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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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-ii<lb/>
. J . v. <lb/>
Jobs Room <lb/>
Thoroughly Equipped <lb/>
Reflector. <lb/>
-WITH- <lb/>
NEW MATERIAL. <lb/>
Give Us a Trial <lb/>
Jones Seminary for <lb/>
Young Ladies. <lb/>
VOL. XI. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
POLITICAL rs. <lb/>
The <lb/>
T. i d party Warren <lb/>
ill min county held convention and MB- <lb/>
a part of the ticket. <lb/>
i all the nominations wens made <lb/>
the convention broke op in a vow. <lb/>
candidate for register<lb/>
m i i Nth. It- v <lb/>
1.-<lb/>
PROOF ON WEAVE. <lb/>
He Acted in Ten- <lb/>
Both<lb/>
MRS. Dec Rates <lb/>
Term <lb/>
Tuition i-. to 16.70; <lb/>
Board . <lb/>
For further particulars aw <lb/>
Z D. <lb/>
A tut is <lb/>
Lot <lb/>
Institute. <lb/>
HAMILTON, X. C. <lb/>
Tin- Fall -if tins open <lb/>
Monday. Aug. -XI. Enrollment last <lb/>
M Excellent advantages in <lb/>
regular Course of study in <lb/>
Music Elocution, and Draw- h <lb/>
If Third party people are <lb/>
bettor Democrats than anybody <lb/>
else why are seven candidates on <lb/>
their State ticket J line <lb/>
cans, and why are they <lb/>
for office in some <lb/>
the -n <lb/>
Terms moderate. in <lb/>
families or Principal. For <lb/>
information <lb/>
John Robinson, col., married <lb/>
woman about eight miles from <lb/>
here last week. He reports that <lb/>
is intended had engaged color- <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
Mrs V. L. Pendleton <lb/>
ill open a School for Young <lb/>
Ladies in Greenville on <lb/>
Tin- full <lb/>
Course taught. The usual <lb/>
prices for tuition in will be <lb/>
Female Institute. <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
Opens ISIS. One of the mo.-t <lb/>
thorough schools for young ladies in the <lb/>
Sou Twenty-live teachers and <lb/>
Conservatory course in music. One <lb/>
I fifty-two boarding pupils <lb/>
from twenty States. <lb/>
Special inducements to persons at a dis- <lb/>
Those seeking the beat school <lb/>
for the lowest terms, write for <lb/>
of school to the <lb/>
dent, A. HARRIS, <lb/>
Virginia. <lb/>
OAK RIDGE INSTITUTE <lb/>
FOUNDED IN 1852. <lb/>
A CLASSICAL AND COMMERCIAL SCHOOL <lb/>
---------OF <lb/>
Elegant buildings and thorough equip- <lb/>
Large patronage from all the <lb/>
Southern States- Beautiful and h <lb/>
situation in view of the mountains. <lb/>
Term Reasonable. <lb/>
Summer Opens <lb/>
June <lb/>
Fall Term begins August 10th. <lb/>
For Illustrated address, <lb/>
J. II. BOLT, <lb/>
Oak Ridge, X. C. <lb/>
Tho p <lb/>
following leaf from <lb/>
record <lb/>
while in <lb/>
in January, <lb/>
issued mi order to Charles <lb/>
John H. Rob- <lb/>
Rhodes and that they <lb/>
pay into his hands for the <lb/>
j of refugees <lb/>
and renegades <lb/>
This order mi ac- <lb/>
by tho threat that if <lb/>
a j the was not paid they and <lb/>
; their families would be sent South <lb/>
j and their property giver to said <lb/>
refugees. All of these parties <lb/>
are dead now, were over sixty <lb/>
years old when the order was is- <lb/>
sued. Can any Southern man <lb/>
vote for such a heartless f <lb/>
A man by the name of C- W. <lb/>
Witt sold Mr. Jasper Cos, a very <lb/>
poor man, two thousand pounds <lb/>
of bacon, for which lie received <lb/>
Press est ates Mr. Cos took the bacon <lb/>
that in twenty years the people of to <lb/>
the United States have paid near- <lb/>
82.000,000,000 of the principal of stored away in <lb/>
the war debt, in in- i thinking <lb/>
on the same, and <lb/>
in j <lb/>
in all. Of this enormous sum <lb/>
nearly has been j <lb/>
taken from the South and paid, <lb/>
out in the North to remain there. <lb/>
WaY WE WITHDRAW PROM THE <lb/>
ALLIANCE. <lb/>
Co-, of the News and <lb/>
Hilt, N. C, Aug. <lb/>
list regular of Union <lb/>
Hill Alliance, No. we, the <lb/>
members of said Alli- <lb/>
ed Methodist preacher to <lb/>
the ceremony and when he called <lb/>
on him the. preacher wouldn't mar- <lb/>
him because he Robin- <lb/>
son I was a Democrat. He got a <lb/>
white man to perform the <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
Female <lb/>
College, <lb/>
Th of this well-known <lb/>
school will begin September 1st. <lb/>
water, no m- <lb/>
lit irk rooms <lb/>
Campus of acres well by <lb/>
gigantic oaks. music <lb/>
teach.-rs. Art and <lb/>
from Academy of Teachers ex- <lb/>
in The whole <lb/>
Course, Physical Culture and <lb/>
and fires only <lb/>
for the year. Special studies in <lb/>
Send for to <lb/>
W. D. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Wilson Collegiate Institute, <lb/>
x. c. <lb/>
For Ladies. Strictly <lb/>
If the force bill is such a <lb/>
or myth, as some <lb/>
cans say, we ask you the name <lb/>
of common sense, why is it couch- <lb/>
ed in the platform <lb/>
Why is it It means <lb/>
Don't be mislead by <lb/>
endeavor to throw you off your <lb/>
guard. Vote against the party <lb/>
that will enforce it the first chance <lb/>
it gets- Don't give that party the <lb/>
it would assist him in purchasing <lb/>
a little home after the war, as he <lb/>
was very poor with a large family <lb/>
and had no home. Weaver <lb/>
learned through some source that <lb/>
he had the cotton twist, and sent a <lb/>
detachment of soldiers to his <lb/>
home and took possession of it, <lb/>
and shipped it to Iowa for his <lb/>
own use. The cotton twist was <lb/>
worth at the time it was stolen <lb/>
Jasper Cox is in <lb/>
Giles county. John P. Williams, <lb/>
Republican a Poor but respected farm- <lb/>
in Giles county, had twenty-five <lb/>
fat hogs, which at the time was <lb/>
worth If per hundred, gross, <lb/>
a lot of turkeys. Weaver, in per- <lb/>
son, took a file of soldiers into <lb/>
place and made the sol- <lb/>
shoot every hog on the place <lb/>
and had them brought into camp. <lb/>
When Williams asked for a vouch- <lb/>
Weaver don't give <lb/>
rebels in the South vouchers. I <lb/>
this the he is getting j furnish rope to hang j aloof from polities as a body, but <lb/>
somewhat tired of the t. p. and of Mr. of doing so it has gone <lb/>
marked that the principles of is still living and will even beyond the bounds of the <lb/>
Democrats were right, but to the above constitution made it a <lb/>
I The hogs were valued at <lb/>
There was a here a few <lb/>
days ago who has been very prom- <lb/>
proclaiming his <lb/>
party Like a great <lb/>
many others who are. following <lb/>
agreed to withdraw from the j ton talk for publication the <lb/>
order, for reasons herein set forth- they talk among themselves. <lb/>
It is with sadness and regret published interviews they all <lb/>
we feel ourselves compelled to <lb/>
withdraw from an order whose <lb/>
with one accord talk as though tho <lb/>
campaign was already settled in I <lb/>
principles declare for the and the election a mere I <lb/>
of tho laboring classes, and an <lb/>
ii- that has done so much, and <lb/>
have accomplished that <lb/>
which the farm ore set out t <lb/>
achieve, but alas politics spoiled <lb/>
the scheme. <lb/>
It appears to us from the pro- <lb/>
of the last county meet- <lb/>
LETTER. know If such a thin was <lb/>
plated, to talk it, <lb/>
our I several of them <lb/>
Washington, D. C Sept. a of Emigration <lb/>
A feature th- M help very much in <lb/>
cholera out of the United <lb/>
States. Senator of <lb/>
now in he <lb/>
does not believe thee is any <lb/>
for the rumor, and that <lb/>
this time <lb/>
campaign is <lb/>
the <lb/>
publicans who come <lb/>
the great difference I <lb/>
way prominent R-v <lb/>
to Washing- <lb/>
there is no necessity at <lb/>
for any law absolutely prohibiting <lb/>
immigration, although he admits <lb/>
that it may become necessary if <lb/>
h the cholera continues to increase <lb/>
Europe. <lb/>
Va., <lb/>
WEAVER'S BRUTAL CRUELTY. <lb/>
Testimony of <lb/>
O-e Who <lb/>
through with just to keep up <lb/>
; but let two or three of <lb/>
them meet privately, where they <lb/>
think themselves safe from the <lb/>
sharp ears of wicked and prying j Editor Reflector news <lb/>
newspaper men, and to hear them i emanating from a town is a <lb/>
reminds one of the line of the fa-1 generally a sure indication of the <lb/>
of the Farmers Alliance that what a and energy of the <lb/>
the organization has undergone a in the and if we may be allowed to judge <lb/>
great change, and believing, as we Two office S. Treas- on Hue. we would say that the I <lb/>
do. that bold designing and Assistant Sec people in and around Green rile <lb/>
have got into the order and i of the Treasury are a live, aggressive and <lb/>
control its action, which is just the i who is also the Republican <lb/>
of Alliance doctrines, in J date for governor of Nebraska <lb/>
words they have side-tracked returned from visits to their re- <lb/>
the Alliance principles and taken j States this week, and be- <lb/>
politics as its main line of fore they had shaken the dust of <lb/>
pies; adopting resolutions and I travel from their clothes they both <lb/>
making demands which we are not gave out colored interviews <lb/>
only unwilling to support, but feel j of Republican prospects in <lb/>
that it is our duty to array and Nebraska, in which those <lb/>
States were stated to entirely <lb/>
out of the doubtful list. By a <lb/>
more accident I learned the real <lb/>
opinions of those two men. Ne- <lb/>
people, and who evidently <lb/>
know a good thing when they see <lb/>
it. We are glad to sec that you <lb/>
give them such a clean, readable <lb/>
paper. It is gratifying to see that <lb/>
you have the courage of your con <lb/>
and do not hesitate to <lb/>
August <lb/>
To I Journal <lb/>
I in your issue of Saturday, <lb/>
the inst., from a <lb/>
letter written by an old citizen of <lb/>
also a copy <lb/>
of a clipping from o Giles <lb/>
of the 20th of July, <lb/>
General Weaver, the <lb/>
party candidate for Pres- <lb/>
with beastly cruelty to- <lb/>
wards the citizens of and <lb/>
Giles county while in command <lb/>
of the Union army Hint place <lb/>
I can fully substantiate <lb/>
camber of the charges con- <lb/>
therein, could add <lb/>
many others of like character, all <lb/>
from my own recollection. Al- <lb/>
though quite young at the lime <lb/>
such a state of terror as we were <lb/>
kept in by this brute in <lb/>
form made an <lb/>
upon my mind. My <lb/>
Dr. Perkins, was living in <lb/>
at this time. Our <lb/>
grandmother's <lb/>
the <lb/>
Eastern Reflector <lb/>
-TILL- <lb/>
gents in <lb/>
is the time to subscribe. <lb/>
human <lb/>
father. <lb/>
house, my <lb/>
D. <lb/>
now of and Major <lb/>
Jones, a relative of ours, <lb/>
selves in line to battle against, to <lb/>
maintain the principles the Alli- <lb/>
intended to inculcate. <lb/>
We can never follow our <lb/>
in the wild, visionary scheme j sent word to Mr. Harrison j Third party men, and as for Skin ; to dress. Mrs. Jones had to wrap <lb/>
of turning the order into a and to his man Carter that unless Mr. Rogers says lie face sick child iii bed-clothing and <lb/>
cal machine that may defeat the something was immediately done what Harry is up to. Mr. Rogers carry it in her arms to a <lb/>
handle those Third party used as quartets. <lb/>
aid-society fellows with ; were all subjected to many insults, <lb/>
gloves off, as they deserve to be- I Major family were ordered <lb/>
That sterling Democrat, W. J- out of their house about o'clock <lb/>
Rogers says he does not believe on a cold night <lb/>
Skinner or at heart I bet. They were not allowed time <lb/>
only party that will ever give us <lb/>
the relief so much needed. Our <lb/>
constitution guarantees no in- <lb/>
en our religious or <lb/>
political views, but some of our <lb/>
brethren think that because we do <lb/>
not agree to the <lb/>
reasonable demands, we are <lb/>
true, weak-kneed and <lb/>
ought to be out of the order. <lb/>
to satisfy the disaffected was an aspirant for the <lb/>
cans in the Fort Wayne district of for Congress from the 2nd <lb/>
Indiana all hope of carrying the district and while he f tiled to get <lb/>
State might as well be abandoned. <lb/>
So much for his confidence Mr. <lb/>
feels so uncertain about <lb/>
the result this State that he is <lb/>
to resign his present office. <lb/>
it, he is not but will <lb/>
do all in his power for Fred Wood <lb/>
ard, the regular nominee. Mr. <lb/>
Rogers is a Democrat of the <lb/>
variety and takes no <lb/>
and wants to fix it so when ho Third party in his. <lb/>
does resign his pay will run to the A protracted <lb/>
home. Many acts of <lb/>
cruelty committed on my <lb/>
relatives and friends are fresh in <lb/>
my memory, Men of highest <lb/>
standing, both young and old, <lb/>
were thrown into prison, kept <lb/>
there for months and some shot <lb/>
down like dogs with never a <lb/>
The Alliance has good and first of October, and tho place be j at Baptist church recent <lb/>
its good influence was being felt kept vacant until after tho election, conducted by Rev. J. E. Hut- <lb/>
throughout this broad land, and order that ho may be i son, of Richmond, assisted by the <lb/>
, charge entered against them. <lb/>
held , Ladies were insulted on the streets <lb/>
there is no estimate of the good it <lb/>
might have accomplished if it had <lb/>
only adhered to the principles it <lb/>
started out with, and kept itself <lb/>
were right, but <lb/>
did not promise the office <lb/>
like tho Third party did. He said <lb/>
further that if the Democrats <lb/>
would promise the some <lb/>
of tho offices, a great many would <lb/>
vote the Democratic ticket Louis- <lb/>
burg <lb/>
Forty-Third S begins <lb/>
Monday, Sept. <lb/>
most thorough and <lb/>
M of t <lb/>
preparatory course of study, with a <lb/>
equal to that of an <lb/>
Female College in the South. <lb/>
Best facilities for the of Music <lb/>
and Art. Standard Scholarship <lb/>
usually I, location. <lb/>
and grounds large pleasantly <lb/>
situated, Charges. <lb/>
and circulars on application. <lb/>
SILAS <lb/>
The Third party nominee <lb/>
Register of Deeds in Vance <lb/>
is a preacher. In Rock- <lb/>
county the nominee for <lb/>
the same office is a white man <lb/>
who can neither read nor write. <lb/>
county the <lb/>
for the Legislature is a <lb/>
while in our own county two for- <lb/>
mer Republicans, who have <lb/>
ways voted for candidates, <lb/>
and furthermore, one of whom <lb/>
taught schools, are on the <lb/>
Third party county ticket for <lb/>
honors. Such is a result of <lb/>
the new order of things-Golds- <lb/>
were val <lb/>
The turkeys to Mrs. <lb/>
Williams, and she begged to have <lb/>
them spared, but tho heartless <lb/>
wretch had them all killed <lb/>
ken to headquarters for his own <lb/>
special use, remarking to her <lb/>
that she had no business being <lb/>
the wife of a rebel. Weaver made <lb/>
it a practice to charge our <lb/>
cents each for passes to <lb/>
come into go out of the Fed- <lb/>
lines. This money ho puts <lb/>
into his own pockets. This pass <lb/>
read as <lb/>
the bearer through <lb/>
Federal lines. <lb/>
J. B. Weaver, <lb/>
the <lb/>
even <lb/>
constitution <lb/>
cal machine, working in the inter- <lb/>
est of the Republican party, which <lb/>
we believe to be greatly against <lb/>
the interest of Southern society- <lb/>
We believe the office of lecturer <lb/>
should be filled by a man who <lb/>
would speak to the Alliance on <lb/>
topics of interest to the order, <lb/>
inculcate Alliance doctrine to its <lb/>
members, that its cause might be <lb/>
advanced, and not to make <lb/>
cal campaign speeches as the <lb/>
of county saw fit to do in <lb/>
his last canvass through tho <lb/>
His at least some of <lb/>
them, were nothing more nor less <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
MALE ACADEMY<lb/>
The session of this School will <lb/>
begin on Monday. August 1892. <lb/>
The advantages offered will be <lb/>
or to those of any previous session. En- <lb/>
tire every <lb/>
Board can be had at lower rates man at <lb/>
similar school In Eastern <lb/>
A LIVING ISSUE. <lb/>
Wilmington Messenger. <lb/>
White supremacy is no mere <lb/>
political catch phrase in the South. <lb/>
