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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 14 September 1892</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
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          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18920914</dc:date>
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Job glinting Room <lb />
Thoroughly Equipped <lb />
The Eastern <lb />
B He <lb />
THE <lb />
Offer. <lb />
The Reflector <lb />
-TILL- <lb />
NEW MATERIAL. <lb />
Give Us a Trial Order. <lb />
Jones Seminary for <lb />
Young Ladies. <lb />
Superior educational <lb />
location, mineral water, commodious <lb />
buildings with Are entire ex <lb />
ml<lb />
Rev. U. HAMPTON. <lb />
All Healing Spring. N- C <lb />
INSTITUTE. <lb />
For Bi it Sexes. <lb />
Term <lb />
fins Rates <lb />
for <lb />
Tuition Marie <lb />
Board ft I. <lb />
further particulars see. r address. <lb />
II. <lb />
A school unsafe for boys girl is <lb />
rot safe for either sex. <lb />
VOL. XI. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1892. <lb />
NO. <lb />
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
Institute. <lb />
X. <lb />
The Term tins will open <lb />
Monday. Auk. Enrollment last <lb />
session in a <lb />
Preparatory Course of study in <lb />
Music. Elocution, Painting and Draw- <lb />
Terms moderate. in <lb />
families or with Principal. further <lb />
information address, <lb />
JOHN <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
FEMALE SCHOOL <lb />
Mrs. V. L. Pendleton <lb />
Will open a Select School for Young <lb />
Ladies and Small Girls in Greenville on <lb />
1893. The full Collegiate <lb />
Course taught. The usual <lb />
prices for tuition in Greenville will be <lb />
charged. <lb />
WESLEYAN <lb />
THE STATE UNIVERSITY. <lb />
What it Does Men. <lb />
Within the past two months <lb />
over ti thousand letters have been <lb />
received Chapel Hill, <lb />
what the University offers to <lb />
young men Let us answer this <lb />
question briefly, for the benefit of <lb />
tin- thousands who have not writ- <lb />
ten and who do not know how <lb />
easily th y may secure within <lb />
North the very best op- <lb />
for broad and liberal <lb />
culture. <lb />
TO <lb />
EM. <lb />
1- Five general courses of I <lb />
study from the I <lb />
other, and each furnishing a broad <lb />
liberal education. There are a <lb />
Latin and Greek course, a Latin <lb />
course, a Science course, a Liters <lb />
course, and a Mathematics <lb />
course. Each of <lb />
these courses secures a degree, <lb />
and requires ordinarily four years <lb />
study. The variety of courses <lb />
is intended to meet the needs of <lb />
various young- men who have <lb />
kinds of preparation and I <lb />
different purposes in life. each <lb />
course the studies of the first two , <lb />
years are fixed, but the studies of <lb />
the last two years may be selected <lb />
mainly by the student under the <lb />
advice of tho Faculty. A student <lb />
is thus enabled, not only to select <lb />
4- A Reading-room well supplied <lb />
with magazines, papers and re- <lb />
views. <lb />
A Gymnasium, large and well <lb />
furnished, in charge of a trained j <lb />
instructor in gymnastics. <lb />
G- Buildings, nine in number, <lb />
affording ample room for <lb />
and lecture balls. <lb />
Athletic Grounds for base <lb />
HOW HE SUCCEEDED. <lb />
How a Gritty Farmer got Along With- <lb />
out Borrowing. <lb />
The following letter to the <lb />
is a very <lb />
sensible one. There is not a farm- <lb />
in the South who will not be <lb />
benefited by reading it, and who <lb />
cannot, if necessary, achieve the <lb />
same success. <lb />
one you may meet with <lb />
a few exceptions, has something <lb />
to say about bard times, tight <lb />
h ; c ii -t money, etc., and if you were to <lb />
halls fine collections of oil i , , . <lb />
. . . , on to the complaint you <lb />
portraits of members who have <lb />
been eminent in all departments of <lb />
life in the State in the nation. <lb />
There are sixty portrait. <lb />
ball, foot ball, running, tennis and <lb />
other athletic games, large, well <lb />
graded and well kept. <lb />
Literary Societies <lb />
to any in Their <lb />
would be about as gloomy as the <lb />
most of the people appear to be. <lb />
I have short, faithful story to <lb />
till in paper and hope it may <lb />
aid the wise men our State to <lb />
arrive at the cause and the remedy <lb />
for hard times among the farmers- <lb />
In I found myself on a fair <lb />
Societies for spec <lb />
Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society <lb />
and the Club, which <lb />
offer unusual facilities for original <lb />
research and study. <lb />
A Young Men's Christian am <lb />
Association, which meets five times <lb />
. . , ,. , ,. , mule, a broken down army horse, <lb />
each week, is active, and <lb />
useful. <lb />
The University offers a <lb />
based manliness and <lb />
self-reliance. There is no system <lb />
of spying, nor of demerits, , . <lb />
, . , for us to -pitch our crops for the <lb />
nor of unnecessary and , , . , <lb />
quantity <lb />
a fair set of farming implements, <lb />
mostly secondhand, but without a <lb />
dollar of credit and just in <lb />
cash. It was the last week in <lb />
January, and the time bad come <lb />
Female Institute. <lb />
Va. <lb />
Sept. Si, 1832. One of the <lb />
thorough schools for young ladies the <lb />
South. Twenty-live teachers a nil officers. <lb />
Conservatory course In music. One . . f , f . <lb />
hundred hoarding pupil a course <lb />
twenty States. led to give him general culture. <lb />
Special inducements to persons at a ills- ; b t also t f b <lb />
I hose seeking the best school . . J , <lb />
for the lowest terms, write for wise selection last two <lb />
of this time-honored school to the j so as to fit for some <lb />
profession. <lb />
dent. <lb />
A. HARRIS. D. D. <lb />
Staunton. Virginia. <lb />
OAK RIDGE INSTITUTE <lb />
BOUNDED IX 1868. <lb />
A CLASSICAL AND COMMERCIAL SCHOOL <lb />
-OF <lb />
ant <lb />
menu. <lb />
situation in view of the mountains. <lb />
Reasonable. <lb />
Summer School Business Opens <lb />
June 16th. <lb />
Fall Term begins August 10th. <lb />
For Illustrated address. <lb />
J. A. M. II. HOLT, <lb />
Oak Ridge, N. C. <lb />
Louisburg <lb />
Female <lb />
College, <lb />
The next session of this well-known <lb />
school will begin September 1st. 1802. <lb />
Pure water, no sicklies, thorough in- <lb />
Brick building with rooms <lb />
Campus of acres well shaded by <lb />
gigantic oaks. Conservatory music <lb />
teachers. A.-t and teachers <lb />
from Academy of Alts. Teachers ex- <lb />
perts in their specialties. The whole <lb />
Literary Course, Physical Culture and <lb />
and fires only <lb />
for the Special studies in <lb />
Send for to <lb />
S. D. BAGLEY. President, <lb />
N- C. <lb />
2- Six courses of study; <lb />
each requiring two years of study <lb />
and arranged for tho benefit of <lb />
young men who have not the <lb />
time or the means to spend four <lb />
Elegant buildings and thorough years at college. These courses <lb />
Large patronage from all the are intended to supply the <lb />
Beautiful and h ., , ,. , , <lb />
possible preparation for business, <lb />
for law, for teaching, for farming, <lb />
for medicine, for journalism ; and <lb />
each course only those <lb />
studies essential to the profession <lb />
selected. <lb />
Three professional courses . <lb />
in Engineering, in Medicine and <lb />
I Pharmacy, Law. Each of <lb />
these courses furnishes special <lb />
technical training <lb />
and experienced teachers. <lb />
4- An unlimited number of <lb />
courses. These special courses <lb />
are in any subject that the student <lb />
desires. He may confine himself <lb />
to one subject if ho prefers. A <lb />
great many students have taken <lb />
special courses Chemistry, fit- <lb />
ting themselves to be chemists <lb />
while others have taken special <lb />
courses in drawing and <lb />
or in English or <lb />
in Greek, or in Philosophy, or in <lb />
History. Any study taught in the <lb />
University may be selected for a <lb />
special course, and it may be j <lb />
sued as long as the student desires- <lb />
5- Graduate courses. These are <lb />
offered in all studies to graduates <lb />
of colleges or universities who <lb />
wish special advanced training to <lb />
fit themselves better for profession- <lb />
life, or for literary careers, or <lb />
for teaching in colleges. Five; <lb />
students pursued these courses <lb />
last year, two ministers, two teach- <lb />
and a journalist. <lb />
UNIVERSITY HELP AS <lb />
WELL AS INSTRUCTION. <lb />
It offers time to those whose <lb />
property is not now available. <lb />
2- It offers sixty scholarships <lb />
to needy young men of talent and , <lb />
character. <lb />
It offers loans of money to <lb />
the very needy who show unusual <lb />
talent. <lb />
It offers free tuition to the <lb />
young men afflicted with bodily <lb />
Wilson Collegiate Institute, <lb />
WILSON. N. C. <lb />
For Ladles. Strictly non-Sectarian. <lb />
The begins <lb />
Monday, Sept. 1892. <lb />
A most thorough <lb />
preparatory course of study, with a <lb />
course 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 high. Healthful location. <lb />
and grounds large and pleasantly <lb />
situated. Moderate charges. <lb />
and circulars on application. <lb />
SILAS E. WARREN , <lb />
petty interference with student <lb />
life, nor of compulsory pledges. <lb />
Tho discipline aims to develop <lb />
character through the education <lb />
of the conscience. <lb />
The University offers a broad <lb />
and manly spirit. It places <lb />
manliness and humanity <lb />
above sectionalism, sectarianism, <lb />
and political partisanship. It is a <lb />
State institute, governed by the <lb />
Legislature, and it invites to its <lb />
opportunities of culture all the <lb />
youth of the State, of whatever re- <lb />
faith, political belief or <lb />
geographical section. It is a little <lb />
world itself, a sort of <lb />
state, where young men of all <lb />
classes, conditions, faiths, <lb />
and talents mingle freely <lb />
together on terms of equality, <lb />
breathe the atmosphere of liberal <lb />
culture, and learn the <lb />
lessons of self reliance, of respect <lb />
for the opinions of others and of <lb />
love for truth- There is no place <lb />
where a young man learns so <lb />
quickly that he must stand on his <lb />
merits. Geo. T. Winston- <lb />
Coming Alright. <lb />
Plymouth Beacon. <lb />
Hello. Jake. <lb />
Good morning, Tom. <lb />
How are you going to vote, Jake <lb />
For Weaver. <lb />
You <lb />
Yes I am. <lb />
For what I <lb />
Because he is the Third party <lb />
nominee. <lb />
I thought you were a Democrat- <lb />
So I was, but yon see the two that <lb />
old parties are corrupt <lb />
year- I had a small quantity of <lb />
corn, about enough with economy <lb />
to feed my stock and give my <lb />
meal for four or five months. <lb />
I Times were hard me with sure <lb />
enough. My near neighbor was a lit- <lb />
I tie off, but not as much as I <lb />
thought him to be at the time- We <lb />
were talking over the matter when <lb />
he informed me that he was go <lb />
to Gadsden the next day to <lb />
make some arrangement for credit <lb />
to enable him to make his crop, <lb />
and asked me to go with him and <lb />
see what I could do. We went to <lb />
town. It long before my <lb />
neighbor had secured his credit <lb />
with a note and mortgage, which <lb />
ho was to trade out during the <lb />
year. <lb />
I tried to do the same, but it <lb />
was no go- The merchant did not <lb />
I know me and I make the <lb />
i security they demanded. Well. <lb />
I we went back home together, my <lb />
neighbor with a smart load of <lb />
. con, coffee, dry goods and shoes <lb />
j for the children, with a dress for <lb />
his wife and a Sunday coat for <lb />
himself- My wagon was empty <lb />
and I disconsolate, with nothing <lb />
to take to my fireside but a heavy <lb />
heart and a will to work. I told <lb />
my wife all about my failure to <lb />
get credit and we talked the, mat- <lb />
over until <lb />
said she, we have got two <lb />
good cows, some hens, and a few <lb />
pigs, a good garden, and the best <lb />
of health. So we will stay at <lb />
home and got our living from our <lb />
work. Bless her soul, was the <lb />
was the wisest woman, I think, <lb />
ever lived on earth, and <lb />
I among tho best that went to <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
MALE ACADEMY <lb />
lo------ <lb />
The next session of this School will <lb />
begin on Monday. August 1802. <lb />
The advantages offered will be <lb />
or to those of any previous session. En- <lb />
tire guaranteed every patron. <lb />
Board can be bad at lower rates than at <lb />
any similar school in Eastern Carolina. <lb />
We propose to do best work for boys <lb />
that has ever been done in the town, <lb />
and challenge proof to the contrary. <lb />
Imp are as follows, payable <lb />
Primary English per mouth. <lb />
Intermediate English per month, <lb />
You don't mean the Democratic I en. I took her advice, and at the <lb />
party end of the year I had seven good <lb />
Well, not the party exactly, but bales of cotton, bushels of <lb />
there are so many men in it who j corn, saved 1,200 pounds of bacon, <lb />
are mean and dishonest. banked snugly bushels of <lb />
Then you are going to quit the sweet potatoes ; while my good <lb />
2.00 <lb />
Higher English per mouth. 2.50 j infirmity, to school I <lb />
languages each, extra, to -ons n <lb />
When you are in town call to see j to sons oil <lb />
or write me your homes. j and to young men intending <lb />
will be cheerfully If <lb />
necessary a competent assistant will lie <lb />
employed- <lb />
H. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. July 1892. <lb />
h School of High Grade <lb />
LS A D BO <lb />
Miss net will re-open her private <lb />
school for girls and in Mrs. V. H. <lb />
nearly <lb />
the Episcopal The Fall <lb />
begins Monday, Sept. ends <lb />
Friday. Jan. 37th. 1803. The String <lb />
Term begins Monday, Jan. <lb />
nils Friday, May 28th, 1893. <lb />
KM.- MONTH.<lb />
Intermediate department. 2.50 <lb />
Higher English. 3.00 <lb />
Latin and each, <lb />
Elocution lessons per 1.00 <lb />
Thorough and will <lb />
be given according to the beat approved <lb />
common s methods. <lb />
arrangements for be made for <lb />
pupils desiring to come from, the <lb />
try. For further address. <lb />
Kiss s. Lucy <lb />
to me preachers. <lb />
It offers advanced <lb />
free to the graduates of col- <lb />
The University offers an equip <lb />
which is a guaranty of good <lb />
honest work, its equipment <lb />
A of twenty-two <lb />
professors and who <lb />
represent the culture of twenty of <lb />
the foremost American and <lb />
Universities. <lb />
Five Scientific Laboratories, <lb />
on which ten thousand dollars <lb />
have been expended recently, sup- <lb />
plied with apparatus for training <lb />
as wed OS illustration. There <lb />
laboratories in Chemistry, Geology <lb />
Mineralogy and Physics. <lb />
A Library of thirty thousand <lb />
volumes, open five hours daily to <lb />
all students. <lb />
party that has done so much for <lb />
this Old North State of ours just <lb />
because there are a few corrupt <lb />
Democrats <lb />
Yep. <lb />
Do you belong to the church, <lb />
Yep. <lb />
What church <lb />
Methodist. <lb />
Pretty good church, isn't it, Jake <lb />
So far as religion goes with me, <lb />
it is the best, Tom. <lb />
Why you have your name <lb />
taken off the church book and go <lb />
off and join another church. Jake <lb />
For what <lb />
Are there no mean men in the <lb />
Methodist church, Jake <lb />
Yes, Tom, I must say there are <lb />
lots of them. <lb />
Then that's why y u ought to <lb />
leave the Methodist <lb />
But the church is alright, it's <lb />
only a few of the members that are <lb />
bad, and any other church has as <lb />
many bad men in it as the <lb />
it church has. <lb />
Is your political faith more hon- <lb />
est than your religious faith <lb />
No. <lb />
You arc a bad man, Jake- <lb />
Why <lb />
Because you quit the Democratic <lb />
party for no other reason than <lb />
are o few bad men in it <lb />
but you don't quit the church for <lb />
the same reason- <lb />
What should I do, then <lb />
Why, stay in the Democratic <lb />
wife had made from her <lb />
eggs, chickens, butter and honey, <lb />
and had bought herself a summer <lb />
dress and bonnet and cloth enough <lb />
to make the for all <lb />
the children. And best of all, I <lb />
did not owe a man on earth a <lb />
