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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 31 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:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <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:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18930531</dc:date>
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                <p>
he <lb />
Believes <lb />
And takes his <lb />
Ono Dollar gets <lb />
This Office for Job Printing <lb />
STATE NEWS. <lb />
Things Mentioned in our State Ex- <lb />
changes that are of General Interest <lb />
The Cream of the News. <lb />
Windsor T- Gilliam, <lb />
Jr., at the Jordan Place, on Roan- <lb />
river, bad the misfortune to <lb />
lose forty head of hogs during <lb />
the freshet in the Roanoke last <lb />
week. <lb />
A are doing immensely on <lb />
cabbage shipments this season. <lb />
They have shipped thus far <lb />
crates. Yesterday they got <lb />
and day previously they sent <lb />
off <lb />
The oldest locomotive <lb />
in the United States is Albert <lb />
Johnson, of Raleigh. He ran the <lb />
first engine into Raleigh. He is <lb />
now over eight- years old and <lb />
is pensioned by the railroad com- <lb />
He will probably visit the <lb />
World's Fair. <lb />
Charlotte There is <lb />
reason to think that sometimes <lb />
sympathy is wasted on the dear <lb />
down-trodden women. Some of <lb />
them certainly, are very well able <lb />
to take care of themselves. It has <lb />
been less than two weeks ago <lb />
since a postmaster in this county <lb />
and his wife had a disturbance, <lb />
whereupon she up with a plank <lb />
and split it over his Load. Turn <lb />
the rascals out <lb />
Kinston Free learn <lb />
that Mr. Ed Hart, of Hugo, this <lb />
county, had the to lose <lb />
his residence and kitchen and all <lb />
of their contents last Saturday <lb />
evening. The cause of tho fire <lb />
was accidental. Mr. Hart had no <lb />
on his property. <lb />
Mr. W- F. Gilbert, mail carrier <lb />
from here to Johnson's Mills, Pitt <lb />
county, tells us that Henderson <lb />
West, a colored tenant on Dr. W. <lb />
L- Best's plantation, near John- <lb />
son's Mills, has a plot of eight <lb />
acres of cotton that will average <lb />
seven leaves high. <lb />
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
Beaches the <lb />
patron <lb />
By advertising in an <lb />
Therefore he uses <lb />
Reflector. <lb />
VOL XII. <lb />
GREENVILLE PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY MAY 1893. <lb />
NO. <lb />
This Office for Job printing <lb />
Salisbury It is re port- <lb />
ed that there is a wild man in the <lb />
woods about a mile north of Car- <lb />
K. C- He has been seen <lb />
by several different people within <lb />
the Lost few weeks. He is a heavy <lb />
set, short and appears per- <lb />
wild, but has no dam- <lb />
age as yet.------Tho com- <lb />
missioners of Forsyth are getting <lb />
in hot water. At a former court <lb />
Judge recommended the <lb />
building of a new court house. <lb />
In his charge to tho grand jury <lb />
at this term of the court, ho re- <lb />
quested the jury that a bill of <lb />
indictment be drawn the <lb />
commissioners for failing to act. <lb />
Statesville About <lb />
three weeks ago John Parsons, <lb />
who lived about six miles from <lb />
Wilkesboro. died. He was a <lb />
maker and by working in- <lb />
at his made a <lb />
living for himself and his wife <lb />
they had no children- The couple <lb />
led a quiet life and it was <lb />
supposed among his neighbors <lb />
that Parsons had saved any <lb />
money After his death his wife, <lb />
who knew he had very <lb />
examined into his effects <lb />
and found five hundred silver <lb />
dollars. This led to a closer in- <lb />
and in greenback <lb />
was found sewed up a <lb />
Mrs. Parsons was almost as much <lb />
surprised as anybody. While she <lb />
knew he had been very frugal she <lb />
had no idea that out of his <lb />
means he had been able to <lb />
lay away <lb />
An Arkansas local soliloquizes <lb />
of our exchanges <lb />
are publishing a curious item to <lb />
the effect that a horse in Iowa <lb />
pulled the plug out of the bung- <lb />
hole of a barrel for the purpose <lb />
of slaking his thirst. We do not <lb />
see anything extraordinary in the <lb />
occurrence. Now, if the horse <lb />
dad nailed the barrel out of tho <lb />
bung-hole and slaked his thirst <lb />
with the plug; or, if the barrel <lb />
had pulled bung-hole out of <lb />
the horse and slaked his plug with <lb />
the thirst; or, if the barrel had <lb />
pulled the bung hole out of the <lb />
plug and its thirst with the <lb />
horse; or, if the ping had pulled <lb />
the horse out of the barrel and <lb />
slaked its thirst with tho bung- <lb />
hole; or. if tho bung-hole had <lb />
pulled the thirst out of the horse <lb />
and slaked the plug with the bar <lb />
rel; or, if the barrel had pulled the <lb />
horse out of the bung hole and <lb />
plugged its thirst with n slake, it <lb />
might be worth while to make <lb />
some fuss over <lb />
was in no uncertain <lb />
that the North Carolina Press <lb />
in session at New. <lb />
recently, paid its respects <lb />
to the paper, typo and tobacco <lb />
trust-. The pronounced <lb />
nation of these hydra-headed <lb />
green-eyed monsters was marked, <lb />
emphatic and without reservation <lb />
Let the Attorney-General of North <lb />
Carolina now show his hand in <lb />
behalf of tho people on this <lb />
matter. are we here <lb />
Show Mr Osborne, and <lb />
come to <lb />
SOMETHING WILL DROP AT <lb />
CHICAGO. <lb />
It may be the prices for board <lb />
and lodging, bat if it is not, then <lb />
Chicago herself will hear some- <lb />
thing drop that will make a <lb />
i tremendous racket. Despite the <lb />
declaration that prices would not <lb />
raised exorbitantly, despite <lb />
the official assurance of General <lb />
Davis in a magazine article that <lb />
Chicago had better sense than to <lb />
kill the goose which lays the gold-, <lb />
en tho cry already goes up <lb />
that extortion is the rule on all <lb />
sides. One correspondent de <lb />
that it cost him cents to <lb />
get a cup of tea; another writes <lb />
over his own signature that for j <lb />
a day can got only the <lb />
commonest sort of food and <lb />
This looks as if Chicago has <lb />
not the common sense the rest of <lb />
the country has hitherto given her <lb />
credit for. She is in debt deeply. <lb />
On the great influx of visitors to <lb />
her fair depends her ability to get <lb />
out. Thousands of her citizens <lb />
will be ruined financially, and the <lb />
fair guarantors will be saddled <lb />
with a debt that will bankrupt <lb />
some of them if that show is a <lb />
failure through tho greed of board- <lb />
house keepers. Has the <lb />
characteristic of the mil- <lb />
lions of hogs annually slaughter- <lb />
ed at Chicago perhaps somehow <lb />
into the spirit of the <lb />
of that town Their conduct <lb />
looks especially queer alongside <lb />
the fact that the railroads are <lb />
making liberal reductions in rates. <lb />
The stories that have already <lb />
gone out about the dizzy prices <lb />
for accommodations at Chicago <lb />
will, if prevent at <lb />
least 500.000 people from visiting <lb />
the fair. They simply cannot and <lb />
will not pay the prices quoted as <lb />
being extorted from visitors. We <lb />
are tho people, but are not <lb />
whoso little ad j <lb />
mission fees and board bills are <lb />
to make that fair a success. If <lb />
the spirit of the favorite <lb />
staple gets in the air to the extent <lb />
of the fair a failure. <lb />
Chicago will get a name for her- <lb />
self that will go thundering down <lb />
the corridors of time along with <lb />
that of Shylock and the fellow who <lb />
would not trust some of our sol- <lb />
for beef during the <lb />
war. She will <lb />
from one end of this re- <lb />
public to the other, and her name <lb />
will henceforth have an evil smack <lb />
in Europe, till she could even <lb />
wish the waters of Lake Michigan <lb />
were rolling over her unquiet bed. <lb />
Let Chicago look <lb />
Wis., May 1803. <lb />
The above editorial is from <lb />
the Milwaukee Sun of the 20th j <lb />
inst., and is not an over colored <lb />
picture of the exorbitant rates <lb />
that are being charged in Chicago. <lb />
One of the leading hotels wanted <lb />
me to pay per day for such a <lb />
as I selected at the same <lb />
time upon all this printed matter <lb />
yon will find, will not ad- <lb />
our rates during the <lb />
Worlds You want to warn <lb />
your people that if they intend <lb />
visiting tho fair to bring plenty of <lb />
money and if you know any poor <lb />
editor, takes the principal <lb />
part of his subscription in <lb />
and so who contemplates <lb />
taking the trip, say to him, he had <lb />
better take his along, if he <lb />
is not fond of walking. <lb />
Sincerely Yours. <lb />
W. S. Greek. <lb />
And now the Republican pa <lb />
of New York are <lb />
Mr. Cleveland and Mr. <lb />
for not coming to the rescue of <lb />
Wall street by bonds, and <lb />
say by not doing this he shows <lb />
absolutely his for the <lb />
office he holds. On the other <lb />
hand the Third party organs are <lb />
still abusing him because he is <lb />
the friend of Wall street. Bat of <lb />
coarse President Cleveland is not <lb />
specially trying to please either <lb />
the Republicans or but <lb />
his decision in the bond question <lb />
has made him many among <lb />
the people at large who admire <lb />
i him for the step he has taken. <lb />
; Roxboro Courier. <lb />
It may be in accordance with <lb />
Scripture to keep your right hand <lb />
in ignorance of the doings of your i <lb />
deft, but when your left hand is, <lb />
dear; <lb />
little soft digits, no law or <lb />
prevent right hand from <lb />
feeling good too, or even i <lb />
and joining the procession. <lb />
Orange Observer. <lb />
CHARITY BEGINS AT HOME. <lb />
is a great deal of <lb />
work done in this and other <lb />
cities. There are organizations <lb />
to provide for destitute orphans, <lb />
and societies which lend a helping <lb />
hand to the deserving poor <lb />
the unfortunate. Women who <lb />
wealth, those who have <lb />
incomes barely sufficient to fur <lb />
the necessaries of life alike <lb />
respond promptly to tho demands <lb />
of charity. Their hearts are <lb />
with pity by tides of <lb />
poverty and suffering, and they <lb />
make sacrifices to afford relief to <lb />
those who claim their assistance. <lb />
All of this is creditable and com- <lb />
but are not some of <lb />
these zealous workers in the char- <lb />
field in danger of forgetting <lb />
that charity begins at home <lb />
We do refer to the fact that <lb />
there are homes that are comfort-1 <lb />
less and unattractive for tho want <lb />
of careful housekeeping, but to <lb />
tho neglect which the babies and <lb />
the older children suffer. How <lb />
often are they to nurses j <lb />
who are in every way unfit to have <lb />
charge them The colored <lb />
nurses of the present day are not <lb />
lobe compared with those <lb />
quarter of a century ago. The <lb />
gentle faced, kind-hearted and . <lb />
neat appearing old colored nurses, j <lb />
with their heads adorned with a i <lb />
handkerchief, have dis-1 <lb />
appeared. Their places have been j <lb />
by colored girls who have <lb />
very little liking for children, and i <lb />
who, as a do not how; <lb />
to take care of them and are in- <lb />
different about promoting their <lb />
comfort and welfare. Their chief <lb />
objects are their wages and their <lb />
amusements. They neglect the ; <lb />
babies when out of sight of their <lb />
mistresses, and devote their time <lb />
principally to gossiping with each <lb />
other, or receiving tho attentions <lb />
of the men who hover about; <lb />
them. Cases of cruel treatment <lb />
of children by their nurses are <lb />
not infrequently reported, but it <lb />
is very difficult to get the facts <lb />
of them because the nurses protect; <lb />
each other. If witnesses of cruel i <lb />
acts attempt to interfere in behalf <lb />
of the children they are liable to <lb />
be made the objects <lb />
particularly if they are ladies. <lb />
A few days ago a nurse <lb />
about years of age. <lb />
who had two children in charge, <lb />
m taken to task for cruel treat-, <lb />
of one of them, a little boy <lb />
about two years old. The woman <lb />
was pushing a baby carriage, <lb />
which was a baby, at a rapid rate, <lb />
and the boy was clinging to <lb />
crying, being almost exhausted <lb />
by his efforts to keep up with tho <lb />
nurse- On being remonstrated <lb />
with for dragging the child along <lb />
in that cruel manner she answered <lb />
sulkily that all she cared for was <lb />
the money she earned and that all <lb />
tho children's parents cared for <lb />
was the work they got out of her. <lb />
It is impossible to say, of course, j <lb />
whether she slandered the child- j <lb />
parents or not, but the . <lb />
chances are she told the truth, not <lb />
only with regard to herself but <lb />
also with regard to the <lb />
If the mother of tho children loved <lb />
them as she ought to she wouldn't <lb />
have them to such a <lb />
nurse. <lb />
How many mothers are there <lb />
whose are to <lb />
these careless and unfit <lb />
nurses, who know how their child- <lb />
spend their time, how they <lb />
are treated, or where they go <lb />
May they not hear words which <lb />
should never reach their innocent <lb />
ears May they be taken to <lb />
the badly ventilated homes of <lb />
these nurses, or of the nurse's <lb />
friends, where disease lurks, or <lb />
may they not be so cruelly treated <lb />
as to make them bad tempered <lb />
and bad-mannered <lb />
We have nothing to say against <lb />
charitable works, the mother <lb />
who devotes tho better part her <lb />
time to hunting up objects for <lb />
charity and leaves her children to <lb />
the care of an ignorant, and some- <lb />
times vicious nurse, doesn't know <lb />
what genuine objects of charity <lb />
are. The claim which her babies <lb />
have upon charity is greater <lb />
than that of any other charitable <lb />
claim, and it ought to be satisfied <lb />
first. Their comfort, training and <lb />
happiness should be her first con- <lb />
Goldsboro Headlight. <lb />
The best salve In tho world for Cuts. <lb />
Sore. Ulcer-. Salt Rheum. <lb />
Sores, Chapped Hands <lb />
Chilblain. Corns, and all <lb />
positively caret Piles, or no <lb />
required. It U guaranteed to give <lb />
satisfaction, or money refunded. <lb />
Price cents box. For tale at <lb />
THE SWAMP CATERPILLARS. <lb />
Newspapers have recently con- <lb />
accounts of immense <lb />
swarms of caterpillars appearing <lb />
along tho tracts of railroads pass- <lb />
through swamps. These cat- <lb />
have in some places, <lb />
been so numerous as to stop <lb />
trains on the roads. These arc <lb />
all one species, known to <lb />
as <lb />
the American forest-tree tent- <lb />
caterpillar- Tho parent of this <lb />
caterpillar is a night flying, <lb />
