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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
gob printing <lb/>
The Eastern <lb/>
Business Man, <lb/>
-pi <lb/>
LIVE ADVERTISEMENT <lb/>
Thoroughly Equipped <lb/>
-WITH- <lb/>
NEW MATERIAL. <lb/>
Give Us a Trial Order. <lb/>
CHILD BIRTH <lb/>
MADE EASY <lb/>
is a scientific <lb/>
ally prepared Liniment, every <lb/>
of recognized value and in <lb/>
constant use by the medical pro- <lb/>
These are com- <lb/>
mi a . unknown<lb/>
WILL DO all that is claimed for <lb/>
ft AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb/>
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb/>
Life of Mother and Child Book <lb/>
lo Mothers mailed FREE, con- <lb/>
valuable information and <lb/>
voluntary testimonials. <lb/>
Cent express on receipt of price per bottle <lb/>
CO., <lb/>
BY ALL <lb/>
WELDON R. I. <lb/>
and Schedule <lb/>
TRAINS GOING SOUTH. <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
Apr mill, daily Fast Mail, dally <lb/>
daily ex Sun <lb/>
Weldon 12,30 pm o <lb/>
Ar am<lb/>
1.1 am <lb/>
Ar p in pin <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
an.<lb/>
TRAINS <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
VOL. XI. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 1892. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb/>
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. <lb/>
per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
OF PITT COUNT NOVEMBER <lb/>
j a j S a. P a. DEEDS i P- <lb/>
M i Is a p a o u a i O o s <lb/>
Beaver<lb/>
1871 <lb/>
Swift 1394 <lb/>
1444 <lb/>
p a j <lb/>
S S. 2.5 <lb/>
a B <lb/>
Wilson am p in <lb/>
Ai Mount<lb/>
Tarboro -58 am <lb/>
except <lb/>
Train on Scotland Branch <lb/>
leaves Halifax 4.22 arrives Scot <lb/>
land Neck at 5.15 I. M., Greenville 6.52 <lb/>
P. M., Kinston p. m. <lb/>
leaves 7.30 a. m., Greenville <lb/>
8.40 a. m. Arriving Halifax <lb/>
Weldon 11.45 a. m. daily except Sun- <lb/>
Trains on leave <lb/>
Washington 7.30 a. m. arrives A. It. <lb/>
Junction 9.00 a. in., returning leaves A. <lb/>
H. Junction 7.00 n. m., arrives Wash- <lb/>
8.20 p. m. Daily except <lb/>
Connects with trains <lb/>
Raleigh H. R., and Scotland Neck <lb/>
Branch. <lb/>
Local freight train leaves Weldon <lb/>
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at <lb/>
10.15 a. in., arriving Scotland Neck 1.05 <lb/>
a. m. Greenville 5.30 p. in., <lb/>
7.40 p. m. Returning leaves Kinston <lb/>
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at <lb/>
7.20 a. m., arriving Greenville <lb/>
n. in., Neck p. m., Weldon <lb/>
5.15 p. in. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb/>
A Raleigh R. K. daily except Sun- <lb/>
day, P M. Sunday P M, <lb/>
N C, P M, M. <lb/>
Plymouth 8.30 p. in., 5.22 p. in. <lb/>
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb/>
Sand- 0.00 a. m., Sunday a. m- <lb/>
II C, 7.30 a in, am. <lb/>
arrive V C, A 11.20. <lb/>
Trains on Division. Wilson <lb/>
nil Fayetteville Branch leave <lb/>
ville a in. arrive p in. <lb/>
leave Rowland m. <lb/>
arrive Fayetteville p m. ex- <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Midland N O Branch leave <lb/>
Go dally except Sunday, A. M <lb/>
C, A M. Re <lb/>
retuning laves S C A M <lb/>
Goldsboro. NO A M. <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection at <lb/>
Weldon for all points North daily. All <lb/>
via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb/>
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb/>
daily except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb/>
railroad for Norfolk and all <lb/>
points via Norfolk. <lb/>
train on it <lb/>
Is No. Northbound is <lb/>
So. except Sunday. <lb/>
Train <lb/>
at P M, arrive Nashville <lb/>
P Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb/>
8.35 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves <lb/>
for except Sunday, i <lb/>
and M Returning <lb/>
ton at A M, and P. M. <lb/>
Warsaw with Nos. <lb/>
Trains No. South and North will <lb/>
stop only at Rocky Mount, Wilson, <lb/>
Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
DIVINE, <lb/>
General <lb/>
J. R. KENLY, Transportation <lb/>
T. -M agent <lb/>
Notice to Shippers. <lb/>
In order to make more convenient and <lb/>
economical use of the vessels now cm- <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/>
folk and and <lb/>
Washington, N. C, into <lb/>
one be known as <lb/>
Tie Norfolk, lain <lb/>
LINK. <lb/>
Connecting at Norfolk with <lb/>
The Ray line, for Baltimore. <lb/>
The Clyde for Philadelphia. <lb/>
The Old Dominion Line, for New <lb/>
York. <lb/>
The Merchants Miners Line for <lb/>
ton and Providence. <lb/>
The Water Lines for Richmond, Va., <lb/>
and Washington, D. C. <lb/>
At with <lb/>
The Atlantic A North Carolina R. K. <lb/>
At Washington <lb/>
The Tar River Steamers. <lb/>
Also Calling at island. N C. <lb/>
The new line will m <lb/>
Service, with such additional sailings as <lb/>
will suit the needs o <lb/>
NO ADVANCE RATES. <lb/>
The direct service of steamers <lb/>
and the freedom from handling, are <lb/>
among the great advantages this Line <lb/>
otters. She following gentlemen have <lb/>
been appointed Agents of New Um <lb/>
John E. at Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
John Son, at <lb/>
S. H. Gray, at N. C. <lb/>
S. C- Whitehurst, at Roanoke Island. <lb/>
J. J. Cherry, at Greenville, N. C <lb/>
The teamer will leave Norfolk <lb/>
on Monday. May 16th, from wharf <lb/>
on Water Clyde <lb/>
and between the piers of the Clyde <lb/>
Line and Old Dominion Co. <lb/>
If- <lb/>
V. G. M. Old Dominions. S Co. <lb/>
CO- <lb/>
Clyde Line, <lb/>
WAITING. <lb/>
BY A. <lb/>
Waiting, standing by his <lb/>
Pleading eyes and curly head <lb/>
me, take your <lb/>
Tired now, to bed; <lb/>
rode my horse, I's tired <lb/>
Put him it. his little stall; <lb/>
Take my shoes off, and <lb/>
Hang my cap up in <lb/>
Waiting in the front veranda. <lb/>
Stands the boy with laughing eyes; <lb/>
Pockets full of nuts and candy, <lb/>
Perfect judge of cakes and <lb/>
Now he longs Io turn life's pages, <lb/>
Loves to sport upon the green; <lb/>
Days are months and years arc ages. <lb/>
Yet but once such days are seen. <lb/>
Waiting, by the carriage, <lb/>
I the man of <lb/>
Waiting while the starlight quivers. <lb/>
For the else will do. <lb/>
Waiting now before parson, <lb/>
For the voice of loving tone ; <lb/>
Now she's bid him cease his pleadings, <lb/>
The response made her his own. <lb/>
Waiting, watching by the bedside, <lb/>
Tired moments pass away ; <lb/>
Hearts exchange in sacred stillness, <lb/>
Souls released for endless day. <lb/>
Watching on through pain and pleasure, <lb/>
Working through the sun and showers, <lb/>
Now he's learned earth has no treasure <lb/>
Which exceeds the lost of <lb/>
Waiting while the shadows gather, <lb/>
And the noonday fades away ; <lb/>
While the sunlight turns to evening, <lb/>
And the golden turns to gray. <lb/>
No one knows the of waiting, <lb/>
If mixed with hope and love, <lb/>
Each new day some joy creating, <lb/>
As we near the home above. <lb/>
Waiting still among the shadows, <lb/>
As they lengthen day by day, <lb/>
the world grows still more narrow, <lb/>
As he the heavenly way. <lb/>
Waiting by the mystic river. <lb/>
Looking for the sweet release; <lb/>
Ah I come; our gracious Giver <lb/>
Grants him everlasting <lb/>
GOVERNORS-ELECT. <lb/>
The following interesting <lb/>
graphical sketches of governors <lb/>
the <lb/>
John <lb/>
Georgia and has seen forty-eight <lb/>
land Las not only been but Quay and others are men of no <lb/>
has to spare- ; ordinary sagacity. They planned <lb/>
We have been reading what executed admirably. It <lb/>
politicians say on the cause of Mr. that these men could not <lb/>
election and the defeat control Mr. --i as <lb/>
of Mr. think it will wish. Ho not m <lb/>
be interesting to all the Watch- that recognition which they <lb/>
Tower readers to ascertain the thought he should, and they re- <lb/>
real causes of the election of the j solved to let Mr. Harrison light <lb/>
successful candidate. The causes ibis own battles, aided by such men <lb/>
are many, some of which have he deemed worthy of his ff- r <lb/>
been published- From the stand-j deuce. Mr. Blaine, n- <lb/>
point of the author of Current, ably one of the ablest statesmen of <lb/>
Events the following are assigned the country, was an essential <lb/>
why Mr. Cleveland is now four years ago, lint for some <lb/>
of the United i time it was plain that and the <lb/>
States. President were not dwelling to- <lb/>
The Democratic part was in unity- Mr. Blaine only <lb/>
never better united and Letter did what he could not avoid, in the i <lb/>
pared for the campaign. Every, late, campaign. He hardly gave j <lb/>
State was thoroughly organized.; Mr- Harrison a support.; <lb/>
counties, township and With the apathy of Mr. Blaine so, <lb/>
precincts were placed in the best deafly his friends <lb/>
working order. No stone was left; they are seemed to drink <lb/>
upturned. The secret of success of his spirit and gave no hearty <lb/>
is organization and the method of support to the Republican <lb/>
attack was based upon this idea. . date. <lb/>
Here is where the Republicans It was a mistake when the <lb/>
and Populists failed. They could; name of Mr. Reid was substituted <lb/>
not organize their forces keep I for Mr. Morton's for the second <lb/>
them in place on the ticket. Mr. Morton <lb/>
2- The victors changed the and his friends failed to sea any <lb/>
method of stating and exposing bad blunder he had made and why <lb/>
the tariff. It was claimed by the he should not be re-nominated was <lb/>
Republicans that the tariff was not; a matter that neither Mr- Reid nor <lb/>
only for the protection of the his friends could satisfactorily ex- <lb/>
but the wage earner was plain. Other reasons could be as- <lb/>
equally protected by the duties signed, but the above are grain and stock He is a <lb/>
imposed upon foreign products-1 to show why Mr. Harrison's j by birth and is <lb/>
The laboring man was taught that banner was not victorious and why <lb/>
if the tariff was reduced his wages Mr. Cleveland's was borne to a <lb/>
would be reduced. The pauper triumphant victory. In next issue <lb/>
labor in foreign countries was J we wish to say to the Watch Tow- <lb/>
shown up in the most odious and readers what the election of <lb/>
frightful manner. The Democrats Mr. Cleveland implies, <lb/>
turned their base and showed with <lb/>
list<lb/>
w.<lb/>
all our readers know, a farmer. <lb/>
After the bard fight his ma- <lb/>
is indeed gratifying. <lb/>
Lorenzo <lb/>
Republican, was born in New <lb/>
served <lb/>
during the F <lb/>
Jones, Ho Md g- <lb/>
democrat, re-elected, was- born in j <lb/>
New John Butler <lb/>
army and was five times <lb/>
wounded. His oratory has a <lb/>
reputation. <lb/>
William <lb/>
Democrat, was born in <lb/>
is sixty-one years old and <lb/>
a lawyer. He has served in the <lb/>
U. S- Senate. <lb/>
Luzon B- Morris, <lb/>
Democrat, is sixty-one years old <lb/>
and is a lawyer. In 1888 be re- <lb/>
cast for governor, but under the <lb/>
law requiring a the <lb/>
governor was elected by the re- <lb/>
publican legislature- The contest <lb/>
of 1890 was almost identical with <lb/>
the experience of 1888- <lb/>
William J. Northern, <lb/>
Democrat, re-elected, was born <lb/>
years ago, served in the <lb/>
Smith, Republican, was in his <lb/>
boyhood a laborer in a <lb/>
factory ; be is now a large mill <lb/>
owner. Philanthropic deeds have <lb/>
given him a wide reputation. <lb/>
was elected by a <lb/>
of Democrats and People's <lb/>
party men. He is unknown out- <lb/>
side, of his own State. <lb/>
Instead Connecticut is <lb/>
the birth place of D. Russell <lb/>
aged 44- Ho <lb/>
is a man, head of the <lb/>
firm of Brown Bros. Several <lb/>
offices have been filled by him. <lb/>
South Benjamin R. <lb/>
Tillman, Democrat, re-elected, is a <lb/>
unique personage- This much- <lb/>
talked-of man was born in South <lb/>
Carolina in 1847. When quite <lb/>
young he lost one of his eves by <lb/>
army, taught a high school He is a <lb/>
and cow farms. Georgians deem <lb/>
him able, wise, trustworthy. <lb/>
forcible, fiery stump speaker. The <lb/>
force of the Alliance in <lb/>
CURRENT EVENTS. <lb/>
W. L. James, in <lb/>
Many of the readers of <lb/>
have been wondering as to <lb/>
what has become of the writer of <lb/>
Current Events. We will say for <lb/>
all that be is still olive, in the <lb/>
on deck and now ready to <lb/>
modestly on the late <lb/>
election. Well the landslide for <lb/>
Mr. Cleveland was a to <lb/>
every body, not even excepting <lb/>
the hero of the day. It was <lb/>
thought that with the power and <lb/>
influence of the federal crib at his <lb/>
back, Mr. Harrison would hard <lb/>
to rout from his quarters Being <lb/>
entrenched behind such an army <lb/>
of officers and behind so many <lb/>
barrels of the chances <lb/>
looked as if Mr. Harrison would <lb/>
remain four years more- But all <lb/>
this seemed impossible to hold <lb/>
back check the tidal wave <lb/>
began to sweep over the country- <lb/>
On the night of the election the <lb/>
telegraph offices were thronged <lb/>
with the friends of the respective <lb/>
candidates waiting and watching <lb/>
for the latest from the great battle <lb/>
that had been fought that day. <lb/>
All eyes turned New <lb/>
Indiana, Connecticut and <lb/>
If these States showed that <lb/>
Mr. Cleveland was the favorite, <lb/>
then there was no doubt about bis <lb/>
election. The first news from New <lb/>
York indicated that Mr. Cleveland <lb/>
was in the lead that he had <lb/>
captured the State by a sale ma- <lb/>
Next Indiana, Connecticut <lb/>
and to the great surprise of all <lb/>
captured by <lb/>
the tidal wave of Democracy. <lb/>
Gain after gain showed that Mr. <lb/>
Cleveland bad been elected by an <lb/>
logical force that protection really <lb/>
meant a reduction of wages to the <lb/>
laborer. If our were <lb/>
closed to foreign products then <lb/>
pauper labor would be out of em- <lb/>
If a laborer failed to <lb/>
get labor at his home he would <lb/>
seek labor in another home- The <lb/>
closing up of the factories in for- <lb/>
lands would flood this <lb/>
try with in of <lb/>
wages. As manufacturers had <lb/>
Try This. <lb/>
It will cost you nothing end will sure- <lb/>
do you good, if you have a Cough, <lb/>
trouble Threat, Chest <lb/>
