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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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Sob <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Thoroughly Equipped <lb/>
-WITH- <lb/>
NEW MATERIAL. <lb/>
Give Us a Trial Ore <lb/>
VOL. XI. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1892 <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
POLITICAL POINTS. <lb/>
With three doctors and a <lb/>
Jones Seminary for <lb/>
Young Ladies. <lb/>
Superior educational <lb/>
location, mineral water, commodious on tho ticket the Third <lb/>
buildings with lire place, entire ex- to <lb/>
tuition 8- per <lb/>
For circulars address. <lb/>
Rev. C. A. HAMPTON, <lb/>
All Healing Spring-. <lb/>
pretty <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
good <lb/>
minis- <lb/>
party <lb/>
i to in <lb/>
shape. Wilmington <lb/>
WEAVER AT TENN. <lb/>
of his Robbery and <lb/>
of the Names <lb/>
and Amounts <lb/>
Which Cannot <lb/>
be Denied. <lb/>
Greenville Institute. <lb/>
Both <lb/>
Fall Term August <lb/>
closes Dee. B, <lb/>
put <lb/>
Hoard on the Harrison <lb/>
For we or address, .,.,, ,. <lb/>
Z. D. L <lb/>
A unsafe for boys and girl-, is <lb/>
not safe for either Marion Butler says that -Harry <lb/>
j is all right Harry <lb/>
Skinner is not all right now. <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
A Massachusetts man is making j Having seen in some paper an <lb/>
campaign roosters a day. account Gen. Weavers conduct <lb/>
We trust he will see the signs of in <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
Co . to <lb/>
Aug. <lb/>
j rotary Charles Foster brought the <lb/>
most assortment of <lb/>
rainbows with him when he <lb/>
v turned from Ohio that has <lb/>
I yet been exposed to the <lb/>
I of <lb/>
a Democrat made the rounds of-j <lb/>
to wager any part of <lb/>
at odds of two to one that Harri- <lb/>
and would not get a <lb/>
single Southern State's electoral <lb/>
votes no takers could be found. <lb/>
It is the of many shrewd <lb/>
observers that <lb/>
are so eh talking <lb/>
SKINNER ONLY GRINNED. <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
All a Put-Up Job and Republican Money Happenings Here and There as Gathered <lb/>
Behind It. From our Exchanges. <lb/>
Reflector <lb/>
-TILT- <lb/>
DECEMBER 1ST <lb/>
gents in Advance. <lb/>
the According their to <lb/>
Hamilton Institute. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
The Fall Term of tins ill open <lb/>
Monday. Aug. Enrollment last <lb/>
session M. Excellent advantage-, in a <lb/>
regular Preparatory Course of study in <lb/>
Music, Elocution, Tainting and Draw- <lb/>
Terms moderate. hoard in <lb/>
families or with Principal. For farther <lb/>
information address. <lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
Mrs. V. L. Pendleton <lb/>
Will open a Select School for Young <lb/>
Ladies and Small Girls in Greenville on <lb/>
August nth, MK. The full Collegiate <lb/>
taught. The usual <lb/>
prices for tuition In Will be <lb/>
charged. <lb/>
WESLEYAN <lb/>
Female Institute. <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
Opens Sept. 1893. One of the <lb/>
thorough schools for young in the <lb/>
South. Twenty-live teachers <lb/>
Conservatory in One <lb/>
and boarding pupils <lb/>
from States. <lb/>
Special inducements per-ons at a dis- <lb/>
Those seeking the best school <lb/>
for the lowest terms write for <lb/>
of this to the <lb/>
dent, WM. A. HARRIS. D. D., <lb/>
Virginia. <lb/>
POUNDED IN 1852. <lb/>
A AND SCHOOL <lb/>
-------OF <lb/>
Elegant building- and thorough equip- <lb/>
patronage from all the <lb/>
Southern States. Beautiful and h <lb/>
situation in view of the mountains. <lb/>
Terms Reasonable. <lb/>
Summer <lb/>
June 16th. <lb/>
Fall Term begins August <lb/>
For Illustrated address, <lb/>
J. A. A M. II. HOLT, <lb/>
Oak Ridge. X. C. <lb/>
is all wrong, and is traveling to <lb/>
the old Harry about as fast as he <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
Tom,., <lb/>
I wrote to the clerk of the county <lb/>
court for either a verification <lb/>
denial of the charges. I receive I <lb/>
the letter which I you. <lb/>
Very respectfully, <lb/>
W. E. <lb/>
Rutherford College, N. C Aug. <lb/>
I him the national election is already States with the hope of <lb/>
settled all the none that the Democratic <lb/>
be spent between this and tho o efforts towards <lb/>
of next November will simply be <lb/>
I thrown away. His modesty in <lb/>
New- and <lb/>
The Raleigh correspondent of <lb/>
i the New York Burning Pot gives trotting stallion <lb/>
that paper the details of an inter-1 to Mess. J. R. and E. <lb/>
view with Col. Harry <lb/>
carry <lb/>
managers <lb/>
ear <lb/>
j the northwestern States. <lb/>
e reproduce the interview. <lb/>
Col. Skinner said <lb/>
I believe in financial <lb/>
re- <lb/>
form <lb/>
making claims is something quite j <lb/>
as wonderful as his manipulation <lb/>
of the figures which show, or are j <lb/>
supposed to show the amount of <lb/>
c surplus in the United States <lb/>
N. C. Railroad vs. Thomas B. Long. <lb/>
endorse the Omaha <lb/>
i platform, I do not believe in <lb/>
political rule in tho Southern <lb/>
, States- Therefore I stated to the <lb/>
; convention that if it became <lb/>
parent that the People's party <lb/>
The white voters of the South, <lb/>
says the Atlanta C are <lb/>
asked to desert their own party, or- <lb/>
because the Democratic <lb/>
party, not having control of <lb/>
the government, has failed to re <lb/>
peal Republican legislation. <lb/>
Gleaner. <lb/>
Thomas Long is the nominee State ticket could not win, and by <lb/>
Pulaski, Tenn., Aug. he is positive that every of the People's party the State its continued candidacy the Re- <lb/>
Will E- Bother northern the word to ticket for Auditor. Mr-Long was publicans would win, I should fa <lb/>
the Third <lb/>
party from the field. The view <lb/>
did not suit many, perhaps a ma- <lb/>
of the delegates, and so I <lb/>
could not consistently longer <lb/>
stand as the nominee of the con- <lb/>
for the <lb/>
ford College, N. sent all except the southern the -agent for the North Carolina the withdrawal <lb/>
letter of in- State will be carried by Harrison j Railroad at Salisbury from August, <lb/>
in regard to the acts of Gen. and at least six of the Southern ; 1868, to October, 1869, a little over <lb/>
Weaver while in command of States. It is not clear why he year. He had given a bond in <lb/>
place was handed me to answer. I; does not claim all of the electoral the sum of for the faithful <lb/>
was between and years old j votes. Such a claim would not be honest conduct of the duties <lb/>
when Weaver was here, and a more ridiculous than those pertaining to this trust. The rail- <lb/>
know whereof I write, and in he has made. He should have road company discovered by and As electoral candidate <lb/>
II n is costing this country port of what I shall write. I refer i known that those absurd claims by agent was not making; main lo the finish, <lb/>
a round million dollars a a few citizens of this county J. would cause his rainbow complete returns of the <lb/>
more than Arthur cost it president Peoples about the condition of the proceeds of the office- Ho was <lb/>
we must have Republicans, give Z W- Ewing, ex-i Treasury, given out at the same dismissed from service, and an in-j your own argument, your c <lb/>
us a better quality for Speaker of the Senate time, to be discredited, as stories, ; instituted which shall endanger the election <lb/>
cannot afford to pay ; J. B. Sta-; like people, are usually judged by the fact that he had been <lb/>
prices for such shoddy i and master of Chan-; the company they keep. unfaithful to the employing com- <lb/>
Coy, Mr. which are tune of several thous- <lb/>
i Sheriff, Giles county Col. Solon obviously on a par with the small <lb/>
The admirable manner in which . Battle, is not a bit but An action was instituted by the <lb/>
the Republicans are prepared to C S. W. judge M might while company to recover the amount of <lb/>
milk the Third party cow in case I county Court, R. H- through the dark places, The suit was <lb/>
the Third warty and trustee, an L E- had a contrary effect to what m Alamance county, <lb/>
malcontents succeed in driving president Commercial Bank he and expected. it being the domicile of the com- <lb/>
and Trust Company. of bow Mr. now upon trial a verdict was <lb/>
these men were here and know called, is so well known tricky rendered b a jury for the sum of <lb/>
the facts. The others know from in matters <lb/>
reputation. . bis rosy tau-. has serious <lb/>
The said Weaver seemed to alarmed many Republicans, who <lb/>
have a perfect hatred for believe that he has discovered <lb/>
some new and very serious danger <lb/>
to the Republican party, and that <lb/>
Mr. W. P. Bachelor, of Raleigh, <lb/>
has sold interest in his noted <lb/>
for <lb/>
D. <lb/>
of Lexington, Ky. <lb/>
Governor Holt has issue a <lb/>
recommending that Co <lb/>
be ob- <lb/>
served as a public School holiday <lb/>
, in North Carolina. <lb/>
The fall term at Trinity College <lb/>
will at Durham, in the new <lb/>
September 1st; but tho <lb/>
has been postponed till <lb/>
October or 12- Bishop Galloway <lb/>
j will preach the dedicatory sermon. <lb/>
Tho sympathy of the whole <lb/>
State goes out to Cant S. A. <lb/>
, of the News and Observer because <lb/>
of the death of his wife. Mrs. <lb/>
Ashe was Miss Hannah Emerson <lb/>
Willard, was years old and died <lb/>
on the 18th, <lb/>
her into the pasture, shows how <lb/>
they have the of <lb/>
their Alliance <lb/>
Washington Mr. <lb/>
e of Governor, so of Edwards Mills, will be <lb/>
I will re- years old in November. He has <lb/>
SO, lam in his life. <lb/>
. -n i i i has one child dead and eleven <lb/>
W for President. hag -0 d <lb/>
I asked, according to one great grand-child. <lb/>
Dr. P. Wood, one of the <lb/>
, , most prominent physicians in <lb/>
of the Democratic electoral ticket, North Carolina, hist week in <lb/>
will you withdraw, as in the first Wilmington of heart He <lb/>
case, because you think the j was secretary of the North Caro- <lb/>
result would be tho election of Board of Health and editor of <lb/>
Republican <lb/>
sir. I am opposed to the <lb/>
election of Mr. There are now convicts at <lb/>
you prefer Harrison to h penitentiary, and at the canal <lb/>
Cleveland near <lb/>
, . , . , , remainder, are all on the three <lb/>
The only reply was a broad and <lb/>
grin. So it is apparent that the, ton. For the first time in years <lb/>
. against defendant Long principal object of the Third party there are no convicts at work on <lb/>
i . . , . railways. <lb/>
President Harrison says one of <lb/>
tho most trying ordeals ho has to <lb/>
encounter in his position is the <lb/>
amount of hand shaking he has to <lb/>
do. He will relieved in No- <lb/>
Then the people will <lb/>
give him one big shake, and that <lb/>
Southern people, <lb/>
robbed, persecuted, <lb/>
Ho <lb/>
and <lb/>
abused our in every bis stock of rainbows has been <lb/>
way. . brought forward order to dis <lb/>
Ho had citizens arrested and I tract attention from this danger. <lb/>
will be the end of on trumped-up To Democrats Mr. Fosters <lb/>
Slur. <lb/>
Louisburg <lb/>
Female <lb/>
College, <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
The next session of this Well-known <lb/>
school will begin September 1st. <lb/>
Pure water, no in- <lb/>
building with rooms <lb/>
Campus of acre- well shaded by <lb/>
gigantic oaks. Conservatory <lb/>
teachers. and teachers <lb/>
from Academy of Teachers ex- <lb/>
perts in their specialties. The whole <lb/>
Literary Physical Culture and <lb/>
and tires only <lb/>
Special In <lb/>
Send for to <lb/>
S. U. President. <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
es, and mad to pay to be released. amusing show. <lb/>
He made the friends of D. K- which although not prepared <lb/>
pay for his release. Mr. Cos specially for them, is being great- <lb/>
S in favor of the plaintiff company, j movement North Carolina is to <lb/>
All the records of the proceedings defeat Mr. That <lb/>
and all are now on file publican money is at the command <lb/>
the office of the Clerk of the j of, and is being and will be freely <lb/>
Superior Court of Alamance used for that purpose by the <lb/>
the judgment has tot Third party people, is very <lb/>
been satisfied to this day. parent. Dr. A. S- of <lb/>
Several years ago, when said Seymour, Connecticut, was <lb/>
B. Long began to aspire to to the convention and said <lb/>
political honors, tie wont to Col. ho would home news that <lb/>
M. Holt, then president of would gladden hearts <lb/>
Institute, <lb/>
K. C <lb/>
Pi Strictly <lb/>
She begins <lb/>
Monday. Sept. <lb/>
A most thorough and <lb/>
preparatory course of study, with a full <lb/>
equal to that of an <lb/>
Female College in the South. <lb/>
Best facilities for the Music <lb/>
and Art. Standard l Scholarship tin. <lb/>
high. Healthful location. <lb/>
large and pleasantly <lb/>
and circulars on <lb/>
K. . <lb/>
son so as he was the day <lb/>
after the now famously disastrous <lb/>
Third party State convention. He <lb/>
added that for the first time in his <lb/>
life he actually felt a touch <lb/>
row for <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
A gentleman tells me that never pay for release. Mr. specially for them, is being great- the N. C R- R-Co., now Governor From the above it sufficiently <lb/>
in his life did ho see S- Otho s dead, but his son. Ed. R. Cox, by them. of Commonwealth, and asked appears that the whole Third par- <lb/>
living here, can testify to; There are reasons for the belief the company's best terms for the performance is known and <lb/>
said facts. So can Maj. J. B. Sta-It the administration is doing all adjustment of the matter. Col. by Col. Skinner Bot- <lb/>
any and Col. S. E. Rose, friends of it to date for the meet- Holt proposed to remit all interest and the crowd of leaden to be <lb/>
Cox, who paid part of the money. I in the international monetary and to fifty cents on the merely the interest of Harrison. <lb/>
He robbed Mr. Jasper Cox re- j conference set so late in the fall as as satisfaction of the It is a false pretense from beg <lb/>
D. K. of to make it certain that the result Mr. Long said the <lb/>
worth of spun thread. Jasper I of conference cannot be known proposition was liberal and <lb/>
Cox is a citizen of this j before the Presidential election, in factory, and that he would pay it <lb/>
county, and now lives near order that Republican stump oft Already several years have <lb/>
ham, Giles county. Tennessee- i speakers and editors may have an elapsed. Mr. Long has not paid <lb/>
He robbed John P. Williams, j opportunity to influence votes by a penny of it. <lb/>
an old farmer and soldier pretending to forecast that result- <lb/>
Clinton There is a <lb/>
widow woman in this county who <lb/>
makes at home all the provisions <lb/>
necessary for tho support of her <lb/>
family large and buys <lb/>
for cash. She says <lb/>
that any man who lives on a farm, <lb/>
and who buys bacon corn to <lb/>
feed his family, ought to be chop- <lb/>
up fed to hogs. <lb/>
Raleigh News We <lb/>
understand the ladies of Raleigh, <lb/>
with their energy, <lb/>
Two facts to call to mind now <lb/>
then are, that the Democrats <lb/>
left a treasury overflowing with <lb/>
funds when the Cleveland <lb/>
went out; and <lb/>
Democratic congress came in find <lb/>
empty coffers, <lb/>
to meet, tho result of two years of <lb/>
Republican <lb/>
to end. The radical <lb/>
knew all about it- <lb/>
Such is the record of the man <lb/>
the of the Mexican. of all his hogs and I Mr. Harrison and his puppets who and Republican whom the <lb/>
