />
In 1867. two years after the war <lb />
had closed and the Southern sol- <lb />
had to their <lb />
lated homes and impoverished <lb />
the Republican party <lb />
the pretext of bringing the <lb />
Southern States back into the <lb />
Union undertook the work of <lb />
reconstruction, and in their work <lb />
overturned with sword and <lb />
net the State government then in <lb />
and under the farce of <lb />
an election held by Federal <lb />
nets established in North <lb />
and other Southern States the most <lb />
venal, corrupt and diabolical gov- <lb />
that ever disgraced the <lb />
annals of a civilized people. Under <lb />
the so-called State government <lb />
thus established indebted- <lb />
was piled upon our people <lb />
till the credit of the State and the <lb />
counties was made a by-word of <lb />
scorn and reproach. <lb />
This party of plunder and ruin <lb />
reveled in theft and crime till the <lb />
people goaded to madness rose up <lb />
in their might and rescued the <lb />
legislature from its foul and <lb />
ting grasp, and soon the whole <lb />
machinery of our State and county <lb />
governments passed into the hands <lb />
of the Democratic party, which <lb />
brought order out of confusion, <lb />
economy out of extravagance. <lb />
I honesty out of theft, peace out of <lb />
turmoil, and has given to us an era <lb />
of good government in the State <lb />
and counties without a parallel in <lb />
our history. <lb />
In 1878-74 this same <lb />
can party, then filled with <lb />
hatred of the Southern people <lb />
undertook to destroy their man- <lb />
hood and humiliate their pride by <lb />
subjecting them to the horrors of <lb />
their accursed Civil Rights <lb />
j and about the time <lb />
proposed and undertook to carry <lb />
through Congress an infamous <lb />
Force Bill, the object of which was <lb />
to again place the ballot box under <lb />
control of Federal bayonets <lb />
At the Third party convention <lb />
held hero last Saturday Col- Harry <lb />
Skinner and Mr. E. A- spoke, <lb />
declaring themselves Third party- <lb />
This is all that will be said <lb />
in reference to this fact in <lb />
issue, as the editor is now, and has <lb />
been absent for the past week. <lb />
On his return they will doubtless <lb />
receive due attention. <lb />
PROCEEDINGS <lb />
Of Pitt County Democratic <lb />
This Convention met on Thurs- <lb />
day, July 28th, at o'clock and <lb />
was called to order by A. L. Blow. <lb />
Esq., of the Ex- <lb />
Committee. Mr. Blow <lb />
made some timely and <lb />
the applause given him showed <lb />
that he was in and in truth <lb />
presiding over a thoroughly Dem- <lb />
body. Every reference to <lb />
the name of Grover Cleveland was <lb />
cheered to the echo- The roll was <lb />
call-id every delegate with <lb />
probably a single exception an- <lb />
to his name. The Con <lb />
was then declared to be <lb />
open and ready for permanent or- <lb />
A. L- Blow, Esq., was <lb />
elected Chairman. <lb />
R. Williams. Jr., and W. H Rags- <lb />
dale were elected Secretaries. <lb />
On motion the delegates retired <lb />
the purpose of selecting <lb />
gates to the Congressional Con- <lb />
which meets in be <lb />
go to and elect this ticket. J B. Little. <lb />
August 9th, and to elect one from <lb />
each township on Resolutions- <lb />
The delegates returned and re- <lb />
ported to the Convention tho fol- <lb />
lowing as delegates to the Con <lb />
Convention from the <lb />
several <lb />
A. and <lb />
J. <lb />
A. Nichols and <lb />
G. T. Tyson- <lb />
F. W. C <lb />
Dudley, T. A- Thigpen- <lb />
Cobb, <lb />
J. E. Randolph. <lb />
A- James, M. C. S- <lb />
Cherry, S- A- Gainer J- R- Barn- <lb />
hill. <lb />
M- Jones. A. <lb />
B. T. H. Barnhill. F. L. <lb />
Brown. <lb />
R. Congleton. J. <lb />
H. Highsmith, J. W. Page. W. W. <lb />
Thomas. <lb />
J. Little, W- <lb />
D. Keel, J. A. Whichard, D. N. <lb />
Nobles. <lb />
C Nobles. J. J. <lb />
J. H. Mills, J. R <lb />
Grimes, W. W. Tucker. R T. <lb />
son, Robert Dixon, Israel Ed- <lb />
wards. <lb />
A. K. Tucker, <lb />
W. F. Carroll, J. Proctor, <lb />
Holliday. P. W. Arnold, J- H- <lb />
Gray. James Galloway, J. L. Cos. <lb />
Cannon, J. <lb />
A- L- Harrington, C- <lb />
sop, J. W. Cannon, C- C <lb />
and E. C- Blount <lb />
G. Cox, G. W. <lb />
Hart. J. <lb />
Josephus Cox. J. S- Hart and <lb />
Henry Blount. <lb />
L. R. <lb />
L. Davis, W. R. Home and W. G <lb />
Lang. <lb />
L. Barrett, J. <lb />
R. Davis, J. W. Parker and W. E. <lb />
Barrett. <lb />
Falkland. R. R. Cotton, A <lb />
and J. H- Smith. <lb />
King, C V- <lb />
Newton and J. L. Fountain. <lb />
R. King, J. <lb />
Smith, Skinner, A- L. Blow, <lb />
H- F. Keel, W. L. Dudley, B. W. <lb />
Tucker. W. C House, W Flem- <lb />
and O. W. Harrington. <lb />
D. <lb />
John Flanagan, W. H. Smith, <lb />
B- Wilson, Noah Forbes, <lb />
Tucker, H. C Hemby, Edgar Buck, <lb />
F. G- Moore and J. A- Harris. <lb />
X. Fleming and <lb />
and the Southern people at tho <lb />
mercy of Federal soldiers. In all <lb />
this rapine and plunder, attempted <lb />
. humiliation and degradation of <lb />
the Southern people by the <lb />
party. James B- Weaver was <lb />
thoroughly identified with and ac- <lb />
participated in the support <lb />
of that party. <lb />
In contrast with the conduct of <lb />
the Republican party the Demo- <lb />
party of the North, though <lb />
weak in numbers, championed the <lb />
cause of the down-trodden people <lb />
of the South and fought with a <lb />
courage and that made <lb />
the pages of our Congressional <lb />
Record bright with their patriotism <lb />
and heroism in defense of the hon- <lb />
or and safety of the <lb />
This national-patriotic Democrat- <lb />
party, appealing to the better <lb />
feelings of their Northern brethren, <lb />
increased in numbers until it was <lb />
able with the vote of Southern <lb />
States to elect a President in <lb />
and though Mr- was <lb />
vented through the fraud and <lb />
of the Republican party <lb />
from filling the office to which he <lb />
had been chosen, this patriotic <lb />
Democratic party, which had lived <lb />
in defeat in victory, through <lb />
war and peace, appealed again and <lb />
again to their Northern <lb />
for justice to the Southern people, <lb />
till in 1884 thousands and <lb />
of thousands of patriotic <lb />
heeding their appeals, <lb />
enlisted under its banners and <lb />
uniting with their Southern <lb />
elected and inaugurated that <lb />
wise statesman, national patriot; <lb />
honest American, Grover <lb />
land, President of the United <lb />
States. In administering <lb />
duties of hit high office he knew <lb />
no North, no South, no East, no <lb />
West, but looking upon every sec- <lb />
his great country as the <lb />
equal of any other section, he call- <lb />
ed into his cabinet councils, placed <lb />
upon the judicial benches and sent <lb />
abroad as his ministers, some of <lb />
the true men of the South whom <lb />
Weaver had denounced as belong- <lb />
to a party guilty of murder, <lb />
treason, theft, perjury, arson, fraud <lb />
and all other possible crimes. <lb />
He gave to the country ad- <lb />
ministration full of peace and hope <lb />
for the South as well as <lb />
and contentment for every sec <lb />
and restored to his hitherto <lb />
divided country that confidence <lb />
and esteem which should ever <lb />
the American people. <lb />
By integrity the <lb />
collection of the rev --mum, by rigid <lb />
economy U expenditures <lb />
and by frequent Vetoes of <lb />
appropriations and pension <lb />
large surplus was <lb />
luted in the National treasury, and <lb />
toward the close of his term when <lb />
there was no longer need of high <lb />
taxes he appealed to the American <lb />
for a reduction of the <lb />
burdens of the people in message <lb />
which will ever stand as a <lb />
to his courage and to his de- <lb />
to tie best interests of the <lb />
The protectionists <lb />
who fa and grown rich <lb />
under iniquitous tariff laws, <lb />
becoming alarmed at the boldness <lb />
and unyielding honesty of this <lb />
man of the people, combined <lb />
with a portion of the Federal <lb />
soldier element which i-o had <lb />
offended by his vetoes o fraud- <lb />
pensions, accomplished his <lb />
in 1888 by the corrupt <lb />
use of their ill-gotten millions <lb />
And we affirm to-day he was de- <lb />
through these <lb />
because ho was trying <lb />
to lighten the burdens of the <lb />
American farmers and <lb />
The Republican party earning <lb />
into power in both bi <lb />
of Congress and tho <lb />
Department undertook to have <lb />
passed into a law a Force Bill <lb />
under which the ballot box and <lb />
the suffrages of the Southern <lb />
were to be made instruments <lb />
through Federal control of op <lb />
to the South and <lb />
in power of the Republican <lb />
party. It failed in its wicked <lb />
pose, but only to make it more de- <lb />
to still enact into a law <lb />
its accursed provisions if power <lb />
be again placed in the <lb />
hands of this vicious party. <lb />
Some of the would-be leaders of <lb />
the People's Party so-called <lb />
to ridicule the idea that the South- <lb />
people are in any danger of a <lb />
Force Bill or that the Republicans <lb />
have any purpose of passing it if <lb />
again entrusted with power. To <lb />
such persons affecting this in- <lb />
credulity we offer for their <lb />
the following <lb />
The National Alli- <lb />
its Convention at <lb />
passed these <lb />
Tin- President of <lb />
in his annual <lb />
urges the m- <lb />
n measure known as <lb />
Lodge election and <lb />
said bill involves I <lb />
revolution in <lb />
of both state and <lb />
and its will be fatal to <lb />
the autonomy of Stales and to the <lb />
of the citizens; and <lb />
In holy war which we <lb />
have against sectionalism, tin <lb />
of the farmers of the North. <lb />
South. East and West are the citadel- <lb />
around which the heaviest battle. arc <lb />
being fought, and to the end that victory <lb />
may crown our crusade, let <lb />
and unity reign therefore lie it <lb />
Resolved by the National Farmers Al- <lb />
and Industrial Union, in <lb />
Convention assembled, that we <lb />
the passage <lb />
the said election hill and we most earn- <lb />
petitioned our Senators <lb />
to employ all fair and loyal means to <lb />
feat this unpatriotic measure, which can <lb />
result in nothing but evil to our common <lb />
and beloved country. <lb />
Resolved further. That a copy of this <lb />
preamble and resolution be forwarded t <lb />
each Senator Congress. <lb />
On the of December, 1801, <lb />
nine patriotic citizens of this State <lb />
the number such <lb />
distinguished and wise leaders of <lb />
the Farmers Alliance as E- A. <lb />
S. B. Alexander and A. <lb />
issued an Address to the <lb />
Friends and Adherents of the <lb />
Democratic party and used the <lb />
following timely, sagacious warn- <lb />
to the Democratic people of <lb />
the State t <lb />
The of the Democratic of <lb />