or Lungs. Dr. King's New Discovery <lb/>
for Consumption, Coughs and Colds is <lb/>
guaranteed to give relief, or money will <lb/>
lie paid Sufferers from <lb/>
found it just the thing and under its u-e <lb/>
had a speedy perfect Try <lb/>
a sample bottle at our expense and <lb/>
for yourself just how good a thing it is. <lb/>
Trial hot at <lb/>
Store Large size Ms. and <lb/>
minor public offices. <lb/>
Illinois. John P. Dem- <lb/>
was born in Germany in <lb/>
he enlisted in tho Federal army <lb/>
when only years old. By hard <lb/>
work rose from the bottom <lb/>
round to a high place on the ladder <lb/>
of lawyer by profession <lb/>
and a millionaire by possession. <lb/>
Chicago is his homo. <lb/>
Murphy J. Foster, <lb/>
Democrat, led tho cohorts of the <lb/>
opposition the infamous <lb/>
Louisiana Lottery and thus en- <lb/>
himself not only to the <lb/>
good people of Louisiana but to <lb/>
the citizens of the whole country. <lb/>
Forty-three years ago he first saw <lb/>
Weakness Cure. <lb/>
To inform of <lb/>
sought labor at the lowest wages, readers Unit have a positive, remedy n . <lb/>
it was very evident that the thousand and which arise Henry B. Cleaves, Re- <lb/>
. i i Hi n deranged female organs. I shall was born m 1840. is a <lb/>
ported labor would have the to send two my mine- p , . <lb/>
over home labor. It was FREE to any lady If they will send ; self-made man and is a member of <lb/>
u. n. M.- ,;,. their Express and address. ours the legal profession. Many offices <lb/>
shown that the protective idea , fl , <lb/>
when logically carried out would has he creditably filled, <lb/>
not protect the very persons -H <lb/>
it out of the paper is the is a prodigy in American <lb/>
Claude Matthews, Dem- South Carolina is due to his lead- <lb/>
is a popular and successful i <lb/>
South <lb/>
don, Republican, was born <lb/>
two years ago Vermont He <lb/>
was a very pool boy, but was hard <lb/>
working and pushing. The Union <lb/>
army claimed his services for four <lb/>
years. Farming is his occupation- <lb/>
Peter Dem- <lb/>
is a lawyer and justice of <lb/>
the State Supremo Court. He lie <lb/>
longs to tho faction <lb/>
and has won a great victory over <lb/>
his two Strong in <lb/>
opinions, forcible in oratory and <lb/>
learned in the law. he will make a <lb/>
line Governor. Tennesseans call <lb/>
him <lb/>
James S. Hogg-, Demo <lb/>
who succeeds is <lb/>
years old. He served two terms <lb/>
as attorney-general with marked <lb/>
distinction. 1890 he was elected <lb/>
Governor by the enormous major- <lb/>
of 180.000. <lb/>
Levi K. Fuller, Re- <lb/>
publican, was in 1832 and is <lb/>
self-made. Ho is inventor of <lb/>
no mean ability he is in the <lb/>
EDUCATION FOR YOU. <lb/>
BY O. K. <lb/>
Sec the children off to school. <lb/>
I, h ant to go. <lb/>
But to realize past time <lb/>
I am too old, you know. <lb/>
My school days have past and gone. <lb/>
The has just began, <lb/>
Now I must work and study, too. <lb/>
And learn it if I can. <lb/>
Work and toil day and night, <lb/>
All through the heat of day; <lb/>
The work I must. I cannot <lb/>
To win my monthly pay. <lb/>
W and study long hours at night. <lb/>
After others have retired, <lb/>
To win the prize I have in view. <lb/>
The one I've long desired. <lb/>
I thank the Lord and His <lb/>
For advantages pretested ; <lb/>
That our youthful days <lb/>
never he lamented. <lb/>
In Carolina Institute we find a friend, <lb/>
One willing to lend us aid, <lb/>
So we can learn to speak <lb/>
And never be afraid. <lb/>
Come on young ministers, let us go <lb/>
And take a course in school. <lb/>
Listen to no backward man. <lb/>
Nor be taught by a fool. <lb/>
We'll go o e can. <lb/>
To learn the precious word. <lb/>
That we may after now <lb/>
Speak words for our Lord. <lb/>
cherish the many friends <lb/>
done so much to win ; <lb/>
Let us engage with heart and hand. <lb/>
And help them to win. <lb/>
Our Master's cause is <lb/>
Yes more precious than diamonds fail; <lb/>
New horn souls to shout Cod's praise <lb/>
Too precious for Satan to share. <lb/>
There is some one calling, brother, <lb/>
Some poor soul calling to you. <lb/>
Come over and help, he cries, <lb/>
That I may learn of Jesus, too. <lb/>
Think of them who know not God <lb/>
In the pardon of their sins, <lb/>
Co work, dear brother, <lb/>
There arc souls yet to win. <lb/>
Spend not your time idleness, <lb/>
The Lord's calling you to-day. <lb/>
Go work In His vineyard, <lb/>
Your reward He will pay. <lb/>
Yes, brother, think of Heaven, <lb/>
The place where rest, <lb/>
There is no more sorrowing then. <lb/>
We should all like Heaven best. <lb/>
After all is ended. <lb/>
And earth's no more to us, <lb/>
Our soul in Heaven praising Cod, <lb/>
Our bodies returned to dust. <lb/>
will meet our loved ones there <lb/>
And those before us gone. <lb/>
Whilst we are yet journeying, <lb/>
Are standing at the gates <lb/>
Welcoming home. <lb/>
Think of our dear Savior pleading, <lb/>
Pleading for you and me; <lb/>
Let's work in His cause, dear brother. <lb/>
heaven we shall sec. <lb/>
Ye messenger of ills labor still <lb/>
Lei II is work go on, <lb/>
Soon you will real in Bleep, <lb/>
To awake hi Heaven, our home <lb/>
whom it was designed. The labor <lb/>
organizations felt the force of this <lb/>
cry which the local newspaper <lb/>
, i publishers daily hear, remarks an <lb/>
way of discussing the subject and To oblige often costs <lb/>
voted largely against the the party <lb/>
What is known as the makes <lb/>
Bill was used to show that its worth saying <lb/>
tics. For the third time he, a <lb/>
Democrat has been elected Gov- <lb/>
of a State strong in the <lb/>
and prejudices of republican- <lb/>
State which revels in the <lb/>
spoils of protection. Cambridge <lb/>
soldier, with gun and bayonet <lb/>
hand watching the ballot box was <lb/>
pictured in most direful man- <lb/>
The law was appeal- <lb/>
ed to in several places to have <lb/>
supervisors s <lb/>
were appointed in several <lb/>
taught was an encroachment upon <lb/>
his suffrage. <lb/>
4- Mr. position on <lb/>
tho currency question, while op- <lb/>
posed by the solid South, was <lb/>
by the States classed us <lb/>
doubtful- If the doubtful States <lb/>
could be captured by financial <lb/>
unprecedented majority. The pa- theories of Mr. Cleveland, then <lb/>
announced on the morning his election was a foregone con <lb/>
humiliation and s was his birth-place and his ago is <lb/>
voter. The article the publics thirty five. Tho law is his <lb/>
eye. The is stormed <lb/>
at because gets hold of William J. Stone, <lb/>
item and is abused because he democrat, is a native of Kentucky <lb/>
does not get another. Young men . his years number forty four, <lb/>
and young women, as well as older He is a lawyer and a large <lb/>
acts stock farm- <lb/>
several for j John T. Rich, Re- <lb/>
i tin used newspaper office j publican, is a native <lb/>
emphasize the objectionable feat- be the to I and bis is one He <lb/>
area of the pending bill escapades. The next day president of tho State <lb/>
voter was frightened this act to condemn the same paper for I Farm Association and was at one <lb/>
deprive him of his liberty and not publishing another party doing, a member of congress, <lb/>
voted to kill what he had the same thing they are guilty of, Nelson, Re- <lb/>
forgetting, apparently, their last publican, is a Norwegian, born in <lb/>
visit to the printing office. The I served in the Union army <lb/>
subscribers expect to read the j was admitted to the bar and elect <lb/>
news, there is always wonder , to Congress three times. He <lb/>
when, for charity's sake, an item voted for the Mills bill. He is <lb/>
on street and in everybody's ; personally very popular. <lb/>
after the election that Mrs. Cleve- <lb/>
land would certainly be mistress of <lb/>
the White House after March the <lb/>
4th. The papers spoke the truth. <lb/>
Since all the smoke of the battle <lb/>
has cleared away and are <lb/>
counted it is seen that Mr- <lb/>
Cleveland has electoral votes, <lb/>
Harrison Mr- Weaver 20- It <lb/>
requires to so Mr. Cleve- <lb/>
The our higher <lb/>
State officials has been striking. <lb/>
Of the six officers of the <lb/>
Department elected with Gov. <lb/>
three have died within <lb/>
three Fowle, Col. <lb/>
and Mr. Of five <lb/>
Supreme Court Judges three <lb/>
Judges Smith, and <lb/>
died in about the <lb/>
same length of time. In the last <lb/>
quarter of a century out of six <lb/>
Governors elected by the people <lb/>
only two served out the full terms <lb/>
for which they were elected. <lb/>
Supreme Court, its first fifty <lb/>
years from 1818 to 1868 had in all <lb/>
organ making business ; his prop- ten In than twenty. <lb/>
is valued in millions. five it had <lb/>
West A. j and many as <lb/>
Democrat, a vacancies, being an average <lb/>
month is not found <lb/>
issue of tho paper. <lb/>
in tho next Hew Jersey George <lb/>
Democrat, was nominated in spite <lb/>
I of his protest Ho is a successful <lb/>
Piper Picked a Peck of Pickled j forty-six years old, and is still <lb/>
was a line of alliterative <lb/>
The emphasis given this sense, that the children need to say. j at present Supreme Court judge. <lb/>
in the had a moat Nowadays can on the. Per-; North Elias Carr, <lb/>
in a most, Powerful Properties of , , . <lb/>
happy effect upon the voter the P. nets, it Democrat was born at <lb/>
doubtful States and he voted for will a fl,., I he for generations the homestead of <lb/>
Mr. Cleveland. <lb/>
6- Mr. Harrison failed to secure <lb/>
the experts, manipulators and men <lb/>
poor boy ; ho now has a lucrative <lb/>
law practice; he was born in <lb/>
years ago. <lb/>
Wisconsin George W. Peck, <lb/>
Democrat, re elected, long ago <lb/>
gained a national reputation as <lb/>
the only and original Bad <lb/>
The editor of Peel's Sun, <lb/>
he was elected mayor of <lb/>
and at the end of his term <lb/>
promoted to the Governorship <lb/>
New York is his native <lb/>
John H. <lb/>
Republican, is a native of Maine, <lb/>
a pioneer settler in the State- He <lb/>
is a lawyer and bank president, <lb/>
and a strong politician. <lb/>
John E- Osborne, <lb/>
Democrat, is a successful very <lb/>
wealthy man, thirty-four <lb/>
years old- New York is the place <lb/>
of his nativity- <lb/>
are Democratic Govern- <lb/>
ors twenty seven States, <lb/>
Governors in thirteen States, <lb/>
People's party Governors in two <lb/>
I and two State tickets tire <lb/>
Undecided. The People's <lb/>
party States are Colorado and <lb/>
North Dakota, the election in the <lb/>
latter State having been won by <lb/>
fusion. <lb/>
of a vacancy about every year <lb/>
a half. Our United States Sena- <lb/>
tors have fared better, Gen. Ran- <lb/>
having now been in tho Sen- <lb/>
ate nearly twenty-one years con- <lb/>
and Gov. Vance near- <lb/>
fourteen <lb/>
and Observer. <lb/>
It is without a Mr. <lb/>
Walter Brewer, Iowa, <lb/>
had a very had cough and a few of <lb/>
Dr. Hull's C ugh gave relief and <lb/>
effected a cars. I would not be without <lb/>
It In my <lb/>
LIVE NEWSPAPER <lb/>
-where it Is read by----- <lb/>
-----That is why he uses----- <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector <lb/>
MERCURIAL <lb/>
ten years ago I con- <lb/>
a case of blood <lb/>
Loading physicians prescribed <lb/>
after medicine, which I took <lb/>
without any relief. I also tried <lb/>
rial and remedies, with <lb/>
RHEUMATISM <lb/>
results, but which brought on an <lb/>
attack of rheumatism that <lb/>
my life of agony. After <lb/>
four years I gave up all remedies <lb/>
and commenced using a S. After <lb/>
taking several bottles, I was entirely <lb/>
and to work. <lb/>
h tho greatest <lb/>
Mood poisoning to-day on <lb/>
tho <lb/>
on Skin <lb/>
CO., Atlanta. Gil <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
The next session of this School will <lb/>
begin on Monday. August 20th, 1802. <lb/>
The advantages offered will be <lb/>
or to those of any previous session. <lb/>
guaranteed every patron. <lb/>
Hoard can be had at lower rates than at <lb/>
any similar in La-tern Carolina <lb/>
We propose to do ii,. for <lb/>
that has ever been la <lb/>
challenge proof the <lb/>
are a- follows, payable <lb/>
Primary English per month, <lb/>
Intermediate English per month. <lb/>
Higher per mouth. <lb/>
Languages each, m <lb/>
When you are in town call to sec me <lb/>
or write homes. <lb/>
will be cheerfully given. If <lb/>
necessary a competent assistant will b <lb/>
employed. <lb/>
W. <lb/>
Greenville, X. C, July 1802. <lb/>
Peanut Pickers and <lb/>
Cleaners. <lb/>
Will pick and clean of <lb/>
Peanuts day. Manufactured by <lb/>
well Machine Co., Richmond. V <lb/>
J. MARQUIS, <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
X. <lb/>
In Skinner tappet Bee <lb/>
Photograph <lb/>
L. <lb/>
DENTIST, t <lb/>
KY-AT-LAW. <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
Prompt ion to business. <lb/>
at Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb/>
5- I ALEX. L. <lb/>
ft BLOW, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
all the Courts. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb/>
A T-LA H <lb/>
N. <lb/>
I. A. <lb/>
B. F. <lb/>
Ai TYSON, <lb/>
 AW, <lb/>
n. o. <lb/>
Prompt attention given to collection <lb/>
Attorney-at-Law, <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
Prompt and careful attention to <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
u. C. LATHAM. <lb/>
I AM <lb/>
MARRY <lb/>
SKINNER, <lb/>
N. I <lb/>
G. JAMES. <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N C. <lb/>
Practice in all the Collection <lb/>
t Specialty. <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
Look. <lb/>
Good looks are more than skin deep, <lb/>
depending upon a healthy condition of <lb/>
all the vital organs. If the Liver be in- <lb/>
active, you have a Look, if your <lb/>
stomach he disordered you have a <lb/>
peptic if your Kidneys be <lb/>
fleeted you have a Pinched Look. <lb/>
Electric Bitters is the great <lb/>
and Tonic acts directly on these vital <lb/>
organs. Pimples, Boils <lb/>
and gives a good complexion. Sold at <lb/>
Drug Store. Ma. per bottle. <lb/>
TRADE <lb/>
MARK <lb/>
of executive ability that conducted <lb/>
his campaign four years <lb/>
Such men as Blaine, <lb/>
bilious attack, indigestion, con <lb/>
The greatest n <lb/>
may be relied u i <lb/>
speedily heal Ii m <lb/>
by many <lb/>
and gripes from drastic remedies Alliance and will make a strong, ; and as a curative Hut <lb/>
