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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 21 June 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>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
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          <dc:date>18930621</dc:date>
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                <p>
Sf- <lb />
Believes <lb />
takes <lb />
One Dollar gets <lb />
HP This for Job Printing <lb />
REV. N. HUGHES. D. U. <lb />
Sketch of His Life Read by Maj. H. <lb />
Harding, in St. Paul's Church, <lb />
Sunday June nth, 1893. <lb />
Rev. N. Colin D. D- <lb />
was Upper Marion, Mont- <lb />
Co. March 24th. <lb />
1822. <lb />
boyhood years were spent <lb />
partly at the place of his birth <lb />
and partly <lb />
He entered the University of <lb />
Pennsylvania at age of <lb />
years and graduated third the <lb />
class the age of years. <lb />
While at the University <lb />
year before hie his <lb />
father, John Hughes, died. <lb />
mediately after his graduation, <lb />
in feeble health, suffering <lb />
especially from an affection of <lb />
the throat which continued <lb />
through life he came to Newborn. <lb />
N- C-, and lived with his brother, <lb />
Dr. Isaac Wayne Hughes, and <lb />
plied himself to the restoration of <lb />
his health with that unremitting <lb />
with which ho ever dis- <lb />
charged everything he took in <lb />
to do. and repairing his <lb />
health to some degree, he went to <lb />
the Seminary New <lb />
York and graduated there about <lb />
the year 1844 and was <lb />
Deacon along with the graduating <lb />
class, by Bishop of <lb />
Now York. He returned to North <lb />
Carolina and engaged Mis- <lb />
work officiating at <lb />
Wayne county, <lb />
in <lb />
Chapel and Greenville- in Pitt <lb />
county, and while officiating in <lb />
tho first St. Paul of <lb />
that parish was built. He was <lb />
advanced to the Priesthood by <lb />
the Rev. L. Ives, <lb />
probably about the year In <lb />
1848 ho married Adeline E. <lb />
daughter of Dr. <lb />
Williams of Pitt He <lb />
then took up his residence in <lb />
Greenville, and after residing <lb />
there about a year, went to <lb />
Philadelphia was for several <lb />
months assistant to Dr. of <lb />
St. Pauls in that city. <lb />
In tho year 1851 ho was again <lb />
residing Greenville, Pitt county. <lb />
About time, in addition to <lb />
work in Pitt lie took min- <lb />
of Trinity Parish. <lb />
Parish, St. Thomas, Bath <lb />
all in Beaufort It was <lb />
his ministry at Zion that the <lb />
church building now standing <lb />
there was erected. From Green- <lb />
ville ho moved to Chocowinity <lb />
about the year or here in con- <lb />
with his ministerial labors, <lb />
almost immediately founded the <lb />
first Trinity School and tho better <lb />
advancement of this end. induced <lb />
the congregation of that Parish <lb />
to erect a good school building <lb />
hard by the little chapel on the <lb />
hill near which his mortal re- <lb />
mains repose. This school <lb />
he continued to keep up, and <lb />
until it became one of the <lb />
meat flourishing schools in the <lb />
eastern section of the State, draw- <lb />
a of its patron- <lb />
age from abroad and at one time, <lb />
numbering <lb />
pupils. In this school work ho <lb />
was aided by employed assistants <lb />
of whom was the afterwards <lb />
eloquent Bishop of <lb />
Georgia. It was in connection <lb />
with this school work that he be- <lb />
to use his influence to raise <lb />
up young men for the ministry, a <lb />
work, which once began was tho <lb />
most fondly cherished object of <lb />
his ambition to tho day of his <lb />
death- <lb />
First among tho young men <lb />
whom he was instrumental in <lb />
helping into the ministry were <lb />
the Revs. I- Harding. S- S. Bar- <lb />
Luther and Edward <lb />
Wooten. In the year 1857 he re- <lb />
moved to Pittsboro, Chatham <lb />
county, whither also the two <lb />
young men last mentioned re- <lb />
paired to continue their course <lb />
of instruction at the feet of their <lb />
typical Gamaliel. Here M. M. <lb />
Marshal now tho Rev. Dr. Mar- <lb />
of Raleigh was added to <lb />
their list. The three stayed with <lb />
him until prepared to enter <lb />
College, Conn. <lb />
After a of nearly three <lb />
years in Pittsboro. he returned <lb />
for a short while to <lb />
but in the fall of the year, <lb />
he went to <lb />
in Henderson county, N. C. and <lb />
took charge of tho church that <lb />
town and Calvary oh a few <lb />
miles tho country. <lb />
He was in <lb />
the fall of 1865 when he again <lb />
came back to his old home in <lb />
Beaufort county and again open- <lb />
ed his school for the training of <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. <lb />
per Tear, in Advance. <lb />
VOL XI <lb />
GREENVILLE PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY 1893. <lb />
NO. <lb />
children generally but especially j his sufferings and weakness in- <lb />
for the training of young men ; creased day by day. At first his <lb />
for the At this opening suffering was great, but as the <lb />
of his school, he gathered to him end approached his pain <lb />
as students of the ministry, Ben- and when the end came he <lb />
Winfield, Revs. N. S. Price, j sank peacefully to sleep. On tho <lb />
and Harding, afternoon of Whit Sunday last, <lb />
and about this time ho had the lie was laid to rest by loving <lb />
to have his own sons hands in the Cemetery of Trinity <lb />
begin the preparation for the I Parish, <lb />
sacred office. After another short . <lb />
sojourn in Pennsylvania he came <lb />
home and took ministerial charge; <lb />
of St. Peters, Washington. Hero <lb />
he found the old church ashes <lb />
and a remnant of the congregation <lb />
ALLIANCE TESTIMONY. <lb />
Concord Times. <lb />
We publish below it letter writ- <lb />
ten by Mr. W. P. of <lb />
using the Court House for a place formerly editor of the <lb />
of worship- Ho immediately Homes, an Alliance paper, <lb />
to Mr. Miles O. Sherrill, of Nev- <lb />
took hand the task of restoring <lb />
the church building- For this <lb />
purpose he went North by <lb />
his solicitations succeeded <lb />
raising a large part of the funds <lb />
necessary to put tho present St. <lb />
Peters, in condition for use. Ho <lb />
continued to serve that <lb />
until 1873, when <lb />
Rector now incumbent <lb />
charge of St. Peters Parish. <lb />
Dr. Hughes then traveled <lb />
the <lb />
re- <lb />
tail. This letter shows plainly <lb />
that the action taken by tho last <lb />
legislature regard to the Alli- <lb />
charter was instituted by <lb />
members of the Alliance them- <lb />
selves, by enemies of the <lb />
Alliance, as has been charged. <lb />
Alliances all over tho have <lb />
took i paSSing. resolutions <lb />
; the legislature for its <lb />
over action, when hero comes tho See- <lb />
the most of North Carolina to of Buncombe say <lb />
raise money for tho establish- j fog he personally that the <lb />
of the permanent action was taken at the request of <lb />
pal fund and was largely alone, Alliance- <lb />
mental putting the fund upon men are responsible for it. How- <lb />
the basis on which it stood at the ever, we believe the amendments <lb />
time of the setting off of the to the charter were right <lb />
of East Carolina ought to have been made. The <lb />
Dr. Hughes was ten Alliance is a secret organization, <lb />
and accepted the position of and no one deny now that it <lb />
Head Master of the Gram is political its character. <lb />
School of the University of the The following is the letter <lb />
South. He assumed that office In <lb />
August of the same j ear. Che l <lb />
spring of 1875 at his own D. C, May <lb />
be was empowered by the ; Dear Sir and Friend <lb />
authorities of the University to reply to your letter of a re- <lb />
go North and solicit endowments j cert de forwarded to mo at <lb />
for that institution. While this place after some delay I take <lb />
sent upon this errand, at a pleasure in giving you tho desired <lb />
from members of the information, especially as I am <lb />
University, he resigned tho Head a position to the facts in <lb />
Mastership and in the fall of the case. <lb />
1875 he was again at work the Tho State Alliance charter was <lb />
North Central part of the amended by the <lb />
Locating at Greensboro ho did at the investigation of many of the <lb />
Missionary work in the vicinity leading in the State <lb />
of Durham, Company Shops, j including the Legislative Com- <lb />
and One or two of the order. Lawyers or <lb />
ether places tho country outsiders bay nothing to <lb />
cent thereto. Early ho do with it. and know nothing <lb />
again returned to his old home at j about it, until the of some <lb />
Chocowinity and has dwelt there j of tho leading lawyers were con <lb />
continuously ever suited as to the legality of the bill <lb />
his return, he again as amended. The purpose in <lb />
applied himself to his favorite pro- changing the charter was to fix it <lb />
of a more thorough establish- j so that any stockholder of the <lb />
of his church school, having Agency Fund might ex- <lb />
view both tho preparation of j his as to what <lb />
young men for tho ministry and I disposition to make of tho amount <lb />
also the supply of deposited, instead of being left at <lb />
cation to all the youth both male the disposal of the Alliance, <lb />
and female. Trinity School as as would be the case at the ex- <lb />
revived at this time, with of five years which would <lb />
facts are stubborn. conference the fact that <lb />
such was the case. <lb />
Mr. J. A. Stevens Gives Pacts and mu. i i r <lb />
T-. . . u I he statement in the <lb />
Cites Authorities That Cannot be . , b <lb />
Controverted. that I was active in <lb />
I securing the repeal of the <lb />
charter and voted for its re- <lb />
peal is false. There was a differ- <lb />
of opinion as to what ought <lb />
Editor April 26th, <lb />
1893, I sent to you for <lb />
an article containing my <lb />
views upon tho resolutions re- <lb />
to be done, and upon the passage <lb />
of the bill I did not vote. In my <lb />
former communication I say, first, <lb />
adopted by the Wayne of tho Alliance <lb />
Alliance, also some j last year were Third party <lb />
comments upon the action of the I candidates. This cannot be de- <lb />
legislature in amending the char-1 and if denied can be easily <lb />
tar of the Alliance. i proven. <lb />
that time I have bee I say next, tho lecturers were <lb />
roundly abused by tho Caucasian j paid out of tho Alliance <lb />
Progressive Farmer, but the funds. turn to proceedings <lb />
principal reply to me was of State Alliance at Greensboro <lb />
The statement in my j August 8th, 10th and 11th, 1892, <lb />
that raises tho biggest howl and find, among the <lb />
is great many of the disbursements of the treasurer, <lb />
but a feeble flickering of life, but <lb />
by patient careful <lb />
finally gained enough strength to <lb />
maintain a continuous existence <lb />
to the present time with such use- <lb />
as God ms pleased to <lb />
vouchsafe it. <lb />
When he returned to <lb />
1876, Rev. Israel Hard- <lb />
was in charge of Trinity <lb />
Parish and Dr. Hughes took mis- <lb />
work at Greenville <lb />
Falkland, Pitt county, and at <lb />
Craven county. As <lb />
these labors grew too much for <lb />
was offered to turn over parts of <lb />
it to others, he relinquished first <lb />
Vanceboro, then <lb />
Greenville but <lb />
had assumed about the year 1883 <lb />
or 1881 charge of Trinity Parish, <lb />
Beaufort county. After giving <lb />
up Greenville he became inter- <lb />
in the establishment of mis- <lb />
in the vicinity of Trinity <lb />
be next August. Maj. Graham <lb />
has the amount of in- <lb />
vested mostly State bonds <lb />
which is conceded to be perfectly <lb />
secure, but the time having about <lb />
expired for its future disposition <lb />
it was thought best that the stock- <lb />
holders should have a say in the <lb />
matter, so the charter was fixed <lb />
for that purpose. I as Secretary <lb />
of county sent some <lb />
to that land and as they had <lb />
asked mo to get it back- I took <lb />
part in securing the amendment <lb />
so that those who wish can have <lb />
his strength, and an opportunity the refunded or let it re- <lb />
main as they desire. Many abuse <lb />
tho Legislature for its action in <lb />
Fall. I e matter but I am sure no true <lb />
in the meantime can object to every <lb />
citizen doing as he chooses with <lb />
his own money. the Senate <lb />
the bill as amended was signed <lb />
by John W. Atwater, a P. P., <lb />
and tho other voted <lb />
with the Democratic <lb />
Parish those missions four or five favor of tho to I <lb />
in number were for the most part was an eve witness. Gen. Vance <lb />
Sunday schools Lay services is as true an as any <lb />
supplied served by students in State but he Lad DO <lb />
of Trinity School, but received to do the formation of <lb />
from Dr. Hughes himself regular the amendment than many other <lb />
monthly services. the in and out of the <lb />
last year owing largely to the who firmly believe in <lb />
stringency of tho times, the bur- the original principles of the or- <lb />
den of sustaining the school Las <lb />
become exceedingly great, and <lb />
Dr. Hughes was full of plans for <lb />
putting into operation some <lb />
means by which the maintenance <lb />
of the school might be better as <lb />
sured. These plans he had <lb />
lated and was expecting to lay <lb />
them before the Council at Wash <lb />
but went to his rest before <lb />
that Council <lb />
For a number of years Dr- <lb />
health has been failing <lb />
but novel enough to deter him <lb />
long at from his regular <lb />
duties. <lb />
On Wednesday the 10th of May <lb />
he was taken with his last sick- <lb />
at first not alarming, it be- <lb />
including myself- <lb />
I fear there are few politicians <lb />
in North Carolina who are <lb />
of losing preferment <lb />
through the latter day embellish- <lb />
is the there is so <lb />
much kicking at the amendment <lb />
of the charter. Yon may use this <lb />
to suit yourself. <lb />
Your friend, <lb />
W, F, <lb />
U- Y- Are, <lb />
salve <lb />
The best salve in the world for <lb />
Bruises, Sores, Ulcer. Salt Rheum, <lb />
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb />
Chilblain, Corns, all Skin <lb />
and positively cures Piles, or no <lb />
pay required. It is guaranteed to <lb />
perfect satisfaction, or money <lb />
Price cents <lb />
w r. sale at <lb />
came more and more m <lb />
lecturers of North Carolina last <lb />
year were third party candidates. <lb />
And still they were paid out of <lb />
the Alliance funds And <lb />
if I am not very much mistaken <lb />
Mr. Graham was called upon for <lb />
to help pay that and other <lb />
expenses of tho State <lb />
This was tho charge made, and <lb />
the reply is a card signed by <lb />
Messrs. Alexander, Johnson, But- <lb />
others, saying that, <lb />
sum was appropriated or used <lb />
last year tho interest of tho <lb />
party, and that no sum <lb />
was paid for lecturing after May <lb />
meeting of executive committee <lb />
or for other than legitimate ex- <lb />
of the <lb />
the lecturing <lb />
I say further, that Mr. Graham, <lb />
trustee of the Business Agency <lb />
fund, has been called upon for <lb />
to defray of <lb />
and other expenses. <lb />
We again to proceeding of <lb />
1892, and on page we find that <lb />
the following resolution was <lb />
adopted <lb />
That the executive <lb />
, committee of this Alliance <lb />
I authorized directed to <lb />
borrow for the use of this Alli- <lb />
from the trustee of <lb />
the Business Agency fund, to <lb />
j repay the same from tho receipts <lb />
i of the office of secretary, treas- <lb />
I now reiterate what I did and Business Agent, <lb />
Alliance lecturers in North above necessary expenses and <lb />
Carolina last year wore paid the trustee is authorized to <lb />
and a great many of due on said funds <lb />
were Thud party until <lb />
This I assert as the truth, and no same <lb />
man can it. Of tho eight . . T . . , ,. , . . <lb />
. ., . , , Again, I stated that, at the last <lb />
names to tho committee card, live u. t , t , u <lb />
. ,, iii State meeting, President Butler <lb />
of them were candidates, four . , . . <lb />
, . , , ruled that a <lb />
Thud party, one a ,, <lb />
., , . , . . by tho committee in the <lb />
Now lets who . u i <lb />
m, ,. , , ,, compensation allowed delegates <lb />
say, order of the ex ,. ,. , , . <lb />
d -u i n -r i applied to tho delegates attending <lb />
committee at the ,. ,, . <lb />
, . . the meeting of while <lb />
last year all tho <lb />
lecturers were withdrawn from <lb />
the field, this several weeks <lb />
prior to the first start to organize <lb />
a new Let's see about <lb />
that. In March last year, Mr. J <lb />
district lecturer. Dr. <lb />
E. Person, county lecturer, ac- <lb />
rowed by Mr. Butler was given <lb />
him without objection. Turning <lb />
again to proceedings, I <lb />
find tho following request, <lb />
the president made a to <lb />
tho amendment as per mileage of <lb />
delegates and other members <lb />
. , was as Thai the <lb />
by Mr- A- L- , ,. . . <lb />
,, change constitution as to <lb />
thou county secretary, canvassed , , , . <lb />
. , J -t. actual transportation expenses <lb />
Wayne county. Messrs. Mew- <lb />
borne and Person would open tho <lb />
boll for the Alliance, Mr. <lb />
would close the scene with a long <lb />
speech in favor of a new party, <lb />
would say all manner of <lb />
against the Democratic <lb />
Well do I remember <lb />
meeting with Falling Creek ,, ,, . <lb />
;. , was remitted to Brother Butler, <lb />
Messrs. ,,, . , ,, . . <lb />
Person made very short speeches, <lb />
followed by Mr. My <lb />
worst political enemy now <lb />
strongest said to me, <lb />
after Mr. closed his re- <lb />
marks, if he was allowed to make <lb />
such political speeches as that in <lb />
the Alliance ho would ruin the <lb />
order. <lb />
Eight here I would call Mr. <lb />
attention to the fact, <lb />
that ho closed his canvass in <lb />
Wayne that ho might be <lb />
at the organization of the <lb />
party for <lb />
which was either the last Sat- <lb />
in March or the first <lb />
day in April. A few days <lb />
holding forth at Falling Creek <lb />
Mr. organized the <lb />
party at Providence and is- <lb />
sued a call for a county mass <lb />
be held, in <lb />
April 10th, for tho purpose of <lb />
completing the <lb />
Mr- Butler, <lb />
fearing Mr. would get <lb />
to the trustees for return of <lb />
contributed to the fund, sever- <lb />
hundred have been received <lb />
this year. There is no <lb />
for return of contributions, except <lb />
on dissolution of Alliance. <lb />
Tho trustee's bond would be re- <lb />
for any money so re- <lb />
turned. There are also <lb />
sometimes to have it used <lb />
as a cash fund in the hands of a <lb />
State business agent. Under tho <lb />
conditions which it was <lb />
this is impossible, etc. If <lb />
any change is desired, I suggest <lb />
that the executive committee be <lb />
instructed to obtain authority by <lb />
law for the <lb />
The Progressive Farmer has <lb />
said that only thirteen have <lb />
plied since the adjournment, of <lb />
the legislature to the <lb />
amounts contributed by them re- <lb />
funded. Is it not strange that <lb />
the who, ac- <lb />
cording to the trustee's report de- <lb />
sired their money before they <lb />
could get it, do not call for it <lb />
now The is they are call- <lb />
it, are not getting it, <lb />
and the groat reason of the cry <lb />
raised, of the throat to pub- <lb />
tho names of those who ask <lb />
for is that it is not on <lb />
hand to pay with. If tho Pro <lb />
Farmer will promise to <lb />
print the-letters, I will furnish <lb />
several from the trustee, written <lb />
since the adjournment of the <lb />
legislature, saying, substance <lb />
that he hasn't the money, on <lb />
hand to pay with, that he will <lb />
make some collections, and may <lb />
be able to pay in June or July <lb />
I do not intend to say that the <lb />
trustees has squandered any part <lb />
of tho fund, and I know of no <lb />
reason for making tho <lb />
I presume that he has held the <lb />
fund and paid it out as directed. <lb />
The report of the trustee also j <lb />
shows that constitution <lb />
and charter of the there <lb />
was no power- to authorize the <lb />
withdrawal of tho money , <lb />
bitted, and that this power could <lb />
only be granted by the <lb />
legislature <lb />
wore asked for the <lb />
money contributed by them to be <lb />
refunded, there was no power <lb />
the charter constitution <lb />
to refund this and under <lb />
these circumstances the <lb />
following tho suggestion of <lb />
the trustee, comes and amends <lb />
the charter that money <lb />
might be withdrawn. Is this <lb />
a great crime <lb />
Many of tho men who wished <lb />
to withdraw their money paid to <lb />
it in that it was being <lb />
contributed to a non-political or <lb />
for good ends. They <lb />
now believe it was being used <lb />
their interest, for <lb />
cal purposes. I they were <lb />
to their money, and it is <lb />
image to me that there should <lb />
be a difference of opinion j <lb />
this. You and I are partners ; I <lb />
believe you are the <lb />
The items making If there j <lb />
is no way for me to get my <lb />
money, ought not one be j <lb />
made I addition to this, Capt j <lb />
Powell, chairman of the <lb />
committee of the <lb />
told several members of the <lb />
that the ought to <lb />
be I have <lb />
than I intended and would write j <lb />
more, but I wish my to I <lb />
. member to be withdrawn. as h is a personal <lb />
Those who say ibis do not know mo. <lb />
the facts, knowing thorn, Farmer <lb />
give them the the <lb />
They are Alexander, Mew <lb />
should apply to this <lb />
and on page I find the follow- <lb />
J. M. <lb />
j made a statement in regard to a <lb />
loan made to President Butler by <lb />
j order of the executive committee <lb />
through W. II. Worth for <lb />
motion the amount of <lb />
the note hold against him by <lb />
W. H- Worth ordered to can-<lb />
It will be seen on page that <lb />
in addition to making President <lb />
Butler a present of as above <lb />
stated, he was paid his full salary <lb />
and was allowed for <lb />
expenses <lb />
total of expenses are not given. <lb />
It has been said that tho amend- <lb />
to the charter originated in <lb />
the evil minds of the legislators, <lb />
that there were no reasons to be <lb />
urged in their favor, that there <lb />
was simply a desire to injure the <lb />
Alliance, and the amendment <lb />
most complained of is that of <lb />
lowing the funds contributed by <lb />
Rats Catching <lb />
A curious spectacle was witness <lb />
Sunday by quite a number <lb />
of who were attracted to <lb />
the windows of J. B. Hug <lb />
grocery store, on Market <lb />
street, by tho action of two rats. <lb />
The Stole was closed, of course, <lb />
and a number of Hies wore dis- <lb />
porting themselves on the window <lb />
panes, while tho two rats were <lb />
having great sport by catching <lb />
devouring the flies. The rats <lb />
would slip up on the flies and <lb />
scoop them by a dexterous <lb />
movement of their paws. Their <lb />
aim was unerring, and they were <lb />
curiously watched by many <lb />
A Little Girl's in Light, <lb />
house. <lb />
Mr. and Mr. keep. <lb />
the at Band <lb />
Beach, Mich, and are blessed with a <lb />
daughter, Law Apr <lb />
she was taken down with Measles, fol- <lb />
lowed with a dreadful cough and turn- <lb />
into a fever. Doctors at home and <lb />
at Detroit treated her, bat in vain, she <lb />
grew wane notary, until she <lb />
mere of Then she <lb />
tried Dr. King's New Discovery and <lb />
after the use of two and a half bottles, <lb />
was completely cured. They say Dr. <lb />
Discovery is worth Its <lb />
Wight in gold, yd you may get a trial <lb />
bottle free at John <lb />
The Atlanta Herald says <lb />
complain of hard times this <lb />
country, but we don't know what <lb />
we are talking about. shiver <lb />
with a financial duck ague when <lb />
is absolutely nothing tho <lb />
And there is a <lb />