the i- to <lb />
proven the of the Force Bill <lb />
which would forever the freedom <lb />
of election, perpetuate rule of ll <lb />
and its vicious meas- <lb />
have so oppressed the <lb />
and ruin the South. We <lb />
have to apprehend this dangerous <lb />
bill, which we all had hoped was dead, <lb />
will again and enacted into a <lb />
law if. by our division-, the Republican <lb />
party should obtain once more full con- <lb />
of the law-making of <lb />
Federal government. <lb />
Since Address above referred <lb />
to was issued the Republican <lb />
party have assembled in National <lb />
Convention and in their platform <lb />
have declared to do the very thing <lb />
that these men above mentioned <lb />
said they would do if again en- <lb />
listed with power, and one has <lb />
but to read the Republican plat- <lb />
form adopted at Minneapolis to <lb />
see how sagaciously these gentle- <lb />
men foresaw the purposes of this <lb />
party and how wisely and well <lb />
they warned the people- of North <lb />
Carolina against permitting this <lb />
party again coming into power <lb />
through division in our ranks <lb />
North Carolina. <lb />
The Hon. S- B. Alexander, a <lb />
member of Congress, an honest, <lb />
devoted North Carolinian, who is <lb />
in daily intercourse with <lb />
can members of both branches of <lb />
Congress, writes under date of <lb />
July 13th. 1892. Republicans <lb />
in the Senate and House of Rep- <lb />
stand squarely by the <lb />
Force bill, and no one here doubts <lb />
their intention to pass it if they <lb />
win in the coming <lb />
In view of this statement of <lb />
facts we, the Democrats of Pitt <lb />
county, appeal to our brethren to <lb />
unite with us in a cordial, hearty <lb />
support of the National, State <lb />
County tickets, and in a <lb />
effort to plane in power <lb />
in the National government that <lb />
party which stood heroically by <lb />
when the Republican party sought, <lb />
and is now seeking by vicious leg- <lb />
to fasten upon for all <lb />
time its coils and its burdens, and <lb />
let us stand together to keep in <lb />
power in North Carolina and in Pitt <lb />
that party which has been <lb />
our shield and our hope for these <lb />
many years- <lb />
Report adopted with much en- <lb />
The convention then <lb />
proceeded to the nomination of <lb />
candidates for the various offices <lb />
which resulted as <lb />
M. Mooring. <lb />
Fob Tile House I. K. Wither- <lb />
and Frederick La whom. <lb />
For W. <lb />
Fob of <lb />
H. Harding- <lb />
John Flanagan. <lb />
W- E- Warren. <lb />
Fob D. <lb />
Messrs. G. B- King and W. G. <lb />
Mizell were appointed to notify <lb />
the nominees of their nomination. <lb />
They all came and accept- <lb />
ed the in sound Dem- <lb />
speeches with tho <lb />
of O M. Mooring and J. I. <lb />
Cox who for sufficient reasons had <lb />
to decline, at tho same time <lb />
their united support and effort <lb />
for the election of the entire <lb />
nominees. Mr. F. G- <lb />
James was nominated for the <lb />
Senate in place Mr. Mooring <lb />
and Mr. Jno. Kilpatrick for <lb />
Surveyor in place of Mr. J. D. <lb />
Cox. Mr. James cairn- forward <lb />
and accepted the nomination in a <lb />
and patriotic speech. <lb />
Mr- Kilpatrick was not in town. <lb />
The following resolution was <lb />
t hen passed <lb />
Resolved. That we endorse wise, <lb />
conservative and patriotic course of our <lb />
pit-sent faithful representative in Con- <lb />
the lion. W. A. B. Branch and <lb />
commend him to our fellow <lb />
for <lb />
On motion the Convention ad- <lb />
A- L Blow, Chair. <lb />
R. t, . <lb />
W. H. <lb />
Immediately after the adjourn- <lb />
of the Convention the <lb />
Township Commit- <lb />
tees met and elected the following <lb />
County Executive Committee for <lb />
the year <lb />
Central Committee Alex. L. <lb />
Blow, Chairman, R. Williams, Jr., <lb />
J. B. Cherry, T. J. Jar- <lb />
vis, John Flanagan- <lb />
Beaver J. Anderson. <lb />
A. Thigpen. <lb />
A- Gainer. <lb />
H. Little. <lb />
C. Nobles. <lb />
It. Forbes. <lb />
King. <lb />
L. Barrett. <lb />
Greenville A. L. Blow. <lb />
J. Nobles. <lb />
Swift B- <lb />
On account of want of space the <lb />
proceedings of tho third party <lb />
Convention could not appear in <lb />
this issue- They will published <lb />
in full next with all necessary <lb />
comment. <lb />
THE DEMOCRATIC CANVASS. <lb />
The gentlemen named below <lb />
will address the voters of the State <lb />
at the. times and places s <lb />
Elias Carr and J. Jarvis, <lb />
Dallas, county, August 5- <lb />
Lincolnton. Lincoln county, Sat- <lb />
August C <lb />
Shelby, Cleveland county. Mon- <lb />
day, August <lb />
Rutherfordton, Rutherford conn- <lb />
Tuesday, August <lb />
Marion. county. Wed- <lb />
August <lb />
J. C Scarborough at Lexington, <lb />
Davidson county, Saturday. Au- <lb />
gust <lb />
Coke and J. C. Scar- <lb />
borough at Iredell <lb />
county. Tuesday, August and at <lb />
Carthage. Moore county. Tuesday, <lb />
August <lb />
C B. Aycock at Winston. <lb />
ford county. Monday, Aug. 8th. <lb />
Oct. Coke at Dunn. Harnett <lb />
county, Thursday, August 4th- <lb />
Oct. Coke and W. Mason <lb />
at Lillington, Harnett county, <lb />
Tuesday. August 9th. <lb />
R. A. at <lb />
Surry county, Monday, Aug. 22nd. <lb />
K. A- Glenn and J. C <lb />
rough at Lexington. Davidson <lb />
county, Saturday, August <lb />
Oct. Coke and T. J. Jarvis at <lb />
Concord, county. Friday, <lb />
August 12th. <lb />
Thomas W. Mason at <lb />
August and at <lb />
wick com August at night, <lb />
and at Lockwood's Folly Bridge, <lb />
Brunswick county. August <lb />
A H. A. Williams at Hillsboro, <lb />
August 9th- <lb />
Hon. Elias Carr and <lb />
Jarvis at Cabarrus <lb />
August 12th- <lb />
C- B- Aycock at Rosabel. Bertie <lb />
county, August Bethel, Pitt <lb />
county. August Whitakers. <lb />
county, August ; <lb />
Halifax county. August <lb />
; Laurels, Franklin, August , <lb />
Kittrell, Vance August <lb />
Coke at barbecue near <lb />
August Eagle <lb />
Rock, county, August <lb />
Auburn, Wake county, August <lb />
Newport, Carteret August <lb />
Smith's Store, Onslow county. <lb />
August Richlands, Onslow <lb />
county, August Tuckahoe, <lb />
Jones county, August ; Beaver <lb />
Creek, Jones county. August 23- <lb />
F M. <lb />
R. H- Cowan. Secy. <lb />
Wilson Collegiate Institute, <lb />
n. a <lb />
For Town Ladies. Strictly <lb />
The Forty-Third Session <lb />
Monday. Sept. 1893. <lb />
A most thorough mid <lb />
y course st with a full <lb />
i course equal to that of any <lb />
College In South. <lb />
Best facilities the study of <lb />
and Art. t Scholarship <lb />
usually high. Healthful location. <lb />
and grounds large and pleasantly <lb />
Moderate ch-rues. <lb />
And on mi plication. <lb />
SUBSCRIBE TO THE <lb />
STATE <lb />
X. C. <lb />
DAILY WEEKLY. <lb />
Latest news from all j <lb />
of the world. Pres <lb />
Special Has tin largest dally <lb />
circulation in the State. more <lb />
State than any other <lb />
daily in <lb />
mouths <lb />
33.00; three months SI <lb />
Weakly, par In clubs of <lb />
lire or over <lb />
T- it. Editor. <lb />
B. W. <lb />
Do yon intend to plant a fall <lb />
crop of Potatoes It is prob- <lb />
able they will bring a <lb />
good price this winter . <lb />
Yon cannot afford to plant them <lb />
without manuring them <lb />
heavily with a good Fer- <lb />
It been <lb />
shown <lb />
the past season <lb />
that yon can <lb />
not make <lb />
Good Potatoes without a good <lb />
Guano. We have just what <lb />
you need and want. <lb />
FERTILIZERS <lb />
are the purest, highest grade on <lb />
the marker, and all who used <lb />
them last spring say they are <lb />
the best for Potatoes they ever <lb />
used. We have a lull supply <lb />
on hand. Call to see us and we <lb />
will explain the merits of the <lb />
different kinds. <lb />
YOUNG <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Notice to Shippers. <lb />
it order to make more convenient mid <lb />
economical use of the vessels now em- <lb />
ployed in the North Carolina <lb />
and thus to better serve the inter- <lb />
of shipper, the <lb />
decided to merge their <lb />
respective Not <lb />
folk and <lb />
Washington, K. into <lb />
one be known <lb />
The Norfolk, Washington Direct <lb />
LINE. <lb />
Connecting at Norfolk with <lb />
Hay line, for Baltimore. <lb />
The Clyde lot <lb />
The Old Dominion Line, for New <lb />
York. <lb />
A Miners Line for <lb />
ton and <lb />
The Water Lines for Viv., <lb />
and Washington. C. <lb />
At with <lb />
The Atlantic North Carolina If. R <lb />
At Washington with <lb />
The Tar River Steamers. <lb />
Also Culling at Island. N C. <lb />
The new line will m <lb />
Service, with such additional sailings a <lb />
will lie.-t suit the needs of the business. <lb />
NO IN <lb />
The direct of these steamers, <lb />
and the freedom from handling, arc <lb />
the advantages this <lb />
oilers. The following gentlemen have <lb />
been appointed Agents of tho New <lb />
at Norfolk. Va. <lb />
John Son. at <lb />
S. It. Gray, at N. C. <lb />
S. C. Whitehurst, at 1-land. <lb />
J. Cherry. N. C. <lb />
The will leave Norfolk <lb />
on May from wharf <lb />
on Water street- Clyde <lb />
and between the piers of I he Clyde <lb />
Line and Old Steamship Co. <lb />
II. A. <lb />
V. M. Old Co. <lb />
W. P. CLYDE CO., <lb />
Clyde Line. <lb />
No-folk, May <lb />
CHERRY <lb />
Tobacco Growers<lb />
Tobacco Furnace <lb />
The best Invention ever for <lb />
With it you have absolute <lb />
control over heating your barn, <lb />
and it removes <lb />
All Danger of lire. <lb />
Two cures per week can lie <lb />
made in the same barn <lb />
co of different degrees of <lb />
can be cured at one time in <lb />
the same barn Saves labor and <lb />
fuel. <lb />
For further particulars ad- <lb />
PHELPS, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
this paper when write. <lb />
TO <lb />
-----If you want lo <lb />
---------DEALERS IN-------- <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 our <lb />
town. And while we are not sell <lb />
at cost we beg lo announce <lb />
that we think we can and will <lb />
any prices on different <lb />
lines of Goods by W <lb />
throw out no baits to entrap <lb />
To one and all we extend <lb />
a cordial welcome to <lb />
will be pleased to serve yon with <lb />
any goods in the 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 />
and Willow Ware, Harness, <lb />
------o <lb />
and Collars, Farming Tools <lb />
I Mows 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 various line try <lb />
Yours, anxious for trade. <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb />
Dissolution Notice. <lb />
The partnership heretofore existing <lb />
W. B. Brown and S. T. Hooker. <lb />
its Brown is hereby <lb />
mums All who <lb />
are indebted to tho old please <lb />
settle with s. X. <lb />
W. B. BROWN, <lb />
S. T. <lb />
I will i till business sit the <lb />
old stand and solicit liberal <lb />
