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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 6 September 1893</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 6 September 1893</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18930906</dc:date>
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                <p>
Believes in <lb />
takes his <lb />
aper. <lb />
Dollar gets <lb />
This Office for Job Printing <lb />
STATE NEWS. <lb />
Things Mentioned in our State Ex- <lb />
changes that are of General Interest <lb />
The Cream of the News. <lb />
The Roxboro Courier is <lb />
years old. <lb />
The Burlington News has en- <lb />
upon its seventh year. <lb />
Moore county now has five <lb />
newspapers. Three weeklies, one <lb />
dally and one monthly, <lb />
Wilkesboro Henry <lb />
Bell, of Mulberry killed a rattle <lb />
snake last week with rattles. <lb />
F. D. populist, will <lb />
contest the seat of B. F. Grady, <lb />
Democrat of the Third Congress- <lb />
District. <lb />
The Hygienic Ice factory, at <lb />
Raleigh owned by Henry Bayer <lb />
Company of Charleston, S- C- <lb />
was destroyed by fire hist week. <lb />
J. EL Wheeless, of Aurora, <lb />
Beaufort has been arrest- <lb />
ed on a requisition from the Gov- <lb />
of for the murder of <lb />
Dick Brock in that State six <lb />
years ago. <lb />
A runaway of Anglo- <lb />
Saxon hue struck Winston last <lb />
Sunday and were so badly scared <lb />
that they couldn't distinguish <lb />
color and had Rev. J. C- Austin, <lb />
the colored preach- <lb />
to tie the knot. <lb />
The Greensboro Record <lb />
that it man by the name <lb />
who was one of <lb />
clowns in circus, <lb />
been living in Guilford county <lb />
since the circus was at Greens-, <lb />
and Tuesday made a pro <lb />
of religion at Hair's <lb />
chapel <lb />
Pittsboro One night <lb />
last week the barn and stable of <lb />
Mr. J. A. Gilliland, of Matthews <lb />
township, were destroyed by fire- <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XI <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER <lb />
NO. <lb />
He Could Afford to Sell it. <lb />
The Wilmington Messenger <lb />
of our exchanges recently <lb />
reported a farmer as selling over <lb />
THE WILSON BILL. <lb />
THE HOUSE. <lb />
PASSED <lb />
Charlotte Observer. <lb />
By way of refreshing the <lb />
pounds of tobacco for a little of our readers, we re print <lb />
more than he sold nine hams tor. <lb />
It is clear that he ought to quit <lb />
making and give his time <lb />
to hog raising. It was either <lb />
very poor tobacco or very lean <lb />
price for tobacco. Raising <lb />
something to eat first is <lb />
better than making all tobacco or <lb />
all cotton. That farmer's hams <lb />
saved his <lb />
The most significant fact about <lb />
the paragraph is that the <lb />
farmer's prudence had put him in <lb />
a position to feel as little as <lb />
the low price commanded <lb />
by his tobacco his <lb />
It is fair to assume that he sold <lb />
his meat out of a superfluous sup- <lb />
ply his smoke and a <lb />
farmer with an meat <lb />
is not apt to have an empty corn- <lb />
bin. <lb />
Low prices for cotton and to- <lb />
great staple crops of <lb />
North always de- <lb />
but they grind, and <lb />
prostrate, and ruin when the <lb />
planter is being by his com- <lb />
mission merchant; when he looks <lb />
to his factor to advance him a <lb />
five dollar bill to pay his taxes; <lb />
he hauls from Sat- <lb />
evening, his next week's <lb />
supply of forage for his stock, <lb />
and bread and meat for his <lb />
Democrat. <lb />
The Crop Outlook of the <lb />
Of the crop outlook of the <lb />
State Commissioner John Robin- <lb />
son says in the August <lb />
The outlook is encouraging, es- <lb />
as to corn and and <lb />
the cotton crop. Never in my <lb />
recollection has there been such <lb />
a radical for the better <lb />
The loss is estimated at than has in cotton crop <lb />
no and is a heavy mis-; since the first of July. Grain and <lb />
fortune to Mr. Gilliland , who is forage is abundant with the far- <lb />
one of best citizens, j the State. <lb />
The tire is thought to have been j There is an assured shortage <lb />
of incendiary origin. . forage and cereal crops in <lb />
England and throughout the most <lb />
Salisbury William M- <lb />
proprietor of <lb />
Hotel, at High Point, was drown-, <lb />
i . r . i f , for all they can snare <lb />
ed at Factory. He and, .,, , . , ,, <lb />
Miss Ida of this <lb />
were riding in a boat. Mr. Jar- <lb />
reached up to break a <lb />
twig off bush and fell out of <lb />
the boat backwards. He could <lb />
not swim sank to the bottom. <lb />
Burlington One day <lb />
last week two colored men who <lb />
live at cut down a <lb />
hollow-tree near that place. <lb />
While sawing it in logs cut off <lb />
the heads of four full-grown cop- <lb />
snakes, and they took <lb />
out and killed an even dozen of <lb />
that species; then setting the <lb />
stump on file, burned three <lb />
more- <lb />
A son of Mr. Will Hunter, of <lb />
Goldsboro, was riding a bicycle <lb />
along the street and a man in a <lb />
sulky was driving rapidly in the <lb />
opposite direction, both looking <lb />
at the train, when they collided ; <lb />
the bicycle was smashed all to <lb />
pieces, and young Hunter was <lb />
run over by horse and sulky. He <lb />
was terribly injured, his breast <lb />
torn open his leg broken. <lb />
Raleigh <lb />
Robinson, of the Depart- <lb />
of Agriculture, is in receipt <lb />
of a letter from Mr. J. H. Gilmer, <lb />
who has a canning plant at <lb />
Greensboro, which he states <lb />
that he has put up this <lb />
of Europe, which means there <lb />
will be a heavy demand on <lb />
This <lb />
will a most favorable <lb />
upon our finances, and will <lb />
put the farmers in a healthy and <lb />
stronger situation if they will <lb />
only take advantage of the <lb />
and husband well their re- <lb />
sources that they go far- <lb />
There is evidently a better day <lb />
ahead for all industrious, frugal <lb />
and intelligent farmers of the <lb />
South. <lb />
Sweet Peas Will Kill Flies. <lb />
inside a said a <lb />
Fourth avenue dealer in pianos <lb />
yesterday afternoon. have <lb />
discovered the greatest fly trap <lb />
on earth I want to show it to <lb />
He led the way to an in- <lb />
in the rear of tho store, <lb />
on which was a newspaper. On <lb />
the paper had been placed a <lb />
bunch of sweet peas. At least a <lb />
thousand dead flies were lying on <lb />
the paper in the immediate <lb />
of the bunch of flowers. <lb />
threw these here by he <lb />
about min- <lb />
I happened to notice that <lb />
every fly that alighted on the <lb />
flowers died in very short <lb />
herewith the Wilson bill which <lb />
passed the lower house of Con <lb />
it enacted, etc., that so <lb />
much cf the act approved July <lb />
14th, 1890. entitled act direct- <lb />
the purchase of silver bullion <lb />
issue of Treasury notes there- <lb />
on, for other <lb />
directs the Secretary of tho Treas- <lb />
to purchase from time to <lb />
time silver bullion to the <lb />
gate amount of ounces, <lb />
or so much thereof as may be of- <lb />
in each month, at the mark- <lb />
et price thereof, not exceeding <lb />
for 871,25.100 grains of <lb />
to issue, in payment for such <lb />
purchases notes of the <lb />
United States, be the <lb />
is hereby repealed; but this repeal <lb />
shall not impair, or in any man- <lb />
affect, the legal tender quality <lb />
of the standard silver dollars here- <lb />
and the faith and <lb />
credit of the United States are <lb />
hereby pledged to maintain tho <lb />
parity of the standard gold <lb />
silver coins of the United States <lb />
at the present legal ratio, or such <lb />
other ratio as may be established <lb />
by law. <lb />
That this bill passed the House <lb />
by so large a <lb />
a to its most zealous <lb />
champion. The majorities for it <lb />
had been figured all the way from <lb />
to 72- never higher the <lb />
latter figure. were some <lb />
surprises also in the votes on the <lb />
amendments. The first one pro <lb />
posed provided for <lb />
on a ratio of to the majority <lb />
against it was The second <lb />
placed the ratio at to defeat- <lb />
ed by majority. The third <lb />
to had majority against it, <lb />
Tho fourth, to The <lb />
fifth, to failed with a major- <lb />
of against it- The most <lb />
popular of the amendments was <lb />
the proposition to substitute for <lb />
the Wilson bill the <lb />
was by major- <lb />
This act, it will be <lb />
was passed 1878 and <lb />
was in effect until the <lb />
act repealed <lb />
it. It required the <lb />
of the Treasury to purchase <lb />
every month, and have coined into <lb />
standard dollars not less <lb />
nor more than <lb />
ounces of silver. It is <lb />
under this act that we have the <lb />
silver dollar that is in circulation <lb />
among us now, no silver dollar <lb />
having been coined since that act <lb />
was repealed. It was to have <lb />
been expected that the <lb />
for free coinage at to <lb />
would develop considerable <lb />
strength. So far from it, it was <lb />
weaker by votes that the <lb />
to proposition. It did not, in <lb />
fact, meet the demand of the <lb />
national Democratic platform for <lb />
the equal intrinsic value of tho <lb />
gold silver dollar, and the <lb />
House apparently viewed it as <lb />
only another make- <lb />
Indeed, unless go to <lb />
i intrinsic value, or very near it, at <lb />
one step, the ratio had perhaps as <lb />
well be left at to as to to be <lb />
raised. About per cent, of the <lb />
silver dollar is fiat now, and a few <lb />
grains more or less are not ma- <lb />
We are very glad indeed that <lb />
on tho main Wilson <lb />
bill North Carolina <lb />
Democrat voted with <lb />
the administration. He surely <lb />
constituents <lb />
Moving the Wheat Crop. <lb />
Now that the question of <lb />
funds to move the cotton crop <lb />
has been settled in the South, <lb />
the West is confronted with the <lb />
problem of securing the money to <lb />
move bushels of wheat <lb />
to tho seaboard, which is a recent <lb />
put on the new crop. <lb />
At a recent meeting of bankers in <lb />
St. Paul a proposition was dis- <lb />
cussed that tho banks of St. Paul <lb />
and Minneapolis should create a <lb />
local currency by issuing, on the <lb />
of New York banks, clearing- <lb />
house certificates <lb />
of and <lb />
which could be loaned to <lb />
the buyers to be used payment <lb />
for wheat to farmers and of <lb />
freight and charges to railroads <lb />
and thus carry the wheat to mark <lb />
et, when the proceeds would <lb />
to the banks, thus put <lb />
ting them in funds with which to <lb />
redeem the local To <lb />
accomplish this it would be <lb />
to have the certificates re- <lb />
as a currency equivalent <lb />
by not only the banks, but all tho <lb />
railways <lb />
Hues, the farmers of the west <lb />
and houses <lb />
ally, and the question arises if so <lb />
many large interests be in- <lb />
to combine and use these <lb />
certificates. They would have to <lb />
pass at their face value not in one <lb />
city or State, but throughout the <lb />
West and in nearly all the cities <lb />
of the Man- <lb />
Record. <lb />
STOP CROAKING. <lb />
A Sensible and Timely Article the <lb />
Philadelphia Times. <lb />
The Tariff Next. <lb />
done, well <lb />
done If tho tariff <lb />
is to be revised by the present <lb />
Stop get down to <lb />
business. It is the croakers who <lb />
are locking up money and dis- <lb />
tressing themselves and business <lb />
We have big crops with a for- <lb />
for our surplus. The <lb />
people were never more generally <lb />
solvent. Money is abundant for <lb />
all legitimate business ; tho <lb />
croakers are on top and coward- <lb />
ice kills where courage would <lb />
cure. <lb />
Let the calamity howlers go to <lb />
the rear. Many banks and <lb />
have <lb />
pended, but not one fifty of <lb />
them has failed. They are sol- <lb />
vent ; ready to resume whenever <lb />
the croakers are through with <lb />
this work, and soon the calamity <lb />
organs which have heralded fail- <lb />
in startling headlines will <lb />
recording the resumption of the <lb />
suspended concerns. <lb />
Stop croaking. It is as serious <lb />
for the times as if bankruptcy <lb />
were upon us as a people, when <lb />
could be revived at once <lb />
honest and well merited faith <lb />
the the <lb />
try and in industries were <lb />
ed. Stop hoarding put it <lb />
into circulation by buying, de- <lb />
positing or lending, and don't <lb />
wait until business has enough <lb />
money without the locked up re <lb />
sources of the croakers. <lb />
We are now adding a million a <lb />
day to our national bank <lb />
; we are getting gold from <lb />
Europe at a rate of a million a <lb />
day, and money ma-t soon be- <lb />
come abundant without the croak- <lb />
it Too Loud. <lb />
In the New York <lb />
Advertiser. <lb />
of colts, I'm reminded <lb />
of a story that Amos J. Cummings, <lb />
the distinguished editor <lb />
statesman of New York, tells <lb />
the financial scare. I <lb />
met him and Tom Murray in the <lb />
tho other night. Amos <lb />
INTERESTING CHICAGO ROUTE. <lb />
Morn- A Well Known Writer Describes <lb />
Recent Trip to the World's <lb />
Fair City.<lb />
Reaches the <lb />
patron <lb />
By advertising in an <lb />
Therefore he uses <lb />
Reflector, <lb />
This Office for Job Printing <lb />
been to Chicago <lb />
and have seen the great <lb />
Exposition t my heart's <lb />
content. The beautiful buildings <lb />
and surroundings even surpass ex- <lb />
and tho is <lb />
Save<lb />
,, worthy of our national <lb />
is a good fellow and fond of But to you who have still <lb />
stories, which I'm not, but this the trip to make, there's a page in <lb />
was a good Ho said that j my experience worth <lb />
Bills <lb />
BOTANIC <lb />
Congress that revision cannot be hoarded wealth. In addition <lb />
lone too soon. When the Slier- j to these sources of enlarged cir. <lb />
medium, Congress will <lb />
surely give us enlarged and <lb />
more flexible circulating medium, <lb />
and money is more likely to be <lb />
mar. silver-law shall have re- <lb />
as it seems probable <lb />
will soon be the fact, if tho <lb />
try fails to show at once the good <lb />
results expected of that repeal too abundant than too scarce <lb />
the people will again become the close of the year- <lb />
clamorous for relief. The action Stop croaking. It doesn't pay ; <lb />
it is all loss and no profit to all, <lb />
and whenever the croaker shall <lb />
cease to ply his vocation money <lb />
will be plenty and business pros- <lb />
Stop croaking. <lb />
of tho House of Representatives <lb />
on the silver question has had a <lb />
salutary effect upon tho public <lb />