deal of truth concealed about <lb />
these statements. Times are not <lb />
good, but they are infinitely bet <lb />
tor with Americans than with <lb />
some other people. <lb />
luxury are denied to a good <lb />
who would enjoy thorn, but there- <lb />
are not a great many hungry <lb />
pie in this country, proportion <lb />
to population, and tho most of <lb />
these could got bread for them- <lb />
selves and their dependents if <lb />
they would work for it, we <lb />
see few persons going about <lb />
without clothes to hide <lb />
their If, instead of <lb />
talking so much about hard times, <lb />
would all brace up look <lb />
alive, the times would improve <lb />
amazingly. <lb />
What every community needs, <lb />
is diversified industries to furnish <lb />
diversified employments to the <lb />
laboring people. There are <lb />
of boys and girls in this <lb />
County who would welcome the <lb />
opportunity to go into a factory <lb />
earn from three to seven <lb />
a week. Farm work is <lb />
suited to females. They are <lb />
physically to do farm work, <lb />
but can easily do the work re <lb />
quired of thorn in a knitting mill <lb />
factory and not only <lb />
support themselves but aid their <lb />
parents. In establishing <lb />
enterprises not <lb />
helping to build up com- <lb />
in which they are <lb />
but furnishing <lb />
employment to the poor <lb />
so that building factories not <lb />
only partakes of tho of <lb />
business enterprise, but <lb />
far as the name is synonymous <lb />
third party men, and no <lb />
further. <lb />
I say that the records of the <lb />
Alliance show a necessity for <lb />
ahead of him, intercepted Mr. change, that they show <lb />
extravagance in expenses of <lb />
rs, and that many de- <lb />
sired to withdraw their funds and <lb />
and held an Alliance <lb />
meeting in the court house that <lb />
day. After delivering his <lb />
address be gave us reasons <lb />
why we should stick to tho Demo- <lb />
party, called on all who <lb />
would attend the coming Demo- <lb />
conventions and support <lb />
their nominees to stand and <lb />
nearly every one the crowded <lb />
court room stood pp. Mr. <lb />
son and five or six of his follow <lb />
who were honest in their con- <lb />
did not <lb />
We all remember tho <lb />
circular Mr. Butler. <lb />
In a very short time Mr. Swinson <lb />
did organize the party <lb />
for the county. Thus the <lb />
new party organized Wayne. <lb />
and Lenoir in April- it is to be <lb />
presumed the balance tho <lb />
State was operated upon in the <lb />
Mine way. At least the Butler <lb />
not do so. <lb />
On page of proceedings of <lb />
I find a report of the executive <lb />
committee signed by Mess. Alex- <lb />
and from which <lb />
I take this extract. <lb />
committee would <lb />
mend the change of the lecture <lb />
system- It is more expensive <lb />
than any we have heretofore had, <lb />
and the good work accomplished <lb />
is in proportion to its <lb />
This shows that a change in the <lb />
system is desirable, that the ex- <lb />
has increased, and, that re- <lb />
not proportion to cost- <lb />
In plain language, would <lb />
this extravagance. On page <lb />
find the trustee's report, from <lb />
which I make <lb />
are frequent application <lb />
and others, says <lb />
papers that have Ste- <lb />
letter, the Observer <lb />
ed, are expected to publish the <lb />
above denial, or else will be <lb />
open to the charge of treating the <lb />
Alliance and individuals unfair <lb />
By the same rule I call <lb />
that paper and Tho <lb />
to publish this <lb />
cation in full. I do dot reply to <lb />
any of their personal flings, be- <lb />
cause it it below tho piano of leg- <lb />
discussion, and because <lb />
they from the editors of <lb />
the and Progressive <lb />
Farmer. Very truly, <lb />
Jno- A. Stevens- <lb />
Deserving <lb />
desire to say IS our that <lb />
for years we have Milling Dr. King's <lb />
New Discovery tor Dr. <lb />
King's New <lb />
and Electric Kilters, and have <lb />
handled rem -dies that sell as well, <lb />
or that have Men universal <lb />
faction, We do not hesitate to <lb />
tee them every time, and we stand <lb />
ready to refund the purchase pries, if <lb />
results do not follow their <lb />
use. remedies have won their <lb />
great popularity purely on their merits. <lb />
Drug Store. <lb />
CHILD BIRTH <lb />
MADE EASY <lb />
is a scientific- <lb />
ally prepared Liniment, every <lb />
of recognized value and in <lb />
constant use by pro- <lb />
These ingredients are com- <lb />
in a t r hitherto unknown<lb />
WILL DO an that is claimed foe <lb />
it AND MORE, it Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb />
Life of Mother and Child. Book <lb />
. to Mothers mailed FREE, con- <lb />
valuable information and <lb />
voluntary testimonials. <lb />
Sent by on receipt of price per bottle <lb />
REGULATOR CO. Atlanta. <lb />
BOLD BY ALL <lb />
Reaches the <lb />
Patron <lb />
By advertising in an <lb />
Therefore ho OAf- <lb />
Reflector. <lb />
C This Office for Job printing <lb />
A Household f <lb />
all <lb />
BLOOD <lb />
DISEASES <lb />
Di Eli Di <lb />
Botanic Blood Balm <lb />
SCROFULA, ULCER, <lb />
RHEUM. ECZEMA. I <lb />
font of malignant SKIN ERUPTION. St- I <lb />
aides being efficacious In toning up the , , <lb />
restoring the . <lb />
ii <lb />
and <lb />
Impaired from any cans. Its <lb />
healing properties <lb />
Justify us In a curs, II <lb />
directions are followed. <lb />
SENT FREE <lb />
BLOOD BALM CO. Atlanta. <lb />
tote <lb />
Notice. <lb />
I desire friends and <lb />
I lie public generally that I have opened <lb />
for myself just the <lb />
from my residence and on the old Dr. <lb />
lot where I tan be found at any <lb />
time. <lb />
W. BROWN. M.<lb />
I C. <lb />
L. Fleming. Andrew Joyner <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
attention to business. <lb />
Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb />
J. JARVIS. L. BLOW <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
in all the Courts. <lb />
A. II. F. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention given to coll<lb />
SKINNER, <lb />
n. c. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N C. <lb />
h courts. Collections <lb />
specialty. <lb />
GENERAL <lb />
Potatoes, Eggs, Sassy <lb />
Oysters, Fish, and <lb />
All Country <lb />
Nos. Roanoke Dock, Norfolk, V <lb />
Reference Son Co., <lb />
OLD DOMINION LIE <lb />
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb />
Steamers leave Washington for Green- <lb />
ville and touching at all land- <lb />
on Tar River Monday, <lb />
and Friday at C A. M. <lb />
Returning leave at A M. <lb />
Tuesday, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
same days. <lb />
These departures are subject of <lb />
water on Tar River. <lb />
Connecting St Washington with <lb />
of The Norfolk, Newborn and Wash <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, <lb />
New York and <lb />
Shippers their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk <lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
more. Miners from <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. SON. <lb />
Washington N. O <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Greenville, N C <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD MICK STORE <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY <lb />
their year's supplies will <lb />
their interest our prices before <lb />
elsewhere Our stock Is complete <lb />
n all Its branches. <lb />
PORK <lb />
COFFEE, <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
at Lowest Market Ma, <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF <lb />
e buy direct from <lb />
Ming you to buy at A <lb />
Mete stock of <lb />
UNDER <lb />
,.,,,, hand and <lb />
limes. l <lb />
r I . sold for CASH, <lb />
AgentS. at a close <lb />
GREENVILLE, C<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017603_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Editor Proprietor <lb />
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 21st, 1893. <lb />
N. C. as second-class mail matter. <lb />
Announcement. <lb />
THE SUBSCRIPTION OF <lb />
I The is 1.00 per <lb />
One com Mill <lb />
one year, column one year <lb />
; one-quarter column one year, <lb />
Transient <lb />
one week. ; two weeks, 41,50-one <lb />
mouth Two inches one week, 1.50, <lb />
two weeks, month, <lb />
Advertisements inserted Local <lb />
Column as reading items, cents per <lb />
line for each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad- <lb />
and Notices <lb />
and Sales, <lb />
Summons to etc., will <lb />
be charged at legal rates and most <lb />
BE PAID FOB IN ADVANCE. <lb />
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb />
Above, for any length of time, can be <lb />
made by application to the office either <lb />
in person or by letter <lb />
Copy tor N Advertisements and <lb />
all changes of be <lb />
Handed In by o'clock on Tuesday <lb />
mornings in order to receive prompt in <lb />
sen ion the day following. <lb />
DETERMINED NEVER TO BE <lb />
SATISFIED. <lb />
It is strange how widely foolish <lb />
men become when they begin to <lb />
practice hypocrisy. They <lb />
tend that they want this, that, and <lb />
tho other, for this and that <lb />
son, and when they find they are <lb />
about to get what they pretend to <lb />
want they shift fronts and say <lb />
these things will not accomplish <lb />
the desired results, or they charge <lb />
those who are about to give them <lb />
their pretended wishes as being <lb />
governed by sinister motives. <lb />
They are false in every <lb />
and become chronic <lb />
for no higher purpose than <lb />
to serve their own personal whims. <lb />
We have a fair example of this <lb />
in those who are now pleased to <lb />
style themselves Third party per- <lb />
About two or three <lb />
years ago they clamored for the <lb />
free coinage of silver and claimed <lb />
this would be a panacea for all <lb />
the evils under which they pro- <lb />
fessed to groan. When they had <lb />
occasion to believe that the Dem- <lb />
party was about to be- <lb />
come a unit in demanding this <lb />
they said through their leader, <lb />
Col. Polk, that this was all right <lb />
but it would not answer the <lb />
pose and would not give the <lb />
needed relief. <lb />
They also had a plank in their <lb />
platform demanding tariff <lb />
but as soon as they found <lb />
that if the Democratic party got <lb />
in power they would give this they <lb />
said this was not sufficient and <lb />
would only be effective when you <lb />
did what they know never could <lb />
be done, abolish the tariff alto- <lb />
Butler boldly <lb />
said this in his speeches about <lb />
months ago and when <lb />
asked how are you going to raise <lb />
revenue to run the government if <lb />
you wipe out entirely the tariff, <lb />
flippantly retorted, by an <lb />
income This they have <lb />
harangued for ever <lb />
since. This most assuredly with <lb />
free coinage of silver, and tariff <lb />
reduction would satisfy even their <lb />
most extreme desires- But what <lb />
do we see when the indications <lb />
are that an income tax will be a <lb />
part of the Democratic plan of <lb />
financial reform. The great <lb />
in his poisoned <lb />
sheet, known and recognized as <lb />
the Caucasian, warns his follow- <lb />
the to beware of <lb />
Greeks bearing gifts. He is get- <lb />
ting ready to boldly attack the <lb />
very thing he has been clamoring <lb />
for tor twelve months, when he <lb />
sees it is about to come- Alas <lb />
for the utter folly of such sore <lb />
head cranks as this great apostle <lb />
of Third party ism in North Caro- <lb />
had thought that even <lb />
he might hold his tongue in <lb />
at the prospect of his great <lb />
hobby, an income tax. and yet we <lb />
quote these words from his issue <lb />
of June 8th income tax is <lb />
right, but it will not correct the <lb />
financial evils in your financial <lb />
system- It not go at the <lb />
root of the trouble. It simply <lb />
clips off the ends of the over- <lb />
grown twigs, while the evil one <lb />
will continue to do its deadly <lb />
If free coinage of silver, <lb />
tariff reform, and an income tax <lb />
are not what they want why in <lb />
the name of common sense and <lb />
common decency have they been <lb />
demanding these things from the <lb />
very of their party I <lb />
They started out to deceive, and <lb />
all of these pretensions are false- <lb />
They don't want the people <lb />
tied. Their only mission is to <lb />
arouse dissatisfaction and thereby <lb />
serve their own hellish personal <lb />
ends. If those leaders were <lb />
lowed to formulate in tablet form <lb />
every demand they desired, so <lb />
that they did not put them in fat <lb />
places, and the Democratic party <lb />
were to give every expressed wish <lb />
without dotting an i or crossing a <lb />
t, they would still howl and growl <lb />
pack of cars and-say that <lb />
these things do not strike at <lb />
of the evil. What in <lb />
with them any way What-1 <lb />
ever it may be here is the <lb />
put me, b, in the I <lb />
United States Senate and the lea <lb />
lights in the next best places <lb />
and the people will flourish as a <lb />
green bay tree. From which, <lb />
good Lord deliver us and our <lb />
people- <lb />
The Democratic press of North <lb />
Carolina are strongly advocating <lb />
all of these desired reforms, the <lb />
prospect is that the present Dem- <lb />
administration will give <lb />
us a if not all of them, and <lb />
nothing is more utterly foolish <lb />
than that sensible men shall fol- <lb />
low such manifest demagoguery <lb />
as is being practiced by these so- <lb />
called reform papers. Look <lb />
through tho issue of the Caucasian <lb />
from which we have quoted and <lb />
note now every word said against <lb />
the party and see <lb />
how large a book you will have. <lb />
This is the party which has in- <lb />
the evils from which we <lb />
are endeavoring to free ourselves <lb />
and no abuse of this shows the <lb />
purpose of the reform press. The <lb />
only hope of this country is <lb />
through the Democratic party, <lb />
and the sooner our people learn <lb />
this, cease to follow these <lb />
and bend every energy <lb />
to the accomplishment unitedly <lb />
of the relief now in sight the more <lb />
speedily will it come. <lb />
pangs of hunger and to clothe <lb />
and shelter those dependent upon <lb />
them- <lb />
So far as the distribution of <lb />
wealth is concerned it is a well <lb />
known fact that it is constantly <lb />
becoming more equally <lb />
ed America than in almost any <lb />
other nation on the face of the <lb />
globe. If our country is so op- <lb />
unfair and even cruel as <lb />
these dyspeptic blowpipes would <lb />
have us believe, why is it that <lb />
immigrant ships are kept busy <lb />
transporting foreigners from <lb />
every clime under the sun to our <lb />
An eminent writer says <lb />
inequality among men is <lb />
not so much that of money as <lb />
mental capacity. We all know <lb />
that many, who now manage and <lb />
direct great industries enter- <lb />
prises were once common labor- <lb />
Their success is not due to <lb />
money or social caste, bat to <lb />
brains. Material conditions are <lb />
not so unequal as we are wont to <lb />
suppose. All men, with few ex- <lb />
start equal in life. <lb />
They come into the world naked, <lb />
and are all slaves to the <lb />
ties of their environments- No <lb />
artificial device can make them <lb />
equally strong, fleet and capable ; <lb />
and when you handicap the swift <lb />
and thrifty you lower the standard <lb />
and retard <lb />
That is just what the reform <lb />
leaders are doing, trying to tear <lb />
down instead of building <lb />
They loudly proclaim that the <lb />
wage earners of the land <lb />
are oppressed, that farming does <lb />
not pay, Ac. and many an honest, <lb />
industrious man is discouraged, <lb />
restless and dissatisfied with his <lb />
lot and ready to wander off in <lb />
search of strange gods- Their <lb />
press, too, while pretending to <lb />
teach the people economic truths <lb />
are in reality filling the minds <lb />
and hearts of their readers with <lb />
hatred for their government and <lb />
suspicion against all in authority. <lb />
The enlightened, progressive <lb />
and patriotic journalists of the <lb />
country have used all their ability <lb />
and to counteract the evil <lb />
tendencies of such pernicious in- <lb />
and they will, let us hope, <lb />
continue to apply the lancet to <lb />
these inflated until <lb />
such an shall take <lb />
place as will lower them to their <lb />
own level. B- W. J. <lb />
ALAS FOR THE RARITY OF POP- <lb />
CHARITY I <lb />
Editor Reflector are <lb />
some blatant and <lb />
the public know who they are, <lb />
going over the country instilling <lb />
communistic doctrines into the <lb />
minds of a certain class of our <lb />
people, who catch <lb />
some euphonious phrase as <lb />
rich are growing richer and the <lb />
poor and accept it as <lb />
complete and truthful exposition <lb />
of the present industrial <lb />
Those, who by some misfortune <lb />
or bad management have involved <lb />
themselves in debt, and have been <lb />
burdened by unjust and unwise <lb />
legislation by the party that is <lb />
now happily driven from power, <lb />
and easily led astray by the <lb />
mouthy calamity howlers, who <lb />
are using them as cat paws to <lb />
accomplish their o n selfish as- <lb />
These self-constituted apostles <lb />
of reform have been discarded by <lb />
the progressive element of society <lb />
and are now seeking to ingratiate <lb />
themselves into the favor of the <lb />
ignorant and prejudiced by tell <lb />
them of imaginary hardships <lb />
and unfair measures forced upon <lb />
them by the men, that <lb />
their hard earnings are filched <lb />
from them, that the harder they <lb />
strive the poorer they get, that <lb />
the price of farm products has <lb />
ceased to be governed by the law <lb />
of supply and demand, that an <lb />
bale crop of cotton will <lb />
be worth as much per pound as a <lb />
bale crop, and that the <lb />
officeholders have become their <lb />
masters instead of their servants. <lb />
They have listened to this cry <lb />
of the political hypocrites until <lb />
their reason has become <lb />
their sense of justice de- <lb />
moralized, and many of them have <lb />
become sour, discontented and <lb />
prone to magnify the evils of the <lb />
situation, working them into the <lb />
belief that matters are growing <lb />
worse instead of better. <lb />
All well informed men know, <lb />
that while there may be a grain <lb />
of truth in some of these charges, <lb />
they come far short of being ab- <lb />
true Public servants <lb />
were never more keenly watched, <lb />
and did so much labor for the <lb />
salaries they in any for- <lb />
mer period of our history. The <lb />
laboring classes are to-day enjoy- <lb />
comforts and luxuries, which <lb />
the wealthy did not enjoy and <lb />
could not procure years ago. Their <lb />
condition, for a century back, has <lb />
steadily improved. Hours of la- <lb />
have become shorter, rates of <lb />
have increased, purchasing <lb />
of earnings has been great- <lb />
y enhanced, homes of tho poor <lb />
have become more sanitary and <lb />
cheerful and every individual has <lb />
all the personal liberty any <lb />
man being could desire, who <lb />
keeps within the bounds of de- <lb />
and of law. <lb />
In their tirade against <lb />
social conditions, these so- <lb />
and populists, whatever <lb />
they are, aim their shafts of <lb />
and sarcasm at those mainly <lb />
who have accumulated wealth, <lb />
seemingly forgetful of the fact, <lb />
that the class, who are in the <lb />
most prosperous circumstances, <lb />
are those who have, in most in- <lb />
stances, acquired it by their fore- <lb />
sight, prudence and energy, and <lb />
belong to the laboring class them- <lb />
selves. Instead of being an in- <lb />
upon the public, as these <lb />
chronic grumblers would make <lb />
their discontented hearers be <lb />
they are the real benefactors <lb />
of the poor. In planting new in- <lb />
and thus providing op- <lb />
for the employment of <lb />
those who are dependent upon <lb />
their daily labor for their daily <lb />
bread, they are doing more to aid <lb />
humanity and to build up waste <lb />
places, than the greedy growlers <lb />
who prate about inequality of <lb />
wealth and its distribution. <lb />
With holy horror and high <lb />
sounding phrases of rhetoric they <lb />
are wont to contrast the condition <lb />
of the capitalist, in their stately <lb />
castles, and the poverty stricken <lb />
abodes of the poor, utterly <lb />
the plain troth, that the <lb />
money spent in the building of <lb />
the castles goes into the pockets <lb />
of the brick mason, the hod car- <lb />
carpenter, architect the <lb />
tapestry worker and every other <lb />
class of represented in <lb />
their erection. In thousands of <lb />
instances, enterprises of the kind <lb />
i alluded to have a God-send <lb />
the J to the working men, whereby <lb />
the they were enabled to allay the <lb />
To Those Who Planted the Eastern <lb />
Pride Tobacco <lb />
I have been informed that a <lb />
number of farmers in the county <lb />
who obtained the Eastern Pride <lb />
tobacco seed from Joyner <lb />
last fall have recently be- <lb />
come very much dissatisfied with <lb />
the kind of tobacco because it is <lb />
buttoning too early and <lb />
pally because it is alleged that I <lb />
have said that it was an inferior <lb />
kind of tobacco and that Mr. Ed- <lb />
wards would not plant it this <lb />
year. I wish to say that I have <lb />
never made any such a statement <lb />
Mr. Edwards, it is true, did not <lb />
plant any of that particular kind <lb />
this year but it was not because <lb />
it was an inferior kind of tobacco <lb />
but because it was lighter weight <lb />
tobacco, and in justice to Mr. Joy- <lb />
the successor of Joyner k <lb />
I want to say that I <lb />
had six acres of this kind last year <lb />
and the highest price that I ob- <lb />
for any tobacco was for this <lb />
kind and should continue to plant <lb />
it if I could raise as much to the <lb />
acre. Mr. Edwards says he can <lb />
cure it as white as he wants it <lb />
and the only objection that I have <lb />
ever heard against it was that it <lb />
would not make as much to the <lb />
acre as the Hester. I am impress- <lb />
ed that if the people would wait <lb />
until this tobacco is topped and <lb />
see how it develops they will be <lb />
much better pleased with it. The <lb />
recent rainy weather has caused <lb />
all kinds of tobacco to grow up <lb />
spindling. <lb />
This with the fact of its slow <lb />
development before it is topped <lb />
has brought about in my opinion <lb />
the recent dissatisfaction- <lb />
E. A. <lb />
in the European demand for <lb />
gold. <lb />
The Government has lost in <lb />
actual cash, according to <lb />
figures, in carrying <lb />
out the provisions of the Sherman <lb />
silver law, nearly re- <lb />
presenting the difference between <lb />
the amount paid for the silver now <lb />
stored in the Treasury vaults and <lb />
its selling price. If it <lb />
really had to be sold at once the <lb />
loss would probably be much <lb />
greater because of tho further <lb />
depreciation in price that would <lb />
follow such a large quantity of <lb />
silver on the market. <lb />
Among the consular appoint- <lb />
made this week was that <lb />
of Bennington B. of New <lb />
Jersey, to be Consul at <lb />
England, in place of <lb />
Folsom, resigned- Mr. Folsom <lb />
who has held the since <lb />
his appointment early in the first <lb />
Cleveland administration, is a <lb />
cousin of Mrs- Cleveland's and as <lb />
he figured in all the <lb />
republican papers as proof that <lb />
President Cleveland was not in <lb />
earnest when he declared himself <lb />
opposed to nepotism. Wonder <lb />
what those same fellows will say <lb />
now that Mr. Folsom has <lb />
resign The chances are <lb />
that they will ignore it entirely <lb />
and say nothing- <lb />
Secretary has, in one <lb />
respect, a long lead of all the <lb />
heads of departments- Since <lb />