cent. <lb />
My neighbor who bad the <lb />
it I could not get, made eleven <lb />
bales of cotton, a small com crop, <lb />
no meat, and had bis credit until <lb />
be was several hundred dollars in <lb />
debt. I met him in Gadsden <lb />
the month of January, 1868, <lb />
after he bad settled with the mer- <lb />
chants and had sold his cotton. <lb />
All he had to show for his year's <lb />
work was a new buggy that he <lb />
really did not need and about <lb />
in cash. In 1872 my neighbor <lb />
sold out to pay his debts and keep <lb />
the sheriff away and moved to <lb />
Texas, where he came to want <lb />
The same year J had loaned <lb />
out and drawing a good interest, <lb />
well secured, and I have never <lb />
borrowed a cent, or a thing, or <lb />
had my name on a merchant's <lb />
book for a nickel's credit. I have <lb />
often thought and believe most <lb />
firmly that the best thing that <lb />
ever happened to me was my fail- <lb />
to get credit 1867. Nearly <lb />
years have passed since I had <lb />
my disconsolate ride back to my <lb />
humble home from Gadsden. I <lb />
have since reared a family of <lb />
en children, given the <lb />
the country could offer, have <lb />
built a large house and barn, and <lb />
party, Jake and help drive the bad i have enough, thank the Lord, to <lb />
out. keep me and my family in comfort <lb />
I hadn't thought about this thing <lb />
in that way, but you are right, and <lb />
instead of leaving the glorious old <lb />
as long as I shall live- I want no <lb />
Sub-Treasury and never wanted it <lb />
once, and then, thank God. I <lb />
party of my father stick to it could not get it. There is not a <lb />
and make the bod fellow git Come j farmer Alabama, worthy o the <lb />
let's drink. to Cleveland's health name of farmer, who cannot do as <lb />
and the success of Democracy. I have done. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Mr. letter of accept- <lb />
was a very decided <lb />
that line- It breaks all <lb />
precedents and instead of being <lb />
n letter of pore and <lb />
simple, it is, in addition, a care- <lb />
i fully and skilfully prepared law- <lb />
plea for tho Republican par- <lb />
; general and the Harrison <lb />
; administration particular, <lb />
j like other able pleas it is <lb />
impose on who are <lb />
familiar, who will not <lb />
; take the trouble to familiarize <lb />
themselves with the other side. <lb />
It shows, too. that the stories <lb />
which have from time to time been <lb />
told of Mr. Harrison's intentions <lb />
j to individually boss tie <lb />
j can side of the campaign were all <lb />
the solid truth. The <lb />
intention has become a fact, and <lb />
j to-day Mr. Harrison is the ac- <lb />
boss of the <lb />
can National committee, which is <lb />
conducting the campaign accord- <lb />
to his orders. It is known <lb />
here that the publication of the <lb />
letter of acceptance this week was <lb />
directly against the wishes of <lb />
Chairman Carter and a number of <lb />
the working members of the coin- <lb />
i they wanted it held back <lb />
at least a month, but boss Benji- <lb />
ordered it given out. <lb />
I en it <lb />
Mi. attempt to dodge <lb />
the Force bill issue such a way <lb />
I as to leave the impression upon <lb />
those who favor that outrage upon <lb />
Constitutional liberty that he is still I <lb />
with he really is. heart <lb />
i and at the same time <lb />
make those opposed to it believe <lb />
that he has abandoned it. is like <lb />
most efforts of a similar <lb />
supremely ridiculous, and meets j <lb />
only with moaning smiles <lb />
; quarter. Democrats and Re- <lb />
alike know just where <lb />
Mr- Harrison stands upon this <lb />
question ; that, if he be re-elected <lb />
and the next House of <lb />
be controlled by the Re- i <lb />
publicans, he will in his first mes- <lb />
sage to the Fifty-third <lb />
sic that a bill similar to the no- <lb />
Lodge bill of the Fifty- <lb />
first Congress be passed. There <lb />
is only way for this country to <lb />
escape the horrors of the <lb />
bill, which in section of the <lb />
would be as bad as a vis- <lb />
of the cholera, that is. <lb />
to defeat Benjamin Harrison and <lb />
Republican party- <lb />
Mr. Blaine's letter, made public <lb />
the day after that of Mr. Harrison <lb />
fell like a wet the <lb />
candidate's It <lb />
nullified about half of Mr. Harri- <lb />
son's letter by advising tho Re- <lb />
publicans to ignore all issues, ex <lb />
three, in the campaign, and <lb />
worse than all, for Benjamin, the <lb />
his own <lb />
nowhere mentioned Mr. Harrison's <lb />
name- No Republican with whom <lb />
I have talked has a doubt about <lb />
this slight to the head of the Re- <lb />
publican ticket being deliberate <lb />
intentional on the part of Mr- <lb />
Blaine. It is a slight, too, that <lb />
Mr. Harrison not resent at <lb />
this time ; but you may be sure <lb />
that he will try to after <lb />
tho election, whichever way it <lb />
goes, by jumping on the <lb />
Republicans wherever he finds <lb />
them- <lb />
The milk in the con- <lb />
the application of the <lb />
man Line Steamship company for <lb />
American registry for two of their <lb />
best steamers, which was granted <lb />
at the last session of Congress, <lb />
was exposed when tho bids for <lb />
carrying mails, under the <lb />
mail subsidy act of billion dollar <lb />
Congress, were this week opened <lb />
by Mr. Wanamaker. The In man <lb />
Line, under its new American <lb />
International <lb />
Company, of Philadelphia <lb />
adopted, solely with the idea of <lb />
getting a slice of this subsidy, was <lb />
the only company that put in a <lb />
bid for the European service, <lb />
I the only company that proposes <lb />
to carry the mails in vessels of the <lb />
first class. It put in two bids, and <lb />
Mr. Wanamaker says they will both <lb />
be accepted. Each of them is-for <lb />
a weekly service and in each <lb />
compensation asked is per <lb />
mile. Multiply the number of <lb />
miles across the Atlantic by and <lb />
j the result by and a sum of <lb />
I money is piled up that fully ex- <lb />
plains the of the <lb />
this company to charge the <lb />
flag over such of their ships as <lb />
they could get subsidized so high- <lb />
Some people have said that <lb />
J Mr. Wanamaker had some very <lb />
near friends who were allowed to <lb />
purchase stock in the <lb />
company at a nominal <lb />
price, but, of course, that had no <lb />
Influence in the deal. <lb />
Representative of <lb />
Mississippi, is in Washington. <lb />
Be says the Democrats will not I <lb />
lose a single electoral vote in the , <lb />
and that the par- ; <lb />
will not have as many members <lb />
in the next as they have the <lb />
present House. He. figures on a <lb />
Democratic majority of between <lb />
forty and fifty in the next <lb />
Cheap Excursion Rates to Washington. ; <lb />
Wilmington Messenger. <lb />
The cheap to Wash <lb />
D. Cm by way of the At- <lb />
Coast Line, are dealing a <lb />
great deal of interest, and the j <lb />
are that a big crowd of j <lb />
people in and around <lb />
and elsewhere on the <lb />
take advantage of the low rates to <lb />
take a trip to the National Capital, <lb />
to Baltimore. Philadelphia. <lb />
New York and other cities <lb />
It has already been announced <lb />
that the cheap rates are offered on <lb />
account of the encampment of <lb />
Grand Army of the Republic at <lb />
Washington, but. of course, the <lb />
excursion rates offered to the <lb />
general public as well as G. A. R <lb />
men. Tickets will be on sale from <lb />
September 13th to 20th inclusive, <lb />
and will be good returning until <lb />
including the 10th of October.; <lb />
The rate for the round trip has <lb />
been fixed at one fare, and as there <lb />
has been some inquiry in regard <lb />
to the matter, we arc authorized <lb />
to state that passengers will have <lb />
the privilege to stop over at all <lb />
points beyond pro <lb />
on their journey at any time <lb />
the limit of the ticket ex j <lb />
pares. This will give a splendid <lb />
opportunity to those who desire to <lb />
stop over and visit the battle fields <lb />
along the including the <lb />
battlefields around Richmond and <lb />
at Stony Creek, Station. <lb />
Five Forks, Run, Lee's <lb />
Mills. Run. <lb />
Hill. Seven Pines, <lb />
Chancellorsville, the Wilderness . <lb />
and other historic spots. <lb />
The cheap rates by the <lb />
Line, which is the shortest and I <lb />
quickest route north, will afford a <lb />
good opportunity to merchants for <lb />
an economical trip to the northern <lb />
markets. The service will be <lb />
double daily with through Pull- <lb />
man palace buffet sleeping ears, <lb />
and tho will just as com- <lb />
as one could desire. <lb />
OF BURKE. <lb />
Landmark. <lb />
Mr. R. A- Cobb. of Burke. <lb />
nominee for Lieutenant Gov <lb />
is getting his record pretty <lb />
well ventilate about now. along <lb />
with Exum, Dr. Durham <lb />
and Col. Long. The <lb />
has examined the records in the <lb />
office of the Clerk of the Federal <lb />
Court at and the exam- <lb />
reveals the fact that Mr. <lb />
Cobb has figured in the Federal <lb />
Court a number of time- in the <lb />
capacity of defendant At the <lb />
October term. 1878. of the Federal <lb />
Court at Mr- Cobb was <lb />
then storekeeper and ganger at <lb />
tho distillery of N. Huffman Co. <lb />
in Burke county, was indicted in <lb />
six different cases for violating <lb />
sections and <lb />
of the internal revenue laws of <lb />
the United States. The <lb />
was that Cobb. while stole- <lb />
keeper ganger, made <lb />
to defraud the govern <lb />
by the removal of distilled <lb />
spirits on which tho had not <lb />
been I being ail officer of <lb />
government not reporting the <lb />
violations of the law aiding and <lb />
abetting the removal of the <lb />
spirits ; retailing without license, <lb />
transporting empty spirit <lb />
casks with revenue stamps on <lb />
them. These indictments were <lb />
found at October term, 1878, and <lb />
at October term. 1879, a pros, <lb />
was entered. In 1883 Mr. Cobb <lb />
was a special deputy <lb />
and at May term of the Federal <lb />
Court of that year he was indict <lb />
ed at Asheville for making, pro <lb />
and swearing to false ac- <lb />
counts against the government. <lb />
As special deputy collector he <lb />
was allowed his expenses by the <lb />
government. Items his ac- <lb />
count were per day for board <lb />
in cents bus fare at <lb />
Morganton. The per day <lb />
board bill seems to have caused <lb />
the trouble and the indictment. <lb />
The case was to <lb />
ville at October term. 1883, certain <lb />
witnesses having left the country, <lb />
a pros, was entered. <lb />
This is the record of Mr. Cobb <lb />
in tho revenue service. Along <lb />
about the time Cleveland was <lb />
he turned Democrat- From <lb />
tho above record it would be fair <lb />
to assume that had he remained <lb />
in the revenue service a while <lb />
longer he would had landed in <lb />
Albany penitentiary. <lb />
1st. <lb />
gents in Advance. <lb />
Sow is the time to subscribe <lb />
OUR HOME <lb />
pas- away <lb />
spot. <lb />
wonder who will come and <lb />
In- deserted out. <lb />
tin- who stand <lb />
And think home i- <lb />
VI hen we have gone Into that laud <lb />
Where parted <lb />
Oh. who will walk beneath tile <lb />
the pine. <lb />
To dream again little dream, <lb />
When not your- nor mine <lb />
Will my favorite tree, <lb />
down I In- mossy <lb />
The things -11 to you and me. <lb />
I they destroy ally <lb />
Who-r name will he on yonder door <lb />
Who-e pictures deck the <lb />
Whore feel pi roughly on the floor <lb />
VI your dear falls <lb />
And when I he yearn to awing; <lb />
Will all we love are read. <lb />
i I any backward bring <lb />
The have said <lb />
I hope the down there will <lb />
All old familiar time. <lb />
When in a happier home than tub <lb />
We talk all our own. <lb />
oh. thin little home is sweet, <lb />
Each corner i- no <lb />
Can Heaven without it he complete; <lb />
I would that Heaven were here. <lb />
DO YOU EVER TRY. <lb />
A mixture of alum, <lb />
vinegar and water for mosquito <lb />
bites t <lb />
Salt or ashes for removing dis- <lb />
coloration from coffee cups or <lb />
other dishes <lb />
Cleaning tho lint from a clothes <lb />
wringer with a cloth saturated in <lb />
kerosene <lb />
Alcohol to remove grass stains <lb />
from the children's white aprons <lb />
skirts, etc. <lb />
Pulverized chalk and ammonia <lb />
for removing stains from marble <lb />
basins and closet bowls <lb />
To clean a gilt picture frame by <lb />
using a sponge wet with hot <lb />
spirits of wine or oil of turpentine, <lb />
then leaving it to dry I <lb />
To cook onions, cabbage or <lb />
nips without having the odor es- <lb />
cape to all of the If <lb />
have, then you probably fail- <lb />
ed, even if you had a dish of vine- <lb />
gar on the stove. <lb />
To do over the much used baby <lb />
carriage, staining with equal parts <lb />
of solution of extract of <lb />
and solution of saffron in diluted <lb />
spirits of wine, with a solution of <lb />
tin thrown in for tone i Good <lb />
Government Ownership cf Railroads, <lb />
Wilson. <lb />
Now the first thing the Weaver <lb />
propose is for the government <lb />
to own the railroads. Now what <lb />
is government Merely, an <lb />
agency for the transaction of our <lb />
business. <lb />
has nor can it ever own any- <lb />
thing- In a man <lb />
owns the Wash- <lb />
I replied, <lb />
own It belongs to us. When <lb />
they come to you and talk about <lb />
owning thorn, <lb />
you say pshaw talk about <lb />
We are the govern- <lb />
and it is ours. There is only <lb />
two ways to get these railroads to <lb />
buy or to steal them- My friend <lb />
would say, <lb />
them, but I will be plain and say <lb />
If I could put on a black- <lb />
board the number of miles of road <lb />
and the price per mile, there's <lb />
hardly a man in Nash county who <lb />
could tell what amount would <lb />
be. I can't see how putting upon <lb />
our people, our children and our <lb />
children's children such a load as <lb />
that can afford relief. <lb />
We have had some experience <lb />
in North Carolina in owning rail <lb />
roads. a red-headed Irish- <lb />
man came to mo from Now York <lb />
and wanted to buy the Western <lb />
North Carolina Railroad. I con- <lb />
tho General Assembly in <lb />
extra session and they said to me i <lb />
it, Jarvis, sell it <lb />
To-day that road and the whole <lb />
Danville is in the <lb />
hands of a receiver, <lb />
they were in the hands of the <lb />
best talent to secured. And <lb />
yet our party COl <lb />
to us and say let's bank- <lb />
property and, saddle our <lb />
with this tremendous debt <lb />
In Warren this same man said <lb />
men who own these roads are <lb />
do you want to them richer <lb />
Do you want to bankrupt us to <lb />
help them f Now those roads <lb />
cease to do want us to <lb />
pay them a good price for <lb />
tax ourselves to run them V <lb />
And he not o word. <lb />
AN APPEAL TO REASON. <lb />
Kin-ton Free Press. <lb />
The asks the Third <lb />
party people to make a careful in- <lb />
and see if they can't <lb />
realize wherein they are mistaken <lb />
in their course. know you do <lb />
not believe much you see this <lb />
paper, but ask you to investigate <lb />
for yourselves. <lb />
yourself seriously, if it is <lb />
not possible that your leaders are <lb />
fallible mistaken And hero <lb />
we wish yon to reflect on what <lb />
good has come to you from the <lb />
advice you have already acted <lb />
from them. For instance, did their <lb />
advice to you to hold your cotton <lb />
last fall prove profitable to you, or <lb />
did you lose by following it <lb />
Have the other advice they have <lb />
given you. as a rule, proved to <lb />
your advantage or disadvantage I <lb />
Marion Butler The <lb />
karma- advised you last <lb />
fall to hold your cotton- You <lb />
lost by following that advice. <lb />
They were mistaken. Now we <lb />
ask you, is it not possible they <lb />
are making a mistake in advising <lb />
you to support a Third party. <lb />
Don't unreasonable, but think <lb />
for yourselves <lb />
Reflect and see if any possible <lb />
good can come from deserting the <lb />
Democratic party and turning the <lb />
State over to the Republicans. <lb />
The only result possible from tho <lb />
Third party movement is to turn <lb />
the State over to tho Republicans, <lb />
who will certainly put out a State <lb />
ticket <lb />
You have been prejudiced <lb />
against Grover Cleveland, but ho <lb />
is a good and a true patriot. <lb />