mind. But thoughtful men know <lb />
that the effects of a panic are not I <lb />
going to disappear the base j <lb />
less fabric of a There Up on Stony Fork last Sunday <lb />
fore, it may be expected that even while the ministers were engaged <lb />
before tho repeal law shall have <lb />
in the solemn ceremony of i miner <lb />
Even as he spoke u number of the <lb />
insects which had stopped to suck satisfied his silver <lb />
the deadly sweet toppled over when he voted for all of the ratios <lb />
dead. They alighted with their i and for the Bland Allison amend- <lb />
1,400 dozen of fruits of different usual buzz, stopped momentarily, and he answered the de- <lb />
quivered in their wings weakly of his party platform when <lb />
several times, and then give up he embraced the first opportunity <lb />
tho to vote for the repeal of the Sher- <lb />
law. Those of his col- <lb />
kinds- That is a very fine lot, <lb />
and we understand the fruits <lb />
were all raised by Mr. Gilmer. <lb />
The Messenger says Frances <lb />
Brown, a colored woman of <lb />
had in the bank <lb />
of New Hanover when it <lb />
ed. After the bank broke she <lb />
put her money in her wardrobe. <lb />
She had mostly in gold, in <lb />
the wardrobe and while she was <lb />
at church some one stole all of <lb />
her money. A colored brother is <lb />
accused of the theft and has been <lb />
arrested. <lb />
Journal <lb />
the storm at Nag's Head the scalp <lb />
of a woman washed ashore and <lb />
was found by one of the cottagers <lb />
on the beach. The hair was <lb />
about fifteen inches long, and <lb />
of flesh were attached to the <lb />
inside the scalp, which appear- <lb />
ed to be a fresh one. After this a <lb />
diligent watch was kept for the <lb />
body, but none came ashore. <lb />
The telegraph wire is down along <lb />
the beach, tint up to Thursday <lb />
night no news of wrecks was re- <lb />
ported at Head. <lb />
Should Have Been in Bank. <lb />
On last Sunday Mr. Geo- <lb />
Wrenn had the misfortune to lose <lb />
He was attending the As- <lb />
and his wife and family <lb />
were all away from home when <lb />
some one entered his house and <lb />
stole the above named sum of <lb />
money. This is quite a serious <lb />
loss, but it might have been worse. <lb />
been allowed time in which to do sing several persons one lady who <lb />
its work the clamorous go too near the bank of the creek <lb />
crowd of sufferers from the panic fell where it was pretty deep <lb />
will renew their demands upon and got wet all This so ex- <lb />
Congress and ask additional cited of tho candidates for <lb />
in their interest. <lb />
For this reason, if for no other, <lb />
ought aB soon as <lb />
to take up the tariff question- <lb />
Either revise the tariff or tell the <lb />
public it is not to be revised. <lb />
Are to have sugar, free <lb />
coffee, free tea, a breakfast <lb />
table, or a mugwump tariff Are <lb />
baptism, a young lady, that she <lb />
fainted. Her best fellow was <lb />
e, and he took a notion that <lb />
his girl was about to die. The <lb />
Dr. was on the other side of the <lb />
creek. Not waiting to go down <lb />
I by the foot log the young man <lb />
plunged in the creek up to his <lb />
waist, waded over and the <lb />
we to continue to pay bounties to Dr. back on his shoulders. <lb />
sugar-growers These questions <lb />
are now being discussed Ohio. <lb />
Let the whole discuss <lb />
Dispatch. <lb />
These Third Party fellows, <lb />
Populists as they style them- <lb />
seem to understand all <lb />
about the question. We <lb />
very often hear them talking, <lb />
who never even learned the <lb />
table by heart, or went <lb />
through Websters Blue Back and <lb />
this little flurry financial circles <lb />
was due to the fact that tho bank- <lb />
and speculators wanted to <lb />
squeeze the government into <lb />
a lot of gold bonds, and so <lb />
they began to howl about silver <lb />
and all that and finally overdid <lb />
and it contains routes <lb />
to tho West. <lb />
all means take the <lb />
and Ohio <lb />
Railroad. The friend whose <lb />
gent insistence prevailed on mo <lb />
to adopt this road has my <lb />
gratitude. <lb />
a patriotic American, tho <lb />
BLOOD BALM J <lb />
GREAT REMEDY i <lb />
the the people ; route is fraught with historic <lb />
ton much. He said it reminded forest. At Baltimore he is less <lb />
him of tho old fellow who half Fort Henry, <lb />
colt out and <lb />
. j J , . cannon easily distinguished, <lb />
west. He got him well by the Spangled <lb />
well trained to tho saddle but ho that floated proudly now <lb />
didn't whether he would I as it did on that early morning <lb />
scare on tho road or not, so a ago when Fran- <lb />
i . . ,., I Scott Key so anxiously sought <lb />
Id one of his neighbors to hide j <lb />
in the bushes the road . immortal verse sung to the <lb />
and he rode past to hollow world his paean of joy that it still <lb />
The neighbor did as re- waved o'er the fort Less than <lb />
quested and when he hollered the two mile <lb />
i i j -i ii -is Druid Hill I ark, tho prettiest <lb />
It toe old man across track of forestry in <lb />
fence went down I America and incomparable for its <lb />
the road. As soon as the old <lb />
min came to ho said to his genial <lb />
assistant, did ye do that <lb />
you tell me to <lb />
holler Boo I <lb />
whined tho old man, dam <lb />
your you said it too loud <lb />
That's the trouble with them gold- <lb />
bugs, Mr- Cummings. <lb />
They hollered too loud and scar- <lb />
t country a too much.; The visitor <lb />
never before seen tho <lb />
There is a general idea that the <lb />
President's salary of a <lb />
year is all that ho receives. This <lb />
is a mistake. In addition to this <lb />
the President receives to <lb />
pay the salaries of his clerks and <lb />
subordinates. His private <lb />
has his assistant <lb />
the stenographer gets <lb />
steward each of <lb />
five messengers, each of <lb />
the doorkeepers while <lb />
other employees are paid in <lb />
proportion, down to the man who <lb />
takes care of the fires, who re <lb />
addition is <lb />
allowed for incidentals such as <lb />
stationery and <lb />
for fuel, for the greenhouse, <lb />
and for the stable, gas <lb />
2nd incidentals. all, the <lb />
President and his house cost a rushing rocky torrent <lb />
country over <lb />
If every one who can would pay, <lb />
at least, a of what owes, it <lb />
would go a long ways to help <lb />
cure the hard times. Many who <lb />
can pay are the <lb />
hard times and making that a <lb />
pit-text for not paying debts which <lb />
they owe could least <lb />
a portion any <lb />
Christian Advocate- <lb />
soon revived, a pleasant <lb />
smile ran over the man's <lb />
face, although his Sunday <lb />
like were <lb />
not very bulbs, hyacinths, tube roses, etc <lb />
size location ; only needing <lb />
other than mere local patronage <lb />
to make it deservedly famous. <lb />
But Baltimore is left behind in <lb />
the onward rush, soon succeeded <lb />
by the tall monument and the <lb />
great gray dome of the Capital at <lb />
Washington, which looms into <lb />
plain sight for some minutes be- <lb />
fore the train stops within a sin- <lb />
block of the Capital itself. <lb />
Tourists never weary of Wash- <lb />
who has <lb />
beautiful <lb />
city gladly avails himself of the <lb />
opportunity for stopover <lb />
here afforded by the <lb />
more Ohio Road, perhaps <lb />
finds it tho most delightful part <lb />
of his whole trip ; while even the <lb />
confirmed who may <lb />
his previous visits by the <lb />
dozen, drops off again, enthralled <lb />
by the magic attractiveness of the <lb />
city of magnificent distances. The <lb />
opportunity of seeing Washing- <lb />
ton its of sights <lb />
should of itself dictate the <lb />
of this route. <lb />
miles out of Washing- <lb />
ton tho long Vestibule <lb />
threads its way rapidly <lb />
through tho beautiful rolling <lb />
Maryland country until <lb />
it strikes the famous <lb />
with which for a hundred miles <lb />
it runs by side. The <lb />
nation of river mountain <lb />
scenery is superb, the broad <lb />
being at times contracted <lb />
as <lb />
I some bold mountain disputes its <lb />
i and then into <lb />
I an eddying pool as the obstruction <lb />
is passed. deep and <lb />
sometimes a placid <lb />
j ow stream, and again a mountain <lb />
few rivers can vie with <lb />
the Potomac ail that interesting <lb />
variety that makes it so lastingly <lb />
delightful. Besides that, it has <lb />
the ineffable associations of the <lb />
War, when it was the <lb />
conceded dividing between <lb />
North South, the of <lb />
the bloodiest fighting, the vantage <lb />
point of innumerable struggles. <lb />
Hagerstown, Winchester, <lb />
FOR ALL SKIN DISEASES <lb />
H. been tamed by B- <lb />
and people X <lb />
tor to Tear, and fall- to <lb />
quickly , I <lb />
ULCERS, ECZEMA. <lb />
RHEUMATISM. PIMPLES, ERUPTIONS, <lb />
HI SO <lb />
blood . if fol- <lb />
bottles for M, Kr <lb />
maw by <lb />
SENT FREE <lb />
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta. G.<lb />
Notice. <lb />
I sin to friends and <lb />
the public generally that I opened <lb />
mi for myself the <lb />
my residence and on the old Dr. <lb />
Mow lot where can be found at <lb />
time. <lb />
W. BROWN. M. D. <lb />
IV. <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
Or I C <lb />
T I. FLEMING, <lb />
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Attention to business. <lb />
at Tinker old stand. <lb />
i ALE X. L. W <lb />
TAR VIS BLOW, <lb />
A ET S-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
ST In all the Courts. <lb />
A. B. F. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
Prompt attention to collections <lb />
HARRY <lb />
SKINNER, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
V JAMES, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N C. <lb />
Practice in all courts. Collections a <lb />
special <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
TAR SERVICE <lb />
A dispatch says it <lb />
transpires that some days ago the <lb />
State Department received a mes- <lb />
sage from Li Hung Chinese <lb />
Viceroy, addressed to the <lb />
dent, to the effect that for the <lb />
can't even give the boundaries of j present no retaliatory measures <lb />
his State. But touch the silver be initiated as regards <lb />
question or financial situation j citizens of the United States <lb />
he can solve it in less than a dent in <lb />
as we learn that he had over <lb />
more in the house at the time. the Senate, and it looks now <lb />
man <lb />
leagues who voted against the <lb />
Wilson bill did so, of course, <lb />
holding it as a sort of hostage for <lb />
other silver legislation. <lb />
The unexpected strength that <lb />
the repeal measure developed in <lb />
the House for its passage <lb />
through the Senate. A majority <lb />
of three in favor of repeal was <lb />
counted in the upper house before <lb />
the lower Toted. The action of <lb />
Monday must have its influence <lb />
Courier. <lb />
Sew This. <lb />
It will cost you nothing will sure- . . ,. . <lb />
I do you if you have a Cough, Three weeks ago nothing appear- <lb />
as if the Sherman act will, sooner <lb />
or later, be unconditionally re- <lb />
pealed. <lb />
minute, knows all about it. <lb />
While the best statesmen and <lb />
most profound thinkers <lb />
studied the same thing for years <lb />
and yet they say they can't solve <lb />
the great money trouble and con- <lb />
fess they simply know very little <lb />
on that Times. <lb />
the <lb />
that <lb />
pro- <lb />
North Carolina's <lb />
black soils are said to be the j Sheridan twenty miles An- <lb />
finest in the world for raisins South Mountain, Gettys- <lb />
all arc easy distance <lb />
of the Potomac, some scarcely six <lb />
miles off; but none can compare <lb />
in familiar tame with historic <lb />
The per acre laud is as pro- <lb />
as the per acre soil <lb />
of Holland and France, yet we <lb />
import bulbs by the of <lb />
thousands. We hope to see tho <lb />
day yet when North Carolina <lb />
planters will make tea and licorice I tin <lb />
root enough to supply I <lb />
Record. <lb />
Harper's Ferry, <lb />
scenery at this little place <lb />
is majestic. Frowning <lb />
ed peaks guard each flank and bar <lb />
the for the pass worked <lb />
ages by tho mighty <lb />
The town is directly at <lb />
confluence of Potomac <lb />
and the two <lb />
and <lb />
every effort will be made to <lb />
them and their interests in <lb />
peace and safety till the <lb />
of Congress in regular <lb />
The people of the United <lb />
States need a little of the religion <lb />
of these whom they are so <lb />
fond of scourging through their <lb />
streets and keeping out of their <lb />
country by exclusion <lb />
Observer. <lb />
Steamers leave Washington for Green- <lb />
ville and touching at all land- <lb />
on Tar River Monday, <lb />
Mini at C A. M. <lb />
inning leave Tarboro at A M. <lb />
Tuesday, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
Greenville A. M. game days. <lb />
These departures are subject to stage of <lb />
water on Tar River. <lb />
Washington with steam- <lb />
of The Norfolk, and Wash- <lb />
line for Norfolk. Baltimore <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers should order their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion Iron <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk <lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
more. Merchants Miners from <lb />
Boston, <lb />
JNO. SON. <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Washington N. C <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Greenville, N C. <lb />
Thus do the scenes shift. <lb />
Figuring corn at cents a <lb />
bushel, the American crop was <lb />
worth in 1892 The <lb />
of the silver mined in the <lb />
same year was less <lb />
than one-eight of the the value of <lb />
the corn. <lb />
Cold, or any trouble with Throat, more <lb />
or Lungs. Dr. King's New Discovery <lb />
for Consumption, Coughs Colds is <lb />
guaranteed to give relief, or money will <lb />
be paid back. Sufferers from <lb />
found it just the thing and under its use <lb />
had a speedy and perfect recovery. Try <lb />
a sample bottle at our expense and <lb />
for yourself just bow good a thing it Is. <lb />
Trial bottles free at Drag <lb />
Store. Large size and 1.00. <lb />
improbable than that <lb />
this act would repealed except <lb />
at the price of a silver substitute. <lb />
The standard blood purifier, <lb />
builder and nerve helper U <lb />
insist Hood's, because <lb />
Hood's Cures. <lb />
Four farmers were in Judge <lb />
Green's office chatting on the <lb />
times, and they didn't seem to <lb />
care whether there was any money <lb />
or not. They said they had <lb />
meat and bread a plenty at home- <lb />