age bestowed upon toe old or <lb />
Will continue under the old Uric <lb />
of Brown Hooker. Mr. Brown will <lb />
continue as <lb />
HOOKER. <lb />
in the of a PIANO and from <lb />
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb />
in purchase of Organ <lb />
ADOLPH COHN, <lb />
URNS, If. C. <lb />
fur <lb />
who is now torn <lb />
the as HIGH <lb />
PIANOS, <lb />
gabbed for workmanship mid <lb />
mid by nearly all the <lb />
in the <lb />
U. who IS lit this <lb />
time cue of the and In- <lb />
of the day. Thirteen new <lb />
patents on this high grade Piano- <lb />
Also the A EVANS <lb />
RIGHT PIANO which been sold by <lb />
for Ax in the eastern <lb />
part of this and up to till time has <lb />
entire Upright <lb />
will lie sold at from <lb />
in Oak, <lb />
Walnut cases.<lb />
from to l in or Oak <lb />
Tea years experience in the music <lb />
has enabled him to handle <lb />
nothing hut standard goods and he. does <lb />
to ray mil sell any <lb />
instrument about H per cent. <lb />
other agent arc now offer- <lb />
Refer to Carolina. <lb />
A Hogshead Story. <lb />
wish by this means to tell people <lb />
that nave prepared and am still <lb />
paring a large lot of material for <lb />
Hogsheads. And to make it as con- <lb />
s possible for my customers <lb />
have derided to run two wagons on the <lb />
road to deliver at most convenient <lb />
places. And I further promise that I <lb />
will efforts to put up <lb />
size quality of Hogsheads as the de- <lb />
may want. And think can com- <lb />
in price with any. <lb />
will also pay special attention to <lb />
making and Brackets for trim- <lb />
ming may build. <lb />
Please see me before placing your or- <lb />
or address me at N. C. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
A. O. COX. <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb />
OF <lb />
CARTS <lb />
My Factory is well equipped with the best nothing <lb />
but WORK. We Veep tip with limes and style. <lb />
material used in all work, All styles of Springs are you can from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King <lb />
Also keep on hand a full of ready <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb />
he year round, which we will sell as as i <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
the people of this and surrounding counties tor past favors we hope t <lb />
merit a continuance of the same <lb />
T. <lb />
J. L. SUGG. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT <lb />
N. C. <lb />
OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds placed in <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-GLASS FIRE <lb />
Homer Military School, Oxford N. C, <lb />
buildings, hot and cold baths, gymnasium, healthful climate, <lb />
surroundings, numbers limited. A model home for <lb />
sent on application, w <lb />
ESTABLISHED <lb />
. I. A. ANDREWS, <lb />
Headquarters for the following lines of Goods <lb />
Car load MM Boxes <lb />
Oar load Rib Side Meat. <lb />
Car load Flour, all grades. <lb />
Car load Seed <lb />
Star Lye. <lb />
Cases Bread Powders. <lb />
Soap. <lb />
Cases Cherries and <lb />
Full line Case <lb />
inn Boxes Tobacco, <lb />
-0 Boxes Starch. <lb />
in Barrels Rico <lb />
Barrels Candy. <lb />
Barrels Gall A Ax Snuff. <lb />
Barrels Railroad Mills Snuff. <lb />
Barrels <lb />
Taper Ac. <lb />
XV. C.<lb />
i A <lb />
Om <lb />
and Quickly <lb />
M BOOM. is <lb />
and <lb />
For Accident Insurance by the year in one of <lb />
the bet in <lb />
ft<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017558_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
A Startling Fact <lb />
. <lb />
WONDERFUL <lb />
STILL BUNKING <lb />
THE GREAT <lb />
COST SALE. <lb />
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
August. <lb />
My ain't it hot. <lb />
Five more month- <lb />
Watermelons ire high yet. <lb />
you . it will rain soon <lb />
The arc somewhat shorter. <lb />
The summer resorts are popular. <lb />
The universal remark hew <lb />
But there a crowd here Thurs- <lb />
day. <lb />
The farmers are the <lb />
eye. <lb />
The forests will soon put on its autumn <lb />
colors. <lb />
Cotton Seed Meal tor sale at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
There Is a phonograph in our midst. <lb />
It is wonder. <lb />
The New Home Sewing for <lb />
MS at Bros. <lb />
Dent forget the when you <lb />
want flue Job work. <lb />
The cooled the atmosphere very <lb />
nicely but it is hot yet. <lb />
Mr. Moses lot a barn of <lb />
by fire on last Thursday. <lb />
New, Home Sewing Machine and <lb />
all at Brown Bros. <lb />
See advertisement In this issue of <lb />
Raleigh state Chronicle. <lb />
New Cream Cheese and Y. State <lb />
at tin Brick Store. <lb />
Attention is culled to the notice by K. <lb />
A. Move, Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
to eat something Boss <lb />
Bis-nits at Old Brick Store. <lb />
Cash given for Hides. <lb />
and Furs at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Cheapest Furniture. Bedsteads and <lb />
Mattresses at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
When did yon the meeting was <lb />
called to organize the Hotel <lb />
There are five Mondays, Tuesdays. <lb />
Wednesdays and in August. <lb />
A neck tie fan is all the clothing <lb />
you want to put on this weather to keep <lb />
cool. <lb />
Twenty-live cents until the Sec- <lb />
Subscribe now and lose none of <lb />
the news. <lb />
forget to tell your neighbor that <lb />
they can get the until after <lb />
the election for cents. <lb />
Ask your neighbor to to the <lb />
Reflector you can get it now till after <lb />
the election for 2.1 cents. <lb />
The colored bass ball club of this town <lb />
played the club of Kinston last week and <lb />
were successful in winning the game. <lb />
Collegiate Institute advertise- <lb />
appears in this issue. The Fall <lb />
term of this excellent school commences <lb />
September 1892. <lb />
The dog days began the 3rd of July <lb />
and ends August 11th. During this <lb />
period or the dog star, rises and <lb />
sets nearly with the sun. <lb />
The ruin that visited this section Sun- <lb />
day was general. We have heard sever- <lb />
say they had had a delightful <lb />
shower. It was what we want- <lb />
ed. <lb />
You about tomatoes, but Allen <lb />
Warren Sou at their Nursery can lead <lb />
the State. Mr. Warren banded in to the <lb />
Reflector as large as we ever saw. <lb />
They would over-run a peck measure. <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Cherry went to Tarboro last <lb />
week. <lb />
Mr. J. II. Hudson, and family left for <lb />
Florida last week. <lb />
Miss Bettie was in town last <lb />
week visiting friends. <lb />
Miss Ora Whichard returned Monday <lb />
from a visit to <lb />
Capt. C A. While left Monday morn- <lb />
lug for Panacea Springs. <lb />
Mrs. R. Home returned to <lb />
last week from the west. <lb />
Capt. Swift of Snow Hill, <lb />
was on our streets last week. <lb />
Mr. J. Williamson left for <lb />
Friday morning to -pond a while. <lb />
We were glad to see Mr. Carlo- Harris <lb />
out after a recent of sickness. <lb />
Mr. J. C. Lanier in Town last week <lb />
shaking hands with his many friends. <lb />
Mr. C. O. Joyner, of Baltimore, was a <lb />
welcome visitor to Mr town last week. <lb />
Mrs. M. M. Nelson returned last week <lb />
from Morehead City and Moore <lb />
Co. <lb />
Misses Alma Sugg and <lb />
spent a few days last week in the <lb />
try- <lb />
Miss Jennie James left for Wilmington <lb />
last week to visit her sister, Mrs. Hardy <lb />
Fennell. <lb />
Miss Bessie returned from <lb />
Monday she been visit- <lb />
friends for sometime. <lb />
Misses Ellington of <lb />
Raleigh and Miss Cotton of <lb />
are visiting Miss Rosa Forbes. <lb />
Miss Dora Calf county, and <lb />
Miss Randolph of were visiting Mrs. <lb />
Ola Forties during the past week. <lb />
John Cherry returned from <lb />
Ocracoke a few days ago and report <lb />
plenty of fish and a pleasant trip. <lb />
Misses Olive Joyner and Bettie Tyson <lb />
and Master Charlie and Leon <lb />
Joyner from Morehead last week. <lb />
Miss Lena Harriss who has been <lb />
awhile in Scotland Neck with friends <lb />
left last week for Washington to visit <lb />
friend- and relatives. <lb />
The editor and wife left last week to <lb />
attend the Press Convention at Charlotte. <lb />
They will take an extended trip to Wash- <lb />
City, New York and Falls <lb />
returning the last of this week. <lb />
Dr. Harman in Wilmington. <lb />
Dr. D. S. Harman, the Russian <lb />
is now permanently located in <lb />
N. C, and has opened a suit of <lb />
rooms just below the New Hanover <lb />
Bank, on Princess street. He is very <lb />
nicely situated and has as pleasant room <lb />
as we ever saw. You go in the main en- <lb />
trance, up one flight of stairs turn <lb />
to the right, where you are met by it <lb />
polite assistant who heartily entertains <lb />
yon until the doctor can be summoned. <lb />
The doctor, in his usual smiles, enters <lb />
from an adjoining room certainly <lb />
makes you feel at home. He will then <lb />
conduct you through, showing you and <lb />
explaining the different machines for <lb />
testing the eye. His rooms arc known as <lb />
Nos. and -I and are in the Allen build <lb />
They are elegantly fitted up. His <lb />
callers through the day arc numerous <lb />
and are always welcomed and treated <lb />
with great courtesy. Besides the work <lb />
in Wilmington he has patients from all <lb />
over the State from South Carolina <lb />
and troubled with <lb />
eyes call to him and have glasses <lb />
fitted. Every one knows when he was <lb />
here he did a great deal of work for per- <lb />
sons all over this and adjoining counties <lb />
and lie gave satisfaction even- instance. <lb />
We wore shown a sample of tobacco of ls l first-class gentleman and acts <lb />
KINSTON VB. GREENVILLE. <lb />
The Second Nines Play Two <lb />
Cornea Out <lb />
Victorious in Both <lb />
And Yet Another. <lb />
Chapel HIM, May 1809. <lb />
Mrs. Joe you have <lb />
made your Formula known to Hie world, <lb />
I know the ingredients to he good for the <lb />
diseases for which yon.- Remedy Is <lb />
recommended, and I not hesitate to <lb />
use it my practice on any case which <lb />
may need It, as I have goo I <lb />
from its use. I am very <lb />
A. B. M. <lb />
Fall Cant, <lb />
hi Telegraphy. Instruction <lb />
In Music and Art. Cornet I inn I. <lb />
Location famous for and Health. <lb />
not prepared for College <lb />
there Is a <lb />
Complete Preparatory Department. <lb />
Burgeons. Preparatory Medical <lb />
So for medical <lb />
rates. particulars, address <lb />
SCHOOL, Winston, N. C. <lb />
RARE BARGAINS<lb />
Bargains are being offered by the low hi iced merchant of Greenville <lb />
THE <lb />
that yon can get choice <lb />
DRY GOODS <lb />
DRESS GOODS, <lb />
Clothing, <lb />
NOTIONS, <lb />
HOOTS AM SHOE <lb />
cost tot at <lb />
M. R. LANG'S. <lb />
this season's curing that is the best we <lb />
have seen yet. One leaf measured <lb />
inches and Mass graded as lemon <lb />