meat. Mr. is are this campaign will has nominated for <lb/>
tins place- have much more exalted opinion <lb/>
He had Dr. J. C- Roberts, of this the intelligence of the Amen <lb/>
State Auditor, whose business it <lb/>
is, briefly stated, to manage the <lb/>
When tho loaders of the <lb/>
Republican Aid alias the <lb/>
tho party, instruct the <lb/>
people to stay away from Demo <lb/>
speakings, it shows they <lb/>
arc afraid for the people to hear <lb/>
j the truth. We do not believe our <lb/>
patriotic citizens will be such <lb/>
slaves the <lb/>
Republican Aid <lb/>
pines, affronted, and tried to make <lb/>
I pay for his release, but <lb/>
j he had found out that tho <lb/>
i doctor would not pay it, he turned <lb/>
him loose- The doctor is now <lb/>
living, will answer any letter. On <lb/>
January he made the fol- <lb/>
lowing parties pay him the sums <lb/>
opposite their names. I have the or- <lb/>
receipt he gave my father, <lb/>
Charles C- All the <lb/>
can voters on the <lb/>
of next November than they <lb/>
appear to have at tho present time. <lb/>
According to an official opinion <lb/>
of the Attorney-General, which <lb/>
suspicion points to having been <lb/>
dictated from Loon Lake, made <lb/>
public this week, the good people <lb/>
of Vicksburg. Miss., must <lb/>
to have their city <lb/>
sided by the notorious <lb/>
of the tonne <lb/>
such a <lb/>
of <lb/>
next session of this School will <lb/>
begin on Monday. August <lb/>
The advantages offered will be <lb/>
or to those of any session. En- <lb/>
tire guaranteed every <lb/>
Board can be had at lower rates at <lb/>
any similar school In IT Saturn Carolina. <lb/>
We propose to do the best work for boys <lb/>
that ever been in the town, <lb/>
and challenge to the <lb/>
Terms are as follows, payable <lb/>
Primary English par mouth. <lb/>
Intermediate English per month, 2.00 <lb/>
Higher English per month, <lb/>
Languages each, extra, <lb/>
When yon are in call to see me <lb/>
or write me homes, <lb/>
be cheerfully If <lb/>
necessary a competent assistant be <lb/>
employed- <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
C, July <lb/>
he except whose nomination tho <lb/>
Republican Senate declined to <lb/>
me <lb/>
Thomas Martin, Dr. Wm, <lb/>
Battle, Charles G <lb/>
f he orator of the Third <lb/>
State convention was a from i J. H. J. M. Morris, <lb/>
Vance county. that Reynolds, D- <lb/>
were quite B. Daly, <lb/>
nous, as speakers and work-1 Total, <lb/>
They spoke and worked j He claimed in his order that it <lb/>
against the Democratic party. was for the support of Union <lb/>
They were there with their white j gees coming within his <lb/>
associates for no E, son It- <lb/>
Raleigh Chronicle. Daly, and Wm. S- son of <lb/>
J. H. are living here and <lb/>
will answer any inquiry. I could <lb/>
give other incidents, or acts of <lb/>
said Weaver, if necessary. <lb/>
A School of High Grade <lb/>
FOR-------- <lb/>
GIRLS AND BOYS <lb/>
Mies net will private <lb/>
school for girls and boys in Sirs. V. H. <lb/>
early opposite <lb/>
church. The Fall Term <lb/>
Monday, Sept. ends <lb/>
Jan. Toe Spring <lb/>
Monday, Jan. 80th, 1893; <lb/>
Friday, May 1893. <lb/>
department. <lb/>
Intermediate department, <lb/>
Higher English, <lb/>
Latin and French, <lb/>
two lesson pr <lb/>
Thorough Instruction will <lb/>
be given according to the best approved <lb/>
methods. <lb/>
for board will be made for <lb/>
pupils desiring to come from the <lb/>
try. For further particulars address, <lb/>
Loot<lb/>
82.00 <lb/>
3.50 <lb/>
1.00 <lb/>
The tax-payers of the State <lb/>
should not forget that with <lb/>
success will come the <lb/>
of taxing them to pay <lb/>
of the special tax <lb/>
bonds. Is it not better to decide <lb/>
that question forever at the polls <lb/>
than to trust the to Re- <lb/>
publican If the <lb/>
succeed in carrying the <lb/>
J. F. <lb/>
A Boston says one of <lb/>
the prime causes of tho great <lb/>
among summer is <lb/>
there will be increased tax- too much clothes. He says the <lb/>
and no hope of financial re- <lb/>
The of the man <lb/>
who trios to create bad <lb/>
among neighbors, or who <lb/>
tempt to array any class of his <lb/>
low against another, class, <lb/>
who endeavors to incite the farm- <lb/>
class against the towns people, <lb/>
or men engaged another hon- <lb/>
and legitimate <lb/>
fewer clothes children have on in <lb/>
warm weather in <lb/>
cool weather they should be re. <lb/>
quired to wear only enough to <lb/>
them <lb/>
bury<lb/>
SUI b CATARRH <lb/>
A for <lb/>
mouth and <lb/>
I With each Lottie there Is en ingenious <lb/>
pursuits,; nasal injector for the more successful <lb/>
is not a desirable member of any <lb/>
Democrat. <lb/>
treatment of these complaints without <lb/>
extra charge, Price at <lb/>
DRUG STOKE. <lb/>
confirm. The Attorney-General <lb/>
holds, or at least pretends to, that <lb/>
a failure to confirm the <lb/>
of a postmaster who is in <lb/>
session of a bore the <lb/>
assembling of the session of Con- <lb/>
which fails to act on the <lb/>
nomination leaves him the legal <lb/>
postmaster until his successor is <lb/>
nominated. If that be law <lb/>
j the department from the <lb/>
foundation the government has <lb/>
in similar eases acting<lb/>
Senator Morgan, of Alabama, is <lb/>
in town. He is a strong advocate <lb/>
of retaliation on Canada, and <lb/>
thinks that Mr. Harrison's <lb/>
should prohibited the <lb/>
Shipment of <lb/>
through the United States. <lb/>
The Marine Hospital <lb/>
bureau is taking active measures <lb/>
to prevent the introduction of <lb/>
cholera into our ports by any <lb/>
of the steamship lines running <lb/>
from Hamburg or where <lb/>
the disease is to be rap- <lb/>
idly spreading- All steamships <lb/>
arriving from those and other for- <lb/>
ports are to be rigidly in- <lb/>
and if any traces, pi the <lb/>
dreaded disease are found they <lb/>
will be and <lb/>
disinfected before being <lb/>
allowed to land their passengers. <lb/>
The Republicans here are doing <lb/>
lots of talking about breaking the <lb/>
this year, but when <lb/>
the State. Should <lb/>
man be chosen to take <lb/>
charge of the State's finances how <lb/>
long would it be before he would <lb/>
bankrupt the State A defaulter <lb/>
to manage the finances of the <lb/>
State be a public disgrace <lb/>
and calamity. The people who <lb/>
believe in honest government and <lb/>
faithful public servants should see <lb/>
to it that only honest and capable <lb/>
men are nominated and elected to <lb/>
office. <lb/>
steps to raise funds for laying the <lb/>
coiner stone of the Confederate <lb/>
monument. Let our citizens, one <lb/>
all, join in the undertaking. <lb/>
Many other counties in tho State <lb/>
have signified their intention to <lb/>
aid. <lb/>
It Has Gained Nothing, But, Thank <lb/>
Heaven, it is Getting Clear of Such <lb/>
Cattle. <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
We just happen to recall, off- <lb/>
hand. W. P. of <lb/>
A. C Greene, of Wake. J. M- <lb/>
Harry Skinner and <lb/>
E. A. of Pitt, who have with- <lb/>
j in the past two given the <lb/>
The folly of the strike as a <lb/>
means adjusting differences be- <lb/>
tween workmen and their employ <lb/>
has again shown by the <lb/>
outcome of the switchmen's strike <lb/>
at Buffalo, New York. Here were <lb/>
a handful of men who demanded <lb/>
a small increase of wages, which <lb/>
refused they struck, Democratic party tons of good <lb/>
of the order issued by vice about the course to pursue, if <lb/>
is the time to subscribe. <lb/>
DO ANIMAL COMMIT SUICIDE . <lb/>
is a story of a poor cat, <lb/>
deprived of her kittens, who hang- <lb/>
ed herself in the fork of a branch. <lb/>
But this may have been an accident; <lb/>
we should have given the cat tho <lb/>
benefit of the doubt. News <lb/>
of a dog who committed suicide. <lb/>
His master declined lo take <lb/>
out to shoot rabbits, and the dog <lb/>
went and drowned himself in a <lb/>
pond. Tho story is true, but Au- <lb/>
and the dog may have <lb/>
merely an extreme form <lb/>
of colonial sensitiveness. If we <lb/>
once admit that dog reason <lb/>
on life and death being a mad <lb/>
and exercise a hasty but <lb/>
choice, is plain that the <lb/>
whole system ethics will have <lb/>
to be altered. <lb/>
The poor Indian may right <lb/>
about the equal sky, which is a <lb/>
poor prospect for people who are <lb/>
not fond of dogs. The ghosts of <lb/>
dogs have been seen, and are as <lb/>
well vouched for as any others; <lb/>
so, on the the poor Indian <lb/>
may be less untutored than the <lb/>
poet Lang in <lb/>
Magazine. <lb/>
Some Very Poor People. <lb/>
Exchange. <lb/>
Tho man who keeps two dogs, <lb/>
but is too poor to take a news- <lb/>
paper. <lb/>
The smoker who can't afford to <lb/>
give more than twenty five cents <lb/>
towards missions. <lb/>
The Christian who has not <lb/>
found out that there is a luxury in <lb/>
giving. <lb/>
People who never pat much in <lb/>
the basket, for fear God will not <lb/>
get in with them. <lb/>
People who live in a eel- <lb/>
lax and go without the light of <lb/>
heaven if they had to pay any- <lb/>
thing for it <lb/>
People who have to all <lb/>
their money to the devil's <lb/>
blacksmith shop and have it made <lb/>
into chains with which to bind <lb/>
themselves. <lb/>
Men who have to take own <lb/>
manhood, the happiness of their <lb/>
wives and children, and the good <lb/>
of the country, all to tho <lb/>
and get back nothing but <lb/>
dust and ashes in the place of it- <lb/>
Hotel Burns. <lb/>
August <lb/>
Belmont Hotel, at White <lb/>
Springs, five miles from this city, <lb/>
was destroyed at midnight last <lb/>
night by a fire which broke out in <lb/>
the laundry and spread with great <lb/>
rapidity. There wore nearly <lb/>
guests in the house at the time <lb/>
and all escaped with their lives, <lb/>
many of them by jumping from <lb/>
the windows. Mrs. Dr. Von Rack, <lb/>
of Asheville, was badly injured, <lb/>
and was fatally injured, <lb/>
and died this morning. Charles <lb/>
Green, of New Orleans, had a leg <lb/>
dislocated, Clerk also <lb/>
had a leg dislocated, and a colored <lb/>
nurse a leg broken. A few others <lb/>
were slightly bruised, but none <lb/>
seriously hurt. All the guests lost <lb/>
their baggage and some of them <lb/>
other personal belongings. A <lb/>
good many diamonds and n good <lb/>
deal of money were lost in the <lb/>
fire, numbers of in the build- <lb/>
escaping only in their night <lb/>
clothes. The guests made <lb/>
way, as best they to <lb/>
villa, where they were made <lb/>
The hotel property owned <lb/>
by a corporation and to Dr. <lb/>
Von Back. The building was <lb/>
erected at a cost of and <lb/>
there was insurance of <lb/>
on it- <lb/>
head Not content with quit- <lb/>
ting work they showed a lawless <lb/>
spirit, resorted to violence, which <lb/>
necessitated the calling out of a <lb/>
large body of State troops to <lb/>
tho peace and maintain the <lb/>
supremacy of the law. They <lb/>
counted on the co-operation of <lb/>
other organizations of railroad <lb/>
endeavored to secure <lb/>
this, and failing, the strike fizzled <lb/>
out and was declared <lb/>
by the boss man, Sweeney. <lb/>
Wednesday night, and now the <lb/>
strikers having lost a couple weeks <lb/>
time, got into a good deal of <lb/>
caused the death of some men <lb/>
the arrest of. more, stopped <lb/>
the running, of freight trains, and <lb/>
hung up a great deal of freight at <lb/>
Buffalo other and put <lb/>
the State to many thousands of <lb/>
dollars expense which the tax pay- <lb/>
will have to pay, will be glad <lb/>
to return to work at the old wages. <lb/>
and sadder, if not wiser <lb/>
men. The strike as an adjuster of <lb/>
disputes is no <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
their <lb/>
Ashe- <lb/>
com- <lb/>
The manner in which chickens <lb/>
are shipped to this market is not <lb/>
in with the spirit of the <lb/>
law with regard to cruelty to <lb/>
They are packed in a <lb/>
basket sort of a cage, and without <lb/>
food ox water while i n transit- The <lb/>
result is that many suffocate before <lb/>
reaching the destination. We <lb/>
heard a produce merchant gay it is <lb/>
rarely that less than five <lb/>
percent of original shipments is <lb/>
lost to the shipper from these <lb/>
Commercial <lb/>
it would escape the wrath to come. <lb/>
Partly through fear and partly <lb/>
from a willingness to be <lb/>
tho party has sacrificed a large <lb/>
measure of its self-respect in <lb/>
to follow the advice of these <lb/>
and has again <lb/>
gotten up to the very dividing line <lb/>
between standing and surrender- <lb/>
Because it would take <lb/>
tho one remaining step, to wit <lb/>
Renounce Cleveland, they, having <lb/>
duped it, now desert it. leaving it <lb/>
to itself what it has <lb/>
ever made or saved by going with <lb/>
them as far as it has- <lb/>
The Progressive <lb/>
of those who go to Demo- <lb/>
speaking are not in <lb/>
thy. The paid and pa- <lb/>
do the This is false, <lb/>
and is an insult to the best citizens <lb/>
of the State. There are less whisk- <lb/>
-drinking Democrats than Third <lb/>
party men; there are many times <lb/>
more sober Democrats than Third <lb/>
party men. If there arc any <lb/>
they are, <lb/>
hired by Republicans to yell for <lb/>
tho Third party, in order to break <lb/>
down white men's government in <lb/>
North tree <lb/>
North Carolina now leads the <lb/>
southern states in the number of <lb/>
spindles operated in cotton facto- <lb/>
as well as in the number of <lb/>
cotton mills. <lb/>
Before the war Southern farm- <lb/>
were, as a general thing, pros- <lb/>
They lived well, some of <lb/>
them in magnificent style, were <lb/>
out of debt, and had plenty of <lb/>
money to meet every demand up- <lb/>
on them- If they needed money <lb/>
for any special purpose more than <lb/>
they had, they had State banks to <lb/>
supply their needs at reasonable <lb/>
rates of interest, and their land <lb/>
was security enough upon which <lb/>
to borrow all the money they need- <lb/>
ed. Then they had no tariff <lb/>
to pay, no pensions to pay. <lb/>
They were not compelled, as they <lb/>
are now, to sell in the cheapest <lb/>
market buy in the dearest <lb/>
market, They were free to sell <lb/>
where they could sell to the best <lb/>
advantage. Now the Southern <lb/>
farmer is taxed to tariff tribute, <lb/>
pensions, and th enormous ex- <lb/>
of running the Govern- <lb/>
the proportion of the South <lb/>
a outing in the aggregate to a <lb/>
couple hundred millions a year, <lb/>
all this must come regardless <lb/>
f the price that he may receive <lb/>
for his crops. The prices of these <lb/>
may go down but the tribute <lb/>
posed upon him goes up goes <lb/>
up higher every year. And yet <lb/>
the Third party ace <lb/>
working to the system <lb/>
s the farmer of <lb/>
the proceeds of his keeps <lb/>
him Star. <lb/>
J. MARQUIS,<lb/>
Office in Skinner Building, upper <lb/>
opposite Photograph Gallery <lb/>
v- <lb/>
rtE. L. <lb/>
DENTIST. J <lb/>
Greenville, N A. <lb/>
l. Fleming-, <lb/>
Greenville, X. O. <lb/>
Prompt attention to business. Office <lb/>
at Murphy's old -laud. <lb/>
HOS. J. <lb/>
ALEX. L. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
VS-AT-LA W, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
In all the Courts. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
B. F. TYSON <lb/>
I. A. <lb/>
TYSON, <lb/>
AT TORS <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
attention Riven to collection <lb/>
H. LONG, <lb/>
Attorney- at-Law, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Prompt and careful attention to <lb/>
solicited.<lb/>
HARRY <lb/>
SKINNER, <lb/>
