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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 8 February 1893</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18930208</dc:date>
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                <p>
If you want to <lb />
well posted and <lb />
get the news <lb />
take the <lb />
This for Job Printing. <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA. <lb />
Things Mentioned in our State Ex. <lb />
changes that are of General Interest <lb />
The Cream of the News. <lb />
South port is to Lave a <lb />
harbor and coal company. <lb />
During 1892 North Carolina <lb />
erected mills with <lb />
spindles and looms. <lb />
Record A meeting <lb />
will soon be held to organize a <lb />
company to establish a cotton <lb />
cry. <lb />
Col. k Cameron Las <lb />
been appointed Adjutant General <lb />
of the State Guard in the place of <lb />
Gen. Glenn resigned. <lb />
Southport Au <lb />
tor measuring nine feet in length <lb />
was killed in Dutchman's creek <lb />
last week by G. F. and D. L. <lb />
Swain. <lb />
Washington Gazette Mr. L. <lb />
K. Mayo, of Aurora, killed one <lb />
hundred and seventy live ducks in <lb />
one day freeze- It was <lb />
fine for ducts. <lb />
News reached Raleigh of the <lb />
destruction by fin of an entire <lb />
family in Johnson county, its <lb />
Being Wiley Peacock, wife, <lb />
infant, a little brother and cousin. <lb />
Scotland Neck Democrat Mr. <lb />
William Baker had the misfortune <lb />
to loose two fine mules <lb />
day near X A <lb />
live fell on then while lie was <lb />
hauling in the woods. <lb />
A young white woman named <lb />
Scarlett and her infant <lb />
child died in a cellar at Durham. <lb />
The woman was from Orange <lb />
county, and before her death made <lb />
on oath before a magistrate <lb />
grave charges against a <lb />
of the <lb />
Dispatch. <lb />
Free Press Mr. W. S. <lb />
Edmond tells that while going <lb />
down river Saturday in a <lb />
canoe he saw a moccasin on a <lb />
bu-h sunning himself. At the <lb />
time ice was floating down <lb />
the river. This is remarkable, as <lb />
it is very unusual for makes to <lb />
come out in the <lb />
Burlington On last <lb />
Thursday night Margaret Craw- <lb />
ford, who was Barring out a <lb />
sentence for keeping a <lb />
disorderly house, burned her way <lb />
through tho floor of the jail at <lb />
Graham and escaped the base <lb />
door, and with her a <lb />
Pugh. who was also serving <lb />
out a sentence. <lb />
Thomas L. Ward, says the Le- <lb />
topic, reports the following <lb />
from seres of <lb />
bushels of gallons of <lb />
heads of cabbage, <lb />
bushels beans, bushels tomatoes, <lb />
bushels cucumbers, bushels <lb />
beets and parsnips. 2.000 pump <lb />
kins and enough broom corn to <lb />
sweep every house in the <lb />
Oxford Mr. J. J. <lb />
Davis, of Stovall. certainly is a <lb />
winner on killing deer. A few <lb />
days ago he killed three bucks at <lb />
i shots. He spied them not <lb />
from his home n Mr. Ike Davis <lb />
drove them by where his brother <lb />
had taken his stand. The first <lb />
shot killed two and the second shot <lb />
killed the third one. <lb />
Louisburg A friend <lb />
furnished us one day this week <lb />
with weights of a of hogs <lb />
recently killed by Fuller, of <lb />
Hayesville township. He killed <lb />
one weighing pounds, and <lb />
eight others, months old. the <lb />
aggregate weight of which was <lb />
1.985 pounds. This looks like <lb />
at home. <lb />
North In <lb />
the House there are quite a <lb />
of very youthful members; <lb />
five less than years old W. <lb />
H. Grimes, of Wake, and S, Erwin, <lb />
of Cleveland, ; F. L Merritt, of <lb />
Wake, W. E. Eure. of Gates, <lb />
and F. L. Fuller, of Durham, <lb />
nearly the Senate R. B. <lb />
of Iredell, aged is <lb />
the youngest man. <lb />
Raleigh Chronicle t Governor <lb />
yesterday offered a reward of <lb />
for the capture of Addison <lb />
a young white man who <lb />
murdered Frank Howard in <lb />
son county on December last. <lb />
Addison is about years old, with <lb />
found ever, auburn hair, in- <lb />
to curl, weighs pounds <lb />
and is five feet eight inches in <lb />
hight, <lb />
Durham Sun; Mr. Ben Ellis, of <lb />
the Flat section, came in <lb />
yesterday stopped at the Ban- <lb />
warehouse. A little, <lb />
cant looking black mule is also <lb />
there. morning that mule <lb />
let his hind leg fly at Mr. Ellis and <lb />
the result was that he broke Mr- <lb />
left leg between the knee <lb />
and ankle. The bone was badly <lb />
fractured. Dr- Johnson was called <lb />
in and fixed up the broken parts. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XII. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1893 <lb />
NO. <lb />
HOW JAPANESE DINE. <lb />
and Amusement the <lb />
Principal Part of the <lb />
One of the most pathetic <lb />
is the manner in which the animal <lb />
kingdom endures suffering, says a <lb />
writer in the Florida <lb />
Take horses, for instance, <lb />
in battle, and, after the first shock <lb />
of a wound, they make no sound. <lb />
They bear the with mute en- <lb />
durance, and if at night you hear <lb />
a wild groan from the battlefield, <lb />
it. conies from their loneliness and <lb />
loss that human companionship <lb />
which seems absolutely <lb />
able to the comfort of domesticated <lb />
animals. <lb />
I The dog will carry a <lb />
leg for days wistfully but <lb />
The cat, stricken with <lb />
club or stone, or caught in some <lb />
trap from which it knows its way <lb />
to freedom, crawls to some secret <lb />
place and bears in silence pain <lb />
which we could not endure. <lb />
and cattle meet the thrust of the <lb />
butcher's knife without a sound, <lb />
and even common poultry endure <lb />
intense agony without complaint. <lb />
The dove, shot unto death, <lb />
to some far-off bough, and as it <lb />
dies the silence is unbroken save <lb />
by the patter on the leaves of its <lb />
own life blood. The wounded deer <lb />
moods to some thick brake, and in <lb />
pitiful submission waits for death <lb />
College of <lb />
Brooklyn. H. Y. Feb. <lb />
Messrs. John F. stratum Son <lb />
Dear your Russian Got <lb />
Strings and must say without flattery that I <lb />
never used a more durable and more perfect <lb />
Stria. I hare had one of Eon my <lb />
days and it Is to day hut as rood <lb />
I pot it on. and I average playing <lb />
dent to ten boors duly. The sale of these <lb />
be enormous. Send me at <lb />
two bandies <lb />
u j, <lb />
Compressed Tea <lb />
Tablet tea is manufactured at <lb />
in factories belonging to <lb />
Russian firms there. It is made <lb />
of the finest tea dust procurable. <lb />
The selection of the dust is the <lb />
work of skilled experts; the cost of <lb />
the dust varies from cents a <lb />
upward. This dust is <lb />
manufactured into tablets by steam <lb />
machinery. About two ounces and <lb />
a half of dust are poured into a <lb />
steel on a steel cylinder. <lb />
The dust is poured in dry without <lb />
steaming, and the pressure brought <lb />
to bear is two tons per tablet. <lb />
Great care is required in the <lb />
and packing of tablet tea, <lb />
the cost is comparatively high. <lb />
The tablets are wrapped first in tin- <lb />
foil, then in expensive and <lb />
wrappers, and finally <lb />
packed m tin-fined cases for export <lb />
to Russia. The tea, it is stilted, <lb />
none of its flavor by being <lb />
pressed into tablets, and, as tablet <lb />
tea is one-sixth of the bulk of <lb />
leaf it is most convenient for <lb />
and also for importing <lb />
the remoter regions of Russia. <lb />
Something About French Novels. <lb />
The French novel, in tho minds <lb />
of most people, has a definite <lb />
meaning. It is yellow without <lb />
and black or at least gray. <lb />
If one is prejudiced against it, it is <lb />
not considered to go be- <lb />
neath tho yellow cover. It would <lb />
these people very much to <lb />
know that in France there is a <lb />
large of literature that <lb />
is not, as they understand it, <lb />
French, and that there is a large <lb />
number of French people who <lb />
would no more read French novels <lb />
as they know of them than they <lb />
would do themselves. Moreover <lb />
the French Academy offers a <lb />
much contested prize, the Mon- <lb />
for such novels, and that <lb />
the remuneration for such novels <lb />
through their Large sales exceeds <lb />
of any other class of novels, <lb />
Mixed <lb />
called Mr. Jones, <lb />
has become of the <lb />
screamed Mrs. <lb />
moan the <lb />
Jones in a high key. <lb />
said Mrs. Jones, <lb />
sternly, -you've been <lb />
have asserted Mr. <lb />
you answer a civil. <lb />
question Who has <lb />
lower <lb />
Mrs. Jones came down stairs <lb />
and looked the excited man over. <lb />
Then she said <lb />
if you cant say it, <lb />
sing get it right in that <lb />
Cut Jones said he hadn't any <lb />
voice for singing just then. <lb />
Detroit Free Press. <lb />
Facts Worth <lb />
Watches were first made in <lb />
in and were <lb />
called animated <lb />
Air brakes were invented by. <lb />
George Westinghouse in and <lb />
subsequently often improved. <lb />
Chain shot were the invention of <lb />
De Witt, the great Dutch admiral. <lb />
They were first used in <lb />
Air guns were made by in <lb />
Germany in and the <lb />
is also credited to Shaw of <lb />
America, in 1845. <lb />
A copy of tho first <lb />
made by Chinese scholars B. C. <lb />
is said to be still preserved <lb />
among the archives of the <lb />
Its only resemblance to <lb />
another historic lexicon is that <lb />
there is in it no such word as fad. <lb />
The November of 1861 will ever <lb />
be famous in our political history, <lb />
because in that month, for the first <lb />
and only time, two presidents were <lb />
elected within these United States <lb />
Abraham Lincoln to rule in <lb />
Washington and Jefferson Davis <lb />
in Richmond. <lb />
J. W. Tales, . <lb />
me good to praise <lb />
Botanic Blood Balm. It cured me an <lb />
on the lungs and asthma <lb />
troubled me two years and that other <lb />
failed to <lb />
MRS. LETTER<lb />
very much Now, <lb />
Miss in commencing your <lb />
work as a stenographer for the <lb />
firm of Poplin Son it is <lb />
for mo to instruct you as to <lb />
your duties. I have charge of the <lb />
house's correspondence entire <lb />
charge. My Miss <lb />
is <lb />
Mr. the girl re- <lb />
plied meekly. <lb />
the first Mr. Hippie <lb />
went on, leaning back in his chair <lb />
so as to expand Iris chest to its <lb />
most capacity, and the <lb />
ends of is mustache with both <lb />
hands as he spoke; the first <lb />
place, always insist on <lb />
verbatim <lb />
ct you know <lb />
what that means. It's he <lb />
added, condescendingly. <lb />
Miss I <lb />
j had the house's correspondence in <lb />
my hands for years, and <lb />
both Mr. Poplins have com to rely <lb />
implicitly upon me. Indeed, I do <lb />
not really see how <lb />
could move along at all without <lb />
Tho girl's gray ever, looked at <lb />
the clerk with an <lb />
amused <lb />
can say. Miss <lb />
the young limn proceeded <lb />
as he settled himself more comfort- <lb />
ably in his chair, i think I <lb />
cm say it without the <lb />
egotism or desire to boast, that I <lb />
have the letters of Poplin <lb />
Son famous through tho business <lb />
world as models of English com- <lb />
position and ornate diction. <lb />
are the reasons why I <lb />
always insist on absolute accuracy <lb />
on the part of my stenographer. <lb />
do not permit even the alteration <lb />
of a word or any other <lb />
change whatever. I trust you <lb />
me <lb />
so, Mr. <lb />
we will <lb />
Mabel first day's work <lb />
was perfectly satisfactory to the <lb />
hypercritical correspondence clerk. <lb />
thanks to Miss skill, <lb />
Mr. Hippie's specimens of ornate <lb />
English composition wont forth <lb />
into the business world more fault- <lb />
than over. <lb />
Everything went with apparent <lb />
smoothness for a month. The <lb />
members of the firm noted with <lb />
approval the demeanor <lb />
of their new typewriter, and the <lb />
other male clerks in the establish- <lb />
envied Hippie his pleasant <lb />
duties. <lb />
One day the elder Mr. Poplin <lb />
sent for Miss to come into <lb />
his private office. <lb />
down, ho <lb />
when she arrived. have a let- <lb />
from my friend Mr. Shaw of <lb />
Shaw King, who that ;. <lb />
recent communication from this <lb />
firm contains much irrelevant <lb />
Poplin looked over his glasses at <lb />
Miss and found her blush- <lb />
with her eves cast down. He <lb />
asked, not <lb />
write a letter to that <lb />
firm <lb />
know its <lb />
have you to say about <lb />
wrote it down just as Mr. <lb />
dictated it, sir. <lb />
I supposed, after reading it; <lb />
but is it not rather unusual to in- <lb />
in letters extraneous remarks <lb />
made during <lb />
has always insisted on <lb />
; being taken down verbatim et lit- <lb />
j the pretty typewriter <lb />
; went on with some confusion; <lb />
really, sir. Mr. Hippie has annoyed <lb />
j me so much with his attentions, <lb />
I and has refused to desist, that I <lb />
j felt I must do something to crush <lb />
j him. I'm sorry I took the method <lb />
I to Oh, dear, <lb />
what shall I <lb />
And Miss put <lb />
dainty cambric handkerchief to <lb />
her eyes, and her speech dissolved <lb />
in tears. <lb />
there my dear girl, <lb />
don't said Mr. Poplin, sooth- <lb />
He took her hand to assist in the <lb />
comforting operation, and placed <lb />
her head on his fatherly shoulder. <lb />
He was not too old to make mental <lb />
note of how long her lashes lay on <lb />
her rosy cheeks, and how dewdrops <lb />
of tears oozed through them. <lb />
am I Mabel ex- <lb />
claimed, as she bethought herself <lb />
of the picture she and Mr. Poplin <lb />
would present if any one should <lb />
come into the office, and she <lb />
promptly raised her head. <lb />
did just said Mr. <lb />
Poplin, referring to her treatment <lb />
of Mr. Hippie, <lb />
rascal Never mind little girl <lb />
I'll settle with <lb />
Mr. Hippie myself. In the mean- <lb />
time you may take a couple of <lb />
days off. Go home away <lb />
and see that ho annoys you no <lb />
After the fair typewriter had <lb />
her wraps gone home, <lb />
Ir. Hippie was called into the <lb />
private office and Mr. Poplin asked <lb />
in the habit of reading <lb />
and signing the firm's letters after <lb />
the typewriter has taken them <lb />
from your dictation and <lb />
scribed them, Mr. <lb />
When Mr. Poplin took the extra <lb />
time necessary to use the prefix <lb />
in addressing one of his <lb />
clerks, it was an indication that <lb />
of tho interview was of <lb />
more than ordinary importance. t <lb />
was with some <lb />
Mr. Hippie <lb />
sir. I used to. but I found <lb />
Miss so scrupulously ex- <lb />
that lately I have permitted <lb />
her to sign and mail letters dictated <lb />
to without my <lb />
takes me down word for word, sir; <lb />
so I that it isn't necessary for <lb />
mo to road them <lb />
reason why I asked you <lb />
that question is I received a <lb />
note from Mr. Shaw this morning, <lb />
of Shaw King, you <lb />
which he asks an explanation of a <lb />
lotter he had just received from <lb />
this house. Perhaps you can give <lb />
the needed explanation after I have <lb />
road you the lotter. This is <lb />
Shaw King. <lb />
Your favor of <lb />
Monday was received in due <lb />
course. Got that down, sweet- <lb />
In reply, we <lb />
like a sweet kiss from those <lb />
that tho goods you men- <lb />
charming win- <lb />
are you so cold to me mention <lb />
were shipped morning. <lb />
bird-like voice thrills mi <lb />
through and through Why do <lb />
never smile on your adorer <lb />
Hoping that they have arrived in <lb />
good me just one <lb />
kiss. Mabel, darling won't 3-011 <lb />
and they gave perfect satisfaction <lb />
got that down, little <lb />
to remain, yours truly <lb />
one kiss now, I insist. What <lb />
you struggling for <lb />
obedient servants, <lb />
Hippie turned alternately <lb />
and white while his employer read <lb />
this letter in icy tones, said <lb />
nothing when it was concluded. <lb />
The occlusion did not to hi <lb />
one for tho display of ornate Eng- <lb />
com <lb />
After a painful pause the senior <lb />
member of the firm wont <lb />
Hippie. I think I'll attend <lb />
to the of this firm <lb />
hereafter myself, and what love <lb />
making it is necessary to do to the <lb />
typewriter I will also look after. <lb />
The cashier will give your <lb />
to date. Good morning, <lb />
exclaims Mr. Pop- <lb />