per. It was cured by Mr. F. M. Smith. <lb />
The tine, handsome family residence of <lb />
Mr. Andrew Joy tier's was entirely con- <lb />
by tire one day last week. The <lb />
contents were saved. There was no In- <lb />
and the loss falls heavily on Mr, <lb />
Joyner. <lb />
Messrs. J. A. M. II. Holt, proprietors <lb />
of Oak Ridge Institute, have issued a <lb />
very handsome, illustrated for <lb />
1891-92. This is one of the most flour- <lb />
schools in the South receiving a <lb />
very patronage from many <lb />
States. <lb />
will sell hats, <lb />
flowers, gauze ribbons, pictures, <lb />
and fancy ware right at cost. Also <lb />
a beautiful line of laces, etc. <lb />
Give me a call before going elsewhere <lb />
and be convinced of the great reduction <lb />
n prices. Mrs. Kan-nib Joyner. <lb />
An entertainment was given in the <lb />
Opera House last Tuesday night by the <lb />
amateurs of Greenville. A fair audience <lb />
greeted them, and as usual was well en- <lb />
The proceeds were devoted <lb />
to the Catholic church. All acquitted <lb />
themselves admirably, and the lack of <lb />
space prevents us saying more. <lb />
On last Saturday the meeting for the <lb />
organization of a military company was <lb />
held in the old armor- and committees <lb />
were appointed to report Friday, <lb />
and then the company will be organized <lb />
and officers appointed. Every one inter- <lb />
in a military company are invited <lb />
to attend this meeting Friday afternoon. <lb />
Mr. John O. Salisbury, of Hamilton, <lb />
Martin county, had a large black, mi. -e <lb />
mule to stray off from lot of Mrs. A. <lb />
Joyner. near Farmville, on last <lb />
night. Any information of the where- <lb />
abouts of the mule will be thankfully <lb />
received at Mr. John store. <lb />
Since writing the above My. Salisbury <lb />
has found his mule and requested us to <lb />
return thanks to Mr. William Harris, <lb />
found animal, and others for kind- <lb />
I take this method of notifying those in <lb />
and Mecklenburg counties to <lb />
whom I have sold the Tobacco <lb />
Furnace that I will leave Greenville on <lb />
the 3rd inst. for that section and w ill <lb />
reach there an soon as I can to give any <lb />
instruction necessary. If there should <lb />
be any trouble in raising heat raise the <lb />
front end of flue or add more smoke <lb />
stack. I hereby forbid all persons using <lb />
any part or parts of my method without <lb />
my authority. g. <lb />
I would like to say to my friend in the <lb />
above sections that this method of Mr. <lb />
for curing tobacco U giving <lb />
satisfaction all through this section <lb />
of the State. W. H. <lb />
squarely with every one, and the people <lb />
all over the State have learned to trust <lb />
him. Any one troubled with their eyes <lb />
can call on him at his office in <lb />
ton and be examined and have glasses <lb />
made for them. Examination free and <lb />
satisfaction assured in every instance. <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
MALE ACADEMY <lb />
The next session of this School will <lb />
begin on Monday. August 29th, <lb />
The advantages offered will be <lb />
or to those of any previous session. En- <lb />
tire guaranteed every patron. <lb />
Board can be had at lower rates than at <lb />
any similar school In Eastern Carolina. <lb />
We propose to do best work for boys <lb />
that has ever been done in the town, <lb />
and challenge proof to the contrary. <lb />
Term- are as follows, payable <lb />
Primary English per month, <lb />
Intermediate English per month, 2.00 <lb />
Higher English per month, 2.50 <lb />
Languages each, extra, <lb />
When you are in town call to see me <lb />
or write me from your homes. I <lb />
will be cheerfully given. If <lb />
necessary a competent assistant will he <lb />
employed. <lb />
W. H. <lb />
Greenville, N. C, July 27.1892. <lb />
Last Friday was a Held day for <lb />
The rousing Democratic <lb />
the day before had stirred up the <lb />
and put them in excellent fighting <lb />
trim. felt like could oust <lb />
almost anything, and the day's sequel <lb />
proved that were not very far wrong. <lb />
Two games of base ball had been <lb />
ranged for between the second nine of <lb />
Kinston and the nine of Green- <lb />
On the arrival of the train at <lb />
o'clock the Kinston boys put In their <lb />
and our boys were soon fully <lb />
persuaded even by their appearance that <lb />
those Kinston fellows could play ball, <lb />
and It would a good effort all <lb />
around to show them that Greenville <lb />
could play even better. The boys <lb />
met the Kinston club at the depot and took <lb />
them at once to Hotel where they <lb />
were to lie quartered for the day. The <lb />
first game was called at o'clock with <lb />
Kinston at the bat, and the inning show- <lb />
ed a score of for the visitors. Green- <lb />
ville then came and went out as they <lb />
came without a score. The boys said <lb />
this was complimentary to the visitors <lb />
and issued an edict that no more runs <lb />
were to be allowed the Kinston nine. <lb />
How well they obeyed this instruction <lb />
may be seen at the end of the <lb />
innings only had been agreed upon In <lb />
the beginning of the game <lb />
Kinston, innings, scored I runs. <lb />
Greenville, innings, scored runs. <lb />
The afternoon game of nine innings <lb />
was called at o'clock M. This game <lb />
resulted In the following <lb />
Kinston, innings, scored runs. <lb />
Greenville. innings, scored runs. <lb />
The weather was hot, being <lb />
the hottest day so far of the year, and no <lb />
one that the boys would lie able <lb />
to play the nine Innings. They did, <lb />
however, in the finest humor, and seemed <lb />
to be but little jailed at the close of the <lb />
game. The following composed the <lb />
Kinston Sugg, Jackson, <lb />
Wade, Harper, Morton, Cox <lb />
and Einstein. In the afternoon they <lb />
played Greenville's nine <lb />
was B. C. Smith, P. O. James, Louis <lb />
Lawrence, Robert E. Cox. J. B. White, <lb />
Ambrose Johnston, Charlie James. Zeb <lb />
Hooker, Charlie Barrett. It. M. More <lb />
and Hooker in the morning <lb />
game. <lb />
The pitching of Mr. II. C. Smith, with <lb />
the exception of the 8th inning in the <lb />
afternoon, was superb, and O. James <lb />
behind the bat was almost The <lb />
finest playing, however, of both nines <lb />
when you consider the size was that of <lb />
Charlie James. He won the applause of <lb />
everybody. He is probably the best <lb />
player in the State to his age and size. <lb />
The best playing among the visitors was <lb />
done by Jackson behind the bat. He is <lb />
a tine catch. Mr. Alex of <lb />
was umpire. <lb />
The very best of feeling prevailed and <lb />
the Kinston boys impressed everybody <lb />
with whom they came in contact that <lb />
they were thorough gentlemen. Green- <lb />
ville will always welcome them and <lb />
promise them a pleasant stay among us. <lb />
Our boys can't help but feel a little <lb />
elated at their victory, and can <lb />
only suggest to the visitors that they <lb />
must, if they CAN, return the <lb />
at the next games to be played in <lb />
Kinston. This notice is given time so <lb />
that Kinston may practice a little In <lb />
order that may at least make it in- <lb />
for boys when they return <lb />
the visit. <lb />
Prices are reduced on all Sum- <lb />
mer Goods in order to close <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 Patterns, only <lb />
a few left, reduced to <lb />
White Goods, former price <lb />
Ginghams worth to <lb />
now selling at and Bleach- <lb />
ed and Domestics <lb />
at any price- All fine Sum- <lb />
mer Wooled Dress Goods at <lb />
your own price. All of our <lb />
Stammer Clothing to be sold at <lb />
cost. Don't forget our Sample <lb />
Notions, such as Shirts, Sus- <lb />
Collars, Cuffs, Hand <lb />
and reduced to and . kerchiefs, Gloves, <lb />
inch White Lawn and Pans, A <lb />
Dress Styles Outing and lot of Shoes and <lb />
Beautiful French Taffetas worth j Slippers at factory prices, <lb />
now Scotch Zephyr saving yon the middle man's <lb />
hams worth Best; profit. <lb />
To our many customers say inspect our <lb />
goods before buying. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
Opposite Old Brick Store. <lb />
C. T. M U N F O R D, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
G. E. HARRIS, <lb />
DEALER IN-------- <lb />
x. o <lb />
a a t a Mil <lb />
a load of your beat and <lb />
will show that <lb />
have best tobacco in the <lb />
GOLDEN BELT. <lb />
A large number f buyers have de- <lb />
their intentions of <lb />
------coming to------ <lb />
I GREENVILLE. <lb />
new Warehouse just been <lb />
completed and is one of the best <lb />
equipped warehouses in the State. <lb />
We have free Stables for your <lb />
j teams. <lb />
charge you nothing for <lb />
and storage. <lb />
have an experienced force to <lb />
your tobacco and will see that <lb />
you get lull value for every pound. <lb />
Presents in household and kitchen <lb />
I . furniture and provisions <lb />
Given Away <lb />
ion our opening day to any worthy <lb />
white couple that will be married pub- <lb />
in our house on September 1st. <lb />
I The list of present and donors <lb />
below. <lb />
Remember the day and date and <lb />
Iconic ail to sec the Knot Tied. <lb />
I Eastern Warehouse, <lb />
O L. Joyner and Alex. A Pram. <lb />
U RISEN VI N. C.<lb />
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb />
-------AND OF------ <lb />
Country Produce <lb />
Bring me all of your Chickens, Eggs, Ducks, <lb />
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the <lb />
highest market price for them and pay in spot <lb />
cash. <lb />
II you have any thing to ship I will attend t it tor you on n small <lb />
Call sec me. <lb />
JNO. S. CONGLETON. <lb />
THE OF C <lb />
to the bay its surrounding counties, a line of the following goo <lb />
not to be excelled in this market. And to be an <lb />
pure straight good. GOODS all kinds, NOTION'S. CLOTHING, <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATH CAPS, BOOTS SHOES, <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SUITERS, FURNITURE and MOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS. and QUEENS <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER <lb />
kinds, Hay, Lime, and <lb />
HAIR, HARNESS. ADDLES <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade Wholesale <lb />
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent Cash, Bread Prep- <lb />
ration and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices, White Lead and pure Lin- <lb />
Oil, and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Suit and Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a I guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
Joyner Bed Boon Hot. C. W. <lb />
Chamber Sot. S. E. Handsome Ranging D. D. <lb />
Complete Kitchen Furniture. M. it. Lang, <lb />
Dr. Tail- Window Shades. A. J. Berg, <lb />
Smyrna Hug. T. Fainting, Mrs. Fannie Joy- <lb />