taking charge of the Treasury he <lb />
has replaced more than Be- <lb />
publican officials, outside the <lb />
classified service, with good <lb />
Democrats- <lb />
Democratic Congressmen, after <lb />
a hard and stubborn fight, have <lb />
succeeded in convincing Post- <lb />
master General that his <lb />
rule against the removal of Be- <lb />
publican fourth-class postmasters <lb />
who have served four years or <lb />
more, unless charges are tiled <lb />
against them, is a bad one, and it <lb />
will be recalled and all <lb />
cans who have been in office four <lb />
years or more will be replaced by <lb />
Democrats just as fast as they can <lb />
be got at in Mr. Maxwell's office. <lb />
A letter received by Mr. Cleve- <lb />
land this week furnishes <lb />
proof, if proof were needed, <lb />
of the wisdom of the establish- <lb />
in the Pension Bureau of a <lb />
Board of He vision, the sole duty <lb />
of which is to go over all the pen- <lb />
that have been granted <lb />
the law of 1890 and deter- <lb />
mine whether they were granted <lb />
in accordance with a proper con- <lb />
of that law. The writer <lb />
of this letter, Mr. J. M. Burnett, <lb />
is an ex of the office, who <lb />
voluntarily resigned during the <lb />
last administration because he <lb />
could not conscientiously take <lb />
part in carrying out <lb />
He tells the President of a <lb />
large number of pensions illegal- <lb />
granted, and gives names, <lb />
dates, and the number of the <lb />
so that his statements <lb />
may be easily verified- He says <lb />
that thousands of pensions have <lb />
been illegally granted, and that <lb />
they are not confined to cases in <lb />
which the law was wrongfully <lb />
constructed, but include an <lb />
number granted in direct <lb />
violation of law- Mr. Burnett <lb />
concludes by expressing the be- <lb />
lief that at least a year <lb />
can be saved by a thorough and <lb />
rigid purging and revision of the <lb />
pension rolls. <lb />
Sad and Gloomy <lb />
Weak and Dyspeptic <lb />
Gave Strength <lb />
and Perfectly Cured, <lb />
Br. J. B. <lb />
Birmingham, Alabama. <lb />
not words enough to my <lb />
the treat benefits received from a <lb />
bottles of Hood's I was <lb />
weak, and It made me strong; I was a <lb />
tic, and It cured me; I was sad and gloomy, and <lb />
It made me cheerful and hopeful. And last, <lb />
though not least, It made me an ardent and <lb />
Hood's s Cures <lb />
working democrat AD who hare taken <lb />
with my advice, report good re- <lb />
I gladly recommend It to all <lb />
J. It White, M. D., Birmingham, Ala. <lb />
V. B. If yon decide to take Hood's <lb />
do not be Induced to buy any other <lb />
Instead. Insist upon HOOD'S. <lb />
Hood's Pills are the best family <lb />
gentle and effective. Try a box, cents. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
By virtue of a mortgage to me <lb />
by Alfred Walker and wife <lb />
duly recorded in the Register's office of <lb />
Martin county, in book FF, pages <lb />
and shall sell for cash before <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 />
This the 12th day of May. 1893. <lb />
R MOBLEY, <lb />
Mortgagee. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly <lb />
as 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 estate <lb />
roust present the same for payment on <lb />
or before the 1st day of May, 1894, <lb />
this notice will be plead in bar of re- <lb />
This 1st day of May, 1803. <lb />
J. S. <lb />
of Mary <lb />
It U with pleasure that I announce to <lb />
the citizens of Greenville and vicinity <lb />
that have just returned from the <lb />
Northern Market- where. visited <lb />
all the now <lb />
the moat and <lb />
stylish selected stock of Millinery ever <lb />
opened in this market. Come to see <lb />
me Mini you will get nothing but the <lb />
latest fashionable good. Low prices <lb />
satisfaction <lb />
Mrs. Georgia Pearce, <lb />
GR N. C. <lb />
Nest door to Old Brick Store.<lb />
And we want to impress upon your minds that have <lb />
-----received our new------ <lb />
SprinG-.-StocK <lb />
-and can now show a <lb />
Our intention is to sell good goods at tho lowest possible <lb />
prices. have the largest and roost varied stocK <lb />
kept in town. We keep almost every thin- <lb />
needed in the household or on the farm and <lb />
invite inspection and comparison of our <lb />
goods. can and will soil low for <lb />
cash. We want your trade and <lb />
will be glad to show you the <lb />
following lines of<lb />
A CARD. <lb />
Not many people know it, says <lb />
the Greensboro Record but rail- <lb />
road companies, or many of them, <lb />
never lose much by accidents <lb />
where lives are lost. They carry <lb />
insurance against such things. <lb />
For instance, they take out a gen- <lb />
policy in a good company for <lb />
a specified amount insuring them <lb />
against loss of life. It is said the <lb />
Bostian Bridge cases never cost <lb />
the railroad anything over and <lb />
above the premium on the <lb />
carried. Insurance com- <lb />
are never known in a suit, <lb />
as it is a part of the <lb />
agreement that the railroad is to <lb />
maintain all suits for damages- <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington June <lb />
President Cleveland is deeply <lb />
interested in the efforts that are <lb />
being made to ascertain if the <lb />
carelessness of any person was <lb />
responsible for the horrible <lb />
in Ford's old which <lb />
killed and injured sixty-odd <lb />
clerks in the Records and Pen- <lb />
office of the War Depart- <lb />
although he has wisely re- <lb />
from taking any action <lb />
that might be considered as inter- <lb />
with the <lb />
now engaged in <lb />
that task. Great pressure is being <lb />
brought to bear on him to <lb />
pend or remove Col <lb />
the army officer who is at the <lb />
head of that office, and upon <lb />
whom a great many people are <lb />
disposed to place the blame, but <lb />
Mr. Cleveland's idea of fair play <lb />
is such that not probable that <lb />
he will take any action until there <lb />
is more tangible evidence of Col. <lb />
s guilt than public <lb />
clamor for making him a <lb />
goat. If he be guilty surely that <lb />
fact can hardly escape the coroner <lb />
jury now investigating and the <lb />
army court of inquiry which will <lb />
take the matter up at the close of <lb />
the inquest <lb />
The improvement in the <lb />
situation has been very mark <lb />
ed during the last few days, and <lb />
Treasury officials and others who <lb />
keep close watch on financial <lb />
fairs that the turn has <lb />
come in the flow of gold abroad <lb />
and that the situation will con <lb />
to improve. It is certain <lb />
that the gold in the Treasury is <lb />
again increasing at a gratifying <lb />
rate and that there is at present <lb />
no demand for gold for shipment <lb />
abroad. Secretary Morton ex <lb />
presses the opinion that from now <lb />
on our cereals will take the place <lb />
of the gold which we have <lb />
shipping to Europe, and the fact <lb />
that the large amount of gold <lb />
which the contracted <lb />
to furnish Austria has all been <lb />
delivered is also thought to have <lb />
been a factor a <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 <lb />
with which many are and which <lb />
i so to them and those with <lb />
whom they associate. can relieve <lb />
this entirely at once, and I respectfully <lb />
ask you to give me a trial and I will <lb />
guarantee to remove this most worry- <lb />
and offensive My <lb />
vices can be secured by calling at my <lb />
shop or it will give me pleasure to serve <lb />
at your homes whenever notified in <lb />
any way This treatment will obviate <lb />
the necessity of almost daily 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 />
Notice <lb />
On Monday the third day of July, A. <lb />
will sell at the Court House <lb />
door in the town of Greenville to the <lb />
highest bidder for cash one tract of <lb />
land in Pitt county containing about <lb />
acres and known as lot No. <lb />
live in the division of the lands of <lb />
deceased, bounded and <lb />
described as Beginning at a <lb />
stump Louis D. thence <lb />
south twenty one degrees one <lb />
seventy poles to a pine and maple <lb />
north sixty seven degrees west one <lb />
hundred and sixty to the great <lb />
branch, down said branch to maple <lb />
branch then up maple branch to the <lb />
beginning containing ninety-five acres <lb />
and being a part the home tract. <lb />
Said lot No. allotted to Nancy Ann <lb />
the said land being situated in <lb />
Falkland township, Pitt county, N. C, <lb />
to satisfy a ex in my col- <lb />
Nancy Ann and <lb />
which has been levied on said land as <lb />
the said Nancy A. <lb />
This day of June 1893. <lb />
R. W. KING, Sheriff, <lb />
Per HENRY T. KING, D. S. <lb />
hardware, <lb />
Roots, <lb />
hi.<lb />
HASKETT.<lb />
HASKETT.<lb />
HINGES. NAILS, AND AXES, <lb />
Rope, Belting and Packing, <lb />
MECHANIC'S 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 goods cheap for <lb />
the cash. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT. <lb />
GREENVILLE N. C <lb />
FARMS FOB SALE. <lb />
Prices Low, <lb />
Terms <lb />
Easy. <lb />
A TUBE IN HIS STOMACH. <lb />
Mr. Chas. W. Branch, the <lb />
whose misfortune in swallow- <lb />
large dose of last <lb />
winter, thereby causing a stricture <lb />
of the windpipe, and whose life <lb />
was several times despaired of, <lb />
returned last night from Atlanta <lb />
where he has been in the Grady <lb />
Hospital for months, restored to <lb />
health. Mr. Branch is still <lb />
to swallow- He can take <lb />
bat liquids and these only <lb />
through a tube in his stomach. <lb />
The tube has a stopper which he <lb />
when feeding time comes <lb />
and pours in a pint of soup, milk <lb />
or whatever fluid food he may <lb />
care to take- Mr. Branch weighs <lb />
more than he has for years, and <lb />
he feels perfectly well and strong. <lb />
Charlotte Observer. <lb />
SPACE HAS A E <lb />
Some people act as if they think- <lb />
it does not cost anything to put a <lb />
line of type in a newspaper. It <lb />
does, though, and if for the <lb />
fit of an individual, he should be <lb />
willing to pay for it. If no one <lb />
else pays for it, the owner of the <lb />
newspaper does. <lb />
Space in a newspaper is the <lb />
owner's stock in trade. He can <lb />
no more afford to give it away <lb />
than a grocer his groceries, or a <lb />
haberdasher his haberdashery, or <lb />
a baker his bakeries, or an <lb />
man his oysters- He has it <lb />
for rent, and he can no more <lb />
ford to furnish it free than a land- <lb />
lord can furnish rent <lb />
Times. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of the Superior <lb />
Court of Pitt County made at April <lb />
Term 1893 in a certain cause therein <lb />
pending, F. M. Davis vs Louisa <lb />
T. Lang ct ills., I will on Monday, <lb />
July 3rd. 1803, sell at public sale before <lb />
the Court House door in Greenville, to <lb />
the highest for cash, all the right <lb />
title and interest which J. Lang <lb />
deceased had at the time of bis death <lb />
in and to a certain piece or pieces of <lb />
land in Farmville township. Pitt county <lb />
that is to say a one-half undivided inter- <lb />
est in said tract of land, described as <lb />
follows. side of Little Content- <lb />
Creek, Beginning at gum on said <lb />
Creek and running North with S. G. <lb />
line to a pine on South prong <lb />
of Branch said corn- <lb />
; thence down with Mid Branch east <lb />
to Gideons corner <lb />
thence with said Ward's line to the Big <lb />
; thence up said Branch <lb />
with the meanderings thereof to a pine, <lb />
Bennett Field's cornier; thence with <lb />
said Fields line to the run of said Little <lb />
Creek thence with the <lb />
run of said Creek to the beginning, con- <lb />
six hundred and thirty acres <lb />
more or less. the event the said <lb />
of Robert J. Lang shall not sell <lb />
for a sufficient sum to pay off dis- <lb />
charge the amount due under a certain <lb />
mortgage executed by K. J. Lang and <lb />
wife to Albert B. recorded in <lb />
the Registers office of Pitt County in <lb />
book page et seq, I will on the <lb />
same day and at the game place and upon <lb />
the same terms sell the undivided one <lb />
half interest of Louisa T in said <lb />
tract of land. <lb />
This the 7th day of June, 1893. <lb />
ALEX. L. <lb />
Commissioner <lb />
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS <lb />
cures Dyspepsia, In- <lb />
digestion ft Debility . <lb />
DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS, <lb />
NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS. <lb />
NICE LINE of <lb />
AND PIECE GOODS FOR <lb />
MAKING MENS AND BOYS <lb />
SUITS, ALWAYS IN STOCK. <lb />
fl <lb />
HATS, SHOES, CROCKERY, <lb />
GLASSWARE. TINWARE, <lb />
i WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, <lb />
j HARDWARE, PLOWS AND <lb />
j FARMING UTENSILS, <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
Groceries, Flour a specialty. <lb />
line of FURNITURE <lb />
We have the largest and, <lb />
ever kept in our <lb />
; Consisting in part <lb />
Marble Top Walnut Suits, <lb />
Solid Oak Suits, Imitation Oak Suits, Imitation Walnut <lb />
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 line <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- We will try to give you <lb />
at all times. r <lb />
SPOOLS COTTON AT WHOLESALE <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
The J. L. Ballard home farm. Bea- <lb />
Dam township, adjoining the lands <lb />
of G T. Tyson and Cobb. A line <lb />
farm of about acres, with good build- <lb />
and adapted to corn, cotton and lo <lb />
A line marl bed. <lb />
A farm near and lying <lb />
mediately on the own- <lb />
ed by Caleb B. Tripp, acres of which <lb />
are cleared. Good neighbor- <lb />
hood, churches and a school within <lb />
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin- <lb />
farms <lb />
A fine farm of acres, three miles <lb />
from Farmville and miles from Green <lb />
ville, with large, substantial dwelling <lb />
and out houses, known as the L. P. <lb />
Beardsley home place, fine cotton land, <lb />
good clay subsoil, accessible marl. <lb />
A smaller farm adjoining the above <lb />
known as the Jones place, acres, <lb />
dwelling, barn and tenant house, land <lb />
good. <lb />
A farm of acres In town- <lb />
ship, about miles from <lb />
of the Singletary tract <lb />
Part of the Noah Joyner farm, <lb />
acres, adjoining the town of <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 Guilford ox. <lb />
ALSO TIMBER <lb />
A tract of about -100 acres near <lb />
the station, with cypress timber well <lb />
suited for railroad ties. <lb />
A tract of about acres in <lb />
township, near the Washington rail- <lb />
road, pine timber. <lb />
A tract of acres near Johnson s <lb />
Mills, pine cypress timber. <lb />
Apply to Wm. H. LONG, <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
-THE- <lb />
New Corned Herrings <lb />
Boxes C. It. Side Meat. <lb />
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb />
Flour, all grades <lb />
barrels Granulated Sugar, <lb />
barrels C. Sugar. <lb />
boxes Tobacco, <lb />
barrels Mills Snuff, <lb />
barrels Three Thistle Snuff. <lb />
barrels Gull Ax Snuff. <lb />
50.000 Luke <lb />
barrels Snuff, <lb />
s Cakes and Crackers, <lb />
barrels Stick Candy. <lb />
kegs Rand's Powder. <lb />
tons Shot, <lb />
c Bread <lb />
cases Star Lye, <lb />
barrels Apple Vinegar, <lb />
cases Gold Dust Washing Powder. <lb />
Full stock of nil other goods carried in my line. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
County. <lb />
L. C. Latham, Harry Skinner and A. <lb />
L. Blow, formerly partners as Latham, <lb />
Skinner Blow, In their own names <lb />
and in behalf of themselves and all <lb />
creditors of John A. Manning, <lb />
against <lb />
Charlotte Manning, executrix of <lb />
A. Manning, Si. A. Manning, Jr. <lb />
W. A. Manning, W. D. Manning, w. C. <lb />
Manning, E. D. Manning, B. R. White- <lb />
and Courtney Whitehurst his <lb />
wife, John and Florence <lb />
Edmundson his wife, G. B. <lb />
and Mary his Char- <lb />
Manning. <lb />
The above settee haying been com- <lb />
in this court on the I day of <lb />
Juno 1893 for a of the estate <lb />
of John A. Manning, deceased, under <lb />
Chapter of the Code of North Caro- <lb />
notice is hereby given to the <lb />
of the said John A. Manning to <lb />
appear before me, at my office in <lb />
town of Greenville, on or before the 7th <lb />
day of July and the evidence <lb />
of their claims. <lb />
14th day of June <lb />
E. A- <lb />
Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt Co. <lb />
fill FLAM <lb />
GREENVILLE, -Y. C. <lb />
Can still be found <lb />
at the Old <lb />
stand. <lb />
pared to do <lb />
FIRST-CLASS WORK <lb />
on anything in the <lb />
mm <lb />
Fine Vehicles Specialty <lb />
Repairing done prompt- <lb />
and in best manner <lb />
Farmers, 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 />
COOK STOVES, <lb />
PAINTS, OIL. <lb />
PLACE YOUR ORDERS for TO FLUES <lb />
S. E. PENDER CO., <lb />
JAMES <lb />
-Dealer In----- <lb />
General Merchandise, <lb />
Has exclusive sale of these celebrated <lb />
In Greenville, N. C. From the <lb />
factory of A Moore, the only <lb />
complete optical plant In the South, <lb />
Atlanta, Ga, W Peddlers arc not sup- <lb />
lied with those famous<lb />
Notice. <lb />
SUPERIOR COURT, <lb />
Pitt County. I <lb />
Jane as <lb />
burg Iron In her own <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, for a settlement <lb />
the estate of Fleming, <lb />
under chapter of the Code of North <lb />
Carolina, notice is hereby to the <lb />
creditors the said Fleming to <lb />
appear before me on or before the <lb />
day of July. 1893, file the evidences <lb />
of their claims. <lb />
This the 17th day of May, <lb />
K. A. <lb />
Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt Co. <lb />
If you feel weak <lb />
and all worn out take <lb />
IRON BITTERS<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017603_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
c, <lb />
he <lb />
Believes <lb />
And takes his <lb />
One Dollar gets <lb />
This Office for Job Printing <lb />
REV. N. HUGHES, D. D. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XII. <lb />
GREENVILLE PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY 1893. <lb />
NO. <lb />
Sketch of His Life Read by Maj. <lb />
Harding, in St. Paul's Church, <lb />
Sunday June nth, 1893. <lb />
H. <lb />
Rev. N. Colin Hushes, D- D- <lb />
at Upper Marion, Mont- <lb />
Co., March <lb />
boyhood years were spent <lb />
partly at the place of his birth <lb />
and partly in Penn. <lb />
He entered the University of <lb />
Pennsylvania at the age of <lb />
years and graduated third in the <lb />
class at the age of years. <lb />
While the University one <lb />
year before his his <lb />
father, John Hughes, died- <lb />
mediately after his graduation, <lb />
in feeble health, <lb />
especially from an affection of <lb />
the throat which continued <lb />
through life he came to <lb />
N- C, and lived with his brother, <lb />
Dr. Wayne Hughes, and <lb />
plied himself to the restoration of <lb />
his health with that unremitting <lb />
diligence with which ho ever dis- <lb />
charged everything he took in <lb />
hand to do. and repairing his <lb />
health to some degree, he went to <lb />
the Seminary New <lb />
York and graduated there about <lb />
the year 1844 and was ordained <lb />
Deacon along with the graduating <lb />
class. Bishop of <lb />
New York. to North <lb />
Carolina and engaged Mis- <lb />
work officiating at <lb />
in Wayne county, <lb />
Kinston in Lenoir <lb />
Chapel and in Pitt <lb />
county, and while officiating in <lb />
tho first St. Paul of <lb />
that parish was built. He was <lb />
advanced to the Priesthood <lb />
children generally but especially j his sufferings and weakness in- <lb />
fer the training of young men creased day by day. At first his <lb />
for the ministry. At this opening was great, but as the <lb />
of his school, he gathered to him end approached his pain <lb />
as students of the ministry, Ben- and when the end came he <lb />
Revs. N. S. Price, sank peacefully to sleep. On the <lb />
and Nut Harding, afternoon of Whit Sunday last, <lb />
about this time ho had the was laid to rest by loving <lb />
satisfaction to have his own sons , hands the Cemetery of Trinity <lb />
begin the preparation for the I Parish, <lb />
sacred office. After another short <lb />
sojourn in Pennsylvania he came <lb />
home and took ministerial charge <lb />
of St. Peters, Washington. Hero <lb />
he found the old church ashes <lb />
FACTS ARE STUBBORN. <lb />
Mr. J. A. Stevens Gives Facts and <lb />
Cites Authorities That Cannot be <lb />
Controverted. <lb />
Argus. <lb />
Editor April 26th, <lb />
1893, I sent to you for <lb />
an article containing my <lb />
ALLIANCE TESTIMONY. <lb />
Concord Times. <lb />
publish below a letter writ- <lb />
a of the congregation Mr w R of <lb />
using the Court House for a place , formerly editor of the <lb />
of worship. He immediately Homes, an Alliance paper, <lb />
took in hand the task of restoring to M,. Mies Q of New- <lb />
the church building. For ; ton. Thia letter <lb />
purpose he went North and that the action taken by tho last <lb />
his solicitations succeeded <lb />
raising a large part of the funds <lb />
necessary to put present St. <lb />
Peters, in condition for use- He <lb />
continued to serve that <lb />
until 1873, the <lb />
Rector now incumbent took <lb />
charge of St. Peters Parish. <lb />
Dr. Hughes then traveled <lb />
legislature in regard to the Alli- <lb />
charter was instituted by <lb />
members of the Alliance them- <lb />
selves, not by enemies of the <lb />
Alliance, as has been charged. <lb />
Alliances all over the State have <lb />
been passing resolutions con- <lb />
the legislature for its <lb />
over action, when here comes the Sec- j <lb />
the most of North Carolina to of Buncombe Alliance say <lb />
money for the establish- ; he knows personally that the I <lb />
of the permanent was taken at the request of <lb />
pal fund and was largely alone, Alliance- <lb />
mental in putting the upon men are responsible for it. How- <lb />
tho basis on which it stood at the ever, we believe the amendments <lb />
time of the setting off of the charter were right <lb />
of East Carolina ought to have been made. Tho <lb />
Dr. Hughes was tender- Alliance is a secret organization, <lb />
and accepted the position of and no one can deny now that it <lb />
Head Master of the Grammar is political its character. <lb />
School of the University of the The following is the letter <lb />
South. He assumed that office in <lb />
August of the same the <lb />
; spring of 187-3 at his own <lb />
j ho was empowered by the Dear Sir and Friend <lb />
j authorities of the University to In your letter of a re- <lb />
; North and solicit endowments date forwarded to me at <lb />
for that institution. While this place after some delay I take <lb />
j conference the fact that <lb />
was the case. <lb />
The statement in the <lb />
; Farmer that I was active in <lb />
securing the repeal of the <lb />
charter and voted for its re- <lb />
peal is false. There was a differ- <lb />
of opinion as to what ought <lb />
to be done, and upon the passage <lb />
of the bill I did not vote- In my <lb />
views upon the resolutions re-j former communication I say, first, <lb />
adopted by the Wayne that many of the Alliance <lb />
Alliance, also some j era last year were Third party <lb />
comments upon the action of the candidates. This cannot be de- <lb />
legislature in amending the if denied can be easily <lb />
of the Alliance. proven. <lb />
Since that time I have bee i j I say the lecturers were <lb />
roundly abused by the Caucasian j paid of the Alliance <lb />
Progressive Farmer, but the i funds. We turn to proceedings <lb />
principal reply to me was abuse. of State Alliance at Greensboro <lb />
The statement in my 8th, 10th and 1892, <lb />
to the trustees for return of <lb />
contributed to the fund, sever- <lb />
hundred have been received <lb />
this year. There is no provision <lb />
for return of contributions, except <lb />
on dissolution of State Alliance. <lb />
The trustee's bond would be re- <lb />