He is battling for the true inter- <lb />
of the people, and you will <lb />
recognize this fact sooner or later <lb />
as soon as you recover from <lb />
blind prejudice. haven't <lb />
space now to discuss this line <lb />
further, but we do ask you not to <lb />
convict Grover Cleveland and the <lb />
Democratic party without giving <lb />
them bearing. We appeal to you <lb />
in common justice to listen to a <lb />
candid and fair discussion. It is <lb />
possible you may yet brought <lb />
to realize the fact that Tho Pro- <lb />
Farmer and National <lb />
Economist liable to be <lb />
en. You have lost in a of <lb />
instances so far by following their <lb />
advice, and it may be that they <lb />
giving yon bad advice now. <lb />
We believe they are- <lb />
BOY. <lb />
A jolly boy. <lb />
A boy full of vim. <lb />
A boy who scorns a lie. <lb />
A boy who will never smoke. <lb />
A boy with some to <lb />
A boy who takes tho bath- <lb />
tub. <lb />
A boy who is proud of his big <lb />
sister. <lb />
A boy who thinks hard work no <lb />
disgrace. <lb />
A boy who does chores without <lb />
grumbling. <lb />
A boy who believes that an ed- <lb />
is worth while. <lb />
A boy who plays with all his <lb />
might during playing hours. <lb />
A boy who listens not to unclean <lb />
stories from any one. <lb />
R. J. <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
X. C <lb />
Office in Skinner Building, upper <lb />
opposite Photograph Gallery <lb />
P. I,. <lb />
DENTIST. <lb />
I AS. L. <lb />
KY-AT-LAW. <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
Prompt attention to business. <lb />
at Tinker Murphy's old stand. <lb />
JARVIS <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
ALEX. L. <lb />
X. O. <lb />
in all the Courts. <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
I. A. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
AT <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention given to collection <lb />
ii. long, <lb />
Attorney-at-Law, <lb />
c. <lb />
and careful attention to <lb />
Collection solicited. <lb />
L. C. LATHAM. MARRY <lb />
SKINNER, <lb />
n. c. <lb />
U . JAMES. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N C. <lb />
Practice in all the Collections <lb />
a Specialty.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017564_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Es-Gov. Jarvis <lb />
Coke will <lb />
-f county on Tuns lay <lb />
C 20th. <lb />
and Notwithstanding committee H. C was <lb />
in cut who. Sf . <lb />
.,, IO A <lb />
J . <lb />
W,. <lb />
N. mini matter. <lb />
given <lb />
of pt- <lb />
NA TICKET <lb />
CLEVELAND. <lb />
Of Hew York.<lb />
ADLAI E. STEVENSON, <lb />
Of Illinois. <lb />
CHARLES B AYCOCK. <lb />
ROBERT B. GLENN. <lb />
1st Dist.-L-L. SMITH. <lb />
W. A. B- <lb />
of Beaufort. <lb />
STATE TICKET. <lb />
ELIAS <lb />
of <lb />
A. DAL <lb />
of <lb />
FOB <lb />
COKE . <lb />
f Wake. <lb />
DONALD W. <lb />
of Wake. <lb />
R. M. <lb />
of <lb />
B BOW. <lb />
J. C <lb />
of Johnston. <lb />
FRANK OSBORNE, <lb />
of <lb />
GEORGE A. <lb />
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb />
JAMES- <lb />
I. K- W <lb />
RICHARD W. <lb />
REGISTER <lb />
HENRY HARDING. <lb />
President Harrison <lb />
to the public bis <lb />
am-. After <lb />
and ricing that the <lb />
is prosperous pro- <lb />
with a plea to the American <lb />
people to elect him again to <lb />
Instead of an outline, of the <lb />
policy to pursued him it is <lb />
simply a stump speech given out <lb />
lot the purpose of trying to catch <lb />
votes. It is evidently far inferior <lb />
to what ought to be expected from <lb />
a candidate for such an exalted <lb />
position. Benjamin will have <lb />
necessity for writing letters of ac- <lb />
the future- <lb />
Bight here the season when <lb />
our farmers could be Baring <lb />
and tons of good hay. we sec <lb />
quantities of the Northern <lb />
Western article being shipped <lb />
here. Is it not the <lb />
In re were <lb />
out t- h- <lb />
for our Southern farmers <lb />
to abusing the people of the <lb />
North and West for having all the <lb />
money, when they won't make <lb />
their supplies at home but look to <lb />
the far away markets to furnish <lb />
them Learn to be producers <lb />
instead of all consumers you <lb />
will have more money.<lb />
report Mint <lb />
that they conic not ., road in <lb />
as thoroughly as they wished, <lb />
fully seven I order issued, ., th <lb />
Tho <lb />
. i <lb />
and Hon. J. Bell, State <lb />
Senator Clay county, at the <lb />
speaking hero on last Wednesday- <lb />
The Cleveland and <lb />
Can- flag x feet was raised to <lb />
tho top of the foot pole at <lb />
noon, at o'clock tho speak- <lb />
commenced the Court <lb />
House <lb />
The first speaker, Mr. Mason, <lb />
was introduced by G- B. King, <lb />
Esq., of the Cleveland <lb />
and Carr Club. Mr. Mason spoke <lb />
for an hour and minutes, <lb />
gave his hearers the <lb />
racy and He <lb />
touched upon all tho issues, con- <lb />
fronting us and gave s points <lb />
in support of the Democratic side, <lb />
showing that none of the reforms <lb />
agitated could be <lb />
CONFEDERATE VETERANS AS- <lb />
OF PITT COUNTY, <lb />
CAROLINA. <lb />
FOB <lb />
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb />
DR- WM. E DARKEN <lb />
J. B- <lb />
Tho Democratic Congressional <lb />
nominees in this State, are as fol- <lb />
First district, W- A. B- <lb />
Second. F-A. <lb />
Third. B. F. i B. H- <lb />
H- A- <lb />
Sixth. S- B Alexander; Seventh. <lb />
JohnS- Eighth- <lb />
H- Bower; Ninth. W. T- Craw <lb />
lord. Messrs Woodard and Bow- <lb />
are the only new men- <lb />
Now Orleans was the scene of <lb />
three prize fights last week, one <lb />
Monday night, one Tuesday night <lb />
and one Wednesday night. Most <lb />
interest centered in tho last fight <lb />
which was between the former <lb />
champion. John Sullivan, and the <lb />
present champion. James <lb />
Sullivan was severely <lb />
Corbett came out victor without a <lb />
scratch in the twenty-first round. <lb />
There are many people who be- <lb />
that Marion Butler is hired <lb />
by the Republican party to take <lb />
the steps ho is now pursuing to <lb />
overthrow the Democratic party in <lb />
North Carolina and give the State <lb />
over to Harrison and the <lb />
cans. How does this strike yon <lb />
as proof or substantiation of such <lb />
a belief The <lb />
During our visit to Mount Olive <lb />
last Friday we mot a gentleman <lb />
who us that he saw Ma- <lb />
Butler open a letter a few- <lb />
days ago which contained a check <lb />
of issued by National <lb />
headquarters. Our <lb />
was heretofore a strong <lb />
Third but since Friday <lb />
has become a convert to <lb />
racy. <lb />
This country has been in right <lb />
much of a cholera scare for the <lb />
last few weeks. That scourge has <lb />
been raging in sections of Europe, <lb />
and several vessels have brought <lb />
cases right to the door of our <lb />
American ports. Only the strict- <lb />
est quarantine has kept it from <lb />
getting a foot hold New York, <lb />
and it may yet break out- There <lb />
should be every precaution taken <lb />
against it. <lb />
The Republican <lb />
held in Raleigh last <lb />
day nominated D. M. of <lb />
Iredell. for Governor; J. M. <lb />
Moody, of Wayne, for Lieutenant <lb />
Governor ; Rufus Amis, of Gran- <lb />
ville, for Secretary of State ; II. C- <lb />
Dockery, of for Treas- <lb />
E. C- Parish, of Guilford. <lb />
for Superintendent of Public In <lb />
; H- L. Grant, of <lb />
for T. It. <lb />
Attorney W S. Ball, of <lb />
Guilford, for Associate Justice <lb />
Supreme Court; W. L- Norwood. <lb />
of Haywood. for Judge of 12th <lb />
District. <lb />
It became around that <lb />
the Third candidates were <lb />
going to speak at May's Chapel. <lb />
Beaver Dam township, <lb />
day afternoon, and Maj. Latham <lb />
went out to reply to them. About <lb />
CO to men gathered there to hear <lb />
them, but the J candidates failed to <lb />
show- up. Their only <lb />
there was Mr. A. J. <lb />
who off for awhile but <lb />
never got out anything except <lb />
abuse of the Democratic party. <lb />
Maj. Latham took the stand after <lb />
him, threw out Democratic doc- <lb />
straight from the shoulder, <lb />
wiped up the earth with the Third <lb />
party remnant and came home <lb />
leaving old Beaver Dam solid for <lb />
Democracy. <lb />
It has for some time been an <lb />
open secret that the leader of the <lb />
Republican and Third parties had <lb />
entered into a combination in this <lb />
county for the purpose of defeat- <lb />
tho Democratic party, now <lb />
there be no possible doubt of <lb />
it. At the meeting of the Board <lb />
of County last <lb />
week, when they were considering <lb />
tho appointments of Registrars <lb />
and Inspectors of Election, the <lb />
Chairman of the Republican com- <lb />
and tho Chairman of <lb />
Third party committee, presented <lb />
petitions for the appointment of <lb />
two inspectors, and what was <lb />
amusing about tho whole matter <lb />
was that of the twenty-two names <lb />
on each petition they were <lb />
cal, except in two solitary <lb />
Neither of the petitions con- <lb />
the name of a single Re- <lb />
publican. We wonder what our <lb />
Republican friends will say of this <lb />
neglect of their right of <lb />
Seeing that it was a fusion <lb />
the Board of Commissioner very <lb />
properly ignored both petitions <lb />
made their own selections. <lb />
needed a <lb />
looked for through any other <lb />
source than the Democratic party. <lb />
J. D- Cox, Esq., member of the <lb />
last Legislature and ex President <lb />
of the county Alliance, introduced <lb />
Mr. Boll, who spoke about an <lb />
hour. It was his first speech of <lb />
the campaign, but he proved him- <lb />
self master of the situation and <lb />
thoroughly posted on tho topics <lb />
under discussion. He was State <lb />
Lecturer of the Al last year, <lb />
but was asked to resign at the <lb />
late meeting in Greensboro be- <lb />
cause ho was too good a Demo <lb />
to suit Third party <lb />
in control of that body. He <lb />
thoroughly exposed Marion But- <lb />
duplicity and also the turn- <lb />
coat course of the <lb />
Farmer. He spoke of the <lb />
faction expressed by both of these <lb />
at the ticket nominated by <lb />
the Democratic convention in May. <lb />
The Farmer under <lb />
flaming head lines and crowing <lb />
roosters declared it a great victory <lb />
for the Alliance, and Butler up <lb />
near the close of July was ad- <lb />
the ticket and declaring <lb />
it would be suicidal to the inter- <lb />
of the Alliance and the State <lb />
to bring out a Third party ticket- <lb />
Now both of these had <lb />
right over were doing all in <lb />
their power to defeat the ticket <lb />
they had helped to <lb />
May. which meant giving the <lb />
State back into the hands of the <lb />
Republican party if their <lb />
pose can be accomplished. He <lb />
said he was an good an Alliance- <lb />
man as ever, and deeply regretted <lb />
that designing men and office <lb />
seekers had been allowed to con- <lb />
it and break down its power <lb />
and influence for good. Ho said <lb />
it was folly to think any reforms <lb />
could be accomplished by turning <lb />
against the Democratic party. <lb />
Stay the party and light for re- <lb />
forms within the ranks. Mr. Bed <lb />
several witty illustrations in <lb />
his speech and frequently had the <lb />
audience roaring with laughter. <lb />
These were two just such speech- <lb />
es as Pitt county needed left <lb />
their impress for good. A few la- <lb />
dies were present and at the close <lb />
of the speeches presented, <lb />
through Mr. A. L. Blow, beautiful <lb />
to each of tho speakers. <lb />
aid <lb />
in <lb />
an <lb />
He <lb />
Sled l. ii i . <lb />
., v. J L, <lb />
ii i v an <lb />
order issued by the Board. Both <lb />
i ts and copies f too <lb />
orders and reports ordered s it to <lb />
tho Boards of Supervisors the <lb />
respective townships. <lb />
J. H. Evans, Haddock, H. <lb />
C and others <lb />
that the Board order the <lb />
Sheriff to summon a and lay <lb />
out a public road to begin near <lb />
Run on Red Banks road <lb />
and run out to the beginning f a <lb />
now road near W. P. Mills. <lb />
to tho Board the <lb />
same had been legally <lb />
due notice given tho order <lb />
was made accordance with tho <lb />
M. C. Cotton <lb />
to retail liquor at Marlboro for six <lb />
months from July 1st. <lb />
The following listed taxes for <lb />
1392 <lb />
Fleming, R. M. <lb />
Kennedy, J. Johnson, J. E- <lb />
H. and wife, <lb />
Mary Lucas, J. M. H- M. <lb />
Rogers, Z- D- <lb />
Swot Mills, Jack- <lb />
son W. F- Pittman, P L. <lb />
James Tingle, William <lb />
Barney, S. H. Taylor and Wash- <lb />
Chapman. <lb />
W. Cox <lb />
J. L. Boss, Mary Cannon, W. <lb />
S. Little, W. W. <lb />
Susan E. <lb />
Smith, H A. <lb />
Boyd. <lb />
A- Tyson and <lb />
E. S. Porker. r . <lb />
and F- Fleming. <lb />
Joyner. <lb />
Jen- <lb />
L. Nelson. <lb />
J. Nobles,<lb />
Tho following were appointed <lb />
Registrars and Inspectors of an <lb />
election to held on the 8th of <lb />
November <lb />
DAM. <lb />
J. Anderson. In- <lb />
F. Allen, G- T. Tyson, <lb />
George Redmond <lb />
Peyton. <lb />
A- Thigpen. In- <lb />
B. F. Shelton, W. H. <lb />
Rives, Virgil Robinson, Arnold <lb />
Spain. <lb />
S. Keel. <lb />
T. Cherry- S- M. Jones. <lb />
It. D. Whitehurst, James H- <lb />
Bryan. <lb />
D. Keel In- <lb />
W. J. Little, W. H. <lb />
W. A. Chance, Benjamin <lb />
Chance. <lb />
Proctor, J. <lb />
Grimes. Alex Grimes, <lb />
Armstrong- <lb />
L. Harrington, <lb />
D. Cox. J. C <lb />
Lawhorn, George W- Daniel <lb />
Hatch. <lb />
Sal i <lb />
This <lb />
H. <lb />
mat, and A. Blow <lb />
secretary. <lb />
Co <lb />
perm <lb />
n zed by elect- <lb />
in chair <lb />
temporary <lb />
appointed to perfect B. Loft <lb />
CLUB AT GRIFTON. <lb />
At of a number of <lb />
sens of <lb />
held at Sept 1893, a <lb />
Democratic club was <lb />
. of one hundred and fifty <lb />
members. <lb />
officers are as Dr. <lb />
W. <lb />
A Forbes and C- <lb />
O. <lb />
A. <lb />
A. <lb />
Randolph. <lb />
Following names for officers to <lb />
hold until tho first Monday in <lb />
March 1893, reported commit- <lb />
tee H. Spain, President, W. <lb />
G- Vice President, C A. <lb />
Randolph, Treasurer, H. A. Blow, <lb />
Secretary. <lb />
to revise Roster of <lb />
Pitt county troops, IT. A. Blow, <lb />
B. P. Sugg and t Greene. <lb />
Committee to <lb />
D. II. James, F. Sugg <lb />
and O. Smith. <lb />
Permanent G. F. <lb />
Evans, Robert Carney, S. A. Dud- <lb />
J. and John B. <lb />
Kilpatrick. <lb />
Committee to extend thanks to <lb />
citizens of Wilmington for <lb />
to our old comrades at <lb />
G. B. King and <lb />
James L. Fleming. <lb />
Committee to memorialize the <lb />
next Legislature for a better ad- <lb />
of pensions to soldiers <lb />
L. C Latham, T. J. Jarvis and B. <lb />
J. Wilson. <lb />
Picnic at X Roads, <lb />
Saturday, October 1892. <lb />
Committee on be <lb />
appointed <lb />
Committee be <lb />
appointed <lb />
Regular meeting of this <lb />
to be on first Monday in <lb />
March every year. <lb />
Every person desiring to be- <lb />
come a member of this body will <lb />
please hand in his name. <lb />
Regiment to tho <lb />
Tho object of this organization <lb />
is to perpetuate the names of all <lb />
men of our county who served in <lb />
the Confederate Armies. Lot us <lb />
make a success of it. <lb />
H. Spain. Pies. <lb />
H. A. Blow, Sec'y. <lb />
The Republicans as was <lb />
met in Raleigh on the 7th <lb />
inst. and nominated a full State <lb />
one has doubted this <lb />
be done who has heretofore <lb />
been familiar with that party. The <lb />
few that have opposed nominating <lb />
a ticket have only done so because <lb />
they wanted to encourage <lb />
among the Democrats. All <lb />
Third can see now that <lb />
they have only been duped by <lb />
their Republican friends it <lb />
will be manly them now to <lb />
show these Republicans that they <lb />
are conscious of this by returning <lb />
to the Democratic party and fight <lb />
tho same old enemy they have <lb />
been fighting for the past twenty- <lb />
five years- Dr. Exum is reported <lb />
saying that he had telegraphed <lb />
S. Otho Wilson that he need not <lb />
make any more appointment for <lb />
him if the Republicans nominated <lb />
a ticket. It is to be hoped this is <lb />
true and that his example will be <lb />
followed by Butler and others <lb />
who are among the more <lb />
gent of the Third party leaders. <lb />
White men come back into the <lb />
