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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
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                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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El <lb/>
Job Printing Room <lb/>
Thoroughly Equipped <lb/>
NEW MATERIAL. <lb/>
Give Us a Trial Order. <lb/>
VOL. XI, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1892<lb/>
D. J. Editor and Owner. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
THIRD PARTY. <lb/>
This noted man Jain, B. <lb/>
Be Is a n public <lb/>
He'd better lie home there to stay. <lb/>
Ami not try to U-ml <lb/>
Once n also a <lb/>
Now in the party wants to be <lb/>
an aristocrat. <lb/>
He'll live in this of ours. <lb/>
Ami never have any <lb/>
He is something like the <lb/>
flea. <lb/>
Anything else hill <lb/>
One thing ease to- <lb/>
morrow. <lb/>
If you vote for a Weaver you'll vote <lb/>
to your sorrow. <lb/>
It. is a man from the <lb/>
All for Weaver, nothing for the rest. <lb/>
His talk is he'll give advice. <lb/>
not rote he a Hearer ail <lb/>
Weaver, a man of the <lb/>
pair; <lb/>
Will never remember sifting in <lb/>
Presidential <lb/>
Kill the Hon. <lb/>
Will he the man to take stand. <lb/>
He honest and ever he free. <lb/>
vote for ll- Democratic <lb/>
your neighbor see how he <lb/>
stands. <lb/>
Be sure and vole for Cleveland. <lb/>
Work for for he's the way. <lb/>
He'll move depression at an early <lb/>
He'll aid his people ill every possible <lb/>
way. <lb/>
his promise not be led <lb/>
astray. <lb/>
Cleveland is a man both solid and true. <lb/>
A Democrat right, a genuine blue; <lb/>
Weaver is of a darker hue. <lb/>
Wants all himself, cares nothing for <lb/>
you. <lb/>
Then work for your country and be a <lb/>
man. <lb/>
Be a hero hi this civilized <lb/>
land; <lb/>
your hand, your feet <lb/>
And you free yourself from this de- <lb/>
sheet. <lb/>
As ugly a word a ever wan heard. <lb/>
The initials is the part; called the <lb/>
It's foundations platform <lb/>
thin. <lb/>
deceitful as Satan, and black as sin. <lb/>
In the year eighteen hundred and <lb/>
nine. <lb/>
There a party. Something of Ibis <lb/>
It walked and grew until it was grown <lb/>
And the terrors they were <lb/>
known. <lb/>
It caused a war four long years. <lb/>
Pain and sorrow and shedding of <lb/>
The widow, the orphan, too. shrieks <lb/>
for bread, <lb/>
brothers were numbered <lb/>
with the dead. <lb/>
Yes my brother, a solemn thought. <lb/>
But many people have clone forgot; <lb/>
Have no trouble in this fair land <lb/>
Avoid it by voting for Cleve- <lb/>
land. <lb/>
The above was mat by a friend to <lb/>
for We <lb/>
often hear it said of an article that it <lb/>
contains truth than <lb/>
Such may be said of truth is <lb/>
prominent even if the poetry is a little <lb/>
In-low the <lb/>
THE ELECTION OF <lb/>
A CURIOUS PIPE. <lb/>
A gentleman named Clark, re- <lb/>
siding at Syracuse. N- Y-, travels <lb/>
a great deal by rail, and has a <lb/>
objection t silting in <lb/>
where all kinds <lb/>
qualities of tobacco in all forms <lb/>
being consumed- For a long <lb/>
time ho thought tho matter over, <lb/>
and studied upon some plan to en- <lb/>
joy a in the <lb/>
coach without the <lb/>
conductor or other passengers in <lb/>
the car, to whom the smell of to- <lb/>
was unpleasant. It is <lb/>
that he has recently overcome <lb/>
this difficulty by m-ans of a <lb/>
el pipe, the atom of which is tint. <lb/>
of wood, and about two feet <lb/>
in length; two tubas operated by <lb/>
valves run the entire length of this <lb/>
stem, one of them being connect- <lb/>
ed with the bowl of the pipe, and <lb/>
the other having a free outlet by <lb/>
the side of the bowl, both of them <lb/>
connecting with the month- When <lb/>
Mr. Clark wants to smoke, he tills <lb/>
the bowl of his pipe, lights <lb/>
pushes it outside of the window, <lb/>
and draws the window down close <lb/>
to the he then commences to <lb/>
and bis valves are so <lb/>
ranged that when he draws on <lb/>
pipe the stem connecting with the <lb/>
bowl opens and allows the smoke <lb/>
to come into his mouth, while the <lb/>
valve connected with the other <lb/>
tube when he blows <lb/>
the smoke out of his mouth <lb/>
this action is reversed, and the <lb/>
smoke stops down tho second tube, <lb/>
and out of the free end into open <lb/>
air. In this way he can smoke <lb/>
without the smoke being smelt in <lb/>
the ear. He has not pate. the <lb/>
pipe, nor as yet he does not intend <lb/>
Cote. <lb/>
H. Clifford, Wig., was <lb/>
troubled with and <lb/>
bis w disordered, his <lb/>
Liver was <lb/>
appetite fell away, and he was terribly <lb/>
reduced in flesh it length. Three <lb/>
bottles of is cured him. <lb/>
Shepherd, <lb/>
bad a running sore on Ms leg of eight <lb/>
years standing. Used three bottles of <lb/>
Electric Bitters and seven boxes of <lb/>
Salve, and his leg Is <lb/>
sound and well. John Speaker. <lb/>
O., had five large Fever sores on leg, <lb/>
doctors said he was One bot- <lb/>
Bitters and box <lb/>
Salve cured entirely. Sold <lb/>
at Drug Wort. <lb/>
Offices lo be and the Dates at <lb/>
Which Th-y will be held. <lb/>
Tho elections of 1893 include <lb/>
those in all tho St for pies <lb/>
i Initial electors, which will <lb/>
held on Tuesday, November 8- All <lb/>
will be chosen by tho several <lb/>
States at large except in Michigan, <lb/>
two will be by <lb/>
at largo ton by <lb/>
districts- Thorn are also to <lb/>
be elected tho national House of <lb/>
members <lb/>
have already been chosen in Ore- <lb/>
I and Slate Legislatures, which <lb/>
will choose twenty six United <lb/>
States Senators lone Senator <lb/>
already elected in <lb/>
Island by the Legislature chosen <lb/>
this The other elections of <lb/>
the year thus grouped by the <lb/>
Albany A <lb/>
Alabama elected a Governor <lb/>
State officers August and <lb/>
will elect nine Representatives in <lb/>
Congress November <lb/>
Arkansas will elect Governor <lb/>
and State officers September and <lb/>
six Representatives in Congress <lb/>
November <lb/>
California will elect Rep- <lb/>
in Congress and a <lb/>
Legislature to choose a United <lb/>
States vice Rep., <lb/>
November 8- <lb/>
Colorado will elect Governor, <lb/>
State officers and two <lb/>
in Congress <lb/>
Connecticut will elect Governor, <lb/>
State officers, four <lb/>
in Congress and a <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Hawley, Rep., No- <lb/>
8- <lb/>
will elect a <lb/>
in Congress and a <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Gray, Dew., <lb/>
Florida will elect Governor, <lb/>
State officers a Legislature to <lb/>
choose a United States Senator, <lb/>
vice October arid <lb/>
two Representatives in Congress <lb/>
November <lb/>
Georgia will elect Governor and <lb/>
State officers October and elev- <lb/>
en Representatives in Congress <lb/>
November 8- <lb/>
Idaho will elect Governor and <lb/>
Stab; officers, a Representative in <lb/>
Congress and a Legislature to <lb/>
choose a United States Senator, <lb/>
vice Shoup, Rep. November <lb/>
Illinois will elect Governor and <lb/>
State officers and twenty two Rep- <lb/>
in Congress <lb/>
Indiana will elect Governor and <lb/>
Slates officers, thirteen <lb/>
in Congress, and a <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Deni., No- <lb/>
Iowa will elect Secretary of <lb/>
State cloven Representatives <lb/>
in Congress November <lb/>
Kansas will elect Governor, <lb/>
State officers and eight <lb/>
in Congress November 8- <lb/>
will elect eleven Rep <lb/>
in Congress <lb/>
8- <lb/>
Louisiana elected Foster. Dem., <lb/>
Governor and a Democratic Leg- <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Gibson, Dem. April <lb/>
; will elect six Representatives <lb/>
in Congress November <lb/>
Maine will elect Governor, four <lb/>
Representatives in Congress and <lb/>
a Legislature to choose a United <lb/>
States Senator, vice Hale, Rep., <lb/>
September 12- <lb/>
Maryland will elect six <lb/>
in <lb/>
8- <lb/>
Massachusetts will elect Gov- <lb/>
State officers, thirteen Rep- <lb/>
in Congress and a <lb/>
Legislature to choose a United <lb/>
States Senator, vice Dawes. Rep., <lb/>
November <lb/>
Michigan will elect Governor <lb/>
and State officers, twelve <lb/>
in Congress and a Leg- <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Rep. <lb/>
November <lb/>
Minnesota will elect Governor <lb/>
and State officers, seven <lb/>
in Congress and a Leg- <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Davis, Rep., <lb/>
. Mississippi will elect seven <lb/>
Representative in Congress No- <lb/>
Missouri will elect Governor and <lb/>
State officers, fifteen <lb/>
in Congress and a <lb/>
tare to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Dem., No- <lb/>
8- <lb/>
Montana will elect Governor <lb/>
COMMISSIONERS <lb/>
and State officers, a <lb/>
in Congress and a Legislature <lb/>
to choose a United States Sena <lb/>
tor, vice Sanders, Rep., Nov. <lb/>
Nebraska will elect Governor <lb/>
and officers, six <lb/>
in Congress and a <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Paddock, Rep., Ho <lb/>
Nevada will elect Supreme <lb/>
Judge, a Representative in Con- <lb/>
and a Legislature to u <lb/>
a United States Senator, vice <lb/>
Stewart, Rep., November <lb/>
New will elect Gov-i <lb/>
two Representatives in <lb/>
Congress November H. <lb/>
New Jersey will elect Governor <lb/>
and State, officers, eight <lb/>
lives in Congress and a <lb/>
choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Dem . No- <lb/>
8- <lb/>
New York will elect chief judge <lb/>
of the Court of Appeals, <lb/>
Representatives in Congress, and <lb/>
tho Assembly of members, to <lb/>
take part in the election of <lb/>
United States Senator, vice His-1 <lb/>
cock. Rep-, November <lb/>
North Carolina will elect Gov-j <lb/>
and State officers nine <lb/>
Representatives in Congress No I <lb/>
8- <lb/>
North Dakota will elect Govern- <lb/>
or and State officers, a Represent- j <lb/>
Congress and a <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Casey, Rep., Nov. <lb/>
Ohio will elect Secretary of State <lb/>
and twenty-one Representatives in <lb/>
Congress November <lb/>
Oregon elected Supreme Court <lb/>
judge and two Republican <lb/>
in Congress June <lb/>
Pennsylvania will elect thirty <lb/>
Representatives in Congress and a <lb/>
Legislature to choose a United <lb/>
States Senator, vice Quay, Rep., <lb/>
November <lb/>
Island elected <lb/>
can Governor and a Republican <lb/>
Legislature, which has re-elected <lb/>
Aldrich, Rep., to the United States <lb/>
Senate April C, will elect two <lb/>
Representatives in Congress No- <lb/>
South Carolina will elect Gov- <lb/>
State officers seven <lb/>
Representatives in Congress <lb/>
South Dakota will elect Govern- <lb/>
or and State officers and two Rep- <lb/>
in Congress Nov. <lb/>
Tennessee will elect Governor <lb/>
and State officers, ten <lb/>
and a Legislature to choose <lb/>
a United States Senator, vice Bate. <lb/>
Dem-, November <lb/>
Texas will elect Governor and <lb/>
State officers and thirteen <lb/>
in Congress Nov. <lb/>
Vermont will elect Governor and <lb/>
State officers, two Representatives <lb/>
in Congress and a Legislature to <lb/>
choose a United States Senator, <lb/>
Proctor. Rep., September <lb/>
Virginia will elect ten <lb/>
in Congress November <lb/>
The Legislature will elect <lb/>
United States Senator, vice Hun- <lb/>
ton, appointed pro torn. <lb/>
Washington will elect Governor <lb/>
and State officers, two Represent-1 <lb/>
in Congress and a <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Allen, Rep-, Nov. <lb/>
West Virginia will Govern- <lb/>
or and State officers, four <lb/>
in Congress and a Leg- <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Faulkner, Dem-, No- <lb/>
Wisconsin will elect Governor <lb/>
and State officers, ten <lb/>
in Congress and a <lb/>
to choose a United States <lb/>
Senator, vice Sawyer, Rep. No- <lb/>
Wyoming will elect Governor <lb/>
and State officers, a <lb/>
in Congress and a Legislature <lb/>
to choose a United States Senator, <lb/>
vice Warren, Rep., November 8- <lb/>
N. C Aug. 1st 1892. <lb/>
The Hoard of Commissioners of <lb/>
Pitt met this day, <lb/>
present, C- Dawson, chairman, S. <lb/>
j A. Gainer, Fleming. T. <lb/>
E. Keel and C- V. Newton. Mi <lb/>
of regular meeting, and of <lb/>
special mooting held July <lb/>
road and approved. <lb/>
The following orders for <lb/>
were <lb/>
Winifred Taylor 0.00, <lb/>
3.00, Alex Harris 12.00, II. <lb/>
D. Smith 2.00, Daniel Webster <lb/>
2.00. Martha Nelson <lb/>
Bryan 2-00, Jacob Me mi n <lb/>
1.50, Susan 2.50, Nancy <lb/>
Moore Susan Norris <lb/>
Smith 1.50, <lb/>
2.00. Harriett Williams Hen- <lb/>
Harris 2-50, Emily Ed <lb/>
Benjamin Crawford Pol <lb/>
Adams Smith <lb/>
Easter Vines 1.50, George Turner <lb/>
Mrs. Asa Knox <lb/>
The following for general <lb/>
Glasgow Evans J. A. <lb/>
1.19, R G. Chapman 1200, <lb/>
W. B. J. A- <lb/>
C A. <lb/>
Robinson 31-50, John A. <lb/>
Wilson Dr. W. E. <lb/>
C 10-00, J. F. Miller 1.50, <lb/>
J. A. K. Tucker 29-00, J. C. Cobb <lb/>
Son D. H. James 28.75, Rob- <lb/>
Johnson Fred Edwards 1.14, <lb/>
Pat <lb/>
30.00. B. J. Wilson 9-71, Southey <lb/>
Carroll W. W. Harper Co., <lb/>
778.45. C Dawson 11-60, C <lb/>
ton 3-30, Leonidas Fleming 10.00, <lb/>
T- E. Keel 7.40, S. A. 18.65. <lb/>
John Rogers, colored, of Bethel <lb/>
township, exempted from paying <lb/>
poll tax for 1892 <lb/>
that tho valuation on <lb/>
Moses Kings residence lot in <lb/>
Greenville be raised from to <lb/>
Ordered that valuation of Amos <lb/>
Elks lot in Greenville be raised <lb/>
from to <lb/>
Ordered that valuation of <lb/>
Brown farm listed by W. M- B. <lb/>
Brown for Mrs. Jane M. Brown in <lb/>
Greenville township, be fixed at <lb/>
Upon petition from J. J. Nobles <lb/>
valuation of property at the river <lb/>
landing was reduced from <lb/>
to <lb/>
James made complaint <lb/>
that he is charged on tax list with <lb/>
real personal property to the <lb/>
amount of while the <lb/>
gate value of the same as given in <lb/>
was less exemption, <lb/>
of taxable property listed <lb/>
Also that acres of laud is as- <lb/>
at while the same <lb/>
1891 was assessed at and sine o <lb/>
then the timber had been sold by <lb/>
Mr. Nobles for and petition- <lb/>
ed that the correspond- <lb/>
reduced- Tins Hoard <lb/>
the valuation back at <lb/>