to his son, the junior member, <lb />
half an hour later, when he laid <lb />
the matter before him. <lb />
idea that a womanly and <lb />
modest like Miss <lb />
should be so grossly mistreated in <lb />
my establishment exasperates mo. <lb />
She's pretty and sweet and alto- <lb />
rather admire Hippie's <lb />
said tho son. <lb />
you exclaimed <lb />
father. I suppose I have <lb />
done in discharging th <lb />
scamp, even when ho knew his <lb />
attentions were distasteful to the <lb />
father, you did quite right. <lb />
Of it would not do for that <lb />
sort of thing to <lb />
course it wouldn't. It would <lb />
be persecution of as sweet a girl as <lb />
are not in love with <lb />
her yourself, are 3-0.1 <lb />
A widower of fifteen 3-oars <lb />
standing The idea Can't an <lb />
man defend a helpless <lb />
young woman without such an <lb />
imputation as <lb />
Then the conversation <lb />
Old Mr. Poplin was in love with <lb />
Miss nevertheless, and <lb />
he resolved to ask her to be his <lb />
son's stepmother on the first op- <lb />
He thought, moreover, <lb />
that he would make that <lb />
when should report for <lb />
duty. <lb />
Miss returned to the <lb />
store at the appointed time, and <lb />
proceeded straight to the private <lb />
office. The elder Mr. Poplin was <lb />
alone. <lb />
morning, Mr. <lb />
said Miss with her sweet- <lb />
est smile. <lb />
it's you, is Mr. Pop- <lb />
replied, raising his eyes above <lb />
his newspaper. down, Miss <lb />
please. Before you take <lb />
the lid off your typewriter I have <lb />
say to you <lb />
been thinking of you almost con- <lb />
since went away two <lb />
vs ago, and I wanted <lb />
ask <lb />
moment, please, Mr. Pop- <lb />
Miss interrupted him <lb />
to say, must pardon me, but <lb />
I have not come back to <lb />
What's <lb />
sir. Fact is is <lb />
Sour son, done mo the <lb />
to to propose, and <lb />
sly <lb />
lated Poplin, not giving her a <lb />
chance to finish. I suppose <lb />
I'll have to be father to you, and I <lb />
will say I am proud of my new <lb />
Then he <lb />
wonder if she really suspected <lb />
what I was going to <lb />
Gray Monthly. <lb />
Bang Up Style. <lb />
you notice that Miss <lb />
had her hair brushed upon <lb />
her forehead <lb />
I thought it was a bang <lb />
up way of dressing <lb />
Interesting. <lb />
The my best man, <lb />
you know. <lb />
The mine, too. <lb />
Truth. <lb />
Never lay out all you <lb />
for he who lays out everything ho <lb />
can afford often lays oat <lb />
he can afford. -4 <lb />
A KNOWING HORSE. <lb />
to <lb />
Be Rewarded <lb />
Billy, the old horse in the em- <lb />
ploy of tho San postal <lb />
sen-ice, is soon to he- <lb />
come a of the Postal <lb />
He is a familiar sight <lb />
in tho downtown portion of the <lb />
city, and belongs to Mail <lb />
tor John but was trained <lb />
eight years ago Collector <lb />
low, and has seen light 3-oars of <lb />
service, never missing a day. <lb />
want to <lb />
said to a <lb />
that Billy knew his own affairs. <lb />
think he is going to run <lb />
but sometimes people <lb />
knows more than a <lb />
Why, if I were to put you in <lb />
buggy to-morrow and start ya <lb />
out, Billy would take to ninety <lb />
boxes on Baker, Sacramento, <lb />
Jackson, Pacific, Broadway, <lb />
and North Beach without <lb />
missing a single box. <lb />
I put on an extra man <lb />
Billy takes him around and stops <lb />
at each regular week <lb />
day route is from to the <lb />
city front and Jackson to <lb />
including thirty-four boxes <lb />
that cleared seven <lb />
Billy has been over the same <lb />
ground for eight years from five to <lb />
seven times daily and walks from <lb />
box to box without a word from <lb />
Among tho <lb />
things this old horse does is <lb />
out of the of cable cars <lb />
when he the bell ring. He <lb />
calmly looks over his shoulder, <lb />
goes across the street, and back <lb />
again after tho car And <lb />
he has a horror of fire engines and <lb />
their wild horses. Whenever an <lb />
engine draws near he pulls in on <lb />
the and displays great <lb />
uneasiness till the danger is past. <lb />
Again he knows the right from <lb />
tho wrong side of the street, -and <lb />
getting out of the way of <lb />
tho street cars or <lb />
ways keeps to his own side of <lb />
street and all this time his master <lb />
is collecting mail at tho <lb />
boxes. <lb />
He will wait loner enough to <lb />
low to step into the boggy, <lb />
and then trot along on his <lb />
drudge. <lb />
He will soon be a pensioner in <lb />
San pastures. <lb />
General in America. <lb />
The first General Congress <lb />
tho United States of America, <lb />
preparatory to their declaration <lb />
of independence, when strong <lb />
resolutions were passed, also a <lb />
petition to the King, and address <lb />
to the people of England, was held <lb />
May in New York. Tho <lb />
second was held May <lb />
the third in 1770. when the In- <lb />
dependence was declared, July i. <lb />
Largest Flag on Record <lb />
The largest American flag ever <lb />
will float from the top of a <lb />
very in front <lb />
of the administration building at <lb />
the World's Fair. Upon request <lb />
tho State of Washington will fur- <lb />
this big Bug Staff as well as <lb />
two or three others of the largest <lb />
that required by the Expo- <lb />
A Mercenary <lb />
has winning ways. <lb />
know it, my dear. <lb />
But in love. and moans never <lb />
to go together <lb />
Literary Husbands- <lb />
Shelley's first marriage was <lb />
fortunate, but his second was a <lb />
model of happiness. <lb />
Lord Bacon enjoyed but little <lb />
domestic bliss, and not to <lb />
be with his <lb />
was married to a wife <lb />
who made him miserable, and <lb />
Rousseau lived a most wretched <lb />
life with his wife. <lb />
Sir Walter Raleigh married a <lb />
beautiful girl eighteen years his <lb />
junior, and adored him with <lb />
ardor to the very last <lb />
Dante was married to a notorious <lb />
scold, and when ho was in exile he <lb />
had no desire to see although <lb />
she was the mother of his six <lb />
children. <lb />
Shakespeare lost tho sympathies <lb />
of the world by marrying Anne <lb />
a woman eight years <lb />
his senior, who was coarse and <lb />
ignorant <lb />
discord in a <lb />
a noble and Addison sold <lb />
himself to a cross-grained old <lb />
countess who made him pay dearly <lb />
for all she gave him. <lb />
Steele, Sterne, Churchill, Colo- <lb />
ridge Byron and Shelley were all <lb />
married unhappily, <lb />
and Dickens boon known by <lb />
all tho world as indifferent <lb />
bands. <lb />
Dr. Johnson's wife was old <lb />
enough to be his mother, but <lb />
to tho illusions <lb />
of the wedding day until died <lb />
at the age of he being <lb />
only forty-three. <lb />
Milton was not great in tho <lb />
character of husband and father. <lb />
We read of him that his first <lb />
was disgusted with his gloomy <lb />
house and soon ran away from <lb />
him, and his daughters left <lb />
to grow up utterly neglected. <lb />
The Result <lb />
you ever shed real tears on <lb />
the stager <lb />
replied the emotional ac- <lb />
tress. <lb />
. was the <lb />
m spoiled my <lb />
JUMPING JOSEPH. <lb />
WITH MUTE <lb />
A Marvel Who is A <lb />
London <lb />
The management of the Empire <lb />
Theater, London, has a novel at- <lb />
in the person of Joseph <lb />
Darby, tho champion jumper of <lb />
the world and holder of the <lb />
pion bolt <lb />
Mr. Darby clears six chairs at a <lb />
hound, his spring-off being <lb />
from brick standing up. In <lb />
a similar way he jumps from a <lb />
brick over a chair on to a second <lb />
brick, and clears a bar five feet <lb />
high. <lb />
His flying leaps include a chair <lb />
place on a table, a series of eight <lb />
chairs making an obstacle nineteen <lb />
feet long, and a horse standing <lb />
seventeen hands, which he dears <lb />
with his ankles tied. <lb />
The more sensational feats con- <lb />
of a jump over three chairs <lb />
backward; a jump over a chair on <lb />
to tho face of a man lying at its <lb />
foot, and off again, without injury <lb />
to the man; and a flying leap over <lb />
water, in tho course of which the <lb />
champion just skims the top of tho <lb />
water without wetting more than <lb />
solos of his shoes. <lb />
Mr. Darby concludes with a <lb />
splendid hound over a six-foot gate <lb />
studded at the top with vicious- <lb />
looking spikes. <lb />
The Parson's <lb />
There is a of a <lb />
who had taken a temporary duly <lb />
for a friend, and who had the ill- <lb />
luck to injure his false teeth <lb />
tho week, says the Manchester <lb />
The data was sent to tho den- <lb />
for a faithful <lb />
being given that it should be <lb />
i returned post, <lb />
but dentist or tho post proved <lb />
i faithless. <lb />
With tho assistance of tho clerk <lb />
clergyman managed to stumble <lb />
through tho but it <lb />
would lie useless to to <lb />
preach. Ho therefore instructed <lb />
clerk to some excuse for <lb />
him and dismiss the <lb />
hit. his feelings may hotter <lb />
imagined than described when, in <lb />
tho the he <lb />
overheard tho clerk, in impressive <lb />
tones, thus deliver the <lb />
very but it is his <lb />
misfortune to obliged to wear a <lb />
set of artificial teeth. They busted <lb />
last Wednesday, and he ain't got <lb />
them back from London as <lb />
was promised. I've helped him all <lb />
I could through the service, but I <lb />
can't do more for him. It isn't <lb />
any use him going up into the <lb />
pulpit, for wouldn't under- <lb />
stand a word he said, so he thinks <lb />
you may as well go <lb />
Technically Innocent <lb />
Tho judge of a Western court <lb />
was not posted on tho <lb />
case before him, but he was one of <lb />
those men you have probably <lb />
heard of who thinks he knows it <lb />
all. <lb />
are charged with horse- <lb />
ho said loftily- to the <lb />
prisoner. guilty or not <lb />
guilt <lb />
guilty, your re- <lb />
the prisoner. <lb />
Tho Court looked surprised. <lb />
3-011 moan to say- that the <lb />
animal m rode into town on to- <lb />
; and which was identified by <lb />
a half a dozen citizens was <lb />
sir, did you buy <lb />
yon <lb />
the owner present it to <lb />
you as a token of and <lb />
the Judge smiled. <lb />
your and tho <lb />
prisoner smiled a little himself. <lb />
feloniously enter the <lb />
table of the owner, whew it was <lb />
kept, in the dead of the night, and <lb />
remove it forcibly, without his <lb />
consent or <lb />
you Honor, more or <lb />
replied the prisoner, boldly. <lb />
don't you call that <lb />
yon <lb />
why not, and tho <lb />
Judge was more sarcastic than <lb />
ever. <lb />
it was a mule, <lb />
and the prisoner guff a <lb />
at his own joke to the extent of a <lb />
fine for contempt of <lb />
A Horse <lb />
is very fond of his <lb />
horse, isn't <lb />
no; he hates <lb />
queer. I saw him rid- <lb />
in the park the other day, and <lb />
he had his arms about the animal's <lb />
It Should fie la <lb />
J. B. Wilson, Clay <lb />
Pa., says he will not be without Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery for Consumption, <lb />
Coughs and Colds, it cured his wife <lb />
who was threatened with <lb />
an attack when <lb />
various other remedies and several <lb />
Man had done her no Robert <lb />
of Pa., claims Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery has done <lb />
more than he ever used <lb />
for Trouble. Nothing like it. Try <lb />
It, Free Trial Bottles at Drug <lb />
bottles. and 81.0. <lb />
Sow Try <lb />
It will cost you nothing end will sure- <lb />
you good. If you have a <lb />
Cold, or any trouble with Throat, Chest <lb />
Dr. King's New Discovery <lb />
for Consumption, Coughs and Colds Is <lb />
guaranteed to give relief, or money will <lb />
be paid back. Sufferers from <lb />
just the thing and under Its use <lb />
had a speedy and perfect recovery. Try <lb />
a sample bottle at our expense and team <lb />
for yourself just how good a thing It Is. <lb />
Trial bottles free at Drug <lb />
Store, Large site and 1.00. <lb />
The in V Animals Stand <lb />
Dining is not in Japan the <lb />
business it is in The <lb />
Japanese do not meet to eat. but <lb />
oat they have met, and <lb />
conversation and amusements <lb />
form the principal part of a ban- <lb />
Conversation need not <lb />
held only with your neighbors, <lb />
bat if a man wishes to speak to a <lb />
friend in another part of the room, <lb />
he quietly slips the paper lie- <lb />
hind him, passes into the veranda, <lb />
enters into the room again and sits <lb />
down on the floor before his friend. <lb />
Exchanging cups is the chief <lb />
at a Japan dinner. <lb />
spirit made Rota rice, re- <lb />
dry drunk hot <lb />
out of tray lacquer and gold cans <lb />
throughout dinner, and the <lb />
who sit on their heals <lb />
the open of the floor, patiently <lb />
watch for every opportunity to fill <lb />
your cup with sake. <lb />
When a gentleman would ox- <lb />
change equivalent <lb />
to drinking sits <lb />
down in front of and bogs the <lb />
honor. You empty your cup into <lb />
a bowel of water, it filled <lb />
with sake, drink, wash it again, <lb />
and hand it to 3-our friend; ho <lb />
raises it to his forehead, bows, has <lb />
it filled, and drinks. <lb />
As this ceremony has to lie gone <lb />
through a great many times, drink- <lb />
is often a <lb />
Eating is, however, but a small <lb />
part of the entertainment. We <lb />
must lie amused, to amuse is <lb />
the business of the the <lb />
singing and dancing <lb />
who attached to every tea <lb />
house. But the singers a <lb />
dinner only take the part of <lb />
tho chorus in Greek play, and they <lb />
sing the story, which dancing <lb />
girls represent or suggest a <lb />
of gestures or postures. The <lb />
dancers dressed, and <lb />
their movements are so interesting, <lb />
so unlike anything Been in Europe, <lb />
that watch them with a curious <lb />
sense of pleasure. <lb />
Ho Knew the Boy- <lb />
A barefooted boy, <lb />
with his hair wet and clothes <lb />
muddy, stopped an express wagon <lb />
in front of a house on street <lb />
yesterday afternoon about S <lb />
clock. <lb />
do said the <lb />
driver. <lb />
you with the <lb />
asked the boy. <lb />
back <lb />
about half an <lb />
you stop hero on <lb />
way <lb />
guess maybe there a jot <lb />
for <lb />
kind of a <lb />
a boy to the <lb />
all right, what <lb />
I've bean a Mother <lb />
told Dot to. She ain't home <lb />
yet. but she will be and <lb />
he took his seat on the <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
Artificial Coloration of Canary Birds <lb />
A well-known German natural- <lb />
Dr. has published <lb />
a number of curious observations <lb />
on the artificial coloration of canary <lb />
birds fed with cayenne <lb />
The plumage changes from yellow <lb />
to red. The contains <lb />
oily matter and an irritating <lb />
and when these are extracted <lb />
maceration tho popper loses its <lb />
coloring property, but if olive oil <lb />
Ix- added to the macerated <lb />
its coloring property returns. <lb />
Hence the oil is considered the <lb />
vehicle of tho color. White hens <lb />
treated in the same way also lie <lb />
reddish, and tho <lb />
their eggs become a bright red. <lb />
Of Interest to Women. <lb />
time a scolds he <lb />
husband adds a wrinkle to <lb />
face. It is thought that tho an- <lb />
of this fact will <lb />
a salutary effect. as it is <lb />
that time a wife <lb />
smiles on husband it will re- <lb />
move one of the old wrinkles. <lb />
Too of Good Thing <lb />
Hack from your <lb />
Instead of looking <lb />
ed you look all fagged <lb />
would you if you had been <lb />
to play the lover to four <lb />
summer girls. <lb />
A Busy Time Coming. <lb />
Both shies are for coming f <lb />
resolved to win. <lb />
Ami the fin will Bred without delay <lb />
That ushers the In. <lb />
Then, while tho humorist make his <lb />
And around tho reporter <lb />
Tho spike the s guns <lb />
And nail the campaign lies. <lb />
to the Occasion <lb />
said the grumbling <lb />
boarder to the landlady, not <lb />
fit for a <lb />
she asked, let <lb />
me take it away get you some- <lb />
thing <lb />
Tho lamp was the <lb />
of Anne in 1789. <lb />
Why They <lb />
see your <lb />
one with you any more. <lb />
she mar.-i. <lb />
best young Free <lb />
MUM <lb />
If yon want t roach <lb />
the people with <lb />
your advertise- <lb />
put it <lb />
in the <lb />
This Office for Job <lb />
FROLICS. <lb />
Fanciful by the Fore- <lb />
man for Folks Fond of Fun in <lb />
the Family. <lb />
The Telegraph <lb />
to know if the keeper of a is a <lb />
jailer, why isn't keeper of a <lb />
prison a prisoner f <lb />
