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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 17 May 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>18930517</dc:date>
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                <p>
Believes in <lb />
And takes his <lb />
paper. <lb />
One Dollar gets <lb />
Reflector. <lb />
This Office for Job Printing <lb />
Thing Mentioned in our State Ex- <lb />
changes that are of General Interest <lb />
The Cream of the News. <lb />
A meeting of the State <lb />
Monument Association is <lb />
called to be held in <lb />
24th. <lb />
Goldsboro Headlight There <lb />
are now twenty-three orphans at <lb />
the Odd Fellows Home, near this <lb />
city. <lb />
Davis Knowles, of <lb />
county, was drowned last week in <lb />
attempting to cross a swamp <lb />
His two stales also per- <lb />
Washington The <lb />
Beaufort County Lumber Com- <lb />
have sold all their timber in <lb />
and part in Craven to <lb />
the Suffolk Co. <lb />
Henderson Gold Mr. I. <lb />
R. Fuller, who lives about seven <lb />
miles from town, lost his pack- <lb />
house, containing six burns of <lb />
tobacco, by tire last night It is <lb />
supposed that the fire caught from <lb />
or was the work of an <lb />
incendiary- says he <lb />
was slightly <lb />
A white <lb />
man named Monday <lb />
morning, was killed at the saw <lb />
mill at A- R. junction, <lb />
by being struck with a board <lb />
which he was to a rip <lb />
saw. He leaves a wife and <lb />
children. He was a good <lb />
citizen and much esteemed by his <lb />
employees. <lb />
Free Press About a <lb />
dozen boys were up in court yes- <lb />
for <lb />
dice mostly. The defendants all <lb />
submitted and judgment was <lb />
pended on payment of costs. The <lb />
solicitor stated that he desired <lb />
for the public to know that all <lb />
cigars or anything <lb />
is against the law. <lb />
Wilkesboro Chronicle Mrs- <lb />
Lottie of Mulberry, is <lb />
peculiarly afflicted. She <lb />
spells of bleeding. The blood <lb />
oozes out through the pores of <lb />
the skin and stains her clothes <lb />
all over her body. Her tongue, <lb />
which has been swollen for some <lb />
time, has begun to bleed. She is <lb />
gradually bleeding to death and <lb />
cannot last long. <lb />
Morganton Herald One day <lb />
last week James Smith, a son of <lb />
George Smith, was <lb />
killed on the lands of Mr. J. W. <lb />
Garrison, a few miles south of <lb />
Morganton- Smith was cutting <lb />
trees in the woods for tan bark, <lb />
and a limb thrown back by a fall- <lb />
tree struck him on the head <lb />
and crushed his skull. Smith <lb />
was about thirty-five years of ago <lb />
and was unmarried. <lb />
Raleigh News and Observer <lb />
Dr. William F. Lewis, son of Dr. <lb />
R. W. Lewis, of Kinston, who had <lb />
recently in medicine <lb />
in the University of Maryland, <lb />
has just passed the examination <lb />
before the Army Board in New <lb />
York and now ranks as Assistant <lb />
in the army. He is at <lb />
home awaiting orders. Dr. W- <lb />
F. Lewis was one of three only <lb />
that passed the board. <lb />
Charlotte Tracy <lb />
Worley, the 14-year-old son of <lb />
this city, met with a terrible <lb />
dent Wednesday, in the factory <lb />
at Rockingham, where he is em- <lb />
ployed. While at work, his left <lb />
arm was caught in the machinery <lb />
and so badly torn and mangled <lb />
that amputation is necessary. <lb />
His mother went to him <lb />
day, and will bring him home as <lb />
soon as he is able to be moved. <lb />
Warren county <lb />
has the smartest hog. Last week <lb />
when the forest fires wore raging <lb />
this hog saw the flames approach- <lb />
her bed of straw, in which <lb />
was her brood. The old porker <lb />
quickly rooted out a hole near by <lb />
and deposited her pigs in it. She <lb />
then laid down over them, and <lb />
the fire passed burning the <lb />
bed and singeing the hair of the <lb />
mother hog. The little squealers <lb />
were saved and are now just as <lb />
happy as little pigs should be. <lb />
Wilmington At <lb />
the base ball game at Hilton <lb />
Park yesterday a was <lb />
drunk, and in his hilarity <lb />
insisted on occupying a position <lb />
on the railroad. Trains were <lb />
ever and anon, and as the <lb />
had been jerked off the <lb />
track three times patience was ex- <lb />
so the police took him <lb />
in hand and landed him in the <lb />
house <lb />
ms, a colored man aged about <lb />
years, dropped dead yesterday <lb />
evening about o'clock on <lb />
Fifth street between Nun and <lb />
Church streets- He was by him- <lb />
self at the time but persons on <lb />
the streets saw him fall and went <lb />
to him. He was dead when they <lb />
reached him. Coroner Walton <lb />
was notified and upon <lb />
he ascertained that the old <lb />
man was subject to heart disease <lb />
and that a few days ago he came <lb />
very nearly dying from an attack. <lb />
The old man had bean going <lb />
about his work as usual the past <lb />
few days, his means of livelihood <lb />
being that of a and wool <lb />
sawyer. He resided Fifth <lb />
street near Castle, just in rear of<lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XII. <lb />
GREENVILLE PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY MAY 1893. <lb />
NO. <lb />
A TALE OF THE SEA. <lb />
glad to see <lb />
you've picked up. Here's Mr <lb />
he's fond of paying us <lb />
a visit down <lb />
I had just got into the engine <lb />
room of the Ocean Monarch, <lb />
bound for Cape Town. I was the <lb />
second engineer and had come <lb />
aboard a week ago scarcely re- <lb />
covered from a low fever. This <lb />
was my first appearance and the <lb />
chief engineer came forward to <lb />
greet me. Mr. one of <lb />
the passengers, with whom I hod <lb />
made great friends, smiled. <lb />
air does said he. <lb />
suppose I had bettor depart in <lb />
peace, as you two have plenty to <lb />
no, said Paterson. <lb />
know we shipped some frosh <lb />
stokers, <lb />
I answered; <lb />
do you find <lb />
have no <lb />
I opened the door of the stoke- <lb />
hole and looked in. put <lb />
his head in behind me; ho always <lb />
said the great red eye of the fire <lb />
had a fascination for him. The <lb />
furnace door was open, and one of <lb />
the men was flinging on coals. <lb />
The hot glare of light fell on him <lb />
as he moved backward and for- <lb />
ward. He looked <lb />
I turned back hastily to Pater- <lb />
is the third I said, <lb />
man What do you <lb />
mean What's the matter Logan, <lb />
you quite <lb />
are only two said <lb />
following me back into <lb />
the engine room. <lb />
We heard the clang-to of the <lb />
furnace door. I looked from one <lb />
to the other. I felt scared. I <lb />
I showed the feeling, for <lb />
both men seemed <lb />
I said, in a curiously <lb />
questioning voice, as if I were not <lb />
sure of what I had seen. <lb />
son and the new don't <lb />
know their <lb />
better go to the doctor <lb />
said Paterson; was in <lb />
there five minutes before yon <lb />
came; there were only Thomson <lb />
and one of the new hands, <lb />
there; and nobody has gone <lb />
in <lb />
I was silent; nothing could have <lb />
been easier than to return to the <lb />
and there and then set- <lb />
the matter. But I had a sort <lb />
of shrinking from seeing <lb />
that strange red figure, and <lb />
dropping the dispute. <lb />
Thinking over it later, it seemed <lb />
probable the others were right. <lb />
That fierce light might produce- all <lb />
manner of effects, and the third <lb />
man had certainly looked shadowy <lb />
enough to be only an optical de- <lb />
But the second time I saw <lb />
was in broad daylight. I mot <lb />
him face to face and again there <lb />
seemed someone behind <lb />
filmy shape, and yet distinct I <lb />
felt paralyzed. <lb />
I thought the fever was still <lb />
hanging about me, but I felt <lb />
strong and well. took to watch- <lb />
I asked Paterson and <lb />
the third engineer if they saw any- <lb />
thing odd about the man. Nothing <lb />
at all, they said. Whenever I saw <lb />
him I saw always that other man, <lb />
like some haunted fate. Was I <lb />
mad or was everyone else <lb />
I said, one night, <lb />
you believe in uncanny <lb />
you mean <lb />
exactly. I wish you'd let <lb />
me tell you something, only don't <lb />
laugh at <lb />
for worlds. I am not an <lb />
entire said <lb />
If s about this <lb />
Do you remember when I <lb />
first saw him I told Paterson <lb />
there were three <lb />
were three <lb />
knows whether the third was a <lb />
I said in a trembling voice. <lb />
is no have proved it <lb />
to be none. I am not ill my <lb />
nerves are not unhinged; they are <lb />
as steady as yours. Always I <lb />
see behind a shape <lb />
you Scotch call a <lb />
said warn- <lb />
of his <lb />
wraith is a likeness of the <lb />
person warned. This shadowy <lb />
form is not in the least like <lb />
What does it mean. Why <lb />
do I alone see it Is there some- <lb />
thing for me to do and I do not <lb />
know <lb />
is very he said <lb />
thoughtfully. may be that <lb />
you alone are a ghost <lb />
do not doubt me <lb />
hardly know what to say. <lb />
Can you describe this appear- <lb />
is as clear as day, though <lb />
so misty. It is a young man's <lb />
white transparent com- <lb />
like a person in bad <lb />
health; -thin, aristocratic features; <lb />
the fair hair falls in curls over the <lb />
forehead; the eyes are brown <lb />
womanish <lb />
I paused suddenly. An <lb />
from checked me. <lb />
To my surprise, he had turn pale. <lb />
you know the <lb />
he said. <lb />
mean in a <lb />
to my said Dan- <lb />
When we reached his cabin <lb />
he fastened the door. He <lb />
locked a desk, and laid a photo- <lb />
graph in my hand. My blood <lb />
turned to ice as I looked. There <lb />
was the face I hod just described. <lb />
see you said <lb />
Ha oat down and <lb />
his face. He seemed <lb />
i cum. <lb />
you were to <lb />
said at last. have <lb />
done <lb />
How I have done <lb />
told <lb />
you Yes because I <lb />
could no longer endure silence. <lb />
What <lb />
tell and you must help <lb />
me. I am not for <lb />
know I said, a little <lb />
you are quick. I am a <lb />
I said, springing up. <lb />
Sit down strain. I <lb />
was sent on the track of a <lb />
We had certain <lb />
that he had escaped to <lb />
ca Borne weeks ago. lie is not <lb />
the I <lb />
I sat overwhelmed. <lb />
quickly regained something of his <lb />
professional quietude. <lb />
pointing to the <lb />
the likeness of <lb />
Ir. Louis Temple, a young man <lb />
of means, and an invalid, who <lb />
was murdered by his man <lb />
Perhaps you have <lb />
I was ilL I heard <lb />
man was a trusted <lb />
half nurse. The murder, <lb />
a peculiarly horrible one on a de- <lb />
man, was committed <lb />
evidently for a purpose of robbery. <lb />
We shall find some of the spoil in <lb />
chest The murderer es- in the constitution of <lb />
caned, but we have evidence that <lb />
will surely hang him. Now do <lb />
see how great a service you <lb />
have unconsciously Prob- <lb />
ably but for this strange inter- <lb />
position the murdered man would <lb />
never have been Now <lb />
I have ray hand on said <lb />
the detective. is, of course, <lb />
disguised. I will arrange a plan <lb />
in which I shall need your <lb />
entire <lb />
; can yet be- <lb />
I am in my right <lb />
senses. Why was I, who <lb />
know nothing of the <lb />
stances, chosen to bring this <lb />
crime to <lb />
there we get into the <lb />
said the detective. <lb />
That did not satisfy me, though <lb />
I knew I could got beyond <lb />
it The strange, the awful thing <lb />
was that the next time I saw <lb />
the shadow was gone. <lb />
We made our plans, and I soon <lb />
saw how necessary my aid was. <lb />
The initial movement was to drug <lb />
the man, get him into my cabin <lb />
under pretense he was ill, and <lb />
there satisfy ourselves of his make- <lb />
I shall never forget the grim <lb />
delight of the detective when this <lb />
Views Upon the Resolutions and <lb />
the Duty of democrats <lb />
N. C, April <lb />
Mr. few days ago I <lb />
sent you for publication some res- <lb />
passed by the Alliance of <lb />
Wayne county, at the lost meet- <lb />
and I have thought it proper <lb />
to explain publicly my connection <lb />
with said resolutions. I am now <lb />
county secretary of the Alliance, <lb />
and as secretary, I furnished the <lb />
resolutions for publication. . <lb />
They do not meet any <lb />
approval- A large majority Of <lb />
those advocating the resolutions <lb />
care nothing for the or- <lb />
except in so far as it will tear <lb />
down and destroy the Democratic <lb />
party, and will sustain and <lb />
the Third party spirit and pro- <lb />
for Third party effect. <lb />
What is the fuss about and <lb />
what's the cause of criticism of <lb />
the legislature t It is that the Al- <lb />
charter has been so amend- <lb />
ed that now there is no <lb />
liability upon any member, that <lb />
any one who has put his money <lb />
in the business agency fund shall <lb />
have the right to withdraw it, and <lb />
if the trustee of the fund refuses <lb />
to pay, that tho Attorney-General <lb />
shall bring an action which will <lb />
enforce payment, and that <lb />
salaries of the officers shall <lb />
be increased beyond those <lb />
the <lb />
not <lb />
fur- <lb />
Hie <lb />
order. These the amend- <lb />
and there was cause for <lb />
each. As to all except the last, I <lb />
ask President Butler if be did not <lb />
state in Raleigh that they wore <lb />
proper, and ought to be made I <lb />
The limitation upon the salaries <lb />
of officers was in the interest of <lb />
the farmers, who have their money <lb />
in the fund, and it be ob- <lb />
to, except by some one <lb />
whose eye has been upon the fund <lb />
and who, by the amendment is <lb />
prevented from enjoying it. <lb />
A great many of the lecturers <lb />
of the Alliance in North Carolina <lb />
last year were Third party <lb />
dates- And still they were paid <lb />
out of the Alliance fund 1.18. <lb />
And if I am not very much mis- <lb />
taken Mr. Graham was called <lb />
upon to help pay that, <lb />
and other expenses of the State <lb />
meeting- <lb />
At the last State meeting it was <lb />
seen that the funds on hand were <lb />
insufficient to pay delegates the <lb />
amount allowed them by the con- <lb />
And the committee re- <lb />
commended a reduction. <lb />
dent Butler ruled that this <lb />
apply to that meeting as well <lb />
plan succeeded, and tho wretched i as future meetings, and delegates <lb />
who had left home understanding, <lb />
what compensation would be <lb />
made them, found it reduced, <lb />
though at the same meeting <lb />
borrowed by Mr. Butler, was <lb />
en him, and he made no <lb />
At the same meeting President <lb />
Butler recommended that the bus- <lb />
agency fund be taken from <lb />
the trustee, a bonded officer, and <lb />
given to the executive committee, <lb />
without a bond. <lb />
Many object to the provision <lb />
lowing members to withdraw <lb />
their funds. I think this was <lb />
ply an act of justice- Many who <lb />
are now Democrats, have joined <lb />
the order believing it was <lb />
and in this belief <lb />
their money, they now believe <lb />
it is political, and that its politics <lb />
is injurious to the doctrines in <lb />
which they believe. this <lb />
ought their money to stay whore <lb />
they think it injurious to their <lb />
welfare <lb />
The amendments were <lb />
ed in the presence, and with the <lb />
assent of Attorneys employed <lb />
selected by the Alliance, one of <lb />