The following listed taxes for <lb/>
1892. <lb/>
T. Godwin, E. <lb/>
C Williams, Sam Mrs. E- <lb/>
J- Moore, W. J, Crisp, Dennis Sim <lb/>
mons L- Co., Ashley Peel, E. J. <lb/>
Moore guardian for Ida Teel, W. <lb/>
H- <lb/>
M. J. <lb/>
Lawhorn, Joseph <lb/>
horn, Samuel Cannon, Mary E. <lb/>
Sarah A- Braxton, Jerry <lb/>
E- B. <lb/>
L- <lb/>
M. Owens, Elias <lb/>
Carr. <lb/>
Swift W. <lb/>
L. C J. W. <lb/>
Bro. <lb/>
Fields. A- <lb/>
M- Joyner. <lb/>
We fail to understand how any <lb/>
self-respecting southerner can vote <lb/>
for Weaver, who has so black a <lb/>
record showing his hatred <lb/>
abase for and his lying about the <lb/>
southern people. A southern man <lb/>
who can stomach Weaver, it seems <lb/>
to us, stomach anything. <lb/>
A man who can vote for Weaver, <lb/>
the of the south, ought to <lb/>
be able to eat dead crow and not <lb/>
get Free <lb/>
in <lb/>
One of the best <lb/>
Wilson county and a man of <lb/>
sit ion, prominence and influence <lb/>
said to us <lb/>
claim everything. They <lb/>
ore lying outrageously. There are <lb/>
not of them in this <lb/>
Wilson Advance. <lb/>
8- W. Barney, M. A. <lb/>
J. T. G. F- Smith, Israel <lb/>
Edwards, C T. W. S. <lb/>
Wooten. A. S. Congleton, E. E- <lb/>
J- H. Highsmith. E. D. <lb/>
ton, AV. T Edwards, J. Dixon, <lb/>
J. W. Page, E- A. Johnson, J. J. <lb/>
Buck mid J. R. Jenkins. <lb/>
A- Gainer and Leonidas <lb/>
committee to estimate work <lb/>
done on reported the <lb/>
work that had completed and <lb/>
recommended that an order for <lb/>
If In. W Harper <lb/>
Co. contractors. <lb/>
S- A. Gainer, committee appoint <lb/>
ed to look bridges across <lb/>
Creek made the <lb/>
same. <lb/>
T. E. Keel. S A. Gainer. <lb/>
Fleming and C V. Newton, <lb/>
committee appointed to ascertain <lb/>
the most suitable to establish <lb/>
a free ferry across Tar river, <lb/>
or at Hall or Boyd's Ferry <lb/>
after visiting and examining each <lb/>
place recommended that it be es- <lb/>
Yankee Hall- <lb/>
Ordered that tho on <lb/>
tho timber of all timber companies <lb/>
listing timber in Pitt county <lb/>
be raised to the amount paid for <lb/>
said timber. <lb/>
Hone Turin. <lb/>
We are here to tell the truth us <lb/>
we see it, tho sun is n t dour <lb/>
or in the Heavens than that <lb/>
has not a ghost of a chance to <lb/>
be President of the United States. <lb/>
But why should a southern farm- <lb/>
to vote for in- <lb/>
stead of Cleveland. He said in <lb/>
Keokuk. Sept. <lb/>
record of tho Republican <lb/>
party appeals to the <lb/>
PRESIDENT BUTLER AND <lb/>
PEOPLE'S PARTY. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
On the 14th of July. 1892, the <lb/>
following appeared in <lb/>
tho Clinton the paper <lb/>
edited by Mr. Marion Butler, Pres- <lb/>
of the State Alli- <lb/>
Read it and the <lb/>
him then and now. <lb/>
the present outlook, <lb/>
very much fear that the <lb/>
party will put a state ticket in the <lb/>
field and possibly tickets <lb/>
Such action, if taken, <lb/>
would be greatly to regretted, <lb/>
and should ho prevented if <lb/>
Whatever may ex- <lb/>
North Carolinians over <lb/>
questions of national policy, there <lb/>
should be none in the State where <lb/>
good Anglo Saxon rule <lb/>
government is the paramount is- <lb/>
sue. It the party put out a <lb/>
State ticket thou tho present <lb/>
ticket headed by Elias Carr. which <lb/>
upon the whole is an admirable <lb/>
one, is almost sure to <lb/>
It will be defeated by the <lb/>
if they put out a State tick- <lb/>
et, it will be defeated by the <lb/>
ticket if tho <lb/>
cans support the ticket, Now a <lb/>
word to those who have Mined <lb/>
tho party. What is there <lb/>
to be gained by reform by defeat <lb/>
the Democratic State ticket <lb/>
Nothing, but much to lose, let the <lb/>
result be what it may. If yon <lb/>
elect your ticket, you do it at tho <lb/>
sufferance of the Republican par- <lb/>
yon at their mercy <lb/>
now and in the future- If you are <lb/>
the cause of the Republican party <lb/>
capturing the State you have <lb/>
en a heavy blow to tho cause of <lb/>
Reform and put the management <lb/>
of your State in unworthy and in- <lb/>
hands. Let not those who <lb/>
want office mote than they do re- <lb/>
form precipitate yon into taking <lb/>
any such unwise action. If <lb/>
party candidates are run for <lb/>
the Legislature then the chances <lb/>
are that the Republicans the <lb/>
Railroad influence will control the <lb/>
next Legislature. This would not <lb/>
only mean misrule, for two years <lb/>
if no more, but it would undo all <lb/>
the reform gained by the lost Leg- <lb/>
The Reformers con- <lb/>
the next Legislature as easily <lb/>
as they did the last if they will <lb/>
stand together and not run a Third <lb/>
Ward, Den- j ticket. The same applies to near- <lb/>
of all men as j Force to be willing to leave <lb/>
Bare, perhaps, that it was too Ion , f their platform. In framing <lb/>
lout with tho leading Democratic ;,,. . ., , , <lb/>
conspirators. Tho same old gang, i <lb/>
save those who wore shot or hung, <lb/>
are again conspiring to get <lb/>
session of tho government next <lb/>
year. Woe to them for tho loyal <lb/>
hosts will crush crush <lb/>
them forever and out of nil <lb/>
danger of such a <lb/>
to our common <lb/>
He said in <lb/>
can ever, under <lb/>
pretending that free and <lb/>
fair what they de- <lb/>
and urging legislation to <lb/>
that end. That was precisely the <lb/>
reason they gave for passing tin- <lb/>
Force bill through the House and <lb/>
trying to put it through tin- Senate. <lb/>
Though tho Force bill i- not by <lb/>
name mentioned in the platform, it <lb/>
is understood to be meant by every <lb/>
any circumstances, have any part Republican. The platform was <lb/>
or lot with the hungry, rebellious <lb/>
man hating, woman selling gang. <lb/>
tinder the name of <lb/>
a so full of stench <lb/>
and poison that it should blot <lb/>
from the vocabulary of civil- <lb/>
and handed over to the <lb/>
barbarism that it so fitly now and <lb/>
all the <lb/>
and has expressed <lb/>
tho opinion that either Harrison <lb/>
or Cleveland would the next <lb/>
President and that tho people <lb/>
must choose one or tho other. This <lb/>
brought the following response <lb/>
from a subscriber, whose name we <lb/>
suppress out of consideration for <lb/>
his family I <lb/>
say that the people must <lb/>
choose Harrison and <lb/>
Cleveland, and them alone, is a lie <lb/>
to its full the word <lb/>
of tho deceiver. You certainly are <lb/>
mistaken in temper <lb/>
of the if you think <lb/>
they are going to swallow such <lb/>
Home and form is striving to I prejudice. <lb/>
framed in the hope that mean <lb/>
be softened down in the <lb/>
South, but this will not be possible <lb/>
This year the Republicans have <lb/>
to light over a vast extent of . <lb/>
The revolt of the North <lb/>
west two years ago is a fact of sin <lb/>
later augury for the coming <lb/>
Mom than they feel <lb/>
the need of achieving success in <lb/>
States heretofore Democratic I <lb/>
The Third patty furbishes an <lb/>
which they hope to utilize <lb/>
for so reducing the Democratic <lb/>
vote in Southern States as to en <lb/>
able them to capture their elector <lb/>
In way they hope <lb/>
to offset any losses which they may <lb/>
sustain in North. To that end <lb/>
they desire Hint us little us <lb/>
be said of the Force bill in the <lb/>
South. It is intended for con- <lb/>
in Northern States, <lb/>
where it can be used to feed see <lb/>
gain relief for tho farmers, North <lb/>
and South, from the oppression of <lb/>
trusts, political and <lb/>
To secure relief farmers must <lb/>
have <lb/>
Freedom from all fear of <lb/>
domination. <lb/>
They cannot be accommodated <lb/>
The bill is s menace of so <lb/>
portentous a nature th South- <lb/>
States cannot afford to Ignore <lb/>
it. While to the whole country it; <lb/>
means and de i <lb/>
of business, to the <lb/>
Wider markets and better prices. it means general prostration. <lb/>
Public economy and lower taxes. I loss of self-government, the <lb/>
A reformed currency that ex is ignorance and crime. <lb/>
with the growing needs of a return to the darkest days of the <lb/>
the time- , era of <lb/>
A for Weaver will not elect j In mi the South <lb/>
but it may elect Harrison, i not divide merely for the <lb/>
Harrison has in two messages I purpose of testing Hie strength of <lb/>
demanded of passage new pledged to <lb/>
W Atari <lb/>
enterprising real estate deal- <lb/>
of Savannah. has offered a <lb/>
novel scheme to the public that <lb/>
might be inaugurated in <lb/>
ton to the mutual advantage of buy- <lb/>
and sellers. The man <lb/>
off red lots feet size on <lb/>
the payment of a nickel, the <lb/>
to pay u nickel a week mi <lb/>
the whole amount Is paid. <lb/>
On the face cf it the scheme <lb/>
looks but when it is <lb/>
examined into and facts MOW <lb/>
tailed ii is discovered that it is <lb/>
not only possible to curry it <lb/>
through but there is ab- <lb/>
no doubt of its paving tho <lb/>
bold innovator. A large tract of <lb/>
land is purchased a fair price <lb/>
and divided up into four or five <lb/>
lots to the acre The price of these <lb/>
lots is placed at a figure that will <lb/>
yield four or five times the <lb/>
cost. The purchaser has three <lb/>
lime in which to pay for the <lb/>
huge tract he has bought. By <lb/>
I ling off the lots at a low figure, <lb/>
and what is only s price when <lb/>
the payments an- so small, at the <lb/>
end of <lb/>
nickels make a twice as great <lb/>
us w hat ho must payout for the <lb/>
land. The and Intel <lb/>
est has accrued is profit and <lb/>
there are still two years during <lb/>
which stream of nickels will be <lb/>
pouring into the treasury. <lb/>
The Savannah says that <lb/>
nearly people are already buy- <lb/>
lots on the I a week plan. <lb/>
and there is of H company to <lb/>
buy land the city and sell <lb/>
it off in building lots at payments <lb/>
of to cents a Week. Now that <lb/>
sues a plan has been inaugurated <lb/>
t here I no bi i e it will <lb/>
top. The day big <lb/>
may use mid of small ones <lb/>
begin, the difference in the pine <lb/>
making f-r the longer time re <lb/>
quired to complete the payment <lb/>
of tho Bill. <lb/>
A for Weaver which may <lb/>
elect Harrison perpetuates the <lb/>
tariff, and tho <lb/>
tariff reduces the exchange value <lb/>
which even their <lb/>
most strenuous advocates must ml <lb/>
to be wholly experimental and <lb/>
of doubtful value. <lb/>
The Democratic party is all that <lb/>
of the cotton crop an- j stands between tho South the <lb/>
I bill, which means ruin alike <lb/>
A vote for Weaver which may j to its autonomy to its material <lb/>
Simmons Lumber Co. <lb/>
Simmons <lb/>
Lumber Co. <lb/>
Smith, Dennis <lb/>
Simmons Lumber Co. <lb/>
The following jurors were drawn <lb/>
for September term of Pitt <lb/>
First Johnson, <lb/>
James Williams, W. A. Hyman, B. <lb/>
F. Ward, W. G. W. F. <lb/>
C F. Moore, Seth Ty- <lb/>
son, G. T. Tyson, Ford, W. <lb/>
M. Lang, Ira J. Frizzle, Charlie <lb/>
Cobb, R. B. W. H. Exum, <lb/>
John W. Martin, <lb/>
Charles Bullock col-, J. C B. <lb/>
Davenport, J. T. Hodges. L B. <lb/>
Geo. M- Smith, J. R- <lb/>
Overton. J. C Cook, J. C. Taylor, <lb/>
J. M- C- Nelson, Berry James col., <lb/>
O. C. Fleming, S. T. Hooker, A. <lb/>
J. R. M. J. <lb/>
C- K. Johnson. Forbes, W. <lb/>
M. King, Edgar Buck and M- <lb/>
Roberson. <lb/>
Flem- <lb/>
every Congressional district in <lb/>
State. In this district, the people <lb/>
have control the convention, <lb/>
and can nominate a man who will <lb/>
stand by the people in Congress. <lb/>
We did it two years ago and we <lb/>
can do it again. If three tickets <lb/>
are run in this district the chances <lb/>
are in favor of the Republican be- <lb/>
elected. The be- <lb/>
in Democratic principles, <lb/>
will always advocate the doctrine, <lb/>
and believes in getting the reforms <lb/>
needed through the political or- <lb/>
known as the Demo- <lb/>
party as far as <lb/>
Yet we do not believe in ma- <lb/>
chine politics, and whenever a <lb/>
man is nominated who does not <lb/>
represent Democratic principles <lb/>
and who is at heart against the <lb/>
interest of the masses, we think <lb/>
that every voter should have the <lb/>
elect Harrison is a which <lb/>
means increased extravagance and <lb/>
higher tariff <lb/>
These may be unpalatable truths <lb/>
to some of our friends, but there is <lb/>
nothing in them to ire. No <lb/>
intelligent man denounces op- <lb/>
as liars, and in this mat- <lb/>
time will show who is mis <lb/>
taken- <lb/>
say that a vote for Weaver <lb/>
is a vote for Harrison this <lb/>
son, Harrison to elected must <lb/>
carry New York and Indiana- <lb/>
Cleveland believe will carry <lb/>
both of these States, and if, in ad- <lb/>
the States which voted for <lb/>
Cleveland in 1888 vote for him <lb/>
again he will he elected. <lb/>
the contrary if Harrison <lb/>
carries tho States which he carried <lb/>
in 1888, and loses New York and <lb/>
Indiana, he may still be elected, if <lb/>
Democrats in the South divide <lb/>
their votes and give Virginia, West <lb/>
Virginia, North Carolina, South <lb/>
Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee or <lb/>
Texas to the Republicans. The <lb/>
only thing that can possibly defeat <lb/>
Harrison is a Democracy. <lb/>
dividing our strength we <lb/>
may enable Harrison to capture <lb/>
some Southern States, and thus <lb/>
elect him. This is our fear and no <lb/>
well informed man can say it is <lb/>
groundless. <lb/>
We believe in the sincerity and <lb/>
patriotism of the members of the <lb/>
Alliance. They arc seeking what <lb/>
we are seeking from <lb/>
Unwise legislation oppressive <lb/>
conditions. They think this relief <lb/>
will come by the election of <lb/>
We believe the attempt to <lb/>
Weaver may insure the el- c- <lb/>
interests. The House, to be sure <lb/>
if Democratic, will defeat it; but <lb/>
we cannot be Stirs of two Demo- <lb/>
Houses during the coining <lb/>
Presidential The only safety <lb/>
is in securing a Democratic <lb/>
dent. That will put a quietus on <lb/>
tho bill, certainly for four <lb/>
years, most probably forever. <lb/>
An Inhuman ton. <lb/>
There is an old mini in No. B <lb/>
township who sometime ago deed- <lb/>
ed his property to his son upon <lb/>
tho agreement that the son should <lb/>
care for him what little time ho <lb/>
had to live. After getting posses <lb/>