for any money so <lb />
Reaches the <lb />
By advertising in an <lb />
Therefore lie ct <lb />
he Reflector. <lb />
This Office for Job printing <lb />
D. C-, May <lb />
that raises the biggest howl i <lb />
is great many of the <lb />
lecturers of North Carolina last <lb />
year were third party candidates. <lb />
And still they were paid out of <lb />
the Alliance funds And <lb />
if I am not very much mistaken <lb />
Mr. Graham was called upon for <lb />
to help pay that and other <lb />
expenses of tho State <lb />
This was the charge made, and <lb />
the reply is a card signed by <lb />
Messrs. Alexander, Johnson, But- <lb />
others, saying that, <lb />
sum was appropriated or used <lb />
last year in tho interest of the <lb />
party, that no sum <lb />
was paid for lecturing after May <lb />
meeting of executive committee <lb />
or for other than legitimate ex- <lb />
of the <lb />
I now reiterate what I did say <lb />
Alliance lecturers in North <lb />
on page and find, among the <lb />
disbursements of the treasurer, <lb />
the lecturing <lb />
I say further, that Mr. Graham, <lb />
trustee of the Business Agency <lb />
fund, has been called upon for <lb />
to defray expenses of <lb />
and other expenses. <lb />
We turn again to proceeding of <lb />
1892, and on page we find that <lb />
the following resolution was <lb />
adopted <lb />
That the executive <lb />
committee of this State <lb />
authorized directed to <lb />
borrow for the use of this Alli- <lb />
from tho trustee of <lb />
the Business Agency fund, and to <lb />
repay the same from tho receipts <lb />
of the of secretary, treas- <lb />
and State Business Agent, <lb />
above necessary expenses; and <lb />
Rats Catching Flits <lb />
W Messenger. <lb />
A curious spectacle was witness <lb />
ed on Sunday by quite a number <lb />
of people who were attracted to <lb />
the windows of J. B. Hug <lb />
grocery store, on Market <lb />
turned. There are also j of two rats. <lb />
sometimes to have it used The was , of course. <lb />
the Rt. Rev. L. Ives, . <lb />
probably about the year 1346. In for While <lb />
a; sent upon this errand, at a wax- pleasure in giving you tho desired <lb />
1848 he married Adeline E. <lb />
Dr. Robert <lb />
from members of the information, especially as I am <lb />
He j University, he resigned tho Head j -i position to know tho facts in <lb />
Mastership and in the fall of the case. <lb />
1875 he was again at work the The State Alliance chatter was <lb />
Hams, daughter of <lb />
Williams of Pitt <lb />
then took up his residence m <lb />
Greenville, and after residing, .,.,., <lb />
there about a year, went to State, <lb />
Philadelphia and was for several Locating at Greensboro he did ; the investigation of many of the <lb />
j Missionary work in the leading in the State <lb />
of Durham, Company Shops, j including the Legislative Corn- <lb />
ham. and one or two of the order. Lawyers or <lb />
ether places tho country a v ; other outsiders hay- nothing to <lb />
cent thereto. Early 1876 he do with it. and know nothing <lb />
again retained to his old home at; about it, until the advice of some <lb />
and has dwelt there j of tho leading lawyers were con <lb />
continuously ever suited as to the legality of the bill <lb />
upon his return, he again as amended. The purpose in <lb />
applied himself to his favorite pro-1 changing the charter was to it <lb />
of a more thorough establish- so that any stockholder of the <lb />
of his church Agency Fund might ex <lb />
view both tho preparation of j his as to what <lb />
young men for tho ministry and disposition to make of tho amount <lb />
also the supply of Christian deposited, instead of being loft at <lb />
cation to all the youth both male <lb />
and female. Trinity School as <lb />
months assistant to Dr. <lb />
St. Pauls in that city. <lb />
In the year 1851 he was again <lb />
Greenville, Pitt county. <lb />
About this time, in addition to <lb />
work in Pitt he took min- <lb />
of Trinity Parish. <lb />
Parish, and St. Thomas, Bath <lb />
all in Beaufort It was <lb />
his ministry at Zion that the <lb />
church building now standing <lb />
there was erected- From Green- <lb />
ville ho moved to Chocowinity <lb />
about the 3-ear or here in con- <lb />
with his ministerial labors, <lb />
almost immediately founded the <lb />
first Trinity School and the hotter <lb />
advancement of this end, induced <lb />
the congregation of that Parish <lb />
to erect a good school building <lb />
hard by the little chapel on the <lb />
hill near which his mortal re- <lb />
mains now repose. This school <lb />
he continued to keep up, <lb />
until it one of tho <lb />
meat flourishing schools in the <lb />
eastern section of the State, draw- <lb />
a of its patron- <lb />
age from abroad and at one time, <lb />
numbering <lb />
pupils. In this school work he <lb />
was aided by employed assistants <lb />
one of whom was tho afterwards <lb />
the disposal of the State Alliance, <lb />
as would be the case at the ex- <lb />
at this tine, began with of five years which would <lb />
but a feeble flickering of life, but j be next August. Maj. Graham <lb />
by patient and careful nursing, j baa the amount of <lb />
gained enough strength to j vested mostly in State bonds <lb />
maintain a continuous existence which is conceded to be perfectly <lb />
to the present time with such use- secure, but the time having about <lb />
as God was pleased to expired for its future disposition <lb />
vouchsafe it. i it was thought best that the stock- <lb />
When he returned to holders should have a say in the <lb />
in 1876, Rev. Israel Hard- matter, so the charter was fixed <lb />
was in charge of Trinity purpose. las Secretary <lb />
Parish Dr. Hughes took mis- <lb />
work at Greenville and <lb />
Falkland, Pitt county, and at <lb />
Vanceboro, Craven county. As <lb />
these labors grew too much for <lb />
of county sent some <lb />
MOO to that and as they had <lb />
asked me to get it back- I took <lb />
part in securing the amendment <lb />
so that those who wish can have <lb />
last year were paid trustee is authorized to <lb />
and a great many of them on <lb />
were Third party <lb />
This I assert as the truth, and no I game j <lb />
man can deny it. Of the eight <lb />
names to the committee card, live <lb />
of them were candidates, four <lb />
Third party, one a Democrat. <lb />
Now let's see who has <lb />
They say, order of the ex- <lb />
committee <lb />
meeting last y <lb />
were withdrawn from,. <lb />
,,,,.,. , . ; without objection. Turning <lb />
the field, this being several weeks ,. <lb />
,. . . again to proceedings, page I <lb />
prior to the first start to organize . ,,. . <lb />
, . T ,. , , the request, <lb />
a new party. Lois see about;. ., , ,. <lb />
. T- , . ,. T . the made n to <lb />
that In March last year, Mr. J , ., , <lb />
, . . . . t- the amendment as per of <lb />
district lecturer. Dr. , , . in i <lb />
,. , delegates and other members <lb />
E. Person, county lecturer, ac-; , . , , . <lb />
ii ,, . r c. i was as the <lb />
Mr. A- L- Swinson, I, . . ,. <lb />
change in constitution as to <lb />
then secretary, canvassed <lb />
Again, I stated that, at the last <lb />
State meeting, President Butler <lb />
ruled that a reduction <lb />
mended by the committee in the <lb />
compensation allowed delegates <lb />
applied to the delegates attending <lb />
at the May ., . , ,. , ,., <lb />
,, ,, ,. the meeting of while <lb />
year all the Alliance . . Cr <lb />
rowed by Mr. Butler was given <lb />
as a cash fund in the hands of a <lb />
State business agent. Under the <lb />
conditions which it was <lb />
this is impossible, etc. If <lb />
any change is desired, I suggest <lb />
that the executive committee be <lb />
instructed to obtain authority by <lb />
law for the <lb />
The Progressive Farmer has <lb />
said that only thirteen <lb />
plied since the adjournment of <lb />
the legislature to the <lb />
amounts contributed by them re- <lb />
funded. Is it not strange that <lb />
the who, ac- <lb />
cording to the trustee's report do- <lb />
sired their money before they <lb />
could get it, do not call for it <lb />
now The truth is they are call- <lb />
it, are not getting it, <lb />
and the great reason of the cry <lb />
raised, of the throat to pub- <lb />
tho names of those who ask <lb />
for their money is that it is not on <lb />
hand to pay with. If the Pro <lb />
Farmer will promise to <lb />
print the letters, I will furnish <lb />
several from the trustee, written <lb />
since the adjournment of l he <lb />
legislature, saying, substance <lb />
DISEASES <lb />
Bi Bi Bi <lb />
Botanic Blood Balm <lb />
porting themselves the window j i It Cures m i <lb />
and a number of flies were die <lb />
panes, while the two rats were <lb />
having great sport by catching <lb />
and devouring the Hies. The rats <lb />
would slip up on tho Hies and <lb />
scoop them by a dexterous <lb />
movement of their paws. Their <lb />
aim was unerring, and they were <lb />
curiously watched by many <lb />
t A Household <lb />
all I <lb />
BLOOD and SKIN <lb />
A Little Girl's in Light, <lb />
house. <lb />
Mr. Mrs. keep. <lb />
of the Gov. at Sand <lb />
Beach, Mich, and arc blessed with a <lb />
daughter, font years Id. <lb />
she was taKen down with Measles, fol- <lb />
lowed with a dreadful cough and turn- <lb />
into a fever. Dot-tors a, home and <lb />
at Detroit treated her, in vain, she <lb />
grew until she was <lb />
mere of Then she <lb />
tried Dr. King's New and <lb />
after the use of two and a half bottles, <lb />
was completely cured. They say Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery is worth <lb />
weight In gold, yet you get a ti <lb />
bottle free at John L. <lb />
The Atlanta Herald says <lb />
of hard times this <lb />
country, but we don't know what <lb />
we are talking about. We shiver <lb />
that he t tho money, on,. <lb />
i j. -ii ii i I . is absolutely not <lb />
baud to pay with, that he will <lb />
, . , matter, <lb />
make some collections, and may i , , <lb />
i ii t t i ideal <lb />
be able to in June or July <lb />
with a financial duck ague when <lb />
the <lb />
And there is a good <lb />
of truth concealed about <lb />
these statements. Times not <lb />
,. ,, actual transportation expenses <lb />
county. Messrs. Mew-; , ,, . . ,. <lb />
y , t n i should apply to this meeting, <lb />
borne and Person would open tho I . , T a j u n <lb />
, ,,, ., ,. , c . land on find the follow <lb />
ball for the Alliance. Mr. . ,, ,. T ., ,, . <lb />
,, , ., J. M. <lb />
would close the with a long . . . , , <lb />
. . made a statement in regard to a <lb />
speech in favor a new party, , . ,. . <lb />
,. . ., loan made to President Butler by <lb />
would say all manner of , , . ,. . <lb />
. ,. . . . order of the executive committee. <lb />
against the Democratic <lb />
eloquent Bishop <lb />
Georgia. It was in connection <lb />
with this school work that he be- <lb />
to use his influence to raise <lb />
up young men for the ministry, a <lb />
work, which once began was tho <lb />
most fondly cherished object of <lb />
his ambition to tho day of his <lb />
death- <lb />
First the young men <lb />
whom he was instrumental <lb />
helping into the ministry were <lb />
the Revs. I. Harding, S- S- Bar- <lb />
Luther and Edward <lb />
Wooten. In the year 1857 he re- <lb />
moved to Pittsboro, Chatham <lb />
county, whither also the two <lb />
young men last mentioned re- <lb />
paired to continue their course <lb />
of instruction at the feet of their <lb />
typical Gamaliel. Here M. M. <lb />
Marshal now the Rev. Pr. Mar- <lb />
of Raleigh was added to <lb />
their list. The three stayed with <lb />
him until prepared to enter <lb />
College, Conn. <lb />
After a residence of nearly three <lb />
years in Pittsboro, he returned <lb />
for a short while to <lb />
but in the fall of the same year, <lb />
he went to <lb />
in Henderson county, N. C, and <lb />
took of the church in that <lb />
town and Calvary ch a few <lb />
miles in tho country- <lb />
He was in <lb />
the fall of 1865 when he again <lb />
came back to his old home in <lb />
Beaufort county and again open- <lb />
ed his school for the training of <lb />
of his strength, and an opportunity the money refunded or let it re- <lb />
was offered to turn over parts of <lb />
it to others, he relinquished first <lb />
Vanceboro, then Falkland and <lb />
Greenville but the meantime <lb />
had assumed about the year 1883 <lb />
or 1884 charge of Trinity Parish, <lb />
Beaufort county. After giving <lb />
up Greenville he became inter- <lb />
in the establishment of mis- <lb />
in the vicinity of Trinity <lb />
Parish these missions four or five <lb />
in number were for the most part <lb />
Sunday schools and Lay services <lb />
supplied and served by students <lb />
of Trinity School, but received <lb />
from Dr. Hughes himself regular <lb />
monthly services. During the <lb />
last year owing largely to the <lb />
stringency of tho times, the bur- <lb />
den of sustaining the school has <lb />
become exceedingly great, and <lb />
Dr. Hughes was full of plans for <lb />
putting into operation some <lb />
means by which the maintenance <lb />
of the school might be better as- <lb />
sured. These plans he had <lb />
lated and was expecting to lay <lb />
them before the Council at Wash- <lb />
but went to his rest before <lb />
that Council convened. <lb />
For a number of years Dr- <lb />
health has been failing <lb />
but enough to deter him <lb />
long at from his regular <lb />
duties. <lb />
On Wednesday the 10th of May <lb />
he was taken with his last sick- <lb />
main as they desire- Many abuse <lb />
tho Legislature for its action in <lb />
the matter but I am sure no true <lb />
Alliance in.-in can object to every <lb />
citizen doing as he chooses with <lb />
his own money. In the Senate <lb />
the bill as amended was signed <lb />
by John W. a P. P., <lb />
and tho other voted <lb />
with the Democratic <lb />
in favor of the bill to which I <lb />
was an eye witness. Gen- Vance <lb />
is as true an as any- <lb />
one in the State, but he had no <lb />
more to do with the formation of <lb />
the amendment than many other <lb />
in and out of the <lb />
Legislature, who firmly believe in <lb />
the original principles of the or- <lb />
including myself- <lb />
I fear there are few politicians <lb />
in North Carolina who are <lb />
of losing preferment <lb />
through the latter day embellish- <lb />
is the there is so <lb />
much kicking at the amendment <lb />
of the charter. Yon may use this <lb />
to suit yourself. <lb />
Tour friend, <lb />
W, F, <lb />
Well do I their <lb />
meeting with Falling Crook Alli- <lb />
Messrs. and; <lb />
Poison made very short speeches, <lb />
, . . o m W. H- Worth ordered to <lb />
followed by Mr- My <lb />
worst political enemy now <lb />
strongest said to me, <lb />
after Mr. Swinson closed his re- <lb />
marks, if he was allowed to make <lb />
such political speeches as that in <lb />
the Alliance ho would ruin the <lb />
order. <lb />
Right here I would call Mr. <lb />
attention to the fact, <lb />
that ho closed his canvass in <lb />
Wayne that he might be in Kin- <lb />
I do not intend to say that the a, . t L . , <lb />
. , J good, put they are infinitely bet <lb />
trustees has squandered any part t ., y . <lb />
. . i V Americana than with <lb />
of tho fund, I of ,, , <lb />
. ,. ., , people. Idleness, and <lb />
reason for making the charge, i . . <lb />
t . ,. . , , , ,, , to a good man <lb />
I presume that he has held the , . , . <lb />
, , , . ,. , , enjoy thorn, hot there <lb />
fund and paid it out as directed. . , <lb />
r not a great many hungry <lb />
The report of the trustee also pie In tins country, in proportion <lb />
shows that constitution to population, and tho most of <lb />
and charter of the there these could get bread foe them- <lb />
was no power to authorize and their dependents if <lb />
withdrawal of the money work for it. and <lb />
and that this power could see few persons going about <lb />
only be granted by the without clothes <lb />
v to hide <lb />
legislature Several their nakedness. If, instead <lb />
wore for the <lb />
Of <lb />
The best in the world for <lb />
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt <lb />
Fever Sores, Teller, Chapped Hand, <lb />
Corns, and all Skin <lb />
and positively cares Piles, or <lb />
pay required. It is guaranteed to <lb />
at first not alarming, it be- perfect satisfaction, or money <lb />
9.3 ran at. <lb />
Price cents Tor sale at <lb />
came more more A Start. <lb />
at th organization of the <lb />
party for Lenoir <lb />
which was either the last Sat- <lb />
in March or the first <lb />
day in April. A few days <lb />
holding forth at Falling Creek <lb />
Mr- Swinson organized the <lb />
party at Providence is- <lb />
sued a call for a county mass <lb />
meeting be held in Goldsboro <lb />
April 16th, for tho purpose of <lb />
completing the <lb />
Mr- Butler, State president, <lb />
fearing Mr- Swinson would get <lb />
ahead of him, intercepted Mr. <lb />
Swinson. and held an <lb />
meeting in the court that <lb />
day- After delivering his Alli- <lb />
address he gave us reasons <lb />
why we should stick to tho Demo- <lb />
party, called all who <lb />
would attend the coming Demo- <lb />
conventions and support <lb />
their nominees to stand and <lb />
nearly every one in the crowded <lb />
court room stood pp. Mr. <lb />
son five or six of his follow <lb />
who were honest in their con- <lb />
did not rise. <lb />
We all the Swinson <lb />
circular denouncing Mr. Butler. <lb />
In a very abort time Mr. Swinson <lb />
did organize the party <lb />
for the county. Thus see the <lb />
new party organized in <lb />
and Lenoir in April. It is to be. <lb />
presumed the balance the <lb />
Slate was operated upon in the <lb />
Mine way. At least the Butler <lb />
through W. II. Worth for <lb />
I On motion the amount of <lb />
wan remitted to Brother Butler, <lb />
and the note hold against him by <lb />
can- <lb />
It will be seen page that <lb />
in addition to making President I <lb />
Butler a present of as above <lb />
stated, ho was paid his full salary j <lb />
and was allowed for j <lb />
expenses. The items making the-l <lb />
total of expenses are not given. <lb />
It has been said that the amend-1 <lb />
to the charter originated <lb />
the evil minds of the legislators, <lb />
that there were no reasons to be <lb />
i urged their favor, that there <lb />
was simply a desire to injure the <lb />
Alliance, and the amendment <lb />
most complained of is that of <lb />
lowing the funds contributed by <lb />
a member to be withdrawn. <lb />
Those who say Ibis do not know <lb />
the facts, or knowing thorn will <lb />
not Rive them to the people, <lb />
They are in. sq <lb />
far as the name is synonymous <lb />
third party and no <lb />
further. <lb />
I say that the records of the <lb />
show a necessity for <lb />
change, in that they show <lb />
extravagance in expenses of <lb />
that many de- <lb />
sired to withdraw their funds and <lb />
not do so- <lb />
On page of proceedings of <lb />
I find a report of the executive <lb />
committee signed by Mess. Alex- <lb />
and from which <lb />
I take this extract- <lb />
committee would <lb />
mend the change of the lecture <lb />
system. It is more expensive <lb />
than any we heretofore had, <lb />
and the good work accomplished <lb />
is not in proportion to its <lb />
This shows that a change in the <lb />
system is desirable, that the ex- <lb />
increased, and, hat re- <lb />
are not proportion to <lb />
g so much about hard times, <lb />
money contributed by thorn to would all brace up look- <lb />
refunded, there was no power alive, the times would improve <lb />
the charter constitution amazingly. <lb />
to refund this money, and under <lb />
these circumstances the What every community needs <lb />
tore, following the suggestion of diversified industries to <lb />
trustee, comes in and amends diversified employments to the <lb />
the charter that money laboring people. There are <lb />
might be withdrawn. Is this of boys and girls in this <lb />
a great crime who would the <lb />
Many of tho men who wished opportunity to go into a factory <lb />
to withdraw their money paid to from three to seven <lb />
it in believing that it was being a week. Farm work is <lb />
to a non political or to females. They are not <lb />
for good ends. They to do farm work, <lb />
now believe it was being used ca easily do tho work re <lb />
against their for of thorn in a knitting mill <lb />
cal purposes. I think they were cotton factory not only <lb />
to their money, and it is support themselves but aid their <lb />
strange to me that there should j Parents. i establishing <lb />
be a difference of opinion enterprises not <lb />
this. You and I are I j helping to build up com- <lb />
you squandering the which they are <lb />
money for bad purposes- If there but furnishing <lb />
is no way for mo to get my employment to the poor <lb />
ought not to j p , factories not <lb />
In addition to this, of. nature of <lb />
ti u i . . , Business enterprise but <lb />
chairman of the <lb />
committee of the <lb />
told several members of the <lb />
that the change ought to j <lb />
be made. I have written more <lb />
than I intended and would write j <lb />
more, but I wish my to j <lb />
read, as it is a reply to personal i <lb />
attacks mo- <lb />
In plain language, we would call <lb />
this extravagance- page <lb />
find trustee's report, from <lb />
which I make <lb />
art frequent application <lb />
The <lb />
May after publishing the <lb />
card of Messrs. Alexander, Mew <lb />
others, says till <lb />
papers that have Ste- <lb />
letter, the Observer <lb />
ed, are to publish the <lb />
above denial, or will be <lb />
open to the charge of treating the <lb />
and individuals unfair- <lb />
By the same rule I call <lb />
upon that paper and Tho <lb />
to publish this <lb />
cation in full. I do dot reply to <lb />
any of their personal flings, be <lb />
canst- it it below tho plane of leg- <lb />
discussion, and because <lb />
they from the editors of <lb />
the and Progressive <lb />
Farmer. Very truly, <lb />
Jno- A. Stevens-<lb />
CHILD BIRTH <lb />
MADE EASY <lb />
J is I scientific- <lb />
ally prepared Liniment, every <lb />
of recognized value and in <lb />
constant use by the pro- <lb />
These ingredients are com- <lb />
in a manner hitherto unknown<lb />
WILL DO all that is claimed for <lb />
it AND MORE It Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb />
Life of Mother and Child; Book <lb />
. to mailed FREE, con- <lb />
valuable information and <lb />
voluntary testimonials. <lb />
Sent by of price 11.60 <lb />
CO., AW nil, <lb />
SOLD BY ALL <lb />
Deserving <lb />
We to say to our Hint <lb />
for years we have wiling Dr. King's <lb />
New Discovery tor Dr. <lb />
King's New Life Pills, <lb />
and Electric Killers, mil have <lb />
sell well, <lb />
or have universal <lb />
We. do not hesitate to <lb />
t every time, stand <lb />
ready to refund the price, if <lb />
results do not follow I heir <lb />
use. These remedies have won their <lb />
great popularity purely oil their merits. <lb />
Drug Store-. <lb />
form malignant SKIN ERUPTION, be- <lb />
sides being efficacious In toning up the <lb />
system and restoring the constitute. <lb />
hen Impaired from any cam. <lb />
almost supernatural healing properties i <lb />
lustily us In guaranteeing cars, II <lb />
directions lo <lb />
FREE <lb />
lowed. <lb />
Mb <lb />
BLOOD CO., Atlanta. a.<lb />
Notice. <lb />
I desire to announce to my friends and <lb />
I lie public generally that I have opened <lb />
an for myself just <lb />
my residence and on the old Dr. <lb />
Blow lot where I can be found at <lb />
time. <lb />
FRANK W. M. D. <lb />
I C. <lb />
Jas. Li Fleming. Andrew <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
Prompt attention to business. <lb />
at Tackier Murphy's old stand. <lb />
J L. BLOW <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
in all the Courts. <lb />
I. A. B. F. TYSON <lb />
t TYSON, <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
Prompt attention given to coll <lb />
HARRY <lb />
SKINNER, <lb />
aw, <lb />
N. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
R E K N V L L E, N C. <lb />
nouns. Collections a <lb />
specialty. <lb />
GENERAL <lb />
AND If- <lb />
Potatoes, Eggs, <lb />
Oysters, Fish, Caviar and <lb />
All Country Products, <lb />
Dons, Norfolk, V <lb />