whom was a Democrat and the <lb />
other voted for Weaver. I do not <lb />
know that they agreed that all <lb />
the amendments were necessary, <lb />
but am informed that they sub- <lb />
so agreed. <lb />
I believe the Alliance origins <lb />
in an earnest desire to <lb />
strengthen our institutions and <lb />
benefit our people, but that it is <lb />
now a mere machine, upon which <lb />
men, who are not farmers, hope <lb />
criminal was revealed in the in- <lb />
sensible man stretched before us. <lb />
That was his last hour free- <lb />
It was a terrible scene. <lb />
The man could not understand <lb />
how he had been discovered. We <lb />
learned that he had purposely <lb />
missed the ship he had been re- <lb />
to have sailed in, and had <lb />
stoned on the Ocean Monarch. <lb />
In chest were found jewels, <lb />
plate, identified as the <lb />
missing property of tho <lb />
ate Mr. Temple. <lb />
There was horror from stem to <lb />
stern when it was known that we <lb />
had a murderer on board. I think <lb />
no one breathed freely till <lb />
had been removed from our ship. I <lb />
myself was the sensation of the <lb />
hour, but I tried to avoid curious <lb />
questioners. There was something <lb />
awesome to me in the mystery <lb />
in which I had been the <lb />
to allow me to discuss it <lb />
with every idle tattler. Was <lb />
what I saw the spirit of the <lb />
man, silently crying for <lb />
vengeance I devoutly believe it <lb />
was. But the question I had put <lb />
to the detective remains <lb />
. was made to <lb />
play this part <lb />
The Girl for Him. <lb />
A society favorite who was de- <lb />
scribing a young woman by whom <lb />
he had been much attracted was <lb />
laughed at for his extravagant ad- <lb />
to your own state- <lb />
said a. listener, girl <lb />
hasn't a single redeeming <lb />
was the earnest reply, <lb />
she is the pink of neatness. <lb />
Her gowns are always in perfect <lb />
trim and speckles. Her skin is <lb />
fresh and glowing, and shows that <lb />
it never has been tampered with. <lb />
Her hair is not dry and <lb />
and all In short you <lb />
can't imagine how fetching this <lb />
one virtue she had no <lb />
makes an otherwise rather <lb />
I answered his <lb />
friend. is the sort of girl that <lb />
adore. I don't find too many <lb />
objects for my adoration, either. <lb />
Who Dropped It <lb />
any one drop a SO cent <lb />
piece here in the inquired a <lb />
man on Second avenue car. <lb />
Like a chain of lightning several <lb />
men felt in their pockets and re- <lb />
plied in chorus.<lb />
Then the ma- walked out upon <lb />
the platform, so that he could get <lb />
off and run if necessary, and <lb />
why in thunder don't <lb />
you get down and and look for it <lb />
before some one picks it up That's <lb />
what I do every tune I drop <lb />
money <lb />
And as he skipped off the men <lb />
who said they had dropped a <lb />
piece kept wall screened behind <lb />
their evening papers. <lb />
struggled to secure and sustain <lb />
Democratic supremacy, because <lb />
we com- <lb />
posed as our vast country is of all <lb />
sorts and classes and conditions <lb />
of people, it is essential to the <lb />
and well-being of the <lb />
try, that one strong political or- <lb />
should be maintained <lb />
as a rook of refuge and defense <lb />
against all emergencies of danger <lb />
and of wrong. The Democratic <lb />
party has performed this service <lb />
from the foundation of the Gov- <lb />
to the present <lb />
ways in some measure as either a <lb />
check upon the abuse of power, <lb />
or a power itself for the redress of <lb />
wrong. Much is expected of it <lb />
during its present lease of power <lb />
much that is reasonable and <lb />
due ; more, perhaps, that is other <lb />
wise. The affairs of the country <lb />
are in bad shape, and the people <lb />
in a state of mind hard to satisfy. <lb />
Tho Civil Service law has a de- <lb />
weakening effect upon the <lb />
enthusiasm of the average citizen <lb />
by placing him under tho <lb />
that it implies a compromise <lb />
of the principles he advocates. It <lb />
is thus working mischief to tho <lb />
party affiliation and attachment, <lb />
while its improvement of the civil <lb />
service is by no means assured. It <lb />
is notice served upon the mass of <lb />
voters that far least as they <lb />
are concerned the political dis- <lb />
signified by their votes <lb />
are without a differ- <lb />
In our judgment, the law <lb />
cannot repealed too soon if. <lb />
political rule in this is to <lb />
continue to be entrusted, as it <lb />
should be, to one or the other of <lb />
two great parties. <lb />
Tho suggestion to which we <lb />
wish to give importance in this <lb />
is that the Democratic par- <lb />
while it has the power to do <lb />
so, should cultivate Democracy <lb />
as a prime duty, looking to the <lb />
opt <lb />
th <lb />
A Remarkable Feat of Strength. <lb />
The other day in Washington a <lb />
gentlemen invited Mr Walter R. <lb />
Henry to the Athletic Club, of <lb />
which there are four hundred <lb />
members. There is a very heavy <lb />
dumb bell there the athletic <lb />
professor in charge said could <lb />
only be raised up from the <lb />
shoulder by but one man in tho <lb />
club and the professor himself <lb />
could only raise it times sue <lb />
Mr. Henry grasped tho <lb />
boll and, without his <lb />
coat, raised it at arms length from <lb />
his shoulder nine times. The pro- <lb />
expressed great astonish- <lb />
and said there was not an- <lb />
other man in tho District of Col- <lb />
who could do it. Any one <lb />
who looks upon Mr. Henry's mag- <lb />
physique need not <lb />
Chronicle. <lb />
PORTFOLIO. <lb />
Green's Observations of <lb />
Reasoning in Trout <lb />
to ride into office. They have the <lb />
ear of the people and, taking ad- <lb />
vantage of our depressed <lb />
seek to destroy confidence <lb />
our public men, and to create <lb />
dissatisfaction. They <lb />
now that with our bone of con- <lb />
their power and <lb />
would be dissipated as the <lb />
mist before the sun. I cannot join <lb />
in their efforts, and will not do so. <lb />
In conclusion, Mr. Editor, I <lb />
would say, it now looks like all <lb />
Democrats will have to retire from <lb />
the Alliance, and all others who <lb />
would teach the rising generation <lb />
something besides being chronic <lb />
grumblers- <lb />
Very truly yours, <lb />
J. A. Stevens- <lb />
As we expected, and so stated <lb />
at the time, we have received and <lb />
publish above, a communication <lb />
from Mr- J- A. Stevens, Secretary <lb />
of the County Alliance, bearing <lb />
the recent resolutions of the <lb />
county Alliance published in these <lb />
columns a week ago. <lb />
The card of Mr. gives <lb />
an uncertain sound and <lb />
much to engage and hold sober <lb />
thought and make men the <lb />
truth. <lb />
The has ever <lb />
Democratic doctrine and <lb />
Prizes for Southern Stories. <lb />
An offer of prizes for original <lb />
sketches of Southern life is an- <lb />
by the Southern States <lb />
magazine, which is published by <lb />
the Record Pub- <lb />
Co., of Baltimore. A prize <lb />
of is offered for the best <lb />
sketch or story dealing <lb />
with Southern life and conditions, <lb />
and will be given for the <lb />
story that shall be judged worthy <lb />
of a second prize. The only con- <lb />
arc that the sketches sub <lb />
shall present true pictures <lb />
of Southern life, that they shall <lb />
be original, and that they shall <lb />
not exceed words length- <lb />
This offer holds good until July <lb />
1st, and the prizes will be awarded <lb />
as soon after that date as the <lb />
submitted can be ex- <lb />
This offer is made in <lb />
the hope of securing <lb />
of a character that will benefit <lb />
tho South by their <lb />
in the Southern States <lb />
the New York Sun of a few <lb />
days ago was an interesting <lb />
upon the agricultural de- <lb />
in Great Britain. The <lb />
figures are given and the decline <lb />
of agriculture in England appears <lb />
from them to have borne a close <lb />
relation, through recent years, in <lb />
the degree of its progress, to that <lb />
in the United States. The whole <lb />
world seems to be down with the <lb />
same profits <lb />
decreasing and the value of farm- <lb />
lands depreciating. The <lb />
complaint is to no <lb />
try nor to any particular section <lb />
of any. The farmer on the fer- <lb />
tile pains of Kansas howls as loud <lb />
as his brother on the red hills of <lb />
North Carolina, The more rapid- <lb />
the world increases its <lb />
; the more mouths there e <lb />
to be fed ; the more manufactures <lb />
multiply and the more customers <lb />
the farmer finds for his products, <lb />
lower the prices and the <lb />
poorer he gets. Where is the <lb />
wise man who will rise up and <lb />
tell us what is the matter Char- <lb />
Observer- <lb />
Remarkable Strength of <lb />
Keeps the Walls of <lb />
a House Free From Damp- <lb />
Curious Deformity of a Lin- <lb />
Eng., Family. <lb />
Beth Green, tho celebrated <lb />
American gives a <lb />
most extraordinary account of tho <lb />
acute reasoning power and <lb />
memory of some trout which <lb />
came under his observation. a <lb />
pond he had some large <lb />
brook trout which had <lb />
originally captured by means of a <lb />
fly and hook. The fisher- <lb />
man who landed them had in <lb />
to do so as quietly and <lb />
gently as possible, and so the <lb />
trout had ample time to examine <lb />
the strange tackle which had <lb />
played them so false. This <lb />
according to Mr. Green, <lb />
they never in life forgot. To illus- <lb />
and prove theory ho <lb />
would accompany a brother pro- <lb />
in matters to <lb />
the banks of the pond, carrying <lb />
behind his back a long and a <lb />
fishing rod. The trout would fol- <lb />
low him along on the look-out for <lb />
bread or scraps of liver. Sudden- <lb />
he would swing his from <lb />
behind him and flourish it in the <lb />
air. Tho trout smiled, wagered <lb />
their tails, and asked for another <lb />
bit of bread. But when a <lb />
moment later he took the rod with <lb />
the reel and tackle from its con- <lb />
the front fled to the <lb />
furthest end of the pond, where <lb />
they remained huddled up for tho <lb />
rest of the day. They were care- <lb />
trout, those of Mr. Green's. <lb />
A Family. <lb />
In a village live a <lb />
family who suffer under tho cur- <lb />
deformity of being <lb />
Ibis peculiarity does not appear <lb />
to one of those freaks of Nature, <lb />
which may appear in one <lb />
and not be transmitted to the <lb />
next generation. So far as can <lb />
be learned, the singularity has ox- <lb />
in this family so far as <lb />
history or tradition extends, and <lb />
there seems at present no signs of <lb />
its dying out as the grandchildren <lb />
as devoid of fingers as their <lb />
The hands of this re- <lb />
markable family present the <lb />
of having had the ringers <lb />
amputated, or chopped off rough- <lb />
and unevenly below the second <lb />
joint, leaving a short stump. <lb />
There is no nail or hard substance, <lb />
and were it not for the absences of <lb />
anything like a cicatrice, a casual <lb />
observer would conclude that the <lb />
defect was duo to accident; but as <lb />
though Nature had attempted to <lb />
compensate for the absence of <lb />
fingers, the thumbs are <lb />
large and strong. The family <lb />
are in other fully endowed <lb />
by nature, and do not appear to <lb />
suffer the disadvantages the ab- <lb />
of fingers might be expected <lb />
to entail. One of the daughters, <lb />
aged twenty, can write, sow, knit, <lb />
and is in every way as dexterous <lb />
and accomplished as other girls of <lb />
her ago and station. When asked <lb />
if she did not find it awkward to lie <lb />
fingerless, she replied; If <lb />
yon had never had fingers, yon <lb />
would not know you needed <lb />
Tho only drawback that <lb />
seems to be occasioned is the cur- <lb />
of the absence of fingers <lb />
evokes from strangers. <lb />
remedy is becoming to well <lb />
and so popular as to need no <lb />
special mention. All who have used <lb />
Bitters slug the same son <lb />
purer medicine doc not exist <lb />
and It is guaranteed to do all that is <lb />
claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all <lb />
diseases the Liver and Kidneys, will <lb />
remove Bolls. Salt Rheum and <lb />
other affections Stated by impure blood <lb />
Will drive Malaria from the system <lb />
and prevent as well as cure all Malarial <lb />
fevers.-For of Headache, <lb />
Indigestion try Electric <lb />
satisfaction guaranteed <lb />
or money c;. and <lb />
per bottle at Drag <lb />
A Canary Captured by a Spider. <lb />
Tho strength of of tho <lb />
spiders which build their webs in <lb />
trees and other places in and <lb />
around Santa Ana, Central <lb />
America, is astonishing. One of <lb />
them had in captivity in a tree <lb />
there not long ago a wild canary <lb />
Tho ends of the wings, the tail, <lb />
and feet of the bird were bound <lb />
together by some sticky substance, <lb />
to which were attached the <lb />
threads of the spider, which was <lb />
slowly but surely drawing up the <lb />
an ingenious pulley <lb />
The bird bung head <lb />
downward and was so securely <lb />
bound with little threads that it <lb />
could not struggle, and would have <lb />
soon been a prey to its great, ugly <lb />
captor if it had not been rescued <lb />
by an onlooker. <lb />
Advantage of <lb />
The growth of ivy on the walls <lb />
of houses renders the walls entire- <lb />
free from damp; the ivy ex- <lb />
every particle of moisture <lb />
from wood, brick or stone for its <lb />
own sustenance, by means of its <lb />
tiny roots, which work their way <lb />
even into the hardest stone. The <lb />
overlapping leaves of the ivy con- <lb />
duct water falling on them from <lb />
point to point until it reaches the <lb />
ground, without allowing the walls <lb />
to receive any moisture whatever <lb />
from the beating rains. <lb />
Aged, <lb />
Mrs. is fitted <lb />
up with all the <lb />
we have a picture molding in the <lb />
parlor. <lb />
Mrs. alive <lb />
But your house must be awful <lb />
damp To think of a picture mold- <lb />
It must be the paste. I a <lb />
A Woman of Many Points, <lb />
Mrs. Dow, who owns and man- <lb />
street-car interests in Dover, <lb />
H., is said to be not only a <lb />
business also skilled <lb />
housewife, a judicious mother, a <lb />
good shot with gun and pistol, a <lb />
fine swimmer and the possessor of <lb />
worth about <lb />
A MISTAKE <lb />
was fair cultured <lb />
With In turban. <lb />
She lived sod formed a <lb />
a town <lb />
And wont writ <lb />
To for the <lb />
Ho a my, runnier, <lb />
Who no passion far the mas <lb />
In whit or or to <lb />
Ho to scorn to at <lb />
And In tho <lb />
A for tho Symphony, <lb />
Ho made him weary; <lb />
potter hr liked a minstrel <lb />
With entertainment cheery. <lb />
And to the <lb />
Went always once a week. <lb />
The wed mo hapless <lb />
Tho nothing daunted. <lb />
Hut soon he to pine and fade <lb />
try M uncultured haunted, <lb />
Ho. ton, dropped like a at fall. <lb />
From to much music <lb />
at she wildly cried, <lb />
i-mils Mond not <lb />
with he sighed, <lb />
Is all stormy weather <lb />
To one Uh whoso soul to dork <lb />
To all. poetry and <lb />
Next ho Hod to tho <lb />
In hurry and <lb />
The of the <lb />
serve n. a <lb />
She Joined which dwelt sport <lb />
And nothing- knew but Just art. <lb />
Oh. Boston of cultured tastes. <lb />
To smile on drummer Jolly <lb />
With years attuned strains, <lb />
Is root folly. <lb />
