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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
Sob printing Room <lb/>
to <lb/>
Thoroughly Equipped <lb/>
-WITH- <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
Eastern Reflector <lb/>
-TILL <lb/>
NEW MATERIAL. VOL. XI. <lb/>
Give Us Your Orders. <lb/>
Orders on <lb/>
Jones Seminary for <lb/>
Young Ladies. <lb/>
Superior <lb/>
location, mineral after, commodious <lb/>
tire places, entire <lb/>
i tuition per <lb/>
month. a h res. <lb/>
Rev. V. A. HAMPTON. <lb/>
All M. CL <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, PITT COUNTY, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1892. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
APT Kit Z ELECTION <lb/>
goats in <lb/>
D. J. Editor and Owner. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
SCHOOL, <lb/>
NECK, m. C. <lb/>
trim <lb/>
20th, Location is fame for health. <lb/>
Community is and Dis- <lb/>
is kind but Charges are <lb/>
low to suit the times. tor <lb/>
Apply for cat <lb/>
W. C. ALLEN, Supt. <lb/>
Hamilton Institute. <lb/>
HAMILTON. N. C. <lb/>
The Fall Term of this school will open <lb/>
Monday. Aug. Enrollment last <lb/>
Excellent a <lb/>
Preparatory Course of study in <lb/>
Elocution, and Draw- <lb/>
Terms moderate. in <lb/>
families or with further <lb/>
information address. <lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
Fall <lb/>
Greenville Institute. <lb/>
Both <lb/>
Term begins August <lb/>
Dee. 1892. <lb/>
Kali- for Te <lb/>
Tuition to Music 312.75; <lb/>
For further particulars see or address, <lb/>
Z. D. <lb/>
A unsafe for girls is <lb/>
not for either <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
FEMALE SCHOOL <lb/>
Mrs. V. L. Pendleton <lb/>
will a Meet School for Young <lb/>
Ladies and Small Girls in Greenville on <lb/>
August 1892. The bill Collegiate <lb/>
Course taught. The usual <lb/>
prices for tuition in will be <lb/>
University of N. C. <lb/>
Instruction is offered in four general <lb/>
courses of study, six brief courses, a <lb/>
large number of 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 <lb/>
character. The next session begins <lb/>
Bent. 1st. For with full <lb/>
address Winston, <lb/>
Chapel ill, N. c. <lb/>
OAK <lb/>
FOl IS law. <lb/>
A CLASSICAL AND COMMERCIAL SCHOOL <lb/>
--------OP <lb/>
Elegant buildings and thorough equip- <lb/>
patronage all the <lb/>
Southern Stales. Beautiful and h <lb/>
situation in view of the <lb/>
Summer School Business <lb/>
June 16th. <lb/>
Fall Term begins <lb/>
For Illustrated address, <lb/>
J. A. M. II. HOLT, <lb/>
Oak X. C. <lb/>
Louisburg- <lb/>
Female <lb/>
College, <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
The session of this well-known <lb/>
school will begin September 1st, MM. <lb/>
Pure water, no sicklies, in- <lb/>
Brick building with rooms. <lb/>
of acres well shaded by <lb/>
gigantic oaKS. Conservatory music <lb/>
teachers. Art and Elocution teachers <lb/>
from Academy of Arts. Teachers ex- <lb/>
perts in their The whole <lb/>
Literary Course, Physical Culture and <lb/>
and only <lb/>
for the year. Special studies in <lb/>
Send for to <lb/>
S. D. President, <lb/>
N- C. <lb/>
Wilson Collegiate Institute, <lb/>
WILSON. N. ft <lb/>
Ladies. Strictly non-Sectarian. <lb/>
The Forty-Third <lb/>
Monday, Sept. 1892. <lb/>
N. C. PRESS ASSOCIATION. <lb/>
The twentieth annual session of <lb/>
the North Carolina Praia <lb/>
was held in the city of Char- <lb/>
on and Than <lb/>
Jay, July 27th and The at- <lb/>
was best for several <lb/>
years, more than sixty bring pres- <lb/>
Most of the editors arrived <lb/>
Tuesday i; all were enter- <lb/>
by the city at the Central <lb/>
and Buford hotels. <lb/>
The association was called to <lb/>
order promptly at o'clock Wed- <lb/>
morning by President J. <lb/>
A- Thomas, who requested <lb/>
Dr. A. G. to open the <lb/>
meeting with prayer. Hon. C- <lb/>
Dowd was introduced and extend- <lb/>
ed the editors a cordial greeting <lb/>
to the This was <lb/>
responded to by Mr. E- E- Hilliard, <lb/>
and the convention proceeded <lb/>
with its regular order of business. <lb/>
The remainder of the morning <lb/>
session was given to calling the <lb/>
roll and enrolling names of at- <lb/>
appointments of com- <lb/>
and reports from delegates <lb/>
to the last meeting of the National <lb/>
Association. <lb/>
In the afternoon the President <lb/>
read his address, was an ex- <lb/>
paper filled with live topics j a number of resolutions <lb/>
The association reassembled at <lb/>
o'clock. The discussion of the <lb/>
various subjects assigned was con- <lb/>
Public Responsibility of <lb/>
Newspaper was <lb/>
discussed by J. Caldwell, J. M. <lb/>
Roberts and V- J- Whichard. <lb/>
The discussion of <lb/>
in Advertising was reopen- <lb/>
ed and Mr. II A. address- <lb/>
ed the association. <lb/>
to Secure Protection <lb/>
Against Advertising was <lb/>
discussed by W. X. Coley, C L- <lb/>
Stephens, B, A. Deal and C W. <lb/>
Hunt. Mr. Deal offered the fol- <lb/>
lowing resolution, which was <lb/>
unanimously <lb/>
That it shall be the <lb/>
duty of each member of this <lb/>
when he shall have dis- <lb/>
covered any advertising fraud, to <lb/>
inform by post the Secretary of <lb/>
the association, giving the facts in <lb/>
the matter, and the Secretary shall <lb/>
forthwith inform by letter all the <lb/>
members of the association, so <lb/>
that each member maybe supplied <lb/>
with a list of such frauds. It shall <lb/>
be the duty of the Secretary to <lb/>
make a report of all such frauds at <lb/>
each annual meeting for the <lb/>
of the members of the <lb/>
During the session of the <lb/>
THE DEVIL <lb/>
INCLINED. <lb/>
truth in what is so well said. <lb/>
and the situation i- not in the <lb/>
least overdrawn- The editor of <lb/>
the Herald is an old man, but <lb/>
e EM thinks J he a very distinct recollection <lb/>
G over Cleveland fit to be; which the Observer <lb/>
and whence-knowing I At the time when Can- <lb/>
by was supreme dictator of North <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
New York Press <lb/>
bearing direct interest to the pro- <lb/>
At its close, upon motion <lb/>
a committee was appointed to <lb/>
select speakers to discuss the <lb/>
embodied in the address. <lb/>
were adopted, among them being <lb/>
one expressive of our sympathy <lb/>
with Senator Z. B. Vance in his <lb/>
enfeebled health; a similar one to <lb/>
Associate Justice J. J. Davis; one <lb/>
Following this came the paper of approving of the steps being taken <lb/>
the Historian. F. M- by the Board of Agriculture, the <lb/>
His paper contained tributes to <lb/>
the memory of J. F. C- R- <lb/>
Oliver and B. F. Tipton, editors of <lb/>
the State who died during the <lb/>
year. <lb/>
Woman's Fair Association, the <lb/>
Tobacco Association, etc., to secure <lb/>
a proper representation of this <lb/>
State at the World's Fair, and <lb/>
pledging cooperation with the <lb/>
At the close of the afternoon same; one inviting and urging the <lb/>
session the association was given National Editorial Association to <lb/>
an excursion on a special train hold its session in ; <lb/>
the Republican press and the <lb/>
Republican would <lb/>
the average reader suppose, of all <lb/>
sources in the world, the New York state at which <lb/>
Pratt fortifies itself with this severe <lb/>
charge against our party's nominee <lb/>
The constitution of the United <lb/>
States The Press says i <lb/>
other provisions of the con- <lb/>
are of such vital <lb/>
as those designed to safe- <lb/>
guard the right of every citizen to <lb/>
cast one legal ballot and have that <lb/>
ballot honestly counted. The Re- <lb/>
Carolina, and when Kirk's <lb/>
dons held sway, we saw an election <lb/>
a con <lb/>
was adopted. At this <lb/>
election voting continued for three <lb/>
days the ballots cast by the <lb/>
people of North Carolina, were <lb/>
earned to Charleston, C, to be <lb/>
counted. At the home of the <lb/>
writer a company of soldiers <lb/>
formed a double line of guards to <lb/>
the ballot box, and the few white <lb/>
men who voted had to march <lb/>
publican national platform echoes j between them, and after <lb/>
around the city, over six <lb/>
one thanking the mi roads <lb/>
different railroads and stopping at courtesies, and one thanking the <lb/>
numerous factories. Barring the citizens of Charlotte for their hos- <lb/>
heat this excursion was and many kindnesses and <lb/>
a pleasant one. In line of <lb/>
manufacturing enterprises Char <lb/>
the constitution in this demand. <lb/>
It does not point out any <lb/>
method for bringing this result <lb/>
about. It does not contain a line <lb/>
that threatens the rights of any <lb/>
State, or that counsels infringement <lb/>
upon the just authority of any <lb/>
State government It does insist <lb/>
that some method shall be found <lb/>
which shall preserve the integrity <lb/>
of the ballot <lb/>
taking up the false and <lb/>
cowardly cry of Grover <lb/>
Cleveland has placed himself in <lb/>
line with the advocates of shotgun <lb/>
rule and frauds upon the ballot <lb/>
box. He has made it apparent <lb/>
that he cannot be trusted to <lb/>
serve, protect and defend the con- <lb/>
of the United States. The <lb/>
solemn oath of office on his lips <lb/>
would be a mockery; for he has <lb/>
plainly intimated in his letter to <lb/>
the Democratic club of <lb/>
Ky. that he is in favor of the <lb/>
violation, not the preservation, of <lb/>
the constitution. <lb/>
such person is fit to be Pres- <lb/>
for of the United <lb/>
The ratification of the <lb/>
by the original federation of <lb/>
States is about years old, or <lb/>
voting each was compelled to leave <lb/>
the court house in an opposite <lb/>
from which he entered. <lb/>
One of the men who submitted to <lb/>
this indignity was our father and <lb/>
we can never forget how deeply he <lb/>
was humiliated- But this was not <lb/>
all that we saw or knew of. The <lb/>
same company of soldiers <lb/>
who guarded the ballot box on the <lb/>
occasion alluded to, while under <lb/>
the direction of the Radical sheriff <lb/>
of the county, attempted to arrest <lb/>
a white citizen, and because he re- <lb/>
fused to submit to their demands <lb/>
his home was burned to the <lb/>
ground, himself and his son were <lb/>
murdered, his son-in-law <lb/>
wounded and his wife and j Kansas, the old <lb/>
daughter threatened with death contention <lb/>
ENTANGLING ALLIANCE. <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
No less distinguished counselor <lb/>
than George Washington, advised <lb/>
bis country to beware of <lb/>
ling alliances with foreign powers, <lb/>
advice which in the has been <lb/>
followed. The true friend of the <lb/>
Southern farmers would advise <lb/>
them to steer of entangling <lb/>
political alliances with the farmers <lb/>
of the west whose interests cud <lb/>
theirs are not identical by any <lb/>
means <lb/>
The western farmers who have <lb/>
gone into the third party move- <lb/>
under the leadership of Sen- <lb/>
Congressman Simpson <lb/>
and others, ask the Southern farm- <lb/>
who have been acting with the <lb/>
Democratic party to break away <lb/>
from it, and unite with them in <lb/>
building up a new party in <lb/>
to both of the old parties. <lb/>
The fact is it is understood that <lb/>
the condition of those <lb/>
the Republican party is that a <lb/>
fight be made against the Demo- <lb/>
party in the South, in other <lb/>
words while they strike against the <lb/>
Republican party the men of the <lb/>
South must fight the Democratic <lb/>
party and while doing so espouse <lb/>
contentions that would in the end, <lb/>
if successful, prove their ruin- <lb/>
Let us give one illustration, <lb/>
which will answer for the <lb/>
poses of this article- The so-called <lb/>
Peoples party had its paternity in <lb/>
time <lb/>
municipal officers, <lb/>
This the result. <lb/>
If the Third party men in the South, <lb/>
they few or many, desire this <lb/>
and willing to work for this, <lb/>
they may clasp hands with the <lb/>
Third party men of Kansas, and <lb/>
give the so-called People's party <lb/>
white and colored amalgamation <lb/>
a big boost <lb/>
Bill Talk. <lb/>
over which <lb/>
and inhumanly treated. Respect-1 the armed conflict <lb/>
ed citizens of the county were <lb/>
hunted as outlaws and were com- <lb/>
to leave home and family <lb/>
the handsome manner in which the <lb/>
editors had been entertained. The <lb/>
stands ahead of any city in association then adjourned to hold <lb/>
North Carolina, and visiting these j its next session in the city of New <lb/>
afforded no little interest Re <lb/>
turning from the excursion and I At o'clock a delightful car <lb/>
getting supper a ride was taken on drive around the city and <lb/>
the electric cars to through the park was enjoyed, and <lb/>
a very beautiful grounds just be- this showed us that beside having <lb/>
improved. factories and being so <lb/>
Wednesday night at the Y. M- j full of vim and enterprise, <lb/>
C- A. hall Mr. J. L. Chambers, of is a city of beautiful homes, <lb/>
the Charlotte chamber of com-1 Just after supper the fire depart <lb/>
made a very interesting responded to a false alarm. <lb/>
and seek concealment in the <lb/>
swamps to save their lives, and the <lb/>
home of no one was considered <lb/>
safe. The were incited to <lb/>
riot and deeds of lawlessness, the <lb/>
money of the country was stolen <lb/>
and a debt piled upon the people <lb/>
which it took years of Democratic <lb/>
ire a <lb/>
A thorough <lb/>
course of with a full <lb/>
equal to that of any <lb/>
College in the South. <lb/>
I facilities for the of <lb/>
and Art. . <lb/>
usually high. Healthful Build- <lb/>
grounds hum and pleasantly <lb/>
charge-. <lb/>
and circuits on application. <lb/>
K. <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
MALE ACADEMY <lb/>
address on the city of Charlotte. <lb/>
W. F. Marshal read the annual <lb/>
poem, which had been prepared <lb/>
for the occasion. Dr. J. B. Shearer <lb/>
also delivered an address on the <lb/>
habit of bad writing, at which the <lb/>
editors were both amused and in- <lb/>
Between these addresses <lb/>
the audience was delighted with <lb/>
vocal solos from Mrs. Cramer and <lb/>
Miss <lb/>
At o'clock Thursday morning <lb/>
the association was again called to <lb/>
order and several new arrivals re- <lb/>
ported names to the <lb/>
After electing a few honorary <lb/>
members the <lb/>
ought not to have started and <lb/>
should put a check on right <lb/>
and a report from the executive <lb/>
committee through Josephus Dan- <lb/>
discussion of the suggestions <lb/>
in the President's address were <lb/>
made the special order. <lb/>
Rev. Dr. led the <lb/>
discussion on Evils of <lb/>
He was fol- <lb/>
lowed by Rev. Dr. Shearer, Rev. <lb/>
J. W. Lee, J. D. J. A. <lb/>
Robinson, W. F. Burbank, H. A. <lb/>
and E. E. Hilliard. The <lb/>
discussion on in Ad- <lb/>
was opened by <lb/>
T. R. Manning, who was followed <lb/>
by G- P. Pell, W. C Dowd and J. <lb/>
T- Griffin. Further discussion <lb/>
was postponed, and the election of <lb/>
thereabouts; and, until the other control to wipe out. ., <lb/>
day, by a member of Congress from f e w of the n gs we saw and knew <lb/>
New England, its intent to j of when Republicans controlled <lb/>
guard the right of every citizen to Carolina and when Federal <lb/>
cast one legal ballot and have that bayonets were placed behind the <lb/>
The next of School will <lb/>
begin on Monday. 29th, 1892. <lb/>
The advantages offered will be <lb/>
or to of any previous session. En- <lb/>
tire patron. <lb/>
Board can be had at lower rates than at <lb/>
any similar school in Carolina, officers, the special order, was pro- <lb/>
We propose to do the best work for <lb/>
that has ever been done in the town, <lb/>
and challenge proof to the contrary. <lb/>
Terms are follows, payable <lb/>
Primary English per mouth, <lb/>
English month, <lb/>
Higher English per month. <lb/>
Languages each, extra, <lb/>
When you are in town call to see me <lb/>
or write me your homes. <lb/>
will be cheerfully given. If <lb/>
a competent assistant will be <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C, July <lb/>
An Announcement. <lb/>
J am now ready to treat baldness. I <lb/>
have improved my preparation and have <lb/>
observed in the last ninety days it <lb/>
Will do I claim tor it. Partial <lb/>
baldness can be treated by the bottle <lb/>
and the patient can use it himself. <lb/>