It is an over present, living issue, <lb/>
which must be recognized because <lb/>
Mr. Cleveland is not opposed to j corner-stone of the South <lb/>
the free coinage of silver dollars <lb/>
which are equal to gold dollars, <lb/>
but he is opposed to the free coin- <lb/>
age of seventy cent dollars and <lb/>
that is the position of the Demo- <lb/>
party as declared in its plat- <lb/>
form. The free coinage of <lb/>
We propose to do best work for boys cent silver dollars is nothing <lb/>
in the town, more the government <lb/>
challenge to contrary. <lb/>
are as follows, payable <lb/>
Primary English month. <lb/>
Intermediate English per 2.00 <lb/>
Higher per mouth. 2.50 <lb/>
each, extra, <lb/>
When you are in tow-i call-to see me <lb/>
or write ma your homes. <lb/>
will to cheerfully given. If <lb/>
necessary competent assistant will be <lb/>
employed- <lb/>
H. <lb/>
Greenville, K. July 27.182. <lb/>
social structure- . Ignore it <lb/>
and mongrel government and so- <lb/>
chaos would be the result <lb/>
This is not a mere speculation, <lb/>
for we had some very bitter and <lb/>
not-soon-to-be-forgotten <lb/>
in this during the period of <lb/>
construction, from the <lb/>
effects of which the South has not <lb/>
yet entirely recovered. There <lb/>
isn't a single leader in the Third <lb/>
party in the South who has here- <lb/>
affiliated with the <lb/>
of silver bullion, to be j party who not <lb/>
to carry it to a United j if he spoke candidly, that white <lb/>
the silver miners a of <lb/>
cents it coins a <lb/>
dollar for them. It does not <lb/>
look fair for a miner, because he <lb/>
has plenty <lb/>
i allowed <lb/>
States mint and get a dollar for <lb/>
every seventy cents he deposits <lb/>
ed if he gets defeated. He has i regular pastor, Mr. Morris. Largo <lb/>
appealed to the national commit-I crowds attended, report it as <lb/>
tee for financial assistance m his j a glorious of spiritual <lb/>
campaign, with tho that freshing. understand there <lb/>
it is money or certain defeat. j wore about accessions to the <lb/>
It may be that Secretary Tracy church. The writer only had the <lb/>
can explain the pleasure of attending twice, <lb/>
charges which the New York We glad to report that the <lb/>
daily reiterates, that the; sick Spoken of in previous <lb/>
it was indeed n reign of terror. <lb/>
Such acts of vandalism and crime <lb/>
I have never even read of in a <lb/>
country. All of it was <lb/>
done by the order or consent of <lb/>
General Weaver. <lb/>
Mrs. Hall, <lb/>
change in the armor of the new <lb/>
war vessels was made at the re- <lb/>
quest of the firms that make the <lb/>
armor, and that it will put several <lb/>
hundred thousand dollars the <lb/>
pockets of tho aforesaid firms, but <lb/>
the ugly fact remains that to <lb/>
the present time he hits not done <lb/>
so, and to attempt to pooh, pooh, Joyner's. <lb/>
charges made by so responsible a <lb/>
journal as the will hardly <lb/>
go down with an intelligent pub- <lb/>
The charge of favoritism, not <lb/>
to call it by a worse name, has <lb/>
been specifically made and <lb/>
Laboratory in Which to Analyze <lb/>
Charlotte <lb/>
Squire Hilton has it in <lb/>
Eddie Harrison. Jeff Wood- to start a laboratory to <lb/>
ard and Miss Ida Grizzard have ; analyze tho make up of Third <lb/>
recovered, He will conduct the <lb/>
R. P. Ellis and daughter Annie. on the same Hues as the old <lb/>
of arc visiting peripatetic expounders of <lb/>
Branchville. phrenology, giving a certificate to <lb/>
S. L. and wife, of Boy- showing the <lb/>
kins are visiting at Mrs. M. E. leaver- <lb/>
ONE ON LONG. <lb/>
Pitt shore Record. <lb/>
Th- nomination of Thomas B. <lb/>
Long the Third party candidate <lb/>
for State Auditor forcibly illus <lb/>
the utter hypocrisy of that <lb/>
its and <lb/>
tensions of n form. To those who <lb/>
know him it seems strange indeed <lb/>
that he should be one of the trust- <lb/>
ed leaders of a party pledged to <lb/>
financial f, unless that relief is <lb/>
intended only for the leaders <lb/>
The court records of <lb/>
show that dealings <lb/>
have not been of such a character <lb/>
as to inspire much Confidence in <lb/>
him, and. as he is now a Candidate <lb/>
for an office overlooking our <lb/>
State's finances, it is proper that <lb/>
the people should be informed as <lb/>
to his financial dealings. In the <lb/>
year 1840. or he removed to <lb/>
this county from Salisbury, where <lb/>
h was born and roared, open- <lb/>
ed a store, at Egypt He went <lb/>
North and with plausible promises <lb/>
he had then and has now the <lb/>
of to a remarkable de- <lb/>
bought a large stock of <lb/>
goods on s credit. When the bills <lb/>
due he refused to pay them, <lb/>
ho was sued in ten cases tho <lb/>
old Court of Pleas and Quarter <lb/>
Sessions of this county. These <lb/>
suits wore tried at February Term, <lb/>
1851. of that court and all were <lb/>
decided in favor of the defendant <lb/>
on tho That is <lb/>
in order to avoid paying those <lb/>
just debts, Mr. pleaded in- <lb/>
he was not twenty one <lb/>
years old when ho bought tho <lb/>
his father. Dr. Alex- <lb/>
Long highly respectable <lb/>
was brought here from <lb/>
Salisbury with the family Bible to <lb/>
it And by this trick he ob- <lb/>
for him- <lb/>
self, and his honest creditors re- <lb/>
nothing for their goods. <lb/>
And this is the sort of man who is <lb/>
put up by the Third party to <lb/>
bring to the <lb/>
of North Carolina I <lb/>
Can men him <lb/>
Q a Pen. <lb/>
A STRIKING CONTRAST. <lb/>
than Third party speeches of the short of an answer just as <lb/>
A Of High Grade OHS BUnk la the platform adopt <lb/>
ed at the Third party State con <lb/>
AND BOYS, held last week at Raleigh, <lb/>
is viewed with suspicion by some <lb/>
of the colored as Mr. <lb/>
Strowd lovingly calls the <lb/>
It is the plank which demands <lb/>
passage of a ballot law <lb/>
by the Legislature at its next <lb/>
Many colored people and <lb/>
some white An not like the <lb/>
of a secret ballot law, of <lb/>
as if yon are afraid or <lb/>
then again the colored <lb/>
will re-open her private <lb/>
school for girls and Mrs. V. H. <lb/>
nearly opposite <lb/>
the Episcopal church. Fall Term <lb/>
Sept. 1892; ends <lb/>
Friday. Jan. 1898. The Spring <lb/>
Term begins Monday, Jan. 1893; <lb/>
ends Friday, May 1893. <lb/>
S MONTH. <lb/>
department <lb/>
Intermediate department. <lb/>
Higher <lb/>
each, <lb/>
per <lb/>
Thorough and d instruction will <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
be given according to approved I people look with suspicion on this <lb/>
Satisfactory . . H . , <lb/>
arrangements for board be made for proposition as the entering wedge <lb/>
pupils desiring to come from the of some other proposition, to <lb/>
For further address, t-i i <lb/>
try. abridge or take away their right <lb/>
Saluda, N. C. <lb/>
I to vote at <lb/>
supremacy w a vital question- <lb/>
The edited Marion, <lb/>
Butler, now one of the leaders of <lb/>
the Third party, declared until a <lb/>
few weeks ago that it was. The <lb/>
another Third <lb/>
party organ, said so until a few <lb/>
week ago and both them <lb/>
that this made it essential <lb/>
that the Democratic party- in <lb/>
in North Carolina must be <lb/>
because Democratic <lb/>
meant white supremacy. <lb/>
Now find these two organs <lb/>
advocating a party ignores <lb/>
white supremacy sad destroys <lb/>
the barriers between white and <lb/>
black by taking into their <lb/>
conventions as delegates and by <lb/>
nominating far office. Is <lb/>
that the way the white farmers <lb/>
of North Carolina are asked to <lb/>
preserve white supremacy <lb/>
most bitter character, denouncing <lb/>
in a most ridiculous manner the <lb/>
party that we as be- <lb/>
to be right, and the only <lb/>
party through we may hope <lb/>
to get the needed relief. <lb/>
We believe the Alliance <lb/>
was one of the greatest institutions <lb/>
for good that was ever organized <lb/>
by man. for its benevolence was so <lb/>
far reaching in its obligation it <lb/>
had some semblance of the Chris- <lb/>
religion, and we regret most <lb/>
sincerely that it has merged head- <lb/>
long into partisan politics, which <lb/>
in our opinion is a complete <lb/>
of the line of it had <lb/>
in view at its inauguration. <lb/>
For these reasons we the <lb/>
of Union Hill Alliance, No. <lb/>
hereby resolve to withdraw <lb/>
our membership from the order. <lb/>
Resolved further, That these <lb/>
resolutions be spread upon the <lb/>
minutes, and a copy be sent to the <lb/>
and Observer, A aid <lb/>
Progressive Farmer, fig <lb/>
W. II Mann, president; L. A. <lb/>
Powell, vice-president t B. P. <lb/>
Drake, secretary; T. E. Powell, <lb/>
business agent; P. H. Smith, <lb/>
; W- T. Bryant, assistant <lb/>
; L. A. Mizell, assistant door- <lb/>
keeper ; Newsom Taylor, sergeant- <lb/>
at arms; J. A Whitaker, S. N. Ed- <lb/>
wards, G. W. Ward. <lb/>
Atlanta Constitution. <lb/>
Russia emancipated her <lb/>
ism, Prohibition. Be <lb/>
forgetful of <lb/>
mules and babies, and pure <lb/>
scrambling for office in <lb/>
each subject. Tho laboratory will <lb/>
be established close to <lb/>
works and hopes to do a <lb/>
fair business. We cannot however, <lb/>
Everybody in Fay knows <lb/>
Mr. Tom Gill, and that he says <lb/>
some very good things. Some <lb/>
days since be was talking to a <lb/>
Third party a former Democrat, <lb/>
now very enthusiastic over <lb/>
new party. said <lb/>
wise politician old parties <lb/>
are rotten, perfectly <lb/>
specific will satisfy <lb/>
diced public. If Secretary Tracy <lb/>
can prove the Herald to be wrong <lb/>
it is a duty be owes to the <lb/>
as well as to his own <lb/>
good name, to do so at once. <lb/>
Secretary Tracy is coming in for <lb/>
considerable criticism because of <lb/>
the position of Amer- <lb/>
interests in South America, <lb/>
which was sharply brought to <lb/>
mind by the forcible seizure of <lb/>
political refugees on a passenger <lb/>
steamship carrying the <lb/>
flag the other day by Venezuelans, <lb/>
and the consequent hurried order- <lb/>
of the gun-boat Concord from <lb/>
the Atlantic coast to Venezuelan <lb/>
waters. When the social <lb/>
of the officers of the navy <lb/>
were many months ago <lb/>
to have the best ships our navy j <lb/>
spend the summer on the Atlantic <lb/>
coast, to give the <lb/>
who so, delightfully, you <lb/>
an opportunity to in a <lb/>
little time at all the fashionable <lb/>
seaside resorts. Secretary Tracy <lb/>
was begged by those interested to <lb/>
keep one or two vessels in South <lb/>
American waters to look after <lb/>
American interests which are con- <lb/>
jeopardized by the unset- <lb/>
condition of several of the <lb/>
countries over there, but he could <lb/>
not stand the social hence <lb/>
the present unsatisfactory j <lb/>
of affairs. <lb/>
The possibility of an extra <lb/>
of Congress Washington <lb/>
all in a flutter this week, that is, it <lb/>
the rumor prevalent about Mr. <lb/>
Harrison intending to call an ex- <lb/>
session to prohibit <lb/>
on account of the spread of <lb/>
cholera in Europe may be said to <lb/>
serfs more than thirty years in direction, <lb/>
ago, several years before our j for, according to his own showing, <lb/>
Southern slaves were freed. man to <lb/>
But these white in ed who hoped to <lb/>
secure the sweets of office under <lb/>
his father-in-law's name, had a <lb/>
bad ease of the dry grins and did <lb/>
not kindly to it at all. <lb/>
a are practically to-day worse <lb/>
off than tho Southern blacks were <lb/>
before the war. They are half the <lb/>
time on the verge of starvation. <lb/>
Every year the tax gatherer sweeps <lb/>
away little property, and in <lb/>
collection of taxes flogging is <lb/>
resorted to force payment. <lb/>
vent peasants, says <lb/>
flogged in a body, in crowds <lb/>
singly. In 1885, in one district, J legislation which has <lb/>
Why Southern Farmers Should Vote <lb/>
Against <lb/>
Appeal-Avalanche. <lb/>
Because lie has favored tariff <lb/>
had a tend- <lb/>
1,500 peasants were to I ency to reduce tho markets for <lb/>
be flogged for nonpayment of tax-, products. Although <lb/>
es. Under our old slave regime . there has been a great abundance, <lb/>
there was never such an extensive; in this country and a <lb/>
use of tho lash as now prevails in abroad, the value of the <lb/>
free Russia a generation after products exported in 1801 was <lb/>
emancipation- Turn from this while in 1881 it was <lb/>
picture of the white freedmen or nearly <lb/>
Tho Homo has more <lb/>
inmates than at any time since its <lb/>
over a year and a half <lb/>
ago. The number under its roof <lb/>
is Life at the home is certain- <lb/>
pleasant and informal, nor tire <lb/>
those attentions so dear lo the <lb/>
heart of Hie war-worn veterans <lb/>
lacking. Neat rooms, good food, <lb/>
plenty of water and excellent <lb/>
for bathing, a creditable <lb/>
library, and a snug home and tidy <lb/>
grounds, arc some of tho things <lb/>
provided to cheer their declining <lb/>
years. How many people in tho <lb/>
State know that the first man in <lb/>
North Carolina to propose tho es- <lb/>
of a homo for the Con- <lb/>
veterans tho first to <lb/>
contribute money for that <lb/>
was Mr. Elias now a <lb/>
date for Governor Mr. Can- sent <lb/>
his check for with the letter <lb/>
in which he urged that the homo <lb/>
be established. This was twelve <lb/>
years ago. <lb/>
I m Angus. <lb/>
IT. C <lb/>
Office In Skinner upper <lb/>
opposite Photograph <lb/>
L. <lb/>
DENTIST, p- <lb/>
N .<lb/>
LAW. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention to <lb/>
at Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb/>
the Czar to the black freedmen <lb/>
of the South kindly pro- <lb/>
On the other hand, our exports of <lb/>
manufactures have nearly doubled <lb/>
of their old masters. Our in that time. So that a protective <lb/>
notion that rotten wood Treasury de- <lb/>
off the log . officials, who ought to <lb/>
ex-slaves hold political offices, and <lb/>
even sit in Congress. They are <lb/>
accumulating property, and in <lb/>
Georgia alone they own <lb/>
They are educated almost <lb/>
entirely at the expense of the <lb/>
white tax payers. They have the <lb/>
same lights in the courts that the <lb/>
whites enjoy, and no tax gatherer, <lb/>
ox any other creditor or employer, <lb/>
flog them. The Russian gov- <lb/>
has made freedom a <lb/>
to its former white serfs, but the <lb/>
patient and sympathetic South- <lb/>
are standing back of their <lb/>
old bondmen, encouraging and <lb/>
aiding them to an extant never <lb/>
fare witnessed in the history of <lb/>
the world. To oar Northern <lb/>
friends who have such a great ad- <lb/>
for Russia, we commend <lb/>
this brief chapter of contemporary <lb/>
tariff, such as Mr. Harrison <lb/>
ors, outs down the profits of the <lb/>
farmers restricts their market. <lb/>
Why should he get tho vote of a <lb/>
single farmer in the South <lb/>
HOS. t. L. <lb/>
ft BLOW, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
hi all the Courts. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LA <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
I. A. <lb/>
TYSON, <lb/>
n. K. <lb/>
A Small Steam Engine. <lb/>
Weldon New. <lb/>
Engineer George Smith, of the <lb/>
Scotland Neck branch road, be- <lb/>
sides being a good locomotive en- <lb/>
is a mechanical genius. <lb/>
We saw once an infinitesimal en- <lb/>
made by him was run <lb/>
by electricity supplied from the <lb/>
telegraph wire. He has in his <lb/>
shop here an engine which can be <lb/>
held up by two fingers, which is <lb/>
powerful enough to ran a sewing <lb/>
machine. He has another also, <lb/>
not he uses in his <lb/>
work. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention given to collections <lb/>
H. LONG, <lb/>
p. <lb/>
Prompt and direful attention to <lb/>
tics. Collection solicited. <lb/>
hurt- <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Practice la all the Collection <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017563_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
T 1802. <lb/>
said that the tariff is an thread <lb/>
meaningless issue. In De <lb/>