Pork must record tie. <lb />
Who shuns the concert Symphony. <lb />
Novelties in Lamp. <lb />
As Limps are left in the room <lb />
day it Is not altogether an <lb />
easy matter to determine on a color <lb />
that is harmonious with the room <lb />
the daylight and yet looks well when <lb />
the lamp is lighted. Certain shades <lb />
of green are harmonious with many <lb />
belongings and light well, but n- <lb />
are most unbecoming, <lb />
giving even the rosiest complexion a <lb />
more or less ghastly look. Some of <lb />
the more recently imported shades <lb />
follow the general trend of fashion <lb />
this season and are bouquets of color, <lb />
so that they tho same office In <lb />
tho room as a of flowers. <lb />
Tho butterfly shade Is still used <lb />
where a shade- that hooks on is avail- <lb />
able. A little novelty In this sort of <lb />
Is which Is a <lb />
medium-sized paper doll dressed in <lb />
fancy costume with skirts. <lb />
It is fastened on a porcelain shade <lb />
by means of a wire hook. Among <lb />
the novelties In lamps ore those <lb />
of mounted In ormolu. Tho <lb />
lower part o these artistic lamps is <lb />
a vase in which is placed the tube- <lb />
like lamp part. These lamps are <lb />
modeled with extreme delicacy and <lb />
have dainty pagoda-shaped shades <lb />
of silk that harmonize with the col- <lb />
ors of the decorations of the <lb />
Lamps In cut-glass, In <lb />
as tea ex- <lb />
pensive. Three <lb />
are m <lb />
of tho others ore very <lb />
In They arc a <lb />
globe on a slender, toll, round Stood, <lb />
of and arc furnished <lb />
with a little globe-shaped shade <lb />
of the same Poet. <lb />
A Little Girl's in Light, <lb />
house <lb />
Mr- Una keep, <lb />
of the Gov. <lb />
Mi.-h. and blessed n <lb />
daughter, Lust April <lb />
she taken down With fol- <lb />
lowed with a dreadful mid <lb />
into n lever. home and <lb />
at Detroit treated her, vain, she <lb />
grew until she was a <lb />
mere of Then she <lb />
tried Dr. King's New and <lb />
after the use of two and a half bottles, <lb />
was completely cured. say Dr. <lb />
New Discovery Is worth its <lb />
weight Id gold, yet you may get n <lb />
bottle at John L. Wooten V <lb />
Wit and Wisdom. <lb />
It is the troubles of to-morrow <lb />
that make people heavy laden to- <lb />
day. <lb />
A groat people are right <lb />
in their hearts and wrong in their <lb />
heads. <lb />
The of does not de- <lb />
pend upon tho size or shape of <lb />
the piece. <lb />
There is wrong if <lb />
you feel spiteful whenever you <lb />
another woman wearing a bet <lb />
bonnet than you can afford. <lb />
Ram's Horn. <lb />
Sale <lb />
The best salve in the world for Cut <lb />
Bruises, Sores, Salt <lb />
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands. <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin <lb />
and positively cures rites, or no <lb />
pay required. It Is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. <lb />
Price rents pet box. For sale at <lb />
Drugstore. <lb />
CHILD BIRTH <lb />
MADE EASY <lb />
is a scientific- <lb />
ally prepared Liniment, every <lb />
of recognized value and in <lb />
constant use by the medical pro- <lb />
These ingredients are com- <lb />
in a unknown<lb />
WILL DO all that is claimed for <lb />
h AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb />
Life of Mother and Child. <lb />
to Mothers con <lb />
valuable and <lb />
voluntary <lb />
a; all <lb />
Beaches the <lb />
By advertising in an <lb />
apT. <lb />
Therefore he uses <lb />
SB <lb />
This Office for Job printing <lb />
Save <lb />
Doctors <lb />
Bills <lb />
BOTANIC <lb />
BLOOD BALM <lb />
THE GREAT REMEDY , i <lb />
i FM ALL BLOOD SKIM , <lb />
, th , , <lb />
tor M rear, and I <lb />
. i <lb />
ULCERS. ECZEMA, <lb />
PIMPLES. <lb />
I If l M- <lb />
. tor IS. Hi i <lb />
I I BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta. Si. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
I desire to announce to my friends and <lb />
I he public generally that I have opened <lb />
office for myself just across the <lb />
horn my residence and on the old Dr. <lb />
Wow lot where I can be found at BO <lb />
limp. <lb />
FRANK W. BROWN. M. D. <lb />
l, C, <lb />
L. Fleming. Andrew Joyner <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Prompt to business. Office <lb />
at Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb />
ALEX. L, BLOW. <lb />
JAR VIS BLOW, <lb />
El S-AT-LA W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
r Practice in all the Courts. <lb />
I. A. II. F. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
Prompt attention given to collections <lb />
LATHAM. HARRY <lb />
I SKINNER, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
G. JAMES, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
R E E N V L L E, N C. <lb />
Practice in all he courts. Collections a <lb />
GENERAL <lb />
AND IN <lb />
his, Poultry, Cubs, <lb />
Oysters, Fish, Caviar and <lb />
All Country Products, <lb />
Dock, Norfolk, V <lb />
Reference Son Co., Bankers <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
TAR RIVER <lb />
Steamers leave Washington for Green. <lb />
ville and touching at all land- <lb />
on Tar River Monday, <lb />
.-lid Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at A M. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
Greenville A. M. same days. <lb />
These depart are subject to stage of <lb />
water on Tar River. <lb />
Connecting at Washington with steam- <lb />
of The Norfolk, n and Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb />
should order their goods <lb />
via Dominion from <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk <lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
more. Miners from <lb />
Boston, <lb />
JNO. SON. <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Washington N. <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Greenville, N C <lb />
ESTABLISHES 1870. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
broken <lb />
son mat mat- or cans. <lb />
Brown's Iron Bitten Rebuilds <lb />
OLD BRICK STORE <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY <lb />
their year's supplies will And <lb />
their Interest to get our prices before <lb />
Our stock is <lb />
n all Its branches. <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICK. c. <lb />
s st M ark <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF A A R <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A com- <lb />
stock of<lb />
always on hand and sold at prior to suit <lb />
the times. Out goods are all bought and <lb />
sold tor CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb />
to at a <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
M. <lb />
i. N U.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017598_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
J. Proprietor <lb />
WEDNESDAY. MAY 17th, <lb />
at th at G <lb />
if. C, as mail matter. <lb />
ESTABLISH THE INFERIOR <lb />
COURTS. <lb />
On the first Monday in June <lb />
the Magistrates of the county will <lb />
hold a joint meeting with the <lb />
Board of Commissioners <lb />
for the purpose of making the tax <lb />
levy for this year, to elect a Board <lb />
of and to transact <lb />
such other business as may come <lb />
before them. <lb />
One matter to come for con- <lb />
at this meeting is the <lb />
re establishment of the Inferior <lb />
Court for the county. The Mag- <lb />
held a meeting while the <lb />
Legislature was in session and <lb />
decided then re-establish this <lb />
court and elected the officers <lb />
therefor. Some persons who <lb />
were opposed to the court raised <lb />
the cry that the action taken at <lb />
that meeting was illegal because <lb />
the Chairman of the Board of <lb />
Magistrates had called the meet- <lb />
instead of the call coming by <lb />
the authority of the Board of <lb />
Commissioners. To overcome <lb />
this objection and remove any <lb />
chance for technical advantage to <lb />
be taken of any work done by <lb />
the court, the Board of <lb />
have given the <lb />
full authority to consider <lb />
the matter at their June meeting <lb />
and to establish the court if they <lb />
deem it wise to do so. <lb />
The opinion of the <lb />
as to the re-establishment of the <lb />
Inferior Court has already been <lb />
expressed. We think that Pitt <lb />
county now needs just such <lb />
courts- The best interest of <lb />
and those persons in <lb />
county who the intent of the <lb />
court and law is to give justice <lb />
fail to get it, demands some- <lb />
thing in this direction. <lb />
For proof of this we need go <lb />
no further back than the begin- <lb />
of this year. The opening <lb />
of the year found the county car- <lb />
a tremendous docket. <lb />
The January term of Superior <lb />
Court did nothing of consequence <lb />
outside of the trials on its <lb />
docket. The Legislature <lb />
then in session increased the <lb />
number of our Superior Courts <lb />
at whose petition we are <lb />
not prepared to giving the <lb />
county three mixed and two civil <lb />
terms a year. <lb />
Under this new order of things <lb />
the March term was for the trial <lb />
of civil causes only. And what <lb />
did that court do toward clearing <lb />
the docket About as near <lb />
as was possible. Jurors and <lb />
witnesses were summoned to <lb />
pear on Monday and the court <lb />
did not open until Thursday. A <lb />
calendar had been prepared but <lb />
of course this delay made it of <lb />
no consequence. Then when the <lb />
court did open about four days <lb />
of it were consumed in a case in <lb />
which a few hundred dollars were <lb />
involved, and after all that time <lb />
the case not finally settled- The <lb />
Reflector is attaching no blame <lb />
to any one for this, but it is just <lb />
what occurred. <lb />
Next take April term of <lb />
Superior Court which was for the <lb />
trial of both criminal and civil <lb />
coses. The criminal docket was <lb />
light, and with the idea that it <lb />
could be disposed in a few days <lb />
a calendar was arranged and pub- <lb />
to begin the trial of civil <lb />
cases on Thursday of the first <lb />
week. But the Grand Jury kept <lb />
the court on criminal matters <lb />
Tuesday of the second week, <lb />
hence the work done on the civil <lb />
docket again to <lb />
nothing when its size is con- <lb />
And what was the <lb />
of the criminal cases that <lb />
so much of the term All <lb />
minor a penitentiary <lb />
case in the entire eight day's <lb />
every one of which might <lb />
have been disposed of by the In- <lb />
Court- <lb />
Trying such cases before the <lb />
Superior Court is much more ex- <lb />
pensive than the Inferior Court <lb />
would be, and by the <lb />
Inferior Court there is not only a <lb />
saving to the county of consider- <lb />
able costs, but the Superior <lb />
Courts would have time to work <lb />
on the civil docket which would <lb />
be more satisfactory to those <lb />
greatest concern in the matter <lb />
the tax payers and persons <lb />
cases in court- <lb />
Taking these things into con- <lb />
the Reflector says es- <lb />
the Inferior Court and es- <lb />
it quick. <lb />
The statement of town finances <lb />
published in this issue gives the <lb />
last year's Board of <lb />
credit for handing down the <lb />
largest sum of money to their <lb />
that has come from any <lb />
retiring Board. When the old <lb />
Board took charge in May of last <lb />
year they received from their <lb />
the sum of and <lb />
had to pay bills contracted by <lb />
their predecessors amounting to <lb />
which virtually had the <lb />
town in debt at the begin- <lb />
of their administration. <lb />
Now at the close of their year, <lb />
after paying every dollar of out- <lb />
standing indebtedness against <lb />
the town, they turn over to their <lb />
successors the sum of With <lb />
this sum to begin with, and the <lb />
prospect of a few hundred dollars <lb />
more being- saved in police <lb />
the new Board certainly <lb />
ought to give the town some per- <lb />
improvements- They can <lb />
make no better beginning than by <lb />
giving the water supply <lb />
ate attention- And when street <lb />
improvements come up for con- <lb />
let the work done on <lb />
them be of a permanent character <lb />
that will <lb />
not have to be worked over after <lb />
every rain- <lb />
The Charlotte Observer <lb />
its strides forward and is now <lb />
a long way ahead of and paper in <lb />
the State in its news service. Its <lb />
Washington specials are a <lb />
did feature. Sunday's numbers <lb />
work on them is done <lb />
is now six pages and full of <lb />
the very best matter. The <lb />
ought to have a good number <lb />
of readers in this section- <lb />
Verily there seems to be a con- <lb />
among some of the banks <lb />
for failing- Under one heading <lb />
Saturday's Richmond Dispatch <lb />
told of the suspension of eighteen <lb />
banks in Indiana, Ohio and Mich <lb />
The failure of several of <lb />
them was due to the suspension o <lb />
the Chemical National Bank of <lb />
Chicago. <lb />
A new phrase will be establish- <lb />
ed now, and instead of asking <lb />
what the Governor North Caro- <lb />
said to the Governor of South <lb />
Carolina, it will be, What did the <lb />
Governor of Oregon say to the <lb />
ox-Governor of New York <lb />
Notwithstanding Greenville is <lb />
the best town in North Carolina <lb />
and the Reflector is printed no- <lb />
where Richmond Dis- <lb />
patch has dropped into the habit <lb />
of getting us at Greensboro every <lb />
time- <lb />
THE INFERIOR COURT. <lb />
of the <lb />
N- C, May 10th, 1893- <lb />
What will the Magistrates do <lb />
about the Inferior Court I see <lb />
that the County Commissioners <lb />
issued a call at their late meeting <lb />
which enables the Magistrates to <lb />
consider the advisability of es- <lb />
the Inferior Court <lb />
when they meet the first Monday <lb />
in June. The masses of Pitt <lb />
county want the Inferior Court- <lb />
Will the Magistrates establish it, <lb />
or will they let a few lawyers <lb />
for them as they dictated for <lb />
the Legislature in establishing <lb />
the present five term system of <lb />
courts I hope they will con- <lb />
sider wants of the people and <lb />
not play into the hands of a few <lb />
lawyers, for as I see the <lb />
it is solely and only for the <lb />
purpose of delaying and con- <lb />
the docket to suit the <lb />
selfish ends of a few. <lb />
The people of Pitt county have <lb />
now for several years been de- <lb />
of their property rights by <lb />
some unexplained condition of <lb />
affairs, and it is high time some- <lb />
thing was done for their relief- <lb />
I heard a lawyer say that with <lb />
the present system of courts we <lb />
would soon have the business of <lb />
Pitt county in good shape. Now <lb />
let that lawyer tell what cases, <lb />
giving the names, were tried by a <lb />
jury at both the March civil term <lb />
and the April mixed term, and <lb />
how long will it take the five <lb />
terms at that rate to dispose of <lb />
the cases now upon the docket for <lb />
trial by jury. True, a good <lb />
railroad suits were compromised, <lb />
but the courts cannot claim <lb />
it for <lb />
There can be no question as to <lb />
the economy of the Inferior <lb />
Court, and no one who has <lb />
in the Superior Court <lb />
it possibly has been for <lb />
doubts that the time consumed in <lb />
the trial of petty by a <lb />
and District <lb />
is needed for the trial of more <lb />
matters. <lb />
Establish the Inferior Court <lb />
for the trial of all minor <lb />
and criminals will be more speed- <lb />
punished, and in my opinion <lb />