Total baldness must treat myself. I <lb/>
invite correspondence in reference to <lb/>
treatment Ac. Every one who my <lb/>
preparation will be thoroughly satisfied <lb/>
with results. We can refer you to a <lb/>
number of men here In this town to <lb/>
Its merits. <lb/>
X. C, April 6th, <lb/>
with. <lb/>
THIS YEA I. <lb/>
The following officers were elect- <lb/>
ed for the ensuing <lb/>
E- Hilliard, <lb/>
Dowd- <lb/>
2nd A. Latham. <lb/>
3rd M. Williams. <lb/>
Secretary and B. <lb/>
Sherrill. <lb/>
Executive CommitteeS. A. <lb/>
Ashe, H. A. London, Josephus <lb/>
Daniels, i E. Harper and T. R <lb/>
Manning- <lb/>
Orator W. F. Marshall. <lb/>
Dowd- <lb/>
P. Caldwell. <lb/>
Delegates to the National Press <lb/>
R. <lb/>
and showed wonderful skill and <lb/>
agility in the engine <lb/>
and hose- There were two com- <lb/>
one white and one colored, <lb/>
and both were loudly cheered and <lb/>
praised. <lb/>
At o'clock an elegant banquet <lb/>
was given at the Central hotel <lb/>
which was a brilliant success. The <lb/>
feast of good things that <lb/>
first, and the flow of soul <lb/>
that followed after in response to <lb/>
tho toasts, showed the Charlotte <lb/>
that the press of <lb/>
North Carolina was not only a <lb/>
power at the table, but that it con- <lb/>
genuine wit intellect and <lb/>
oratory. <lb/>
A letter from and <lb/>
telegrams from Senator Ransom, <lb/>
Governor Holt and Congressman <lb/>
Alexander were read, and then the <lb/>
following toasts were responded <lb/>
it be <lb/>
adequate to the growth of the <lb/>
T. R <lb/>
in the school <lb/>
and at the C L- Ste- <lb/>
young man in <lb/>
J. H. Myrover. <lb/>
J. P. Cook. <lb/>
Governor of North Caro- <lb/>
W. W. <lb/>
T. R <lb/>
Manning. <lb/>
Educators of North Caro- <lb/>
W. H. Miller. <lb/>
Old North E. E. <lb/>
Early Friday morning the <lb/>
tors loft Charlotte, about forty of <lb/>
them taking the train for <lb/>
Washington on an excursion to <lb/>
that city and New York. <lb/>
This was written for last issue <lb/>
but was crowded out <lb/>
Kitchen for Cleveland. <lb/>
F. Tomlinson, G. W. Blount J. A. <lb/>
Thomas. Alternates-H. A. <lb/>
J. T. Griffin, T. <lb/>
and J- A. Robinson. <lb/>
Ex-Congressman Kitchen, of <lb/>
Halifax county, who so opposed <lb/>
the nomination of Cleveland as to <lb/>
declare he would not vote for him, <lb/>
but would canvass the State <lb/>
W. j against him, has his in- <lb/>
honestly was in- <lb/>
a behind every <lb/>
the constitution has been <lb/>
construed always as the very <lb/>
embodiment of the civil law <lb/>
over the law of force. <lb/>
Let us remind many who read <lb/>
these lines of a time when there <lb/>
was a alive and opera- <lb/>
in one great part of this Union, <lb/>
when in this State, while hundreds <lb/>
of men stood by, simple lookers-on <lb/>
at their county and State elections, <lb/>
banned by their participation in <lb/>
civil war or by the <lb/>
clause which deprived them of <lb/>
suffrage as worth more than <lb/>
the farce of poll-holding was <lb/>
carried on with a behind <lb/>
every when <lb/>
troops, in many cases Fed- <lb/>
troops, marshaled by the <lb/>
creatures of or Sickles, <lb/>
formed a double line to the voting <lb/>
booth, and Southern white men <lb/>
if, when they came within view of <lb/>
this spectacle, did not tear their <lb/>
bits of paper to pieces in an out- <lb/>
burst of generous the <lb/>
gauntlet to vote for the men of <lb/>
their choice- This is no ex- <lb/>
picture. There are <lb/>
North Carolinians who open the <lb/>
Observer every day who passed <lb/>
this ordeal, or who, declaring that <lb/>
they would die before they would <lb/>
submit to it turned away from the <lb/>
exercise of the rights of citizen- <lb/>
ship. This was super- <lb/>
vision of <lb/>
The Republican party the party <lb/>
of the constitution. Great <lb/>
It is their veritable foot- <lb/>
ball from the day on which Abra- <lb/>
ham Lincoln was inaugurated <lb/>
President until the close of the <lb/>
great war between the <lb/>
they violated it in two flagrant in- <lb/>
stances during the <lb/>
of the subjugated States; and <lb/>
to-day there is not a man in either <lb/>
house of Congress who, getting up <lb/>
seriously the <lb/>
the constitution, will be <lb/>
met with their influence, veiled <lb/>
smiles or almost open Contempt by <lb/>
the leading men of the Republican <lb/>
party. Surely the in the <lb/>
person of the New York Press, is <lb/>
now busy <lb/>
ballots. Although a boy at the <lb/>
time, the recollection cf these <lb/>
The Atlanta Constitution pub- <lb/>
a interesting article <lb/>
written by Bill from which <lb/>
we make the following <lb/>
time will come when the <lb/>
mighty North will look to us for <lb/>
help, for protection from anarchy <lb/>
and revolution. A kind <lb/>
has kept away from us the <lb/>
lawless hordes of Europe, and the <lb/>
has in his way proved a <lb/>
blessing. <lb/>
Hyde, of <lb/>
College, in Maine, has recently <lb/>
published an article with the <lb/>
ominous title of Pa <lb/>
in New He de- <lb/>
that in tho rural districts <lb/>
the churches have so dwindled as <lb/>
to have on their rolls only <lb/>
names of a few women with hard y <lb/>
enough men to do the work of a <lb/>
church organization. Alas for <lb/>
cultured, classic, critical, exacting <lb/>
New England. <lb/>
Cleveland's administration <lb/>
left in the treasury, <lb/>
and Mr. Harrison's spent it all the <lb/>
first year came down upon us <lb/>
is the time to subscribe. <lb/>
Saul. <lb/>
. MARQUES, <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
If. <lb/>
Office in Skinner upper <lb/>
opposite Gallery <lb/>
nit L. <lb/>
DENTIST, t <lb/>
I I <lb/>
FLEMING, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention to business. Office <lb/>
at Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb/>
HOS. J. ALEX. L. BLOW <lb/>
BLOW, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
in all the Courts. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb/>
A T-LA I <lb/>
N. <lb/>
I. A. <lb/>
TYSON. <lb/>
B. K. TYSON <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention given to collections <lb/>
II. LONG, <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
Prompt, and careful attention to <lb/>
Hess. Collection solicited. <lb/>
LATHAM. <lb/>
HARRY <lb/>
SKINNER, <lb/>
for more. Mr. Cleveland's watch- <lb/>
between the North and the South, word was reform, and Mr. <lb/>
The majority of the people of sons is and the force <lb/>
that State were educated to the bill. Now, let the South stand to- <lb/>
belief that the was the equal and pull together and make <lb/>
one united effort to elect Mr. <lb/>
Cleveland, for there is no hope <lb/>
from other party, and no hope <lb/>
from any platform except <lb/>
Apologies. <lb/>
of the white man and entitled to <lb/>
all the rights and privileges of the <lb/>
white man. Many of them went <lb/>
so far as to that these <lb/>
rights and privileges were not <lb/>
simply of a civil but of a social <lb/>
character. They maintained that <lb/>
the color of the skin should not To the beauty of apology <lb/>
affect standing of tho man, and in its fullness, it should be met in <lb/>
that the block man was a the same spirit of To <lb/>
and a entitled to as full j receive an apology n doubting, <lb/>
recognition as the man who wore j grudging, ungracious way, is a <lb/>
a white skin. It is true that in disgrace. It is ill bread, ignoble. <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
g. <lb/>
G RE A V ILL E, N. C. <lb/>
Practice in all the Collection <lb/>
practice they did not live up to <lb/>
dignities that were heaped upon this, in theory they contended <lb/>
the helpless people of Eastern <lb/>
North Carolina can never be blot- <lb/>
from our memory. Better <lb/>
times have come to them now be- <lb/>
cause white men have broken the <lb/>
fetters that bound them and have <lb/>
driven out Republican officers and <lb/>
Federal soldiers. this <lb/>
change for the better has been <lb/>
by Democratic control there <lb/>
is danger of the repetition of the <lb/>
outrages if the infamous Force bill <lb/>
becomes a law. The Republican s <lb/>
are as cordial haters of the South <lb/>
to-day as they were in 1868, and <lb/>
many of the leaders then are lead- <lb/>
now. Safety for our people can <lb/>
only be secured by unswerving <lb/>
to the Democratic party <lb/>
and the triumph of its candidates. <lb/>
President Harrison and the con- <lb/>
that nominated him favor <lb/>
the Force bill, which will be <lb/>
placed upon us as surely as they <lb/>
are continued in power. We must <lb/>
defeat them in order to save our- <lb/>
selves. Only a straight Demo- <lb/>
vote will accomplish this. <lb/>
A vote for Weaver, or any <lb/>
other candidate except Grover <lb/>
Cleveland is aiding Harrison and <lb/>
will help rivet more firmly the <lb/>
that bind us. Bear this <lb/>
fact in mind, white men of North <lb/>
Carolina, and work and vote ac- <lb/>
unchristian- all liable to <lb/>
grievously offend at any moment, <lb/>
for it. and when our brother says. was <lb/>
Senator Congressman wrong; let me try lot us <lb/>
Simpson and other Kansas i not chill his frank impulses. Let <lb/>
us add our share to the beauty of <lb/>
his apology by n trusting, hearty <lb/>
and exponents of the <lb/>
party got their political train- <lb/>
in this school. Whether they <lb/>
go far as to contend for the so- <lb/>
equality of the black man Tho third party people, who I <lb/>
do not know, and not knowing will j have withdrawn or seceded from I <lb/>
not assert, but they have both said i the Democratic party, may very <lb/>
enough since they became con- properly be called i <lb/>
as representative Third and they may yet bring as much <lb/>
party men to leave no doubt that distress and suffering upon the <lb/>
they believe the is entitled j South as did the Secessionists in <lb/>
to all the civil and political 1861- In that year <lb/>
and privileges that the white man j people thought it best to remain <lb/>
is. In his electioneering tour in in the Union, and contend for their <lb/>
the South two years ago Mr. rights under the old flag, but the <lb/>
son made this one of the salient j majority said no, let us withdraw <lb/>
points of his speeches, especially , from the Union and for <lb/>
when he was addressing meetings our rights under another flag. <lb/>
which there happened to be <lb/>
enough to make it an ob- <lb/>
to address himself directly to <lb/>
them- He was so radical upon this <lb/>
point that he was charged with <lb/>
favoring social equality, which, <lb/>
now in like manner, there are some <lb/>
Democrats who say let with- <lb/>
draw from that party, let us secede, <lb/>
and obtain our demands in a new <lb/>
party and under another flag. But <lb/>
the great bulk of the Democrats <lb/>
i. <lb/>
I a <lb/>
go <lb/>
a S <lb/>
S w <lb/>
IS <lb/>
ft <lb/>
d- <lb/>
P- <lb/>
rT <lb/>
it<lb/>
however, he denied after he got say no. let us not divide, let cs not <lb/>
back to Washington, because secede, but let us stand united and <lb/>
feared it might have a chilling in- contend for our demands under tho <lb/>
on the organization of the j old flag of Democracy Shall we <lb/>
third party which he was then la- ; not take warning from the severe <lb/>
Do you want to see Cleveland <lb/>
or Harrison inaugurated next <lb/>
March You know it must be one <lb/>
or the other. If you prefer Cleve- <lb/>
land, tariff reform and fair treat- <lb/>
to the South, vote for Cleve- <lb/>
land. If you prefer Harrison, <lb/>
and the Force Bill, vote <lb/>
for Harrison. Don't have any <lb/>
half way business about <lb/>
it. Be something in the fight <lb/>
Don't go to tie side shows <lb/>
when your entitles you to a <lb/>
seat in the big <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
boring to build up. <lb/>
In some remarks recently in the <lb/>
Senator indirectly <lb/>
that were <lb/>
hunted and either hang- <lb/>
lessons taught us by sad <lb/>
t Or will our people insist <lb/>
on another <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
The Henderson Gold Leaf well <lb/>
ed or shot to death on mere j not think because n <lb/>
of having committed crime- <lb/>
There was little, if any, ground for <lb/>
this sweeping assertion, but the <lb/>
man does not agree with you <lb/>
about politics or <lb/>
he is necessarily to <lb/>
interests or is your enemy. <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
obtained, and all business in U. S. <lb/>
Patent office or in tho Courts attended to <lb/>
for Moderate Fees. <lb/>
We arc the IT. S. Patent Of- <lb/>
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and <lb/>
can obtain patents In time than <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
the model or drawing is sent <lb/>
advise as to free of <lb/>
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb/>
Patents. <lb/>
refer, here, to the Post Master, tho <lb/>
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to <lb/>
of the U. S. Patent Office. <lb/>
advise terms and reference to <lb/>
actual clients In your own State, or <lb/>
address, C. A. Snow Co., <lb/>
D. C. <lb/>
fact that Senator uttered is <lb/>
this statement on the floors of you are to yours. Both <lb/>
may be after the same thing <lb/>
but entertain different ideas as to <lb/>
of giving him bis support. <lb/>
lie says he likes the platform of <lb/>
the party and cannot stand the <lb/>
fores bill. <lb/>
Commenting on the above the <lb/>
Salisbury Herald <lb/>
J. P. Caldwell, who always <lb/>
writes well, never wrote stronger <lb/>
or truer words than those in the <lb/>
last two paragraphs of the article <lb/>
in another column copied from <lb/>
yesterday's Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
is nothing but simple huh. <lb/>
Th's remedy is becoming so well <lb/>
known and so popular as to need no <lb/>
special mention. All who used <lb/>
Electric Bitters sing tho same song of <lb/>
purer medicine does not exist <lb/>
land It is guaranteed to do all that is <lb/>
claimed. Electric Bitters win cure all <lb/>
diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will <lb/>
remove Pimples, Boll. Salt Rheum and <lb/>
other affections caused by impure blood, <lb/>
Will drive Malaria from the system <lb/>
and prevent as well as cure all Malarial <lb/>
cure of Headache, <lb/>
Indigestion try Electric <lb/>
satisfaction guaranteed, <lb/>
or money and <lb/>
par bottle at Drag store. <lb/>
Senate shows the animus that in- <lb/>
spires him, and that while <lb/>
tending to be honest and fair he <lb/>
has still the old time prejudice <lb/>
against the South, and the old- <lb/>
time leaning to the and <lb/>
in black. <lb/>
Taking these two men as typical <lb/>
representatives of the new party of <lb/>
which they are put at the front as <lb/>
spokesmen, what would the result <lb/>
he upon the South if their views <lb/>
were carried out and the party they <lb/>
speak for honestly and consistently <lb/>
stood by its principles as expound- <lb/>
ed by them t In every Southern <lb/>
State where the demanded <lb/>
it and had the ballots to enforce <lb/>
the demand in the conventions and <lb/>
in the elections afterwards we <lb/>
would have Governors and <lb/>
State officers, Legislators, <lb/>
Judges, Congressmen <lb/>
electors, county and <lb/>
the means of attaining it Be <lb/>
reasonable and tolerant in your <lb/>
views and listen with patience to <lb/>
any reasonable, dignified <lb/>
We'll write it down till everybody sees <lb/>
It, till everybody is sick of seeing It, till <lb/>
everybody knows it without seeing it <lb/>
that Dr. Sago's Catarrh Remedy cures <lb/>
the worst cases of chronic catarrh in the <lb/>
head, headache, and in <lb/>
the In perfect faith, its makers, <lb/>
the World's Dispensary Medical <lb/>
of Buffalo, N. Y. offers to pay <lb/>
to any one suffering from chronic <lb/>
catarrh in the head they cannot <lb/>
cure. <lb/>
Now if the conditions were reversed <lb/>
if they asked you to pay for a <lb/>
cure you might hesitate. Here are <lb/>
reputable men, with rears honorable <lb/>
dealing; thousands of dollars and a groat <lb/>
name back of them and they <lb/>
can core yon because we've cured thous- <lb/>
ands of others like we can't we <lb/>
will pay yon for the knowledge that <lb/>
there's one whom we cant <lb/>
They believe In themselves. Isn't it <lb/>
worth a trial. Isn't any trial preferable <lb/>
to catarrh V <lb/>
THE <lb/>
WATCH TOWER, <lb/>