last Mr- the Third <lb/>
party nominee for Congress, <lb/>
it was burdensome, on- <lb/>
necessary, cruel, exacting and <lb/>
satisfactory to the most <lb/>
monopolists. <lb/>
Entered at lit Greenville, <lb/>
J. C., as second-dial's mail matter. <lb/>
THE CANVASS. <lb/>
The nut intend- <lb/>
ed to overlook the county canvass <lb/>
and the splendid work the county <lb/>
are doing, because <lb/>
nothing had been said about them <lb/>
in the last few issues. We attend <lb/>
ed the speaking at two <lb/>
The tariff is the same now and wrote it <lb/>
TICKET <lb/>
CLEVELAND. <lb/>
Of New Tort<lb/>
ADLAI E STEVENSON, <lb/>
Of Illinois. <lb/>
FOB ELECTORS AT UM i <lb/>
CHARLES B AYCOCK. <lb/>
B GLENN. <lb/>
1st Dist.-L. L SMITH. <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
A. B- BRANCH, <lb/>
of Beaufort. <lb/>
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb/>
ELIAS CARR. <lb/>
of <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
R. A- <lb/>
of <lb/>
FOB STATE <lb/>
COKE <lb/>
of Wake.<lb/>
DONALD W. <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
R. M. FURMAN, <lb/>
of Buncombe. <lb/>
FOB OF <lb/>
C SCARBOROUGH. <lb/>
Of ill II-I <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
FRANK I. OSBORNE, <lb/>
of Mecklenburg. <lb/>
OF TWELFTH <lb/>
GEORGE A. SHUFFORD. <lb/>
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb/>
FOB THE <lb/>
F. G JAMES. <lb/>
FOB HOUSE <lb/>
FREDERICK <lb/>
I. K. WETHERINGTON. <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
RICHARD W. KING. <lb/>
FOR REGISTER OF <lb/>
HENRY HARDING<lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb/>
fob <lb/>
DR. WM. E. WARREN <lb/>
fob <lb/>
J. B. KILPATRICK. <lb/>
EXTRACTS FROM WHAT E. A. <lb/>
SAID IN <lb/>
BER LAST. <lb/>
They tell us our Third par- <lb/>
friends will not believe what <lb/>
Democrats write, and that many <lb/>
of them will not go to hear Demo- <lb/>
speak. We have therefore <lb/>
concluded to present to them <lb/>
this issue what one of own <lb/>
chosen leaders of this county has <lb/>
said and published over his own <lb/>
signature. We refer to Mr. E. A. <lb/>
who on the of August <lb/>
was nominated by Third party <lb/>
as their chosen candidate for Con- <lb/>
Certainly our Third party <lb/>
friends will listen to what he says <lb/>
and it will not be possible for them <lb/>
to dispute it. <lb/>
In an Address issued last De- <lb/>
by him in with <lb/>
other gentlemen he <lb/>
would seem of the <lb/>
great struggle of 1802, and it is <lb/>
from that Address that the Re- <lb/>
this morning makes some <lb/>
quotations and earnestly com- <lb/>
mends them to oar Third party <lb/>
In our grievances he <lb/>
said <lb/>
real author of the <lb/>
of which the people so just- <lb/>
complain is the Republican par <lb/>
which has administered the <lb/>
Federal Government for the <lb/>
fit of favored classes and against <lb/>
the interests of the toiling masses <lb/>
of the American people. And we <lb/>
appeal to our fellow citizens of all <lb/>
vocations to stand shoulder <lb/>
shoulder in the tight we must <lb/>
make against this great <lb/>
Again he says in further <lb/>
and our <lb/>
and their <lb/>
add to this inadequacy of <lb/>
money supply and its improper <lb/>
distribution, the unequal and <lb/>
necessary burdens of tariff <lb/>
whose cruel exactions have <lb/>
realized the wildest dreams of the <lb/>
most exorbitant monopolies, and <lb/>
we find a sufficient cause for the <lb/>
unrest and disquiet existing <lb/>
among our people affirm that <lb/>
these evils are the direct offspring <lb/>
of Republican legislation. Other <lb/>
causes of greater or less weight <lb/>
may be for the present <lb/>
depression in agriculture and <lb/>
pursuits, but they too, so far <lb/>
as their origin can traced to <lb/>
legislation, must be charged to <lb/>
the same Republican party ; for <lb/>
has not been an hour in the <lb/>
last twenty-five years when that <lb/>
party did not control one branch <lb/>
or the other of Congress or the <lb/>
Executive, and thus hold an <lb/>
check at all times upon the <lb/>
power of the Democratic party to <lb/>
give the people relief and redress <lb/>
by repealing vicious legislation <lb/>
and enacting remedial ; <lb/>
so that it cannot in fairness be <lb/>
said that the Democratic party is <lb/>
responsible for failing to do these <lb/>
In these days we hear it said by <lb/>
some designing men that the <lb/>
Democratic party is responsible <lb/>
for the present condition of things <lb/>
of which there is so much com- <lb/>
plaint- December last Mr. <lb/>
the nominee of the Third <lb/>
party for Congress, declared it <lb/>
the Republican party and <lb/>
that party alone- <lb/>
was then, and we cannot <lb/>
stand how it oppresses the farm- <lb/>
less than it did then- On the <lb/>
contrary we can see how this tariff <lb/>
becomes more unbearable <lb/>
every day. The Democrats in the <lb/>
present Congress have passed bills <lb/>
through the House repealing the <lb/>
onerous tariff tax on several of the <lb/>
necessaries of life, but a <lb/>
can Senate refuses to consider <lb/>
these honest measures which <lb/>
would lighten some of the burdens <lb/>
of our people- <lb/>
In the Address referred to, Mr. <lb/>
points out to the people <lb/>
words the shortest road to <lb/>
and urges them to walk <lb/>
therein. Hear him, ye Third par- <lb/>
followers Write his words <lb/>
over the lintels of your doors He <lb/>
our opinion the shortest <lb/>
practicable road to the redress of <lb/>
the wrongs and evils which op- <lb/>
press the country is through the <lb/>
complete triumph of the Demo- <lb/>
which is the party of <lb/>
the people, whose fundamental <lb/>
principles are in harmony with <lb/>
their <lb/>
Hear him again along the same <lb/>
line and be governed, we <lb/>
you, by his then manly patriotic- <lb/>
advice in the following <lb/>
we will remain united and <lb/>
determined we may dislodge the <lb/>
Republican party from power and <lb/>
in time work out these needful re- <lb/>
forms, but if we divide up among <lb/>
ourselves it can but result in con- <lb/>
this party in power and <lb/>
thus perpetuating the evils of <lb/>
which we now justly <lb/>
It does look like Mr. saw <lb/>
with prophetic vision that in Au- <lb/>
gust 1892 some misguided men <lb/>
would meet in Edenton and set <lb/>
about dividing the Democratic <lb/>
party, and with an earnest desire <lb/>
for the relief of our people he <lb/>
them in December last <lb/>
against it and pointed out the <lb/>
evil results of such a course- How <lb/>
can he now join that movement <lb/>
As strange as it may seem some <lb/>
of our Third party friends <lb/>
the <lb/>
for <lb/>
last <lb/>
for him- Referring then to <lb/>
Mr. <lb/>
the <lb/>
national character, lie asked Mr. <lb/>
Fleming was it, then, the <lb/>
Third party had brought out both <lb/>
State and county tickets, when no <lb/>
roan living could utter a word <lb/>
against our excellent and <lb/>
county <lb/>
up for the next paper, but having <lb/>
so many letters caused it to be left <lb/>
out for two weeks. It will be in- <lb/>
to other sections of the <lb/>
county to know what was at <lb/>
so publish it now, <lb/>
even though a little old- <lb/>
It was a good day for the Dem- <lb/>
Several of the Democratic <lb/>
candidates went down to make <lb/>
speeches, and had about out <lb/>
to hear one third of tho <lb/>
crowd being colored men. J. B- <lb/>
Little, chairman of the township <lb/>
executive committee, was master <lb/>
of ceremonies, and announced the <lb/>
candidates in their order for speak- <lb/>
Gov- <lb/>
says <lb/>
wise <lb/>
us there is no danger in <lb/>
Force Bill. Their nominee <lb/>
Congress his said Address <lb/>
December <lb/>
unity of the Democratic <lb/>
party of the whole country is es- <lb/>
also to prevent the en- <lb/>
of the Force Bill which <lb/>
would forever destroy the freedom <lb/>
of elections, perpetuate the rule <lb/>
of the Republican party and its <lb/>
vicious measures which have so <lb/>
oppressed the people, and ruin <lb/>
especially the South. We have <lb/>
to apprehend that this danger- <lb/>
bill which we all had hoped <lb/>
was dead will be revived again <lb/>
and enacted into a law if by our <lb/>
divisions the Republican party <lb/>
should once more full <lb/>
control of the law making power <lb/>
of the Federal <lb/>
In speaking of our State <lb/>
and home affairs he <lb/>
in the same <lb/>
to these <lb/>
laws have been wisely <lb/>
and daring all period <lb/>
we have had a pure, pro- <lb/>
Administration of our <lb/>
home affairs, and we do not hes <lb/>
to say that the State Gov- <lb/>
given us by the Dem- <lb/>
party is as near perfect as <lb/>
human institutions well be <lb/>
made- It would be madness in <lb/>
us to divide up among ourselves <lb/>
and by this division turn our <lb/>
State Government over to the <lb/>
party of 1868 and 1869; and we <lb/>
think to sow the seeds of discord <lb/>
and promote division in the ranks <lb/>
of the Democrats of North Caro- <lb/>
from whatever motive would <lb/>
imperil the best interests of the <lb/>
State should be avoided by <lb/>
all true <lb/>
Ye followers of Exum, and Cobb, <lb/>
and Lang, and Worth, and Lyon, <lb/>
and Woody, Mr. said in <lb/>
December last that such a course <lb/>
as you are now pursuing would <lb/>
be madness and should be avoided <lb/>
by all true men. If ye be true <lb/>
men, we urge you to consider, to <lb/>
return and help that <lb/>
Government of our State which <lb/>
Mr. has declared to as <lb/>
near perfect as human institutions <lb/>
can well be made. <lb/>
There was a large crowd at <lb/>
Farmville. last Saturday, to hear <lb/>
the speech cf Hon. C B. Aycock, <lb/>
Democratic Elector for the State <lb/>
at large. Mr. Council Wooten, a <lb/>
Lenoir county Third was <lb/>
over there and wanted a division <lb/>
of time. He got it, all he wanted <lb/>
and more besides. The arrange- <lb/>
was that each should make <lb/>
a speech and then have a half <lb/>
hour rejoinder Wooten led off <lb/>
for an hour a rambling talk on <lb/>
the financial legislation of Con- <lb/>
since war. There was <lb/>
nothing in his speech and it had <lb/>
no effect on his hearers. Aycock <lb/>
followed in a powerful argument <lb/>
that had force and conviction in <lb/>
it His was an speech and <lb/>
did good for the Democracy. He <lb/>
so completely demolished Wooten <lb/>
and his argument that that gen- <lb/>
would not avail himself of <lb/>
the remaining-half hoar, there <lb/>
We also hear it was nothing that he could say. <lb/>
R. W. King, candidate for <lb/>
Sheriff, was the first called upon. <lb/>
He said he was not a speaking <lb/>
man, but was the nominee of the <lb/>
Democratic party of Pitt county <lb/>
for Sheriff, and said if elected he <lb/>
would serve the people faithfully. <lb/>
His knowledge of the Sheriff's <lb/>
office and its work qualified him <lb/>
to make the best Sheriff in the <lb/>
county, and he wanted everybody <lb/>
to vote for him. <lb/>
W. H- Harrington, the Third <lb/>
party candidate for Sheriff, was on <lb/>
the ground also and the chairman <lb/>
invited him to speak. He took <lb/>
the stand and said he could not <lb/>
make a speech either, that he was <lb/>
the of the Third party <lb/>
and was. satisfied that he would <lb/>
make a better Sheriff than Mr. <lb/>
King. <lb/>
H. Harding, candidate for Regis- <lb/>
of Deeds, was next announced. <lb/>
He said he would not get up on <lb/>
the platform this time but would <lb/>
stand on the ground so as to be <lb/>
on a level with all the people. He <lb/>
had no opponent present and <lb/>
would not attempt to make any <lb/>
speech other than to announce <lb/>
himself as the regular nominee of <lb/>
the Democratic party of Pitt <lb/>
for the office of Register of <lb/>
Deeds. If elected he was going <lb/>
to serve the people to the very best <lb/>
of his ability. He believed he <lb/>
would be was certain <lb/>
he would be if ho got enough <lb/>
votes. He wanted the good <lb/>
of township to help <lb/>
swell the for him. <lb/>
Fred nominee for <lb/>
the Legislature was next called. <lb/>
After the usual announcements, he <lb/>
said he had not been present at any <lb/>
of the speakings of the campaign <lb/>
and was as yet unacquainted with <lb/>
the lines to be followed. He had <lb/>
an opponent on the ground who <lb/>
would be given a hearing and if <lb/>
anything worthy cf reply came <lb/>
from that source ho would <lb/>
heard from again. He closed by <lb/>
saying he had no doubts but that <lb/>
he would be elected, and it was his <lb/>
intention to advocate such meas- <lb/>
that would be to the best in- <lb/>
of all the people. <lb/>
Fleming, the Third party <lb/>
candidate for the Legislature, was <lb/>
invited to speak. He said he was <lb/>
not the candidate of any party but <lb/>
the people had <lb/>
nominated him and he was their <lb/>
candidate- He was not there <lb/>
specially to represent himself, but <lb/>
was the representative of Mr. <lb/>
Weaver, the peoples candidate for <lb/>
President. He then made some <lb/>
random thrusts at Grover Cleve- <lb/>
land without offering any proof <lb/>
whatever of his charges. He said <lb/>
further that the only legislation <lb/>
that affected the people was <lb/>
and all they cared about was <lb/>
the President and Congressmen. <lb/>
He said he was not so confident of <lb/>
being elected as his opponent who <lb/>
had just spoken. He did not <lb/>
know whether he would be elected <lb/>
or not, but hoped all there would <lb/>
vote for <lb/>
coming from half a dozen colored <lb/>
people, somewhat took tho <lb/>
by surprise, and it was here <lb/>
that the fun started. The colored <lb/>
people began putting such ones <lb/>
Mr. Ids past <lb/>
pasty affiliations, the way he used <lb/>
to challenge colored voters, etc <lb/>
that he was completely hacked, <lb/>
and the audience enjoyed the fun <lb/>
The next speaker announced <lb/>
as F. G. James nominee for the <lb/>
Senate, who spoke for minutes. <lb/>
As usual he made a handsome <lb/>
speech and won himself friends- <lb/>
He said as yet he hod no opponent <lb/>
in the field, and being interrupted <lb/>
by Mr. Fleming who said <lb/>
mind, you will have Mr. <lb/>
James replied light, let him <lb/>
show up and I will be ready for <lb/>
It was left for G. B. King to <lb/>
make the speech of the occasion in <lb/>
response to calls for him. Mr. <lb/>
King is not a candidate for any <lb/>
is always ready to do <lb/>
service when the party calls. He <lb/>
answered every charge Mr. Flem- <lb/>
mode against Grover Cleve- <lb/>
land. He also showed <lb/>
record and hatred for the <lb/>
South, and said he did not see <lb/>
how any Southern man could vote <lb/>
Mr- have several <lb/>
ons. One is the next Legislature <lb/>
may have a Senator to elect, and <lb/>
we nominated the other so <lb/>
as to help each other along. <lb/>
Mr. Carolina has two <lb/>
U. S- Senators whose terms do not <lb/>
expire some years yet. On <lb/>
what do yon base your <lb/>
that tho next Legislature <lb/>
to elect a Senator <lb/>
Mr. men than <lb/>
Vance or sometime <lb/>
die suddenly. <lb/>
Mr- it is your wish <lb/>
that one them may die, is it, <lb/>
and you are prospecting for it <lb/>
hand <lb/>
Mr. Fleming found himself so <lb/>
embarrassed again that he could <lb/>
not reply, and Mr. King went on <lb/>
with his speech, saying the Third <lb/>
were jumping at the <lb/>
ditch they get to it. <lb/>
It was evident that tho Third <lb/>
party would get little if any sup- <lb/>
port from township, <lb/>
either from white or colored <lb/>
Tho next Saturday following <lb/>
they had a speaking at Ayden, and <lb/>
were greeted by a crowd of <lb/>
more than two hundred- They <lb/>
found that Third party <lb/>
in was very scarce <lb/>
and what little there was of it was <lb/>
diminishing- <lb/>
what, j Mr. has not receded far lie lo by his fellow students and <lb/>
said about all enough from the Democratic party always a favorite with his teacher. <lb/>
. . , , , to be able to attentive t W simile <lb/>
legislation needed being of a lo , , n , , <lb/>
sham falsehoods which <lb/>
his so called party have <lb/>