Democratic party and let all of <lb />
fight OUT common enemy. <lb />
At the recent Republican <lb />
Convention held hero for tho <lb />
purpose of appointing delegates to <lb />
tho State Convention. Mr. C- M- <lb />
Bernard. Republican elector, ad- <lb />
dressed the Convention in a <lb />
speech of bitter denunciation of <lb />
tho Democratic party. Among <lb />
the many epithets that he applied <lb />
to it were such as thieves, ballot <lb />
box dishonesty, <lb />
oppressors, Ac. He ad- <lb />
vised the to go home and <lb />
organize their Harrison clubs and <lb />
when the time comet <lb />
We supposed that the <lb />
tho advice and we have no <lb />
doubt but what they will be ready <lb />
to stand by the Republican <lb />
on the Nth of November. Judging <lb />
from the mutterings we hear, both <lb />
loud and deep, their leaders had <lb />
better stand from under in their <lb />
attempt to deliver the vote <lb />
according to the terms of barter <lb />
and sale that they have made <lb />
with tho Third party. <lb />
Moore, a colored lawyer, <lb />
the Convention that it was best <lb />
for the Republican party to have <lb />
full and complete tickets in the <lb />
field from President down to the <lb />
lowest advice was loud- <lb />
applauded and seemed to be the <lb />
sentiment of those composing the <lb />
Convention. Tho Convention was <lb />
composed of C white men and <lb />
MEETING. <lb />
N. C, Sept. 82- <lb />
The Board of Commissioners of <lb />
Pitt county met this day. present <lb />
C- Dawson, chairman, S. A. Gain <lb />
ex, Fleming. C- V. New- <lb />
ton and T. E. Keel. <lb />
The following orders were <lb />
drawn for <lb />
Winifred Taylor Margaret <lb />
Bryan 3.00, Alex Harris Do, H. <lb />
D. Smith 2.00. Daniel Webster 2-00. <lb />
Martha Nelson 2-00, Lydia Bryan <lb />
2-00, Jacob 1.50, Susan <lb />
Briley Nancy 3.00. <lb />
Susan Norris Lucinda Smith <lb />
1.50. Patsy L Harriett <lb />
Williams 2.00. Henry Harris 2.50. <lb />
Emily Edwards 3.00. Benjamin <lb />
Crawford 1.50. Folly Adams, 2.50 <lb />
Smith 1-50. Easter Vines <lb />
1.50, George Turner 2.50. Mrs. <lb />
Asa Knox Kenneth <lb />
son 2.00. <lb />
The following orders for general <lb />
purposes were issued <lb />
E. B. T. A. <lb />
Thigpen O. Hooker 3-25, R <lb />
W. Smith R. W. Smith 8.40. <lb />
E. B. G. W. <lb />
Edmondson 7.20, H. P. <lb />
82.59. Wm. House 2-88, O- W. <lb />
1.20. B- S- Sheppard 2.39. <lb />
Dr. B. T. Cox J. H. Man <lb />
8.10, Elias James Sher- <lb />
man Foreman Henry Bennett <lb />
1.75, Wiley Clark 3.00. Lewis Ives <lb />
2.70, T. C Bryan 51-1, John A. <lb />
3.60, W. B- <lb />
W. B. Moore 1.00. <lb />
J. A- K. Tucker 2.60, <lb />
J. A K. Tucker W H. <lb />
T. R. Hodges 154-47, <lb />
I. Fleming 37.45. N. R. Cory <lb />
1.00, W. P. W. F. <lb />
J. B. Bullock 6.00, <lb />
D. H. James 11.12, D. H. James <lb />
300.00. D. J. Holland 3.71, E- A. <lb />
M. G. P. P. <lb />
Johnson 2.00, C P- 3.33 <lb />
Henry Brown 10.00, J- B. <lb />
k Co. W. W. Harper k Co. <lb />
743.75, James Brown. 1.00. <lb />
A petition from certain citizens <lb />
in township, asking <lb />
for the sum of if dollars to be <lb />
appropriated to bridges in Fork <lb />
Swamp, was granted and a sum <lb />
not exceeding that amount <lb />
mended to be paid when lumber <lb />
is furnished labor performed <lb />
at said bridges. <lb />
Upon petition liquor license of <lb />
FALKLAND. <lb />
Registrar. H- Smith. <lb />
R. King, B. P. <lb />
Oscar Johnson, Ed- S- Harris. <lb />
R. Davis. <lb />
A. Barrett, W. T. Joyner, <lb />
J. S. Bennett, Jack Pitt. <lb />
Registrar AV. L. In- <lb />
-O. AV. Harrington, B. <lb />
S. Moses King, S. P. <lb />
Humphrey- <lb />
Registrar--- B- Little. <lb />
tors-AV. G- J. R- Over- <lb />
ton, James Holiday, Samuel <lb />
Daniel. <lb />
SWIFT <lb />
E. Powell. In- <lb />
Slaughter, C P. <lb />
Moore, Arch Cox, Henry Hardy. <lb />
S. A. Gainer and Leonidas <lb />
Fleming, committee on dam, re- <lb />
ported the work completed and <lb />
that they had received tho dam- <lb />
Balance duo on the was <lb />
and they recommended <lb />
that an order for that amount be <lb />
issued. <lb />
The tax list for 1892 <lb />
made out according to law, it was <lb />
ordered that the same be turned <lb />
over to the Sheriff for collection <lb />
and that the Clerk make the proper <lb />
endorsement thereon. <lb />
DAY. <lb />
September 6th 1892. <lb />
The following is- <lb />
sued for general county <lb />
Walter Nettle 2.00. AV. M. Kin- <lb />
19.00, C 16.00, B. S. <lb />
Sheppard 2.00, B. S. Sheppard <lb />
Henry Sheppard 2.00, <lb />
Abe 2.00. George <lb />
2.00; C. Dawson 7.60. C V. New- <lb />
ton 6.60, Leonidas Fleming 19.50, <lb />
T. E. Keel 9.40, A- Gainer 10.80- <lb />
and Swift Creek <lb />
Stock Law H. <lb />
James 16-00. <lb />
Greenville Stock Law Territory <lb />
D. H James <lb />
The Board then proceeded to re- <lb />
vise tho Jury List accordance <lb />
with law. <lb />
are <lb />
n, Pres., W. <lb />
1st A. P., E. Pittman, 2nd P. <lb />
L. 3rd V. P., F. L. <lb />
Ives, See., J. K. Leery. Treas. <lb />
After tho of officers the <lb />
President, Mr. Fred Harding and <lb />
E. J. Brooks made short speeches <lb />
to the club. <lb />
The following elected as <lb />
executive V. A. Bonn- <lb />
tree, AV. F. Harper, C P. <lb />
E. A. Johnson, and C. Dawson. <lb />
The following committee of ad- <lb />
was appointed by the <lb />
E. C Spier. E. F. Harper, <lb />
Albert Fred Hard- <lb />
and G. W. Hellen. <lb />
The following delegates were <lb />
elected to D. <lb />
Calvin Tucker. Dr. P. B. Loftin. <lb />
J. E. Pittman, C L. Bonn <lb />
tree, J. C. Koonce and E. C- Spier. <lb />
Upon motion in the event any <lb />
of tho delegates failing to go the <lb />
President was empowered to <lb />
point his <lb />
The President appointed E- J. <lb />
Brooks, Fred Harding and C P. <lb />
a committee to a <lb />
speaker for our next meeting. <lb />
Upon motion the club agreed to <lb />
meet Saturday 24th of September, <lb />
1892, at o'clock P. M. <lb />
Upon motion the club called a <lb />
meeting on Tuesday night, 13th at <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
No farther business being before <lb />
tho house the minutes were read <lb />
and upon the proceedings <lb />
were ordered to be sent to the Kins- <lb />
ton Free Press, Greenville <lb />
and Lamp Light. <lb />
F. L. Ives, Secy. <lb />
9-i <lb />
Ladies <lb />
RH <lb />
Mil <lb />
completed my <lb />
N. I am opening <lb />
a of <lb />
MERCHANDISE, <lb />
cordially fie to call <lb />
and examine my <lb />
GOODS, BOOKS, NOTIONS, <lb />
Ac, <lb />
Our motto i Standard Goods at Re. <lb />
Prices for <lb />
Examine my stock before buying <lb />
elsewhere. If the goods and prices do <lb />
not unit charge nothing to snow them. <lb />
Country produce taken In exchange , <lb />
for goals, n. <lb />
VA JOTTINGS. <lb />
Editor have <lb />
been quite a number of revivals in <lb />
this part of the country recently, <lb />
mainly Baptist churches and <lb />
great good seems to have been <lb />
done. Large numbers have pro- <lb />
fessed faith joined the differ- <lb />
churches. A grand meeting <lb />
closed at Hebron church a few days <lb />
It was conducted by Rev. J. <lb />
E. Hutson, the same preacher that <lb />
conducted the recent meeting at <lb />
Boy-kins. Quite a number joined <lb />
Hebron church and baptized <lb />
yesterday near Hailey's bridge. <lb />
Your correspondent attended one <lb />
day during the meeting and thinks <lb />
there were at least people <lb />
sent that day. tho church being <lb />
crowded and quite a number sat <lb />
in their vehicles outside at the <lb />
windows. <lb />
After Service we rode op a mile <lb />
so to see sometimes <lb />
called Church. This is <lb />
the oldest church in the county <lb />
and one of tho oldest the State, <lb />
having built in colonial <lb />
days. While it has undergone <lb />
at different times the or- <lb />
brick and timbers in <lb />
it yet and in good state of <lb />
stumbled across an <lb />
account a few days ago. when <lb />
preacher Asbury, one of the <lb />
of Methodism, had preached <lb />
in the building in 1801. It was <lb />
originally an Episcopal church. <lb />
The old graveyard is near <lb />
gazed on the tombstones ft <lb />
feeling of sadness stole over us to <lb />
reflect on the shortness of life and <lb />
think that those who had <lb />
shipped in this old church <lb />
gone to the majority. <lb />
There is not much to <lb />
to report this week we are glad to <lb />
state. <lb />
A colored girl. Rob s <lb />
daughter, very suddenly a <lb />
few days ago, from what is <lb />
not known- Tho fa wont off <lb />
visiting and left alone to take <lb />
care of the house, she being about <lb />
K years When they returned <lb />
she was lying in the yard dead but <lb />
no marks of violence on per. <lb />
Tho Methodist church is being <lb />
plastered adding very much to its <lb />
appearance. <lb />
R- D- Moore, of Franklin, was <lb />
in town one day last week. <lb />
Hay riding seems to be a favorite <lb />
pastime and the young people <lb />
around have been in- <lb />
in it these pleasant moon- <lb />
light nights. <lb />
A fawn came up in town Friday <lb />
being chased by and Mr. <lb />
James tried to get a shot at it but <lb />
failed. <lb />
Dissolution Notice. <lb />
The heretofore, existing <lb />
W, II. Brawn Hooker, <lb />
trading at Drown A Hooker, is hereby <lb />
dissolved by mutual All who <lb />
arc Indebted to old will please <lb />
settle S. T. Hooker. <lb />
W. B. BROWN, <lb />
s. T. <lb />
July <lb />
I will business the <lb />
stand and solicit the liberal patron- <lb />
age bestowed upon the old firm. <lb />
consent will continue under the old style <lb />
of Brown ft Hooker, <lb />
continue as salesman. <lb />
Mr. Brown will <lb />
T. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
State In the <lb />
County. i Superior Court. <lb />
Eliza Stocks, J. T. Alien wife Min- <lb />
Allen. T. Allen wife <lb />
Pattie Stocks, Cora Stocks, William <lb />
Stocks. Annie Stocks, Clint. Stocks, <lb />
stocks and Stocks, the <lb />
sis by their friend T. <lb />
Allen. <lb />
Home association, defendants. <lb />
The defendant above named U hereby <lb />
notified to be and appear before the <lb />
Judge of our Superior Court, a court <lb />
to be held for the county of Pitt, at the <lb />
Court House in on 2nd <lb />
Honda; after the Honda; of <lb />
it the 19th day of September, <lb />
answer the complaint which <lb />
will be deposited in the of the <lb />
Clerk of the Superior Court of Bald <lb />
within the first three days of said <lb />
let said defendant <lb />
that if .- said com- <lb />
plaint the. time by law <lb />
the plaintiffs apply to the court for <lb />
the relief demanded in the complaint. <lb />
Given under my hand and -real of said <lb />
court, this day of August, 1892. <lb />
K. A. HOVE, <lb />
t Superior Court. <lb />
Dissolution. <lb />
The of Culley mid Edmonds is <lb />
hereby by mutual consent. <lb />
Will pay the <lb />
same to Herbert Edmonds. <lb />
Culley. <lb />
Edmonds. <lb />
It gives pleasure to announce to <lb />
our customers I will continue the <lb />
business at the Every com- <lb />
fort and convenience will be found in <lb />
my shop. First-class -have and haircut <lb />
can be had all times. the <lb />
public for past I it a con- <lb />
of the same. <lb />
WALTER'S <lb />
aw- <lb />
Evans Street, in rear of Dr. D. U James <lb />
office <lb />
N. C. <lb />
I take great pleasure In Informing my <lb />
and the public generally<lb />
u now open. A successful career of<lb />
is a proof of the satisfaction I always give. <lb />
My Work Speaks for Itself. <lb />
Call i ally and examine, <lb />
to gum your and <lb />
merit favor. am <lb />
respectfully, <lb />
THOMAS WALTER <lb />
Peanut Pickers and <lb />
Cleaners. <lb />
Will pick and clean bushels of <lb />
Peanuts a day. Manufactured by Card- <lb />
well Machine Co., Richmond. Va. <lb />
Action for Divorce. <lb />
Henry i Pitt County,<lb />
Sheppard j In Superior Court. <lb />
Defendant above named, is here- <lb />
by fled to be appear before the <lb />
Judge of our Superior Court, Court <lb />
to be held for the County of at <lb />
Court Mouse In on the 8th <lb />
Monday before 1st Monday of March <lb />
and answer the <lb />
will be in the office of the <lb />
the Superior Court of said <lb />
Count;, within three of. <lb />
said term, and let <lb />
take notice that if she fall to answer the <lb />
complaint within the time required <lb />
by law the will apply to the <lb />
Court for the relief demanded the <lb />
complaint. <lb />
Hereof fail not. <lb />
i; under my and seal of said <lb />
Court, this day 1892. <lb />
E. A. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court <lb />
TO <lb />
-----If you want to save---- <lb />
in the of a and from <lb />
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb />
in the purchase of an Organ address <lb />
ADOLPH COHN, <lb />
X. C. <lb />
Agent for Carolina, <lb />
who Is now handling from <lb />
manufacturers, as <lb />
GRADE PIANOS, <lb />
for tone, workmanship and <lb />
and endorsed by nearly all the <lb />
United <lb />
Made by Paul O. M. is at Ibis <lb />
time one of the mechanics mid In- <lb />
of the day. Thirteen new <lb />
patents on tills high Piano- <lb />
Also the BY A EVANS <lb />
which has been sold by <lb />
him for the part -is rear hi the eastern <lb />
part of tills State ii to this has <lb />
given entire Tho Upright <lb />
Piano he sold at from <lb />
1904 <lb />
f eases. <lb />
Also PARLOR ORGAN <lb />
from to in solid or Oak <lb />
cases- <lb />
Ten years in music <lb />
him lo handle <lb />
nothing but Standard goods and he does <lb />
not hesitate to say that he sell any <lb />
musical instrument about per <lb />
than other agents are now offer- <lb />
T to all banks in Eastern<lb />
Sometimes object to a <lb />
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 />
for TEN CENTS.<lb />
DEALERS IN <lb />
beg to announce to our many <lb />
friends and customers that we <lb />
have the largest and best, <lb />
stock of Goods to be our <lb />
town. And while we are not sell- <lb />
at cost we beg lo announce <lb />
that we think we and will <lb />
any prices on the <lb />
lines of 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 lines <lb />
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions, <lb />
Furnishing Goods, Pants <lb />
Goods, Hats, Shoes, Hardware, <lb />
Cutlery, Nails, Tinware, Crockery, <lb />
Glassware. Groceries, deg. <lb />
White Oil cents per gallon, <lb />
and Willow Ware, Harness, <lb />
Whips and Collars, Farming Tools <lb />
Plows of improved makes. <lb />
Trunks, Valises, Floor Matting, <lb />
Oil Children's Carriages, <lb />
and the largest and best selected <lb />
stock of FURNITURE ever kept <lb />
in our town. When in need of <lb />
anything in our various line try us. <lb />
Yours, anxious for trade. <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb />
G. E. HARRIS, <lb />
DEALER IN <lb />
He Q, <lb />
J. L. SUGG, <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT <lb />
N. C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds Risks placed strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COW PAIN <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AM FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE <lb />
hi w i ii i ii <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1833. <lb />
Headquarters for the following lines of <lb />
load Ms Pork. Dome . <lb />
Car Meat. <lb />
Car load All grilles.<lb />
Bread Powder. <lb />
Ca cs Soup. <lb />
Cases ilia inly Cherries reaches. <lb />
Pull line Case <lb />
inn Boxes <lb />
no<lb />
M Gail Ax <lb />
Mills <lb />
Barrels Dinners <lb />
Paper Sacks, Cigarette. Ac. <lb />
GREENVILLE. C. <lb />
For Accident Insurance by the year in one ox <lb />
the best Companies in existence, see <lb />
Whichard.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017564_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
V-d <lb />
-TO- <lb />
Overflow <lb />
GOODS. <lb />
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Warm days, cool nights. <lb />
The fall crop Is line. <lb />
Early are ripe. <lb />
have been plentiful season. <lb />
Our had line <lb />
The New Home Sewing Machine <lb />
Mat Bros. <lb />
these warm <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mr. Andrew Joyner has sick a <lb />
few days, but Is now out again. <lb />
Died. <lb />
On the morning of the 8th <lb />
lust, while <lb />
I darkness yet hung over the earth, the <lb />
Maj. wife and hi young- of U <lb />
daughter are eh with fever. h Mr. and Mia. John <lb />
and took away youngest <lb />
girl of <lb />
several days she <lb />
been very -irk. and many prayers <lb />
w v she might be spared to <lb />
her pa hut our kind <lb />
Father in Ii- wisdom thought it best to <lb />