Published <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR <lb/>
Devoted to Apostolic Christianity, <lb/>
cation. General Intelligence. Send <lb/>
for Sample Copy. Office of Pub- <lb/>
Greenville, N, C. <lb/>
Editorial Office, Wash- <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
J. L. Editor. <lb/>
D. W. DAVIS. Associate. <lb/>
EMPORIUM <lb/>
For Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair <lb/>
AT <lb/>
m top <lb/>
THE GLASS FRONT <lb/>
the Opera House, at which place <lb/>
I have recently located, and where I nave <lb/>
everything In ray line <lb/>
CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO MARK A <lb/>
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb/>
with all the improved appliances; <lb/>
and comfortable chain. <lb/>
Resort sharpened at reasonable figure <lb/>
for work outside my bop <lb/>
promptly executed. Very <lb/>
IS<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017559_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
Greenville. N. <lb/>
OVER THEY <lb/>
THIRD <lb/>
is not alone this Ben- <lb/>
but hears it generally ex- <lb/>
Col. and Mr. E. A. pressed that if Mr. will not <lb/>
During Their party mt Committee of tho <lb/>
Party of Pitt county a <lb/>
N- 1892. <lb/>
of his widowed daughter in- <lb/>
Mrs. Lena <lb/>
The <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1892. <lb/>
Entered at th at <lb/>
N. a second-class mail mutter. <lb/>
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
GROVER CLEVELAND. <lb/>
New York. <lb/>
ADLAI E. STEVENSON, <lb/>
Illinois. <lb/>
ELECTORS AT <lb/>
CHARLES R AYCOCK, <lb/>
13- GLENN. <lb/>
to the Third Par- <lb/>
Both are Chosen Del- <lb/>
to State and Con-<lb/>
Pursuant to a call of the f said <lb/>
, that ho had <lb/>
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
ELIAS CARR, <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
R, A. <lb/>
-f Alleghany. <lb/>
FOB OF STATE <lb/>
COKE, <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
DONALD W. <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
R. M. <lb/>
of Buncombe. <lb/>
or <lb/>
J. a SCARBOROUGH. <lb/>
of <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
FRANK I. OSBORNE, <lb/>
of Mecklenburg. <lb/>
FOR OF TWELFTH <lb/>
GEORGE A. SHUFFORD. <lb/>
to office and vote for its nominees, <lb/>
the bounds of self- <lb/>
to remain in I he office in <lb/>
which that party placed him. <lb/>
Tho Democracy not only of Pitt <lb/>
Tho Third party convention hero ; county, of the State, is <lb/>
on the 30th of July brought about to heartily congratulated that <lb/>
one result that will helpful to the final settling to the Third <lb/>
the Democracy of Pitt county, j patty of these two men it has got- <lb/>
Tho Democrats now understand ; rid of two cases of Simon pure <lb/>
the enemies they have to tight j Judas Iscariot hypocrisy, so far M <lb/>
this campaign- Certain men ; politics is concerned, and no re- <lb/>
will be expressed either at <lb/>
their going or at the inevitable <lb/>
defeat and oblivion which is be- <lb/>
fore them. <lb/>
Tho Reflector calls upon the <lb/>
in <lb/>
have at last unmasked themselves <lb/>
and the public can now view them <lb/>
judge accordingly. They <lb/>
have themselves squarely <lb/>
in line with the Third party move- <lb/>
as is well known, j Democrats of North Carolina to <lb/>
been secretly agitating such a j repudiate such conduct. The last <lb/>
thing for the past several months. of doubt is now removed <lb/>
One of tho men who addressed j as to where these men stand, since <lb/>
this meeting was none other than they are both delegates to Third <lb/>
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb/>
FOB THE <lb/>
F- G. JAMES. <lb/>
for of <lb/>
FREDERICK <lb/>
I. K. WETHERINGTON- <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
RICHARD W. KING. <lb/>
FOB OF <lb/>
HENRY HARDING. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb/>
DR. WM. E. WARREN <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
J. B. KILPATRICK. <lb/>
CONVENTION. <lb/>
Last week The had <lb/>
something to say in reference to <lb/>
the Democratic Convention. Now <lb/>
we propose to write briefly upon <lb/>
tho Third Party Convention which <lb/>
met OH Saturday after the Demo- <lb/>
They were similar in one <lb/>
particular only, they met to <lb/>
County candidates <lb/>
point a few delegates. How <lb/>
the ultimate purpose of <lb/>
each. One endeavoring to keep <lb/>
North Carolina and Pitt county <lb/>
in the hands of <lb/>
who have watched over her <lb/>
destinies for the past quarter of a <lb/>
century and brought her from <lb/>
bankruptcy to her present prosper- <lb/>
condition in every department <lb/>
working for harmony and <lb/>
tho highest good of our entire <lb/>
citizenship The other laboring <lb/>
zealously but foolishly for the re- <lb/>
turn of our beloved old State into <lb/>
the hands of the Republican par- <lb/>
which once robbed herself of <lb/>
everything her honor, and <lb/>
placed this even in jeopardy- <lb/>
striving assiduously to tear <lb/>
former political ties and inter- <lb/>
that identical and array <lb/>
class against class, and interest <lb/>
against interest. Such was the <lb/>
between tho two <lb/>
The delegates to the form- <lb/>
were chosen in the townships <lb/>
at their primaries when the masses <lb/>
were present. The delegates to <lb/>
the latter were selected by the few <lb/>
men, mostly office seekers, that <lb/>
had assembled at the Court house <lb/>
after having heard a from <lb/>
their adorable friend Col. Harry <lb/>
Skinner. One nominated a ticket <lb/>
Without having any grand mogul <lb/>
to pass from the delegations of <lb/>
one township to the other and tell <lb/>
then how to vote. The other was <lb/>
Conspicuous for the omnipresence, <lb/>
and extraordinary interest of one <lb/>
great leader, the Colonel in every <lb/>
ballot that taker- Ono could <lb/>
but help being reminded of the <lb/>
old Republican conventions when <lb/>
there was an assemblage of <lb/>
people, but the had to be <lb/>
followed, and one man saw that <lb/>
this was <lb/>
One convention had only white <lb/>
men in it as delegates. The other <lb/>
had Third staunch <lb/>
pendents of former days, old and <lb/>
new line Republicans, etc. These <lb/>
are the conventions that <lb/>
ed tickets for you to support. The <lb/>
Reflector calls upon the white <lb/>
men of Pitt county to know which <lb/>
they will support. A vote for the <lb/>
Democratic nominees is a vote for <lb/>
your home and its prosperity. A <lb/>
vote for the candidates of the <lb/>
Third party is certainly a half vote <lb/>
for the straight out Republicans. <lb/>
We believe that when many who <lb/>
are now affiliating with the Third <lb/>
party are convinced of this fact, <lb/>
which they must be when the sit- <lb/>
is fairly viewed, they will <lb/>
at once return to their former <lb/>
and say we are <lb/>
now and forever to going back <lb/>
Hie rule of those people who <lb/>
have only one object and that is <lb/>
plunder. Stand by Democrat- <lb/>
party this year and yon may ex- <lb/>
to get the desired reforms, <lb/>
tor party and you <lb/>
Col. Harry Skinner, tho gentleman <lb/>
who has been feigning such beau- <lb/>
silence, thinking that to one <lb/>
knew what ho was doing or where <lb/>
he was drifting- With much <lb/>
of manner he spoke for <lb/>
sometime, and no doubt, while he <lb/>
did not utter it. this feeling up <lb/>
in his mind am <lb/>
arch of all I survey. I have sown <lb/>
some seed of discord in Democrat- <lb/>
ranks and may it a <lb/>
vest for His remarks <lb/>
did not reach tho level of an <lb/>
but were simply rant and <lb/>
noisy sound. It was not much <lb/>
but all the way <lb/>
through with did and <lb/>
did He ranted much about <lb/>
what he had done, and what the <lb/>
party had for years <lb/>
promised but failed to <lb/>
The Colonel reached tho point <lb/>
of showing the utter heinousness <lb/>
of his character when he stood on <lb/>
tiptoe and shouted that from <lb/>
hood his sympathies had been with <lb/>
the and expressed his <lb/>
great love for the <lb/>
that he rather be <lb/>
with the common people and go <lb/>
down with than to receive <lb/>
tho homage and plaudits of others, <lb/>
etc Great Jupiter I just as if <lb/>
the people of Pitt county did not <lb/>
know that <lb/>
has ever had for tho and <lb/>
people measured <lb/>
by what he could extortion out of <lb/>
the in What one man has eyer <lb/>
defrauded more of the farmers of <lb/>
Pitt county than Hatty Skinner I <lb/>
How many farmers are there to- <lb/>
day who will testify that for money <lb/>
borrowed from him they had to <lb/>
pay from to percent and in <lb/>
some cases even as high as CO per <lb/>
cent <lb/>
The secret of Got Skinners <lb/>
Third party enthusiasm can be <lb/>
told in fewer words than ho tried <lb/>
to tell it in that speech. There are <lb/>
people who read tho <lb/>
who are familiar enough with the <lb/>
Scriptures to know that woes are <lb/>
pronounced against the man <lb/>
his money to <lb/>
Well, the Colonel has been over- <lb/>
taken by of tho woes. How <lb/>
he stands to-day is no hidden <lb/>
and he perhaps speaks more <lb/>
truth than is intended when he <lb/>
says fool tho financial <lb/>
as much as any His <lb/>
god is and having lost the <lb/>
art of former days ho is now ready <lb/>
to mike any of principle <lb/>
or manhood if by so doing he can <lb/>
blind the people and by their <lb/>
be raised to power and <lb/>
But tho Colonel's little <lb/>
game wont work. His talents and <lb/>
gift of mind might be used in a <lb/>
better and more worthy cause. <lb/>
Mr- E. A- also responded <lb/>
to the call upon him. He <lb/>
was the call and was <lb/>
loaded for the occasion. His best <lb/>
friends were surprised, not at his <lb/>
endorsement of a Third party, but <lb/>
were not prepared to believe that <lb/>
he could utter such unworthy and <lb/>
despicable sentiments as fell from <lb/>
his lips. His speech was hot with <lb/>
prejudice and passion, <lb/>
ism all the way through- It was <lb/>
an effort to array class against <lb/>
class, excite the prejudices of the <lb/>
masses against all other <lb/>
and callings life. <lb/>
If such utterances are to be the <lb/>
keynote of the Third party cam- <lb/>
in this county we deplore <lb/>
that it is to descend to such a low <lb/>
plane. But those who wish to <lb/>
such, in Pitt county <lb/>
will receive through this campaign <lb/>
that drubbing that they are en- <lb/>
titled to. <lb/>
Mr. made the unblushing <lb/>
statement that vote for Grover <lb/>
Cleveland meant to the people <lb/>
slavery worse than slave- <lb/>
This statement was <lb/>
in ignorance or with the <lb/>
purpose of deception. While Mr. <lb/>
Democracy has for some- <lb/>
time been to a certain degree <lb/>
many were to believe <lb/>
he would prove the renegade that <lb/>
now marks him to the party under <lb/>
whom he at this time holds office. <lb/>
Pursuing the course upon which <lb/>
he is going, if he has the honor <lb/>
and self-respect that he should <lb/>
possess he will resign his office, <lb/>
and not hold a gift from the Dem- <lb/>
party while at the same <lb/>
time he is doing all in his power <lb/>
to break down that party. <lb/>
party State and Congressional <lb/>
conventions, as will be seen from <lb/>
tho authentic report of the county <lb/>
convention published in this <lb/>
paper. <lb/>
The election in Alabama crush- <lb/>
es the hope of the so called <lb/>
party. bolted tho reg- <lb/>
Democratic Convention and <lb/>
boasted that tho Republicans <lb/>
would support him and that in <lb/>
consequence the People's party <lb/>
would carry the State of Alabama <lb/>
by at least fifty thousand majority. <lb/>
Ho only foil short of this <lb/>
by from seventy-five to one <lb/>
hundred thousand. Jones the <lb/>
Democratic Governor carried the <lb/>
State by twenty thousand. <lb/>
The Legislature and all of the <lb/>
State officers straight Demo- <lb/>
Our North Carolina Third <lb/>
had better take warning. <lb/>
Republicans vote Third party <lb/>
tickets. Better get back where <lb/>
you belong and help us enjoy the <lb/>
victory. <lb/>
We notice in tho proceedings of <lb/>
the Third party convention that <lb/>
Hon. Willis R. has <lb/>
represented this county in the <lb/>
Senate, as a Democrat, for several <lb/>
past terms, has been nominated for <lb/>
tho Senate by said convention. <lb/>
Mr. Williams was not present when <lb/>
the nomination was made, and we <lb/>
learn gave no authority to use <lb/>
his name- He has not as yet <lb/>
his acceptance, and it is cur- <lb/>
that he will not ac- <lb/>
but says that he is as good <lb/>
a as he has over been. <lb/>
trust that he will soon let his <lb/>
friends know that ho is still true <lb/>
to tho party whose principles he <lb/>
has so long, so faithfully, and so <lb/>
eloquently advocated- Tho <lb/>
is open for the expression <lb/>
of such sentiment by this old hero <lb/>
of Democracy, and its readers are <lb/>
waiting to hear from him <lb/>
People's <lb/>
., . meeting <lb/>
was held and the following <lb/>
A- J. <lb/>
chairman. D- S. Spain and E. <lb/>
B. Moore secretaries- <lb/>
Nominated for the Senate, <lb/>
R. Williams ; for <lb/>
Jno. T. Phillips and Jno. Fleming; <lb/>
for Sheriff, W. H. Harrington; for <lb/>
Register of Deeds, A- F. ; <lb/>
for Treasurer, Jno. B. Galloway; <lb/>
for Surveyor, J. S. L Ward ; for <lb/>
Coroner, J. H- Barnhill. <lb/>
gates to attend the State <lb/>
were elected as Dr. <lb/>
J. W. Perkins, W. H. Allen, A. <lb/>
Forbes. Slade Chapman, Col. <lb/>
Harry Skinner, C C. J. <lb/>
A. Lang. W. M. King, T. M. Man- <lb/>
Abram Congleton, G. L. <lb/>
Stancil and Fernando Ward. <lb/>
Delegates for Congressional <lb/>
Convention J. W- Carson, J. H. <lb/>
Barnhill J. R- Jenkins, Jno. <lb/>
Eubanks, R- B. Parker, Elias <lb/>
Turner, G. M- Smith- J. T. Abrams, <lb/>
R. G. Chapman, E. S- Dixon, Mar- <lb/>
Cox, W. Dr. J. W. <lb/>
Perkins, Jno. Elks, R. L. Joyner, <lb/>
Joseph R. L. Smith, M. <lb/>
L. S. V- W. <lb/>
B. Wingate, J. T. Smith, D. W. <lb/>
C. C. Kirkman, 0- J Smith, <lb/>
D. S. Spain, C A. Randolph, E. D. <lb/>
Hathaway, I- Moore, J. M- Dixon, <lb/>
F. F. Brooks, W. J. Laughing- <lb/>
house, J. C- Wilson, <lb/>
T. Godwin, Capt. H. W. <lb/>
Brown, B- J. Wilson, T. J. <lb/>
W. H. Allen, A. A. Forbes, W. <lb/>
H. Harrington, E. A. <lb/>
Joseph Homing, W. S. Leggett, <lb/>
Beverly Daniel, R. W. Ward, <lb/>
H. S- Congleton, Henry <lb/>
Taylor, Harry Skinner. <lb/>
The following Executive Com- <lb/>
were elected for the next <lb/>
twelve months A. A. Forbes, G. <lb/>
F. Evans, W. B. Moore, J. E. <lb/>
Brown, A. J- <lb/>
Tho nominees for the various <lb/>
offices were called for, those pres- <lb/>
came forward and accepted in <lb/>
appropriate speeches. Col. Harry <lb/>
Skinner delivered a short address <lb/>
when the convention was called to <lb/>
order- Just before closing Hon. <lb/>
E. A- was called for, lie re- <lb/>
with his characteristic <lb/>
eloquence- <lb/>
Motion adopted to send the pro <lb/>
of this days meeting to <lb/>
the Progressive Farmer, <lb/>
Advocate and Eastern <lb/>
for publication. <lb/>
A. J- Move, <lb/>
D. S. Spain, a.- <lb/>
Moore, <lb/>
counted <lb/>
widows and only two <lb/>
in around Branchville. <lb/>
Edgar seems to be interested in <lb/>
the subject of widows, and if <lb/>
cations point to anything he is en- <lb/>
to reduce the surplus. <lb/>
Should he succeed in his present <lb/>
endeavor he will be a Merry-man. <lb/>
are glad to say that you hit <lb/>
straight from tho shoulder, Mr- <lb/>
Editor, at tho Third and <lb/>
are not afraid to say what you <lb/>
think. This is right, and to our <lb/>
mind shows that your heart is in <lb/>
tho right place. It is plain to <lb/>
every thinking man, I mt tho <lb/>
Third party is a Republican dodge <lb/>
to break tho but it <lb/>
will hardly succeed. If <lb/>
is will know <lb/>
how to deal with those fellows who <lb/>
prefer to Wall <lb/>
St. dictation Dispatch <lb/>
July Not indeed that we fear <lb/>
Wall St. dictation with Cleveland <lb/>
at the helm, but the sentiment ex- <lb/>
pressed is enough to rouse every <lb/>
Democrat to action. <lb/>
CHERRY <lb/>
Mr. H. W. Phillips returned to- <lb/>
day from a visit to Suffolk. When <lb/>
a young man begins to price prop- <lb/>
and examine into its <lb/>
it looks significant, don't it <lb/>
Miss Ida Grizzard is very low <lb/>
with typhoid fever. <lb/>
Miss Mattie Joyner has return- <lb/>
