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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 1 November 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:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18931101</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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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>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 1 November 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>
          <dc:creator></dc:creator>
          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18931101</dc:date>
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w. <lb />
Anything You Want <lb />
the way of <lb />
CHEAP -AND- FANCY <lb />
STATIONERY <lb />
can be LI at the <lb />
Reflector Book Store. <lb />
Books, Tablets, Paper of <lb />
Envelopes all sizes, <lb />
Panel Is, Pen-, Mucilage, <lb />
Sponge Oops, Blotters, in <lb />
great variety. <lb />
This Office for Printing. <lb />
The <lb />
Reflector. <lb />
-PEOPLE WHO USE- <lb />
I i <lb />
To Young <lb />
Mothers t <lb />
Makes Child h Eat. <lb />
Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, <lb />
Endorsed by the Leading Physicians.<lb />
to <lb />
REGULATOR CO j <lb />
CA. <lb />
ALL DRUGGISTS. J <lb />
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XII- <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER i, 1893. <lb />
NO. <lb />
STATE NEWS. <lb />
Things Mentioned in oar State Ex- <lb />
changes that are of General Interest <lb />
The Cream of the News. <lb />
WHAT IT <lb />
COSTS <lb />
LAWS. <lb />
TO MAKE <lb />
Should not fail to see our <lb />
of <lb />
Mm m m w <lb />
Copying Ink and Colored Ink. <lb />
-o <lb />
Reflector Book Store. <lb />
This Office for Job tin <lb />
The Enormous Amount of Money it <lb />
Takes to Run the <lb />
Some of it is Spent <lb />
Economical With Respect <lb />
to its Expenditure <lb />
Religion. <lb />
Washington Co-respondent of States- <lb />
ville Landmark. <lb />
-4 <lb />
.- --7<lb />
J. <lb />
. I <lb />
-AT-LAW <lb />
X. <lb />
to Office <lb />
at Tucker old stand. <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
L VI <lb />
FT 8-AT-LA W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, X. C. <lb />
in all fie Courts. <lb />
a. <lb />
B. V. <lb />
Oil <lb />
Prompt i to collections<lb />
th <lb />
SKIN f r <lb />
SKINNER, <lb />
D G. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
G R E F. N V I L I. K, V . . <lb />
Practice in all the a <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
TAP. RIVER SERVICE <lb />
leave Washington for Green- <lb />
ville and Tarboro at all land- <lb />
ins on Tar River Monday, <lb />
and at G A. M. <lb />
leave Tarboro at A at. <lb />
Thursdays and Saturday <lb />
Greenville V A. days. <lb />
These departures are subject lo age of <lb />
water on Tar River. <lb />
ti <lb />
its of The Norfolk, and Wash- <lb />
direct line for Baltimore <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and <lb />
Shippers their goods <lb />
marked via OM <lb />
New York. from <lb />
more from <lb />
more. from <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Washington B. <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Greenville, K C- <lb />
A Third party paper called <lb />
the Solid South has just been <lb />
started at Fayetteville. <lb />
A woman of Mt. Olive <lb />
wad sent to the penitentiary a <lb />
year for a DOS of <lb />
Kinston Free Mr. W. <lb />
F. Stanly's gin house and four <lb />
, , . .- -i the Senate, <lb />
bales of cotton, four or live , . . . , , . <lb />
, . in, following figures give detail a <lb />
from Kinston. barned last- , ,. <lb />
t, , ,. I part of these expenses. Many <lb />
afternoon. .,. , . . , , <lb />
ridiculous items are omitted <lb />
The citizens of Wilmington j Is not some reform in <lb />
will not have direction possible <lb />
this year, because the railroads of <lb />
would not comply with the one of <lb />
cent rate, as heretofore. a big sum in cash. <lb />
Ex Judge and Hon. B. j Though many of the expenses of <lb />
H. Bunn have formed a the legislature on <lb />
for the practice of law, i during its absence from Washing <lb />
tho former residing at Wilson ton, they jump to maximum when <lb />
and the latter at Rocky Mount- it sits. To make laws costs Uncle <lb />
The State Superintendent of Sam a pile of annually, <lb />
education has received W of tho <lb />
from Dr. Curry, of the Peabody <lb />
writing of tho Congressional Re- <lb />
cord, the stenographers paying <lb />
their own assistants. The print- <lb />
this <lb />
cation is done at an expense of <lb />
nearly annually. During <lb />
the last fiscal year it used <lb />
pounds of paper and <lb />
pounds of-ink. For the titles and <lb />
ornamentation bound copies <lb />
pecks of gold leaf were re <lb />
I have several in this quired, at Five <lb />
to the of were consume <lb />
atrocious extravagance -f Con- the of paste for <lb />
During session of the <lb />
C ingress the outlay on the print <lb />