A lecturer once said of certain <lb />
immigrants land in <lb />
Garden on wash their <lb />
faces on open a gin mill <lb />
n Wednesday, and vote on Thurs- <lb />
Able man, this <lb />
is a bad break. Yon any Hint Mr. <lb />
k a house <lb />
o cost <lb />
Reporter- That is all <lb />
rigid, lie is going to have the <lb />
work done by tie day. <lb />
TOO Foil <lb />
Mrs. The papers <lb />
new to be passed to <lb />
marriage more difficult. <lb />
Mr. N Why in <lb />
creation they <lb />
ago <lb />
it too <lb />
awful about Miss <lb />
to be put in the lunatic <lb />
Miss <lb />
If I thought I should ever <lb />
crazy, I'd go <lb />
OF <lb />
Mrs docs it hap- <lb />
pen that Mrs. can afford <lb />
to dress better than I <lb />
Mr. They haven't been <lb />
married long, and I presume he <lb />
isn't quite broke <lb />
A TO <lb />
Can't you pay mo <lb />
something on that bill you owe <lb />
mot <lb />
much do you <lb />
want <lb />
like enough to <lb />
hire n lawyer to sue for the <lb />
The Writer is <lb />
torI have brought you a poem of <lb />
four stanzas, sir. <lb />
Editor count <lb />
five. <lb />
Contributor <lb />
addition to the <lb />
four, you see, notice it stanza <lb />
chance of going into the waste <lb />
basket <lb />
the BOOST to apply. <lb />
Tonne Mother- What ought tho <lb />
food to be. Doctor <lb />
but milk <lb />
from cue cow. <lb />
Young I belie re <lb />
you said the mother ought to take <lb />
four or five fresh eggs every day t <lb />
Young doctor, <lb />
should they be eggs from one<lb />
A small boy's composition on <lb />
ran as follows. <lb />
editor is one of the hap- <lb />
individuals in the world. <lb />
He can go to circus in tho <lb />
afternoon and evening without <lb />
paying s penny, also to inquests <lb />
and hangings. Has free tickets <lb />
to gets wedding cake sent <lb />
him. and sometimes gets <lb />
but not often, for he can take <lb />
things back in the next issue, <lb />
which he generally does. While <lb />
other folks have to goto bed early, <lb />
the editor can sit up late every <lb />
night and see all that is going on- <lb />
When I am a man I mean to be an <lb />
editor, so I may stay out late <lb />
night. That will be <lb />
injections of morphia <lb />
frequently prescribed by for <lb />
cure Mandate; hut its effects <lb />
only ephemeral and foil will have to <lb />
repeat the injection lay. <lb />
this seductive enchanter, and use <lb />
Oil, which to the seat of the <lb />
trouble and efforts permanent <lb />
I. <lb />
-i DENTIST, <lb />
N . <lb />
L. FLEMING, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
attention to business. Office <lb />
at Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb />
J L. <lb />
i BLOW, <lb />
S-AT-L A W, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
y Practice In all tho <lb />
a. b. r. sou <lb />
A TYSON, <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
M. <lb />
Prompt attention given to <lb />
HARRY <lb />
T SKINNER, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
V JAMES. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, SC <lb />
Practice In all the courts,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017584_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
than the Old <lb />
U A failure to observe it Las <lb />
i and will foundation of <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Niter and <lb />
WEDNESDAY. <lb />
at at <lb />
H. C. M mail matter. <lb />
Publisher's Announcement. <lb />
THE PRICE OF <lb />
I The is 81.00 per <lb />
commit <lb />
one year, column one year, <lb />
one-quarter column one year, <lb />
Transient <lb />
one week. ; two weeks. one <lb />
month Two inches one week. 81.50, <lb />
two infill. S-- one month, <lb />
advertisements inserted in Local <lb />
Column as items, cents per <lb />
line for each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad, <lb />
and <lb />
and Sales, <lb />
Summons to etc., will <lb />
be charged for at legal rates and MUST <lb />
PAID IN ADVANCE. <lb />
Contracts for any not mentioned <lb />
above. any length of time, can be <lb />
mads by application to the office either <lb />
in person or by letter. <lb />
Advertisements and <lb />
all changes of should be <lb />
handed In by o'clock on Tuesday <lb />
morning.-in order to receive prompt in- <lb />
following. <lb />
KEEP IT CLOSED ON SUNDAY. <lb />
Much has been written, much <lb />
has been said, and much remains <lb />
to be written and said in reference <lb />
to opening the World's Fair <lb />
on Sunday. Last summer Con- <lb />
voted an appropriation of <lb />
to the fair on the ex- <lb />
press condition that the gates <lb />
should closed on Sunday. The <lb />
commissioners received it on that <lb />
condition and that only. Forty <lb />
million of our people asked Con- <lb />
to make that condition. The <lb />
managers, after having received <lb />
this are endeavoring to arrange to <lb />
hold the Fair on the Sabbath with <lb />
the exception of stopping the ma- <lb />
They have corresponded <lb />
with men of every vocation and <lb />
calling in reference to this- They <lb />
have published every sentiment in <lb />
favor of the project and suppress <lb />
ed neatly all the expressions that <lb />
were opposed to such desecration <lb />
of the Sabbath. They took Dun's <lb />
Directory and selected men of <lb />
ratings as to wealth in <lb />
most every in Union. <lb />
They announce that at least eighty <lb />
per cent of these favor opening <lb />
of the Fair on Sunday. They have <lb />
gotten Bishop Potter and some <lb />
other divines to the same <lb />
In consequence they <lb />
insult Congress and the American <lb />
people by asking to rescind <lb />
the condition of the <lb />
and allow them lo carry on their <lb />
nefarious plan of making the <lb />
bath the great day of the <lb />
Fair. They go about this as if <lb />
this is the only restriction that <lb />
stands in the way now of making <lb />
the fair a great and grand success, <lb />
especially in respect to their pock- <lb />
It is the of <lb />
that has been perpetrated <lb />
by any set of citizens <lb />
for the past century. civil <lb />
is the law of every State <lb />
in the Union save one. and the <lb />
custom of sixty And <lb />
yet these men petition Congress <lb />
to ignore these facts, and just to <lb />
accommodate them to say this six <lb />
years, practice is all a <lb />
myth, and these laws cf every <lb />
State more sham- The Supremo <lb />
Court of the United States has de- <lb />
that this nation is a Chris- <lb />
nation and the Sabbath a day <lb />
not to be desecrated. That <lb />
bath laws are right and must be <lb />
respected. All work of a national <lb />
character cease on <lb />
All employees of the Government <lb />
cease their labors on this In <lb />
fact in every pint this nation <lb />
as a nation recognizes the <lb />
bath, and yet in the face of all this <lb />
these few little commissioners <lb />
have the brazen to ask <lb />
this nation through its Congress <lb />
to allow them to entirely disregard <lb />
the day. and make it the biggest <lb />
day of the a <lb />
financial point of view. If they <lb />
have a right to do this, every man <lb />
on this continent has a right to <lb />
keep his shop open and ply his <lb />
t and make what he can, re- <lb />
of any law or custom. <lb />
a merely human standpoint <lb />
it would barely wrong to allow <lb />
the Fair to In; open en Sunday. <lb />
Instead of consulting so many for <lb />
whom the day was made it would <lb />
be more appropriate to consult <lb />
author of the day and see what <lb />
He has to say about it. The law <lb />
of the Sabbath was the very first <lb />
that God ever ordained in this <lb />
world. Ho -rave it to our first <lb />
p and live, the <lb />
of Christ him <lb />
that it was made, <lb />
in all lands and all time. <lb />
of the ten commandments <lb />
enjoins its says it <lb />
must be kept Christ <lb />
while on earth observed it and <lb />
that work was to be done <lb />
on that day. This would do away <lb />
with the false idea held -by some <lb />
I hat the Sabbath is a Jewish <lb />
and not binding on us. <lb />
New Testament Scriptures are <lb />
not less strict demanding its <lb />
all religious life and bring down <lb />
upon the offenders the righteous <lb />
of heaven. A failure <lb />
to observe God's laws scattered the <lb />
Jews in all and demolish- <lb />
ed the temple with all its services. <lb />
These directors of the Fair talk as <lb />
if all that is needed is to get Con- <lb />
to say, open your gates on <lb />
Sunday and what a financial <lb />
They should remember that <lb />
God with a scourge of cholera, or <lb />
with some other dire calamity, <lb />
could not only close the gates on <lb />
Sunday but during the week, and <lb />
make what might be if properly <lb />
managed a success, an utter fail- <lb />
in every particular. Tho <lb />
world is not wanting in examples <lb />
to show this. How often in the <lb />
past has everything seemed to <lb />
portend success and yet some <lb />
foreseen calamity blasted even the <lb />
semblance of prosperity. The <lb />
days of miracles may have passed <lb />
but God's providence has not <lb />
ed to exist, and this cation would <lb />
do well to heed the- fates of other <lb />
nations have disregarded His <lb />
laws before they decide to <lb />
as a nation this base <lb />
of God's day. Whether it is <lb />
to be a success or not has nothing <lb />
to do with whether it shall be kept <lb />
open on Sunday, f ho only <lb />
is whether it is right or not- <lb />
The sham and false as to <lb />
keeping it open for the benefit of <lb />
the laborer has nothing to do with <lb />
the question. If it were true, and <lb />
no one believes it is, that they <lb />
could go no other day than this, <lb />
even then this would not the <lb />
slightest reason for violating God's <lb />
commands. Tho Christian people <lb />
of America ought not to allow <lb />
themselves to be deluded into the <lb />
idea that some advance, that less <lb />
wickedness will be committed by <lb />
its being open. That Chicago <lb />
will be tilled with visitors and not <lb />
having any to go Sun <lb />
day they will spend the, day in <lb />
beer gardens, and <lb />
thereby desecrate the day more <lb />
than by going to the Fair. No <lb />
sane person will favor opening the <lb />
gates on Sunday if this is to <lb />
the reason. We insist that it is a <lb />
matter of right and not policy as <lb />
to whether the Sabbath shall be <lb />
observed. If this people are not <lb />
to observe the day while <lb />
go attending tho Fair why should <lb />
they observe it at all If it is <lb />
right to observe the day at all it is <lb />
right to observe it at all times and <lb />
under all circumstances. It will <lb />
be a grand opportunity for this <lb />
nation to show to tho world that <lb />
as a nation we recognize God <lb />
and his laws as having authority <lb />
over us. Open the gates on Sun <lb />
day and then boast that we are a <lb />
Christian nation and become <lb />
the laughing stock of all civilized <lb />
lands. <lb />
It is to be hoped that Congress <lb />
will not listen for one moment to <lb />
any persuasion to violate their con- <lb />
their oaths, <lb />
of forty millions of people. <lb />
and the laws and customs of this <lb />
nation since its existence, and the <lb />
laws of God, by ever conceding to <lb />
these Directors <lb />
permission to violate this first law <lb />
of God to man for man by open- <lb />
the gates of tho World's Fair <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
We heard a Richmond leaf deal- <lb />
say a few days ago that he had <lb />
locate in Greenville than <lb />
any market North <lb />
Because, said he, it is only a <lb />
of time when it will take its <lb />
stand, one among the foremost of <lb />
Carolina tobacco <lb />
Situated as Greenville is, right in <lb />
the of the finest bright to <lb />
leaf the world, with to- <lb />
growing one hundred miles <lb />
east of us and an equal extent on <lb />
all sides, and with but few <lb />
that GUI draw from us, is <lb />
no doubt but that Greenville will <lb />
rank with any of her neighbor <lb />
towns that owe their success to <lb />
the tobacco industry, and while, up <lb />
to date our merchants and <lb />
business men taken but little <lb />
interest in the tobacco market, <lb />
young men have <lb />
noted tho progress of Eastern <lb />
Carolina the production of <lb />
bright tobacco, and with an eye <lb />
to business arc making it their <lb />
home. Watch ye sticklers of old <lb />
customs If you don't wake <lb />
the progress of the times will <lb />
leave you mourning the loss of <lb />
your own negligence. <lb />
SIX DECADES AGO. <lb />
The Reflector recently had the <lb />
privilege of looking through a <lb />
scrap book that was the posses- <lb />
of an aged lady of this town <lb />
prior to her death. In this scrap- <lb />
book was a leaf giving a <lb />
men of North Carolina journalism <lb />
away back in the thirties. It was <lb />
two pages of a little 3-column <lb />
sheet called The Buzzard, and <lb />
dated Saturday, August <lb />
Above the heading was <lb />
an ugly picture of a buzzard with <lb />
outstretched wings. The announce- <lb />
of the paper said Bus- <lb />
be published semi-month- <lb />
at one dollar per annum, one- <lb />
half payable in advance. <lb />
tor F. R. S. Editor. <lb />
James Furor and Samuel Savage, <lb />
The two pages did <lb />
not give local news, the first <lb />
being filled with a short story, the <lb />
second with poetry, <lb />
and advertisements. One of <lb />
those communications was signed <lb />
Thomas who seemed <lb />
aggrieved because of <lb />
about himself he did like. One <lb />
of the advertisements read like <lb />
LOOK <lb />
Internal and <lb />
Van <lb />
PILLS. <lb />
DR. has <lb />
received, and has now on baud <lb />
a large supply of the above article, <lb />
which he will sail low for cash. <lb />
Ho his friends and the <lb />
public generally, that they posses <lb />
the power of raising the spirits, <lb />
banishing sorrow and care, and <lb />
completely destroying tho sad <lb />
which the late shower of tick- <lb />
into ballot boxes has had upon <lb />
their minds. following is a <lb />
certificate from a gen- <lb />
who has tried the virtue of <lb />
the <lb />
do hereby certify, that the <lb />
17th of this present month, about <lb />
o'clock, A. M-, I was taken with <lb />
a severe illness. The first <lb />
tom was a swelling in the throat, <lb />
which denied me tho power of <lb />
nest was a beating <lb />
heaving of the heart, which <lb />
seemed to threaten a general bus <lb />
In this situation, I took <lb />
a box of Dudley's Pills, and am <lb />
now well as ever. <lb />
Under the heading of <lb />
and a of a ship <lb />
with some packages of <lb />
was given this marine <lb />
Gen. Marion, Rich- <lb />
with and wood. <lb />
Comet, Flip <lb />
eggs, and turtles from the bar. <lb />
John <lb />
with alligators, and pole <lb />
cats, from Swift Creek. <lb />
Wherever the name of tho town <lb />
occurred it was one word, New <lb />
which shows those who were <lb />
not since having so much dis- <lb />
over whether the name was <lb />
New or what was <lb />
in common use sixty years ago. <lb />
Mr. H. A. Reams, a prominent <lb />
citizen of and a candidate <lb />
for tho of that town, <lb />
publishes a card tho Durham <lb />
Sun fa which ho calls Al Fair- <lb />
brother, editor of Globe, liar <lb />
and a defamer of good men's <lb />
That is just about the <lb />
opinion some of us have had of <lb />
since he began to show <lb />
what was in him after coming to <lb />
this State. He seems to be of the <lb />
opinion that because he does not <lb />
particularly fancy a man, or wants <lb />
somebody else to have a position, <lb />
it licenses him to defame at will <lb />
the characters of the best men in <lb />
the State. North Carolina has <lb />
but little use for such characters <lb />
as Al the sooner <lb />
he is made to understand this the <lb />
better it will be. <lb />
The Reflector has received <lb />
copies of the biennial reports of <lb />
the State Librarian, of the Super- <lb />
of the North Carolina <lb />
Insane and of the Super- <lb />
of Instruction, <lb />
all giving record in <lb />
their respective departments. <lb />
There is no brighter, cleaner or <lb />
more readable paper in North <lb />
Carolina than tho Charlotte Ob- <lb />
server. It has now under the <lb />
able editorial guidance of Mr. J. P. <lb />
Caldwell for one year, and he <lb />
easily in.-i e it the equal of any pa- <lb />
per in the State. As an editor <lb />
as a gentleman ho is tho peer of <lb />
any man- The Reflector has said <lb />
once before, sticks to it, that it <lb />