j nor, Pillow .-ii W. II r Towels. <lb />
J Brow n Hooker, S. M. Mirror. K. <lb />
I Photo of each Groom. D. Which- <lb />
subscription to Jack Smith, doe Spool <lb />
I Cotton. Miss Forties. E. <lb />
Zeno Moore, I. C. Limp. <lb />
Brown Bleached Domestic. W. II. White, <lb />
J. L. Dipper. T. doz Clothe <lb />
Harris, l Bale Hay. W. B. Wilson. <lb />
in the Flour. . L. Brown, pounds Sugar. <lb />
Son, pounds Roasted Coffee. I. C. Smith, Coffee. <lb />
W, H. Cox, ID pounds Flour. A. Andrews, pounds Flour. <lb />
. S. Smith. pounds Coffee. D. W. ID pounds Flour. <lb />
James Long, pound French Candy. Tyson Bawls, <lb />
B. Ch. A, Marriage License. <lb />
J Ceremony to lake place at o'clock M. will be <lb />
It any minister the couple may choose. The only <lb />
, i Tor the couple is to make known their intentions to <lb />
Alex, one week September 1st, ISM, who <lb />
i will keep the matter a profound secret that day. Call early <lb />
laud avoid the I nth. <lb />
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS- <lb />
THE CENTRAL <lb />
Tobacco Warehouse <lb />
OAK RIDGE INSTITUTE <lb />
POUNDED IN 1852. <lb />
A CLASSICAL AND COMMERCIAL SCHOOL <lb />
Elegant building and thorough equip- <lb />
patronage from all the <lb />
Southern States. Beautiful and h <lb />
situation in view of the mountains. <lb />
Reasonable. <lb />
Summer School <lb />
Fall Term begins August <lb />
For Illustrated address, <lb />
J. A. M. n. HOLT, <lb />
Oak Ridge, H. C. <lb />
YOU <lb />
WILL <lb />
FIND <lb />
YOU <lb />
WILL <lb />
FIND <lb />
AT <lb />
-THE <lb />
begin second season on <lb />
AUGUST 1892. <lb />
Under the same Management, <lb />
and desires to thank the <lb />
Planters of Pitt, Le- <lb />
and Greene for <lb />
their liberal <lb />
patronage <lb />
last <lb />
year and solicits a continuance <lb />
of their favors. Especial <lb />
given to Shipments. Try <lb />
Greenville Institute. <lb />
Both <lb />
Fall Term begins <lb />
MM, Dec. Si, ISM. <lb />
for <lb />
Tuition lo Music 812.75; <lb />
Hoard <lb />
For further particulars see or address, <lb />
Z. I. <lb />
A school unsure for boys and girls is <lb />
not safe for either Duckett. <lb />
WALTERS <lb />
Notice. <lb />
State North Carolina, In the <lb />
Pitt County. Superior Court. <lb />
Eliza Stocks, J. T. Allen and wife Min- <lb />
Allen, T. B. Allen wife <lb />
Pattie Stocks, Cora Stocks, William <lb />
Stocks, Annie Stocks, Stocks, <lb />
Queenie Stocks and Stocks, the <lb />
last six minors by their friend J. T. <lb />
Allen. <lb />
Against <lb />
Home Benefit Association, defendants <lb />
The defendant above named Is hereby <lb />
notified to be and appear before the <lb />
Judge of Superior at a court <lb />
to be held for the county of Pitt, at the <lb />
Court House In Greenville, on the 2nd <lb />
after the 1st Monday of <lb />
It being the 19th day of September, <lb />
1893, and answer the complaint which <lb />
rill be deposited in the of the <lb />
Clerk of Court of said <lb />
within the three days of said <lb />
term, and let said defendant take notice <lb />
that If fail to answer the said com- <lb />
plaint within the time by law <lb />
the plaintiffs will apply to the court for <lb />
the relief demanded In the complaint. <lb />
Given hand and seal of said <lb />
court, day of <lb />
. A <lb />
Court. <lb />
MADE. <lb />
Lantern Globes. <lb />
Tobacco Knives. <lb />
Fruit Jars-All Sizes <lb />
PURE APPLE <lb />
VINEGAR <lb />
which is guaranteed to keep pickle or <lb />
money will be refunded. <lb />
In fact we sell you anything you want <lb />
from a box of matches to a suit of <lb />
and guarantee the price to be as <lb />
cheap as the cheapest. <lb />
We will buy anything you have to <lb />
Call and try us. <lb />
PRICE STORE. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
The Central Warehouse, <lb />
TARBORO, N. <lb />
us Street, in rear of Dr. D. L. <lb />
office. <lb />
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb />
I take pleasure in informing my <lb />
friends and the public generally <lb />
my. <lb />
Is now open. A successful career of <lb />
YEARS .-. <lb />
is a proof of the ion I ways give. <lb />
My Work Speaks for Itself. <lb />
Call early and examine <lb />
Hoping to gain your confidence, and <lb />
merit your favor, l am <lb />
Very respectfully, <lb />
THOMAS <lb />
Sale. <lb />
By virtue of an order of the Clerk of <lb />
the Superior Court of Pitt county in <lb />
case of F. G. James, administrator of G- <lb />
W, Johnston, against Louisa 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 described piece or parcel of <lb />
land, situated of Pitt, and <lb />
in Greenville township, lying on north <lb />
side of Tar river, adjoining the lands of <lb />
Mrs. A. J. Johnston, Miss S. O, Brown <lb />
and others, containing acres, more or <lb />
leas. F. G. JAMES, <lb />
Administrator. <lb />
This June 27th, <lb />
Notice. <lb />
expect to be absent from my office <lb />
on the second Monday in August next, <lb />
office will be open, in charge of my <lb />
deputy during my absence. <lb />
B. A. <lb />
Superior Pitt Co.<lb />
There is a deal of satisfaction in leading <lb />
a ad 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 />
OF- <lb />
You Are No Is It <lb />
If you fall to see the brand new stock of <lb />
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb />
------that is now being offered by <lb />
W. H. WHITE. <lb />
I have just the to suit------ <lb />
f GENTLEMEN, <lb />
LADY, <lb />
HOUSEKEEPER, <lb />
I FARMER, <lb />
ELSE. <lb />
If you want anything to wear or anything <lb />
to eat, or any to go in the house, <lb />
call on me. Goods all new, not a piece <lb />
of old stock the house. <lb />
sty prices will be found as low as <lb />
able goods can be sold at. <lb />
W. H. WHITE <lb />
Two doors from C, A. <lb />
Bear Firs <lb />
TOBACCO FLUES. <lb />
We are now ready to supply Tobacco Flues the farmers who <lb />
have placed their orders for them. <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. PENDER CO., <lb />
June 15th, 1892. <lb />
Kt. O. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017558_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
YOUR <lb />
IS NO . <lb />
HOPELESS <lb />
. . up Hie <lb />
waste tor mercy, u of of desperadoes <lb />
be he would meet death a <lb />
man. It was hard, though, j <lb />
the girl without pert- no <lb />
U ho had only her let- <lb />
AIDS NATURE <lb />
IN NATURES OWN WAY. <lb />
II COSTS YOU NOTHING TO INVESTIGATE. <lb />
A . MAILED <lb />
ATLANTIC CO. <lb />
1406 Hew York Ave. Washington. D. C. <lb />
MANHOOD <lb />
How Lost How Regained <lb />
THYSELF.<lb />
us with I SEND <lb />
of the Press I <lb />
of th; cured. .- <lb />
in i- or by mail. <lb />
Oh. the desert <lb />
The wind from the blew In <lb />
Ii Mew from the of the south, <lb />
From the sand Mid the hills of <lb />
And it the Its worthing <lb />
mouth <lb />
The wind from the desert blew In <lb />
It the bod on Um almond <lb />
And It shriveled the fruit on tho <lb />
wizened dervish breathed no <lb />
Be weary and was he. <lb />
The lean muezzin could not cry; <lb />
The ran mad and bayed the sky; <lb />
Tho hot son shone like a copper <lb />
And prone in the shade of an obelisk <lb />
The water carrier sank with a <lb />
Pat limp and dry wag bis water akin <lb />
And the wind from the desert blew in. <lb />
The came crouched by the crumbling wall. <lb />
Ami ob. pitiful moan it made <lb />
lag minarets, taper slim and tall. <lb />
Heeled and swum in the light. <lb />
And prayers up by day night. <lb />
Hut and drawn were the lips that <lb />
prayed. <lb />
Tho rivet writhed In its slimy <lb />
Shrunk to a tortuous, turbid <lb />
The burnt earth cracked like a cloven rind <lb />
And still tho wind, the ruthless wind <lb />
wind from the desert blew in. <lb />
late the cool of Hie it crept. <lb />
Where poor sought rest at the <lb />
shrine; <lb />
its breath war. fire the <lb />
It the brow of the maid <lb />
And men grew with revel of wine. <lb />
The fledglings died in the nest; <lb />
The sick babe the mother's breast; <lb />
Then a rumor rose swelled and spread <lb />
From a tremulous whisper, faint and <lb />
Till it burst in a terrible cry of dread <lb />
plane Tho plague The plague <lb />
Oh, tho wind <lb />
Tho from the desert blew in <lb />
i Clinton in Century. <lb />
rumored had con- <lb />
When he was tied so that ho could <lb />
not move hand or foot, <lb />
walked off twenty or thirty paces, <lb />
i and drawing his revolver called <lb />
Clancy's attention to his right wrist <lb />
; and fired. Clancy could no longer <lb />
I feel that that wrist ho had a <lb />
hand. When he tried to move his <lb />
i fingers the seemed to <lb />
; suddenly numb. <lb />
laughed and asked him <lb />
I what be thought of such <lb />
i slap. not answer. A <lb />
Electric <lb />
remedy U becoming so well <lb />
known and no popular as to need no <lb />
by tho rumor, liar mention. All used <lb />
Hitler Hie sons of <lb />
, ., I, purer medicine not exist <lb />
deny it u to do that is <lb />
her head mother s breast and claimed. Electric Bitter will cure all <lb />
sobbed an she had never since tin- Liter Kidneys, will <lb />
the day she- had seen Clancy's body I Salt Rheum <lb />
consigned K the earth. <lb />
Several times she had r <lb />
messages, but from whom o one <lb />
knew. Even to her who <lb />
alone spoke to her, she to <lb />
tell. One day she received <lb />
these messages, and that night after <lb />
she had to her grave she <lb />
went to the house of the sheriff, <lb />
who was the only officer that dared <lb />
to follow murderer. When <lb />
TBS LANE Cr SUNSHINE. <lb />
A Unique Country Where the Skies <lb />
Never While <lb />
sir Is Cool and Bracing. <lb />
Perpetual Spring. <lb />
As an anomalous southern resort, by <lb />
reason of the fact that there one <lb />
other affect tons caused by Impure Mood, summer heat no less than winter <lb />
; Will drive Malaria the system New Mexico is rapidly <lb />
famous. Averaging throughout en- <lb />
tire territory feel in altitude abort <lb />
and prevent as well as cum all Malarial <lb />
cure of Headache, <lb />
and Indigestion try Electric <lb />
or money and <lb />
per Drug <lb />
Some Men <lb />
new hope, though, hod come into his <lb />
breast They would not kill him <lb />
outright, merely maim and with <lb />
tho to help him he would not Mm Where <lb />
i mind that. Anything but separation in ,,, <lb />
j from her. <lb />
Then spoke to him again <lb />
she returned he was with h , and <lb />
pulsing the dimly <lb />
patio she led him to her and <lb />
amid i t <lb />
and then she <lb />
lay down in her bed and waited in <lb />
the darkness as tho hours passed <lb />
and fired, the same numb feeling tap at tho window. <lb />
DEATH. <lb />
W. II. <lb />
or <lb />
Much St.,<lb />
w. M <lb />
Medical many <lb />
but no equal <lb />
Science o or , l a <lb />
than eM. <lb />
and <lb />
h. <lb />
A Family Affair <lb />
Health for the Baby, <lb />
the Parents, <lb />
New Life Old Folks. <lb />
Root<lb />
GREAT <lb />
DRINK <lb />
h a family <lb />
of<lb />