A N A W, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
M ft, JAMES. <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Practice In all courts. <lb/>
it Specialty.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017562_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
J. term of Associate Justice Davis. <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST <lb/>
II at the at Greenville,, <lb/>
N. C, as matter. <lb/>
TICKET <lb/>
FOR I <lb/>
CLEVELAND. <lb/>
Of Sew York. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
STEVENSON, <lb/>
Illinois. <lb/>
FOR ELECTORS AT <lb/>
CHARLES B <lb/>
B- GLENN. <lb/>
1st Dist.-L L. SMITH- <lb/>
FOR 1st <lb/>
W. A. B- BRANCH, <lb/>
of Beaufort. <lb/>
Gov. Holt made a speech in Ala- <lb/>
county and said <lb/>
that he met Col. Harry Skinner <lb/>
, just after the Third party State <lb/>
convention, and him how it <lb/>
was that he had been treated so <lb/>
Skinner answered that he had <lb/>
turned down the <lb/>
damned fools didn't have sense <lb/>
enough to stand If the <lb/>
, Colonel's opinion of that convention <lb/>
is that it was composed of a of <lb/>
it does not look <lb/>
reasonable that any Democrat <lb/>
should be led away to vote for the <lb/>
mongrel ticket it nominated. <lb/>
true Southern white man ought <lb/>
not only to vote against it but n so <lb/>
every endeavor to drive it fr om <lb/>
forever. He showed ail <lb/>
Third party men the folly of ac- <lb/>
but God forbid that he should be <lb/>
the means of destroying others. <lb/>
it destroying the Democratic <lb/>
party, and with it the <lb/>
and and peace, <lb/>
the Democratic party of his county, his State, his <lb/>
being of inflicting the Fatherland. Follow him not <lb/>
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb/>
MB <lb/>
ELIAS CARE, <lb/>
of <lb/>
for I III I III <lb/>
R A. <lb/>
of <lb/>
FOB OF STATE <lb/>
COKE <lb/>
of K <lb/>
for <lb/>
DONALD W. RAIN. <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
E. M. FURMAN, <lb/>
of Buncombe. <lb/>
FOR OF PUBLIC <lb/>
J. C SCARBOROUGH, <lb/>
of Johnston. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
FRANK I. OSBORNE, <lb/>
of Mecklenburg. <lb/>
FOB OF TWELFTH <lb/>
GEORGE A. SHUFFORD. <lb/>
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb/>
FOR THE <lb/>
F- G- JAMES. <lb/>
FOR HOUSE <lb/>
FREDERICK <lb/>
I. K. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
RICHARD W. KING. <lb/>
FOB REGISTER <lb/>
HENRY <lb/>
MM II <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
ML WM. E <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
J R <lb/>
The letter from Mr. <lb/>
which we publish in this issue <lb/>
speaks for itself and needs no com- <lb/>
It should be rend by every <lb/>
white man not only in Pitt county <lb/>
but throughout the whole State. <lb/>
All over the -State many of the <lb/>
Third party candidates are drop- <lb/>
ping out and stating that they can <lb/>
not take any part with that party. <lb/>
Mr. W. A- who was <lb/>
by them for Associate <lb/>
of the Supremo Court, pub <lb/>
a card that he cannot accept- <lb/>
John A. Bennett, who was <lb/>
on the c ticket in Mar- <lb/>
tin county, publishes a card de- <lb/>
and says he has become <lb/>
thoroughly satisfied that the re <lb/>
forms needed can only come <lb/>
rough the success of the Demo- <lb/>
party. Capt. D. A. Cogdell, <lb/>
the Third party nominee for the <lb/>
Senate in Wayne county, refuses <lb/>
to accept the nomination. <lb/>
The Hon. L. C- Latham will <lb/>
speak at Aurora. Beaufort county, <lb/>
on Saturday nest filling the <lb/>
of Governor Jarvis at <lb/>
that place. As soon as the <lb/>
court is over he proposes <lb/>
to make a series of speeches in the <lb/>
District. <lb/>
The Republican pow-wow will <lb/>
open up in Raleigh <lb/>
day and it may be expected that <lb/>
there will be some fur flying <lb/>
Loge Harris swears and snorts that <lb/>
they shall have no ticket, while <lb/>
Eaves is equally determined that <lb/>
there shall be one. thieves <lb/>
know the rest. <lb/>
The time for the meeting of the <lb/>
Democratic Clubs in Raleigh, has <lb/>
been changed to the of <lb/>
which is the day upon <lb/>
which Gen. A. E. Stephenson, <lb/>
Democratic nominee for Vice-Pres- <lb/>
is to speak in that city. It <lb/>
will be a grand occasion and <lb/>
will be full of pure <lb/>
Democracy- The railroads will <lb/>
reduced rates. <lb/>
A telegram sent from Goldsboro <lb/>
to the daily papers, last Thursday, <lb/>
shows what kind of a man <lb/>
the Third party nominee for Gov <lb/>
is- How a decent white <lb/>
man can vote for a man of his <lb/>
character and ideas is beyond our <lb/>
comprehension, and we believe few <lb/>
will Jo so. Hero is the telegram <lb/>
X. August <lb/>
prominent when review- <lb/>
here tin- evening- in the presence of <lb/>
the good done in this <lb/>
Si site mi the past present <lb/>
administration and danger <lb/>
the of <lb/>
undoubtedly menu- it <lb/>
force hill supremacy, received <lb/>
the follow tag from <lb/>
rather would <lb/>
ride or anything to tin- rule we <lb/>
have These are the <lb/>
exact word- mined by Dr. and <lb/>
will a minted the editor of the <lb/>
Goldsboro Headlight . <lb/>
Goldsboro; Oliver. <lb/>
;. W. Petersburg. Va. and <lb/>
others. Since utterance the <lb/>
next day wanted to <lb/>
shut the affair up and tried to <lb/>
bribe Mr. editor of the <lb/>
Goldsboro But lie <lb/>
struck the wrong man and the fol <lb/>
lowing telegram showed his <lb/>
V. C August <lb/>
Pat the candidate far <lb/>
Governor, told Mr. of <lb/>
the Headlight, if he would <lb/>
the words uttered by him <lb/>
as telegraphed lo the Chronicle <lb/>
M 111- and if lie <lb/>
would make his favor the <lb/>
Third party, he would guarantee <lb/>
him 20.0110 subscribers, where <lb/>
upon the editor replied that <lb/>
was god enough for him. Mr. <lb/>
is ready willing to <lb/>
to the at any time failure <lb/>
to hi- object has produced him <lb/>
a political <lb/>
On Saturday there was a big <lb/>
Democratic rally in Goldsboro at <lb/>
which speeches were made by <lb/>
Carr. Sanderlin and Jarvis. D. <lb/>
M- Hardy, the man who placed <lb/>
Exum nomination for Governor <lb/>
at the Third party convention, was <lb/>
present. He went upon the speak- <lb/>
stand, repudiated Exum and <lb/>
the Third party, and said he is <lb/>
going to work for and vote the <lb/>
whole Democratic ticket. <lb/>
wrongs upon us under which we <lb/>
are now His argument <lb/>
in showing these people that by <lb/>
being in the Third party they <lb/>
were aiding the Republicans was <lb/>
conclusive and no man who has <lb/>
the good of his country at heart <lb/>
could remain out of tho <lb/>
Democratic fold. Capt Kitchen <lb/>
was at his best and his plea in <lb/>
behalf of Democracy was such as <lb/>
will toll in the present crisis. He <lb/>
said no man had fought Grover <lb/>
harder than he did be <lb/>
fore he was nominated- He had <lb/>
gone so fur as to say that he would <lb/>
not vote for him but he had taken <lb/>
it all back because he represented <lb/>
Democracy, and that now he <lb/>
would vote for him if it cost <lb/>
Ids life to do so, and he would not <lb/>
vote for Harrison if it cost him <lb/>
his life. <lb/>
Capt. Kitchen is a man of con- <lb/>
He has the boldest to <lb/>
express these No <lb/>
man in North Carolina has for the <lb/>
past twenty years done better <lb/>
work for the Democratic party at <lb/>
the same cost than ho. No man <lb/>
deserves more at her hands and <lb/>
no honor that the State con- <lb/>
fer on him would be unmerited or <lb/>
unworthily bestowed. Pitt county <lb/>
gives three rousing cheers for the <lb/>
old Democratic war-horse, <lb/>
Kitchen. <lb/>
After Mr. Kitchen's speech din- <lb/>
was served and this was fol- <lb/>
lowed by dancing and other <lb/>
amusements- The dinner was el- <lb/>
and abundant- <lb/>
At three o'clock speaking was <lb/>
again announced everybody <lb/>
was ready to hear it. Hon. Jas. <lb/>
E- Moore, of Williamston. was the <lb/>
next speaker. Mr. Moore has <lb/>
vim about him as well as true or- <lb/>
and never before have we <lb/>
heard him when he appeared to <lb/>
better advantage. He clinched <lb/>
every argument in such a manner <lb/>
Democrats of Pitt. Folio him <lb/>
not ye white men who the <lb/>
white man's civilization to <lb/>
serve to transmit to your <lb/>
If you do follow tin, you <lb/>
will sorry for it Follow him <lb/>
you will repent in sack cloth <lb/>
and misery and in I <lb/>
Follow Inter on, midst <lb/>
ignominy and disgrace, will <lb/>
find your reward, and that i -ward <lb/>
shall be the bitter consciousness <lb/>
that you allowed yourselves to <lb/>
become conspirators the <lb/>
peace and dignify of firesides, <lb/>
your your State, <lb/>
and your whole Southland. <lb/>
Would to God that I could in- <lb/>
fuse into the hearts of my fellow <lb/>
citizens of North Carolina the <lb/>
feeling that is in my own heart <lb/>
Would to God that I could bring <lb/>
them to see, as I see, the utter <lb/>
folly and wickedness of the <lb/>
business I all is said, <lb/>
it is nothing more nor less than a <lb/>
cleverly laid scheme on the part <lb/>
of the Republicans to break up <lb/>
the white vote of the South- <lb/>
And have not Southern men <lb/>
sense enough to see it I Are <lb/>
they such fools as to be blind to <lb/>
a fact so patent What is plainer <lb/>
than the fact, that, if the <lb/>
can decoy some twenty or <lb/>
twenty-five North Car- <lb/>
Democrats into voting the <lb/>
ticket they <lb/>
will be able to <lb/>
sweep tho State for Harrison <lb/>
And is there a decent white man <lb/>
in the Old North State that wants <lb/>
such scandalous things to be Is <lb/>
there in all North Carolina, from <lb/>
Currituck to Cherokee, a white <lb/>
man who wants his grand old <lb/>
State to cast her electoral votes <lb/>
for Ben Harrison and his <lb/>
Force Bill White men of <lb/>
every vote cast by you for <lb/>
Col. Skinners crowd will mean a <lb/>
vote for Harrison, a for the <lb/>
BARGAINS <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
-DEALERS IN- <lb/>
OUT SAIL <lb/>
COMMENCING-- <lb/>
Tuesday Morning, August <lb/>
-WE WILL OFFER FOR- <lb/>
Only <lb/>
The following goods at the following prices which are very much <lb/>
less the goods cost Bat 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 please under- <lb/>
stand that we do not agree to ever duplicate these <lb/>
prices again, and nothing sold at these prices <lb/>
on this list will be taken back or exchanged. <lb/>
Come at once and get the choice, it will pay yon. We give you <lb/>
the former prices at which the goods 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 yon. <lb/>
Edging, price cents.<lb/>
that all were put to rout Force Bill, a vote for the return <lb/>
and every Democrat present could of Reconstruction Days, a vote <lb/>
not help from for . for Southern degradation and <lb/>
the gallant Jim Ed Moore The , ruin Think well before you <lb/>
8th day of November will reveal i cast such infamous ballot May- <lb/>
some of the fruits of his speech. be, some farmer will chance to <lb/>
Swiss Inserting, <lb/>
Edging, <lb/>
Cheeked<lb/>
Bob L. C Latham was then <lb/>
called for. No man in the State <lb/>
has a better command of chaste <lb/>
and ornate language and of his <lb/>
subject than Maj. Latham, <lb/>
those who are accustomed to <lb/>
read this letter. Then I say to <lb/>
him. you can never <lb/>
prove your condition by deserting <lb/>
the Democratic party. All that <lb/>
and I has been dote for you, as a <lb/>
or, has been done by tho Demo- <lb/>
him speak, know that he never party- if anything more <lb/>
leaves unsaid anything which j is to be done for you, it must be <lb/>
to be said to make his done by the Democratic party, <lb/>
complete. Those who What I tell you is as true as the <lb/>
heard this gentleman Thursday, i Skinner to the con- <lb/>
gay that it was one of the best j notwithstanding, <lb/>
political speeches they ever heard j What the Southern farmer <lb/>
Major Latham make. Suffice it to wants is, not the Force or <lb/>
say that Pitt county never had the Sub-Treasury Bill, but the <lb/>
Mr. Abe told us yesterday <lb/>
that his brother, Mr- E- A. <lb/>
would not accept the <lb/>
nomination for Congress in the <lb/>
First District. He says further <lb/>
Mr- said he could net spare <lb/>
the time from his office Clerk <lb/>
Superior Court to make a <lb/>
thorough canvass of the District <lb/>
It is just possible that after this <lb/>
present term expires, Mr. <lb/>
will have all the time he desires. <lb/>
The Democrats of Pitt county may <lb/>
decide that he ought not be con- <lb/>
fined so closely, and shoulder the <lb/>
onerous duties of the office upon <lb/>
some one Advance. <lb/>
This is just what will take place- <lb/>
THE PICNIC AT <lb/>
Three Thousand People Assemble <lb/>
Enjoy the and Hear <lb/>
Democratic Doctrine. <lb/>
to <lb/>
three better speeches upon her <lb/>
soil on tho same day. <lb/>
The good accomplished can <lb/>
only W known when the news <lb/>
from the 8th of November <lb/>
shall tell that old Pitt has again <lb/>
rolled up usual Democratic <lb/>
majority for all the candidates <lb/>
from President to Constable- <lb/>
Everybody voted the picnic a <lb/>
grand best they had <lb/>
ever attended. The Reflector <lb/>
man heard old men say they had <lb/>
so large an assemblage, <lb/>
not even at a preaching, where <lb/>
the crowd was more orderly or <lb/>
better behaved. Not the least <lb/>
pleasantness disturbance of any <lb/>
kind occurred, and everyone <lb/>
sent experienced a day of unbroken <lb/>
enjoyment. The Greenville band <lb/>
mode some splendid music and <lb/>
helped to enliven the occasion. <lb/>
The managers of the picnic. <lb/>
Messrs. J. L- Fleming, O- <lb/>
J. B. Fleming. Edgar Buck, <lb/>
J. B. Little, J. J- Satterthwaite. <lb/>
W. J- Little, W. D. Keel, M- C. S- <lb/>
Cherry, Jr. W. O. Little, showed <lb/>
themselves indefatigable workers. <lb/>
and are deserving of unbounded <lb/>
praise for the success of the <lb/>
The suggests <lb/>
that they could do the Democracy <lb/>
of Pitt county untold good by <lb/>
one or two more such picnics <lb/>
in other of the county. <lb/>
Ex-Gov. T J. Jarvis came home <lb/>
Sunday to take a weeks rest from <lb/>
the very active canvass he has <lb/>
been making with Mr. Carr, <lb/>
date for Governor, and Mr- Fur- <lb/>
man, candidate for Auditor. He <lb/>
will return to his appointments <lb/>
next Saturday- The Reflector <lb/>
has watched with no little pride the <lb/>
comments of the State press upon <lb/>
the speeches of our honored towns- <lb/>
man, and the reference made to <lb/>
the excellent work he is doing- <lb/>
There is but one Tom Jarvis, and <lb/>
and he is doing the Democracy of <lb/>
the Old North State more good in <lb/>
this campaign than any other man <lb/>
within her borders. His speeches <lb/>
are so plain and convincing that <lb/>
there is no disputing his <lb/>
Everywhere he goes he <lb/>
shows the Third party followers how <lb/>
they are being deceived by the lead <lb/>
ere of that faction, and wins them <lb/>
back into the Democratic fold. In <lb/>
response to an inquiry as to the <lb/>
outlook in the State the Governor <lb/>
said he can see that the <lb/>
gaining ground every day and <lb/>
the prospects of success are con- <lb/>
growing brighter. <lb/>
WHITE MEN THINK <lb/>
When it was proposed by a <lb/>
of young men to hold a Dem- <lb/>
picnic at those <lb/>
to whom they first unfolded their <lb/>
plans at once declared it a capital <lb/>
idea, but hardly any one dreamed <lb/>
that it was going to be the <lb/>
success that the occasion <lb/>
proved to be- The result, how <lb/>
ever, only shows what Pitt county <lb/>
can accomplish when her sterling <lb/>