been industriously circulating con- <lb/>
our peerless, standard <lb/>
bearer, Cleveland, the man <lb/>
whose record has so noble, <lb/>
that even stalwart <lb/>
cans f tho North deserted their <lb/>
brilliant but tricky leader Blaine, <lb/>
and cast their votes to make him <lb/>
President instead. It requires <lb/>
either a native depravity that <lb/>
makes one blush for our race or a <lb/>
very long association with the rad- <lb/>
party South, before any white <lb/>
man could readily retail false- <lb/>
hoods of the ordinary St. <lb/>
get Mr. <lb/>
says he has beet, for <lb/>
time opposed to Mr. <lb/>
Cleveland's <lb/>
This is no reflection whatever <lb/>
upon our great Democratic <lb/>
candidate for President. We <lb/>
know several cranks of Mr. <lb/>
type who are ready to step into the <lb/>
boat with Mr. and drift out <lb/>
on a piratical cruise in search of <lb/>
some candidate who will pledge <lb/>
the United States Government to <lb/>
clothe and yes, and <lb/>
furnish medicine when <lb/>
to as many indolent, impoverished <lb/>
dead beats as can be found to <lb/>
hold out hands for rations at the <lb/>
doors of our National Treasury. <lb/>
Such an might be de- <lb/>
to many ; but it is hardly <lb/>
practicable. Now, will Mr. <lb/>
tell tho people of Pitt county ex- <lb/>
what Mr. Cleveland's <lb/>
views are Will he tell them <lb/>
in print through your columns <lb/>
We dare him to do so. <lb/>
The gentleman says he will, <lb/>
the campaign discuss the <lb/>
issues tho people <lb/>
he has time and opportunity <lb/>
to do We have heard Mr. <lb/>
speak and do not think he <lb/>
can hurt anybody but himself by <lb/>
so doing, unless it be some <lb/>
person who may chance to <lb/>
be peculiarly sensitive to boredom. <lb/>
But when he deals in sentiment. <lb/>
and talks of and <lb/>
and to <lb/>
he grow eloquent. Let him <lb/>
dodge finance whenever he shall <lb/>
speak, and he may hold some of <lb/>
his hearers the if he <lb/>
will only have a due regard for <lb/>
brevity, and some show of point <lb/>
in argument. <lb/>
And by the way <lb/>
of Mr. office have not <lb/>
heretofore been so binding, but <lb/>
that he find time, to attend <lb/>
conventions, as far away as Ashe- <lb/>
ville, and even and other <lb/>
points for the sole purpose of <lb/>
working up a Third party, in <lb/>
which Mr. intelligence <lb/>
might be estimated at par with <lb/>
his recognition which <lb/>
be could not possibly hope for in <lb/>
the Democratic party. So, we do <lb/>
not presume the gentleman will <lb/>
hesitate to enter the fight and <lb/>
main in it to the if he can <lb/>
only feel a reasonable certainty <lb/>
that it will be to his interest to do <lb/>
Some of the brethren of the <lb/>
State press place a splendid value <lb/>
on their advertising space when <lb/>
they give the Alden book con- <lb/>
a line reading notice for <lb/>
a cent book. should <lb/>
be looking after these brethren <lb/>
better and- not allow them to <lb/>
wander from the path of rectitude. <lb/>
We shall expect him to give them <lb/>
a lecture as soon as ho gets <lb/>
through with Exum- <lb/>
and was known to In any- <lb/>
thing in- undertook. The tun often went <lb/>
down on him tit. hi earnestly en- <lb/>
to solve prob- <lb/>
On the ground, too, ho ill- <lb/>
ways bore a prominent part, on account <lb/>
his lively, fun-loving disposition. At <lb/>
early age he great <lb/>
In national mid in victory of <lb/>
1884 no one could sound the Cleveland <lb/>
triumph After <lb/>
hit studies at Hie he enter- <lb/>
ed the establishment of R. L. Davis. <lb/>
As lie hail no In the mer- <lb/>
lie was given the junior <lb/>
went into It with the <lb/>
same to succeed that had <lb/>
always Two years <lb/>
passed he wax foil d the <lb/>
And, he lived, he would <lb/>
have been a partner in <lb/>
Integrity, Industry and courage placed <lb/>
his MOM high ill the e-l it ion of his <lb/>
fellow-men. I can scarcely that <lb/>
he b gone. one ago I was In <lb/>
store, lie In his usual good <lb/>
spirits, and the l.-mt I heard from him <lb/>
a farewell tune, on his violin, he lie- <lb/>
a great lover of music. Only n short <lb/>
time before his death, not even his own <lb/>
family could believe his end was so <lb/>
Hut alas lie is gone. Hut his memory <lb/>
lives in the hearts of those w ho loved <lb/>
him And to ends the life of one, ho <lb/>
prospects seemed so before It had <lb/>
fairly begun, and as quietly the mid- <lb/>
night hour stole in, his soul was faking <lb/>
its flight upward and onward, beyond <lb/>
world and planet stars. M. <lb/>
There are some patent medicine- that <lb/>
are more marvelous than a dozen <lb/>
prescriptions, but they're not those that <lb/>
profess to cure everything. <lb/>
now and then, feels <lb/>
They've the <lb/>
will, but no power to vitality. <lb/>
They're not sick enough to call <lb/>
but just too sick to be well. That's <lb/>
where the right kind of a patent <lb/>
cine comes and docs for a dollar what <lb/>
the doctor wouldn't do for less than live <lb/>
or ten. We put our claim for Dr. <lb/>
Pierce's Golden Medic Discovery. <lb/>
We claim it to be an <lb/>
to the blood to invigorate the <lb/>
liver. We claim to be lasting in its <lb/>
effects, creating an appetite, <lb/>
the blood, mid preventing Billions, Ty- <lb/>
and Malarial fevers if taken <lb/>
time. The time to take it is when you <lb/>
first feel the signs of weariness <lb/>
weakness. The time, on general <lb/>
Is now. <lb/>
J. B. CO. <lb/>
DEALERS IN<lb/>
-o <lb/>
We beg to announce to our many <lb/>
and customers that we <lb/>
have the largest and best selected <lb/>
stock of to be oar <lb/>
town. And while we are not sell <lb/>
at cost we beg to announce <lb/>
that we think we and will do-<lb/>
The other day we heard Mr. <lb/>
Ben James, of Bethel township, <lb/>
say the recent Democratic picnic <lb/>
had done the Demo- <lb/>
party much good, Some <lb/>
men who before hearing <lb/>
Kitchen were strong Third party <lb/>
advocates, are now talking just <lb/>
as strongly for the Democratic <lb/>
ticket. Mr- James is an old <lb/>
time Republican but takes no <lb/>
stock tho Third Party fusion- <lb/>
He says if the Republicans don't <lb/>
give him a ticket to vote for. he <lb/>
will not be found voting the Third <lb/>
party ticket. <lb/>
A WORD FOR MR. E. A. <lb/>
Mb- your issue of <lb/>
Aug. 24th, you published a letter <lb/>
from Mr. E- A- in which <lb/>
letter Mr- protests, as you <lb/>
so ably stated in your editorial. <lb/>
against your previous criticism of <lb/>
and because he <lb/>
and had tho courage of his <lb/>
and convictions, and <lb/>
resolved to stand by <lb/>
What those are we <lb/>
should be glad to have Mr. <lb/>
unfold at If he has any <lb/>
convictions on any political sub- <lb/>
beyond the point that he <lb/>
the presentation of his <lb/>
name before the so called Peoples <lb/>
party convention for- tho <lb/>
for Congress from this dis- <lb/>
and that he means to hold <lb/>
on to his present office of Clerk <lb/>
of this county until some <lb/>
than that the wish of the <lb/>
Democratic voters of Pitt shall in- <lb/>
him to resign, we have <lb/>
failed to to the same. <lb/>
Mr. states that <lb/>
and intolerant policy <lb/>
pursued by you has wrought great <lb/>
harm to the Democratic party <lb/>
this Surely Mr. Move <lb/>
does not complain of We <lb/>
should infer that he would tender <lb/>
you a vote of thanks for such in- <lb/>
jury, since he boasts of tho person- <lb/>
el of the party <lb/>
which met here on tho <lb/>
of July, and triumphantly asserts, <lb/>
it compared favorably with <lb/>
any Democratic convention ever <lb/>
held here in every -i <lb/>
Certainly this would seem to in <lb/>
that Mp. has washed; <lb/>
his hands of the par- <lb/>
and that he means to fight <lb/>
it pretendedly for some <lb/>
imaginary reform ; and that <lb/>
the <lb/>
of this assertion, in <lb/>
view of Mr. very moderate <lb/>
mental is simply astound- <lb/>
He blows his horn unasked, <lb/>
and puts himself at the head of an <lb/>
imaginary to fight for an <lb/>
reform, while Mr. <lb/>
certainly has ability to <lb/>
understand that every hope for <lb/>
any reform for beloved laud <lb/>
and people, must come through <lb/>
the Democratic party and through <lb/>
that alone. <lb/>
Mr. stated that con- <lb/>
of his error he will be ready <lb/>
and willing to Perhaps <lb/>
the gentleman is already <lb/>
ed since the fiasco of the Third <lb/>
convention at Raleigh. Per <lb/>
he does not see bis way so <lb/>
clearly to an election to Congress <lb/>
over the present honorable <lb/>
Mr. Branch, the <lb/>
promised withdrawal <lb/>
and concluding that discretion is <lb/>
the better part of valor, has <lb/>
ed not to himself out of the <lb/>
loaves, and fishes of the Clerks <lb/>
office the dazzling uncertainty <lb/>
of a couple of winters in Washing- <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
Has Mr- anything to say <lb/>
upon this point <lb/>
Scotland mi m mm, <lb/>
The. dying of Garments, Rib- <lb/>
etc., etc., done with neatness and <lb/>
dispatch. <lb/>
Charges for woolen or mixed goods <lb/>
one-fourth to one-third, and cotton one- <lb/>
half less than city prices. Also dry- <lb/>
cleaning by French process. II request- <lb/>
ed any repair attended to at reasonable <lb/>
prices. When work done am to <lb/>
82.00 express will be paid way, <lb/>
when both ways. Send for price <lb/>
list, <lb/>
Scotland Neck, N. O. <lb/>
so. <lb/>
Now one direct question <lb/>
When Mt. Skinner was <lb/>
Greenville on a certain <lb/>
Monday morning, to attend the <lb/>
People's party convention to be <lb/>
held the following day at Raleigh, <lb/>
did Mr. authorized Mr- <lb/>
Skinner to the nomination <lb/>
for him at the Edenton <lb/>
convention, or did he not <lb/>
Let him as Christian gentle- <lb/>
speak on this point, <lb/>
We pause for a reply- <lb/>
Citizen-. <lb/>
1802. <lb/>
Km <lb/>
In your issue of lust week n <lb/>
reflecting upon me as an officer and <lb/>
a which I cannot permit to go <lb/>
noticed. I am constable <lb/>
this township, and always endeavor to <lb/>
do wish to say- <lb/>
that Hie statement about me was wholly <lb/>
and basely false. Whoever re- <lb/>
ported such to yon Kited was false <lb/>
and was actuated by the basest <lb/>
motives. If your will make <lb/>
himself known to I will tell he <lb/>
has lied upon me and has done so without <lb/>
excuse, j am one of those who try <lb/>
to conceal the truth. actions <lb/>
should be exposed, and a serious <lb/>
injustice is done me which affects my <lb/>
and standing both as a man <lb/>
and officer, I can not be have <lb/>
thus chosen to denounce the false state- <lb/>
made against me, <lb/>
Dissolution Notice. <lb/>
The partnership heretofore existing <lb/>
between W. Brown and S. T. Hooker, <lb/>
trailing as Hooker, is hereby <lb/>
dissolved by mutual consent. All who <lb/>
arc indebted to the old will please <lb/>
settle with S. T. Hooker. <lb/>
W. B. BROWN, <lb/>
T. HOOKER. <lb/>
July 27th, 1891 <lb/>
conduct the at the <lb/>
old stand and solicit the liberal patron, <lb/>
age bestowed upon the old Hy <lb/>
consent will continue under the old style <lb/>
of Brown Booker. Brown will <lb/>
continue as salesman. <lb/>
S. T. HOOKER. <lb/>
any prices th different <lb/>
of Goods by us. We <lb/>
throw out no baits to entrap <lb/>
To one and all we extend <lb/>
a cordial welcome to our <lb/>
will be pleased to serve you with <lb/>
any goods in the following <lb/>
-------o- <lb/>
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions, <lb/>
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Pants <lb/>
Goods, Hats, Shoes, Hardware, <lb/>
Cutlery, Nails, Tinware, Crockery, <lb/>
Glassware, Groceries, deg. <lb/>
White Oil cents per gallon, <lb/>
Wood and Willow Ware, Harness, <lb/>
------o <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
State North In the <lb/>
Pitt County. I Superior Court. <lb/>
Eliza Stocks. J. T. Allen and wife Min- <lb/>
Allen. T. B. Allen and wife Mollie, <lb/>
Stock-, Cora Stocks. William <lb/>
Stocks. Annie Stocks, Chas. Stocks, <lb/>
Queenie Mocks and Stocks. Hie <lb/>
last six minors by their friend J. T-<lb/>
Home Benefit Association, <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 he for the county of at the <lb/>
Court in Greenville, on the 2nd <lb/>
Monday after the 1st Monday f <lb/>
it being the Nth day of <lb/>
1802, answer the complaint which <lb/>
will lie deposited in the office of <lb/>
Clerk of the Superior Court of said <lb/>
the first three days said <lb/>
term, lot said defendant take notice <lb/>
that if they fad to answer the said com- <lb/>
plaint within the time required law <lb/>
the plaintiffs apply to the court for <lb/>
the relief demanded the complaint. <lb/>
Given under my hand and seal of said <lb/>
court, this day of August, <lb/>
E. A. <lb/>
Superior Court. <lb/>
Very <lb/>
K. <lb/>
Dissolution. <lb/>
The firm of and Edmonds is <lb/>
of j hereby dissolved Mutual consent. <lb/>
Those indebted to the will pay the <lb/>
same to Herbert Edmonds. <lb/>
Edmonds. <lb/>
Aug. <lb/>
It gives me pleasure to announce to <lb/>
our customers that I will continue the <lb/>
business a, the old stand. Every com- <lb/>
fort and convenience will be found in <lb/>
ray shop. First-class shave and haircut <lb/>
pan be had at all times. Thanking the <lb/>
public for pact I solicit <lb/>
of the same. <lb/>
Edmonds. <lb/>
RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT. <lb/>
At a palled meeting of the tobacco <lb/>
board of trade of Greenville N. C, the <lb/>
following resolutions were adopted <lb/>
the sudden of Mr. C. It. <lb/>
It pleased Almighty God in in- <lb/>
and to take <lb/>
our midst our friend and <lb/>
Mr. C. B. and where- <lb/>
as, we recognize that in him we have <lb/>
lost a firm friend and a sterling co-labor- <lb/>
therefore lie it, <lb/>
Hi -sol That this organization feels <lb/>
the great that fallen to <lb/>
his toll is friends and to the trade, <lb/>
we tender to his <lb/>
and friends out profound <lb/>
sympathy in their loss. <lb/>
That a copy of these resolutions <lb/>
sept lo his a copy to be sent the <lb/>
Eastern Tobacco Journal and <lb/>
and Oxford Public <lb/>
and also the resolutions be spread <lb/>
on the mi mites of our organ <lb/>
O. Evans, <lb/>
W. T. <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Died, on Thursday, 25th, at his <lb/>
in county, IT. <lb/>
of Mr- Taylor <lb/>
Barrow, aged The life and <lb/>
character of him who has passed from us <lb/>
I will endeavor to place before the many <lb/>
readers of the have not <lb/>
known him In person. He was left <lb/>
when quite young, r the family <lb/>
also sustaining a great loss by Are. be <lb/>
seemed to dismiss all hope of obtaining a <lb/>
collegiate education which had ever been <lb/>
his highest ambition. He therefore took <lb/>
up his father's work and successfully con- <lb/>
ducted his mother's farm, until big 16th <lb/>
year, when ambition beating so high In <lb/>
his breast, he at last reluctantly abandon- <lb/>
ed the farm and the loved face of his de- <lb/>
voted mother to attend the at <lb/>
Farmville, which was then a thriving <lb/>
school. It was from tills lime, onward <lb/>
that I bad the opportunity to know and <lb/>
appreciate the noble character my be- <lb/>
loved desk-mate. It was in these days <lb/>
that he those friendships which <lb/>
ever be warm hearts of those <lb/>
who survive him. And It was In <lb/>
days we became dear friends. At <lb/>
You are Not In It <lb/>
If you fail to see the brand new stock of <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
is now going offered by----- <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
-----1 have just to suit----- <lb/>
f GENTLEMEN, <lb/>
LADY, <lb/>
HOUSEKEEPER, <lb/>
j FARMER, <lb/>
ELSE- <lb/>
If you wan t wear or an <lb/>
to cat, or any article to go in the house, <lb/>
call on me. all new, not a piece <lb/>
of old stock n the house. <lb/>
My prices will be found as low as <lb/>
goods can be sold at. <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
Two doors from C. A. <lb/>
near Five Points. <lb/>
WALTER'S <lb/>
Street, in rear of Dr. D. L. James <lb/>