Batman Son ft Co,, <lb />
OLD DOMINION LIE <lb />
TAR RIVER <lb />
Steamers leave Washington for Green- <lb />
ville and Tarboro touching at all land- <lb />
on Tar River Monday, <lb />
and Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at A A. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
Greenville <lb />
These departures are subject of <lb />
water on Tar River. <lb />
Connecting at Washington with steam- <lb />
of The Norfolk, Newborn mid Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore <lb />
New York and <lb />
Shippers should goods <lb />
marked via Dominion <lb />
New York. from Phil <lb />
Norfolk A <lb />
steamboat from <lb />
more. Miners from <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. SON. <lb />
Washington N. O <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent, <lb />
N C- <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK STORE <lb />
FARMERS AND <lb />
their year's supplies will <lb />
their Interest our prices before <lb />
else where Our stock Is com <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, <lb />
RICE, TEA, <lb />
at Lowest <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF ft <lb />
we buy direct from <lb />
you to buy at ape A d <lb />
stock of <lb />
and W. <lb />
YOUNG- <lb />
a I a for CASH,<lb />
GREENVILLE,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017603_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Editor Proprietor <lb />
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 21st, 1893. <lb />
a- second-class mail matter. <lb />
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb />
I The is per <lb />
Bates.- One <lb />
one year, one-halt column one year <lb />
; one-quarter column one <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 <lb />
Column as reading items, cents per <lb />
line each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad <lb />
and Notices <lb />
and Sales, <lb />
Summons to etc., will <lb />
be charged for at legal rates and must <lb />
DE PAID FOR IN ADVANCE. <lb />
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb />
for any length of time, can be <lb />
made by application to the office either <lb />
in person or by <lb />
Copy tor Advertisements and <lb />
all changes of should be <lb />
Sanded in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb />
mornings, in order to receive prompt- in <lb />
day following. <lb />
DETERMINED NEVER TO BE <lb />
SATISFIED. <lb />
It is strange how widely foolish <lb />
men become when they begin to <lb />
practice hypocrisy. They <lb />
tend that they want this, that, and <lb />
tho other, for this and that <lb />
son, and when they find they are <lb />
to get what they pretend to <lb />
want they shift fronts and say <lb />
these things will not accomplish <lb />
the desired results, or they charge <lb />
those who are to give them <lb />
their pretended wishes as being <lb />
governed by sinister motives. <lb />
They are false in every <lb />
and become chronic <lb />
for no higher purpose than <lb />
to serve their own personal whims. <lb />
We have a fair example of this <lb />
in those who are now pleased to <lb />
style themselves Third party per- <lb />
About two or three <lb />
years ago they clamored for <lb />
free coinage of silver and claimed <lb />
this would be a panacea for all <lb />
the evils under which they pro- <lb />
fessed to groan. When they had <lb />
occasion to believe that the Dem- <lb />
party was about to be- <lb />
come a unit in demanding this <lb />
they said through their leader, <lb />
Col. Polk, that this was all right <lb />
but it would not answer the <lb />
pose and would not give the <lb />
needed relief- <lb />
They also had a plank in their <lb />
platform demanding tariff <lb />
but as soon as they found <lb />
that if the Democratic party got <lb />
in power they would give this they <lb />
said this was not sufficient and <lb />
would only be effective when you <lb />
did what they know never could <lb />
be done, abolish the tariff alto- <lb />
Butler boldly <lb />
said this in his speeches about <lb />
months ago and when <lb />
asked how are you going to raise <lb />
revenue to run the government if <lb />
you wipe out entirely the tariff, <lb />
flippantly retorted, by an <lb />
income This they have <lb />
harangued for ever <lb />
since. This most assuredly with <lb />
free coinage of silver, and tariff <lb />
reduction would satisfy even their <lb />
most extreme desires- But what <lb />
do we see when the indications <lb />
are that an income tax will be a <lb />
part of the Democratic plan of <lb />
financial reform- The great <lb />
in his poisoned <lb />
sheet, known and recognized as <lb />
the Caucasian, warns his follow- <lb />
the to beware of <lb />
Greeks bearing gifts. He is get- <lb />
ting ready to boldly attack the <lb />
very thing he has been clamoring <lb />
for for twelve months, when he <lb />
sees it is about to come- Alas <lb />
for the folly of such sore <lb />
head cranks as this great apostle <lb />
of Third in North Caro- <lb />
We had thought that even <lb />
he might hold his in <lb />
at the prospect of his great <lb />
hobby, an income tax, and yet we <lb />
quote these words from his issue <lb />
of June 8th income tax is <lb />
right, but it will not correct the <lb />
financial evils in your financial <lb />
system. It does not go at the <lb />
root of the trouble- It simply <lb />
clips off the ends of the over- <lb />
grown twigs, while the evil one <lb />
will continue to do its deadly <lb />
If free coinage of silver, <lb />
tariff reform, and an income tax <lb />
are not what they want why in <lb />
the name of common sense and <lb />
common decency have they been <lb />
demanding these things from the <lb />
very incipiency of their party <lb />
They started out to deceive, and <lb />
all of these pretensions are false- <lb />
don't want the people <lb />
tied- Their only mission is to <lb />
arouse dissatisfaction and thereby <lb />
serve their own hellish personal <lb />
ends. If these leaders were <lb />
lowed to formulate in tablet form <lb />
every demand they desired, so <lb />
that they did not put them in fat <lb />
places, and the Democratic party <lb />
were to give every expressed wish <lb />
without dotting an i or crossing a <lb />
t, they would still howl and growl <lb />
as a pack of Cars and say that <lb />
name of hum is of the <lb />
with them any way t What- <lb />
ever it may be here is the <lb />
put me. b, in the <lb />
United States Senate and the <lb />
lights in the next best places <lb />
and the people will flourish as a <lb />
green bay tree. From which, <lb />
good Lord deliver us and our <lb />
people- <lb />
The Democratic press of North <lb />
Carolina are strongly advocating <lb />
all of these desired reforms, the <lb />
prospect is that the present Dem- <lb />
administration will give <lb />
us a if not all of them, and <lb />
nothing is more utterly foolish <lb />
than that sensible men shall fol- <lb />
low such manifest demagoguery <lb />
as is being practiced by these so- <lb />
called reform papers- Look <lb />
through tho issue of the Caucasian. <lb />
from which we have quoted and <lb />
note now every word said against <lb />
the Republican party and see <lb />
how- large a book you will have. <lb />
This is the party which has in- <lb />
the evils from which we <lb />
are endeavoring to free ourselves <lb />
and no abuse of this shows the <lb />
purpose of the reform press. The <lb />
only hope of this country is <lb />
through the Democratic party, <lb />
and the sooner our people learn <lb />
this, cease to follow these <lb />
and bend every energy <lb />
to the accomplishment unitedly <lb />
of the relief now in sight the more <lb />
speedily will it come. <lb />
ALAS FOR THE RARITY OF POP- <lb />
CHARITY I <lb />
Editor Reflector are <lb />
some blatant and <lb />
the public know who they are, <lb />
going over the country instilling <lb />
communistic doctrines into the <lb />
minds of a certain class of <lb />
people, who catch <lb />
some euphonious phrase as <lb />
rich are growing richer and the <lb />
poor and accept it as Ea <lb />
complete and truthful exposition <lb />
of the present industrial <lb />
Those, who by some misfortune <lb />
or bad management have involved <lb />
themselves in debt, and have been <lb />
burdened by unjust and unwise <lb />
legislation by the party that is <lb />
now happily driven from power, <lb />
and easily led astray the <lb />
mouthy howlers, who <lb />
are using them . as cat paws to <lb />
accomplish their o m selfish as- <lb />
These self-constituted apostles <lb />
of reform have been discarded by <lb />
the progressive element of society <lb />
and are now seeking to ingratiate <lb />
themselves into the favor of the <lb />
ignorant and prejudiced by tell- <lb />
them of imaginary hardships <lb />
and unfair measures forced upon <lb />
them by the men, that <lb />
their hard earnings are filched <lb />
from them, that the harder they <lb />
strive the poorer they get, that <lb />
the price of farm products has <lb />
ceased to be governed by the law <lb />
of supply and demand, that an <lb />
bale crop of cotton will <lb />
be worth as much per as a <lb />
bale crop, and that the <lb />
officeholders have become their <lb />
masters instead of their servants. <lb />
They have listened to this cry <lb />
of the political hypocrites until <lb />
their reason has become <lb />
their sense of justice de- <lb />
moralized, and many of them have <lb />
become sour, discontented and <lb />
prone to magnify the evils of the <lb />
situation, working them into the <lb />
belief that matters are growing <lb />
worse instead of better. <lb />
All well informed men know, <lb />
that while there may be a grain <lb />
of truth in some of these charges, <lb />
they come far short of being ab- <lb />
true Public servants <lb />
were never more keenly <lb />
and did so much labor for the <lb />
salaries they receive in any for- <lb />
mer period of our history. The <lb />
laboring classes are to-day enjoy- <lb />
comforts and luxuries, which <lb />
the wealthy did not enjoy and <lb />
could not procure years ago. Their <lb />
condition, for a century back, has <lb />
steadily improved. Hours of la- <lb />
have become shorter, rates of <lb />
wages have increased, purchasing <lb />
power of earnings has been great- <lb />
enhanced, homes of the poor <lb />
have become more sanitary and <lb />
cheerful and every individual has <lb />
all the personal liberty any <lb />
man being could desire, who <lb />
keeps within the bounds of de- <lb />
and of law. <lb />
In their tirade against <lb />
social conditions, these so- <lb />
and populists, whatever <lb />
they are, aim their shafts of <lb />
and sarcasm at those mainly <lb />
who have accumulated wealth, <lb />
seemingly forgetful of the fact, <lb />
that the class, who are in the <lb />
most prosperous circumstances, <lb />
are those who have, in most in- <lb />
stances, acquired it by their fore- <lb />
sight, prudence and energy, and <lb />
belong to the laboring class them- <lb />
selves. Instead of being an in- <lb />
upon the public, as these <lb />
chronic grumblers would make <lb />
their discontented hearers be- <lb />
they are the real benefactors <lb />
of the poor. In planting new in- <lb />
and thus providing op- <lb />
for the employment of <lb />
those who are dependent upon <lb />
their daily labor for their daily <lb />
bread, they are doing more to aid <lb />
humanity and to build up waste <lb />
places, than the greedy growlers <lb />
who prate about inequality of <lb />
wealth and its distribution- <lb />
With holy horror and high <lb />
sounding phrases of rhetoric they <lb />
are wont to contrast the condition <lb />
of the capitalist, in their stately <lb />
castles, and the poverty stricken <lb />
abodes of the poor, utterly <lb />
the plain truth, that the <lb />
money spent in the building of <lb />
the castles goes into the pockets <lb />
of the brick mason, the hod car- <lb />
carpenter, architect, the <lb />
tapestry worker and every other <lb />
class laborer represented in <lb />
their In thousands of <lb />
instances, enterprises of the kind <lb />
alluded to have been a God-send <lb />
-I <lb />
pangs of hunger and to clothe <lb />
and shelter those dependent upon <lb />
them- <lb />
So far as the distribution of <lb />
wealth is concerned it is a well <lb />
known fact that it is constantly <lb />
becoming more equally <lb />
ed in America than in almost any <lb />
other nation on the face of the <lb />
globe. If country is so op- <lb />
unfair and even as <lb />
these dyspeptic blowpipes would <lb />
have us believe, why is it that <lb />
immigrant ships are kept busy <lb />
transporting foreigners from <lb />
every clime under the to our <lb />
shores An eminent writer <lb />
The inequality among men is <lb />
not so much that of money as <lb />
mental capacity. We all know <lb />
that many, who now manage and <lb />
direct great industries and enter- <lb />
prises were once common labor- <lb />
Their success is not due to <lb />
money or social caste, but to <lb />
brains. Material conditions are <lb />
not so unequal as we are wont to <lb />
suppose. All men, with few ex- <lb />
start equal in life. <lb />
They come into the world naked, <lb />
and are all slaves to the <lb />
ties of their environments. No <lb />
artificial device can make them <lb />
equally strong, fleet and capable ; <lb />
and when you handicap the swift <lb />
and thrifty you lower the standard <lb />
and retard <lb />
That is just what the reform <lb />
leaders are doing, trying to tear <lb />
down instead of building up. <lb />
They loudly proclaim that the <lb />
toilers, wage earners of the land <lb />
are oppressed, that farming does <lb />
not pay, Ac, and many an honest, <lb />
industrious man is discouraged, <lb />
restless and dissatisfied with his <lb />
lot and ready to wander off in <lb />
search of strange gods. Their <lb />
press, too, while pretending to <lb />
teach the people economic truths <lb />
are in reality filling the minds <lb />
and hearts of their readers with <lb />
hatred for their government and <lb />
suspicion against all in authority- <lb />
The enlightened, progressive <lb />
and patriotic journalists of the <lb />
country have used all their ability <lb />
and skill to counteract the evil <lb />
tendencies of such pernicious in- <lb />
and they will, let hope, <lb />
continue to apply the lancet to <lb />
these inflated until <lb />
such an shall take <lb />
place as will lower them to their <lb />
own level. R- W. J. <lb />
To Those Who Planted the Eastern <lb />
Pride Tobacco <lb />
I have been informed that a <lb />
number of farmers in the county <lb />
who obtained the Eastern Pride <lb />
tobacco seed from Joyner <lb />
last fall have recently be- <lb />
come very much dissatisfied with <lb />
the kind of tobacco because it is <lb />
buttoning too early and <lb />
pally because it is alleged that I <lb />
have said that it was an inferior <lb />
kind of tobacco and that Mr. Ed- <lb />
wards would not plant it this <lb />
year. I wish to say that I have <lb />
never made any such a statement <lb />
Mr. Edwards, it is true, did not <lb />
plant any of that particular kind <lb />
this year but it was not because <lb />
it was an inferior kind of tobacco <lb />
but because it was lighter weight <lb />
tobacco, and in justice to Mr. Joy- <lb />
the successor of Joyner <lb />
I want to say that I <lb />
had six acres of this kind last year <lb />
and the highest price that I ob- <lb />
for any tobacco was for this <lb />
kind and should continue to plant <lb />
it if I could raise as much to the <lb />
acre. Mr. Edwards says he can <lb />
cure it as white as he wants it <lb />
and the only objection that I have <lb />
ever heard against it was that it <lb />
would not make as much to the <lb />
acre as the Hester. I am impress- <lb />
ed that if the people would wait <lb />
until this tobacco is topped and <lb />
see how it develops they will be <lb />
much better pleased with it. The <lb />
recent rainy weather has caused <lb />
all kinds of tobacco to grow up <lb />
spindling. <lb />
This with the fact of its slow <lb />
development before it is topped <lb />
has brought about in my opinion <lb />
the recent dissatisfaction- <lb />
E- A. Mo ye. <lb />
in the European demand for <lb />
gold. <lb />
The Government has lost in <lb />
actual cash, according to <lb />
figures, in carrying <lb />
out the provisions of the Sherman <lb />
silver law, nearly re- <lb />
presenting the difference between <lb />
the amount paid for the silver now <lb />
stored in the Treasury vaults and <lb />
its pros selling price. If it <lb />
really had to be sold at once the <lb />
loss would probably be <lb />
greater because of tho further <lb />
depreciation in price that would <lb />
follow such a large quantity of <lb />
silver on the market. <lb />
Among the . consular appoint- <lb />
made this week was that <lb />
of Bennington R. of New <lb />
Jersey, to be Consul at Sheffield, <lb />
England, in place of <lb />
Folsom, resigned- Mr. Folsom <lb />
who has held the u since <lb />
his appointment early in the first <lb />
Cleveland administration, is a <lb />
cousin of Mrs. Cleveland's and as <lb />
he figured in all the <lb />
republican papers as proof that <lb />
President Cleveland was not in <lb />
earnest when he declared himself <lb />
opposed to nepotism- Wonder <lb />
what those same fellows will say <lb />
now that Mr. Folsom has <lb />
The chances are <lb />
that they will ignore it entirely <lb />
and say nothing. <lb />
Secretary has, in one <lb />
respect, a long lead of all the <lb />
heads of departments- Since <lb />
taking charge of the Treasury he <lb />
has replaced more than Re- <lb />
publican officials, outside the <lb />
classified service, with good <lb />
Democrats- <lb />
Democratic Congressmen, after <lb />
a hard and stubborn fight, have <lb />
succeeded in convincing Post- <lb />
master General that his <lb />
rule against the removal of Re- <lb />
publican fourth-class postmasters <lb />
who have served four years or <lb />
more, unless charges are filed <lb />
against them, is a bad one, and it <lb />
will be recalled and all <lb />
cans who have been in office four <lb />
years or more will be replaced by <lb />
Democrats just as fast as they can <lb />
be got at in Mr- Maxwell's office. <lb />
A letter received by Mr- Cleve- <lb />
land this week furnishes <lb />
proof, if proof were needed, <lb />
of the wisdom of the establish- <lb />
in the Pension Bureau of a <lb />
Board of Revision, the sole duty <lb />
of which is to go over all the pen- <lb />
that have been granted <lb />
the law of 1890 and deter- <lb />
mine whether they were granted <lb />
in accordance with a proper con- <lb />
of that law. The writer <lb />
of this letter, Mr- J. M- Burnett, <lb />
is an ex of the office, who <lb />
voluntarily resigned the <lb />
last administration because he <lb />
could not conscientiously take <lb />
part in carrying out <lb />
He tells the President of a <lb />
large number of pensions illegal- <lb />
granted, and gives names, <lb />
dates, and the number of the <lb />
so that his statements <lb />
may be easily verified. He says <lb />
that thousands of pensions have <lb />
been illegally granted, and that <lb />
they are not confined to cases in <lb />
which the law was wrongfully <lb />
constructed, but include an <lb />
number granted in direct <lb />
violation of law. Mr. Burnett <lb />
concludes by expressing the be- <lb />
lief that at least a year <lb />
can be saved by a thorough and <lb />
rigid purging and revision of the <lb />
pension rolls. <lb />
Sad and Gloomy <lb />
Weak and <lb />
Gave Strength <lb />
Perfectly Cured. <lb />
Dr. J. K. <lb />
Birmingham, Alabama. <lb />
not words enough to my <lb />
thanks for the great benefits received from a <lb />
few of Hood's Sarsaparilla. I was <lb />
weak, and It made me strong; I was a <lb />
tic, and It cored me; I was sad and gloomy, and <lb />
It made me cheerful and hopeful. And last, <lb />
though not least, It made me an ardent and <lb />
Hood's Cures <lb />
working democrat All who hare taken <lb />
Sarsaparilla with my advice, report good re- <lb />
I gladly recommend It to all <lb />
J. R White, m. D., Birmingham, Ala. <lb />
V, B. It yon decide to take Hood's Sap- <lb />
do not be Induced to buy any other <lb />
Instead. Insist upon HOOD'S. <lb />
Hood's Pills are the best family cathartic <lb />
and effective. Try a box. coats, <lb />
these things do not strike at the the working men, whereby <lb />
the evil- What in were enabled to allay <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular Correspondent <lb />
Washington June 17,1803- <lb />
President Cleveland is deeply <lb />
interested in the efforts that are <lb />
being made to ascertain if the <lb />
carelessness of any person was <lb />
responsible for the horrible <lb />
in Ford's old which <lb />
killed and injured sixty-odd <lb />
clerks in the Records and Pen- <lb />
office of the War Depart- <lb />
although he has wisely re- <lb />
from taking any action <lb />
that might be considered as inter- <lb />
with the <lb />
now engaged in <lb />
that task. Great pressure is g <lb />
brought to bear on him to <lb />
pend or remove Col. <lb />
the army officer who is at the <lb />
head of that office, and upon <lb />
whom a great many people are <lb />
disposed to place the blame, but <lb />
Mr. Cleveland's idea of fair play <lb />
is such that not probable that <lb />
he will take any action until there <lb />
is more tangible evidence of Col. <lb />
guilt than public <lb />
clamor for making him a scape- <lb />
goat. If he be guilty surely that <lb />
fact can hardly escape the coroner <lb />
jury now investigating and the <lb />
army court of inquiry which will <lb />
take the matter at the close of <lb />
the inquest. <lb />
The improvement in the <lb />
situation has been very mark- <lb />
ed during the last few days, and <lb />
Treasury officials and others who <lb />
keep close watch on financial <lb />
fairs believe that the turn has <lb />
come in the flow of gold abroad <lb />
and that the situation will con- <lb />
to improve. It is certain <lb />
that the gold in the Treasury is <lb />
again increasing at a gratifying <lb />
rate and that there is at present <lb />
no demand for gold for shipment <lb />
abroad. Secretary Morton ex- <lb />
presses the opinion that from now <lb />
on our cereals will take the place <lb />
of the gold which we have <lb />
shipping to Europe, and the fact <lb />
that the large amount of gold <lb />
which the contracted <lb />
all been <lb />
have <lb />
been a factor a <lb />
Notice. <lb />
virtue of a mortgage to <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 before <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 />
This the 12th day of 1893. <lb />
R. MOBLEY, <lb />
Mortgagee. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly <lb />
as administrator of Mary <lb />
notice is hereby to <lb />
all persons indebted to the estate to <lb />
make immediate payment, and all per <lb />
sons having claims against the estate <lb />
must present the same for payment on <lb />
or before the 1st day of May, 1894, r <lb />
this notice will be plead In bar of re- <lb />
This 1st day of May, 1893. <lb />
J. S. KEEL, <lb />
of Marv <lb />
Lt is with pi ens u re that I announce to <lb />
the citizens of Greenville and vicinity <lb />
Hint I have just returned from the <lb />
Northern Markets where. I visited <lb />
all the openings and am now <lb />
the most beautiful and <lb />
stylish selected stock of Millinery ever <lb />
opened in this market. Come to see <lb />
me mid you will get 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 />
Not many people know it, says <lb />
the Greensboro Record but rail- <lb />
road companies, or many of them, <lb />
never lose much by accidents <lb />
where lives are lost. They carry <lb />
insurance against such things- <lb />
For instance, they take out a gen- <lb />
policy in a good company for <lb />
a specified amount insuring them <lb />
against loss of life- It is said the <lb />
Bridge cases never cost <lb />
the railroad anything over and <lb />
above the premium on the <lb />
carried. Insurance com- <lb />
are never known in a suit, <lb />
however, as it is a part of the <lb />
agreement that the railroad is to <lb />
maintain all suits for damages. <lb />
A CARD. <lb />
To the People of Greenville and <lb />