will not be satisfied until call <lb />
him Gov. <lb />
Receipt for Hog Cholera. <lb />
The following has been vouched <lb />
for as being a safe for hog <lb />
cholera, which generally prevails <lb />
throughout the country about this <lb />
time of the year; give your hogs <lb />
turpentine on corn or in tho slop <lb />
once a day for ten days. My hogs <lb />
have been dying this spring and <lb />
summer, says J. E- Rice, in Homo <lb />
and Farm, and I find this to a <lb />
certain cure. All of got well <lb />
that I could get to eat enough of <lb />
the turpentine- plenty of <lb />
turpentine all the year round, and <lb />
you will find that they will thrive <lb />
and do much better. <lb />
Judge William Lindsay sue <lb />
Senator as Senator <lb />
from He is a native of <lb />
Virginia and is regarded as a very <lb />
able lawyer jurist. <lb />
Superior Court. <lb />
Notice is hereby given that by reason <lb />
of a recent Act of the General Assembly <lb />
of North the next term of the <lb />
Court of Pitt county will tie <lb />
for tin- trial of Civil v will <lb />
lie on the MONDAY in <lb />
MARCH next. All mid <lb />
In action bound, <lb />
or to attend at the <lb />
March Term will be required to at- <lb />
tend at the term of said court to be held <lb />
on the fourth Monday after the first <lb />
Monday In March, and nil <lb />
actions shall be made <lb />
to the last named term of said court. <lb />
A. <lb />
Superior Con it Pitt Co. <lb />
and content is a <lb />
a lamp with light of the morning. <lb />
GENERAL ASSEMBLY. <lb />
Below we give some of the bills <lb />
of interest that have been intro- <lb />
before the General <lb />
senate. <lb />
Senator James, a bill to allow <lb />
John Hellen to peddle without <lb />
payment of tax. Propositions and <lb />
Grievances. <lb />
Senator bill to provide <lb />
for codifying the laws of the State <lb />
came It authorizes the Gov- <lb />
to appoint three <lb />
with pay of each, <lb />
with a clerk at They must <lb />
report to the next General <lb />
The bill passed its third <lb />
reading. <lb />
A bill to increase the annual <lb />
for the Guilford L it- <lb />
Ground from to <lb />
passed its reading by a <lb />
vote of to On the third <lb />
reading the ayes and noes were <lb />
called for and the bill passed by a <lb />
vote of ayes to noes. <lb />
A resolution requesting our <lb />
Senators and Representatives in <lb />
Congress to use their influence in <lb />
favor of the Nicaragua Canal bill. <lb />
A bill to established a criminal <lb />
court for the 13th judicial district. <lb />
Tabled. This was the bill <lb />
Pitt county. <lb />
The bill to provide for furnish- <lb />
completing the Governor's <lb />
mansion, appropriating for <lb />
furnishing and for <lb />
the same, passed second and <lb />
third readings. <lb />
A bill to provide for indexing <lb />
the Colonial records and <lb />
for that purpose, passed <lb />
several readings. <lb />
Senator Battle, to establish a <lb />
State motto- <lb />
The simple bill to allow railroads <lb />
to give passes to those traveling <lb />
in the interest of orphan asylums <lb />
gave rise to a spirited debate. <lb />
Passed it third reading. <lb />
Senator Day introduced a <lb />
for the erection of a <lb />
in Nash square. <lb />
The bill to repeal chapter <lb />
laws of 1883, restore to the <lb />
Superior courts jurisdiction in re- <lb />
to concealed weapons came <lb />
up. It was opposed by Senators <lb />
of Robeson, <lb />
and and favored <lb />
by Senators Jones, <lb />
Posey. Tho bill passed by an <lb />
aye and no vote of to <lb />
Senator of Cumberland, <lb />
for the creation of the of <lb />
Scotland. <lb />
Senator Morton, to establish a <lb />
naval battalion the State Guard. <lb />
Senator James, to provide for <lb />
and completing the ex- <lb />
mansion. <lb />
Senator Mercer, to allow the <lb />
commissioners of to <lb />
levy a special tax for road <lb />
poses. <lb />
Tho bill to provide <lb />
for the several courts of the <lb />
State came up. This bill was in- <lb />
by Senator <lb />
It failed to pass its second reading. <lb />
Ayes nays <lb />
Tho bill to establish a motto for <lb />
the State, <lb />
passed third reading. <lb />
HOUSE. <lb />
By Mr. Carraway, to change the <lb />
time of holding tho Superior court <lb />
of Greene county. Judiciary. <lb />
House bill to amend sec- <lb />
1256 of the Code, in regard to <lb />
the acknowledgment of deeds, <lb />
privy examination of females no <lb />
longer needed. All may be taken <lb />
and probated before Justices of <lb />
the Peace. As amended by the <lb />
committee, the bill passed and was <lb />
ordered to engrossed. <lb />
House bill in regard to <lb />
amends the Code, so, if wife <lb />
obtain decree of separation from <lb />
bed and board on tho usual charges <lb />
of cruelty, neglect, abandonment. <lb />
and if absent husband does not <lb />
return to the State within three <lb />
years, it is ground for absolute <lb />
parsed and was ordered to <lb />
engrossed. <lb />
Mr. of Buncombe, to pro- <lb />
for the improvement of the <lb />
public roods of North Carolina, by <lb />
tho use of convict labor, etc. <lb />
Mr. Nash, to regulate tho weigh- <lb />
of etc. <lb />
Mr. in regard to <lb />
county surveyors. <lb />
Mr. in regard to <lb />
Mr. Day, to allow clerks of the <lb />
Superior courts thirty days in <lb />
which to attend the World's fair. <lb />
Mr. Norwood, to provide a sys <lb />
tern by which to keep the public <lb />
roads at North Durham in re- <lb />
pair. On motion copies of <lb />
this bill were ordered printed. <lb />
Mr. Norwood, to provide for a <lb />
proper display at the World's fair <lb />
of the products of North Carolina. <lb />
Mr. Watkins, to amend the Code <lb />
in regard to compensation of <lb />
of tho peace in certain cases. <lb />
Mr. Harris, in relation to the <lb />
date of deeds. <lb />
Mr. Grimes offered a resolution <lb />
in relation to an to <lb />
erect a to confederate <lb />
soldiers- <lb />
Mr. Kitchen, to insure the listing <lb />
of solvent credits. printed. <lb />
Mr- Brooks, to amend a section <lb />
of the Code so as to exempt the <lb />
town of Kinston from the <lb />
of the pharmaceutical <lb />
Mr. Anderson, to amend the <lb />
Code so as to secure an equal dis- <lb />
of the school fund. <lb />
Mr- Graves, to provide a system <lb />
of uniform text books for the pub- <lb />
schools of the State. <lb />
Mr. Allen, to allow clerks to or <lb />
examination of parties before <lb />
trial within less than five days. <lb />
Mr. to land <lb />
lords. <lb />
Mr. Norwood, to establish an <lb />
astrological observatory in North <lb />
Carolina. <lb />
Bill to amend section 1478, of <lb />
the Code, relating to the <lb />
of personal estate came <lb />
Mr. Robertson said that bill <lb />
that if a man should die <lb />
without next of kin, his widow <lb />
should have one-half of his estate, <lb />
and the other half should go to the <lb />
University of the State. He was <lb />
in favor of giving the University <lb />
all it needed, but was opposed to <lb />
this bill in its present form. On <lb />
motion of Mr. Allen, the bill was <lb />
passed over informally. <lb />
The bill to amend the act con- <lb />
the Railroad Commission <lb />
a board of Appraisers. Passed <lb />
third reading. <lb />
Mr. Watson, of to pro- <lb />
for the settlement of taxes <lb />
and change the day for the sale of <lb />
land, etc <lb />
Mr. Norwood, to discourage <lb />
lynching. <lb />
Mr. Parker, of Perquimans, to <lb />
amend the machinery act, and to <lb />
list credits. <lb />
Mr. to define the <lb />
of telegraph operators <lb />
for railroad corporations. <lb />
The bill to exempt the bonds of <lb />
Fifth Street Methodist church <lb />
from taxation came up. Tho <lb />
committee by a majority of <lb />
one, reported the bill favorably. <lb />
bill failed by a vote of to <lb />
Mr- to the length <lb />
of a days the cases <lb />
not to exceed ton <lb />
Mr. Williamson, to impose and <lb />
a tax imposed for- <lb />
corporations. <lb />
Mr. Brooks, to incorporate the <lb />
People's bank of Kinston. <lb />
Mr. Byrd, to abolish the tax <lb />
marriage license. <lb />
Mr. Lawrence, to <lb />
Martin county. <lb />
Mr, Taylor, of Alleghany, to <lb />
strike, out of chapter section <lb />
of the Code in regard to pub- <lb />
roads by striking out <lb />
inserting <lb />
Mr. to allow Justices of <lb />
the Peace fees in criminal cases <lb />
only upon correction- <lb />
The bill to abolish the Bureau <lb />
of Labor Statistics up with a <lb />
favorable committee report. There <lb />
was no debate- The vote was ayes <lb />
noes so the bill passed <lb />
second reading. By vote of to <lb />
the rules were suspended and <lb />
the bill put upon its third loading. <lb />
The vote was ayes noes On <lb />
motion of Mr. Anderson tho <lb />
was put tho bill. <lb />
CHILD BIRTH <lb />
MADE EASY <lb />
Friend is a scientific- <lb />
ally prepare J Liniment, every <lb />
of recognized value in <lb />
use by the medical pro-, <lb />
These are com- <lb />
in a manner hitherto unknown<lb />
DO all that is claimed for <lb />
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb />
Life of Mother and Child. Boole <lb />
to Mothers mailed FREE, con- <lb />
valuable information and <lb />
voluntary testimonials. <lb />
express on receipt of price per bottle <lb />
REGULATOR CO., <lb />
BOLD BY ALL <lb />
with it plenty of energy WANTED <lb />
to represent THE MICHIGAN <lb />
MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., <lb />
and AMERICAN ACCIDENT CO. To <lb />
whom n contract will <lb />
For terms, etc. <lb />
W. J, AN, <lb />
District Agent for N. C, <lb />
SNOW HILL, N. C. <lb />
When yon buy your goods of <lb />
W. H. WHITE <lb />
lie Is now offering a full line of <lb />
Goods, <lb />
Shoe, <lb />
Tinware, Wool and Willow <lb />
Staple and Light Groceries at such low <lb />
us will leave money in <lb />
your pocket <lb />
He also the best for the <lb />
money that can be had in town. <lb />
It you want good and sub- <lb />
for Christmas tall on him. <lb />
W. II. WHITE. <lb />
Greenville. N- C. <lb />
Buggy <lb />
X C. <lb />
Can still be found <lb />
at Old <lb />
stand. <lb />
paved do <lb />
FIRST-CLASS WORK <lb />
on anything in the <lb />
mi mm m <lb />
Fine Vehicles Specialty <lb />
Repairing done prompt- <lb />
and in heat manner. <lb />
Save<lb />
ii <lb />
Bills <lb />
BOTANIC <lb />
BLOOD BALM <lb />
THE GREAT REMEDY <lb />
FOR ALL BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASE <lb />
by em- <lb />
the <lb />
for rear, and never to <lb />
quickly permanently <lb />
. ULCERS. <lb />
I RHEUMATISM. <lb />
PIMPLES. ERUPTIONS. <lb />
and <lb />
. .- <lb />
lowed. Price O per bottle. i <lb />
. the <lb />
blood If fol- <lb />
. . <lb />
ale by <lb />
SENT FREE <lb />
S CO., Atlanta. Ga. <lb />
Z h T <lb />
Superior Court f <lb />
Roebuck and wife, Mary E. <lb />
Roebuck, <lb />
vs. , <lb />
John T. Harrison, George <lb />
ct <lb />
To Harrison <lb />
You will take that an action en- <lb />
titled as above has been commenced in <lb />
the Superior Court of Martin county to <lb />
foreclose a upon realty, <lb />
In township, <lb />
aforesaid; nod said defendant will <lb />
further take notice, that lie is required <lb />
to appear at the next term of the <lb />
Court of said comity to be held on the <lb />
second Monday after the first Monday in <lb />
March 1893. at the Court house of said <lb />
county in Williamston N. C. and answer <lb />
or demur to the complaint in said action, <lb />
or the plaintiffs will apply to the court <lb />
for the relief demanded In said com- <lb />
plaint. W. T. CB A D. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
This 30th January 1803. <lb />
Sale of <lb />
Land. <lb />
Pitt <lb />
W. Charles Hardy, trading at Hardy <lb />
J. T. J. B. Galloway. <lb />
Pursuant to the power and authority <lb />
given In a executed by J. T. <lb />
Evans to Hardy A Bros., recorded in the <lb />
of Deeds office, Pitt county. <lb />
Book R page and In accordance with <lb />
a and decree of sale in the <lb />
above entitled action obtained In the <lb />
Superior Court, Pitt county at <lb />
Term 1801 recorded In <lb />
docket No case i will offer <lb />
sale at the House door in Green- <lb />
ville on Monday March 1803, to the <lb />
highest bidder for cash the following <lb />
tract of adjoining lands of Frank <lb />
MilK John Carroll, Alfred <lb />
ton and others containing fifty acres. <lb />
Upon to raise a sufficient amount <lb />
of money from the sale of said fifty acre <lb />
tract to discharge mid satisfy said judge- <lb />
will at the said Court House <lb />
door on the said Monday, the 0th day of <lb />
March 1898, offer for sale for cash <lb />
tract a parcel of land described In <lb />
said and decree as follows I <lb />
lot containing one sere which <lb />
my store h now lands and all <lb />
being the one tract of land <lb />
on which the store house of the said J. T. <lb />
now stands. <lb />
C. M. <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
February 2nd 1803. <lb />
B. I, <lb />
Schedule <lb />
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb />
No No Ti, No <lb />
Jan. 1st, daily Fast Mail, <lb />
daily ex Sun <lb />
Weldon pin pin C <lb />
Ar pm pm <lb />
i pm <lb />
Tarboro AS pin <lb />
Rocky Mt in pm nm<lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Ar Florence <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
a- <lb />
GOO <lb />
TRAINS GOING NORTH <lb />
No No CO, <lb />
daily<lb />
daily <lb />
Florence <lb />
Ar Selma <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilmington <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
CO <lb />
So <lb />
daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
2-1 <lb />
lam<lb />
Ar Wilson am II p m pm <lb />
A. Monti <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro am <lb />
Daily except <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 5.16 Halifax 5.35 p. <lb />
m., arrives Neck at 0.21 p. in., <lb />
Greenville p, in. <lb />
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m., <lb />
Greenville 8.22 a. in. Halifax <lb />
at II a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. in. daily <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Washington Brand leave <lb />
Washington 7.20 a. m., arrives <lb />
8.60 a. in. Tarboro 0.60; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 6.36 p. m., 7.85 <lb />
p. in,, arrives Washington 9.00 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Scot ml Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
Raleigh B. B. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, P M, Sunday P M, <lb />
Plymouth 9.50 p. m., 5.20 p. in. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
5.30 a. m., Sunday 10.00 a. m- <lb />
Tarboro. N C, 10.96 AM 12,20. <lb />
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb />
and leave Fayette- <lb />
ville a m. arrive Rowland p in. <lb />
leave Rowland p m. <lb />
Fayetteville a in. Daily ex- <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch lean <lb />
dally except Sunday, A M <lb />
N C, A M. Be <lb />
laves If G S A M <lb />
Goldsboro. N C SO A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
Mount P M, arrive Nashville <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Nashville <lb />
8.36 A M, arrives Mount A <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch R. B. leave <lb />
7.80 p. in., arrive 8.40 p. <lb />
in. Returning leave Dunbar a. m., <lb />
arrive Latta 7.15 a. in. y except <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves W a ran <lb />
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, It CM <lb />
and U M Returning leave <lb />
UM at A M, and P. M. <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Weldon for all points North dally. All <lb />
-Till via Richmond, and dally except Sun- <lb />
lay via Bay Line, also Rocky Mount <lb />
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb />
railroad for Norfolk and all <lb />
via Norfolk. <lb />
JOHN INK, <lb />
General <lb />
J. U. <lb />
M agent <lb />
best salve in the world for Cuts, <lb />
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, <lb />
Fever Sores. Chapped Hands. <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin <lb />
positively cures Piles, or no <lb />
pay required. It is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. <lb />
Price cents box. tor sale at <lb />
Drug <lb />
If so come to sue us will make you <lb />
is Iowa <lb />
than can be gotten elsewhere. We <lb />
-----have in stock the---- <lb />
Largest and Most Varied <lb />
Selection of Furniture <lb />
ever kept in our town. <lb />
-q <lb />
We buy direct from the maim- <lb />
can and will sell <lb />
low down. Out stock consists. <lb />
in part of <lb />
Marble Top Walnut <lb />
Solid Oak Suits, <lb />