office. <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb/>
I take great pleasure in informing my <lb/>
. friends and public generally <lb/>
that<lb/>
is now open, A successful career of <lb/>
YEARS <lb/>
Is a proof of the satisfaction I give. <lb/>
My Work Speaks for Itself. <lb/>
Coll early and examine <lb/>
Hoping to gain your confidence, and <lb/>
merit your favor. am <lb/>
Whips and Collars, Farming Tools <lb/>
Plows of the improved makes. <lb/>
Trunks, Valises, Floor Matting, <lb/>
Oil Children's Carriages, <lb/>
and the largest and best selected <lb/>
stock of FURNITURE ever <lb/>
in our town. When in need of <lb/>
anything in our various line try us. <lb/>
Yours, anxious for trade, <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
G. E. HARRIS, <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. G <lb/>
OFFICE 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/>
Horner Military School, Oxford, N. C. <lb/>
Very respectfully <lb/>
WALTER <lb/>
sent on <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb/>
Headquarters for the of <lb/>
Car load Mei Port. <lb/>
Car load Rib Side Meat. <lb/>
Car load <lb/>
Car load While Seed Oats. <lb/>
Horses Bread <lb/>
and Peaches. <lb/>
Boxes Tobacco. <lb/>
Boxes Starch. <lb/>
Barrels Rico Molasses. <lb/>
Barrels Stick Candy. <lb/>
Barrels Gail ft Ax Snuff. <lb/>
Barrels Mills Snuff. <lb/>
Barrels Snuff. <lb/>
Paper Sacks, hero Cigarette. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
MUSIC SCHOOL. <lb/>
MRS. would be <lb/>
to have a class in Instrumental <lb/>
Music at her home In J. Perkins <lb/>
residence. Session begins September <lb/>
on <lb/>
For Sale on Easy Terms <lb/>
Double Store In I <lb/>
offer sale on terms Urge <lb/>
Double Store north of <lb/>
east Evan- with lot fronting <lb/>
feet on Fifth street by feet deep. A <lb/>
splendid bargain. Apply at once to <lb/>
ii<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017563_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
CD <lb/>
tr <lb/>
DO <lb/>
CD <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
The nights arc fine. <lb/>
It is dry again. <lb/>
Tin- is first fall month. <lb/>
Tobacco breaks keep right on. <lb/>
Some fact are needed in Greenville. <lb/>
The New Home Sewing Machine for <lb/>
Brown Bros. <lb/>
The a quarter for a <lb/>
See <lb/>
and have <lb/>
been in market. <lb/>
Prof. dancing class gave a <lb/>
hop Friday night. <lb/>
Nicholson had oysters last Thursday, <lb/>
the first of the season. <lb/>
A handsome flag floats over the Eastern <lb/>
Warehouse 8.1 feet high. <lb/>
New Cream X. Y. State <lb/>
Butter at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Mr. I,. II. spent <lb/>
Tarboro hist week. <lb/>
a few in <lb/>
Mr. K. A- Tyson <lb/>
Friday on business. <lb/>
went to Baltimore <lb/>
. J-J <lb/>
Roll of Honor, <lb/>
For last month of tire public school <lb/>
taught hi district by Vi-s Bessie <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
Alien, John Allen, <lb/>
Allen, Lloyd Smith, A. <lb/>
Smith, Robert K. Thomas <lb/>
Job T. Tyson. <lb/>
it tic Tyson. Alice <lb/>
Dora Lizzie <lb/>
Rosa I. and <lb/>
Maggie Tyson. <lb/>
Dr. J. Marquis last week from <lb/>
a visit to Philadelphia. <lb/>
Three children of Treasurer Job it <lb/>
Flanagan are quite sick. <lb/>
Mrs. W. R. Onion, of to <lb/>
visiting Mrs. James Brown. I Man <lb/>
Mr. E. J. Proctor, one of the A young colored man named John May <lb/>
I tor boys spent Sunday in Kinston. j wan drowned on the excursion to Wash- <lb/>
I Mrs. I. E. of vis- I Thursday, lie was taking a <lb/>
her mother. Mrs. P. E. Dancy. <lb/>
Master Charlie Forbes left Monday <lb/>
morning for Horner School, Oxford. <lb/>
Mrs. Z. D. and her mother, <lb/>
Mrs. J. I. arc both quite sick. <lb/>
FARMS FOR <lb/>
Low, <lb/>
Watch the id Democracy as it <lb/>
unfurls to the breezes to-day. <lb/>
Bros, are another store <lb/>
in the Hall corner. <lb/>
Want to eat something good Bess <lb/>
Biscuits at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
We see it stated that Weaver will <lb/>
-peak at Mount the <lb/>
Everybody join and give three grand <lb/>
for Cleveland and Carr to-day. <lb/>
Greenville was full of la-l <lb/>
Thursday and will be full again to-day. <lb/>
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads and <lb/>
Mattresses at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The Co. met Mon- <lb/>
day and transacted the usual business. <lb/>
Cali given for Produce. Hides, Eggs <lb/>
and Furs at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The Reflector Book Store has just re- <lb/>
another of Cleveland but- <lb/>
tons. <lb/>
says Food is <lb/>
good for hog cholera. At the Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
drum from the upper to the lower <lb/>
deck of the steamer while walking <lb/>
along the gangway the drum a <lb/>
post and knocked him overboard. Be- <lb/>
fore the steamer could be stopped and <lb/>
turned around he was some distance <lb/>
away- The drum kept him afloat for <lb/>
several minutes, bit the <lb/>
among the passengers and rail- to him to <lb/>
Miss Move, of Kinston, has bee. <lb/>
visiting friends here the past two weeks. I h <lb/>
j and before a life boat could <lb/>
Hon. W. Mason and State Senator reach him. This occurred in about <lb/>
miles Washington. The body was re- <lb/>
covered Saturday and brought to <lb/>
Mr. If. R. Lang returned last <lb/>
day from his three weeks at the north. <lb/>
i of were <lb/>
turned warm again <lb/>
The few day <lb/>
cool, hut it <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Cooper's Warehouse. Henderson, is <lb/>
ready for new chop tobacco. He <lb/>
highest prices. <lb/>
The merchant who does not advertise <lb/>
in the Reflector is missing it. Our <lb/>
subscription list more rapidly. <lb/>
The old reliable is Cooper's Ware- <lb/>
house. Henderson. Send your tobacco <lb/>
there. Cooper is the farmer's friend. <lb/>
There are rumors of a circus in the dis- <lb/>
We hope it will stay in the dis- <lb/>
so far as Pitt county is concerned. <lb/>
The Reflector overrun its average <lb/>
last week and entered new subscribers <lb/>
for the week. tired writing <lb/>
receipts. <lb/>
Ship your tobacco to Cooper's Ware- <lb/>
house, Henderson, and he will work <lb/>
honestly and faithfully for your best <lb/>
interest. <lb/>
Mrs. Laura Brown has purchased the <lb/>
house and lot on Pitt street <lb/>
It was sold through Which- <lb/>
real estate agents. <lb/>
Remember if you send your tobacco to <lb/>
Cooper's Warehouse. Henderson, yon <lb/>
will obtain high prices and be <lb/>
Try it. <lb/>
They are fine tomato vine- growing by <lb/>
the side of Cobb Son's store. They <lb/>
arc evidence of what the tomato can do <lb/>
when properly trained. <lb/>
Reflector thanks Mr. W. <lb/>
of for a Carr campaign <lb/>
button. It bears a splendid photograph <lb/>
of our candidate for Governor. <lb/>
The thanks of the Reflector are re- <lb/>
turned to the Ladies Aid Society of the <lb/>
Methodist church for ice cream cake <lb/>
sent to the office last Thursday. <lb/>
You can get a good for <lb/>
cents in the vacant store between Con- <lb/>
and Ladies <lb/>
Aid Society of the Baptist church are in <lb/>
charge. <lb/>
The other day Mr. J. W. <lb/>
who cures for Mr. J. B. Nichols, sent <lb/>
a beautiful sample of tobacco. He said <lb/>
It was Democrat mahogany, and it was <lb/>
certainly Simon pure. <lb/>
people, and all others who <lb/>
pass that way. are now more happy than <lb/>
formerly. The new foot bridge is com- <lb/>
mud is all right. It is a larger and <lb/>
better bridge than the old <lb/>
On Aug. th. Cooper's Warehouse, <lb/>
Henderson, sold new primings for K. <lb/>
It. Carr at 15.50. and <lb/>
and for F. T. Carr at 4.50 ft, 10.50 <lb/>
II, 13.75 Cooper make just <lb/>
as good sales for yon. <lb/>
The Directors of the Weldon fair have <lb/>
decided to have a fair this fall from No- <lb/>
1st to 4th inclusive. Weldon <lb/>
usually has a good fair and there is no <lb/>
reason why the one this season should <lb/>
not be excellent In every respect. <lb/>
There will lie I meeting at <lb/>
next Saturday for purpose of organ- <lb/>
a Cleveland and Carr club. Mr. <lb/>
G. B. King, of Greenville, and <lb/>
of Kinston. will both speak. Already <lb/>
names arc on the list of the Club. <lb/>
The past few weeks have certainly <lb/>
shown that Greenville ought to have an <lb/>
ice Who will take hold of this <lb/>
It seems that some of our money men <lb/>
should be less backward in taking hold of <lb/>
enterprises in which large profits can be <lb/>
made.<lb/>
Attention is called to the advertisement <lb/>
of the Scotland Steam Dye Works, <lb/>
which will be found in this issue. Any <lb/>
of people having done <lb/>
will find this establishment very <lb/>
for t hem and prices lower than cam <lb/>
be had further away. <lb/>
The Tobacco Trade of Richmond have <lb/>
tip an excursion to that city on <lb/>
e 14th inst. for a big sale of tobacco on <lb/>
the 15th. Ship your tobacco three days <lb/>
ahead to Silas Ware- <lb/>
house and go on the excursion and see it <lb/>
sold. Fare for the round trip is only <lb/>
from points between Goldsboro and <lb/>
Whitakers to Richmond and return. <lb/>
hog-head- will be furnished all <lb/>
shippers. Got your tobacco ready and <lb/>
ship it to Silas who the <lb/>
best lighted best located warehouse <lb/>
in Richmond, and promises his best <lb/>
efforts to get yon good prices. <lb/>
New Cotton. <lb/>
The first bale of new cotton at Green- <lb/>
ville came in Saturday and was <lb/>
ed by Young It was raised <lb/>
by Ed on one of the Latham <lb/>
Skinner farms and weighed pounds. <lb/>
A new bale was carried to Bethel the <lb/>
same day bought by <lb/>
MM. <lb/>
On Wednesday evening. August 31st, <lb/>
at the residence of the bride's parents, <lb/>
Mr. Mrs. J. E. Boyette, in Scotland <lb/>
Neck. Mr. Harris, of Greenville, <lb/>
and Miss Blanche Boyette were married. <lb/>
Key. R. T. Vann officiating. Re- <lb/>
joins Jim's many friends in ex- <lb/>
tending best wishes. <lb/>
Flags. <lb/>
Cleveland and Carr lags float all over <lb/>
town. We notice one from the flag pole <lb/>
on Williamson's carriage streps, and the <lb/>
patriotism of boys keeps increasing. <lb/>
Mr. Smith's little boy has raised one <lb/>
on the corner near bis home and little <lb/>
David James has one up In front of his <lb/>
father's residence. the grand <lb/>
banner will be unfurled from top of <lb/>
the foot pole in from, of the Court <lb/>
House amid the shoots of the <lb/>
multitude. <lb/>
J. S. Bel will speak ill Greenville to-day. <lb/>
Miss Mollie E. Kidd. of Petersburg, is <lb/>
visiting her sister, Mrs. A. B. Ellington. <lb/>
Mr. J. W. Higgs has just returned from <lb/>
the north where he went on a purchasing <lb/>
tour. <lb/>
Mr. Andrew Joyner has moved his <lb/>
family back to Greenville. We welcome <lb/>
them. <lb/>
Mrs. Eva Satchwell, of Beaufort <lb/>
is visiting sister, Mrs. A. <lb/>
Sheppard. <lb/>
Capt. C. A. White has been sick for <lb/>
two weeks, but we are glad to know he <lb/>
is up again. <lb/>
Mr. C. L. Tyson, who spent part of <lb/>
the summer at Connelly Springs, has <lb/>
returned home. <lb/>
Miss Helen Friday <lb/>
morning to continue her studies at Notre <lb/>
Dame, Baltimore. <lb/>
Mr. D. Bullock, of Oxford, was on <lb/>
the breaks here last week and bought <lb/>
largely of the Pitt weed. <lb/>
Messrs. Robert Hester and R. W. <lb/>
Royster have located in Greenville <lb/>
as buyers and handlers of <lb/>
The family of Mr. D. Gasket re- <lb/>
turned home last week from their <lb/>
to Morganton and Connelly Springs. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. L. Langley and <lb/>
Miss Maggie, have been spending <lb/>
sonic days with relatives in Washington. <lb/>
Miss S. Lucy Joyner returned from <lb/>
Franklin county Saturday and began her <lb/>
school for boys and Monday morn- <lb/>
She opened with <lb/>
Messrs. F. C. Harding and E. A. Move, <lb/>
Jr., to their studies at the <lb/>
last week. Mr. W. F. Harding <lb/>
will leave Hill this evening. <lb/>
Mr. Silas proprietor of <lb/>
Warehouse, Richmond, -pent <lb/>
last week here. He was working in the <lb/>
interest of the big Richmond excursion <lb/>
on the 14th. <lb/>
Sheriff B. W. Edwards, of Snow Hill, <lb/>
attended the opening breaks here last <lb/>
Thursday. He reports the Democracy <lb/>
of Greene county all right and says the <lb/>
Third party is in over there. <lb/>
Mr. Y. Cooper, the old reliable, <lb/>
and the clever proprietor of <lb/>
Warehouse, Henderson, was at the <lb/>
opening breaks here last Thursday, and <lb/>
said we had a fine tobacco country down <lb/>
here. <lb/>
Rev. J. X. H. of <lb/>
preached in Elliott Hall Sunday morn- <lb/>
and Rev. R. W. Wilson, <lb/>
preached Hall in the <lb/>
Rev. II. II. Phelps preached <lb/>
the Episcopal church both morning <lb/>
Mr-. J. T. William- will, her children <lb/>
left Friday to make her home in <lb/>
more. She has long been a resident of <lb/>
Greenville, everybody in the entire com- <lb/>
was her friend and all regret her <lb/>
departure from our town. The <lb/>
tor semis its wishes with her to her <lb/>
new home. <lb/>
Mr. W. S. Greer, one of the cleverest <lb/>
drummer.- on the road, was town la.-t <lb/>
week and dropped for a chat with the <lb/>
Reflector, lie said he had just been <lb/>
on a trip all over the State and is satisfied <lb/>
the Third party not amount to a <lb/>
hill of He said wherever Gov. <lb/>
Jarvis had been there were signs of the <lb/>
best work that had ever been done in any <lb/>
campaign, for Cleveland and <lb/>
Democracy grow brighter every day. <lb/>
Latham, the cartoonist of the <lb/>
Washington Gazette, dropped to see <lb/>
us a short while Saturday, while on his <lb/>
way to inspect his vegetable patch near <lb/>
Mt. Pleasant. He found his turnips and <lb/>
onions all had the big root, the cabbage <lb/>
bad the big head, somebody had pulled <lb/>
all the leaves off the corn stalks, the <lb/>
cotton bolls were all breaking open, <lb/>
and ho thought the was <lb/>
to pay generally over there. If frost <lb/>
don't catch he expects his spring <lb/>
beans to snap and the cucumbers to <lb/>
double up. The reading clerk plant <lb/>
was blooming and will ripe enough <lb/>
to pull by January. <lb/>
Elder W. A. Ross, of this county, re- <lb/>
returned home from a mouth's trip <lb/>
through several counties In the central <lb/>
portion of the State. He traveled over <lb/>
fourteen counties, went as far over in <lb/>
Virginia as Danville, and while away at- <lb/>
tended three Associations, He reports <lb/>
that his entire trip was an <lb/>
pleasant ore. tells the Reflector <lb/>
that in all his travels he did not find a <lb/>
Third at any house he visited. <lb/>
Uncle Alfred is a close observer and a <lb/>
good of men, and would been sure <lb/>
to have spotted a Third man had <lb/>
he come across one. He is not only a <lb/>
good man and a good preacher, but he is <lb/>
the best Democrat in Pitt <lb/>
Last Thursday had a sad beginning in <lb/>
Greenville. Though he was a stranger <lb/>
to most of our citizens every one was <lb/>
saddened upon learning early that morn- <lb/>
that Mr. C. R. had died at <lb/>
the King House about half past three <lb/>
o'clock. Mr. was from Oxford. <lb/>
A few weeks since he made a brief trip <lb/>
to Greenville to confer with the <lb/>
tors of the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse <lb/>
as to accepting the position of auctioneer <lb/>
for house. An agreement Ml <lb/>
made between them and Mr. <lb/>
was to return to Greenville in time for <lb/>
the opening break. He came back two <lb/>
days before the break but was sick when <lb/>
he came and had to keep his room after <lb/>
arriving. Wednesday evening he was <lb/>
thought to be doing moderately well and <lb/>
stated some plans about his going to the <lb/>
warehouse the next day, but that night <lb/>
he grew rapidly worse and died at the <lb/>
time above stated. Though comparative- <lb/>
among strangers he was among friends. <lb/>
Every attention was paid him in his <lb/>
and every mark of respect was <lb/>
shown him after death. The Odd <lb/>