of the property, the son drove <lb/>
tho old roan away. days <lb/>
ago the feeble old man went back <lb/>
to bog for broad- ft was refused <lb/>
him ho turned back. Feeble <lb/>
from want of food, bowed down <lb/>
with sorrow and humiliation, he <lb/>
fell exhausted by the wayside, <lb/>
where he was found by tho neigh- <lb/>
who took him to a house <lb/>
near by and ministered to his <lb/>
needs. When driven from homo <lb/>
by his inhuman son, the old man <lb/>
was given an asylum by a <lb/>
who had been deserted by a <lb/>
worthless husband who left her <lb/>
Some fancy the charms of lily-white. <lb/>
Of form and eve. <lb/>
Who faints In the sunshine and <lb/>
the shade, <lb/>
And Is always ready to <lb/>
But the girt of <lb/>
bloom whose vein-; <lb/>
healthy and free. <lb/>
With the vigor of youth her <lb/>
of gram. <lb/>
Oil. that Is the maiden for me <lb/>
She Is tho girl to for life. <lb/>
Tin- sickly, complaining woman may be <lb/>
an object of love pity, but she ceases <lb/>
of Harrison, and we bill <lb/>
i. <lb/>
manhood to condemn him. <lb/>
This <lb/>
A. i Pure Democracy which floats <lb/>
on our banner at tho masthead of <lb/>
this <lb/>
weaknesses and disorders sub- <lb/>
the truth as we see It. Time will and a martyr to bear <lb/>
determine who is right. <lb/>
, ,,.,., i . , la cure for <lb/>
for decision, let us not resort inn complaint, raid will the <lb/>
to denunciation. The man who drooping sufferer into <lb/>
. . . I happy, woman. Guaranteed <lb/>
I resorts to ft creates a suspicion In <lb/>
his own honesty or intelligence. <lb/>
every <lb/>
j money paid it <lb/>
WHO TARIFF TAX <lb/>
There i.-i h street car driver in <lb/>
Washington named Mike <lb/>
He i fl native of Ireland and has <lb/>
been in this country about six <lb/>
rears. During the int year Mike <lb/>
has been paying a good deal of <lb/>
attention to the tariff <lb/>
has been led away by the <lb/>
theories of the lb-publicans that <lb/>
protection was a good thing for <lb/>
pOOl man and helped to keep <lb/>
wages. He had told, by <lb/>
the Republicans, and by <lb/>
Icy in particular, that the foreign- <lb/>
paid our taxes. About ten <lb/>
days ago a cousin of Mike's <lb/>
rived in this country. Ho brought <lb/>
a present from Mike's mother to <lb/>
her son. consisting of twelve pairs <lb/>
of woolen socks which herself <lb/>
knitted for him. It is safe to say <lb/>
that the value of tho socks was <lb/>
about cents a pair, but <lb/>
Mike's cousin arrived at tho <lb/>
tom house he was assessed <lb/>
cents a pair tariff duty on the <lb/>
socks When ho came to Mike <lb/>
he showed his receipt from tho <lb/>
custom -house officers for the <lb/>
that ho paid for the dozen <lb/>
socks, and Mike, of had to <lb/>
refund tho money to him. This <lb/>
set Mike thinking, and on the <lb/>
-suggestion of a friend, with whom <lb/>
he conferred, he addressed the <lb/>
following letter to <lb/>
on the <lb/>
Hon. William -Dear <lb/>
I read your speeches in the <lb/>
of Representatives during <lb/>
the Fifty first Congress when the <lb/>
tariff bill was under discussion, <lb/>
in which yon and made <lb/>
that tho foreigner paid <lb/>
our taxes. I also read your speech <lb/>
as presiding officer of the <lb/>
National Convention at Min- <lb/>
in which you asserted <lb/>
again that tho paid our <lb/>
taxes. My mother sent mo a doz- <lb/>
en pair of socks from Ireland a <lb/>
few days ago, each pair being <lb/>
worth about cents. My cousin, <lb/>
who brought to mo, had to <lb/>
pay cents a pair tariff duties on <lb/>
tho socks at the Now York <lb/>
tom-House. Will you please <lb/>
enough to toll me what foreign <lb/>
Government I shall apply to hate <lb/>
that refunded to me I If the <lb/>
foreigner pays the tax, as you say <lb/>
he docs, I to get my <lb/>
money back, but I do not know <lb/>
just exactly to what foreign Gov- <lb/>
to apply, and I hope you <lb/>
will be kind enough to inform me <lb/>
by return mail. Yours truly, <lb/>
Michael- <lb/>
This is a very pretty little ob- <lb/>
lesson, and should not be lost <lb/>
sight of by people who are labor- <lb/>
to understand the tariff <lb/>
Washington<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017561_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
LETTER. <lb/>
they are called upon to elected a delegate to the <lb/>
I the nominee. Third party con- <lb/>
for Governor. for four mention in last <lb/>
to any-These <lb/>
most everybody cannot <lb/>
reform r <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
i, <lb/>
AUGUST U, <lb/>
at <lb/>
N. C-. M mill mail <lb/>
TICKET <lb/>
job <lb/>
CLEVELAND. <lb/>
York. <lb/>
Of <lb/>
CHARLES AYCOCK, <lb/>
SMITH. <lb/>
W. A- B. BRANCH, <lb/>
of Beaufort. <lb/>
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET- <lb/>
ELIAS <lb/>
of <lb/>
Knit A ST <lb/>
II A. <lb/>
of <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
com,. <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
DONALD W. LAIN. <lb/>
Wake. <lb/>
R. M. <lb/>
if Buncombe. <lb/>
mm hit. o ; <lb/>
J. C SCARBOROUGH. <lb/>
of Johnston. <lb/>
pan <lb/>
FRANK I. <lb/>
of <lb/>
ran of truth <lb/>
GEORGE A. SHUFFORD. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Ar 15th 1802, <lb/>
-who is Dr. A nation- Mr. should j of g not <lb/>
from his county town says himself politically before he enters untrue hut wholly <lb/>
he stands indicted in its court for i the campaign to preach bis so-1 Christian. Professing as you do <lb/>
reform to the people <lb/>
Mr. Cobb for Governor i lit t county. in your walk, and arc- <lb/>
was a Republican until Cleveland The REFLECTOR was glad to see j in the <lb/>
in and he followed many that Mr- had a letter from I certainly not honoring <lb/>
and turned Democrat. Dr. lone of the truest and best men, Master or bis cause, when yon go <lb/>
Durham for Secretary of State is <lb/>
Bid to have been a Democrat. <lb/>
Mr. Worth, candidate <lb/>
has been a Republican, a <lb/>
Prohibitionist, Ac. Mr. Lyon for <lb/>
Attorney General has always been land be loyal to that political party <lb/>
a Republican of tho stripe by whose exclusive favor and re <lb/>
Rev. Mr. Woody has been a Re-1 support he to day tills the <lb/>
publican Prohibitionist- Mr. I high office of Clerk of the <lb/>
Malone. an old line liberal <lb/>
political looker. Maj. <lb/>
out of your way to try to injure <lb/>
defame the character of my <lb/>
an eminent jurist of the State, and <lb/>
it hopes that he will receive others, <lb/>
good advice and we lave COurage of our <lb/>
by them he may yet influenced and are to <lb/>
to turn from the error of his way I stand by them. <lb/>
am disposed to look eh <lb/>
upon you your course is men <lb/>
BARGAINS. <lb/>
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb/>
Mill <lb/>
F- G. JAMES- <lb/>
FREDERICK <lb/>
I. K- <lb/>
RICHARD W. KING. <lb/>
of <lb/>
HENRY HARDING. <lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
DR. WM. E. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
J. B. KILPATRICK. <lb/>
is a respectable Republican- <lb/>
Col. T- B. candidate fr <lb/>
Auditor, many know as an old <lb/>
Republican Post Office inspector. <lb/>
This old Boss Republican of <lb/>
Western North Carolina now <lb/>
boasts that he is fie bass singer <lb/>
in the choir which sings <lb/>
and ministers of grace defend us <lb/>
This is the complexion of the tick- <lb/>
et you are asked to support- How <lb/>
can you do this and say you are <lb/>
for reform You are all too well <lb/>
acquainted with the Republican <lb/>
party to believe that these men <lb/>
who to have changed to <lb/>
your way of thinking are anything <lb/>
but what they have always been, <lb/>
opposed to all reforms. This is <lb/>
not a ticket of your own way of <lb/>
thinking and many of you will <lb/>
never support it. <lb/>
THIRD PARTY CONVENTION. <lb/>
The so-called People's cob- <lb/>
met in <lb/>
inst- It is evidently a misnomer <lb/>
to call it Third or Peoples party <lb/>
convention. It exceedingly <lb/>
mongrel affair. Among the more <lb/>
prominent in the transaction of the <lb/>
business were old moss back Re- <lb/>
publicans, and such, tails, <lb/>
mugwump ft Co. with a <lb/>
sprinkling of It <lb/>
is literally true that almost all truly <lb/>
People's party men are thoroughly <lb/>
disgusted with the proceedings of <lb/>
the convention. Many honest <lb/>
had gone into tho Third <lb/>
party because they believed by so <lb/>
doing they would benefit their con- <lb/>
They have never been Re- <lb/>
publicans. They never intended <lb/>
to do anything that would be to <lb/>
the interest of their greatest <lb/>
my, the Republican party. They <lb/>
are forever opposed to Republican <lb/>
rule. They now realize the fact <lb/>
that the convention in Raleigh was <lb/>
largely controlled by men who are <lb/>
working in the interest of the Re- <lb/>
publicans. They are no longer <lb/>
to this fact. The con- <lb/>
put themselves on record, <lb/>
and the honest men of the Third <lb/>
party are now realizing that the <lb/>
Republicans are only so <lb/>
long as they may advance their <lb/>
own plan. <lb/>
When Col. Harry Skinner, of <lb/>
this place, who had been <lb/>
for Governor by acclamation, <lb/>
made as a condition of his <lb/>
if at any hour there <lb/>
appears such a division wrought <lb/>
among the white people of this <lb/>
country that the ma- <lb/>
chine, the common cause of all our <lb/>
and the enemy of us all and <lb/>
of our country, has and is <lb/>
taking advantage of our <lb/>
division and white supremacy is <lb/>
endangered, want to advise you <lb/>
of it other words he wanted to <lb/>
withdraw if the Republicans in- <lb/>
stead of standing with the Third <lb/>
party put out a ticket of their own, <lb/>
which meant the defeat of both the <lb/>
Democratic and Third parties, and <lb/>
throwing the State under <lb/>
the convention at once <lb/>
sat down upon him and demanded <lb/>
that he should withdraw. The <lb/>
leaders in this demand were such <lb/>
old time Republicans as T. B <lb/>
Long, Nat Macon and others. <lb/>
They showed their true colors and <lb/>
what their intentions are when they <lb/>
denounced a man and had him <lb/>
literally driven out for the <lb/>
of opposition to Republican <lb/>
rule. <lb/>
The Reflector believes that all <lb/>
white men who have with <lb/>
the Third party will see that the <lb/>
Republicans are going to use <lb/>
them for an aid society even if it <lb/>
becomes necessary for a few of <lb/>
them to renounce their allegiance <lb/>
to their old friends and blow loud <lb/>
and long for the Third party. <lb/>
We would especially call the at- <lb/>
of the farmers of Pitt <lb/>
MR. LETTER. <lb/>
In to-days Reflector appears a <lb/>
letter from Mr. E. A. intend- <lb/>
ed as a reply to some comments we <lb/>
made two weeks ago upon his <lb/>
the Democratic party and plant <lb/>
himself squarely in line with <lb/>
the Third party movement. He <lb/>
says that our characterization of <lb/>
him not only unwarranted <lb/>
and untrue but wholly <lb/>
After this state- <lb/>
in the opening part of his <lb/>
letter we expected him to make <lb/>
some effort to show wherein the <lb/>
Reflector had done him an <lb/>
or misrepresented him in any <lb/>
wise- it Beams that he <lb/>
and studiously omits to particular- <lb/>
or point out in what respect he <lb/>
was wrongly accused or unjustly <lb/>
censured. His letter deals in vain <lb/>
jangling and glittering <lb/>
ties. <lb/>
He speaks of prescriptive and <lb/>
intolerant as doing the <lb/>
Democratic party great harm in <lb/>
this county- There has been no <lb/>
Bach policy pursued or advocated. <lb/>
facts can be cited sustain- <lb/>
such an assertion. This is <lb/>
simply a cry started so as to give <lb/>
some pretense of plausible excuse <lb/>
for leaving tho Democratic party- <lb/>
It is no new dodge. It has been <lb/>
the demagogic cry of political <lb/>
kickers and enemies of tho Demo- <lb/>
party in campaigns before <lb/>
this. The Reflector is aware <lb/>
that some Third were dis- <lb/>
appointed at our primaries held on <lb/>
the Saturday our Demo- <lb/>
county convention. They <lb/>
participated in those primaries, <lb/>
and because the true Dem- <lb/>
being in an overwhelming <lb/>
majority, chose to elect only <lb/>
straight Democrats as <lb/>
gates to the county convention <lb/>
on July 27th. the larger part <lb/>
of the minority crowd became dis- <lb/>
and made themselves <lb/>
delegates to the Third party meet- <lb/>
Unless they, a weak <lb/>
could boss the Democratic <lb/>
and dictate the delegates, <lb/>
they were unwilling to be govern- <lb/>
ed by the action of said primaries. <lb/>
A piece of attempted bossism <lb/>
heard of before in the county of <lb/>
Pitt, an effort to reverse the time <lb/>
honored policy that a majority <lb/>
shall rule in Democratic <lb/>
In order to keep the Democrat- <lb/>
party in the hands of its friends <lb/>
and to preserve its grand <lb/>
pies, it was well for tho honest <lb/>
Democrats in tho different town- <lb/>
ships at their primaries to select <lb/>
none but loyal Democrats to rep- <lb/>
represent them in county <lb/>
for they had been deceived <lb/>
by some men who were debates <lb/>
to the State Democratic <lb/>
and after returning <lb/>
had repudiated the work they had <lb/>
there helped to do. It time <lb/>
to become suspicions of men <lb/>
who proved faithless to the party <lb/>
at whose hands they accepted a <lb/>
commission as delegate to the <lb/>
State convention. Mr. was <lb/>
a delegate to the Democratic <lb/>
State convention, he participated <lb/>
in the Greenville Democratic <lb/>
that elected delegates to the <lb/>
Democratic county convention <lb/>
which nominated a legislative and <lb/>
county ticket and sent delegates <lb/>
to Edenton to nominate a Demo- <lb/>
candidate for Congress and <lb/>
a Presidential Elector. Mr. <lb/>
addressed tho party con- <lb/>
in Greenville the 30th of <lb/>
July in manner as described in <lb/>
Court of Pitt county. <lb/>
We did not suppose for a mo- <lb/>
that Mr- would resign <lb/>
his office, but along with thous- <lb/>
ands of other Democrats in the <lb/>
county expressed the opinion that <lb/>
he to do so- This remark, <lb/>
to be sure, touched him in a ten- <lb/>
place, his <lb/>
to serve his people is always <lb/>
set forth. But, Mr. <lb/>
if you really think that the great <lb/>
majority of those who put you in <lb/>
this office now endorse your <lb/>
there is an easy way <lb/>