it will not be long before it would <lb />
be as it was when we had that <lb />
court before, not as much criminal <lb />
business to do and a clean civil <lb />
docket. Nothing so puts down <lb />
crime as speedy and wise punish- <lb />
W. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
New York must be chock full of <lb />
and its an easy matter to <lb />
get and in shape for a <lb />
in the metropolis- Sta- <lb />
show there are <lb />
bar-rooms in the city, which is <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington, D. C, May <lb />
President Cleveland has this week <lb />
been able to devote more f his <lb />
time to important public matters <lb />
than in any single week since his <lb />
inauguration, owing to his having <lb />
stopped the practice of granting <lb />
personal interviews to applicants <lb />
for Presidential positions; it <lb />
they have had to devote almost <lb />
their entire time to them, and <lb />
less there is a they will <lb />
be compelled to follow the <lb />
dent's example and <lb />
applicants for office. Those who <lb />
pretend to be shocked at what <lb />
they are pleased to call the <lb />
dent's innovation have short <lb />
as he did precisely the <lb />
same thing in October, 1885. It <lb />
would be advantageous to <lb />
cants for places if members of the <lb />
cabinet would also refuse to see <lb />
applicants, for then they would <lb />
have a chance to look over the <lb />
papers on file and make <lb />
to the President, thus <lb />
hastening appointments. It is <lb />
because Republicans know this <lb />
that they are trying so hard to <lb />
create a public sentiment in favor <lb />
of unlimited personal interviews ; <lb />
the longer the heads of the de- <lb />
are kept away from the <lb />
papers on file, by callers, the <lb />
longer the big offices will be fill- <lb />
ed by Republicans. See <lb />
The Weather Bureau <lb />
has closed and Gen. Colby is <lb />
now at work on the testimony, <lb />
upon which his report will be <lb />
based. What that report will <lb />
recommend your correspondent <lb />
has no means of knowing, but the <lb />
evidence will certainly justify a <lb />
general shake-up of the bureau <lb />
from top to bottom, and it is <lb />
together probable that Secretary <lb />
Morton will see that it gets it. <lb />
While nothing absolutely <lb />
was proven against <lb />
officials a state of affairs was <lb />
shown to exist that calls loudly <lb />
for a change. <lb />
Secretary Herbert has correct <lb />
and thoroughly Democratic ideas <lb />
about the relations that should <lb />
exist between naval officers and <lb />
the U. S- Government, as his or- <lb />
that no more leaves of ab- <lb />
be granted naval officers <lb />
for the purpose of allowing them <lb />
to enter private employ fully <lb />
proves. This practice, like many <lb />
other questionable ones, is of <lb />
Republican origin, and has <lb />
grown into almost a scandal. <lb />
Under it naval officers who have <lb />
acquired special knowledge along <lb />
certain lines after long study, at <lb />
government expense, nave <lb />
ed leaves of absence, in some <lb />
cases for as long as four years, on <lb />
two-thirds pay, in order that they <lb />
might sell their special <lb />
edge to the highest bidder among <lb />
those to whom it would be most <lb />
contractors who do <lb />
business with the Navy depart- <lb />
Secretary Herbert says <lb />
that hereafter when any naval of- <lb />
desires to accept private em- <lb />
he must resign his com- <lb />
mission before doing so, and <lb />
every good Democrat will say <lb />
amen <lb />
So many complaints of one <lb />
kind and another have been re- <lb />
by Secretary <lb />
about the methods and the ad- <lb />
ministration of the New York <lb />
tom-house he has determined <lb />
to have it investigated <lb />
from top to bottom, and has <lb />
the following gentlemen to <lb />
do it; ex-Secretary Fairchild, of <lb />
New York city; Hon. Daniel <lb />
of N- Y-, <lb />
and Hon. Poindexter Dunn, of <lb />
Arkansas. <lb />
It is significant that upon the <lb />
very day Judge the new <lb />
Commissioner of Pensions, took <lb />
personal charge of the Pension <lb />
Bureau that frauds aggregating <lb />
something like should <lb />
have been exposed. And still <lb />
more significant is the fact that <lb />
all of these frauds obtained pen- <lb />
through a single attorney <lb />
W. R Drewry, of Norfolk, Va. <lb />
That hundreds of similar cases <lb />
will be is the <lb />
belief here- Judge is <lb />
of the opinion that the amount <lb />
out for pensions can be <lb />
reduced without depriving <lb />
any man of what is justly and <lb />
legally his and without changing <lb />
the laws and he proposes to de- <lb />
the correctness of that <lb />
opinion- <lb />
A number of prominent Demo- <lb />
headed by Representative <lb />
Bynum, of Indiana, are endeavor- <lb />
to persuade President Cleve- <lb />
land to call the extra session in <lb />
June, instead of September. The <lb />
argument of these gentlemen is <lb />
that September is the most <lb />
healthy month in the year in <lb />
Washington, malaria being worse <lb />
than at any other time. They <lb />
say that if Congress comes to- <lb />
in June the House can <lb />
perfect its organization and the <lb />
committees get down to work be- <lb />
fore the hottest weather of the <lb />
summer comes and then a recess <lb />
can be taken to the first of <lb />
escaping the malarial season. <lb />
TOWN TREASURER'S REPORT. <lb />
Report of Charles Skinner, Treasurer <lb />
of the Town of <lb />
DR. <lb />
Jane <lb />
No. To whom issued. <lb />
in Skinner, street work <lb />
J Hoyle, night watch <lb />
B Johnson, night watch <lb />
r, night <lb />
night watch <lb />
R D Cherry, night watch <lb />
Amount. <lb />
IS <lb />
Sad and Gloomy <lb />
Weak and Dyspeptic <lb />
Hood's ave Strength <lb />
and Perfectly Cured. <lb />
J. R. White <lb />
Birmingham, <lb />
one to each persona. That , , <lb />
ample opportunity for a haTe had , that <lb />
hare not words enough to pM my <lb />
for treat from a <lb />
battles of Hood's I was <lb />
weak, and it mad me strong-, I a <lb />
and U eared b; I was sad and gloomy, <lb />
It me cheerful and hopefuL And last, <lb />
though not least. It made me an ardent sat <lb />
Hood's s Cures <lb />
working democrat. All who taken Hood's <lb />
with report good re- <lb />
I it to all <lb />
E. X. D., Am. <lb />
N. B. II decide to take Hood's Bar- <lb />
do net be Induced to bur any other <lb />
Insist HOOP'S. <lb />
Hood's ax u best <lb />
J R Move, street work <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
J I, Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
Hi F O James, <lb />
M J Latham, muse <lb />
Dr Warren, <lb />
D J Whichard, printing <lb />
Co, <lb />
l. W Lawrence, <lb />
July <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
S J I. Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
J J Stocks, rent <lb />
S Chas Skinner, street work<lb />
A J Berg, watch <lb />
James, <lb />
S Vines, rent <lb />
Move, rent <lb />
August 1892. <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
A Dudley, board <lb />
II Ha mdse <lb />
James, <lb />
S E <lb />
J B Cherry A Co, mdse <lb />
September <lb />
J L Daniel, night lighter <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T It Moore, police <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
F O James, <lb />
J Smith. <lb />
D J Whichard, printing <lb />
G L I Co, lumber <lb />
October <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
X R Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
F G James, <lb />
S E Pender Co. mdse <lb />
L W Lawrence, tax list <lb />
B S Sheppard, tax list <lb />
J J Stocks, rent <lb />
F Greene, witness . <lb />
A Dudley, board <lb />
B Cherry, witness <lb />
November <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
X B Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M William, lamp Heritor <lb />
F G <lb />
Printing Company <lb />
D J Whichard, i <lb />
December 1892. <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T B Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
James, <lb />
S E Pender A Co, mdse <lb />
Flood, work <lb />
E mdse <lb />
D D mdse <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
Ed Clerk <lb />
January 1893. <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T K Moore, police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
J L Daniel, night witch <lb />
F G James, <lb />
T H Moore, wood <lb />
J J Cherry, muse <lb />
J J Stocks, <lb />
J D Williamson, <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
January <lb />
A relief com. <lb />
February 1893. <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T K Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
Brown Hooker, mdse <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
Alfred Forbes, mdse <lb />
S E mdse <lb />
S M Shultz, mdse <lb />
H A Blow, police <lb />
Dr Warren, <lb />
March 1893. <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T It Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
S E Pender Co, mdse <lb />
F G James, <lb />
A Dudley, <lb />
D D mdse <lb />
J B Cherry Co, mdse <lb />
April <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
X It Moore, police <lb />
M William-, lamp lighter <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
James, <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
mdse <lb />
S E mdse <lb />
Hay 1893, <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
X B Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
F G James, <lb />
F G James, salary <lb />
W B Greene, <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
E B rent <lb />
X R Moore, <lb />
D J Whichard, <lb />
SE mdse <lb />
J T rent <lb />
L Hooker Co, rent <lb />
DO YOU <lb />
W--N-T <lb />
THE Latest Styles and Best MODS <lb />
The Lowest Prices. <lb />
-If you do we have them. We have just opened the------ <lb />
Largest Stock of Goods <lb />
ever brought to <lb />
Greenville this Spring. <lb />
A little drop of printer's ink, <lb />
Sometimes causes people to think. <lb />
ft <lb />
And we want to impress upon your minds <lb />
------received our new------ <lb />
we have <lb />
SprinG-.-StocK <lb />
------and can now show a- <lb />
BEAUTIFUL LINE OF GOODS; <lb />
On account of being <lb />
late we bought them at very <lb />
reduced prices and now find that <lb />
bought too many, so we are going to sell them at <lb />
much less than regular prices. If prices is an object to you it <lb />
will pay you to examine our stock before yon make purchases <lb />
On and Dress Goods we can save you from to cents <lb />
on dollar spend. We will save you Cents on the dollar <lb />
on SHOES. <lb />
We also carry a full line of Groceries and will sell you Good <lb />
for cents per pound. Good Tobacco for cents. Good . <lb />
for cents per pound, and the Best Laundry Soap for cents a cake. <lb />
Coffee <lb />
Flour <lb />
are agents for Martinez's celebrated PAINTS <lb />
Call and see us. <lb />
YOUNG <lb />
GREENVILLE, M C. <lb />
FARMS FOR <lb />
CRYSTAL LENSES <lb />
Prices Low, <lb />
Terms <lb />
Easy. <lb />
CB. <lb />
Reed J It S <lb />
James, tax<lb />
Tit Moore, market <lb />
Smith, police <lb />
Moore, taxes 1,887 <lb />
DB. <lb />
To cash paid out <lb />
No to <lb />
per cent commission <lb />
Cash on <lb />
Due Fund <lb />
For work, <lb />
Report of T B Moo.-c, Town Tax <lb />
for the year ending May DB. Amt taxes property and poll, <lb />
purchase tax <lb />
to July, <lb />
purchase tax from <lb />
to January, <lb />
license <lb />
on- <lb />
By fire company <lb />
insolvent <lb />
per cent, <lb />
cash paid <lb />
Approved by <lb />
Ed. H- <lb />
C. C. Forbes, <lb />
M. B. Lang. <lb />
Report of Charles Skinner, Town <lb />
Treasurer of the Town of Greenville, <lb />
ending May <lb />
DB. <lb />
Amt reed from former <lb />
treasurer, <lb />
Amt reed F G James, <lb />
Mayor, <lb />
Amt reed from citizens <lb />
of <lb />
Amt from T B <lb />
Moore, market <lb />
Amt reed from J T <lb />
Smith, fines A costs <lb />
Amt from T B <lb />
Moore, tax collector, 1,887 <lb />
cm. <lb />
town <lb />
orders, <lb />
By per cent, to 2,407.87 <lb />
Cash on band, t <lb />
Doe Fund. <lb />
Approved by Id. H.<lb />
M. <lb />
The J. L. Ballard home farm. Bea- <lb />
Dam township, adjoining the lands <lb />
of G. T. Tyson and J. Cobb. A line <lb />
farm of about acres, with good build- <lb />
and adapted to corn, cotton and <lb />
A fine marl bed. <lb />
A farm near Ayden and lying <lb />
mediately on the own- <lb />
ed by Caleb B. which <lb />
are cleared. Good neighbor- <lb />
hood, churches and a school within <lb />
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin- <lb />
farms <lb />
A line farm of three miles <lb />
from Farmville and from <lb />
ville, with large, substantial dwelling <lb />
and out houses, known as the L. P. <lb />
Beards-Icy home place, line cotton land, <lb />
good clay accessible to marl. <lb />
A smaller farm adjoining the above <lb />
known as the Jones place, acres, <lb />
dwelling, barn and tenant house, land <lb />
good. <lb />
A farm of acres In town- <lb />
ship, about miles from <lb />
acres t of the tract <lb />
Part of the Noah Joyner farm, <lb />
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro, <lb />
located in an improving section <lb />
and can be made a valuable farm. <lb />
A small farm of about acres, <lb />
about miles from Greenville, on In- <lb />
Well Swamp, with house, etc., for- <lb />
owned by G nil ford Cox. <lb />
ALSO TIMBER <lb />
A tract of about acres near Cone- <lb />
the 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 Wk. H. LONG, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
JAMES LONG, <lb />
-----Dealer in----- <lb />
General Merchandise, <lb />
Has exclusive of these celebrated <lb />
glasses in Greenville, N. C. From the <lb />
factory of A Moore, the only <lb />
complete optical plant in the South, <lb />
Atlanta, Ga, Peddlers are not sup- <lb />
plied with those famous glasses. <lb />
Boggy <lb />
GREENVILLE, C. <lb />
Can still be found <lb />
at the Old <lb />
stand. <lb />
pared to do <lb />
FIRST-CLASS WORE <lb />
on anything in the <lb />
ma m <lb />
Fine Vehicles Specialty <lb />
Repairing done prompt- <lb />
and in best manner <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
In the HOUSE <lb />
New York Cheap Store. <lb />
NEW STORE. NEW GOODS. <lb />
Prices Lower Than Ever. <lb />
FIRST GOODS <lb />
MEN'S AND <lb />
CHILDREN'S SUITS, <lb />
HATS, SHOES, SHIRTS, <lb />
Notice these remarkable <lb />
Men's Suits as low as 82.50 and up. <lb />
Men's Pants as low as and up. <lb />
Children's Suits as low as ct <lb />
Shirts as low cents and up. <lb />
Shoes as low as cents and up. <lb />
Shoes low as cent and up. <lb />
Other goods correspondingly cheap. <lb />
We are the for LOW PRICES <lb />
and solicit the patronage of the people. <lb />
id <lb />
Our intention is to sell good Roods at the lowest <lb />
prices. We have most varied f <lb />
kept town We keep every thing <lb />
needed in the household or on the farm and <lb />
invite inspection and comparison of our <lb />
We can and will sell low for <lb />
cash. want your trade and <lb />
will be glad to show you the <lb />
following lines of <lb />
DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS, <lb />
NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS. <lb />
NICE LINE of <lb />
AND PIECE GOODS FOR <lb />
MAKING MENS AND BOYS <lb />
SUITS, ALWAYS IN STOCK. <lb />
if. <lb />
HATS, SHOES, CROCKERY, <lb />
GLASSWARE, TINWARE, <lb />
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, <lb />
HARDWARE, PLOWS AND <lb />
FARMING UTENSILS, <lb />
I HARNESS AND WHIPS, j <lb />
Groceries, Flour a specialty. We the largest and <lb />
kept in our <lb />