I am now prepared to treat success- <lb />
fully of the feet from which <lb />
arises the exceedingly unpleasant <lb />
with which many are afflicted and which <lb />
i so to them and those with <lb />
whom they associate. can relieve <lb />
this entirely at once, and I respectfully <lb />
ask you to give a trial and I will <lb />
guarantee to remove this most worry- <lb />
and offensive affliction. My <lb />
vices can be secured by calling at. my <lb />
shop or it will give me pleasure to serve <lb />
you at your homes whenever notified in <lb />
any way . This treatment will obviate <lb />
the necessity of almost daily bathing <lb />
to which many are subjected and la so <lb />
troublesome. Try my treatment and <lb />
you will not regret it. <lb />
ALFRED CULLEY. <lb />
Notice <lb />
On Monday the third day of July, A. <lb />
1893, will sell at the Court House <lb />
door in the town of Greenville to the <lb />
highest bidder for cash one tract of <lb />
land in Pitt county containing about <lb />
acres and known as lot No. <lb />
five in the division of the lands of <lb />
deceased, bounded and <lb />
described as Beginning at a <lb />
stump in Louis D. <lb />
south twenty one degrees east one <lb />
seventy poles to a pine and maple <lb />
north sixty seven degrees west one <lb />
hundred and sixty to the great <lb />
branch, down said branch to maple <lb />
branch then up maple branch to the <lb />
beginning containing ninety-five acres <lb />
and being a part the home tract. <lb />
Said lot No. allotted to Nancy Ann <lb />
the said land being situated in <lb />
Falkland township, Pitt county, N. C, <lb />
to satisfy a ex in my col- <lb />
against Nancy Ann and <lb />
which has been levied on said land as <lb />
the of said Nancy A. <lb />
This 3rd day of June 1893. <lb />
B. W. KING, Sheriff, <lb />
Per HENRY T. KING, D. S. <lb />
hardware, <lb />
Roots, <lb />
Mill<lb />
HASKETT.<lb />
HASKETT.<lb />
HINGES. NAILS, AND AXES, <lb />
Rope, Belting and Packing, <lb />
MECHANIC'S 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 yen want goods cheap for <lb />
the cash. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
FARMS SALE. <lb />
Prices Low, <lb />
Terms Easy. <lb />
A TUBE IN HIS STOMACH. <lb />
Mr- Chas- W. Branch, the <lb />
whose misfortune in swallow <lb />
large dose of last <lb />
winter, thereby causing a stricture <lb />
of the windpipe, and whose life <lb />
was several times despaired of, <lb />
returned last night from Atlanta <lb />
whore he has been in the Grady <lb />
Hospital for months, restored to <lb />
health. Mr. Branch is still <lb />
to swallow. He can take <lb />
but liquids and these only <lb />
through a tube in his stomach. <lb />
The tube has a stopper which he <lb />
removes when feeding time comes <lb />
and pours in a pint of son p. milk <lb />
or whatever fluid food he may <lb />
care to take- Mr. Branch weighs <lb />
more than he has for years, and <lb />
he feels perfectly well and strong <lb />
Charlotte Observer. <lb />
HAS A E <lb />
Some people act as if they think- <lb />
it does not cost anything to a <lb />
line of type in a newspaper. It <lb />
does, though, and if for the <lb />
fit of an individual, he should be <lb />
willing to pay for it. If no one <lb />
else pays for it, the owner of the <lb />
newspaper does- <lb />
Space in a newspaper is the <lb />
owner's stock in trade. He can <lb />
no more afford to give it away <lb />
than a grocer his groceries, or a <lb />
haberdasher his haberdashery, or <lb />
a baker his bakeries, or an <lb />
man his oysters. He has it <lb />
for rent, and he can no more <lb />
ford to furnish it free than a land- <lb />
lord can furnish rent <lb />
Times. <lb />
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS <lb />
cures Dyspepsia, In- <lb />
digestion Debility. <lb />
BULL'S <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of the Superior <lb />
Court of Pitt County made at April <lb />
Term 1893 In a certain cause therein <lb />
pending, F. M. Davis vs Louisa <lb />
T. Lang et I will on Monday, <lb />
July 3rd. 1893, sell at public sale before <lb />
the Court House door in Greenville, to <lb />
the highest for cash, all the right <lb />
title and interest which Robert J. Lang <lb />
deceased had at the time of his death <lb />
in and to a certain piece or pieces of <lb />
land in Farmville township, Pitt county <lb />
Is to say a one-hall undivided inter- <lb />
est in said tract of land, described as <lb />
follows. side of Little Con tent- <lb />
Creek, Beginning at gum on said <lb />
Creek and running North lib S. G. <lb />
line to a pine on South prong <lb />
of Branch said corn- <lb />
thence down with said Branch cast <lb />
lo Gideons corner <lb />
thence with said Ward's hue to the Big <lb />
Branch ; thence said Branch <lb />
with the meanderings thereof to a pine, <lb />
Bennett Field's cornier; thence with <lb />
said Fields line to the run of said Little <lb />
thence with the <lb />
run of said Creek to the beginning, con- <lb />
six hundred and thirty acres <lb />
more or less. In the event the said in- <lb />
of Robert J. Lang shall not sell <lb />
for a sufficient sum to pay off and dis- <lb />
charge the amount due under a certain <lb />
mortgage executed by R. J. Lang and <lb />
wife to Albert R. recorded in <lb />
the Registers office of Pitt County in <lb />
book page et seq, I will on the <lb />
same day and at the same place and upon <lb />
the same terms sell the undivided one <lb />
half Interest of Louisa X Lang in said <lb />
tract of land. <lb />
This the 7th day of June, 1893. <lb />
ALEX. L. <lb />
Commissioner <lb />
The J. L. Ballard home farm, <lb />
Dam township, adjoining the lands <lb />
of G T. Tyson and Cobb. A line <lb />
farm of about acres, with good build- <lb />
and adapted to corn, cotton and lo <lb />
A line marl bed. <lb />
A farm near Ayden and lying <lb />
mediately on the own- <lb />
ed by Caleb B. Tripp, acres of which <lb />
are cleared. Good neighbor- <lb />
hood, churches and a school within <lb />
miles- Plenty of marl the adjoin- <lb />
farms <lb />
A farm of three miles <lb />
from Farmville and miles from Green <lb />
ville, with large, substantial dwelling <lb />
and out houses, known as the L. P. <lb />
Beardsley home place, lino land, <lb />
good clay subsoil, accessible to marl. <lb />
A smaller farm adjoining the above <lb />
known as the Jones place, acres, <lb />
dwelling, barn and tenant house, land <lb />
good. <lb />
A farm of acres In town- <lb />
ship, about miles from <lb />
acres of the Singletary tract <lb />
Part of the Joyner farm, <lb />
acres, adjoining tho town of Marlboro, <lb />
located in an improving section <lb />
and can be made a valuable farm. <lb />
A small farm of about acres, <lb />
about miles from Greenville, on In- <lb />
Well house, etc., for- <lb />
owned by Guilford Cox. <lb />
ALSO TIMBER <lb />
A tract of about -100 acres near <lb />
the station, with cypress timber well <lb />
suite. for railroad ties. <lb />
A tract of about acres in <lb />
township, the Washington rail- <lb />
road, pine timber. <lb />
A tract of acres near Johnson s <lb />
Mills, pine and cypress timber. <lb />
Apply Wm. H. LONG, <lb />
Greenville- N. C. <lb />
SprinG-.-StocK <lb />
Notice. <lb />
Superior County. <lb />
L. C. Latham, Harry Skinner and A. <lb />
L. Blow, formerly partners as Latham, <lb />
Skinner Blow, In their names <lb />
and in behalf of themselves and all <lb />
creditors of John A. Manning, <lb />
against <lb />
Charlotte Manning, executrix John <lb />
A. Manning, Sr. John A. Manning, J r, <lb />
W. A. Manning, W. D. Manning, w. C. <lb />
Manning, E. V. Manning, B. R. <lb />
and Courtney Whitehurst his <lb />
wife, John Edmundson and Florence <lb />
Edmundson his wife, G. B. <lb />
and Mary his Char- <lb />
Maiming. <lb />
The above action having been com- <lb />
in this court on the day of <lb />
June for a settlement of the estate <lb />
of John A. Manning, deceased, under <lb />
Chapter of the Code of North Caro- <lb />
notice is hereby given to the <lb />
of the said John A. Manning to <lb />
appear before me, at my office In the <lb />
town of Greenville, on or before the th <lb />
day of July 1813, and file the evidences <lb />
of their claims. <lb />
This 14th of June 1893. <lb />
E. A. MOTE, <lb />
Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt Co, <lb />
Boggy <lb />
GREENVILLE, K. C. <lb />
Can still be found <lb />
at the Old <lb />
stand. <lb />
pared to do <lb />
FIRST-CLASS WORK <lb />
on anything in the <lb />
WAGON, Wm <lb />
Fine Vehicles Specialty <lb />
Repairing done prompt- <lb />
and in best manner <lb />
-and can now a------ <lb />
intention is to sell good at the lowest possible . <lb />
prices. We have the largest most varied stock r <lb />
kept in town. We keep almost every <lb />
needed in the household or on the farm and <lb />
invite inspection and comparison of our <lb />
goods. can and will sell low for <lb />
cash. We want your trade and <lb />
will be glad to show you the <lb />
following lines of <lb />
DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS, I <lb />
NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS. <lb />
NICE LINE <lb />
AND PIECE GOODS FOR <lb />
MAKING MENS AND BOYS <lb />
SUITS, ALWAYS IN STOCK.<lb />
HATS, SHOES, CROCKERY, <lb />
GLASSWARE, TINWARE, <lb />
j WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, <lb />
HARDWARE, PLOWS AND <lb />
FARMING UTENSILS, <lb />
f G <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
Groceries, Flour a specialty. We have the largest and . <lb />
. ever kept in our town. <lb />
line of FURNITURE Consisting in part <lb />
Top Walnut Suits, <lb />
Solid Oak Suits, Imitation Oak Suits, Imitation Walnut <lb />
Suits, Bureaus, Bedsteads, Tables, Buffets, Washstands, <lb />
of different kinds, Children's Cribs and Cradles, <lb />
Mattresses, Tin Safes, Bed Springs, a full line of <lb />
Tables, Children's Carriages, A-c. Keep also a nice line <lb />
of Lace Curtains and Curtain Poles, Matting and Floor <lb />
Oil Cloths. We cordially invite all to come to see <lb />
when in want of any goods. We will try to give you <lb />
satisfaction at all times. r <lb />
SPOOLS COTTON AT WHOLESALE PRICE <lb />
J. <lb />
If <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
f. <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
Corned Herrings <lb />
Bo Boxes C. B. Side Meat. <lb />
Tubs Boston 1-ard. <lb />
Flour, all grades <lb />
barrels Granulated Sugar, <lb />
barrels C. Sugar. <lb />
boxes Tobacco, <lb />
barrels Mills Snuff, <lb />
barrels Three Snuff, <lb />
barrels Gail Ax Snuff. <lb />
Full stock of all <lb />
50.000 Luke <lb />
barrels P. Snuff, <lb />
s Cakes and Crackers, <lb />
barrels Stick Candy. <lb />
kegs Hand's Powder. <lb />
tons Shot, <lb />
c Bread Powder. <lb />
cases Star Lye, <lb />
barrels Apple Vinegar, <lb />
eases Gold Dust Washing Powder, <lb />
other goods carried in my line. <lb />
Farmers, Make Tour Own Hay<lb />
WE CAN SELL YOU THE <lb />
BEST MOWER IN <lb />
THE WORLD FOR <lb />
CUTTING IT. <lb />
WOOD a <lb />
CALL ON US WHEN IN <lb />
COOK STOVES, <lb />
PAINTS, OIL. <lb />
PLACE YOUR ORDERS for TOBACCO FLUES <lb />
S. E- PENDER CO., <lb />
JAMES <lb />
----Dealer In----- <lb />
General Merchandise, <lb />
Has exclusive sale of there celebrated <lb />
glasses In Greenville, N. C. From the <lb />
factory of A Moore, the <lb />
complete optical plant In the South, <lb />
Atlanta, Ga, Peddlers are not sup- <lb />
lied with those famous <lb />
KT. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
SUPERIOR <lb />
Pitt C I <lb />
Jane trading as <lb />
burg Iron in her own <lb />
and in behalf of herself and all other <lb />
creditors of Fleming, deceased, <lb />
against <lb />
B. B. Fleming of Fleming. <lb />
The above entitled action having been <lb />
commenced in this Court on the 17th <lb />
day of May, 1803, for a settlement of <lb />
the estate of Fleming, deceased, <lb />
under chapter of the Code of North <lb />
Carolina, notice is hereby pi to the <lb />
creditors the said Fleming to <lb />
appear before me on or before the 11th <lb />
day of July. 1893, and file the <lb />
of claims. <lb />
the 17th day of May, 1893. <lb />
X. A. <lb />
Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt Co. <lb />
If you feel weak <lb />
and all worn out take <lb />
BROWN'S IRON<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017603_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
JUNE. <lb />
All of this <lb />
month we <lb />
have <lb />
ed to sell <lb />
our entire <lb />
Stock at <lb />
reduced prices. DRESS <lb />
Our stock of Dress <lb />
Goods is complete, the best <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 />
Gauze vest <lb />
and C-13 <lb />
Corsets all <lb />
to be sold <lb />
-C-H-E-A-r. <lb />
ClothinG <lb />
Our spring <lb />
summer <lb />
Suits are cheap <lb />
and SHOES <lb />
and SLIPPERS to <lb />
match your dresses and <lb />
SAMPLE STRAW <lb />
HATS at cost. Everybody call. <lb />
HIGGS BROS. <lb />
GREENVILLE, S. C <lb />
REFLECTOR. <lb />
Rules Adopted by the N. C. Press <lb />
Tin- sum of not less than live cents <lb />
per line will be charged for of <lb />
of and <lb />
obituary poetry; also for obituary notices <lb />
other than those which the editor him- <lb />
self shall give as a matter of news <lb />
Notices of church society and all <lb />
other entertainments from which rev- <lb />
is to be derived ill be charged <lb />
for at the rate of live cents a line. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
BRIGHT <lb />
Ladies and Gent <lb />
Underwear and Straw Hat at <lb />
June is too wet. <lb />
Best Butter in town kept on ice at<lb />
have ratted badly since Fit- <lb />
rain. <lb />
Fruit Jars Cheap at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
The Teachers Assembly began at <lb />
yesterday. <lb />
Bushels; Black Eye Peas at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Last Friday was stormy and rainy all <lb />
day. Crops suffered. <lb />
The Best Flour on earth at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Potato talk Is the chief topic with <lb />
planters and shippers. <lb />
Received to-day fresh X. C. <lb />
Butter at cents per pound at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Attention is called to the notice to <lb />
creditor by Moore administrator <lb />
Samuel Mo-re. <lb />
Peaches, apples, and <lb />
spring chicken.- were plentiful in mar- <lb />
Saturday. <lb />
Buy Bin; nil tie- from <lb />
Bits. <lb />
All of ii- who pass that way miss <lb />
games of the boys on the Academy hill <lb />
since school closed. <lb />
; ii mi ii I I pay you cash for Chickens <lb />
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
There is a sink where the old well <lb />
was, on the corner near Mr. Lang's <lb />
that need- attention. <lb />
Pairs over <lb />
alls from- cents up, at Bros. <lb />
Hooker Bros. Greene, have sold <lb />
their steam merry-go-round to parties <lb />
north. They shipped the machine last <lb />
week. <lb />
A large stock of Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick Score. <lb />
One dollar of your potato money in- <lb />
vested in the will give you <lb />
good reading until the nest potato crop <lb />
is ripe. See <lb />
Land for <lb />
have just received a cargo of fresh <lb />
ground Land Plaster to top dress Pea- <lb />
nut. Can fill orders promptly <lb />
F. S- Tarboro, f. C. <lb />
It us that the planks <lb />
all along on the river bridge are <lb />
dangerous to vehicles. The County <lb />
Commissioners should order them re- <lb />
moved. <lb />
We are now in the mi 1st of the long <lb />
est days of the year, and <lb />
row having a sunlight <lb />
than any other day of the calender. <lb />
The members of the Pitt County <lb />
have sent In their measures for new <lb />
both fatigue and dress stilts. <lb />
They expect to receive the new suits In <lb />
time for the encampment next month. <lb />
Personal, <lb />
Mr. W. I. Boswell returned last week <lb />
from Petersburg. <lb />
Mr. Alfred Forbes, one of our largest <lb />
merchants, is quite sick. <lb />
Bey. B. W. i spending this <lb />
week with relatives in <lb />
Miss Eliza Ward has been spending <lb />
a few days with relatives in town. <lb />
Mrs. Julia Barrett, of spent <lb />
Sunday visiting Mrs. W . R. Parker. <lb />
Ex-Gov. Jarvis and Mrs. Jarvis went <lb />
down to Saturday evening. <lb />
Mrs. Mary of <lb />
visiting the family of Mrs. E. Hooker. <lb />
Mrs. V. L. Stevens and children, of <lb />
Wilson, arc visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. <lb />
Stevens. <lb />
Misses May Murray Leta <lb />
Gowan left Monday to visit relatives at <lb />
Trenton. <lb />
Mrs. Susan Proctor, Washington, <lb />
came up Friday to visit her son, Mr R. <lb />
J. Proctor. <lb />
Miss Rollins, of has <lb />
been spending the past week with Mis. <lb />
Cherry. <lb />
Miss Belcher, of <lb />
has been Mrs. W. II. Smith the <lb />
past few days. <lb />
Mr. W. C. Jackson, a student of the <lb />
A A M College, Raleigh, returned home <lb />
last Thursday. <lb />
Miss Addie Johnson, of Grifton, spent <lb />
part of last week visiting her sister. Mrs. <lb />
C. Rountree. <lb />
Sheriff R. W. King left yesterday for <lb />
Raleigh to carry Mr. Blount Cosby to <lb />
the insane asylum. <lb />
Mrs. G. B. Elam, of Durham, and <lb />
Mrs Jane F. Savage, of Wilson, arc vied <lb />
Mrs. T. <lb />
Mr. W. W. Hargrove, of Tarboro. a <lb />
solicitor for the B. O. railroad, was <lb />
here part of the past week. <lb />
Mr. J. J. Cherry, agent of the O. <lb />
Co., left for New York yesterday on <lb />
business with his line. <lb />
Mi-.-es and Ella King and Mr. <lb />
Larry Moore left last Thursday to spend <lb />
a few days at the World's Fair. <lb />
Mrs. B. W. of Wilson, <lb />
ed Saturday evening to spend a tow <lb />
days with her sister, Mrs. C. <lb />
Mr. J. II. Randolph, who has awn <lb />
spending the past year or two in Louis- <lb />
returned to Greenville last week. <lb />
At Falkland this evening Or. <lb />
and Miss Lillie Mayo will be <lb />
married. The Reflector sends up <lb />
best wishes. <lb />
Miss Alice Wilson, of Natural Bridge, <lb />
Va-. i visiting Misses and <lb />
Rosa Forbes. They were schoolmates <lb />
at <lb />
Mr. Edward Randolph, an inmate <lb />
from this county of the Home <lb />
at Raleigh, came down last week to visit <lb />
friends here. <lb />
Miss Carrie left Saturday for <lb />
her home in Rocky Mount to spend <lb />
cation. She will re-open her <lb />
school here in the Fall. <lb />
Miss Havens Cherry returned homo <lb />
last week from Salem, Va., to spend <lb />
She charge of the music <lb />
department of the female college in that <lb />
city. <lb />
Messrs. J. R. J. G. Move, J. <lb />
A. Andrews. R. L. Davis. J. B. Cherry, <lb />
Jr., and J. M. Moore leave this morn- <lb />
for the World's Fair. They go the <lb />
B. O. route returning by way of <lb />
Niagara and will be gone three weeks. <lb />
Miss daughter <lb />
of Mr. J. J. of Grimes- <lb />
land, and Miss Sallie Gotten, daughter <lb />
of Mr. R. R. Cotten, of both <lb />
arrived in Greenville Saturday evening <lb />
to their respective homes from <lb />
Notre Dame, near Bali i mo re. <lb />
Drowned <lb />
Mr. J. T. Worthington told us Mon- <lb />
day that a youth named William Pitt- <lb />
man, about years old, was drowned <lb />
on Saturday while bathing in the creek <lb />
at Grifton. The body was recovered <lb />
Sunday evening. <lb />
The Eagle Screams <lb />
Commencements all over, and the <lb />
nearest date out of the ordinary now is <lb />
the 4th of July. But that has dribbled <lb />
down to having no more observance in <lb />
these parts than any other day. Every- <lb />
body has heard by this time about the <lb />
declaration of Independence. <lb />
Rain and Wind. <lb />
The rains last Friday seemed to be <lb />
general no section of the county <lb />
escaped the heavy downpour. People <lb />
from portions of county <lb />
were here Saturday and reported that <lb />
crops were damaged by so much rain <lb />
and being blown down by the that <lb />
also prevailed. Mr. Frank Hart, of <lb />
told the editor that a whole <lb />
field of his corn was blown flat. Mr- <lb />
John Pierce said that in his <lb />
much corn is blown down, and Mr. Jen- <lb />
Harrington says the same thin g <lb />
for his neighborhood near Great Swamp. <lb />
Elder Alfred Ross said that him <lb />
in the Creek section there was <lb />
more water on the ground than he had <lb />
noticed any time this season and all <lb />
work in the crops had to be suspended. <lb />
Mr. of Greene county, sail that <lb />
along the line of Greene and Pitt it was <lb />
entirely too wet for the crops. The <lb />
hopes that a few days of <lb />
good weather will bring the crops <lb />
around all right and that the damage <lb />
will only be slight. <lb />
Do yon read the testimonials published <lb />
in behalf They <lb />
are thoroughly reliable and worthy your <lb />
confidence. <lb />
East Young Man. <lb />
Upon actual count there are fifty mar- <lb />
young ladies in the city with <lb />
not half that number of marriageable <lb />
young men. How sad Washington <lb />
Progress. <lb />
House Breakers. <lb />
We learn that out in the <lb />
section some of the people are being <lb />
troubled by thieves entering their <lb />
houses while everybody is away from <lb />
home. Sunday is the day selected for <lb />
such deeds, advantage being taken of <lb />
the absence of the people at church. <lb />
Several houses have been entered in the <lb />
last few weeks. We hope the offenders <lb />
will be caught and punished. <lb />
Diphtheria. <lb />
F. W. Brown and W U. Bagwell <lb />
discovered three cases of diphtheria <lb />
among the colored people down in <lb />
railroad ravine, on Monday, and report- <lb />
ed the fact to Mayor Fleming. A <lb />
was established at once. The <lb />
cases are mild and three of them arc <lb />
in one house, that of Jess <lb />
who has it large family. With the <lb />
reported so promptly and the <lb />
immediate establishment of the <lb />
tine there is no danger of the disease <lb />
getting beyond the house in which It <lb />
was discovered. <lb />
Served Three Sentences. <lb />
A colored man named Haywood <lb />
Johnson recently returned to <lb />
township from serving his third term in <lb />
the penitentiary, every sentence being <lb />
for He first went for live <lb />
years about fifteen years ago. He came <lb />
to his home after serving each <lb />
twice waited but a weeks be- <lb />
fore committing another crime and get- <lb />
ting back in the penitentiary. His <lb />
career from now on will be watched <lb />
with interest as to whether he pursues <lb />
his old course. <lb />
THE <lb />
Two More Enjoyable Evenings. <lb />
MISS CLASS. <lb />
Last week was another which gave <lb />
our people two pleasant evenings. Tues- <lb />
day evening the class Miss Carrie <lb />
gave their closing piano recital <lb />
and the lovers of good music had a feast <lb />
f melody seldom enjoyed In the com- <lb />
The rendered was <lb />
as <lb />
Bird Kills Itself. <lb />
Mr. D. L. Crawford, of Beaver Dam, <lb />
told us Saturday of a very unusual <lb />
at his home a few days before. <lb />
While he was sitting down in his home <lb />
there suddenly came a crash against the <lb />
window shattered fragments of glass <lb />
went flying over the room. Recovering <lb />
from the excitement a moment later he <lb />
discovered a dead partridge lying upon <lb />
the floor and an examination of the bird <lb />
showed that both its legs cut off. <lb />
The bird had flown against the window <lb />
with such force as to cut off both legs <lb />
and kill itself. <lb />
Grand <lb />
arr. by T. Misses A. <lb />
Shepard, L. White, R. Rountree, B. <lb />
Jarvis. <lb />
Verdi, Carrie <lb />
Cobb. <lb />
Duet L. M. <lb />
chalk. Mis es L. White, R Rountree. <lb />
Shepherd's Dream, W. <lb />
the F. Op. Miss Bessie I la-ding. <lb />
in Algiers, Ros- <lb />
Misses A Sheppard, B. Jarvis. C. <lb />
Cobb. <lb />
in the Cold. Cold <lb />
Ground, arr. by Willie Op. <lb />
White. <lb />
Pi T. <lb />
Baker, Misses C. Cobb, Harding, I <lb />
e, B. <lb />
Annie <lb />
Solo-Souvenir de Richard <lb />
Hoffman, Miss Bessie Jarvis. <lb />
Ant. <lb />
de Op. Misses A. Shep- <lb />
C. Cobb, C. L. White <lb />
H. G. Andres, Miss <lb />
Rosalind Rountree- <lb />
Sweet Home, C. <lb />
Misses A. Sheppard. C. <lb />
Each of the pupils performed excel- <lb />
and showed wonderful skill. At <lb />
an Intermission Miss recited <lb />