young, men set their heads to a <lb/>
thing. <lb/>
The morning train from Green- <lb/>
ville bore two cars filled with <lb/>
the Greenville Cornet Band <lb/>
in the number. These <lb/>
reached the picnic grounds at <lb/>
by o'clock, and found <lb/>
that were by no means the <lb/>
first arrivals- Already several <lb/>
hundred people hod gathered, <lb/>
and the crowd kept swelling until <lb/>
noon, by which time it was <lb/>
mated that fully 3.000 people were <lb/>
present. A glance over the <lb/>
grounds showed that the commit- <lb/>
tee had made every preparation <lb/>
for the pleasure of the multitude- <lb/>
A table enough to <lb/>
date upwards of persons at a <lb/>
time had been prepared, and for <lb/>
the dancers was constructed one <lb/>
of the best platforms that we ever <lb/>
saw at a picnic. A ball room <lb/>
floor could not surpass it. The <lb/>
Robersonville string band was on <lb/>
hand and dancing began at an <lb/>
early hour. <lb/>
At o'clock it was announced <lb/>
that the speaking would begin- <lb/>
The committee who hod charge cf <lb/>
this department were fortunate in <lb/>
their selection of speakers. Many <lb/>
people in this county were anxious <lb/>
to hear Kitchen and when <lb/>
it was known that be was to be the <lb/>
first speaker the entire crowd men, <lb/>
boys and ladies repaired to the <lb/>
stand. Capt. Kitchen began by <lb/>
, saying there were only two <lb/>
To <lb/>
Halifax, Nova Scotia, <lb/>
Aug. 1892- <lb/>
The Editor Reflector. <lb/>
the <lb/>
of August 16th. I had the <lb/>
pleasure, and of reading <lb/>
a selection from your paper en- <lb/>
titled, They I found <lb/>
pleasure in reading the aforesaid <lb/>
selection on account of the clear- <lb/>
directness and unflinching <lb/>
courage, and, above all, on account <lb/>
of the unmistakable ring of its <lb/>
patriotism, but I- was pained, <lb/>
deeply the fact that <lb/>
it was my old friend, Col. Harry <lb/>
Skinner, who had <lb/>
Col. Skinner gone over to <lb/>
the enemy Is it possible Is <lb/>
there not a mistake somewhere <lb/>
Were my eyes did <lb/>
I read the type <lb/>
was what I read true t Col. <lb/>
chum of my boy- <lb/>
hood, the Democratic son of a <lb/>
Democratic sire, the gifted, <lb/>
champion of Southern <lb/>
and Southern progress- <lb/>
Col. Harry Skinner gone over to <lb/>
the enemy; in the midst too, of <lb/>
the most threatening contest <lb/>
than has aver beset his people <lb/>
Mr. Editor can this thing be <lb/>
Is thy servant a dog, that <lb/>
he should do this thing Write <lb/>
to me, and tell me that the types <lb/>
you were misinformed <lb/>
regarding Harry Skinner, and <lb/>
that in this great and trying bat- <lb/>
for supremacy, <lb/>
he is still with the Old Guard, <lb/>
following the Standard of <lb/>
and the Eagles of Victory <lb/>
But Mr. if J most be- <lb/>
here the it is indeed a <lb/>
fact that Col. Skinner had <lb/>
the Ark of the Covenant <lb/>
and gone over to the enemies of <lb/>
Israel, then allow me, through <lb/>
the columns of your journal, <lb/>
of the Bill. <lb/>
He wants freer he wants <lb/>
the wide markets of the world; <lb/>
which he would have if the Chi- <lb/>
of Protection was torn <lb/>
he wants the. markets of <lb/>
the world, I say, wherein he may <lb/>
sell his corn, cotton, wool and <lb/>
other produce, and realize for the <lb/>
same a living price. The Sub- <lb/>
Treasury idea is the dream of <lb/>
idiocy, and is as degrading as it <lb/>
is nonsensical. The farmer is not <lb/>
a beggar, be made a ward of <lb/>
the Government; he is amply able <lb/>
to look out for himself if he is <lb/>
given half a chance. Elect <lb/>
elect a Democratic <lb/>
House, and a Democratic Senate; <lb/>
abolish and its re <lb/>
on give us the <lb/>
free benefit of the great foreign <lb/>
demand for our produce ; and the <lb/>
farmer will be able to hold his <lb/>
head up and be a man amongst <lb/>
men. <lb/>
Mr. Editor, I am a North Caro- <lb/>
by birth. lived for <lb/>
years upon Carolina s no- <lb/>
and though <lb/>
have kept me for some time in <lb/>
an alien land, I hope yet to return <lb/>
to my native State, to dwell there <lb/>
for some years in peace and hon- <lb/>
or, and, when I am dead, to be <lb/>
buried in its protecting earth- <lb/>
Mr. Editor, I assume that you, <lb/>
too, are a North Carolinian, and <lb/>
that to the love that burns in my <lb/>
own heart for my Native State, <lb/>
you are no stranger; and so we <lb/>
will together join in the patriotic <lb/>
Carolina <lb/>
attend <lb/>
we live, we will cherish, protect <lb/>
defend <lb/>
Yours for the Right, <lb/>
Thomas B. Gregory. <lb/>
All <lb/>
Percale, <lb/>
Saline <lb/>
Yard Wide <lb/>
Wash Silk <lb/>
Pineapple Tissue <lb/>
Solid Brown Chocked lawn <lb/>
India Muslin <lb/>
Muslin <lb/>
Chantilly <lb/>
Bedford Cord <lb/>
Inverness t <lb/>
Cloth <lb/>
Calico <lb/>
Embroidered Flouncing <lb/>
IS<lb/>
down o cents. <lb/>
. M .<lb/>
M .<lb/>
t, . <lb/>
h . . <lb/>
n .<lb/>
IS <lb/>
. n . <lb/>
u . . <lb/>
.<lb/>
IS <lb/>
beg to announce to ear many <lb/>
friends and customers that we <lb/>
have the largest and best selected <lb/>
stock of Goods to be our <lb/>
town. And while we are not sell- <lb/>
at cost we beg to <lb/>
that we think we can and will <lb/>
any prices on the different <lb/>
lines of Goods by us. W <lb/>
throw out no baits to entrap ens- <lb/>
To one and all we extend <lb/>
a cordial welcome to <lb/>
will be pleased to serve you with <lb/>
any goods in the following lines <lb/>
former price cents, marked down to <lb/>
IS <lb/>
Si. <lb/>
1.85 <lb/>
1.55 <lb/>
1.44 <lb/>
1.30 <lb/>
Worsted Dress Goods <lb/>
Gingham <lb/>
Lot Hack China Silk Handkerchiefs <lb/>
Child's White Lawn Hats <lb/>
Ball Cotton <lb/>
Handkerchiefs <lb/>
Gauze Vests<lb/>
Mitts<lb/>
Dress Goods Remnants At <lb/>
Straw Hats J <lb/>
Roll Straw Malting, former price S <lb/>
IT cents <lb/>
fl<lb/>
CO<lb/>
I c <lb/>
S c <lb/>
I e <lb/>
1.25 <lb/>
1.10 <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/>
Oil cents per gallon, <lb/>
Wood and Willow Ware, Harness,<lb/>
one-half first cost. <lb/>
cents, marked down to cents<lb/>
buying now you safe at least per cent, on article pi this list <lb/>
as the we have pat upon these goods are much below what they cost us. But <lb/>
we would rather sell now and lose something to carry them <lb/>
season. Call and examine for yourself. Ask to see our Bargain <lb/>
over for another <lb/>
Counter. <lb/>
YOUNG <lb/>
Mil <lb/>
I think I was then off a j <lb/>
fishing ff rule was to examine i <lb/>
the bridge on top twice a day. i <lb/>
went over it Monday after sunset, <lb/>
it was all right I had employed j <lb/>
a man to attend to it Tuesday. If you fail to sec the brand new stock of <lb/>
he <lb/>
Ton are Not In It <lb/>
When I returned he told me <lb/>
had mended a bod hole in the <lb/>
bridge and that it looked like it, <lb/>
was broken with an as. The hole <lb/>
w as reported to the Commission-; <lb/>
ere that day but by whom I never <lb/>
find out, but one of the j <lb/>
Board told me some one was try-. <lb/>
to get my job, and that I <lb/>
an <lb/>
Mr- Editor have been ask- <lb/>
ed the question often by both <lb/>
Democrats and Third party men, <lb/>
why it was that a Democratic <lb/>
Board of Commissioners took the <lb/>
bridge from me, a life long Demo- <lb/>
and gave it to a colored man <lb/>
When I took the draw I was to <lb/>
have forty cents every day I opened <lb/>
the draw. made three dollars <lb/>
cents the first month, <lb/>
and nine dollars and sixty cents <lb/>
the second month. After that the <lb/>
Commissioners gave me twelve <lb/>
dollars and fifty cents per month. <lb/>
A few months later my was <lb/>
raised to fifteen dollars, and I was <lb/>
to keep the bridge <lb/>
thing that I could do. I worked <lb/>
at that price a few months. Mr. <lb/>
Mooring one of the Commission- <lb/>
that lived on tho north side of <lb/>
tho river who crossed the river <lb/>
several times during a week, told <lb/>
the Board it was an imposition on <lb/>
me as I done so much on the <lb/>
bridge, that ha would more to give <lb/>
me twenty dollars. Mr L Flem- <lb/>
another Commissioner who <lb/>
lives on the north side, seconded <lb/>
the motion, as he saw the amount <lb/>
of work that I was doing. I tried <lb/>
to do my duty and told Messrs. <lb/>
Mooring and Fleming if I should <lb/>
overlook anything just call my at- <lb/>
to it and it should be done- <lb/>
I bad not lost a day only for rash- <lb/>
in about eight months <lb/>
Tuesday after first Monday in <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
------that is now being offered by- <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
------1 have Just to suit----- <lb/>
GENTLEMEN. <lb/>
LADY. <lb/>
HOUSEKEEPER, <lb/>
BODY ELSE <lb/>
If you want anything to wear or anything <lb/>
to eat, or any article to it in the house, <lb/>
call me. Goods all new, not a piece <lb/>
of old stock in the house. <lb/>
My prices will be found as low as <lb/>
goods can be sold at, <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
A. <lb/>
WALTER'S <lb/>
near losing my place that day. I <lb/>
then told several men to <lb/>
and see if I did not do my duty. <lb/>
I took a man then under the <lb/>
to examine the posts with j <lb/>
me- There were sis poets <lb/>
which all of the sap had rotted but <lb/>
the heart was good. Four of them <lb/>
ore still standing, two have <lb/>
cut down. I measured the heart <lb/>
in them which was inches in <lb/>
ampler. I saw one of the from C. <lb/>
call another to him m <lb/>
their meeting the first Monday in <lb/>
January and after they had a talk <lb/>
I saw one of them come out of the <lb/>
Court House with Mr. 0- <lb/>
and go down to the bridge <lb/>
went to tho and after they; <lb/>
came back without a word of re- <lb/>
proof or a single charge made in I <lb/>
the notice another man was hired <lb/>
in my place- I had no chance to <lb/>
defend myself, if I had I could j <lb/>
have proven on good evidence, <lb/>
that myself and another had ex- <lb/>
of my duty. <lb/>
Good judges say I kept tho bridge <lb/>
in as good repair as it has been <lb/>
kept since, while the tax payers of <lb/>
the county have paid every month <lb/>
this year, except July, from to <lb/>
dollars, and added to this ex- <lb/>
help and the whole amount is <lb/>
on the heels of five hundred <lb/>
Street, in rear of Dr. D.-L. James <lb/>
office. <lb/>
GREEK N. p. <lb/>
I great pleasure in informing my <lb/>
friends and public generally <lb/>
that <lb/>
S-NEW STUDIO-; <lb/>
is now open. A successful career of <lb/>
. YEARS <lb/>
Is proof of the sat ion I always give <lb/>
are or more with the lumber. My Work Speaks for Itself. <lb/>
Mr. Mooring said I kept the , , <lb/>
bridge in the best condition at one; <lb/>
less expense than it had been <lb/>
kept while hp had been <lb/>
which was a long <lb/>
The captain on the boat signed <lb/>
paper that I was the most prompt <lb/>
draw-keeper between Tarboro and <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
B. H. <lb/>
Call early and examine <lb/>
Hoping gain your <lb/>
merit roar favor, l am <lb/>
Very respectfully, <lb/>
THOMAS <lb/>
Sale an Easy Terms <lb/>
offer for sale on the Urge <lb/>
Double Store north of Fifth street. <lb/>
east of street, with lot fronting <lb/>
feet on Fifth by feet deep. A <lb/>
splendid bargain. Apply at once to <lb/>
Whips and Collars, Farming Tools <lb/>
I lows of the improved makes. <lb/>
Trunks. Valises, Floor Matting, <lb/>
Oil Children's Carriages, <lb/>
and the largest and best selected <lb/>
stock of FURNITURE ever kept <lb/>
in our town. When in need of <lb/>
anything in our line try <lb/>
Yours, anxious for trade. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
THE RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
Has Moved to next Door in Court House <lb/>
CONTINUE MANUFACTURE OF <lb/>
My Factory is well equipped with the host Mechanics, put up nothing <lb/>
but WORK. We keep up with the times and improved <lb/>
Rest material used in all work. All styles of Springs arc use J. you can select <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full i., ready <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb/>
he year round, which we will sell as as the <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we hop <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same <lb/>
My is well equipped with we put up <lb/>
nothing but work. We keep up with the times and best <lb/>
in all work. All styles springs used, select from <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King <lb/>
Wu also keep on hand a full line of Harness and Whip which we <lb/>
sell at the lowest rates. Special attention given to repairing. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG. <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rates. <lb/>
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE <lb/>
Homer Military Oxford, N. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
buildings, hot and cold baths, gymnasium, healthful climate, <lb/>
surroundings, numbers limited. A home school for boys, <lb/>
sent on implication. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb/>
f, <lb/>
for the following lines of <lb/>
Boxes Crackers. <lb/>
Car load Mess <lb/>
Car load Side Meat <lb/>
Oar load Flour, all <lb/>
Car load White Seed Oaf. <lb/>
Cases Star Lye- , , <lb/>
Cases Bread <lb/>
Cares Soap. <lb/>
Cases Cherries <lb/>
Full line Case Goods <lb/>
Boxes Tobacco. <lb/>
Boxes Starch. <lb/>
Barrels Rico Molasses, <lb/>
Stick Candy. <lb/>
Barrels Gail Ax <lb/>
Barrels Railroad Mills Snuff. <lb/>
Barrels Snuff. <lb/>
Paper Sacks, Cigarette, <lb/>
K. C. <lb/>
. v.-, . <lb/>
Ac. <lb/>
For Accident Insurance by the year in one of <lb/>
the best Companies in existence, see <lb/>
ft d<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017562_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
w. <lb/>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
if <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Local <lb/>
ThU i- the- last of August. <lb/>
Moonlight nights an with <lb/>
conies in to-morrow. <lb/>
The boys arc at girls, too. <lb/>
Republican next Saturday. <lb/>
The Prohibitionists have nominated a <lb/>
ticket Beaufort comity. <lb/>
Chip in a quarter now ant the H <lb/>
is your Dec. 1st. <lb/>
Lumber was unloaded last week for <lb/>
repairing the bridge. <lb/>
Cotton is right along. The <lb/>
pickers will soon be in the Holds after it. <lb/>
The Greenville Land and improvement <lb/>
Company arc building a store near their <lb/>
mill. <lb/>
The weather, or something else, brings <lb/>
out the bugs in full force when lamps are <lb/>
lighted. <lb/>
The Home Sewing <lb/>
Moat Brown Bit. <lb/>
Machine for <lb/>
S ore has the <lb/>
offered <lb/>
The Reflector Book <lb/>
cheapest lot of <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Tobacco Is coming in for the opening <lb/>
breaks of the Greenville and Eastern <lb/>
Warehouse to-morrow. <lb/>
Ship your tobacco to Cooper's Ware- <lb/>
house, Henderson, he will work <lb/>
honestly and faithfully for your beat <lb/>
interest. <lb/>
The Greenville Warehouse takes the <lb/>
lead. It got the first load of new crop <lb/>
tobacco, which came in last M <lb/>
Cream Cheese X. <lb/>
Butter at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Y. State<lb/>
Work commenced last week on the <lb/>
Eastern prize house. It will be <lb/>
before. gout. <lb/>
Remember if yon semi your tobacco to <lb/>
Cooper's Henderson, you <lb/>
will obtain high prices be <lb/>
Try it. <lb/>
The colored people will have <lb/>
from here to Washington to-morrow <lb/>
on the steamer Myers. It is the <lb/>
of the Good Samaritans. <lb/>
Want to eat something good Boss <lb/>