ed from a visit to friends in N- C. <lb/>
The boys glad to welcome her <lb/>
her back. <lb/>
Mr. A. P. Grizzard who call- <lb/>
ed home by sickness of his sister <lb/>
noted above, has returned to <lb/>
where ho holds a position <lb/>
in a grocery store of Bros. <lb/>
Perry's many friends were glad to <lb/>
see him. <lb/>
The farmers about through <lb/>
with their crops and they are <lb/>
a well earned rest <lb/>
Quill Pen. <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
The Democratic Congressional <lb/>
convention of the second district <lb/>
held recently at Scotland Neck, <lb/>
nominated F. A. Woodard. of <lb/>
son, on the ninth ballot. N. J. <lb/>
Rouse, of Lenoir, was nominated <lb/>
for hope <lb/>
to hear good news from the <lb/>
in the second district, and <lb/>
that the Democrats over will <lb/>
able to wipe out the black spot <lb/>
on North Carolina and rid them- <lb/>
selves of a representative in <lb/>
Congress. <lb/>
The report of the committee <lb/>
pointed by Congress to investigate <lb/>
the charge of drunkenness made <lb/>
against tho members of the House <lb/>
by Tom Watson his campaign <lb/>
book stamps the utterances as <lb/>
false. He would probably have <lb/>
been expelled had Congress seen <lb/>
fit to him so that he might <lb/>
pose as a martyr thereby be <lb/>
returned to his present seat in the <lb/>
House of Representatives. <lb/>
I AM A DEMOCRATIC. <lb/>
Josephus new paper, the <lb/>
North Carolinian, put in its <lb/>
from Raleigh last week- <lb/>
It is an eight column paper, and <lb/>
as bright and clean as a now dollar. <lb/>
It means to be a weekly paper for <lb/>
the whole State, and makes its <lb/>
start exactly in that direction. Of <lb/>
course it can nothing else but <lb/>
of tho pure Democratic stripe <lb/>
and will put in some good cam- <lb/>
work for the party. <lb/>
Congress adjourned at <lb/>
o'clock last Friday night, and most <lb/>
of its members will at once enter <lb/>
into the campaign. <lb/>
Hon. B- H. Bunn has been <lb/>
to succeed himself in the <lb/>
Fourth Congressional District. <lb/>
This is the third time that he has <lb/>
been endorsed by the Democracy <lb/>
of his district. <lb/>
Harry Skinner possesses won- <lb/>
vanity. The idea of having <lb/>
printed and issued posters an- <lb/>
that on a certain day he <lb/>
will declare how he stands on the <lb/>
political situation.- As if anybody <lb/>
cared, except a few tads their <lb/>
third party nines <lb/>
Respectfully submitted to all the <lb/>
political Weavers, and especially <lb/>
to Harry <lb/>
what a tangled web we weave <lb/>
When first we practice to <lb/>
Wilmington Star. <lb/>
N. C, Aug. 1892. <lb/>
Mb. Editor I am sorry to <lb/>
have to write this letter, but in <lb/>
justice to myself I do not see how <lb/>
I can do otherwise. Tho people <lb/>
of this county know that my name <lb/>
was put before the Democratic <lb/>
convention for tho nomination for <lb/>
Sheriff, which nomination Mr. R- <lb/>
W. King received. Now since I <lb/>
failed to get the nomination some <lb/>
scoundrels have circulated the <lb/>
report that I was going to the <lb/>
Third party. This report I de- <lb/>
as false, and whoever <lb/>
started it lies. <lb/>
Now, Mr. Editor, I hope the <lb/>
of Pitt county do not think <lb/>
am that kind of a Democrat. If <lb/>
they do I will deceive them No- <lb/>
when I go to the polls. <lb/>
Perhaps the author of this report <lb/>
is tho kind of a Democrat he takes <lb/>
me to one that has belonged <lb/>
to the Independent or Radical <lb/>
party and having turned back to <lb/>
the Democratic party claims to be <lb/>
as good a Democrat as I am. <lb/>
It m remembered that only a <lb/>
few years ago this county was <lb/>
mostly in the hands of the <lb/>
party, and when those Demo- <lb/>
to above were doing; <lb/>
their utmost to defeat the <lb/>
of the Democratic party, I <lb/>
was standing to the Demo <lb/>
and tried and continued to <lb/>
try until, thank God, we redeemed <lb/>
our good old county back into the <lb/>
hands of the Democrats. And <lb/>
now they say they are as good <lb/>
Democrats as I am. They may be <lb/>
but I can't see it. <lb/>
I am a Democrat, true and tried, <lb/>
and what it takes to constitute <lb/>
of that kind is one who has always <lb/>
stood square as I have, and never <lb/>
voted for any but the nominee of <lb/>
the Democratic party. Show mo <lb/>
one of that kind and I will show <lb/>
you one as good as myself. To <lb/>
think that such reports are <lb/>
lated about me because I failed to <lb/>
get the nomination asked for <lb/>
Why I expect to go to the election <lb/>
and not only vote the straight <lb/>
Democratic Cleveland <lb/>
down to township <lb/>
self, every one <lb/>
to do likewise. <lb/>
I hope this is sufficient to lot <lb/>
people of Pitt county know that I <lb/>
am not the kind of a Democrat <lb/>
some would have me to be. I <lb/>
thank the people who voted for me <lb/>
in the convention, especially those <lb/>
who voted for me and their votes <lb/>
were counted against me- Stand <lb/>
square, fellow Democrats, as I ex- <lb/>
to do, and we will gain tho <lb/>
victory, if we have got to fight two <lb/>
H. F. KEEL <lb/>
BRANCHVILLE, V., JOTTINGS. <lb/>
Miss Bennett received <lb/>
a fall, a few days ago at the <lb/>
of Mr. T. E. Peete, by which <lb/>
she was badly hurt. She was car- <lb/>
a bed out doors, and, losing <lb/>
her footing, she fell out tho door; <lb/>
fracturing her hip. She has been <lb/>
confined to her bed ever since. <lb/>
Mr- Ed was killed <lb/>
near here a few days ago, by be- <lb/>
thrown from a turn, had <lb/>
been to the saw mill for a load of <lb/>
lumber and on his return the <lb/>
became unmanageable and ran, <lb/>
throwing him from the cart, part <lb/>
of the lumber falling on him, kill <lb/>
him instantly. He was a <lb/>
worthy gentlemen, about years <lb/>
of age, and quite a number of <lb/>
years he had been living at the <lb/>
From our Correspondent. <lb/>
Southern Democrats regard tho <lb/>
result of Alabama election as <lb/>
the death of the people's <lb/>
party movement in the South, so <lb/>
far as its controlling any electoral <lb/>
votes is concerned, and they think <lb/>
it will also aid in keeping a <lb/>
of Congressional districts <lb/>
Democratic that might have elect- <lb/>
ed people's party men if that par- <lb/>
had carried Alabama. <lb/>
At this week's cabinet meeting <lb/>
the question of when action should <lb/>
be taken under tho recently enact- <lb/>
ed law, authorizing the President <lb/>
to retaliate upon Canadian vessels, <lb/>
was discussed, but as only tho two <lb/>
Fosters and Attorney-General Mil- <lb/>
were present no definite con- <lb/>
was arrived at <lb/>
All sorts of sensational stories <lb/>
been current about the dis- <lb/>
agreement of the sub- committee <lb/>
which went to Homestead to in- <lb/>
tho strike in tho <lb/>
mills on the report written by <lb/>
chairman There is nothing <lb/>
sensational about the facts. Chair- <lb/>
man Oates prepared the report in <lb/>
the usual manner, and when it was <lb/>
read to the sub-committee every <lb/>
member agreed that it was a fair <lb/>
and impartial statement of what <lb/>
the committee had learned at <lb/>
Homestead, but some of the con- <lb/>
arrived at concerning or- <lb/>
labor were unsatisfactory <lb/>
to two Democrats and one <lb/>
making a majority of tho <lb/>
so the report was <lb/>
rejected by tho and <lb/>
referred to the full Judiciary com- <lb/>
for final action. If the full <lb/>
committee sustains tho action of <lb/>
tho subcommittee Mr. Oates says <lb/>
his report be to <lb/>
tho House as a minority report, <lb/>
and a now majority report will be <lb/>
written by Bynum, <lb/>
one of tho dissenting <lb/>
Tom Watson, of Georgia, made <lb/>
a miserable failure to prove his <lb/>
charge of drunkenness against <lb/>
members of the House. The only- <lb/>
member he dared to name was <lb/>
Judge Cobb, of Alabama, and <lb/>
his assertion that he <lb/>
ed him to have been intoxicated <lb/>
when he made a speech in the <lb/>
House, was the positive statements <lb/>
of a score of prominent members <lb/>
that Mr. Cobb was not even in the <lb/>
slightest way under the influence <lb/>
of liquor when he made the speech <lb/>
referred to. Watson refused to <lb/>
name any other member to the in- <lb/>
committee-What ac- <lb/>
the committee will take is not <lb/>
at this time known, but it is be- <lb/>
that a disinclination to feed <lb/>
Watson's craving for notoriety w ill <lb/>
prevent the committee taking any <lb/>
action that would result in allow- <lb/>
him to pose as a martyr. At <lb/>
one time it looked like the sharp <lb/>
league between Representative <lb/>
of Louisiana, and Mr <lb/>
Watson might result in a personal <lb/>
encounter those gentle- <lb/>
men, outside of the committee <lb/>
room, but so far peace reigns. <lb/>
several prominent <lb/>
Senators including Sherman <lb/>
and Hawley, had openly express <lb/>
ed their sympathy for the <lb/>
Company, the Senate adopted <lb/>
a resolution providing for an in- <lb/>
of the Homestead <lb/>
strike, and the following Senators <lb/>
were named as members of tho <lb/>
Felton, Sanders, <lb/>
White Hill, comment <lb/>
has been made because only two <lb/>
Democrats were named for service <lb/>
on this committee. <lb/>
Attorney General Miller is said <lb/>
to be mad because instead of <lb/>
place toe bench of <lb/>
tho Supreme Court which went to <lb/>
Mr. Shires as a peace-offering to <lb/>
Mr- Blaine, to he is related. <lb/>
Mr. Harrison gave the promise <lb/>
that should have the first <lb/>
that during his sec- <lb/>
term. Mr. Miller regards the <lb/>
probability of a second term as <lb/>
entirely too to be satisfy- <lb/>
bat he does not openly kick <lb/>
against the man who brought him <lb/>
from obscurity to the Attorney- <lb/>
Generals office. <lb/>
Do you intend to plant a fall <lb/>
crop of Potatoes l It is prob- <lb/>
they will bring a <lb/>
good price this winter. <lb/>
You cannot afford to plant them <lb/>
without manuring them <lb/>
heavily with a good Fer- <lb/>
It has been <lb/>
shown conclusively <lb/>
the past season <lb/>
that yon can <lb/>
not make <lb/>
Good Potatoes without a good <lb/>
We have just what <lb/>
you need and want. Our <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 <lb/>
will explain the merits of the <lb/>
different kinds. <lb/>
YOUNG <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Notice to Shippers. <lb/>
In order to make more convenient and <lb/>
use of the vessel g now cm- <lb/>
ployed In the Carolina <lb/>
and thus to better serve the inter- <lb/>
of shippers, the <lb/>
have decided to their <lb/>
respective lines between Not <lb/>
folk and and <lb/>
Washington. N. Into <lb/>
one be known as <lb/>
The Norfolk, <lb/>
LINE. <lb/>
Connecting at Norfolk with <lb/>
The Bay Baltimore. <lb/>
The Clyde Line, for Philadelphia. <lb/>
The Old Dominion Line, for New <lb/>
York. <lb/>
The Merchants it Miners Line for <lb/>
ton and Providence. <lb/>
Tho Water Lines for Va., <lb/>
and Washington. D. C. <lb/>
At with <lb/>
The Atlantic North Carolina K. K. <lb/>
At Washington with <lb/>
The Tar <lb/>
Also Calling at N. C. <lb/>
The new line will <lb/>
Service, with such additional sailings as <lb/>
will best suit the needs business. <lb/>
NO ADVANCE IS HATES. <lb/>
The direct service of steamers, <lb/>
and the freedom from handling, are <lb/>
among the great advantage this <lb/>
oilers. The following gentlemen have <lb/>
been appointed Agents of the Ne- <lb/>
John E. at Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
John Son, at <lb/>
S. II. Cray, at N. C. <lb/>
S. Whitehurst, at Roanoke Island. <lb/>
J. J. Cherry, at Greenville, N, C. <lb/>
The steamer will leave Norfolk <lb/>
on May from wharf <lb/>
on Water street. Clyde <lb/>
and between the piers of the Clyde <lb/>
Lino and Old Dominion Steamship Cu- <lb/>
ll. A. <lb/>
V. P. G. M. Old Dominion S. S. Co. <lb/>
W. P. CLYDE CO., <lb/>
Clyde Line. <lb/>
No-folk. May 14th, <lb/>
o- <lb/>
We beg to announce to our many <lb/>
Mends and customers that we <lb/>
have the largest and best selected <lb/>
stock Goods to be our <lb/>
town. while we are not sell <lb/>
at cost we beg to announce <lb/>
that we think we can and will <lb/>
any prices on the <lb/>
fines of Goods earned by us. W <lb/>
throw out no baits to entrap <lb/>
To one and all we extend <lb/>
a cordial welcome to our <lb/>
will be pleased to you with <lb/>
any goods in the following lines <lb/>
Tobacco Growers <lb/>
USE <lb/>
Furnace <lb/>
The best Invention for <lb/>
TOBACCO. <lb/>
With it yon have absolute <lb/>
control over heating your barn, <lb/>
and it removes <lb/>
All Danger of Fire. <lb/>
Two cures per week can be <lb/>
made in the same barn <lb/>
co of different degrees of ripe- <lb/>
can be cured at one time <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 to <lb/>
in the purchase of a PIANO from <lb/>
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb/>
In the of an Organ <lb/>
ADOLPH COHN, <lb/>
NEW N. C. <lb/>
General Agent for North Carolina, <lb/>
who is now handling goods direct from <lb/>
the manufacturers, as HIGH <lb/>
GRADE PIANOS, <lb/>
for tone, workmanship and <lb/>
and by all the <lb/>
journal in the United States. <lb/>
Made by Paul who is at this <lb/>
time one of the best mechanics and in- <lb/>
of the day. Thirteen new <lb/>
patents on this grade Piano- <lb/>
Also the NEW BY EVANS <lb/>
PIANO widen has bean told by <lb/>
him for the past six in the eastern <lb/>
part of this and an to this time has <lb/>
given The <lb/>
Piano just mentioned will sold at from <lb/>
In Rosewood, Oak, <lb/>
Walnut or Mahogany cases. <lb/>
Also the PARLOR ORGAN <lb/>
from to in solid or Oak <lb/>
Ten years In the <lb/>
business has enabled him to handle <lb/>
nothing bat standard goods mid he does <lb/>
not to say that he can sell any <lb/>
about SB per <lb/>
than other agents are now <lb/>
Refer to nil banks In Eastern Carolina. <lb/>
A Hogshead Story. <lb/>
wish by this means to tell the people <lb/>
that have prepared and am still <lb/>
paring a huge of material for <lb/>
co Hogsheads. And to make it as con- <lb/>
possible for my customers I <lb/>
have decided to run two wagons on the <lb/>
road to deliver them at most convenient <lb/>
place. And I further promise that I <lb/>
will use. best efforts to put up such <lb/>
site and finality of Hogsheads the de. <lb/>
Want- Ana think I can com- <lb/>
in price with any. <lb/>
I will also pay special attention to <lb/>
making and Brackets for trim- <lb/>
ming any house yon may build. <lb/>
Please see me placing your or- <lb/>
or address me at N. C. <lb/>
T Respectfully, <lb/>
f A. G. COX. <lb/>
man <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions, <lb/>
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Pants <lb/>
Goods, Hats, Shoes, Hardware, <lb/>
Nails, Tinware, Crockery, <lb/>
Glassware, Groceries, deg. <lb/>
White Oil cents per gallon, <lb/>
Wood and Willow Ware, Harness, <lb/>
Whips and Collars, Farming Tools <lb/>
of the improved makes, <lb/>
Trunks, Valises, Floor Matting, <lb/>
Oil Children's Carriages, <lb/>
and the largest and best selected <lb/>
stock of FURNITURE ever kept <lb/>
in our town. When in need of <lb/>
anything in our line try us. <lb/>
Yours, anxious for trade, <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb/>
CONTINUE THE OF <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory is well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing <lb/>
but work. We keep up with the times and improved styles <lb/>
Rest material used In all work. All styles of Springs are you can select from <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil. Ram Horn, King <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full of ready <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb/>
he year round, which will sell as as the <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking the people this and surrounding counties for past favors w hope t <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same <lb/>
T. X. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG. <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rates. <lb/>
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb/>
Horner Military School, Oxford, N. C.<lb/>
MODERN buildings, hot and cold baths, gymnasium, healthful climate, <lb/>
numbers limited. A model home school boys. <lb/>
sent on <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb/>