lowish brown moth, measuring <lb />
about one and one-half inches <lb />
across the expanded wings. It is <lb />
a native species, especially <lb />
abundant in the Southern States. <lb />
This caterpillar, as its popular <lb />
name indicates, feeds chiefly upon <lb />
tho leaves of forest trees, more <lb />
especially those of the wild cherry, <lb />
oak, hickory, basswood and <lb />
nut. It often entirely defoliates <lb />
largo tracts of these trees, there- <lb />
by suspending the growth of the <lb />
trees for tho season. Where for- <lb />
est trees are not at hand the <lb />
caterpillar has damaged apple <lb />
and cherry orchards. <lb />
long as it con- <lb />
its attack to forest trees <lb />
there is at present no practicable <lb />
remedy, as it is impossible to <lb />
spray or such <lb />
Where it threatens orchards or <lb />
ornamental grounds, <lb />
with Paris green will prove a <lb />
most effectual remedy. Another <lb />
is to tie a wide band of scrap cot- <lb />
or an old piece of carpet, <lb />
around the trunks or the trees be- <lb />
low the crotch and saturate the <lb />
band with kerosene oil. The cat- <lb />
cannot pass this barrier. <lb />
Rut to be effectual the trees must <lb />
first be cleared of the caterpillars <lb />
and eggs already upon them- <lb />
The female moth lays her eggs <lb />
during June a cluster of three <lb />
hundred or more upon the small <lb />
twigs of tho the cater- <lb />
pillars afterwards attack. <lb />
eggs look like small, white kegs. <lb />
The caterpillar does not hatch <lb />
out until the next spring. <lb />
This insect has numerous <lb />
mies, and on this account it has <lb />
never and is not likely to become <lb />
a scourge. The most potent <lb />
mies are the carnivorous ground <lb />
and tree beetles, flies, <lb />
and a fungous disease, which in- <lb />
variably appears when the cater- <lb />
pillars become very numerous <lb />
and exhaust the food supply. <lb />
Farmers and lumbermen should <lb />
learn to recognize and protect the <lb />
useful beetle which prey upon <lb />
these and other injurious insects. <lb />
of the N. C <lb />
station contains <lb />
of all the more important of <lb />
these <lb />
N. C. Experiment Station. <lb />
A Gushing Love Letter. <lb />
My doer Henry; <lb />
I embrace this here <lb />
to let you as how <lb />
I had a spell of does <lb />
hope lines may find <lb />
you enjoying the same Gods <lb />
blessing. Why you rite a <lb />
line to tell suffering Kath- <lb />
rum all about her <lb />
my my turtle dove <lb />
my judging my deer deer <lb />
how my poor sole is longing to <lb />
your I him <lb />
singing as he comes <lb />
from his plow now Oh my <lb />
do home and lets get married <lb />
so no more at preset but remain <lb />
your <lb />
An Tildes. <lb />
To my <lb />
P S part <lb />
has raised a <lb />
Polly does live so snug <lb />
she rites him times when <lb />
he gets a little over my <lb />
let us keep house <lb />
and if you love me I wont whip <lb />
you indeed nor I wont look at <lb />
any body so I wont. Daddy says <lb />
I must get married because I have <lb />
waited long already. So no <lb />
more at present. K A T <lb />
P S part <lb />
My pa is bad my Ink l pale <lb />
my love for you shall never fall <lb />
for is my own true love <lb />
My pulping duck and turtle dove <lb />
K A <lb />
P Note <lb />
Mothers dead and Timothy are <lb />
got the fever. So no more at <lb />
sent from your <lb />
Am <lb />
Benny <lb />
I forgot to say as how that air <lb />
corn on my big toe hurt as <lb />
it use to sq your wife <lb />
as it is to be sends kisses end <lb />
say farewell, yours till death do <lb />
us part; <lb />
KAT <lb />
WHAT THE UNIVERSITY IS <lb />
FOR NORTH CAROLINA. <lb />
We received with pleas- <lb />
a of tho University <lb />
for the present year. It is offer- <lb />
a wide range of instruction, <lb />
which is attracting several <lb />
young men to its halls. <lb />
There are fifteen departments of <lb />
instruction, including eighty <lb />
eight minor courses. The <lb />
of students has grown to <lb />
being a gain of over last year; <lb />
of these are law students and <lb />
medical and pharmacy <lb />
dents ; have already graduated <lb />
at college and are pursuing ad- <lb />
or professional studies- <lb />
come from Vanderbilt <lb />
Davidson College, Wake <lb />
Forest College, Guilford College, <lb />
Washburn College, the <lb />
of New Brunswick, and the <lb />
University cf North <lb />
There are four general courses <lb />
of study leading to degrees pro <lb />
courses in law, medicine, <lb />
and engineering; brief courses <lb />
in law, medicine, and engineer- <lb />
brief courses for men of <lb />
limited means; special courses <lb />
in Chemistry and other sciences, <lb />
and a large of optional <lb />
courses. The Faculty includes <lb />
teachers ; there are six <lb />
laboratories and museums, <lb />
buildings, . libraries, reading <lb />
rooms, Y. M- C A. room, athletic <lb />
grounds, gymnasium, etc., etc. <lb />
are seventy scholarships <lb />
giving free tuition Any <lb />
boy can get help. The <lb />
Fund for loans amounts <lb />
to dollars. <lb />
pamphlets, etc. are <lb />
sent free to anyone who will ad- <lb />
dress President Winston at <lb />
Chapel Hill, N. C, <lb />
Editing a Newspaper. <lb />
An exchange has summed up <lb />
the following as some of the ex- <lb />
of an editor. <lb />
Editing a newspaper is a pleas- <lb />
ant business -if yon can stand it. <lb />
If it contains many advertise- <lb />
subscribers complain that <lb />
they take up too much space. <lb />
If there is a lack of advertising <lb />
it is unpopular and the people <lb />
won't have it. <lb />
If attend church regularly <lb />
they say we go for effect. <lb />
If stay away from church <lb />
they say we are monstrously heath- <lb />
If accept an to a <lb />
wedding they say invited <lb />
to it <lb />
If we to the opera house they <lb />
say we go on free tickets. <lb />
If are seen on the too <lb />
often say neglect our <lb />
If avoid going upon tho <lb />
street they say we don't hustle <lb />
around after news. <lb />
If we reject a long <lb />
its author gets furiously en- <lb />
raged and discontinues his paper. <lb />
If we publish lengthy <lb />
mentions our readers say we lack <lb />
discretion and put everything <lb />
to <lb />
If we neglect to decorate our <lb />
office on Washington's birthday <lb />
they say lack enterprise and <lb />
that there is not a drop of <lb />
blood in our car- <lb />
If we swell out in a now of <lb />
clothes and celebrate groundhog <lb />
day they say we got our clothes <lb />
in payment for advertising and <lb />
that we are by far too foppish. <lb />
If, in our frailty, we sometimes <lb />
perpetrate a Joke or make a stag- <lb />
at a poor little pun, they say <lb />
we are exceedingly light and won't <lb />
do. <lb />
If we omit jokes say we <lb />
are poor miserable fossils. <lb />
If we are married they say it is <lb />
a pity for our wives. <lb />
If we are not married they say <lb />
it is because we are too homely <lb />
to get a wife <lb />
If we publish a roan who has <lb />
brought disgrace upon his family, <lb />
the friends of the family never <lb />
forget us. <lb />
If we, out of goodness of heart, <lb />
to say anything on the <lb />
subject the man's enemies are dis- <lb />
appointed, and we are branded as <lb />
white-livered cowards. <lb />
are able to stand these reps <lb />
and many more, and are always <lb />
ready to receive visitors whether <lb />
accompanied by a dog or not. <lb />
Of course we do not claim, there <lb />
is any work, running a news- <lb />
paper; every one knows it is a <lb />
snap. <lb />
ICE TEA. <lb />
There is a certain good woman, <lb />
the wife of a lawyer of <lb />
Texas, who has never lived out of <lb />
the county in which she was born. <lb />
Her husband attended court at <lb />
the different towns of the State, <lb />
and his wife listened to his ex- <lb />
with wonder and <lb />
prise- Tho Saturday Gazelle <lb />
gives this story <lb />
Ho never grow tired of <lb />
the virtues of big glass of <lb />
ice tea when a man is warm and <lb />
tired and when a new railroad <lb />
line was laid out to his native <lb />
town his first commission was for <lb />
a quantity of ice. <lb />
The wife was neither surprised <lb />
nor displeased to have a well fill- <lb />
ed ice chest, and on the morning <lb />
after tho arrival of the ice the j <lb />
lawyer her to have iced j <lb />
tea for supper. <lb />
It was an extremely warm day. <lb />
when he took his scat at the <lb />
he was hot, tired and thirsty. <lb />
What was his t; see. <lb />
stead of the refreshing, amber j <lb />
beverage of the soul's desire ; the <lb />
same old steaming Brown Betty <lb />
teapot, tho cups saucers <lb />
of former days. <lb />
is the tea, Mary <lb />
he asked- <lb />
she answered, lay <lb />
her forefinger tho hissing i <lb />
lid of Brown Betty ; if yon <lb />
can tell any difference it <lb />
and plain well water to i you're <lb />
smarter than I <lb />
She had boiled the ice <lb />
A Fable. <lb />
Once upon a a blind man <lb />
was passing along a public high- <lb />
way when he ran plump against <lb />
another man from an <lb />
opposite direction. <lb />
what does this <lb />
demanded one. <lb />
yon Fanning into V <lb />
asked tho other. <lb />
did you run against <lb />
am <lb />
well. I'm glad to meet <lb />
you. You arc tho first blind <lb />
I've seen or rather run against. <lb />
I mean a long time j <lb />
pose we travel together, I'll lead <lb />
I understand you to say <lb />
you were as bad off as <lb />
How, then, you going to lead <lb />
that's all right. All you <lb />
have to do is to put implicit faith <lb />
in me, follow me wherever I go <lb />
and if I make a mistake or lead <lb />
you wrong, and get us into <lb />
just cry out that I am <lb />
Follow mo, and ask no <lb />
questions, and you will soon find <lb />
a great change in your financial <lb />
With this assurance they set out <lb />
upon their journey, the blind <lb />
j leading the blind. They <lb />
I ed for many Weary days and <lb />
nights. Finally, one morning <lb />
about ten o'clock, or perhaps it <lb />
was ten fifteen, as the leader was <lb />
entertaining his companion with <lb />
a glowing recital of his own great <lb />
and power in land, and <lb />
portraying a most enticing picture <lb />
of what a new which he had <lb />
just thought of, would do for the <lb />
world by forever banishing <lb />
enabling people to live with- <lb />
out work and simply by a <lb />
the laws make poor people rich, <lb />
he stepped into a sixty foot well; <lb />
and hasn't been heard of since. <lb />
except that his blind friend is now <lb />
sitting by the asking <lb />
contribution to enable him to J <lb />
his carcass drawn out of the hole. <lb />
If you would the moral <lb />
call to <lb />
in North Carolinian.<lb />
Little Trick an <lb />
Played on Her Husband. <lb />
Her of u-ii <lb />
to th- V. <lb />
Hi- Doesn't <lb />
HOW SHE CURED <lb />
Velocity of the Sun. <lb />
Prof. Boss of the Dudley <lb />
finds the velocity of the <lb />
not far from per <lb />
second. There is at present no <lb />
that the sun is moving at a <lb />
more than three times that <lb />
indicated by Strove, namely. <lb />
live miles per second. In <lb />
your , words, it is certain that <lb />
grumbles over bills before h pays the sun is moving approximate- <lb />
thorn, my dear Well, n in a straight lino <lb />
way some men bare. I think they the planets with at the rate of <lb />
do it to keep alive least miles per year <lb />
tradition that women would be f probably is nearer <lb />
extravagant if men didn't true figure. At the end of a <lb />
them in <lb />
i . I mi <lb />
the the Other <lb />
flourishing a scrap of cambric. <lb />
husband knows well I every <lb />
penny go as far as I con. In his <lb />
calmer moments he acknowledges i <lb />
Sometimes you might think Was a <lb />
spendthrift and every i ill an <lb />
tor which I am <lb />
century the sun is in a part of <lb />
c. nearly 80,000,000,000 miles <lb />
from the part it occupied <lb />
at the beginning of the century. <lb />
Cards <lb />
Notice. <lb />
i -in- and <lb />
Don i v . that <lb />
you do. Cure him i I tell an. office tor myself <lb />
how one if you <lb />
The other v. i . i I of i i <lb />
she'd like. She said <lb />
wisdom of all the . i to ma u <lb />
particular man aim hod. <lb />
Will used to do just . <lb />
Ami it made me v. rel <lb />
as it does a long. <lb />
At lust I came to the <lb />
it was nothing bill I <lb />
must break him of bi for h <lb />
my nerves or my h <lb />
day Will was <lb />
coal, and before he did he <lb />
mi tin-old Dr. <lb />
Brow let Where I can be found at <lb />
l line. <lb />
FRANK D. <lb />
-V-S <lb />
DENTIST <lb />
I C. <lb />
I. Fleming. <lb />
Andrew <lb />
sured me <lb />
Greenville, N. O. <lb />
Attention business. <lb />
Tucker A old stand. <lb />
ate the coal or gave away I <lb />
friends. That evening my <lb />
I JARVIS <lb />
P u , ft BLOW. <lb />
We were baring a i to- <lb />
i ling to me and <lb />
I was trimming a school for <lb />
Aggie, I remember Presently I <lb />
stopped him and said in a serious <lb />
I have a confession to <lb />
,; tho special sin now, lit- <lb />
He he asked. <lb />
about the cool. <lb />
en wondered why ii wen so fa <lb />
began. <lb />
then he said didn't m an <lb />
that, my dear. know are <lb />
most economical wife a f How , . ,. .,. <lb />
had. Yon i I my . <lb />
extravagance sen times ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
l. blow. <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
i. Practice In all the Courts <lb />
i. a. n. k. <lb />
ft TYSON, <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,<lb />
i attention Riven to collections <lb />
C LATHAM. HARRY <lb />
SKINNER, <lb />
N. <lb />
I hurt your <lb />
son, my Hi <lb />
been spending at a <lb />
for some time- little <lb />
and tickets and car <lb />
hire, besides an <lb />
bill and a few little things <lb />
lid. <lb />
lunches <lb />
U K E S V J L L E, C. <lb />
courts. Collections <lb />
six <lb />
actually needed and I found ii <lb />
GENERAL <lb />
AND IX <lb />
Potatoes, Poultry, Sim, <lb />
Oysters. Fish, Caviar and <lb />
All Country Product <lb />
Ne-. ii Dock, Norfolk, V <lb />
Sen Bankers <lb />
DOMINION LINE. <lb />
.-i Ionic, or children <lb />
bitters. <lb />
t con Malaria, <lb />
Some sharpers <lb />
ed the old of advertising <lb />
Uncle Sam's stamps as tine steel <lb />
engravings, and reports from rural I <lb />
New England show that they are <lb />
plenty of victims. A man <lb />
living in Mass., saw an <lb />
advertisement that on tho <lb />
Of an elegant engraving of the <lb />
of would be <lb />
sent. He forwarded the amount <lb />
and received in return of the <lb />
Columbian two-cent stamps. <lb />
i a little cash <lb />
Will's eye; began to stick <lb />
out. <lb />
upon earth do yen mean, <lb />
he said, staring in <lb />
amazement. <lb />
T concluded would be <lb />
good I. sell mm <lb />
coal in small lot j to the <lb />
you must be he <lb />
said. <lb />
replied, calmly. <lb />
of took i mm h a a <lb />
of a ton at a time, sonic only e <lb />
couple of Then began to <lb />