Misses Rouse and Bogart here call the little one from earthly home <lb />
l d. I. A. Sugg returned from Greens- child, little Lela, a <lb />
much improved in health. . t <lb />
Mr. Henry has engaged as. <lb />
in the Eastern Tobacco <lb />
op mis rapidly <lb />
dry <lb />
New Cream Cheese and N. Y. State <lb />
Batter at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
paring to move art studio to Tar- <lb />
Mr. J. B. Cherry returned home <lb />
day evening from New York and <lb />
more. <lb />
The family of Rev. A. D. Hunter re- <lb />
turned Monday evening from their visit <lb />
to Cary. <lb />
is about on its <lb />
for a <lb />
Cash given for Produce. Hides. <lb />
and Furs at the Old brick Store. <lb />
Men's Hats. <lb />
The boy is father the man, <lb />
and when the boy dons the man's <lb />
hat he is of sight These <lb />
boys are in and have <lb />
old heads on young shoulders. <lb />
The yelp of the coon dog up the <lb />
denizens of the forest these nights. <lb />
Wart-house, Henderson, is <lb />
for new chop He <lb />
prices. <lb />
Superior Court begins next Monday. <lb />
Judge George II. Brown will preside. <lb />
The rain yesterday morning settled <lb />
the dust but left the temperature warm. <lb />
to Silas <lb />
get free hogs- <lb />
The Ice cream season <lb />
last freeze. <lb />
Want to eat something good <lb />
Biscuits at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
1st of v <lb />
came down to cents <lb />
gallon Saturday. <lb />
says Food is <lb />
good for hog cholera. At the Old Brick <lb />
Stoic. <lb />
Cheapest Bedsteads and <lb />
Mattresses at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Squirrel hunting season is about on and <lb />
the hunters are after them.<lb />
P-o <lb />
CD <lb />
CD <lb />
CD <lb />
ft <lb />
CD <lb />
CO <lb />
Si <lb />
CD <lb />
heads from a. F. Evans. <lb />
some change along and get the <lb />
you come to Colin <lb />
next week. <lb />
The old reliable is Cooper's Ware- <lb />
Henderson. Send your tobacco <lb />
there. Cooper is the farmer's friend. <lb />
Tablet usually selling for 2.1 cents <lb />
lie had for cents, at Reflector <lb />
Book Store. <lb />
The new tobacco of the season <lb />
was sold by Harris, Co., Hen- <lb />
N. C. They are always at the <lb />
front. <lb />
Novels formerly costing cents can <lb />
now lie had for cents, at Reflector <lb />
Book Store. <lb />
Ship your tobacco to Cooler's Ware- <lb />
house, Henderson, he a work- <lb />
honestly and faithfully for your best <lb />
interest. <lb />
Registration will be opened in <lb />
the several townships on the 29th of this <lb />
month. <lb />
Remember if you send tobacco to <lb />
Cooper's Warehouse, Henderson, you <lb />
will obtain high prices and be happy. <lb />
Try it. <lb />
Is it not strange that our do not <lb />
appreciate a cornet band enough to give <lb />
one any encouragement <lb />
Some of the best cures of tobacco are <lb />
those men recommended by <lb />
Co. of Henderson. X. C. <lb />
Their price.- are always up with the <lb />
market and their market up with any. <lb />
Breaks every day last week but <lb />
day. That for us <lb />
a new tobacco market. <lb />
On Aug. 11th. Cooper's Warehouse, <lb />
Henderson, sold new primings for R. <lb />
R. Carr at 15.50. <lb />
and for F. T. Carr at 4.50 C. 10.30 <lb />
15.73 and Cooper can make just <lb />
as good sales for you. f <lb />
The Southerner reports that the Par- <lb />
lumber mills at the -1 unction, re- <lb />
destroyed by tire, will be rebuilt. <lb />
Everything about Harris, <lb />
business is conducted strictly business, <lb />
principles, they do what they say and <lb />
will be surpassed by none. They do not <lb />
run by gas or wind. Their motto is <lb />
makes the <lb />
Strike while the iron is hot. Get the <lb />
from now until the 1st of <lb />
January for cents. This is the last <lb />
campaign offer for <lb />
There is not a township in the county <lb />
that can show anything like the number <lb />
of Third party that were said to <lb />
two or three weeks ago. <lb />
Use plenty of lime about your premises. <lb />
It is very important that sanitation should <lb />
be well looked after now. Proper <lb />
may save some cases of fever. <lb />
Mr. J. J. Nobles brought the <lb />
six tremendous pears on Saturday, <lb />
the of which weighed 11-2 pounds. <lb />
were not only large but elegant. <lb />
Leap year is almost to the waning <lb />
quarter and we hear of no marriages <lb />
peeked for the fall. May be the girls arc <lb />
not making good use of their <lb />
The yearly meeting at Swamp <lb />
was held last Saturday and The <lb />
fourth Saturday and In <lb />
month is the date for the yearly meet- <lb />
at Great Swamp. <lb />
Judging from the quantities of <lb />
goods in the are ex- <lb />
a large trade this fall. They <lb />
need plenty of advertising to realize <lb />
their full expectations. <lb />
The star mail route from Tarboro now <lb />
supplies the offices on both sides of the <lb />
river, giving Holland and Penny Hill <lb />
both direct service. It comes down on <lb />
one side of the river and returns on the <lb />
other. <lb />
Thomas Walter, the photographer, ha <lb />
been doing some splendid work since <lb />
coming to Greenville. If you want first- <lb />
class photographs be sure and see him <lb />
before he leave. His work always give <lb />
satisfaction. <lb />
Hon. Elias Carr, Democratic <lb />
for Governor, in company with ex-Gov. <lb />
Jarvis, passed down the railroad <lb />
day to meet an appointment to speak at <lb />
a grand Democratic rally in Lenoir <lb />
to day. Quite a number of our <lb />
sens were at the depot to greet our next <lb />
Governor. <lb />
Harris, Gooch Co. of Henderson, X. <lb />
C. arc making a specialty of eastern to- <lb />
and they have for several years <lb />
past paid the best prices for eastern to- <lb />
as many will testify, though they <lb />
pay for all alike. They do not consider <lb />
it honest to pay u big talker two prices <lb />
for his tobacco get big poorer neigh- <lb />
for nothing. <lb />
At a meeting of the board of trustees <lb />
of Washington Male and Female <lb />
my, Prof. C. H. James, of High <lb />
Improved School, was elected principal <lb />
for the next term, which is to begin Oct. <lb />
3rd. 1892. The trustees are to repaint <lb />
and thoroughly prepare be- <lb />
fore the school The <lb />
lie of a high grade for and, <lb />
Mr. W. B. Brown has moved his <lb />
into the Fleming house, opposite Ir. <lb />
Williams. <lb />
Mrs. of Atlanta, arrived <lb />
last week on a visit to her son. Prof. Z. <lb />
Mr. W. J. who has in <lb />
Wilmington for some time, returned <lb />
home last week. <lb />
Mr. C. W. is in the Northern <lb />
markets making purchases for his <lb />
Young and <lb />
Forties returned Saturday <lb />
the North, where lie has been <lb />
making <lb />
Rev. J. E. L. Presbyterian, <lb />
will preach in Hall next Sunday <lb />
morning evening. <lb />
Mrs. F. Smith recently returned <lb />
from Beaufort, where she has been <lb />
part of the summer. <lb />
Mr. Willis Brodie, of Franklin county. <lb />
down Monday- to see his <lb />
sister, Mrs, n, a. Blow, who is sick. <lb />
Thomas and <lb />
Coke will address the people of Pitt <lb />
county on Tuesday in Court week, 20th. <lb />
Mr. C. who for several <lb />
months ha living in Norfolk, is <lb />
spending a few days at his old home. <lb />
We were glad to see him in town Mon- <lb />
day. <lb />
Rev. R. T. Vann, of Scotland <lb />
will lecture in the Baptist church to-night <lb />
in the interest of the Centennial Mission <lb />
Work. This work is educational ill its <lb />
nature and our have an <lb />
of hearing something <lb />
All invited. <lb />
Clerks for the Pall. <lb />
There have recently been some changes <lb />
ill the clerkship and hiring of new clerks <lb />
our mercantile houses. <lb />
Mr. Harry Harding has taking a <lb />
with Young <lb />
Mr. Bach, of York, has come <lb />
among us and taken a with M. <lb />
R- Lang. <lb />
Mr. Emmet Savage, of Scotland <lb />
has taken a position with Bros. <lb />
Messrs. Ed. and Alton Taft are both <lb />
clerking for C. T. <lb />
Mr. Will Ricks i for J. C. <lb />
Cobb A Son. <lb />
Mis Estelle Williams <lb />
with Brown A Hooker. <lb />
Mr. F. Joyner I with Brown <lb />
Hooker. <lb />
Miss Jarvis a position with <lb />
Brown Bros. <lb />
has a position <lb />
The Pain Disappeared. <lb />
Mrs. Dr. of Newton Grove. <lb />
Sampson county, is now at Carolina <lb />
Beach. She a great deal with <lb />
her eyes and when he went to the <lb />
dare not venture out of her <lb />
rooms. The suffering was in the <lb />
of intense headache, caused by tile con- <lb />
other eyes. Dr. D. S. Harmon <lb />
was called in and in a few days a mark- <lb />
ed improvement was the result. She now <lb />
wears the glasses ordered by him with <lb />
ease and comfort and the pains have dis- <lb />
appeared. Mrs. cheerfully give <lb />
these facts to a Review reporter and <lb />
feels very grateful to Dr. <lb />
Review. <lb />
The Sermons Had Effect. <lb />
Rev. G. F. Smith in his sermon Sunday <lb />
morning, and Rev. A. D. Hunter hi his <lb />
sermon Sunday night, both had some- <lb />
thing to say about dancing that their re- <lb />
congregations will not he hasty <lb />
to forget. One effect o those sermons <lb />
was that the dancing school which had <lb />
been in progress here for some weeks <lb />
came to a close Monday night and the in- <lb />
took his departure yesterday <lb />
morning. These ministers heard some <lb />
charges against the professor that proved <lb />
him a man of questionable morals and <lb />
disqualified him as an instructor or com- <lb />
of young people. An <lb />
substantiated the charges. <lb />
Marriage Licenses. <lb />
The Register of Deeds issued sixteen <lb />
marriage licenses during the month pf <lb />
August to the following <lb />
A. Moore and Adams, <lb />
William Baker and Mary; J. Gray, H. B. <lb />
Tripp and Alice E. Nelson, E. F. <lb />
and Emily Francis <lb />
and Emily <lb />
W. A. White and Ida E. in. <lb />
and Alice <lb />
Henry Brown and Ida Pol- <lb />
lard, Savage and Sarah Mitchell. <lb />
Minter Northern and Olivia King, James <lb />
and Easter A. Joseph <lb />
Jones and Ellen Daniel <lb />
Dupree and Queen Webb, Abraham <lb />
Venable Julia Hill, John Gorham <lb />
and Fannie Israel, Willie and <lb />
Dora Perkins. <lb />
Sunday School Work. <lb />
At a meeting of the Pitt county Sunday <lb />
School Association held last March, a <lb />
resolution was adopted looking to the bet- <lb />
organization of the work in the county, <lb />
and the following were to attend <lb />
and organize branch associations in the <lb />
several Is. <lb />
ex-Gov. T. J. <lb />
Swift Creek, A. L. Blow. <lb />
Rev. A. V. Hunter. <lb />
Falkland. Rev. J. N. II. <lb />
Farmville, E. A. <lb />
Prof. W. II. <lb />
-Beaver Dam, D. J. <lb />
Bethel, Rev. D. H. Tuttle. <lb />
Revs. G. F. Smith and A. A. <lb />
The Rev. A. D. Hunter, re- <lb />
quests that the work the several town- <lb />
ships be performed as early as possible <lb />
and full reports be made of the enroll- <lb />
of Sunday School in he <lb />
county, so that statistical report may- <lb />
be complete. <lb />
Sunday School <lb />
The Independent Sunday School, con. <lb />
ducted at Smith's school house, In Bea- <lb />
Dam township, bad a very nice picnic <lb />
last Friday. About or people <lb />
were present and the occasion passed off <lb />
as pleasantly as could be for. A <lb />
tine dinner was spread and it was <lb />
Two or three had promised to go <lb />
out and make Sunday School talks but <lb />
the man was the only one <lb />
who could be on hand. He talked about <lb />
minutes and at the close was present- <lb />
ed by Mr. C. L. Tyson with a beautiful <lb />
box of flowers with the compliments of <lb />
Miss Fannie Smith. <lb />
Mr. E. Little is Superintendent <lb />
of the Sunday School of which this was a <lb />
celebration, and there Is no doubt <lb />
to that bright mansion He had prepared <lb />
for her beyond the skies. Little Lela <lb />
was not only the joy of the immediate <lb />
household, but nil who knew her loved <lb />
her for her sweetness, for her gentleness <lb />
and for her own loving nature. In this <lb />
sad that tills the heart of her <lb />
loving parent- with bitterest anguish, <lb />
they have the deepest sympathy of the <lb />
entire community and the earnest <lb />
prayers of Christian. May the Lord <lb />
lib tenderness and mercy heal their <lb />
heart with Hi own great love <lb />
and cease them to feel that their little <lb />
darling ha been plucked from earth to <lb />
be transplanted amid the shining hosts <lb />
of angels Heaven, and I here <lb />
tenderly folded in the arm of a loving <lb />
Savior, awaits the coining of pupa, mama <lb />
and loved ones, mid all reunited around <lb />
the Great White Throne there will be no <lb />
more pat ting, and Godwin wipe away- <lb />
all <lb />
On Friday morning the remains of lit- <lb />
Lela were taken Baptist church <lb />
where services were conducted by Rev. <lb />
A. D. Hunter, and thence to Cherry Hill <lb />
for interment. Mews, W. B. <lb />
Wilson. J. L. Little, J. R. J. R. <lb />
Starkey, Jarvis and D. J. <lb />
ard acting as pall bearer. The Infant <lb />
class of the Sunday School, of which lit- <lb />
Lela was a devoted member, followed <lb />
behind the when the grave <lb />
was tilled covered it with beautiful floral <lb />
I he midst of their great grief Mr. <lb />
and Mrs. Flanagan remember with <lb />
gratitude the numerous kindness and <lb />
expressions of sympathy shown them in <lb />
their trouble and sore <lb />
and request to urn their <lb />
sincere I banks to I heir many friends, and <lb />
to their physician. Dr. for such <lb />
acts of kindness and manifestations of <lb />
sympathy. <lb />
Resolutions Adopted by the Greenville <lb />
Baptist Sunday School. <lb />
Whereas, Oar Master in Hi <lb />
wisdom has by the band of death re- <lb />
moved one of our number from us. one <lb />
tender lamb from the fold, little Lela <lb />
Flanagan, who died on I lie morning of <lb />
the 8th and, Whereas, this Sunday- <lb />
School desires to respect her memory <lb />
and console bereaved one, therefore <lb />
Resolved 1st. That in the death of dear <lb />
little Lela the Baptist Sunday School and <lb />
especially the Infant class loses one of its <lb />
sweetest and brightest little pupils, one <lb />
ever regular in attendance, always loving <lb />
and lovable to teacher and scholars and <lb />
apt to listen and learn of her <lb />
Savior who so tenderly said, <lb />
little children to come unto me and for- <lb />
bid them not for of such is the kingdom <lb />
of and to whom she Is now gone <lb />
to lie kept in His loving embrace for all <lb />
time to come. <lb />
Resolved 2nd. That though. we shall <lb />
miss her and mourn that her little seat is <lb />
to lie forever vacant with us, we bow in <lb />
humble submission to the will of Him <lb />
who all things well, remembering <lb />
that He hath said that tilings work <lb />
together for good to them who love the <lb />
Resolved That we extend our <lb />
heartfelt sympathies, to the sorely <lb />
father and mother, brothers a ml <lb />
sisters, and say to that though they <lb />
hall bear no more on earth the patter of <lb />
those little feet and the prattle of that <lb />
little tongue which gave so much joy, and <lb />
that though they may receive no more <lb />
here the fond embrace and the sweet <lb />
cares of dear little hands and lips <lb />
that has brought so much com- <lb />
fort to their hearts, yet they should real- <lb />
the sweet consolation that dear little <lb />
Lela has only been transplanted from a <lb />
world of sorrows to a Heaven of eternal <lb />
bliss, that their loss is her everlasting <lb />
gain, and that she is now another link to <lb />
draw to that home prepared for all <lb />
who love and serve their Lord. She i <lb />
in the arm of Jesus. <lb />
Safe on Hi gentle breast. <lb />
There by His <lb />
Sweetly her soul shall <lb />
Resolved 4th. That a copy of these <lb />
resolutions be. spread upon the record <lb />
honk of the school, a copy sent to the <lb />
parents of the deceased and a copy to the <lb />
Reflector with request to <lb />
publish the same. <lb />
W. II. <lb />
Mrs. M. If. Nelson, <lb />
Miss <lb />
Committee. <lb />
rat. i <lb />
Prices Low; <lb />
Terms Easy,. <lb />
NEW GOODS <lb />
o- <lb />
C. T. <lb />
HAS FROM MARKETS. SO TAKE A <lb />
AT HIS STORE, IT IS OVER WITH NEW <lb />
OF A LINK <lb />
Dry Goods, Clothing, Hoots. Shoes, Notions, <lb />
Furnishing Goods, <lb />
oil novelties numerous to mention. <lb />
Pine All- Warn Sails <lb />
Men's worth i I <lb />
Men's lire.- Shoes cents 81.50. <lb />
Dress Shoos cents worth fin. <lb />