Sixteenth Finish Suits, <lb />
Walnut Finish Suits, <lb />
Marble Top and Withstands, <lb />
Wood Top Bureaus and <lb />
Ward Robes, Buffets, <lb />
walnut. Bedsteads, <lb />
all grades and colors, <lb />
Children- Wire Cribs and Beds and Cradles, <lb />
Marble Top and Solid Wood Top Tables, <lb />
Solid Chairs and Rockers, <lb />
Solid Oak Chairs Bookers, <lb />
Fancy Reed and Wood Rockers, <lb />
Chairs all grades, Lounges, <lb />
Bed Springs, Mattresses, <lb />
--------We for------- <lb />
and extend to all a invitation to call on us when in want <lb />
of any goods we carry one of the best stocks of <lb />
MERCHANDISE <lb />
ever kept our town, <lb />
Yours truly, <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO <lb />
We have just <lb />
most beautiful line of <lb />
ever brought to Greenville <lb />
Come and sec what ex- <lb />
low we are <lb />
asking for them. We are <lb />
selling a great many of <lb />
those good old <lb />
Elmo Cook Stoves <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. E. PENDER CO., <lb />
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. O. <lb />
SAMUEL M. SCHULTZ, Agent, Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Mills on Tr <lb />
AT <lb />
mill <lb />
K. V. <lb />
Sec. Tarboro, N C. <lb />
awl <lb />
All dealers keep It, ft per <lb />
a- . i <lb />
Hie. I <lb />
mill <lb />
BETA. <lb />
trip between Washington and Tarboro Way Lauding.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017584_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Tuesday is Valentine day. <lb />
One week to the of Lent. <lb />
Many our people are getting ready <lb />
for gardening. <lb />
D. M. Ferry's new Garden Seed at the <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
The weather is good enough now to talk <lb />
improvements. <lb />
For several days the farmers have been <lb />
busy their tobacco beds. <lb />
A new roof was placed on the Germania <lb />
Hall building last week. <lb />
The cheapest Furniture is at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
A brass door key was found Saturday <lb />
and left at office. <lb />
oil at Reflector Book Store and <lb />
sec how cheap valentines are sold. <lb />
Cash given for Hides. Furs, Eggs and <lb />
poultry, at the Old Brick <lb />
The boys are laying in a supply of <lb />
for use next Tuesday night. <lb />
Comic Valentines for cent or cent <lb />
per dozen at Reflector Book Store. <lb />
The who wants trade should <lb />
lift overlook the importance of <lb />
sing. <lb />
There was some of all kinds of weather <lb />
Sunday, a little of rain, hail, snow and <lb />
sunshine. <lb />
bad colds going since the <lb />
weather got than when it was <lb />
bitter cod. <lb />
. Some fine oysters came up Friday and <lb />
our people went for them eagerly. They <lb />
were oyster hungry. <lb />
The County Commissioners had a large <lb />
day's work at their meeting <lb />
Full proceeding nest issue. <lb />
of valentines has been put <lb />
right to the bottom at Reflector <lb />
Book Store. Comics cents a dozen. <lb />
The Reflector Book Store has valentines <lb />
and does not propose to carry them over. <lb />
Com; get your pick at the bottom figure; <lb />
The weather bureau made several <lb />
effort to turn loose a cold nave on us <lb />
la-t week, but could not get up much of <lb />
one. <lb />
A big lot of Stationery and school <lb />
supplies just in at Reflector Book Store. <lb />
Prices low enough to astonish you. Come <lb />
and see. <lb />
Work was resumed last week on Brown <lb />
Hooker's new stores. work could <lb />
be done on them through the entire month <lb />
of January. <lb />
The train has a hard time with its <lb />
evening schedule and rarely get-s in on <lb />
time. It U frequently as much as one to <lb />
two hours late. <lb />
Mr. A. Johnston went from Green- <lb />
ville to Washington in a canoe one day <lb />
last week. lie was looking for a lost boat <lb />
and found it just this side of Washington. <lb />
The Atlantic Coast Line sell round <lb />
trip tickets from Greenville to New <lb />
Ode ins. on account of the Mardi <lb />
festival, for or to Mobile for <lb />
It re prims ninety days residence the <lb />
ward in which you live to lie eligible to <lb />
vote In the town election. Don't move <lb />
between this and the first Monday in <lb />
May. <lb />
The dog is the biggest citizen in this <lb />
country and Legislators are always afraid <lb />
to tackle any measure that offers the <lb />
est to canine rights and <lb />
The thinks itself worth <lb />
every penny asked for <lb />
every subscriber gets his full money's <lb />
worth we offer no premiums to induce <lb />
people to take it. <lb />
Mr. E. Little says the Beaver <lb />
Dam farmers took every advantage of the <lb />
fine weather last week and put in a big <lb />
weed's work. doubt the same is true <lb />
of every section of the county. <lb />
Just like we you last week, turn <lb />
i over to fourth page and read our <lb />
tobacco department. It is going to be <lb />
interesting every week and well worth <lb />
the consideration of every reader. <lb />
The Steamer Myers brought up the <lb />
largest cargo of freight in her history <lb />
last Friday. So many new goods have not <lb />
before received in one day. The <lb />
freight Monday was also very large. <lb />
Monday was cloudy, but proved a good <lb />
day for the Reflector. booked <lb />
seventeen subscribers that day and did <lb />
not have to go out of the office to hunt <lb />
them, all of them coming in voluntarily <lb />
Our Tarboro tobacco correspondent <lb />
writes, though too late to get it under the <lb />
regular breaks last week <lb />
were the largest of the Prices <lb />
were high, bringing figures. <lb />
The merchants in Greenville who <lb />
have the largest trade run the largest <lb />
advertisement to be found in the <lb />
while the merchants who have the <lb />
smallest trade do no advertising at all. <lb />
See the difference <lb />
Remember that Dr. J. H. Daniel, of <lb />
Dunn, will be here on Feb. 14th. He <lb />
has met with wonderful success in the <lb />
line his special practice and those <lb />
with cancer will do well to see him <lb />
His card can be found in this paper. <lb />
The steamer Myers a snag. <lb />
Saturday, and knocked a hole in her <lb />
bottom. The pumps had to be used on <lb />
the of the trip down the river. <lb />
She went on the ways immediately upon <lb />
arrival at Washington, and was in good <lb />
for making her regular trip Mon- <lb />
day. <lb />
When we see so many western horses <lb />
and mules being sold annual re- <lb />
at this season of the <lb />
suggests to mind what good stock the <lb />
farmers of Pitt county could raise, and <lb />
at a comparative small cost, if they <lb />
would just engage in it. Think of the <lb />
enormous sum going out of this county <lb />
every year for horses and mules. <lb />
It may interest some of our readers to <lb />
know that the following is the religious <lb />
festival and holiday record for <lb />
Lent begins February 15th and ends with <lb />
Easter April 2nd ; Washington's <lb />
22nd, is on <lb />
day ; inauguration of President, Saturday, <lb />
March 4th; St. Patrick's day, March 17th <lb />
on Friday; h of July on Tuesday; <lb />
Labor day, on Monday, September 4th; <lb />
Christmas. December 35th, on Monday. <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mrs. J. S. i sick. <lb />
Mr. J. L. Sugg has been quite sick the <lb />
past week. <lb />
E. C. Glenn, of Elm City, has <lb />
been spending a few days In town. <lb />
Ex-Gov. and Mrs. have been <lb />
spending the past week In Raleigh. <lb />
Mr. R. B. Latham, of Plymouth is vis- <lb />
the family of r. F. W. Brown. <lb />
Mr. B. C. Pearce was home last week, <lb />
returning because of the sickness of little <lb />
Miss Lucy who was visiting <lb />
Mrs. Joyner, left Friday for her home in <lb />
Maryland. <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Cherry went to Oxford yes- <lb />
to visit her son who is at <lb />
school there. <lb />
Mrs. Mangle James, wife of Senator <lb />
James, left yesterday to spend i few <lb />
days in Raleigh. <lb />
Mr. J. D. Williamson and daughter. <lb />
Miss Jessie, went to Suffolk Friday. The <lb />
latter will cuter school there. <lb />
Mr. W. II. White has moved into the <lb />
dwelling in in which ex-Reg- <lb />
James resided last year. <lb />
Rev. J. II. Lambeth is to <lb />
rive Friday and will occupy the pulpit <lb />
the Baptist Church next Sunday. <lb />
Rev. J. N. U. of <lb />
tilled his regular monthly appointment <lb />
here in Elliott Hall on Sunday evening. <lb />
Mr. Basil M. special agent <lb />
of the York Life Insurance Com- <lb />
has been in town for several days. <lb />
Mr. J. S. C. Benjamin, who Ins been <lb />
living in Greenville for several years, left <lb />
yesterday to accept a position in Raleigh. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. Leggett, of <lb />
Baltimore, have been spending a few days <lb />
hero with the family of Mr. W. J. Higgs. <lb />
At the of officers for tin- <lb />
Sunday School, last Sunday, Mr. C. <lb />
E. was re-elected <lb />
dent. <lb />
Mr. Jesse of Wilson, has come <lb />
to Greenville to accept a position with <lb />
Young Mr. C. M. Jones takes <lb />
a position with the same firm. <lb />
Mrs. Sallie S. Cotton, of Falkland, <lb />
of the Virginia Dare Association of <lb />
North Carolina, was in Greenville <lb />
day in the interest of the Association. <lb />
Mis Lucy Joyner returned last week <lb />
from Franklin count-, where she went to <lb />
spend the holidays and was detained by <lb />
the bad weather- She has reopened her <lb />
school. <lb />
Mr. E. J. Proctor, an on the <lb />
Reflector and now foreman on the <lb />
Watch-Tower, and Mr. Clinton Ross, of <lb />
Washington, spent from Saturday to <lb />
Monday here. <lb />
Representative W. H. Grimes, one of <lb />
the youngest members of the General <lb />
Assembly, was here a day or two last <lb />
week, having obtained a short leave of <lb />
absence to look after his interests in <lb />
this county. <lb />
Mr. O. L. Joyner is now conducting the <lb />
tobacco department of the Reflector. <lb />
How well he is doing it, reading of that <lb />
department will show. Mr. Joyner is <lb />
also authorized to receipt for <lb />
to the Reflector and to make <lb />
contracts for advertising. Any court- <lb />
or favors shown him on behalf of <lb />
the will be appreciated by the <lb />
proprietor. <lb />
An Old House <lb />
The old one-story brick building on <lb />
the corner of Third and streets, <lb />
in which Mr. Boyd lived for many <lb />
years prior to his death, was torn down <lb />
last week. It was built long before the <lb />
war by Mr. Charles Greene, and before <lb />
that unpleasantness was put to various <lb />
uses. Col. E. C. once had it <lb />
for his law office ; Dr. Wyatt Brown also <lb />
occupied it as an office; and during the <lb />
war it was used as a kind of headquarters <lb />
for officers when troops were stationed <lb />
In this section. The old house has for <lb />
sometime been in a very dilapidated and <lb />
uninhabitable condition and was torn <lb />
down too soon. The promises is <lb />
now the property of Mrs. Dr. W. M. B. <lb />
Brown. <lb />
Pitt County Courts. <lb />
The act changing the times of holding <lb />
the Superior Courts of Pitt county has <lb />
become a law. It gives us five Courts <lb />
annually, the times for holding them <lb />
being January, March, April, September <lb />
and December. Each term Is for two <lb />
weeks if there is business to continue it <lb />
that long. The March and December <lb />
terms are for the trial of civil cases only, <lb />
while the others are to be mixed Courts <lb />
as we have had before. Now let the <lb />
Magistrates at their meeting on Saturday, <lb />
18th of this month, arrange for a few <lb />
terms of the Court for each <lb />
and we believe all the dockets will soon <lb />
be cleared up. Let there no further <lb />
excuse for the dockets continuing filled <lb />
tip with matters that ought to have speedy <lb />
hearing and settlement. <lb />
New Advertisements. <lb />
C. T. Wilson stock at cost <lb />
for days. <lb />
E. A. Superior Court notice. <lb />
W. T. Crawford, Summons before <lb />
Court of Martin county. <lb />
C. M. Bernard. Commissioner's sale of <lb />
land. <lb />
W. J. Jordan, life and accident in- <lb />
Marriage. <lb />
Mr. E. B. a very popular young <lb />
man of this and a member of the <lb />
firm of Bros, goes to Scotland <lb />
Neck to-day where he will be married <lb />
at o'clock this evening to Miss Annie <lb />
Shields, Rev. R T. Vann officiating. <lb />
The couple will take the evening <lb />
train for and make this place <lb />
their home. The bride is a very charm- <lb />
and accomplished young lady and <lb />
will lie cordially welcomed to our town. <lb />
The Reflector extends its best wishes <lb />
to them. <lb />
Tonic and <lb />
do not hesitate to recommend Mrs. Joe <lb />
Person's Remedy as the finest tonic I <lb />
used. At the time I commenced its <lb />
use. had no appetite for anything, <lb />
could cat a mouthful for breakfast, <lb />
and had to force myself eat, as <lb />
tasted natural. I was also so nervous I <lb />
could get no natural sleep, waking at <lb />
sound. I commenced with a tea- <lb />
spoonful and gradually increased the <lb />
dose. Three of the Remedy <lb />
worked wonders; my appetite became <lb />
natural ; could eat anything I wanted <lb />
and relished it; my sleep became sound <lb />
and natural; a band of music would <lb />
hardly wake me now. My general health <lb />
is excellent, better than it has been in ten <lb />
years, and this change is owing solely to <lb />
Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy, as I took no <lb />
other. As a tonic and it cannot <lb />
be excelled. Anne Davis. <lb />
Chapel Hill, H. C. Feb. 1880. <lb />
COTTON MARKET- <lb />
Reported by Cobb <lb />
Norfolk. Va., 3rd, 1893. <lb />
The cotton market continues dull. <lb />
movement of cotton is extremely <lb />
light comparatively, but this influence is <lb />
still offset by the continued depression <lb />
in trade both at home and abroad caused <lb />
by the strike troubles in Lancashire, <lb />
which have not yet been adjusted, and <lb />
the pending legislation on the Hatch bill. <lb />
Prices here have been unchanged for <lb />
more than two weeks. Liverpool and <lb />
New York have shown a steady decline <lb />
during the week while the comparison in <lb />
the movement should bring about an ad- <lb />
Unless the strike troubles are <lb />
settled soon we will in all probability <lb />
have a still further decline. <lb />
1892 <lb />
Receipts at S. port <lb />
for week <lb />
Exports <lb />
Stock at ports <lb />
Plantation receipts <lb />
Net receipts since <lb />
Sept. 1st <lb />
Crop in sight <lb />
Visible supply <lb />
NORFOLK <lb />
As Cobb Bros. <lb />
Va., Feb. 7th 1893. <lb />
Good <lb />
3-10 <lb />
Good 1-10 <lb />
PEANUT <lb />
Extra <lb />
Attempted Burglary. <lb />
Mr. G. M. Tucker tells us that some <lb />
one went to his home, about miles from <lb />
town, during his absence last Friday <lb />
night and tried to break in the house. <lb />
Mrs. Tucker and the children were home <lb />
and were awakened by the noise of the <lb />
would-be burglar made. They got up <lb />
and a little son fired a gun out an up <lb />
stairs window which frightened the in- <lb />
away. All examination showed <lb />
that a lock had nearly been prized off the <lb />
door in the attempt to effect an entrance <lb />
into the house. <lb />
Few <lb />
Register of Deeds Harding tells us that <lb />
so far this year the number of crop liens <lb />
and mortgages coming in for registration <lb />
is much smaller than for the correspond- <lb />
time of-any recent year. The RE- <lb />
hopes that all through the <lb />
mortgaging season the number will show <lb />
a marked falling off. This decrease of <lb />
mortgages do doubt means that the farm- <lb />
are going as far as possible to run on <lb />
the cash system. If they do so they will <lb />
find themselves in much better <lb />
stances next <lb />
February Weather. <lb />
Below are some points about the <lb />
weather that may be of interest to our <lb />
readers, and may be put aside for com- <lb />
with the present The <lb />
warmest February was that of 1890, with <lb />
an average of degrees. The coldest <lb />
February was that of 1889, with an aver- <lb />
age of 37- The highest temperature was <lb />
degrees, on the of February, 1871. <lb />
The lowest temperature. February 26th, <lb />
1886, degrees. Average rainfall for the <lb />
month, 3-67 inches ; greatest rainfall was <lb />
7.33 inches in 1878. The least monthly <lb />
rainfall was 1.47 inches in 1872. The <lb />
greatest amount of precipitation record- <lb />