warm up to my subject. <lb />
made a good tiling out <lb />
of the coal business, my dear. Of <lb />
course sold o lit tic over the market <lb />
price, you know, tor <lb />
That's the reason tho COOl <lb />
goes so much i f. N J <lb />
I could act deceive you about ii any <lb />
the time kept staring <lb />
at me as if I and suddenly gone de- <lb />
ranged. <lb />
I a topped be said, solemn- <lb />
you feel wry ill, c <lb />
Shall your or <lb />
I began t <lb />
laughed, believe, until I <lb />
The poW man wan at his <lb />
end to find out what hi <lb />
world was the trouble. <lb />
when he did, my love, <lb />
didn't need a second lesson. If from <lb />
force of habit he began to <lb />
over a bill I just said I a <lb />
little coal, dear, and raise the mi <lb />
It. settled <lb />
said the other Woman, <lb />
drawing a long breath, might try <lb />
that, or something else. The dear <lb />
creatures certainly have drawbacks <lb />
to their <lb />
Globe. <lb />
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb />
Steamers leave Washington Green- <lb />
ville and Tarboro tombing at .-ill <lb />
River Monday. <lb />
l mid ; A. If, <lb />
leave Tarboro at A M. <lb />
Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
lire A. M. same <lb />
Ii, and I water on Tar River.<lb />
f The Norfolk. and Wash- <lb />
line fur Norfolk. Baltimore <lb />
New and <lb />
snippers -ii-uM order their good <lb />
via Dominion <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk ft <lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
more. Miners from <lb />
Boston. <lb />
Washington N. <lb />
I. <lb />
Greenville, N C. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
It Should B Is Reuse. <lb />
J. B. Clay St., <lb />
Pa., be will not be Dr. <lb />
KingS New Discovery for <lb />
Coughs and that it his wife <lb />
Who threatened with Pneumonia <lb />
alter an attack of wren <lb />
various other <lb />
had done her <lb />
of claims Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery Hone him <lb />
more good than anything ever inert <lb />
for Lung Trouble. like it. Try <lb />
It. Free Trial Bottles at Drug <lb />
Store. Large bottles, and <lb />
About <lb />
The Island of Jamaica produces <lb />
about all the allspice that is used. <lb />
It is known also as pimento or <lb />
Jamaica pepper. The tree on <lb />
which the bullies prow is ever- <lb />
green, and the flowers grow in <lb />
dense clusters ; these develop into <lb />
small, green aromatic berries the I and <lb />
size of black pepper. It allowed , r their year's supplies will And <lb />
to ripen become and their Interest our prices before <lb />
loose of their For Is complete <lb />
commercial purpose the berries ail branches. <lb />
are gathered carefully <lb />
dried in the sun afterwards <lb />
STORE <lb />
packed in bags holding t U <lb />
pounds and shipped. Pimento <lb />
j trees grow in many parts of <lb />
cal America, but nowhere do they <lb />
thrive as in Jamaica. The trees <lb />
are never planted man and re- <lb />
I no cultivation worth of tho <lb />
, name. Tho seeds are dropped by <lb />
the birds, and tho HUM the <lb />
i tropical sun do the rest. Surplus <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICE, Ac. <lb />
Lowest <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
yon to buy at one A com- <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on sold at prices <lb />
the. times. goody me all bought<lb />
trees are out down nod heroine , therefore, having no <lb />
walking sticks and umbrella l to sell M a close margin. <lb />
dies. i- more mild and Respectfully, . <lb />
innocent than most other M.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017600_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
as. hereto <lb />
WEDNESDAY. MAY 31st, 1893. <lb />
at Greenville, <lb />
N. C. as mail matter. <lb />
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb />
L The is 41.00 per <lb />
Hates.- One <lb />
one year. one-half <lb />
; column one year, <lb />
Transient inch <lb />
one week. ; two weeks. ; one <lb />
month Two inches one week, 81.50, <lb />
two weeks, one month, <lb />
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb />
Column as reading items. cents par <lb />
line each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, as Ad <lb />
and Notices <lb />
and Sales, <lb />
to Non-Residents, etc., will <lb />
be charged at legal rates and MUST <lb />
BE PAID FOR IN ADVANCE. <lb />
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb />
above, any length of time, can be <lb />
made by application to the office either <lb />
in person or by letter. <lb />
Copy tor Advertisements and <lb />
all changes of be <lb />
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb />
mornings in order to receive prompt- in <lb />
the day following. <lb />
Winston seems unfortunate and <lb />
has been more scourged with fire <lb />
of late than any town we have <lb />
noticed. Several very destructive <lb />
fires have occurred there within <lb />
the last few months and lost week <lb />
another was added to the number <lb />
This last fire burned among <lb />
the mammoth <lb />
tobacco factory, the losses foot- <lb />
tip The insurance <lb />
amounted to <lb />
A project is on foot to raise <lb />
funds to secure the purchase of <lb />
some acres of land on the <lb />
northeast corner of the famous <lb />
Island, which will em- <lb />
brace tho so called city of Raleigh <lb />
and the ruins of Sir Walter <lb />
Fort. Roanoke Island was <lb />
the first landing spot of the Eng- <lb />
race on continent in 1584, <lb />
and its here that three years later <lb />
Virginia Dare, the first American <lb />
child, was born. <lb />
OUR DEAD CHIEFTAIN. <lb />
To-day in the city of Richmond <lb />
the old capitol of the Southern <lb />
Confederacy will be re-interred <lb />
the mortal remains of its only <lb />
President, Hon. Jefferson Paris. <lb />
Mr. Davis was buried in 1889 in <lb />
the city of New Orleans where <lb />
his body has lain until a few days <lb />
ago- The casket bearing the re- in March, <lb />
mains was borne from New Or- <lb />
leans a special observation car <lb />
attached to a vestibule train <lb />
draped mourning from tho <lb />
headlight of the engine to the <lb />
signal flags at the last car and <lb />
banked -with floral offerings from <lb />
the corners of the flowery <lb />
Miss Winnie Davis, the <lb />
Daughter of the <lb />
and a guard of honor from the <lb />
Louisiana veterans and the <lb />
leaders of the lost cause <lb />
were on board the train. The <lb />
train left New Orleans at on <lb />
the 28th of May. The first stop <lb />
was at the old home of Mr- Davis <lb />
at Beauvoir, Miss. The nest was <lb />
at Montgomery the Alabama cap- <lb />
ital of the Confederacy, being the j believe I voted the sentiments of <lb />
place where Mr. Davis first took <lb />
oath of office as President- <lb />
THE OTHER SIDE. <lb />
Falkland, N. C, May 29th 1893 <lb />
Editor <lb />
I saw an article in your last <lb />
weeks issue J. P- that <lb />
es me to say a few words. He <lb />
M he sees we are to have an- <lb />
other trial at the Inferior Court <lb />
first Monday June, and wants <lb />
to know the cause for it. The <lb />
call from Maj- Harding states it <lb />
is to consider advisability of <lb />
establishing an Inferior Court, <lb />
which shows it was not legally es- <lb />
in March, and I think <lb />
answers his question. There are <lb />
different causes why there were <lb />
no more Magistrates at the meet- <lb />
Some perhaps as <lb />
the writer stated, were informed <lb />
it was of no use to go, some be- <lb />
cause they did not think the <lb />
Chairman of the Board of <lb />
was the proper one to call; <lb />
and some because they didn't <lb />
know anything about the call, <lb />
the Chairman only notifying <lb />
them through the and <lb />
those who are not, or wore not <lb />
subscribers to the paper, were <lb />
of the call unless informed <lb />
from some other source. He <lb />
says the three who voted against <lb />
the Inferior did it entirely <lb />
through personal and political <lb />
desires to please Mr. The <lb />
gentleman in that charge is badly <lb />
mistaken. I voted against it not <lb />
giving Mr. a thought <lb />
personally. politically, but <lb />
solely because I believed it to be <lb />
right to do so. and in so doing <lb />
The nest point of importance <lb />
where the train stopped and the <lb />
body lay state was at Atlanta. <lb />
Short stops were made at Green- <lb />
ville S- C- and N- C <lb />
The train reached Raleigh at <lb />
o'clock on the 30th where the <lb />
body lay in state for hours and <lb />
thousands of admiring friends of <lb />
the late President were present to <lb />
do honor to the memory of the <lb />
great Chieftain. At o'clock tho <lb />
body was again taken to the train <lb />
when the journey was resumed to <lb />
Richmond at which place the sol- <lb />
and elaborate re-interment <lb />
ceremonies will take place to day. <lb />
Mrs. Davis was to have taken the <lb />
journey with the party but feeble <lb />
health pi and she was to <lb />
come directly from New York <lb />
to Richmond and be present at <lb />
the ceremonies to-day. Thous- <lb />
ands and thousands of people by <lb />
their presence all along the route <lb />
of the train did honor to the <lb />
memory of the dead Statesman. <lb />
The estimation in which he is <lb />
held can not be better expressed <lb />
than in these words so fitly writ- <lb />
ten by <lb />
virtue he was spotless ; in <lb />
patriotism he was peerless ; in at- <lb />
he was excellent; in <lb />
the discharge of his duties he <lb />
was fearless and constant; while <lb />
be illustrated the genius of our <lb />
brave people by heroic conduct <lb />
on the battlefield and by a wise <lb />
and firm policy the cabinet. <lb />
Orator, soldier, statesman, scholar <lb />
and Christian <lb />
him all in all he was one of the <lb />
most commanding figures in <lb />
history of the world, and his fame <lb />
will shed a radiance over the <lb />
Southern country is long as valor <lb />
is esteemed and virtue <lb />
The hotels of Chicago seem in- <lb />
take advantage of the <lb />
and are expecting to make <lb />
a fortune in one season by <lb />
the visitors to the World's <lb />
Fair. If they are not careful the <lb />
tables will turn and they will not <lb />
only ruin their prospects for <lb />
a good thing out of the fair, <lb />
but will succeed in bankrupting <lb />
the fair also. Some idea of the <lb />
exorbitant rates charged by the <lb />
hotels may be had from a clipping. <lb />
and letter sent us by Mr. W. S- <lb />
Greer, a well-known traveling <lb />
man, published on first page of <lb />
the Reflector to-day. People <lb />
will not submit to such extortion <lb />
as this and there must be changes <lb />
if the fair is wanted to be other- <lb />
wise than a financial failure. <lb />
There are already thousands of <lb />
people throughout the country <lb />
who have lost all interest and <lb />
pride in the fair because of the <lb />
discovery that its purpose is be- <lb />
converted into a money trap <lb />
for Chicago instead of an <lb />
to do honor to our Nation as <lb />
originally intended. <lb />
of the intelligent <lb />
people of my I don't <lb />
object to Mr. opinion be- <lb />
as mine on the subject, there <lb />
are lots of those kind of people, <lb />
who like myself have not been <lb />
either, and on the first . <lb />
Monday in June you will see men j or <lb />
who favored the Inferior Court <lb />
in March, sit down on it then, pro- <lb />
the Superior Courts remain <lb />
as they are- It seems he thinks <lb />
whatever Mr. ideas are <lb />
concerning a thing, if we have <lb />
the same opinion, then it is <lb />
for Mr- benefit- <lb />
He ought not to be considered in <lb />
these meetings and <lb />
fiscal Secretary <lb />
Morton will bring the matter to <lb />
tho attention of the President be- <lb />
re taking action. <lb />
President and Mrs. Cleveland <lb />
acquitted themselves handsome- <lb />
of the unprecedented task of <lb />
entertaining as the guest of the <lb />
United States the official proxy of <lb />
the Queen Regent of Spain, in <lb />
the person of Princess Eulalie, <lb />
the Spanish and they <lb />
did it without importing any <lb />
European frills. After spending <lb />
a week in Washington the <lb />
and her party left for New <lb />
York yesterday, where they will <lb />
spend a few days before going to <lb />
the World's Fair. The Princess <lb />
mad things easy from the start by <lb />
expressing a desire to be treated <lb />
just as an American lady would <lb />
be, which fitted in exactly with <lb />
the plans of Mr. and Mrs. Cleve- <lb />
land. The State dinner given in <lb />
her honor at the White House is <lb />
said never to have been surpass- <lb />
ed in Washington. <lb />
Senators and Representatives <lb />
who made no kick over the four- <lb />
year full-term rule of the Post <lb />
Office department are not taking <lb />
kindly to the last rule of that de- <lb />
that no Republican <lb />
fourth class postmaster will be <lb />
removed save for malfeasance in <lb />
office, or on complaint and proof <lb />
that he is an <lb />
The following conversation was <lb />
told to me as having taken place <lb />
between an Ohio Democratic Con- <lb />
and Assistant P. M- G <lb />
don't <lb />
like your rule ; it offers a <lb />
um to the sneak and the informer. <lb />
Why shouldn't these men work <lb />
for their party Why should <lb />
they be dismissed for doing it T I <lb />
want them dismissed for being Re- <lb />
publicans, not for being good, <lb />
working <lb />
Mr. Maxwell are some <lb />
vacancies your district, and if <lb />
you will name your men for these <lb />
vacancies I'll appoint them at <lb />
once- I mean those vacancies <lb />
where the occupants have re- <lb />
I won't <lb />
make any recommendations in <lb />
those cases. There are two kinds <lb />
of Republican postmasters in my <lb />
district. One kind are manly, <lb />
and when their party lost they <lb />
sent in their resignations. The <lb />
others are a set of sneaks, and <lb />
when their party loses they still <lb />
hold on to their places. Your <lb />
rule offers a premium and <lb />
to these sneaks. At the <lb />
same time you ask me to name <lb />
successors to those who were <lb />
manly enough to tender their <lb />
resignations. I won't do it. I'll <lb />
not be party to an arrangement <lb />
which will cat off the heads of <lb />
decent Republicans and allow the <lb />
sneak to live in official <lb />
Ex-Secretary Fairchild. to <lb />
whom Secretary <lb />
mended the Cherokee delegation <lb />
which went to New York this <lb />
week to place the in <lb />
bonds based upon deferred <lb />
payment from the Government <lb />
e did a <lb />
good turn for the Indians when <lb />
he advised the delegation not to <lb />
follow its original intention of re- <lb />
the bonds in Wall street <lb />
but instead to advertise for bids <lb />
for the entire amount of bonds, to <lb />
be opened here, and the <lb />
of the delegation showed <lb />
their shrewd business sense by <lb />
recognizing at once the value of <lb />
the advice and accepting it As <lb />