It K a for<lb />
fills.-. No <lb />
the <lb />
Scientific American <lb />
Agency for <lb />
CAVEATS, <lb />
r MARKS. <lb />
PATENT <lb />
etc. <lb />
write to <lb />
t. <lb />
m t <lb />
public <lb />
Scientific <lb />
in tho <lb />
world. No <lb />
. I. a<lb />
M Hi a <lb />
K. <lb />
and <lb />
ins <lb />
Sol <lb />
Apr. daily Mall, daily <lb />
ex Sun <lb />
12,90 <lb />
am ii SB <lb />
Ar N am <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar <lb />
am<lb />
Magnolia u <lb />
GOING<lb />
Sun. <lb />
Ar M <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar <lb />
Lt am IS pa <lb />
Ai <lb />
Ar <lb />
except <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck <lb />
leaves Halifax 4.22 arrives <lb />
land Neck at 5.15 P. M. Greenville 6.52 <lb />
P.; M., Kinston 8.00 p. m. Returning, <lb />
leaves Kinston 7.10 it. m., <lb />
Arriving Ball fax id. <lb />
Weldon 11.2.5 a. m. daily except Sun- <lb />
day <lb />
Trains an Washington Branch leave <lb />
Washington a. in., arrives A. <lb />
Junction 8.4 a. A. <lb />
R. Junction 7.05 p. in., arrives <lb />
8.45 p. m. except <lb />
Connects with trains on <lb />
Raleigh R. R. and Scotland <lb />
Branch. <lb />
Local freight train leaves <lb />
Monday, Wednesday and Friday <lb />
10.15 a. m., arriving Scotland Neck 1.05 <lb />
a. m., Greenville 5.30 in., <lb />
7.40 p. n. leaves Kinston <lb />
and Saturday <lb />
7.20 a. in., arriving Greenville 0.55 <lb />
a. m., Scotland Neck 2.20 p. as., Weldon <lb />
5.15 p. m. <lb />
Train leave Tarboro. N via <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, F M. Sunday M, <lb />
N C, IS P ii, H. <lb />
Plymouth t. n., 5.22 p. m <lb />
leaves daily except <lb />
Sunday 0.00 a. m., Sunday a. <lb />
N C. 7.30 a m, 0.58 am <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N C, A M <lb />
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb />
and Fayetteville leave Fayette- <lb />
M a in, arrive p in. <lb />
Returning leave p <lb />
arrive Fayetteville p ex- <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb />
daily except A M <lb />
N C, A M. Re <lb />
laves V <lb />
arrive SC <lb />
Train <lb />
at P M, arrive Nashville <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
leaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
8.85 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton v, except Sunday, at G IN <lb />
flu <lb />
ton at A M, and P. <lb />
Warsaw with and <lb />
Southbound train on Wilson A <lb />
Branch is No. Northbound I <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains No. South and North will <lb />
top only Rocky Mount, Wilson, <lb />
Magnolia. <lb />
Train No. makes close connection a <lb />
Weldon for all points North daily. AI i <lb />
-all via Richmond, and daily except Sun <lb />
via Bay Line, -.-o at Rocky Mount <lb />
daily Sunday with Norfolk <lb />
rs for Norfolk an I all <lb />
paints via Norfolk. <lb />
DIVINE, <lb />
J. X. <lb />
T. -u. <lb />
There is an intoxication in the <lb />
shedding of human blood that is for- <lb />
given to but few men to <lb />
know. men more <lb />
to it than others-just us BOOM <lb />
men rapidly into <lb />
drunkards by tho drinking of wine <lb />
than others. This Mood drunken- <lb />
is not war. Soldiers seldom <lb />
know it. In when you feel your <lb />
bayonet sink to tho shank in the soft <lb />
yielding breast of another, r drop a <lb />
man with n bullet, you lose interest <lb />
in the man you have and jerk <lb />
out your bayonet off load your <lb />
for another. Blood drunkenness is <lb />
merely killing for the sake of killing. <lb />
A hundred years ago this blood <lb />
drunkenness was by the <lb />
law prohibiting butchers from <lb />
as jurymen. It is still recognized <lb />
on our frontiers, where the <lb />
of law not so in <lb />
communities. A half years <lb />
ago it was more common than at <lb />
present. There were but few sec- <lb />
then but bad their- blood <lb />
maniacs. <lb />
New Mexico had one, and his name <lb />
was Billy Had he been an <lb />
ancient Greek instead of being an <lb />
American, mythology would have <lb />
cruel ferocity immortal. <lb />
Ho was only a boy when he got Iris <lb />
first taste of blood. When death <lb />
overtook him he was but twenty- <lb />
three, yet was known to <lb />
killed more men than there <lb />
years his age, All but his mother <lb />
rejoiced at death as if n <lb />
had been staid. <lb />
There was another woman, though, <lb />
that rejoiced to see his body fester <lb />
swell and blacken. the <lb />
dead man had loved her, and she <lb />
lived with him as a wife lives with a <lb />
husband, yet it was not for <lb />
she killed him. Before she had met <lb />
him she had loved another man. His <lb />
name Charley Clancy. He was <lb />
foreman of the H-B Cattle company, <lb />
on the near <lb />
The people along the river called <lb />
the II bar B outfit. He, was a <lb />
mar. just from the with <lb />
no more business in New Mex- <lb />
at that time than a preacher has <lb />
in purgatory. <lb />
When he had first met the girl it <lb />
was in Las Graces-that strange lit- <lb />
town near tho Mexican lino <lb />
whose history runs back to the Span- <lb />
conquest. Ho was young <lb />
and perhaps homesick, and it <lb />
was not long before ho was in love <lb />
with this girl of alien race, for she <lb />
a Mexican. he found <lb />
the ranch more and more lonesome <lb />
and pleas- <lb />
ant. Homo could not have <lb />
more desirable. When a man is in <lb />
and his love i-- returned by a <lb />
bountiful girl, with her presence any <lb />
place is heaven. It was so in this <lb />
case, and Clancy's visits to Las <lb />
cos became very frequent. <lb />
One day while he was there there <lb />
was a prisoner brought into town <lb />
whoso presence created more <lb />
than if he had been the gov- <lb />
of territory, for it eras this <lb />
man Billy Every one crowd- <lb />
ed to see the desperado, and with <lb />
them went Clancy, for no man was <lb />
ever more feared or more noted for <lb />
his ferocity. So great was the terror <lb />
inspired by his deeds that when his <lb />
trial came there few men who <lb />
would serve as jurors. those <lb />
who did serve was Charley Clancy. <lb />
Ho was young and green, and they <lb />
made foreman of the jury. <lb />
When the girl you need not know <lb />
her for it is that of a good <lb />
family, as good as your own per- <lb />
haps, and besides she. too, is dead <lb />
now and it would fen nothing <lb />
when she learned this she <lb />
implored Clancy, in her terror, to <lb />
aw. but lie only smiled at her <lb />
tears and her tears with <lb />
kisses. She a native of the <lb />
try and a stranger, but. <lb />
thought be knew it all. <lb />
When the trial was ended and the <lb />
death sentence imposed, for that was <lb />
the only verdict Clancy <lb />
turned to ranch and his cattle, <lb />
promising the girl not to lie long ab- <lb />
sent. While he was the man <lb />
whose death ho. had voted for es- <lb />
caped prison. The judge who had <lb />
presided at the trial in his terror left <lb />
the Bounty W-Cut to Santo Fe to <lb />
safe, and the girl wrote to Clancy <lb />
to Ms guard and come to her <lb />
U once. Womanlike, she thought <lb />
that while with her no danger could <lb />
reach him. He received the letter, <lb />
and manlike thought it would not do <lb />
to leave his ts if in fear. The <lb />
judge who wont to Santo was old <lb />
enough to be his grandfather. At <lb />
any other time Clancy would have <lb />
been only too glad to have gone to <lb />
the girl at Las <lb />
While ho waited-and debated when <lb />
it would do to go to her, one morn- <lb />
there rode up to his door two <lb />
men, and of them was <lb />
When he saw them it too late <lb />
for Clancy to attempt to arm him- <lb />
self. All he could do was to answer <lb />
their questions and submit to <lb />
their prisoner. The men took <lb />
their lariats and tied him in of <lb />
his door to a post, and then <lb />
told him that he to <lb />
Its, <lb />
I came into bis left hand below tho <lb />
wrist, v. here he laid felt second <lb />
pistol ball crush through tho bone <lb />
and sinew. But he did not wince. <lb />
Barely this man who looked so boy- <lb />
and innocent Would satisfied <lb />
with this much in revenge and now <lb />
show him mercy. <lb />
If Charley Clancy had not <lb />
fresh from the east he would know <lb />
that this was a man to <lb />
death -an old method of torture <lb />
caught from the Indians. But now <lb />
a white man was doing it. There <lb />
are but few instances white <lb />
white men have triad their hands at <lb />
it. though it very- simple. All that <lb />
there is to do is to shoot a man as <lb />
many times as possible without kill- <lb />
him, until yon are tired of the <lb />
sport and willing that he should die. <lb />
first time it was ever tried by <lb />
by one white man on another was on <lb />
railroad. They still <lb />
point out the station to you. It is <lb />
Clancy, though, was not <lb />
long enough in the west to even <lb />
beard of it Before the day <lb />
he learned it all, though. Shot after <lb />
mt put into his arms and <lb />
legs until you could have twisted <lb />
them like a piece t rubber hose in <lb />
any direction you desired. Between <lb />
the shots he his companion would <lb />
smoke their cigarettes and rest and <lb />
divide the plunder they had taken <lb />
from the house. And Clancy would <lb />
faint with pain and weakness as tho <lb />
hot sun beat down on him. Some- <lb />
time he Would not regain conscious <lb />
Bess had fired two or <lb />
three shots in into his <lb />
body. Ho never showed the white <lb />
though. When he found out <lb />
that it was too late to hope for life, <lb />
even if the best surgeons in Christen- <lb />
ready to care for his <lb />
wounds, he simply thought of the <lb />
girl and cursed in his scorn the cow- <lb />
of the man who was murder <lb />
him. <lb />
Everything must have an end. <lb />
though. So it is with <lb />
the day had nearly passed <lb />
away and the sun was sinking in the <lb />
west, leaving the lonely house on <lb />
the unbroken mesa in An- <lb />
trim grew tired of the sport told <lb />
Clancy so. and while telling it he <lb />
emptied his revolver into the stomach <lb />
and bowels of the man tied to the <lb />
stake. Then he and his comrade <lb />
saddled their horses, and Clancy, <lb />
as be was. wondered if they <lb />
going to leave him to the night and <lb />
darkness, when the coyotes, attract- <lb />
ed by his blood, would to con- <lb />
the work that day had seen be- <lb />
His mind was still clear, and <lb />
when walked toward him <lb />
he to curse him for the coward <lb />
be was. until placing his <lb />
pistol against teeth, forced <lb />
the muzzle into his mouth and pulled <lb />
the trigger i and then tho day's work <lb />
was over. <lb />
Tin n was no concealment about <lb />
Every one in Mexico knew <lb />
what Charley Clancy had died for. <lb />
few men spoke of it above then <lb />
breath. The judge who went to <lb />