ed In twenty-four consecutive hours was <lb />
8.45 inches on February Sta, 1872. The <lb />
prevailing winds have been from the <lb />
southwest. The highest velocity of the <lb />
wind was during February. 1889, west <lb />
Justice's Meeting. <lb />
To the Justices of the Peace of Pitt <lb />
county. <lb />
You are notified to meet at <lb />
Greenville on Saturday the 18th day of <lb />
February 1893 for the purpose of con- <lb />
the advisability of establishing <lb />
an Inferior Court for the county Pitt. <lb />
The Justices are requested to attend <lb />
promptly, as the matter should be con- <lb />
before the adjournment of the <lb />
present Legislature. G. T. TYSON, <lb />
Chairman. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
Having qualified as the Executor of <lb />
Mrs. S. F. Parker, hereby notify all <lb />
persons indebted to her estate to make <lb />
prompt settlement, and all persons <lb />
claims against the estate to present <lb />
the same for settlement on or before <lb />
the of January, 1894, or this notice <lb />
will be plead in bar of their recovery. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The Superior Court Clerk of Pitt <lb />
county, having issued letters of <lb />
to me, the undersigned, on the <lb />
day of January. 1893, on the estate <lb />
of Fannie White, deceased, Notice is <lb />
hereby given to all persons indebted to <lb />
the estate to make immediate payment <lb />
to the undersigned, and to all creditors <lb />
of said estate to present their claims, <lb />
properly authenticated, to the under- <lb />
signed, within twelve months after the <lb />
date of this notice, or this notice, will <lb />
plead in bar of their recovery. <lb />
This the 25th day of January 1893. <lb />
J. W. SMITH, <lb />
on the estate of Fannie White. <lb />
MERCURIAL <lb />
Mr. of Fulton, Ark., says of <lb />
ten years ago I <lb />
a severe case of blood <lb />
poison. Leading prescribed <lb />
medicine after medicine, which I took <lb />
without any relief. I also tried <lb />
rial and potash remedies, with <lb />
RHEUMATISM <lb />
results, but which brought on an <lb />
attack of mercurial rheumatism that <lb />
made my life one After <lb />
four years I gave up all remedies <lb />
and S. After <lb />
taking several bottles, I was entirety <lb />
cured and able to resume work. <lb />
is the greatest <lb />
blood to-day on <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our regular <lb />
D. C, Feb. <lb />
Hon. Don M- Dickinson, who is <lb />
regarded as President-elect Cleve- <lb />
land's personal representative, is <lb />
in Washington working in the <lb />
interest of the Andrews bill for the <lb />
repeal of the Sherman silver law, <lb />
which is to be taken in the <lb />
en Thursday and Friday, <lb />
next. Mr. Dickinson is spoken <lb />
in favor of the annexation of Ha- <lb />
and in this he is in line with <lb />
tenths of Congress, without <lb />
regard to politics. The Hawaiian <lb />
Commissioners arrived to-day and <lb />
to-morrow they will present their <lb />
petition for annexation. <lb />
There are so many complications <lb />
that would have to be met if an act <lb />
of Congress annexing Hawaii is to <lb />
be passed, and in the course of the <lb />
delay, which would necessarily <lb />
ensue, some foreign Government <lb />
might, by a revolution or other <lb />
means, secure control of the <lb />
try, that it is probable that the out <lb />
come will be the adoption of some <lb />
quicker method of asserting <lb />
can control and warning foreign <lb />
Governments to keep their hands <lb />
off. There is no politics this, <lb />
simply Americanism, and, be it said <lb />
to his credit, Mr. Harrison has <lb />
consulted as freely with the prom- <lb />
democrats in Congress as <lb />
with members of his own party. <lb />
Notwithstanding the threats <lb />
cabled from London as to <lb />
England intended to do, it can be <lb />
stated without exaggeration that <lb />
the intentions of England or any <lb />
other nation is cutting no figure <lb />
whatever in this matter. Hawaii <lb />
is going to pass under the control <lb />
of the United States. That much <lb />
is certain, but it is not yet decided <lb />
just how it is to be done. Another <lb />
certainty in the situation is that <lb />
Hawaiian sugar producers will not <lb />
be paid the bounty of cents a <lb />
pound now paid to Americans <lb />
under the law, which <lb />
some allege to have been the cause <lb />
of the revolution and application <lb />
for annexation- Whatever the <lb />
cause, there are many good reasons <lb />
for our not neglecting the <lb />
to get control of the islands. <lb />
The majority report of the <lb />
House Judiciary committee, which <lb />
investigated the Homestead labor <lb />
troubles, has attracted wide <lb />
It was written by <lb />
of Louisiana, <lb />
who says therein that he finds <lb />
nothing in the Constitution which <lb />
authorizes Congress to interfere <lb />
with, regulate, or prohibit the em- <lb />
of Pinkerton or other <lb />
detectives, by persons or corpora- <lb />
except so far as they may <lb />
engaged in interstate commerce. <lb />
trouble at con- <lb />
beyond Fed- <lb />
or Congressional jurisdiction. <lb />
To permit interference by the Fed- <lb />
authorities, without demand <lb />
of the States, or to make laws <lb />
which would control or affect the <lb />
relations of employer and <lb />
in the States, would be to under- <lb />
mine the just authority of the <lb />
States and to Federal <lb />
authority upon a subject of which <lb />
the States have, and ought to have, <lb />
supreme <lb />
of the Senators that voted <lb />
against the anti-option bill when <lb />
it was finally passed by the Senate <lb />
were Democrats, and of the <lb />
votes cast in favor of the bill were <lb />
from Democrats. Four Demo- <lb />
were paired and did not vote. <lb />
The investigation of the <lb />
key trust, authorized by the House, <lb />
will be conducted by a sub com- <lb />
composed of <lb />
Bynum, Indiana ; <lb />
of Mississippi, Buchanan, of New <lb />
Jersey, and Powers, of Vermont. <lb />
There was a general surprise <lb />
the Senate voted down a <lb />
motion made by Senator Sherman <lb />
to make the Nicaragua Canal bill <lb />
the of the <lb />
Senate, which would have given it <lb />
the right of way every day after <lb />
o'clock. There is hardly one <lb />
chance in ten that this bill can get <lb />
through the present House, but it <lb />
has been supposed that the Senate <lb />
intended to pass it anyway. Per- <lb />
haps after all it will go to join the <lb />
numerous other matters that are <lb />
stated to be left over for the Fifty- <lb />
third Congress to wrestle with. <lb />
Representative Fellows, is chair- <lb />
man of the committee that will in- <lb />
the spending of Panama <lb />
Canal money the United States. <lb />
Col- Fellows is a shrewd lawyer, <lb />
and as a skillful cross-examiner <lb />
has few equals. Furthermore, he <lb />
is deeply interested in the subject <lb />
he is investigating. All of which <lb />
increases the chances for the ex- <lb />
of somebody, if there is <lb />
any truth in the charges that have <lb />
been from time to time made, both <lb />
in this country and in France, of <lb />
the bribery of Americans of prom- <lb />
Ex-Secretory Thompson <lb />
will be one of the witnesses heard. <lb />
He was president of the American <lb />
end of the company. <lb />
The Senate, which has only <lb />
two of the appropriation <lb />
ills seems at last to realize that it <lb />
is in a hole. Beginning to-day, it <lb />
will meet at. o'clock. <lb />
If the gold in the Treasury is re- <lb />
as much this month as lost, <lb />
Secretary will find less <lb />
than the known as <lb />
the gold reserve fund, when he <lb />
takes charge. There is now less <lb />
gold in the Treasury than at any <lb />
time for many years, and of course <lb />
what is there will have to be paid <lb />
out whenever Treasury notes are <lb />
presented for redemption. <lb />
WILSON AT <lb />
Stand catch the <lb />
qualities as they grasped the <lb />
knife this time with a grip of determination <lb />
nothing shall stay our turn <lb />
our backs on the loss of snap our <lb />
finger at the sacrifice of truth of It <lb />
is Just Wilson stock has been moved <lb />
to our Greenville we have not <lb />
the room for you know we are <lb />
not disposed to dabble in the future until <lb />
the present Is settled so we arc going to set- <lb />
it this of tho a <lb />
mite of money is a mountain of stock <lb />
to there yet remains months of <lb />
service for these will be <lb />
the car that docs not hear the breaking of <lb />
these the eye that cannot gee <lb />
the purse <lb />
that cannot claim a share of this monster sac- <lb />
only be for days <lb />
and don't take advantage of It. <lb />
Respectfully, C. T. <lb />
New <lb />
Straight <lb />
Clean <lb />
Large <lb />
We are still making a specialty of <lb />
m mom, notions, hats <lb />
Ml <lb />
We have a first class assortment Do not fail to <lb />
gel our <lb />
Prices Low, <lb />
Terms Easy. <lb />
BROS. OFFER FOR <lb />
The J. L. homo farm, Bea- <lb />
Dam township, adjoining the lands <lb />
of O T. Tyson and J. U. Cobb. A fine <lb />
farm of about acres, with good build- <lb />
and adapted to corn, cotton and to- <lb />
A line marl bed. <lb />
A farm near and lug <lb />
mediately on the railroad, formerly own- <lb />
ed by Caleb B. which <lb />
a unit are cleared. Good neighbor- <lb />
hood, and a school within <lb />
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin- <lb />
farms <lb />
A farm of three miles <lb />
from and miles <lb />
with large, substantial dwelling <lb />
and out houses, Known as the L. P. <lb />
home place, line cotton land, <lb />
good clay subsoil, accessible to marl. <lb />
A smaller farm adjoining the above <lb />
known as the Jones place, acres, <lb />
dwelling, barn and tenant house, laud <lb />
good. <lb />
A farm of acres in town- <lb />
ship, about miles from <lb />
acres cleared, part of the tract. <lb />
Part of the Noah farm, <lb />
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro, <lb />
located in mi improving section <lb />
can be made a valuable farm. <lb />
A small farm of abort <lb />
about miles from Greenville, on In- <lb />
Well Swamp, with etc., for- <lb />
owned by ox. <lb />
ALSO TIMBER <lb />
A tract of about acres near <lb />
station, with cypress timber well <lb />
suited for railroad ties. <lb />
A tract of about acres in <lb />
township, near the Washington rail- <lb />
road, pine timber. <lb />
A tract of acres near Johnson's <lb />
Mills, pine and cypress timber. <lb />
Apply to Wm. H. LONG, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
and parts for all kinds of machines are sold by us. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
BROWN BROS., <lb />
Depositors for American Bible Society <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having qualified as administrator de <lb />
non, upon the estate or F. V. At- <lb />
deceased on the day of Dec. <lb />
1892, notice is hereby given to all per- <lb />
sons indebted to the paid estate to <lb />
come forward and settle the same and all <lb />
persons having claims against the said <lb />
estate will present duly <lb />
c within the time prescribed by law <lb />
or this notice Will be plead in oar of <lb />
their recovery. <lb />
I'll is the st day of <lb />
J. L. lie non, <lb />
of the estate of F. M. Atkinson. <lb />
If you feel weak <lb />
and all worn out lake <lb />
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS <lb />
BARNES, <lb />
COMMISSION MERCHANTS <lb />
Va- <lb />
Tho of the cotton crop thus far this season would <lb />
indicate that there was some foundation for the bad crop accounts <lb />
daily reaching us from all parts of the cotton territory, if so the <lb />
staple Is selling too cheap and wishing to hold for higher <lb />
prices can do so by it to and drawing for per <lb />
bale on same and having it held for six months is so desired. <lb />
Faithfully yours, <lb />
VAUGHAN BARNES. <lb />
Specialist. <lb />
I will lie at the Macon Green- <lb />
ville N. C. Tuesday, February 14th <lb />
to examine those suffering with cancer <lb />
a d scrofulas and other kindred <lb />
The examinations will be free to <lb />
those who are really seeking advice and <lb />
to all who call for examination <lb />
through curiosity sake. <lb />
My mode of treatment is local and con- <lb />
no knife use. <lb />
I call the attention to the Subjoining <lb />
cards and also the citizens of Dunn and <lb />
Harnett counties and especially the <lb />
medical profession of the same. <lb />
Persons who may think of calling on <lb />
me while at Greenville can correspond <lb />
with me at this place before hand if they <lb />
wish. Respectfully, <lb />
J. HILL DANIEL, <lb />
Lock Box Dunn, N. O. <lb />
N. C, Dec. 1890. <lb />
Dr. J. H. Daniel, Dunn, N. C. <lb />
Dear Sir sore on my face, <lb />
was pronounced cancer, Is per- <lb />
well, and I do not hesitate to re- <lb />
commend your mode of treatment to any <lb />
suffering with cancer. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
M. D. <lb />
N. C, Jan. 1802. <lb />
Dr. J. H. Daniel, Dunn, N. C. <lb />
Dear letter in <lb />
regard to my trouble has been received. <lb />
I will say In reply that it is Still well <lb />
and now after two years since it was <lb />
treated, have no fears of Its return. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
A. M. M. D. <lb />
I am personally acquainted with Dr. J <lb />
H. Daniel of Dunn, Harnett Co., N. C. <lb />
who is a specialist treating cancer. I <lb />
have known only five cases he has <lb />
undertaken to cure or treat, and In each <lb />
case be had most perfect success. Any <lb />
persons suffering from cancer and de- <lb />
siring treatment, will do well to put <lb />
themselves In the hands of Dr. Daniel, <lb />
and if he or this paper Is doubted, in- <lb />
of persons in or around <lb />
ton. N. C. will leave those inquiring sat- <lb />
by the facts herein stated. Dr. <lb />
Daniel has certainly had wonderful <lb />
in the line of hi special practice. <lb />
OSCAR J. SPEAR. <lb />
This March 17th, 1862, Dunn, N. O. <lb />
as a Mr. <lb />
E. D. Weiss, Gay Building, Ht. Louis, <lb />
Mo., used <lb />
Oil several time- and And It an. <lb />
equaled as a pain-destroyer. I was <lb />
troubled with pains In my legs and tried <lb />
several remedies which did lac no good. <lb />
I then used Salvation Oil and the re- <lb />
were good. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly <lb />
before the Superior Court Clerk of Pitt <lb />
Co. as of U. J. Lang, <lb />
notice is hereby given to all persons in- <lb />
to the estate to make immediate <lb />
payment to the undersigned, and all per- <lb />
sons claims against said estate <lb />
must present the same for payment be- <lb />
fore the 20th of Dec., 1803, or this no- <lb />
will be plead in bar of recovery. <lb />
This 20th day of December, 1882. <lb />
R. L. DAVIS, <lb />
of R. J. Lang. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
By virtue of power of sale contain- <lb />
ed in a certain Mortgage. Deed executed <lb />
and delivered by H. A. Boyd and wife <lb />
F. Boyd to John Peyton on the 17th <lb />
day of Dec- 1385 and duly recorded In <lb />
Book Hi, Page in the Registers office <lb />
of Pitt Co., C. undersigned will <lb />
to public sale before the Court <lb />
House In Greenville for cash to the high- <lb />
est bidder on the day of Feb. 1803, at <lb />
o'clock M. the following described <lb />
landed property, A certain tract <lb />
of land In township, Pitt county, <lb />
N. C. adjoining the lands of Chas. Elks, <lb />
J. J. and Mrs. F. C- <lb />
containing about acres, to <lb />
satisfy said mortgage deed. <lb />
This 14th day of January, 1893. <lb />
JOHN PEYTON. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK STORK <lb />
AND MERCHANTS BUY <lb />
A their year's supplies will And <lb />
their interest to get our prices before <lb />
is complete <lb />
n all branches. <lb />
PORK SIDES <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
a at. LOWEST <lb />
TOBACCO CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
buy at one profit. A com <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on band and sold at prices to <lb />
the times. Our goods arc all bought a <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having n B <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. <lb />
Greenville, C <lb />
the family. <lb />
Something for Every Member. <lb />
Th for of n r <lb />
In the world. Model abort <lb />
for and old, <lb />
Department on The II did. <lb />
and Flower, Popular Science, Current <lb />
and Moral Hew <lb />
In for a <lb />
and Superb <lb />
RUSSELL <lb />