Opinion of Two Jurors. <lb />
Something is radically wrong <lb />
with the jury system of this <lb />
country when murderers ore ac <lb />
were those in Ashe- <lb />
ville, when on first ballot <lb />
were for and six for <lb />
Herald- <lb />
The same thing is with <lb />
it that always has been it is the <lb />
humbug of the ages. is as <lb />
safe to toss up a penny justice <lb />
as to depend upon the j try sys- <lb />
for <lb />
was not by me- The meetings <lb />
are not to consider the establish- . . , .,. <lb />
of Mr- but the Inferior <lb />
Court. Perhaps the gentleman <lb />
was weighing himself in similar <lb />
scales of Joe Laughinghouse <lb />
and Andrew Joyner. <lb />
As to Senator James he did <lb />
what the people have shown, and <lb />
are showing they wanted, and <lb />
that is he gave them more court <lb />
facilities and now some are growl- <lb />
because he did not afterwards <lb />
have two abolished. Why the <lb />
Legislature would have thought <lb />
he was there for no purpose save <lb />
to show himself. It would have <lb />
been about as reasonable as for a <lb />
man to transplant one acre of <lb />
large, thrifty tobacco plants to- <lb />
day and pull them up to-morrow <lb />
so as to transplant three acres in <lb />
small inferior plants and stand <lb />
chances for a season on them- <lb />
He did right in not abolishing <lb />
the added court, unless he had <lb />
been appealed to by more than <lb />
twenty out of fifty and known also <lb />
that the Inferior Court would be <lb />
established legally. My opinion <lb />
is and has been in favor of <lb />
Courts, because I think it <lb />
will be less expensive, transact <lb />
business faster, and the judges <lb />
will have a better knowledge of <lb />
the persons committing the crimes <lb />
and can therefore place fines and <lb />
punishments more deservingly <lb />
on them than a circuit judge. <lb />
But I do not think it just or wise <lb />
to have it with so many Superior <lb />
Courts. It is taking the hard <lb />
honest laboring and law-abiding <lb />
citizens too much time from their <lb />
own business to attend to the law- <lb />
of others in every twelve <lb />
months. If the County <lb />
have the right to <lb />
some of the Superior Courts <lb />
have them to do so, and I will go <lb />
for the Inferior Court for my own <lb />
personal and political desires. <lb />
But with five Superior Courts <lb />
don't favor any Inferior Courts if <lb />
Mr. desires are the same. <lb />
J. P. ALSO. <lb />
which is more than the <lb />
Government has paid on its bonds <lb />
for years, and are practically <lb />
guaranteed, principal and inter- <lb />
est by the Government <lb />
having agreed to <lb />
sign a statement to that effect <lb />
printed across the face of each <lb />
bond, it is expected that the bid- <lb />
ding will be lively and that the <lb />
bonds will be sold for enough <lb />
above par to pay all the costs. <lb />
That's the way Democrats show <lb />
their friendliness for the Indians. <lb />
Judge tersely defines <lb />
the policy upon which he will run <lb />
the Pension Office as follows. <lb />
equal energetic and exactly <lb />
just administration of the pension <lb />
laws as they are found upon the <lb />
statute books. If a man is <lb />
to a pension he ought to <lb />
have it and if he is not entitled to <lb />
it he should not apply. The <lb />
department is really a court of <lb />
claims, and it is the business and <lb />
duty of its officials to enter <lb />
examination of the papers sub- <lb />
in each case with patience <lb />
and without bias. So far as lies <lb />
in my power this will be done. If <lb />
money is being paid to the <lb />
unworthy it will be <lb />
INFERIOR COURT. <lb />
N. C, May 1898. <lb />
Editor <lb />
I am not a J. P., but a tax I <lb />
have felt considerable t in the <lb />
talk about, the Court. like to <lb />
see the people themselves prop- <lb />
interest in this matter it <lb />
concerns them fully as much if not more <lb />
than a lawyers in Greenville. Our <lb />
condition would be improved in many <lb />
ways if we ourselves assumed more re- <lb />
in matters of public inter- <lb />
est, and not be governed by a who <lb />
are always actuated the best of <lb />
motives in what they say or do. As an <lb />
humble Pitt county, taking an <lb />
honest pride her welfare, I will <lb />
to state my reasons thinking <lb />
there is a present need for the Inferior <lb />
Court. <lb />
In the first place. Mr. Editor, every <lb />
county should have sufficient court fa- <lb />
to insure a prompt and speedy <lb />
trial both criminal and civil cases at <lb />
the least expense to the tax payers. It <lb />
is well known to our people that <lb />
civil docket ha received but little- at- <lb />
many years. Civil cases <lb />
have rapidly accumulated and only a <lb />
few now and then have been disposed of. <lb />
Such a state of affairs is wrong and <lb />
brings imputation upon our county. <lb />
The who oppose the Inferior <lb />
Court will perhaps acknowledge what I <lb />
have thus stated to be true, but they <lb />
say that the last legislature increased <lb />
the terms of our Superior Court from <lb />
lour to five, and they seem to think this <lb />
change will remedy everything and <lb />
bring all the cases the civil docket <lb />
trial at an early day. This may be <lb />
a plausible theory to some, but past ex- <lb />
and a little common sense will <lb />
prove actual to the contrary. <lb />
Some lawyer who thinks an Interior <lb />
Court too him might use <lb />
such an argument. I regret to say it as <lb />
a fact that many of our people believe <lb />
there are some lawyers in our <lb />
who have no desire to improve <lb />
the present condition of our civil docket <lb />
and that their reason is purely a selfish <lb />
and mercenary one. If that be so, it is <lb />
to be hoped that our Magistrates In <lb />
to the wishes of the people will <lb />
do duty and by all means <lb />
maintain the honor and respect of the <lb />
county. The change made by the last <lb />
legislature was unnecessary, amounts, <lb />
to nothing beneficial to Pitt county. <lb />
Let us look at the three Superior Courts <lb />
already held this year and see what <lb />
progress was made on the civil docket. <lb />
I learn from a reliable source that only <lb />
about a dozen civil cases were actually <lb />
tried by all three of these courts. This <lb />
may taken as a lair specimen of the <lb />
civil business that will be done in said <lb />
courts the future, for we can only <lb />
judge the future by the past. <lb />
la my opinion the remedy tor this <lb />
bad condition of affairs is to take the <lb />
large mass of the criminal business out <lb />
of the Superior Court s so as to give them <lb />
opportunity to work the civil docket. <lb />
This can only be done by establishing <lb />
the Inferior Court, which will dispose <lb />
of all criminal matters except the <lb />
grave and do so at much less <lb />
expense. The who oppose the In- <lb />
Court say that we would have too <lb />
many courts and the expenses would <lb />
be large. This kind of an argument is <lb />
deceptive, and is narrow, and cannot <lb />
stand the test. if frequency of <lb />
courts would increase expenses, it <lb />
would by no means follow that we <lb />
ought not to have the courts, for I con- <lb />
tend that it is the duty of a county to <lb />
have such court facilities as will <lb />
tee every citizen, who seeks justice and <lb />
prompt hearing But the truth of it <lb />
is not the number of courts always that <lb />
increase expenses, etc It is the delays <lb />
and continuances that run up the ex- <lb />
in trials. As the matter now <lb />
stands it is often the MM witnesses <lb />
are kept at court for a whole week at <lb />
the time and then the is not reach- <lb />
ed, and they come from court to court <lb />
until the costs amount to a great deal <lb />
more than the worth of the property in <lb />
dispute. The Inferior Court can be run <lb />
at much less expense than a Superior <lb />
Court. It can dispose of criminal <lb />
of which it has jurisdiction just as <lb />
Now <lb />
the Is, what will the <lb />
do about it I believe they will <lb />
act wisely in the matter, and be brave <lb />
enough to say by a la majority that <lb />
Pitt county needs and must have the In- <lb />
Court. Farmer. <lb />
UNIVERSITY COMMENCEMENT. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington, D. C, May <lb />
No more scathing arraignment of <lb />
the methods of Republican <lb />
has ever been drawn by a <lb />
Republican than that which is <lb />
contained in the official report <lb />
of the investigation of the <lb />
Bureau, which has been made <lb />
to Secretary Morton by Assistant <lb />
Attorney General Colby who con- <lb />
ducted the investigation- The re- <lb />
port finds that the charges of <lb />
official abuses, favoritism and en- <lb />
tire absence of business methods <lb />
in the bureau where fully <lb />
by the and con- <lb />
by quoting significantly <lb />
the expense of the bureau during <lb />
the last year it was under <lb />
the <lb />
amount appropriated for the next <lb />
The University commencement <lb />
will begin on Sunday, June <lb />
with, the Baccalaureate sermon <lb />
by Rev. F. D. Swindell. <lb />
Monday evening, Hon. Henry <lb />
Watterson will deliver an address <lb />
before the two literary societies. <lb />
Tuesday is Alumni Day. <lb />
There will be a grand reunion of <lb />
the Alumni in Person Hall. <lb />
Judge C- Fuller will de- <lb />
liver a memorial oration on the <lb />
late Justice J. Davis, and <lb />
Judge R. T. Bennett will deliver <lb />
an oration on the late Hon. <lb />
L. Steele. The class of 1843 <lb />
will celebrate the 60th <lb />
of its gradation, and the <lb />
class of 1883 the 10th anniversary. <lb />
The Senior Class day exercises <lb />
will held Tuesday afternoon, <lb />
with the following <lb />
Class Oration, C- <lb />
Harding. <lb />
Class History, Howard E. <lb />
Class Poem, E. Payson <lb />
lard. <lb />
Class Prophecy, Wm. Preston <lb />
Wooten. <lb />
Farewell Address, J. Crawford <lb />
The Representatives of the <lb />
Dialectic and Philanthropic <lb />
ties will hold their annual <lb />
contest Tuesday evening. <lb />
The Annual Address will be <lb />
made by Hon. P. Dick, of <lb />
Greensboro. <lb />
In the afternoon there will be <lb />
athletic sports. In the evening <lb />
the Glee Club will give its annual <lb />
concert. Winston, <lb />
reason for the great pop- <lb />
of Hood's <lb />
Hood's Be sure to get <lb />
TOWN TREASURERS REPORT. <lb />
Report of s Skinner, Treasurer <lb />
of l he Ti of <lb />
DR. <lb />
No. To-whom issued. <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
II J Hoyle, night <lb />
It Johnson, night watch <lb />
It Cherry, night watch <lb />
Latham, night watch <lb />
J It street work <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
F G <lb />
M J Latham, mdse <lb />
Dr Warren, <lb />
printing. <lb />
G L I Co, <lb />
L W Lawrence. <lb />
July <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
T Smith, <lb />
J Stocks, rent <lb />
Skinner, street work<lb />
A watch <lb />
DIG James, <lb />
S Vines, rent <lb />
J T rent <lb />
August 1892. <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T It Moore, police <lb />
J I- Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
A Dudley, board <lb />
D Ha mdse <lb />
F G <lb />
S E Shell <lb />
B Cherry Co, mdse <lb />
September G, 1802. <lb />
J I. Daniel, night lighter <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
I T Smith, police <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
F G James, <lb />
J S Smith. <lb />
D J Whichard, printing <lb />
G L I Co, lumber <lb />
October <lb />
I T Smite., police <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
H Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
F G James. <lb />
S E Fender Co, mdse. <lb />
L W Lawrence, tax list <lb />
B S tax list <lb />
J J Stocks, rent <lb />
F Greene, <lb />
A Dudley, board <lb />
B Cherry, witness <lb />
November 1802. <lb />
I T Smith, police <lb />
T It Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
F G James, <lb />
Harrell Printing Company <lb />
D J Whichard. <lb />
December 1892. <lb />
I T Smith, police <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, police <lb />
oil M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
F G James, <lb />
S E Fender Co, mdse <lb />
A us Flood, work <lb />
S E mdse <lb />
is D D Haskett, mdse <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
Clerk <lb />
January 1803, <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
M Williams, lamplighter <lb />
J L Daniel, night <lb />
F U James, <lb />
T R Moore, wood <lb />
J J Cherry, mdse <lb />
J J Stocks, <lb />
J I Williamson. <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
January 1893. <lb />
A com. <lb />
February MB. <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T It Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
Brown Hooker, mdse <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
Allied Forbes, mdse <lb />
S E mdse <lb />
S M mdse <lb />
II A Blow, police <lb />
Dr Warren, <lb />
March 1898. <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
Tit <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
S E Fender Co, <lb />
F G James, <lb />
A Dudley, <lb />
D D Haskett, mdse <lb />
J B Cherry Co, mdse <lb />
April <lb />
J T police <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
James, <lb />
Chas Skinner, street work <lb />
O D S S Co. mdse <lb />
S E mdse <lb />
May <lb />
J T Smith, police <lb />
T R Moore, police <lb />
J L Daniel, night police <lb />
M Williams, lamp lighter <lb />
F G James, <lb />
W G James, salary <lb />
W B Greene, salary <lb />
Chas street work <lb />
E B Ellington, rent <lb />
Moore, <lb />
D J Whichard, <lb />
SE <lb />
J T rent <lb />
L Hooker ft Co, rent <lb />
Mrs. L. <lb />
Rising Sun, Delaware. <lb />
Good Family Medicines <lb />
Hood's <lb />
Hood's <lb />
and <lb />
Sarsaparilla <lb />
Pills. <lb />
regard Hood's Sarsaparilla and Hood's <lb />
Fills, tho very best family medicines, <lb />
re never without them. I have always been <lb />
A Delicate Woman <lb />
and began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla throe <lb />
years ago for that tired feeling. It built mo up <lb />
so quickly and so wall that I feel like a different <lb />
woman and hare always had great faith In It I <lb />
eve it to my children whenever there <lb />
with their blood, and It does them good; <lb />
My little boy likes It so well he cries for It, t <lb />
cannot And words to tell how highly I It <lb />
Hood's nils In the family and they <lb />
Act Like a Charm <lb />
I take pleasure in recommending these <lb />
to all my friends, for I believe If people <lb />
Hood's x Cures <lb />
would only keep Hood's Sarsaparilla and Hood's <lb />
at hand a we do, much sickness and <lb />
would be lists. L. ToWn <lb />
Bun, Delaware. <lb />
Hood's easily, yet promptly i<lb />
Notice. <lb />
By virtue of a mortgage to me <lb />
by Alfred Walker and wife and <lb />
duly recorded in the Register's office of <lb />
Martin county, in book FF, pages <lb />
and I shall sell for cash net ore <lb />