line of FURNITURE Consisting in part of <lb />
. , Top Walnut Suits, <lb />
Solid Oak Suits, Imitation Oak Suits, Imitation Walnut <lb />
Suits, Bureaus, Bedsteads, Tables, Buffets, <lb />
of different kinds, Children's Cribs and Cradles, . <lb />
Tin Safes, Bed Springs, a full lino of <lb />
Tables, Children's Carriages, Keep also a nice line <lb />
of Lace Curtains and Curtain Poles, Matting and Floor <lb />
Oil Cloths. We cordially invite all to come to see <lb />
when in want of any goods. We will try to give you <lb />
at all times, r <lb />
SPOOLS COTTON AT WHOLESALE PRICE. <lb />
hardware, <lb />
Roots, <lb />
HASKETT. <lb />
COLUMBUS <lb />
DISCOVERED <lb />
And the people have discovered that <lb />
they can get bargains by trading with <lb />
WHITE <lb />
MT GOODS have <lb />
rived and are ready for examination. <lb />
I want every lady to see the nice Dross <lb />
Goods, and every gentleman to the <lb />
nice CLOTHING and <lb />
GOODS contained in my Mock. Bring <lb />
along the boys and girls, too. as I have <lb />
just what la needed fir every of them <lb />
GROCERIES. <lb />
Speaking of I have fresh <lb />
rivals of such things as every house- <lb />
keeper needs. Examine what have <lb />
and you will be sore to boy. <lb />
Yours to serve, <lb />
W. H. WHITE<lb />
HASKETT.<lb />
HINGES. NAILS, AND AXES, <lb />
Belting and Packing, <lb />
MECHANIC'S TOOLS, <lb />
THE <lb />
It is with pleasure that I announce to <lb />
the citizens of Greenville and vicinity <lb />
that I have Just returned from the <lb />
Northern Markets where I visited <lb />
all the fashionable openings and am now <lb />
receiving the most beautiful and <lb />
stylish selected stock of Millinery ever <lb />
l, i; J <lb />
latest fashionable good. Low prices <lb />
and satisfaction <lb />
i Tinware, Hollowware, <lb />
Stove Pipe, and Chimney Pipe, <lb />
Paints, Oils, Glass and Putty, and <lb />
many other articles kept in a first- <lb />
class Hardware Store. Call to see <lb />
me if want <lb />
the cash. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
Mrs. Georgia Pearce, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
goods cheap for Next door to Old Brick Store. <lb />
Happy content is a home with <lb />
a lamp with the light if <lb />
write <lb />
Farmers, Make Tour Own Hay<lb />
WE CAN SELL YOU THE <lb />
BEST IN <lb />
THE FOR <lb />
CUTTING IT. <lb />
CALL ON US WHEN <lb />
NEED OF TIN WARE, <lb />
COOK STOVES, <lb />
PAINTS, OIL. <lb />
PLACE YOUR ORDERS for TOBACCO FLUES. <lb />
S. PENDER CO., <lb />
VS. O.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017598_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE RUSH. <lb />
-ALL ARE- <lb />
RushinG <lb />
-----AFTER THOSE <lb />
Beautiful k Lovely <lb />
DRESS GOODS <lb />
In all the new Shades and Trim- <lb />
to match- <lb />
REFLECTOR. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Rules Adopted by the N. C. Press <lb />
The sum of not less than five cents <lb />
per line will be charged for of <lb />
of and <lb />
obituary poetry; also for obituary notices <lb />
other than those which the editor him- <lb />
self shall give as a matter of news <lb />
Notices of church society and all <lb />
other entertainments from which rev- <lb />
Is to be derived will be charged <lb />
for at the rate of five cents a line. <lb />
ClothinG <lb />
We have a beautiful line of nice <lb />
and genteel <lb />
for Boys and Young Men, to fit <lb />
anybody and suit all <lb />
SHOES <lb />
Slippers. <lb />
Shoes and Slippers match <lb />
your dresses and at <lb />
very low prices, at <lb />
HIGGS BROS., <lb />
GREENVILLE, g, C <lb />
BRIGHT SPARKS. <lb />
Shoes at <lb />
Call on B. Cherry A Co. when you <lb />
want good Flour cheap for cash. <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. have a nice line <lb />
of Ladies Slippers. <lb />
They are here. Strawberries and <lb />
Fruit Jars at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Bros. Fine Shoes for Ladies <lb />
and Children at <lb />
Get the best Butter and Cheese that <lb />
money can buy at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Seed Peanuts and <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
at the Old <lb />
Lace Curtains and Curtain Poles at <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co's. <lb />
We are requested to announce that <lb />
the next debate at Frog Level will take <lb />
place on Saturday night, 20th. <lb />
Buy ties from <lb />
Bros. <lb />
Nice line of Floor Oil Cloths and <lb />
Matting at J. B. Cherry Co's. <lb />
Remember I pay you for Chickens <lb />
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
For breakfast, dinner or supper <lb />
and Cheese at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
Mason's Lined Fruit Jars <lb />
at J. B. Ch <lb />
First appearance in <lb />
Seedless Oranges of delicious <lb />
sweetness at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. have a nice line of <lb />
Children's Carriages. <lb />
Pa i its S ample over <lb />
alls from cents up, at Higgs Bros. <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Fob fine black Mare Colt <lb />
months old. Sired by George <lb />
Apply to LA. <lb />
Genuine Climax and Stonewall Cotton <lb />
Plows for sale by J. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
A full line of Castings kept on <lb />
band. <lb />
Arbitrator Flour at at J. B. <lb />
Cherry A Co's, guaranteed the equal <lb />
of any on the market. Money returned <lb />
if not O K. <lb />
Fob Institute, beat <lb />
school building in Eastern Carolina. <lb />
Healthy location, good water, In a live <lb />
town with back country. For <lb />
further Information apply to Alfred <lb />
Forbes. Greenville N. C. <lb />
Handsome Residence for Sale. <lb />
The I. A. Sugg property, situated on <lb />
Fifth street and occupied by him Is for <lb />
sale. The dwelling is nearly new, mod- <lb />
In style, and contains IS rooms. <lb />
The lot embraces about acres and has <lb />
all necessary out houses, barns, stables, <lb />
carriage house, etc. Excellent water, <lb />
highest elevation in the town and the <lb />
comfortable and convenient home <lb />
in the community. For terms apply to <lb />
When you speak or even think of <lb />
spring medicine, how quickly Hood's <lb />
comes to your mind. Take <lb />
It now. <lb />
Has the weather settled <lb />
A baby show is being talked. <lb />
Marked Improvement the weather. <lb />
The shad and herring season is almost <lb />
over. <lb />
lot of blank deeds at Reflector <lb />
office. <lb />
In some sections cotton chopping ha <lb />
started. <lb />
Strawberries got as low as certs a <lb />
quart Saturday. <lb />
The Reflector Book Si on; now <lb />
cabinet sire envelopes. <lb />
Flies are on the increase and next the <lb />
mosquito will be lay. <lb />
Mr. J. W. Mayo, of Washington, will <lb />
run the Ocracoke hotel this summer. <lb />
Some of the finest bananas we ever <lb />
saw have recently been on sale here. <lb />
The Racket Store's I n let in No <lb />
calls for your attention to-day. Be sure <lb />
that you read it. <lb />
Attention is called to the notice to <lb />
creditors by Elizabeth Clark, executrix <lb />
of Week H. Clark. <lb />
Greenville has not got a bicycle. We <lb />
doubt there being many towns the size <lb />
cf this without one. <lb />
It is reported that the freshets dam- <lb />
aged the State farmers near to <lb />
the extent of <lb />
One by one the plums fall. Mr. <lb />
John W. Bryan has been appointed <lb />
postmaster at Goldsboro. <lb />
Mr. James Evans tells us that out in <lb />
his neighborhood the cut worms are <lb />
destroying much of the young corn. <lb />
If you are not a subscriber to the Re- <lb />
and happen to read this, stop <lb />
and ask yourself if yon ought not be a <lb />
subscriber. <lb />
The Old Delaney building on the <lb />
near the Court House Is getting a <lb />
new roof on it. The improvement was <lb />
badly needed. <lb />
Only forty-seven out of eighty <lb />
cants for license before the State Board <lb />
of Medical Examiners, at Raleigh last <lb />
week, passed the examination. <lb />
The Old Brick Store some fruit <lb />
that is a real that are <lb />
entirely seedless. They came from <lb />
California and arc delightful in flavor. <lb />
We have a HI nine in this office that <lb />
takes the place of any <lb />
Standard. <lb />
We have a in this office that <lb />
the off of any tree. <lb />
Yesterday Mr. E. Buck showed us <lb />
some of the finest oats we have seen so <lb />
early in the season. They were three <lb />
feet high and fully headed. <lb />
R. L. agent, last week re- <lb />
a reaper and binder <lb />
he has on exhibition at his <lb />
It is a complete machine in re- <lb />
The store building <lb />
the corner of Fifth and street <lb />
has been converted into a nice dwelling <lb />
house. It very much improves the <lb />
corner. <lb />
Some communications intended for <lb />
this Issue had to be left over for the <lb />
present because of a rush of other mat- <lb />
This will explain to the writers <lb />
their failure to appear to-day. <lb />
Talking about county fairs, It strikes <lb />
us that If Pitt county would just turn <lb />
her head in that direction she could <lb />
hive the equal of any county in the <lb />
State. We throw this out as a hint. <lb />
We arc indebted to Miss Nannie Cox <lb />
for an invitation to the dedication and <lb />
first annual commencement of the <lb />
State Normal and Industrial School, <lb />
Greensboro, May 23rd and 24th, <lb />
The Baptist Sunday-school <lb />
will go on an excursion to <lb />
Yankee Hall to-morrow and have a <lb />
there. The steamer will leave at <lb />
o'clock, all who expect to go must <lb />
be at the wharf in time. <lb />
Mr. of Beaver Dam <lb />
told us Saturday that out in his neigh- <lb />
the cold weather of last week <lb />
and week before gave the crops a serious <lb />
set back. Much of the young cotton <lb />
was dying and corn was looking mighty <lb />
yellow. <lb />
An editor wisely If you have a <lb />
grudge against a man it is better to in- <lb />
him out behind the barn and there <lb />
settle the matter for better or for worse, <lb />
than to rush into a printing office and <lb />
try to make the editor an innocent club <lb />
with which to thump your antagonist. <lb />
After July 1st the mail route from <lb />
Kinston in Lenoir county, to Johnson's <lb />
Mills in this county, will stop at G i if ton <lb />
and omit going to Mills, so <lb />
we see stated in the dispatches If this <lb />
is so the entire route had as well be <lb />
abolished, as the service between Kin- <lb />
and Grifton is supplied each way <lb />
daily by train. <lb />
We are requested to tell a young man <lb />
in New York who writes letters to <lb />
Greenville, and who sometimes uses <lb />
nine sheets of paper no two of which <lb />
are alike, that if paper la scarce In the <lb />
city send down to Greenville and he can <lb />
get some. This is not advertisement <lb />
for the Reflector Book Store, either, but <lb />
we do sell something to write on mighty <lb />
cheap. <lb />
Hereafter when any society adopts <lb />
resolutions of respect and Includes the <lb />
request for publication of the same, they <lb />
should not overlook to issue and order <lb />
on their treasurer to pay the paper to <lb />
which they send it. Reference to the <lb />
rules recently adopted by the X. C. <lb />
Press Association, which we publish at <lb />
bead of this page give the <lb />
needed on this <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mr. Larry has gone to <lb />
Tarboro to spend a few weeks. <lb />
Dr, Frank W. Brown was called to <lb />
Plymouth Sunday on <lb />
Mrs. T. G. Skinner, of Hertford, is <lb />
visiting Mrs. Chas. Skinner at Hotel <lb />
Macon. <lb />
Mr. Andrew Joyner, has been made <lb />
manager of the Keeley Institute at Ash- <lb />
land, Va. <lb />
Miss Theresa of Tarboro, <lb />
has been spending the past week with <lb />
Mrs. M. B. Lang. <lb />
We bear sermon in-1 he <lb />
Court House, last Wednesday night, <lb />
spoken of an excellent one. <lb />
Mrs. Warren and children, of <lb />
Hill, have been visiting the <lb />
other fatter, Mr. B. Wilson. <lb />
T. J. Jarvis and Ma. L. C. <lb />
Latham arc the committee appointed <lb />
to act as escort to the remains of lion. <lb />
Jefferson Davis as they pass through <lb />
North Carolina. <lb />
Rev. Rector of the <lb />
Episcopal church, left yesterday to eon- <lb />
duct a week's meeting at Kinston. <lb />
family accompanied him and will spend <lb />
the week in Kinston. <lb />
Rev. J. II. is In Scotland <lb />
Neck conducting a protracted meeting <lb />
for Rev. R. T. Vann. Rev. Mr. Vann <lb />
will preach In the Baptist church here <lb />
next Sunday morning and evening. <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Cherry returned home <lb />
Monday night from Oxford where she <lb />
had been attending the meeting of King's <lb />
Daughters. In reports of the meeting <lb />
published we see complimentary men- <lb />
of her singing. Her son who was <lb />
at school at Oxford came home with her. <lb />
Mr. J. T. a member of the <lb />
Junior Class of Trinity College, Dur- <lb />
ham, has accepted the of <lb />
the Academy, Ashe county, <lb />
and will open the summer session begin- <lb />
May 15th. Mr. Erwin is a native <lb />
of Pitt county, and son of Mr. S. P. <lb />
He prepared for College under <lb />
Prof. Duckett at Greenville. <lb />
Our townsman, ex-Gov. Jarvis, is <lb />
much in demand to make literary ad- <lb />
dresses at commencements this year. <lb />
He goes to Burlington Academy on the <lb />
inst., to the State Normal School <lb />
for women at Greensboro on the 23rd, to <lb />
Wilson Collegiate Institute on the 30th <lb />
and to Fremont Military Institute on <lb />
June 1st. As great a friend to <lb />
as he is it is no wonder all the <lb />
schools want him to make addresses. <lb />
Dr. Charles who re- <lb />
graduated with distinction at the <lb />
Philadelphia Medical College, returned <lb />
home Saturday. He came by way of <lb />
Raleigh and stood the examination for <lb />
license before the State Medical Board <lb />
and pissed with high rating. He will <lb />
engage in practice here with his grand- <lb />
father, Dr. C. J. The RE- <lb />
congratulates him upon the <lb />
high stand he has taken all through the <lb />
pursuit of his studies, and wishes him <lb />
success as he out the <lb />
Big Find. <lb />
Last week Lieut. A. Teel came to <lb />
the conclusion that some of his guinea <lb />
hens were laying, and went in search of <lb />
nests, found two, the first having <lb />
eggs in it and the other having the <lb />
astonishing number of He was still <lb />
on the hunt at last accounts but has not <lb />
reported an additional find. . <lb />
Large Families. <lb />
We have seen an Item about a woman <lb />
in Pennsylvania who was years old <lb />
and was the mother of twenty-two <lb />
children; that the woman weighed <lb />
pounds and her children were so f it at <lb />
birth that only one of them lived. <lb />
There is a colored woman in Greenville <lb />
this same years Is the <lb />
mother of eighteen children and twelve <lb />
arc living. She is an able bodied <lb />
woman and one of the best nurses in <lb />
the community. <lb />
Starts His Court. <lb />
Mayor Fleming had his first cases be- <lb />
fore him Saturday. Two <lb />
were up for reconciliation and <lb />
their troubles adjusted by each paying a <lb />
fine of and costs. A young white <lb />
man from the country tried to destroy <lb />
too much of the bad liquor these town <lb />
keep, and it seems that the <lb />
liquor got into legs and tongue and <lb />
put him In bad shape generally. Being <lb />
his first the Mayor let him off <lb />
with the payment of costs and <lb />
that he should not do so any <lb />
more. <lb />