Santa Fe staid there. So man eared <lb />
to meat one <lb />
officer in the territory who had tho <lb />
corn-age to make the attempt to <lb />
him, but so well did the <lb />
murderer conceal his movements <lb />
that- it was impossible to follow him. <lb />
Reward after reward was offered, <lb />
yet no one cared to earn them. <lb />
When Clancy's body was found it <lb />
was taken into Las and buried <lb />
in the little graveyard where the <lb />
girts forefathers for generations <lb />
back had been buried. Through it <lb />
all the girl did not break down as <lb />
most women would. said <lb />
she was cold, though at evening <lb />
she would come with her beads and <lb />
pray by the new grave until <lb />
darkness came. <lb />
One she was missing; no <lb />
knew whither she had Soon, <lb />
though, rumors returned that she <lb />
was in the frontier towns <lb />
among the Americans as one of the <lb />
public dancing girls. She was beau- <lb />
had no lack of lovers. She <lb />
seemed to be without fear, and ho <lb />
matter how desperate the men with <lb />
whom her lot was cast, she <lb />
quailed. The called her <lb />
la <lb />
Where men squandered the money <lb />
gained by robbery murder in <lb />
wild orgies, in which men fought <lb />
and killed each other like mad <lb />
she was always cool and <lb />
The wilder the crowd, the <lb />
worse the men who composed it, <lb />
tho more she enjoyed it. <lb />
Her beauty was so great that many <lb />
men, oven among the Americans, <lb />
offered to make her a wife, hut she <lb />
only smiled rind refused all with a <lb />
gentleness that mode them wonder <lb />
that one in her position could display <lb />
it When she was at the height of <lb />
i The house was so quiet that it seemed <lb />
to echo like a pistol shot, she <lb />
arose, and going to the window <lb />
opened it and let a man enter, who <lb />
threw his arms about her and kissed <lb />
her passionately spoke regret- <lb />
fully of the time they had been <lb />
rated. <lb />
Tho room was very dark, an as <lb />
she led him from the window toward <lb />
the bed where the other man crouch- <lb />
ed hid could almost feel her heart <lb />
The man whose arm was <lb />
around her waist noticed her <lb />
drew her closely to <lb />
him. When they reached the bed <lb />
drew herself gently from his arm <lb />
and lay down. She fancied that <lb />
could hear the man who was con- <lb />
breathing as she lay between <lb />
him and tho man who had just en- <lb />
The air of the room seemed <lb />
to stifle her, as if laden with death. <lb />
Then she turned spoke to tho <lb />
man who had entered, telling him to <lb />
light a match, so that he would not <lb />
make any noise by striking the fur- <lb />
and when he demurred that <lb />
it might not he safe she answered <lb />
him that as the was asleep no <lb />
one could see him. For a moment <lb />
he hesitated, and then ho struck a <lb />
match and the tiny spark grew into <lb />
a blaze, showing the room plain and <lb />
distinct. Only for an instant, though, <lb />
for then there leaped out across the <lb />
bed on which tho girl lay a jot of <lb />
and the man who hold <lb />
fell to the ground without a groan. <lb />
The air of the room grew thick <lb />
with the smell of powder, and <lb />
through the house could heard <lb />
voices calling in affright, but in the <lb />
room no stirred or uttered a <lb />
word. girl was wondering if <lb />
the man who had fallen was dead <lb />
or only wounded, tho man who <lb />
had shot him remained quiet, fearing <lb />
that after till his shot might have <lb />
failed him It was only when tho <lb />
door of the room was opened from <lb />
without and the light showed a dead <lb />
outstretched figure on the ground <lb />
that he came forth, and then tho <lb />
girl rose from the bad and gazed <lb />
coolly down on the of the man <lb />
who had murdered her <lb />
Francisco Argonaut. <lb />
This is beyond question the most <lb />
Cough Medicine c have ever <lb />
sold, a few doses invariably cure the <lb />
worst cases of Cough, Croup and Bron- <lb />
while wonderful success In the <lb />
cure of Consumption is without a petal- <lb />
lei in the history of Since its <lb />
discovery it. 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 SI, If lungs are sore, chest, or <lb />
back use Porous Matter. <lb />
Sold at WOOTEN'S STORE. <lb />
The <lb />
The crown in Europe, ex <lb />
perts say, is that worn by the czar <lb />
of Russia on occasions. It is <lb />
surmounted by a cross formed of five <lb />
magnificent diamonds, r upon <lb />
an immense bat ruby. <lb />
Th. ruby vests upon eleven largo <lb />
which in <lb />
by a mat of pearls. The coronet of <lb />
tho empress, it is said, contains the <lb />
moss of diamonds ever <lb />
collected in York <lb />
Sim. <lb />
CATARRH REMEDY. <lb />
A for Catarrh, <lb />
Canker mouth and Headache. <lb />
With each bottle there is an ingenious <lb />
nasal Injector for the mere successful <lb />
treatment of these complaints without <lb />
extra charge. Price Sold at <lb />
EN'S DRUG STORK. <lb />
sea-level, mid by dry all <lb />
which, unlike a humid atmosphere, is i <lb />
of communicating the j <lb />
midsummer remains <lb />
a delightfully comfortable degree <lb />
the day, and at night become invariably . <lb />
brisk and bracing. The sunshine i <lb />
almost constant, yet the most violent; <lb />
out-of door exertion may undertaken <lb />
; without tear of i <lb />
Sunstroke or arc absolutely I <lb />
unknown there. It is an ideal land for <lb />
a summer Its climate is I <lb />
by reputable physicians as n j <lb />
for pulmonary and <lb />
the medicinal Mot Springs at Vegas <lb />
are noted for their curative virtues. <lb />
The sumptuous hotel in the west, <lb />
the is located at these <lb />
springs. Write to J. <lb />
Block. Chicago, for <lb />
band of an entertaining and <lb />
profanely illustrated book descriptive of <lb />
this region, the most picturesque and <lb />
romantic in the United states. <lb />
Pay<lb />
A great of and <lb />
expense to railway companies is tho <lb />
encroachments of tho grass which <lb />
grows around the rails of their lines. <lb />
An effective anode of getting rid of <lb />
this nuisance has been devised in <lb />
shape of an vegetation <lb />
destroyer. This consists of a wire <lb />
much in appearance <lb />
like an ordinary brush. <lb />
This connected by a with a <lb />
dynamo in nearest available <lb />
light i u- power station. A power- <lb />
current is turned on, and an <lb />
operator drags tho fully charged <lb />
brush -which is supplied with a <lb />
wooden the grass, kill- <lb />
it York <lb />
gram. <lb />
C. A. Thompson. Seymour. Ind., <lb />
sister Jennie, when she <lb />
was a young girl. Buffered from white <lb />
swelling, which greatly Impaired her <lb />
health and made her blood very impute <lb />
TEN CENTS FOR A <lb />
CIGAR THAT IS NO <lb />
BETTER THAN AN <lb />
l- Virginia <lb />
Cheroot. <lb />
SOLD <lb />
FIVE <lb />
FOR <lb />
TEN CENTS. <lb />
As a matter of fact there is scarce- <lb />
any connection between <lb />
racy, even democratic aristocracy, <lb />
and a good profile. Tho more com- <lb />
tho system of caste, tho more <lb />
absolutely it is dissevered from any- <lb />
thing relating to external appear- <lb />
The social inferior looks up to <lb />
tho superior as one of <lb />
looks up to her <lb />
band, with a reverence not unpaired <lb />
by any homeliness of features. Rufus <lb />
Cheese said of Chief Justice Shaw, of <lb />
Massachusetts, who was one of tho <lb />
plainest of men, toward him <lb />
as the South sea islander feels to- <lb />
ward bis idol ho sees that ho is ugly, <lb />
but ho knows that he is <lb />
W. in <lb />
Talking of patent <lb />
knew the old prejudice. And the doc- <lb />
of them are between you and <lb />
us. They would like yon to think that <lb />
what's thousands won't cure yon. <lb />
You'd believe in patent medicines it <lb />
they didn't profess to cure everything <lb />
and so, between the experiments of doc- <lb />
tors, and the experiments of patent <lb />
medicines that are sold because <lb />
there's money la the you lose <lb />
faith in everything. <lb />
you can't always tell the <lb />
him <lb />
k Met Mine Writing <lb />
AND IMPROVED. <lb />
The Best Standard Typewriter in World. <lb />
Inexpensive, Portable, No Ink Ribbon, In- <lb />
Type in all <lb />
to learn, and rapid as an v. <lb />
EVERYWHERE. <lb />
Warranted as Represented. <lb />
This Machine is everybody's friend. <lb />
should have their writing done on the <lb />
Typewriter. It always insures the n <lb />
prompt attention. Address <lb />
N. Washington, St., <lb />
One of these machine can be seen at the Reflector office, win re particulars and <lb />
prices can be had. <lb />
In the spring she was not able to do <lb />
anything and get about. <lb />
More than a year ago look three <lb />
of Botanic Blood Balm, and now she j that cures by what you read In <lb />
III <lb />
Ordinary chewing gum is made of <lb />
gum chicle, sugar a variety of <lb />
flavors. Gum chicle is merely a <lb />
form of rubber. Tho gum has <lb />
a certain quality of sugar added to it <lb />
to sweeten and make it palatable. <lb />
It will noticed in chewing <lb />
gum attar it has been in the mouth <lb />
awhile the sugar flavor en- <lb />
and what is the <lb />
product, which is tho <lb />
chicle gum nearly pure. This gum <lb />
is the sap of tho a Mexican <lb />
tree. It is collected like <lb />
lier sap. by cutting incisions in <lb />
bark between the months of <lb />
April, and after the gum <lb />
has been gathered it is packed in <lb />
sacks, pounds to the sack. <lb />
It is then c light colored mass, <lb />
about half way between <lb />
and rubber. In <lb />
the factories it is washed, dried and <lb />
mixed, and when run off on spread- <lb />
is cut into sticks, wrapped and <lb />
packed ready for shipment. Within <lb />
a few years the industry has as- <lb />
large proportions and the de- <lb />
for it seems to be growing. <lb />
Exchange. <lb />
Answer This Question. <lb />
Why do so many people we see around <lb />
us seem to prefer to suffer and be made <lb />
by Indigestion, Constipation, <lb />
Dizziness, Loss of Coining up <lb />
of the Food, Yellow Skin, when for <lb />
we sell them <lb />
guaranteed to cure them Sold at J. <lb />
Wooten's Drag Store. <lb />
is perfectly <lb />
A book of anonymous authorship, <lb />
entitled Englishman in <lb />
contains a number of very interest- <lb />
reminiscences of great French <lb />
literary men. Of Balzac it is stated <lb />
that whenever he was hard at work <lb />
he went to roost the as <lb />
he himself put it, at in tho even- <lb />
He was called at in tho morn- <lb />
and wrote till then took an- <lb />
other hour u half of sleep; then <lb />
after a light meal went to work <lb />
again until in the afternoon; then <lb />
he took a hath, saw a few friends, <lb />
took perhaps a short walk and <lb />
mediately after dinner went off to <lb />
bed, <lb />
shall be ho wrote, <lb />
lead this life for a <lb />