One old gentleman, nearing <lb />
ninety years of age, said he had <lb />
never known a generation of <lb />
he had seen three <lb />
but what had some reverses; some <lb />
depressions in some way; it would The tariff is an <lb />
all blow over and then would burden upon the people, <lb />
come another season of prosperity. The Democratic was voted <lb />
His experience and observation by the people to re <lb />
is worth something. He it. The party are <lb />
people were getting too lazy, too -flow in to <lb />
expected a great deal now a days work on this line. If the big tariff <lb />
for nothing. Nobody ever suffer- a robbery the cam- <lb />
ed who worked, and he is right. it is certainly no less so <lb />
Durham Sun. Free Press. <lb />
in a magnificent sweep <lb />
One hundred and eighteen opposite sides of the towering <lb />
unemployed families were fed mountain, whoso top is crowned <lb />
., . . , , s easily <lb />
last Saturday by l which tho <lb />
contributions made by the into three Mary- <lb />
land the two <lb />
of John Brown's, en- <lb />
fort and tho ruins of <lb />
the arsenal, are tho rail- <lb />
road in plain view, few pass <lb />
the spot without being <lb />
moved by the thoughts of mo- <lb />
occurrences there trans- <lb />
so short a while ago, <lb />
through which the greatest nation <lb />
of modern times was <lb />
Specimen Case. <lb />
S. II. Clifford, New Wit,, was <lb />
troubled with and <lb />
his Stomach was disordered, <lb />
was to an alarming degree, <lb />
appetite fell away, he terribly <lb />
reduced strength. Three <lb />
bottles of cured him. <lb />
Edward Shepherd, III., <lb />
on his leg of eight <lb />
had a running sore . .- . . <lb />
Used three bottles of I and well nigh perished from the <lb />
Bitters and seven boxes of face of the <lb />
Salve and his leg is <lb />
sound and well. John Speaker. Catawba, <lb />
O. had five large Fever sores on his leg, <lb />
doctors said he was Incurable. One bot- <lb />
Baltimore v, Ohio route <lb />
to Chicago is simply <lb />
and unapproachable for scenic <lb />
tie Electric one box and historic interest; the motive <lb />
Salve cured him entirely. Sold. power is of the finest, cars <lb />
at s Drug Store. an comfortable, and the <lb />
service in every way the best that <lb />
An eminent physician says it is can be afforded. My own <lb />
often dangerous to lie on the j experience with the route prom- <lb />
right It is also unnecessary, j the that you adopt the <lb />
Any political speaker or Picturesque Baltimore <lb />
knows the wrong side the <lb />
lying if any. <lb />
Mrs- Joseph Swarm died at <lb />
HI; of sunstroke. She- <lb />
weighed pounds, and the cask <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
OLD BRICK STORK <lb />
MERCHANTS BUT <lb />
their year's supplies will find <lb />
their interest to get our prices before <lb />
chasing elsewhere is complete <lb />
n all its branches, <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb />
RICE, TEA, <lb />
at Lowest Market Prices. <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF A. CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A com- <lb />
of <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices <lb />
the times. Our goods are bought <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
M. <lb />
if too <lb />
D. On., <lb />
sores my entire person <lb />
mid itched intensely night day. <lb />
, t had to be For could not work Ht <lb />
et, to tie to , , <lb />
could not be got in the door. She <lb />
was the heaviest <lb />
use of Botanic <lb />
Blood B and began to grow better <lb />
person in Fay the first week, and am now sound and <lb />
well, free from sores and Itching and at <lb />
work<lb />
CHILDREN, PARENTS. <lb />
AIM, tor la On <lb />
In i Army or <lb />
of u, India wan of to <lb />
stony. The to.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017614_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
THE GREAT STORM. <lb />
Editor <lb />
EMBER C, 1893. <lb />
at at Greenville, <lb />
N. C-. M mail matter. <lb />
SENATOR <lb />
Ex Gov. nor Jarvis with Mrs- <lb />
Jarvis passed through Wilson <lb />
last week. . A number of our <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington, D- C, Sept, <lb />
President Cleveland, in <lb />
dance with the announcement <lb />
made when he left Washington, <lb />
after the extra session met, <lb />
is back at his desk in the White <lb />
House, and his appearance is the , <lb />
best of the many silly fury of it, as all telegraph wires <lb />
sensational stories that have been were down. Millions of dollars <lb />
published within the last week have been destroyed <lb />
about the dangerous condition he of lost It <lb />
It has been many a day since <lb />
we have had such a storm as <lb />
on our coast last Sunday <lb />
and Monday Aug. 27th and 28th. <lb />
At and even when we went <lb />
to press a week ago not hod <lb />
been learned of the extent and <lb />
He probably never <lb />
severest on the coast of <lb />
was in. <lb />
when he was having i was <lb />
those two troublesome teeth ex-1 South Carolina and Georgia but <lb />
traded and their ulcerated roots over large of <lb />
cut out, two months ago, <lb />
that <lb />
into <lb />
portion of his jawbone would, <lb />
their respects to their eminent <lb />
fellow citizen. Native of an ad- <lb />
joining county, Got. Jarvis has <lb />
always had a strong hold on the <lb />
affections of Wilson people, and <lb />
version of the f <lb />
the mind of tho sensational <lb />
writer, have to cut away in <lb />
order to remove tho terrible can- <lb />
In short, it was <lb />
a successor to Senator Ransom, <lb />
the Representatives from this <lb />
section will in all likelihood <lb />
solid for Jarvis. <lb />
It strikes the Advance that <lb />
Gov. Jarvis with his high quality <lb />
of common sense would of <lb />
great service in Washington <lb />
a crisis like tho present- <lb />
Wilson Advance. <lb />
We take the above from tho <lb />
last issue of the Wilson Advance, <lb />
and make our grateful <lb />
to our esteemed con- <lb />
temporary for the worthy <lb />
to our distinguished towns- <lb />
man- <lb />
It is, believe, generally <lb />
that Governor Jarvis <lb />
will be a candidate, next year, for <lb />
the United States Senate and it <lb />
will conceded that his eminent <lb />
services to his party and his State <lb />
his candidacy to a respect <lb />
consideration by tho press <lb />
and the people. In fact, we be- <lb />
it will be seen as the great <lb />
campaign approaches, that his <lb />
name will furnish a rallying point <lb />
around which all who wish to <lb />
save the State may gather to do <lb />
battle for the best interest of the <lb />
people. <lb />
It must be apparent to the <lb />
thoughtful observer that strong <lb />
effort will be made to consolidate <lb />
tho Third party and the <lb />
can party. Already, <lb />
Mott and Butler have <lb />
debated the terms of <lb />
and the subordinate leaders <lb />
are falling in with the movements <lb />
of their bosses. We do not be <lb />
old story of the man who <lb />
vomited three black crows. Pres- <lb />
Cleveland is not sick, and <lb />
he has not been sick since he <lb />
left Washington. In fact, there <lb />
were few days while he was away <lb />
that he did not perform of <lb />
his public duties, as the records <lb />
in tho office of his private <lb />
will show. <lb />
The passage of the bill for the <lb />
unconditional repeal of the <lb />
chasing clause of the Sherman <lb />
silver law by the House has <lb />
public attention upon <lb />
the Senate, where financial speech- <lb />
es are now the order of the day <lb />
How long the Senate will talk <lb />
before voting is a question that <lb />
will be differently by <lb />
nine out of every ten men in <lb />
Washington. Two weeks is the <lb />
shortest time given by anyone, <lb />
and the longest goes away up in <lb />
the months. An agreement of <lb />
some sort will have to be <lb />
before a vote can taken, and <lb />
tho silver declare they <lb />
will make no agreement, unless <lb />
tho bill, which has been <lb />
reported as a substitute for tho <lb />
bill, that was passed by <lb />
the House, is amended in a man- <lb />
satisfactory to them. The <lb />
democratic leaders, are <lb />
confident that an agreement will <lb />
shortly be reached. <lb />
Procrastination be the <lb />
thief of time, as the old school <lb />
adage says, but it isn't getting a <lb />
chance to steal much of it from <lb />
the House Ways and Means com- <lb />
, i which has buckled right <lb />
it is said, the tariff question with <lb />
met and the determination to report a re- <lb />
form tariff bill at the extra session. <lb />
While the committee is not dis- <lb />
posed to encourage long-drawn <lb />
out hearings of every Tom, Dick <lb />
and Harry who may think them- <lb />
it is possible for these lead- selves tariff experts, it will grant <lb />
to consolidate tho rank and file <lb />
of their parties against Gov Jar- <lb />
vis. His whole life, both public <lb />
and private, has been marked by <lb />
his earnest work for the education <lb />
and uplifting of tho people. He <lb />
has in public and in private shown <lb />
himself to be the friend of the <lb />
people and <lb />
promising advocate of the <lb />
of their children. But few <lb />
men in tho State who are not ac <lb />
engaged in the work of ed- <lb />
have given as much of <lb />
their time to this important work <lb />
upon which the best interest <lb />
the State and the people depend. <lb />
The people know this. They <lb />
appreciate it. They believe <lb />
in this man of the people. <lb />
They have confidence in him <lb />
and we repeat the leaders of <lb />
the Third Republican part- <lb />
cannot consolidate the rank <lb />
and file of their parties into an <lb />
organization to defeat him. <lb />
We are not unmindful of the <lb />
fact that the struggle nest year is <lb />
to be one of vital interest to the <lb />
State, and that it will require a <lb />
powerful effort to overcome the <lb />
enemy, but we also believe that <lb />
our distinguished fellow county- <lb />
man his tho necessary elements <lb />
of strength for such a contest. <lb />
We feel authorized to say, how- <lb />
ever, that if it shall develop <lb />
that any other Democrat can do <lb />
better, that he will subordinate <lb />
his personal to the pub- <lb />
good. <lb />
It is generally believed that the <lb />
repeal of the Sherman bill which <lb />
is now about concede will re- <lb />
store confidence, and that the <lb />
money now hoarded up will be <lb />
turned loose and the panic will <lb />
be over. Secretary is re- <lb />
ported as saying that there is <lb />
more currency in the country <lb />
outside of the Treasury of the <lb />
United States by than <lb />
there was on the 1st day of <lb />
1892, when the country <lb />
was in a prosperous condition, <lb />
and that the panic is due not to a <lb />
scarcity of currency, but to the <lb />
fact that it has been locked up. <lb />
This being true there is no reason <lb />
why business should not assume <lb />
its usual aspect as soon as <lb />
is restored and the money <lb />
now held in clutches finds its way <lb />
into circulation again. This is a <lb />
hopeful view to take of the <lb />
and we trust may be fully <lb />
realized in the near future. <lb />
proper hearings to all parties who <lb />
by reason of their prominence in <lb />
lines of business that may <lb />
affected by a change in the tariff <lb />
have a reasonable right to be <lb />
heard. The hearings will begin <lb />
Monday and end September <lb />
Speaker Crisp did a very <lb />
although not unprecedented <lb />
thing when he called <lb />
Richardson, of Tennessee, to <lb />
the Speaker's chair and descended <lb />
to the floor of the House to reply <lb />
to the unjust and uncalled-for at- <lb />
tack which ex-Speaker Reed made <lb />
upon the now rules of the House. <lb />
Mr. Reed was surprised, and be- <lb />
fore the Speaker got through <lb />
disgusted to find himself justly <lb />
held up to the scorn of the House <lb />
and the country for having falsely <lb />
claimed that the now rules were in <lb />
the line of the notorious rules <lb />
with which he gagged the House <lb />
of the Fifty-first Congress. It is <lb />
not the first time that Mr. Crisp <lb />
has proved himself more than a <lb />
match for the Maine blusterer, <lb />
and it will not be tho last. The <lb />
difference between the new rules <lb />
of the House and tho notorious <lb />
Reed rules is precisely that be- <lb />
tween the Government of tho <lb />
United States and the Govern- <lb />
of new rules put <lb />
the authority for shutting off <lb />
debate in the hands of the major- <lb />
of the House, where it alone <lb />
the old it into <lb />
the hands of Reed, making him <lb />
more of an autocrat than would be <lb />
tolerated in any legislative body <lb />
of the world. <lb />
It is queer how some things <lb />
work. It is now said that Col. <lb />
Charles P. Lincoln, who was De- <lb />
Pension Commissioner <lb />
who has lately <lb />
gained some notoriety by publicly <lb />
announcing his intention to test <lb />
in the courts the right of tho Com <lb />
missioner of Pensions to suspend <lb />
pensioners, except in cases where <lb />
fraud is proved to have been u <lb />
in securing the pension, got tho <lb />
scheme up for no other purpose <lb />
than to boom his candidacy for <lb />
of the G- A. <lb />
R. at the coming encampment of <lb />
that organization at Indianapolis. <lb />
It is regarded as significant <lb />
that Speaker Crisp should have <lb />
attached I am in Washington <lb />
on that to his acceptance of <lb />
an invitation to deliver a short <lb />
address at the centennial <lb />
of the laying of tho corner <lb />
stone of the Capitol, to be held on <lb />
th 18th It is taken <lb />
to mean that the Speaker thinks <lb />
the extra session may <lb />
before that date, consequent- <lb />
that the Senate will be <lb />
in acting on the bill. <lb />
The Pittsboro Record began a <lb />
new volume, its sixteenth, with <lb />
last It was started fifteen <lb />
years ago by Mr- H. A. London <lb />
and has always continued <lb />
the same management. The <lb />
says that this is far <lb />
above the average lifetime of a <lb />
North Carolina newspaper under <lb />
one management We trust the <lb />
paper and editor may flourish <lb />
together for many years yet- <lb />
Southern and Eastern States. <lb />
At sea much damage was done to <lb />
vessels, a large number being en- <lb />
wrecked- Much yet re- <lb />
to be learned of its <lb />
We print to-day a few of <lb />
many consequences of this great <lb />
storm as gathered from the tole- <lb />
graphic reports and exchanges. <lb />
Augusta, Ga., August 1893. <lb />
The loss of life on tho sea <lb />
islands of South Carolina for ex- <lb />