Trinity College Commencement. <lb />
This year's commencement of Trinity <lb />
College, Durham, will occur June , <lb />
and include, the following Important <lb />
features. Baccalaureate sermon, by <lb />
Rev. Dr. R. N. Richmond, Va., <lb />
at A. Wednesday, 7th. Literary <lb />
Address before the Columbian and Hes- <lb />
Literary Societies, by Hon. A. <lb />
M. Waddell, of Wilmington, at P. M., <lb />
Wednesday 7th. Annual Address be- <lb />
fore the Alumni Association, by Walter <lb />
P. Andrews, of Atlanta, at P. M. <lb />
Wednesday. Graduating Exercises at <lb />
A. M., Thursday, 8th. <lb />
Stray <lb />
In the State news column <lb />
last week was an item from the <lb />
Courier about a buzz with a steel <lb />
trap and attached to his foot that <lb />
was seen flying in that section. Mr. <lb />
Ralph House tells us that he lost a steel <lb />
trap in that way, and may be the one <lb />
seen near was his <lb />
rather his trap He says he set a trap <lb />
for hawks, that the buzzard got in It, <lb />
broke the chain and carried the trap off. <lb />
Bear <lb />
Last week Messrs J. H. Mills and Cal- <lb />
Mills, two brothers who live near <lb />
Black Jack, killed the largest bear that <lb />
was ever They <lb />
wrote us a letter about it and say that <lb />
the bear weighed pounds, was feet <lb />
Inches long, measured inches <lb />
across the breast, inches across the <lb />
foot, had claws Ion and teeth <lb />
inches long. That was a large bear <lb />
sure, and was built right for making a <lb />
bad light. <lb />
Help the Board. <lb />
The Board of Councilmen at their <lb />
meeting Monday night adopted <lb />
for the government of the town <lb />
which will be published In a few days. <lb />
Every good citizen of the town should <lb />
lend his encouragement to the Board <lb />
and do all he can towards assisting in <lb />
the observance of the laws. The best <lb />
administration is that in which the <lb />
take an Interest. Lets help to u. <lb />
hold the hands of those we have chosen <lb />
to direct these matters. <lb />
BRANCHVILLE JOTTINGS. <lb />
Both Democratic and <lb />
vein ions have recently held in this <lb />
county to nominate candidates for the <lb />
various county offices. The <lb />
cans did not nominate any candidate <lb />
for clerk but endorsed B. P. ire. <lb />
the present clerk, who is a Democrat <lb />
and very popular. <lb />
Mr. J. C. James who has been <lb />
ill Is able to be out again. <lb />
Last Friday night some thief effected <lb />
an entrance into the store of J. C. <lb />
James and succeeded in getting about <lb />
In money and some goods. It is <lb />
supposed that the thief must have been <lb />
concealed In the store when It was <lb />
closed as he left by the front door and <lb />
no fastenings were broken. <lb />
Mrs. A. C. of Petersburg, is <lb />
visiting her daughter, Mrs. Duke. <lb />
R. W. who has been very <lb />
ill with pneumonia is out a <lb />
Quill Pen has a broad smile on. It's <lb />
a boy. <lb />
Pen. <lb />
Many people who sing is my <lb />
never seem to suffer from home <lb />
Observer. <lb />
A Sure Sign. <lb />
A perfect town Is that In which you <lb />
see the farmers patronizing the home <lb />
merchants, the merchants patronizing <lb />
home printers, the laborers spending <lb />
the money they earn with their own <lb />
tradesman, and they buying their things <lb />
at home instead of going abroad. The <lb />
spirit of reciprocity between business <lb />
men and mechanics, tradesmen and <lb />
laborers, the farmers and manufacturers <lb />
results every time in making the town a <lb />
good one for <lb />
Democrat. <lb />
More Than a Centenarian. <lb />
a colored woman who <lb />
lives on the premises of Mr. J. B. Cherry, <lb />
Is more than a hundred years old, but <lb />
lust how much over that age has to <lb />
approximated. In olden times she be- <lb />
longed to the Pearce family, and is pro- <lb />
for in her age by descendants <lb />
of that family and their connections. <lb />
Mr. B. C. Pearce tolls us that she was <lb />
the nurse of his father in infancy, and <lb />
as his father was born in 1795-98 years <lb />
ago-it is evident that Roxie,, <lb />
must have been several years old at that <lb />
time or she would have been too <lb />
to entrust with the can of an infant. <lb />
She sometimes talks about remembering <lb />
the Revolutionary war, but It is very <lb />
probable that she has reference to the <lb />
war of No doubt ate was a <lb />
woman when latter Wat occurred. <lb />
What the Paper Does. <lb />
An Illinois newspaper <lb />
real power of a new draw trade <lb />
to its own town, or direct the trade in <lb />
other channels, can hardly be estimated; <lb />
and what is more, It is a matter that is <lb />
hardly ever considered as an important <lb />
factor in the towns prosperity, for the <lb />
simple reason that it is not thought of <lb />
by men. He who will give the <lb />
matter a moment of unbiased thought <lb />
will be the last to pooh pooh the <lb />
idea. The local paper, that is receiving <lb />
a good living patronage from the town <lb />
in which it is published, will guard well <lb />
the interests of that town with jealous <lb />
care, just the same as the merchant <lb />
guards the Interests of his <lb />
customers. <lb />
The Revival. <lb />
The meeting in the Methodist church <lb />
continue- this week and the services are <lb />
attended by large congregations. There <lb />
Is much interest the meeting, though <lb />
as yet there have been few professions. <lb />
Rev. R. A. Willis, of who <lb />
has been preaching twice each day for <lb />
more than a week, is sowing seed that <lb />
can but be productive of a good harvest. <lb />
He has delivered a number of excellent <lb />
Sermons, the one Sunday being <lb />
exceptionally good and delightful. His <lb />
text that was walk by <lb />
filth, and not by and the <lb />
was a feast indeed to Christians. <lb />
He an earnest, faithful minister of <lb />
the Word, and has m a host of <lb />
friends while here. The pastor, Rev. <lb />
G. F. Smith, is also doing zealous work <lb />
during the meeting, and his words of <lb />
exhortation at services show his <lb />
earnestness and love for those among <lb />
whom he Is laboring. The doors of <lb />
church will be opened for members at <lb />
next Sunday mornings service. <lb />
A weekly exchange says that the re- <lb />
cent cyclone In south Georgia upset <lb />
things generally, changed the day of <lb />
the week, wed the off of a bar- <lb />
and left the bung hole, and scared a <lb />
red-headed woman. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having qualified before the Superior <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county as executrix <lb />
the Will of Weeks H. Clark, <lb />
ed, notice Is hereby given to all persons <lb />
indebted to the estate to make <lb />
ate payment to the undersigned, and <lb />
all persons having claims against the <lb />
estate must present same for pay- <lb />
on or before the 10th day of May <lb />
1894, or this notice will be plead in bar <lb />
of recovery. <lb />
Tills of May. 1893. <lb />
ELIZABETH CLARK, <lb />
Executrix of Weeks H. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly <lb />
as Mary <lb />
ton, deceased, notice hereby given to <lb />
all persons indebted to the estate to <lb />
immediate payment, and all per. <lb />
sous having claims against the estate <lb />
must present the same for payment <lb />
at before the 1st day of May, or <lb />
this notice will be plead bar of re- <lb />
This lit day of May, 1893. <lb />
J. KEEL, <lb />
Mart- <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having <lb />
as administrator of W. A. <lb />
deceased, notice is hereby given to all <lb />
persons Indebted to the estate to make <lb />
payment, and all persons <lb />
having claims against the estate must <lb />
present the same for payment on or be- <lb />
fore the th day of April, this <lb />
will be plead in bar of recovery. <lb />
This day of April. 1698. <lb />
B, <lb />
o W. <lb />
In our Dress Goods Department <lb />
WE WANT YOUR We have the right goods at the low- <lb />
. est prices and guarantee satisfaction- <lb />
Bedford Cords, Suitings, <lb />
dress <lb />
. of all kinds. A line of China <lb />
and Plain Silks. <lb />
In Irish Lawns, Scotch Cambrics, <lb />
Black Lawns, Figured Lawns, Fig- <lb />
Mulls. Ac. Big Bar- <lb />
in and <lb />
reduced from and cents to <lb />
cents. White Goods from cents <lb />
. In Clothing. If you will look at <lb />
I WE WILL HAVE YOUR styles and good fitting <lb />
j TRADE. Suits for Men, Boys and Children- <lb />
Boys Suits cents and <lb />
Yon will be sure to buy our Ladies <lb />
. Shoes and Ties, in all colors, if you <lb />
SHOES. SHOES- see them. Gents Patent Leather <lb />
Shoos, and Shoes of all grades <lb />
and prices. <lb />
. And everything in the Notion line. <lb />
j FURNISHINGS. Big line of Stiff, Felt and Straw Hats. <lb />
. Everything sold at the lowest prices. <lb />
C. T. <lb />
GREENVILLE, A. C. <lb />
RACKET STORE <lb />
BULLETIN NO. <lb />
-o <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions, Hosiery, Shoes, Slippers, <lb />
In fact in all of different Departments goods cheaper and <lb />
better than ever. <lb />
Cf I IN ALL LATEST SPRING SHADES <lb />
But come and get our prices before spending hard earned cash. <lb />
We are the people for you to spend your gold, silver and greenbacks <lb />
with. Yours for reliable goods and low prices. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
No trouble to show goods. One door south of Bank. <lb />
WELCOME SPRING <lb />
Toil bring us balmy air and blue skies. <lb />
Under your influence nature <lb />
wakes to a fresh beauty productive- <lb />
n People yield to your influence and <lb />
their pulses quicken. Everybody and <lb />
everything is awake and the watchword <lb />
of the season is I have just <lb />
returned from the Northern markets and <lb />
am opening a beautiful line of <lb />
Dry Bonds, Dress , <lb />
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes and <lb />
Furnishing Goods, <lb />
the public at a close margin. We do i <lb />
Ives. I will be glad to see my old <lb />
CLOTHING <lb />
MACHINE <lb />
O- <lb />
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton A <lb />
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO REPAIRING. <lb />
E BEST IN THE WORLD. <lb />
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Write for <lb />
and prices before buying elsewhere- <lb />
A few Second-Hand Engines for sale. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
I. A <lb />
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL<lb />
GREENVILLE. HT. <lb />
Half Bolls Bagging, <lb />
Bundles New Arrow Ties. <lb />
Small Full Cream Cheese. <lb />
Tubs Choice Butter. <lb />
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb />
Boxes Tobacco, all grades. <lb />
Boxes Cakes and Crackers. <lb />
Stick Candy. <lb />
Kegs New Corn Mullet-. <lb />
Barrels Gail Ax <lb />
Barrels P. Snuff. <lb />
Barrels Railroad Mills <lb />
Barrels Three Thistle <lb />
Car load Rib Side Meat <lb />
Car load Seed <lb />
Car load Flour, all grade. <lb />
Kegs Powder. <lb />
ons Shot. <lb />
old Virginia <lb />
Full line Case foods and <lb />
else kept in a first class eats<lb />
I- <lb />
-J <lb />
J y <lb />
Q. <lb />
a o <lb />
O o a<lb />
k M P <lb />
Wishing to my many <lb />
friends for their liberal patronage <lb />
for both Merchandise and differ <lb />
articles which I manufactured <lb />
I take this method of <lb />
that while thank you all I <lb />
am also striving hard to secure <lb />
advantages that I can give you <lb />
in order to merit you <lb />
Mi <lb />
fl <lb />
If Is<lb />
I shall offer to the public at a close margin. We do no blowing, our goods <lb />
talk for themselves. I will be glad to see my old customers and friends. <lb />
Tor other articles <lb />
as Pews, <lb />
Brackets <lb />
Hogsheads and General <lb />
Repair Work, you will do well <lb />
to correspond with me before <lb />
ranging with any one else. I <lb />
yon some advantage. <lb />
A. G. COX, <lb />
Winterville, N.<lb />
Joshua <lb />
COBB BROS CO.,<lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE STREET, NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
OUR SPRING SUITS arc doing duty to-day. Grand, good ones they are. <lb />
got In quality. I desire to get I am <lb />
trying to do better- All the colors, all the cuts, proper lengths, nothing but a tit. <lb />
one I <lb />
I am located the store formerly by Mr. <lb />
of goods in the store. Give trial I am sure I can pie; <lb />
Cox. Not <lb />
you. <lb />
FRANK WILSON, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
New. <lb />
Straight <lb />
Clean <lb />
Large <lb />
We are still making a specialty of- <lb />
MB <lb />
mm <lb />
We have a first-class assortment and sell close. <lb />
get our prices- <lb />
Do not fail <lb />
parts for all kinds of machines are sold by as. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
BROWN BROS., <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF <lb />
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following go <lb />
not to be excelled in this market. And to be <lb />
pure straight good. DRY GOODS of all kinds, CLOTHING, Gill <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and La <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE <lb />
GOODS, DOOR., WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb />
kinds, Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Limb, Plaster of Paris, and Plat <lb />
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at <lb />
JACK WHITE <lb />
IS AGAIN <lb />
BEFORE YOU. <lb />
Bring me your <lb />
CHICKENS, EGGS, <lb />
TURKEYS. DUCKS, <lb />
GEESE, GUINEAS, <lb />
And in fact that is raised in the country and I will <lb />
as much in cash can be had anywhere in Greenville. I will also <lb />
handle on a small commission anything that my customers may want <lb />
me to. Remember my headquarters is at the old Marcellus Moor <lb />
store, right at the five points crossing, the most convenient pm m <lb />
town. Come to see me. <lb />
Yours to please, <lb />
JACK WHITE. C <lb />
J. L. SUGG. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE AGENT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N- C <lb />
t JAMES <lb />
All kind, placed in <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
for American A FIRE PROOF BAH<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017598_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
TOBACCO<lb />
Conducted by O- L. JOYNER, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse. <lb />
AND TOBACCO <lb />
JOTTINGS. <lb />
Mr. who for some time <lb />
has been quite sick is now get- <lb />
ting able to be out again. <lb />
The financial panic which <lb />
threatened Wall Street a few days <lb />
ago to hare affected the <lb />
price of tobacco as it is now a <lb />
little off in value. <lb />
M. W. T. Brogden, who has <lb />
been associated with Green- <lb />
ville Warehouse for the past three <lb />
months returned to his home in <lb />
Oxford last week. <lb />
Esq. G. T. Tyson, of Beaver <lb />
Dam township is one of the most <lb />
forward and progressive farmers <lb />
that we have. He is one of the <lb />
get up at o'clock in the morning <lb />
kind and ha makes things move <lb />
around bin-. <lb />
The Winston Tobacco Journal <lb />
says that Greenville N. C- is <lb />
tined to be one of the leading to- <lb />
in the State, situ- <lb />
in the midst of a fine tobacco <lb />
section and with of the best <lb />
dealers in the tobacco trade <lb />
there is no reason why it <lb />
not- Thanks to Bro. Harman, we <lb />
are moving slowly but surely- <lb />
Lexington Ky. is situated in the <lb />
of the far famed blue grass <lb />