Biscuits at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Any man having surplus money and <lb/>
wanting to make a good investment could <lb/>
not do better than put it in prize <lb/>
iii Greenville. <lb/>
The old reliable is Cooper's Ware- <lb/>
house, Henderson. Send your tobacco <lb/>
there. Cooper Is the farmer's friend. <lb/>
Mrs. W. R. brought the <lb/>
half a pound <lb/>
on Friday. It was a line one. <lb/>
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads and <lb/>
at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Some as pretty tobacco as we have seen <lb/>
till- season was brought to the <lb/>
last Friday by Mr. F. M. Smith. <lb/>
Warehouse. Henderson, is <lb/>
ready f. new chop tobacco. He <lb/>
highest price.-. <lb/>
Just one week from to-morrow and the <lb/>
Cleveland and Carr grand old <lb/>
Democratic be unfurled to <lb/>
the breeze. <lb/>
Cash given for Produce. Hides, <lb/>
and Furs at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Eggs <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Mr. W II. Cox is Net buying new <lb/>
goods. <lb/>
Hon. E. Moore, of <lb/>
been in town this week on business. <lb/>
Mr. V. R. Parker has been sick for <lb/>
weeks. We are glad to know he is <lb/>
now improving. <lb/>
Mr. it. T. Spier, of went to <lb/>
the at Chapel Hill, last week, <lb/>
to take a medical course. <lb/>
Miss in tense Forbes returned Wed- <lb/>
from where she had <lb/>
been spending several weeks. <lb/>
Miss Estelle Williams returned home <lb/>
Thursday evening from a visit of several <lb/>
weeks to Raleigh and <lb/>
C. B. Esq., Democratic <lb/>
tor for the State at large, will speak at <lb/>
Friday, 2nd. and at <lb/>
3rd. <lb/>
Miss Minnie Caraway, of Halifax-, <lb/>
rived Friday evening and upon <lb/>
her duties as music teacher at the <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
Mr. W. S. Rawls and wife, and Mr. <lb/>
Zeno Moore went on the recent <lb/>
to Asheville. Mr. Moore tells us <lb/>
they had a delightful trip. <lb/>
Rev. X. Harding, of Washington, made <lb/>
a short visit last week to his brother, Maj. <lb/>
II. Harding. He preached in the <lb/>
pal church Friday evening. <lb/>
Mr. O. L. Joyner, one of the <lb/>
tors of the Eastern Warehouse, came <lb/>
last Thursday from a trip to sever- <lb/>
of the up country markets. <lb/>
Rev. R. W. of the Disciples <lb/>
church, will preach in Hall. <lb/>
Greenville, next Sunday afternoon at <lb/>
o'clock. Public cordially invited. <lb/>
Mr. W. of Oxford, who <lb/>
served so acceptably as book-keeper at <lb/>
Greenville Warehouse, last season <lb/>
returned to take the same position the <lb/>
coming season. <lb/>
Sir. Lawrence who for a year <lb/>
past been here with his uncle, Mr. C. <lb/>
W. returned to bis home In <lb/>
Oil Monday. Lawrence made many <lb/>
friends in Greenville we would be <lb/>
glad to see him hack. <lb/>
Mr. B. Cherry left for the <lb/>
markets Monday to buy new goods for <lb/>
the of j. B. Cherry Co. Keep <lb/>
eye on their space in the <lb/>
tor and it will tell you all about their <lb/>
new stock. This Ann is never surpassed <lb/>
in the selection and quality of goods. <lb/>
Mr. W. B. Greene Is opening a <lb/>
Racket Store in the building opposite A. <lb/>
Forbes, and next door to Griffin's. He is <lb/>
a young man of good business experience <lb/>
ml has the push about him to make <lb/>
things hustle. He says he is going to as- <lb/>
the natives in selling cheap goods. <lb/>
Messrs. Eugene Crews and Robert <lb/>
Hester, representing Bullock Mitchell's <lb/>
Oxford warehouse. Mr. R. G. Hart, rep- <lb/>
resenting Coopers Henderson warehouse. <lb/>
and Mr. W. H. Jenkins, of the Header- <lb/>
warehouse, have all been put- <lb/>
ting some good tobacco talk with the <lb/>
farmer- the past week. <lb/>
Rev. A. D. Hunter returned from Gary <lb/>
last Friday. Since arriving and consult- <lb/>
a number of the members of the Ba- <lb/>
church the slot Men was that <lb/>
Ms resignation be withheld until the close <lb/>
of the year, and be will continue bis pas- <lb/>
here during that time, lie will <lb/>
preach to-night at the usual hour. <lb/>
Tobacco Board of Trade. <lb/>
The Greenville Tobacco of Trade <lb/>
wag organized mi Monday night with the <lb/>
following <lb/>
F. Evans. <lb/>
M. Hester. <lb/>
Sec. A. <lb/>
The following committees were <lb/>
pointed the ensuing <lb/>
W. T. <lb/>
and C. B. Blackley. <lb/>
T. Joyner, Ola Forbes <lb/>
and R. M. Hester. <lb/>
A. W. T. Man- <lb/>
gum and R. W. Royster. <lb/>
The Secretary will take pleasure in <lb/>
furnishing buyers and planters the <lb/>
rates governing the trade. <lb/>
The Tobacco Journal. <lb/>
The Eastern Journal <lb/>
Guide made its <lb/>
in Greenville last Thursday with Mr. <lb/>
Chas. A. managing editor. It is <lb/>
a sixteen page journal enclosed a <lb/>
handsome orange cover, the latter in- <lb/>
tended to represent the color of bright <lb/>
tobacco. The Journal is devoted to the <lb/>
advancement of the tobacco interest of <lb/>
Eastern Carolina. It believes <lb/>
there is a future for this section in <lb/>
the establishment of such enterprises as <lb/>
grow out of the cultivation and handling <lb/>
of tobacco. The Reflector extends its <lb/>
hand to the Journal. We are with yon <lb/>
in everything that tends to build up <lb/>
Eastern Carolina, especially where <lb/>
Greenville and Pitt county are to come in <lb/>
for a good share of the benefit. <lb/>
PARIS FOR <lb/>
A gentleman out what cheap <lb/>
honk- could be bad at the Reflector Book <lb/>
Store bought forty at one time last Fri- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Bear mind the fact that the Green- <lb/>
ville Amateurs will give an entertain- <lb/>
Elliott Hall to-morrow night. <lb/>
It will be enjoyable. <lb/>
On Aug. 11th, Cooper's Warehouse, <lb/>
Henderson, sold new priming- for R. <lb/>
R. Carr at 15.50, and <lb/>
and for F. T. Carr at 4.50 n, 10.50 <lb/>
15.75 and Cooper can make just <lb/>
as good sales for you. <lb/>
The Greenville Warehouse Company <lb/>
have erected a lot of stables for the free <lb/>
use of farmers selling tobacco at that <lb/>
warehouse. <lb/>
The flag pole stands on the coiner of <lb/>
the public square, towering its head <lb/>
feet in the air. The flag goes up <lb/>
Wednesday. <lb/>
The Reflector Book Store has the very <lb/>
thing the way of slate to suit <lb/>
every school boy or girl. Come and sec. <lb/>
Also a new line of tablets. <lb/>
The subscribers keep coining right <lb/>
along and getting on the Reflector <lb/>
roll, but there Is always at the <lb/>
for more. It is now going the <lb/>
first of for cents. <lb/>
Somebody has said, though they could <lb/>
give no reason for it, that lightning never <lb/>
strikes a sycamore tree, but Mr. W. R. <lb/>
Whichard tells us it struck one in his yard <lb/>
a few nights ago. <lb/>
The weather wise are up a-ready <lb/>
talking about our going to have a severe <lb/>
winter. The first thought that will pop <lb/>
into heads of folks in these hot times <lb/>
is care if <lb/>
It seems to be the rule now for the <lb/>
not to go through a week with <lb/>
less than twenty-five new subscribers. <lb/>
This is a good item for advertisers to <lb/>
make a note of. <lb/>
Dr. J. X. of town- <lb/>
ship, lost a tobacco barn last Thursday <lb/>
night. We heard two others were burned <lb/>
In the same township, last week, but did <lb/>
not learn names of the looser-. <lb/>
The trade that the tobacco industry <lb/>
brings to Greenville helps the business <lb/>
of every man in the town. And the last <lb/>
one of them ought to feel Interested in <lb/>
ma Wing this a tobacco market equal to <lb/>
any in the State. Do not stand back and <lb/>
expect to reap miles- you sow. <lb/>
Greenville township Republicans held <lb/>
a primary last Saturday to appoint <lb/>
gates to the county convention which <lb/>
meets next Saturday. The county con- <lb/>
is called to select delegates to a <lb/>
State convention which meets on the 7th. <lb/>
The Coast Line has completed its de- <lb/>
pots at and Whichard on the <lb/>
Washington of their road. At <lb/>
the latter place Mr, W. R. <lb/>
built a nice store and will open a stock of <lb/>
general merchandise there by the 1st <lb/>
October. <lb/>
The flag pole of the Cleveland and Can- <lb/>
club was put up Saturday morning <lb/>
during the day the Greenville Guard flag <lb/>
floated from the top of It. The regular <lb/>
dub flag will be raised next Wednesday, <lb/>
Sept. 7th, the day appointed for Pitt <lb/>
county's grand Democratic ratification. <lb/>
The Ladies Aid Society of the <lb/>
dist church will have a dinner to-morrow <lb/>
the store formerly occupied by Mr. J. <lb/>
M. Latham nest to grocery <lb/>
store where all the delicacies of the sea <lb/>
son be obtained at figure, <lb/>
Everybody invited and the ladles assure <lb/>
you plenty to eat. <lb/>
To-morrow Is the day, and the ware- <lb/>
houses and the Reflector both expect <lb/>
to come out with flying colors. The <lb/>
warehouses are hopeful of selling many <lb/>
piles of tobacco, and we are hopeful of <lb/>
adding many subscribers to our list. At <lb/>
any rate we are confident of <lb/>
happy bride-groom of the occasion. <lb/>
The Most Popular Physician. <lb/>
Yancey t Stronach. of Raleigh, have <lb/>
donated a phaeton to the Soldiers Home, <lb/>
the vehicle to be voted to the Most <lb/>
physician In Carolina <lb/>
Christmas. If Dr. C. J. <lb/>
does not get that phaeton the <lb/>
tor will have to acknowledge itself not <lb/>
a good prophet. <lb/>
Still Joined to His Idols. <lb/>
Rev. J. T. Phillips, one of the Third <lb/>
party nominees for the Legislature, was <lb/>
in town Friday and told the REFLECTOR <lb/>
that he had reconsidered and would not <lb/>
withdraw, lie was at onetime <lb/>
plating withdrawing but lie got a new <lb/>
inspiration from a caucus with the <lb/>
that day made up Ids mind <lb/>
to go through with them. <lb/>
The Club. <lb/>
At the. meeting of the Cleveland and <lb/>
Carr club last Thursday night Mr. G. B. <lb/>
King was elected President for the next <lb/>
month. A line speech was made by <lb/>
Cape. W. II. Kitchen, of Scotland <lb/>
and a vote of thanks was extended him. <lb/>
It was decided to hold the next meeting <lb/>
on Friday night of this week. <lb/>
fir Walter Raleigh's Hat. <lb/>
Will James made a trip through Con- <lb/>
township, one day last week, <lb/>
searching for Third lie said <lb/>
he could not find but one of them in the <lb/>
whole township. But while making the <lb/>
search he .-tumbled across <lb/>
may prove interesting, being decided- <lb/>
antiquated in its character. It is an <lb/>
old hat that was the property of and worn <lb/>
by Sir Walter Raleigh. Mr. James <lb/>
cured the hat, brought it to town with <lb/>
him and presented it to the Reflector. <lb/>
It shows age and looks as though it <lb/>
done good service its time. <lb/>
The Schools. <lb/>
Three of Greenville's schools opened <lb/>
Monday with a flue beginning. The Male <lb/>
Academy, in charge of Prof. <lb/>
bad the first day. The Male and Fe- <lb/>
male Institute, charge of Prof. <lb/>
opened with Mrs. <lb/>
ton's Female School had only though <lb/>
she would have had more but for some <lb/>
slight misunderstanding as to the open- <lb/>
The enrollment of each school has <lb/>
l increased since Monday, and there <lb/>
will be constant additions for several <lb/>
days to come. Prof. begin- <lb/>
at this session was just twice as <lb/>
large a year ago. <lb/>
Your Harmon. <lb/>
Dr. D. S. Harmon, the Russian, Op- <lb/>
and Inventor, has open- <lb/>
ed a permanent office in Wilmington. <lb/>
He has rooms and in the Allen <lb/>
building, elegantly fitted up, where he <lb/>
has a number of callers daily- In <lb/>
to the local work in Wilmington, <lb/>
persons from all over the State and from <lb/>
South Carolina who have trouble with <lb/>
their eyes, are going constantly to <lb/>
to consult him, have their eyes <lb/>
examined by his original method and <lb/>
lasses fitted. When Pr, Harmon was <lb/>
In Clinton several months since, <lb/>
be did a great deal of work for persons in <lb/>
Sampson and adjoining counties. They <lb/>
have all been greatly pleased with bis <lb/>
work. He deals squarely and honestly <lb/>
with even- one, so all who know have <lb/>
learned to trust him. He has had several <lb/>
orders from Sampson since locating in <lb/>
Wilmington. By his efficiency and fair <lb/>
treating he has beta a real benefactor to <lb/>
those who have eye troubles, at the <lb/>
same time he is adding to his reputation <lb/>
and Caucasian. <lb/>
Rather Mixed. <lb/>
Saturday night at John <lb/>
Dickens knocked George Cater down <lb/>
with ii chair. George fired at Dickens <lb/>
with a pistol, but Dickens dodged behind <lb/>
Jack who was struck in the hip <lb/>
with the ball. The wound is not con- <lb/>
dangerous. The constable arrest- <lb/>
ed George, tied his hands together and <lb/>
tied the rope to himself to goto Falkland <lb/>
for trial. On the way the officer, who <lb/>
was a state of fell <lb/>
out of the buggy. George of course fall- <lb/>
out too. George untied, the rope <lb/>
with his teeth that bound to the <lb/>
officer, drove the to Falkland and <lb/>
back after the sleeping sentinel of <lb/>
justice. George stood his trial Sunday <lb/>
like a man. gave a straw bond and late <lb/>
Sunday afternoon was seen near Farm- <lb/>
ville giving leg ball for Greene county. <lb/>
Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy Will Cure <lb/>
Rheumatism and Dyspepsia. <lb/>
Como, Hertford Co. X. C, <lb/>
Joe Madam <lb/>
After having been a great from <lb/>
Rheumatism and Dyspepsia, and finally <lb/>
Erysipelas, and getting <lb/>
relief from other treatment, I was entirely <lb/>
relieved of these troubles in <lb/>
short time by the use of your <lb/>
Remedy, and heartily recommend ft to <lb/>
all who are similarly afflicted. I know <lb/>
of other instances in which it has been <lb/>
most effective and satisfactory. <lb/>
Yours <lb/>
MRS. B. S. <lb/>
Piper Picked pick- <lb/>
led a line of alliterative <lb/>
nonsense, that children used to sty. <lb/>
Nowadays they can practice on the Per- <lb/>
Painless, Powerful Properties <lb/>
Pierces Pleasant Purgative Pellets. It <lb/>
will impress a which will lie useful <lb/>
to know. These cure sick head- <lb/>
ache, billions attacks, indigestion, <lb/>
and all stomach, liver and bowel <lb/>
troubles. They are tiny, sugar-coated <lb/>
pills, easy to take, and, as a laxative, one <lb/>
is sufficient for a dose. more groans <lb/>
gripes from the old drastic remedies <lb/>
Purgative Pellets are as pain, <lb/>
less as they are perfect in their effects- <lb/>
MUSIC SCHOOL. <lb/>
MRS. ANDREW would be <lb/>
glad to have a class in Instrumental <lb/>
Music at her home in the J. J. Perkins <lb/>
residence. Session begins September <lb/>
5th. Terms on application. <lb/>
Dissolution Notice. <lb/>
The partnership heretofore existing <lb/>
between W. B. Brown and S. T. Hooker, <lb/>
trading as Brown ft Hooker, is hereby <lb/>
dissolved by mutual consent. All who <lb/>
are indebted lo the old firm will please <lb/>
with S. T. Hooker. <lb/>
XV. B. BROWN, <lb/>
S. T. <lb/>
July 27th, 1892. <lb/>
I will till conduct the business t the <lb/>
old stand and solicit the liberal patron- <lb/>
age bestowed upon the old firm. By <lb/>
consent will continue under the old style <lb/>
of Brown Hooker. Mr. Brown will <lb/>
continue as <lb/>
T. HOOKER. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
State Carolina, the <lb/>
County. Court. <lb/>
Eliza Stocks, J. T. and wife Min- <lb/>
Allen, T. B. Allen and wife Mollie, <lb/>
Pattie Stocks, Cora stocks, William <lb/>
Stocks, Annie Stocks, Chas. Stocks, <lb/>
Stocks and Stocks, the <lb/>