bargains In all departments. <lb />
hard licks it. <lb />
50111- <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
Opposite Old Brink Store. <lb />
C. T. M U N F O R D, <lb />
N. <lb />
A SCALE. <lb />
Business conducted on a large. <lb />
scale reduces proportion of <lb />
expense and eases sum <lb />
of receipts. It enables one to <lb />
buy cheap and sell cheap. That <lb />
accounts for <lb />
He offers largest <lb />
of goods at. lowest <lb />
Delegates to Raleigh. <lb />
At the last meeting- the Cleveland <lb />
and Carr the following were <lb />
pointed delegates to the meeting of Dem- <lb />
clubs in Raleigh on the <lb />
Cox, B. F. Sugg, <lb />
L. C. Latham, J. L. Fleming, Dr. C. J. <lb />
W. H. Smith, <lb />
V. D. Rountree, D. J. <lb />
O. Move, Charlie <lb />
Dudley. Dr. J. Marquis, J. T. D. <lb />
C. Moore. Noah Forbes. J. D. William- <lb />
son, H. F. Keel, W. H. Long, Jesse L, <lb />
J. L. Little, Charlie <lb />
Let Them Come. <lb />
A subscriber remarked <lb />
tor man the other day talk- <lb />
tobacco warehouses until yon got two <lb />
here; you kept talking <lb />
bridge until you got that rebuilt, now <lb />
keep on with your talk for more prize <lb />
houses and a hotel you will get <lb />
them, That's what we are after. <lb />
The is in for just that kind <lb />
of and it to the <lb />
The dying of Garments, Sashes, <lb />
bong, etc., etc., done with neatness and <lb />
dispatch, <lb />
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. If request- <lb />
ed any repairs attended to at reasonable <lb />
prices. When work done am tints to <lb />
82.00 express will be paid one way, <lb />
when both ways. Send for price <lb />
list. STEAM DYING CO., <lb />
Scotland X. C. <lb />
For Sale on Easy Terms <lb />
Large Double Store In Greenville. I <lb />
offer for sale on terms the large <lb />
Double Store north of Fifth street, <lb />
east of street, with lot fronting <lb />
feet on street by feet deep A <lb />
splendid bargain. Apply at once to <lb />
Wm. EL <lb />
MUSIC SCHOOL. <lb />
MRS. would <lb />
glad to have a class In Instrumental <lb />
Music at her home in the J. J. Perkins <lb />
residence. Session begins September <lb />
5th. Terms on application. <lb />
Bullock Mitchell, <lb />
Owners and Proprietors. <lb />
for Big Prices Averages <lb />
are still doing business at the same old stand, whet we are prepared than <lb />
ever before to handle to the line bright from the Golden <lb />
have very large corps of buyers who are anxious for New Tobacco <lb />
and arc willing to pay good for it. stands well on our <lb />
and Is eagerly sought by our order men and speculators. arc <lb />
very that we can say to the of and adjoining counties <lb />
tobacco has better this year than we have known it in <lb />
and that we look for good prices during the season. Hogsheads can he <lb />
had FREE OF CHARGE by those planters shipping to us, by applying to S. M. <lb />
Schultz Co. Greenville, N. C, or to Amos G. Cox, Winterville. N. C. <lb />
that bid lively on every pile put our buy largely of Nil grades <lb />
that we sell, and will see to it that you shall have highest price for <lb />
pound sold with us. that it cost you nothing to collect our checks a they <lb />
are payable New York Exchange without cost to holder. Don't forget to us <lb />
with good shipment mid will convince yon that we from <lb />
and that we every time on big prices and yon know they talk. <lb />
Will have graded for you our house by skilled hands at per <lb />
Thanking our Hie very liberal bestowed upon us tin- past <lb />
and pledging our very to please them in the future. We are with <lb />
best wishes. Very truly your friends, <lb />
BULLOCK MITCHELL, <lb />
Oxford, X. C. <lb />
I. farm. Bea- <lb />
township, adjoining t to tenth <lb />
of T. Tyson and J. II. Cobb. A line <lb />
of acres, band- <lb />
am lo corn, cotton and to- <lb />
A line lied. <lb />
i. A near and King <lb />
mediately on tin- railroad, own- <lb />
ed hf Caleb R. Tripp. Ml which <lb />
annul are cleared. neighbor- <lb />
hood, and a within <lb />
miles. Plenty Of marl on the adjoin- <lb />
farms <lb />
A One f.-1 of three mile I <lb />
from Farmville and <lb />
with large, dwelling <lb />
and out borne, known I lie I,. <lb />
home In cot It'll <lb />
good clay accessible to marl. <lb />
A smaller farm adjoining <lb />
known as the dunes place, loll acres. <lb />
dwelling, barn tenant house, laud <lb />
good. <lb />
C. A farmer acres in <lb />
ship, about miles from <lb />
part of the tract. . <lb />
of the farm, <lb />
acres, adjoining I he town of <lb />
located all improving section <lb />
can be a valuable farm. <lb />
A small farm acres, <lb />
about to miles from Greenville, oh In- <lb />
Well Swamp, with house, etc., for- <lb />
ox. <lb />
B. <lb />
A tract of about acres near <lb />
tile station, with timber well <lb />
suited for railroad tics. <lb />
A tract of in <lb />
township, near the rail- <lb />
road, pine timber, <lb />
A Of acres near <lb />
Mills, pine and press timber. <lb />
Apply to . <lb />
Hie, N. C. <lb />
at the <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
WAREHOUSE. <lb />
The reason with a big break on <lb />
Thursday, September <lb />
Bring on your Tobacco and I guarantee <lb />
that will get as prices <lb />
for it as o ii lie had any- <lb />
where. <lb />
I will have help in conduct- <lb />
the Warehouse and <lb />
every will prompt <lb />
attention. forget to <lb />
bring me Tobacco. <lb />
The following ales been made <lb />
it. Smith Kr- <lb />
i i-t Forbes T. Ill ton M. <lb />
Peebles 40.86, 80.25. 18.76, 13.2-5, 12.75. <lb />
M. R. SO, 30.60, 13.25. <lb />
12.75. M. B, Dale SO, x. <lb />
i. F. EVANS, <lb />
PROPRIETOR. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On Monday, <lb />
A. U. 1811. I will House <lb />
iii tin- town to the <lb />
Milder for rm-h Hie following; <lb />
Iran land iii Tit county. ill <lb />
town of and known in <lb />
tow ii as lots No. X and Si. lie. <lb />
t lots set apart lo Ann IS. Bernard <lb />
Iii the division of the lauds of William <lb />
Si., to a veil ex in my <lb />
lot Ann K. Her- <lb />
I aid and Lave levied on said <lb />
land a- tin- of -aid Ann K. Ber- <lb />
-i. A. K. Sheriff. <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 />
AND WK PREPARED TO HANDLE It TOBACCO TO THE <lb />
ADVANTAGE. <lb />
THE PLANTERS OF EASTERN CAROLINA THAT THEY WU, <lb />
SO TO TOBACCO- <lb />
AS HIGH AS THE HIGHEST. <lb />
TO EASTERN WHERE WILL FIND THE <lb />
BUYERS ALWAYS OS <lb />
R. M. <lb />
R. W. ROYSTER, <lb />
K. HESTER, <lb />
R. If. CREWS, <lb />
R. HART, J. s. <lb />
W. E. Lulls. <lb />
They all want will pa. for It. <lb />
O- <lb />
when the weather was eta that the <lb />
could out, <lb />
After the many of <lb />
those present went to a base ball ground <lb />
near by to witness a match game <lb />
Beaver Dam and Bridge <lb />
It was a good game and closed <lb />
with a score of to In favor of Bea- <lb />
Dam. <lb />
A. t, 1888. <lb />
MB. Joe <lb />
used your Remedy and Wash twelve <lb />
years ago for sore eyes, and found great <lb />
relief, which has been permanent. When <lb />
I began using the Remedy my eyelid was <lb />
very cow there to no sore, lid <lb />
Insurance and Free. Free Stables. <lb />
Your friends, <lb />
L. JOYNER, <lb />
ALEX. <lb />
owners end Proprietor of Joyner Eastern Warehouse. <lb />
A Hogshead Story. <lb />
I wish by this means to tell the people <lb />
that have prepared and am still <lb />
paring a large lot of material for <lb />
co Hogsheads. And to make it as con- <lb />
us possible for my customers I <lb />
have decided to run two wagons on the <lb />
road to deliver them at most convenient <lb />
places. And I further promise that I <lb />
best efforts to put such <lb />
size and quality of Hogsheads as tie <lb />
may want. And think I cap, com- <lb />
in <lb />
t will also pay special attention to <lb />
making and Brackets for trim- <lb />
any house yon may build. <lb />
Please see mo placing your or- <lb />
or add res, me at Winterville, N. C. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
A. G. <lb />
New Barber <lb />
I take this to, return <lb />
thanks to, my customers who have <lb />
Fran e liberal support in past. <lb />
have opened a new shop in toe old Club <lb />
and would respectfully solicit a <lb />
continuation of my former <lb />
I will assure ail that they <lb />
every attention besides the best <lb />
share and hair cat town. All I i- <lb />
trial. All <lb />
of latest In the <lb />
rial art will be In use in shop. <lb />
Have on hand a full line of Cooking Stoves, Kitchen ware, Tin- <lb />
ware, Lamp Goods, Paints, Oils, Glass and Putty. <lb />
We make own glove pipe and pans of cold rolled steel which <lb />
is far the mot durable. <lb />
We don't try to keep the cheapest goods in town, out if yon <lb />
want to get the most value for your money give a call. <lb />
test White Oil per gallon. <lb />
Tin Roofing and Guttering less the Tariff. <lb />
S. E. PENDER CO., <lb />
ST. O. <lb />
THE OF C <lb />
to the buyers of and surrounding count a line the following goo <lb />
not to excelled in this market. And to he I an <lb />
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, <lb />
GOODS. HATS and C MOOTS mid SHOES, LA <lb />
and SUPPERS. FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS, DOOR.-i. WINDOWS. SASH and and QUEENS <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb />
kinds. Gin and Mill Hay, Rock and <lb />
Hair, ii and addles <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade lit Wholesale <lb />
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less b per cent for Cash. <lb />
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, Lead and pure Lin- <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a call and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb />
-ANTI BUYER OF- <lb />
Country Produce <lb />
Bring me all of your Chickens, Eggs, Ducks, <lb />
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the <lb />
highest market price for them and pay in spot <lb />
cash. <lb />
It you have anything to ship I will attend to it for yon on a small commission. <lb />
Call see me. <lb />
JNO.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017564_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
IS <lb />
HOPELESS <lb />
AIDS NATURE <lb />
IN NATURES OWN WAY. <lb />
IT COSTS YOU TO <lb />
A HAILED <lb />
ATLANTIC CO. <lb />
1406 Tort tea, Washington. D. C. <lb />
MANHOOD <lb />
How Lost How Regained I <lb />
THYSELF. <lb />
Or SKI. . M <lb />
Gold Medal oil and <lb />
PHYSICAL of <lb />
Si <lb />
Sal <lb />
unions, a. <lb />
r diV sealed. <lb />
as <lb />
the Press and <lb />
u SEND <lb />
the F NOW <lb />
of I HUS. . MOW- <lb />
Institute ho. j <lb />
but no equal- <lb />
The or 1- I <lb />
than ll am. <lb />
,.,,,. an man, and loam <lb />
h, . <lb />
A Family Affair <lb />
Health for the Baby, <lb />
Pleasure for the Parents, <lb />
New Life for the Old Folks. <lb />
CAPO. <lb />
She Kit at the- old <lb />
Her <lb />
Th-- of minor scale. <lb />
Hit <lb />
form lib <lb />
twin look and tone, <lb />
the <lb />
instrument, quaint and olden. <lb />
With single <lb />
Was little more than a spirit. <lb />
And its tone seemed a whir of wines. <lb />
And the keen chisel of sorrow <lb />
And the cruel of care <lb />
Hod cat in her dear old feat ares <lb />
Deep furrows here and there. <lb />
Till all that was and earthy <lb />
Had been chipped and smoothed away, <lb />
disclosed the patient <lb />
its thin mask of clay. <lb />
She paused, and with upturned features <lb />
And reminiscent eyes. <lb />
Was translated in one brief moment <lb />
Back to young life's Paradise. <lb />
And the lovely spirit of childhood. <lb />
So and and sweet. <lb />
Came back and her <lb />
beaming forehead to feet. <lb />
Then she swept the keys, and the <lb />
Of vanished years leaped out; <lb />
Each note was a patter of merry feet. <lb />
And a gleeful, childish shout. <lb />
And dimpled and <lb />
Tripped o'er the enchanted keys. <lb />
And the music was fresh as ht ugh <lb />
Or warble of birds in the trees. <lb />
No strain from the old tone masters. <lb />
No -t of harmony grand, <lb />
Sprang from the old piano <lb />
At of that magic hand. <lb />
the simple airs of her girlhood <lb />
in melody <lb />
As in days when her was all <lb />
And the hours were M happy as fleet. <lb />
And sparkled the light that <lb />
eyes long dried of tears. <lb />
And twinkled feet her music <lb />
That have In for years. <lb />
And as and listened <lb />
She to our moistened eyes <lb />
Already beyond the <lb />
That opened toward he I <lb />
Nor it longer a marvel <lb />
That when, in the morning gray. <lb />
The disciples came to tomb cf the Lord <lb />
To bear the body away. <lb />
They found his cast off garment. <lb />
With Its odor of and myrrh. <lb />
And rolled from the open do-r <lb />
Of an empty <lb />
Transcript- <lb />
THE BLACK BOX. <lb />
THE GREAT <lb />
TEMPERANCE DRINK <lb />
a family a requisite <lb />
of the home. A <lb />
makes gallons of <lb />
if a dealer, for <lb />
hf profit, you <lb />
sonic tit her is Just at;<lb />
as genuine <lb />
Scientific American <lb />
Agency for <lb />
CAVEATS, <lb />
TRADE MARKS. <lb />
DESIGN PATENTS <lb />
etc. <lb />
mil, fro writ tn <lb />
ML XX A CO. . New <lb />
patents in America. <lb />
patent taken out is in-fore <lb />
tbs public by a notice given free charge in the <lb />
of any <lb />
world. No <lb />
It. a <lb />
rear; all months. CO.- <lb />
York. <lb />
WILMINGTON A K. <lb />
and Schedule <lb />
TRAINS GOING SOUTH. <lb />
No No Ti. No <lb />
Apr. 19th, daily Fast Mail, daily j <lb />
daily ex Sun <lb />
Weldon 12,30 pm pm G MM <lb />
Ar am<lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Ax Wilson <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar Fayetteville <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
am CO <lb />
S am <lb />
Wilmington <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
Ar Goldsboro <lb />
Fayetteville <lb />
Ar Selma <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
am<lb />
5-5 <lb />
TRAINS NORTH <lb />
No No No <lb />
daily daily daily <lb />
ex Sun.<lb />
Wilson am p m pm <lb />
Ai Rocky Mount<lb />
Tarboro am <lb />
Daily except <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Halifax 4.22 arrives Scot <lb />
land Neck at 5.15 P. M., Greenville <lb />
M., Kinston p. m. Returning, <lb />
leaves 7.10 a. Greenville <lb />
a. m. Arriving Halifax a. m. <lb />
Weldon 11.25 a. m. daily except Sun- <lb />
day <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb />
Washington 7.00 a. m. arrives A. R. <lb />
Junction a. . returning leaves A. <lb />
R. 7.1-5 p. in., arrives Wash- <lb />
8.45 Daily except <lb />
Connects with trains on <lb />
Raleigh R. R. and Scotland Neck <lb />
Branch. <lb />
Local freight train Weldon <lb />
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at <lb />
10.15 a. m., arriving Scotland Neck 1.05 <lb />
a. m. Greenville 5.30 p. <lb />
7.40 p. in. leaves <lb />
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at <lb />
7.20 a. arriving Greenville <lb />
a. m., Scotland 2.2-1 . in., Weldon <lb />
5-15 p. in. <lb />
Tram leave Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, P M. P M, arrive <lb />
N C, P M, P M. <lb />
Plymouth 8.30 p. m., 5.22 p. m. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
6.00 a. m., 0.00 a. m- <lb />
N C, 7.30 a m, 9.58 a in . <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N C, A <lb />
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb />
Fayetteville Branch leave <lb />
ville T a m; arrive Rowland IS p in. <lb />
Returning leave Rowland p m. <lb />
arrive Fayetteville p Daily ex- <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M <lb />
Arrive N C, AM. Re <lb />
retuning laves S C A V <lb />
Goldsboro, NO A M. <lb />
Train No. makes close connection a <lb />
Weldon for all points North dally. Al <lb />
-all via Richmond, and daily except Sun <lb />
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb />
crafty- except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb />
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and all <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
train on Wilson <lb />
No. Northbound is <lb />
Daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train <lb />
at P M, arrive Nashville id <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
except <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at <lb />
P M. and AM Returning leave <lb />
Um-at A M, P. M. <lb />
in at Warsaw with and <lb />
Trains No. Sooth North will <lb />
atop only at Rocky Mount, Wilson, <lb />
and Magnolia. <lb />
DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
-I R. KENLY, Transportation <lb />
T U. Passenger <lb />
It was in tho of a dark <lb />
dreary winter. But it m in the <lb />