the court house door, in Martin county, <lb />
on Monday, the 3rd day of July, 1893, <lb />
the land conveyed in said mortgage. <lb />
the 12th day of May. 1898. <lb />
Mortgagee. <lb />
Amount.<lb />
BO<lb />
as<lb />
1200<lb />
ISM<lb />
1250 <lb />
GOO <lb />
18.15 <lb />
CO<lb />
SO <lb />
in <lb />
LEADER. <lb />
It is with pleasure that I announce to <lb />
the citizens of Greenville and vicinity <lb />
that have Just returned from the <lb />
Northern Markets where I visited <lb />
all th e fashionable openings now <lb />
living the most beautiful and <lb />
stylish selected stock of Millinery ever <lb />
opened in Ibis Come to see <lb />
me and you will gel nothing but the <lb />
latest fashionable good. Low prices <lb />
and satisfaction <lb />
Mrs. Georgia Pearce, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Next door to Old Brick Store. <lb />
Roots,<lb />
HASKETT.<lb />
HASKETT.<lb />
NAILS, AND AXES, <lb />
Rope, Belting- and Packing, <lb />
MECHANICS TOOLS, <lb />
PUMPS and <lb />
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 cheap for <lb />
the cash. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT, <lb />
GREENVILLE N. C <lb />
If <lb />
FARMS FOR SALK. <lb />
Prices Low, <lb />
Terms <lb />
Easy. <lb />
ELLIOTT <lb />
CIt. <lb />
Reed R S <lb />
F G James, tax <lb />
Ch of <lb />
market <lb />
J T police <lb />
T R Moore, taxes<lb />
To cash paid out from <lb />
No to <lb />
per cent commission on <lb />
Cash hand, <lb />
Due Fund <lb />
For work, <lb />
Report of T R Town Tax Col- <lb />
for the year ending May <lb />
DB. <lb />
Amt taxes property and poll, <lb />
purchase tax <lb />
to July, 1892, <lb />
purchase tax from July <lb />
to January, 1893, <lb />
license tax, <lb />
1,887 <lb />
OR- <lb />
By fire company exemptions, <lb />
insolvent list, <lb />
per cent, commissions, <lb />
cash paid treasurer, <lb />
Approved by <lb />
Ed. II- <lb />
Com. <lb />
M. R. 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 iced from T R <lb />
Moore, market house <lb />
Amt reed from J T <lb />
Smith, fines A costs <lb />
Amt from T R <lb />
Moore, tax collector, 1,887 1818.01828 <lb />
CB. <lb />
town <lb />
orders, <lb />
By per cent, 2,497.07 <lb />
Cash on band, <lb />
Due Cemetery Fund, <lb />
Approved by Ed. EL f <lb />
C. C. Forbes, <lb />
M. B. Lang. y <lb />
The J. L. home farm. Bea- <lb />
Ham township, adjoining the lands <lb />
of G . T. and Cobb. A line <lb />
farm of about acres, with good build- <lb />
and adapted to corn, cotton and to <lb />
A tine marl bed. <lb />
A farm near Ayden and lying <lb />
mediately on tho own- <lb />
ed Caleb B. Tripp, acres of which <lb />
a are cleared. Good neighbor- <lb />
hood, -3 churches and a school within <lb />
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin- <lb />
farms <lb />
A fine farm of three miles <lb />
from and miles from Green <lb />
with large, substantial dwelling <lb />
and out houses, known as the L. <lb />
Beardsley home place, fine col ion land, <lb />
good clay subsoil, accessible M marl. <lb />
A smaller farm the above <lb />
known as the Jones place, acres, <lb />
dwelling, barn and tenant house, land <lb />
good. <lb />
A firm of acres In town- <lb />
ship, about miles from <lb />
of the Singletary tract <lb />
Part of the Noah 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 acres, <lb />
about miles from Greenville, on In- <lb />
Well house, etc., for- <lb />
owned by I ox. <lb />
ALSO TIMBER <lb />
A of about acres near Cone- <lb />
station, with cypress timber well <lb />
suited for railroad ties. <lb />
A tract of about acres in <lb />
township, near the Washington <lb />
road, pine timber. <lb />
A tract of acres near s <lb />
Mills, cypress timber. <lb />
Apply to Wm. LONG, <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
JIM <lb />
Baggy y. <lb />
GREENVILLE, C. <lb />
Can still be found <lb />
at the Old <lb />
stand. <lb />
pared lo do <lb />
FIRST-CLASS WORE <lb />
on anything in the <lb />
WM, mm i Ml <lb />
Fine Vehicles Specialty <lb />
Repairing done prompt- <lb />
and in best manner <lb />
A little drop of printers ink, <lb />
Sometimes causes people to think.<lb />
And we want to impress upon your minds that we have <lb />
-----received our new------ <lb />
SprinG-.-StocK <lb />
------and can now show a <lb />
LINE OF <lb />
intention is to sell good at lowest possible <lb />
prices. We have the largest and most varied stock <lb />
kept in town. We keep almost every thine <lb />
needed in the household or on the farm and <lb />
invite inspection and comparison of our <lb />
goods. We can and will sell low for <lb />
cash- We want your trade and <lb />
will to show you the <lb />
following lines of <lb />
DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS, <lb />
NOTIONS. WHITE GOODS. <lb />
NICE LINE of i <lb />
AND PIECE GOODS FOR <lb />
MAKING MENS AND BOYS <lb />
SUITS, ALWAYS IN STOCK. I <lb />
HATS, SHOES, CROCKERY. <lb />
GLASSWARE, TINWARE, <lb />
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, <lb />
HARDWARE, PLOWS AND <lb />
FARMING UTENSILS, <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
Flour a specialty. We have the largest and <lb />
. ever kept in our <lb />
FURNITURE Consisting in part <lb />
,., , Top Walnut Suits, <lb />
Solid Oak Suits. Imitation Oak Suits, Imitation Walnut <lb />
A Suits, Bureaus, Bedsteads. Tables, Buffets, Washstands. <lb />
of different kinds, Children's Cribs and Cradles, <lb />
Tin Safes, Bed Springs, a full line of <lb />
Tables. Children's Carriages, Ac Keep also a nice lino <lb />
of Lace Curtains and Curtain Poles, Matting and Floor <lb />
Oil Cloths. We cordially invite all to come to see us <lb />
when in want of any goods. will try to give you <lb />
at all times. r <lb />
SPOOLS COTTON AT WHOLESALE PRICE <lb />
B. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
Corned Herrings <lb />
o C. K. Side Meat. <lb />
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb />
barrels all grades <lb />
barrels Granulated Sugar. <lb />
barrels C. Sugar, <lb />
boxes Tobacco. <lb />
Mills Snuff, <lb />
barrels Three Snuff, <lb />
barrels Gall Ax <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
I. <lb />
barrels P. Snuff. <lb />
box s Cakes and Crackers, <lb />
barrel Slick Candy. <lb />
1.50 kegs Band's <lb />
tons Shot. <lb />
c Bread Powders. <lb />
case Star Lye, <lb />
Apple Vinegar. <lb />
Washing Powder. <lb />
Full stock of all goods carried in my line. <lb />
Make Tour Own Hay <lb />
WE CAN SELL YOU THE <lb />
BEST MOWER IN <lb />
THE WORLD FOR <lb />
CUTTING IT. <lb />
CALL ON US WHEN IN <lb />
NEED OF TIN WARE, <lb />
COOK STOVES, <lb />
PAINTS, OIL. <lb />
PL A CE YO UR ORDERS for FL <lb />
S- E. PENDER CO., I <lb />
JAMES LONG, <lb />
Dealer in----- <lb />
General Merchandise- <lb />
Has of <lb />
glasses in Greenville, N. C. From the <lb />
of Moore, the only <lb />
optical plant in the <lb />
Atlanta, W Peddlers are not <lb />
with those famous <lb />
Kr. O- <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of n decree of <lb />
Court made March term, the <lb />
ease of Turner Smith and wife vs. Sam- <lb />
Cory, the <lb />
will sell, for cash, before the Court <lb />
House door, Greenville, on Monday, <lb />
the 6th day of June, 10.1, the following <lb />
described piece or parcel of land, <lb />
in the county of Flu, and in <lb />
township, adjoining lands of Jo- <lb />
Samuel Cory and others, containing <lb />
acres, more or less, being the piece on <lb />
said Turner wife lived <lb />
In 1895. This April 1898. <lb />
A. L. BLOW F. G. JAMES, <lb />
If you feel <lb />
and all worn out take <lb />
IRON BITTERS <lb />
-i<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017600_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
JUNE. <lb />
All of this <lb />
month <lb />
Lave <lb />
ed to sell <lb />
our entire <lb />
Stock at <lb />
greatly reduced prices. DRESS <lb />
Our stock of Dress <lb />
Goods is complete, the best thing <lb />
in town our 40-inch Linen Lawns <lb />
at cents. <lb />
stock was <lb />
never bet- <lb />
We <lb />
have a big <lb />
lot Ladies <lb />
vest <lb />
and C-B <lb />
Corsets all <lb />
to be sold <lb />
-C-H-E-a-p. <lb />
ClothinG <lb />
Our spring <lb />
and summer <lb />
Suits are cheap <lb />
and <lb />
and SLIPPERS to <lb />
match dresses and <lb />
SAMPLE STRAW <lb />
HATS at cost. Everybody call. <lb />
HIGGS BROS. <lb />
GREENVILLE, S. C <lb />
HE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Rules Adopted by the N. C. Press <lb />
The sum 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 Rive as a matter of news <lb />
Notices of church and society and all <lb />
other entertainments from which rev- <lb />
is to be derived m ill be charged <lb />
for at the rate of live cents a Hue. <lb />
BRIGHT <lb />
doubt you can buy a dog cheap <lb />
now. <lb />
Call on B. A Co. you <lb />
want gold Flour cheap for <lb />
Boot Batter In Wept on ice at<lb />
Town ordinances go into effect to- <lb />
morrow. <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. have a nice line <lb />
of Ladies Slippers. <lb />
Fruit Jars Cheap the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
The season begins to- <lb />
morrow. <lb />
See the stylish new millinery goods <lb />
just received this week by Mrs. Georgie <lb />
Pearce. <lb />
Bushels Black Eye Peas at the <lb />
Old Brick Stoic. <lb />
With every rain of late has come a <lb />
cold spell, and the last was no <lb />
Bro-- will offer special induce- <lb />
during June. See their new ad- <lb />
Ike best Butter and Cheese that <lb />
money can buy at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
New lot of millinery just received this <lb />
week by Mrs. Georgie Pearce. <lb />
Curtains and Curtain Poles at <lb />
J. B. Cherry <lb />
The Best Flour on earth at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Your tics from <lb />
Higgs Bros. <lb />
line Floor Oil Cloths and <lb />
Matting at J. B. Cherry Co's. <lb />
Remember I pay you cash for Chickens <lb />
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
Mason's Fruit Jars <lb />
at J. B. Cherry <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. have a nice line of <lb />
Children's Carriages. <lb />
The river affords a good bath tab for <lb />
the boy now, and lots of swim- <lb />
ming. <lb />
Pairs Simple over <lb />
alls from cents up, at Higgs Bros. <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick <lb />
Genuine Climax and Stonewall Cotton <lb />
Plows for sale by I, B. Cherry Co. <lb />
A full line of Castings kept on <lb />
hand. <lb />
The lumber mill of Mr. J. J. Elks, <lb />
a few miles from town, wag destroyed <lb />
by Are night last week. <lb />
Arbitrator Flour at at J. B. <lb />
Cherry Co's, guaranteed the equal <lb />
of any on the market. Money returned <lb />
If not <lb />
For best <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 j <lb />
Greenville If. C. i <lb />
Last day of May. <lb />
Good rains since Saturday. <lb />
After next week comes vacation. <lb />
To-morrow is the first day of <lb />
Wheat and oat harvesting has begun. <lb />
Some hail Ml with the rain here Sun- <lb />
day afternoon. <lb />
Strawberries all gone. Now for <lb />
Potatoes arc being shipped. Some of <lb />
are fine. <lb />
Since the rains crops show an <lb />
proved condition. <lb />
Splendid time for moonlight <lb />
lawn parties. <lb />
Miss Julia school gave an en- <lb />
Monday night. <lb />
Only about twenty-six of the <lb />
out at the drill last Friday afternoon. <lb />
FOR Reaper war- <lb />
ranted to work. G. T. Tyson, Greenville. <lb />
Some of the new style dresses going <lb />
around are reminders of inverted <lb />
loons. <lb />
Monday was more like an April day <lb />
than a May at frequent <lb />
intervals. <lb />
The Washington Gazette issued a nice <lb />
little daily during the Episcopal <lb />
there last week. <lb />
W. King has let the con- <lb />
tract for building a handsome residence <lb />
on Dickerson avenue. <lb />
A new paper called the Herald has <lb />
just started at Beaufort, this State with <lb />
Chas. L. as <lb />
The Harrington building on the <lb />
occupied by Mr. Braddy as a bar, <lb />
is being enlarged and repaired. <lb />
Miss and Forbes are <lb />
both preparing their music class's for <lb />
recitals about the middle of June. <lb />
June is going to give us five Thurs- <lb />
days and five Fridays, and goodness <lb />
knows how much hot weather. <lb />
Everybody who can get a pole goes a <lb />
fishing. The catch is usually small but <lb />
the yarn large enough to make up for it. <lb />
Several cases of summer sickness <lb />
among our citizens. Great care should <lb />
be exercised in eating early vegetables. <lb />
Every mother who gets hold of <lb />
to-day should read the <lb />
Begins at on first <lb />
page. <lb />
A dollar brought to town with you <lb />
next Monday and invested in the <lb />
will insure you a year's good <lb />
reading. <lb />
says he is going to close out <lb />
his spring and summer goods at way- <lb />
prices. See his <lb />
Tax listing for 1893 begins to-morrow. <lb />
Mr. II. A. Blow is List <lb />
ville township and Mr. Henry <lb />
for the town. <lb />
Kin-ion had another lire last week, <lb />
and immediately after it went to talking <lb />
lire company again. That's just like <lb />
Greenville does after a fire. <lb />
The meetings of the County Com- <lb />
missioners. Magistrates Board of <lb />
Education next Monday will no doubt <lb />
bring quite a number of people In town. <lb />
Prof. II Bell is treating a <lb />
of persons this community for <lb />
various forms of scalp diseases with <lb />
satisfactory He is an expert in <lb />
his line. <lb />
The Reflector renews its <lb />
that the magistrates at their meet- <lb />
next Monday consider the question <lb />
of improving the roads of the county by <lb />
working convicts upon them. <lb />
The Goldsboro Headlight headed off <lb />
the of hot weather last week <lb />
and published the <lb />
Somebody ought to have <lb />
thrown a sun flower to <lb />
This is the last day of grace for the <lb />
dogs. If they want to take promenades <lb />
on our thoroughfares hereafter they <lb />
must either wear muzzles or run the risk <lb />
of picking bullets out of their flanks. <lb />
Another matter that the Town <lb />
might wisely give attention to and <lb />
legislate upon is vagrancy. There are <lb />
decidedly too many loafers about town, <lb />
and they all have to get rations some- <lb />
how. <lb />
The Reflector thanks the Pitt <lb />
county boys for an invitation to the <lb />
University commencement June 5th to <lb />
7th. Messrs. F. C and E. A. <lb />
Jr., of this town, are in the grad- <lb />
class. <lb />
If the prosperity of town Is to de- <lb />
pend or does depend to any <lb />
extent upon its interest <lb />
this seem to be <lb />
is high time Greenville was stir- <lb />
ring herself the direction of factories. <lb />
The closing exercises of Bethel High <lb />
School take place June 7th and 8th, con. <lb />
certs both nights. Rev. G. F. Smith <lb />
will preach commencement sermon <lb />
on the 8th at A. M., and Mr. G. B. <lb />
King will deliver the address at P. M. <lb />
Everybody get himself in readiness <lb />
to begin the observance of the town <lb />
ordinances to-morrow. And let the <lb />