region which covers an area of <lb />
about five counties and is noted <lb />
world over for the production <lb />
of beautiful horses and charming <lb />
women. Greenville N. C is sit- <lb />
in the of the New <lb />
Golden Belt, whose bright and <lb />
silky product is winning for itself <lb />
a world wide reputation, and our <lb />
women well they can vie with the <lb />
fairest of Italy's fair eyed <lb />
daughters- <lb />
We have been hampering on <lb />
the house question now for <lb />
nearly five months and have not <lb />
met with much success yet, still <lb />
our determination is just as strong <lb />
now as when we first took up the <lb />
pen. Perhaps we have not tried <lb />
right- Believing this to be the <lb />
case and having failed in getting <lb />
any built by individual effort we <lb />
are going to try co-operative <lb />
fort There are parties here now <lb />
who are willing and anxious to <lb />
sign a contract for a house x <lb />
to give thirty dollars a month <lb />
for it by the year. This house <lb />
complete will cost eleven <lb />
and fifty dollars. Now three <lb />
men by taking four hundred <lb />
apiece can put this house <lb />
and within three years it will very <lb />
near pay for itself. The land <lb />
can be had on reasonable <lb />
terms without spending a dollar <lb />
cash and thus the cash required <lb />
will be about six hundred dollars. <lb />
Let hear from you. <lb />
In the summer of 1885, Mr- <lb />
Leon F- Evans was traveling in <lb />
Nash county and while- there he <lb />
met Mr. J. T. Seat, who at that <lb />
time was superintending a large <lb />
tobacco farm near Nashville. <lb />
Mr. Evans noticed that the Nash <lb />
county soil was something like <lb />
that of Pitt and told Mr. Seat if <lb />
he would come down he thought <lb />
it likely that he would get up a <lb />
club of tobacco growers as the <lb />
Pitt county farmers were getting <lb />
tired growing cotton, to which Mr. <lb />
Seat agreed provided Mr. Evans <lb />
would go home and find out the <lb />
sentiments of the people in re- <lb />
to culture. <lb />
Mr- Evans came home and <lb />
went personally to see a good <lb />
number of farmers in his <lb />
ate community and finding the <lb />
sentiment in favor of the project <lb />
he wrote Mr. Seat to come down. <lb />
The time appointed for him to <lb />
come was bet and accordingly on <lb />
a winter night in the early part <lb />
of the month of December there <lb />
gathered together at the home of <lb />
Mr. A. A. Forbes the following <lb />
gentlemen who cultivated the first <lb />
crop of tobacco that was ever <lb />
grown as a monetary crop east of <lb />
the Wilmington Weldon R. R. I <lb />
Leon F. Evans. G F- Evans, A <lb />
A. Forbes, T. J. Stancill and <lb />
cob Joyner. After parleying <lb />
over the matter considerably they <lb />
finally agreed to employ Mr. <lb />
Seat at five hundred dollars a <lb />
year. This was the first <lb />
price that was filched out of <lb />
the farmers of east Carolina by <lb />
Granville county tobacco experts <lb />
but thousands of dollars have <lb />
since been carried away from <lb />
county alone. <lb />
All arrangements being made, <lb />
Mr. Seat returned to Nash to <lb />
make preparations for coming to <lb />
Pitt county, but before he had <lb />
Mot home tone of the number <lb />
who employed him became <lb />
easy and ordered Leon to <lb />
direct Mr- Seat not to come. It <lb />
was too late, however, for before <lb />
the letter got to Nashville, Mr. <lb />
Seat was here ready to enter into <lb />
his duties and thus it was under <lb />
these circumstances that Eastern <lb />
Carolina first made its exit in the <lb />
From that <lb />
little section three miles west of . <lb />
Greenville on the Tarboro road <lb />
the cultivation of tobacco has <lb />
spread like wild fire over Eastern <lb />
Carolina. Central Carolina hoot- <lb />
ed at the idea of the Eastern <lb />
counties ever becoming her rival. <lb />
Granville county boasts of Dutch- <lb />
ville, her Beaver Dam and her <lb />
Sunny South side while Pitt <lb />
county as a whole is the peer if <lb />
not the superior of any of these <lb />
sections in the production of the <lb />
golden weed, and surrounding her <lb />
is her sister counties Greene, Le- <lb />
Craven, Wilson, Edgecombe, <lb />
Martin, Beaufort and numbers of <lb />
others that are now just begin- <lb />
the cultivation of tobacco. <lb />
The Southern farmer to-day is <lb />
not solely dependent upon his <lb />
cotton crop for a living. In west <lb />
Tennessee, Arkansas, <lb />
pi, Louisiana and Texas, while <lb />
some few are following the old <lb />
plan of purchasing food and <lb />
planting cotton, the vast majority <lb />
are raising diversified crops, and <lb />
each succeeding year will see this <lb />
plan carried out in a greater de- <lb />
In the States of Georgia <lb />
and North and South Carolina <lb />
cotton-raising soon hold sec- <lb />
place, as to value, among the <lb />
agricultural products of the <lb />
States, not necessarily because <lb />
less will be raised, but because of <lb />
the increase in the production of <lb />
cereals, fruits vegetables. <lb />
Through the western part of the <lb />
cotton belt such a condition will <lb />
not be likely to exist, but cotton <lb />
will never again be raised in <lb />
of food products, as has <lb />
done in the <lb />
more Manufacturers Record. <lb />
The sentence above that refers <lb />
to the States of Georgia, North <lb />
and South Carolina should Tie read <lb />
carefully by every farmer who <lb />
has a tendency to cotton culture. <lb />
The class of farmers to which <lb />
this sentence should especially <lb />
refer grew up in helium days- <lb />
Then the true type of the South- <lb />
gentleman was the owner of <lb />
large of southern lands <lb />
with slaves enough to keep them <lb />
in o proper state of cultivation. <lb />
At that time cotton was about the <lb />
only monetary crop grown in the <lb />
South, it brought large <lb />
prices and of course its <lb />
cultivation began to increase. <lb />
But when the slaves were set free <lb />
the cost of cultivation increased <lb />
and this with the continual de <lb />
crease in the price paid for cot- <lb />
ton soon made the cost of <lb />
equal to or greater than <lb />
the price obtained. Now with <lb />
these conditions confronting our <lb />
intelligent farmers what hopes <lb />
can encourage them in the one <lb />
crop cotton culture. To those <lb />
who still persist in the cultivation <lb />
of cotton we would suggest that <lb />
you note the advice in the above <lb />
clipping- King cotton stand <lb />
aside, other cereals will take your <lb />
place. <lb />
We are not opposed to the <lb />
of cotton solely because <lb />
we are interested in tobacco <lb />
hire, but for plain and plausible <lb />
reasons first because there are <lb />
other Southern States that can <lb />
grow cotton at so much less ex- <lb />
than we can that it knocks <lb />
competition out cf the question <lb />
and second, the present price will <lb />
not pay the cost of cultivation. <lb />
These two alone are <lb />
proof in the of this <lb />
vexing problem. If the Southern <lb />
farmer would free himself from <lb />
debt and be an independent man <lb />
he must surely his attention <lb />
to the diversification of crops. <lb />
It is not natural that our <lb />
Sunny South with its warm <lb />
and genial climate and diversified <lb />
fertile lands that grow and <lb />
op almost every species of <lb />
from the heady oak to the <lb />
delicately constituted orange tree <lb />
and all kinds of fruits and flowers <lb />
should be the home of the great- <lb />
est number of poverty stricken <lb />
and distressed humanity and yet <lb />
such is the case- <lb />
FARMERS READ THIS. <lb />
Now that the tobacco crop <lb />
is well under way and nearly <lb />
everybody that plants the weed <lb />
knows pretty accurately how <lb />
many acres they intend planting, <lb />
we wish to ascertain the number <lb />
of acres that will be planted in <lb />
Pitt and the adjoining counties <lb />
this year It is almost or quite <lb />
impossible to get the exact <lb />
of acres that will be planted <lb />
but in order to get as nearly a <lb />
perfect statement as possible we <lb />
have decided to have posted at <lb />
some convenient point at every <lb />
post office in Pitt and a good <lb />
number in the adjoining counties <lb />
a blank tobacco acreage register <lb />
which will be so arranged as to <lb />
shew the name of the planter the <lb />
number of acres planted, in <lb />
and the number planted in <lb />
which course show when <lb />
difference in acre- <lb />
two years, whether an <lb />
a decrease as the case <lb />
maybe. When this register is <lb />
filled out through the kindness of <lb />
the postmaster it will sent <lb />
back to us. We of course will <lb />
pay the postage. <lb />
Now to have these registers <lb />
printed and mailed to the major- <lb />
of the post offices in Eastern <lb />
North Carolina will cost us no <lb />
small amount of money and a <lb />
great deal of time and to walk <lb />
probably not further than five <lb />
steps from where your mail is de- <lb />
livered to you and write your <lb />
name and the number of acres of <lb />
tobacco that you are planting <lb />
will be but a small trouble and <lb />
cost you nothing. Hence we <lb />
earnestly insist that every one <lb />
who plants a half acre and from <lb />
that up will do us the to <lb />
register their names and acreage <lb />
properly. The posters will be <lb />
sent out between now and the <lb />
first of June and by the 5th of <lb />
July we want to have them all re- <lb />
turned properly filled. Allow us <lb />
again to impress you with the <lb />
expense and time this information <lb />
will cost us and sincerely ask that <lb />
no one who plants tobacco will <lb />
treat us silence when the re- <lb />
turns are rendered for it is for <lb />
your interest as well as ours that <lb />
this investigation is being made. <lb />
TENEMENT CIGARS. <lb />
Important Amendments to the Factory <lb />
Law Now in Operation. <lb />
Several important amendments <lb />
to the factory law of New York <lb />
State went into effect on Monday <lb />
lost. They are as <lb />
No room or apartment in any <lb />
tenement or dwelling house shall <lb />
be used, except by the immediate <lb />
members of the family living <lb />
therein, for the manufacture of <lb />
coats, vests, trousers, knee pants, <lb />
overalls, cloaks, hats, caps, <lb />
jerseys, blouses, waists, <lb />
waist bands, underwear, neck- <lb />
wear, furs, fur trimmings, fur gar- <lb />
shirts, purses, feathers, <lb />
flowers, cigarettes or <lb />
cigars. <lb />
No person, firm, or corporation <lb />
shall hire or employ any person <lb />
to work in any room or apartment <lb />
in any rear building or buildings, <lb />
in tho rear of a tenement or <lb />
dwelling house, at making in <lb />
whole or in part any of the <lb />
mentioned in this section, <lb />
without first obtaining a written <lb />
permit from the Factory <lb />
tor, his assistant, or one of his <lb />
deputies, stating the maximum <lb />
number of persons employed <lb />
therein. <lb />
This permit is revocable by the <lb />
Factory Inspector or his <lb />
if at any time the health of <lb />
the community or of those em- <lb />
ployed may require it. A written <lb />
register of the names and address- <lb />
es of persons to whom such is <lb />
given is to be kept by the man- <lb />
to be produced when <lb />
demanded by the Factory <lb />
tor. The following clause then <lb />
No person shall knowingly sell <lb />
or expose for sale any of the articles <lb />
mentioned in this section made <lb />
in any dwelling or tenement <lb />
house or rear building without a <lb />
permit- All goods so made shall <lb />
be labeled on <lb />
a tag. Unclean goods shall be <lb />
labeled and the <lb />
Board of Health shall be notified <lb />
to remove and disinfect them. <lb />
The penalties for violation of <lb />
this law are not less than nor <lb />
more than fine for the first <lb />
not less than nor <lb />
more than for the second, <lb />
and for the third a fine not less <lb />
than and not more than <lb />
days U- S. Y. <lb />
Tobacco Journal. <lb />
HOW TO <lb />
HUNDRED DOLLARS FOR <lb />
NOTHING. <lb />
The Winner has a Clear Gift of a Small <lb />
Fortune, and the Losers Have <lb />
Patents that may Bring <lb />
Them in More. <lb />
and <lb />
of Vienna, have subjected <lb />
tobacco smoke to analyses on a <lb />
large scale, having drawn the <lb />
smoke of Havana cigars <lb />
by an aspirator through a series <lb />
of six bottles, the first of which <lb />
contained carbonate of soda, the <lb />
second and fourth clear water, the <lb />
third diluted sulphuric acid, the <lb />
fifth and the sixth ether. <lb />
The contents of the first four bot- <lb />
were found to be tinged dark <lb />
brown, while those of the last <lb />
two assumed a light yellow color. <lb />
Analysis of the contents of the <lb />
first two bottles showed no trace <lb />
of prussic acid, while analysis of <lb />
the contents of the last bottle <lb />
gave no indication of any poison- <lb />
substance. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court made at March term, the <lb />
case of Turner Smith and wife vs. Sam- <lb />
Cory, the <lb />
will sell, for cash, before the Com t <lb />
House door, in Greenville, on Monday, <lb />
the 6th day of June, 1803, the following <lb />
described piece or parcel of laud, <lb />
in county of Pitt, and in <lb />
township, adjoining the land of Jo- <lb />
Henry <lb />
Samuel Cory and others, <lb />
acres, more or leas, being the piece on <lb />
said Turner wife lived <lb />
in 1885. This April 30th, 1893. <lb />
A. L. BLOW ft F. G. JAMES, <lb />
Commissioners. <lb />
Needing tonic, or who want <lb />
late <lb />
Bureau. <lb />
M Hi ; Malaria, Indigestion, <lb />
Would you like to twenty- <lb />
five hundred dollars t If you <lb />
would, read carefully follows <lb />
and you may see a way to do it. <lb />
The Press Claims Company de- <lb />
votes much attention to patents. <lb />
It has handled thousands of <lb />
for inventions, but it <lb />
would like to handle thousands <lb />
more- There is plenty of <lb />
talent at large in this <lb />
try, needing nothing <lb />
to produce practical re- <lb />
That encouragement the <lb />
Press Claims Company proposes <lb />
to give. <lb />
NOT SO HARD AS IT SEEKS. <lb />
A patent strikes most people as <lb />
an appallingly formidable thing. <lb />
The idea is that an inventor must <lb />
be a natural genius, like Edison <lb />
or Bell; that he must devote years <lb />
to delving in complicated <lb />
problems and that he must <lb />
spend a fortune en delicate <lb />
before he can get a new <lb />
device to a patentable degree of <lb />
perfection. This delusion the <lb />
company desires to dispel. It <lb />
desires to get into the head of the <lb />
public a clear comprehension of <lb />
the fact that it is not the great, <lb />
complex, and expensive <lb />
that bring the best re- <lb />
turns to their authors, but the lit- <lb />
simple, and cheap <lb />
things that seem so absurdly <lb />
vial that the average citizen would <lb />
feel somewhat ashamed of bring- <lb />
them to the attention of the <lb />
Patent Office. <lb />
Edison says that tho profits he <lb />
has received from the patents on <lb />
all his marvelous inventions have <lb />
not been sufficient to pay the cost <lb />
of his experiments- But the man <lb />
who conceived the idea of fasten- <lb />
a bit of rubber cord to a child's <lb />
ball, so that it would come back <lb />
to the hand when thrown, made a <lb />
fortune out of his scheme- The <lb />
modern sewing-machine is a <lb />