last six minors by their friend J. T. <lb/>
Allen. <lb/>
Against <lb/>
Home Benefit Association, defendants. <lb/>
The defendant above named Is hereby <lb/>
notified to be and appear before the <lb/>
Judge of our Superior Court, at a court <lb/>
to be held for the county of Pitt, at the <lb/>
Court House In Greenville, on the 2nd <lb/>
Monday after the 1st Monday of <lb/>
it being the 19th day of September, <lb/>
1892, and answer the complaint which <lb/>
will be deposited in the office of the <lb/>
Clerk of the Superior Court of said <lb/>
within the three days of said <lb/>
term, and let said defendant take notice <lb/>
that If they fail to answer the said com- <lb/>
plaint within the time required by law <lb/>
the plaintiff's will apply to the court for <lb/>
the relief demanded in the complaint. <lb/>
Given under ray hand and seal of said <lb/>
court, this day of August, 1892. <lb/>
K. A. <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court. <lb/>
flea <lb/>
ear <lb/>
Everybody Come. <lb/>
Next Wednesday will be a <lb/>
in Greenville. The Democratic <lb/>
will be hoisted and to the <lb/>
breeze from a poll, feet high, that has <lb/>
been raised In front of the Court House <lb/>
Some fine political speaking will be Marti. <lb/>
Two distinguished a the kite <lb/>
will be present discuss the living <lb/>
political Issues the campaign. Every, <lb/>
body is invited to one and <lb/>
all and help make it a glorious day for <lb/>
Cleveland, Carr sad Democracy. <lb/>
A Hogshead Story. <lb/>
I wish by this means to tell the people <lb/>
that have prepared and am still <lb/>
paring a large lot of material for <lb/>
co Hogsheads. And to make it as con- <lb/>
as possible for my customers I <lb/>
have decided to run two wagons on the <lb/>
road to deliver them at most convenient <lb/>
places- And I further promise that I <lb/>
will use best efforts to put up such <lb/>
size and quality of Hogsheads as the de- <lb/>
may want. And think I can com- <lb/>
in pride with any. <lb/>
I will also pay special attention to <lb/>
making and Brackets for trim- <lb/>
ming any house you may build. <lb/>
Please see me placing your or- <lb/>
or address me at N. C. <lb/>
fully, <lb/>
-A. G. COX. <lb/>
O- <lb/>
NEW GOODS <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
HAS JUST RETURNED FRO V ff NORTHERN MARKETS. SO A <lb/>
PEEP AT HIS STORE, IT IS OVER NEW <lb/>
GOODS A COMPLETE LINE OF <lb/>
Dry Goods, Boots, Shoos, Notions, <lb/>
Furnishing Goods, <lb/>
LISTEN <lb/>
and other novelties numerous to mention. <lb/>
Pine All-Wool Suits 88.00 <lb/>
Men's All-Wool Pauls worth 11.00. <lb/>
Men's Dress cents worth <lb/>
Dress Shoes 7- cents worth <lb/>
bargains in <lb/>
hard licks and long stride <lb/>
all departments. <lb/>
to obtain it. <lb/>
We your trade and are <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
Opposite Old Brick Store. <lb/>
C. T. MUN FOR D, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
BANNER WAREHOUSE <lb/>
OXFORD, O- <lb/>
Bullock Mitchell, <lb/>
Owners and Proprietors. <lb/>
Big Prices High Averages <lb/>
We at the same old stand, where are better prepared than <lb/>
ever before to hand; to advantage the line bright from <lb/>
have very lam corps of buyers who arc anxious for New Tobacco <lb/>
and are willing to nay good prices for it. stands well on our <lb/>
market and is eagerly sought alter both by our order and speculators. We are <lb/>
very glad that we can say to the of and adjoining counties <lb/>
that tobacco has latter ibis year we have known it in <lb/>
awl that we look for good prices during the season. Hogsheads can be <lb/>
had FREE OF CHARGE by planters to us, by applying to S. M. <lb/>
Schultz Co. Greenville, N. C, or to Autos G. Cox. X. C. <lb/>
that we bid lively on every pile put upon our and buy largely of grades <lb/>
that we sell, and will see to it that you shall have highest market price for event <lb/>
pound sold with us. Recollect that it cost you nothing to collect our checks as they <lb/>
are payable in York Exchange without cost to holder. Don't forget to us <lb/>
with a good shipment will convince you that we an from way- <lb/>
that we every time on big prices you know they talk. <lb/>
Thanking our friends for the very patronage bestowed upon us in the past <lb/>
and pledging them our very to please them in the future, we are with <lb/>
best Wishes, Very truly your friends, <lb/>
BULLOCK ft MITCHELL, <lb/>
Oxford, x. <lb/>
New Advertisements. <lb/>
tie people some <lb/>
news in his advertisement <lb/>
talk. <lb/>
Mrs. Andrew Joyner announces tho <lb/>
opening of a music school in Greenville. <lb/>
Mrs. Joyner took the first music medal of <lb/>
her class at the celebrated Wesleyan In- <lb/>
at is a brilliant per <lb/>
former on the piano and thoroughly <lb/>
the science. <lb/>
to-days the <lb/>
advertisement of the Banner Warehouse, <lb/>
Oxford, Bullock Mitchell, proprietors. <lb/>
This warehouse is known to the planters <lb/>
of Pitt county, and it is known that every <lb/>
seller there gets fair and square dealing. <lb/>
They want the bright tobacco of this sec- <lb/>
and are In position to guarantee the <lb/>
very best prices for It. Mr. Crews, <lb/>
r remain In <lb/>
ft week <lb/>
will take pleasure in giving shipper <lb/>
any Information wanted. <lb/>
The Ladies Aid Society of the Baptist <lb/>
Church will have a dinner next <lb/>
day, Sept 7th. Price of dinner M <lb/>
There is a great deal of satisfaction in leading <lb/>
we are still in that position. Rivals at- <lb/>
tempt to follow our methods but find that we <lb/>
lead them a merry chase and they finally give <lb/>
it up or come to grief. <lb/>
Elegance and durability, coupled with low <lb/>
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods <lb/>
and Notions in the lead. <lb/>
BROWN BROTHERS. <lb/>
Terms Easy, j <lb/>
BROS. OFFER FOR SALE <lb/>
I,. farm, Rea <lb/>
Dam township, lira lands <lb/>
of T. Tyson and J. II. b. A Hue <lb/>
farm of about build- <lb/>
adapted to cotton lo- <lb/>
A line Burl <lb/>
A farm near lying <lb/>
mediately on the railroad, own- <lb/>
ed by Caleb B. Tripp, which <lb/>
are cleared- Good neighbor- <lb/>
hood, and a within <lb/>
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin <lb/>
log farms. <lb/>
A line farm of three miles <lb/>
from and ti lies from <lb/>
ville. with substantial dwelling <lb/>
and out known as the I . <lb/>
home place, line col ton <lb/>
good clay accessible to marl. <lb/>
A smaller farm adjoining the above <lb/>
known as the Jones place, <lb/>
dwelling, barn tenant laud <lb/>
good. <lb/>
I. A farm of acres in town- <lb/>
ship, about miles from <lb/>
part the tract. <lb/>
C. Part of the Joyner farm, <lb/>
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro, <lb/>
in an Improving section <lb/>
and can be made B valuable farm. <lb/>
A small farm of Mores, <lb/>
about miles from mi In- <lb/>
Will Swamp, with etc., for- <lb/>
owned by ox. <lb/>
K. <lb/>
A set of about acres near <lb/>
station, with <lb/>
suited for lies. <lb/>
A of about SUD acres in <lb/>
township, near the Washington <lb/>
pine limber. <lb/>
A tract of acre, near <lb/>
Mills, pine limber, <lb/>
OLD MAN GUSS <lb/>
your Tobacco at the <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
WAREHOUSE. <lb/>
Tie season opens with a big break en <lb/>
Thursday, September <lb/>
Bring on your and i guarantor <lb/>
that you Hill get M prices <lb/>
for It as e n be bad any- <lb/>
where. <lb/>
Apply to <lb/>
m. II, <lb/>
X. c. <lb/>
I Will have experienced help in conduct- <lb/>
the Greenville Warehouse and <lb/>
every patron will receive prompt <lb/>
attention. Don't forget to <lb/>
bring ms your Tobacco. <lb/>
G. F. EVANS, <lb/>
PROPRIETOR. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
Monday, the day of September, <lb/>
A. D. I w sell the Court House <lb/>
door in the town of to the <lb/>
highest bidder for cash the following <lb/>
tract of land county, situated In <lb/>
town of known in <lb/>
town as lots No. and lie. <lb/>
I lot- set apart to Ann K. Bernard <lb/>
In the of the lands of William <lb/>
Si., veil ex in ray <lb/>
hands for collection against Ann K. Ber- <lb/>
and which have been levied on said <lb/>
land as the property r said Ann B. Ber- <lb/>
A. K. Sheriff. <lb/>
Bring a load of your best tobacco and <lb/>
we will show everybody that we <lb/>
have the best tobacco in the <lb/>
BELT. <lb/>
j A large number of buyers have de- <lb/>
their intentions of <lb/>
------coming to------ <lb/>
i GREENVILLE. <lb/>
Our new Warehouse just been <lb/>
completed and is one of the best <lb/>
warehouses in the State. <lb/>
We have free Stables for your <lb/>
teams. <lb/>
We charge you nothing for <lb/>
and storage. <lb/>
We have an experienced force to <lb/>
I handle your and will see that <lb/>
get lull value for every pound. <lb/>
CD <lb/>
Presents in household and kitchen <lb/>
furniture and provisions <lb/>
Given Away <lb/>
ion our opening day to any worthy <lb/>
c, white couple that will be married pub- <lb/>
O in our house on September 1st. <lb/>
j The list of present and donors <lb/>
j below. <lb/>
Remember the day and date and <lb/>
come all to see the Knot Tied. <lb/>
Eastern Warehouse, <lb/>
L. Joyner and Owners A Props. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C.<lb/>
-o- <lb/>
Dis solution. <lb/>
The firm of and Edmonds is <lb/>
hereby dissolved mutual consent. <lb/>
Those indebted the will pay the <lb/>
same Herbert <lb/>
Au. <lb/>
It gives me pleasure to to <lb/>
our customers that I will continue the <lb/>
business the old stand. Every com- <lb/>
fort and convenience will be found in <lb/>
my shop. First-class shave and hair <lb/>
can be had at all times. Thanking the <lb/>
public for past I solicit a con- <lb/>
of the same. <lb/>
Edmonds. <lb/>
New Barber Shop. <lb/>
I take this to return <lb/>
to my many customers who have <lb/>
me their liberal support in the past. <lb/>
have opened a new shop In old Club. <lb/>
House and would solicit a <lb/>
continuation of my former patronage; <lb/>
I will assure all that they shall receive <lb/>
every attention besides getting the best <lb/>
have and hair out In town. All I ask Is <lb/>
trial. Satisfaction guaranteed. AU <lb/>
of the latest Improvements In the <lb/>
rial art will be in use in my shop. <lb/>
Have on band a full line of Cooking Stoves, Kitchenware, Tin- <lb/>
ware, Lamp Goods, Paints, Oils, Glass and <lb/>
We make our own stovepipe and pans of cold rolled steel which <lb/>
is far the most durable. <lb/>
We don't try to keep cl goods in town, if yon <lb/>
to get the most value for money give us a call. <lb/>
test White Oil cents per gallon. <lb/>
Tin Roofing and Guttering less the Tariff. <lb/>
PENDER CO., <lb/>
o. <lb/>
j Joyner Hod Room Sot. C. W. <lb/>
j Chamber Set. s. K. Handsome Hanging lamp. D. D. <lb/>
I Basket, Complete Bet Kitchen Furniture. M. K. <lb/>
Dr. Pair Window Shades. A. J. Berg, <lb/>
Smyrna Bug. C T. Oil Painting. Mrs. Fannie Joy- <lb/>
Laos Pillow alums. W. J. Biggs, pr Towels. <lb/>
Set S. M. Schultz, Mirror. R- <lb/>
Hyman, Doc Bride and D. J. <lb/>
years subscription to Reflector. Jack Smith, i Spool <lb/>
Rosa Forbes, Coffee Pot. J. J. Starker, <lb/>
Zeno Moore, Sifter. L. Lamp. <lb/>
Brawn Bros, yards Bleached Domestic. W. II. White, <lb/>
Bucket J. I., Dipper. T. f. doz <lb/>
Ii. K. Harris, Bale W. B. Wilson. pounds <lb/>
S die Flour, . I,. Brown, pounds Sugar. J. <lb/>
C. Sun. pounds Roasted Coffee. H. C. Coffee. <lb/>
W, II. Cox, pounds Flour. A. Andrews, id pounds Flour. <lb/>
Smith. pounds often. D. W. pounds Flour, <lb/>
Long, pound French Candy. Tyson Check <lb/>
j S. K. lbs. cake. digs. A. Marriage License. <lb/>
i Ceremony to take place at o'clock P. M. Ceremony will be <lb/>
performed by any minister the couple may choose. The only re- <lb/>
for the couple is to make known their intentions to <lb/>
i Mr. Alex. one week September 1st, who <lb/>
will keep the matter profound secret until that day. Call early <lb/>
and avoid the i <lb/>
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following goo <lb/>
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed lobe First-class an <lb/>
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS. BOOTS and SHOES, LA <lb/>
CHILDREN'S FURNITURE HOUSE <lb/>
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH BLINDS. CROCKERY and QUEENS <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW LEATHER of <lb/>
kinds, Gin and Hay, Rock Link, and <lb/>
Hair, Harness, Bridles and -addles <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent for Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale- <lb/>
Jobbers price, cents per dozen, less U per cent for Cash. Bread Prep- <lb/>
ration and Hall's Star Lye jobbers Prices. Lead and pure Lin- <lb/>
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a call and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT. <lb/>
--------AND BUYER OF-------- <lb/>
Country Produce <lb/>
Bring all of your Chickens, Eggs, <lb/>
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you <lb/>
highest market price for them and pay in spot <lb/>
cash. <lb/>
If you have anything to ship I will attend to it for yon on a small commission, <lb/>
Call see me. <lb/>
. JNO. S.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017562_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
YO<lb/>
IS <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
AIDS NATURE <lb/>
IN NATURES OWN WAY. <lb/>
IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO INVESTIGATE. <lb/>
A MAILED <lb/>
ATLANTIC CO. <lb/>
1405 N York Av. Washington. C. <lb/>
GOD YOU <lb/>
e la tins <lb/>
And I It, <lb/>
-i. ; . <lb/>
Ta . i I <lb/>
n from tho heart, <lb/>
i m-n yon, <lb/>
mill clouds depart <lb/>
That common phrase Hod you <lb/>
Life often Is n <lb/>
here thorns and briers beset <lb/>
Ant while you stance <lb/>
Ire Min-r and fret yon. <lb/>
It dries the tear <lb/>
When ail tin M lib yen, <lb/>
H from n yon bear <lb/>
The phrase. you <lb/>
An often the heart would speak<lb/>
other are nil too weak <lb/>
Its dot P to reader. <lb/>
Or a seeks <lb/>
w it would address yen. <lb/>
Then in the ;. <lb/>
TIm <lb/>
Item. <lb/>
was ab use- to me. as <lb/>
sometimes to give the his down I see the white on the <lb/>
coup tie grace, and in tho mint it of tho dim gleaming in <lb/>
was employed to cut the throat of a ; a ray of light that streams through <lb/>
stag which bad been brought down foliage, and I think involuntarily <lb/>
by a bolt from a j of the tradition associated with tho <lb/>
Arthur Macgregor turned Use j knife in tho Macgregor family. <lb/>
.,. ml-r in hands wish I could hear what they are <lb/>
I say to myself. should <lb/>
like to be an eavesdropper, but I <lb/>
am afraid of Arthur when hi gets <lb/>
into one of those terrible of <lb/>
over in his hands affectionately, <lb/>
i as ho described its uses, and then re- <lb/>
turned it to its nest in his stocking. <lb/>
where tho butt on tho black <lb/>
handle looked like the evil eye of a <lb/>
; Cyclopean imp in ambush. <lb/>
An hour later Arthur and I <lb/>
the where the ball was in <lb/>
progress. saw him look swiftly <lb/>
around, then he marched to the <lb/>
Upper end of tho largo room, whore <lb/>
the stag. a mass of flags and ever- <lb/>
greens, was occupied by <lb/>
In America. <lb/>
Till beyond question the moat sue- f was not confined to <lb/>
earful cough bare trills of <lb/>
Mid. H few doses cure, the i T ., , , ., . <lb/>
I north worship tho sun and <lb/>
How Lost How Regained I <lb/>
THE <lb/>
lei the girl go, Arthur. I <lb/>
would not worry myself about her <lb/>
I were you. If die the Other <lb/>
fellow yon can r make her <lb/>
transfer her affection by running <lb/>
his. In his jealous frenzy he i <lb/>
even kill that <lb/>