to test this matter. Suppose in <lb/>
the coming election it was agreed <lb/>
that every man who voted for you <lb/>
two years ago should have his <lb/>
opinion recorded as to whether he <lb/>
endorsed you or not- We dare <lb/>
say you would not consent to <lb/>
influenced by that poll of opinion <lb/>
as to your continuing in office or <lb/>
resigning- <lb/>
the fight for reform and in <lb/>
it to tho This is his war <lb/>
whoop. Uttered by a Third party <lb/>
man, what does it mean and what <lb/>
its logical result. It means that <lb/>
Mr- will vote for Weaver and <lb/>
help to give North Carolina's <lb/>
vote to Harrison. It is in- <lb/>
directly but most surely assisting <lb/>
the Republicans to carry North <lb/>
Carolina in this election. It is <lb/>
strengthening the Republican par- <lb/>
and helping to perpetuate it in <lb/>
power, which party alone is re- <lb/>
for the legislative evils, <lb/>
the class legislation and financial <lb/>
burdens of which our people com- <lb/>
plain. This is the result of such a <lb/>
course, and your reforms will <lb/>
come to a finish and ho Southern <lb/>
people will to grief if Harri- <lb/>
son upon his Force bill platform <lb/>
is re-elected and the next Con- <lb/>
is controlled by tho <lb/>
J. B. Y Y <lb/>
DEALERS IN <lb/>
The Third party Congressional <lb/>
Convention at Edenton, last <lb/>
Thursday nominated Col. Harry <lb/>
Skinner. In his speech he took the <lb/>
same position ho did in Raleigh <lb/>
which met with the same result- <lb/>
ho was pat down and another man <lb/>
nominated. The second <lb/>
was given to Mr. E. A. <lb/>
W. R- Henry. Esq., of <lb/>
son, made three excellent speeches <lb/>
in Pitt county last week, one at <lb/>
Falkland, one at and <lb/>
at Black Jack. At each point he <lb/>
did good work for the Democracy. <lb/>
Ho contrasted the records of the <lb/>
three candidates for President so <lb/>
forcibly that no white man bearing <lb/>
him should his duty. He <lb/>
produced records which showed <lb/>
the Republican party to be pledged <lb/>
to the Force Bill and that it was <lb/>
their intention to fasten it upon <lb/>
the people of the South the very <lb/>
first opportunity they had. After <lb/>
producing against <lb/>
the iniquitous ho said the <lb/>
merchants of our country could do <lb/>
most effective work if every time <lb/>
they sold an article over their <lb/>
counters they told the <lb/>
how much the bill added <lb/>
to the price- Mr. Henry brings <lb/>
out telling points on all the issues <lb/>
that are before the people. <lb/>
In the list of appointments at <lb/>
which A- E- Stevenson, <lb/>
date Vice-President, is to speak <lb/>
in Carolina, Goldsboro is <lb/>
put down as one of the places <lb/>
which he will visit. The <lb/>
is of the opinion that the Executive <lb/>
Committee should change that <lb/>
from to <lb/>
Rocky Mount. to <lb/>
from all this portion of the <lb/>
Stale Rocky Mount has many ad- <lb/>
vantages over Goldsboro. If the <lb/>
speaking is at Rocky Mount, <lb/>
along the lines of tho <lb/>
and Greenville road, tho Wash- <lb/>
road, the Plymouth read <lb/>
and the Norfolk and Carolina road, <lb/>
could attend and return home the <lb/>
same day, while they could not <lb/>
go to hear the speaking-at Golds- <lb/>
and get back under two <lb/>
days. Rocky Mount, too, would <lb/>
be just as good a point for the <lb/>
people on the main line of the W. <lb/>
k W. road. If the committee are <lb/>
to put Mr. Stevenson at the point <lb/>
where tho most people can hear <lb/>
him, the appointment for this <lb/>
of the State should be at <lb/>
Rocky <lb/>
w ; <lb/>
to the character of the ticket I the Reflector two weeks ago, and <lb/>
the <lb/>
Century, Re- <lb/>
can <lb/>
Reflector Book <lb/>
of Reviews, Frank <lb/>
Puck and <lb/>
paper. A large assort meat, f late <lb/>
novels will be In this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
sometimes are not wholly <lb/>
Bible for what they do. pros <lb/>
and intolerant policy that <lb/>
has been pursued by you has <lb/>
wrought great harm to the Demo <lb/>
party in this county. The <lb/>
policy that has been <lb/>
the rule so long has become <lb/>
and is no longer effective. In <lb/>
no State has it been carried to such <lb/>
an extent as in North Carolina and <lb/>
in no county in the State further <lb/>
in Pitt county. <lb/>
a received a few days <lb/>
ago, from one of the best and <lb/>
truest men in tho State, one who <lb/>
stands second to none in the <lb/>
of all the people in the <lb/>
State, an eminent jurist who ranks <lb/>
first in his profession, he uses the <lb/>
following language in regard to <lb/>
the policy that should <lb/>
the discussion of these differ- <lb/>
we should avoid all bitter- <lb/>
intolerance or <lb/>
The man who encourages <lb/>
bigotry and language <lb/>
is an enemy to the and m- <lb/>
the best interest of all. <lb/>
Truth and justice can never ad- <lb/>
by harsh words or unkind <lb/>
has never <lb/>
yet settled any controversy in the <lb/>
right way- The subject is one of <lb/>
the most importance <lb/>
of great difficulty, it should be <lb/>
discussed in a spirit of absolute <lb/>
freedom and toleration. Men <lb/>
should pot be on ac- <lb/>
count of their opinions or the ex- <lb/>
of them. A cause which <lb/>
will not admit of freedom of dis- <lb/>
is not entitled to <lb/>
In an address by the Hon. Basil <lb/>
B- Gordon, chairman of the Demo- <lb/>
State Central Committee of <lb/>
Virginia directed the Demo- <lb/>
members of tho Third Par- <lb/>
in Virginia he closes the ad- <lb/>
dress in tho following <lb/>
However yen may cast your vote. <lb/>
I for one shall not doubt that you <lb/>
have done so with a full sense of <lb/>
the responsibility involved, and <lb/>
actuated by as sincere u love of <lb/>
our common State as any class of <lb/>
her <lb/>
The contrast between the <lb/>
ions Of these men and yours <lb/>
from your article is very mark- <lb/>
ed indeed. <lb/>
The support of G rover Cleveland <lb/>
been made tho test of loyalty <lb/>
to the Democratic party in this <lb/>
county. It is well known that <lb/>
there is a large number of our <lb/>
who and been for <lb/>
some time bitterly opposed to Mr. <lb/>
Cleveland's financial views, and <lb/>
who would not support him. They <lb/>
were as honest in their convictions <lb/>
of what was their as yon <lb/>
could be. They had always <lb/>
worked for and voted for the Dem- <lb/>
party, they were anxious to <lb/>
see the people of this country once <lb/>
more on the high road to prosper- <lb/>
they believed that they were <lb/>
working for the best interests of <lb/>
all tho people and believing <lb/>
they could not and would not vole <lb/>
for Mr. Cleveland. Among this <lb/>
number was myself You will <lb/>
perhaps acknowledge that the <lb/>
present condition of affairs is in <lb/>
deed deplorable. You bound <lb/>
to admit that reform is needed and <lb/>
must come or that the people will <lb/>
be slaves to the money power of <lb/>
this country which is worse, <lb/>
worse, was chattel <lb/>
slavery before the war. No system <lb/>
of slavery can equal it- neither <lb/>
feeds, clothes nor shelters its slaves <lb/>
nor does it furnish them medicine <lb/>
when sick. All these -were furnish- <lb/>
ed under our former system. <lb/>
As for myself. Mr. Editor, I wish <lb/>
to say that I was born and raised <lb/>
in this county, that I am no <lb/>
to tho people and you will not <lb/>
injure me or my standing with <lb/>
them by such language as is found <lb/>
in your columns. Honestly <lb/>
that unless the reforms we <lb/>
seek can be brought about that <lb/>
our country and Government is <lb/>
doomed, honestly believing that <lb/>
the rights of the people must be <lb/>
respected and in order that they <lb/>
may be respected and protected <lb/>
that must be a change in tho <lb/>
financial of our Gov- <lb/>
and being convinced of <lb/>
the justness of our demands and <lb/>
that they essential to the <lb/>
of our liberties, I say <lb/>
now as said on the 30th of July <lb/>
that I am in the fight tor reform <lb/>
and in it to the finish- When I am <lb/>
convinced of my error. I am ready <lb/>
willing to change, but I can <lb/>
never be driven by such means s <lb/>
you using. <lb/>
The people alive to the is- <lb/>
sues of the day as is shown by the <lb/>
attendance at the different con- <lb/>
that have been held, and <lb/>
no man who is not blinded by <lb/>
but will gay that the <lb/>
People's party convention hold <lb/>
here on the 30th July will com- <lb/>
favorably with any Democratic <lb/>
convention held here, in every <lb/>
way. I am responsible to the <lb/>
as an officer of- this county. I <lb/>
was not placed in office by the Re- <lb/>
and its advisers alone, <lb/>
and believing that a large <lb/>
of the people of the county, and <lb/>
I mean a large majority of those <lb/>
who voted for me now in this <lb/>
fight with me as will be shown on <lb/>
the day of election, I think that <lb/>
you are a little too previous in <lb/>
asking me to step down and out. <lb/>
You will learn if you do not know <lb/>
it now that you are not <lb/>
now, and that yon can neither <lb/>
make clerks nor unmake them. <lb/>
My of office is two years <lb/>
more and I propose to fill out my <lb/>
term until some other reason is <lb/>
Tuesday Morning, August <lb/>
-WE WILL OFFER FOR- <lb/>
Two WEEKS On y <lb/>
The following goods at the following prices which are very much <lb/>
less than the goods cost us. But we prefer to selling them now <lb/>
at these prices to carrying them over to another season. <lb/>
This offer is only open two weeks and under- <lb/>
stand that we do agree to ever duplicate these <lb/>
prices again, and nothing sold at these prices <lb/>
on this list will be taken bark or exchanged. <lb/>
Come at once and get the choice, it will pay you. We give you <lb/>
the former prices at which the were sold, and the prices <lb/>
at which we are now offering them. Look over the list <lb/>
and see if there is not a bargain in them for yon. <lb/>
We beg to announce to our many <lb/>
friends and customers that we <lb/>
have the largest and best selected <lb/>
stock of Goods to be <lb/>
town. And while we are not sell <lb/>
at cost we beg to announce <lb/>
that we think we and will tin- <lb/>
it i <lb/>
n M <lb/>
ti t<lb/>
SwIm <lb/>
it I <lb/>
ti<lb/>
t u<lb/>
ti t, <lb/>
t.<lb/>
Lawn <lb/>
it <lb/>
a I <lb/>
it<lb/>
All W. down to<lb/>
Yard Wide c <lb/>
Wash <lb/>
Pineapple <lb/>
Solid Brown Checked <lb/>
India <lb/>
Bedford JO <lb/>
Inverness c <lb/>
g c <lb/>
Embroidered <lb/>
.<lb/>
. <lb/>
Worsted<lb/>
Handkerchiefs <lb/>
White Lawn<lb/>
tons <lb/>
Gauze<lb/>
. . <lb/>
Silk<lb/>
Remnants J-At Straw Hats <lb/>
Kali Matting; cent-, marked<lb/>
buying now yon will safe at least per cent, on every article in this list <lb/>
as the pi he put upon these goods arc much below what they cost But <lb/>
we would rather sell now and lose something than to carry them over for another <lb/>
season Call and examine for Ask to see our Bargain Counter. <lb/>
YOUNG <lb/>
given that J should resign to <lb/>
please you. <lb/>
My desire is to do my duty as <lb/>
an officer and as I <lb/>
have always endeavored to live so <lb/>
as to merit the esteem and <lb/>
of fellow man and now <lb/>
at the age of fifty years I have the <lb/>
satisfaction of knowing the <lb/>
esteem in which I am held by the <lb/>
good people of not only this but <lb/>
counties where am known, <lb/>
can never be damaged by such <lb/>
unjust and unwarranted assaults <lb/>
as yon make upon me, and which <lb/>
I am glad to meet the <lb/>
most universal condemnation of <lb/>
high toned honorable gentlemen <lb/>
everywhere. All I ask of you sir, <lb/>
is to treat me fairly. If lam <lb/>
wrong me by argument, <lb/>
you can never do by abuse- <lb/>
Ton Are Not Ii It <lb/>
If you fail to sec the brand new stock of <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
-----that is now being <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
------1 have Just me to suit----- <lb/>
GENTLEMEN, <lb/>
LADY. <lb/>
HOUSEKEEPER. <lb/>
I FARMER, <lb/>
BODY ELSE <lb/>
If you want anything wear or anything <lb/>
to eat, or any article to go in the <lb/>
call on me. Goods all new, not a piece <lb/>
am able to take care of myself and as low as <lb/>
propose to do so. I shall during j at- <lb/>
the campaign discuss the issues. white- <lb/>
before the people have j <lb/>
time and opportunity, and j Two doors from V. A. <lb/>
can have the opportunity of hear-1 near Five Points, <lb/>
me and judge for yourself how . <lb/>
much I will get Now A I <lb/>
Mr. Editor in conclusion I will ti- i <lb/>
simply say, that misrepresentation <lb/>
and abuse of the men who are en- <lb/>
gaged this fight is calculated to I <lb/>
do groat harm, and cannot <lb/>
any good- If you are lion j <lb/>
eat and in your efforts and <lb/>
believe them to be for the best in-. <lb/>
people, allow the <lb/>
men who think differently from I us Street, tn rear of Dr. D. L. James <lb/>
yon tho privilege of differing with <lb/>
yon, and give them the credit of <lb/>
being honest and also. <lb/>
N. . <lb/>
They are in no inferiors. <lb/>
Their interest hero is as <lb/>
yours, their all is here, and then- <lb/>
past lives prove their devotion to <lb/>
country. <lb/>
g. A- Mote. <lb/>
Notice of Dissolution. <lb/>
business heretofore be- <lb/>
tween E. Hester and Alex <lb/>
under the firm name of E. J. Hester <lb/>
Co., has been this day dissolved by mu- <lb/>
LB <lb/>
E. J- <lb/>
Greenville Aug. <lb/>
MM <lb/>
Hat <lb/>
Cam It. All nil ii. <lb/>
I take groat pleasure in informing my <lb/>
friends and the <lb/>
that <lb/>
-.-NEW <lb/>
is now open, A successful career of <lb/>
.-. YEARS <lb/>
is of the satisfaction always give. <lb/>
My Work Speaks Itself. <lb/>
Call early and examine <lb/>
Hoping to gain your confidence, and <lb/>
merit favor. I am <lb/>
Very respectfully, <lb/>
For Sale on Easy Terms <lb/>
Double Store In Greenville. I <lb/>
offer sale on easy terms the large <lb/>
Double Store north of street, <lb/>
east of Evans street, with lot front <lb/>
feet Fifth street feet deep. A <lb/>
any prices on the different <lb/>
lines of Goods earned by us. <lb/>
throw out no baits to entrap <lb/>
To one and all we extend <lb/>
a cordial welcome to our <lb/>
will be pleased to serve you with <lb/>
any goods in the following lines <lb/>
o- <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions, <lb/>