of product of <lb />
the toil of hundreds of busy brains <lb />
through a hundred and fifty years, <lb />
but the whole brilliant result rests <lb />
upon the simple device of putting <lb />
the eye of the needle at the point <lb />
instead of at the other end. <lb />
THE LITTLE THINGS THE MOST VAL- <lb />
Comparatively few people re- <lb />
themselves as inventors, but <lb />
almost everybody bus been struck, <lb />
at one time or another, with ideas <lb />
that seemed calculated to reduce <lb />
some of the little frictions of life. <lb />
Usually such ideas are dismissed <lb />
without further thought. <lb />
don't the railroad com- <lb />
make its car windows so <lb />
that they can be slid up and down <lb />
without breaking the <lb />
exclaims the traveler. <lb />
I were running the road I would <lb />
make them in such a <lb />
, was the man that made <lb />
I this saucepan thinking of <lb />
j the cook. never had to <lb />
work over a stove, or he would <lb />
j have known how it ought to have <lb />
such a collar button <lb />
the man who is late for <lb />
I were in the <lb />
I'd make buttons that would <lb />
not slip out, or break off, or <lb />
gouge out the back of my <lb />
And then the various sufferers <lb />
forget about their grievances and <lb />
begin to think of something else. <lb />
If they would sit down at the <lb />
next convenient opportunity, <lb />
their ideas car windows, <lb />
saucepans, and collar buttons into <lb />
practical shape, and then apply <lb />
for patents, they might find them- <lb />
selves as independently wealthy <lb />
as the man who invented the iron <lb />
umbrella ring, or the one who <lb />
patented the fifteen puzzle. <lb />
A OFFER. <lb />
To induce people to keep track <lb />
of their bright ideas and see what <lb />
there is in them, tho Press Claims <lb />
Company has resolved to offer a <lb />
I prize. <lb />
To the person who submits to <lb />
it the simplest and most <lb />
invention, from a commercial <lb />
point of view, the company will <lb />
twenty-five hundred dollars <lb />
in cash, in addition to refunding <lb />
the foes for securing the patent. <lb />
It will also advertise the <lb />
free of charge. <lb />
This offer is subject to the fol- <lb />
lowing <lb />
competitor must obtain <lb />
a patent for his invention through <lb />
the company. He must first <lb />
ply for a preliminary search, the <lb />
cost of which will be five dollars. <lb />
Should this search show his in- <lb />
to be he <lb />
can withdraw without further ex- <lb />
Otherwise he will be ex- <lb />
to complete his <lb />
and take out a patent in the <lb />
way. The total expense, in- <lb />
Government and Bureau <lb />
fees, will be seventy dollars. For <lb />
this, whether he secures the prize <lb />
or not, the inventor will have a <lb />
patent that ought to be a valuable <lb />
property to him. The prize will <lb />
be awarded by a jury consisting <lb />
of three reputable patent <lb />
of Washington. Intending <lb />
competitors should fill out the <lb />
following blank, and forward it <lb />
with their <lb />
1898. <lb />
submit the within described <lb />
invention in competition for the <lb />
Twenty-five Hundred Dollar Prize <lb />
offered by the Press Claims Com-<lb />
NO BLANKS IN THIS COMPETITION. <lb />
This is is a competition of rather, <lb />
an unusual nature- It is common <lb />
to offer prizes for the best story, <lb />
or picture, or architectural plan, <lb />
all the competitors risking the loss <lb />
of their labor and the successful <lb />
one merely selling his for the <lb />
amount of the prize. But the <lb />
Press Claim Company's offer is <lb />
something entirely different Each <lb />
is asked merely to help <lb />
and the one who helps <lb />
himself to the best advantage is <lb />
to be rewarded for doing it The <lb />
prize is only a stimulus to do <lb />
something that would be well <lb />
worth doing without it The <lb />
whose competitive plan <lb />
for a club house on a certain <lb />
is not accepted has spent his <lb />
labor on something of very little <lb />
to him. But the person who <lb />
patents a simple and useful de- <lb />
vice in the Press Claims Company's <lb />
competition, need not if he <lb />
fail to secure the prize. He has <lb />
a substantial result to show for <lb />
his that will command <lb />
its value in the market at any <lb />
time. <lb />
The plain man who uses any <lb />
article in his daily work ought to <lb />
know better how to improve it <lb />
than the mechanical expert who <lb />
studies it only from the <lb />
cal point of view. Get rid of the <lb />
idea that an improvement can be <lb />
too simple to be worth patenting. <lb />
The simpler the better. The per- <lb />
son who best succeeds in <lb />
simplicity and popularity, will <lb />
get the Press Claims Company's <lb />
twenty-five hundred dollars. <lb />
The responsibility of com- <lb />
may be judged from the fact <lb />
that its stock is held by about <lb />
three hundred of the leading <lb />
newspapers of the United States. <lb />
Address the Press Claims Com- <lb />
John <lb />
attorney, F. street, N. W., <lb />
H. C. <lb />
A Ten Story Clubhouse. <lb />
Think of a club house ten <lb />
stories high. This is what the <lb />
Iroquois Club of Chicago proposes <lb />
building on tho corner of Adams <lb />
street and Michigan avenue. The <lb />
second floor is to contain the <lb />
rooms of the club, the third <lb />
floor will be a large reception room <lb />
for use on formal occasions; the <lb />
fourth and fifth floors will be fur- <lb />
into rooms for the members, <lb />
he sixth floor will contain a largo <lb />
ball room, and ninth floors <lb />
tho dining rooms, and servants <lb />
will occupy the tenth floor. This <lb />
is the most ambitious effort in <lb />
the way of a clubhouse that has <lb />
as been projected. <lb />
People Who Rarely Wink. <lb />
There are people who rarely <lb />
wink. How they manage to get <lb />
along without doing so is a mar- <lb />
but somehow or other they do. <lb />
Some eyes are naturally more <lb />
moist than others, and the very <lb />
moist eye does not so much need <lb />
the assistance of the lids to keep <lb />
the eyeball bright It is a <lb />
matter, for winking <lb />
though under the control of the, <lb />
will, is done so quickly that it is <lb />
practically an involuntary action. <lb />
Men wink when they that the <lb />
eye is uncomfortably dry, and <lb />
when it does not dry the <lb />
necessity for winking is not felt. <lb />
The Moon. <lb />
The moon is a fossil world, an <lb />
ancient cinder, a ruined <lb />
The moon was once tho <lb />
seat of all the varied and intense <lb />
activities that now characterize <lb />
the surface of our earth. Its life <lb />
age was, perhaps, reached while <lb />
the earth was yet glowing. <lb />
E. J. Hertford, Mass., says bra <lb />
has been cored of Scrofula by tho <lb />
bottles of after having had <lb />
other treat- being <lb />
to quite a low condition of health, as it <lb />
i as thought she could not live. <lb />
Cured little boy <lb />
all over bis For <lb />
year I had hoPe <lb />
f his <lb />
was to use <lb />
of the disease remain. <lb />
Has. T. L. Miss. <lb />
book Blood an Skin Disease milled free. <lb />
SWIFT Co. Atlanta. C. <lb />
The <lb />
Fundamental <lb />
Principle of <lb />
Life Assurance <lb />
is protection for the family. <lb />
Unfortunately, however, the <lb />
beneficiaries of life assurance <lb />
are often deprived of the pro- <lb />
vision made for them, through <lb />
the loss of the principal, by <lb />
following bad advice regard- <lb />
its investment <lb />
Under the <lb />
Policy of <lb />
The Equitable Life <lb />
you are provided with an ab- <lb />
solute safeguard against such <lb />
misfortune, besides securing <lb />
a much larger amount of in- <lb />
for the same amount <lb />
of premiums paid in. <lb />
For facts and figures, address <lb />
W. J. Manager. <lb />
Rock Hill, <lb />
CHILDREN <lb />
are com- <lb />
pounded from a prescription <lb />
widely used by the best <lb />
cal authorities and are <lb />
in a form that is be- <lb />
coming the fashion every- <lb />
where.<lb />
act gently <lb />
but promptly upon the liver, <lb />
stomach and intestines; cure <lb />
dyspepsia, habitual <lb />
offensive breath and head- <lb />
ache. One tubule taken at the <lb />
first symptom of indigestion, <lb />
biliousness, dizziness, distress <lb />
after eating, or depression cf <lb />
spirits, will surely and quickly <lb />
remove the whole difficulty. <lb />
may be <lb />
of nearest druggist <lb />
are easy to take, <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, and all business in the If. S <lb />
Patent office or in the Courts to <lb />
for Moderate Fees. <lb />
We the S. Patent Of- <lb />
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and <lb />
can obtain patents in less time than those <lb />
more remote from Washington. <lb />
model or drawing is sent <lb />
advise as to free of charge, <lb />
and we. make no change unless we ob- <lb />
Patent,. <lb />
refer, here, to the Post Master, the <lb />
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to <lb />
of the U. S. Patent Office. Fox <lb />
advise terms and reference to <lb />
clients in your own State, or <lb />
address, C. A. Snow A Co., <lb />
Washington, D. C. <lb />
R. W. ROYSTER CO. <lb />
GREEN N.<lb />
BUYS ONLY. <lb />
References and type samples furnished on application. <lb />
We want one A I <lb />
I town to handle the <lb />
JACK FROST FREEZERS.<lb />
A Scientific Machine made on a Principle. <lb />
cost a times a year. It is not mussy <lb />
or sloppy. A child can operate it. Sells at nigh. <lb />
Send for prices and discounts. <lb />
St., <lb />
Cream in thirty <lb />
-Manufacturer of- <lb />
BUGGIES, DRAYS <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
MARK <lb />
Tor the Cm all Ski Diseases <lb />
Tills Preparation has been in use over <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know has <lb />
been in steady demand, it has been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
e country, and has effected cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is of <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which it obtained is owing entirely <lb />
x its efficacy, as but little has <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. Sample box free. The <lb />
discount to Druggist. All Cash <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
and communications to <lb />
T. F. <lb />
Sole Mai- Proprietor, <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
My Factory is well equipped with the best Mechanics, consequently put up nothing <lb />
but FIRST-CLASS WORK. We keep up with the limes and the improved style. <lb />
Best material used in all work. All styles of springs are you can select <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King <lb />
We also keep on hand a full of Ready Made Harness Whip, which <lb />
ell at the lowest, rates. Special attention given to repairing. <lb />
ID- <lb />
Greenville, N C. <lb />
Do You Write <lb />
THEN <lb />
YOU MUST <lb />
HAVE PAPER. PENS, <lb />
ENVELOPES. PENCILS, INK. <lb />
SEE WHAT THE- <lb />
A WELDON R. B. <lb />
and Schedule <lb />
TWAINS SOUTH. <lb />
No No No <lb />
April. 18th, Fast Mail, daily <lb />
daily ex Sun <lb />
Weldon 12,30 pm pm <lb />
Ar pm pm <lb />
pm <lb />
Tarboro pm <lb />
Rocky Mt p pm am <lb />
Wilson<lb />
Ar Florence <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar ti <lb />
TRAINS GOING <lb />
NO No No H <lb />
dally daily daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
Florence <lb />
Fayetteville<lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilmington am<lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Ar Wilson am p m <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar Rocky Mont <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro p m <lb />
Daily except <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 8.40 Halifax 4.00 p. <lb />
in., arrives Scotland Neck at p. m., <lb />
Greenville p. m., 7.03 p. m. <lb />
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m., <lb />
Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving Halifax <lb />
at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. m. daily <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb />
Washington 7.00 a. m., arrives Parmele <lb />
8.40 a. m., Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m,, Parmele 6.00 <lb />
V. m arrives Washington 7.30 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connect with <lb />
trains on tin Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, P M, Sunday PM, arrive <lb />
Plymouth 0.20 p. in., 5.20 p. m. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
6.80 a. m., Sunday 10.00 a. m- <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N C, 10.25 AM 12,20. <lb />
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb />
and Fayetteville Branch leave Fayette- <lb />
ville a in. arrive Rowland IS p m. <lb />
Returning leave Rowland p in. <lb />
arrive Fayetteville IS ; m. Daily ex- <lb />
sept Sunday. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M <lb />
arrive N C, A M. Re <lb />
laves If C AM <lb />
Goldsboro. NO A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville M <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Spring Hope AM, Nashville <lb />
8.85 AM, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. leave <lb />
Latta 7.80 p. m., arrive Dun bar 8.40 p. <lb />
m. Returning leave Dunbar a. <lb />
arrive Latta 7.15 a. m. y except <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at <lb />
and teat <lb />
ton at A M, and P. M. <lb />
lug at Warsaw with Nos. And <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
North dally. AD <lb />
rail via Richmond, and dally except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky <lb />
daily Sunday with Norfolk A <lb />
Carolina railroad tor Norfolk and all <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
General <lb />
J. R. <lb />
T agent. <lb />
Reflector V Book Store<lb />
CAN OFFER YOU IN THESE. <lb />
Legal Cap Paper to cents a quire. <lb />
Fool's Cap Per to cents a quire. <lb />
Letter Paper cents a quire. <lb />
Note Paper to cents a quire. <lb />
Envelopes to a pack. <lb />
Box Paper from cents up. <lb />
Gilt Edge to cents a quire. <lb />
Pure Linen Note Paper, ruled and plain, to cents a quire- <lb />
Nice Envelopes to match tho Paper. <lb />
Fine Tablets at all prices. <lb />
THESE AWE NO THIN, CHEAP <lb />
PAPERS THAT WILL NOT HOLD <lb />
INK but Strictly FIRST-CLASS. <lb />
Tablets, Slates, <lb />
JUST <lb />
SEE WHAT <lb />
WE HAVE FOR <lb />
THE SCHOOL CHILDREN. <lb />
Pencil Tablets, Letter and <lb />
Fools Cap sizes only cents. <lb />
You pay cents for <lb />
same tablets elsewhere- <lb />
Slates cents to cents- <lb />
Slate Pencils per doz. <lb />
Fancy Colored Crayons <lb />
per box. <lb />
Spencerian Pens cents per <lb />
dozen. <lb />
Fine Assorted Pens cents <lb />
per dozen. <lb />
Plain Lead Pencils cents <lb />
per <lb />
Rubber Tipped Lend Pencils <lb />
per dozen- <lb />
Pen Holders cents per doz. <lb />
And of other things just <lb />
as cheap.<lb />
CO <lb />
Do You Read <lb />
Then yon want the best We handle the lending Ma <lb />
Century, Harper, Frank Leslie, Review of Reviews, <lb />
New Peterson, etc., at usual retail prices- Besides we carry s line of <lb />
popular paper covered Novels at only cents each, and nicely bound <lb />
Novels at cents- These embrace books by best writers, com <lb />
a list too large to mention. Any book wanted that is not on hand <lb />
ill be ordered. <lb />
SUBSCRIPTIONS TAKEN TO ALL TH LEADING PAPERS A M <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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