Purgative are as , fills the effect Is magi-. <lb/>
as they are perfect in their conservative executive. He as ca, I <lb/>
Waller <lb/>
six I hart been with <lb/>
an en of <lb/>
the hone In I tried <lb/>
me. lied lo me. <lb/>
lie sore- healed, an, i o lit bi <lb/>
health than I ii. send <lb/>
d I <lb/>
others lobe <lb/>
For the Cure d all Skin Diseases <lb/>
This has been in use over <lb/>
fifty j-cars, and wherever known ha <lb/>
been in steady demand. It has been ere <lb/>
by the leading physicians all over <lb/>
e country, and has effected cures where <lb/>
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb/>
the most experienced physicians, have <lb/>
for years failed. This Ointment Is Of <lb/>
long standing and the high reputation <lb/>
which It has obtained is owing entirely <lb/>
its as but little effort has <lb/>
ever made to bring it the <lb/>
public. One tic of this Ointment will <lb/>
lie sent to any address on receipt of One <lb/>
Sample box free. The usual <lb/>
to Druggists. All Cash Order <lb/>
promptly to. Address all or- <lb/>
and communications to <lb/>
V. <lb/>
Hide Proprietor, <lb/>
N. <lb/>
l. Mr. <lb/>
. . . .,., . cat <lb/>
t. <lb/>
s Malaria. <lb/>
u ant <lb/>
to <lb/>
to Its Color. <lb/>
r-i w hair tailing,<lb/>
ISSUE<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017574_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
J. Editor and Proprietor <lb/>
WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER <lb/>
will at <lb/>
H. C. u mail <lb/>
Publisher's Announcement. <lb/>
of <lb/>
I The is 81.00 . <lb/>
Hates.-One <lb/>
yew, one-half column one year. <lb/>
; one-quarter column one <lb/>
Transient inch <lb/>
week. ; two weeks. II one <lb/>
Two inches one week. <lb/>
t o weeks, one month, <lb/>
Advertisements inserted in <lb/>
Column as reading Item. Ti cents <lb/>
for insertion <lb/>
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad. <lb/>
and <lb/>
and Sales. <lb/>
to etc. will <lb/>
for at and MUST <lb/>
PAID TN ADVANCE. <lb/>
Contracts for any not mention <lb/>
Above, for any of time, can be <lb/>
mad by application to the either <lb/>
hi person or by letter. <lb/>
tor v and <lb/>
II of should <lb/>
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb/>
order to receive prompt in- <lb/>
the day following. <lb/>
The a large <lb/>
will be found a provable medium <lb/>
which to the public. <lb/>
Holt has appointed Col. S. <lb/>
Tate, of Mo <lb/>
Treasurer to fill the vacancy caused <lb/>
by the death of Treasurer <lb/>
Durham opens rite ball in baby <lb/>
naming, the first North <lb/>
Carolina boy after Adlai Steven- <lb/>
son. No doubt the of name- <lb/>
sakes will be plentiful. <lb/>
The Governor appointed <lb/>
Justice James E. <lb/>
as Chief Justice of the Supreme <lb/>
Court of North to fill the <lb/>
vacancy caused by the of <lb/>
Chief Justice n. and <lb/>
pointed Mr- of <lb/>
Charlotte as Associate Justice in <lb/>
the place of Judge Shepherd <lb/>
These appointments give general <lb/>
satisfaction throughout the State. <lb/>
It is no uncommon thing now <lb/>
to hem men if they hail known <lb/>
before the election what they have <lb/>
learned since they never <lb/>
have voted a Third party ticket- <lb/>
They have found out since of the <lb/>
unholy compact made between the <lb/>
Third party leaders the Rep- <lb/>
for the purpose of defeat- <lb/>
the Democratic party. The <lb/>
Reflector warned readers, and <lb/>
the Democratic speakers told their- <lb/>
hearers that there was such <lb/>
compact, and while some believed <lb/>
and turned, others were so blinded <lb/>
misled that they would not <lb/>
believe. Now since the election <lb/>
Catawba and Iredell were two <lb/>
counties in which the <lb/>
were going do great In <lb/>
Catawba they elected two township <lb/>
constables and Iredell one <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
There's something in this squib <lb/>
that reminds us of Pitt county- <lb/>
Captain W. H. Kitchin- of Hali <lb/>
fax county, has announced his <lb/>
for First Assistant Post- <lb/>
master General, and failing that, <lb/>
he says, he will apply for the <lb/>
of collector of internal revenue <lb/>
for the eastern district of this <lb/>
State. <lb/>
Cleveland and Harrison rode to <lb/>
in the same carriage, from <lb/>
the White House to the Capitol on <lb/>
the 4th of March, 1889 ; and on the <lb/>
4th of March, 1893 they will again <lb/>
take the same ride, but under ex- <lb/>
opposite circumstances. On <lb/>
the former occasion Cleveland, as <lb/>
the outgoing President, was ac- <lb/>
companying his successful com- <lb/>
to his inauguration, and on <lb/>
the 4th of next March as <lb/>
the outgoing President, will ac- <lb/>
company on a similar <lb/>
Now the election is over bury <lb/>
your political differences and let's <lb/>
get down to business. Let all true <lb/>
Alliance men. no matter how they <lb/>
voted, take more interest in the <lb/>
organization. All political cam- <lb/>
tend to the injury of the <lb/>
Alliance, but the right kind of <lb/>
efforts will always reunite us. <lb/>
Let political discussions stop for <lb/>
the farmer. <lb/>
There has been nothing <lb/>
than this since Rill Nye's last letter <lb/>
appeared in the Citizen. <lb/>
tend to the in- <lb/>
jury of the If that be <lb/>
so the has been doing <lb/>
all it could to injure the Alliance, <lb/>
for it has been trying for months <lb/>
to conduct a campaign of its own <lb/>
particular kind of mean politics, <lb/>
it had to cease to be the organ <lb/>
of the Alliance to do so. The fact <lb/>
is, the Partner ought to be <lb/>
by every as his <lb/>
worst enemy. It tried to drag the <lb/>
Alliance into politics of the lowest <lb/>
order, led by some of the most dis- <lb/>
reputable politicians the world <lb/>
ever saw for office. Its <lb/>
advice to an honest <lb/>
is an Citizen. <lb/>
Every word of the above is true. <lb/>
The Citizen might also have said <lb/>
that no published in the <lb/>
State had sunk so deep in political <lb/>
infamy degradation as the <lb/>
farmer, that it is a disgrace to <lb/>
North Carolina journalism and the <lb/>
destroyer of the Alliance. Under <lb/>
its baneful influence the Alliance, <lb/>
which two years ago nearly <lb/>
members now has less than <lb/>
and is growing weaker and <lb/>
respectable every <lb/>
bury Herald. <lb/>
The first thing every honest Al- <lb/>
ought to do is to kick <lb/>
the Farmer out of his home. We <lb/>
have been noticing with no little <lb/>
amusement since the election how <lb/>
some of the self styled <lb/>
have changed their <lb/>
and are now to soft soap <lb/>
the remnant of the Alliance by <lb/>
raising the cry or <lb/>
must be <lb/>
the Republicans do not hesitate to <lb/>
speak openly and boastfully of the j to have thought of <lb/>
propositions made to them by the j before the election not <lb/>
party leaders and the agree- j then to have a course <lb/>
that followed. This agree I to drive three fourths of the <lb/>
in substance was that if the out of the order. The <lb/>
Republicans would not get out a -reform itself has done the <lb/>
ticket but throw their Alliance more harm than every <lb/>
strength to the Third party county other influence combined. <lb/>
the Third party would in j BRANCH J <lb/>
no way interfere with the <lb/>
State and electoral ticket. it has been <lb/>
We have heard it was you <lb/>
ed to the Republican executive anything from this part of the <lb/>
committee that certain of the country we thought to drop you a <lb/>
county candidates were hold line so and a bit <lb/>
. ., of news. <lb/>
secret meetings with the is <lb/>
and breaking the compact again elected and that it will be <lb/>
by advising them to vote the whole more years for <lb/>
Third party ticket, whereupon the i We have much to rejoice over and <lb/>
called the Third party just here let us add that we know <lb/>
, , . ., of about a dozen 3rd that <lb/>
leaders together and told were brought back to the <lb/>
them if they did not stand by their fold through the influence <lb/>
the last of them j of the Reflector. We have been <lb/>
would be slaughtered at ballot celebrating Cleveland's <lb/>
, ., I,, here for several nights by tiring <lb/>
and renewed their prom- blacksmith anvils as we <lb/>
On day the Third j no cannon. If your readers <lb/>
party leaders interfere with the it would not make a report, <lb/>
Republican State and electoral j -t them try it- Saturday night <lb/>
ticket and many our celebrating came to a sudden <lb/>
., i i no one was hurt, <lb/>
into voting the whole Third ; f the boys got a hollow <lb/>
ticket. The distributing of the j u casting and put it on the <lb/>
tickets among the was lower anvil pat a too heavy <lb/>
left in a large measure to the Third j charge of powder as the top one <lb/>
party people and Weaver tickets <lb/>
, , i l ed off the hollow casting exploded <lb/>
instead of Harrison tickets were , and the <lb/>
given. At the Greenville box this j f as pieces went clear through <lb/>
was discovered after many the sides We are this <lb/>
had voted for Weaver and morning that the reports were <lb/>
and members the <lb/>
executive committee went to the <lb/>
voting place and tore up the Third <lb/>
party tickets, stopping the <lb/>
from voting them any further. <lb/>
about miles away. We rejoice <lb/>
with all good citizens that the <lb/>
odious force bill is killed and hope <lb/>
; may soon go <lb/>
o- l , same way. There has been right <lb/>
Similar attempts were made at of late around in <lb/>
other precincts and at some of them the country and we have to report <lb/>
all the were fooled into two deaths from yellow chills, one <lb/>
voting Third party tickets. Though being a son of W. B. Person and <lb/>
not intended that way this proved j a son Arthur Darden. <lb/>
, ., . lour correspondent has been <lb/>
a fortunate thing for the Demo-j Jg <lb/>
and swelled Cleveland s <lb/>
in Pitt county to nearly <lb/>
one thousand- <lb/>
is suffering with a severe sick <lb/>
headache. There is a notice post- <lb/>
ed at one or two of the stores here <lb/>
The vote for Weaver and I language but <lb/>
. whether the work of a crank or <lb/>
in Pit can not be looked upon as a f ,,, I <lb/>
indicating that much Third party but judge it is the latter. It reads <lb/>
strength in the county, for the rascals who owe me come <lb/>
Reflector verily believes that bet P and but those that I owe go <lb/>
the <lb/>
wore deceived the vote would not bad them posted, <lb/>
have exceeded half what it did. j J. V. Beale has opened a grocery <lb/>
We do not believe as many as store in the old Geo. N. <lb/>
white in Pitt county voted for i . , <lb/>
it t. Mrs. Duke babies re- <lb/>
Weaver. Here, as elsewhere, the, y to <lb/>
Third party drew its strength j burg and Dinwiddie county, <lb/>
largely from Republican side-. Quill Pen. <lb/>
LETTER. <lb/>
our <lb/>
Washington, D. C-, Nov. <lb/>
elect Cleveland will <lb/>
not call an extra session of Con- <lb/>
the Republican Sen <lb/>
ate shall at the coining session by <lb/>
hanging up or defeating some <lb/>
appropriation or measure <lb/>
compel him to do The speak- <lb/>
of the above is a Democrat who <lb/>
took a prominent part in the cam- <lb/>
and has just returned from <lb/>
New York he had a <lb/>
of conferences with the President- <lb/>
elect- Ho is opposed to an extra <lb/>
session of Congress, believing that <lb/>
it would bad business as well as <lb/>
bad politics, as indeed do many <lb/>
other Democrats who were at first <lb/>
inclined to think it good policy to <lb/>
hold an extra session for tariff <lb/>
legislation- Unless the prominent <lb/>
Republicans who have up <lb/>
in Washington since the election <lb/>
are mistaken an attempt is to be <lb/>
made in the Senate to make an <lb/>
extra session necessary by leaving <lb/>
things that ought to be <lb/>
done. This i not to be done <lb/>
openly, but by parliamentary <lb/>
at which the <lb/>
can Senators are adepts. <lb/>
Senator who is regard- <lb/>
ed by many as the next Secretary <lb/>
of State, thinks Mr. Cleveland's <lb/>
little speech at the banquet of the <lb/>
New York Chamber of Commerce <lb/>
have a happy effect in counter- <lb/>
acting the causeless business scare <lb/>
which the Republicans are trying <lb/>
so hard to extend over the <lb/>
try. The sensible men of the <lb/>
country know full well that the <lb/>
prosperity of this country is in no <lb/>
danger the hands of the Demo- <lb/>
but if they had been <lb/>
ever so uneasy these words from <lb/>
Democracy's chosen leader and <lb/>
President-elect would sufficient <lb/>
to reassure are all in <lb/>
as Americans a com- <lb/>
pursuit. Our purpose is, or <lb/>
ought to be, in our several spheres <lb/>
I to add to tho general fund of <lb/>
I national prosperity. From this <lb/>
we are all entitled to draw, per <lb/>
haps not equally, but justly, <lb/>
receiving a fair of <lb/>
prosperity- Let us avoid <lb/>
trampling on each other our <lb/>
anxiety to be first the <lb/>
of shares, and let us not at- <lb/>
tempt to appropriate the share of <lb/>
Is this the language of a <lb/>
conspirator against his <lb/>
welfare, or of a patriotic citizen <lb/>
who believes every being <lb/>
given a to enjoy the great- <lb/>
est attainable prosperity <lb/>
Senator who only stop <lb/>
in Washington a few horns on <lb/>
his way to see his family, said of <lb/>
the session <lb/>
will depend upon conditions at <lb/>
this time undeveloped and which <lb/>
only time will develop. If there is <lb/>
session it will probably <lb/>
not meet until late in the fall- The <lb/>
tariff alone will not furnish <lb/>
reason for an extra session. <lb/>
The financial affairs of the govern- <lb/>
may be such as to make an <lb/>
extra session imperative. It <lb/>
pears probable that we shall find <lb/>
that there is not enough money in <lb/>
the Treasury for the needs of the <lb/>
government. There is a situation <lb/>
in the Treasury which every <lb/>
thoughtful man who has consider <lb/>
ed the matter has long foreseen. <lb/>
There is an accumulation of de <lb/>
and obligations that have <lb/>
been contracted and will come <lb/>
over to us- It may be that this <lb/>
situation will furnish reason <lb/>
enough why an . extra session <lb/>
should be called. We shall have <lb/>
to see what is done at this session <lb/>
of Congress. If the Sherman <lb/>
law be not repelled, and other <lb/>