for the following lines <lb/>
wort Boxes Cracker. <lb/>
Car load Pork <lb/>
Car load hide Meat. <lb/>
Car load Flour, all <lb/>
Car load White Seed Oats. <lb/>
Cases Star Lye . <lb/>
Cases Bread Powders. <lb/>
Caw brandy Cherries and Peaches. <lb/>
Pull line Case <lb/>
Crackers. <lb/>
Bones Tobacco. <lb/>
Boxes Starch. <lb/>
Barrels Pate Molasses. <lb/>
Barrels Mick <lb/>
Barrels Gall A Ax Snuff. <lb/>
Barrels Railroad Mills Snuff, <lb/>
Barrels Snuff. <lb/>
Paper Cigarette, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
For Accident Insurance by the year In one of <lb/>
the beet Companies tn existence, Re <lb/>
Rag<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017559_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
Low water In the river. <lb/>
A heavy rain-fall Sunday night. <lb/>
The hot wave is down on us again. <lb/>
The time for big yearly meetings draws <lb/>
near. <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the Old <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
the Colonel hi mouth he <lb/>
put his foot in it. <lb/>
The New Home Bearing Machine for <lb/>
at Bros. <lb/>
The New Home Sewing Machine and <lb/>
all at Brown Bros. <lb/>
The other half of the State Guard is <lb/>
now in camp at Wrightsville. <lb/>
New Cream Cheese and X. Y. State <lb/>
Butter at the Old Brick <lb/>
The campaign grows warmer and be- <lb/>
fore many day will red hot. <lb/>
Want to eat something goody Boss <lb/>
Biscuits at the Old Store. <lb/>
Cash given for Produce. Hides. Eggs <lb/>
and Furs at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Cheapest Furniture. Bedsteads and <lb/>
Mattresses at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Attention is called to the Mile of three <lb/>
town lots advertised by Sheriff Tucker. <lb/>
To-day and to-morrow the State <lb/>
Association meets in Raleigh. <lb/>
It is good that are heard about <lb/>
the crops. The corn yield will be large. <lb/>
As yet the watermelon is comparative- <lb/>
scarce. The local crop has been poor. <lb/>
It will not lie long the dam Is <lb/>
completed. Already a portion of it is <lb/>
Use. <lb/>
The Baptist Sunday School will have a <lb/>
lawn party in the Academy grove Friday <lb/>
night. <lb/>
Office on comer near Mrs. board- <lb/>
house is for rent. Apply to <lb/>
iS Whichard. <lb/>
A mule running with a cart load of to- <lb/>
flues created just a little excite- <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
The steamer Myers is off for repairs, <lb/>
he i place on the river being supplied by <lb/>
steamer Kinston. <lb/>
The Southern has again made <lb/>
its appearance at Bethel with J. T. and <lb/>
R. Ward a- editors. <lb/>
C. B. Aycock. Esq., one of the Demo- <lb/>
electors for the State at large, will <lb/>
speak at Bethel to-day. <lb/>
The price of meat has a cent <lb/>
a the past week. Sugar also has <lb/>
an upward move in price. <lb/>
A by the name of Oakley has <lb/>
been established at Mr. W. 11- Williams, <lb/>
on the Washington branch road. <lb/>
The boys of the second nine base ball <lb/>
club went to Kinston yesterday evening <lb/>
and will play the that town to-day. <lb/>
In order to close out my of To- <lb/>
Knives and Thermometers before <lb/>
the season ends I have reduced the price.<lb/>
The colored folks have an excursion <lb/>
from Kinston to Norfolk to-day. Quite <lb/>
a number from Greenville and the baud <lb/>
will go along. <lb/>
A large two-story dwelling is going up <lb/>
on the corner of the Bernard property <lb/>
upon the site of the building that was <lb/>
burned in May. <lb/>
Gregory, have <lb/>
ranged to furnish free hogsheads o <lb/>
shipping tobacco to them. See <lb/>
Weeds are about to take the town. The <lb/>
present Board of will be <lb/>
dubbed do nothing if they <lb/>
don't look out. <lb/>
Mayor James is after several parties <lb/>
failed to list their town taxes. <lb/>
Those who receive a card from him had <lb/>
better look sharp. <lb/>
Miss Lee Parker, of Wilson, is visiting <lb/>
Mrs. C. W. <lb/>
Ma Pearl of Greene, is <lb/>
visiting Mrs. B. F. <lb/>
E. C. Glenn, of Elm City, i- <lb/>
spending a few days here. <lb/>
Mr. J. W. has been spending <lb/>
couple weeks In Asheville. <lb/>
Mrs. Julia is at visit- <lb/>
lier daughter. Mrs. G. Nelson. <lb/>
Mr. R. left Monday for a few <lb/>
days stay at bis old home, Palmyra. <lb/>
Mr. E. A. is attending the meet- <lb/>
of the State Alliance Greensboro. <lb/>
Mr. S. B. Wilson returned last week <lb/>
from Panacea Springs much improved in <lb/>
health. <lb/>
Miss May of Grimes- <lb/>
land, is visiting her grandfather. Dr. <lb/>
Mr. R. Cherry Miss Lillie Cherry <lb/>
readied home Saturday evening from an <lb/>
extended stay at Morehead. <lb/>
Misses Nannie Fleming and Estelle <lb/>
Doughty, the latter from Hamilton, are <lb/>
visiting Miss Aylmer Sugg. <lb/>
Mr. Leon Cox, of Washington, has <lb/>
taken a ion in the <lb/>
room. He worked with us last fall. <lb/>
Misses Nellie and Fannie Skinner, of <lb/>
Hertford, daughters of Hon. G. <lb/>
Skinner, are visiting Misses Myra Skinner <lb/>
and Bessie White. <lb/>
Miss Cherry home <lb/>
last week from Boston, having been <lb/>
special instruction there in the Con <lb/>
of Music. <lb/>
Mr. n. W. Martin, a good citizen of <lb/>
Bethel Wednesday night <lb/>
of last week. He had more than <lb/>
his three score years and ten. <lb/>
Mr. Charles skinner was confined to <lb/>
Ids room with sickness last week. Though <lb/>
feeble he came out Monday and left <lb/>
the other delegates for the Congressional <lb/>
convention. <lb/>
Mr. D. D. Haskett returned home Fri- <lb/>
day from a two weeks visit in the West- <lb/>
portion of the State, <lb/>
and Connelly Springs. He left <lb/>
his family at the latter place for the re- <lb/>
of the summer. <lb/>
I Ion. W. Mason, one of the State <lb/>
Ha road Commissioners, passed down on <lb/>
the train Friday evening for <lb/>
Kinston at which place he spoke <lb/>
day. Mr. Mason thorough Democrat, <lb/>
an able speaker, and is throwing himself <lb/>
earnestly into the canvass of this cam-<lb/>
People from various parts of the State <lb/>
will in at the opening of <lb/>
the tobacco market, Sept. 1st. Many <lb/>
have told us they Intended to lie on the <lb/>
breaks. It's going to be a big day. <lb/>
Pitt county delegates to the <lb/>
convention at left on <lb/>
Monday's train. The convention was <lb/>
held yesterday but nothing had been <lb/>
beard from it this writing. <lb/>
Mr. A. W. brought in a <lb/>
bunch of nice tobacco Monday which he <lb/>
cured himself. He is a new hand at the <lb/>
business but his cures show that he is <lb/>
getting it down to perfection. <lb/>
. <lb/>
C. C Crab. <lb/>
At the meeting of the Cleveland and <lb/>
Carr club last Thursday night several <lb/>
new names were enrolled. The com- <lb/>
on entertainment reported that J. <lb/>
; L. Fleming and G. B. King will address <lb/>
the club at next meeting, Aug. 11th. <lb/>
The flag pole committee reported that <lb/>
the would be here and ready by the <lb/>
last of the week. A committee of three, <lb/>
consisting of . R. J. E. Starkey <lb/>
and J. S. C. Benjamin, was to <lb/>
procure a flag. <lb/>
The date tor raising the pole and <lb/>
furling the flag will be announced early. <lb/>
Let all Democrats <lb/>
Get yourself ready to read the news. <lb/>
Lang's column tells you to-day of his <lb/>
going to the northern markets after new- <lb/>
goods. He will find them, of course, new <lb/>
and stylish, just such as his customers <lb/>
will desire. <lb/>
The Entertainment. <lb/>
It Is on the of everybody present <lb/>
that the entertainment by the Greenville <lb/>
Amateurs last Friday night was the best <lb/>
they have yet given. The singing of Dr. <lb/>
Charles and Miss Havens <lb/>
Cherry was superb. Little Nina and <lb/>
Charlie James also sang won every <lb/>
heart in tin- audience. The duct by <lb/>
Misses Annie Florence <lb/>
Williams was excellent. As the Gypsy <lb/>
Maid little Miss Sheppard was as <lb/>
sweet as could be. Mr. R. the <lb/>
of the evening, brought down <lb/>
the house at every appearance. In fact <lb/>
every character was charming and the <lb/>
audience was delighted. <lb/>
Marriage <lb/>
During July the Register of Deeds <lb/>
issued marriage licenses to the following <lb/>
T. and F. <lb/>
Harris, J. ft. Huggins and Lizzie Turner, <lb/>
David Sutton Ada Elliott, Johnson <lb/>
Sutton and Sarah Dickerson, William <lb/>
Carson and Theresa M. <lb/>
Stokes. <lb/>
Knight and <lb/>
Moore, Simon Cherry and Mamie Tyson, <lb/>
David Dickens and Mattie Phillips, Moses <lb/>
Sherrod and Sarah Jones, Samuel Daven- <lb/>
port and Jennie Rollins, E. Mayo <lb/>
and Caroline John R. <lb/>
and Ida Wilkinson, Louis Chapman and <lb/>
Mary White, John C. Baird and Sarah J. <lb/>
Joseph Perkins and Mary E. <lb/>
Harrington. <lb/>
AYDEN NOTES. <lb/>
Missionary Baptist church is going <lb/>
up very rapidly. Hope we may also <lb/>
other churches ere long. The pro- <lb/>
meeting at church <lb/>
closed last Friday night, only one <lb/>
Mr. J. K. Smith made a flying trip to <lb/>
Greenville last Friday. <lb/>
We are glad to see Mrs. <lb/>
ton out again after her recent illness. <lb/>
Judge is speaking of coming to <lb/>
to live. <lb/>
Master Will was visiting his <lb/>
father Mr. John last week. Come <lb/>
again Will. <lb/>
The Tobacco should read the <lb/>
ten commandments. <lb/>
The Third party men are scarce in our <lb/>
one. <lb/>
Quite a severe storm visited oar little <lb/>
town last Saturday about o'clock. The <lb/>
wind blew the top on-the Baptist church, <lb/>
and quite demolished the brick house of <lb/>
Baker Nichols. Timbers blew across <lb/>
the kiln of brick that had just been burned <lb/>
and killed some poultry, also blew the <lb/>
dwelling of H. S. Baker off the blocks <lb/>
that had just been raised. Right much <lb/>
excitement prevailed. <lb/>
The Reflector will receive another <lb/>
subscription before long. A. V. L. <lb/>
The last two weeks were exceptionally <lb/>
ones with the tobacco the <lb/>
curing season being full blast. A <lb/>
fa mer told us Saturday that the curing <lb/>
of the crop will be finished much earlier <lb/>
year than last. <lb/>
White men of county, think before <lb/>
you take any step toward the Third par- <lb/>
It is nothing more a Republican <lb/>
side show, and by giving It your en- <lb/>
help to put Caro- <lb/>
under control. Beware what <lb/>
you do <lb/>
Saturday Mr. T. Smith brought us a <lb/>
-ample of bis tobacco, the first lie ever <lb/>
cured. It was a good as if he had always <lb/>
been an old hand at the business. <lb/>
Wm. II. Long, attorney, two ad- <lb/>
in this paper, one a two- <lb/>
story brick store for rent, the other a <lb/>
double-store for sale. Bead them. <lb/>
One section of the big flag pole to go <lb/>
up on the public square was brought in <lb/>
Saturday. The other came Monday, <lb/>
now listen for the date of a big Demo- <lb/>
jubilee. <lb/>
Let there be a big turn at the <lb/>
Cleveland and Carr club to-morrow night. <lb/>
J. L. Fleming and G. B. King will make <lb/>
speeches, and both of them will be good. <lb/>
Everybody come. <lb/>
The time for holding the meeting look- <lb/>
to the organization of a new military <lb/>
company here is set for third Friday of <lb/>
this month, Let all interested be <lb/>
present. <lb/>
Last week the Kernersville News be- <lb/>
its sixth volume. Editor Hunt has <lb/>
done some fine work on the News since <lb/>
enlarging it and is making it a capital <lb/>
good paper. <lb/>
Messrs. Hooker Bros. Greene, after <lb/>
a ill season with their new merry- <lb/>
go-round, moved it to Scotland Neck <lb/>
yesterday. From there they will move <lb/>
towards the west. <lb/>
The handsomest sent out by <lb/>
any school this season comes from Oak <lb/>
Ridge Institute. This institute is one of <lb/>
the most flourishing in the South and en- <lb/>
joys a wide reputation. <lb/>
Culley Edmonds, Barbers, have dis- <lb/>
solved co-partnership. Herbert Edmonds <lb/>
continues business at the old stand in the <lb/>
Opera House corner, while Alfred Culley <lb/>
opens a shop in the Club House. Cards <lb/>
from both are in this issue. <lb/>
The is complete for the <lb/>
opening of the Eastern Warehouse on <lb/>
the first of September. The couple to be <lb/>
married that day have notified the <lb/>
that will be on hand ready for <lb/>
the knot to be tied. Us going to be a <lb/>
big time and is invited. <lb/>
will sell hats, <lb/>
flowers, ribbons, pictures, easels <lb/>
and fancy ware right down at cost. Also <lb/>
a beautiful line of Hamburg laces, etc <lb/>
Give me a call before going elsewhere <lb/>
and be convinced of the gnat <lb/>
in prices. Km Jonas. <lb/>
The of Cobb Bros. <lb/>
commission merchants of Norfolk, has <lb/>
been dissolved by the withdrawal of Mr. <lb/>
Gilliam from the Ann. The business will <lb/>
be continued by R. J. Cobb and <lb/>
C. . Cobb. under the firm name of Cobb <lb/>
Brothers. <lb/>
For Sale on Easy Terms <lb/>
Large Double Store in Greenville. I <lb/>
offer for sale on easy terms the large <lb/>
Double Store north of Fifth street, <lb/>
east Evan- street, with lot <lb/>
feet on Fifth street by feet deep. A <lb/>
splendid bargain. Apply at once to <lb/>
Wm. If. LONG, <lb/>
In <lb/>
AID <lb/>
Fall Count. <lb/>
Coarse <lb/>
In Music and Art. Cornet Hand. <lb/>
ion for and Health. <lb/>
For prepared for College Class. <lb/>
la a <lb/>
Complete Preparatory Department. <lb/>
Resident Burgeon. Preparatory J <lb/>
for medical <lb/>
lien. Low rate. For particulars, -i <lb/>
SCHOOL, Winston, N. C.<lb/>
The of Culley and Edmonds Is <lb/>
dissolved consent. <lb/>
Those i to III in Will pay Che <lb/>
Herb <lb/>
Al <lb/>
Aug. <lb/>
It fives to In <lb/>
our I will continue the <lb/>
business, the old stand. Every com- <lb/>
fort and convenience be found in <lb/>
my shop. First-class shave and haircut <lb/>
can be had at all limes. the <lb/>
public for past I It <lb/>
i in mi lion of the same. <lb/>
m onus. <lb/>
RARE <lb/>
Bargains are being offered by the low merchant of Greenville <lb/>
T. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Prices are reduced on all Sum- <lb/>
mer in order to close out <lb/>
by SEPTEMBER 1st to make <lb/>
room for Fall Stock. Warm <lb/>
Ginghams worth to <lb/>
Dow selling at Bleach- <lb/>
ed and Unbleached Domestics <lb/>
at any price- All our line Sum- <lb/>
makes them go in a rush. <lb/>
Those beautiful Embroidered <lb/>
Black Mull Dress Patterns, only <lb/>
a few left, reduced, to <lb/>
White Goods, former price <lb/>
and reduced to and <lb/>
Lewis and Baker, W. A. Bright 40-inch White Lawn and <lb/>
Dress Styles Outing and j. <lb/>
Beautiful French Taffetas worth <lb/>
now G. Scotch Zephyr <lb/>
hams worth Best <lb/>
weather coupled with low prices mer Dress Good at <lb/>
your own price. All of <lb/>
Summer Clothing to be sold at <lb/>
cost. Don't forget our Sample <lb/>
Notions, such as Shirts, Sus- <lb/>
Collars, Cliffs, Hand- <lb/>
kerchiefs, Gloves, <lb/>
Mitts, Pans, Umbrellas. A <lb/>
large lot of Sample Shoes and <lb/>
Slippers at factory prices, there- <lb/>
by yon the middle man's <lb/>
To our many customers we say inspect our <lb/>
goods before buying. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
Opposite Old Brick Store. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
G. E. HARRIS, <lb/>
--------DEALER IN-------- <lb/>
ill <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb/>
-AND BUYER OF- <lb/>
Country Produce <lb/>
Bring me all of your Chickens. Eggs, Ducks, <lb/>
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the <lb/>
highest market price for them and pay in spot <lb/>
cash. <lb/>
If you have anything to ship I will attend to it for you on a small <lb/>
Call see me. <lb/>
JNO. S. <lb/>
At the Town Council is discover- <lb/>
that people arc <lb/>
of the town and have claims. A <lb/>
new pump has been placed in the well on <lb/>
corner of Evans and Ninth streets, and <lb/>
the order is out for lumber to rebuild the <lb/>
footbridge. <lb/>
Tho. Ball Opens. <lb/>
The Democratic nominees for the Leg- <lb/>
and various county officers will <lb/>
open the campaign next Saturday, at <lb/>
which time they will speak at Parker's <lb/>
School House. There should be a large <lb/>
turn out of the people to hear the issues <lb/>
of the day Every Democrat in <lb/>
should be present and get every- <lb/>
body else possible to go. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
Richmond Market. <lb/>