Last Call. <lb />
All persons in Pitt county owing taxes <lb />
for the year 1803. are hereby notified <lb />
that I will attend at the following times <lb />
and for the purpose of collecting <lb />
the <lb />
Bethel, Saturday, February <lb />
Parker's School House, Tuesday, Feb- <lb />
14th, 1808. <lb />
Wednesday, February 18th, <lb />
1898. <lb />
Saturday, February 18th. <lb />
1808. <lb />
Calico, Friday, February 1803. <lb />
Grifton, Saturday 26th, 1893. <lb />
den, Tuesday, February 28th, 1803. <lb />
Wednesday, March 1st, <lb />
1808. <lb />
This is positively the last call shall <lb />
make for the taxes of 1802 and all who <lb />
do not pay promptly, will be proceeded <lb />
against as the law <lb />
J. A. K. TUCKER, <lb />
Tax Collector. <lb />
I desire to annotate to rm friends and <lb />
the public generally that I have opened <lb />
n office for myself Just the <lb />
from my residence on the old Dr. <lb />
Blew lot where I be found at any <lb />
time. <lb />
FRANK W. BROWN, M. D. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
f. <lb />
-WHOLESALE AND RETAIL- <lb />
ST. C. <lb />
Half Rolls Barging, <lb />
Bundles New Arrow Tie. <lb />
Full Cream Cheese. <lb />
Tubs Choice Butter. <lb />
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb />
Boxes Tobacco, all grades. <lb />
Hum- Cakes and Crackers. <lb />
Barrels Stick Candy. <lb />
Kegs New Corn <lb />
Barrels Gail Ax Snuff. <lb />
Barrels P. Snuff. <lb />
; Barrels Railroad Mill- Snuff. <lb />
Barrels Snuff <lb />
Car load Side Meat <lb />
Car Seed Oat. <lb />
Car load Flour, all grade. <lb />
Kegs Powder. <lb />
Tons Shot. <lb />
old Virginia Cheroots. <lb />
j Full line Case Goods and everything <lb />
kept a Brat class grocery <lb />
General Merchant, <lb />
-Manufacturer of the- <lb />
COX COTTON <lb />
PLANTER <lb />
Manufacture and dealer in Brackets, <lb />
Scrolled Work, Church Pews and all Building Supplies. <lb />
My Tobacco in all sizes are for sale at S. M. <lb />
Co., Greenville, and at my mill. <lb />
Will make satisfactory arrangements with to <lb />
furnish their customers. <lb />
K. J. conn, put Co., n. ;. <lb />
C. C. COBB, Pitt Co., N. <lb />
COBB BROS., <lb />
to Bros. <lb />
Cotton Factors <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
STREET, NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb />
to the of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following <lb />
not to be excelled in this market. And to be First-class an <lb />
pure straight good. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, LA <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb />
kinds, Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Limb, Plaster of Paris, and <lb />
Hair. Harness, Bridles and <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb />
Jobbers prices, dozen, lees per cent Cash. 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 Pumps, Salt and Wood <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a nail and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
is <lb />
And a good lamp <lb />
must be simple; when it is not simple it is <lb />
I not good. Simple, Beautiful, <lb />
I words mean much, but to sec The Rochester <lb />
will impress the truth more forcibly. All metal, <lb />
tough and seamless, and in three pieces only <lb />
it is absolutely safe and unbreakable. Like Aladdin's <lb />
of old, it is indeed a for its mar- <lb />
light is purer and brighter than gas light, <lb />
softer than electric light and more cheerful than either. <lb />
Look If the lamp denier the <lb />
Rochester, and the want, tend to us for our new illustrated <lb />
-and we will send you a lamp safely by over <lb />
from the Largest Lamp Store in <lb />
LAMP CO., Park Place, New York City.<lb />
J. L. SUGG. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG OLD STAND <lb />
All Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At rate. <lb />
FOB A PROOF<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017584_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
-i <lb />
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb />
LOCAL. <lb />
Messrs. J. B- Thomas, of Tar- <lb />
and G- A. Lea of Danville <lb />
were on our breaks Thursday. <lb />
Breaks have been quite large <lb />
since the market opened up after <lb />
the holidays and the offerings very <lb />
good with wrappers clear out of <lb />
sight <lb />
Attention is called to the <lb />
of G. M. Tucker. The <lb />
brands of guano that Mr. Tucker <lb />
is handling are too well known in <lb />
this section to need any comment <lb />
from us. <lb />
While skating on the floor of the <lb />
Eastern a few days <lb />
ago Mr. W T- Mangum accidental <lb />
feel and seriously sprained his <lb />
ankle- He is almost unable to <lb />
attend the breaks. <lb />
The Greenville warehouses are <lb />
better located for the convenience <lb />
of the buyers than any other <lb />
warehouse in the State, being <lb />
within fifty yards of each other <lb />
and about two hundred from the <lb />
depot- <lb />
There are no reasons in the <lb />
world why Greenville should not <lb />
develop her manufacturing inter- <lb />
surrounding country pro- <lb />
enough fruit vegetables <lb />
to thoroughly sustain a canning <lb />
factory. <lb />
Our cotton resources are <lb />
and enterprise and <lb />
pluck are all that is to <lb />
start up a cotton factory. <lb />
And last, but not least, de- <lb />
of tobacco industry <lb />
and will a new era in <lb />
history of Eastern North Carolina. <lb />
A few days ago we gentle- <lb />
man of means say that ho <lb />
contribute liberally towards <lb />
tobacco factory in <lb />
Greenville- To purchase the ma- <lb />
needed in a plug factory <lb />
and all other arrangements for <lb />
manufacturing aside from the <lb />
building will not cost to exceed <lb />
fifteen hundred dollars. Tho old <lb />
college- is much more <lb />
arranged for manufacturing <lb />
than any other building <lb />
in town and be bad very <lb />
liberal terms. <lb />
Will not some enterprising man ; <lb />
t advantage of this opportunity j <lb />
to make Greenville a Durham and <lb />
himself a J. S- Can <lb />
A sure for Keep it I <lb />
handy. Mr. Clinton Campbell. Chester, j <lb />
Pa., pays can Dr. Bull's <lb />
Syrup pure cure for croup. <lb />
We have kepi it in the house for the last <lb />
years and would not be without <lb />
Salvation Oil <lb />
IT BLAKELY. <lb />
The Trait Begins War on <lb />
Broadway Dealer. <lb />
New York World. <lb />
The determination of the <lb />
can Tobacco Trust to crush the <lb />
National Cigarette and Tobacco <lb />
j Company has been carried to the <lb />
of ordering one of the <lb />
largest tobacco dealers on Broad- <lb />
way to stop selling the product of <lb />
i the latter concern. When the <lb />
rectors of the American Company <lb />
j met on Wednesday it was decided <lb />
i not to refuse to send consignments <lb />
of cigarettes to John Blakeley, of <lb />
No- ad way, but later, when <lb />
I it was reported that Mr- Blakely <lb />
i hat determined to sell the <lb />
Company's cigarette, the action <lb />
j was rescinded. <lb />
advice of Gen. <lb />
i son of Gov. Leon of New <lb />
Mr. Blakely <lb />
day, do not propose to <lb />
to any such It is <lb />
to think that a large <lb />
i can govern my local trade. <lb />
i I took this as a joke at first, but <lb />
now it becoming serious. On <lb />
Dec. J. C- foreign agent <lb />
of the American Company, called <lb />
at my store and told me that I <lb />
I must remove from my window the <lb />
On Dec. <lb />
j he came officially from his com- <lb />
I and told me that I had been <lb />
off from all rebate privileges <lb />
granted who sold the trust <lb />
cigarette. <lb />
asked for that ultimatum tn <lb />
writing, but I am still waiting for <lb />
it- said I had been cut off <lb />
on Dec. but on the 28th I re- <lb />
a bill accompanying a con- <lb />
of cigarettes from the <lb />
trust which I am allowed a re- <lb />
bate of per cent. On subsequent <lb />
bills however, the items show that <lb />
the trust has placed me on its list <lb />
of boycotted dealers. This week I <lb />
ordered trust and <lb />
was sent only showing <lb />
that I am not to receive enough <lb />
goods to meet my demands as a <lb />
punishment for soiling the Nation- <lb />
Mr. Blakely said that he at once <lb />
ordered cigar from the <lb />
National Company on the receipt <lb />
of the bill showing a curtail meat <lb />
of his consignment from the Amer- <lb />
Company- <lb />
has been an effort made <lb />
since then to have me give the <lb />
continued Mr- <lb />
Blakely. Browne, the Assist- <lb />
ant Secretary of the American <lb />
Company, wrote asking to con- <lb />
fer with W. A- Butler, the <lb />
but I would not do so- Mr. <lb />
Butler called up by telephone <lb />
to-day. to call upon <lb />
him but I didn't go. If the trust <lb />
continues to refuse me cigarettes <lb />
I shall have to sue it, that's all- I <lb />
am under no contract with the <lb />
American Company not to sell <lb />
other goods, while it is obliged to <lb />
furnish me with what I pay for. <lb />
Tho fight is still on between us, <lb />
I am to sell the Nation- <lb />
goods and do my share of the <lb />
in and out of <lb />
THE SPECIAL TAX <lb />
On Tobacco Warehouse Should be <lb />
Repealed <lb />
Steps have been taken to have <lb />
the special tax on warehouses re- <lb />
pealed by the Legislature of this <lb />
State now in session. The matter <lb />
has been referred to a special com <lb />
who will shortly make a <lb />
special report on the subject. <lb />
That the special tax on ware- <lb />
houses is wrong goes without say <lb />
No class of people in the <lb />
tobacco trade work harder than <lb />
Their life is a <lb />
strain and push from start to fin- <lb />
With few exceptions they do <lb />
more to build up the financial <lb />
standing of a town than any one <lb />
else- When the warehouseman <lb />
has succeeded in influencing heavy <lb />
sales of leaf then business is brisk <lb />
and trade goes on at a lively rate- <lb />
But that is not all. The ware- <lb />
house people work hard and are <lb />
benefactors to their towns, but the <lb />
pay coming to themselves is very <lb />
small in the end- It is safe to say <lb />
that in no line of the tobacco <lb />
is the pay so small for the <lb />
amount of energy expended. <lb />
Take the warehouse proprietors of <lb />
the two States and how many of <lb />
them have become rich Very <lb />
few indeed In North Carolina <lb />
you can count on the fingers of <lb />
one hand the who <lb />
have made a success, in a business <lb />
way, of warehouse management- <lb />
This being the case it is unjust to <lb />
tax the people who work so hard <lb />
and make so little The tax is a <lb />
strain on them and it is often very <lb />
difficult to pay it The law should <lb />
be repealed and at this session. <lb />
To secure this repeal the ware- <lb />
house people must use their <lb />
Every market in the State <lb />
should send a representative to <lb />
Raleigh to push the matter <lb />
There is much opposition to re <lb />
Jaws of this kind and <lb />
our take the <lb />
matter in their own hands and <lb />
push it nothing will be dons. The <lb />
repeal of this law will save our <lb />
warehouse people many hard <lb />
earned dollars and they should <lb />
have their own interests enough <lb />
at heart to watch the matter close- <lb />
and see that the Bill to repeal <lb />
the special tax is passed, <lb />
ATTENTION FARMERS <lb />
Do you want a strictly Do you want a Fertilizer that has been <lb />
high grade Fertilizer tested by your neighbor and found to be <lb />
superior to all others. <lb />
IF SO <lb />
Call on the undersigned and buy any of the following brands which <lb />
are guaranteed strictly reliable- <lb />
Reported by Joyner <lb />
Green, <lb />
Common, <lb />
Good. <lb />
I Fine, <lb />
f Common. <lb />
Fair. <lb />
Good, <lb />
Kine, <lb />
f Common, <lb />
Good, <lb />
Fancy, <lb />
Fair. <lb />
Good, <lb />
Fancy, <lb />
Scraps <lb />
Fillers <lb />
Smokers. <lb />
Cutters <lb />
Wrappers <lb />
t Bright. <lb />
to<lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to IS <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
goto <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
K. M. Pace, Reporter. <lb />
We are again enjoying goo open <lb />
weather, fit tor all kinds of nit door <lb />
work. The receipt- of tobacco ins been <lb />
heavy. Prices ate ruling, on all <lb />
desirable grades. Tobacco q to <lb />
correspondents two week ago f oat of <lb />
reach. Wrappers are muffing com <lb />
to <lb />
sabot. <lb />
Reported by Owen Davis, Manager Davis <lb />
Warehouse. <lb />
MARKET QUOTATIONS. <lb />
Lugs or <lb />
Common to medium. <lb />
Medium to good. <lb />
Good to fine. <lb />
Fillers or <lb />
Common to medium, <lb />
It <lb />
Medium to good, <lb />
Good to fine. <lb />
Cutters or Best <lb />
Common to <lb />
Medium to good, <lb />
Good to tine, <lb />
Wrappers or Best <lb />
Common to medium, <lb />
Medium to good, IS, <lb />
Good to line, <lb />
Fine to fancy, <lb />
Common to medium, <lb />
Medium to good, <lb />
Good to flue. <lb />
Flue to fancy, <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
Primings <lb />
Fillers to S <lb />
good to to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
Cutters <lb />
to g <lb />
Wrappers <lb />
By J. S. Meadows, <lb />
Smokers common, to to <lb />
Cutters common, good. to IS to <lb />
to <lb />
Fillers to f <lb />
to <lb />
Wrappers to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
THE STOLEN LETTER. <lb />
LOUISVILLE <lb />
Alex. Reporter, <lb />
Sales for week, month and year, with <lb />
1892 1891 1890 <lb />
Week <lb />
Month <lb />
Year <lb />
market <lb />
Dark. <lb />
Trash, <lb />
Com. lugs <lb />
Medium lugs, <lb />
Good lugs. <lb />
Com. leaf. <lb />
Medium leaf. <lb />
Good leaf. <lb />
1892 crop 1890 crop <lb />
8.50 to to 2.50 <lb />
4.00 to 4.50 2.75 to 4.00 <lb />
4.50 to 6.25 Nominal <lb />
6.26 to 6.00 <lb />
to <lb />
6.50 to 7.60 <lb />
nominal <lb />
ORINOCO <lb />
SPECIAL COMPOUND, <lb />
BONE, <lb />
PREMIUM, <lb />
PURE GERMAN f <lb />
I will sell these goods on terms to suit all purchasers. <lb />
G. M. TUCKER, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
l- W- <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
-o-<lb />
References and samples furnished on application. <lb />
Bullock Mitchell, <lb />
Owners and Proprietors. <lb />
headquarters for Win Prices High Averages <lb />
We the old stand, where are better prepared than <lb />
cut u i -i band lo advantage the fine bright Tobacco from the Golden <lb />
We have a very large corps of buyers who arc anxious for New Tobacco <lb />
arc t pay for it. stands well on our <lb />
and I eagerly sought both by our order men and speculators. Wt <lb />
very we mil fay in the Pitt, and adjoining counties <lb />
Hint tobacco better this year than we have known it in <lb />
wars and that we look tor good prices during season. Hogsheads can be <lb />
OF CHARGE those planters shipping to us, by applying to S. M. <lb />
A Co. Greenville, N. C. or to Amos G. Cox, Winterville. N. C. <lb />
that we bid lively on every pile put upon our floor and buy largely of nil grades <lb />
that ant sell, and will sec to it that you shall have highest market for every <lb />
sold with us. Recollect that it cost you nothing to collect on they <lb />
are in New York Exchange without cost to bolder. Don't forget to try us <lb />
with a good shipment and will yon that from way. <lb />
and that we every time on big prices and you know they, talk- <lb />
v, ill have your tobacco graded for you in our house by skilled at 1.00 per <lb />
Thanking friends for the very liberal bestowed upon tin in the past <lb />
and pledging them our very best efforts to please in the future, we are with <lb />
but Very truly your friends, <lb />
BULLOCK MITCHELL, <lb />
Oxford, S. C. <lb />
The <lb />
Tobacco <lb />
Warehouse, <lb />
PROPS. <lb />
THANK our friends and <lb />
patrons for their kind and <lb />
liberal patronage during the <lb />
past year and promise that we <lb />
shall work as hard daring <lb />
the present year to protect their <lb />
interest. Oar market has re- <lb />
sales after the unusual <lb />
long cold weather and all grades <lb />
of tobacco are in active demand. <lb />
We have the same force of buy- <lb />
with increased orders for <lb />
all grades and can say <lb />
that we can get you as much <lb />
money for your tobacco as <lb />
ANY MARKET <lb />
Bring on tobacco and we <lb />
will please yon with a high <lb />
average. <lb />
To those who wish to plant <lb />
tobacco we will distribute free <lb />
a few packages choice variety <lb />
seed. <lb />
Give us a trial, <lb />
Your friends truly, <lb />