officers in charge see that the proper <lb />
observance is given. Laws are a dead <lb />
letter and a shame they arc en- <lb />
forced. <lb />
There has been a slight chance in the <lb />
schedule of the freight train that will <lb />
prove a convenience to trackers. Going; <lb />
North the train is two hours later in <lb />
the morning, making it about noon when <lb />
leaving Greenville. The moving time <lb />
going South is about the same as before. <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mrs. Lou Ricks moved from this <lb />
place to Hookerton. <lb />
Miss Joy tier spent part of last <lb />
week visiting Mrs. J. Smith. <lb />
Mr. C. W. left yesterday to <lb />
visit at Va. <lb />
Miss Lucille. Owen, of Plymouth, <lb />
visiting the family of Maj. L. C. Latham <lb />
Mr. Allen Warren left Saturday for a <lb />
tour in the Interest of Riverside <lb />
M. T. spent several days <lb />
of last week visiting his brother Mr. E. <lb />
A. <lb />
Mrs. Lama Duncan and children of <lb />
Beaufort, arc visiting the family of Rev. <lb />
G. F. Smith. <lb />
Miss Sullivan, of Greene county, <lb />
has been visiting her sister, Mrs. W. II. <lb />
While, the past week. <lb />
Mr. W. I. Roswell, who has been here <lb />
since the left last week to spend <lb />
the summer at his home In Petersburg. <lb />
Hon. W. II. of Scotland <lb />
has secured a position under the <lb />
Treasury Department with a salary of <lb />
Mr. J. S. C. Benjamin moved back <lb />
Raleigh last week and takes a <lb />
at the J. D. Williamson carriage <lb />
factory. <lb />
Key. J. N. II. will preach <lb />
in Elliott nail next Sundas-. The Sacra- <lb />
will be administered at the morn- <lb />
Mrs. J. W. Goodwin and children, of <lb />
Philadelphia, who have been spending <lb />
some weeks with relatives here, left <lb />
Saturday for Hertford. <lb />
i c regret to note that Dr. Richard <lb />
Williams, one of our oldest citizens, has <lb />
quite sick the last few days, and <lb />
hope he may speedily recover. <lb />
Mr. V. T. of a <lb />
medical student, has been spend- <lb />
two weeks with his parents and left <lb />
Saturday for Durham where he takes a <lb />
position in a drug store. <lb />
Miss Meta Chestnut, well-known here, <lb />
who has been teaching in Indian Terri- <lb />
for several years, remembered the <lb />
with an invitation to the <lb />
fourth annual entertainment of her <lb />
school. <lb />
Rev. J. H. returned <lb />
day from Scotland Neck and occupied <lb />
his pulpit in the Baptist church Sunday <lb />
morning and evening. The meeting he <lb />
conducted at Scotland Neck was a very <lb />
successful one, many being added to the <lb />
church. <lb />
Cards received by a number of his <lb />
friends here announce that Mr. George <lb />
C. Billups. of Norfolk, will be married <lb />
on Thursday, June 8th, to Mrs. Marie <lb />
Sidonia Hutching, of New Orleans, the <lb />
ceremony to take place in the latter <lb />
city. The Reflector in advance of- <lb />
its congratulations with best wishes. <lb />
What is It. <lb />
Mr. R. killed a very peculiar <lb />
fowl while fishing the other day. It <lb />
was about the size of a duck and <lb />
footed, with the feet extending behind <lb />
the body. The beak was long and round <lb />
extending to a keen point. The fowl <lb />
was about the color of a wild goose. <lb />
Children's Exercises. <lb />
The Children's Day exercises of the <lb />
Methodist Sunday-school were post- <lb />
because of the recent protracted <lb />
meeting, and will take place the <lb />
church next night in place of <lb />
the regular preaching service- These <lb />
services by the children arc always in- <lb />
M. E. Sunday-School Excursion. <lb />
The Methodist Sunday-school, Mr. D. <lb />
D. Superintendent, has its. an- <lb />
excursion and picnic to-day. They <lb />
go by rail to a beautiful grove just <lb />
miles beyond Scotland Neck and spend <lb />
the day there. Two extra coaches for <lb />
the use of the school will be attached to <lb />
the regular train this morning. We <lb />
wish them a good and a pleasant <lb />
time. <lb />
Neat Black Mountain. <lb />
Rev. A. A. Tyson, who recently left <lb />
this county for the Western portion of <lb />
State, writes back to H for the Re- <lb />
to be forwarded to him and <lb />
says he has located six miles from <lb />
Black Mountain station in one of the <lb />
grandest spots North Carolina, <lb />
rounded by the finest scenery in all that <lb />
section. He will a hotel June first, <lb />
having taken charge of the house for- <lb />
known as the Patton hotel. He <lb />
promises good board and low to <lb />
all who go up and stop with him. <lb />
The Colored People. <lb />
There is right much house building <lb />
and repairing going on in colored <lb />
of the town. like to see the <lb />
colored people prosperous. They are <lb />
citizens among us, and when they con- <lb />
duct themselves well, save their earn- <lb />
and make improvements they are <lb />
aiding just that much in the prosperity <lb />
and of the community. <lb />
Rev. P. W. Williams, pastor of the <lb />
A. M. K. church here, returned last <lb />
week from Boston where he had been <lb />
as a fraternal delegate from the South- <lb />
Conference to the meeting of the <lb />
Northern Conference which was held <lb />
in that city. He tells us that the Con- <lb />
for this State will meet in <lb />
Greenville next fall. It will bring a <lb />
large number of colored ministers here. <lb />
Keep it la the house. Good advice <lb />
from the Captain. Captain S. C. <lb />
Company C, 1st Regiment, Indiana <lb />
Veteran Legions, Lafayette, Ind., writes <lb />
have used Dr. Bull's Cough <lb />
Syrup in my family for the last two <lb />
years, and advise all having children <lb />
never to be without It. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
SUPERIOR COURT, <lb />
Pitt County. i <lb />
Jane trading as <lb />
burg Iron In her own name <lb />
and in behalf of herself and all other <lb />
creditors of Fleming, deceased, <lb />
against <lb />
R. R. Fleming of Fleming. <lb />
The above entitled action having been <lb />
commenced in this Court on the 17th <lb />
day of May, 1893, for a settlement of <lb />
the estate of Burnt Fleming, deceased, <lb />
under chapter of the Code of North <lb />
Carolina, notice Is hereby to the <lb />
creditors of the said Fleming to <lb />
appear before me on or Before the 13th <lb />
day of July. 1893, and file the evidences <lb />
of their claims. <lb />
This the 17th day of My, <lb />
Clerk of Court et Pitt Co. <lb />
Freight Train Wrecked. <lb />
The south bound freight train which <lb />
left here between and o'clock last <lb />
Friday afternoon was wrecked Just be- <lb />
fore reaching Ayden. The exact <lb />
cause of the wreck is not known, but <lb />
the report to which most credence is <lb />
given is that while going down a grade <lb />
at a speed of about thirty miles, two <lb />
of them a passenger coach- <lb />
in some way became detached from <lb />
the train without being discovered. <lb />
About the same time the engineer <lb />
noticed a twist in the track <lb />
ed by beat from the sun and when he <lb />
slacked up in order to pass It safely the <lb />
two detached cars crashed into tin- <lb />
derailing and wrecking the box car <lb />
and knocking the end of the passenger <lb />
coach Into kindling wood. Two train <lb />
hands and three passengers were hurt, <lb />
but none of them seriously. Mr. Rob- <lb />
received a very painful <lb />
cut on the head and Mr. Luther <lb />
and his mother were slightly in- <lb />
The railroad people set to work <lb />
immediately to remove the wreck and <lb />
cleared it up in a remarkably short <lb />
lime. A work train was at the scene <lb />
before night and had track clear by <lb />
o'clock and a wrecking train went <lb />
down that night to put the derail- <lb />
ed cars back on the track The South <lb />
bound passenger train reaching Green- <lb />
ville at was held up here until <lb />
We are glad that the damage both to <lb />
the passengers the railroad H much <lb />
lighter than was at first feared. <lb />
Death of Mrs. J. W. Brown. <lb />
It becomes our painful duty to <lb />
the death of another estimable lady <lb />
of this to whom the <lb />
summons came amid all the beauty and <lb />
vigor that surrounds young womanhood. <lb />
Our people were both shocked and <lb />
pained when they learned of the sudden <lb />
death of Mrs. J. W. Brown Miss <lb />
Madeline which occurred Friday <lb />
night at the home of her husband three <lb />
miles from Greenville. Mrs. Brown <lb />
was only in her and it was <lb />
less than a year <lb />
she stood a bride at the altar <lb />
ed her love to him who had won her <lb />
heart's affection, and bidding farewell <lb />
to the loved ones of the family circle, <lb />
went to be a queen of his home, and to <lb />
bring to his life that joy and happiness <lb />
which can only come through the love <lb />
and presence of a pure woman. Alas <lb />
that death should make such <lb />
into the home and rob it <lb />
of Its light and joy, leaving instead only <lb />
gloom and sorrow. No sadder picture <lb />
can be imagined. The blow to the <lb />
young husband was as intense M it was <lb />
sudden, and his heart was well nigh <lb />
crushed beneath the weight of grief. <lb />
The remains of Mrs. Brown were <lb />
brought to Greenville at o'clock <lb />
Saturday evening, were met by pall <lb />
bearers, Messrs. J. B. Cherry, II. Hard- <lb />
W. U. W. L. Brown, B. <lb />
F. Wiley Brown, borne to <lb />
Cherry Hill Cemetery for interment. <lb />
This hour was selected because of the <lb />
absence of Mrs. Brown's father, Mr. W. <lb />
J. Higgs could not get here until <lb />
the arrival of the evening A <lb />
large number of people assembled at <lb />
the grave every eye was melted to <lb />
tears at the scene of sorrow witnessed <lb />
there. Services were conducted by <lb />
Revs. G. F. Smith J. <lb />
May the Father look in ten- <lb />
pity upon the heart-broken husband <lb />
and motherless infant, and comfort the <lb />
father, brothers sisters who so deep- <lb />
feel this sad bereavement. <lb />
Rev. J. H. <lb />
This gentleman left Monday to attend <lb />
Baptist Female com- <lb />
and the commencement of <lb />
Wake Forest College. From there he <lb />
goes to hi-old home at Roxboro <lb />
a short time. He will then spend the <lb />
remainder of the summer in Virginia <lb />
doing evangelistic work. An <lb />
over there has made a tent and will <lb />
move it about destitute portions of its <lb />
territory and hold meetings, and Mr. <lb />
has been invited to conduct <lb />
these meetings. We congratulate the <lb />
Association upon secured his <lb />
vices. Mr. has preached for <lb />
the Baptist church here for three months <lb />
and the Church has granted him the <lb />
next three to hold these meet- <lb />
No has ever come among M <lb />
who has more favorably impressed eve- <lb />
than he. As a he has <lb />
few equals in North Carolina, and the <lb />
Church has never had a pastor who <lb />
has so won hearts, admiration <lb />
confidence as this I Chris- <lb />
minister. His sermons arc <lb />
powerful and richly freighted <lb />
pure Gospel truths, an I cannot fail to <lb />
impress move to a better and higher <lb />
life those who hear them. As a <lb />
consecrated Christian gentleman <lb />
Mr. shines <lb />
above the average man. He will be <lb />
much missed here during the summer <lb />
months and will be welcomed with much <lb />
heartfelt joy in September, at which <lb />
time he is to return. The prayers of his <lb />
church many admiring friends will <lb />
follow him during his absence in bis la- <lb />
but glorious work. During his <lb />
absence his pulpit here and at <lb />
and his appointment at Forbes School <lb />
House will he filled by Rev. B. W. <lb />
man, of the Southern <lb />
cal Seminary, Louisville. Ky. Mr. <lb />
man will preach at next Sun- <lb />
day morning and will occupy the pulpit <lb />
of the Baptist church here for the first <lb />
time Sunday night. His church and the <lb />
people the town will give him a hear- <lb />
welcome among us. <lb />
TO THE PUBLIC <lb />
OWING to the dull trade <lb />
we propose to close out <lb />
Spring and Summer Stock at <lb />
that defy competition, <lb />
as CLOTHING, HATS, <lb />
SHOES, DRY GOODS and <lb />
NOTIONS. In connection <lb />
with regular stock <lb />
have an elegant line of SAM- <lb />
SHIRTS, <lb />
Ac, to <lb />
EMPORIUM. <lb />
EMPORIUM. <lb />
SOLD at Now York cost. <lb />
SHIRTS from cents up. <lb />
GENTS TIES from cents <lb />
STRAW HATS from <lb />
up. A big lino of DRESS <lb />
GOODS at reduced <lb />
We also Sole Agents for <lb />
BROS, and E. P. <lb />
REED k fine SHOES <lb />
and SLIPPERS. Call and <lb />
see them and pleased. <lb />
C. T. <lb />
GREENVILLE, K. C. <lb />
RACKET STORE <lb />
BULLETIN NO. <lb />
Grand Annual Mart Si <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 />
PI I AL LATEST SPRING SHADES <lb />
-o <lb />
ff A <lb />
lint come and get our prices before hard earned cash. <lb />
are the people for you to spend gold, silver and greenbacks <lb />
with. Yours for reliable goods and low prices. <lb />
Store, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
No trouble to show goods. One door south of Bank. <lb />
New <lb />
Straight <lb />
Clean <lb />
Large <lb />
We are still making a specialty of <lb />
W NOTIONS. HATS <lb />
We n first-class assortment and sell close. Do not fail to <lb />
get prices <lb />
and parts for all kinds of machines are sold by as. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
BROWN BROS.,<lb />
Depositors for American Bible Society <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
New York Cheap Store. <lb />
NEW STORE. NEW GOODS. <lb />
Prices Lower Than Ever. <lb />
FIRST QUALITY GOODS <lb />
MEN'S AND <lb />
CHILDREN'S SUITS, <lb />
HATS, SHOES, SHIRTS, Ac. <lb />
Notice these remarkable <lb />
Men's Suits as low as and up. <lb />
Men's Pants as low as eta and op. <lb />
Suit as low as eta <lb />
as low as cents and <lb />
Men's Shoes as low as and <lb />
Shoe a low cent and up. <lb />
Other goods cheap. <lb />
We are the place for LOW PRICKS <lb />
and solicit the patronage Of the people. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having qualified before the Superior <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county as executrix <lb />
the will Weeks II. 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 claims against the <lb />
estate must present the same for pay- <lb />
on or before the day of Hay <lb />
1804, or this notice Kill be plead in bar <lb />
of recovery. <lb />
This of May. 1893. <lb />
CLARK, <lb />
Executrix of Weeks II. Clark. <lb />
A CARD. <lb />
To the People of Greenville and vicinity <lb />
I am now prepared to treat success- <lb />
fully of the feet from which <lb />
arises the exceedingly unpleasant odor <lb />
with which many are afflicted and which <lb />
I so them and those with <lb />
whom they associate. relieve <lb />
tills entirely at once, and I respectfully <lb />
ask you to give me a trial and I will <lb />
to remove this most worry- <lb />
rig and offensive affliction. My <lb />
vices can be secured by calling at my <lb />