anything yet reported, and <lb />
will not fall far short of <lb />
Great destitution exists among <lb />
the remaining inhabitants <lb />
and an urgent appeal is made for <lb />
aid in the shape of provisions, <lb />
the crops and supplies of the <lb />
having been entirely destroy- <lb />
ed. <lb />
Columbia, S- C, Ac- <lb />
counts continue to come in of <lb />
general havoc by Sunday's storm. <lb />
Thousands of valuable <lb />
trees have been blown down, <lb />
crops have washed away, and the <lb />
rivers are full of flotsam and jet- <lb />
from the disaster. Advices <lb />
from the sea coast may be sum- <lb />
mons up in tho following extracts <lb />
from today's Charleston <lb />
long-staple cotton crop <lb />
has met with severe injury, and <lb />
the estimates are that where in for- <lb />
mer years Charleston received <lb />
bales of sea-island <lb />
year she will do well to get 3.000. <lb />
That is the situation in a nut shell, <lb />
as viewed yesterday by those who <lb />
are in the best position to do any <lb />
talking. The reports indicate <lb />
that the sea islands met with tho <lb />
heaviest damage, while the up- <lb />
lands fared somewhat better. <lb />
Robinson, of <lb />
establishment, gives the <lb />
story of the effects of the <lb />
in the low He had just <lb />
arrived from Waterloo, <lb />
stated that from place <lb />
on the to Jackson- <lb />
two had floated on <lb />
the top of their shanty re- <lb />
ported that all the on the <lb />
place in the lowlands had been <lb />
drowned, in all about men <lb />
women and children. They relate <lb />
a terrible experience, and <lb />
more state that all of the dwell <lb />
totally destroyed and <lb />
the place in abject desolation. <lb />
Mr Robinson <lb />
The Wilson bill passed the <lb />
House of Representatives on last <lb />
Monday by majority. No one <lb />
had expected such a large <lb />
in favor of the unconditional <lb />
repeal of the Sherman bill. This <lb />
bill has been sent to the Senate <lb />
and has been referred to the <lb />
Finance Committee- It is <lb />
thought that the Senate will pass <lb />
the bill and that this <lb />
will be sent to the House and by <lb />
that passed in a short time and <lb />
the Sherman bill which so <lb />
much has been and said <lb />
will be a thing of the past <lb />
for <lb />
and Stomach take <lb />
per bottle. Genuine bu <lb />
Crude mar and rad en wrapper. <lb />
said, of tho houses had <lb />
been completely washed from <lb />
their foundations out into the <lb />
streets and all of the rice fields <lb />
were overflowed. <lb />
steamboat Pilot <lb />
familiar to every soul on the <lb />
inland route between tho cities of <lb />
Charleston and Savannah, has <lb />
been stranded more or less <lb />
injured. Tho pilot fleet of the <lb />
harbor is wrecked or stranded. <lb />
The phosphate which are <lb />
located on the banks of the neigh- <lb />
boring rivers, are in little better <lb />
Slight than those on Charleston <lb />
Royal, lying on a <lb />
tongue of land down the Beaufort <lb />
river, must have been more ex- <lb />
posed to the fury of the tempests. <lb />
The place is practically in ruins. <lb />
Its water front is destroyed and <lb />
great damage has been done to <lb />
its buildings. The great loss of <lb />
life which resulted from the storm <lb />
on every shore of the islands is <lb />
the greatest here, or else it has <lb />
been more authentically stated. <lb />
Thirty odd were found <lb />
dead on the beach, and <lb />
was expected to be largely <lb />
increased before the death roll <lb />
was finally closed. It is needless <lb />
to add that the crops were injured <lb />
terribly. Fifty per cent, loss <lb />
would probably not too large <lb />
an estimate to make. <lb />
experience of Captain <lb />
Whitely and his wife and family <lb />
of ten children on Castle <lb />
on the night of the storm was a <lb />
terrible The wind blew the <lb />
storm houses to pieces and blew <lb />
away all the ship stores, <lb />
and his dwelling was so exposed <lb />
that it was seen to be dangerous <lb />
to remain in it. He and his <lb />
therefore, sought shelter from <lb />
the of the tempest to the lee- <lb />
ward of the fort, and with his <lb />
children he stood out in the <lb />
with occasional waves <lb />
breaking over the helpless family. <lb />
Three of the little ones were from <lb />
six months to three years of age <lb />
and stood it like the old ones <lb />
without a whimper. <lb />
fury of the and <lb />
waves was so great that some <lb />
huge masses of iron used for <lb />
holding buoys and weighing <lb />
pounds were moved from <lb />
their places and rolled the <lb />
beach. Some great anchors <lb />
weighing from to <lb />
pounds were flung about the <lb />
place like so much timber. The <lb />
place is a complete ruin, and in <lb />
spite of it all Capt Whitely and <lb />
brave family are still on the <lb />
Castle and are holding the fort <lb />
Savannah, Ga-, August <lb />
Jacob Paulsen left this morning <lb />
for Coffin Point, S- C, to bring <lb />
the survivors of the wrecked <lb />
steamship City of Savannah here. <lb />
Reports of the disastrous work <lb />
of the storm are still coming in <lb />
The entire coast is strewn with <lb />
wreckage and vessels are high <lb />
and dry in exposed harbors. The <lb />
bark Clara E- Bull <lb />
River, S. C, loaded with <lb />
was torn from her moor- <lb />
and dashed upon shore at <lb />
least a quarter of a mile from the <lb />
docks. The beach and inlets are <lb />
filled with wrecks of small crafts. <lb />
Dr. William and C- H <lb />
Cunningham, who have been mis- <lb />
sing since storm, hare been <lb />
nm <lb />
heard from and are on their way <lb />
to the city. <lb />
Beaufort, N. C, Aug. <lb />
captain of the bark Ann is here <lb />
with all his crew. They turned <lb />
the vessel over to tug boatman <lb />
for salvage. The schooner Ann <lb />
T. is anchored under Point <lb />
Lookout in a safe harbor- She <lb />
is making 1,200 strokes pi r hour <lb />
with her pumps, has lost anchor <lb />
and chain and split mainsail- <lb />
Savannah, Ga., Ado. -The <lb />
tug that went to Coffin Point, <lb />
near St Helena lighthouse, to <lb />
bring back the women and <lb />
wrecked on the steamer <lb />
City of Savannah, was expected <lb />
to return by P. M-, but had I <lb />
not arrived here at P. M- j <lb />
A great many dead <lb />
that were drowned in the <lb />
are floating down the river. <lb />
About P. M. the body of a <lb />
little girl, about eight years old, <lb />
floated down. It is not yet known <lb />
r the child was white or <lb />
black. <lb />
It is reported this evening that <lb />
twenty four bodies floated <lb />
up on the lower end of <lb />
sou's Island, near ferry. <lb />
The report is not verified, and <lb />
be verified to-night. It is <lb />
considered doubtful. <lb />
Wilmington, N. C-, Aug. <lb />
The three-masted schooner En- <lb />
of New York, Captain <lb />
Frank with cargo of rail- <lb />
road ties, is ashore twenty-five <lb />
miles south of Cape Fear, with <lb />
deck load lost, and cabin and <lb />
forecastle washed away. She was <lb />
three days without food or water. <lb />
The mate was washed overboard <lb />
Sunday night and the captain in <lb />
The three masted schooner <lb />
Jennie Thomas, of Savannah, <lb />
from Savannah to Baltimore, <lb />
Captain A. T- Young, with a cargo <lb />
of lumber, is waterlogged, and <lb />
anchored twenty-five miles south <lb />
of Cape Fear. No lives lost <lb />
Augusta, Ga., Aug. A <lb />
to the Chronicle from Beau- <lb />
fort, S. C-, Over dead <lb />
bodies have been found on the <lb />
islands about Beaufort and Port <lb />
Royal. Over two hundred mil- <lb />
lions of property has been wrecked <lb />
near the same points. Both are <lb />
the direct results of the severe <lb />
storm which swept along the <lb />
Atlantic coast Sunday night <lb />
Every one of the fifteen or <lb />
twenty islands lying around Port <lb />
Royal and Beaufort are steeped <lb />
in sorrow. On every door nob <lb />
there is a bunch of crepe, and <lb />
upon every hillside there <lb />
fresh-made graves, some already <lb />
filled, while others are awaiting <lb />
tho bodies that will deposited <lb />
in them just as soon as some one <lb />
can found to do the Christian <lb />
act of shoveling tho dirt upon <lb />
the coffin. The bushes, the under- <lb />
growth, the trees, and the marshes <lb />
turning up dead bodies <lb />
ever an investigation is made. <lb />
Already more than bodies <lb />
have been found, and those who <lb />
are at all posted about the <lb />
try and the habits of the people <lb />
in the storm-visited sections, are <lb />
confident in their predictions <lb />
that the death roll will run as <lb />
high as Some of the people, <lb />
and they are among the best <lb />
in this section of the State, <lb />
even place the loss at <lb />
There has not been an hour of <lb />
any day since the early hours of <lb />
Monday morning that a dead <lb />
body has not been found at some <lb />
point on one of the many islands- <lb />
As the waters recede and the <lb />
move deeper into the wreck- <lb />
age gathered by the storm, the <lb />
ghastly pictures are uncovered. <lb />
So frequent are the discoveries <lb />
that the finding of a single body <lb />
attracts no attention at all. It <lb />
takes the discovery of at least a <lb />
clump of half a dozen or more to <lb />
induce the people to show any <lb />
feeling <lb />
It is around Beaufort and Port <lb />
Royal that the death rate was the <lb />
greatest, but in neither of those <lb />
towns were many lives lost. <lb />
Around the there is a <lb />
complete chain of islands, and it <lb />
was upon these the black angel of <lb />
death hovered for hours Sunday <lb />
night, leaving in his path sorrow <lb />
and desolation greater than has <lb />
ever been experienced there be- <lb />
fore. <lb />
The storm which <lb />
Atlantic States last Sunday night <lb />
and Monday was very severe at <lb />
Washington, Baltimore and New <lb />
York, shaking the people up and <lb />
doing considerable damage at all <lb />
these places. A Baltimore dis- <lb />
of the 29th ult, reads as <lb />
since the big flood of <lb />
has such a deluge of water <lb />
invaded Baltimore as that of last <lb />
night. The wind blew a gale all <lb />
the afternoon, whirling around <lb />
corners and damaging all <lb />
property. Early in the even- <lb />
sheets of driving rain began <lb />
to fall, and continued with intense <lb />
fury until an early this <lb />
morning. Roofs and chimneys <lb />
were smashed and trees uprooted. <lb />
Telegraph and telephone wires <lb />
were soon wrecked, and the <lb />
electric lights went out leaving <lb />
the greater part of the city in <lb />
darkness. <lb />
seas were piled up and <lb />
rolled high in the basin. The <lb />
waves spread over the wharves <lb />
and flooded streets and <lb />
cent building. From midnight to <lb />
o'clock the wind blew a gale of <lb />
sixty miles an hour. The rain <lb />
fell in torrents. It was almost a <lb />
cloudburst <lb />
rowed around in boats <lb />
from store to store in the lower <lb />
part of the city, carrying mer- <lb />
chants and clerks to their <lb />
of business and removing <lb />
ables and books. The streets re- <lb />
lagoons instead of <lb />
thoroughfares- The wharves <lb />
were completely submerged, if <lb />
not destroyed. Street cars <lb />
ed along Pratt streets with water <lb />
running over their floors. <lb />
and schooners <lb />
were washed out of the basin <lb />
and to-day lie high and dry on <lb />
the street beds. At the foot of <lb />
Commerce street the large <lb />
warehouses of <lb />
other firms were flooded <lb />
thousands of barrels of flour I <lb />
damaged. The Baltimore and <lb />
Ohio Railroad warehouses and <lb />
freight station at the foot of <lb />
Spear's wharf suffered to the <lb />
extent of thousands of dollars. <lb />
the entire water front <lb />
there were constant evidences of <lb />
tho havoc wrought by the storm. <lb />
The southeast gale prevented <lb />
the waters from receding until <lb />
noon to-day, up to which hour <lb />
business was practically at a <lb />
standstill in the flooded <lb />
THE FOR AID. <lb />
Columbia, S. C-, August <lb />
Governor to-night issued <lb />
a proclamation calling on the <lb />
of the State for contributions <lb />
to relieve sufferings of the <lb />
people of Port Royal and Beau- <lb />
fort. <lb />
Who are for the first time to <lb />
undergo woman's severest trial <lb />
we offer <lb />
A remedy which, If as directed a few <lb />
weeks before confinement, robs it of its <lb />
PAIN, HORROR AND RISK TO LIFE <lb />
of both mother and child, as thousands who <lb />
have used it testify. <lb />
two bottles of Mothers Friend with <lb />
marvelous results, wish every woman <lb />
ordeal child birth to <lb />
know if they will use Mothers Friend for a few <lb />
weeks it will rob confinement of pain <lb />
and insure safely la life mother and child. <lb />
Mrs. Sam Montgomery <lb />
took <lb />
To Mothers mailed free.------ <lb />
Co., Atlanta, <lb />
-THE- <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Made a New Man <lb />
I have been made a new man by Hood's <lb />
I pains In my back, felt languid <lb />
and did not have any appetite. I have taken <lb />
twelve bottles of Hood's and can- <lb />
not praise It Jacob <lb />
16th St and Portland Av., Louisville, Ky. <lb />
HOOD'S PILLS Cure all Liver Ills. <lb />
LADIES <lb />
a tonic, or children who want <lb />
up, take <lb />
BITTERS. <lb />
is cum Malaria. <lb />
Liver complaints and <lb />
Ml run <lb />
GREENVILLE, X. C. <lb />
Can still be found <lb />
at the Old <lb />
pared lo do <lb />
FIRST-CLASS WORK <lb />
on anything in the <lb />
mi <lb />
Fine Vehicles Specialty <lb />
Repairing done prompt- <lb />
and in best manner <lb />
THIS SPACE BELONGS TO <lb />
WILEY BROWN <lb />
Successor to <lb />
BROWN BROS. <lb />
Lookout for advertisement next week. <lb />
CO <lb />
-----DEALERS IN----- <lb />
AND FANCY GROCERIES, <lb />
We arc again in business to and have a nice line of fresh <lb />
goods. Will be glad to have our old customers call and see us, as well as all <lb />
others who wish to get Groceries and Confections that are pure. <lb />
Our goods will be guaranteed In every respect. We pay the highest mar <lb />
prices for <lb />
MM. <lb />
RELIABLE <lb />
Oilers to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding line of the following goods <lb />
not to be excelled in this market. to be and <lb />
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN- <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS, SHOE., LA- <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE, HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH, BLINDS, and QUEENS- <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, i-LOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER Of different <lb />