We have arranged with Samuel M. <lb/>
Schultz Co., at Greenville, N. C. to <lb/>
supply our customers with new Hogs- <lb/>
heads free. Our market is now ready <lb/>
for the new it come. <lb/>
DAVIS , GREGORY, <lb/>
Planters Warehouse. <lb/>
Richmond, Va. <lb/>
New Barber Shop. <lb/>
I take this opportunity to return <lb/>
thanks to my many customers who have <lb/>
given me their liberal support in the past. <lb/>
have opened a new shop In toe old Club <lb/>
and would respectfully solicit a <lb/>
continuation of my former patronage. <lb/>
I will assure all that they shall receive <lb/>
every attention besides getting the best <lb/>
shave and hair cut in town. All I a If <lb/>
trial. Satisfaction guaranteed. All <lb/>
of the latest improvements in the <lb/>
rial art will be in use in my shop. <lb/>
August 8th, 1882. <lb/>
freed from Dan- <lb/>
by the of my preparation which <lb/>
no one else is allowed to use. <lb/>
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
to the buyers of surrounding counties, of the <lb/>
not to be excelled in this market. And in c- an <lb/>
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of nil kinds, NOTION'S. GEN <lb/>
FURNISH INC. GOODS. HATS and CAPS, HOOTS and SHOES. LA <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS. FURNITURE and MOUSE FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS. WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb/>
Gin and Mill Hat, Rock Pi till W or Paris, and <lb/>
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade Wholesale <lb/>
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less C per cent for Bread Prep- <lb/>
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, Lead and pure Lin- <lb/>
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt Wood and <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a null and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
For Rent. <lb/>
A large two-story brick store in the <lb/>
Opera House Greenville, <lb/>
splendid room, with patent <lb/>
tor, counters, shelving and drawers. <lb/>
Apply to <lb/>
Wm. H. LONG. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. Attorney-at-Law-. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Tobacco Warehouse <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
Roll of Honor <lb/>
For the first month of the public school <lb/>
taught in district No. by Miss Bessie <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
Allen, Alfred Allen, <lb/>
John Allen, Mills S. Smith, A. <lb/>
Smith. Robbie Howell, T. Tyson, <lb/>
Robert E. and Tom <lb/>
Dora Bundy, Caro- <lb/>
line Little. Lizzie Willoughby, Sal lie <lb/>
and Rosa L. Willoughby. <lb/>
The highest average was attained by <lb/>
Lizzie her average being <lb/>
Matters in Lenoir. <lb/>
Alex was in Kinston <lb/>
day and tells us that he never saw a <lb/>
larger or more harmonious county con- <lb/>
than the one the Democrats of <lb/>
held that day. Every <lb/>
but one was made by acclamation. <lb/>
The same day a Third party convention <lb/>
was held there with not to exceed a <lb/>
present. This does not look like <lb/>
the Third party was having a walk <lb/>
over in Lenoir as some of their number <lb/>
ire claiming. The Reflector expects <lb/>
to hear that the Democracy of Lenoir <lb/>
does its duty on election day and brings <lb/>
In a large majority for the ticket. <lb/>
In the <lb/>
I Superior Court. <lb/>
State North Carolina, <lb/>
Pitt County. <lb/>
Eliza Stocks, J. T. Min- <lb/>
Allen, T. B. Allen and wife Mottle, <lb/>
Stocks, Cora Stocks. <lb/>
Stocks, Annie Stocks, Chas. <lb/>
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 our Superior Court, at a court <lb/>
to be held for the county of Pitt, at the <lb/>
Court House in Greenville, on the 2nd <lb/>
Monday after the 1st Monday of <lb/>
it being the 19th day of September, <lb/>
1892, and answer the complaint which <lb/>
will be deposited in the office of the <lb/>
Clerk of the Court of said <lb/>
within the first three days of <lb/>
term, and let said defendant take notice <lb/>
that if f ad to answer the said <lb/>
within the time required by law <lb/>
the plaintiffs apply to the court for <lb/>
the relief demanded in the complaint. <lb/>
Given under my hand and seal of said <lb/>
court, this day of August, <lb/>
K. A. <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court. <lb/>
Will begin its second season or <lb/>
AUGUST 1892. <lb/>
WALTER'S <lb/>
r. <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/>
Street, in rear of Dr. D. L. <lb/>
office. <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb/>
I take great pleasure in informing my <lb/>
friends and the public generally <lb/>
that my<lb/>
is now open. A successful career of <lb/>
SO .-. TEARS .-. <lb/>
lea proof of the satisfaction I always Rive. <lb/>
My Work Speaks for Itself. <lb/>
Call early and examine <lb/>
Hoping to gain your confidence, and <lb/>
merit your favor. I <lb/>
Very respectfully, <lb/>
THOMAS <lb/>
j Bring a load of your best tobacco and <lb/>
we will show everybody that we <lb/>
have the best tobacco in the <lb/>
BELT. <lb/>
A large number of buyers have de- <lb/>
their intentions of <lb/>
------coming- to------ <lb/>
j GREENVILLE. <lb/>
new Warehouse has just been <lb/>
completed and is one of the best <lb/>
equipped warehouses in the State. <lb/>
We have free Stables for your <lb/>
teams. <lb/>
charge you nothing for <lb/>
and storage. <lb/>
We have an experienced force to <lb/>
I handle your tobacco and will see that <lb/>
get full value for every pound. <lb/>
Presents in household and kitchen <lb/>
furniture and provisions <lb/>
j Given Away <lb/>
ion our opening day to any worthy <lb/>
white couple that will married pub- <lb/>
in our house on September 1st. <lb/>
j The list of present and donors <lb/>
pear below. <lb/>
j Remember the day and date and <lb/>
all to see the Knot Tied. <lb/>
j Eastern Warehouse, <lb/>
L. and Alex. Props. <lb/>
GREEN N. C. <lb/>
Joyner Red Room Set. W. <lb/>
Chamber Set. s. K. Handsome Hanging D. D. <lb/>
Set Kitchen Furniture. M. it. Lang, <lb/>
Dr. ,. Pair Window Shades. A. J. Berg, <lb/>
Smyrna ling. O T. Oil Painting. Mrs. Fannie Joy- <lb/>
Pr Pillow W. J. pr Towels. <lb/>
Brown ft Hooker. Set S. M. Mirror. R- <lb/>
; Dos. Photo of each Bride and Groom. J. <lb/>
ard, years subscription to Jack Smith, Spool <lb/>
Cotton. Mis Rosa Forbes, Coffee Pot. K. Starkey, <lb/>
Pie-tin. Moore. Sifter. L. C. Rountree, Lamp. <lb/>
Brown Bros, Id yards Blenched Domestic. W. White, <lb/>
Bucket J. L. Dipper. T. Clothe <lb/>
Plus. E. Bale Hay. W. B. Wilson. <lb/>
the . L. Brown, pounds Sugar. J. <lb/>
C. Cobb ft Son, pounds Roasted H. ;. Smith, Coffee. <lb/>
W. II. Cox. pounds Floor. J. A. Andrews. Flour. <lb/>
S. Smith. pounds Coffee. D. W. in pounds Flour. <lb/>
James Lout;, pound French Candy. Tyson A Rawls, Check <lb/>
S. F. lbs. cake. Chas. A. Marriage License. <lb/>
Ceremony take place at o'clock Ceremony will lie <lb/>
performed any minister the couple may choose. The only re- <lb/>
tin- couple is to make known their intentions to <lb/>
Mr. Alex. one week before September 1st, 1892, who <lb/>
will keep the matter a profound secret mil it that day. Call early <lb/>
and avoid the <lb/>
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS- <lb/>
There is a great deal of satisfaction in leading <lb/>
we are still in that position. Rivals at- <lb/>
tempt to follow our methods but find that we <lb/>
lead them a merry chase and they finally give <lb/>
it up or come to grief. <lb/>
Elegance and durability, coupled with low <lb/>
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods <lb/>
and Notions in the lead. <lb/>
BROWN BROTHERS. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
The Central Warehouse, <lb/>
TARBORO, H. <lb/>
Sore Month Cared. <lb/>
I have need Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy <lb/>
for Dime's sore was perfect- <lb/>
caved, sad east It <lb/>
Mas. W. <lb/>
dally <lb/>
SUBSCRIBE TO THE <lb/>
STATE <lb/>
RALEIGH, N. C. <lb/>
DAILY AND WEEKLY. <lb/>
Latest Telegraphic news from all parts <lb/>
of the world. United <lb/>
Has th- largest <lb/>
to the State. Has <lb/>
than any <lb/>
daily the State. <lb/>
three <lb/>
Weekly, as <lb/>
or over J . ., <lb/>
B. W. <lb/>
in clubs Of <lb/>
Dissolution Notice. <lb/>
The partnership heretofore existing <lb/>
between W. B. Brawn and S. T. Hooker, <lb/>
trading as Brown A Hooker, is hereby <lb/>
dissolved by mutual consent. All who <lb/>
are Indebted to old Arm will please <lb/>
settle with S. T. Hooker. <lb/>
W. B. BROWN, <lb/>
S. T. HOOKER. <lb/>
July 1892. <lb/>
I will. till conduct the business at the <lb/>
old stand and the patron- <lb/>
age upon the old firm. By <lb/>
consent will under the style <lb/>
f Brown Hooker. Mr. Brown win <lb/>
as salesman. <lb/>
You Are Not Is It <lb/>
If you fail to see the brand new stock of <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
------that Is now being offered by <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
------1 hare just the to suit <lb/>
GENTLEMEN, <lb/>
LADY, <lb/>
HOUSEKEEPER. <lb/>
FARMER, <lb/>
ELSE. <lb/>
If you want anything to wear or anything <lb/>
to eat, or any article to in the <lb/>
call on me. Goods all new, not a piece <lb/>
of old stock in the house. <lb/>
Ky prices will be found as low as <lb/>
able goods can be sold at. <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
A. White's <lb/>
Two doors from C, <lb/>
near Five Points. <lb/>
Paints, Oils.<lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
On the 6th day of September, <lb/>
A. D. will sell at the Court House <lb/>
door in the town of Greenville, to the <lb/>
highest bidder for cash. S town lots in <lb/>
the town of Greenville, known as lets <lb/>
SB, and in the plot of said <lb/>
town, to satisfy ex in my hands for <lb/>
collection against Ann S. Bernard, aid <lb/>
which have been on lots as <lb/>
the property of said Ann E. Bernard <lb/>
. J. A. K. <lb/>
TOBACCO FLUES. <lb/>
We are now ready to supply Tobacco Flues to th-j 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/>
and the LIBERTY. They are low priced stoves and <lb/>
never failed to give satisfaction. <lb/>
Repairing promptly done and guaranteed. <lb/>
S. E. PENDER CO., <lb/>
16th, Mi.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017559_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
IS i <lb/>
AIDS NATURE <lb/>
IN NATURE'S OWN WAY. <lb/>
IT YOU NOTHING TO <lb/>
a ma <lb/>
ATLANTIC CO. <lb/>
1406 N York Aw. Washington, C. <lb/>
FORT LAFAYETTE. <lb/>
From <lb/>
n l <lb/>
Awl . .-; <lb/>
it royal state. <lb/>
ti v. <lb/>
I errand Huron natch <lb/>
eased <lb/>
where roll <lb/>
of death. <lb/>
Of terrible <lb/>
r Winds a wreath <lb/>
To ratted <lb/>
At sunset hour It to be <lb/>
A of the <lb/>
of the foam and of tea. <lb/>
To vanish break of <lb/>
It stands as a to hail <lb/>
The which gently rids <lb/>
With crew sail <lb/>
beardless of lie wind <lb/>
When the veil of mist roll in from sea. <lb/>
Tin- fort burn <lb/>
And a in Io be<lb/>
And I. .- banner is the summer sky <lb/>
From north to and to <lb/>
To distant It seems to <lb/>
And ma the world below rest. <lb/>
All strife la then hut a mockery <lb/>
The tossing tideways never cease, <lb/>
is to me <lb/>
The watchword of the <lb/>
iii-I-v. of <lb/>
and <lb/>
c. <lb/>
St- Only i.-. <lb/>
SEND <lb/>
of the Press and HIPP I <lb/>
of the cured. . nu. <lb/>
In mm or by raid, <lb/>
and <lb/>
W. IT.<lb/>
Medical has many <lb/>
later, no equal. <lb/>
The Science of Ufa, <lb/>
treasure more n. <lb/>
man and learn<lb/>
But test <lb/>
was an the <lb/>
train and to <lb/>
house I the <lb/>
I thought I knew <lb/>
some one who going <lb/>
to take charge of the practice for <lb/>
three months dad takes a <lb/>
His name <lb/>
At that the such <lb/>
they undoubtedly <lb/>
an opening window. <lb/>
lie rapidly retreated through the <lb/>
gate and ran toward the house. As <lb/>
she did so she noticed that on tho <lb/>
first floor tho window of tho room <lb/>
which had been prepared for the new- <lb/>
comer was open, and that St. John <lb/>
was stationed thereat, <lb/>
watching her movements. <lb/>
Keeping her face well shrouded in <lb/>
her shawl. Nellie gained the door of <lb/>
the house and reached her room in <lb/>
leas then tea from the time <lb/>
she had it. <lb/>
-Doctor's daughter <lb/>
on the said St. John to himself <lb/>
s he closed his window. <lb/>
like that sort of girl either. <lb/>
so much tho better for <lb/>
came, in reply front toe <lb/>
of the-gig. <lb/>
been ran <lb/>
tho think h be <lb/>
killed. Be you a <lb/>
A CALCULATION. <lb/>
BUM <lb/>
I Ingenious Scheme of Some <lb/>
Swindlers Exposed. <lb/>
Perhaps many readers have <lb/>
and tho i favored with a letter from a friend <lb/>
am afraid I shall to give it <lb/>
up, and the speaker sighed <lb/>
i A Family <lb/>
Health for the Baby, <lb/>
Pleasure for the Parents, <lb/>
New Life for the Old Folks. <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
TEMPERANCE DRINK <lb/>
a family , <lb/>
Of borne A <lb/>
package makes gallon of <lb/>
a delicious, <lb/>
effervescent beverage. <lb/>
I Don't be If n for <lb/>
of profit, fells you <lb/>
Mint <lb/>
No good <lb/>
Scientific American <lb/>
for<lb/>
CAVEATS, <lb/>
. m <lb/>
etc. <lb/>
r . <lb/>
i. i<lb/>
t tic <lb/>
l I- ;.,; i , <lb/>
nu-i .;. a <lb/>
t. . i i- O <lb/>
B B. <lb/>
and i <lb/>
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
daily Fast H <lb/>
Wt <lb/>
pin; I <lb/>
i am <lb/>
am <lb/>
IS p m pm S am <lb/>
Apr. <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
B M <lb/>
am<lb/>
TRAINS NORTH <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
daily daily dally <lb/>
ex<lb/>
10.7 <lb/>
H p in <lb/>
f. -0 S <lb/>
IS <lb/>
am <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar Goldsboro <lb/>
Ar Selma <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
L Wilson am <lb/>
Ai <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
Daily <lb/>
Train on Scotland Neck <lb/>
leaves M P. M. Scot <lb/>
land Meek at P. M <lb/>
P. M. p. m. <lb/>
leaves 7.10 a. <lb/>
a. m. a. m <lb/>
Weldon 11.25 a. m. <lb/>
Trains on Brandt leave <lb/>
Washington a. m. arrives A. ft B. <lb/>
Junction a. returning leaves A. <lb/>
R. Junction i. in., <lb/>
8.45 p. m. Dally except Sunday. <lb/>
Connects with trains on <lb/>
B. and Neck <lb/>
Branch. <lb/>
Local freight train leaves Weldon <lb/>
Monday. Wednesday and Friday <lb/>
10.15 a. arriving Scotland I <lb/>
a. m., Greenville 5.30 p. m., Stetson <lb/>
7.40 p. m. leaves <lb/>
Saturday <lb/>
7.20 arriving Greenville <lb/>
a. m., Scotland p. in. <lb/>
5.15 p. in. <lb/>
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb/>
B. B. daily except Sun- <lb/>
P M. Sunday V M, arrive <lb/>
N C, P M, M. <lb/>
Plymouth 8.80 p. in . p, m. <lb/>
Returning leaves daily except <lb/>
0.00 a. m. Sunday <lb/>
C, JO a 0.58 a in . <lb/>
arrive Tarboro, M <lb/>
on o Division, <lb/>
and leave .- <lb/>
ville a m. arrive l. p m. <lb/>
p m, <lb/>
arrive ex- <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Tram on Midland N C Branch leave <lb/>
except Sunday, A M <lb/>
N C, a M. Be <lb/>
laves C A II <lb/>
Goldsboro. N A M. <lb/>
Train <lb/>
at arrive Nashville <lb/>
P Hope I i H. <lb/>
leaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb/>
8.85 A M. arrives Mount A <lb/>
except <lb/>
Train on Clinton Blanch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton except Sunday, e <lb/>
ton at A M, and M M. <lb/>
VIM a-t I <lb/>
train on <lb/>
Branch is No. is <lb/>
Ho. except Sunday. <lb/>
No. and North will <lb/>
stop only at Mount, Wilson, <lb/>
Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection a <lb/>
Weldon for all points North dally. Al <lb/>
rail via and dally except Sun <lb/>
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb/>
dally except Sunday with Norfolk <lb/>
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and all <lb/>
points via Norfolk. <lb/>
DIVINE, <lb/>
General <lb/>
J. R. <lb/>
T. Passenger <lb/>
wearily; day seems busier than <lb/>
tho last, and I'm no longer a young <lb/>
Nellie West, doctor's only <lb/>
child, crossed the room to the arm- <lb/>
chair in which her father had thrown <lb/>
himself, and, placing her cool hands <lb/>
on his forehead, said <lb/>
I an idea, daddy, that <lb/>
might meet the circumstances. Why <lb/>
don't you advertise for some to <lb/>
take charge of the practice while you <lb/>
Best <lb/>
and change of scene would soon set <lb/>