shop or It will me pleasure to serve <lb />
you at your homes whenever notified In <lb />
anyway. This treatment will obviate <lb />
the necessity of almost dally bathing <lb />
to which many are subjected and is so <lb />
troublesome. Try my treatment and <lb />
you will not regret It. <lb />
ALFRED CULLEY. <lb />
. . . n <lb />
take<lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly <lb />
administrator of Mary <lb />
ton. deceased, notice is hereby given to <lb />
all persons indebted to the estate to <lb />
make immediate payment, and all per <lb />
sons having claims against the <lb />
present the same for payment on <lb />
or before the 1st day of May, 1694, or <lb />
this notice will be plead in bar of re- <lb />
This 1st day of Mar, 1893. <lb />
J. S. KEEL, <lb />
of Mary <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly <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 day of April, this <lb />
will be plead in bar of recovery. <lb />
This 20th day of April. 1898. <lb />
B. S. <lb />
of W. A. <lb />
BULL'S <lb />
MACHINE WORKS, <lb />
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Ac. <lb />
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO REPAIRING.<lb />
THE BEST IN THE WORLD. <lb />
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded- Write tot <lb />
and prices before buying <lb />
A few Second-Hand Engines for sale. <lb />
CO, <lb />
------DEALERS IN------ <lb />
All F km <lb />
We arc again in business to and have a nice line of fresh <lb />
goods. Will be glad to have old cu-to-. call and sec as well as all <lb />
others who wish to get Groceries and Confections arc <lb />
Our goods will lie guaranteed in every respect. We pay the highest mar- <lb />
prices for<lb />
a. <lb />
Fa <lb />
-3 <lb />
a -j o <lb />
Wishing to thank my many <lb />
friends for their liberal patronage <lb />
for both Merchandise and differ <lb />
articles which I manufacture <lb />
I take this method of <lb />
that while I thank you all I <lb />
am also striving hard to <lb />
that I can give you <lb />
in order to further merit you <lb />
a throat ;. <lb />
oH <lb />
s a <lb />
l r <lb />
St <lb />
3-a<lb />
I la- <lb />
For other articles in our Tin <lb />
ditch as Church Pews, Cart <lb />
Wheels, Brackets and <lb />
Tobacco Hogsheads and <lb />
Repair Work, you will do well <lb />
to correspond with me before <lb />
ranging with any one else. I can <lb />
give you some advantage- <lb />
A. G- COX, <lb />
Winterville, <lb />
COBB BROS CO., <lb />
factors. <lb />
----AND p <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE STREET, NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
THE OF C <lb />
I I <lb />
GOODS, and BLINDS, and <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, 2nd CASTING, LEATHER of <lb />
kinds. Gin and Mill Belting, Hat, Hock Lime, Plaster or and<lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at <lb />
prices cents per dozen, less u percent for Cash. Bread <lb />
and Hair-Star jobbers Prices, Lead and pure Lin- <lb />
Oil. Varnishes and Taint Coors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood mat <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a Give, me a and I guarantee satisfaction. <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 that is raised in the country and I will par just <lb />
as much in cash can be had anywhere in Greenville- I will also <lb />
handle on a small commission that my customers mar want <lb />
me to. Remember my headquarters is at the old Moore <lb />
store, right at the five points crossing, the most convenient hi <lb />
town. Come to see me. <lb />
Tours to please. <lb />
JACK WHITE, W. C <lb />
J. L. SUGG, <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
OFFICE SUGG k JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
FOB A FIRE PROOF JR<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017600_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
proprietor <lb />
r. i. <lb />
SOUTHERN <lb />
ADVANTAGES. <lb />
now their i <lb />
now preparing weir for <lb />
planting. <lb />
primings before they get through <lb />
setting- <lb />
The <lb />
As Viewed by a Massachusetts <lb />
ton Manufacturer. <lb />
position of the market, namely, <lb />
I the short supply of print cloths, <lb />
together with the very low price <lb />
of cotton that prevailed just prior <lb />
to the passage of the act lost <lb />
year, that made it a very easy <lb />
matter for the manufacturers to <lb />
accept the situation- the <lb />
end is not yet It is too early to j <lb />
HOUSE AMI m. <lb />
Helpful Hints and Bits of <lb />
ion Gossip. <lb />
Fall River has seen times when <lb />
How to Handle <lb />
of Good <lb />
Kitchen <lb />
Correct <lb />
there is no article that <lb />
Manufacturer Record. <lb />
Mr. Win- C Lovering. treasurer <lb />
of the mills at Tann- <lb />
on. Mass., has addressed an open <lb />
of to Senator Robert Howard, , , ,. <lb />
drive ways is over <lb />
Thomasville, III remembered that the , and as a detergent . the <lb />
Mr. In- i Prosperity of print-cloth laundry; for oil stoves, for lamps <lb />
your, will by the <lb />
f of other cotton <lb />
North the people for ton goods- I to <lb />
here build houses enough to . j branches of the business when <lb />
re-dry in he will , prices of manufactured goods <lb />
floor room, of mo Massachusetts legislature, i . j is put to as many <lb />
in which he discusses the effect manufactured at. fa , <lb />
were than any in their <lb />
man- <lb />
leave <lb />
guarantee to enough ST a i <lb />
to take all Sat is I. view cf fa been <lb />
grown Massachusetts down <lb />
. , j ,. m to the tutors of these goods were com- <lb />
It T pelted to raise wages with the <lb />
L meaSUre S- consequence lost a <lb />
; its a statement bearing upon . , e i <lb />
of and which I feel sure kT <lb />
surrounding J , ., allow to <lb />
I ho of pounds r i State to recoup. <lb />
sold on this market and what the to letter. I am not afraid to hazard the <lb />
The cotton-manufacturing Prediction that if the hour bill <lb />
of Massachusetts and becomes a law that <lb />
the eve of j be and <lb />
a regular cloth <lb />
by their actions if you want i that in the be he <lb />
houses built you will have to do bids to over. j per yard for all cost and expenses <lb />
u-helming. This competition is. over cotton and waste. I have <lb />
nor idle talk. <lb />
are<lb />
men here <lb />
New England are on <lb />
no longer a myth nor <lb />
people of are build-1 Already Northern and English <lb />
another large tobacco capitalists prospecting for the <lb />
The Wilson most desirable locations for the <lb />
warehouse opened in September establishment of cotton mills in <lb />
1890, At that time there was no the Southern States and near the <lb />
other warehouse nor any prize i cotton fields. Being obliged to <lb />
house in Wilson. spend a few weeks in the South I <lb />
the break was not a have taken, occasion to inform <lb />
success yet under the skillful man- myself upon the subject of cotton <lb />
and enterprising spirit of tho <lb />
M. the Wilson mar States, and I confess that I am <lb />
a servant, it is a very bad <lb />
master. A largo percentage of <lb />
horrible accidents is caused by the <lb />
ignorance or carelessness of <lb />
who handle it. When fires to <lb />
kindled with it, never trust the <lb />
can in tho hand of ignorant <lb />
or children, and never trust <lb />
even yourself to turn oil on the <lb />
least there be an <lb />
of fire among the ashes, <lb />
in which case it may ignite the <lb />
gas in the can and cause an ex- <lb />
with all its attendant <lb />
horrors. The only safe way is to <lb />
first turn a little into a cup kept <lb />
for the purpose, and throw it <lb />
quickly over the and <lb />
then touch it off with a match. <lb />
Another unsafe practice is to <lb />
turn down a burning lamp low <lb />
enough to smoke for the <lb />
of saving oil or obtaining a sub- <lb />
light The vapor soon fills a <lb />
tight room with a poisonous gas <lb />
wholly unfit to breathe, and there <lb />
have been instances of death <lb />
caused by inhaling this gas <lb />
through the hours of the night in <lb />
a closed chamber. Either allow <lb />
die wick of a lamp to be high <lb />
enough to burn clear, otherwise <lb />
extinguish it. The right way to <lb />
do this is to turn it down so as to <lb />
shut off about half tho flame, and <lb />
The Duty on Imported Cigar Leaf, the top <lb />
the honor to remain, <lb />
truly <lb />
W. C Lovering. <lb />
LEXINGTON LETTER. <lb />
Should Not be Reduced as a Ne- <lb />
But Treated as a <lb />
and Taxed Accordingly. <lb />
Lexington, May <lb />
reclaimed the honors j very gravely impressed with the i next Congress is expected to re- <lb />
that site lost on that occasion and fact that it will not be many the tariff on various articles <lb />
today it is making rapid strides to before the Northern spindles will, imported from foreign counties, <lb />
ward success with thirteen prize ho silenced and driven out by I whether they be products of the <lb />
houses and warehouse room Southern spindles. soil or factory. Among these <lb />
though to s-c-ll that she can go well convinced am I of this articles Cigar Tobacco takes a <lb />
Suppose that T would undertake to-day j prominent position. While the <lb />
Bad waited for a new print cloth mill built in power is committed to I taken <lb />
P have male money j,, State of Georgia the tariff reductions or reform, the in too large doses it has been <lb />
of the chimney, but never <lb />
down the chimney, as this is <lb />
safe. Lamps should be filled and <lb />
trimmed in the morning, and <lb />
by lamp light; after being <lb />
filled, if the wicks are turned <lb />
down it will prevent the overflow <lb />
of on the surface of the lamp. <lb />
Spirits of camphor is another <lb />
article in general use which must <lb />
be used with caution. While it is <lb />
a good remedy for outward <lb />
cation, it should be administered <lb />
internally only by persons who are <lb />
acquainted with its powerful <lb />
merchants of Wilson setts a print cloth at per cent, j tent Congress in its <lb />
Mk hundred dollars a week- Do cost than it could by any action- Articles of necessity, <lb />
that they would ever i be produced by the best <lb />
have been built <lb />
houses. <lb />
Let the Warehouse Com- <lb />
Build Sonic Prize Houses. <lb />
mill in Massachusetts. <lb />
The following are the <lb />
which would enable mo to <lb />
do this <lb />
A better average <lb />
climate for spinning and <lb />
weaving. <lb />
J. A <lb />
power plant both to build <lb />
and maintain. <lb />
Low and in many <lb />
cases absolute immunity from <lb />
taxation for a long term of years. <lb />
Freight facilities <lb />
as salt, glass, or other <lb />
staples, needed in every family, <lb />
should first receive the attention <lb />
and pruning shears of tho law <lb />
makers, while those classed as <lb />
luxuries, should be made to car- <lb />
a greater share of the burden <lb />
of raising the revenue Under <lb />
Again we are you with <lb />
tho prize house question. Hot <lb />
as yet ti h <lb />
anything by appealing to <lb />
effort we now ask the pres <lb />
idem SI e <lb />
Company to call his directors to- <lb />
s to our rescue. <lb />
months ago this project <lb />
suggested itself to our mind but in favor of Southern man- <lb />
we would no. mention it. because Five hundred pounds <lb />
one. two of print cloth can be transported <lb />
or three might be induced to at less cost for freight from <lb />
then to to Massachusetts than a bale <lb />
gel the of pounds of cotton <lb />
Warehouse be the points. <lb />
brought into service. it is Proximity to tho cotton thus cheating <lb />
only new about sixty day before . fields. <lb />
the again on the A advantage in the <lb />
n r- we some Lours of A in <lb />
way we in a year of fifty weeks <lb />
tare nowhere, to handle the to advantage in <lb />
hence we offer this to seven <lb />
m board of directors of Massachusetts running <lb />
Warehouse com time. or nearly per cent ,,, ,, The <lb />
If the will A. paid <lb />
xi win run m Georgia than in <lb />
this matter in charge they son <lb />
very easily build two or three Au of n-ill <lb />
will pay them at per cent- less wages <lb />
cent- on the investment- paid for tho same work <lb />
I Massachusetts. <lb />
There are many more minor ad- <lb />
vantages, such as cheap food and <lb />
shelter. <lb />
It will be seen by this that the <lb />
opportunities and inducements to <lb />
be required. cotton in the South <lb />
W ft have hoard it suggested are of most and <lb />
prize houses might character. A very short <lb />
than would be. needed and time will prove the of <lb />
they would be bad proper <lb />
Such a flung is possible but efforts be. <lb />
not probable. V hen we look at to still farther reduce, <lb />
other tobacco markets and count o in can supply a home grown article <lb />
their prize m then situ- i setts are at the South with I- wrappers and fillers remains to <lb />
can better be understood. delight- Southern The in <lb />
great <lb />
powerful stimulant and its <lb />
for harm is very great if taken <lb />
in largo doses. Ulceration of tho <lb />
stomach has been known to fol- <lb />
low the free use of this potent <lb />
drug. It be far better to <lb />
have every camphor and pepper- <lb />
mint bottle in the land broken, <lb />
rather than hare their contents <lb />
indiscriminately used by persons <lb />
ignorant of their injurious effects. <lb />
These preparations should be <lb />
this head, imported Tobacco purchased only from n reliable <lb />
,, . , ii, druggist, and the required amount <lb />
would certainly be classed, as the for dose on tho <lb />
masses are not of the j if laudanum is kept in tho <lb />
grades of Cigars made from this j house have it poison, with <lb />
Tobacco. Instead of the number of drops to be used <lb />
a reduction of the tariff on <lb />
from per pound to that and prying children, as <lb />
paid on fillers, cents per ; an of on is worth <lb />
pound, the duty on all cigar to-1 a pound of Cub <lb />
should be placed at <lb />
A Narrow Escape. <lb />
Two met in the <lb />
road. <lb />
Mr. Green, good <lb />
on <lb />
They may not have tho money in <lb />
the treasury to pay for the work <lb />
cash but it is quite an easy mat <lb />
get what will be re- <lb />
quired to do the building and the <lb />
lumber can had on as reason <lb />
per pound. <lb />
Under tho existing law a large <lb />
per cent, of Wrappers paying the <lb />
higher duty imported as fillers, <lb />
Good <lb />
out of its just revenue, and en- <lb />
a few importers. The <lb />
most profitable employ in many <lb />
of the largest factories is the re- <lb />
handler who selects from the to- <lb />
which paid cents per <lb />
pound duty that which, if the law <lb />
was strictly complied with, would <lb />
time, or nearly per cent, long- j pound <lb />
demand for lowering the duty is <lb />
based on the ground that <lb />
can soil can not produce wrap- <lb />
to equal those of other <lb />
tries; this is incorrect, as it is <lb />
proven that some sections of the <lb />
States are producing as fine <lb />
wrappers as were ever imported. <lb />