kinds. Gin and Mill Belting, Hat, Rock Lime, Plaster of Paris, <lb />
Hair. Harness, Bridles and addles <lb />
HEAVY A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb />
Jobbers prices, cents per per cent for Cash. Bread Prep- <lb />
and Hall's Star Lye Jobbers Prices, White Lead and pure Lin <lb />
seed OH, Varnishes and Paint Wood and Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb />
-IN- <lb />
TO my Friends and Customers of Pitt and adjoining counties <lb />
I wish to say that I have made special preparation in preparing HOGS- <lb />
HEAD MATERIAL and propose you HOGSHEADS with inside dressed <lb />
smooth which will prevent cutting or scrubbing your Tobacco when packing. <lb />
Also I have made special arrangement to use beat split Hoops made <lb />
Oak. special advantages I have In cutting my own timber places me in a <lb />
position to meet all competition. cheerfully promise you that will strive to <lb />
make it to your interest to use my Hogsheads and you can find them at any time <lb />
either at my factory at the Warehouse, Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Scroll Sawing, Making <lb />
And Turned Trimmings for Houses a Specialty. <lb />
I am prepared to any kind of Scroll Sawing for Brackets or anything In that <lb />
line, or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, Pickets for Stairways. of <lb />
any kind, including Piazza Railing, and would be pleased to name you prices on <lb />
anything in the above upon application. <lb />
GENERAL REPAIR WORK <lb />
done on short notice. Thanking you for your past patronage, lam willing to <lb />
strive to meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you me a trial before <lb />
arranging elsewhere- Respectfully, <lb />
Winterville, N. <lb />
A little of printer's ink. <lb />
Sometimes causes people to think. <lb />
And we want to impress upon minds that we have <lb />
-----received our new------ <lb />
SprinG-. -StocK <lb />
-----and can now show a----- <lb />
intention is to sell good roods at the lowest possible <lb />
prices. We Lave the largest and most varied stocK <lb />
kept in town. We keep almost every thing <lb />
needed in the household or on the farm and <lb />
and comparison of our <lb />
goods. We 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, <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 />
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, <lb />
HARDWARE, PLOWS AND <lb />
FARMING UTENSILS, <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
We have the largest and, <lb />
ever kept in our <lb />
line of FURNITURE Consisting in part oP- <lb />
Marble Top Walnut Suits, <lb />
Solid Oak Suits, Imitation Oak Suits. Imitation Walnut <lb />
Suits, Bureaus, Bedsteads, Tables, Buffets, <lb />
of different kinds, Children's Cribs and Cradles, <lb />
Tin Safes, Bed Springs, a full lino of <lb />
Tables, Children's Carnages, Ac Keep also a <lb />
of Lace Curtains and Curtain Poles, Matting and Floor <lb />
Cloths. We cordially invite all to come to see us <lb />
when in want of any goods. We will try to give you <lb />
satisfaction at all times. <lb />
COATS SPOOLS COTTON AT WHOLESALE <lb />
J. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883.<lb />
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL- <lb />
N. C. <lb />
C. R. Side Meat. <lb />
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb />
barrels Flour, all grades <lb />
barrels Granulated Sugar. <lb />
barrels C. Sugar. <lb />
hoses Tobacco, <lb />
barrels Mills Snuff, <lb />
barrels Three Thistle <lb />
barrels Gall Ax <lb />
barrels P. Snuff, <lb />
eases Sardines. <lb />
Full stock of all oil <lb />
50.000 Luke Cigarette. <lb />
host s Cakes and Crackers, <lb />
barrels Stick Candy. <lb />
ft Rand's Powder. <lb />
tons Shot, <lb />
c Bread Powders. <lb />
cases Star Lye, <lb />
V-o barrels Apple Vinegar, <lb />
eases Gold Dust Washing Powder, <lb />
i i lb Bagging. <lb />
bundles Arrow Ties. <lb />
goods carried in my line. <lb />
COOK STOVE <lb />
YOU CAN BUY ONE AT FENDERS, GOOD COOK STOVES <lb />
are now so cheap that you can not afford to buy an inferior <lb />
one- Go to and buy tho best <lb />
to k <lb />
Tinware, Paints, Oils, Glass, Lamp Goods, <lb />
Stoves repaired, Tin Roofing and all kinds of Sheet Metal work <lb />
done. <lb />
S. E.<lb />
R J <lb />
COBB BROS CO., <lb />
-AND <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE STREET, VA. <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
J. L. SUGG, <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N- C <lb />
OFFICE ft JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest currant rates. <lb />
Ml AGENT FOB A FIRST-GLASS FIRE PROOF<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017614_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE <lb />
Earth Do Move <lb />
SO DOES OUR GOODS AT <lb />
THE MIRACULOUS <lb />
LOW PRICES GIVEN BELOW. <lb />
All Calicoes and Domestics at <lb />
cents. Ginghams to cents. <lb />
Nice White Lawn to <lb />
Nice White Lawns inches at <lb />
cents. <lb />
NOTIONS. <lb />
Ladies Cool Vests cents a pair- <lb />
Ladies and Gents Hosiery at <lb />
cents per pair. Spool Cotton at <lb />
cents per dozen. <lb />
CLOTHING. <lb />
Nice Suits for Boys <lb />
Nice Suits for Youths <lb />
52-50- Nice Suits for Men <lb />
for to <lb />
SHOES. <lb />
In Shoes can fit both your pocket <lb />
and your foot. Ladies Shoes <lb />
cents. Slippers to cents. <lb />
Men Shoes to <lb />
HATS. <lb />
A Nice Line Sample Straw Hats <lb />
and Pants to be sold at your own <lb />
price. <lb />
HIGGS BROS. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
REFLECTOR. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
The Reflector Book Store <lb />
everybody in need of stationery of any <lb />
kind to come see a lot we have just re- <lb />
Some special bargains in slates, <lb />
pencils, paper and envelopes. <lb />
The Greenville and boys <lb />
played a game of ball here Friday re- <lb />
in a victory for by a <lb />
of to They played another <lb />
game Monday, the score at <lb />
Uncle Tommy Little tells us that we <lb />
slipped up in giving the date of the <lb />
earthquake in last issue, tint it was <lb />
seven years ago instead of And he <lb />
is correct, as the date was Aug. 31st, <lb />
1886. <lb />
Clarence tried to go wild- <lb />
goose horns cue better and put a cow- <lb />
bell on his bicycle the other day. One <lb />
Would think he was the old bell cow <lb />
from the way the calves bleated as he <lb />
went along. <lb />
One thing the town ought <lb />
to put a stop to is boys jumping on and <lb />
off the trains at the depot. We have <lb />
noticed it several time- of late and the <lb />
practice is certainly a nuisance as well <lb />
as <lb />
Last Thursday Mr. V. K. Whichard <lb />
brought the Reflector the finest <lb />
melon have had season. It <lb />
weighed pounds. We are also in- <lb />
to his excellent wife for a case <lb />
of delicious canned peaches. <lb />
We noticed the other day a novel <lb />
method of persuading a balking horse <lb />
to move off. A man grabbed the horse <lb />
by the head and began biting the animal <lb />
fiercely on the nose. The horse couldn't <lb />
stand any such embracing as that. <lb />
Some of tan papers have been referring <lb />
to the recent storm as the equinoctial- <lb />
We are inclined to the belief that <lb />
one was an extra, and that the <lb />
finny will come along ill its <lb />
usual shape somewhere in twenties <lb />
of this month. <lb />
The firm of Brown Bros., has dissolved, <lb />
Mr. Wiley Brown purchasing the inter- <lb />
est cf Mr. Brown in the business. <lb />
Mr. James Brown forms a co-partner- <lb />
ship with Mr. A. B. Ellington to <lb />
duct the and machine shops. <lb />
We all success. <lb />
There was a meeting of Confederate <lb />
veterans in the Court House here on <lb />
to take steps for a reunion and <lb />
picnic to be held soon. Mr. Andrew <lb />
Joy nor made them a speech. Commit- <lb />
tees were appoint- d who will report at <lb />
a later meeting when all the arrange- <lb />
will be announced. <lb />
You will a step of enterprise in <lb />
the large advertisement of T. Mun- <lb />
ford today, lie takes a half page of <lb />
the Reflector for the fall and is going <lb />
to keep you Informed about the en- <lb />
did stock he i- and the low <lb />
prices at which he will sell.<lb />
Five men and boys got shot at Has- <lb />
Hardware Store Saturday. <lb />
We g ct five Fridays and five <lb />
days in September. <lb />
the Old Brick <lb />
Married, <lb />
In the Episcopal church at o'clock <lb />
last afternoon, Rev- <lb />
officiating. Miss F. <lb />
of Greenville was to <lb />
Mr. W. M. Hammond, of Bethel. The <lb />
Reflector joins a host of friends in <lb />
extending best wishes. <lb />
Fruit Jars Cheap at <lb />
Stoic. <lb />
See notice to by J. C. Cook, <lb />
administrator of Robert Edwards. <lb />
The Best on earth at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
A series of meetings will begin to- <lb />
night in the Baptist eh inch at <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
John H. Smith, executor of Abel <lb />
Smith, has a notice to creditors in this <lb />
paper. <lb />
Several men boys got pow- <lb />
too. at Hardware Store <lb />
this week and still there Is more left. <lb />
Ground was broken yesterday and <lb />
work commenced on the <lb />
church. <lb />
Remember I pay you cash for Chickens <lb />
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
Farmers t corn blown all <lb />
over the county, and much fodder has <lb />
been destroyed. <lb />
Aug. 23rd, Fresh N. C, Mountain <lb />
Butter M cents per lb at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
The Reflector is in receipt of an <lb />
to a school entertainment at <lb />
on the 8th. <lb />
I am expecting a ear load of Windows <lb />
and doors this week which were bought <lb />
below the regular price and will be sold <lb />
D. D. <lb />
The Greenville Land Improvement <lb />
Co., advertises an engine and boiler for <lb />
gale under mechanics lien <lb />
Mr. D. S. Smith has purchased Mr. C. <lb />
F. White's k of Groceries and is <lb />
carrying on the business. <lb />
Ill keeping with the adage the <lb />
storm comes the enjoying <lb />
delightful weather this week. <lb />
Merchants did not have very much to <lb />
do Saturday. Light trade usually fol- <lb />
lows a week of bad weather. <lb />
Messrs. M. B. Lang and S. M, <lb />
will their stores on nest <lb />
Monday on account of th c Jewish New <lb />
Tear. <lb />
Miss Bettie Warren opened <lb />
school in Masonic Hall building on <lb />
Monday morning with twenty-seven <lb />
pupils. <lb />
Messrs- W- B. Parker and Charles <lb />
Braxton were sturgeon fishing down the <lb />
river, last Friday morning, and caught <lb />
four large ones inside of four hours. <lb />
The Board of Health, <lb />
log of the physicians of the county, held <lb />
a meeting in the Court House Monday <lb />
and elected Dr. W. H. Bagwell as Super- <lb />
of Health for the next two <lb />
years. They also a county <lb />
society and will hold regular monthly <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mr. C. W. has been the <lb />
past week. <lb />
Mrs. D. J. Whichard has been sick for <lb />
several days. <lb />
Mr. C. D. Smith came home Thurs- <lb />
day from a trip north. <lb />
Miss Inez of Perquimans is <lb />
visiting Mrs J. White. <lb />
Mr. H. C. Hooker took a position with <lb />
Brown Hooker on the first. <lb />
Mrs. B. Evans went to Tarboro <lb />
yesterday to visit her daughter. <lb />
Mr. W. Hal left Monday to <lb />
buy a lot of horses mules. <lb />
Mrs. J. W. Perkins returned last <lb />
week from a visit to Asheville. <lb />
Master Will Blow returned home <lb />
Friday from his trip up country. <lb />
Miss Novella Higgs left Monday for <lb />
school de Sales, near Baltimore. <lb />
Hon. L. C. Latham has been confined <lb />
to his home for some with <lb />
Mess. W. C. Jackson and Preston Cot- <lb />
leave this week for the A. M. col- <lb />
at Raleigh. <lb />
Miss Pool, of Williamston, <lb />
has been visiting her aunt, Mrs- A. M. <lb />
Clark, the past week. <lb />
Mr. W. F. foreman of the Re- <lb />
has taking a few days <lb />
vacation in Norfolk. <lb />
Miss Pattie Crawford, of Williamston, <lb />
has been spending the past week visit- <lb />
Miss Myra Skinner. <lb />
Mrs. S. C. Wells, of Wilson, has been <lb />
spending some days with the family of <lb />
her father, Mr. W. M. King. <lb />
Mrs. Andrew Joyner and children re- <lb />
turned home last week from a long visit <lb />
to points in this State and Virginia. <lb />
Miss Smith left yesterday for <lb />
Oxford to enter the female seminary, of <lb />
which Prof. F. P. is President. <lb />
Mr. Alfred Forbes, the <lb />
left for New York Monday to <lb />
new -roods. His son Charlie <lb />
him. <lb />
Rev. N. of Tarboro, <lb />
has been he--e for a few days looking <lb />
after of work on the <lb />
Presbyterian church. <lb />
Mrs. John Duckett. late of Hamilton, <lb />
ha been spending a few days with Mrs. <lb />
V. II. Whichard prior to leaving for her <lb />
new home at <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Miss <lb />
Mollie and Messrs. Frank <lb />
Wilson, J. R. Davis. F. M. Davis, J. <lb />
J. Satterthwaite and G. II. Little came <lb />
home last week from the World's <lb />
Fair. <lb />
Mr. Cherry went north last <lb />
to purchase new goods for his <lb />
J. Cherry Co. <lb />
readers will be kept advised of their <lb />
stock, than which no larger or better <lb />
will be found in the market. <lb />
Mr. J. A. returned last week <lb />
from Asheville where he had been in <lb />
response to a telegram from his uncle, <lb />
Mr. G. E. Taft, who was sick there. <lb />
Mr. Taft is now at Littleton and arc <lb />
glad to know is much <lb />
Mr. J. Bryan Grimes, of this county, <lb />
has been invited and consented to act <lb />
as chief marshal for the coming State <lb />
fail-. While this is a compliment to Pitt <lb />
county the selection is also a credit to <lb />
the fair. The directors could not <lb />
have made a better choice. <lb />
Mr. John of <lb />
county. Va., was here last week visiting <lb />
his brother. Rev. Our <lb />
eastern country with its broad fields of <lb />
cotton and other line crops was very <lb />
interesting to him. lie had not seen <lb />
cotton growing before coming here. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county as Ad- <lb />
of Eliza James, deceased, <lb />
notice is given to all persons in- <lb />
to the estate to make immediate <lb />
payment to the undersigned, and all <lb />
persons having claims against the estate <lb />
must present the same tor payment be- <lb />
fore the 1st day of Sept-, 1884, or this <lb />
notice will be plead bar of recovery. <lb />
This the 1st day of September. 1803. <lb />
WILLIAM J. JENKINS. <lb />
Eliza <lb />
Notice <lb />