middle of a and <lb />
summer when the deed was done. <lb />
As yet I am not alluding to any- <lb />
thing mysterious at all. at the <lb />
same time I am anxious to <lb />
explain how it was that I. a humble <lb />
and not altogether solitary English <lb />
man. found myself located in the <lb />
Hotel at <lb />
berg. <lb />
I was traveling alone one summer <lb />
time, full of health and uncommonly <lb />
full of and rashly got out of <lb />
the Rhine steamer at <lb />
in order to a flying visit to a <lb />
miniature Paris, hedged with <lb />
avenues and to the <lb />
and deliver some letters of in- <lb />
to an English <lb />
engineer, who was doing his best to <lb />
make tin- stolid Germans energetic, <lb />
and make a fortune during the <lb />
enviable process. <lb />
Strange to nay, he took to me. <lb />
There was no the <lb />
bush. We were friends once, and <lb />
a few noun after my <lb />
were raid and thrown aside, I found <lb />
myself walking with my arm in his <lb />
toward that cozy and hospitable <lb />
mansion in which lie lived, and <lb />
where he had introduced that de- <lb />
home feeling, and those <lb />
pleasant family associations, so dear <lb />
to the strange to the <lb />
foreign mind. <lb />
Hero was a miniature English <lb />
home planted in a strange land, and <lb />
I can tell you it was by no means ob- <lb />
to enjoy my cut of joint <lb />
under his mahogany in the company <lb />
of men worth talking to and women <lb />
decidedly worth admiring. <lb />
I an now gradually nearing the <lb />
point. Before the next sun sank my <lb />
portmanteau was moved from the <lb />
hotel to my friend's house, and the <lb />
first night I slept under his <lb />
table roof I was dreaming, strange <lb />
to say, of his daughter. <lb />
There was no help for it. It was <lb />
the very place of all others to make <lb />
love in. It was the very weather of <lb />
all weather for tho operation. <lb />
A house surrounded by a wilder- <lb />
of varied trees overarching one <lb />
another, and making love in their <lb />
quaint and fanciful fashion; a lake <lb />
at the end of tho garden full of <lb />
late weeds, and owning a crazy old <lb />
boat; a soft croquet lawn for the <lb />
more worldly, and bright flowers for <lb />
the lovers of nature; a sun which <lb />
perpetually gleamed upon the warm, <lb />
white house, and laughter forever <lb />
out of such a <lb />
place as this was the one of all others <lb />
love in. <lb />
They her Annabel, and I <lb />
called her so first on the brightest of <lb />
nil the moonlight nights, when half <lb />
a dozen of us had been frightening <lb />
the girls in the shrubbery, and we <lb />
found ourselves deny that <lb />
it was the gloomy lake. <lb />
There we were. Tho one word <lb />
came trembling from my <lb />
lips, and the one look which her an- <lb />
eyes gave me persuaded me <lb />
I had not made a mistake. <lb />
We were engaged, and a few days <lb />
after I left for England with all the <lb />
parental got <lb />
husband that was to be of as true <lb />
and sensible and as pure a woman <lb />
as ever fell to a young fellow's lot. <lb />
This was in the summer time, and <lb />
at midwinter I found myself, of <lb />
course, at the at An- <lb />
It was a bitterly cold winter, but I <lb />
heeded it not. The thoughts of see- <lb />
her again almost warmed me. <lb />
My excitement to get away from <lb />
London was tremendous. I was <lb />
bound for Germany and my love. <lb />
My holiday was short, but under the <lb />
circumstances where in the whole <lb />
world could it better spent <lb />
And what with sleeping and <lb />
and dreaming and thinking and <lb />
fidgeting and longing, I arrived <lb />
after midnight at the <lb />
It was too late to present myself <lb />
at the white house. Besides, I was <lb />
not presentable. I was dirty, <lb />
and woebegone from con- <lb />
traveling. A quiet night at <lb />
the hotel I thought the best plan, <lb />
that I might myself <lb />
and span the next morning. <lb />
Such precautions as these should <lb />
never be forgotten. The female <lb />
mind is generous but susceptible, <lb />
and this susceptibility not <lb />
conquers generosity. I de- <lb />
to be on the right side of <lb />
the hedge, and made up my mind <lb />
for a refreshing sleep at the <lb />
But reckoned without my host- <lb />
It was after when I <lb />
drove up to the hotel from tho <lb />
and though, as luck would have I <lb />
it. mine host had not retired for tho <lb />
night, I found anything but pleasant <lb />
news awaiting me. I was absolutely <lb />
thunderstruck. There was no room <lb />
in tho hotel. <lb />
What at this time of the <lb />
I with something like <lb />
A stupid and very positive <lb />
answered me <lb />
But have you no corner in which <lb />
you can squeeze me for the I <lb />
The landlord consulted his slate. <lb />
He also consulted a very sleepy and <lb />
obstinate kind of man <lb />
who seemed determined not to smile <lb />
or genial, and appealed to a <lb />
quiet and fiendish delight in my <lb />
misery. <lb />
yes; there was one <lb />
There was one room; but should I <lb />
object. There was not somebody, <lb />
but something in it. <lb />
What is I asked <lb />
blank <lb />
I looked astonished. <lb />
there is nothing to lie alarmed <lb />
my host, wondering at the <lb />
curious expression of countenance I <lb />
had assumed. <lb />
The fact of the matter is <lb />
An officer, who is to be attached to <lb />
the cavalry regiment quartered in <lb />
the town, telegraphed to me only <lb />
this morning for a room <lb />
which he always uses. He said that <lb />
he would send on his luggage lief ore- <lb />
hand, and arrive by the last train to- <lb />
night. The luggage, consisting of <lb />
this one black box, arrived, not be- <lb />
forehand, but on tho last train, and <lb />
as the officer has not up to this mo- <lb />
made his appearance, and as I <lb />
cannot imagine that he is remaining <lb />
so late with any friends in the town, <lb />
there will surely be no harm in your <lb />
occupying his <lb />
Accordingly I went very grateful- <lb />
up to bed, and too tired oven to <lb />
take tho precaution of locking my <lb />
door. I surveyed tho black box for a <lb />
few minutes, wondered how officers <lb />
could use such ridiculous and <lb />
sightly coffers for conveying their <lb />
impedimenta and very shortly after <lb />
turned into bed. <lb />
I was dead tired, but, strange to <lb />
say, I was restless and could not <lb />
sleep; indeed I was, if anything, <lb />
overtired. <lb />
I was excited with my rapid <lb />
excited with the thought of see- <lb />
worried with the pro- <lb />
of the landlord and curious <lb />
the black box. <lb />
I was gradually becoming excited <lb />
about this box. I fancied all sorts <lb />
of horrors. My mind wandered <lb />
from the murderer, to <lb />
the horrible tragedy; from <lb />
Portia to Bluebeard; from the <lb />
narrative of the <lb />
to the thrilling tragedy of <lb />
the -Iron which I had seen <lb />
during Mr. Charles Kean's manage- <lb />
at the Princess theater. <lb />
then I suppose from sheer fa- <lb />
I must have dozed. <lb />
A sudden and sharp click <lb />
me <lb />
up In bed and listened. <lb />
Not a sound. <lb />
The again fascinated me; so. <lb />
shrinking down beneath tho sheets <lb />
again, I watched it. <lb />
by inch, <lb />
I saw the lid of the box move. <lb />
There was no use denying <lb />
was in a terrible fright. I don't <lb />
mind the natural, but I have a holy <lb />
horror of the supernatural. I was <lb />
in a fevered, nervous and <lb />
state, and in that horrible con- <lb />
between sleeping and waking <lb />
I hardly knew what I was about. <lb />
Still the the box rose grad- <lb />
There was no doubt about it. <lb />
Then a head appeared and it <lb />
looked stealthily around the room. <lb />
I instantly pretended to fall asleep, <lb />
and gave a very good imitation of a <lb />
snore. <lb />
The head lengthened into a body. <lb />
The lid of the box flew back, and a <lb />
short, thickset man stepped out of <lb />
his hiding place. <lb />
It was no ghost. <lb />
He paid no attention to my Jewel- <lb />
but made at once for the door. <lb />
He walked as noiselessly as a cat, <lb />
and slipped quietly out of the room. <lb />
There was no time to be lost. I <lb />
hurried on a few articles of <lb />
provided myself with a stout wait- <lb />
stick, the only thing I had handy, <lb />
thrust my money and jewels into <lb />
my pockets and started off on the <lb />
pursuit. <lb />
I was wide awake by this time, <lb />
and was now terribly eager to arrest <lb />
my midnight visitor. <lb />
I was determined not to arouse the <lb />
house until it was absolutely <lb />
The clock struck three as I darted <lb />
into the passage to surprise him. <lb />
Down stairs went-in than no <lb />
time. <lb />
But I was too late. Those minutes <lb />
occupied in collecting my valuables <lb />
and slipping on my things were all <lb />
wasted time. <lb />
There was no trace of him. It <lb />
was terribly dark In the passages, <lb />
and I was rather nervous of a sud- <lb />
den encounter in the dark. <lb />
Besides he might have firearms, <lb />
while I was comparatively unarmed. <lb />
The notion of coming flop up against <lb />
him in the pitch darkness <lb />
some portion of my <lb />
Besides, while I was reflecting <lb />
what to do and where to go, I found <lb />
that I had lost myself entirely. I <lb />
knew nothing about the ins and outs <lb />
of the rambling old hotel, and I bad <lb />
not taken my bearings and <lb />
forgot the number of my room. <lb />
I wandered about the passages for <lb />
quite half an hour, and at last, after <lb />
a fruitless search for the mysterious <lb />
man in the box, I happily discovered <lb />
a half open door and found out my <lb />
room by my boots. <lb />
Now came the question what <lb />
There was no trace of the man in the <lb />
room. Tho door of the room was <lb />
open as I left it, but the black box <lb />
was shut. <lb />
What should I do Should I alarm <lb />
the house and get called a fool for <lb />
my pains, supposing the box was dis- <lb />
covered empty Should I lift the lid <lb />
and risk everything in a final <lb />
Should I lock the door from the out- <lb />
side or lock the door from the inside <lb />
and go to bed again <lb />
I went deliberately up to the hex <lb />
and struck it violently with my <lb />
stick. It was not quite closed after <lb />
all, and I heard to my surprise a <lb />
howl of pain from the inside. <lb />
As luck would have it, I had got my <lb />
man after all. My mind was instant- <lb />
I darted back <lb />
gave lox violent crack <lb />
with my k, rushed put of the room <lb />
end locked door. <lb />
And then I shorted with might <lb />
main, h eH pull was handy <lb />
and I at it. Up came Half a <lb />
dozen waiters, and. lastly, up came <lb />
the puny of the <lb />
Having collected my I <lb />
opened tho door. We were just <lb />
in time, for tho window was <lb />
open, and with one bound across the <lb />
room I just managed to secure his <lb />
last retreating leg. <lb />
I dragged the culprit back into the <lb />
middle of the room and him <lb />
show his guilty face. <lb />
cried the landlord and the <lb />
waiters with one voice. <lb />
They the object of I is visit <lb />
when they looked into the black <lb />
box. for there were every <lb />
atom of forks, <lb />
and tho <lb />
possessed. <lb />
The mystery was soon explained. <lb />
The midnight visitor was a dis- <lb />
charged waiter, and he had hit upon <lb />
tho happy expedient of the black box <lb />
and the false telegram in order to <lb />
conveniently rob the house. <lb />
Tho thief was immediately handed <lb />
over to the police. The detestable <lb />
box war, dragged out of my room into <lb />
the passage. I locked myself into <lb />
the room and slept without a break <lb />
mi every in woke <lb />
me out of my slumbers and reminded <lb />
mo it was morning. <lb />
As for my dear Annabel, she made <lb />
far more of a hero of meas all good <lb />
women I really deserved, <lb />
and after dinner that night, over tho <lb />
walnuts and the wine, with a <lb />
little hand resting in mine <lb />
under the told the assembled <lb />
guests, with as much picturesque <lb />
force and dramatic intensity as I <lb />
could muster, the true and authentic <lb />
legend of Night at tho <lb />
or. Landlord, the Lackey <lb />
and the Black V. <lb />
Scott in Boston Globe. <lb />
THE BULL'S EVIDENCE. <lb />
Electric en. <lb />
Ties remedy is becoming so well <lb />
known and popular as to need no <lb />
special mention- All who have used <lb />
Electric slug the same song of <lb />
purer medicine doe not exist <lb />
and it is guaranteed to do all that is <lb />
Electric Bitters will cure all <lb />
Abeam Of the Liver and Kidneys, will <lb />
remove Pimples, Boils. Salt Kin urn and <lb />
other affections caused by impure blood. <lb />
Will drive Malaria from the system <lb />
and prevent as well as cure all Malarial <lb />
cure of Headache, <lb />
and try <lb />
guaranteed, <lb />
or money and <lb />
f 1.00 per bottle at Woolens Drug stir. <lb />
MAli. There j <lb />
A story is told the <lb />
English and the Eurasian worshipers <lb />
at St. cathedral, Calcutta, <lb />
forty years ago. It seems that at <lb />
that time the English of the <lb />
congregation always sat on one side <lb />
of the nave and the Eurasian <lb />
were rigidly kept on the other. <lb />
Bishop Daniel Wilson was preaching <lb />
one day. and while denouncing the <lb />
feeble religion of the European world <lb />
in Calcutta was struck by tho <lb />
quid indifference of his English <lb />
With a sweep of the arm <lb />
over the aristocratic side he passion- <lb />
exclaimed. there ye sit, <lb />
yo sinners, and <lb />
other arm above his darker yet more <lb />
attentive listeners to the right, <lb />
there sit the fruits of your <lb />
Contemporary Review. <lb />
Salve <lb />
The best salve in the world for Cuts, <lb />
Bruises, Sores. Ulcers, Rheum, <lb />
Fever Sores. Chapped Hands. <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin <lb />
and cures Piles, or <lb />
pay required. It is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded <lb />
Price cents box. For sale at <lb />
Drug Store. <lb />
Fin Work pa Photographs. <lb />
The art of painting and mounting <lb />
photographs has been carried to such <lb />
perfection that a careful inspection <lb />
is sometimes necessary to distinguish <lb />
a photograph from an ivory <lb />
The photograph smoothed <lb />
and polished over a glass a <lb />
glass cover is fitted over it so care- <lb />
fully that the two pieces of glass <lb />
seem but one, so close is the union, <lb />
When work is done, no, <lb />
ivory painted miniature is prettier, <lb />
and with a reasonable amount of <lb />
practice any amateur can learn to <lb />
do the Louis <lb />
Sh urn re. <lb />
This is beyond question the moat <lb />
Cough have ever <lb />
sold, a few doses invariably cure the <lb />
cases Cough, Croup Bron- <lb />
while in <lb />
cure of Consumption Is without a <lb />
in the history of Since its <lb />
first discovery it has been sold on a <lb />
a test which no other medicine <lb />
can stand. If you have a cough we earn- <lb />
ask i try it. Price <lb />
and If your lungs ate chest, or <lb />
back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster. <lb />
Sold at DRUG STORE. <lb />
Mot Infallible. <lb />
As Shakes- <lb />
was Be <lb />
wrote nothing in which there were <lb />
not admirable passages worthy of <lb />
himself. But we, like Ben Jonson, <lb />
should him this side idol- <lb />
Criticism is absolutely worth- <lb />
less if it is We are not <lb />
to read Shakespeare as if he were m <lb />
fallible, nor to accept all he did in a <lb />
spirit of blind and <lb />
faith. At the same time we must <lb />
in speaking of so divine a <lb />
genius, what Pope says of others that <lb />
blamed as great a mind t <lb />
It la not J it nods, bat dream. <lb />
Andrew Lang in Harper's. <lb />
SHILOH'S REMEDY. <lb />
A cure for Catarrh, <lb />
Canker mouth and Headache. <lb />
With each bottle there Is an ingenious <lb />
nasal Injector tot the more <lb />
treatment of these complaints without <lb />
extra charge. Price Sold at <lb />
EN'S DRUG STORE. <lb />
be <lb />
assisted to throw <lb />
does It so well, m <lb />
promptly, to <lb />
safely as <lb />
Specific <lb />
Smith Objected to Its Admission <lb />
cod the Court Sustained Him. <lb />
Who is there in or around about <lb />
Janesville, Wis., that does not know <lb />
Billy Smith, the lawyer Billy add- <lb />
ed fresh laurels to those which <lb />
ready crowned him by some cute ob- <lb />
he filed in a case tried in that <lb />