This is notably true of Western <lb />
Florida. This is not however, a <lb />
reason for reducing the tariff on <lb />
cigar tobacco, that would not <lb />
ply equally well to the duty on <lb />
champagne, silk, and hundreds of <lb />
other articles of luxury imported <lb />
from other lands- <lb />
To what extent the Gulf States <lb />
Oxford has ever forty prize <lb />
houses Henderson more than <lb />
are filled with leaders ex-lite infancy, offers most promising <lb />
papers <lb />
over the prospect. only <lb />
results, but whether they ever <lb />
Carolina <lb />
Mount with about twenty and Tennessee, <lb />
this is nothing compared to such for <lb />
larger markets as Durham, Wm- the truth of tho above <lb />
Richmond, Lynchburg, I feel sure you I <lb />
Danville and numbers agree me that the <lb />
Greenville demands and can, has not t <lb />
readily use a half the <lb />
houses during the of cotton in <lb />
people <lb />
s out in j <lb />
a year. th old reduction of the of <lb />
inhabitants of the town will sixty to fifty- higher, those <lb />
know if. that . , . J . . <lb />
has ever taken hold of the P eek v <lb />
co industry prospered and by a rise in print cloths and <lb />
they may. and a redaction of the <lb />
duty that would cheapen them <lb />
would be an imposition on the <lb />
masses as long as a cent re- <lb />
mains on any article used in a <lb />
poor man's family. <lb />
We may be mistaken about the <lb />
action of the next Congress, but <lb />
if the Jeffersonian principle still <lb />
dominates the Democratic party, <lb />
the duty on luxuries for the rich <lb />
-a business .-raise in wages. Bet here let me <lb />
as there are anywhere that the redaction cf the <lb />
background in the of , j <lb />
Stare- -11. n . <lb />
with it It was the phenomenal <lb />
on by the mass <lb />
es will be the lowest <lb />
point with raising a <lb />
tor Mr. <lb />
Jackson. How's <lb />
or little <lb />
in de congregation once in <lb />
while. no trouble in <lb />
church, does <lb />
I does, better <lb />
Do de <lb />
sisters tor or <lb />
once in while, of I didn't <lb />
stay right plum by <lb />
would be dun gone to rack ruin. <lb />
Wall, now, down from de <lb />
family de de family de <lb />
flesh, how's own folks get or- <lb />
well, <lb />
ain't got no <lb />
here, you mean <lb />
tell me ain't got no twins <lb />
down to <lb />
you did twins down <lb />
not twins, but tell <lb />
you come In one it ten times <lb />
jest come in <lb />
I you cider had <lb />
twins down a mighty <lb />
Good I <lb />
go on down look de <lb />
family de <lb />
Traveler. <lb />
as a Purifier. <lb />
Electricity seems to be coming <lb />
prominently to the front for use in <lb />
purification processes. It has been <lb />
successfully introduced in France <lb />
and England for purifying sewage, <lb />
and if worked with a refuse <lb />
tor, In which the heat can be used <lb />
for generating the current, it is <lb />
thought it will be found not only <lb />
more satisfactory, but more <lb />
than existing methods. <lb />
In Germany on electrolytic process <lb />
for purifying mercury for use In <lb />
very accurate work is coming <lb />
into general use. A new <lb />
of bleaching starch by <lb />
is also reported, <lb />
which, ft is said, second and lower <lb />
qualities of product can be <lb />
treated so that they <lb />
con compare the first <lb />
quality. Methods of manufacturing <lb />
by electrical action arc also well <lb />
known. In fact, it seems as if the <lb />
electric current were destined to <lb />
play a very important part In the <lb />
sanitary engineering the <lb />
ABOUND THE <lb />
Interesting Reading for <lb />
Family <lb />
All<lb />
the <lb />
Bow Vive Their <lb />
Novell In <lb />
Tea Arc <lb />
A few days since, the Of a <lb />
wealthy man went into grocery <lb />
store where most of the provisions <lb />
for the house were bought. She <lb />
went in considerable to the <lb />
proprietor asked him to loan <lb />
her a Abate. Her husband, she <lb />
said, had gone down town and for- <lb />
gotten to leave her any change and <lb />
she must have a little immediately. <lb />
She took the bill, rolled it up and <lb />
put it into her then in an <lb />
charge that <lb />
sugar. My husband might not <lb />
it if I borrowed mo The <lb />
man and tho <lb />
woman went out. A customer who <lb />
was standing at a little <lb />
who was concealed from the lady by <lb />
a pile of tea chests, smiled to him- <lb />
self and then smiled at the grocer <lb />
who came back to finish tilling his <lb />
order. <lb />
Although the grocer said nothing <lb />
it was B fact to that <lb />
customer, as it is to many other <lb />
in large cities, that this is a not <lb />
uncommon Men who are <lb />
liberal with their families, as far as <lb />
food and clothes go. rarely give them <lb />
a cent of money for their own use. <lb />
They will pay any reasonable bill <lb />
and many unreasonable ones, but <lb />
they pay them in checks, and over- <lb />
look the bills themselves; then they <lb />
fancy they know what becomes of <lb />
the money. Such conduct Is <lb />
wise. If there is anything in the <lb />
world that has a tendency to drive a <lb />
woman to underhand practices it is <lb />
such lack of confidence on the part <lb />
of her husband or father. <lb />
A wise way is to make a regular <lb />
allowance for each member of the <lb />
family. If it must be very small, <lb />
make it, all same. Hold re- <lb />
accountable for it and de- <lb />
a showing of results. Restrict <lb />
it to certain limits, if necessary, but <lb />
let all persons have their own way of <lb />
using their own Y. <lb />
Ledger. <lb />
ea Gowns. <lb />
ten gown is a wonderfully <lb />
comfortable thing and extremely be- <lb />
coming to women, and <lb />
is in danger of trespassing <lb />
on hours strictly belonging to <lb />
other garments. <lb />
A tea gown is not, as n rule, a <lb />
dress costume and should be worn <lb />
with discretion. it remain in <lb />
the privacy of the family rooms ex- <lb />
when permitted for informal <lb />
occasions, such as a cup of tea before <lb />
one dresses to go out of an <lb />
At houses where there arc <lb />
many guests tho hostess and <lb />
visitors of family some- <lb />
times come in from excursions or <lb />
outings, make themselves comfort- <lb />
able in loose garments, take a cup <lb />
of tea and some light refreshment, <lb />
then indulge in a lazy half hour be- <lb />
fore dressing for the evening. <lb />
Tho tea gown may be as handsome <lb />
as one fancies, but should not even <lb />
under thane circumstances be too <lb />
suggestive of a wrapper. <lb />
Not Likely. <lb />
Old ho kisses the gov- <lb />
you, my dear. <lb />
mention it, sir. <lb />
Old I guess not, <lb />
and If you do it will cost you your <lb />
position.-Truth. <lb />
a vegetable <lb />
made entirely of roots and herbs <lb />
gathered from the forests of <lb />
Georgia, and has been used by millions <lb />
of people with best results. It <lb />
cases <lb />
AH manner of Blood diseases, from the <lb />
pestiferous little boil on your nose to <lb />
the worst cases of inherited Wool <lb />
taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism, <lb />
Catarrh and <lb />
Blood and Skin <lb />
bee. swift Specific Co. Atlanta, <lb />
Can <lb />
You Read <lb />
The Future <lb />
Do you know what your con- <lb />
will lie years hence <lb />
Will your earning capacity <lb />
be equal to the support of <lb />
yourself and family This is <lb />
a serious question, yet, you <lb />
could confidently answer <lb />
if yon had a twenty- <lb />
years Policy in the <lb />
Equitable Life <lb />
are com- <lb />
pounded from prescription <lb />
widely used by best <lb />
cal authorities and are <lb />
ill a form that is be- <lb />
coming the fashion every- <lb />
where. <lb />
try <lb />
the <lb />
but promptly up <lb />
stomach and intestines; core <lb />
dyspepsia, <lb />
offensive breath and <lb />
ache. One law n at <lb />
first of <lb />
biliousness., dizziness, distress <lb />
after eating, or cT <lb />
spirits, will surety and quickly <lb />
remove the whole <lb />
be 00- <lb />
of nearest<lb />
are easy to lake, <lb />
quick to act, <lb />
save many a <lb />
tor's bill. <lb />
R. W. ROYSTER CO <lb />
GREENE N. C.<lb />
on <lb />
type samples on application. <lb />
ED <lb />
I town to handle the <lb />
JACK FROST FREEZERS.<lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, and all business in the <lb />
Patent or in the Courts attended to <lb />
for Moderate Fee. <lb />
We are opposite the IT. 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 drafting la sent we <lb />
advise as to free of charge, <lb />
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb />
Patents. <lb />
refer, here, to Post Master, the <lb />
of Order and to <lb />
of the U. S. Patent <lb />
advise terms and reference to <lb />
actual clients in your own State, or <lb />
address, A. Co., <lb />
Washington, D, C. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
A Scientific Machine made on Principle. <lb />
their cost a dozen a It is not <lb />
or sloppy. A child can operate it. Sells <lb />
Send for prices and discounts. <lb />
St., NEW YORK. <lb />
Makes in Seconds.<lb />
-Manufacturer of- <lb />
HARK <lb />
For the Cure o all Skis <lb />
This Preparation has been in use over <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know <lb />
been in steady demand. It been on- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
-be country, and has effected where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention if <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for year failed. This Ointment is of <lb />
long and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained is owing entirely <lb />
its own efficacy, as but little effort has <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. Sample box free. The <lb />
discount to Druggist. AH Cash <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
communications to <lb />
T. F. <lb />
Sole Man and Proprietor. <lb />
Greenville. K. C <lb />
Is well equipped with the best put nothing <lb />
but keep up with the limes and the styles <lb />
Best material used all work. All styles of springs arc you can select from <lb />
Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King <lb />
We keep on hand a full lino of Ready Made Harness aim Whips which w <lb />
ell Hie lowest rates. S attention given to repairing. <lb />
T. <lb />
Greenville, N C. <lb />
Do You Write <lb />
THEN <lb />
YOU MUST <lb />
PEN'S. <lb />
ENVELOPES, PENCILS, INK. <lb />
and Schedule <lb />
TRAINS <lb />
No No No <lb />
April. 18th, daily Fast Mail, daily <lb />
ex Sun <lb />
Weldon 12,80 pin pm <lb />
Ar pm pm <lb />
pm <lb />
Tarboro pm <lb />
Rocky Mt n m pm am <lb />
L Wilson <lb />
Betas<lb />
Ar Florence <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Magnolia H <lb />
Ar <lb />
TRAINS NORTH <lb />
No No <lb />
SEE WHAT THE----- <lb />
Reflector V Book <lb />
Store <lb />
CAN OFFER YOU IN THESE. <lb />
daily <lb />
daily <lb />
No <lb />
daily <lb />
ex Sun.<lb />
am<lb />
pm <lb />
A method which guarantees <lb />
the protection Midi <lb />
by any kind of life insurance, <lb />
and in addition the <lb />
Florence <lb />
Fayetteville <lb />
Selma <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilmington <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Ar Wilson am <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar Rocky Mont <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
except <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 8.40 Halifax p. <lb />
m. arrives Scotland Neck at p. <lb />
Greenville p. m., Kinston 7-03 p. m. <lb />
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m., <lb />
Greenville a. m. 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 <lb />
8.40 a. m., Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m., Parmele 6.00 <lb />
p. m,. arrives Washington 7.30 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Scotland Neck Branch. <lb />
Train Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
A Raleigh R. B. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, P M, Sunday P arrive <lb />
Plymouth p. in., 5.20 p. m. <lb />
leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
6.80 a. m., Sunday 10.00 a. m- <lb />
Tarboro, N C, AM 12,20. <lb />
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb />
and Fayetteville Branch leave Fayette- <lb />
ville a m, arrive Rowland p m. <lb />
leave Rowland p m, <lb />
arrive Fayetteville p m. Dally <lb />
Cap Paper to cents n quire. <lb />
Pool's Cap Per HI 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 to cents a quire. <lb />
Pure Linen Note Paper, ruled and plain, to cents a quire- <lb />
Nice Square Envelopes to match Paper. <lb />
Fine Tablets at all prices. <lb />
THESE ARE NO THIN, CHEAP <lb />
PAPERS THAT WILL NOT HOLD <lb />
INK hit Strictly FIRST-CLASS. <lb />
Tablets, Slates, <lb />
-o <lb />
and N C Branch <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday. A M <lb />
. . arrive N C, a M. Re <lb />
rah to those laws X C AM <lb />
cash returns to G y, K A M. <lb />
holders lives are <lb />
Mount at P M, arrive CM <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Spring Hope AM, Nashville <lb />
8.86 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
except <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. leave <lb />
m., arrive 8.40 p. <lb />
m. Returning leave a. <lb />
arrive Latta 7.15 a. m- y <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Tram Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton daily, except at <lb />
and leave <lb />
ton at A M, and S V. M. <lb />
at Warsaw with Nos. and <lb />
Train Mo. TB ma close connection at <lb />
Weldon for all point Worth AH <lb />
via Richmond, and <lb />
Via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb />
daffy except Sunday Norfolk <lb />
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and ail <lb />
points <lb />
General <lb />
J. R. Transportation <lb />
T. <lb />
longed, and who then peed <lb />
money rather than assurance. <lb />
For facts and figures, address <lb />
W. J. Manager, <lb />
Far <lb />
ROCK HILL. S. C <lb />
PENSIONS <lb />
lib <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 />
Yon pay cents for these <lb />
same tablets elsewhere. <lb />
Slates cents to cents. <lb />
Slate Pencils per doz- <lb />
Colored Crayons <lb />
per <lb />
Pens cents per <lb />
dozen- <lb />
Fine Assorted <lb />
per dozen. <lb />
Pens B cents <lb />
Pencils cents <lb />
Plain Lead <lb />
per <lb />
Rubber Tipped Load Pencils <lb />
cents per <lb />
Pen cents per doz. <lb />
And lots of other things just <lb />
as cheap. <lb />
fall <lb />
ill.<lb />
a I <lb />
1- <lb />
it <lb />
Do You Read <lb />
yon want the best We handle the leading <lb />
Harper. Frank Leslie, Review of Review, <lb />
New at retail carry a line of <lb />
popular paper covered Novels at only and bound <lb />
Novels at cunts. These embrace books the best writers, <lb />
a list too large to mention. Any book wanted that is not on hand <lb />
be ordered- <lb />
TAKEN TO ALL THE LEADING PAPERS A <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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