Having qualified before the Superior <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county as <lb />
of Win. deceased, <lb />
notice is hereby given to all persons <lb />
indebted to the estate to make <lb />
ate payment to the undersigned, and <lb />
all persons having claims against the <lb />
estate must same tor pay- <lb />
on or before the day of Aug- <lb />
1894, or this notice will be plead in <lb />
bar of recovery. <lb />
This of August, 1893. <lb />
W. H. HEATH, <lb />
Wm. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk Pitt county as <lb />
Administrator of the estate of Robert <lb />
wards, deceased, notice is hereby <lb />
given to all persons indebted to the es- <lb />
to make immediate payment to Hie <lb />
and all persons having <lb />
claims against must present <lb />
the same for payment before the first <lb />
day of 1394, or this notice <lb />
will be plead in bar of recovery. <lb />
Tins of Anew. 1893. <lb />
COOK, <lb />
of Robert Edwards, <lb />
Engine Sale. <lb />
On the 20th day of Sept. <lb />
1893 at o'clock at tho prize house of <lb />
R. W. Royster Co., in the town of <lb />
Preen ville to satisfy a Mechanics Lien <lb />
and by virtue of See. of the <lb />
Code of North Carolina, for work done <lb />
and material furnished at Hie instance <lb />
and the order of W. M. Brown, <lb />
undersigned will sell for cash one <lb />
four horse engine and boiler, Upright, <lb />
made by the Tyler Manufacturing <lb />
Company, Minister, Md-, pat- <lb />
Sept. TO. July 1877. <lb />
THE C. L. A IMP. CO. <lb />
August <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified as executor to <lb />
the last will and testament of Samuel <lb />
Cory, deceased, before E. A. <lb />
Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt <lb />
county, on the 37th day July If <lb />
notice is hereby given to all persons <lb />
holding claims against the estate of <lb />
said Cory to present them to the under- <lb />
signed for payment, duly authenticated, <lb />
on or before the 2nd day of August 1894 <lb />
or this notice will be plead bar of <lb />
their recovery. All persons Indebted <lb />
to said estate are notified to make <lb />
mediate payment to the undersigned. <lb />
This the 2nd day August <lb />
CHARLES A. WHITE. <lb />
Executor of Samuel Cory <lb />
Bled to Death. <lb />
Mr. John Mason, who lived just <lb />
beyond Creek, met with a sud- <lb />
den death on Saturday He <lb />
was in town that day and started home <lb />
riding alone, and just before reaching <lb />
the lumber railroad his horse shied and <lb />
threw him out of the buggy. On one of <lb />
his legs was a very bad sore with which <lb />
he had been troubled for sometime, and <lb />
in the fall ruptured an artery near this <lb />
sore from which he Wed to death. He <lb />
was carried from the scene of the <lb />
dent to his home and expired soon after <lb />
reaching there. Mr. Mason was about <lb />
years old. <lb />
Sunday School Organizers. <lb />
At a meeting of the Executive <lb />
of the Pitt county Sunday School <lb />
the following were selected <lb />
as organizers for the different town- <lb />
ships of the county, and they are ear- <lb />
requested to take step to <lb />
organize in each township <lb />
during the month of September. It is <lb />
the intention and desire to have Sunday <lb />
School in each neighborhood in the <lb />
comity, the organizers are requested to <lb />
organize as many Sunday Schools as <lb />
when none BOW exists, and to <lb />
have two delegates together with the <lb />
selected from each <lb />
Sunday School to attend the County <lb />
Convention which meets in Greenville <lb />
Oct. 20-27. <lb />
Beaver J. d. <lb />
C. C Harley. <lb />
G. F. L. A. <lb />
Mayo. <lb />
J- Jarvis. <lb />
D. Cox.<lb />
J. N. U. <lb />
J. <lb />
Greenville, South R. Parker. <lb />
Greenville, North White. <lb />
H. <lb />
Swift A. L. Blow. <lb />
Died. <lb />
A. M. on Sept. 4th, Mrs. <lb />
Susan wife of J. Gray, died <lb />
at her home in township. She <lb />
left a one child, and <lb />
relatives and friends to <lb />
mourn her loss, but they mo urn not as <lb />
those without hope; for she left strong <lb />
evidences of a hope for an eternity of <lb />
bliss. A Friend. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified as Executor to <lb />
the last will and testament of Abel <lb />
Smith, deceased, before E. A. <lb />
Clerk the of Superior Court of <lb />
county on the cf August ISM, <lb />
notice is hereby given to all persons <lb />
holding the estate of Abel <lb />
Smith deceased to present them the <lb />
undersigned for payment, duly <lb />
on or before the day <lb />
August 1804, or this notice will be <lb />
plead in bar of their recovery. All per- <lb />
sons indebted to said estate arc <lb />
to make immediate payment to the <lb />
undersigned. <lb />
day of August 1893. <lb />
It. SMITH, Executor of <lb />
Abel Smith, <lb />
Notice. <lb />
State of North In Superior <lb />
i Co <lb />
Pitt County. I Court. <lb />
Wm. L. Elliott. P. Elliott and <lb />
John Nicholson, partners under the <lb />
name of Elliott Bros, <lb />
vs. <lb />
J. B. and wife, Elizabeth L. <lb />
Skinner, down W. <lb />
Brooks, David II. Allen, John R <lb />
Williams. R. B. and T. G. <lb />
Skinner, trustee. m <lb />
The defendant, J. is here- <lb />
by notified to be and appear before the <lb />
appointment at St. John's Judge our Superior Court a court <lb />
Mr. F. M. had a congestive to be bold for the County of the <lb />
Johnson's Items. <lb />
Ms. returned to <lb />
last Friday <lb />
Miss Annie Harding returned <lb />
from Monday. <lb />
Rev. filled his regular <lb />
Kin- <lb />
home <lb />
chill last Friday and been quite sick <lb />
ever since. <lb />
A baby boy came last week to bright- <lb />
en the home of Mr. J. II. Smith and now <lb />
he smiles a day <lb />
Messrs. W. J. and I. <lb />
M. Johnson went to Greenville on <lb />
Saturday. <lb />
Mr. Clarence Misses Winnie <lb />
and Cornelia left for Seven <lb />
Springs <lb />
Mrs. Battle Harding of Chocowinity <lb />
spent the past week with Mrs. <lb />
Harding. <lb />
Miss May, Messrs. Fred and <lb />
Durward Johnson went to Greenville <lb />
Saturday and were examined by Super- <lb />
of Public Miss <lb />
has taken a school near Green- <lb />
ville. <lb />
Mr. Gus Harrington shot <lb />
himself last Friday. He went to fence <lb />
his pistol when he dropped it <lb />
the discharge lodging the ball in his foot <lb />
Uncle Pete. <lb />
D. D. Haskett. <lb />
Will Test It. <lb />
The legality of the establishing of an <lb />
Inferior Court for Pitt county by the <lb />
Magistrates at a meeting held <lb />
18th will be tested. Opponents of the <lb />
Court raised objection that the meet- <lb />
of Magistrates was irregular because <lb />
of chairman of the Board of <lb />
having no authority to assemble <lb />
them together. When the officers <lb />
elected for the Court went before the <lb />
Board of County Commissioners to <lb />
qualify the Commissioners declined to <lb />
accept the bonds tendered or to qualify <lb />
any officer for the Court, or to drawn <lb />
any jury for the Court as demanded by <lb />
the officers elected by the <lb />
Last week upon application to Judge <lb />
Connor he issued an alternative man- <lb />
to the Board of Commissioners, <lb />
them to show cause before <lb />
Judge W. A. the 18th of <lb />
why a mandamus should <lb />
not issue requiring them to accept and <lb />
the bonds of the officers and <lb />
draw a Jury for the next regular term <lb />
of the Inferior Court. This order was <lb />
served upon the Board of Commissioners <lb />
at their meeting Monday, and the mat- <lb />
comes up for a hearing at o'clock <lb />
P. M. on the first day of September <lb />
term of our Superior Court. <lb />
Dissolution. <lb />
Tie firm of Brown Bros, was dis- <lb />
solved by mutual consent on this date, <lb />
the interest of James Brown in the <lb />
business purchased by Wiley <lb />
Brown. The latter assumes the <lb />
and indebtedness the firm <lb />
and persons owing the firm will make <lb />
settlement with him. <lb />
WILEY BROWN. <lb />
JAMES BROWN. <lb />
This 1st day of September, 1893. <lb />
Having become sole proprietor of the <lb />
business heretofore conducted under <lb />
the firm name of Brown Bros., I take <lb />
pleasure in Informing the public that <lb />
the business will be continued at the <lb />
same stand in my own name. Thank- <lb />
all our customers for past patron- <lb />
age. I hope to receive a continuance of <lb />
their favors. WILEY BROWN. <lb />
Court House in Greenville, on the <lb />
ind Monday the 1st Monday <lb />
September, 1893. it being the 18th day <lb />
of September, 1893, and answer the <lb />
complaint which will be deposited in <lb />
the of the Clerk of the Superior <lb />
Court of said County within the <lb />
three days of said term, and let the <lb />
said take notice that if he <lb />
tails to answer complaint with- <lb />
in the time prescribed by law, the <lb />
plaintiffs will apply to the court for the <lb />
relief demanded in the complaint. <lb />
Given under my hand and seal of said <lb />
Court, this filth day of August, 1893. <lb />
E. A. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
Land <lb />
By virtue of tho authority granted by <lb />
decree of Pitt Superior Court held for <lb />
the county of Pitt at January term, <lb />
1808, in a bill wherein S. S. <lb />
was plaintiff and Samuel was <lb />
defendant, I will, on Monday, <lb />
18th. 1888, at the Court door, <lb />
in Greenville. expose to public <lb />
sale the following tract of land, <lb />
One tract of land situated in the county <lb />
of Pitt, and State of North Carolina, <lb />
and described as A tract of <lb />
land bounded on the north by the lands <lb />
of John K. Smith, John A. Smith, Wm. <lb />
Garris, the heirs of Randal He well and <lb />
Smith, on the east by the lands <lb />
of the heirs of Guilford Smith and the <lb />
first wife of Richard Harris, Samuel M. <lb />
Smith and the lands of the wife of J. J. <lb />
B. Cox, on the south by the lands <lb />
Bland and John Bland and <lb />
on west by the lauds of the heirs of <lb />
Louis B. containing by <lb />
seven hundred acres more or <lb />
less and being the lands conveyed by <lb />
deed on the 18th of December 1875 by <lb />
Samuel Smith to Samuel and <lb />
the same which on said day was con- <lb />
by mortgage deed to secure the <lb />
purchase money by Samuel to <lb />
Samuel Smith which appears on Record <lb />
in Book F. page and in the <lb />
Registers Office of Terra Cash. <lb />
HARRY SKINNER, <lb />
August 18th 1893. Commissioner. <lb />
C. T. <lb />
THIS STARTS THE BALL FOR <lb />
LOW PRICES <lb />
Md lie tie Plays is IDs Time <lb />
O. T. <lb />
is now receiving his <lb />
moth stock of <lb />
Some cheaper than ever be- <lb />
fore, and in this space next <lb />
week will begin telling you <lb />
all about what he has and <lb />
at what prices x <lb />
he can fit you up. <lb />
Keep Your Eye Right on this space and <lb />
be Ready to Hear the Music. <lb />
O. T. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
Action for Divorce. <lb />
State North Carolina, In the Superior <lb />
Pitt County. Court. <lb />
Amanda <lb />
vs. <lb />
Frank Dickens. <lb />
The defendant Frank Dickens is <lb />
hereby not Hied to be and appear before <lb />
the Judge of our Superior Court at a <lb />
court to be held for the county of Pitt <lb />
at the Court House in Greenville, on the <lb />
2nd Monday after 1st Monday in <lb />
September, it being the day of <lb />
1693, and answer the complaint <lb />
which will be deposited in the office of <lb />
the Clerk the Superior Court of said <lb />
county within the three days of <lb />
said term, and let the said defendant <lb />
take notice that if be fails to answer the <lb />
said complaint within the time required <lb />
by aw the plaintiff will apply to the <lb />
court for the -relief demanded in the <lb />
complaint. Given under my hand and <lb />
seal of said court this 8th day of August <lb />
1893. E. A. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017614_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT <lb />
O- Proprietor <lb />
LOCAL <lb />
NOTES AND <lb />
JOTTINGS. <lb />
TOBACCO <lb />
Danville, the largest tobacco <lb />
market in tho world, is paying off <lb />
with ninety days paper. <lb />
Richmond script is being dis <lb />
counted at to per cent, so <lb />
says the Tobacconist. <lb />
Greenville still pays cash. <lb />
Mr. Dudley Bullock, of Ox- <lb />
ford's Severest gentlemen, is on a <lb />
visit to our town. We are always <lb />
glad to welcome him. <lb />
We are sorry to hear that our <lb />
neighboring markets are in a <lb />
financial strait. We hope they <lb />
will soon come through all right. <lb />
The fodder pulling be <lb />
over. Then you will see the to- <lb />
begin to roll in especially <lb />
if prices should improve as we <lb />
truly hope. <lb />
The Winston Tobacco Journal <lb />
says there is a new cigarette <lb />
company formed in St. <lb />
ready-to begin work the first of <lb />
January-. We hope it will in- <lb />
crease the price of cutters. <lb />
Mr. R. W. Royster, who has <lb />
just returned from a trip to <lb />
Lynchburg. Danville, Chase City <lb />
and other markets, reports the <lb />
dullest times he has ever seen <lb />
with money tighter- <lb />
Some man, who has more re- <lb />
for the interest of his mar <lb />
than he has for the has <lb />
circulated the report that the <lb />
Greenville market has closed <lb />
October. It is an absolute <lb />
falsehood. The disciples of An- <lb />
still flourish. <lb />
There was a destructive storm <lb />
Monday and Monday night, do- <lb />
considerable damage in <lb />
sections. The <lb />
warehouse in Oxford was blown <lb />
down. It did no serious damage <lb />
in this section so far as we have <lb />
yet learned. <lb />
We notice some circulars <lb />
sent out by tho Richmond ware- <lb />
housemen, that they claim honor <lb />
for the Richmond market more <lb />
than it ever has or ever will <lb />
fill. It is time the farmers were <lb />
thinking for themselves. Weigh <lb />
the actual facts and you will <lb />
they merely wish to <lb />
the tobacco trade in a few mar- <lb />
thereby them to <lb />
more easily depress prices when <lb />
We notice the Durham market <lb />
has closed until tho present <lb />
depression is over. Such <lb />
action by so experienced ware- <lb />
housemen is significant. We <lb />
Bow tho Wild tho <lb />
Command. <lb />
PURELY IMAGINATIVE. <lb />
It a Hat It <lb />
the Treaty That There Were <lb />
Indian They Es. <lb />
an <lb />
the <lb />
is for the markets to close <lb />
their warehouses until there is an <lb />
ease up in money affairs. It <lb />
would be well for a general con- <lb />
to De held of <lb />
advised all along the from different markets <lb />
of holding better i make the closing If <lb />
of the present crop, for an ad- j this cannot done each market <lb />