you up <lb/>
you would enjoy the <lb/>
scamper, eh, replied <lb/>
the doctor with a smile. <lb/>
no It would be nonsense <lb/>
for mo to go. A man is so <lb/>
freer and can get on so much better <lb/>
by What <lb/>
lie West's additional reason was for <lb/>
refusing to take put in proposed <lb/>
trip did not transpire, for she <lb/>
checked her speech and turned <lb/>
to pour out the doctor's tea. <lb/>
For more than a dozen years Dr. <lb/>
West had in the straggling <lb/>
of <lb/>
that time his daily rounds had <lb/>
extended, and the calls upon his skill <lb/>
had increased by leaps and bounds. <lb/>
He was making money rapidly, and I <lb/>
hoped in the course of a few years to <lb/>
retire from the profession. For this j <lb/>
reason be had abstained from taking <lb/>
a partner, while ho had all the <lb/>
toy doctor's objection to the sen-ices j <lb/>
of a strange assistant, who, fresh <lb/>
from the hospitals, would anxious <lb/>
to try all sorts of ex- <lb/>
But of late the work had <lb/>
been too heavy for his strength, and j <lb/>
after duly considering <lb/>
he determined to adopt it. j <lb/>
An advertisement was inserted, <lb/>
several replies were received, in- <lb/>
were made into the standing, <lb/>
etc., of the applicants, and a choice <lb/>
was made of a certain Charles St. <lb/>
John, who seemed perfectly <lb/>
for tho position of <lb/>
the doctor's absence. Mr. St. <lb/>
John sent a testimonial from a <lb/>
ton medical man with whom, lie <lb/>
wrote, ho had lived for six months <lb/>
after leaving Dr. West <lb/>
Brighton and received a short but <lb/>
satisfactory reply, and a fort- <lb/>
night had elapsed from the date of <lb/>
the conversation recorded above ere <lb/>
Charles St. John made appear- <lb/>
at <lb/>
He arrived late in the evening, and <lb/>
after a nondescript meal, which was <lb/>
tea and supper in one, retired to his <lb/>
room, pleading fatigue after his <lb/>
Nellie West had seemed strange- <lb/>
agitated that day, and the <lb/>
newcomer had said good night she <lb/>
crept up to her father's chair, and <lb/>
nestling on the at his feet <lb/>
said in a low <lb/>
don't like him a bit, <lb/>
don't, <lb/>
a bit. He looks crafty, de- <lb/>
; you know I can always read <lb/>
faces, I'm <lb/>
know you fancy yo i can do <lb/>
laughed her father, this is non- <lb/>
sense. I'm sure St. John might <lb/>
please any woman, so far cs appear- <lb/>
are concerned. I only hope <lb/>
my lady patients wont fascinated <lb/>
with him and persuade him to set up <lb/>
in opposition to <lb/>
know there is no fear of that, <lb/>
answered fondly; <lb/>
dad too much much re- <lb/>
any stranger to injure <lb/>
him in this place. But, dad, I want- <lb/>
ed to ask and the speaker <lb/>
paused. <lb/>
ask away, dear. What is <lb/>
haven't heard anything of <lb/>
of Fred lately, have <lb/>
The doctor rose quickly from <lb/>
chair. <lb/>
thought I had requested, you <lb/>
never to mention scoundrel's <lb/>
name and the usually calm <lb/>
voice rang in the tone of suppressed <lb/>
anger. <lb/>
and there was <lb/>
tho Bound of tears in the girl's voice. <lb/>
are we never to forgive those <lb/>
who injure How can we hope to <lb/>
be forgiven <lb/>
hove nothing to forgive, re- <lb/>
said the doctor in the <lb/>
same harsh voice. was tho one <lb/>
injured, and It in Dot your place. <lb/>
Nellie, to preach to your father. <lb/>
Good night, and though his <lb/>
kiss was as fond as ever there was <lb/>
something in the speaker's voice <lb/>
which told the weeping girl that the <lb/>
subject most to dropped. <lb/>
But although Nellie retired to her <lb/>
room, it was not to sleep. She sat <lb/>
patiently in a chair till tho clock <lb/>
chimed and then wrapping her- <lb/>
self in a she crept quietly <lb/>
down the stairs, and opening a door <lb/>
in the rear of house stole through <lb/>
the shrubbery and reached tho wall <lb/>
of the kitchen garden, in which was <lb/>
a small gate communicating with a <lb/>
lane. Opening the gate with a <lb/>
hand found herself almost <lb/>
immediately clapped hi of <lb/>
a tall, athletic young fellow, whose <lb/>
shabby attire poorly matched his <lb/>
clear cut and aristocratic features. <lb/>
darling he murmured <lb/>
in passionate tones. <lb/>
Fred, how could you ask mo <lb/>
to meet yon at such an <lb/>
the girl shivered more in <lb/>
than from cold as spoke. <lb/>
I knew you would be <lb/>
sure to come, dearest. It is not often <lb/>
we dance of a few minutes <lb/>
Having duly introduced Mr. St. <lb/>
John to his patients and gone over <lb/>
the case diaries with lain, Dr. West <lb/>
packed his portmanteau and depart- <lb/>
ed, with the intention of rambling <lb/>
through Franco and Switzerland, <lb/>
with possibly a run as far as Rome. <lb/>
Nellie continued her housekeeping <lb/>
duties, aided by tho servants, who <lb/>
had been for many years in her <lb/>
father's employ. <lb/>
Charles St. John was out during <lb/>
the greater part of the day, though <lb/>
he generally managed to be home <lb/>
for the o'clock dinner, which he <lb/>
shared with the doctor's daughter, <lb/>
on by tho sedate man <lb/>
ant, who was butler, footman and <lb/>
groom, all in one. From the first <lb/>
St. John had declined the services of <lb/>
this man out of the house. He <lb/>
so he said, to drive himself, <lb/>
and ho certainly did not spare the <lb/>
doctor's horses. <lb/>
don't said Sam, tho <lb/>
factotum referred to, as lie was bed- <lb/>
ding his charges for the night; <lb/>
don't seem to drive fast, for they <lb/>
alias comes in cool enough. But he <lb/>
must cover a lot ground, fer them <lb/>
never was so dead beat ever <lb/>
since I've with <lb/>
Sam mentioned the matter <lb/>
to his mistress, but it <lb/>
was hardly one in which she could <lb/>
interfere. In fact site spoke as little <lb/>
as to Mr. St. John, who had <lb/>
chosen to make love to her in a cool, <lb/>
nonchalant way, which the very <lb/>
reverse of flattering. And when on <lb/>
one occasion had been tempted <lb/>
to snub him most plainly he had re- <lb/>
dear Miss West, you can say <lb/>
what you like me. You can't vex <lb/>
mo. Why, you don't know how de- <lb/>
voted I could be to your interests if <lb/>
necessary. I believe I could even <lb/>
watch at the gate, <lb/>
come you never so the <lb/>
looked as ho <lb/>
uttered these words. The memory <lb/>
of tho open window Hashed across <lb/>
tho girl's mind. She Mashed <lb/>
and muttering something <lb/>
about to give to tho <lb/>
left the room, conscious <lb/>
of a most sardonic smile on tho face <lb/>
of her <lb/>
Some three wicks after tho doc- <lb/>
tor's departure the community of <lb/>
was startled with <lb/>
news that tho seat <lb/>
one of the county families, <lb/>
been broken into by burglars and <lb/>
a considerable amount of valuable <lb/>
jewelry earned off. The local police, <lb/>
by a detective from town, soon <lb/>
established the fact that the <lb/>
was the work of experienced thieves, <lb/>
they were busy following up a <lb/>
at least so they <lb/>
they were called to a mansion some <lb/>
eight miles from which <lb/>
also been burglarized, evidently <lb/>
by the same hands. Here tho plate <lb/>
chest been rifled, and the thieves <lb/>
had got clean away without leaving <lb/>
any of their subsequent move <lb/>
meats. <lb/>
These two burglaries gave tho <lb/>
of plenty to talk <lb/>
about, and when, a day or two later, <lb/>
news came of yet a third raid on tho <lb/>
Grange, an isolated country house <lb/>
some ten miles away, excitement rose <lb/>
to fever heat. Two more detectives <lb/>
were dispatched from Scotland Yard. <lb/>
They numerous inquiries, and <lb/>
evidently put on their mettle <lb/>
by the sarcastic comments of the <lb/>
local newspaper on their want of <lb/>
success, but in spite of all their <lb/>
forts the thieves remained <lb/>
covered. <lb/>
A few days after this third bur- <lb/>
a somewhat shabbily attired <lb/>
individual, who, however, had the <lb/>
unmistakable stamp of good breed- <lb/>
in his air and entered <lb/>
the police station <lb/>
end asked to see tho inspector. <lb/>
into the little room where the <lb/>
official was over the most <lb/>
recent reports of his subordinates <lb/>
and anathematizing their <lb/>
be characterized their want of <lb/>
tho visitor coolly took a <lb/>
chair and waited for the official to <lb/>
speak. <lb/>
Mr. exclaimed the <lb/>
Inspector, as glance fell on the <lb/>
newcomer. <lb/>
it's me, was the <lb/>
laughing response. again to <lb/>
see you like a penny. <lb/>
course you're perfectly <lb/>
to come to or any other <lb/>
said the inspector, some- <lb/>
what I should have <lb/>
never mind, my old pal, my <lb/>
wild oats are all sown. I've come <lb/>
hero on business. What reward is <lb/>
offered for the capture of these en- <lb/>
burglars of <lb/>
echoed the officer in <lb/>
surprise; altogether about <lb/>
Are you going to turn thief- <lb/>
catcher, Mr. <lb/>
Fm going to try my hand. <lb/>
Wow just you listen quietly to me <lb/>
for half an hour and perhaps we <lb/>
shall share that between us, if <lb/>
all goes <lb/>
driver dismounted and walked up to <lb/>
tho group. <lb/>
And then a curious thing took <lb/>
place. Two the four men seized <lb/>
the new arrival, who was n other <lb/>
St. John, and slipped a i of <lb/>
handcuffs on his wrists, while re- <lb/>
figure rose quickly ran <lb/>
to the gig. <lb/>
all he exclaimed ex- <lb/>
here. <lb/>
ray <lb/>
Possibly the three men who had <lb/>
shared his watch under the hedge <lb/>
in their hearts, as as <lb/>
was Mr. Fred, though they bet- <lb/>
trained in repressing their feel- <lb/>
But when, after a weary t mp, <lb/>
tho vehicle, tho prisoner and ; cap- <lb/>
tors arrived at police <lb/>
station, and a very complete set of <lb/>
burglar's tools were from <lb/>
under the seat of the gig, in the well <lb/>
of which the proceeds of a fourth <lb/>
burglary were found, the re- <lb/>
itself lavishly in celebration of <lb/>
the event. <lb/>
Little remains to be told. St John, <lb/>
who had had a medical training in <lb/>
youth, but had afterward to <lb/>
the was recognized as a <lb/>
of the swell mob. It was <lb/>
found that his testimonials <lb/>
were clever forgeries, and that the <lb/>
Brighton letter had been penned by <lb/>
a confederate. Aided by knowledge <lb/>
gained during his <lb/>
visits to the in tho country, <lb/>
and by the use of tho doctor's horses <lb/>
and gig, which allayed suspicion, he <lb/>
was able to work in co-operation <lb/>
with a gang of who dis- <lb/>
after each burglary, carrying <lb/>
nothing with them which would <lb/>
cause suspicion, even had they been <lb/>
arrested. <lb/>
Charles St. John was sent to penal <lb/>
servitude for ten years. Dr. West, <lb/>
hurriedly recalled from the <lb/>
gladly recognized tho services <lb/>
of his ward, Fred Sin- <lb/>
whom lie had banished from <lb/>
his roof some twelve before, <lb/>
owing to that young man's spend- <lb/>
thrift habits. It was during this <lb/>
term of that, passing <lb/>
away an idle hour in a metropolitan <lb/>
police court, ho seen St. John <lb/>
brought up suspicion of <lb/>
to but discharged for <lb/>
want of evidence, and the features <lb/>
of the accused had not for- <lb/>
gotten. <lb/>
A year London, however, with <lb/>
empty pockets, had tamed <lb/>
Mr. Fred's high soaring spirits. <lb/>
Very gladly did ho accept his old <lb/>
of assistant to tho doctor, and <lb/>
it is rumored in <lb/>
his guardian returns to <lb/>
finish Interrupted holiday Nellie <lb/>
will, with her fathers full consent, <lb/>
His. Fred Sinclair. W. K. <lb/>
in Yankee Blade. <lb/>
It was a dark night, the rain was <lb/>
coming down in torrents and four <lb/>
men, who crouching under a <lb/>
hedge about eight miles from <lb/>
were wet to the skin. <lb/>
I hear said one of <lb/>
them. <lb/>
They emerged from the hedge, and <lb/>
one of their number coolly laid him- <lb/>
self down in the muddy road. As <lb/>
the lamps of the approaching Vehicle <lb/>
near one of the quartet raised <lb/>
CS, What a <lb/>
Will you herd the warning The <lb/>
perhaps or the sure approach of that <lb/>
more terrible ion. Ask <lb/>
yourselves if can afford for the sake <lb/>
of saving run the risk do <lb/>
for It, We know from experience <lb/>
that Cure will cure <lb/>
It never fails. This why more <lb/>
than a million bottle- were sold the past <lb/>
year. It relieves croup and whooping <lb/>
cough at once. Mothers, do not be with <lb/>
out. For lame back, side or chest use <lb/>
Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Sold at Wool- <lb/>
en's Drag Store. <lb/>
In u ii <lb/>
A Mr. of Ills., sud- <lb/>
found his horse, usually a very <lb/>
gentle one. acting in a very strange <lb/>
manner. would lay said <lb/>
the gentleman who gave tho ac- <lb/>
his teeth of everything <lb/>
within his reach and <lb/>
shake it as a terrier would a rat. <lb/>
While tho gentleman was watching <lb/>
the horse reached into a pigpen and <lb/>
seizing hold of one of tho inmates <lb/>
threw it up into tho air. This <lb/>
Strange feat he repeated two or three <lb/>
times; then setting his teeth in the <lb/>
body of th pig ho crushed it to the <lb/>
earth, gnawing and mangling the <lb/>
body in tho most frightful manner. <lb/>
The horse then took a pig, <lb/>
served it in a similar manner, and <lb/>
then tossed a calf into the air as <lb/>
easily as a cat would a mouse. <lb/>
immediately sent <lb/>
popular farrier, but when he arrived <lb/>
the was more where- <lb/>
upon the farrier ventured into tho <lb/>
and called tho horse to <lb/>
him. The animal came up, apparent- <lb/>
very docile, but the moment he <lb/>
was within reach ho seized the man <lb/>
violently by the shoulder, threw him <lb/>
forcibly with his face on the ground, <lb/>
then setting his teeth in his back en- <lb/>
to crush and gnaw him, <lb/>
the animal's eyes meantime becoming <lb/>
glassy with Tho owner res- <lb/>
cued tho farrier, but the horse had <lb/>
to be shot. It was clearly a case of <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
A Little Experience in A Light- <lb/>
house. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Loren keep- <lb/>
of the Gov. Lighthouse at Stand <lb/>
Beach, Mich, and are blessed with a <lb/>
daughter, lour years old. Last April she <lb/>
was taken down with Measles, followed <lb/>
with a and turning Into <lb/>
a Fever. Doctors home and at Detroit <lb/>
her. but in she grew worse <lb/>
until she was a mere <lb/>
she tried Dr. King's <lb/>
New and after the use of two <lb/>
and h half bottles, was completely cured. <lb/>
They Dr. King's New Discovery <lb/>
worth its weight in gold, yet you may <lb/>
get a trial bottle free at Drug <lb/>
store. <lb/>
A Drop of <lb/>
drop of ink may make a mil- <lb/>
lion said Byron. Yes, and It <lb/>
is apt to make one woman think <lb/>
enough for the other when <lb/>
that drop ornaments her car- <lb/>
Review. <lb/>
CHILD BIRTH <lb/>
MADE EASY <lb/>
Friend is a scientific- <lb/>
ally prepared Liniment, every <lb/>
of recognized value in <lb/>
constant use by the medical pro- <lb/>
These ingredients are com- <lb/>
in a manner hitherto unknown<lb/>
WILL DO an that fa claimed for <lb/>
it AND MORE, It Shortens Labor, <lb/>
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb/>
Life of Mother and Child. <lb/>
to Morales FREE, eon- <lb/>
valuable and <lb/>
voluntary testimonials. <lb/>
o, <lb/>
RU IT Al <lb/>
in something like the <lb/>
terms. The following is a <lb/>
copy of one received by the writer <lb/>
being <lb/>
the rebuilding of the <lb/>
orphan homes at Queen's square, <lb/>
is You <lb/>
are requested to send in <lb/>
stamps for that object; to <lb/>
two copies of this letter, putting at <lb/>
the head of each number <lb/>
that heading this. Send <lb/>
these to two friends, requesting them <lb/>
to do When the number <lb/>
is reached the ball steps rolling. <lb/>
Please do not let the n break in <lb/>
your <lb/>
Hero follows a list of patrons, tho <lb/>
name of tho lady secretary, and last- <lb/>
the name and address of the <lb/>
writer. <lb/>
Tho scheme looks well enough, and <lb/>
does not seem at all extravagant <lb/>
When, however, come to analyze <lb/>
it we find that the ball must stop <lb/>
rolling long tho coveted be <lb/>
for want of <lb/>
to carry it on. <lb/>
To make our meaning plain to the <lb/>
curious we will suppose that the <lb/>
chain is unbroken, and that the <lb/>
169,732,422,127,308,073,543,950,330 re- <lb/>
of letter No. have duly <lb/>