months without stopping in order <lb />
not to lie swamped by terrible <lb />
bills that yet, as <lb />
all know, ho was always hard up for <lb />
money. <lb />
Female Weakness Cure. <lb />
To the rear <lb />
readers that I have a positive remedy <lb />
tor the thousand and one ills which <lb />
arise from deranged female organs. <lb />
shall DO glad to send two hollies of my <lb />
remedy to any lady who will s <lb />
their Express and P. O. address. <lb />
Yours respectfully, <lb />
Dr. A. <lb />
N. Y. <lb />
her popularity she disappeared. No <lb />
one knew whither, although some <lb />
said she had left to join a band of <lb />
desperadoes near tho Arizona line. <lb />
Wherever it was, nothing was seen <lb />
of her for months, and then one day- <lb />
she returned home, but only a <lb />
shadow of her former At first <lb />
her father would pot permit her to <lb />
enter tho while her mother <lb />
cried and embraced her as if-she had, <lb />
returned from the Then the <lb />
father, too, relented. Perhaps, he <lb />
thought, it would after all be for but <lb />
a short time, and it would be <lb />
that she should die at home than <lb />
an outcast. She seemed impassive <lb />
and indifferent night <lb />
came she went to the little grave- <lb />
yard and prayed over the grave that <lb />
still was the newest. <lb />
Where she had spent the months <lb />
of never told. To <lb />
questions she an evasive an- J <lb />
It was said by that her <lb />
wan <lb />
It Should Be In Every Howe. <lb />
ii. Wilson, Clay St., Sharpsburg, <lb />
Ph., says lie will not be without Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery for Consumption, <lb />
Coughs and Colds, that it cured his wife <lb />
who was threatened with Pneumonia <lb />
after an attack of when <lb />
various other remedies and several <lb />
had done her Robert <lb />
Barber, of Pa., claims Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery has done <lb />
more good than anything he ever used <lb />
tor Trouble. Try <lb />
it Free Trial Bottles at Drug <lb />
Store. Large bottles, and SI <lb />
CHILDBIRTH , <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 />
FRIEND <lb />
Third Postmaster General. <lb />
The issuing of postage stamps, <lb />
stamped envelopes newspaper <lb />
wrappers all belong to one of tho <lb />
divisions under the care of the third <lb />
assistant postmaster general. There <lb />
is another division of the same bureau <lb />
which looks after registered letters, <lb />
still another which attends to <lb />
the system for the special delivery <lb />
of letters. classification of <lb />
matter belongs to this bureau, it <lb />
is with the third assistant postmaster <lb />
general or his clerks that <lb />
to <lb />
over their rights to official entry us <lb />
second class Field's <lb />
Washington. <lb />
the papers. So, perhaps, there's no <lb />
way to sell a remedy, than to tell the <lb />
truth about it, and take the risk of its <lb />
doing just what it professes to do. <lb />
what the World's Dispensary <lb />
Medical Association, of Buffalo, <lb />
does with Dr. Medical <lb />
Discovery and Dr. Favorite <lb />
Prescription. <lb />
If they don't do what their makers say <lb />
they'll gel your money back. <lb />
The plain white sign with blank <lb />
lettering, or vice versa, was. once <lb />
much need, but at pit-sent gold let- <lb />
on a black ground is very pop- <lb />
seems to an <lb />
i-ion of business solidity and dignity. <lb />
The signs are never wider than two <lb />
feet, which is the law limit. Their <lb />
length is paid for. in plain signs at <lb />
the rate of one dollar a running foot; <lb />
in fancy signs, where there is an in <lb />
i of gold, this price is doubled. <lb />
Besides these huge signs over <lb />
doors and under windows a smaller <lb />
kind has come much into use, <lb />
within late years. These are <lb />
usually fastened right beside tho <lb />
door or on the corner of the house. <lb />
Here, again, plain black lettering on <lb />
brass seems to look most business <lb />
like, and is, on the whole, probably <lb />
most need. The price, however, has <lb />
dropped from five to three dollar <lb />
a square foot- New York Times. <lb />
Indigestion, <lb />
Dyspepsia <lb />
And all by <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
Ask, Poke and <lb />
is cured by P- P. <lb />
Pains and in the back, shoulders, <lb />
knees, ankles and wrists lire all attacked <lb />
and by P. P, P. This great <lb />
medicine, my its proper- <lb />
ties, builds up and strengthens the whole <lb />
body. <lb />
Nothing is so efficacious a P. P. P., <lb />
at this season, for toning up, <lb />
orating, and as a and <lb />
take P. P. P. It off the <lb />
malaria and puts you in good condition. <lb />
Whichard, <lb />
O. <lb />
up Hit rapidly. <lb />
Ladles are w. <lb />
Kn <lb />
f CURES <lb />
MALARIA<lb />
i will <lb />
Root <lb />
Suction's <lb />
The best salve In the world for Cots, <lb />
Bruises. Sores, Sale <lb />
Fever Sores. Chapped Hands, <lb />
Chilblain-. Corns, and all Skin <lb />
lions. and positively cures Piles, or no <lb />
pay required. It is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. <lb />
Price cents box. For sale at <lb />
Wooten's Store. <lb />
Gather tho <lb />
church does your <lb />
papa belong to; <lb />
Little Baptist, I guess. <lb />
He always takes his pole along. <lb />
Good News. <lb />
A Household Remedy <lb />
FOR ALL <lb />
BLOOD and SKIN t <lb />
Di Di Di <lb />
Bled <lb />
It r SALT <lb />
IX ECZEMA, <lb />
MM i <lb />
h a th , <lb />
a KB Hi <lb />
FREE <lb />
BALM CO., Atlanta. Ba. <lb />
ERADICATES BLOOD <lb />
SON AND BLOOD TAINT, <lb />
Cures dyspepsiA <lb />
Proprietors, <lb />
Block, <lb />
For sale at J. L. Wooten's Drag <lb />
SAVANNAH. a <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
bottles of Swift's Specific <lb />
entirely cleansed my system of contagious <lb />
blood poison of the very worst type. <lb />
S. La. <lb />
CURES SCROFULA EVEN <lb />
IN ITS WORST FORMS. <lb />
had in and <lb />
x system entirely from it taking <lb />
bottles of S. S. S. not any <lb />
toms since. C. Wilcox. <lb />
S. C <lb />
HAS CURED HUNDREDS OP <lb />
CASES OF SKIN CANCER. <lb />
on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed <lb />
free. Swift Co., Atlanta, <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD <lb />
AND MERCHANTS <lb />
year's <lb />
their Interest to get our price before <lb />
chasing el-e where complete <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
PORK SIDES k <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, <lb />
RICE, TEA, <lb />
always at <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A com <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on band and solo at prices to suit <lb />
tho times. goods are all bought and <lb />
old for CASH, therefore, having no <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
S. M. <lb />
iron bitters <lb />
tin. Biliousness, Dyspepsia. Mala-<lb />
All sell it. <lb />
mart and rod on <lb />
HA Several desirable of N <lb />
for Mile. Look over the <lb />
below and call on or write them. <lb />
lot nil Third below Co- <lb />
in the town of <lb />
good two-story house with four rooms <lb />
kitchen and smoke house convenient <lb />
large stables on the premises. <lb />
Two good building in Skinner- <lb />
ville desirable <lb />
ion. <lb />
D A lot on street, <lb />
O. front and Second, baa nice house of <lb />
rooms, good well of water, large gar- <lb />
den plot and stable. <lb />
A A half acre lot in <lb />
t. large single story house <lb />
of C rooms, cook and dining rooms at- <lb />
all necessary out buildings and <lb />
stables, good water <lb />
r A line, farm containing M acres <lb />
O. about o from Greenville on lit <lb />
Pleasant road, has house, stables, <lb />
barns, two room tenant houses; about <lb />
lores cleared, balance well wooded, <lb />
good water. This land is excellent for <lb />
the cultivation of line <lb />
farm on branch of the <lb />
W. w. railroad about half way be- <lb />
tween Grifton and Kinston and J <lb />
mile of a new depot, contains acres, <lb />
and heavily limbered <lb />
with pine, oak, hickory, and cypress; <lb />
has M good tenant railroad passes <lb />
nearly through of this farm. The <lb />
land has clay subsoil with sandy loam, <lb />
is in good of cultivation and highly <lb />
i. line land. <lb />
A farm miles from on <lb />
. Kinston road known as the Jackson <lb />
farm; contains acres, cleared ; has <lb />
good dwelling house and nil necessary <lb />
out buildings. This is a to- <lb />
farm. <lb />
A house lot in on <lb />
corner near J, it. Chen; and W. <lb />
j Rawls, now occupied by the family of <lb />
the late A. house contains <lb />
convenient, is convenient <lb />
half a block from main <lb />
street of the town. Possession <lb />
can he given January 1st. <lb />
A lot on <lb />
. street, between Third and Fourth <lb />
streets, splendid location. <lb />
The and lot <lb />
Ivy, street near Avenue, <lb />
good house of H rooms, large lot with <lb />
stables and out buildings. <lb />
Worrier house and i on <lb />
. Pitt street, adjoining the lot of <lb />
S. Sheppard and the in No. <lb />
large, comfortable one-story dwelling <lb />
of four rooms, dining cook rooms, <lb />
plenty of room for garden. <lb />
Valuable Steam Corn and Flour <lb />
Mills, Cotton and Store <lb />
property located at a X <lb />
within a hundred yards of a U. Ii. is sit- <lb />
in one of the best Agricultural <lb />
Sections of Pitt county. The mills are <lb />
fitted up with the best machinery. Bolt- <lb />
cloths, etc., and are in full <lb />
operation. The store house is a two <lb />
story building dwelling attacked <lb />
also a kitchen warehouse in rear. <lb />
The store is kept constantly supplied <lb />
with general merchandise suited to a <lb />
Country store and is doing a good <lb />
The mills the known <lb />
this section. <lb />
This property is n ire red for sale s the <lb />
owner wish from business <lb />
Terms on any of the above property <lb />
be had on application to <lb />
WHICHARD <lb />
For sample of our work we refer you to the editor of the <lb />
PARKER'S <lb />
HAIR BALSAM <lb />
. u ask <lb />
Meier to Gray <lb />
to Youthful Color. <lb />
Cart a hair <lb />
CONSUMPTIVE <lb />
WILL DO all that fa for <lb />
h AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb />
Life of Mother and Child. Book <lb />
to con- <lb />
valuable and <lb />
voluntary testimonials. <lb />
co,, <lb />
a-v <lb />
From Bottom <lb />
The house is best cleaned that is <lb />
cleaned with Pearline. It is done <lb />
with little labor and with great <lb />
ease to yourself, <lb />
and with no possible injury to <lb />
anything that is cleaned. To <lb />
use once is to want it <lb />
always you will want it always <lb />
because it does what you want. <lb />
Peddlers and grocers will tell you <lb />
-l <lb />
audit <lb />
yea place of Pearline, do the <lb />
this as the same as <lb />
. t <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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