lows of this was a member of <lb/>
the his body- prepared <lb/>
the remains to the <lb/>
depot and sent one of their number, Mr. <lb/>
J, S. C. Benjamin, in charge of it to Ox- <lb/>
ford. The news of hi death was a sad <lb/>
shock to his family who had the <lb/>
sympathy of the of Greenville in <lb/>
their <lb/>
In Fla., July 21st. Col. R. W. <lb/>
formerly a resident of this <lb/>
place where he Was well known. De- <lb/>
ceased lived in Pitt county many years <lb/>
ago. He was a kindly man, generous <lb/>
impulses, warm friendship, lofty <lb/>
and easily moved by appeals to the <lb/>
high and Advance. <lb/>
The infant daughter of Mr. Reeve. <lb/>
died last Thursday morning near En field <lb/>
where Mrs. Reeves with the little one <lb/>
was visiting. The Reflector extends <lb/>
sympathy. <lb/>
X. C, April <lb/>
wife used Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy in <lb/>
family and we found It to be all that <lb/>
she claimed for it. It cannot he excel led <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
Thursday Evening Last. <lb/>
The scenic entertainment last <lb/>
Thursday evening under the efficient <lb/>
management of Mrs. Cherry, Mrs. <lb/>
Sheppard and Miss Jennie Williams, <lb/>
assisted by many other faithful <lb/>
of the King, was a decided <lb/>
and so received and applauded to the <lb/>
encore by an enthusiastic audience. <lb/>
Indeed having mind the ten days only <lb/>
of practice and rehearsal by our <lb/>
we were literally surprised out of <lb/>
certain hypocritical airs were trying <lb/>
to assume into intense and howling <lb/>
admiration. <lb/>
Whence so much talent so much <lb/>
taste how conjured from amateurs <lb/>
such genuine, lively acting, the <lb/>
Even Greenville's bright young <lb/>
people excelled themselves and those <lb/>
who were absent missed the thing <lb/>
of this kind we have ever attended in <lb/>
Greenville. But a fulsome puff would <lb/>
be undignified and to real <lb/>
merit. Just a word to the chief feat- <lb/>
Yet what was better when nil <lb/>
was best The scene from the Opera <lb/>
Wang elicited much healthy applause. <lb/>
a- Contrary seemed <lb/>
to well understand how that a dainty <lb/>
toss of the head, an arch impertinent <lb/>
lift of the chin, a little superior vanity <lb/>
would but enhance an already more <lb/>
than striking beauty. Then fun f wasn't <lb/>
it fun to see dear old Bob Cox play <lb/>
the country bumpkin lover and Delia <lb/>
dear girl, how she and Bob must have <lb/>
practiced together; they could put up <lb/>
job on the real old <lb/>
For want of space we can notice only <lb/>
the feature, by far, of the whole <lb/>
the tableau, <lb/>
Daughter and Her taken <lb/>
from fine work of art. As <lb/>
the curtain rose on that <lb/>
beautiful scene amid breathless silence, <lb/>
our heart and mind flew away over <lb/>
to old hills beyond Jordan, to <lb/>
the times when the daughters of <lb/>
used to lament the sad fate of hero- <lb/>
Hebrew maiden. Full of pathos it <lb/>
was What wondrous resignation in <lb/>
the beaut upturned face of the mar- <lb/>
canvass or human <lb/>
depict the utter hopelessness of <lb/>
despair more intensely than the marble <lb/>
features and pose of the half kneeling <lb/>
maiden friend Thou <lb/>
en. And thou maiden kneeling at the <lb/>
virgin's feet, thou wouldst have said <lb/>
didst know it would have <lb/>
been in vain. Tears, despair, <lb/>
tender affection, and over all, <lb/>
blending all the heroic resolve of the <lb/>
devoted maiden. More than one eye <lb/>
familiar with old Bible story felt <lb/>
the ready tear stayed the <lb/>
emotion of awe of something <lb/>
grand. Have it again by all means. <lb/>
And who did not enjoy Dr. Charlie's <lb/>
sweet mellow notes as be and won, <lb/>
his dusky bride and made her a <lb/>
But the Editor is kicking <lb/>
we must -top. Would like to say <lb/>
abort all. <lb/>
Are you going to Kinston Go by all <lb/>
means. Sure success would attend you. <lb/>
and the hearty good will and assistance <lb/>
possible of your audience, including <lb/>
yours truly. <lb/>
Old Black. <lb/>
NEW GOODS<lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
HAS JUST RETURNED FROM TIE NORTHERN MARKETS. SO TAKE A <lb/>
PEEP AT HIS STOKE. IT OVER NEW <lb/>
GOODS OF A <lb/>
Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots, Shoes, Notions, <lb/>
Furnishing Goods, <lb/>
The Opening Breaks. <lb/>
From the way hogsheads and loads of <lb/>
tobacco rolled into Greenville on Tues- <lb/>
day, Wednesday and Thursday last, and <lb/>
the way people poured into town Thurs- <lb/>
it was seen that the open- <lb/>
breaks of two tobacco ware- <lb/>
houses had attracted interest from every <lb/>
quarter of the county and from every ad- <lb/>
joining county. It was a great day and <lb/>
one long to be remembered. The men <lb/>
in charge of the warehouses arc hustlers, <lb/>
they had advertised thoroughly and <lb/>
tobacco came people, too. It is <lb/>
rare that a tobacco sale anywhere is so <lb/>
largely attended. The buyers were here, <lb/>
the planters were here, the spectators <lb/>
were here all ready for the sales to begin. <lb/>
Both warehouses had much more to- <lb/>
than they could handle at onetime <lb/>
and it was not long before their floors <lb/>
were covered with bright piles of the <lb/>
golden weed. The sale began at the <lb/>
Greenville Warehouse at o'clock, and <lb/>
old Man never looked happier <lb/>
since his wedding day than when he said, <lb/>
it's here, come in bid on <lb/>
Mr. Eugene Crews, of Oxford, served as <lb/>
for the day and was a wonder <lb/>
to listen at. He warbled and trilled <lb/>
equal to a mocking bird and just made <lb/>
the piles of tobacco walk right out be- <lb/>
hind him. Bidding was brisk in no <lb/>
while pile on the floor had <lb/>
been knocked off. <lb/>
The sale then began in the Eastern <lb/>
Warehouse with the same auctioneer <lb/>
milking the music, and the more he sang <lb/>
the better he got. Alex was in all hi <lb/>
glory checking up the tags, while <lb/>
never got red of spurring up the buyers <lb/>
w on her, boys, she's The <lb/>
floor of the Eastern was not half gone <lb/>
over when the sale stopped at o'clock <lb/>
for dinner. After dinner the crowd grew <lb/>
still larger and hundreds of ladies were <lb/>
out. The marriage to take place after <lb/>
the was a drawing card and the <lb/>
crowd was there to sec it. they <lb/>
were bent on seeing it, for the crowd s <lb/>
so large that they could not be cleared <lb/>
out after the sales to make room for the <lb/>
bridal party. <lb/>
It was about five o'clock when the <lb/>
wedding took place in the door of the <lb/>
Greenville Warehouse. The couple <lb/>
joined In wedlock In the presence of the <lb/>
multitude were Mr. J. of <lb/>
Franklin county, and Mrs. Mamie Pol- <lb/>
lard, daughter Rev. A. A. Tyson, <lb/>
of Pitt. They were attended by J. n. <lb/>
Fuller with Miss and A. <lb/>
W. with Miss Ophelia Col- <lb/>
lens. The ceremony was performed by <lb/>
Rev. J. T. Phillips, of Farmville, who <lb/>
looked as happy over the occasion, as the <lb/>
bride and groom A shout <lb/>
went up from the c when he pro-. <lb/>
them man and Wife. <lb/>
Greenville is bound to be a good to- <lb/>
market, Men of pluck are <lb/>
charge of the warehouses and they will <lb/>
nothing undone to give <lb/>
Nothing more was expected them <lb/>
that there should be some kicking, but <lb/>
there was a small of it <lb/>
for such an occasion. <lb/>
Pitt county has the tobacco, Green- <lb/>
ville has the warehouses, now everybody <lb/>
lend his aid to make the home market <lb/>
equal of any. <lb/>
New Barber Shop. <lb/>
I take this to return <lb/>
Hanks to my many customers who have <lb/>
me their liberal support in the out. <lb/>
have opened m new shop in Hie old Club <lb/>
House and would respectfully solicit a <lb/>
continuation of my former patronage <lb/>
will assure all that they shall <lb/>
every attention besides getting the best <lb/>
share and cut in town. All L ask is <lb/>
trial. Satisfaction guaranteed. All <lb/>
of latest Id As <lb/>
art will in one In mt strop. <lb/>
LISTEN <lb/>
and other novelties too numerous to mention. <lb/>
Fine All- Wool Suits 88.06 <lb/>
All-Wool PaWS worth <lb/>
Men's Dress Shoes cents worth <lb/>
Dress Shoes cents worth <lb/>
Magnificent bargains in all departments, <lb/>
hard licks and long strides to it. <lb/>
We want your trade and are making <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
Opposite; Old Store. <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
IV. O. <lb/>
Bullock Mitchell, <lb/>
Owners and Proprietors. <lb/>
Headquarters for Big Prices High Averages <lb/>
are still doing business at the same old stand, where we are better prepared than <lb/>
ever before to handle to advantage the line bright Tobacco from the Golden <lb/>
have a very large corps of buyers who are anxious for New Tobacco <lb/>
and arc willing to pay good for it. stands well on <lb/>
market and is eagerly sought after both by our order mm and speculators. Wt are <lb/>
very glad can say to the of Pitt and adjoining counties <lb/>
Unit tobacco has better this year than we have known it in <lb/>
and that we look for good prices during the season. Hogsheads can be <lb/>
OF CHARGE by those planters shipping to us, by applying to S. M. <lb/>
Schultz ft Co. Greenville. N. C. to Amos G. Cox. c. <lb/>
her bid lively on every pile put upon our floor and buy of grades <lb/>
that we sell, and will see to it that you shall have highest market price for <lb/>
sold with us. that it cost you to collect our cheeks as they <lb/>
are payable in New York Exchange without cost to holder. forget to try u-- <lb/>
with a good shipment and we will convince you we from <lb/>
and that get every time on big prices and you know they talk. <lb/>
Will have your tobacco graded for you in our by skilled bands at per <lb/>
Thanking our friends for the very liberal bestowed Upon the past <lb/>
and them our very best efforts to please them in the we arc with <lb/>
best wishes. Very truly your <lb/>
Terms Easy. <lb/>
BROS. OFFER FOR SALE <lb/>
The J. L. Ballard home farm, Bea- <lb/>
Dam township, adjoining the lands <lb/>
of G. T. and J. II. A fine <lb/>
farm of about acres, with good build- <lb/>
and adapted to corn, cotton and <lb/>
A Hue bed. <lb/>
S. A farm near mid King i <lb/>
mediately on the railroad, formerly own- I <lb/>
ed by Caleb B. Tripp, i <lb/>
are cleared. Good neighbor- <lb/>
hood, churches and a school within <lb/>
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin <lb/>
farms. <lb/>
A farm of three miles <lb/>
from and from Green- <lb/>
with large, dwelling <lb/>
and out houses, known as the I. I. <lb/>
home place, line, cotton <lb/>
good clay subsoil, accessible marl. <lb/>
i. A smaller farm adjoining the above <lb/>
known as the Jones place, 1.10 acres, <lb/>
dwelling, ham and tenant house, land <lb/>
good. <lb/>
A farm of acres in town- <lb/>
ship, about miles from <lb/>
acres cleared, part of the Singlet tract. <lb/>
Part or the Noah farm, <lb/>
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro, <lb/>
located in an improving section <lb/>
can be made a valuable farm. <lb/>
A small farm of acres, <lb/>
about miles from Greenville, on In- <lb/>
Well Swamp, with house, etc. for- <lb/>
owned by <lb/>
ALSO TIMBER <lb/>
A tract of about acres near Cone- <lb/>
the nation, with cypress timber well <lb/>
suited for I ties. <lb/>
a tract of about acres in <lb/>
township, near the Washington rail- <lb/>
road, pine timber. <lb/>
A of acres near Johnson's <lb/>
Mills, pine and cypress timber. <lb/>
Apply to II. LONG, <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
OLD <lb/>
Vt ants your Tobacco at the <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
WAREHOUSE. <lb/>
The re ed with a big break en <lb/>
Thursday, September <lb/>
Bring on your Tobacco and I guarantee <lb/>
that you will get n high prices <lb/>
for it as c n be hail any- <lb/>
where. <lb/>
I will have t help in conduct- <lb/>
the Warehouse and <lb/>
every patron will prompt <lb/>
attention. Don't forget to <lb/>
bring <lb/>
The following sales have made <lb/>
this season; M. smith Kr- <lb/>
nest Forbes Dixon John <lb/>
Peebles 13.25, 12.75. <lb/>
M. B. SO, 20.00, <lb/>
18.75. M. K. Dale 3.0, SO, SO, X. <lb/>
i. EVANS, <lb/>
PROPRIETOR. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
On Monday, the 19th day <lb/>
A. D. 1802, I will sell at the Court <lb/>
door in the town of Greenville, to the <lb/>
highest bidder for cash the following <lb/>
tract of laud in county, situated <lb/>
the town of Greenville and known in <lb/>
said tow n as lots No. and <lb/>
the lots in K, Bernard <lb/>
ill the division of the land-of William <lb/>
Bernard. St. lo satisfy s veil ex in <lb/>
hands for collection Ann K. <lb/>
III and which have been levied oh said <lb/>
hind as the property of said Ann K. Her- <lb/>
J. A. K. <lb/>
AND WK ABE PREPARED TO HANDLE R TOBACCO TO THE <lb/>
BEST ADVANTAGE.<lb/>
THE <lb/>
BULLOCK A <lb/>
MITCHELL, <lb/>
Oxford. N. C <lb/>
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTiONS- <lb/>
There is a great, deal of satisfaction in leading <lb/>
we are still in that position. Rivals at- <lb/>
tempt to follow our methods but find that we <lb/>
lead them a merry chase and they finally give <lb/>
it up or come to grief. <lb/>
Elegance and durability, coupled with low <lb/>
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods <lb/>
and Notions in the lead. <lb/>
BROWN BROTHERS. <lb/>
W. C, <lb/>
mi; PLANTERS Of EASTERN CAROLINA THAT WILL <lb/>
SPARE No EFFORTS TO BELL I TOBACCO <lb/>
AS HIGH AS THE HIGHEST. <lb/>
-o------ <lb/>
COME TO THE EASTERN WHERE YOU FIND FOLLOWING <lb/>
BUYERS ALWAYS ON <lb/>
Ii. M. HESTER, <lb/>
R. W. <lb/>
E. J. HESTER, <lb/>
E. II. <lb/>
J. HART, <lb/>
W. WIGGINS, <lb/>
S. JENKINS, <lb/>
W. K. <lb/>
They all want an will pay for It. <lb/>
Insurance and Free. Free Stables. <lb/>
Your friends, <lb/>
L. JOYNER, <lb/>
Owners and Proprietors of Jo; -r Eastern Warehouse. <lb/>
Have on hand a full line of Cooking Stoves, Kitchenware, Tin- <lb/>
ware, Lamp Goods, Faints, Oils, Glass and Putty. <lb/>
We make our own stovepipe and pans of cold rolled steel which <lb/>
the most durable. <lb/>
We don't try to keep the cheapest goods in town, out if you <lb/>
want to get the most value your money give a call. <lb/>
test White Oil cents per gallon. <lb/>
Tin Roofing and Guttering the Tariff. <lb/>
S. E. CO., <lb/>
O. <lb/>
the of <lb/>
to the havers of Pitt and surrounding a line of the following goo <lb/>
not to he In this market. And an <lb/>
pure DRY GOODS of all kinds. NOTIONS. <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS. FURNITURE and FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS. CROCKERY and <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb/>
kinds, Gin and Mm. Belting. Hay, Rock of Paris, and <lb/>
Hair, Harness, Bridles and <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A <lb/>
Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb/>
Jobbers price, dozen, less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep <lb/>
and Hall's Star 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 satisfaction. <lb/>
COM MISSION MERCHANT, <lb/>
--------AND OF-------- <lb/>
Country Produce <lb/>
Bring me all of your Chickens, Eggs, Ducks, <lb/>
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the <lb/>
highest market price for them pay in spot <lb/>
cash. <lb/>
If you have anything to ship I will attend to it for yen on a small commission. <lb/>
Call see me.<lb/>
ma<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017563_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
IS N <lb/>
AIDS NATURE <lb/>
IN NATURE'S OWN WAY. <lb/>
IT COSTS TO <lb/>
ATLANTIC CO. <lb/>
Sew York e. P. C. <lb/>
How Lost How Regained <lb/>
THYSELF. <lb/>
A and ml. <lb/>
MATURE <lb/>
Tb invaluable <lb/>
mill, doable <lb/>
, with endorsements <lb/>
the Press <lb/>
of tin <lb/>
in person or by . <lb/>
and ILK- <lb/>
Main v . r r <lb/>
W W St. <lb/>
M has many <lb/>
I, ., <lb/>
w valuable than . <lb/>
man I. <lb/>
STRONG<lb/>
CO <lb/>