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Pants <lb/>
Goods, Hats, Shoes, Hardware, <lb/>
Cutlery, Nails, Tinware, Crockery, <lb/>
Glassware, Groceries, deg. <lb/>
White Oil cents per gallon, <lb/>
Wood and Willow Ware, Harness, <lb/>
-------o <lb/>
Whips and Collars, Farming Tools <lb/>
Plows of the improved makes, <lb/>
Trunks, Valises, Floor Matting, <lb/>
Oil Children's Carriages, <lb/>
and the largest and best selected <lb/>
stock of FURNITURE ever kept <lb/>
in our town. When in need of <lb/>
anything in our various 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/>
OF <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory Is well equipped with the host put up nothing <lb/>
but We keep tip with the times improved styles <lb/>
material used in all work, AU styles of Springs are you can septet from <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, <lb/>
Also keep on hand a lull of ready . <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb/>
he year round, which will as low as <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we hope t <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same <lb/>
J. SUGG-, <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE T <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
OFFICE SUGG JAMES 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 Oxford. N. C.<lb/>
buildings, hot and cold baths, gymnasium, healthful climate, <lb/>
surroundings A model home school for boys. <lb/>
son on <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb/>
I, <lb/>
Headquarter for the following lines of <lb/>
Car load Mew Pork. Boxes Crackers. <lb/>
Car load Rib Side Meat. <lb/>
Car load Flour, all grades. <lb/>
Car load White Seed Oats. <lb/>
Cases Star Lye. <lb/>
Cases s Bread Powders. <lb/>
Soap. , . <lb/>
Cherries and Peaches. <lb/>
Full line Case Goods. <lb/>
mo Boxes Tobacco, <lb/>
Boxes <lb/>
Barrels Molasses. <lb/>
Stick Candy. <lb/>
Barrels Gail it Ax Snuff. <lb/>
Hi Barrels Railroad Mills Snuff. <lb/>
Barrels Snuff. <lb/>
Paper Sacks, <lb/>
N. c. <lb/>
For Insurance by the year In on, of <lb/>
the beat Companies in existence, see <lb/>
ft<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017561_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
P- <lb/>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
P- <lb/>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
Ms <lb/>
p- <lb/>
GO <lb/>
8-<lb/>
THE <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
T. Flanker was sick last week. <lb/>
Autumn on. <lb/>
Vacation U nearly <lb/>
sweet potatoes have appeared in <lb/>
market. <lb/>
methods, wherein they appeared <lb/>
more i desirous to add discord <lb/>
W been bit- <lb/>
days in comity. ; awl list end <lb/>
. . .,. i of persuasive to con <lb/>
Mr. It. <lb/>
-no. Hi <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal for stile the <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
Cleveland <lb/>
tor Book Store. <lb/>
The are cool enough for sleep <lb/>
to be delightful. <lb/>
The New Home Ma for <lb/>
Brae. <lb/>
If i- about time for the to <lb/>
put In an appearance. <lb/>
This section had light rains <lb/>
Monday evenings. <lb/>
County candidates at next Sat- <lb/>
Don't forget it. <lb/>
of were caught in <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
New Home Sewing Machine <lb/>
all parts Brown Bro-. <lb/>
Lots of small melons in town last week. <lb/>
The large ones were scarce. <lb/>
New Cheese and X. Y. State <lb/>
Butter at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
This is preserving season and many a <lb/>
matron is over the sweets. <lb/>
Want to eat something good Bin <lb/>
at the Old Store. <lb/>
The continued dry weather seriously <lb/>
injured crops in many sections. <lb/>
Cash given for Produce. Hides. <lb/>
and at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Furniture. Bedsteads <lb/>
I Mattresses at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
comity has a lovely Third <lb/>
on it. <lb/>
There is some complaint about <lb/>
that needs looking into. <lb/>
Pender Co. made nearly lour <lb/>
sets of tobacco Hue- this season. <lb/>
Don't say a word against any home en- <lb/>
give it your encourage- <lb/>
A cleaning up of premises now might <lb/>
prevent some cases of t fever in <lb/>
the fall. <lb/>
The farmers had line weather for <lb/>
fodder last week and much of it was <lb/>
tripped. <lb/>
The lumber rebuilding <lb/>
foot is slow putting in an <lb/>
One 40-saw Brown ion. one <lb/>
and cheap at<lb/>
The firm of E. Hester Co. leaf to- <lb/>
dealers, has dissolved. Sec notice <lb/>
in this issue. <lb/>
We hear that the Republican s will <lb/>
hold a county convention on Saturday. <lb/>
September 3rd. <lb/>
The opening breaks September 1st are <lb/>
all the talk. That date will lie a gala <lb/>
day for <lb/>
A named Stokes has been <lb/>
Opened at stove on the line of the <lb/>
Washington railroad. <lb/>
Warehouse. Henderson, is <lb/>
ready for new chop He <lb/>
highest prices. <lb/>
The Reflector Book Store has ordered a <lb/>
of handsome Cleveland campaign <lb/>
buttons. Wait for them. <lb/>
Another supply of Bibles and <lb/>
just received Brown <lb/>
for American Bible Society. <lb/>
Business promises to good this fall. <lb/>
Those merchants who don't advertise <lb/>
should be calling on the printers. <lb/>
The old reliable is Ware- <lb/>
house. Henderson. Send your tobacco <lb/>
there. Cooper is the farmer's friend. <lb/>
We have learned that Rev. T. Phil- <lb/>
lips, who was nominated by the Third <lb/>
party for the Legislature ha- withdrawn. <lb/>
The Ladies Aid Society of the Baptist <lb/>
church will have ice cream for sale the <lb/>
day of opening break at the warehouses. <lb/>
In order to close out my stock of To- <lb/>
Knives and Thermometers before <lb/>
the season ends I have reduced the price. <lb/>
D. <lb/>
Ship your tobacco to Wm <lb/>
Henderson, and he will work <lb/>
honestly and faithfully for your best <lb/>
interest. <lb/>
Remember if you send your tobacco to <lb/>
Cooper's Warehouse. Henderson, you <lb/>
high prices and happy. <lb/>
Try it. <lb/>
1st the Atlantic Hotel <lb/>
Morehead will close for the season. It <lb/>
ha- baas brilliant and successful season <lb/>
u there. <lb/>
goods tor J. C. Son. <lb/>
Mr. W. A. Bernard left yesterday to <lb/>
spend some days In county. <lb/>
Mr. W. A. of Washington, has <lb/>
taken a case with the typos. <lb/>
John Cherry and family re- <lb/>
turned last Wednesday from <lb/>
Mr. F. L. a soldier of the IT. S. <lb/>
Army at Fortress Monroe, is home on a <lb/>
furlough. <lb/>
Miss Katie Smith, of has <lb/>
recently been visiting Miss Blanche <lb/>
Flanagan. <lb/>
Prof. R. X. of Tarboro. is <lb/>
conducting a dancing class here in M <lb/>
mania Hall. <lb/>
Miss Settle Warren been sick <lb/>
some days. We arc glad to hear that <lb/>
she is better. <lb/>
Mr. B- Yellowley. who several <lb/>
months ha-been ill Mississippi, returned <lb/>
home last week. <lb/>
Mamie Bernard, who is teaching <lb/>
in Wilmington, came home last week to <lb/>
visit her mother. <lb/>
Mr. E. Barnes, representing Coo- <lb/>
Warehouse. Henderson, has been <lb/>
spending the last days in this com- <lb/>
is a hustler. <lb/>
Rev. Dr. X. C. Hughes and family, of <lb/>
Chi passed through <lb/>
last week to western Car- <lb/>
to spend a few days. <lb/>
Mr. C. T. returned last week <lb/>
from his trip north to purchase new <lb/>
goods. His stock i- coming in and he is <lb/>
ready to show something nice. <lb/>
C any his been spending a <lb/>
days at Rock. She was taken <lb/>
sick up there and i- returning home. <lb/>
Her brother. Mr. R. Cheery, went to <lb/>
Raleigh yesterday to meet her. <lb/>
Mrs. v. I,. of <lb/>
arrived last week and will on next Mon- <lb/>
day enter her duties as teacher of <lb/>
Female School. The parents <lb/>
are to lie congratulated <lb/>
upon the of sending their <lb/>
girls to Mrs. As an <lb/>
tor and trainer of girls she stands with- <lb/>
out a peer. work bears the highest <lb/>
testimonials a teacher could possess. <lb/>
Both her instruction and her influence in <lb/>
the school room are beyond estimation. <lb/>
We bespeak for her a large school. <lb/>
Again the would remind <lb/>
its local readers not to complain if they <lb/>
fail to sec the names of their guests in <lb/>
if they fail to let the editor know <lb/>
they visitor-. We are always glad <lb/>
to have such items. Don't hesitate to <lb/>
tell any Item of news. <lb/>
More than two prize houses will be <lb/>
needed here. We have heard of some <lb/>
buyers wanting to come bore and locate <lb/>
who could not do so because of <lb/>
to secure prize house room. Let <lb/>
more be built. If is to be the <lb/>
market it should be every convenience <lb/>
for handling tobacco must be provided. <lb/>
The broad smiles our candidate for <lb/>
Sheriff. Mr. R. W. King, wore as he <lb/>
came down the street last <lb/>
day morning, made hi- friends believe <lb/>
he had just secured a big lot of votes and <lb/>
was correspondingly happy. It wasn't <lb/>
the votes bin a sweet little girl at his <lb/>
house that made Dick so lull of -mile-. <lb/>
Pastor Resigned- <lb/>
Rev. A. D. Banter recently tendered <lb/>
hi- resignation as pastor the Baptist <lb/>
church here. At a meeting of the <lb/>
Church last Wednesday night his <lb/>
was accepted. Mr. Hunter ha-had <lb/>
charge of ibis church for two years <lb/>
his pastorate has at all times ac- <lb/>
It is regretted that he leaves <lb/>
the work in Pitt country. <lb/>
Halifax All Right. <lb/>
It has been rumored down this <lb/>
that the d party almost had Halifax <lb/>
solid, but we heard a gentleman <lb/>
who knows the county well say that Hal- <lb/>
will be found square in the Demo- <lb/>
column when election day come.-. <lb/>
The Democrats of that county nominated <lb/>
a good ticket last week and the <lb/>
tor hope- to hear of its election a <lb/>
handsome majority. <lb/>
is not a nicer warehouse in <lb/>
Carolina than the Ea-tern. <lb/>
tiling i- in for the opening, <lb/>
1st. <lb/>
A bank in Weldon. <lb/>
lay. Mr. W. E. Daniel i- <lb/>
Weldon is a growing town and a good <lb/>
bank w as needed there. <lb/>
If you want to see a busy place now <lb/>
peep the office. Three <lb/>
papers lots of job work make our <lb/>
seven boys hustle. <lb/>
Every business man in Greenville <lb/>
lend his aid to making this town <lb/>
a leading tobacco market. It can be done <lb/>
and must be done. <lb/>
In the midst of political excitement <lb/>
don't forget to drop in a good word <lb/>
your town occasionally. Greenville will <lb/>
do to keep an eye on. <lb/>
Keep the date in mind, <lb/>
Sept. 7th. as the time the grand <lb/>
in Greenville and raising the <lb/>
Cleveland and Carr nag. <lb/>
The Reflector is requested to invite <lb/>
everybody to Democratic at <lb/>
to-morrow. The <lb/>
will not object to your taking a basket <lb/>
along with yon. <lb/>
a week to-morrow to the opening <lb/>
breaks in of Greenville's tobacco <lb/>
warehouses. The town will be full <lb/>
people. The wedding to take place at <lb/>
the Eastern is all the talk. <lb/>
Parents and others interested in <lb/>
are invited to be present at the open- <lb/>
exercises at <lb/>
next morning. <lb/>
Z. D. <lb/>
People passing over it declare the dam <lb/>
from the north end the bridge to high <lb/>
land the biggest improvement a de- <lb/>
It ought to have been built <lb/>
ago. but it is late than never. <lb/>
Every day the Third party is loosing <lb/>
ground. Many good men who in- dis- <lb/>
covering that they have been misled in- <lb/>
to it are coming out and declaring their <lb/>
allegiance to the Democratic, party. <lb/>
Don't tail to read the advertisement <lb/>
the Greenville Warehouse which <lb/>
pears to-day. Old Man U ready <lb/>
tor tobacco and promises to please <lb/>
every person who with him. <lb/>
Monday the trains on the Washington <lb/>
branch rood began carrying the mails, <lb/>
supplying Oakley. <lb/>
Stokes and Washington. This is <lb/>
the people along the line the <lb/>
road. <lb/>
The Democratic picnic at to- <lb/>
morrow be a tremendous affair. All <lb/>
the North side of the river and all who <lb/>
can from the south side will be <lb/>
there. The train will have all it can <lb/>
carry. <lb/>
On Aug. Cooper's Warehouse, <lb/>
Henderson, new primings for R- <lb/>
R. Carr 15,50, So and <lb/>
Ungrateful. <lb/>
I been visited by a log- <lb/>
during Hie past week who i <lb/>
of an He claims to lie a <lb/>
maimed Confederate soldier. Hi- con- <lb/>
shows that he has severe <lb/>
and this fact alone elicits <lb/>
for him. But when he applies for <lb/>
aid to any one, if the gift wanted is not <lb/>
so large as be wants it to lie be it <lb/>
back at I lie donor and follow- the act <lb/>
with a tirade of abuse. Such conduct <lb/>
should debar him from any <lb/>
Gone Astray, <lb/>
Mr. Pittman from near here, at- <lb/>
tended the Third party State <lb/>
which was held in Raleigh Tuesday. We <lb/>
fear that he will get so deeply absorbed <lb/>
in polities that be will forget the first <lb/>
Only a months he <lb/>
walked not in the path-, of the <lb/>
nor did he stand in the way of sinners, <lb/>
and was never seen in scat of the <lb/>
fill, but recently he ha- entirely changed <lb/>
his companions. Don't forget to heed <lb/>
the of your Bible <lb/>
ton Lamplight <lb/>
Mr. Pittman is the man who the late <lb/>
Third party convention in Greenville <lb/>
nominated as their candidate for Regis- <lb/>
of Deeds. <lb/>
and tor P. <lb/>
Jarratt, 4.50, 10.50 <lb/>
MR. CARD. <lb/>
Falkland, Pitt Co., N. C. <lb/>
August 15th, 1892. <lb/>
of The I <lb/>
ask a small space to inform my <lb/>
Peoples party friends, that I can- <lb/>
not accept the nomination of Sen- <lb/>
I would have declined be- <lb/>
fore now but have been waiting <lb/>
to be informed by some official <lb/>
information authorized by the <lb/>
Convention of the 3rd of July. <lb/>
Rumor and the newspapers, say I <lb/>
was nominated. It was <lb/>
unsought and not merited, <lb/>
and that by many of old personal <lb/>
and political friends. <lb/>
I can feel thankful and <lb/>
grateful for such undeserved kind- <lb/>
The complaints of the <lb/>
farmers and laborers, are no idle <lb/>
childish measures. Tear by year, <lb/>
the and combines of the <lb/>
moneyed plutocrats lessen the price <lb/>
of bis labors, lessen the price of <lb/>
his hard earnings that he has to <lb/>