action such as the situation de- <lb/>
taken we may be swamped. <lb/>
Upon these things depend the <lb/>
calling of an extra <lb/>
Representative Wilson, of West <lb/>
Virginia, who presided over the <lb/>
convention which nominated <lb/>
Cleveland and Stevenson, and who <lb/>
has now gone to New York upon <lb/>
the invitation of Mr. Cleveland <lb/>
believe that he can have a <lb/>
place in the cabinet, if he desires <lb/>
is one of the strongest <lb/>
for the holding of an extra <lb/>
session of Congress as soon as <lb/>
practicable after the inauguration, <lb/>
and following are his <lb/>
true worth and value of a <lb/>
tariff bill cannot be tested in a <lb/>
short time, and the first effects <lb/>
pear to be sometimes what they <lb/>
really are not. I think it would be <lb/>
most impolitic to place a new tariff <lb/>
bill before the country just <lb/>
to the elections of 1894. For <lb/>
this reason I favor the extra <lb/>
idea and think the sooner the <lb/>
proposed tariff changes go into <lb/>
effect the better will tho final re- <lb/>
be for our <lb/>
Democratic organizations intend- <lb/>
to go to the inauguration would <lb/>
better a on their <lb/>
plication for quarters or they may <lb/>
have to sleep in tents, so rapidly <lb/>
are being already booked. <lb/>
The same chairman who made <lb/>
such a magnificent success of the <lb/>
first Cleveland inauguration has <lb/>
been put at the head of the <lb/>
inaugural committee and the <lb/>
preliminary arrangements are <lb/>
ready well under way. <lb/>
Tho crocodile tears now being <lb/>
shed by Secretary Noble and <lb/>
Superintendent Porter, because <lb/>
two Census bureau have <lb/>
been detected in crooked work, one <lb/>
trying to steal votes in New York <lb/>
and tho other furnishing the Gov- <lb/>
false reports on Alaska, <lb/>
for use before the Sea <lb/>
Court of are old to say <lb/>
the least, when the record of the <lb/>
is called to mind. <lb/>
The re-election of H. L. <lb/>
as president of the National Farm- <lb/>
Alliance, over Dr. <lb/>
his competitor for tho place, fixes <lb/>
definitely the status of that organ- <lb/>
as an annex of the Third <lb/>
party. wanted to keep up <lb/>
tho delusion -or <lb/>
rather get back to the <lb/>
Third party sentiment swept him <lb/>
off the deck, and in view of the <lb/>
fact that this was the real issue in <lb/>
the contest it is reasonable to sup- <lb/>
pose that we shall have an end <lb/>
now of shuffling and lying about <lb/>
the political of noble <lb/>
order Charlotte <lb/>
thanksgiving proclamation <lb/>
of gov. <lb/>
State of North Carolina, <lb/>
Emotive Department <lb/>
From the establishment of this <lb/>
Government to the present time,, <lb/>
there has been no period in the <lb/>
history of our Commonwealth in <lb/>
which the Supreme Ruhr of the <lb/>
Universe has mere richly <lb/>
noon us His indicated <lb/>
more clearly His purpose to <lb/>
serve for us our civil and religions <lb/>
liberties. <lb/>
To the Author of all Good <lb/>
owe whatever of peace, prosperity, <lb/>
or happiness we have enjoyed <lb/>
the past year. The people of <lb/>
North Carolina have much for <lb/>
which to be thankful, while <lb/>
the earth has not yield id her <lb/>
greatest abundance, our people <lb/>
are yet blessed with a moderate <lb/>
and reasonable return for their <lb/>
labors. <lb/>
In conformity, therefore with <lb/>
the recommendation of the <lb/>
dent of the United States, I, <lb/>
Thomas M- Holt, Governor of the <lb/>
State of North Carolina, do <lb/>
Thursday, the 24th day of <lb/>
1882, as a day of <lb/>
thanksgiving, praise and prayer <lb/>
I do earnestly request that <lb/>
the people of our State lay aside <lb/>
all secular business and assemble <lb/>
on that day, at their usual places <lb/>
of worship, in humble <lb/>
for past blessings, prayer for <lb/>
a continuance of Divine favor. <lb/>
order that cur service may be <lb/>
more and acceptable, let <lb/>
us remember our prayers and <lb/>
substantial offerings the needs of <lb/>
the widow and orphan, the dis <lb/>
soldier, the poor and afflict- <lb/>
ed, and nil established <lb/>
throughout the State for their <lb/>
proper care and maintenance. <lb/>
Given under my hand, and the <lb/>
great Seal of the State of North <lb/>
at the city of Raleigh, <lb/>
this eleventh day of in <lb/>
the year of our Lord, thous- <lb/>
and eight hundred and ninety-two. <lb/>
and in tho one hundred and seven- <lb/>
year of our American <lb/>
Thomas M. Holt. <lb/>
By the Governor <lb/>
8- F. <lb/>
Private Secretary. <lb/>
VIEWED from home. <lb/>
The Springfield <lb/>
sons thus in regard to the results <lb/>
of the election in this <lb/>
votes which Weaver received in <lb/>
North Carolina seem to have <lb/>
all been taken from the <lb/>
republican party. This is a <lb/>
inference from a comparison of the <lb/>
vote for all candidates this year <lb/>
with those cast for Harrison <lb/>
Cleveland four years ago. In 1888 <lb/>
the Harrison electors received <lb/>
votes in sixty-nine counties, <lb/>
and Cleveland a total of <lb/>
This year the same <lb/>
counties Cleveland has <lb/>
Harrison and Weaver <lb/>
a total of Harrison's <lb/>
vote plus Weaver's so <lb/>
only more than Harrison alone <lb/>
received in 1888- The decrease in <lb/>
the Cleveland vote is more than <lb/>
the decrease in the total vote of <lb/>
these counties, and these Dem- <lb/>
may have voted for Weaver. <lb/>
If we me that the missing votes <lb/>
required to bring Cleveland's total <lb/>
of 1888, all went to Weaver, <lb/>
which is not then <lb/>
there will be votes to his <lb/>
credit out of a total of which <lb/>
must have come from the <lb/>
The further inference <lb/>
from these figures is that tho only <lb/>
effect of the attempt of the <lb/>
to fuse with the party <lb/>
in North Carolina was to wipe out <lb/>
the Third party divide the <lb/>
can vote. This was a dis- <lb/>
outcome of what was sup- <lb/>
posed to be a shrewd move on the <lb/>
part of the Republican <lb/>
The Third party has proved to <lb/>
be a veritable boomerang to the <lb/>
Republicans in this State. They <lb/>
had hoped to capture our <lb/>
and destroy the Democratic party <lb/>
by and through the Third party. <lb/>
They encouraged in every way <lb/>
possible the organization of the <lb/>
Third party in North Carolina, <lb/>
and rejoiced greatly at the <lb/>
among the Democrats- Re- <lb/>
publican postmasters and revenue <lb/>
officers attended Third party meet <lb/>
them with <lb/>
all their might, and gloated with <lb/>
great glee when former Democrats <lb/>
deserted their old party and joined <lb/>
in with them. But alas, alas They <lb/>
overdid it, and the boomerang has <lb/>
rebounded and knocked them all <lb/>
to smithereens Yes, one good <lb/>
accomplished by the Third party <lb/>
is the annihilation and destruction <lb/>
of the Republican party in North <lb/>
Carolina Pittsboro Record. <lb/>
While the men who were v- <lb/>
ed into this Third party will be <lb/>
welcomed back by their former <lb/>
associates of the Democracy, tho <lb/>
scoundrelly leaders are not wanted <lb/>
and Democrats will not fellowship <lb/>
with them any more. There <lb/>
never anything but in <lb/>
their hearts. They knowingly and <lb/>
wickedly deceived their blind fol- <lb/>
lowers, working them for money <lb/>
all the time and doubtless <lb/>
money from the Republicans <lb/>
besides, and they should be com- <lb/>
now to lie on the bed of <lb/>
their own making. Democrats <lb/>
want nothing more to do with them <lb/>
and will have nothing more to do <lb/>
with them. Away with them <lb/>
Away with <lb/>
mark <lb/>
The ordinary rocket on the <lb/>
day we celebrate is made of various <lb/>
compositions packed in tubes rolled <lb/>
tightly round a cylindrical core. The <lb/>
match by -which tho rocket is ex- <lb/>
is placed tea cavity at the <lb/>
bottom. The movement of the <lb/>
rocket would be irregular if it were <lb/>
not for tho guide stick, which is <lb/>
made very light, so that it does not <lb/>
retard tho Eight of the rocket when <lb/>
tho gases come out and hit the <lb/>
ground with all their might and send <lb/>
the rocket up into tho air for all that <lb/>
it is York Evening <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
of Animal. <lb/>
The religion of the Cherokees, like <lb/>
that of most North American tribes, <lb/>
is a worship of everything tangible, <lb/>
but particularly of animals. Among <lb/>
the animal gods insects and fishes <lb/>
occupy a subordinate place, while <lb/>
quadrupeds, birds and reptiles are <lb/>
invoked almost constantly. The <lb/>
mythic great horned <lb/>
rattlesnake, the <lb/>
pin, tho hawk, the rabbit, tho <lb/>
rel and the dog are the principal <lb/>
gods. <lb/>
The spider occupies a prominent <lb/>
place in the love of life destroying <lb/>
formulas, its duty being to entangle <lb/>
the soul of the victim in the meshes <lb/>
of its web or to pluck it from the <lb/>
body of the doomed man and drag it <lb/>
away to tho black coffin in the dark- <lb/>
land. The sun is invoked by <lb/>
the ball player, while the hunter <lb/>
prays to the fire, but every <lb/>
connected <lb/>
with medicine, love, hunting or <lb/>
an invocation ad- <lb/>
dressed to the which <lb/>
is the name for water, or, more <lb/>
for the river. <lb/>
Other formulas invoke tho wind, the <lb/>
cloud, the storm and the frost. <lb/>
Another god invoked in tho hunt- <lb/>
is a giant <lb/>
hunter who liver, in one of the great <lb/>
mountains of Blue Ridge and <lb/>
owns all tho game. Others are the <lb/>
Little Men. Children of tho Thunder <lb/>
and the Little People, who are fairies <lb/>
that dwell in the rock cliffs. There <lb/>
is also a diminutive sprite which <lb/>
holds tho place of our Puck. One <lb/>
important is addressed to <lb/>
the Headed Woman. Whose <lb/>
Hair Down to tho <lb/>
Trees. Trees. <lb/>
It is lion- time In plant all kind <lb/>
Fruit Nut Bearing Trees Chapel <lb/>
Vines. W c have in stock a nice selection <lb/>
of Apple. . <lb/>
Pecan, Chestnut, Japan Per- <lb/>
and Cherry Trees. We also <lb/>
have a line variety of Grape Vines <lb/>
for this section. It is also a <lb/>
time to transplant Evergreens, <lb/>
Shrubs, Ac., will h you ill <lb/>
always at Nursery for <lb/>
wile. Send in your now. <lb/>
o Fruit and Ornamental tree.- <lb/>
en t on application . <lb/>
A SON. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C <lb/>
Gen. W. H. Jackson, of <lb/>
says he has assurances that <lb/>
considerable Northern capital will <lb/>
be invested in Southern enter- <lb/>
prises after Mr. Cleveland gets in <lb/>
the saddle- Similar reports come <lb/>
from other <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
Office Board Commissioner-, <lb/>
Pitt county. J <lb/>
The following is a statement of the <lb/>
of meeting of the Hoard of Com- <lb/>
for Pitt county, and <lb/>
of each attend- <lb/>
ed, and the of miles traveled <lb/>
by each, and the amounts allowed to <lb/>
member for services as <lb/>
fur the fiscal year ending De- <lb/>
Council attended. <lb/>
T E Keel <lb/>
A Gainer <lb/>
Fleming <lb/>
C V Newton <lb/>
IS <lb/>
IV <lb/>
Amount allowed Council Dawson <lb/>
For la as commissioner, <lb/>
For days cm committee. <lb/>
For miles traveled at <lb/>
Amount allowed T E Keel <lb/>
For clays as commissioner. <lb/>
For days on committee. <lb/>
For miles traveled at cents, <lb/>
pa <lb/>
OS <lb/>
Amount allowed S A Gainer <lb/>
For days as commissioner. <lb/>
For days on committee, <lb/>
For miles traveled at cents.<lb/>
allowed Fleming <lb/>
For days as <lb/>
For day on committee, <lb/>
For miles traveled at cents, <lb/>
Amount allowed C V <lb/>
For as commissioner, <lb/>
tat days on committee, <lb/>
For traveled at cents. <lb/>
Total amount Board, <lb/>
3-2 <lb/>
SO 0.5 <lb/>
Stale of North Carolina, <lb/>
Pitt county. <lb/>
I. David H. James, Clerk of <lb/>
the Board of Commissioners for the afore- <lb/>
said county, do certify that th <lb/>
is a correct as doth <lb/>
pear upon record in my office. <lb/>
Given under my hand ind the official <lb/>
seal of the Board of for <lb/>
Pitt county, at office in this <lb/>
the 19th day of November. A. <lb/>
O. JAMES, <lb/>
Clerk Com. Pitt Co. <lb/>
For Rent. <lb/>
A two-story brick store in the <lb/>
Opera House Block, Greenville, just <lb/>
splendid room, with patent <lb/>
to;, counters, shelving and drawers. <lb/>
Apply to <lb/>
Wit. II. LONG. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
For Sale on Easy Terms <lb/>
Double Store in Greenville. I <lb/>
offer for gale on easy terms the large <lb/>
Double Store north side cf Fifth street, <lb/>
east of Evan- street, with lot <lb/>
feet on Fifth street by feet deep. A <lb/>
splendid Apply at once to <lb/>
Wm. II. <lb/>
When Grover Cleveland turned <lb/>
over the Government to Benjamin <lb/>
Harrison he turned over the treas- <lb/>
with about <lb/>
in it. On the 4th of March when <lb/>
Benjamin Harrison turns the Gov- <lb/>
over to Grover Cleveland <lb/>
he will turn over a treasury with a <lb/>
deficiency of about <lb/>
which is the first thing Congress <lb/>
will have to tackle. With four <lb/>
years more of Republican <lb/>
there wouldn't have been <lb/>
any treasury at all to turn over <lb/>
I Salisbury Herald. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
North Carolina, . <lb/>
Pitt bounty, , <lb/>
Before W. T. Clerk. <lb/>
J. T. Everett, S. H. Everett, A. S. <lb/>
Everett, V. Everett and Mary <lb/>
E. Everett, <lb/>
The defendants S. M. Everett. C. S. <lb/>
Everett and II. J. Everett are hereby <lb/>
to appear before me at my office <lb/>
in Martin North <lb/>
Carolina, on day of January, 1893, <lb/>
to answer or demur to a petition tiled in <lb/>
the above titled action before me by <lb/>
A. S. Everett, guardian of V. <lb/>
Everett, against H. Everett, M. <lb/>
Everett. C. Everett and II. J. Ever- <lb/>
purpose of said action is to <lb/>
ask that the lot No. assigned to S. II. <lb/>
Everett be sold to pay the sum of ninety <lb/>
dollars, the charge placed on said lot <lb/>
for equality of partition due Hat I V. <lb/>
Everett. <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court. <lb/>
18th, 1892. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
By a decree made at March term, 1892, <lb/>
of Pitt Court, in the case of L. <lb/>
V. of I. H. <lb/>
Beardsley vs. I. H. L- P. <lb/>
Jr , others, under- <lb/>
signed was appointed a referee to take <lb/>
and state nil account which shall a <lb/>