price is sure to follow I can do as it sees best in the mat-1 four hundred miles, with no halt <lb />
any casing of the market, Such closing will stop four hours, and at ten o'clock <lb />
, ,, . ; t t in the forenoon half the troops were <lb />
But until then, there are strain of paying out money for d , h <lb />
of our people who owing to I leaf and also save the planters; <lb />
the are necessarily from making sacrifice of their <lb />
were going down tho <lb />
formed by the junction <lb />
Yellowstone and Little <lb />
hoping to intercept the Indians <lb />
and turn tack. It had been a <lb />
hard, swift march, a ride of over <lb />
hundred <lb />
forced to sell some product to crops at present low <lb />
realize some money. Tobacco j The above article was written <lb />
the only crop now ready after he had re- <lb />
market, of course is the look- several letters from <lb />
ed to. True, a sale at this time j markets in the State among <lb />
seems a sacrifice, but we think in them being one from the Durham <lb />
closing against the planter, when which appeared in <lb />
it can be avoided is bad policy, the Reflector last week and an- <lb />
for if the majority of them ever other from Wilson which in part <lb />
needed a friend it is now. I is as <lb />
we are glad to say is still very scarce and <lb />
is still able to keep open doors, if some relief is not offered <lb />
tho buyers continue to come, only our market will have to tempo- <lb />
a few days ago. Mr. Morgan of We again repeat <lb />
the American Tobacco Company that we are authorized to say that <lb />
came and began buying. Wed- money matters in Greenville are <lb />
of last Mr. R. H. comparatively easy but we say <lb />
Hays, of Chase City, a large buy- this in no boasting way at all, for <lb />
with big orders came down on well we are aware if these press- <lb />
a prospecting tour. Being so times with seeming- <lb />
well pleased with the kind of to- safe and solid hunting houses <lb />
being offered here, he at going under it is only a question <lb />
once decided to locate. Green of time before will be forced <lb />
ville is bound to come to th e to share the same fate of our at <lb />
front as a tobacco market with a present less fortunate ones, <lb />
large corps of buyers and a conn- Looking at this question from the <lb />
try that produces the finest broadest point of view of which <lb />
co in the world surrounding it, we are we invite the at- <lb />
there is no reason why it should of our readers to these <lb />
not only a few years hence be- stem stubborn facts. As yet <lb />
come truth the as before stated the bank of <lb />
of the Golden Belt. To buyers Greenville has experienced no in <lb />
have to say, Greenville extends convenience from the present <lb />
to you a hearty welcome. All we financial stunts but a great many <lb />
ask is to come and of our buyers like others of course <lb />
wager you will be like Mr. are unable to dispose of their old <lb />
Hays-so charmed with our gold stocks. The bank of course will <lb />
weed girls, if to of the tobacco <lb />
are unmarried, and cleverness of money ls Put ll tobacco <lb />
our married people, if you are now dormant, which is equal <lb />
married, that you too will locate to BUM out of <lb />
and help us in making it the mar- Tue channels of ex- <lb />
of the world for the bright change which heretofore have <lb />
grades. We look for conn- been open to all the markets are <lb />
expect to see the day when blocked and with a continual <lb />
I the steam from hundreds of drain upon the banks without a <lb />
way over the rough ground. <lb />
had planned to roach the <lb />
where the fleeing Indians would <lb />
cross the Little Missouri a day or <lb />
two ahead them. We believed we <lb />
had accomplished it. At ten o'clock <lb />
we were within two miles of the <lb />
spot. Then the head of the column <lb />
halted the men to close up. Our <lb />
line had strung out for n mile or <lb />
more. Between us and the cross- <lb />
as the was made, nature <lb />
had mode highway. It was a <lb />
grassy road, about twenty feet <lb />
soon wide, twisting and turning like a <lb />
creek. Either side was lined with <lb />
dense thickets. Half a mile down <lb />
the highway it was crossed by a <lb />
creek with steep banks. Half a <lb />
mile farther on was a second creek. <lb />
No man the column of two <lb />
men knew what lay beyond the <lb />
first turn. The halt to close up was <lb />
a precautionary measure, but no one <lb />
dreamed of danger. If the hostile <lb />
Indians had not turned or <lb />
changed their route they should still <lb />
be forty or fifty miles to the south. <lb />
The stragglers had come up, the <lb />
sleepy troopers had braced up under <lb />
the eyes of their officers, and the <lb />
bugler was about to sound the for- <lb />
ward when the half-breed guide and <lb />
scout held up his hand In warning. <lb />
A deer came running up the grassy <lb />
lane at full speed and was within <lb />
ten feet of the colonel's horse when <lb />
it wheeled to the right and vanished <lb />
into the thicket. Next came a fox, <lb />
which ran under the feet of a dozen <lb />
horses before he found shelter. <lb />
Then a second three or <lb />
four rabbits. <lb />
is the colonel of <lb />
the guide. <lb />
was the brief reply. <lb />
The guide waved his hand to <lb />
that it was down the lane some- <lb />
where. <lb />
what makes you think <lb />
persisted the colonel, who was <lb />
patient to go ahead, and yet too <lb />
prudent to needlessly expose his <lb />
here will ascend to the corresponding inflow, money <lb />
clouds. Here is where the weed matters of course grow tighter <lb />
is grown to perfection. Here is tighter- We are glad to say <lb />
where it should be manufactured that a good many of the Green- <lb />
and distributed to the world. ville buyers have thus far man- <lb />
Such a condition of things will aged to keep their channels of ex- <lb />
j not only help every branch of in- change open but with a <lb />
the town hut will he of money pressure how long <lb />
it suits them. Farmers, you well town, out win k r, <lb />
i , also the of the will be do it nobody <lb />
know they have no interest in you t- -1 r <lb />
or yours except to use you to ad- in- For with hundreds knows e are daily looking or <lb />
their interest. Stick . to wages loose of the <lb />
your home markets and men and would make a demand for all the galled hard times, but the grip <lb />
you will find that it not only pays products of the farm, garden, <lb />
you now but will pay you still <lb />
more in the future. Therein lies <lb />
way <lb />
orchard and vineyard. In other j until hard times will <lb />
words it would give to our truck- I continue. The best thing for the <lb />
to a great extent your protection, and agriculturists in every line f the of <lb />
I a home market. To bring about i to <lb />
I new markets to open in this condition of affairs the wait without giving himself alarm, <lb />
Tennessee this season. It seems j a part to perform as well the turning of the tide which in <lb />
they think the times will be bet as the citizen of the town. They i a Probability will not be very <lb />
in the near future- We sin- j not be lured by prom. long now. <lb />
hope such may be the case, j Meanwhile we say if you are <lb />
The Winston Tobacco Journal from other markets. tobacco just load <lb />
says the business men are push-i You say being a come and we <lb />
the enterprise. We predict a man. you the very best market price. <lb />
man, we have policy in <lb />
success, that is what the business . thus, but if you please look <lb />
men of every town should do- us <lb />
Let all business men. farmers, at the <lb />
and buyers unite. want our grades of to- <lb />
Let prejudice and ill feeling are going to them. <lb />
thrown aside, each side giving It is not <lb />
justice to the other, strive to ad-1 orders to other markets <lb />
the interest of each other them, but here whew n <lb />
and the tobacco interest Do j. and where is WOuld have been a graduate of <lb />
this we predict, without fear j facilities for hand Oxford but that he was expelled for <lb />
of contradiction, that Greenville. the is they <lb />
situated as she is m the finest very expect to got <lb />
bright tobacco section in the J tobacco as can be <lb />
world, with ample means of ship- j <lb />
ping both to and will yet <lb />
be the market of Eastern North <lb />
PENN AND PENNSYLVANIA. <lb />
Facts the Quaker and the Com- <lb />
It is generally overlooked that <lb />
William was half Dutch; his <lb />
father, a sailor, married Margaret <lb />
Jasper, of Rotterdam, and the <lb />
and voluptuousness of Penn <lb />
might be traced to motherhood. <lb />
Carolina. <lb />
A meeting was held a few days <lb />
ago by the buyers warehouse- <lb />
men to organize a Tobacco Board <lb />
of trade. R W. Royster, Esq., <lb />
was elected to the Presidency, <lb />
with S- T. White as Secretary. <lb />
After adopting a Constitution <lb />
and By-Laws for the government <lb />
of the Association, a committee <lb />
to go before Clerk <lb />
and have the Board char- <lb />
under the State law.-. The <lb />
object of the association is for the <lb />
mutual protection of the several <lb />
interests of the buyers and ware- <lb />
housemen, while that of the plan <lb />
has not been left out. We <lb />
notice one thing in the <lb />
that will be likely at first to <lb />
cause some confusion with the <lb />
planters especially, that is, the <lb />
hour of sale being changed from <lb />
to o'clock. We think the <lb />
change will be better for all con- <lb />
With a well organized <lb />
Board of Trade, and a foil corps <lb />
of puts Greenville on an <lb />
footing in every way with <lb />
all of the older markets. <lb />
purchased no <lb />
All we ask is for the <lb />
buyers and planters to stick to <lb />
attacking Catholics or their <lb />
ors among the students, says the <lb />
Cincinnati Enquirer. And he had a <lb />
good nip of the continent; but his <lb />
religion was tho tipple of English- <lb />
men of that day. He must needs <lb />
Greenville and when the wave of join the Quakers and fight the police <lb />
prosperity begins rolling over our and books in the vein of George <lb />
loved South land, we can f finally he reached the illus- <lb />
, ., . , notoriety for that day of so- <lb />
each other point to our city ; to the of La-a <lb />
with pride and leave such a con- j months, at the age of only twenty- <lb />
of affairs to be enjoyed by four. His father discerned a good <lb />
the coming generation that they business man under religious <lb />
roustabout, and gave him his estates <lb />
to manage and left him seven thou- <lb />
sand five hundred dollars a year, <lb />
probably equivalent to thirty thou- <lb />
sand dollars at present. <lb />
His attachment to the Quakers <lb />
gained him ready-made colonists of <lb />
a valuable class, for the Quakers <lb />
were strong both in the mechanical <lb />
trades and in agriculture. Previous- <lb />
they had been emigrating to <lb />
America like sheep without a <lb />
herd and settling in Island, <lb />
threatening to settle in <lb />
setts, overflowing Maryland and <lb />
will call you blessed. <lb />
For some time past we have <lb />
been writing a great deal about <lb />
the present low price of all kinds <lb />
of farm products and advising the <lb />
farmers to hold their tobacco es- <lb />
because it was the almost <lb />
universal opinion of leading men <lb />
in the trade that in a short while <lb />
prices would get higher. This <lb />
we have done in a spirit of justice <lb />
to the farmer and not because <lb />
fox replied <lb />
the guide. were frightened. <lb />
All running away from something. <lb />
down there for us. <lb />
We go some other <lb />
We turned to the left and flanked <lb />
the position. We had made a dis- <lb />
of seven miles when Indians <lb />
were seen and skirmishing began, <lb />
but they soon retreated southwards, <lb />
and as we followed them up they <lb />
crossed the Little Missouri. It was <lb />
the band we had hoped to intercept, <lb />
but why did they turn back without <lb />
a fight Everybody was asking the <lb />
question when a few of us rode off to <lb />
inspect the ambush. The death trap <lb />
had been set for us between the <lb />
creeks. The lower end of the avenue <lb />
had been blocked with felled trees <lb />
bushes, and trees partly cut <lb />
down would have blockaded the up- <lb />
per end as soon as the last horseman <lb />
had passed. The road here narrowed <lb />
to fifteen feet. Wherever there was <lb />
an opening in the bushes which lined <lb />
the sides it had been closed with <lb />
thorns. <lb />
From sunrise that morning the <lb />
Indians had been waiting for us. Al- <lb />
most two hundred warriors were in <lb />
hiding behind the bushes, ready to <lb />
thrust out their rifles and fire at the <lb />
signal. Perched in the trees along <lb />
the way were half a hundred boys <lb />
armed with bows and arrows. Hid- <lb />
den away under the banks of the <lb />
creeks were a hundred or more <lb />
squaws, armed with hatchets, knives <lb />
or clubs. It was not to be a battle, <lb />
but a massacre. No mercy was to <lb />
be a prisoner taken. <lb />
Scouts had observed our approach <lb />
and reported. When the head of <lb />
our column had fairly entered the <lb />
lane the eager squaws and impulsive <lb />
boys could hardly be controlled. In <lb />
their moving about they frightened <lb />
the wild animals out of their re- <lb />
treats and sent us the warning. <lb />
They did not know why we halted, <lb />
hesitated and then took another way. <lb />
For half an hour they waited <lb />
with the scowl of hate on their <lb />
bronzed the savageness <lb />
of devils in their eyes <lb />
which glared and glinted as they <lb />
roamed about in search of the ex- <lb />
prey. Then they whispered <lb />
to each <lb />
have token another <lb />
The Great Spirit sent them a warn- <lb />
to turn aside We cannot fight <lb />
these men; let us recross the river <lb />
and return to the agency <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
Ethel Gives Valuable Information to <lb />
Her Sister's Suitor. <lb />
likes you better than any <lb />
of the other men in the said <lb />
little Ethel, as she swung bock and <lb />
forth in the hammock. <lb />
glad to hear that. Have <lb />
some more said Willie Bird, <lb />
with pleased surprise. <lb />
said Ethel, as she <lb />
helped herself liberally. she <lb />
likes you a great deal <lb />
how do you know What <lb />
did your sister say about <lb />
she says she don't mind go- <lb />
to walk in the woods with <lb />
why should <lb />
she's afraid to go with <lb />
some of the other men. She says <lb />
they're always killing snakes, and <lb />
she hates snakes worse than any- <lb />
she, <lb />
that's why she's so down on <lb />