sell, and price the necessities he <lb/>
is compelled to buy for himself <lb/>
and home- Daily the free homes, <lb/>
are passing away. <lb/>
They know, almost a <lb/>
the government has bean <lb/>
run and directed to support and <lb/>
protect the rich, that whilst all <lb/>
wealth comes from <lb/>
rich is getting pretty much all. <lb/>
I can but wonder with <lb/>
the patience and forbear- <lb/>
of the farmers and laborers. <lb/>
Down deep in the heart of the <lb/>
proud is an <lb/>
that unerringly teaches resist- <lb/>
to obedience to God. <lb/>
The people want reform, they de- <lb/>
a change. <lb/>
Candor compels me to state <lb/>
I differed with the leaders as <lb/>
and lo convince. To u <lb/>
wayward brother, is <lb/>
ever better than open rebuke. I <lb/>
thought we would so act as to <lb/>
first safely secure 0111- grand old <lb/>
State, our Congress Districts, and <lb/>
own county Republican <lb/>
rule. Home is and <lb/>
should be the first consideration <lb/>
in ethics. It is the <lb/>
idea which bus <lb/>
the teachings of the Demo- <lb/>
party. <lb/>
This is not the hour for rash- <lb/>
and passion. Let us reason <lb/>
together. The great heart of the <lb/>
people ever throbs with patriotic <lb/>
emotions, and should be trusted. <lb/>
But as I do not wish to write a <lb/>
political homily nor trespass upon <lb/>
your columns, I will close by j <lb/>
saying that with to all <lb/>
and malice to you find <lb/>
me now, as the past, ever-ready <lb/>
to give my humble services to the <lb/>
grand old party to which J have <lb/>
devoted the best part of my life. <lb/>
For over forty years I have voted <lb/>
the Democratic ticket, have <lb/>
often trade sacrifices, dictated <lb/>
more by zeal than prudence. <lb/>
The people of my county have <lb/>
ever-shown me great respect, and <lb/>
confidence. As a Representative <lb/>
I tried to do my duty, without <lb/>
reward or the hope of reward. <lb/>
Mr. Editor, now whilst <lb/>
the restlessness, the <lb/>
disturbances, the riotous out- <lb/>
breaks causing bloodshed, the <lb/>
strikes, the boycotts, resisting a <lb/>
heartless moneyed plutocracy, I <lb/>
am move than ever convinced that <lb/>
we should return to the teachings <lb/>
of Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, <lb/>
Jackson. Polk, Pierce, <lb/>
and others, who gave this country <lb/>
laws and a government which has <lb/>
been truth fully called the golden <lb/>
age of America. <lb/>
Mr. Editor, urge the <lb/>
to be on their guard, ever re- <lb/>
that <lb/>
lance is the price of <lb/>
Bad men, ambitions men, are <lb/>
found in all parties, and for sol- <lb/>
fish greed would corrupt purity <lb/>
herself. best way to resist <lb/>
and to strangle them, to fight <lb/>
within our own household. When <lb/>
our fore fathers penetrated the <lb/>
wilderness, built them houses and <lb/>
them with clay, they wont <lb/>
inside to find the cracks. There <lb/>
never was a time when should <lb/>
be more mindful of the careful <lb/>
and cautious examples bequeathed <lb/>
to us. Lot us imitate thorn <lb/>
cannot do so by dividing our <lb/>
by voting for the nominees all the <lb/>
way from Cleveland to <lb/>
Constable- I think that is the <lb/>
best way to reform. <lb/>
W. It. William. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
ova. <lb/>
In Telegraphy. <lb/>
Art. not Rand. <lb/>
Loom Ion famous for lie and Health. <lb/>
For those Dot prepared for Col Classes, <lb/>
Is a <lb/>
Complete Preparatory Department. <lb/>
Indent Preparatory <lb/>
No charge medical alien- <lb/>
LOW rates. For address <lb/>
SCHOOL, Winston, N. C <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
On Monday, the <lb/>
A. D. INS, I will sell the Court I loose <lb/>
door in the town lo the <lb/>
highest bidder foe following <lb/>
tract land l county, in <lb/>
the town of known m <lb/>
aid town as lots No. SB, and 8-. be- <lb/>
ate In the <lb/>
County. <lb/>
T. Allen if.- Min- <lb/>
Allen. T. II. Allen m wife <lb/>
ks. Com <lb/>
Stock. Stocks, Chile. <lb/>
the <lb/>
last fix minors their friend o. T. <lb/>
Allen. <lb/>
Against. <lb/>
Home defendant. <lb/>
The Hawed M hereby <lb/>
to lie awl the <lb/>
of our Court, at a court <lb/>
lo I c held the county at the <lb/>
Conn In on <lb/>
lay after the let Monday of <lb/>
it the day of <lb/>
1812. and answer th complaint which <lb/>
lie of the <lb/>
Clerk of the Superior of said <lb/>
within the three days said <lb/>
term, and let said defendant take notice <lb/>
that they fail to answer the said <lb/>
Mrs. Joe Person's Will Cure <lb/>
Indigestion. <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
winter I was very much from <lb/>
Indigestion and general debility, with a <lb/>
followed with <lb/>
dysentery. I tried one bottle <lb/>
Mm. son's Remedy, and found so <lb/>
relief and improvement Icon tinned <lb/>
its use until used the bottle. <lb/>
restored me to perfect health, and <lb/>
I am now as sound as a silver dollar. I <lb/>
can cheerfully recommend it as a good <lb/>
blood purifier and a <lb/>
up of u <lb/>
Tobacco Growers <lb/>
Tobacco Furnace <lb/>
The best ever for <lb/>
TOBACCO. <lb/>
With it you have absolute <lb/>
control over heating your <lb/>
and it removes <lb/>
All Danger of <lb/>
Two per week can be <lb/>
made in the same barn <lb/>
co of different degrees of ripe- <lb/>
can be cured at one time in <lb/>
the same barn Saves labor and <lb/>
fuel. <lb/>
For further particulars ad- <lb/>
dress <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
this paper when write. <lb/>
Bet on tie Breaks <lb/>
OLD MAN GUSS <lb/>
Wants your Tobacco at the <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
WAREHOUSE. <lb/>
the lots set to Ann K. Bernard plaint within the time by law <lb/>
in division of binds Of William will apply to the court for <lb/>
Bernard. to ;, van ex in my in the <lb/>
hands for collection Ann K. Ber- under my hand and seal Of said <lb/>
Hard and which have levied on said i court, this day <lb/>
land as the of said Ann B. Her- A- <lb/>
J. A. K. Sheriff. <lb/>
The season opens with en <lb/>
Thursday, September <lb/>
Ml on your Tobacco and I <lb/>
that will get .- high prices <lb/>
for it as c n be had any- <lb/>
where. <lb/>
I will have help in conduct- <lb/>
the Warehouse and <lb/>
every will prompt <lb/>
attention. forget to <lb/>
bring me your Tobacco. <lb/>
Watch <lb/>
It will tell something of the Rare Bargains at <lb/>
our Clothing Establishment. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
Opposite Old Brink Stow. <lb/>
X. C <lb/>
G. E. HARRIS, <lb/>
in <lb/>
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS- <lb/>
There is a deal of satisfaction in leading <lb/>
we are still in that position. Rivals at- <lb/>
tempt to follow our methods but find that we <lb/>
lead them a merry chase and they finally give <lb/>
it up or come to grief. <lb/>
Elegance and durability, coupled with low <lb/>
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods <lb/>
and Notions in the lead. <lb/>
BROWN BROTHERS. <lb/>
Have on hand a full line of Cooking Stoves, Tin- <lb/>
ware, Lump Goods, Taints, Oils, Glass Putty. <lb/>
oar own stovepipe and pans of rolled h <lb/>
Vim e slop. <lb/>
Prices Low, <lb/>
Terms Easy, <lb/>
BROS. OFFER FOR SALE <lb/>
L. no-no tar in, <lb/>
Dam adjoining the land <lb/>
of t; . T. Tyson mid I. II. A tine <lb/>
farm of about acre-, with good <lb/>
to com. to- <lb/>
A line marl <lb/>
A near mid jug In <lb/>
on railroad, formerly own- <lb/>
ed Caleb It Tripp. which <lb/>
a are cleared, <lb/>
r school <lb/>
mile. Plenty marl on the adjoin- <lb/>
farms. <lb/>
A if acres, three mill s <lb/>
trow mid in <lb/>
ville, with dwelling <lb/>
out hones. known as L. I. <lb/>
home place, line <lb/>
clay to marl. <lb/>
I. A mailer farm tin- <lb/>
known as the place, acres. <lb/>
d-oiling, barn and tenant house, land <lb/>
good. <lb/>
S. A farm of t in n- <lb/>
about miles from <lb/>
of the <lb/>
acres, the town of Marlboro. <lb/>
loomed In an Improving <lb/>
and cm made valuable farm, <lb/>
v. a farm of <lb/>
about miles from on In- <lb/>
Well Swamp, with house, etc., <lb/>
owned by i ox. <lb/>
ALSO <lb/>
A of about too acre near <lb/>
the station, with timber well <lb/>
soiled for i ties. <lb/>
A tract BOO Mere in loins <lb/>
township, the mil- <lb/>
pine timber. <lb/>
A acres near Johnson's <lb/>
pine cypress timber. <lb/>
Apply to H. LONG, <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
I I H n , . ,, <lb/>
Ilia . ,. <lb/>
mi <lb/>
I have up . u , ,, <lb/>
j . . , <lb/>
j I will . ,.;.,. <lb/>
every r . . , . ; <lb/>
j i trial. Sail Fa. All <lb/>
I Of I c, I, ,; I <lb/>
rial a. lisp <lb/>
A . <lb/>
a I . <lb/>
the it c <lb/>
no one eh <lb/>
Dissolution Notice. <lb/>
The ; bin I <lb/>
j W. II , i, <lb/>
ii- lime i Hooker. I <lb/>
j in w t, , <lb/>
are Indebted <lb/>
with s. Hooker. <lb/>
IV. W ill II N. <lb/>
. T. Hi <lb/>
i will eon the <lb/>
i. and It tin <lb/>
ii. h i Hi a <lb/>
toil i I will <lb/>
if lb-own Ml Will <lb/>
Continue . in <lb/>
Dissolution, <lb/>
The lino of I ll; <lb/>
hereby dip ml i r mi <lb/>
in <lb/>
l same I <lb/>
in <lb/>
Aug. <lb/>
It b i lire <lb/>
, our customers lint <lb/>
a, the , <lb/>
cot <lb/>
my Pin <lb/>
I public <lb/>
, Ion <lb/>
a load of your tobacco and <lb/>
will show everybody that <lb/>
have me best tobacco in <lb/>
GOLDEN <lb/>
A large number of de- <lb/>
intentions of <lb/>
------coming to------ <lb/>
j GREEN V <lb/>
Oar new Warehouse has I been <lb/>
and is one best <lb/>
equipped warehouses in th e. <lb/>
We free Stables for your <lb/>
teams. <lb/>
We charge you nothing <lb/>
and storage. <lb/>
We an-experienced cc to <lb/>
handle your tobacco a <lb/>
you get lull G id. <lb/>
4- <lb/>
Presents in <lb/>
and <lb/>
on our op en i up, day <lb/>
while couple that will <lb/>
in our house on <lb/>
The list of present . <lb/>
pear below. <lb/>
Remember the day <lb/>
come all to see the K <lb/>
; Eastern <lb/>
JO L. Alex ii <lb/>
far <lb/>
and Cooper can nuke would of the <lb/>
as goes tales to too. party their <lb/>
G. F. EVANS, <lb/>
A Story. <lb/>
with by this means to tell the people <lb/>
Unit have prepared and m still pie- <lb/>
paring a large lot of for <lb/>
co Hogsheads. And to make It as con- <lb/>
m for my customers I <lb/>
have decided to run two wagons tits <lb/>
road to deliver them at most convenient <lb/>
place. And I further promise <lb/>
use my best efforts to put up such <lb/>
and quality of Hogsheads as the <lb/>
may want. And think I can com- <lb/>
in price with any. <lb/>
I win pay attention to <lb/>
making Brackets tor trim- <lb/>
ming any house TOO way build. <lb/>
me before placing your or- <lb/>
or at X. C.<lb/>
We d try to keep the cheapest goods in town, if yon <lb/>
want to get the most for money give a call. <lb/>
test White Oil cents per gallon. <lb/>
Tin Hooting end Guttering legs the Tariff. <lb/>
S. E. PENDER CO., <lb/>
o. <lb/>
A Hi <lb/>
el. S. II <lb/>
l. <lb/>
Dr. i . v <lb/>
Oil I <lb/>
m r. i Pr i i bit <lb/>
; A Mil V . . <lb/>
Photo of each <lb/>
; l years to i <lb/>
Cotton. Miss Port <lb/>
lie-tin. Moore, I Miter. I <lb/>
i Bros, Do . II. i . v<lb/>
; Pins. i. i;. Harris, Ban ; <lb/>
j In the Flour. . <lb/>
A Vii, i; i <lb/>
W. II. . <lb/>
I pound I i <lb/>
s. -in I lo . <lb/>
ti take i <lb/>
, performed sin mil I <lb/>
couple Is lo make kn in <lb/>
Mi. Alex. i <lb/>
Hill keen the <lb/>
the <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
THE RELIABLE <lb/>
to the buyers Pitt and cot <lb/>
that are net to be In market. A I <lb/>
pure good. DRY all kind, <lb/>
WINDOWS, I, <lb/>
CA I I I <lb/>
kind, ; . <lb/>
and I <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A<lb/>
. nun ii i i <lb/>
lee per i h <lb/>
Paint Colon, cod Pure and <lb/>
Willow Ware. a a and I <lb/>
MERCHANT,<lb/>
--------AND OF- <lb/>
Country Produce <lb/>
mo all of your Chickens, Eggs, <lb/>
Turkeys and and I will you tho <lb/>
highest market price for them and pay In spot <lb/>
cash. <lb/>
It have anything I will attend to it you on a n -inn. <lb/>
Call ice me.<lb/>
n i<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017561_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
DEATH WEEK. <lb/>
A SNAKE RIDES A BICYCLE. <lb/>
I I<lb/>
A Big Battler Take. Pf <lb/>
but Tansies <lb/>
Of <lb/>
elf <lb/>
one I .,, , , <lb/>
i It a road in .,,. ., .,.,. j j c.,,,. <lb/>
AIDS NATURE <lb/>
IN NATURE'S OWN WAY. <lb/>
IT CUTS YOU NOTHING TO INVESTIGATE. <lb/>
A MAILED <lb/>
FREE <lb/>
ATLANTIC CO. <lb/>
Tort Aw. C. <lb/>
MAN-HOOD <lb/>
How Lost How Regained I <lb/>
THYSELF. <lb/>
Or <lb/>
a new and only <lb/>
Descriptive <lb/>
SEND <lb/>
at the I <lb/>
inner. <lb/>
Pr- I gay <lb/>
St. <lb/>
toe tog <lb/>
m ., , <lb/>
of <lb/>
SO 1- I I. <lb/>
i m J i;<lb/>
A Family Affair <lb/>
Health for the <lb/>
Pleat bribe Parent, <lb/>
New I He for the Old Folks. <lb/>
last at m days of <lb/>
I a pure and <lb/>
. . i ; ; Ll <lb/>
Slavonic as in the <lb/>
mini.; of the mass of untaught <lb/>
nowadays. the idea at death <lb/>
and winter is and <lb/>
tho ceremonies proper to the death <lb/>
from the sacrifice to the <lb/>
or water spirit, with <lb/>
which it to the driving out <lb/>
and drowning of death, with which <lb/>
it arc upon the <lb/>
superstition that formerly <lb/>
m northern Europe. That <lb/>
writers on and the Russians <lb/>
have given no the <lb/>
due, no doubt, <lb/>
to the fact that it takes place at a <lb/>
time of the year when travelers <lb/>
rarely tempted to visit and <lb/>
confined to rural out of ; <lb/>
beaten track, which to <lb/>
attract foreigners. <lb/>
When the ice begins <lb/>
water, to considered over <lb/>
in the breaking the <lb/>
this <lb/>
to the or water <lb/>
who bes Ids abode in th riven and <lb/>
sin i He hag slept over the <lb/>
and awakes hi <lb/>
and angry Hi Aral rays Is <lb/>
Ia Q <lb/>
covering of water. <lb/>
the ice Boas drifting drives <lb/>
k r I end now <lb/>
I i Bow. <lb/>
I. ., b -f re- <lb/>
. fore, i to <lb/>
its in I <lb/>
the ; by <lb/>
f r the <lb/>
not be kept <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
i-.-i-. .- <lb/>
a .;. , <lb/>
. I . <lb/>
. <lb/>
i re .-<lb/>
fr <lb/>
American <lb/>
for <lb/>
etc. <lb/>
ft to . <lb/>
. I . rid. <lb/>
.; t <lb/>
. l-l <lb/>
paper la the <lb/>
No<lb/>
L ft CO-<lb/>
WILMINGTON K. <lb/>
Schedule <lb/>
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb/>
No ST, Be <lb/>
Apr. 10th. daily Fast Mail, daily to <lb/>
, said, <lb/>
Ar I CM TIT <lb/>
SO <lb/>
waiting when he awakes from bis <lb/>