I can see the largo fan of Miss <lb/>
Jamison languidly waving to and fro <lb/>
as she apparently listens to Ar- <lb/>
is saying. There is no doubt <lb/>
that be is desperately in earnest. His <lb/>
show that. <lb/>
Around ha hall were the stalls in I gentle movement of the <lb/>
which fancy had been offered ; chafe If I could only see <lb/>
for sale the past two weeks, faces I do not know whether <lb/>
I arc quarreling or not. Now ins <lb/>
the stalls themselves converted forward and takes bar hand. <lb/>
into arbors, where, amid cool looking ; snatches it away. The fan stops <lb/>
and artistically disposed flow- , waving. I we him bring his fiat down <lb/>
ere, the most delightful j on his knee, and <lb/>
worst eases of Croup and Bron- <lb/>
while its won success in the <lb/>
cure of U without a <lb/>
in the history of Since its <lb/>
discovery it has been sold on a <lb/>
a test which no other medicine <lb/>
can stand. If yon have a cough earn- <lb/>
ask yon to try it. Price <lb/>
and If your lungs are fore, chest, or <lb/>
back bone, use Shiloh's Plaster. <lb/>
at WOOTEN'S STORE. <lb/>
A Cane of Charmed. <lb/>
A N w Yorker tailing a Sunday <lb/>
stroll tho city limits was <lb/>
at . conduct of of <lb/>
that fluttered in the air a <lb/>
foot or so above a bare rock in the <lb/>
midst of en empty posture. Now <lb/>
end then a bird would light on the <lb/>
rock, but most of the time tho gray- <lb/>
brown uneasily just <lb/>
could enjoyed by the tired <lb/>
Into one of these Arthur made <lb/>
a flash fly to the <lb/>
KM <lb/>
s I A T, 1.1 <lb/>
after her. Besides, such on j glowering around the <lb/>
your part would be unmanly and room and looking. I knew, for Miss <lb/>
A only <lb/>
and <lb/>
of <lb/>
all <lb/>
K N of SOU Cloth<lb/>
by Descriptive <lb/>
utterly in a i <lb/>
going to run after her I <lb/>
simply state I <lb/>
at night, and you <lb/>
the P <lb/>
testimonial <lb/>
of the Press <lb/>
of cured. <lb/>
in person or <lb/>
menu <lb/>
m iv II- I u or <lb/>
B X, <lb/>
many <lb/>
Mn . , <lb/>
The Science of Idle, or I <lb/>
than cold. H <lb/>
i man, and <lb/>
I he running after <lb/>
I Helen I cannot help it if <lb/>
NOW. <lb/>
Expert <lb/>
The Science or i . <lb/>
more than cold, <lb/>
every and m <lb/>
he CaW. <lb/>
She to go. At these public <lb/>
charity anybody of average re- <lb/>
with the ability to pay <lb/>
five dollars for <lb/>
come. I and I have no <lb/>
doubt that that valuable institution, <lb/>
the Asylum for <lb/>
or whatever is, wall be <lb/>
to tho extent of five dollars <lb/>
from the pocketbook of Jamison <lb/>
for his daughter's <lb/>
Arthur. I am <lb/>
not going to make a fool of yourself. <lb/>
From what yon say, I <lb/>
does v. it look upon you <lb/>
with favor as we thought. Is <lb/>
Sam Bangs going to take her to the <lb/>
ball <lb/>
should I <lb/>
responded with <lb/>
and I not say any move. <lb/>
Arthur Macgregor was <lb/>
and his disposition so veil <lb/>
for <lb/>
temper, especially when <lb/>
knew I had given ample <lb/>
provocation. My regard for him <lb/>
was fully know, but he <lb/>
often used to say, when B Baking f <lb/>
me, that Ned <lb/>
things a cold blooded way <lb/>
that would strain tho <lb/>
strongest ties friendship. Per- <lb/>
haps Arthur was right, but I nip <lb/>
sure <lb/>
shall go in Arthur <lb/>
j announced after n pause, during <lb/>
j which we had b smoked so <lb/>
; that my tittle den looked more <lb/>
i like the private room of a Gorman <lb/>
student than the b i race of a <lb/>
respectable rising young lawyer. <lb/>
As a Highlander, I suppose, Ar- <lb/>
I, waving my hand to die- <lb/>
course, i Lave the dross, <lb/>
I feel more h ma i-i a and <lb/>
kilt than anything else, except an <lb/>
A Family Affair <lb/>
Health for the Baby, <lb/>
Pleasure for the Parents, <lb/>
New Life for the Old Folks. <lb/>
Root <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
TEMPERANCE DRINK <lb/>
is a family requisite <lb/>
of tho home. A cent <lb/>
linkup makes gAllon of <lb/>
a delirious, <lb/>
Don't ho If a dealer, for <lb/>
Hie sake of you <lb/>
Scientific American<lb/>
etc. <lb/>
to <lb/>
Ml <lb/>
i is<lb/>
fat <lb/>
s co, <lb/>
by <lb/>
of In th <lb/>
world. <lb/>
mat, It. <lb/>
Tear; i i-O- <lb/>
York. <lb/>
WILMINGTON WELDON <lb/>
and Schedule <lb/>
TRAINS GOING SOUTH. <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
Apr. 19th, daily Fast Hail, daily <lb/>
dally ex Son <lb/>
pm <lb/>
Ar am -17 <lb/>
u coat and w <lb/>
The ball, to <lb/>
L am <lb/>
Ar pm S <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
am <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
TRAINS GOING <lb/>
ex bun.<lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
u was to ring to a <lb/>
close the fair <lb/>
charity, to be the <lb/>
social event of the <lb/>
not a fancy dress gather- <lb/>
it . i It . the i of those <lb/>
attending w appeared in <lb/>
I ;. evening dress. Jinny <lb/>
of the gentlemen had signified <lb/>
intention of going in fancy <lb/>
that <lb/>
most of the ladies appear only <lb/>
in the of <lb/>
moth <lb/>
Macgregor. <lb/>
American, prided his <lb/>
blue blooded Scottish descent. Tito <lb/>
of the olden time had <lb/>
been terrible fellows, who took a <lb/>
prominent part <lb/>
I with, the and of <lb/>
j that ilk, and who, claymore <lb/>
and led their neighbors a sad <lb/>
life of it when they took it into their<lb/>
A. Mount S to real <lb/>
IS . to their <lb/>
; way, and then he sat, in hilt of the I see the <lb/>
j white eye glistening in his <lb/>
band as he raises the weapon <lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Daily except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on I Neck Branch <lb/>
leaves 4.22 P Scot <lb/>
land Neck at 6.15 P. M. Greenville 6.63 <lb/>
M., Kinston p. m. <lb/>
leaves a. m., Greenville <lb/>
a. m. Halifax a. m. <lb/>
11.25 a. m. daily except Sun- <lb/>
Trains on Washington leave <lb/>
Washington 7.00 a. m. arrives A. R. <lb/>
Junction a. in., leaves A. <lb/>
ft R. n. Bl., arrives <lb/>
8.45 p. m. Daily except <lb/>
Connects with trains on Albemarle lid <lb/>
Raleigh R. R. and Scotland Neck <lb/>
Branch. <lb/>
Local freight train leaves Weldon <lb/>
Monday, and Friday at <lb/>
clan. <lb/>
do yea think of <lb/>
asked as ho showed <lb/>
himself to an before we d for <lb/>
the baD on the following evening. <lb/>
yon think I hare passed <lb/>
muster if I had lived the <lb/>
century, when tho <lb/>
ors were a power the bonny hind <lb/>
of <lb/>
I was obliged to admit that he did <lb/>
look well. A tall, handsome fellow, <lb/>
with a massive, frame, of <lb/>
which his at the knee. <lb/>
were somehow tho most conspicuous <lb/>
portion, tho dress of a <lb/>
him y. <lb/>
m., arriving Scotland Neck the tip of the long, raven black <lb/>
feather in bonnet to ; <lb/>
Ins shoes he looked every <lb/>
inch a Scotch warrior. <lb/>
is that in your stocking, <lb/>
I asked. <lb/>
Ho stooped and ht. v.-forth a <lb/>
m. 5.30 p. m., <lb/>
7.40 p. in. h <lb/>
Tuesday. aid Saturday <lb/>
7.20 a. m., arriving Greenville <lb/>
a. m., p. m., <lb/>
p. <lb/>
Tram leaves N G, via <lb/>
ft R. R. daily except Sun- i row <lb/>
day, F ii. P M, arrive ,,,.,. r <lb/>
Williamston. N C, IS P ii, P M. <lb/>
Plymouth r- 5.22 p. there, <lb/>
Returning leaves Plymouth daily i as if tho rust of blood from a <lb/>
a. in. a. in- ; not <lb/>
N G, 7.30 a m, am <lb/>
arrive Tarboro, N C . 11.20. <lb/>
Trains on Division. <lb/>
removed, was still bright and gleam- <lb/>
As flourished it in the <lb/>
and Branch leave <lb/>
a m. arrive Rowland p in. <lb/>
Returning leave Rowland p m, <lb/>
arrive Fayetteville p in. Daily ex- <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb/>
daily except Sunday, G A M <lb/>
arrive N C, A M. <lb/>
laves Smithfield, C AM <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro. NO A M. <lb/>
Train <lb/>
at P M.-arrive Nashville <lb/>
P Hope ft P M. Returning <lb/>
Hope A M, Nashville <lb/>
8.35 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
except <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leave Warsaw <lb/>
gaslight it looked a murderous <lb/>
on, would do terrible ex- <lb/>
in the hand of a desperate <lb/>
man. <lb/>
this is one of the most <lb/>
heirlooms of my family. This <lb/>
knife hundreds of old. It <lb/>
eras to n Macgregor by Dong- <lb/>
I las himself, and there i- a tradition <lb/>
that v me of name i bet rayed <lb/>
in love he can regain tho affections <lb/>
of the maiden of his heart if he can <lb/>
manage to draw from <lb/>
bosom with this <lb/>
a villainous am <lb/>
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, at afraid that in this prosaic ago such a <lb/>
proceeding would result in a very <lb/>
ton at A M, and P M. charge of felonious <lb/>
Warsaw with Nos. i ,, .-., of <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson ft <lb/>
Branch Is No. Northbound Is <lb/>
Sui-day. <lb/>
Trains No. South and North will <lb/>
stop only at Rocky Wilson, <lb/>
Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. makes connection a <lb/>
Weldon all points North dally. Al <lb/>
rail via Richmond, and daily except <lb/>
day via Bay at Rocky Mount <lb/>
daily except Sunday with Norfolk ft <lb/>
railroad for Norfolk and all <lb/>
points via Norfolk. <lb/>
DIVINE. <lb/>
General <lb/>
J. R. Transportation <lb/>
T. <lb/>
and I ; <lb/>
reunion of two loving re- <lb/>
marked. heathenish <lb/>
launched <lb/>
that mission and no <lb/>
A weapon of this kind is <lb/>
part of every warrior's <lb/>
equipment. It is called the <lb/>
black knife. When the owner was <lb/>
hard pressed in combat, and <lb/>
no longer use his sword, he drew his <lb/>
from hie stocking and <lb/>
tried to tum the tide of battle by <lb/>
plunging the blade into his <lb/>
Helen Jamison. <lb/>
I had fallen with a group cf ac- <lb/>
and was talking the <lb/>
usual conventionalities about the <lb/>
tasty decoration of the hall, the pros- <lb/>
of a large attendance, the <lb/>
merits of the charity, the <lb/>
results of the fair and so on. Then <lb/>
a certain lady sailed through <lb/>
the doorway with her brother, and <lb/>
as I had tho best of feeling toward <lb/>
this same brother I took his sister <lb/>
off his hands and joined in the grand <lb/>
just then forming. As <lb/>
paraded slowly around tho great <lb/>
hall to tho strains of a selection <lb/>
from I looked at every <lb/>
couple as they passed us in the mazes <lb/>
of the march to see if Helen Jamison <lb/>
were there. <lb/>
At last Yes, there she is, and <lb/>
leaning on tho arm of Stun Bangs. <lb/>
But was Not in the <lb/>
arbor near the stage, where I had <lb/>
last seen him Not among tho <lb/>
Not standing in that group <lb/>
of young men near the <lb/>
of them in evening <lb/>
the kaleidoscopic effect of the march, <lb/>
wherein the quaint costumes of the <lb/>
gentlemen and the rich party dresses <lb/>
of the ladies seemed in every in- <lb/>
so well matched Not in the <lb/>
gallery, where many who did not <lb/>
care to dance bad betaken them- <lb/>
selves to enjoy a full view of the <lb/>
proceedings below Where was he <lb/>
you see muttered a <lb/>
hoarse voice in my ear, as I was <lb/>
handing my head to speak to the <lb/>
lady arm through tho music. <lb/>
I turned with a start. <lb/>
There at my elbow, his mighty <lb/>
frame trembling with passion as he <lb/>
kept step in the march, his face <lb/>
flushed, and his strong, white teeth <lb/>
savagely biting at his blond mus- <lb/>
was Arthur Macgregor. <lb/>
you see he repeated. <lb/>
As he spoke the black feather in <lb/>
his vibrated in sympathy <lb/>
with tho tremor of hate that went <lb/>
through him like electric current. <lb/>
and I saw tho nervous fingers steal <lb/>
down toward the black hilt of tho <lb/>
which, to my imagination, <lb/>
seemed to actually wink lawless en- <lb/>
with its white eye. <lb/>
be a fool, was my <lb/>
response, but he was gone. <lb/>
As Helen Jamison passed and re- <lb/>
passed me in the march I was obliged <lb/>
to admit that there was some excuse <lb/>
for Arthur mad love for <lb/>
her. A decided brunette, with the <lb/>
I oft brown eyes that will play the <lb/>
Hence with an impressionable young <lb/>
heart when the <lb/>
young man has Gaelic <lb/>
Veins --cheeks in which the rich color <lb/>
comes and goes with every passing <lb/>
emotion, a tall, stately figure, car- <lb/>
with the easy grace born of per- <lb/>
health and tho lifelong drill of <lb/>
good la-ceding, and to crown all. a <lb/>
Wealth of blue black hair <lb/>
above white shoulders in the classic <lb/>
coil so in Keeping with her <lb/>
statuesque beauty. <lb/>
What if brown eyes could flash <lb/>
file while the color <lb/>
the fair cheeks Just now <lb/>
aha was smiling at some remark of <lb/>
her <lb/>
not a shadow upon her mind. <lb/>
To be sure I thought I could sec <lb/>
signs of preoccupation in her man- <lb/>
as if conversation <lb/>
were not the only thing she desired <lb/>
in this life. But then I had had pain- <lb/>
experience of Mr. <lb/>
as a bore, and I did not won- <lb/>
at Helen Jamison's attention <lb/>
wandering from his stream <lb/>
of small talk. <lb/>
if this quarrel between <lb/>
Arthur and Miss Jamison is as <lb/>
as he seems to <lb/>
as, after delivering my part- <lb/>
into tho care of her brother, I <lb/>
strolled up into the gallery and sat <lb/>
by myself to gather strength for a <lb/>
waltz for which I had booked myself <lb/>
with a notoriously vigorous dancer. <lb/>
am sure she does not care anything <lb/>
for Bangs. I guess it is only a <lb/>
quarrel, and that and <lb/>
Arthur will nil right in tho <lb/>
of a few <lb/>
As I this philosophical <lb/>
I glanced carelessly the <lb/>
of the stage. Tho musicians <lb/>
were sitting quietly in their bower <lb/>
Of foliage, turning over the of <lb/>
their music and start- <lb/>
ling the company with fugitive toots <lb/>
Of a few liars where they did not feel <lb/>
quite wire of a passage, or giving a <lb/>
violinist an in a brotherly de- <lb/>
sire that his instrument should lie in <lb/>
tune. <lb/>
But what is this Yes, surely <lb/>
Helen Jamison in the little <lb/>
arbor near the stage, where Arthur <lb/>
Macgregor took up his position on <lb/>
our first entrance Half hidden by <lb/>
the drooping fronds of tho palms, <lb/>
she is looking around the hall, <lb/>
for Perhaps for <lb/>
Sam Bangs, who, in his as a <lb/>
Revolutionary soldier, is wandering <lb/>
feebly the floor, evidently wish- <lb/>
that he had not come in cos- <lb/>
wherein the trousers are cut off <lb/>
at the <lb/>
No Tins is the person she wanted <lb/>
to see. I can tell that by her <lb/>
manner, as Arthur Macgregor <lb/>
stalks up to the arbor, and after <lb/>
Standing at the entrance for a few <lb/>
seconds, doffs his blue bonnet and <lb/>
enters. <lb/>
From where am sitting I can see <lb/>
into tho arbor, though the two <lb/>
pants aw conceded from nearly <lb/>
in the hall by the palms <lb/>
over the head of tho helpless girl, <lb/>
act then I suddenly regain control <lb/>
of my paralyzed I <lb/>
I rush wildly down the stairs, <lb/>
a dozen at a time, and fly along the <lb/>
hall the little arbor where a <lb/>
fearful tragedy is being enacted in <lb/>
the very midst of a festive gather- <lb/>
get a hasty glimpse of people <lb/>
staring at me in open mouthed <lb/>
prise, of young men bestowing on <lb/>
mo a supercilious grin, of <lb/>
couples moving hastily out of my <lb/>
path. I hear tho young men and the <lb/>
couples asking each other what is <lb/>
the matter with me But I take no <lb/>
heed I <lb/>
All I can see is the <lb/>
The terrible Made is still in his up- <lb/>
lifted hand, while the girl sits quite <lb/>
still, evidently too frightened to <lb/>
move. I hear her saying some- <lb/>