written to their <lb/>
796,147,087,900,672 friends. <lb/>
We will further suppose that the <lb/>
whole <lb/>
persons thus addressed have <lb/>
responded with their threepenny <lb/>
pieces. The sum to a penny thus <lb/>
raised would only amount to <lb/>
486,621,100,300.903,677,197,516 <lb/>
Calling the world's population <lb/>
and allowing <lb/>
for tho building of each place, the <lb/>
sum realized would build <lb/>
orphan homes for each per- <lb/>
son alive. <lb/>
If we be one or short hope <lb/>
each of these <lb/>
homes will forgive <lb/>
Deserving Praise, <lb/>
We desire Io say to our citizens, that <lb/>
for years we have been selling Dr. King's <lb/>
Now Discovery tor Consumption, Dr. <lb/>
King's New Life Fills. <lb/>
Salve and Electric Bitters, and have <lb/>
never handled remedies that sell as well, <lb/>
or that have given such universal <lb/>
faction. We do not hesitate to <lb/>
tee them every time, and we stand <lb/>
ready to refund the purchase price, if <lb/>
satisfactory results do not follow their <lb/>
use. These remedies have won their <lb/>
great popularity purely on their merits, <lb/>
Drug Store. <lb/>
e n slaver. <lb/>
said Henry <lb/>
Cooper, a retired Boston sea captain, <lb/>
as ho rolled to a seat in the rotunda <lb/>
of tho Southern. I had one <lb/>
that was queer enough. It was in <lb/>
tho fifties, while I was a man <lb/>
tho mast. I shipped one night from <lb/>
Havana for a voyage to Good Hope, <lb/>
but we didn't go there. went <lb/>
up to Congo and got a cargo of <lb/>
slaves. Tho queer thing of it all <lb/>
that the crew never got sight of <lb/>
the captain, and when the first mate <lb/>
came on deck lie a mask. <lb/>
The craft, a swift sailer, <lb/>
unarmed, but a twist or <lb/>
two with a handspike was enough to <lb/>
bring six Ugly looking IS; Hinders <lb/>
on deck. We were not molested, <lb/>
however, and on oar return we <lb/>
stood off the coast of Cuba, and all <lb/>
the but four were sent ashore <lb/>
in the longboat. As we passed into <lb/>
the the masked mate put en en- <lb/>
in each man's hand. Mine <lb/>
contained Louis <lb/>
Democrat. <lb/>
THE LAND OF SUNSHINE. <lb/>
fl the lie <lb/>
. . <lb/>
alt it and <lb/>
Spring. <lb/>
Ah an l-y . <lb/>
reason the that one <lb/>
escape beat no lees r <lb/>
cold. New is <lb/>
famous. Averaging Mm en- <lb/>
tire Cert in attitude <lb/>
sod by dry air <lb/>
which, unlike a humid atmosphere, is <lb/>
of communicating lite. <lb/>
ti  remains Ht <lb/>
a delightfully comfortable decree <lb/>
the day, and at night becomes <lb/>
brisk and The sunshine i- <lb/>
assistant, the inn- violent <lb/>
exertion may be undertaken <lb/>
of <lb/>
Sunstroke or absolutely <lb/>
unknown there. It i- an ideal laud for <lb/>
in summer outing. Its climate is <lb/>
by reputable physicians as a <lb/>
for pulmonary complaints, and <lb/>
the Hot Springs at Vegas <lb/>
I are noted for their curative virtue. <lb/>
I The most sumptuous hotel in the west, <lb/>
the is toasted at <lb/>
springs. Write Io Jno. J. <lb/>
Block, Chicago, for <lb/>
Land of an entertaining and , <lb/>
profusely illustrated book of <lb/>
this region, the most picturesque <lb/>
in the United States.<lb/>
Men <lb/>
. j <lb/>
Old <lb/>
TEN CENTS FOR A <lb/>
CIGAR THAT IS NO <lb/>
BETTER THAN AN <lb/>
ma <lb/>
Cheroot. <lb/>
ARE SOLD <lb/>
FIVE <lb/>
KM <lb/>
TEN CENTS. <lb/>
Female Weakness Positive Core. <lb/>
To the your <lb/>
raiders that I have a positive remedy <lb/>
tor the thousand and one ills which <lb/>
arise from deranged female organs. I <lb/>
shall be glad to send two bottles of my <lb/>
remedy FREE to any lady who will send <lb/>
their Express and O. address. <lb/>
Yours respectfully, <lb/>
Dr. A. C. <lb/>
Y. <lb/>
.; Ii. <lb/>
The man was plowing a patch of <lb/>
corn on a hillside farm with a <lb/>
thinner than tho soil was. As I rode <lb/>
up to the fence he stopped to see <lb/>
what I wanted. <lb/>
hard work, isn't I re- <lb/>
marked. <lb/>
ho said, mopping his <lb/>
face. <lb/>
don't you plow I <lb/>
suggested. <lb/>
to tho bed rock ho <lb/>
said, with a grin. <lb/>
many acres have I in- <lb/>
quired. <lb/>
guess you don't work it <lb/>
I said, with the air of a man who <lb/>
knew all about tho business. <lb/>
ought to turn tho whole farm <lb/>
He looked at me lazily for ten sec- <lb/>
who in turn it <lb/>
over ho asked in mild surprise. <lb/>
ain't nobody here H <lb/>
kin afford to take it They've got <lb/>
more now than they can pay taxes <lb/>
on. Maybe you'd like to try it, mis- <lb/>
Ill the whole thing fer <lb/>
that you're and throw the <lb/>
old woman and children in to boot. <lb/>
What do you <lb/>
I said hurriedly, and went <lb/>
away in the same <lb/>
Free Press. <lb/>
Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint- <lb/>
Is It not worth the small of Tie <lb/>
to free yourself of every symptom of <lb/>
these distressing complaints, If you think <lb/>
so call at our BUM and gel a of <lb/>
Shiloh's every bottle has I <lb/>
on it, use <lb/>
and if it does you no good It will co-it you <lb/>
nothing. Sold at Drug Store. <lb/>
Financier. <lb/>
A rich financier once called upon <lb/>
explained brief- <lb/>
that tho passion of his life was to <lb/>
attend on the first night of the rep- <lb/>
of a play. I can't <lb/>
oblige said <lb/>
ting the request thought not. M. <lb/>
but I have an idea. I <lb/>
a beautiful daughter years <lb/>
old I will her francs if <lb/>
your son will accept her as his wife; <lb/>
then being the father-in-law of the <lb/>
son of tho author I shall a <lb/>
right, as a member if the family of <lb/>
the author, to assist tho first <lb/>
nights of his Post. <lb/>
C. A. Thompson, Seymour, <lb/>
sister Jennie, when she <lb/>
was a young girl, suffered from white <lb/>
swelling, which greatly Impaired her <lb/>
health and made her blood very Impure. <lb/>
In the spring she was not able to do <lb/>
anything and scarcely eel about. <lb/>
More than year she look three <lb/>
of Blood and now she <lb/>
is perfectly <lb/>
Tools of the <lb/>
An investigator, who lived during <lb/>
in a tomb at <lb/>
collected evidence to prove that <lb/>
tho tools ti. d ill working stone <lb/>
years Ago bad jeweled cutting edges, <lb/>
like modem tools. He Bays that tho <lb/>
builders of tho pyramids used solid <lb/>
and tubular tools, straight and <lb/>
saws and many other tools sup- <lb/>
posed to modern. In some <lb/>
mens of granite a drill had sunk one- <lb/>
tenth of an inch at each revolution, <lb/>
indicating that the pressure was at <lb/>
least two tons. Nothing is known of <lb/>
the material of the tools. As the <lb/>
was scarce then, it is prob- <lb/>
able that corundum was <lb/>
York Sun. <lb/>
The best salve in the world for <lb/>
Bruises, Sores, fleer-. Salt Rheum, <lb/>
Fever Sores. Chapped Rands. <lb/>
Chilblains. Corns, and all Skin <lb/>
and positively cures Piles, or <lb/>
required. It is guaranteed to <lb/>
perfect satisfaction, or money ref. <lb/>
Price cents box. For sale at <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
u Cure for <lb/>
is Instrument <lb/>
for the care Tho <lb/>
of its operation is the massage <lb/>
of tho sound conducting <lb/>
of the ear by means of vibratory <lb/>
forces. By this method various con- <lb/>
can relieved which would <lb/>
not be reached by tho regular modes <lb/>
of treatment, and which are the <lb/>
principal causes of deafness in a very <lb/>
large- proportion of those afflicted. <lb/>
The phonograph has been for <lb/>
this purpose, and although its <lb/>
was in a comparative- <lb/>
crude manner, the results attained <lb/>
justified tho belief an <lb/>
embodying special improve- <lb/>
on the same lines would of <lb/>
tho Such an <lb/>
is the and so <lb/>
tins been its that <lb/>
many whose; deafness was <lb/>
from five to fifteen years branding <lb/>
can now, it is claimed, through its <lb/>
use hear ordinary conversation from <lb/>
ten to twenty feet <lb/>
WU <lb/>
a Perfect <lb/>
AND IMPROVED. <lb/>
GOOD <lb/>
The Rest Standard Typewriter the World. <lb/>
Inexpensive, Portable. No Ink Ribbon, In- <lb/>
Type in all Easiest <lb/>
to and rapid a- <lb/>
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. <lb/>
Warranted as Represented. <lb/>
This Machine is everybody's friend. Every- <lb/>
should have their done on <lb/>
writer. it always Insure most <lb/>
V prompt Address <lb/>
N. Ml Washington, St., Clot <lb/>
One of can be seen at the Reflector office, where particulars and <lb/>
prices can be <lb/>
and MM <lb/>
all aid of <lb/>
the of<lb/>
give <lb/>
f CURES <lb/>
Proprietors, <lb/>
For sale -I. L. Drug Store <lb/>
Indigestion, <lb/>
Dyspepsia <lb/>
And all Stomach Troubles are cured by <lb/>
P- P- F- <lb/>
Ask, Poke Root and <lb/>
Rheumatism is by P. P. I. <lb/>
Pains and aches in the back, shoulders, <lb/>
knees, ankles and i are all attacked <lb/>
and conquered by P. I. P- This great <lb/>
medicine, my its proper- <lb/>
ties, up and strengthens the whole <lb/>
body. <lb/>
Nothing is as P. P; r., <lb/>
this season and for toning up. <lb/>
orating, and as a and <lb/>
take P. P. T. It off <lb/>
malaria and puts you in good condition. <lb/>
We have a speedy positive cure <lb/>
for catarrh, diphtheria, canker mouth <lb/>
and headache, in SHILOH'S CATARRH <lb/>
REMEDY. A nasal injector free with <lb/>
each bottle. Use it if you desire Health <lb/>
and sweet breath. Price Sold at <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Minister to bad <lb/>
Do you smoke cigarettes <lb/>
Bad but I don't collect <lb/>
the Field's Washing- <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
s. s. s. <lb/>
a vegetable compound, <lb/>
made entirely of and herbs <lb/>
gathered from the forests of <lb/>
and has been used by millions <lb/>
of people with the best results. It <lb/>
All manner of Blood diseases, from As <lb/>
pestiferous little boil on your nose to <lb/>
the worst cases of Inherited blood <lb/>
taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism, <lb/>
Catarrh and <lb/>
Household <lb/>
ALL <lb/>
BLOOD and SKINS <lb/>
DISEASES <lb/>
CUreS RHEUM. ECZEMA, <lb/>
torn, o SKI , <lb/>
slats In , <lb/>
and . <lb/>
sea a. eases, as <lb/>
Manns i <lb/>
Botanic Bleed Balm <lb/>
l, a <lb/>
FREE <lb/>
CO., a. <lb/>
OLD <lb/>
FARMERS AND BO'S <lb/>
lag their supplies will And <lb/>
their int. n I i cl our priest before <lb/>
n bran <lb/>
incomplete <lb/>
PO SIDES SHOULDERS <lb/>
COFFEE, SUGAR <lb/>
RICE, TEA, <lb/>
at Lowest Prices. <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
yon to buy at one profit. A <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand sold at prices to sulk <lb/>
the times. Our goods arc nil bought <lb/>
sold for therefore, no rink <lb/>
to sell at a margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
S. M. Z. <lb/>
X. <lb/>
HOMES ft FARMS <lb/>
Whichard, <lb/>
M ESTATE <lb/>
O. <lb/>
HA desirable parcels of <lb/>
estate for sale. Look over the list <lb/>
below call on or them. <lb/>
A i lot on Third street below Co- <lb/>
in the town ff <lb/>
good house with tour rooms <lb/>
kitchen and house convenient <lb/>
large stables on the premises. <lb/>
Two good building lots <lb/>
desirable <lb/>
a A lot on street, between <lb/>
Front and Second, hits nice house of <lb/>
rooms, good well of water, large gar- <lb/>
plot and able. <lb/>
A ball sore lot In <lb/>
-T. Urge single story house <lb/>
. of rooms, cook and dining rooms at- <lb/>
, inched, all OUt buildings and <lb/>
stables, good water <lb/>
A line farm containing U acres <lb/>
about miles from on Mt <lb/>
Pleasant road, has gin house, stables, <lb/>
barns, two room tenant houses; <lb/>
acres cleared, balance well wooded, <lb/>
good water. This laud Is excellent for <lb/>
the cultivation of line <lb/>
One farm lying on branch of the <lb/>
w. Sc W, railroad about ball way lie- <lb/>
I ween Kin-Ion and within i <lb/>
mile of a new depot, contains acres, <lb/>
heavily timbered <lb/>
with pine, oak, hickory, and cypress; <lb/>
good tenant houses; passes <lb/>
nearly through this farm. The <lb/>
land has clay subsoil with sandy loam, <lb/>
is good state cultivation and highly <lb/>
improved; is line I land. <lb/>
A farm miles from on <lb/>
I . Kin-Ion road known as the Jackson <lb/>
farm; C-l acres, cleared; has <lb/>
good dwelling house and nil necessary <lb/>
out buildings. This is a first-class to-- <lb/>
farm <lb/>
Q A ii mi lot In i. i rein I lie on <lb/>
corner IS. Cherry and W. <lb/>
Bawls, now i coupled by the family of <lb/>
the late A. Stocks, house contains <lb/>
rooms, kitchen convenient, is convenient <lb/>
only half a block from main <lb/>
street Of the town. Possession <lb/>
can be n 1st, <lb/>
A good building lot on <lb/>
strict, between Third and Fourth <lb/>
streets, splendid location. <lb/>
The home and lot on Pitt <lb/>
street near Avenue, <lb/>
good of room., huge lot with <lb/>
j and out buildings. <lb/>
house and on <lb/>
street, adjoining the lot Of B. <lb/>
S. and the lot described in No. <lb/>
large, comfortable one-story dwelling <lb/>
of four rooms, dining and cook rooms, <lb/>
plenty d room for garden, <lb/>
Valuable Steam Corn and Flour <lb/>
Cotton Gin and Store <lb/>
property located at a X Road <lb/>
within a hundred yards of a K. It. is sit <lb/>
In one of best Agricultural <lb/>
Sections of Pitt county, The mills <lb/>
up with the beat machinery. Bolt- <lb/>
smelter etc., and are in full <lb/>
operation. The store house Is a two <lb/>
story building with dwelling attacked <lb/>
also a kitchen and warehouse in rear. <lb/>
The store Is kept constantly supplied <lb/>
with general merchandise salted a <lb/>
country store and is a good <lb/>
The mills are the best known in <lb/>
ibis section. <lb/>
This property is offered for sale as the <lb/>
owners wish to withdraw from business <lb/>
Terms on any of the above property <lb/>
be had on application to <lb/>
WHICHARD <lb/>
BETHEL CLASSICAL and <lb/>
ACADEMY. tail MUM <lb/>
for I Mr. of Va.,<lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
The Washington, C, for <lb/>
Campaign of A clean, clear, <lb/>
honest Democratic campaign paper, <lb/>
with full campaign news, will be mailed <lb/>
to any address until November 10th for <lb/>
Fifty Sample copies free. <lb/>
Agents wanted everywhere. Address, <lb/>
The Democrat. Washington, <lb/>
or tho with <lb/>
which it will be clubbed cents for <lb/>
Doth <lb/>
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb/>
morning and night, <lb/>
at <lb/>
TRADE <lb/>
MARK. <lb/>
First Sunday. <lb/>
Second Sunday morning <lb/>
and Saturday night before. <lb/>
Third fourth at <lb/>
morning and night, also second <lb/>
night, and Regular <lb/>
night services week. <lb/>
Services at house on <lb/>
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS <lb/>
Debility. <lb/>
recommend It. All dealers sell It. <lb/>
mark and crossed lines<lb/>
AM hair. <lb/>
rails <lb/>
For of all Dims <lb/>
This Io over <lb/>
fifty years, and wherever known has <lb/>
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb/>
by the leading physicians all over <lb/>
M country, and has effected cores where <lb/>
all other remedies, With attention of <lb/>
the most experienced physicians, have <lb/>
for years failed. Ointment is of <lb/>
lone and tho high reputation <lb/>
which it has obtained Is owing entirely <lb/>
Its own efficacy, as but little effort has <lb/>
ever been to bring it before <lb/>
public. One bottle of this will <lb/>
be sent to any on receipt of One <lb/>
Dollar. Sample box The usual <lb/>
discount to Druggists. All Cash Orders <lb/>
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb/>
and communications to <lb/>
T. F. <lb/>
Proprietor, <lb/>
Greenville, If. C. <lb/>
Services <lb/>
roil <lb/>
each third Sunday <lb/>
Tarboro road on Thursday night before <lb/>
until April and then <lb/>
on Sunday evening. <lb/>
Rev. R. F. Taylor's Appointments. <lb/>
Rev. R. P- Taylor, pastor of Green- <lb/>
ville Circuit M. K. South, <lb/>
will preach at tho following times and <lb/>
places, regularly each <lb/>
1st Sunday at II o'clock A. M. <lb/>
1st Sunday, Chapel, <lb/>
B. M. <lb/>
Sunday, Shady Grove, o'clock <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
2nd Sunday, School House, <lb/>
miles west of Greenville, <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
3rd Sunday, den or Spring <lb/>
School k <lb/>
3rd Tripp's Che. J, <lb/>
O'clock P. M. <lb/>
4th Sunday, o'clock <lb/>
A M. <lb/>
Lang's School House, <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>