full list of the creditors late L. P. <lb/>
and the amount due each. <lb/>
This therefore is to to all <lb/>
such to present their claims to <lb/>
me to be passed on in accordance with <lb/>
the terms of said decree on or the <lb/>
10th day of March. at which lime <lb/>
I shall proceed to take and state said ac- <lb/>
count and to the <lb/>
Court as I m directed in said de- <lb/>
F. IS. JAMES, Referee. <lb/>
This No.-ember 1892. <lb/>
Important Sale. <lb/>
By virtue of the power conferred upon <lb/>
me in a certain executed by <lb/>
Greenville Land and Improvement <lb/>
Company on the day of March. <lb/>
duly d in Hook No. f. <lb/>
mo. 19- and in the Regis- <lb/>
office Pitt county, I will on Tues- <lb/>
day. December 20th. sell for cash <lb/>
to the highest bidder on the premises of <lb/>
said the following property, <lb/>
to-wit <lb/>
1st. entire mill plant a- it Stands. <lb/>
consisting of Saw and Grist Mills, Dry <lb/>
Kilns Planing Mills, together with <lb/>
Boilers, Engines and all such ether <lb/>
Tools. Implement. <lb/>
Shafting, Pulleys. Office <lb/>
Furniture and all used ill <lb/>
ion with the M ill Plant of said <lb/>
Land and Improvement Com- <lb/>
totaled at said Mill Plant. <lb/>
2nd. One Engine. Boiler. Lathe and <lb/>
all such other Machinery, Shafting, <lb/>
Helling, <lb/>
Hangers. Attachments and stock on hand <lb/>
in the Machine Shops and Foundry of <lb/>
in the town of <lb/>
3rd. M Mules, U Oxen, Log <lb/>
Timber Trucks, Wagons and <lb/>
Curt. <lb/>
everything connected with <lb/>
this Plant is new and con- <lb/>
Its capacity is about feet <lb/>
per day. Timber supply The <lb/>
mules are extra fine and the other team <lb/>
and properly good. It is a splendid op- <lb/>
for a good investment. Call <lb/>
and examine property. Place of sale <lb/>
at the Mill Plant. Hour of Sale <lb/>
o'clock A. M. and continue until close. <lb/>
Terms of sale, to highest bidder. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Mortgagee <lb/>
N. C. Mo. <lb/>
Important Sale <lb/>
By virtue of the power given me in a <lb/>
certain executed to me on <lb/>
the Pith day of August by the <lb/>
Land and Improvement <lb/>
Company and recorded in Book i, <lb/>
pages HOT, will sell fur <lb/>
cash to the highest bidder on the <lb/>
said company at the mill plant on <lb/>
Tuesday the 20th day of December <lb/>
the following red and properly <lb/>
to wit. <lb/>
First. All the right title and interest <lb/>
of the said company in and to a of <lb/>
land adjoining the landS. of F. Pat- <lb/>
rick. A. y. Clark, C, F. Manning and <lb/>
others known as a part -f the Williams <lb/>
House property. The interest cf the <lb/>
Company said tract of laud sub- <lb/>
to a mortgage upon which there is <lb/>
due about The exact amount <lb/>
will be made known on day of sale. <lb/>
Second. I will at same time and <lb/>
place join vis In u sale to lie <lb/>
made by him the entire Mill Plant of <lb/>
said consisting of Saw and <lb/>
Mill, Dry Kills, Plaining Mills and <lb/>
all toot-, attachments Ac, connected <lb/>
therewith. The said sale him to be <lb/>
made under a mortgage dated March <lb/>
1892 and recorded Book II. pages <lb/>
MS and <lb/>
Third. The right title and interest of <lb/>
said company to cut and remove all the <lb/>
pine, ash, cypress and popular <lb/>
of and above the size of twelve <lb/>
es on a tract of land in Swift Creek <lb/>
township, Pitt adjoining the <lb/>
lauds of W. M. King, Arch Nobles, <lb/>
Garris. It. Wilson Others con- <lb/>
acres more or less, described <lb/>
a from Hurry Skinner to said <lb/>
company dated June 3rd re- <lb/>
ill Book pages lit and <lb/>
Pitt, county. <lb/>
This sale a splendid <lb/>
for investment. Call examine the <lb/>
property. <lb/>
Place of Mill Plant, <lb/>
Hour of o'clock A. M. <lb/>
continues till close. <lb/>
Terms of sale to highest, bidder. <lb/>
E. A. MOVE, Jr., <lb/>
Greenville, X. C, Nov. 15th 1892. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
We have for sale at Black Jack, Pitt <lb/>
county, a good Cotton Gin,. <lb/>
and a good XIII, the rocks of <lb/>
Moore county grit. are almost <lb/>
as good as new and will be sold cheap. <lb/>
either to <lb/>
J. B, KILPATRICK, <lb/>
Mills. N . C. <lb/>
or G. W. Venters. Calico, X. C. <lb/>
Dissolution. <lb/>
The firm of and Edmonds is <lb/>
hereby dissolved by mutual consent. <lb/>
Those indebted to the will pay the <lb/>
same to Herbert Edmonds. <lb/>
Edmonds. <lb/>
All. <lb/>
It gives me pleasure to announce to <lb/>
our customers that I will continue the <lb/>
business a-, the old stand. Every com- <lb/>
fort and convenience will be found in <lb/>
my shop. First-class shave and hair cut <lb/>
can be had at all times. Thinking the <lb/>
for past I solicit a con- <lb/>
of the same. <lb/>
III <lb/>
If so come to see us and we will make you prices that <lb/>
are conceded by our customers as being <lb/>
Ilia i be gotten elsewhere. We <lb/>
------have in <lb/>
Largest and Most Varied <lb/>
Selection of Furniture <lb/>
ever kept in our town. <lb/>
Action for Divorce. <lb/>
Henry f <lb/>
against <lb/>
J In <lb/>
Pitt County, <lb/>
TOBACCO SEED FREE, <lb/>
All About Growing Tobacco. <lb/>
II m Miking Crop, <lb/>
writ U <lb/>
SOUTHERN TOBACCO JOURNAL, <lb/>
Winston. N. C. <lb/>
Superior Court. <lb/>
The Defendant above named, is here- <lb/>
by notified to be and appear before the <lb/>
Judge of our Superior Court, at a Court <lb/>
to be held for County of Pitt, at the <lb/>
Court House on 8th <lb/>
Monday the 1st Monday of March <lb/>
1898, and answer the complaint which <lb/>
will be deposited the office of the <lb/>
Clerk the Superior Court of said <lb/>
County, within the first three of <lb/>
said term, and let said Defendant <lb/>
lake notice that if she fail to answer the <lb/>
said complaint within the time required <lb/>
by law the Plaintiff, will apply to the <lb/>
Court for the relief demanded in the <lb/>
complaint. <lb/>
Hereof fail not. <lb/>
Given under my hand and seal of said <lb/>
Court, this 12th day Sept. 1892. <lb/>
E. A. Mote, <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court. <lb/>
We buy direct from Ike <lb/>
and can and will <lb/>
low down. Our stock consists <lb/>
of <lb/>
Marble Top Walnut Suits, <lb/>
Solid Oak Suits, <lb/>
Sixteenth Century Finish Suits, <lb/>
Walnut Finish Suits, <lb/>
Marble Top Bureaus and <lb/>
Wood Top Bureaus and <lb/>
Ward Robes, Buffets, and Side-Boards, <lb/>
Walnut Bedsteads, <lb/>
Bedsteads of all grades and colors, <lb/>
Wire Cribs and Beds and Cradles. <lb/>
Marble Top and Solid Wood Top Tables. <lb/>
Solid Chairs and Rockers, <lb/>
Solid Oak Chairs and Rockers, <lb/>
Fancy Reed and Wood Rockers, <lb/>
Chairs of all grades, Lounges, <lb/>
Bed Springs, Mattresses, <lb/>
We are headquarters for- <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
and extend to all a cordial invitation to call on us when in want <lb/>
of any goods as we carry one of the best stocks of <lb/>
MERCHANDISE <lb/>
ever kept in our town. <lb/>
Yours truly, <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
Have on hand a full line of Cooking Stoves, Kit Tin- <lb/>
ware, Lamp Goods ts, Oils, Glass and Putty. <lb/>
We make own stovepipe and pans of cold rolled steel which <lb/>
is far the most durable. <lb/>
We don't try to keep tin cheapest goods in if you <lb/>
want to get the most value for your money give us a call. <lb/>
test White Oil cents per gallon., <lb/>
Tin Roofing and Guttering less the Tariff. <lb/>
S. E. PENDER CO., <lb/>
Greenville, IO-. O.<lb/>
Special facilities for handling Seed in any <lb/>
quantity from all Tar River Landings. <lb/>
Car Load Lots taken from any point in <lb/>
Eastern North Carolina and Virginia. <lb/>
BAGS FURNISHED FOR SHIPPING SEED <lb/>
COTTON SEED MEAL AND HULLS FOR SALE OR <lb/>
EXCHANGE FOR SEED. <lb/>
Oil Mills, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
SAMUEL M- SCHULTZ, Greenville, N. C <lb/>
Mills on Tar <lb/>
AT <lb/>
prices and terms write <lb/>
K. V. <lb/>
Sec. Tarboro, N. C <lb/>
Owners mid <lb/>
STEAMER BETA. <lb/>
Semi-Weekly trips between Washington Tarboro and Way Landings.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017574_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
The election Is over. <lb/>
Good crowd in town Saturday. <lb/>
Street lamps lighted again. <lb/>
Big stock of Shoe just in at Brown <lb/>
Bros. ., <lb/>
Cotton reached cents in Greenville <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
Some of the towns ale not yet <lb/>
celebrating. <lb/>
Do-not forget the widow and <lb/>
to-morrow. <lb/>
The Hew Home Sewing Machine <lb/>
at Brown Bros. <lb/>
for <lb/>
Merchants get their holiday ad- <lb/>
ready. <lb/>
You may prepare to take the weather <lb/>
now just as you it. <lb/>
Merchants should not overlook the <lb/>
of advertising. <lb/>
Plantation. <lb/>
Apply to Mrs. V. Atkins m. <lb/>
Home Sewing Machines all <lb/>
machine parts at Brown Bros. f <lb/>
is Thanksgiving Day. We <lb/>
have much to be thankful for. <lb/>
First of the Chest- <lb/>
nuts at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The next date of general importance <lb/>
after Thanksgiving is Christmas. <lb/>
New Cream Cheese and M. Y. State <lb/>
Butter at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Water in the river has risen a little but <lb/>
not yet high for good boating. <lb/>
Want to eat something good Boss <lb/>
Biscuits at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
20.100 envelopes that will be sold very <lb/>
cheap by the box at Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
Cheapest Furniture, and <lb/>
Mattresses at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
lot of picture books for children <lb/>
and at Book Store. <lb/>
Cash given for Produce, Hides, Egg <lb/>
and Furs at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The young people of Farmville will <lb/>
have a Cleveland and Carr ball to-night. <lb/>
Hew while is high is a good time <lb/>
to subscribe to the or to re- <lb/>
new. <lb/>
First of the fancy buck- <lb/>
wheat and cherry jelly at the Old Brick<lb/>
h 10-year-old boy was killed in <lb/>
last week by taking hold of an <lb/>
wire. <lb/>
tons cotton seed for cash <lb/>
or exchange for meal at the Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Cotton is still whizzing upward. It is <lb/>
two cents higher than it was two months <lb/>
ago. <lb/>
Congressman-elect Woodard's <lb/>
over the second district <lb/>
Is 1900. <lb/>
Mr. Asa told us Satin day that <lb/>
one of his neighbors owns a calf with <lb/>
seven teats. <lb/>
Beautiful cream laid unruled note <lb/>
paper, only cents a quire at <lb/>
Book Store. <lb/>
Halifax gave Carr the largest majority <lb/>
of any county in the State and is entitled <lb/>
to the <lb/>
Our neighbor town Washington <lb/>
hi shape yesterday over the <lb/>
Democratic victory. <lb/>
cents now will get the Reflector <lb/>
nearly or through the next session <lb/>
of the Legislative. <lb/>
You will find the full official vote of <lb/>
Pitt county on first page of ibis Issue. <lb/>
The Reflector has been presented <lb/>
with one thousand eight hundred and <lb/>
ninety-three almanacs. <lb/>
There is hardly any doubt about Dem <lb/>
being in a frame of mind for <lb/>
to-morrow. <lb/>
Thanksgiving services will be held in <lb/>
the Methodist, Baptist and Episcopal <lb/>
churches to-morrow. <lb/>
Aspirants for office now arc as thick as <lb/>
hops. There are more than before the <lb/>
nominating conventions. <lb/>
When you get to talking about cotton <lb/>
markets you count on Greenville <lb/>
paying the very top notch. <lb/>
A colored woman named Rhoda Barn- <lb/>
hill is having a neat house built on Greene <lb/>
street, next to Moses King's. <lb/>
Everybody who can get a gnu will be <lb/>
in the to-morrow. It will not be <lb/>
a Thanksgiving day for the birds. <lb/>
The best way to show your own thank- <lb/>
is by giving something to the <lb/>
poor. Remember this to-morrow. <lb/>
The wife of Mr. A. R. of <lb/>
died Sunday night. His friends <lb/>
extend sympathy his bereavement. <lb/>
On Sunday night, at Mt. <lb/>
church Greene county, Mr. J. <lb/>
A. Jones was married to Miss Emma <lb/>
The farmers ail wish the election had <lb/>
come sooner, as such a rise in cotton has <lb/>
followed the Democratic Many <lb/>
had already sold their entire crop. <lb/>
Mr. J. W. Brown caught a peculiar <lb/>
looking owl a steel trap and was ex- <lb/>
it town Monday morning. No <lb/>
one could tell kind of owl it was. <lb/>
On the first Thursday in next month <lb/>
the field officers of the State Guard will <lb/>
be elected. The commissioned officers <lb/>
of the First Regiment will meet in <lb/>
Raleigh. <lb/>
indebted to me <lb/>
for Guano will find their notes and ac- <lb/>
counts in the hands of J. They <lb/>
will please call on him and settle the <lb/>
name. II. <lb/>
The Southerner says there are enough <lb/>
candidates for the in Tarboro <lb/>
to fill every Presidential office in the <lb/>
State. About the same thing can be said <lb/>
of Greenville. <lb/>
Some sections of the had con- <lb/>
of a storm last Friday morning. <lb/>
At Yellowley farm some <lb/>
houses were blown a mule was <lb/>
killed and two people hurt. <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Mr. J. T. of York, v <lb/>
here last week. <lb/>
L. of Wilson, has <lb/>
been in town this week. <lb/>
Miss Lena Fields, of Kinston, is visit- <lb/>
Mrs. B. W. King. <lb/>
Mrs. Towns, of Atlanta, Is visiting her <lb/>
sister, Mrs. W. L. Brown. <lb/>
Prof. Bro principal of Grifton <lb/>
Academy, spent Saturday in town. <lb/>
Maj. L. Latham returned home Sat- <lb/>
morning from Hyde county court. <lb/>
Miss Mattie Abrams, of Rocky Mount, <lb/>
h her sister, Mrs. S. M. Schultz. <lb/>
Prof. John Duckett and <lb/>
Sherrod, of Hamilton, made a short visit <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Buss, of <lb/>
are visiting the family of Williams, <lb/>
of Mrs. Russ. <lb/>
Rev. R. B. John, Presiding Elder, of <lb/>
this district, attended the Virginia Con- <lb/>
at Norfolk last week. <lb/>
Mr. S. Greer, of Baltimore, was <lb/>
here Saturday and Monday, making <lb/>
everybody glad with his jolly <lb/>
Rev. A. D. Hunter will preach at <lb/>
Falkland next Sunday Bight and Rev. R. <lb/>
W. will preach Sunday night in <lb/>
the Baptist church instead of in <lb/>
Ball at i P. M. <lb/>
Ex-Gov. T. J. Jan-Is will deliver a <lb/>