Jack Ford. He killed a great big <lb />
black snake the last time she went <lb />
with him, and now she can't hardly <lb />
bear the sight of <lb />
yesterday Mr. Fish took up <lb />
a stick and crept up behind a rattle- <lb />
snake that was lying on a rock and <lb />
knocked him on the head. So <lb />
she won't have anything more to do <lb />
with <lb />
Tom Hick ox never kills <lb />
snakes, but he's always seeing them <lb />
and calling her attention to them. <lb />
She says she can't stand a man who <lb />
sees snakes all the <lb />
I see snakes, too, some- <lb />
said Willie Bird, doubtfully. <lb />
but Mamie doesn't mind <lb />
replied Ethel, consolingly. <lb />
says she knows the snakes you <lb />
see aren't real <lb />
in Brooklyn Life. <lb />
A LITTLE WISDOM. <lb />
Some Bright Pickings from the <lb />
Daily Globe. <lb />
When you want to be your best, <lb />
you are always your worst. <lb />
Being lucky consists of the con- <lb />
that there is no such thing. <lb />
There is a frightful lot of non- <lb />
sense about the best people you <lb />
know. <lb />
Many a man who thinks he has <lb />
aristocratic hay fever finds that he <lb />
has plain, common catarrh. <lb />
When a man has bad luck, his <lb />
friends think they have done their <lb />
duty when they is too <lb />
Find out what you want to do <lb />
most, and then quit trying to ac- <lb />
it, for that is the one thing <lb />
you cannot do. <lb />
It is all right to eat when you are <lb />
hungry, but if you talk when you <lb />
feel like talking, you will say some- <lb />
thing you will regret. <lb />
That which a woman calls her <lb />
is really what she has <lb />
known all the time, but never ad- <lb />
until she marries. <lb />
Both in Error. <lb />
Viscountess wife of <lb />
Robert Lowe, the well-known Eng- <lb />
statesman, was a woman of <lb />
strong character, and she challenged <lb />
criticism in that she was in the habit <lb />
of saying whatever came into her <lb />
mind at the moment. <lb />
She had sense and courage, a <lb />
heart and a head, and she bore a <lb />
large part in her husband's public <lb />
life. <lb />
One repartee ascribed to her <lb />
shows that she was at least ready <lb />
with loyalty of speech. The French <lb />
ambassador one day said to her, <lb />
somewhat <lb />
know England is said to be <lb />
a land of shopkeepers. I had no <lb />
idea of finding there such great mil- <lb />
she replied, people of <lb />
different countries do not understand <lb />
each other. Now I have actually <lb />
been under the impression that the <lb />
French were a great military <lb />
Companion. <lb />
A Place for Him. <lb />
A very respectable-looking person <lb />
called at a boarding house up town <lb />
the other morning and was received <lb />
by the landlady. <lb />
you want a good, sober, <lb />
steady, industrious man to work for <lb />
his he inquired, politely. <lb />
I she answered, sharp- <lb />
you that <lb />
madam, I <lb />
I've got a regular job for <lb />
I ask what it is, <lb />
work isn't hard, but it will <lb />
keep you busy all the <lb />
madam, but what is <lb />
as an example to my <lb />
she snapped, and he went <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
A Correction. <lb />
exclaimed Miss <lb />
to her as he placed her <lb />
on his knee with his arm around her <lb />
waist. <lb />
I am a corrected <lb />
the young man. have just set <lb />
the jewel <lb />
, in stout numbers in Long <lb />
this market was less able to pay and , g <lb />
tobacco than other Dutch. Penn found miners among <lb />
Quite to the contrary we have the Welsh Quakers, picked seven <lb />
argued all along that the Green I mechanics out of Sussex, <lb />
ville market was in as i mm -1 , millwrights, ship- <lb />
wrights and all sorts of smiths and <lb />
market was in as good a con <lb />
to do business as at any <lb />
time in the past, and if farmers <lb />
carpenters to his colony, which he <lb />
soon demonstrated to be the richest <lb />
will and must sell we cordially in- in the country and with the <lb />
you to make us a visit and climate. We therefore see to- <lb />
you will find us doing business at Pennsylvania with thirty rep- <lb />
tile same place and paying full <lb />
Slave. <lb />
The best slave in the world for Cut <lb />
Bruises, Ulcers, Salt Fe- <lb />
Sores. Chapped Hand- <lb />
Corns, and all Skin Eruption. <lb />
cure Piles, or no pay <lb />
It is to give perfect <lb />
action, or money refunded <lb />
cent per box. For sale at <lb />
Drug Store. <lb />
paying <lb />
market prices for the weed. On <lb />
this same line of thought the <lb />
Winston Tobacco Journal, a trade <lb />
paper and one to a very great ex- <lb />
tent voices the sentiments of the <lb />
combined markets of the State <lb />
has this to is now the <lb />
opinion of the wisest heads that <lb />
the best thing that can be done <lb />
in congress, only four <lb />
less than the state of New York <lb />
and three more than the entire <lb />
states of New England. <lb />
confronts us with a population <lb />
of more than five and one-half mil- <lb />
lions. If you take the city of <lb />
Brooklyn out of the population of <lb />
New York state Pennsylvania will <lb />
surpass New York in population. If <lb />
you double the population of Pitts- <lb />
burgh and its suburbs Pennsylvania I The Fresh thought <lb />
will surpass New York in are best; think <lb />
Australian Finances. <lb />
The financial returns of the <lb />
colony of Victoria for the <lb />
year ending the 30th of this month <lb />
are expected to show a deficit of <lb />
about in addition to a <lb />
debit balance of brought <lb />
forward from last year. The gov- <lb />
is adopting strenuous meas- <lb />
to prevent a like showing in <lb />
the coming year, and is cutting de- <lb />
estimates very heavily. <lb />
It is probable that fresh taxation <lb />
will also be imposed. <lb />
Nothing Impossible. <lb />
At the . this one <lb />
is a timber wolf. <lb />
sakes, and he looks <lb />
exactly like he's a but there's <lb />
these <lb />
Ocean. <lb />
Two of <lb />
The Vain think I am is <lb />
love with you<lb />
E B <lb />
If<lb />
Suggestions. <lb />
The stage has furnished many <lb />
amusing anecdotes, and has in many <lb />
instances served to bring out the <lb />
latent humor of the masses. One of <lb />
these, told of the aster <lb />
the aptness of the gallery <lb />
god in the hour of need. It seems <lb />
that was acting in some <lb />
forgotten piece with an abnormally <lb />
ponderous actress, Mile. Suzanne <lb />
by name, whom he was sup- <lb />
posed in one of the scenes to carry <lb />
off half fainting on his back. But <lb />
his arms were too short to embrace <lb />
the well-developed figure of Mile. <lb />
noting which of the <lb />
taking pity on the super- <lb />
human efforts of his favorite actor, <lb />
shouted two journeys <lb />
of <lb />
Another story which shows the <lb />
same aptitude has been told as <lb />
happened in a concert hall not <lb />
far from London. An incompetent <lb />
vocalist having endeavored to sing <lb />
the song, don't <lb />
say I told was promptly hit <lb />
with a missile in the shape of a <lb />
small cabbage by one of the <lb />
in the gallery. <lb />
threw he howled, <lb />
angrily. <lb />
was cried a voice in the <lb />
gallery; for sake, <lb />
don't say I told <lb />
This brought down the house, and <lb />
the singer retired, followed by a <lb />
clapping of hands which his own <lb />
merits never could have evoked. <lb />
Harper's <lb />
it ls interesting <lb />
disquieting to note how much <lb />
it takes to cash a <lb />
eh-c; it dos to get lynched<lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
MARK <lb />
for the Cure of all Diseases <lb />
This has been In use over <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know has <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
country, and where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years tailed. This Ointment is of <lb />
long Standing and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained is Owing entirely <lb />
a its own efficacy, as but has <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. Sample box bee. The <lb />
discount to Druggist. All Cash <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
and communications to <lb />
T. CHRISTMAS, <lb />
Sole Proprietor. <lb />
X . C <lb />
UNDER <lb />
COST LESS THAN SI S PEE SAL. <lb />
YOUNG <lb />
Sole Agents, <lb />
VILLE, X. C. <lb />
are com- <lb />
pounded from a prescription <lb />
widely used by the best <lb />
cal authorities and are <lb />
in a form that is be- <lb />
coming the fashion every- <lb />
where. <lb />
act gently <lb />
but promptly upon the liver, <lb />
stomach and intestines; cure <lb />
dyspepsia, habitual <lb />
offensive breath and head- <lb />
ache. One taken at the <lb />
first symptom of indigestion, <lb />
biliousness, dizziness, distress <lb />
after eating, or depression of <lb />
spirits, will surely and quickly <lb />
remove the <lb />
may be <lb />
of nearest druggist <lb />
are easy to take, <lb />
quick to act, and <lb />
save many a doc- <lb />
tor's bilL <lb />
GO <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
and all business in the U. S <lb />
Patent office or in the attended to <lb />
for Moderate Fees. <lb />
We are opposite the U. S. Patent Of- <lb />
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and <lb />
can obtain patents in less time than those <lb />
more remote from Washington. <lb />
the model or drawing is sent we <lb />
advise as to free of charge, <lb />
we make no change unless we ob- <lb />
Patent. <lb />
We refer, here, to the Post Master, the <lb />
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to <lb />
officials of the U. S. Patent Office. <lb />
advise terms and reference to <lb />
actual clients in your own State, or <lb />
address, C A. Snow A Co., <lb />
D. C <lb />
inUres <lb />
and <lb />
Riders of Victor Pneumatics carry an extra inner tube <lb />
to be used in case of accident. By simply removing a <lb />
inner tube through a hole in the rim, repair is <lb />
effected in five minutes by replacing with a new <lb />
If you are going to ride why not ride the best <lb />
BOSTON, <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
WASHINGTON. DENVER, SAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
R. W. ROYSTER CO. <lb />
OS <lb />
GREENE N. C.<lb />
Reference and type samples on application.<lb />
Manufacturer <lb />
CARTS DRAYS<lb />
well equipped with the best nut up <lb />
but first-class work. e keep up with the times and the improved styles <lb />
Best material used in all work. All styles of springs are yon can select from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King <lb />
on hand n full line of Ready Harness Whips we <lb />
rates. Spews attention given to repairing. <lb />
T. <lb />
Greenville, N C. <lb />
We also heap <lb />
at the lowest <lb />
SCROFULA, <lb />
SALT RHEUM, <lb />
RHEUMATISM, <lb />
BLOOD <lb />
and every kindred disease arising <lb />
impure blood treated by <lb />
that never-failing and best of all tonics and <lb />
medicines. <lb />
IV <lb />
Jim, branches <lb />
April <lb />
Swift's Specific <lb />
Books on Blood and Skin <lb />
Diseases free. <lb />
Printed testimonials sent <lb />
application. Address <lb />
Swift Specific Cc <lb />
ATLANTA. CA, <lb />
K. K. <lb />
Condensed Schedule <lb />
SOOTH. <lb />
No Mo Ha <lb />
., daily Fast Mail, daily <lb />
daily ex Sun <lb />
Weldon 12,80 pm pm <lb />
j Ar it pm pin <lb />
S pm <lb />
i Tarboro pm <lb />
i Rocky Ml p G pm am <lb />
Wilson<lb />
ell. ville <lb />
Ar Florence<lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar GOO <lb />
TRAINS GOING NORTH <lb />
No <lb />
Is Your Life <lb />
Worth Anything <lb />
to others Are there not <lb />
persons dependent on <lb />
your earnings for their <lb />
Florence <lb />
Ar W <lb />
Wilmington <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilson <lb />
dally <lb />
daily <lb />
II IS<lb />
ID <lb />
am<lb />
No <lb />
daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
support Are they pro- <lb />
death The simplest and except Sunday. <lb />
r , r Trains on w <lb />
A. Rocky <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
p m <lb />
Daily except <lb />
Train on Scotland Meek Branch Road <lb />
leaves 3.40 Halifax 4.111 p. <lb />
m., arrives Scotland Neck at p <lb />
6.28 p. -7.03 p. m. <lb />
-j r y 8.22 a. <lb />
tor in case your ,,. a. m , n . a. -m- <lb />
leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m., <lb />
m. Arriving Halifax <lb />
safest of Branch leave <lb />
assuring Washington 7.00 a. arrives <lb />
their protection is life in- 8.40 a. n. Tarboro returning <lb />
Business P- 6.00 <lb />
pro- L, Washington p. m. <lb />
and working Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
men generally, should in- <lb />
sure, for their brains or Raleigh R, I. dally except Sun- <lb />
muscles are their u- M- r M, <lb />
arc p. m., 5-20 .,. m <lb />
capital and income too. leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
Death stops them <lb />
Insure in the <lb />
both. <lb />
Equitable Life <lb />
and death cannot stop your <lb />
salary or steal your <lb />
and your loved ones <lb />
will be safe from want <lb />
General for the inn a. <lb />
ROCK HILL, South Carolina. <lb />
I KEEP COOL <lb />
Inside, nil <lb />
by <lb />
ES <lb />
la u t- Try It <lb />
a. m., 10.00 a. . <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N C, 10.25 A V 12,20. <lb />
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb />
Branch leave <lb />
. ville arrive Rowland p m. <lb />
Returning leave Rowland p m, <lb />
; m. Daily <lb />
sept Sunday. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb />
dully except Sunday, A M <lb />
N C, AM. Re <lb />
laves Smithfield, K A M <lb />
NO A U. <lb />
Train <lb />
Mount at l M, arrive Nashville <lb />
I P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Hope AM, <lb />
A M, arrives Rocky Mount is a <lb />
I except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. leave <lb />
i p. arrive Dunbar 8.10 p. <lb />
m. Returning leave Dunbar a. <lb />
arrive Latta 7.15 a. m. y <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch loaves Wares <lb />
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, st <lb />
and leave <lb />
at S A M, and P. M. <lb />
ins at Warsaw with Nos. and <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Weldon for all points North daily. All <lb />
ail via Richmond, and dally except Sun- <lb />
, day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb />
daily except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb />
railroad tor Norfolk and all <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
J. R. Transportation <lb />
agent. <lb />
For Liver <lb />
use <lb />
BROWN'S BITTERS <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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