city. It was a very odd case, and it <lb />
excited much interest in the town. <lb />
A farmer named Broughton, <lb />
t ear Janesville, has a neighbor who <lb />
owned a blooded bull. This bull <lb />
broke into a field of and <lb />
that farmer, in an attempt to drive <lb />
him out, rather got the worst of it. <lb />
The bull chased him, and as the <lb />
pursued and pursuer reached the <lb />
fence tho bull aided Mr. Broughton <lb />
in scaling it. He took him on his <lb />
horns and threw bodily over it. <lb />
Broughton warned the owner that <lb />
ho must keep the animal tied up or <lb />
there would lie trouble. <lb />
No attention, however, was paid <lb />
to the warning, and only a few days <lb />
after first mishap the bull was <lb />
found again hi field. <lb />
Calling to his help some of his men, <lb />
Broughton got the bull into his barn, <lb />
where injuries were inflicted upon it <lb />
from which it died. The owner of <lb />
tho bull sued Broughton for the <lb />
value of the beast and that gentle- <lb />
man retained Billy Smith as his <lb />
counsel. <lb />
On tho day of the trial the court- <lb />
room was packed, for it was hinted <lb />
that Billy Smith had several <lb />
mote he intended springing. I am <lb />
sorry my informant's memory was <lb />
so defective, for in relating the story <lb />
to mo he could only call to mind one. <lb />
but that one was important and had <lb />
much to do with his winning the case <lb />
for his client, Billy's wit and humor <lb />
on this occasion exceptional <lb />
even for and he hail tho <lb />
tors and even the judge himself <lb />
laughing the greater part of the <lb />
time. <lb />
Among others there was one wit- <lb />
for the prosecution, a farmhand, <lb />
who was endeavoring to make out <lb />
that the bull only did his duty in <lb />
chasing Mr. Broughton and tossing <lb />
him out into the road. He tried to <lb />
make out that the bull was more <lb />
playful than ugly, and if Broughton <lb />
had only acted properly he would not <lb />
have been hurt. <lb />
said the witness, is true <lb />
the bull did chase the defendant. He <lb />
went after him and said, boo, <lb />
the witness endeavored <lb />
to imitate the sound of a bull <lb />
mildly and not savagely. <lb />
Billy Smith was on his feet in an <lb />
instant with an objection. ob- <lb />
said he, turning to tho judge, <lb />
the admission of what the bull <lb />
said as evidence. You are well aware, <lb />
your honor, that it is a common max- <lb />
in common law that the speeches, <lb />
remarks or sayings of persons who <lb />
may have died in the interim be- <lb />
tween the utterance of such sayings <lb />
and a trial cannot be admitted, be- <lb />
cause of the fact that death makes it <lb />
Impossible to produce them that they <lb />
may acknowledge or deny having so <lb />
spoken. The bull in the case is dead, <lb />
your honor, and what he said to Mr. <lb />
Broughton when he chased him can- <lb />
not be The judge saw <lb />
the point and sustained the objection, <lb />
Chicago Post. <lb />
LIFE HAD NO <lb />
for three rears I was troubled with <lb />
poison, which canted to fall, <lb />
and was greatly reduced hi flesh, and life <lb />
lost all its charms. I triad <lb />
remedies, but to no effect I could <lb />
medicine Bud a <lb />
cure, and I now enjoy batter i- <lb />
Our book on Blood and Skin Diseases <lb />
mailed free. <lb />
Co, Atlanta, Ga, <lb />
A Word In Time. <lb />
A prompt action and a few season- <lb />
able wort-, at the beginning of a <lb />
young man's career often produce a <lb />
lasting effect on his after life. Many <lb />
years ago, when Samuel Phillips, of <lb />
Andover, Mass., afterward <lb />
ant governor of the state, was a <lb />
dent at Harvard college, owing to <lb />
some boyish freak he left the college <lb />
and went home. <lb />
His father, a grave man. of sound <lb />
mind, strict judgment and few words, <lb />
was greatly disturbed by the seem- <lb />
lack of stability in his son's char- <lb />
After learning tho facts ho <lb />
deferred expressing any opinion <lb />
the next day. <lb />
At he said, addressing <lb />
his <lb />
dear, you any cloth in <lb />
the house that would be suitable for <lb />
making Sam a frock and <lb />
she replied. <lb />
said the old gentle- <lb />
man, may follow me, my <lb />
As they approached the common <lb />
Samuel ventured to <lb />
yon going to do with <lb />
me, <lb />
replied old gentleman, <lb />
apparently roused from a pleasant <lb />
speaking in a cheerful tone, <lb />
am going to bind you apprentice <lb />
to tho blacksmith over yonder. You <lb />
can take your added Mr. <lb />
Phillips firmly, as he saw the look of <lb />
consternation his son's face. <lb />
turn to college and stay there, or you <lb />
must work. <lb />
had rather replied <lb />
Samuel meekly. <lb />
said tho old gentle- <lb />
man, turning toward home <lb />
sou did return to college, con- <lb />
fessed his fault, applied himself to <lb />
study and a much respected <lb />
man. And his father never regret- <lb />
the day when ho offered Samuel <lb />
such an unpleasant alternative, <lb />
though he often admitted that he <lb />
have been a little put to if <lb />
if Sam had elected to follow the <lb />
blacksmith's <lb />
But he would have held to his word <lb />
in any Companion. <lb />
Answer This Question. <lb />
Why do so many around <lb />
us seem to prefer to sillier and be made <lb />
Indigestion, Constipation, <lb />
Dizziness, Loss of Appetite. Coming up <lb />
of the Food. Yellow Skin, when for <lb />
we will sell Shiloh's <lb />
guaranteed to cure them Sold at <lb />
Drug Store. <lb />
Ways of <lb />
The ladies of Arabia stain their <lb />
fingers and toes red, their eyebrows <lb />
black and their lips blue. In Persia <lb />
they paint a black streak around <lb />
their eyes and ornament their faces <lb />
with representations of various fig- <lb />
Miller Illustrated. <lb />
A Slip of tho <lb />
do you mean by <lb />
writing such repel in the <lb />
as defendant and <lb />
Typewriter s-sup <lb />
pose it's because I have an <lb />
in tho <lb />
Field's Washington. <lb />
nine Flowers for House Culture <lb />
There no several blue flowers for <lb />
; culture. Per- <lb />
the st. ; things considered, <lb />
is soft lavender <lb />
blue, very and an <lb />
constant loonier. data <lb />
is a brighter blue and vary pretty. <lb />
The veronicas several blues <lb />
their<lb />
tho boys is <lb />
to have a circus. May I act <lb />
I so. What <lb />
are you to do <lb />
Little much. They <lb />
is to have a pyramid of sixteen <lb />
boys, en all I has to do is to stand <lb />
on News. <lb />
A in,. Spell. <lb />
The Indian, it is said, measures dis- <lb />
in by One <lb />
pipe is the interval the <lb />
is allowed to make for a <lb />
smoke. Evidently a must <lb />
vary a good deal with the good <lb />
of the employer. Field's <lb />
Washington. <lb />
There is a clergyman in <lb />
Kan., who is such a that <lb />
he won't ride in the street ears on <lb />
Sunday, and he is BO that <lb />
ho will not ride in on week <lb />
days; no walks all the <lb />
A Household Remedy <lb />
FOR ALL <lb />
t BLOOD and SKIN <lb />
Botanic Blood Balm <lb />
I SALT <lb />
i IT. RHEUM. <lb />
form st SKIM <lb />
Di Di Eli <lb />
In <lb />
system and restoring <lb />
Impaired from in cause. He <lb />
healing <lb />
I guaranteeing a II <lb />
directions are to I lowed. <lb />
CO. Atlanta, <lb />
For Rent. <lb />
A two brick lathe <lb />
Opera Greenville, <lb />
splendid room, With pair in . mi- <lb />
counter-, and drawers. <lb />
Apply lo <lb />
II. LONG. <lb />
N. C. Attorney-at-Law. <lb />
THIS WEI <lb />
NEW YORK. <lb />
AT V. <lb />
i. <lb />
All- <lb />
It <lb />
r or <lb />
BOWES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb />
My Factory i well equipped with the best Mechanics, i put up nothing; <lb />
but We keep up with the time and ii-n improved <lb />
Rest material used in all work. All styles of Springs are use., you can select from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King <lb />
We also keep on hand a full line of Harness and Whips which <lb />
ell at the lowest rates. CW Special given to repairing. <lb />
It Should In Every House. <lb />
J. Wilson, Clay St., Sharpsburg, <lb />
Pa., says he will not be without Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery for Consumption, <lb />
Coughs and Colds, that it cured his wife <lb />
who was threatened with Pneumonia <lb />
an attack of when <lb />
Various, other remedies several <lb />
physicians had dope her tip good. Robert <lb />
Barber, of Pa., claims Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery done him <lb />
more good than anything he ever used <lb />
for Lung Trouble. Nothing like it. Try <lb />
it. Free Trial Bottles at Drug <lb />
Store. Large bottles. and <lb />
Telegraphing-. <lb />
The greatest sum ever paid for <lb />
telegraph tolls in one week by a <lb />
newspaper was the expenditure of <lb />
tho London Times for cable <lb />
from Ayres during the <lb />
in the Argentine Republic <lb />
The cost of cabling from <lb />
Ayres to London was a word, <lb />
and The Times paid out for <lb />
one week's <lb />
It Took Twopence Pus. <lb />
have forgotten my purse, but <lb />
you will surely allow mo to pass <lb />
when I tell you that I am mas- <lb />
of said an don <lb />
to the keeper of a turnpike near the <lb />
town. may be the master of <lb />
but you don't pass my gate <lb />
if you the master of two- <lb />
was the unexpected reply. <lb />
London Standard. <lb />
M, D, Line, wries <lb />
summer several years ago while rail; <lb />
reading in Mississippi, I became badly <lb />
affected with malarial blood poison that <lb />
impaired my health for more than two <lb />
years. Several offensive appear- <lb />
ed on my legs, and nothing seemed to <lb />
give permanent relief until i took six <lb />
bottles B which eared me en<lb />
They had just dined, and tho host <lb />
hands around a box of cigars. <lb />
smoke he says, <lb />
you will find them my <lb />
man steals more of them than any <lb />
other brand I ever <lb />
Tit-Bits. <lb />
Overhead Wires In Philadelphia. <lb />
There are i, miles of overhead <lb />
telephone and <lb />
trip lighting- -in Philadelphia, some <lb />
of them dangerous, Philadelphia <lb />
Record. <lb />
Erysipelas, Limbs, Bad Sores, <lb />
Scales and Scabs on the leg have been <lb />
entirely cured by P. P. P., the <lb />
wonderful blood medicine of the day. <lb />
course of P. P. P. will banish all <lb />
feelings and your health to <lb />
perfect powers <lb />
Era marvelous. If out of sorts and In <lb />
bad humor with yourself and the world, <lb />
take P. lien I ml<lb />
CHILD BIRTH <lb />
MADE EASY <lb />
II it a scientific- <lb />
ally prepared ma .- <lb />
of recognized value In <lb />
constant use by the medical pro- <lb />
These ingredients are com- <lb />
pined in a manner hitherto unknown<lb />
WILL DO all that is claimed for <lb />
ft AND MORE. Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, Di m i Danger let <lb />
of Mother and Child. Boo <lb />
FREE, cote. <lb />
fining viable information <lb />
voluntary <lb />
price <lb />
CO., ,, <lb />
h sold by <lb />
The Longest Sign. <lb />
The longest wooden sign in <lb />
America, it is said, is that of the <lb />
and <lb />
of this <lb />
which shows raised gold letters on a <lb />
ground of imitation cop- <lb />
per. It is feet York <lb />
Times. <lb />
They poulticed her feet poulticed <lb />
her head. <lb />
And blistered her back till <lb />
smarting red. <lb />
Tried tonics, elixirs, pain-killers <lb />
Salves, <lb />
grandma declared it WM <lb />
nothing hut <lb />
The poor woman thought she must <lb />
certainly die, <lb />
Till she hap- <lb />
to <lb />
No wonder its praises so loudly they <lb />
speak i <lb />
She grew at once and was well <lb />
in a week. <lb />
The torturing pains distressing <lb />
which accompany, at times, <lb />
certain forms of female weakness, yield <lb />
like magic lo Dr. Pierce Favorite <lb />
It is vegetable, per- <lb />
h harmless, and adapted to the <lb />
pf woman. It allays <lb />
and subdues the nervous symptoms and <lb />
relieves the pain accompanying <lb />
organic troubles. Guarantee <lb />
printed on and faithful- <lb />
carried out for rears. <lb />
X. ID- <lb />
Greenville, N. Q. <lb />
TIE NEW MODEL HALL TYPEWRITER, <lb />
a Machine Characters. <lb />
REMODELED AND improved. <lb />
GOOD <lb />
The Best Standard Typewriter in the World. <lb />
Inexpensive, Portable. Mo Ink Ribbon, In- <lb />
Type in all Easiest <lb />
to learn, and rapid a any. <lb />
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. <lb />
as <lb />
This Machine i- everybody's friend. <lb />
should have their writing done on the <lb />
Typewriter. It always insures mos <lb />
prompt attention. Address <lb />
N. COMPANY, Oil Huston, MM <lb />
One of these machines can be seen at the Reflector e. where particulars and <lb />
CURES SYPHILIS <lb />
SB P. R P. B. <lb />
and It tor th rm of <lb />
ill and of at-d <lb />
r R R R <lb />
Cures scrofulA. <lb />
HI ll old <lb />
that to nil <lb />
fa, <lb />
foaM <lb />
I. P. f. ts t. <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
Cures rheumatism <lb />
an n <lb />
CURES <lb />
r. p. r. am,. <lb />
Cures dyspepsiA <lb />
For sale at J. L. Wooten's Drug Store <lb />
THE CENTRAL <lb />
Tobacco <lb />
Will begin its second season <lb />
AUGUST 1892.<lb />
same Management, <lb />
and desires to thank the <lb />
Planters of Pitt, Le- <lb />
and Greene for <lb />
their liberal <lb />
patronage <lb />
last <lb />
year and a <lb />
of their favors,. Especial <lb />
given to Shipments. Try us. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
The Central Warehouse, <lb />
TARBORO. <lb />
MARK. <lb />
For the Core of all Skis Bums. <lb />
This has in use over <lb />
years, and wherever known has <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
country; and has cures where <lb />
all other remedies, With the attention of <lb />
most experienced <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment Is of <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained Is owing; <lb />
its own as but little effort has <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
public. One hot tie of this Ointment will <lb />
be to any address on receipt of One <lb />
tree. The usual <lb />
discount to Cast Orders <lb />
promptly all <lb />
and communications to <lb />
T. <lb />
Mar Proprietor, <lb />
T if. C.<lb />
Notice to Shippers. <lb />
In order to make more convenient and <lb />
economical use of the vessels now em- <lb />
ployed In the North Carolina service <lb />
and thus to better serve the inter- <lb />
of shippers, the undersigned <lb />
have decided to merge their <lb />
respective lines between Nor <lb />
folk and and <lb />
Washington, N, into <lb />
one be known as <lb />
The Norfolk, Dim. <lb />
LINE. <lb />
-Connecting at Norfolk with-. <lb />
The line, for Baltimore. <lb />
The Clyde Line, for Philadelphia. <lb />
The Old Dominion Line, for New <lb />
York. <lb />
The Merchants Miners Line for <lb />
ton and providence, <lb />
water Lines far Va <lb />
and Washington. D. C. <lb />
At with <lb />
The Atlantic North It. R. <lb />
At Washington with <lb />
The Tar Steamers. <lb />
Also Calling at Island, N. C. <lb />
The new lino will m <lb />
Service. With such additional sailings as <lb />
will beef suit <lb />
NO ADVANCE I HATES, <lb />
The direct service of steamer, <lb />
and the freedom from handling, are <lb />
among the great this Line <lb />
oilers. The following gentlemen have <lb />
been appointed Agents of the New <lb />
John E. at Norfolk. Va. <lb />
John Son, at <lb />
s. II. Gray, at N. o. <lb />
S. C. Whitehurst, at Island. <lb />
J. J. Cherry, at Greenville, N. C <lb />
The steamer will leave <lb />
on Monday. May from <lb />
on Water street Clyde <lb />
and between piers of Clyde <lb />
Line and Old Dominion Steamship Co, <lb />
II. A. <lb />
V. P. C. H. Old Dominion S. S. Co. <lb />
W. P. CLYDE A CO-, <lb />
Clyde Line <lb />
No-folk, May 14th, 1892.<lb />
S. M. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD STOKE <lb />
AND BUY <lb />
their year's supplies will And <lb />
their Interest to get our prices before <lb />
chasing elsewhere <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
SIDES <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR. <lb />
RICE, TEA, p. <lb />
Lowest Pricks. <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF A <lb />
we bur from Manufacturers, en,, <lb />
buy at one profit. A c <lb />
stock of <lb />
always op hand at prices to sulk <lb />
he Out goods are all and <lb />
sold CASH, therefore, having no rial <lb />
to sell at a margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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