thing in low. broken accents. Then <lb/>
ho flourishes the knife to make the <lb/>
death stab deep and sure. <lb/>
I reach the arbor. Another sec- <lb/>
and my hand will clutch his <lb/>
arm. <lb/>
Too late I <lb/>
The glittering steel comes down <lb/>
like a flash of lightning <lb/>
into a fan. <lb/>
There is a burst cf silvery laughter <lb/>
from Miss Jamison as she takes the <lb/>
fan from his hand and <lb/>
you, Arthur. It is a very pretty <lb/>
You know my weakness <lb/>
or curiosities in fans. I will use this <lb/>
to kill off all tho bores of my ac- <lb/>
with Sam Bangs, I <lb/>
puts in Arthur. <lb/>
are a silly boy. Sam Bangs, <lb/>
indeed Who will you be jealous of <lb/>
next Show me once more how this <lb/>
is managed and do not talk <lb/>
As I turn away to look for my <lb/>
partner in the waltz just com- <lb/>
I have only breath enough <lb/>
for the incomplete <lb/>
I'll C. <lb/>
in Bulletin. <lb/>
II. Line, wries <lb/>
summer several years ago while rail- <lb/>
in Mississippi. I became badly <lb/>
affected with malarial blood poison that <lb/>
impaired my health mere than two <lb/>
years. Several offensive ulcers appear- <lb/>
ed on my legs, and seemed to <lb/>
give permanent relict L took six <lb/>
bottles of B. which cured me en <lb/>
i over the spot. It looked at first as if <lb/>
the birds wire insects. <lb/>
though was visible. On the <lb/>
human . approach <lb/>
tho birds still in the air took flight, <lb/>
and as many more sprang cut <lb/>
of the grass immediately about the <lb/>
rock. At the same instant tho head <lb/>
and moving tongue of a large <lb/>
blacksnake became visible be- <lb/>
hind the rock, and he too made off. <lb/>
It wee apparently o clear ease of bird <lb/>
dunning the snake.-New York <lb/>
Hood <lb/>
Good looks are more than skin deep. <lb/>
depending upon a condition of <lb/>
the vital organs. If the be in- <lb/>
active, you have a Look, if your <lb/>
he disordered you have a <lb/>
peptic . and if your Kidney be <lb/>
you have a Pinched Looks <lb/>
Bitters is the great <lb/>
and Tonic acts directly on these vital <lb/>
organs. Cures Pimples, Blotches, Boils <lb/>
and gives a good complexion. Sold at <lb/>
Drug Store. per bottle. <lb/>
I;, ii u Cow. <lb/>
A comic scene took place a few days <lb/>
i go at A peasant from <lb/>
was driving a cow into <lb/>
the capital, and had arrived at the <lb/>
when the animal bolted, <lb/>
and jumping the rails around the <lb/>
well known boar pit arrived at the <lb/>
bottom without injury. The pro- <lb/>
thought feat his cow was <lb/>
lost, but he was mistaken She at- <lb/>
tacked the bears <lb/>
routed, retired into their den. into <lb/>
which she would have followed them <lb/>
had she not been prevented by the <lb/>
beeper of the animals, who let down <lb/>
the trapdoor. Then the cow went <lb/>
to the slaughter house and fulfilled <lb/>
her destiny.- Pull Mall Budget. <lb/>
Salve <lb/>
The best salve In the world for Cuts, <lb/>
Bruises. Sores. Salt Rheum, <lb/>
Fever Sores. Chapped Hands. <lb/>
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin <lb/>
and positively cures Piles, or no <lb/>
pay required. It is guaranteed to give <lb/>
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. <lb/>
Price cents pet box. For sale at <lb/>
Drug Store. <lb/>
Prices you must understand to <lb/>
ply to good coins. Better or worse <lb/>
preservation would make a great <lb/>
in every case. On that <lb/>
basis a United States copper cent of <lb/>
1703, with tho clover leaf, is worth <lb/>
twenty-five dollars, or- times as <lb/>
much as the valuable cent of 1790. <lb/>
From that tho premiums on cents <lb/>
ran all the way down to five cents. <lb/>
The valuable dates, in order of worth, <lb/>
are 1709. 1804, 1795, 1809, <lb/>
1811. 1808, 1797. 1818, <lb/>
. 1857, 1810 and <lb/>
in Washington Star. <lb/>
Answer This Question. <lb/>
Why do so many people we see around <lb/>
us seem to prefer to be made <lb/>
Indigestion, Constipation, <lb/>
Dizziness. at Coming up <lb/>
of the Food. Yellow Skin, when for <lb/>
sell them Shiloh's <lb/>
to cure them Sold L. <lb/>
Wooten's Drug Store. <lb/>
Indians of Central <lb/>
live in mini <lb/>
Amelia. . a <lb/>
hers in a single hut. i.-. <lb/>
visited comprised about fifteen huts. <lb/>
She dead are buried in the <lb/>
and the earth covering the <lb/>
graves settles until it is about a foot <lb/>
below the surface of the floor. As <lb/>
time goes on the graves become less <lb/>
distinct, and finally they are com- <lb/>
obliterated When a pecan <lb/>
lies the relatives wail crying. <lb/>
am <lb/>
When a warrior buried his body <lb/>
is provided with certain feathers of <lb/>
moon, and the i are and Iroquois , <lb/>
Indians sacrifice to both. was <lb/>
the moon, rut deified in For- <lb/>
miles to the north of tho capital is ; <lb/>
the site of tho ancient city of <lb/>
twenty miles in j <lb/>
In the center of tho ruins are <lb/>
tho remains of a pyramid of the sun j <lb/>
and one of the moon. Adjoining the j <lb/>
temple of the sun at Cuzco <lb/>
stood several chapels of smaller <lb/>
One of these was <lb/>
to the moon, tho mother god- <lb/>
of the race. <lb/>
A vast silver almost <lb/>
one wall the apartment, and <lb/>
open it was emblazoned <lb/>
of tho deity, consisting of a <lb/>
human countenance surrounded by <lb/>
numerous rays of light emanating <lb/>
from it in all directions. All tho <lb/>
other decorations of the temple were <lb/>
of the same metal, as fitted to the <lb/>
pale, silvery light of the moon. <lb/>
London Standard, <lb/>
CHILD BIRTH <lb/>
MADE EASY <lb/>
is a scientific- <lb/>
ally prepared Liniment, every <lb/>
of recognized value and in <lb/>
constant use by the medical pro- <lb/>
These ingredients ere com- <lb/>
hitherto unknown <lb/>
Some Men <lb/>
Pay , <lb/>
TEN GENTS FOR A <lb/>
CIGAR THAT IS NO <lb/>
BETTER. THAN AN <lb/>
id Virginia <lb/>
Cheroot. <lb/>
ARE SOLD <lb/>
FIVE <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
TEN CENTS.<lb/>
WILL DO ail that is claimed for <lb/>
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb/>
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb/>
Life of Mother Bid Child. Book <lb/>
to Mothers mailed FREE, con- <lb/>
valuable information and <lb/>
voluntary testimonials. <lb/>
Sent by express on pt of price per <lb/>
REGULATOR CO., <lb/>
MOOT ALL DRUGGISTS. <lb/>
between the WOMAN who is <lb/>
wedded to ideas and <lb/>
she who is t to <lb/>
a new one. Everybody is <lb/>
striving to something to make <lb/>
Fastest Time Ever Made. <lb/>
One of Line trains of <lb/>
the Baltimore and Ohio on a re- <lb/>
cent run York and <lb/>
on. coveted mile ill seconds as <lb/>
recorded by a mechanical indicator. At <lb/>
rate the train traveled at the <lb/>
speed of a trifle over a mile and <lb/>
S half a minute, ST Over ninety a <lb/>
hour which surpasses all previous re- <lb/>
time, if the speed were <lb/>
maintained the tune between New York <lb/>
and Washington reduced with- <lb/>
out stops to two hours and a and <lb/>
with stops to three hours. Five hours <lb/>
now the fastest time between tho two <lb/>
cities, mid it is made dally by Royal <lb/>
Blue Line only. <lb/>
life it's right <lb/>
beside who are <lb/>
bright enough to embrace it <lb/>
get the benefits, those who <lb/>
don't go <lb/>
work grows Pearline <lb/>
makes life easier and cleaner. <lb/>
Washing and cleaning done <lb/>
with Pearline has about <lb/>
enough work in it to make it good <lb/>
enough to tire the body or ruffle the temper. <lb/>
Not ours, but the word of the millions who use it as <lb/>
to whether it hurts the hands, clothes or <lb/>
your neighbors can tell you all about PEARLINE. <lb/>
tome grocers will <lb/>
tell vi-ii is-., g. or as <lb/>
IT'S <lb/>
and if your sends you place of the honest <lb/>
thing to it balk. JAMES New York. <lb/>
-Manufacturer Of- <lb/>
BUGGIES, <lb/>
Ht a Ia. <lb/>
A weakness fr observation and a <lb/>
natural liking for re- <lb/>
incited a young man <lb/>
resides in Brooklyn and in <lb/>
Now York to talk to a friend in this <lb/>
yon ever observe the <lb/>
traffic in tho busy <lb/>
and evening <lb/>
have been in <lb/>
Well, then, you . <lb/>
pressed with the fact . <lb/>
crowded train moves enough persons <lb/>
from of tho river to the <lb/>
other to make a good sized village. <lb/>
The trains an packed early in the <lb/>
morning and between and <lb/>
o'clock at night. Each train carries <lb/>
between and passengers. <lb/>
Now a country village with that <lb/>
of inhabitants thinks very <lb/>
well of itself. It has or four <lb/>
a library, an opera, <lb/>
and id at j <lb/>
department in Washington for a new <lb/>
And yet the restless cable <lb/>
that stretches across the bridge two a bunch being <lb/>
villages back and forth at the ; placed in each hand, and for some <lb/>
rate of twenty-five or thirty an hour. <lb/>
I tell you this is a moving ago in <lb/>
which York Times. <lb/>
P. I. f. M <lb/>
and for <lb/>
mil form, i-d of <lb/>
cw <lb/>
old <lb/>
that all<lb/>
P. P. P. b ft <lb/>
id to <lb/>
art and la<lb/>
blocs. <lb/>
Puke K--t <lb/>
My Factory is with tho Aye put <lb/>
nothing but work. We keep with the best <lb/>
In all work. AH styles o. spring used, you cm select from <lb/>
Storm, Coil, Horn, King <lb/>
We also keep on hand a full line of Ready Made fatness and Whips width a <lb/>
. the lowest Special attention given to repairing,<lb/>
j . N. C, <lb/>
New Try This. <lb/>
It v. ill Betting end will sure- <lb/>
do you good, if you have a Cough, <lb/>
Gold, or any trouble with Threat, <lb/>
or Lungs. Dr. King's New Discovery <lb/>
for Consumption, Coughs and Colds is <lb/>
to give relief, or money will <lb/>
On paid beet. Sufferers from <lb/>
found it just the thing and under Its use <lb/>
n speedy and perfect Try <lb/>
a Sample bottle at expense lean; <lb/>
how good a thing it is. <lb/>
Trial hot free at Drug <lb/>
Store, Large size Me. and <lb/>
into the surf this morn- <lb/>
I think so. Are you <lb/>
I think not. Fact is, I'm <lb/>
afraid of tho pitas. <lb/>
are there catfish about <lb/>
here <lb/>
Erysipelas, Bad Sores, <lb/>
Scales and Scabs on the leg have been <lb/>
entirely cored by P. r. the most <lb/>
wonderful medicine of the day. <lb/>
A course of P. p. p. will banish all <lb/>
bad and your health to <lb/>
perfect Its curative powers <lb/>
are marvelous. If out of sorts and in <lb/>
bad humor with yourself and the world. <lb/>
take and become healthy and <lb/>
time after death cacao is placed upon <lb/>
the grave, in order that the departed <lb/>
Warrior may he supplied with drink. <lb/>
Anthropologist <lb/>
I had a malignant breaking out on my leg <lb/>
below the knee, and and well <lb/>
with two and a half bottles of <lb/>
Other blood medicines had failed <lb/>
to do me any good. C. <lb/>
Viii <lb/>
She is seated in a chair . <lb/>
A Household Remedy ; <lb/>
FOR ALL <lb/>
BLOOD and SKIN <lb/>
Bi Bi <lb/>
. Bate <lb/>
ii <lb/>
say c <lb/>
at pi <lb/>
SENT FREE <lb/>
CO., ea. <lb/>
I was troubled from childhood with <lb/>
of and three bottles cf <lb/>
cured me permanently.<lb/>
Oar book on Blood and Diseases <lb/>
fine, Co Atlanta, Ga. <lb/>
Cures dyspepsiA <lb/>
Block, GA. <lb/>
For sale at Wooten's Drug Store <lb/>
. MM Writing Character., <lb/>
For Rent. <lb/>
A large two-story brick <lb/>
Opera Block, <lb/>
in <lb/>
just <lb/>
patent <lb/>
drawers. <lb/>
Splendid room <lb/>
tor, counters, <lb/>
Apply to <lb/>
Wit. H. LONG. <lb/>
Greenville, X. C <lb/>
PARKER'S <lb/>
HAIR <lb/>
th <lb/>
ft <lb/>
Restore Cray, <lb/>
to Color. <lb/>
ft<lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD STOKE <lb/>
MERCHANTS BUT <lb/>
hag their year's supplies will And <lb/>
their Interest to get our prices before <lb/>
abasing else where Is complete <lb/>
n all its branches. <lb/>
PORK <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE. <lb/>
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb/>
Lowest Marks Pricks. <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF A CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct front Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to bay at one profit. A own <lb/>
stock<lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
MARK. <lb/>
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
the time. Our all <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb/>
to sell at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
M. <lb/>
For Cure of all <lb/>
This has been in over <lb/>
years, and wherever known has <lb/>
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb/>
by leading all over <lb/>
country, and ha effected cures where <lb/>
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb/>
the moat experienced have <lb/>
for years failed. This Ointment is of <lb/>
long standing and the high <lb/>
winch it has is owing entirely <lb/>
x its own as little effort has <lb/>
ever been made to bring It before the <lb/>
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb/>
be sent to any address en receipt of One <lb/>
Dollar. Sample box The <lb/>
discount to Pi All Orders <lb/>
promptly attended to. Address all r- <lb/>
mid to<lb/>
Greenville, N. C <lb/>
AND IMPROVED. <lb/>
The Rest Standard Typewriter in the World. <lb/>
Inexpensive. Portable. No Ink Ribbon. In- <lb/>
Type in all Easiest <lb/>
to learn, and rapid as any. <lb/>
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. <lb/>
as represented. <lb/>
This Machine is everybody's friend. Every- <lb/>
body should have writing dope <lb/>
Typewriter. It always insures moat <lb/>
prompt attention. Address <lb/>
N COMPANY, Boston, <lb/>
One of these machine, can be seen at the where particulars and <lb/>
prices can he had. <lb/>
Notice to Shippers. <lb/>
In order to make more convenient and <lb/>
economical use of the vessels now em. <lb/>
In the Carolina <lb/>
thus to better serve the inter- <lb/>
of shipper, the undersigned <lb/>
have decided to merge their <lb/>
respective lines between Not <lb/>
folk and Newborn and <lb/>
Washington. N. <lb/>
one be known as <lb/>
fa Mi I Washington Direct <lb/>
LINE. <lb/>
-Connecting Norfolk <lb/>
The Bay line, for Baltimore. <lb/>
The Clyde Line, for Philadelphia. <lb/>
The Old Dominion Line, for <lb/>
York. <lb/>
The Merchants Miners Line for Boa- <lb/>
ton and Providence. <lb/>
The Water Lines for Richmond, Va., <lb/>
and Washington. C. <lb/>
At with <lb/>
The Atlantic A North Carolina R. R. <lb/>
At Washington with <lb/>
The Tar River Steamers. <lb/>
Also Calling at Island, M. O, <lb/>
The new line <lb/>
with such additional sailings a <lb/>
will hew suit the needs o the business. <lb/>
NO ADVANCE l HATES. <lb/>
The direct service of steamers. <lb/>
and the freedom from handling, are <lb/>
among the great advantages this Line <lb/>
following gentlemen have <lb/>
been appointed Agents of the New <lb/>
John E. at Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
John Son, at <lb/>
S. II. Gray, at N. O. <lb/>
S. C. at Roanoke Island. <lb/>
J. J. Cherry, at Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
will leave Norfolk <lb/>
on 16th, from wharf <lb/>
strew, Clyde <lb/>
and between the piers of the Clyde <lb/>
Line and Old Dominion Co. <lb/>
A. <lb/>
V. P. all. M. Old Co. <lb/>
W. CO., <lb/>
THE CENTRAL <lb/>
Tobacco Warehouse <lb/>
Will begin its second season <lb/>
AUGUST 1892. <lb/>
-O-------- <lb/>
the same Management, <lb/>
and desires to thank the <lb/>
Planters of Pitt, Le- <lb/>
and Greene for <lb/>
their liberal <lb/>
patronage <lb/>
last <lb/>
year and solicits a continuance <lb/>
of their favors. Especial <lb/>
given to Shipments. Try <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
Central Warehouse, <lb/>
TARBORO, N.<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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