Joyner <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
Lucy Watson had two lovers <lb />
this would be an unfair allowance <lb />
in these days, but fifteen years ago <lb />
there were more marrying men <lb />
in India and fewer maidens. <lb />
Besides, Lacy was really sweet <lb />
enough and pretty enough and <lb />
adorable enough to <lb />
the attentions of any number. <lb />
Of these two swains was an <lb />
elderly is, if the Col- <lb />
of a District on two thous- <lb />
and and some odd hundreds of <lb />
rupees a month and a <lb />
the most liberal nature can prop- <lb />
be called a swain at all, which <lb />
is doubtful He was a good fellow, <lb />
was John but at least <lb />
twenty years older than Lucy, and, <lb />
which was more to the point, very <lb />
prim and stiff and solemn and <lb />
And so when CoL Watson cited <lb />
instances of the happy marriages <lb />
he had seen between elderly gen- <lb />
and youthful <lb />
used occasionally to draw on his <lb />
imagination a Lucy <lb />
would piteously <lb />
papa, but it isn't his age, <lb />
that's nothing, oh, <lb />
Lucy, he's so old in <lb />
his ideas and he has <lb />
in common with a <lb />
And then there would be a <lb />
break down in the voice, and a <lb />
tear would fall on the Colonel's <lb />
hand, and he would turn away to <lb />
smoke a cheroot, and make tho <lb />
best of it, for he did not want to <lb />
force hit child into a distasteful <lb />
marriage, ho was too fond of her <lb />
for that; but with six sons ranging <lb />
from to that his one <lb />
should marry a well-to-do man was <lb />
distinctly desirable. <lb />
Pensions were. good m those <lb />
days, but even a year <lb />
small with such a troop <lb />
boys to educate and put into the <lb />
world. And then there was a <lb />
trifle of debt which <lb />
what was the use of <lb />
thinking about it if it would make <lb />
little Lucy unhappy It is almost <lb />
superfluous to say that the <lb />
adorer, whom Lucy did like, was <lb />
a hopeless ineligible, Fair- <lb />
was a subaltern her <lb />
father's regiment, of about five <lb />
service. A fine young <lb />
ow, good at sports, but with <lb />
no prospects. <lb />
In a small up-country station <lb />
these two had many opportunities <lb />
of meeting, and to do them justice <lb />
they took advantage of all they <lb />
could get But was not <lb />
without a sound, com- <lb />
sense, and she would not <lb />
pledge herself to George until he <lb />
could show some reasonable <lb />
grounds for believing that his <lb />
position will soon justify <lb />
she would not listen to the idea of <lb />
an indefinite arrangement. <lb />
Matters were thus at a deadlock, <lb />
and there seemed no hope of a so- <lb />
Months passed by, weary <lb />
months to all concerned, all <lb />
of a sudden came a change. Tho <lb />
new Governor-General arrived in <lb />
the country, and it so happened <lb />
that in former years he had Known <lb />
George's father rather intimately. <lb />
The natural result followed. For <lb />
a boy who had passed nothing but <lb />
the higher standard in Hindustani <lb />
it was not possible to do much at <lb />
once, but still he might tried. <lb />
So down the offer of a semi- <lb />
political appointment in a native <lb />
State for six months, the <lb />
of which was to depend <lb />
upon George's progress and ability. <lb />
There was a tearful parting. <lb />
mind, you are not to write <lb />
to mo unless I write to you first. <lb />
Papa would be very angry if you <lb />
were to write direct to mo; and, of <lb />
course, I won't have anything done <lb />
in a roundabout way. When I <lb />
write to if I do write at all, <lb />
sir, then you may answer, <lb />
So, half crying, half laughing, <lb />
Lucy dismissed him, and both tho <lb />
Colonel and said good- <lb />
by with a sigh of relief. The <lb />
Lucy had a reason for the <lb />
condition she imposed. Over and <lb />
above the difficulties of a <lb />
to which her father <lb />
would object, she wanted to test <lb />
her lover. Married, ladies often <lb />
prone to dismal advice, had sniff- <lb />
told her of the inconstancy <lb />
of man, and she had also read <lb />
about it in novels and poems. <lb />
we begin by writing to each <lb />
she argued to herself, <lb />
won't have a chance of forgetting <lb />
me; but if there is no <lb />
between us for some time, <lb />
then that will show whether his <lb />
affection is <lb />
Left alone in the field, good, <lb />
honest could make the <lb />
running at his own pace; but some- <lb />
how he never seemed to get any <lb />
neater the winning post. <lb />
But the three months never <lb />
passed, for one fine day the Colonel, <lb />
with a white face and broken <lb />
was brought back in a <lb />
from the parade ground <lb />
horse had and though <lb />
the bones were soon mended, com- <lb />
set in, and the doctors <lb />
ordered him in- <lb />
juries; never got right in this <lb />
place; voyage will give him <lb />
strength, etc. Then the poor man <lb />
told Lucy that she really had <lb />
better make up her mind, that he <lb />
could ill afford the expense of taking <lb />
her to England, and reminded her <lb />
that she did not get on too easily <lb />
with her stepmother, who was <lb />
looking after the boys. And Lucy <lb />
did make, up her mind. She wrote <lb />
straight to George that very after- <lb />
noon, telling him everything. <lb />
hope it isn't very <lb />
dear, but this is no time to stand <lb />
upon formalities. If you care <lb />
for me; if you think your position <lb />
hopeful to justify <lb />
marrying, come down at once or <lb />
write. But if a tear would <lb />
fall an the find that <lb />
for any reason it cannot be, then <lb />
don't answer. I shall <lb />
It was three post to <lb />
George's station, and Lucy told <lb />
her father she would think over <lb />
the matter, and would give him a <lb />
definite answer in a week. The <lb />
sixth day came and the poor girl <lb />
was trembling with excitement; <lb />
the seventh, and she could scarce- <lb />
keep still for a moment But <lb />
toe post no letter. At <lb />
first a of despair <lb />
on one <lb />
rallied. <lb />
stupid I am There may <lb />
not have been time to catch the <lb />
mail or George may have been <lb />
out <lb />
So to make sure, and leave <lb />
enough margin, she begged her <lb />
father for throe grace, for she <lb />
never doubted George. But tho <lb />
three days passed and there was <lb />
no sign. <lb />
Lucy was married to <lb />
a fortnight afterward. <lb />
very short engagement, my <lb />
said the Major's wife to her <lb />
bosom friend, you see tho <lb />
poor dear Colonel must be off at <lb />
once; can't wait any longer, the <lb />
doctors say, and it is everything <lb />
to have Lucy settled before he <lb />
goes. I wrote and told George <lb />
Fairleigh that it was coming off <lb />
an awful blow for him, poor <lb />
low, unless he has forgotten all <lb />
about her, which is <lb />
But he had not forgotten all <lb />
about her, and for hours after re- <lb />
the good lady's information <lb />
he sat like one in a dream. Then <lb />
ho shook himself together, and in <lb />
duo course read the domestic <lb />
in the paper quite calmly. <lb />
The and George Fair- <lb />
never met, for he went into <lb />
the political lino, and went from <lb />
one native State to another without <lb />
once returning to his former <lb />
But he now and again <lb />
heard of they led an <lb />
happy fife in a <lb />
way, no particular love perhaps on <lb />
her part, but a sincere attachment <lb />
to her husband. And presently <lb />
retired and settled in <lb />
England. <lb />
It was just fourteen years since <lb />
George left his regiment. He had <lb />
got on well, and was now <lb />
dent at the court of an <lb />
prince with an <lb />
name. It was a <lb />
hot night, and his solitary dinner <lb />
was over when the day's <lb />
post came English mail <lb />
with he lighted a cigar and <lb />
left tho table for a long arm chair <lb />
in tho veranda. Tho bearer placed <lb />
the lamp conveniently, and retired <lb />
to doze. Tho first letter that <lb />
caught his eye from the Post- <lb />
master-General, and, wondering <lb />
what that exalted functionary could <lb />
want with ho opened it be- <lb />
fore looking at the English letters <lb />
and newspapers. Tho following <lb />
is what he <lb />
I tho honor to inform <lb />
that an old man died lately at <lb />
the village of in tho <lb />
State of who was <lb />
formerly a runner in that <lb />
State. On his deathbed he con- <lb />
fessed to haying stolen one of tho <lb />
letter bags ago, under <lb />
tho belief that there was money in <lb />
it; but that ho then became fright- <lb />
and hid tho loiters in a DOS <lb />
without opening them. This box <lb />
ho buried, but after some trouble <lb />
it has bean found, and tho contents <lb />
arc now being distributed so far as <lb />
the addresses can traced. Tito <lb />
enclosed is apparently for you, as <lb />
on inquiry it has boon ascertained <lb />
that it you who wore at the <lb />
time in I have the <lb />
honor, <lb />
George know the writing on tho <lb />
enclosure at it was <lb />
Tho faithful bearer wondered <lb />
tho Sahib was so long coining <lb />
to bed; also ho did not seem to <lb />
reading, for there was no of <lb />
paper, so with cat-like tread he <lb />
crept to the veranda. Tho Sahib <lb />
was lying back in the with <lb />
his hand over bis face. Throe and <lb />
four times tho man returned, and <lb />
always to find his master in the <lb />
tame position. <lb />
It was not till tho gray dawn <lb />
made the lamp-light pale that <lb />
George roused himself from along <lb />
dream of what might have been <lb />
and of what had boon; oven <lb />
then he did not feel in the <lb />
sleepy, so for sheer lack of some- <lb />
thing to do ho. tool up an English <lb />
paper that had just arrived, and <lb />
chancing to open it at the Deaths, <lb />
IS, at Q roan <lb />
Gardens, John <lb />
Allister, Esq., late of tho Indian <lb />
Civil Service. Indian papers please<lb />
Next month <lb />
started for England on urgent <lb />
Million. <lb />
FRAY <lb />
is a town in Uruguay, America, <lb />
on the rivet Plate. It would not be <lb />
except that It Is whore the <lb />
COMPANY'S <lb />
EXTRACT OF <lb />
comes from, and in the fertile grazing <lb />
fields around It, are reared the cattle <lb />
which arc n <lb />
make this product, which in <lb />
known the world the standard <lb />
QUALITY, FLAVOR AND PURITY. <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb />
Steamers leave Washington for Green- <lb />
ville and touching at all land- <lb />
on Jar River Monday, Wednesday, <lb />
and Friday at A. II. <lb />
Returning leave at A . M. <lb />
Saturdays. <lb />
Greenville A. days. <lb />
These departure subject to stage of <lb />
water on Tar River. <lb />
at Washington with steam- <lb />
of and <lb />
direct line for Norfolk. <lb />
Philadelphia. New Tort and Boston. <lb />
Shippers order their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk A Hal ti- <lb />
n-ore Steamboat from <lb />
more. -Merchants Miners from <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. SON. <lb />
Washington, N. C <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent. <lb />
If <lb />
RUSSIAN <lb />
Violin strings. <lb />
Imitators and followers But No Competitors <lb />
JOHN F SON'S <lb />
GENUINE <lb />
Violin Strings <lb />
Dealer or need by If he <lb />
desires lo buy Ones <lb />
JOHN F. SON, r. <lb />
A your Dealer for and if you cannot them report to <lb />
Mo Goods Band Sold at Retail. <lb />
It cannot <lb />
the finest fabric or <lb />
hands.<lb />
K TOT <lb />
WASHING <lb />
COMPOUND <lb />
THE INVENTION <lb />
For Saving Toil <lb />
r To The <lb />
Or <lb />
NEW YORK. <lb />
Burning, corroding, destroying the <lb />
of animal flesh.<lb />
purging. <lb />
Chemical analysis will prove that has no caustic <lb />
qualities, but that the ingredients of which it is made have <lb />
been so skilfully manipulated, that stands to-day <lb />
the greatest household detergent Science <lb />
it ; its rapid adoption by inti Hi and economical <lb />
housekeepers, who use jackals each <lb />
year, is proof positive that science and arc right <lb />
These facts should lead those who do not use to <lb />
try it at once ; directions for easy n every <lb />
I . meet<lb />
V. same i , id <lb />
. pod <lb />
all rs. ,,; t i T i- <lb />
j Factory is well with the boat pot up nothing <lb />
We up with the times the <lb />
t material used in all work. All styles of Spring are yon can select from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram King <lb />
also keep on hand full line of Made which we <lb />
at the lowest rates. Special attention given to repairing, <lb />
T. XX <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
NEW GOODS <lb />
completed nu <lb />
N. C, I am opening <lb />
a or <lb />
and invite the to rail <lb />
examine <lb />
GOODS, NOTIONS, <lb />
Our motto in Standard at <lb />
soluble Prices for <lb />
Examine my before buying <lb />
elsewhere. the goods prices do <lb />
not suit we charge them. <lb />
Country produce taken In <lb />
or w. k. <lb />
New Barber Shop. <lb />
I take tills to return <lb />
thanks to my many have <lb />
me their liberal support in the past <lb />
opened a new shop in <lb />
House and would respectfully solicit n <lb />
continuation of my former patronage. <lb />
I will all that they shall <lb />
every attention getting the best <lb />
and hair cut in town. All is <lb />
trial. Satisfaction guaranteed. All <lb />
of the latest Improvements in the <lb />
art will be In OH in my shop. <lb />
TO <lb />
------If you to <lb />
then purchase of a NO and from <lb />
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb />
in the purchase of Organ address <lb />
ADOLPH COHN, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
General Agent for North Caroling, <lb />
who is now handling goods direct from <lb />
the manufacturers, as <lb />
GRAPE PIANOS, <lb />
for tone, workmanship and <lb />
and endorsed by nearly all the <lb />
in the United <lb />
Made by Paul G. who is <lb />
one of the best mechanics and In- <lb />
of the day. Thirteen new <lb />
patents on this high grade Piano- <lb />
Also the EVANS UP. <lb />
RIGHT PIANO which been sold by <lb />
him for the past six years in the eastern j <lb />
part of this State and up to this time has <lb />
given entire The Upright <lb />
mentioned will he sold at <lb />
to 1360, in Oak, <lb />
Walnut or Mahogany cases. <lb />
Also the CROWN PARLOR ORGAN <lb />
from to f In solid or Oak <lb />
cases. <lb />
Ten year experience the mask <lb />
has enabled him to handle <lb />
nothing but standard goods and he doe <lb />
not to say that he can sell an <lb />
musical Instrument about nut <lb />
cheaper than other agents arc now <lb />
Refer to all banks In Carolina. <lb />
Rent. <lb />
A large brick store in the <lb />
Opera House Block, Greenville, just <lb />
rated, splendid room, with patent <lb />
tor, counters, and drawers. <lb />
Apply to <lb />
H. LONG. <lb />
N. C. Attorney-at-Law. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, and all business in the U, <lb />
Patent office or in the Courts attended to <lb />
for Moderate Fees. <lb />
We arc the IT. Patent Of- <lb />
engaged In Patents Exclusively, and <lb />
can obtain patents n 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 <lb />
Patents. V <lb />
refer, to the Post Master, the <lb />
Supt. of the Money Order Did. and to <lb />
of the U. S. Patent Office. <lb />
advise terms and reference to <lb />
actual clients in your own State, or <lb />
address, C. A. A Co., <lb />
Washington. D. C. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
SCOTLAND NECK DYE WORKS, <lb />
Scotland Neck. N. C. <lb />
Express Paid on Packages. Send for <lb />
Address,<lb />
For the Core all hum <lb />
This has been in use over <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know has <lb />
been In steady demand. It has en- <lb />
hi the lending physicians all over <lb />
country, and has effected cures where <lb />
other remedies, with the attention of <lb />
tho most experienced physicians, <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment la of <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained Is owing entirely <lb />
its efficacy, as but has <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
public. One bottle of this will <lb />
be sent to any address receipt of On <lb />
Dollar. Sample box free. The usual <lb />
discount to Druggist. All Cash <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
and communications to <lb />
T. r. <lb />
Sole <lb />
gas <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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