now. <lb/>
A Family Affair <lb/>
Health for the Baby, <lb/>
Pleasure for the Parents, <lb/>
New Life for the OH Folks. <lb/>
Hires <lb/>
THE TURN Or THE <lb/>
There's of cold. <lb/>
And a Wink -f rave stained <lb/>
the a rood or so. <lb/>
a roof low; <lb/>
And h day will seldom fall <lb/>
its distress lent and old. <lb/>
root and red than <lb/>
her black napped doorway tans, <lb/>
Very frail and meaner and small. <lb/>
And Ibo load <lb/>
With a foot she bears <lb/>
the tall to and fro. <lb/>
But her steps will ever stay <lb/>
the turn of tho road <lb/>
Never reach It, you guess <lb/>
That they halt for feebleness. <lb/>
Till you hear her story told. <lb/>
For she children all <lb/>
Are while away; <lb/>
Years Ions since watched them go <lb/>
Twas when day came glimmering cold <lb/>
Hound the turn of the road; <lb/>
And I'm lonesome left behind; <lb/>
Yet time passes, fast or slow. <lb/>
And they're coming home some day. <lb/>
They'll hack to me, they said; <lb/>
this morn that's overhead <lb/>
It might for aught I know. <lb/>
And that's always in my mind. <lb/>
For I dream It in my sleep. <lb/>
And I think it when I wake. <lb/>
And when out of doors I creep <lb/>
Toward tho turn of tho road, <lb/>
hen a step I hardly make. <lb/>
But I'm saying all the while. <lb/>
Ere another minute's gone. <lb/>
may see them there, all three. <lb/>
Coming poor lads, to mo, <lb/>
I lie turn of the road. <lb/>
Bat a stone's throw farther on. <lb/>
If I'd creep to where it showed <lb/>
Like a stretched a mile. <lb/>
And the look I'd <lb/>
Saw stirring on its white. <lb/>
Sure my heart were fit to break. <lb/>
So I in fight. <lb/>
Home I set face again. <lb/>
Lest I'd lose the thought that's <lb/>
the day. And then <lb/>
If find the house so still <lb/>
That my heart begins to <lb/>
Ere my foot is o'er the sill. <lb/>
I can think I needn't fret. <lb/>
If they're maybe near me yet <lb/>
At the turn of the <lb/>
Jane Barlow In <lb/>
If tho L <lb/>
CHINA'S MANY DIALECTS. <lb/>
to Keep trio <lb/>
his hat and the kettle <lb/>
I can taste-it in the people in the mu <lb/>
tarn tho t steam, <lb/>
Tho fevers ye, raM j trice as distant Crow <lb/>
Theo, following out pt the water tho pipe only a few miles raw <lb/>
boat and his aim. cow and the is condensed into j totally different forms. In <lb/>
Harry shouted. j fresh Water and rune into the jug. some of the larger cities, <lb/>
water. I tell yon we shall have all It's one of first things I learned <lb/>
i in chemistry; some use, <lb/>
It said too <lb/>
we will Troop <lb/>
land Hurry <lb/>
the water we want inside of two <lb/>
think I'm <lb/>
all right, I end a <lb/>
Don't know that lead pipe and n <lb/>
teakettle arc good a spring <lb/>
Canton, with more than 1.000,000 in- <lb/>
often finds several <lb/>
dialect f in The variation <lb/>
In the are so great <lb/>
watch j indeed that it is not too much to say <lb/>
that there arc many dialect forms <lb/>
Go and room and get to on tho man on watch ; in the Kingdom day in <lb/>
Work and shall soon have all the ; to keep the lire going and keep water i the year. <lb/>
water yon can <lb/>
i walked oil toward <lb/>
but not without looking <lb/>
over his at Harry, <lb/>
j sudden ext he not <lb/>
Horn- into the <lb/>
and drew half inch <lb/>
. lead pipe fifteen feet long. He <lb/>
went into the little cabin found <lb/>
the copper big to hi M <lb/>
I- he cried, <lb/>
lake the plenty or <lb/>
-a big to lest <lb/>
in a little more <lb/>
in new, Theo; about a pint at a <lb/>
Is kettle <lb/>
than a full and never let <lb/>
fire go down. New, go and t <lb/>
sonic more for <lb/>
At supper time d <lb/>
half of water apiece. <lb/>
kept steaming . <lb/>
night, and the jug was <lb/>
than a full. <lb/>
i four after tho of <lb/>
tho boys lived on and <lb/>
water. It not a <lb/>
ids bat they made com <lb/>
will stay here to help . <lb/>
abated on the fifth day <lb/>
that they were on the island. But <lb/>
tor two days tho sea was too <lb/>
rough for them to <lb/>
broken <lb/>
On the seventh day they heard a <lb/>
steam close by and a few <lb/>
woo <lb/>
i i <lb/>
took the and <lb/>
for a thicket, keeping <lb/>
the shelter tho that shielded <lb/>
; him from the fury of hurricane. <lb/>
Theo, look at the end of <lb/>
this pipe. Now I wish you to make. <lb/>
The most widely spread language <lb/>
is tho Mandarin. It is used one <lb/>
form or another in fourteen or <lb/>
teen of the nineteen provinces com- <lb/>
posing China. There are north- <lb/>
and southern Mandarin t agues. <lb/>
The northern Mandarin dialect is <lb/>
spoken Peking, while tho est <lb/>
southern spoken in Nan- <lb/>
kin. A marked form of the <lb/>
tongue is used west China, <lb/>
especially in People <lb/>
who speak the various Mandarin <lb/>
dialects however can understand one <lb/>
another readily. If we estimate tho <lb/>
population of China at of <lb/>
people at least use tho <lb/>
Mandarin tongue. All persons, from <lb/>
THE STILL. <lb/>
the men on her cheering at sight of <lb/>
the throe boys alive and well. <lb/>
THE GREAT <lb/>
DRINK <lb/>
a family requisite <lb/>
of The home <lb/>
Ration, of <lb/>
for<lb/>
NO I <lb/>
us <lb/>
Scientific American <lb/>
Agency for <lb/>
CAVEATS. <lb/>
TRADE MARKS, <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
etc. <lb/>
to <lb/>
w. <lb/>
In <lb/>
oat i i-- <lb/>
the Ly a t it, <lb/>
f r <lb/>
i-. . .;. a <lb/>
0- <lb/>
t u <lb/>
MINN CU- <lb/>
Oldest far <lb/>
B. E. <lb/>
and <lb/>
TRAINS SOUTH.<lb/>
Apr. 19th. daily Fart Mail, daily <lb/>
ex Sun <lb/>
pin S <lb/>
i -to am u ; it <lb/>
1288 am CO <lb/>
p S <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar Wilmington <lb/>
sit Magnolia <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
TRAINS COOK NORTH <lb/>
So K <lb/>
daily daily <lb/>
ex Sun. <lb/>
fl <lb/>
i am <lb/>
It<lb/>
ii 5-5 <lb/>
1306 <lb/>
Ar OS <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson am m ii <lb/>
Ai Mount S SO h <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
except <lb/>
Train on Scotland Week Branch <lb/>
leaves Halifax 4.22 arrives Scot <lb/>
at P. M., Greenville 6.62 <lb/>
P. M., Kinston p. Returning, <lb/>
leaves Kinston 7.10 a. <lb/>
9.25 Arriving Halifax in. <lb/>
Weldon 11.25 a. at., daily Sun- <lb/>
on Washington Branch leave <lb/>
Washington 7.0 a arrives A. R. <lb/>
Junction a. in., returning A. <lb/>
B. Junction v. in., arrive- <lb/>
8.46 p. Daily except <lb/>
with trains on ml <lb/>
Raleigh it. B. and Neck <lb/>
Branch. <lb/>
Local freight train leaves Weldon <lb/>
Monday. Wednesday and Friday <lb/>
10.15 in., arriving Scotland Neck 1.05 <lb/>
a. m. Greenville p. in., <lb/>
7.10 p. m. leaves Kinston <lb/>
Tuesday. and Saturday <lb/>
7.20 a. m. arriving <lb/>
a. m., Scotland 2.-1 p. m. Weldon <lb/>
5.15 p. m. <lb/>
Tram leaves Tarboro, X via <lb/>
Raleigh B. B. except Sun- <lb/>
day. F M. Sunday S On P M, <lb/>
Williamson, N C, V M, M. <lb/>
Plymouth 8.80 p. in., 5.22 p. m. <lb/>
leaves Plymouth daily except <lb/>
Sunday 6.00 a. in., 0.00 a. m- <lb/>
in. N t. 7.30.1 in, am. <lb/>
arrive Tarboro, X C, A <lb/>
Trains on Southern Division. Wilson <lb/>
and leave <lb/>
ville a m. arrive Rowland p m. <lb/>
Returning leave Rowland p m. <lb/>
arrive p in. Daily ex- <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb/>
Goldsboro dally except Sunday. A M <lb/>
M C, A M. Be <lb/>
laves X A M <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro. N C A M. <lb/>
Train leaves Bock <lb/>
Monet at P M, arrive <lb/>
P Hope p M. <lb/>
Spring Hope A M. Nashville <lb/>
A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for daily, except Sunday. <lb/>
and <lb/>
ton at A M, and P. cornice <lb/>
in at Warsaw And <lb/>
Trains No. South and North will <lb/>
only at Mount, Wilson, <lb/>
and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. makes connection <lb/>
Weldon for all points daily. AI <lb/>
rail via and daily except Sun <lb/>
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb/>
daily except Sunday, with Norfolk A <lb/>
railroad for Norfolk and all <lb/>
Norfolk. <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson <lb/>
Branch is-No. Northbound Is <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
DIVINE, <lb/>
General <lb/>
J. B. Transportation <lb/>
T, <lb/>
no use cooking any more <lb/>
conchs, Theo, I can't cat another <lb/>
mouthful of anything till I have some <lb/>
water. Come down to the <lb/>
Theo, a brawny boy of eight- <lb/>
or twenty, barefooted, with his <lb/>
trousers rolled to his knees, his shirt <lb/>
I open at tho throat and a tattered <lb/>
straw hat on his head, followed to a <lb/>
boat lay well up on the beach <lb/>
i with it great hole stove in her side. <lb/>
brought you down said <lb/>
Harry Waterfowl, leaning his back <lb/>
against the boat and looking seriously <lb/>
I at the boy. I don't <lb/>
i want t J -car what I say. <lb/>
Bat this thing is coining to an end. <lb/>
You sec how sits there with <lb/>
i his head on his looking at the <lb/>
I water He's been that way all day. <lb/>
That's the thirst. Ho feels it worse <lb/>
we do because he is a mulatto, <lb/>
j they the strength of a <lb/>
, pure black or a pure white. <lb/>
I well the same way by tomorrow <lb/>
I and will worse. This is <lb/>
j the third day without water, and in <lb/>
I another twenty-four hours we'll not <lb/>
j be able to help <lb/>
true, Theo replied; <lb/>
I is <lb/>
thirst; but what are we going <lb/>
to <lb/>
am going to throw the ballast <lb/>
j out of patch her up and <lb/>
try to take her to Nassau. It is a <lb/>
slim chance, bat I might as well <lb/>
drown as hero of <lb/>
They were on Pelican island, these <lb/>
boys, only twelve miles from <lb/>
in the Bahamas. But in the <lb/>
terrific hurricane that was blowing <lb/>
they might as well a thou- <lb/>
sand miles away, even if they had <lb/>
not bilged their boat while landing <lb/>
on the island. <lb/>
Harry Waterfowl, an American <lb/>
boy spending the winter in tho hotel <lb/>
in with his father, bad gone <lb/>
out fishing with the two colored <lb/>
boatmen, and when tho storm sud- <lb/>
broke up they had managed to <lb/>
reach Pelican island, with no food, <lb/>
with their water jug washed full <lb/>
of salt sea water. <lb/>
The lack of food was a small mat- <lb/>
for plenty of conchs are to be <lb/>
found near the shores of these is <lb/>
lands, and conchs when properly <lb/>
pared are as wholesome as clams. <lb/>
But the water P island was <lb/>
not more than an acre in extent, a <lb/>
limestone rock, with thin soil on <lb/>
top and not a drop of fresh water. <lb/>
They had terribly for <lb/>
three days and now they had reached <lb/>
the danger <lb/>
Might as well throw yourself into <lb/>
the once, <lb/>
i is no small made could <lb/>
; live this sea. And the wind would <lb/>
pick it right out of the water. This <lb/>
j is what we call a long wind <lb/>
i keeps in the same quarter. It may <lb/>
blow so for five or six days. There <lb/>
wouldn't no Nassau boatman come <lb/>
out while it lasts for no <lb/>
am going to try Harry re <lb/>
plied. is sure death to stay here. <lb/>
can do as you like, <lb/>
, but I have made up my mind to go. <lb/>
I The wind blows dead for Nassau, and <lb/>
I shall lash the sail over this bole in <lb/>
I tho side and try it with a double <lb/>
reefed <lb/>
go down, Theo <lb/>
expostulated. <lb/>
can sink if we throw <lb/>
out the Harry asked. <lb/>
she fills shell still float. She'll bras <lb/>
mo a plug out of the hardest wood minutes later tho steam tug City of <lb/>
yon can find, with tho end just ; Nassau was pulling off their beach <lb/>
big enough to fit snugly into tho pipe Harry's father on board, and <lb/>
large end three times as <lb/>
Hairy twisted tho pipe five times <lb/>
around a broken limb of a tree that <lb/>
lay near, five or six inches in <lb/>
and thus made a coil, leaving <lb/>
about two feet of the at <lb/>
tho top cf the coil and a foot or I <lb/>
I more at the bottom. <lb/>
the said Theo, re- j <lb/>
; turning with it. <lb/>
and now show j <lb/>
said. me that hatchet from j <lb/>
for a minute. Now <lb/>
He inserted the email end of the <lb/>
I plug into the end of tho pipe- and i <lb/>
struck it fix or eight smart blows <lb/>
with the hatchet. This, drove tho <lb/>
whatever part of China, who <lb/>
out in to enter political or official life loam <lb/>
j this tongue. <lb/>
Tho other Chinese languages are <lb/>
spoken by comparatively small <lb/>
hereof people. for <lb/>
Instance, speak Cantonese in one <lb/>
I form or another. It is used in tho <lb/>
greater part of tho province of <lb/>
j one-third of the <lb/>
Mr. was hardly on tho of this province use the <lb/>
island before he saw the still, and ho tongue. In its northeastern part <lb/>
knew at a glance what meant. j tho dialect is also heard, <lb/>
that he asked, i Cantonese is also spoken in the <lb/>
Harry it, Theo <lb/>
The best salve In the work tor Cats, <lb/>
Sure-. Salt <lb/>
Suit's Titter, t <lb/>
it-, and <lb/>
it is <lb/>
lit . or in <lb/>
Pries box <lb/>
I'm.- store <lb/>
Skill <lb/>
I I . if <lb/>
.-.- I<lb/>
III- I <lb/>
What i Fit <lb/>
It is as foolish and absurd to try to <lb/>
wear a shoo too short for you as it <lb/>
would be to wear groves several <lb/>
too small <lb/>
fit it is meant that the <lb/>
shoe i too nor <lb/>
scull-. not wrinkle nor <lb/>
allow the foot room enough slip <lb/>
around largo <lb/>
enough for ho foot to <lb/>
till it. about HaMS <lb/>
quart i--- of i n <lb/>
f t . <lb/>
and <lb/>
ti k <lb/>
r, I. ;. <lb/>
tab longer than your <lb/>
from the the <lb/>
. . with low, <lb/>
Seal s <lb/>
I. <lb/>
wonder <lb/>
Ac <lb/>
bail f. <lb/>
e I-. Limbs <lb/>
id Scabs OH log en <lb/>
by P. p. p the <lb/>
; of day. <lb/>
P. P. p. will ban ah all <lb/>
an I yo to <lb/>
en will ion. It lowers <lb/>
are if out of aorta in <lb/>
bad with yourself and the nor Id, <lb/>
take P. p. become healthy .- -1 <lb/>
father Harry in his arms. <lb/>
ho said, have often <lb/>
been told that knowledge Is power, <lb/>
without paying attention to it. <lb/>
Now you know that knowledge is <lb/>
Harry learned afterward that his <lb/>
lather had offered a great sum of j <lb/>
money while the storm was raging i <lb/>
plug in and enlarged tho bore of the I to any who would go in i <lb/>
end of the pipe to more than double <lb/>
its original size. Then ho took the <lb/>
plug out. <lb/>
get mo n. big out of <lb/>
the boat and drive tho end into any <lb/>
piece of wood for a handle, you <lb/>
know. Then heat the spike <lb/>
in tho <lb/>
While Theo was doing this Harry <lb/>
fitted the enlarged end of the to <lb/>
the spout of the teakettle, and gently <lb/>
search of him. but no would <lb/>
venture. The tug was the first boat <lb/>
out after the storm. <lb/>
The still was boxed and sent to Now <lb/>
fork, <lb/>
There are not so many dialectic <lb/>
forms of the tongue of the <lb/>
Cantonese. Passing Up tho coast <lb/>
I find about people speaking <lb/>
I In nil probability <lb/>
Chinese the dialect, which <lb/>
j as closely <lb/>
as Portuguese resembles Spanish. <lb/>
j Still farther up the coast find tho <lb/>
dialect. It is used in a dis- <lb/>
about miles long and <lb/>
miles broad, containing a population <lb/>
of This is for tho <lb/>
a new boat, <lb/>
with any number of copper <lb/>
Drysdale in Boston<lb/>
M. Line, wries <lb/>
summer years while rail- <lb/>
But i pounded it down snug and tight with ; in Mississippi, <lb/>
the hatchet. <lb/>
good as a <lb/>
don't know what a sea is <lb/>
breaking on the Nassau Theo <lb/>
argued. <lb/>
said Harry, I know <lb/>
what a thirst is us hen-, <lb/>
me a hand with these planks, and <lb/>
we'll get the <lb/>
Harry picked up the end of one of <lb/>
tho planks that a false bot- <lb/>
tom for the boat, under which the <lb/>
ballast lay, and Theo, seeing it use- <lb/>
less to expostulate, seized the other <lb/>
end and the plank was thrown over <lb/>
the side. <lb/>
Hairy did not stoop to lift another <lb/>
plank. Something lay there in the <lb/>
I bottom of tho hi- eyes <lb/>
fixed upon. He looked and looked <lb/>
though fascinated and dreading <lb/>
to move lest he find it all a mistake. <lb/>
tho matter, Theo <lb/>
asked at length. <lb/>