Thanksgiving address the Methodist <lb/>
at o'clock Thursday, 24th. <lb/>
and the public generally invited <lb/>
to attend. A collection will be taken for <lb/>
the Oxford Orphan Asylum. <lb/>
Sunday hours will be observed In the <lb/>
telegraph office, to-morrow, open a sheet <lb/>
while in the morning and a short while <lb/>
the evening. Persons having business <lb/>
with office may govern themselves ac- <lb/>
It is time sowing wheat and our <lb/>
farmers should put In plenty of it. Let <lb/>
the motto be raise everything possible at <lb/>
home and make the farm self sustaining. <lb/>
Then you will know what it is to have <lb/>
better times. <lb/>
The election is over, our count-. State <lb/>
and Nation are in good hands, now all <lb/>
do something that will help Greenville. <lb/>
Many improvements and enterprises that <lb/>
are needed can be secured with proper <lb/>
unity and energy among our people. <lb/>
Resolutions of Respect. <lb/>
Lodge A. F. A. M. <lb/>
Worshipful Master, Wardens and <lb/>
Brethren <lb/>
We, your committee appointed for the <lb/>
purpose of drafting resolutions of respect <lb/>
to our deceased brother, Fredrick Hard- <lb/>
lug, beg leave to submit the follow <lb/>
The All Wise Being has <lb/>
seen fit in His divine providence re- <lb/>
move from this world our highly es- <lb/>
teemed and much beloved brother, Fred- <lb/>
Harding, be it <lb/>
Resolved, That in the death of brother <lb/>
Harding Lodge has lost one <lb/>
of her brightest and purest members, <lb/>
that the community has lost one of its <lb/>
best and most useful <lb/>
That to the family of our deceased <lb/>
we extend our heartfelt <lb/>
and commend them to the care of <lb/>
that God in whom he trusted. <lb/>
That a copy of these resolutions be <lb/>
sent to the family of our deceased broth- <lb/>
one spread oil our minutes one <lb/>
sent to the Eastern Reflector for <lb/>
publication. <lb/>
F. Hi <lb/>
D. C. Smith, <lb/>
Committee. <lb/>
I. M. Phillips, Sec. <lb/>
King's Entertainment. <lb/>
The entertainment the Opera House <lb/>
Monday evening under the management <lb/>
of Mrs. J. B. Cherry for the benefit of <lb/>
the King's Daughters, gave our citizens <lb/>
a musical treat. The began <lb/>
at o'clock and was as follows <lb/>
to Mrs. <lb/>
Campbell, Miss Sheppard and Mrs. <lb/>
Cherry. <lb/>
Instrumental Fields, of <lb/>
Kinston. <lb/>
Solo Mrs. Campbell. <lb/>
the Heart is <lb/>
Mrs. Cherry. <lb/>
Two choruses and solo from the opera <lb/>
Maidens in a Doleful <lb/>
Magnet and <lb/>
Is a Plaintive The. par- <lb/>
these were Misses <lb/>
Cobb, <lb/>
Jarvis, Williams, Cherry, James, Greene, <lb/>
and Foley, Messrs. White, <lb/>
Whichard, Proctor and Foley. <lb/>
The solo by Miss Fields. <lb/>
and Mrs. <lb/>
Mrs. Campbell, Messrs. Burch <lb/>
and Whichard. <lb/>
Solo Heart Miss Fields. <lb/>
Mrs. Cherry, <lb/>
Miss Sheppard and Mrs. Campbell. <lb/>
Campbell and Mrs. Cherry. <lb/>
Comic <lb/>
COTTON MARKET. <lb/>
Reported by Cobb <lb/>
Norfolk. Va., Nov. lit, <lb/>
cotton market improved since our <lb/>
last report but the nervous character of <lb/>
the -ii nation Is reflected by the giving <lb/>
away of es under the bare mention <lb/>
of Senator having expressed <lb/>
the opinion the Anti-Option Bill <lb/>
would pass the Senate if there was no <lb/>
revolution of The future mar- <lb/>
declined nearly a half cent per <lb/>
only to be revived in the next forty-eight <lb/>
hours upon the report that the strike in <lb/>
Lancashire had been adjusted. <lb/>
Receipts at polls the past week were <lb/>
bales against total re- <lb/>
since Sept. 1st to Nov. 18th being <lb/>
bales against bales <lb/>
last year, while stocks at ports are <lb/>
bales against last year. <lb/>
The crop sight is 2.802,207 bales <lb/>
4.130,101 bales last year. <lb/>
The visible supply of the world is <lb/>
bales against lust year <lb/>
and in 1890. <lb/>
The Norfolk market is two cents per <lb/>
pound higher than on the 1st of <lb/>
is a gratifying feature to the <lb/>
producers. <lb/>
NORFOLK SPOT MARKET. <lb/>
As wired by Bros. <lb/>
NORFOLK, Va., Nov. 22nd. 1892 <lb/>
to <lb/>
13-10 <lb/>
Finn. <lb/>
Good Middling, <lb/>
Middling, <lb/>
Low Middling, <lb/>
Tone, <lb/>
I'M YOUR III. <lb/>
-I HAVE JUST BOUGHT THE- <lb/>
is admitted the finest stock of good in Eastern Carolina. <lb/>
tn order to make room for these I will begin at once running <lb/>
Stock Greenville at greatly reduced prices. If <lb/>
you <lb/>
want <lb/>
Some of the campaign <lb/>
subscribers are renewing. Burch. <lb/>
many of them will do so and that the The accompanists were Mrs, Cherry <lb/>
coming year will us with a large list Misses Sheppard and Forbes. <lb/>
of new readers. Speak to your neighbor j The will not undertake to <lb/>
about this and get him to subscribe. comment on each selection. Many of <lb/>
them were excellently rendered. The <lb/>
singing of Mesdames Cherry and <lb/>
bell and Misses Sheppard and Fields was <lb/>
enjoyed. Much credit is due <lb/>
are showing a for <lb/>
poultry conic light in after <lb/>
them. Mr. Henry Sheppard caught a <lb/>
big fat fellow In his hen house Saturday <lb/>
night. The will pay the penalty <lb/>
of chicken stealing by making a for <lb/>
dinner. <lb/>
tack Cherry us that <lb/>
in Washington City is Democratic now, <lb/>
and it's hard to get a man to own he is a <lb/>
Republican. also says lie is ready <lb/>
to take care of any of our people <lb/>
very best shape when they go on to <lb/>
Washington. <lb/>
Arthur L. butt will exhibit his <lb/>
religious the <lb/>
House Thursday, Friday and Saturday <lb/>
nights. cents admission will <lb/>
Mrs. Cherry for the success of the <lb/>
A supper followed the entertainment <lb/>
and in all something over was realized. <lb/>
be charged. Everybody should see th <lb/>
pictures hear the lectures upon them <lb/>
pulpit and press recommend them. <lb/>
Persons having cotton to ship would <lb/>
always do well to notice what <lb/>
Barnes, of say in their adv r- r <lb/>
in the The rapid <lb/>
advance price shows that they were <lb/>
correct in saying it was selling too low <lb/>
and would go higher. <lb/>
Almanacs. <lb/>
The Reflector is indebted to the <lb/>
publisher. James II. for a copy <lb/>
of Turner's almanac, and also to Rev. L. <lb/>
for a copy of Almanac <lb/>
both for The former is its <lb/>
year of publication, the latter in its <lb/>
year. Both arc very useful th the <lb/>
cents asked for them. <lb/>
All Will <lb/>
The Reflector did not go around <lb/>
this time to ask each of the merchants <lb/>
personally if his store will be closed to- <lb/>
morrow. Thanksgiving Day. The <lb/>
tom has now become general and we <lb/>
take it for granted that everyone will <lb/>
close without being solicited personally <lb/>
to do so. In view of this our readers <lb/>
may take notice that all business will be <lb/>
suspended to-morrow. <lb/>
Hamilton Institute. <lb/>
The pupils did not miss n <lb/>
word in written spelling in the primary <lb/>
department Hamilton Institute for a <lb/>
week in succession arc known as gold <lb/>
pupils and wear gold colored <lb/>
Floyd Hobbs, Robt. Baker, Mary Baker. <lb/>
Vic and Annie Hyman. Floyd <lb/>
Hobbs being the only one who wore the <lb/>
bow for a whole mouth without miss- <lb/>
a word or being absent from a <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
By virtue of power conferred upon <lb/>
me in certain executed by <lb/>
Mrs. S. Clara Brown ad II. W. Brown <lb/>
on the 1880, and <lb/>
duly in book ho, <lb/>
and in the of <lb/>
rift county, I ill <lb/>
sell for ea-h. to the highest <lb/>
bidder, at Court House in <lb/>
N. C. following proper- <lb/>
A certain or pared of <lb/>
laud iii township. <lb/>
of Tar river, a <lb/>
lands on lira north, and <lb/>
the lauds and Wilson Stencil <lb/>
the cast, lands of the <lb/>
J. U Smith and W. Brown, on the <lb/>
south by said B. W. Brown's land and <lb/>
the lands of John Brown on the west by <lb/>
the lands of S. II. Spain. Win. White- <lb/>
head. Joe Atkinson and others, the <lb/>
whole containing acres, more or <lb/>
less. For fuller descriptions refer to <lb/>
pages awl in It-g- <lb/>
Terms cash. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C , Nov. 12th, 1832. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The having duly <lb/>
before the Superior tout <lb/>
county Executor to the last will <lb/>
testament of <lb/>
not ire is given all persons In- <lb/>
lo the e <lb/>
lo the I. <lb/>
Slaving said <lb/>
must present the same for be- <lb/>
fore- the t of October. no. <lb/>
will be pi ad in of n <lb/>
This of 1602. <lb/>
EDWARDS, <lb/>
of Edney Galloway <lb/>
Greenville Institute. <lb/>
Roll of Honor for Quarter ending <lb/>
4th. <lb/>
G. F. Evans, S. W. Vernon <lb/>
Sarah Hooker, C- C. Joyner. <lb/>
Flossie Humber, X. F. Keel, Susie Keel, <lb/>
J. S. Mooring, Alice Moore, Maggie <lb/>
Nelson, Lonnie Patrick, <lb/>
Leslie Rawls, Berry Annie <lb/>
Thigpen, W. J. Thigpen, B. Tucker, <lb/>
II. W. Whichard, Guy Williamson, <lb/>
White, Ella Anderson, Allie Anderson, <lb/>
Georgie Anderson, Maud Anderson, <lb/>
Lizzie Fleming, Fred Forbes, David <lb/>
Harris, Katie Moore, Canonic <lb/>
Highest average made by II. W. Which- <lb/>
ard. <lb/>
Greenville Celebrates. <lb/>
Pitt county Democrats had a grand <lb/>
jollification last Tuesday night over the <lb/>
victory at the late The <lb/>
of the demonstration was very short but <lb/>
a la crowd was here and occasion <lb/>
was an enthusiastic one. A procession <lb/>
on the Court House and <lb/>
Opera ; moved charge Sheriff <lb/>
J. A. K. Tucker as chief marshal with a <lb/>
containing the Greenville hand <lb/>
the lead. The chief and assistant mar- <lb/>
were mounted, as were also several <lb/>
citizens. <lb/>
Several features of the parade were <lb/>
very interesting. Miss Julia Foley rep- <lb/>
tile Goddess of Liberty rode In <lb/>
a chariot driven by Mr. J. S. C. <lb/>
min. A beautifully decorated flotilla <lb/>
contained several young ladies represent- <lb/>
the Solid South with Mr. Alex <lb/>
representing Uncle Sam. The <lb/>
young ladies were Misses Annie Foley, <lb/>
Minnie Carraway, Lucy Cox. Belle <lb/>
Greene, Fannie Higgs, Estelle Williams, <lb/>
Carrie Cobb, Bessie Jarvis. Lillie Cherry <lb/>
and Jennie James. <lb/>
The phaeton of Mr. A. Forbes, gaily <lb/>
festooned with flags and a large picture <lb/>
of Cleveland on the front, was occupied <lb/>
by a party of young ladies and gentle- <lb/>
men. Mr. A. B. Ellington drove a <lb/>
wagon on which was a large <lb/>
in shape of a coffin with <lb/>
In large letters on the side. <lb/>
There were a number of amusing trans- <lb/>
that caused much laughter. All <lb/>
along the line of march the houses were <lb/>
brilliantly illuminated and made a beau- <lb/>
scene. At every street <lb/>
crowds gathered to cheer the procession <lb/>
as it passed. <lb/>
After parading nearly every street in <lb/>
town the vast crowd gathered in front of <lb/>
the Court where tar barrels were <lb/>
burning, and listened to tine speeches <lb/>
from T. J. <lb/>
F. G. James, G. B. King, Esq., and <lb/>
Chairman A. L. Blow, of the Democratic <lb/>
county executive committee. All made <lb/>
excellent speeches and congratulated <lb/>
the upon glorious victory they <lb/>
had won. At the close of the speeches <lb/>
the crowd dispersed and everybody went <lb/>
home happy. It was a memorable <lb/>
and even many colored people <lb/>
seemed to enjoy it. <lb/>
THE BARGAINS <lb/>
at my Greenville store <lb/>
Opposite Old Brick Store. <lb/>
C. T. M U N F O R D, <lb/>
S. C <lb/>
New <lb/>
Straight <lb/>
Clean <lb/>
Large <lb/>
We are still making a specialty of <lb/>
i, <lb/>
am mm. <lb/>
We have a first class assortment and sell close. <lb/>
get our <lb/>
Do not fail to <lb/>
Administrator's Notice <lb/>
Letters Of i-l ration having been <lb/>
lo the undersigned by the Clerk <lb/>
of the Superior of conn y. <lb/>
on h day of September, upon <lb/>
the estate Of V. A ceased, <lb/>
notice is given to of <lb/>
said estate to present their <lb/>
to the undersigned or <lb/>
before the day o September, <lb/>
or ibis notice will lie plead liar of <lb/>
recovery. Indebted to <lb/>
said estate are notified to make <lb/>
tea payment to undersigned. <lb/>
This the day Of September, <lb/>
I. II. SPIER, <lb/>
JOEL PATRICK. <lb/>
of C. M. V. Griffin, <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The undersigned having duly qualified <lb/>
before the Superior Court Clerk of <lb/>
county as Administrator of John Flem- <lb/>
deceased, notice is hereby given to <lb/>
all persons indebted to the estate to <lb/>
make immediate payment to the under- <lb/>
signed, and all persons having claims <lb/>
the estate are to present <lb/>
the same for payment to tie <lb/>
ed before the 7th day of November 1803, <lb/>
or this will be plead in bar of re- <lb/>
This 7th day November 1803, <lb/>
N AX DO WARD. <lb/>
of John Fleming. <lb/>
FARMS <lb/>
m S, M. <lb/>
Prices Low, at the <lb/>
Terms Easy, OLD STORE <lb/>
BROS. OFFER FOR SALE <lb/>
their interest to KM <lb/>
is complete <lb/>
all its branches <lb/>
PORK SIDES <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb/>
RICK, TEA, <lb/>
Lowest Market <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF ft CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
yon to buy at one profit. A com <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and sold at prices to <lb/>
the limes. goods are all bought sad <lb/>
sold CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb/>
sell at a close margin <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
1- L. home farm, <lb/>
Dam township, adjoining the lands <lb/>
of . T. Tyson and J. II. Cobb. A line <lb/>
farm of about acre, with good build- <lb/>
and adapted to corn, cotton and to- <lb/>
A tine marl bed. <lb/>
A farm near and <lb/>
mediately on the railroad, <lb/>
ed by Caleb II. Tripp, which <lb/>
a tout are cleared. Good neighbor- <lb/>
hood, churches and a school within <lb/>
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin- <lb/>
farms <lb/>
A farm of acres, three miles <lb/>
from Farmville and lira from <lb/>
with large, substantial dwelling <lb/>
and out houses, known as the I. <lb/>
home place, line cotton <lb/>
good clay to marl. <lb/>
A smaller farm adjoining the above <lb/>
known the Jones place, acres, <lb/>
Helling, barn and tenant, house, land <lb/>
good. <lb/>
A farm of acres in <lb/>
ship, about G miles from So <lb/>