very charmingly. She <lb />
in elocution as well as music. Just be- <lb />
fore the entertainment closed Mr. F. C, <lb />
Harding stepped upon the rostrum and <lb />
in a beautiful speech presented her with <lb />
an elegant brass table in behalf of her <lb />
class. Miss responded very <lb />
neatly. We have seldom heard an en- <lb />
so generally commended <lb />
M this both for the case and grace of <lb />
management, and the skillful rendering <lb />
of an admirably selected <lb />
miss class. <lb />
To The World's Fair. <lb />
Arthur G. Lewis, passenger and tick- <lb />
et agent of the Baltimore ft Ohio rail- <lb />
road, Main St., Norfolk, Va., is sell- <lb />
tickets from Norfolk to Chicago for <lb />
On this you go from Norfolk <lb />
via Washington City direct to Chicago <lb />
return via Niagara Falls and <lb />
back to Washington and Nor- <lb />
folk. We can imagine no delight- <lb />
trip than this, on an elegant palace <lb />
steamer from Norfolk to Washington, <lb />
then on the splendid B O <lb />
train to Chicago through a section <lb />
country rich with magnificent scenery, <lb />
then leaving Chicago go through the <lb />
Northeast to picturesque This <lb />
is the route to take. Write to the above <lb />
address and arrange for tickets. <lb />
Test Case. <lb />
There was a test of the stock law <lb />
for territory before Esquire B. S. <lb />
Sheppard Saturday. Mr. R. W. <lb />
Royster who has planted the vacant lot <lb />
around his took up some stock <lb />
that had damaged his crop. The stock <lb />
belonged to Mr. L. A. Mayo, who lives <lb />
on the north side of the river, and he <lb />
got out a claim and delivery for the <lb />
stock. Justice decision was <lb />
that the stock be delivered to the own- <lb />
the law being inasmuch <lb />
as were no gates to the river <lb />
bridge and no barrier to obstruct stock <lb />
coming across the bridge at will. There <lb />
are gates at the bridge but the Board of <lb />
County Commissioners have made no <lb />
order that they should be closed. It <lb />
will now devolve upon them to have the <lb />
closed or the county may be held <lb />
responsible for damage done by stock <lb />
coming in from the other side of the <lb />
river. <lb />
A Sad Homicide. <lb />
One of the saddest affairs we have <lb />
been called upon to chronicle is that <lb />
which occurred last Wednesday in <lb />
which one boy kills another. It is all <lb />
the more sad to us because one of the <lb />
actors in the tragic affair was a boy of <lb />
this town and a member of one of <lb />
best families. <lb />
Last Wednesday evening at Hobgood <lb />
Isaac Sugg, a son of Col. I. <lb />
A. Sugg, had a difficulty with another <lb />
hoy, M. A. James, aged about <lb />
resulted in the death of the latter. As <lb />
might be expected of such <lb />
all reports concerning it do not entirely <lb />
agree, as it is seldom that two people <lb />
can tell the same thing alike, but from <lb />
all that has been told in our presence we <lb />
take the following to be about as near <lb />
the particulars as can be given <lb />
Young Sugg was the newsboy be- <lb />
tween and Weldon and young <lb />
James performed a similar service be <lb />
tween Norfolk and Rocky Mount. <lb />
Week before last Sugg lay off an- <lb />
other boy made the run several days <lb />
place. He loaned this other boy some <lb />
books and the boy in turn loaned them <lb />
to young James. When returned <lb />
to his run last week the other boy told <lb />
him that James had the books and he <lb />
could get them by asking him for them. <lb />
When the two trains stopped together <lb />
at Hobgood Wednesday evening Sugg <lb />
asked James for the books. James re- <lb />
fused to give them up saying he was go- <lb />
to keep them, and Sugg said some- <lb />
thing about bis stealing the books. At <lb />
this James began cursing Sugg, words led <lb />
to blows and Sugg cut him in <lb />
men. <lb />
When reached home that even- <lb />
he told his father what had occurred. <lb />
Next morning condition was re- <lb />
ported as dangerous and the Mayor of <lb />
Hobgood telegraphed the Chief of Police <lb />
here to arrest Sugg and hold him in <lb />
the officer was to find <lb />
him. Friday morning at o'clock <lb />
young James died and that evening the <lb />
Coroner of Halifax county held an in- <lb />
quest over the body. <lb />
Speaking of this gives u and <lb />
we wish that all such matters could be <lb />
blotted out. It has occurred and <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Raving duly qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county as <lb />
administrator of Samuel Moore, de- <lb />
ceased, notice Is hereby given to all <lb />
per.-ons indebted to the estate to make <lb />
immediate payment to the <lb />
and all persons having claims against <lb />
the estate must present the same for pay- <lb />
on or before the 17th day of June <lb />
1891, or this notice will be plead in bar <lb />
of recovery. <lb />
This 17th day of June, 1803. <lb />
J. N. <lb />
of Samuel Moore, <lb />
best ft can. <lb />
have tried to do carefully and without <lb />
partiality to either side. The affair is a <lb />
most unfortunate one, and we feel truly <lb />
sorry for bath families connected with K. <lb />
Greenville, C. <lb />
In the CORNER HOW V- <lb />
New York Cheap Store- <lb />
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 remarkable <lb />
Men's Salts as low as and up. <lb />
Men's Pants low as cm and op. <lb />
A Few Things <lb />
The Reflector would like to see in <lb />
A good hotel. <lb />
Some factories. <lb />
The weeds cut down. <lb />
The Court House square fenced. <lb />
The smutty street lamps replaced b <lb />
electric lights. <lb />
The stock law made applicable to <lb />
everybody's stock. <lb />
Some these miserable sidewalks re- <lb />
paired. <lb />
A sidewalk north side of Dicker-on <lb />
Avenue. <lb />
An end to so much lo ting about the <lb />
streets. <lb />
Young people behaving themselves <lb />
in church and other public assemblies. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having <lb />
fed 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 <lb />
having claims the estate must <lb />
present the same for payment on or be- <lb />
fore day of April. this <lb />
will plead in of recovery. <lb />
of April. <lb />
I. S. <lb />
of W. A. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having before the Superior <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county as executrix <lb />
the will Weeks H. Clark, <lb />
ed, notice is hereby given to all persons <lb />
indebted to the estate to make <lb />
ate payment to the undersigned, and <lb />
all persons claims against <lb />
estate must pres same for pay- <lb />
on or before the 10th day of May <lb />
1894, or this notice will be plead in bar <lb />
of recovery. <lb />
This of May. 1803. <lb />
ELIZABETH CLARK, <lb />
Executrix of Weeks II. Clark. <lb />
Notice <lb />
Again on Thursday evening were our <lb />
people delighted tills being the occasion <lb />
of the closing entertainment of Miss <lb />
music school. The <lb />
was as follows <lb />
Op. <lb />
Misses Bessie and Bertha Patrick and <lb />
Sarah Hooker. <lb />
Gob- <lb />
Mary Patrick <lb />
Delia Marshall and Settle Hooker. <lb />
Bella. C. <lb />
M. Von W Miss Clara Bruce Forbes <lb />
F. Chopin. Mi-s <lb />
Bertha Patrick, aged years. <lb />
Nights <lb />
Dream. F. Miss <lb />
Leta and Sarah Hooker. <lb />
Version of the <lb />
Flood, Helen's Babies, Miss <lb />
Sheppard. <lb />
arranged by <lb />
Herbert Misses Bettie Tyson. <lb />
Leta Sarah Hooker, Bruce <lb />
Forbes. <lb />
Vocal <lb />
Faust Act III. Scene I, Gounod. Mrs. J. <lb />
It. Cherry. <lb />
Franz <lb />
Misses Sheppard, Bessie Patrick. <lb />
Mary and Bettie Hooker. <lb />
Liszt F. Miss Leta <lb />
Tell, Miss- <lb />
es Bettie Tyson and Bruce Forbes <lb />
Miss Leta <lb />
Solo-Sonata Quasi Fantasia. C <lb />
sharp Minor. L. Von Miss <lb />
Bettie Tyson. <lb />
Von Bag- <lb />
dad, Misses Bettie Tyson. <lb />
Sarah Hooker, Bruce Forbes, Leta <lb />
Gowan. Mary Sheppard. <lb />
Sweet Home, <lb />
Misses Bettie Tyson and Bruce Forbes. <lb />
The performance of the above <lb />
showed that the pupils had been <lb />
well trained, a number of them <lb />
themselves with marked credit. A <lb />
gold medal offered at the beginning of <lb />
the term for most improvement was <lb />
awarded to Miss Sarah and <lb />
by Senator F. G. James in his <lb />
always graceful manner. Tin. awarding <lb />
committee were Mrs. J. B. Cherry, Miss <lb />
II Cherry and Mrs. G. F. Smith. <lb />
Mayor J. L. Fleming behalf her <lb />
school an appropriate speech present- <lb />
ed to Miss Forbes a handsome perfume<lb />
Ocracoke. <lb />
Those who are feeling the oppression <lb />
of the warm weather and arc thinking <lb />
of getting off for a week or two to <lb />
and enjoy the sea breezes, will <lb />
read with interest the advertisement or <lb />
Ocracoke in this issue- Besides what <lb />
this advertisement tells we learn from <lb />
the Gazette that in two days recently a <lb />
party caught pounds of trout down <lb />
there with hook and Hue. This shows <lb />
what splendid there is at <lb />
coke. and that it is the pi to go for <lb />
fun and health. We learn also that in <lb />
two generations only two young people <lb />
have died on the Island. This is a mar- <lb />
health record. Proprietor J. W. <lb />
Mayo is letters engaging <lb />
rooms, etc. Many from Greenville are <lb />
talking about going <lb />
Notice <lb />
On Monday the third day of July, A. <lb />
D., 1893, I will sell at the Court House <lb />
door for cash one tract of in Pitt <lb />
county containing about forty-live acres <lb />
and bounded as Situated in <lb />
Falkland township. Pitt county, N. C, <lb />
known as lot No. in the division of <lb />
the lands of Wm. deceased <lb />
bounded and described as Be- <lb />
at a ditch the line between L. <lb />
. tract at a stake running <lb />
with the road north eighty three de- <lb />
east one hundred and fifty two <lb />
poles to a stake south south two degrees <lb />
east four poles to a stake to Richard <lb />
line, forty degrees west fifty <lb />
two poles ton branch, then down said <lb />
branch to the beginning containing <lb />
forty-five acres and allotted to Richard <lb />
In said division, to satisfy ex <lb />
in my hands for collection <lb />
ard and which has been levied <lb />
on said laud as the of said <lb />
Richard <lb />
To is 3rd day of June 1803. <lb />
R. W. KING, Sheriff, <lb />
Per HENRY T. KING. D. S- <lb />
On Monday the 3rd day of A. <lb />
will sell at the Court House <lb />
in the town of to the <lb />
highest bidder for cash two tracts of <lb />
land In Pitt county containing about <lb />
four hundred and fifty acres and bound- <lb />
ed as One tract situated in <lb />
Falkland township containing acres <lb />
more or less, the lands of J. <lb />
F. Edwards, W. F. the Wool- <lb />
en tract and others and lying along <lb />
Kitten Creek, another co i- <lb />
acres or leas. In <lb />
land township adjoining the I <lb />
G. Webb, Harry Corbett <lb />
place and others, the ah <lb />
the excess of the Horn stead <lb />
of A. V. Newton to satisfy a i I <lb />
in my hands for i <lb />
A. V. Newton, and which has <lb />
on said laud as the of <lb />
A. V. Newton. <lb />
This 1st of June 1803. <lb />
W. KING, Sheriff, <lb />
Per HENRY T. KING, D. S. <lb />
Notice <lb />
Monday the third day of July, A. <lb />
I will sell at the Court House <lb />
door in the town of Greenville to the <lb />
highest bidder for cash one t of laud <lb />
in Pitt county containing about one <lb />
hundred and twenty-two acres and <lb />
bounded as Situated Green- <lb />
ville, township, Pitt county, N. C. ad- <lb />
joining the town of Greenville and the <lb />
lands of B. F. Patrick, W. A. Manning, <lb />
Alfred Forbes and others being that <lb />
tract of land on which is located the mill <lb />
plant of Greenville Land and <lb />
Company formerly owned <lb />
by Wm. Moore deceased and bequeath- <lb />
ed to Mrs. Allie to satisfy sundry <lb />
executions in my hands for collection <lb />
against the Greenville Land and <lb />
Company and which has <lb />
on said laud as tho proper, y of <lb />
said Company. <lb />
This 1st of June 1893. <lb />
R. W. KING. Sheriff, <lb />
Per HENRY T. KING, S. <lb />
TO THE PUBLIC <lb />
OWING to the dull trail., <lb />
we propose to close out our <lb />
Spring and Summer Stock at <lb />
prices that defy competition. <lb />
Such as CLOTHING. HATS, <lb />
SHOES, DRY GOODS <lb />
NOTIONS. In connection <lb />
with our regular <lb />
have lino of SAM- <lb />
SHIRTS, <lb />
SUSPENDERS, to <lb />
EMPORIUM. <lb />
MUN FORD'S <lb />
EMPORIUM. <lb />
SOLD at New York cost. <lb />
SHIRTS from cents up. <lb />
GENTS TIES from cents <lb />
STRAW HATS from <lb />
up. A big line of DRESS <lb />
GOODS at reduced prices. <lb />
We are also Sole Agents for <lb />
BROS- and E. P. <lb />
REED fine SHOES <lb />
Call and <lb />
see them and be pleased. <lb />
C. T. <lb />
GREENVILLE. K C. <lb />
feel that the should Children's as lo w as cm and up , <lb />
v W twit and <lb />
Men's as m tip. <lb />
as and <lb />
Other goods <lb />
We are the place for LOW PRICES. <lb />
and solicit the patronage of the <lb />
Sea and get <lb />
healthy. <lb />
Steamer leaves <lb />
Washington on <lb />
Wednesday morn <lb />
and <lb />
day nights after <lb />
train arrives. <lb />
2.50 for <lb />
round trip. <lb />
the <lb />
day, 11.50; per <lb />
week. to <lb />
according to <lb />
Per month <lb />
children <lb />
yearn <lb />
and servant- half <lb />
price. <lb />
OCRACOKE HOTEL <lb />
NEW <lb />
pen 15th <lb />
1893. <lb />
Thin Famous Summer- <lb />
Place promises greater <lb />
attractions than ever. <lb />
Address, <lb />
j. w. mayo. <lb />
Washington, N. C. <lb />
Math <lb />
1- <lb />
and Hunting <lb />
the coast. <lb />
Table supplied <lb />
with Oysters, <lb />
Clam, and Fish <lb />
right out of the <lb />
water, and the <lb />
best the market <lb />
affords. <lb />
Hotel large and <lb />
comfortable- <lb />
by Atlantic Coast <lb />
Line to Washing- <lb />
ton, by <lb />
or steamer from <lb />
i ii g l n ii <lb />
down the <lb />
Pamlico to <lb />
the Inland, <lb />
MACHINE WORKS, <lb />
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Gins. Ac. <lb />
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO REPAIRING. <lb />
THE BEST IN THE WORLD. <lb />
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Write for <lb />
and prices before buying elsewhere- <lb />
A few Second-Hand Engines for sale. <lb />
New <lb />
Straight <lb />
Clean <lb />
Large <lb />
We are still making a specialty of <lb />
We have a first-class assortment and sell <lb />
get prices- <lb />
close. Do not fail <lb />
and parts for all kinds of machines are sold by us. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
DEALERS IN- <lb />
We are gain in business to and have a nice line of fresh <lb />
goods. Will be glad to have our old call and see us, as well as all <lb />
others who wish to get Groceries and Confections that arc pure. <lb />
Our goods will lie in every respect. We pay the highest mar- <lb />
prices for <lb />
Wishing to thank my many <lb />
friends for their liberal <lb />
for both Merchandise and differ <lb />
But articles which I <lb />
I take this method of <lb />
that while I thank yon all I <lb />
am also Striving hard to secure <lb />
advantages that I can give <lb />
in order to further merit you<lb />
S u <lb />
to t <lb />
g g a c<lb />
O S a S <lb />
X is is <lb />
or other articles in our <lb />
push as Church Pews. Cart <lb />
Wheels, Brackets and <lb />
Tobacco Hogsheads and General <lb />
Repair Work, you will do well <lb />
to correspond with me before <lb />
ranging with any one else. I <lb />
you some <lb />
A. G. COX, <lb />
Winterville. N-C<lb />
H. <lb />
COBB BROS CO., <lb />
TOR <lb />
AND---- P <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE STREET, NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb />
to the buyers of Pitt surrounding counties, a line of the following goo <lb />
not to be excelled in this market. And to be First-class an <lb />
pure straight good. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and LA <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS, DOOR. WINDOWS. SASH and BLINDS, CROCKERY and QUEENS <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb />
kinds. Gin and M Hay, Rock Limb, Plaster op Paris, and Plat <lb />
Hair, Harness, Bridles and -addles <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb />
prices, cents per less percent for Cash. Bread Prep. <lb />
ration and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices, Lead and pure Lin- <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. 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 />
BROWN BROS., <lb />
Depositors for American Bible Society <lb />
And in fact that is raised in the country and I will pay just <lb />
as much in cash as can be had anywhere in Greenville- I will also <lb />
handle on a small commission that my customers may want <lb />
me to. Remember my headquarters is at the old Moore <lb />
store, right at the five points crossing, the most convenient place in <lb />
town. Come to see me- <lb />
to please., <lb />
WHITE, Greenville, N. C <lb />
J. L. SUGG. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE OLD <lb />
All placed in at net <lb />
COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AGENT FOE A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017603_tn_0006" n="6" />
                <p>
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb />
Conducted by O. L- JOYNER, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse. <lb />
moon in June, fall crop <lb />
worms. <lb />
local NOTES AND TOBACCO , say, any other man in <lb />
jottings. I Greenville that such men as W. <lb />
of I S- Rawls, C- A. White, J- A. An- <lb />
J. R- C W. <lb />
and numbers of other of our <lb />
In certain localities the recent business men who here- <lb />
heavy rains are reported damage- taken but little in- <lb />
to the crops while as a goner- are out and show <lb />
thing crops are looking fine- in concern in its be- <lb />
Mr. R. W. returned half. With such men as those to <lb />
Sunday evening from give encouragement to enter- <lb />
THE EXPERIMENT STATION <lb />
Of North at <lb />
to Farmers. <lb />
Am <lb />
Lynchburg and other markets in <lb />
Virginia. He says tobacco is <lb />
lower on the Richmond market <lb />
than anywhere he struck. <lb />
Mr. J- W. Morgan, <lb />
of the American Tobacco <lb />
Company, two years on the Tar- <lb />
market was, in town last <lb />
week trying to rent a prize house- <lb />
From what we gather Mr- Morgan <lb />
is a upright, gen- <lb />
but the methods of his <lb />
company should be repudiated- <lb />
We are told that a young Rich- <lb />
upstart remarked a few days <lb />
that the Eastern Carolina tobacco <lb />
markets ought to closed, in <lb />
fact all loose markets except one <lb />
or two in North Carolina <lb />
that many in Virginia. The <lb />
farmers little enough for their <lb />
tobacco now and if they arc- <lb />
placed at the mercy of the Amer <lb />
Tobacco Company or any <lb />
other company on one or two <lb />
markets the bottom will fall out. <lb />
However there is no danger of <lb />
that unless the patronize <lb />
Richmond and one or two other <lb />
large markets to the exclusion of <lb />
the smaller markets home. <lb />
This institution was organized <lb />
legislative enactment in 1877, and has <lb />
for sixteen years been laboring for the <lb />
best interests of the agriculture of <lb />
North Carolina. <lb />
The station has issued during these <lb />
years a million and more copies of <lb />
all bearing upon <lb />
of the agriculture. Hy <lb />
this information, and through i <lb />
Um Control, the station has <lb />
saved millions of dollars to the farm-1 <lb />
of Carolina. <lb />
The fund for the support of the j <lb />
station is derived from the general gov. <lb />
eminent, and no appropriation is re- j <lb />
by it from the state. <lb />
The station desires and needs the <lb />
active co-operation of all people of the <lb />
state, for without this co-operation it <lb />
can do but little effectual and <lb />
the Tarboro market, if it has; work. <lb />
In order to extend its the j <lb />
station will present to the readers of <lb />
Insects Beneficial to Track and <lb />
Crop. <lb />
Insects are not useless w noxious. <lb />
o the worm and lion- .- bee <lb />
known to all. Insects play a most <lb />
port in the fertilization of the ovules of many <lb />
plan is. There in a large lass of <lb />
and carnivorous insects whit a arc in an <lb />
indirect extremely useful to all of <lb />
plants, because they hunt out and <lb />
larva or mature forms of in- <lb />
sect. <lb />
Cum show exact size except where lines in- <lb />
natural <lb />
prises, it is not stepping beyond j <lb />
the bounds of presumption to <lb />
that success looms up ahead.<lb />
TOBACCO MARKETS. <lb />
We learn from reliable author- <lb />
that the Tarboro market will <lb />
not open again the coming sea- <lb />
son. <lb />
causes have sunk <lb />
gone under- First and most <lb />
is its geographical <lb />
Situated as it is, only <lb />
miles from Rocky Mount, a little <lb />
more that from Wilson, and <lb />
this paper, once each three <lb />
columns of matter of peculiar interest <lb />
to farmers. <lb />
The general subjects embraced in <lb />
this agricultural matter will be <lb />
only from Greenville, Announcements. <lb />
it almost notes of Station <lb />
to build up much of a trade. I x summaries of result of <lb />
Take this and add to it the fact at the station. <lb />
. Is upon in the adult <lb />
state it ice's upon insects. It never <lb />
harms human beings or animals <lb />
be persecuted. <lb />
It should not <lb />
Fie. Murky <lb />
round-Dome <lb />
-H and show <lb />
the <lb />
the. i <lb />
us its larva. The <lb />
U of a <lb />
color, of exact size <lb />
of <lb />
Murky U <lb />
Fig. Fly. <lb />
n warfare upon the <lb />
prey upon crops, we should <lb />
para, protest our Insert allies <lb />
These as one their <lb />
are generally large <lb />
powerful jaws for <lb />
and tearing their prey. In with <lb />
tins. <lb />
but as the friendly <lb />
Insects are u not eat the foil- <lb />
ii r green or <lb />
there were prize houses ; They however, killed the <lb />
. , , , , i Special agricultural articles of gen- MM emulsion and all insecticides by <lb />
which to handle tobaCCO j interest farmers who to resort to <lb />
, , , ,. . to save their crops, these <lb />
you have two out Of three things Letters of inquiry from any person ferocious looking, carnivorous insects more or <lb />
-ii i -i r l. agricultural will less abundant upon the plants, conclude that <lb />
that Will make ft failure of to n a ,. J .,, , I must be the parent forms of the lice or <lb />
encouraged. to same hf which do the damage. These, then, are <lb />
market- <lb />
made at once the member of th <lb />
STOCKHOLDERS MEETING. <lb />
Meeting of the Stockholders of the <lb />
Greenville Tobacco Warehouse Com- <lb />
Important Business <lb />
Transacted Measures <lb />
Adopted. <lb />
a majority the that will take the profits <lb />
that the meeting i when tobacco is bought on as close j <lb />
The annual meeting of the stock- <lb />
holders of the Greenville <lb />
co Warehouse Company met in <lb />
the Court House in Greenville. <lb />
Monday, 12th. President <lb />
J. W. Allen instructed the <lb />
to ascertain if there was a <lb />
quorum of stock present. On in- <lb />
it was found that <lb />
out of shares were represented <lb />
which <lb />
dent Announce <lb />
was ready lei the transaction of <lb />
business. <lb />
The minutes of the previous <lb />
meeting being read J. R. <lb />
treasurer made in substance the <lb />
following <lb />
That he had <lb />
and had paid out showing <lb />
a balance on hand and due the <lb />
company <lb />
The old Board of Directors re- <lb />
ported that they had rented the <lb />
property as it now stood to G- F. <lb />
Evans for the ensuing year, which <lb />
ends 1894, at per <lb />
annum and authorized Mr. Evans <lb />
also to expend an amount not to <lb />
exceed improvement of <lb />
the property, viz, to purchase <lb />
lumber and extend warehouse <lb />
floor over one drive way to <lb />
complete third floor in prize <lb />
house. <lb />
There being no other <lb />