winter sleep. They meet together <lb/>
in the village where the <lb/>
to take place and u son <lb/>
of for purchase A a young <lb/>
horse. The animal must not he a <lb/>
gift, hut bought for money; it most <lb/>
b bargained and per- <lb/>
son mast more than an- <lb/>
other to the amount required. <lb/>
hone is taken to a stable <lb/>
reserved the gift to the <lb/>
and fed days <lb/>
a bread and the fourth <lb/>
day, midnight, the horse is taken <lb/>
from the stall and to the <lb/>
neatest river or stream, the villagers <lb/>
following in a body. The mane is <lb/>
decorated with ribbons, the head <lb/>
mooted with honey, the legs are tied <lb/>
together a couple of <lb/>
to the a is <lb/>
mad in the thrown <lb/>
into the water a living sacrifice to <lb/>
th <lb/>
folk in the Archangel dis- <lb/>
poor a quantity of fat into the <lb/>
water it stead of throwing to a horse, <lb/>
and the millers of the cast <lb/>
the bead into the river and <lb/>
not the living animal. After <lb/>
pending the water spirit, the house <lb/>
spirit, the call for a <lb/>
. He e w on the night of <lb/>
and will wait only three <lb/>
days for hi offering. return- <lb/>
from river side the villagers <lb/>
are a i ratable gift for him. They <lb/>
take a fat pig. kill it and cut <lb/>
it into as main- pieces as there are <lb/>
residents in the place. Each <lb/>
dent receives one piece, which he <lb/>
straightway buries under the door <lb/>
tacky which crossed a strip of wood- <lb/>
land probably two miles <lb/>
road was so nearly obstructed by an <lb/>
almost growth of <lb/>
that there was barely room <lb/>
for n carriage. <lb/>
I was riding very slowly, enjoying <lb/>
tho and scenery, <lb/>
which was rendered the more enjoy- <lb/>
able by the sun an it cast its last <lb/>
golden rays over the dense foliage, <lb/>
and tho thought never struck me <lb/>
that my heart would any <lb/>
a much dread- <lb/>
ed foe. r <lb/>
was descending a gentle Elope <lb/>
about yards long, and on account <lb/>
of the descent was coasting at a <lb/>
rate when I glanced ahead, <lb/>
and there, only a few paces from <lb/>
me. toy a huge-rattlesnake stretched <lb/>
across the road directly hi my course. <lb/>
I was greatly frightened and trot <lb/>
down the brake as hard as I could, <lb/>
but was so near that I could not stop <lb/>
before coming into contact with him. <lb/>
He seemed not to care for me, and <lb/>
still lay stretched at full length with <lb/>
much more ease was enjoy <lb/>
bag. I was afraid if I tried to run <lb/>
around him Butt he would spring <lb/>
upon me, and not being to stop <lb/>
my wheel in time I determined to <lb/>
over him. <lb/>
the front wheel him <lb/>
both bis bead and tail gave a quick <lb/>
slap my f el, bat I <lb/>
the pedals with all my might, and <lb/>
when, tail thought, I WM i <lb/>
I looked back over my shoulder, but <lb/>
could not see him anywhere, and not <lb/>
until beard his body slashing about <lb/>
and heard him could locate <lb/>
him. <lb/>
I found that s mo difficult way <lb/>
he had in getting between <lb/>
the rows of direct spokes, and by <lb/>
crawling as the wheel rolled he man- <lb/>
aged to keep his <lb/>
I was not particularly pleased to <lb/>
have a dose combat with such a rep- <lb/>
tile, neither was I willing to have my <lb/>
wheel ridden by such a raffling con- <lb/>
but I conquered my jealousy <lb/>
and determined to give it possession. <lb/>
Jumping off I let my wheel fall, <lb/>
and stepping back a few feet found <lb/>
that the snake had sank his fangs <lb/>
the tire, and after he <lb/>
made repeated attempts to face Urn- <lb/>
self I concluded that ho was con- <lb/>
I got a stick which I found near by <lb/>
and mangled his head. He was so <lb/>
badly tangled between tho <lb/>
that I had considerable trouble in <lb/>
pulling him out. Hi exact measure <lb/>
was feet and inches, and he was <lb/>
tho I ever encountered. <lb/>
never took another ride over that <lb/>
road, for it makes me quiver every <lb/>
time I think of it. Cm Com- <lb/>
Gazette. <lb/>
Watt a <lb/>
TOT heed the The <lb/>
. . pa of the sure of that <lb/>
t-r <lb/>
if . ran for the <lb/>
tin ., <lb/>
than ii million were i the i-in-t <lb/>
year. i croup sod <lb/>
I at do I U <lb/>
o use <lb/>
lob's Porous Sold at <lb/>
en's Store. <lb/>
Tho lieu. A. W. M. P., <lb/>
speaker the house of com- <lb/>
mons, in opening tho now wing o <lb/>
tin.- hospital at <lb/>
ton, remarked that for several years <lb/>
be had lier-u ring in an house <lb/>
in London which looked i the <lb/>
to the great of St. <lb/>
Thomas. A of his t ; many <lb/>
years ago. a out of <lb/>
tho window, remarked to <lb/>
sir, those opposite <lb/>
the residences of the principal <lb/>
nobility r <lb/>
Be not far from <lb/>
i They not the of the <lb/>
j titular nobility, but if they thought <lb/>
of tho nobility of the <lb/>
healing art it was not far wrong.- <lb/>
i London Telegraph. <lb/>
A Household Remedy <lb/>
FOR ALL . <lb/>
blood and <lb/>
DISEASES <lb/>
Bi Di Di <lb/>
Botanic Blood Balm <lb/>
f It SALT <lb/>
d it <lb/>
SKIS I <lb/>
in toning f A <lb/>
and J <lb/>
treat I<lb/>
u la a can. If , i <lb/>
arc i <lb/>
I FREE <lb/>
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta. <lb/>
Many years ago White de <lb/>
tho barn owl beating the <lb/>
Molds like a dog, ever and <lb/>
dropping into tho or <lb/>
corn when a rat. mouse, vole or <lb/>
shrew was of. though, <lb/>
as this species, will <lb/>
leave its until after <lb/>
sunset, its is not generally <lb/>
observed. Tho snowy owl <lb/>
in America may be ob- <lb/>
served sitting for hours on tho sum- <lb/>
of a tree, swooping down every <lb/>
now and again on a the base <lb/>
of tho stump being after a few days <lb/>
of this sport littered with the <lb/>
pelts and roes of its quarry. <lb/>
was also indignant at <lb/>
tho farmers blaming tho barn owl <lb/>
for destroying tho eggs of pigeons, <lb/>
the ruts, to which it i i an enemy, <lb/>
being tho real offenders. <lb/>
Hawks are, however, not blame- <lb/>
less as regards pigeons and birds <lb/>
even more sacred. But some of the <lb/>
species of the kestrel <lb/>
among others, feed more upon mice <lb/>
than upon Scots- <lb/>
man. <lb/>
Danger of Animate. <lb/>
The approach of danger is ex- <lb/>
pressed by a universally intelligible <lb/>
cry. Tho a peculiar <lb/>
sound, indicative of fear <lb/>
and tenor that when beard the <lb/>
Wood i- m BO instant. It is <lb/>
said often utters it from <lb/>
pure Iota of <lb/>
says <lb/>
received from tho power of <lb/>
uttering a song or certain sound by <lb/>
which it can its desires <lb/>
to other birds. Tim chaffinch's call <lb/>
varies with its when on the <lb/>
wing it is Its <lb/>
of joy If <lb/>
it makes tho call more <lb/>
quickly, and f is a sign <lb/>
of tenderness or melancholy. <lb/>
raven calls out <lb/>
or its emotions <lb/>
Troy Times. <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
IS <lb/>
1258 aw <lb/>
1- ;. in pm <lb/>
iT am <lb/>
.-, <lb/>
ii<lb/>
BOB I--. <lb/>
TRAINS <lb/>
No if <lb/>
dally daily <lb/>
ex Sun.<lb/>
ii as <lb/>
p m pr <lb/>
S S <lb/>
am <lb/>
bury a few eggs beneath <lb/>
hold i dwelling to <lb/>
ate the Spec-<lb/>
Guaranteed Cora. <lb/>
IF authorize our advertised <lb/>
to . II r. New <lb/>
an I <lb/>
you with <lb/>
. or <lb/>
Chest trouble, and tits <lb/>
as directed, giving a fair and ex- <lb/>
no you may return <lb/>
have roar money refunded. <lb/>
We make I lib did we not <lb/>
know lint Dr. <lb/>
In relied on. It never <lb/>
Trial free at <lb/>
STORK. Large and SI. <lb/>
Etc <lb/>
One of the Royal Line <lb/>
-ii.- r.- <lb/>
between Sew York and Wash- <lb/>
b M <lb/>
recorded by a Indicator. At <lb/>
rate . <lb/>
of a trifle over a mile sad <lb/>
a half or over ninety a <lb/>
boar which all as- <lb/>
cords of fast time. If Bated were <lb/>
maintained the lime New York <lb/>
and be <lb/>
tWO hour- sad <lb/>
slops to three bean. Five boom hi <lb/>
bow time the <lb/>
cities, and it i- dally b the Royal i <lb/>
Blue Line only. <lb/>
Sly <lb/>
George went with his father to <lb/>
bring home a sleigh. The distance <lb/>
was not great and Mr. S. decided to <lb/>
draw vehicle home. The little <lb/>
b took his Bled with him, but was <lb/>
to push and render all the assistance <lb/>
could that way. Now, the <lb/>
temptation to slip the rope of his sled <lb/>
through the runner of the sleigh and <lb/>
catch a ride occasionally was too <lb/>
great to be <lb/>
At such times his father <lb/>
was very finding the <lb/>
sleigh drawing little heavily, would <lb/>
say. are you push- <lb/>
As of ten as the question came <lb/>
the little fallow was on his feet in an <lb/>
instant, and renewing his exertions <lb/>
answer, <lb/>
you York Tribune. <lb/>
Thy all Testier <lb/>
CHILD BIRTH <lb/>
MADE EASY <lb/>
is a <lb/>
ally pa I every <lb/>
of and in <lb/>
i. use by pro- <lb/>
These ingredients are com- <lb/>
in a manner hitherto unknown<lb/>
WILL DO all that is claimed for <lb/>
HAND It Shortens Labor, <lb/>
Lessens Diminishes Danger to <lb/>
Life of Mother and Child. Hook <lb/>
to FREE, con- <lb/>
U i; v valuable and <lb/>
voluntary testimonials. <lb/>
CO. Atlanta. <lb/>
ALI. <lb/>
I Jones Seminary for <lb/>
Young <lb/>
Superior <lb/>
mineral t-r. <lb/>
I with entire ex- <lb/>
tor and <lb/>
; mouth. For <lb/>
Rev. C. A. II <lb/>
All V. V. <lb/>
MILITARY <lb/>
NECK, x. c. <lb/>
Full t. <lb/>
is for health. <lb/>
i- and <lb/>
la but <lb/>
low lo for <lb/>
tin <lb/>
W. . <lb/>
Institute. <lb/>
For <lb/>
Fall Term <lb/>
list. i .-. is, <lb/>
Bates for<lb/>
Hoard <lb/>
For ire <lb/>
D. M. <lb/>
A for ant i- <lb/>
I safe for either <lb/>
Some Men <lb/>
CENTS FOR A <lb/>
CIGAR THAT IS NO <lb/>
BETTER THAN AN <lb/>
Virginia <lb/>
Cheroot. <lb/>
THEY ARE SOLD <lb/>
FIVE <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
TEN CENTS. <lb/>
THE HEW HALL, <lb/>
Perfect <lb/>
AND <lb/>
in the World. <lb/>
No In- <lb/>
in all <lb/>
i. i. an<lb/>
friend. <lb/>
on the <lb/>
always moat <lb/>
prompt mil <lb/>
St., lot.,.<lb/>
This t- <lb/>
done <lb/>
It <lb/>
X. <lb/>
One of there i can be an n <lb/>
n i be had. <lb/>
the A i and <lb/>
J. MARQUIS, <lb/>
DENTIST. <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
i upper ten <lb/>
opposite Photograph <lb/>
D. L. JAMES, <lb/>
L. FLEMING, <lb/>
AW. <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention to <lb/>
at old Mend. <lb/>
J. JARVIS Al E L <lb/>
JARVIS BLOW, <lb/>
S-AT-L A W <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
m all the <lb/>
I Hamilton Institute. <lb/>
HAMILTON, x. r. <lb/>
The Term tin <lb/>
i Monday. Aug. . 1802, Enrollment <lb/>
-e.-ion in a <lb/>
of in <lb/>
Draw- <lb/>
moderate. board in <lb/>
or with Principal. For further <lb/>
address. <lb/>
Specific <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
Fayetteville <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Wilson o am <lb/>
Ar Rocky <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
Dally except <lb/>
Train on Branch Road <lb/>
leaves Halifax arrives Sent <lb/>
land at P. H., <lb/>
a. m. Halifax a. m. <lb/>
a. m. daily Sun- <lb/>
A Sol l-1 tons <lb/>
We of la <lb/>
accorded to a i by a <lb/>
I retriever at a water- <lb/>
place. wan out for a <lb/>
walk on the sands with its master. <lb/>
it observed a gentleman float- <lb/>
ins in the water, and no doubt <lb/>
seizing the hair <lb/>
dragged him to the shore his . <lb/>
protests. It that the <lb/>
Trains on Washington have two little <lb/>
7.00 arrive A- R. from the near York. <lb/>
Junction n . m. leaves A. <lb/>
A R. p. m., <lb/>
p. m. Daily except <lb/>
Connects with trains <lb/>
saw in the bather an- <lb/>
ens its assistance. <lb/>
London Tit-Bits. <lb/>
Raleigh R. and Scotland <lb/>
Branch. <lb/>
Local freight train leaves Weld <lb/>
Monday, and Friday <lb/>
10.15 a. m., arriving Net REMEDY. A f.-. <lb/>
a. m. Greenville p. m., . t <lb/>
7.40 p. m. Returning sweet breath. Price Sold at <lb/>
We have a and <lb/>
for catarrh, diphtheria, canker <lb/>
ill <lb/>
l In eat <lb/>
i brags that it <lb/>
has had the biggest fire in <lb/>
but it that Moscow, in <lb/>
had a bigger one, in which <lb/>
wen destroyed, at <lb/>
The loss in the Chicago <lb/>
fire of October, was <lb/>
the buildings <lb/>
The building- by the great <lb/>
Ire of London. were <lb/>
at The great Bra <lb/>
of Boston, <lb/>
r acres and <lb/>
In <lb/>
Constantinople bad a <lb/>
of and BOO buildings. <lb/>
In Kan Francisco lost <lb/>
buildings, at In <lb/>
Hamburg had a fire which <lb/>
1,747 of the finest buildings iv. <lb/>
the city. It is to lie expected <lb/>
any Bra will burn <lb/>
more at Chi- <lb/>
Sr. Pioneer <lb/>
PB <lb/>
en-amp hi n. ,. i ha <lb/>
f f. i i;<lb/>
who on tho <lb/>
J There B e <lb/>
which <lb/>
or th- <lb/>
from to <lb/>
it is an <lb/>
up oM and <lb/>
z from impure blood or weakened<lb/>
I. <lb/>
SPECIFIC CO., <lb/>
.-. <lb/>
Female Institute. <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
Sept. One of the <lb/>
Ear young ladle- in the <lb/>
South. <lb/>
in One <lb/>
boarding pupil. <lb/>
from State-, <lb/>
to at at a <lb/>
the school <lb/>
for the lowest term., write for <lb/>
of time-honored school lo tho <lb/>
dent. WM. A. D. . <lb/>
Virginia. <lb/>
s it. <lb/>
N. D. <lb/>
Is <lb/>
I. A. II. F. <lb/>
TYSON, <lb/>
W, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
attention given to <lb/>
H. LONG, <lb/>
x. <lb/>
Prompt and to bu-i- <lb/>
Collection solicited. <lb/>
LATHAM. f <lb/>
W. <lb/>
N t <lb/>
Mrs V. L. <lb/>
will open a for <lb/>
and Small in Greenville on <lb/>
1802. The fall <lb/>
The usual <lb/>
for in will <lb/>
CURES SYPHILIS <lb/>
HOMES S FARMS <lb/>
Whichard <lb/>
ML <lb/>
U- O. <lb/>
. P. a i <lb/>
a--l f s- <lb/>
P. <lb/>
Cures scrofula. <lb/>
v- J i <lb/>
Fa <lb/>
G. JAMES. <lb/>
E Y-AT-LA <lb/>
GREENVILLE, A. C. <lb/>
Practice in all the <lb/>
a Specialty. <lb/>
M Drug Store. <lb/>
lie Knew Tiling or <lb/>
the Athenian <lb/>
who <lb/>
; t taught his <lb/>
scholars that wind was air set in <lb/>
motion by rarefaction; <lb/>
awed to <lb/>
that was the <lb/>
resulting phenomena of reflection-, <lb/>
that Waneta wen wandering stars, <lb/>
and that the Band stars were at an <lb/>
immeasurable distance beyond the <lb/>
nm, besides giving them many other <lb/>
ideas thought to belong to more <lb/>
modern Republic. <lb/>
Liver <lb/>
Is it not worth the small price <lb/>
to free of every symptom of <lb/>
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday <lb/>