acres part of the Singletary tract. <lb/>
C. of the Noah Joyner farm, <lb/>
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro, <lb/>
l in an section <lb/>
and cm be made a valuable farm. <lb/>
A small farm of acres, <lb/>
about. miles from Greenville, On In- <lb/>
Will Swamp, with house, etc., for- <lb/>
owned by ox. <lb/>
A tract of about acres near <lb/>
the station, with express timber well <lb/>
suited for railroad lies. <lb/>
A tract of about acres <lb/>
township, near the Washington tail- <lb/>
road, pine timber. <lb/>
A tract of acres near Johnson's <lb/>
Mills, pine and press limber. <lb/>
Apply to WM. II. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Is DOW customers the <lb/>
latest in----- <lb/>
Winter <lb/>
Mrs. has just, <lb/>
from Baltimore where she attend <lb/>
all the large openings, <lb/>
and made the very best selections fer <lb/>
the trade here. My stock <lb/>
everything pertaining to the millinery <lb/>
trade be sold at reasonable <lb/>
prices. Mis. M. D. HIGGS, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1888. <lb/>
-WHOLESALE AND <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
and parts for all kinds f machines are Bold by us <lb/>
BROWN BROS., <lb/>
Depositors for American Bible Society. <lb/>
Halt Rolls Barging. <lb/>
Bundles Arrow Ties. <lb/>
Sin ill Cheese. <lb/>
Tuba Choice Butter. <lb/>
Hill Tub Boston Lard. <lb/>
Boxes Tobacco, all grades. <lb/>
Boxes Cakes and Crackers. <lb/>
Stick Candy. <lb/>
New Corn Mullet. <lb/>
Barrels Gall <lb/>
Ml P. Snuff. <lb/>
; Barrels Mills Sou <lb/>
Barrels Three Thistle <lb/>
Car load Side Meat <lb/>
Car load Seed Oats. <lb/>
j Car load Flour, all <lb/>
Kegs Powder. <lb/>
; Tons Shot. <lb/>
old Virginia <lb/>
j line Case Goods, and <lb/>
kept in a grocery <lb/>
Car. <lb/>
General Merchant, <lb/>
, 1ST. O. <lb/>
of the----- <lb/>
COX <lb/>
ea <lb/>
HAT WE ARE STILL <lb/>
U OFF THE <lb/>
M. R. LANG STOCK <lb/>
Happy and content is a home with <lb/>
a lamp with the light of <lb/>
New Advertisements. <lb/>
Scotland Neck Steam Dye Works pays <lb/>
express on packages. <lb/>
A. L. Blow, commissioner, offers <lb/>
able real estate for sale. <lb/>
F. G. James, referee, publishes a no- <lb/>
to the creditors of L. P. Beardsley, <lb/>
deceased. <lb/>
Mrs. Jane M. Brown advertises a <lb/>
valuable farm for sale under foreclosure <lb/>
of mortgage. <lb/>
T. Crawford, Clerk Superior Court <lb/>
of county, gives notice of land <lb/>
sale in the case of Everett against Everett. <lb/>
B. W. administers on the <lb/>
estate of T. J. and gives notice <lb/>
to creditors. He also advertises a sale of <lb/>
personal property. <lb/>
The Best in the World for Rheumatism. <lb/>
N. C, Dec. 1884.-I <lb/>
have used Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy, <lb/>
and It is the finest medicine I ever used <lb/>
for Rheumatism. For more than <lb/>
years I have been with Muscular <lb/>
Rheumatism, and had tried every known <lb/>
remedy, but without avail. I was often <lb/>
so bad off and suffered so much that I <lb/>
could not lie down, but had to he propped <lb/>
up in bed. I had been subject to these <lb/>
severe attacks for years. I tried Mrs. <lb/>
Person's last spring, and am <lb/>
perfectly cured. It is the best medicine <lb/>
in the world. I think. No words of mine <lb/>
can express the benefit I have derived <lb/>
from its use. I suffered from palpitation <lb/>
of the heart the least exertion. Of <lb/>
that I am perfectly relieved. My health <lb/>
is now perfect, it is all owing to Mrs. <lb/>
Joe Person's Remedy. am strong and <lb/>
well, and take extended exercise <lb/>
without fatigue. I advise all who need <lb/>
a tonic, or are suffering with Rheumatism <lb/>
or Eczema, to take it- I was Induced to <lb/>
try It by having cured my little grand- <lb/>
son of Eczema. <lb/>
Mas. S. M. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
Having on the 10th day of November. <lb/>
1802. before E. A. Clerk of Super- <lb/>
Court of Put county, qualified as ad- <lb/>
of the estate of the late T. J. <lb/>
deceased, notice is hereby given <lb/>
to all parties having claims said <lb/>
estate to present them for tin <lb/>
or before the 22nd day or November, <lb/>
this notice will be in bar <lb/>
of their recovery- one Indebted to <lb/>
said estate will come forward and settle <lb/>
at once. R. W. STANCILL, <lb/>
Administrator. <lb/>
This November <lb/>
Sale of Personal <lb/>
Property. <lb/>
On Wednesday. h, 1802, <lb/>
at my farm, kn as the T. J. <lb/>
township, Pitt county, N. <lb/>
C. I will sell for rash, to the highest <lb/>
bidder. following personal property, <lb/>
One Wagon, Two <lb/>
Dumping all good as new. One <lb/>
Horse Top Buggy and Harness, Two <lb/>
Setts Tobacco Hues new, One Cooking <lb/>
Stove and Fixtures, and other Farming <lb/>
Implements, Plows, I will <lb/>
also sell my entire crop, consisting of <lb/>
Corn, cotton, seed, rice, peanuts, <lb/>
fodder, hay. Held peas, sweet potatoes, <lb/>
Irish potatoes, an I seventy-five gallons <lb/>
sorghum. I will at same time rent <lb/>
for cash to the highest bidder a four- <lb/>
horse crop of core, cotton, peanut, <lb/>
and lice barns in <lb/>
good All crops whatsoever made <lb/>
on said lands to be held for <lb/>
rent of same, rent to he paid from first <lb/>
sales of crop. will commence at <lb/>
o'clock A. M. W. STANCILL, <lb/>
And want yon to et some of tile bargains while they <lb/>
Do not delay longer to get your <lb/>
WINTER OUTFIT. <lb/>
We have just the article needed by every man, woman and child. <lb/>
ON <lb/>
PLANTER <lb/>
and dealer in Turned or <lb/>
Scrolled Work, Pews and nil Building Supplies. <lb/>
My Tobacco in all for sale at S. M. <lb/>
Greenville, and at my mill. <lb/>
Will make satisfactory arrangements with to <lb/>
furnish I heir customers. <lb/>
J. Pitt Co., N. c. <lb/>
C. C. COBB. Co., N. <lb/>
We can suit you in CLOTHING. <lb/>
We can suit you in HATS. <lb/>
We can suit you in <lb/>
We can suit you in DRESS GOODS. <lb/>
We can suit you in <lb/>
We can suit you in EVERYTHING <lb/>
in general Dry Goods line, in Carpets, in Trunks, in Notions, etc <lb/>
Your chance is now. Strike while the Iron is hot. <lb/>
BROWN HOOKER, <lb/>
AT LANG'S OLD STAND, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, Ma C. <lb/>
VAUGHAN BARNES, <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANTS<lb/>
COBB BROS., <lb/>
tn lo Cobb Bros. <lb/>
Cotton Factors <lb/>
Commission Merchants, <lb/>
STREET, NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb/>
FORBES <lb/>
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
lo buyers of Pitt surrounding counties, a line of following <lb/>
not to be excelled in ibis market. lobe <lb/>
pure straight good. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTION'S. CLOTHING, GEN <lb/>
GOODS. HATS and CAPS. HOOTS and SHOES, <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, and F <lb/>
HOODS. WINDOWS. SASH and BLINDS, and QUEEN <lb/>
WARE. HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb/>
Gin and Mill Rock Paris, and <lb/>
and ADDLES <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Clark's O. N. T. Spool which I oiler to the trade ac Wholesale <lb/>
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, ii per cent for Bread Prep <lb/>
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices. White Lead and pure Lin- <lb/>
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pomps, Salt and Wood <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a n and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
SCOTLAND NECK DYE WORKS, <lb/>
Scotland Neck. N. C. <lb/>
Express Paid on Packages. Send for <lb/>
Address, <lb/>
Steam <lb/>
Scotland Neck, N. C <lb/>
Sale of Valuable Real <lb/>
Estate. <lb/>
of a of the Superior <lb/>
Court of county, September <lb/>
term. in a certain therein <lb/>
pending entitled Louis v. J. II. <lb/>
Yellowley. executor of U. A. Yellowley <lb/>
et as, will on 10th. <lb/>
1803, in front cf the Court House door. <lb/>
In the town of Greenville, sell at public <lb/>
Sale, to the bidder, a certain <lb/>
tract or parcel of land adjacent to the <lb/>
town of Greenville and adjoining the <lb/>
of Martha Wilson, Susan J. <lb/>
son others and the <lb/>
of the late Col. E. C. Yellowley. <lb/>
containing one hundred eighty <lb/>
acres, more or it being same <lb/>
land conveyed to A. Yellowley <lb/>
by U. Yellowley, <lb/>
of decree g date <lb/>
October 25th. 1887. and recorded In the <lb/>
office of tire Register of Deeds of <lb/>
county In book pages and Terms <lb/>
of sale cash. A. L. BLOW, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C, Not. mi. <lb/>
The of the cotton crop thus far this season <lb/>
indicate was some foundation for the bad crop accounts <lb/>
daily reaching us all parts of the cotton territory, if J so the <lb/>
staple Is Belling too cheap and parties wishing to hold Tor higher <lb/>
prices can do so by shipping it lo us and drawing for per <lb/>
bale on same and having it held ft six months is so desired. <lb/>
Faithfully yours, <lb/>
VAUGHAN BARNES. <lb/>
G. B. <lb/>
is Believing. <lb/>
And a good lamp <lb/>
most be simple; it is net simple it is I <lb/>
I not good. <lb/>
mean much, but to tee <lb/>
impress the truth forcibly. All metal, <lb/>
tough and seamless, and made in three pieces only, <lb/>
it is absolutely unbreakable. Like <lb/>
of old, it is indeed a for its mar- <lb/>
light is purer and brighter gas light, <lb/>
softer than electric light more cheerful than either. <lb/>
Loot TUB If arena I no <lb/>
Rochester, and the you mat. send to us fer oar <lb/>
we will Bend you a safely b choice over <lb/>
I varieties from the largest Lam Stare in the <lb/>
LAMP CO., Park Place, New forte<lb/>
-DEALER IN <lb/>
inn in <lb/>
J, L. SUGG. <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD ST <lb/>
All kinds Risks plated in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rater. <lb/>
AM AGENT FOB A FIRST-CLASS PROOF<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017574_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
-0-------r- <lb/>
FOR HANDLING THE <lb/>
OF THE <lb/>
r- <lb/>
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
M. II. II. of Wilson, aid <lb/>
J. of Oxford, ware on the <lb/>
Cooler's Warehouse, Henderson, Is <lb/>
ready for new chop tobacco. lie <lb/>
highest prices. <lb/>
The weal her last was good for <lb/>
handling tobacco and, both warehouses <lb/>
Urge breaks every day. <lb/>
Messrs. J. Willis <lb/>
returned In Greenville and are now <lb/>
operating this market. <lb/>
The old reliable is Cooper's Ware- <lb/>
house, Henderson. Send your tobacco <lb/>
there. Cooper Is the farmer's friend. <lb/>
Has a big success and shows how well prepared we are to handle your tobacco. <lb/>
It is considered by all that we have the best lighted Warehouse in the State. <lb/>
Every Farmer Selling on our Floor will be guaranteed <lb/>
very highest prices for their Tobacco <lb/>
Assistants. <lb/>
Satisfaction to <lb/>
Some Sales recently made at the Greenville Warehouse. Compare them with other houses. <lb/>
-r,, SO, SMITH IS, <lb/>
18.28, 12.76,8. <lb/>
X. W. IN 17.60, 15.73, 7.60, <lb/>
II. 15.25, 18.60 W. 18.75. 17.75. <lb/>
12.25. G. <lb/>
18.76, 12.75. 8.76, 88.80, <lb/>
I. II. 18.75,1 11.73. <lb/>
8.35. BRYANT 13.75. <lb/>
A. r. 15,18.75. 15.75. 8.25. <lb/>
7-25. BILL 18.80, 18.25, <lb/>
12.50, 5.00. <lb/>
II. 13.25, 10.75, BILL 13.50, <lb/>
7.75. I <lb/>
M. E. 39.50, J. 8.50. <lb/>
A 14.25, <lb/>
10.50, 8.25. <lb/>
18.5. 12.75. 10.25. E. S. 10.75, <lb/>
M. It. 10.75,1 <lb/>
10.75. 12.75, 12.75, ERNEST 25.50,25, 23.50, <lb/>
M. R. TURN 13.75, 20.50.1 10.25,5.20. <lb/>
17.75. 12.75, 7.75. <lb/>
MISS BURNETT pounds at 13.50, 10.25. <lb/>
Storage and Insurance Free <lb/>
G. F. EVANS, Proprietor. <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb/>
R- W- Roster <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
ow only. <lb/>
and type sample furnished on application. <lb/>
R. CO., <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb/>
BUYERS AND HANDLERS OF ALL KINDS OF <lb/>
Leaf and Scraps, <lb/>
Refers to any member of Tobacco Trade of Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
I Correspondence Solicited. <lb/>
Air. George i of <lb/>
m d- <lb/>
la I run I the hi <lb/>
With Prof. W. K <lb/>
Remember if yon send your tobacco to <lb/>
Cooper's Warehouse, Henderson, you <lb/>
will obtain high prices and be happy. <lb/>
Try it. <lb/>
Mr. B. N. Duke, of Durham, ought to <lb/>
squirt tobacco juice on the Tobacco <lb/>
for printing dial, horrid picture of <lb/>
him in la.-l issue. <lb/>
Ship your tobacco to Cooper's Ware- <lb/>
house, Henderson, and he will work <lb/>
and faithfully for your best <lb/>
Interest. <lb/>
The Eastern had a solid car load from <lb/>
on the 15th. Among the . <lb/>
pleased patrons from on that day <lb/>
were Messrs. Tucker, Jackson. Ferry <lb/>
and Tally. <lb/>
On Aug, 11th, Cooper's Warehouse, <lb/>
Henderson, sold new primings for R. <lb/>
It. Carr at 15.50, and <lb/>
and for F. T. Can- at 4.50 10.50 <lb/>
ill, 15.75 and Cooper can make just <lb/>
as good sales for yon. <lb/>
Danville, manufacturers <lb/>
hipped pounds of plug tobacco <lb/>
during October, making the total for the <lb/>
year to November aggregate <lb/>
pounds. <lb/>
Two Indiana youths are reported lo <lb/>
have quarreled recently about I chew of <lb/>
one killing the other in <lb/>
Of course the <lb/>
will another death from tobacco. <lb/>
Mr. J. Burgess, of Mason County, <lb/>
Ky., his 1892 crop to Mr. John Os- <lb/>
last w at per hundred <lb/>
through. The crop is said to lie some- <lb/>
Ike average in quality and <lb/>
is one of lies crop sales of new made <lb/>
Tobacco Journal. <lb/>
The Florence Times says <lb/>
that There been a marked <lb/>
improvement in the grade of <lb/>
offered here lately, prices have been <lb/>
correspondingly good. There nine <lb/>
buyers actively employed here, all <lb/>
large orders to till, and competition <lb/>
in is always lively. <lb/>
That the National Cigarette company, <lb/>
of New York, is preparing for active <lb/>
work is from the following in <lb/>
the Tobacco <lb/>
now begins lo look as if the National <lb/>
Cigarette and Tobacco company, of New <lb/>
York, meant business. They purchased <lb/>
this week on the Danville market a large <lb/>
mini her of packages of old cutters, which <lb/>
indicate an early commencement of the <lb/>
manufacture of cigarettes. If this com- <lb/>