the company proceeded to elect <lb />
a new set of officers board <lb />
of directors for the ensuing year. <lb />
C- W. moved that the <lb />
offices of Secretary <lb />
be consolidated. The motion <lb />
was carried by a unanimous vote <lb />
and the following officers and <lb />
rectors were elected W. S- Rawls, <lb />
President; J- W- Allen, Vice-Pres- <lb />
; J- R- Secretary and <lb />
Treasurer; C. W. and G- <lb />
F. Evans. <lb />
C- W- then moved that <lb />
the board of directors be author- <lb />
to borrow an amount not to <lb />
exceed to be used in the <lb />
erection of two prize houses and <lb />
to make such on <lb />
the property as in their judgment <lb />
might for the interest of <lb />
The three essential needs to <lb />
make a tobacco market a j <lb />
are first, plenty of territory from <lb />
which to draw custom ; second, <lb />
plenty of prize loom in which <lb />
store away this tobacco when it is <lb />
sold, third, plenty of buyers <lb />
to take the tobacco when it <lb />
offered the market at current <lb />
prices. Of these things Green- <lb />
ville has and can easily get two. <lb />
namely, plenty of territory that <lb />
grows the brightest tobacco in <lb />
the world what buyers it likes <lb />
will come on demand if we will <lb />
give them the houses to work in. <lb />
No buyer of importance that builds <lb />
up the market afford to locate <lb />
a town in the leaf tobacco <lb />
unless he has a prize house. <lb />
man can afford to tobacco i m. s. chemist. <lb />
J P. B. S. <lb />
on our market and pack it tin i; B. m. <lb />
. KB <lb />
ship it to some other place to <lb />
There in a double cost at- <lb />
of destroyed, in the relief <lb />
I hut in this way in- <lb />
station staff most competent to do so. I to prevented. <lb />
q whose special field the question lies, Those <lb />
u . . . i. j I ons Inserts arc s best friends. <lb />
All must invariably be ad present in considerable <lb />
dressed to K. f-, Agricultural i the further increase, If not the reduction. <lb />
Experiment Station. Raleigh, I <lb />
Questions and replies of general inter- <lb />
est will also printed in these col-1 a f . V <lb />
for the benefit of all readers. <lb />
The bulletins of the Experiment <lb />
Station are supplied free in those ; <lb />
dents of the State who request them, i <lb />
The regular bulletins contain such <lb />
subjects of immediate interest and <lb />
and are written in plain <lb />
for popular reading. <lb />
cal are issued also, and eon- j <lb />
result of and technical j <lb />
investigations. A list of <lb />
issued which can now <lb />
plied will be printed in these Export- i <lb />
station columns for July. <lb />
or <lb />
As at present constituted, staff St <lb />
. II. Battle. Ph. D. Director and Stale <lb />
P. K. II. S. <lb />
and En- <lb />
W. F. O. K. <lb />
C. <lb />
W. <lb />
F, ll. <lb />
.-.- none are more lien <lb />
i than the <lb />
species. arc the natural <lb />
plant-lice. The lot of the <lb />
a miniature and us appetite for plant <lb />
simply <lb />
color and size. small, the <lb />
usual red or pink spotted with <lb />
Mack <lb />
Assistant <lb />
A. F. <lb />
The Experiment Station has <lb />
a margin as it is to-day. Hence <lb />
we again repeat the assertion <lb />
that the only stands <lb />
between the Greenville tobacco <lb />
market and high success is the <lb />
lack of prize houses. We are of <lb />
course glad to note that two or <lb />
three more will built, but these <lb />
two or three more with the <lb />
that are hero will only <lb />
make four or five in all and five <lb />
prize houses for Greenville with <lb />
the prospects that it has is <lb />
parts, no folio <lb />
Fertilizer Control station. <lb />
Agricultural Experiment Sta- <lb />
In order to work, the <lb />
Station has been classified Into <lb />
Executive Division. <lb />
Chemical Division. <lb />
Agricultural Division. <lb />
Division. <lb />
Entomological Division, <lb />
ii. Horticultural Division. <lb />
Meteorological Division. <lb />
s. Division of Publication. <lb />
Visitors are cordially welcomed at <lb />
i any time, and the work carefully ex- <lb />
tWO i plained to them. The headquarters of <lb />
the Station are in the Agricultural <lb />
J -1; i i i Immediately north of the <lb />
Capitol building in In the <lb />
north wing located the offices, the <lb />
chemical laboratories and store-rooms. <lb />
On the basement floor is the document <lb />
no- when if we had or l room, where are kept the publications <lb />
u we , of and where the mailing <lb />
twenty-five houses we could easily of these publications takes place. On <lb />
the floor is situated the <lb />
sell four or five million pounds. <lb />
This may seem to be a little over <lb />
some who have not <lb />
given the matter much thought- <lb />
laboratory, botanical and <lb />
logical also the <lb />
division of the Station, or- <lb />
tin the State Weather Service, <lb />
Question and <lb />
Address all In N. C. <lb />
ml Station. Raleigh, N. <lb />
may sent in by any one and the sub- <lb />
embrace any topic. Re- <lb />
plies will be written as as possible by the <lb />
of the Station staff most to <lb />
do so. and, when cf general interest, they will <lb />
also In these columns. The Station ex- <lb />
in this way. to its sphere of use- <lb />
and reader great assistance to practical <lb />
tanner. <lb />
Lain c . or I <lb />
I send a box of leaves to it contain <lb />
any I have lost two horses, <lb />
U have been p. A. Laurel, <lb />
Answered by Gerald <lb />
The sent tire those of <lb />
popularly called Lamb- <lb />
kill. This plant Is to <lb />
sheen, but has never been known to kill horses <lb />
or other Vet ii might so when <lb />
animals ore themselves upon the leaves, as <lb />
they are to do out too early. <lb />
before In the spring, and i <lb />
there is else for them to eat. This <lb />
be pas- <lb />
lots. <lb />
I send you a small bottle of vinegar which has <lb />
worms in ll. Please let rue know if the -e IN <lb />
always present vinegar, or if they are <lb />
J. S. N. C <lb />
Answered by <lb />
Station., <lb />
The sample of <lb />
Their presence Is caused <lb />
too much of to the air, <lb />
probably by I ad or handling of the <lb />
from which the vinegar was made. Heat <lb />
the vinegar until it is scalding <lb />
degrees. which temperature It for <lb />
half an hour. strain through cotton sheet- <lb />
buns- U , <lb />
vinegar, an that will <lb />
being us Indicated will <lb />
perfectly wholesome, though not nun so <lb />
as might be. <lb />
Mixing of Watermelons and <lb />
Is it good practice to have watermelon and <lb />
side of each oilier <lb />
Will either corrupt ll. c., Char- <lb />
N. C <lb />
by w. F. <lb />
Ii was formerly supposed that nil <lb />
plants would mix if planted close each <lb />
other, but investigations of <lb />
there Id very little even of thorn <lb />
near akin. The end water- <lb />
melon will cross all. and you may plant <lb />
them together freely. <lb />
are com- <lb />
pounded from a prescription <lb />
widely used by the best <lb />
cal authorities and are <lb />
in a form that is be- <lb />
coming the fashion every- <lb />
where. <lb />
co-operating with the States <lb />
. Weather Bureau. On the cf the <lb />
In order to prove these tilings and I building are located the various <lb />
to show that we are <lb />
but stern and stubborn facts <lb />
let us look at a few figures. In <lb />
1890 the Pitt county acreage was <lb />
estimated at acres, which <lb />
was a very conservative estimate <lb />
of course the acreage is now <lb />
considerably larger. However, <lb />
will calculate on that basis. <lb />
have asked several gentle- <lb />
men in different parts of the <lb />
county what their average per <lb />
for recording ob- <lb />
together with a <lb />
foot for displaying flairs for <lb />
the weather forecasts. <lb />
The Experiment Farm Is located <lb />
about one mile and a half west of the <lb />
city, and adjoins the grounds of the <lb />
State Agricultural Society. It is in <lb />
close proximity to the of tho <lb />
North of <lb />
and Mechanic Arts, and the students <lb />
have access to the experiments, and <lb />
study their progress their results. <lb />
the farm located the <lb />
mental dairy, silos and barn, in which <lb />
are the cattle under test for <lb />
of milk and other purposes, <lb />
tests arc also conducted, as <lb />
Trig, <lb />
Lady hug and <lb />
larva. <lb />
The Experiment Farm i.-, con- <lb />
by telephone with the city <lb />
street line of <lb />
ears of the city stops in easy walk- <lb />
distance of the <lb />
Cora Silo. <lb />
far S.-. upon the land of the <lb />
acre was and with but a very few ; farm. Here, also, Is the Held and plant <lb />
exceptions have been told that it <lb />
was over pounds. For tho <lb />
sake of conservatism, however, we <lb />
will calculate this on a basis of <lb />
only pounds to the acre- <lb />
the Pitt county crop then with <lb />
these figures we have two millions <lb />
pounds here that <lb />
with the proper facilities and <lb />
good management could <lb />
control. Now this <lb />
we have not considered <lb />
the warehouse association. Seven- Greene, Beaufort <lb />
shares voted on this saying nothing about <lb />
in favor of and C other that have <lb />
The board of directors sold tobacco in Es- <lb />
to take immediate steps <lb />
toward getting the money and <lb />
having the houses built. While <lb />
The noxious encumber beetle maybe known <lb />
from the tn. lady bug by its in- <lb />
of spotted. u are never <lb />
striped. <lb />
PI also B destructive <lb />
to crops, lady <lb />
bug, it is larger and has long <lb />
lady bugs have <lb />
not. The Dial <lb />
yellow, with black <lb />
There Is insect closely <lb />
to the lice lady bus's <lb />
which feeds upon cu <lb />
and plants <lb />
is <lb />
shown In Pig. ii. Is of a <lb />
reddish-yellow color, with <lb />
en black snots on each <lb />
cover. It larger than <lb />
true lady bug. Among our <lb />
and useful allies <lb />
are the <lb />
The kiwi. <lb />
V led lad.- <lb />
I Fig.<lb />
taut,<lb />
Is with B black <lb />
Very common in this <lb />
state. <lb />
The <lb />
bug, <lb />
Fig. This <lb />
beetle I, pink, <lb />
with <lb />
The convergent <lb />
21.1 lady bag, <lb />
Fix. This Is with <lb />
Lady-bug. small black spots. Also rather <lb />
common. <lb />
The Green <lb />
tor, I., one our most <lb />
insects. It l o. a col- <lb />
spots or stripes. <lb />
Fig. show- tho <lb />
Virginia <lb />
It is of a shining <lb />
green color, with <lb />
brow n legs, of the ex- <lb />
act size shown- <lb />
Fig. shows the <lb />
Ground- <lb />
II is of a <lb />
shining block color, <lb />
edge. <lb />
Fig. IV the <lb />
Handed Soldier-Bug, <lb />
The line at left <lb />
shows exact 11- <lb />
is one <lb />
our most <lb />
ferocious <lb />
ii upon <lb />
eat-worms, but de- <lb />
vast <lb />
of cotton and boll- <lb />
worms. This beetle <lb />
is greenish- <lb />
with <lb />
dos rows <lb />
When to <lb />
of Sage. <lb />
have fast puked from live acre Held truck <lb />
pens, and am desirous to know when, or how <lb />
soon may plant black-eve The farmers <lb />
hero say wait in <lb />
What has the moon to do am think- <lb />
about planting an acre or so h, Sage that <lb />
Is. if there is any market for it. What la <lb />
variety to and when is the best time, <lb />
Mai What does it sell E. E. <lb />
N. C <lb />
by IV. V. <lb />
Experiment station. <lb />
Plant the at once, now that UM ground <lb />
is warm. There are still u great many <lb />
who study the moon more than the condition of <lb />
their soil. If the and season is all right. <lb />
and the proper <lb />
will be good. San and rain have tar more to do <lb />
with it Hum the moon, bread leaf gage Is the <lb />
kind to grow. It l- now hue to <lb />
Sage seed e sown early in April in a rich <lb />
bed. and the plants transplanted tea piece of <lb />
crop has been <lb />
cut. The plants set in rows feet apart and <lb />
in the row, If land Is good, nearly <lb />
cover tho ground by September, and as all the <lb />
growth B and lender it run be cut off <lb />
the ground and cured in the shade. It properly <lb />
cured ll will sell better in any of the northern <lb />
lilies. Baltimore especially. <lb />
R. W. ROYSTER CO <lb />
BACKUS <lb />
N. C.<lb />
samples on <lb />
ONLY. <lb />
set gently <lb />
but promptly upon the liver, <lb />
stomach and intestines; cure <lb />
dyspepsia, habitual <lb />
offensive breath and head- <lb />
ache. One taken at the <lb />
first symptom indigestion, <lb />
biliousness, dizziness, distress <lb />
after eating, or depression of <lb />
spirits, will surely and quickly <lb />
remove the whole difficulty. <lb />
may be ob- <lb />
of nearest druggist. <lb />
are easy to take, <lb />
quick to act, <lb />
save many a doc- <lb />
tor's bill. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, had all business tho U. s <lb />
Patent office or In the Courts to <lb />
for Moderate Fees. <lb />
We are opposite the U. S. Patent Of. <lb />
in Patents <lb />
can obtain patent In less time <lb />
more remote from Washington. <lb />
model or drawing l sent we <lb />
advise as to free of <lb />
make no change unless we ob- <lb />
Patents. <lb />
We refer, here, to the Post Master, the <lb />
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to <lb />
of the S. Patent oilier-. <lb />
advise terms reference to <lb />
actual in your own State, or <lb />
address, A. Snow t <lb />
C. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
DEALER <lb />
JACK FREEZERS.<lb />
MARK <lb />
or Corn <lb />
T want to plant for market. North, torn for <lb />
n crop of <lb />
nips. Will you not please write me H <lb />
what of corn will pay to <lb />
for early market, of <lb />
season of the year will do <lb />
L. K., Tarboro. N. C. <lb />
by W. F. <lb />
The you tan for early <lb />
is Adam Extra Karly. Is <lb />
this crown by In <lb />
near known as <lb />
the Neck corn, which Is earlier bet- <lb />
to climate than northern Ad- <lb />
ams. You Mt it. I think, J. O. <lb />
Son. For a crop of <lb />
turnips usu the Extra Milan. It crow's <lb />
almost as quickly as a ll much ear- <lb />
lier than the ordinary Oat Dutch turnip.<lb />
Virginia <lb />
Fly. 23.- <lb />
i.,. . . a. <lb />
h. pupa. c. <lb />
Plant your corn as yon would to <lb />
make a crop of Cut it up and <lb />
put in the silo when the kernels are <lb />
well glazed, that is, while the stalks ; <lb />
and most of the leaves are still green, <lb />
and the kernels are beginning to <lb />
den. You can count to pounds I <lb />
per day for a mature animal, cow or I <lb />
mule, which would be pounds per In the slaw <lb />
animal from Not. 1st to May 1st. Four <lb />
animals would eat pounds. <lb />
There will necessarily be some waste, <lb />
and you may want to feed another cow, <lb />
so we will raise this amount to tons. <lb />
At pounds per cubic foot, this will <lb />
require 2.000 cubic feet. Ten feet <lb />
square and feet high will be a good <lb />
form, you can get out the <lb />
timber needed for the walls and roof, <lb />
need to only the boards. <lb />
Greene, Lenoir and <lb />
Craven, three principal <lb />
ties, at only acres, we have <lb />
it is to be regretted that the stock more millions pounds that <lb />
represented was not unanimously I stands between and <lb />
in favor of the prize market, and then is no i sheathing, nails, doors and hinges, and <lb />
houses as it was manifestly shown in the world why it should <lb />
that not only the would t control it. <lb />
be largely by it and the No- Gentlemen of Greenville, <lb />
lets not stop at four or five prize <lb />
houses, but lets go to work and <lb />
have four or five times four or <lb />
five and it will not be very long <lb />
hands employed in these several j <lb />
houses and all monies otherwise <lb />
are now doing and instead of <lb />
having- a town of only <lb />
1,500 or inhabitants, some <lb />
loafing and others in a but <lb />
property enhanced in value but <lb />
that every business house in <lb />
Greenville would increase its <lb />
in proportion to the <lb />
saved by through tho tobacco <lb />
market, yet we grant to others <lb />
their difference of opinion with- <lb />
out in the slightest degree <lb />
their motives. <lb />
to say right here that the <lb />
shown by the entire board of in various <lb />
rectors and officers backed up by industries that will give employ-J <lb />
the great of the stock- <lb />
door. <lb />
If you have a convenient to <lb />
your stable, you can put your silo <lb />
to it so as to fill from above to good <lb />
advantage. Make a firm base with <lb />
good foundation, i would use <lb />
cement to make a bottom a <lb />
dry place well clay will dons <lb />
well and lay the sills, which may be <lb />
times the cash business that you of lumber sufficient to build <lb />
such a silo would be as <lb />
ERADICATES BLOOD POI- <lb />
Swift's <lb />
my system contagious <lb />
blood poison n the wont <lb />
WM. . La. <lb />
r. U R r, EVEN <lb />
IN ITS WORST FORMS. <lb />
T la 1884, end <lb />
It by taking seven <lb />
S. B. I not any <lb />
toms since. <lb />
C. W. Wilcox. <lb />
S. C <lb />
-81 <lb />
HAS CURED <lb />
EBB CASES OF SKIN CANCER. <lb />
Treatise on and Discards mailed <lb />
Swift Co., <lb />
Sills. pieces, x Mn. x <lb />
Studs. <lb />
10- <lb />
hoards cover. <lb />
Matched <lb />
We will <lb />
cover sill. f <lb />
sq. ft <lb />
holders last Friday is to <lb />
in their under- <lb />
takings. We rejoice more, we <lb />
4.488 <lb />
to the loafers that want em-1 <lb />
and cold quarters ; two of lime, for foundation and <lb />
to those that do not that tho com-1 the additional expense <lb />
will soon be rid of <lb />
pace. U sent application. <lb />
Fiery <lb />
and Larva. <lb />
Thin Is one of our <lb />
Tho colors are Muck, <lb />
whit yellow. <lb />
on <lb />
upon <lb />
and U ; <lb />
there. <lb />
U shows l ,<lb />
is <lb />
the South. <lb />
to red. It of tho <lb />
exact size <lb />
FiR. ll y s the <lb />
or <lb />
Soldier-Bug.<lb />
You can become a capitalist at <lb />
once by laying by a email part of <lb />
your yearly Income and invest, <lb />
in a policy of the <lb />
Equate <lb />
yon can instantly <lb />
cure a capital of <lb />
a capital of thus <lb />
acquiring at; estate which you <lb />
may leave to heirs, we- <lb />
a fund for your own <lb />
support In age, if your life <lb />
be prolonged. <lb />
Such a step will prompt you <lb />
save, will strengthen your <lb />
increase your con- <lb />
preserve you from <lb />
can- and will give you lasting <lb />
satisfaction. <lb />
The Plan <lb />
The Security Absolute. <lb />
It fa the perfect development <lb />
of the life policy. To-day is <lb />
the right time to get and <lb />
figures. Address <lb />
W. J, Manager, <lb />
For the Carolinas. <lb />
ROCK HILL. C. <lb />
MOOT <lb />
Cure o all <lb />
his baa been In me over <lb />
year.-, and know <lb />
been In steady demand. It has been en <lb />
lotted by the over <lb />
country, and effected where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention <lb />
the have <lb />
for failed. Is of <lb />
long standing and the high <lb />
it liar obtained is owing entirely <lb />
it-; as but little baa <lb />
ever been to bring it the <lb />
public. One of tins Ointment will <lb />
to any address on of One <lb />
Dollar. box The <lb />
discount to Druggist. Ail <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
and to <lb />
T. V. <lb />
Proprietor, <lb />
x. C <lb />
A it. H. <lb />
Schedule <lb />
RB SOUTH. <lb />
Hi, <lb />
April. daily Fast Mall, dally <lb />
daily ex Sun <lb />
Weldon pin o pm o <lb />
Ar l as pm o pm <lb />
pm <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar Florence <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
pm <lb />
p in pm am <lb />
o as<lb />
north <lb />
daily <lb />
Slit <lb />
daily <lb />
Florence <lb />
Selma <lb />
Ar <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Ar <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Mo <lb />
dally <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
7.10 <lb />
SO <lb />
p in<lb />
s hitter . <lb />
n i, ., for <lb />
SOLDIERS, WIDOWS, <lb />
, CHILDREN, PARENTS. <lb />
. In of <lb />
la no <lb />
So of tho Indian of ISM to <lb />
widow, Old sod <lb />
to Higher<lb />
Ai Mont <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Daily Sunday. <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 11.40 Halifax p. <lb />
m., arrives Scotland Neck at p. in., <lb />
Greenville p. m., 7.08 p. m. <lb />
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m., <lb />
Greenville 8.22 a. Arriving Halifax <lb />
at n. m., Weldon 11.20 a. m. daily <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb />
Washington a. m. arrives <lb />
8.40 a. m., Tarboro 8.80 returning <lb />
leaves <lb />
arrives 7.80 p. m. <lb />
ally except wild <lb />
trains nil Neck <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
It. K. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, M, Sunday p M, <lb />
Plymouth 0.20 p. m., 6.20 p. m. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
a. m., Sunday 10.00 a. <lb />
N C, 10.25 AM 12,20. <lb />
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb />
mil Brunch leave <lb />
ville arrive Rowland p in. <lb />
Returning leave Rowland p m, <lb />
arrive pm. Dally <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train en Midland X C Branch <lb />
Goldsboro dully except Sunday, M <lb />
X C, A M. Re <lb />
retuning laves C AM <lb />
Goldsboro. N A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
8.35 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
except <lb />
Trains on Latin Branch R. R. leave <lb />
m arrive 8.40 p. <lb />
m. Returning leave a. is. <lb />
arrive 7.15 a. m- y <lb />
Train on Clinton leaves <lb />
for daily, it <lb />
and M Returning leave <lb />
ton at A M, and P. M. <lb />
at Warsaw Nos. and <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Weldon for all points North dally. All <lb />
via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay also at Rocky Mount <lb />
dally except Sunday with Norfolk <lb />
Norfolk and all <lb />
points via <lb />
General L <lb />
J. R. K Transportation <lb />
T. M <lb />
Murray St., <lb />
Makes ice in Seconds. <lb />
-Manufacturer <lb />
CARTS DRAYS <lb />
Is well with best put up nothing <lb />
FIRST-CLASS WORK. We keep up With the lime and the Improved styles <lb />
material MM In all work. All lea spring arc you can select from <lb />
Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King <lb />
also keep on hand a full Hue of Boa Made which n <lb />
ell the given to repairing. <lb />
eT, I- <lb />
Greenville, N C. <lb />
Do You Write <lb />
THEN <lb />
YOU MUST <lb />
HAVE PAPER, PENS, <lb />
ENVELOPES, PENCILS, INK. <lb />
SEE WHAT <lb />
Reflector V Book Stoke <lb />
CAN YOU IN THESE. <lb />
Cap to cents a <lb />
Fool's Cap Per to cents a quire. <lb />
Letter Paper cents a quire. <lb />
Note Paper to cents a quire. <lb />
Envelopes to a pack. <lb />
Box Paper from cents up. <lb />
Gilt to cents a quire. <lb />
Linen Paper, ruled and plain, to cents a quire. <lb />
Nice Square Envelopes to mulch the Paper- <lb />
Fine Tablets at all prices. <lb />
THESE ABE NO THIN, CHEAP <lb />
PAPERS THAT WILL NOT HOLD <lb />
INK but FIRST CLASS <lb />
Tablets, Slates, <lb />
Mi <lb />
Mi <lb />
Mi <lb />
Mi <lb />
Mi <lb />
Mi <lb />
JUST <lb />
SEE WHAT <lb />
WE HAVE FOIl <lb />
THE SCHOOL CHILDREN. <lb />
Pencil Tablets, Letter <lb />
Fools Cap sizes only cents. <lb />
You pay cents these <lb />
same tablets <lb />
Slates cents to cents. <lb />
Pencils per <lb />
Fancy Colored Crayons <lb />
per box- <lb />
Pens per <lb />
dozen. <lb />
Fine Assorted Pens cents <lb />
per dozen. <lb />
Plain Lead Pencils cents <lb />
per <lb />
Rubber Tipped Lead <lb />
JO cents per dozen. <lb />
Pen Holders cents per do. <lb />
And lots of other things just <lb />
as cheap- <lb />
Mi <lb />
Mi<lb />
Do You Read <lb />
Then you want tho best handle the leading <lb />
Harper, Frank Leslie, Review of <lb />
New Peterson, etc., at usual retail prices. Besides we carry a line o <lb />
popular paper Novels at only cents each, and nicely bound <lb />
Novels at cents. These embrace books by tho best writers, <lb />
a list too large to mention- Any book wanted that is not on hand <lb />
will be ordered- <lb />
TO ALL <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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