7.20 a. m., Greenville <lb/>
a. m., Scotland Meek p. m., <lb/>
6.15 p. m. <lb/>
Train leaves N C. via <lb/>
Raleigh R. R. Sun- <lb/>
day, P M, Sunday P <lb/>
N P M. CO P M. <lb/>
Plymouth 8.30 a. in., 5.22 p. <lb/>
leaves Plymouth daily <lb/>
Sunday m. Sunday a. <lb/>
X C. 7.30 a in, i a . <lb/>
arrive Tarboro, X C, to A <lb/>
Trains on Southern Wilson <lb/>
and Fayetteville Branch leave <lb/>
ville am, arrive p m. <lb/>
Returning leave Rowland IS p m. <lb/>
arrive Fayetteville p m. Daily ex- <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Train on N C Branch leave <lb/>
Goldsboro daily except Sunday. M <lb/>
C, SO a M. Re <lb/>
retuning laves X V. <lb/>
Raw O A M. these distressing if you think take P. P. P., healthy and <lb/>
Train store and pet a bottle of <lb/>
at P M, arrive Shiloh's every battle has a <lb/>
P Hope ti P M. Returning printed guarantee on it, use accordingly <lb/>
THE CENTRAL <lb/>
Tobacco Warehouse <lb/>
M. D. <lb/>
Bummer several year ago while <lb/>
I became badly <lb/>
affected blood poison that <lb/>
impaired my health than two <lb/>
years. Several <lb/>
on my leg, and seemed to <lb/>
give relief i look six <lb/>
B. B. B, cured me en <lb/>
are great at combined <lb/>
play, generally takes the form <lb/>
of races. Emulation seems to form <lb/>
part of their amusement, for their <lb/>
races seem to have the win- <lb/>
of first place for their object, <lb/>
and are quite different from those <lb/>
rushes for food, or cause- <lb/>
less stampedes in which little pigs <lb/>
are want to indulge. Racing is an <lb/>
amusement natural to some <lb/>
and, being taught by others, <lb/>
becomes one of their most exciting <lb/>
Tit-Bits. <lb/>
Erysipelas, Limbs, Boil Sores, <lb/>
Scales and Scabs on the leg hare been <lb/>
entirely cured by P. P. P. the year solicits a continuance <lb/>
wonderful blood medicine of the day. j of <lb/>
a curse of p pp. win all given to Shipments. Try us. <lb/>
bad feelings i your health to <lb/>
perfect condition. Its curative powers <lb/>
Bra marvelous. If out of sorts and in <lb/>
bad humor with yourself and the world. <lb/>
Will begin season or <lb/>
AUGUST 1892. <lb/>
Under the game Management, <lb/>
and desires to thank the <lb/>
Planters of Pitt, Le- <lb/>
and Greene for <lb/>
their liberal <lb/>
patronage <lb/>
last <lb/>
Dope A M, Nashville <lb/>
8.85 A if, arrives Rocky Mount II A <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Wt <lb/>
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, a. C <lb/>
and leave <lb/>
ton at A M, and <lb/>
log at Warsaw <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson A <lb/>
Branch is No. <lb/>
go. Daily except Sunday. <lb/>
No. South and North will <lb/>
atop only at Rocky Mount, Wilson, <lb/>
Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
and if ii does you no good it will cost you <lb/>
nothing. Sold at Drug Store <lb/>
Man Should Fix Thing Early. <lb/>
Everyman expects in his own case <lb/>
a have ample time to got bis <lb/>
affairs in good shape before be dies, <lb/>
out no man ever has. Men hope <lb/>
to keep their wives I <lb/>
but they 1- -a it in such shape that <lb/>
be women lose half the threads in . <lb/>
Tying to get affairs <lb/>
Globe. <lb/>
PO ALL <lb/>
BLOOD <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection a <lb/>
Weldon for all points North Al <lb/>
rail via Richmond, and dally except Sun The best salve in the world for Cut, <lb/>
day via Bay Line, also at Mount i Bruise . Sores, Salt Rheum, <lb/>
daily except with Norfolk A Seres. Chapped Hand-,, <lb/>
for Norfolk and all Corns, and all skin <lb/>
points Norfolk. j and positively cures Pile-, or <lb/>
j pay It is to give <lb/>
General or <lb/>
J. B. KENLY, Transportation Price cents box. For sale, at; <lb/>
T. Drug Store <lb/>
DISEASES <lb/>
Di Di<lb/>
Respectful <lb/>
The Central Warehouse, <lb/>
TARBORO, <lb/>
A School of High Grade <lb/>
CIR <lb/>
Miss will her private <lb/>
school for girls and b in Mrs. V. <lb/>
the Episcopal The Pull Term <lb/>
Monday. Sept. Mb, ends <lb/>
Friday. Jan. 27th. The Spring <lb/>
Term begins Monday, <lb/>
ends Fri lay. May Mb, 1803. <lb/>
Intermediate <lb/>
Higher <lb/>
and each. <lb/>
Elocution <lb/>
Thorough and will <lb/>
given according to the beat approved <lb/>
use Satisfactory <lb/>
arrangement for board will he made for <lb/>
pupils desiring to come from the <lb/>
try. For further particulars <lb/>
Mies S. Lucy -lot <lb/>
s N. C. <lb/>
2.50 <lb/>
3.00 <lb/>
Notice to Shippers. <lb/>
In order to make more convenient land <lb/>
economical use of the now em- <lb/>
ployed the North Carolina <lb/>
and thus to better inter- <lb/>
of shippers, the <lb/>
have decided to merge their <lb/>
respective Not <lb/>
folk and and <lb/>
Washington, N. ;., into <lb/>
Be be known <lb/>
For Bent. <lb/>
A large two-story brick store in the <lb/>
Opera House Block, Greenville, <lb/>
splendid room, with patent <lb/>
tor, counters, and drawers. <lb/>
Apply to <lb/>
. U. LONG. <lb/>
Greenville, X. C. <lb/>
Connecting at Norfolk with <lb/>
The Bay line, for Baltimore. <lb/>
Clyde Line, for Philadelphia. <lb/>
The Old Line, New <lb/>
York. <lb/>
The Merchants A Miners Line for <lb/>
ton and Providence. <lb/>
Water Line for Richmond, Va., <lb/>
and Washington, D. C. <lb/>
At with <lb/>
Atlantic A North Carolina It. R, <lb/>
At Washington with <lb/>
The Tar River Steamer. <lb/>
Also Calling at Island, N. C. <lb/>
The new line will m <lb/>
Service, with such additional sailings a <lb/>
will best suit needs o business. <lb/>
NO ADVANCE If RATES. <lb/>
direct of mere steamers. <lb/>
and freedom from are <lb/>
among the great advantages this Line <lb/>
The following gentlemen have <lb/>
been appointed Agents of the New <lb/>
John K. at Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
John Son, at <lb/>
S. U. Gray, at M. O, <lb/>
C. Whitehurst. at Island. <lb/>
J. J. Cherry, at Greenville, N. C <lb/>
The drat will leave Norfolk <lb/>
on Monday. May lath, from wharf <lb/>
on Water Clyde <lb/>
and between the piers of the Clyde <lb/>
Line and Did Dominion Steamship Co. <lb/>
H. A. <lb/>
V. P. G. M. Old Dominion S. S. Co. <lb/>
W. P. CLYDE CO., <lb/>
Clyde Line, <lb/>
May 14th, It. <lb/>
University of N, C. <lb/>
is offered In four general <lb/>
courses of study, six brief a <lb/>
large number of special in <lb/>
law, medicine and engineering. The <lb/>
Faculty Includes twenty teachers. <lb/>
Scholar-hips and loan fund- are avail- <lb/>
able for young men of talent and <lb/>
character, next session begins <lb/>
Sept. 1st. For with full <lb/>
Winston, <lb/>
Hill, N. C. <lb/>
OAK RIDGE <lb/>
IN <lb/>
A AND <lb/>
--------0 <lb/>
Elegant and thorough equip- <lb/>
patronage from all the <lb/>
Southern States. Beam If and h <lb/>
ml in view of the <lb/>
r.-. <lb/>
June 16th- <lb/>
Fall Term August 10th. <lb/>
For <lb/>
J. A. M. II. <lb/>
Oak N. r. <lb/>
Louis burg- <lb/>
College, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
next of this <lb/>
will begin 1st, <lb/>
Pure water, no 111- <lb/>
Brick <lb/>
Campus of acres well -haded by <lb/>
gigantic Conservatory music <lb/>
teachers. At and teachers <lb/>
from Academy of Arts. Teachers ex- <lb/>
in The whole <lb/>
and <lb/>
hoard, washing and lire, only <lb/>
for the tear. <lb/>
Send for to <lb/>
S. D. President. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
MALE ACADEMY <lb/>
----M---- <lb/>
The nest session of this School nil <lb/>
begin 20th, <lb/>
The advantages will be <lb/>
or to those of any previous Ku- <lb/>
every patron. <lb/>
be hail at lover rate- than at <lb/>
any similar school hi Carolina. <lb/>
We propose to do the best work for <lb/>
that has ever been done in the town. I el <lb/>
and challenge proof to the <lb/>
Term- are as follows, <lb/>
English p.-r month. <lb/>
Intermediate English month, <lb/>
Higher English per month. 2.50 <lb/>
Languages each, extra, <lb/>
When yon are in town call to see me <lb/>
or write me your homes. I <lb/>
will be If <lb/>
a Will <lb/>
N. C, July MB. <lb/>
An Announcement. <lb/>
I am ready to treat baldness. I <lb/>
have improved my preparation and have i <lb/>
observed in the last ninety days that it <lb/>
will do what I claim for it. <lb/>
baldness can be treated by bottle <lb/>
and the patient an use it himself. <lb/>
Total baldness must treat I <lb/>
invite correspondence in reference to <lb/>
Every one who tries my <lb/>
preparation will be thoroughly satisfied l <lb/>
with result. We can refer yon to a <lb/>
number of men here in tills town to <lb/>
sit merits. <lb/>
N. C, April 5th, <lb/>
Cures rheumatism <lb/>
CURES <lb/>
Malaria <lb/>
t, r. t. P-e <lb/>
Cures dyspepsia <lb/>
Block, <lb/>
For sale at J. L. Drag<lb/>
pain.<lb/>
1875. <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb/>
OLD <lb/>
AND <lb/>
lag find <lb/>
their real to get oar prices before<lb/>
n all it- branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE; <lb/>
RICE, TEA, <lb/>
it Lowest <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF <lb/>
we buy direct from <lb/>
to buy at one A com <lb/>
always on hand and at prices to <lb/>
the times. Out goods are all bought j <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb/>
to sell at a margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
s. M. .- <lb/>
HAVE desirable of at <lb/>
estate for sale. Look over list <lb/>
below and call on or write them. <lb/>
A J lot on Third street Co- <lb/>
In town ff Greenville, <lb/>
good with four rooms <lb/>
ate smoke convenient <lb/>
i large on the <lb/>
in Two good <lb/>
i. <lb/>
A lot <lb/>
Front has nice house of <lb/>
rooms, good well of water, large gar- <lb/>
den plot and stables. <lb/>
a lot In <lb/>
; t. story house <lb/>
of ooh and at- <lb/>
all out buildings and <lb/>
stable-, good water <lb/>
r A line farm If acres <lb/>
mile- from Greenville on Mt <lb/>
road, stables, <lb/>
barns, I two room tenant about <lb/>
Cleared, balance well wooded, <lb/>
good water. Tab bub i excellent tor <lb/>
of line <lb/>
farm on branch of the <lb/>
. A iv. halt way be- <lb/>
tween and and within t <lb/>
mil- ;. depot, contain. acre. <lb/>
and timbered <lb/>
with pine. oak. hickory, and <lb/>
ha- tenant railroad pas-e <lb/>
The <lb/>
land has clay subsoil with sandy loam. <lb/>
In good Mata of cultivation and highly <lb/>
i- trucking land. <lb/>
T A farm mi let from on <lb/>
I . known as the Jackson <lb/>
acres, has <lb/>
dwelling hon-e and nil necessary <lb/>
This is a first-class 10- <lb/>
A boats and lot in B <lb/>
O corner ti. J. II. Cherry and W. S. <lb/>
Bawls, now occupied by the family of <lb/>
, lair A. contains <lb/>
rooms. convenient, is convenient <lb/>
I location, only half a block from main <lb/>
of the town. Possession <lb/>
i Ban . given <lb/>
go's lot on <lb/>
i d <lb/>
t-. n lot <lb/>
The r lot on lilt <lb/>
street near Dicker-on Avenue, <lb/>
house of rooms, large lot with <lb/>
stables and out buildings. <lb/>
The Wonder house on <lb/>
I -tied, the lot of B. <lb/>
s. and M <lb/>
dwelling <lb/>
of renew, and cook room, <lb/>
room for <lb/>
Valuable Steam Corn and Flour <lb/>
Gin and Store <lb/>
property located at a X Road <lb/>
within a yard- a R. R. is sit- <lb/>
in one the best Agricultural <lb/>
Sections of Pitt county. The mill are <lb/>
fitted up with the be-t machinery. Bolt- <lb/>
smelter etc. and are in full <lb/>
operation. The -tore house is a two <lb/>
story building with attacked <lb/>
also kitchen and warehouse in rear. <lb/>
The store I kept constantly supplied <lb/>
with general merchandise bulled t a <lb/>
country store and i doing a good <lb/>
The mills are the <lb/>
section. <lb/>
Thai pron Wired for sale as the <lb/>
owners to withdraw from business <lb/>
Terms on any of the above property <lb/>
can be bad on application to <lb/>
for of Vs. <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
TRADE <lb/>
Wilson Collegiate Institute, <lb/>
WILSON. N. C. <lb/>
For <lb/>
The Session <lb/>
Monday. Sept. <lb/>
A most thorough and <lb/>
preparatory course stud j, with a full <lb/>
course equal to that of an <lb/>
Female College in South, <lb/>
Best facilities for the <lb/>
and Art. Standard Scholarship <lb/>
usually high. location. <lb/>
and grounds large am pleasantly <lb/>
situated. Moderate charges. <lb/>
and circulars on application. <lb/>
K. <lb/>
MARK. <lb/>
For Cue of all <lb/>
This has In use over <lb/>
fifty years, and wherever known has <lb/>
been in stead. demand, it has been en- <lb/>
by leading physicians all over <lb/>
c country, and ha effected where <lb/>
all ether with the attention of <lb/>
most experienced have <lb/>
for years failed. This Ointment of <lb/>
and the high reputation <lb/>
which It has obtained is owing entirely <lb/>
its efficacy, as but Utile effort has <lb/>
ever been made to bring it before the <lb/>
One bottle of this Ointment ill <lb/>
b sent to any address on receipt of One <lb/>
The Washington, D. C. for <lb/>
, of A clean, clear, <lb/>
honest campaign paper, <lb/>
with full campaign news, will be mailed <lb/>
to any address until November for <lb/>
Sample copies <lb/>
Agents wanted everywhere. <lb/>
The Democrat. Pox D <lb/>
or the with <lb/>
which it will be clubbed cent for <lb/>
both era. <lb/>
of Rev. A. P Hunter. <lb/>
First morning and night, <lb/>
Second morning at Antioch <lb/>
and Saturday <lb/>
Third fourth at Green- <lb/>
ville. morning and night, also second <lb/>
Sunday night, and Regular Wednesday <lb/>
night services each week. <lb/>
Services at school house on <lb/>
Tarboro road on Thursday night before <lb/>
. third Sunday until then <lb/>
on third evening. <lb/>
Rev. R. F. <lb/>
Rev. R. F. Taylor, pastor of Green- <lb/>
ville Circuit of the M. Church, South, <lb/>
will preach at the following times and <lb/>
places, regularly each <lb/>
Sunday at Salem, o'clock A. M. <lb/>
Ill Chapel, o <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
2nd Sunday. Shady Grove, H o'clock <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
2nd Sunday. School Home, <lb/>
miles west of <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
3rd Sunday. den or Spring <lb/>
Sole Proprietor, <lb/>
X. C <lb/>
Dollar. Sample box Ire. The usual School o A, M. <lb/>
to Druggists. All Cash Orders Chapel <lb/>
promptly attended to. Address all or- ,, <lb/>
and to Sunday. Bethlehem. <lb/>
F. Al <lb/>
o'clock <lb/>
o'clock P. M. <lb/>
School Hosts, <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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