is successful as the American <lb/>
Tobacco company in educating the for- <lb/>
trade for our bright goods, in the <lb/>
shape of cigarettes, it will prove a val- <lb/>
customer, to say nothing of the <lb/>
competition, in buying which will <lb/>
tend to strengthen the already <lb/>
good prices on this market for this class <lb/>
Of <lb/>
season would cause heavy breaks. <lb/>
Prices are stiff, thus a marked Improve- <lb/>
In the quality of offerings. <lb/>
I. II. En, , has heated here <lb/>
mid ii leaf. <lb/>
Ales. Reporter. <lb/>
i his w i he the <lb/>
were inure Hun <lb/>
hist week, with only a sprinkling of good <lb/>
lo line leaf, for the lies which <lb/>
was obtained <lb/>
ts lo dale last <lb/>
of 1801 sold <lb/>
lo 1890 crop sold ill <lb/>
crop mid in 1890, <lb/>
.-lies fur woo, n I year, with <lb/>
I sol 1888 <lb/>
We. k <lb/>
Month <lb/>
Year <lb/>
quot <lb/>
1890 <lb/>
Ira to 2.10 to <lb/>
to 4.50 2.75 to <lb/>
Medium 4.50 to Nominal <lb/>
in o <lb/>
Con. to 0.50 <lb/>
Medium to 7.50<lb/>
In condition. <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb/>
-FOR THE- <lb/>
SALE OF LEAF TOBACCO. <lb/>
We are having daily breaks at our New Warehouse and are using our very best efforts to <lb/>
get as high prices for your tobacco as can be had anywhere. <lb/>
Th Greenville market will be on an equal with <lb/>
very market in the State. The Eastern Ware- <lb/>
house has every convenience for your to- <lb/>
and we will see that every pound brings full <lb/>
value. <lb/>
For week ending Sat Nov. <lb/>
by <lb/>
to<lb/>
lo <lb/>
to <lb/>
to to <lb/>
Cut ten, lair, to to Hi to 2-5 <lb/>
to <lb/>
MARKS. <lb/>
Reported by Owen Davis, Manager Davis <lb/>
Warehouse. <lb/>
Owing lo the election our receipts have <lb/>
been moderate. have advanced <lb/>
and now with weather we ex- <lb/>
heavy receipts in few days. <lb/>
MARKET QUOTATIONS. <lb/>
Lugs or <lb/>
Common to medium, to <lb/>
Medium to good, to <lb/>
Good to fine, to <lb/>
Fillers or Tips <lb/>
Common to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to good, <lb/>
Good to <lb/>
Cutters or Best <lb/>
Common to Medium, to <lb/>
Medium to good, to <lb/>
Good to line, to <lb/>
Wrappers or Best <lb/>
Common to medium, <lb/>
Medium to <lb/>
Good to line. <lb/>
Fine to fancy, <lb/>
to medium, <lb/>
Medium to good. <lb/>
Sew <lb/>
Fine to<lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
Some Step. <lb/>
Coming down the main walks <lb/>
from tho Capitol to Pennsylvania <lb/>
there groups of three or <lb/>
four steps that are very confusing to <lb/>
tho average pedestrian, and there <lb/>
a queer incident connected with <lb/>
their construction. For years there <lb/>
a man about tho Capitol who <lb/>
made the study of steps and persons <lb/>
going up and clown stairs a fad <lb/>
and a science. A certain <lb/>
of persons always seem to <lb/>
their balance going down a long <lb/>
flight of light colored steps, and this <lb/>
savant on steps invented a flight of <lb/>
tho treads of which alter- <lb/>
white and black. In watch- <lb/>
crowds walking down tho long <lb/>
approaches to tho Capitol ho dis- <lb/>
covered that by far a greater <lb/>
of stumbled on those <lb/>
groups of steps than the record ought <lb/>
to show. The attention of the pres- <lb/>
Capitol architect was called to <lb/>
tho matter, but ho was incredulous <lb/>
at the idea. said he, <lb/>
the architect, took <lb/>
especial pains with groups of <lb/>
steps, I <lb/>
himself came here later. <lb/>
The subject was brought to his at- <lb/>
and ho went down to watch <lb/>
tho steps himself. He was simply <lb/>
amazed at the way the De- <lb/>
veil when they reached steps. <lb/>
He can't account for it. I <lb/>
spent weeks arranging the <lb/>
of to tread for them. <lb/>
Wooden models of them were put <lb/>
down for use at my own place, and I <lb/>
walked over them day after day till <lb/>
I felt sure they were <lb/>
isn't of your legs a <lb/>
trifle shorter than tho the <lb/>
step savant inquired. <lb/>
was when <lb/>
it flashed on him that owing to tho <lb/>
inequality in tho length of his legs <lb/>
ho had steps to tho Capitol <lb/>
that were suited only for people <lb/>
Post. <lb/>
It the Iterator Boy Tired. <lb/>
are lots of tips and downs <lb/>
In your life, ain't remarked a <lb/>
fat and florid gentleman to the <lb/>
boy in a big down town build- <lb/>
Tho made no response, but the <lb/>
fat and florid man was chuckling so <lb/>
hard at his own joke that he did not <lb/>
notice that i was not appreciated by <lb/>
the object of it. <lb/>
When he got off the car the <lb/>
said this to some of tho <lb/>
other <lb/>
Joke always gives me a <lb/>
tired feeling. I have to listen to it <lb/>
about fifty limes a day. and on some <lb/>
busy days it has been chucked at mo <lb/>
a many as a hundred times. The <lb/>
man that it always laugh at <lb/>
it as though it was that <lb/>
no man ever thought out before. <lb/>
couldn't laugh at it if I get a dollar <lb/>
every time I heard it. I don't think <lb/>
it a joke anyhow. <lb/>
But perhaps I've got a prejudice <lb/>
against it. Soon after I got this job <lb/>
I struck what I thought was a great <lb/>
scheme to pat a atop to that joke <lb/>
and show that I could be a little fun- <lb/>
myself. I wrote out a sign and <lb/>
stuck it up in ray car. This is what <lb/>
the elevator boy that <lb/>
there are lots of ups and downs in <lb/>
his life. He has been told it a thou- <lb/>
sand times already and it will make <lb/>
him very tired to hear it <lb/>
felt quite proud of that and <lb/>
thought that tho boss might take a <lb/>
fancy to and give mo a job in the <lb/>
office on tho strength of it. But he <lb/>
didn't. When ho saw it ho just <lb/>
yanked it down and said that I was <lb/>
getting tH fresh. And ever since <lb/>
then when anybody flings that joke <lb/>
at me I've just had to grin and bear <lb/>
it. But it's rough, all <lb/>
New York Herald. <lb/>
Ample Accommodation for the Planter, <lb/>
STABLES. FREE INSURANCE. FREE STORAGE. <lb/>
as a trial and we will please you. Your friends, <lb/>
ft J <lb/>
QUOTATIONS. <lb/>
Primings common to <lb/>
to <lb/>
line to <lb/>
Fillers common to <lb/>
good to fine to <lb/>
u tine to <lb/>
Smokers common to <lb/>
good to <lb/>
Cutters common to <lb/>
fine to <lb/>
Wrappers normal. <lb/>
HA BEET. <lb/>
By J. S. Meadows, Reporter. <lb/>
Smokers common, to <lb/>
good, to <lb/>
Cutters common, to <lb/>
good. to <lb/>
fine, to <lb/>
fancy, to <lb/>
Fillers common. to <lb/>
good, to <lb/>
Wrappers common, to <lb/>
good, to <lb/>
line, to <lb/>
fancy, to <lb/>
Sales continue full and well up <lb/>
on all grades, fine white cutters and <lb/>
bring fancy prices. think <lb/>
the will be sold early as farmers a-c <lb/>
satisfied with prices and but few of them <lb/>
are In a condition to bold <lb/>
WILSON BASEST. <lb/>
By E. M. Pace. Reporter. <lb/>
We having a cold rain, and while <lb/>
it has failed to bring a tobacco season <lb/>
the cheering news of Democratic <lb/>
make up for that loss. <lb/>
Receipt bare been light. A good <lb/>
demanded tho city <lb/>
marshal of O. T., burst- <lb/>
into a room where several prom- <lb/>
citizens were congregated, <lb/>
tho cause of this rumpus <lb/>
Whatever are you with that <lb/>
Tho tourist in question <lb/>
was stretched on his face on tho <lb/>
floor, with four prominent citizens <lb/>
holding him down, one seated on <lb/>
each corner. him useful <lb/>
as well as was <lb/>
the in checkers on his <lb/>
pants. It's your move, Hammer- <lb/>
Tribune. <lb/>
Stump Not lo lit ticked. <lb/>
There was a time when paper <lb/>
and was used and when the <lb/>
printing was an improvement upon <lb/>
tho present stamps, but we <lb/>
have learned that a damp sponge is <lb/>
fully as good as the In <lb/>
paring tho stamps for adhesion the <lb/>
quality of tho materials used be- <lb/>
comes of leas <lb/>
A Household Remedy <lb/>
FOR ALL <lb/>
BLOOD and SKIN J <lb/>
DISEASES <lb/>
BUM CO., atlas. . i <lb/>
an c-------. <lb/>
In a ear, H . <lb/>
REE . <lb/>
COMFORT <lb/>
AND . <lb/>
CASH <lb/>
You can save Cash and <lb/>
increase your Comfort <lb/>
at the same time. <lb/>
HOW <lb/>
Why, buy FIVE OLD <lb/>
VIRGINIA CHEROOTS <lb/>
for TEN CENTS, in- <lb/>
stead of a TEN CENT <lb/>
CIGAR. e <lb/>
EU, O- <lb/>
Bullock Mitchell, <lb/>
Owners and Proprietors. <lb/>
for Prices Averages <lb/>
e are still doing at the same when are bettor prepared than <lb/>
ever wore to handle to advantage Wight Tobacco from the <lb/>
Licit. o a very large corps of buyers who re for New <lb/>
and are willing to pay good prices for it. stands well on our <lb/>
market l eagerly sought alter both by our order men and speculators. are <lb/>
very glad that we can say to the of and counties <lb/>
Wat tobacco better this than we have known it in <lb/>
during the season. can <lb/>
had OP OH E by those planters shipping to us, by applying to s. M. <lb/>
a Co. Greenville. N. C. or to Amos Cox. X. C. <lb/>
that we bid lively on every pile put upon our and buy largely of all grades <lb/>
that sell, and will sen to it that yon shall have highest market price for <lb/>
sold with that it cost yon nothing to as they <lb/>
are payable In New York Exchange without to holder. forget to us <lb/>
with a good shipment and we will convince you that we from way. <lb/>
back and we every time on big you know they talk, <lb/>
will have your tobacco graded for you in our house by skilled hands at per <lb/>
Thanking our Mends for the very liberal patronage b stowed upon us in tho past <lb/>
and pledging them very to th in in the we arc with <lb/>
be.-t Very truly your friends, <lb/>
BULLOCK MITCHELL, <lb/>
Oxford, N. <lb/>
of <lb/>
CASTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory Is well equipped with the best put up nothing <lb/>
t WORK. We keep up with the time- and the styles <lb/>
st material used in all work. All styles of Springs are you can select from <lb/>
Storm, Ram Horn, King <lb/>
We also keep on hand a full line of Harness Whips which we <lb/>
ell Die lowest rates, Special attention given to repairing. <lb/>
Greenville, C. <lb/>
New Barber Shop. <lb/>
take opportunity to return <lb/>
to my many customers who have <lb/>
given their liberal support in the past <lb/>
have opened a new shop in the old <lb/>
House and would respectfully solicit a <lb/>
of my former patronage. <lb/>
I will assure all that they shall receive <lb/>
every attention besides getting the best <lb/>
shave and hair cut ill town. All I ask Is <lb/>
trial. Satisfaction guaranteed. All <lb/>
of the latest Improvements In the <lb/>
rial art will be in use in ray shop. <lb/>
N to Creditors. <lb/>
The undersigned qualified <lb/>
before e Conn Clerk of I'm <lb/>
county Executor to the last will an <lb/>
testament of Frederick ed <lb/>
notice is hereby to persons in <lb/>
to the estate to make Immediate <lb/>
payment to the undersigned, and all <lb/>
persons having claims against said es- <lb/>
must present Die same for payment <lb/>
before the 20th of October. 1898, or this <lb/>
will plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
This day of 1802. <lb/>
Executor Of Frederick White, <lb/>
the <lb/>
Something for Every Member. <lb/>
Th forth of <lb/>
I he world. Morie over <lb/>
oM, <lb/>
on Tho <lb/>
Moral Now <lb/>
Valuable <lb/>
IA In for S <lb/>
Over and M <lb/>
PUBLISHING <lb/>
Having completed my store <lb/>
X. I am opening <lb/>
a of <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE, <lb/>
and cordially invite public to call <lb/>
and examine <lb/>
GOODS, SHOES, <lb/>
Ac. Ac. <lb/>
motto is Standard Goods at Rea <lb/>
Prices for Cash. <lb/>
Examine my stock before buying <lb/>
elsewhere. It the goods prices do <lb/>
not suit we charge nothing them. <lb/>
Country produce taken In exchange <lb/>
goods. W. ft. <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
obtained, and all business in S. <lb/>
office or in Courts attended to <lb/>
TA W <lb/>
Ml n l U L I opposite the IT. s. Patent Of. <lb/>
I lice engaged In Patents Exclusively, and <lb/>
.-----If you want lo save----- <lb/>
lift Italian <lb/>
then of a PIANO and from <lb/>
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb/>
in the purchase of an Organ address <lb/>
ADOLPH COHN, <lb/>
NEW X. C. <lb/>
General Agent for North Carolina, <lb/>
who Is now handling goods direct from <lb/>
Die manufacturers, as HIGH <lb/>
PIANOS, <lb/>
for tone, workmanship and <lb/>
and endorsed by nearly nil the <lb/>
musical journal In <lb/>
Made Paul G. who Is this <lb/>
time one of the best and In- <lb/>
of the day. Thirteen new <lb/>
ran obtain patents in less time than <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
the model or drawing Is sent we <lb/>
advise as to free of charge, <lb/>
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb/>
Patents. <lb/>
refer, here, to the Post Master, <lb/>
of the Money Order Did., and to <lb/>
the Patent <lb/>
advise term and to <lb/>
actual clients in your own State, or conn. <lb/>
address, C. A. Snow A Co., <lb/>
Washington, D. C. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
Martin Die Superior Court. <lb/>
Francis Purvis <lb/>
vs Summons for Relief <lb/>
Purvis. I <lb/>
THE STATE CAROLINA <lb/>
To t he Sheriff of M art in <lb/>
are to <lb/>
summon PURVIS, the de. <lb/>
above named, if he be found <lb/>
him for the past .- -------i <lb/>
of this State up to this time has on the 1st Monday of <lb/>
given entire The I and answer the complaint which will be <lb/>
Piano lust mentioned will be sold at from deposited in the of the Clerk of the <lb/>
Rosewood, Oak, Superior Court of said county, within <lb/>
the first three day of said term, and let <lb/>
said defendant take notice that said <lb/>
action is for divorce from th mat- <lb/>
and if befall to answer the said <lb/>
within the required b <lb/>
handle i law the to the Court lot <lb/>
Walnut or Mahogany cases. <lb/>
Also the PARLOR ORGAN <lb/>
from to in or Oak <lb/>
Ten years experience In <lb/>
business enabled him to <lb/>
nothing but goods and be doc <lb/>
not to say that he can sell an <lb/>
musical Instrument about per cent <lb/>
cheaper than other agents are now offer <lb/>
to all banks Eastern Carolina, j <lb/>
in the complaint, <lb/>
of this summons <lb/>
relief <lb/>
Hereof fail not and <lb/>
make due return. <lb/>
Given under my band this day of <lb/>
August. W. T. <lb/>
C. S. C. Martin County, <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>