is this boat ballasted with, <lb/>
answered. <lb/>
was than because it <lb/>
took less room. We it out of <lb/>
the Spanish steamer that was <lb/>
wrecked a year <lb/>
didn't <lb/>
Harry's throat so parched and <lb/>
he was so much excited he could not; <lb/>
speak. <lb/>
is it, That plank must <lb/>
have been too heavy for you. Sit <lb/>
down a few minutes and <lb/>
rm all right. Didn't I see a <lb/>
teakettle in the locker V <lb/>
we always that copper <lb/>
along. Most boatmen like <lb/>
coffee, but we like <lb/>
Before ha had finished Harry had <lb/>
became badly <lb/>
affected with malarial blood poison that <lb/>
When the spike was hot enough j impaired my health than two <lb/>
ho melted of the pipe, <lb/>
thus soldered it to the kettle. ,.,.,.,. until i took six <lb/>
bring the water Jug out of bottles of B. B. It., which cured en <lb/>
the boat, and that rusty tin pail you <lb/>
use for he ordered. <lb/>
Theo brought pail and jug. and <lb/>
Harry managed to cut a small hole <lb/>
through the side of tho pail, <lb/>
t the bottom, through which ho <lb/>
thrust the straight end of pipe from <lb/>
the lower part of the coil, thus fix- <lb/>
the coil in tho pail, and stuffing <lb/>
pieces of his handkerchief into the <lb/>
hole beside the pipe to mate it water <lb/>
tight. <lb/>
Then he bent down about three <lb/>
inches of tho end of pipe that pro- <lb/>
traded from tho pail like a water <lb/>
spigot. . I <lb/>
said the thirsty <lb/>
young scientist, build me a lit- <lb/>
tie hearth of stones to hold , <lb/>
tie where it is now; and you. <lb/>
Samson, get that other old pan out <lb/>
of the boat and dip me up some; <lb/>
Harry scraped sand on the <lb/>
side- <lb/>
most part mountainous. <lb/>
Tho dialects of and <lb/>
and Samson soon although only a few miles apart, <lb/>
differ The is <lb/>
by the people of It <lb/>
is related to tho and <lb/>
resembling tho <lb/>
is spoken by about <lb/>
3.000,000 people. Tho inhabitants of <lb/>
about between Japan and <lb/>
Too <lb/>
A certain amiable young house- <lb/>
wife who presides over a comfort- <lb/>
able suite of apartments in Harlem <lb/>
is convinced that there is such a <lb/>
thing being too neighborly. Her <lb/>
neighbors on tho floor above con- <lb/>
her. When the aforesaid <lb/>
neighbors moved into tho building <lb/>
this amiable housewife considerately <lb/>
sent her neatly aproned domestic up <lb/>
stairs to inquire if there was any- <lb/>
thing that she could do to add to the <lb/>
comfort of tho newcomers. Down <lb/>
a prompt request for tho loan <lb/>
of a hammer and a When <lb/>
the was returned it was <lb/>
cracked, but that fact did not deter <lb/>
from asking for a <lb/>
bar of soap and a few matches, <lb/>
The latter articles they forgot to <lb/>
return, but they kept up borrow- <lb/>
i habit steadily, and did not get a <lb/>
f the pail farthest from the fire out m <lb/>
Formosa, also speak <lb/>
Lloyd. <lb/>
From a letter written by Mrs. E. <lb/>
of Breton, S. we quote <lb/>
taken with a had sold, which settled on <lb/>
my Lungs, cough set in and Dually <lb/>
in Consumption . Four doctors <lb/>
gave tip, raying I could live but a <lb/>
time. I Bare lo my <lb/>
Saviour, determined if could not stay <lb/>
my friends on earth, I would meet <lb/>
my absent ones above. My was <lb/>
advised to get Dr. King's Hi-w Discovery <lb/>
Consumption, Coughs and Colds. I <lb/>
nave it a trial, took in ail eight <lb/>
it has cured me. and God I am <lb/>
now a well and Trial <lb/>
tree at Drug Store, reg- <lb/>
size We, and 81.00. <lb/>
The instances. <lb/>
. i for <lb/>
and when they <lb/>
it moisten K with milk or water; but <lb/>
the Italians refuse to put any bread <lb/>
into their sausages, and they claim <lb/>
that <lb/>
is at a more nourishing <lb/>
and a sausage than <lb/>
the Is-st man <lb/>
much as tho must <lb/>
boiled three times before it <lb/>
COoke V and the water in which it <lb/>
has hi boiled n strong <lb/>
clear soup The Romans main like- <lb/>
wise a highly ambitious in <lb/>
which no kind of bread is allowed to <lb/>
enter. They call it <lb/>
Which is the foot and of young <lb/>
pork, the of which is obtained <lb/>
from <lb/>
A leg freshly salted is chosen and <lb/>
carefully skinned, the trotter <lb/>
preserved; then tho meat is finely <lb/>
minced, and. after being seasoned, is <lb/>
replaced in the which is <lb/>
tied with string and simmered in an <lb/>
oval an for two hours. Wholly in- <lb/>
of breadcrumb are also the <lb/>
renowned of <lb/>
London Telegraph. <lb/>
CHILD BIRTH <lb/>
MADE <lb/>
is a <lb/>
Liniment, every <lb/>
of recognized value and in <lb/>
constant by tie pro- <lb/>
These ingredients arc com- <lb/>
in manner hitherto unknown <lb/>
Ladies <lb/>
Sometimes object to a <lb/>
Pipe, and every one ob- <lb/>
to a Bad Cigar. <lb/>
You can smoke <lb/>
OLD <lb/>
VIRGINIA <lb/>
CHEROOTS <lb/>
with perfect satisfaction <lb/>
both to yourself and <lb/>
friends, as their aroma is <lb/>
equal to the Best Cigar. <lb/>
FIVE for TEN CENTS. <lb/>
BUSIES, CARTS <lb/>
s well with the put up nothing <lb/>
first-class We u with the and <lb/>
material all work. AH stylos of Spring- are you can <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, Kin <lb/>
also on hand a full of lit ml Whip <lb/>
sell tho lowest rote-. to repairing. <lb/>
Greenville, N C. <lb/>
aT- X. <lb/>
until the of the water jug was <lb/>
brought on a level with the I <lb/>
of the pail, with the bent end of the <lb/>
pipe running into it. <lb/>
In a few minutes there was a roar- <lb/>
tee under kettle, for fuel was <lb/>
plenty. <lb/>
boas, that soon begin <lb/>
Theo shouted as the <lb/>
crackled and roared. <lb/>
r said Harry. is <lb/>
no kettle <lb/>
Theo answered, <lb/>
the Ant Hear <lb/>
The Brazilian ant bear survives tho <lb/>
season in a way of his <lb/>
own. His hunting grounds, <lb/>
tho big ant hills of tho underbrush, <lb/>
are under twenty feet of <lb/>
water, and tree ants the nooks <lb/>
of their dens timing tho season of <lb/>
constant In spite of his <lb/>
big claws their enemy is not pro- <lb/>
pared to rip big trees in quest of his<lb/>
WILL DO ail that is claimed for <lb/>
It AND MORE. Shortens Labor, <lb/>
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb/>
Life of Mother and Child. Book <lb/>
to mailed FREE, con. <lb/>
faining valuable information and <lb/>
voluntary testimonials. <lb/>
on of price per bottle <lb/>
REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. Si. <lb/>
SOLD <lb/>
A Writing <lb/>
Fattest <lb/>
the Royal nine Line trains <lb/>
the on re- <lb/>
gent run Sew and <lb/>
mile in <lb/>
a mechanical Indicator. At <lb/>
this rate the train traveled the <lb/>
meed of a trifle over a nils and <lb/>
food, and his in climbing j a hall n minute, or <lb/>
cannot compare with that of the big hour which surpasses all re- <lb/>
cats, but his talent for long fasts is <lb/>
REMODELED AND <lb/>
GOOD <lb/>
The Rest standard Typewriter In the <lb/>
Inexpensive, No ink Ribbon, In- <lb/>
Type in nil <lb/>
to and a- any. <lb/>
WASTED <lb/>
as Represented. <lb/>
This Machine l friend. <lb/>
have done the <lb/>
It always insures the n <lb/>
attention. Address <lb/>
N. Boston, <lb/>
One el can be mm the t office, where particular and <lb/>
THE CENTRAL <lb/>
Tobacco <lb/>
when the young daughter of <lb/>
family came <lb/>
door and after <lb/>
M , ,, . a am v; <lb/>
mother had unexpected unrivaled even this era of Tanner mi would be a it <lb/>
guests for dinner begged the loan of <lb/>
a pie for dessert. will have to <lb/>
excuse said the amiable house- <lb/>
wife with gentle frigidity. am <lb/>
out of now, and if I had <lb/>
I would not saga to lend <lb/>
New York Times. <lb/>
Strength Health. . <lb/>
has left j weak weary, Kiev- activity. Pet dealers often warn <lb/>
Bitters. This remedy acts directly <lb/>
on Stomach and Kidneys <lb/>
these to perform <lb/>
functions. f afflicted with Sick <lb/>
Headache, you will find Speedy and per- <lb/>
relief by taking Electric Bitters. <lb/>
One that this is <lb/>
the remedy need. Large <lb/>
only Sue. kt Drugstore. <lb/>
freaks. One drink per week will do j stop to two hours and a half and <lb/>
him for period of ten or twelve with slops to three hours is <lb/>
weeks, during which ho husbands now the time between the two <lb/>
his vital on tho principle of i <lb/>
minimum expenditure. <lb/>
With his bushy tail coiled <lb/>
neck he dozes away the rainy <lb/>
under the roof of a fallen tree, <lb/>
while his physical torpor is not apt <lb/>
tea out of. <lb/>
Harry <lb/>
is not a kettle any it is <lb/>
This coil of pipe is a <lb/>
The water jug is a Tho <lb/>
whole apparatus is a I am go- <lb/>
to distill water now, and you <lb/>
shall have a drink in very few <lb/>
A few minutes later the kettle <lb/>
to sing. Too much steam es- <lb/>
caped around the lid, and Harry tore <lb/>
a piece of lining from his coat, <lb/>
it in and placed it over the <lb/>
Joints. Then he lay down on the <lb/>
Band and put bis ear close to the <lb/>
water jug. <lb/>
Drop, drop, he heard; but he said <lb/>
not word. <lb/>
Drop, drop, drop, drop, <lb/>
steady now, though slow, nail <lb/>
every sixty of those a spoon- <lb/>
It was the sweetest music he <lb/>
ever heard, the falling of those drops <lb/>
of life. It woe the singing of birds <lb/>
in green meadows, the dashing of <lb/>
cascades over mossy rocks. <lb/>
wood on the fire, Theo. <lb/>
Keep her <lb/>
got into the jug, <lb/>
Theo asked after the fire had been <lb/>
replenished. <lb/>
Harry cried. <lb/>
no, boss; you can't turn salt <lb/>
water into <lb/>
I; Go bring me a tumbler <lb/>
and a tablespoon out of the boat- <lb/>
two rum <lb/>
Theo Drought the tumblers and <lb/>
three tablespoons, and Harry lifted <lb/>
the jug from under the end of the <lb/>
pipe, putting one of the tumblers in <lb/>
its place. <lb/>
your <lb/>
Theo and stood each with <lb/>
a spoon in his outstretched hand, j <lb/>
Harry emptied the jug into one of j <lb/>
tumblers. Such a tiny bit <lb/>
He filled Theo's spoon, filled San- <lb/>
and had only a few drops left j <lb/>
for half a spoonful. <lb/>
It was warm, but as <lb/>
water from any well. To taste was j <lb/>
to swallow to boys in their thirsty <lb/>
condition. It moistened their parch- <lb/>
ed throats, gave them new life. Even <lb/>
revived. <lb/>
beats me, said he. <lb/>
something never saw <lb/>
done before. But there's so little <lb/>
of <lb/>
we con make a spoonful, we <lb/>
can make a add Harry, <lb/>
An Socialism. <lb/>
Even if tho modern should <lb/>
; become more equitable and more en. <lb/>
lightened j if it should become really <lb/>
something else than an <lb/>
collectivity power by <lb/>
changing and passionate proxies; if <lb/>
; it should put away its sectarian spirit <lb/>
i and its tyrannical <lb/>
i should still doubt its competence and <lb/>
; its capacity to regulate the mill and <lb/>
tho shop. The state is a weighty <lb/>
engine, with running <lb/>
I uselessly complicated, ex <lb/>
acts a <lb/>
customers against tho blunder <lb/>
of mistaking that lethargy for n <lb/>
symptom of disease, and an <lb/>
menagerie keeper told <lb/>
mo that he would not waste a cent <lb/>
drugs till the patient <lb/>
should seem to consider ten days too <lb/>
long a time between <lb/>
Francisco Chronicle. <lb/>
Oh. a Cough. <lb/>
win you the warning The <lb/>
mil perhaps of the sure tat <lb/>
more terrible Ask <lb/>
yourselves if you can afford the sake <lb/>
of saving to run the risk and do <lb/>
i for it, know from experience <lb/>
I that Shiloh's will <lb/>
I It fails. This explains why more <lb/>
than a million were old the past <lb/>
j year, it relieves croup and whooping <lb/>
; cough at Mothers, do not be with- <lb/>
out For back, side or use <lb/>
at <lb/>
ion <lb/>
for cart <lb/>
Shiloh's Porous Plaster. <lb/>
. Store. <lb/>
mm tarT, ard <lb/>
Cures <lb/>
Will begin second Mason or <lb/>
AUGUST 1892. <lb/>
-o------ <lb/>
Under the same Management, <lb/>
desires 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 Shipment. Try <lb/>
p. r. p. a <lb/>
fuel and manual labor for least <lb/>
work. No other instrument makes I <lb/>
a feebler return and wastes so much j yon to seen in <lb/>
t.-iv-e. Consequently the more we <lb/>
extend ration of the state tho Baxter Jim <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
The Central Warehouse, <lb/>
CHRIST MAN'S <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
more we impoverishing the <lb/>
in Pop- <lb/>
Science Monthly. <lb/>
. and Liver Complaint. <lb/>
Is It. not worth the small of <lb/>
to yourself of every symptom of <lb/>
If you think <lb/>
so call at our More and get a <lb/>
every a <lb/>
printed guarantee on it. use accordingly <lb/>
If ii you no yon <lb/>
nothing. Sold at <lb/>
indeed, parson, I ain't <lb/>
ed. don't belong me. What's <lb/>
I got be of th-<lb/>
We have a speedy positive cure <lb/>
for catarrh, diphtheria, canker month <lb/>
and headache-, in SHILOH'S <lb/>
A nasal injector free with <lb/>
Use ii ii desire health <lb/>
sweet Kola at <lb/>
k Household Remedy <lb/>
KIN <lb/>
DISEASES <lb/>
Di Bi <lb/>
Botanic Beta <lb/>
It Cures <lb/>
am mum. Its <lb/>
art i <lb/>
art <lb/>
BLOOD BALM CO. G-<lb/>
U Li <lb/>
r. r. r. <lb/>
MARK. <lb/>
Notice to Shippers. <lb/>
In order to make convenient and <lb/>
use of the cm- <lb/>
ployed the o <lb/>
thus better servo the <lb/>
-u of I he <lb/>
have to merge their <lb/>
respective lines between Not <lb/>
and <lb/>
Washington, Into <lb/>
one known <lb/>
Norfolk, Direct <lb/>
Norfolk with <lb/>
The Bay line, tor Baltimore. <lb/>
The Clyde Line, for Philadelphia. <lb/>
The Old Dominion Line, for New <lb/>
York. <lb/>
The A Line fr <lb/>
ton and Providence. <lb/>
The Water Linen Vs. <lb/>
and C <lb/>
M ill. <lb/>
The R. <lb/>
At Washington with <lb/>
The Tar <lb/>
Also Calling at Island. N. C. <lb/>
The new line will m <lb/>
with such additional sailings a <lb/>
will suit the needs of business. <lb/>
I HATES. <lb/>
The service of steamers, <lb/>
mill the freedom from handling, are <lb/>
.; the great advantages thin Line <lb/>
following gentlemen <lb/>
Agents of the New <lb/>
John K. at Norfolk. V- <lb/>
John Son, <lb/>
B. II. Gray, II. C. <lb/>
S, C. at Island, <lb/>
I J. at N. C. <lb/>
The will leave Norfolk <lb/>
on May 18th, from wharf <lb/>
on Water <lb/>
I between piers of lie Clyde <lb/>
Line and Old Co. <lb/>
II. A. <lb/>
V. P. A O. M- Old Dominion Co. <lb/>
W. P. CO., <lb/>
Clyde Line <lb/>
May 14th, <lb/>
ESTABLISHED <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
AT <lb/>
For the foe cf Skin to I OLD STOKE <lb/>
S Swift's Specific <lb/>
Tested Remedy <lb/>
For All <lb/>
Skin <lb/>
A tun <lb/>
Blood <lb/>
-r. Cancer. <lb/>
a for delicate Women <lb/>
Children it has no equal. <lb/>
la<lb/>
A treat <lb/>
mat <lb/>
II- <lb/>
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., <lb/>
For sale at L. Wooten's Store <lb/>
This neon in <lb/>
wherever known <lb/>
; been In demand. It has-been on. <lb/>
i toned by the leading all over <lb/>
he cures where <lb/>
all other remedies, the of<lb/>
for year failed. This Ointment Is if <lb/>
long standing and the high <lb/>
which it has Is owing entirely <lb/>
own hut effort has <lb/>
ever been made to bring It before <lb/>
public. One bottle will <lb/>
be to-any on receipt of Ono <lb/>
Sample box <lb/>
to Druggists. All <lb/>
attended to. Address all or- <lb/>
Sole-Mar. and Proprietor, <lb/>
. N. C. <lb/>
For Bent. <lb/>
A large two-story brick store in the <lb/>
Clock, Greenville, lost <lb/>
room, patent <lb/>
tor, counters, and drawers.<lb/>
. N. C. <lb/>
H. <lb/>
AND <lb/>
lb year's will And <lb/>
their get our prices below par <lb/>
sing el sew lie re <lb/>
I n all it . <lb/>
I PORK SIDES <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, <lb/>
at Lowest Pricks. <lb/>
TOBACCO A <lb/>
we buy direct <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. A <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always oil hand and fold n <lb/>
the times. Our goods <lb/>
sold therefore, having no <lb/>
i sell at a <lb/>
s. <lb/>
X.<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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