of bills and joint resolutions <lb />
for both Senate and House was <lb />
fund, for the normal department <lb />
the Normal and <lb />
rial School at Greensboro- <lb />
Col J. S- Carr. who was <lb />
pointed by Gov. Elias Carr a <lb />
delegate to the World's Congress <lb />
etc. The salary list for this force <lb />
of assistants runs to 730.000 <lb />
does not include the office <lb />
of the sergeant at-arms. which is <lb />
I a Sort of bank through which th <lb />
salaries of the Representatives are <lb />
paid. To this financial <lb />
an outlay of need <lb />
ed. An additional pro <lb />
was the ablest colored man in the i for th I support of the House <lb />
South and the finest orator of his through which as much <lb />
race. He was a native of Newborn, mail matter passes as comes <lb />
. , laud goes out of a good sized city. <lb />
Governor Carr has pardoned j The o <lb />
out of the penitentiary ,. . , <lb />
smaller, their annual pay <lb />
House amounts to a <lb />
year, and they get extra <lb />
for mileage. To help them trans- <lb />
act, their they require a <lb />
small army of clerks, j expense of <lb />
book, keepers, pages, messengers. <lb />
the two sessions <lb />
such documents <lb />
to the House and to <lb />
the Senate. Bills have to be <lb />
printed and reprinted at all stage s <lb />
of their progress, so that a e <lb />
one may have to be put type a <lb />
score of times before it becomes <lb />
a law. <lb />
Among the advantages which <lb />
a Congressman enjoys is the ex- <lb />
of a costly eulogy in <lb />
case he dies daring his term of <lb />
office. In such event custom <lb />
demands that his virtues shall be <lb />
embalmed in book form at the <lb />
Having decided upon making a change in our business on January 1st, 1894, we now <lb />
------offer our entire stock of------ <lb />
FIXTURES <lb />
AT <lb />
elected a vice president of the <lb />
American Association. <lb />
Rev. C Price, D. <lb />
President of Livingstone College. <lb />
Salisbury, died in that town on <lb />
Tuesday night of last week. He <lb />
Jones, who was <lb />
manslaughter 1881 <lb />
county and sentenced to <lb />
twenty years. He has served <lb />
twelve years of his term. <lb />
Smithfield It is <lb />
learned that quite a number of <lb />
milch cows are dying through <lb />
county. One near Benson, <lb />
we has lost two or three <lb />
and we have heard of others. <lb />
Some two or three have died <lb />
around town recently. <lb />
pi to with <lb />
addition of for mileage. the publications issued <lb />
During the last fiscal nine <lb />
Representatives and Senators <lb />
were thus honored, at an outlay <lb />
of The most extravagant <lb />
of these came to j <lb />
The expenditure for j <lb />
runs from up- From <lb />
to copies ordinarily <lb />
are Fifty are <lb />
to the family of tho dead j <lb />
statesman; most of thy others find <lb />
their way sooner or later to tho <lb />
junk shop. Each one must have <lb />
a portrait, the engraving of which <lb />
costs <lb />
Congressmen have caused great <lb />
waste of the public by <lb />
HOST <lb />
and some tilings we will sell for less than Cost as our whole stock of Merchandise must <lb />
be closed out by December next. <lb />
OUR STOCK <lb />
BOYS CHILDREN'S CLOTHING and <lb />
LI- S UTENSILS, SNUFF. TOBACCO and other <lb />
Shelf M B, LB and COFFEE. BACH AN TIES fat everything usually carried in stock by a general <lb />
lot of <lb />
LADIES FINK CAPS and SHAW LS, Ladies and RUBBER A small lot of <lb />
hi FURNITURE, which we will sell <lb />
chi <lb />
improved pattern of CARPET SWEEPERS- Several widths nice <lb />
There is an expense of government <lb />
the office of the broadcast where there was <lb />
Gastonia An <lb />
years old, who works on <lb />
Mr- Mac Wilson's farm, picked <lb />
of cotton in one day- <lb />
last week and it wasn't a good <lb />
day for picking cotton either <lb />
His name is Big Bill Adams an <lb />
The office of the <lb />
of the upper house, which <lb />
tho banking and to <lb />
much of the clerical business of <lb />
august body, costs <lb />
salaries- Clerks and messengers <lb />
to the various committees draw <lb />
, The sergeant-at arms <lb />
i doorkeepers other helpers <lb />
an of <lb />
no use for them. As a result of <lb />
of this practice, thousands and <lb />
thousands of volumes every year <lb />
were sold to dealers in waste pa- <lb />
per ail over the country Without <lb />
having even been taken from <lb />
their wrappers- This abuse has i <lb />
been done away with to a great <lb />
extent by recent legislation-. <lb />
Among tho materials consumed ; <lb />
FLOOR OILCLOTH. We We also have thousand SNOW I STICKS BASKETS which <lb />
we will sell CHEAP. Some PLOWS. PLOW CASTINGS and SHOVELS and HOES. We cannot name everything, we are <lb />
nearly e to have anything want. Try us. We m an business. The whole stock has be sold and you buy it at such <lb />
a price as to save you considerable money. <lb />
O. <lb />
N. shall continue to buy Cotton, Peanuts and <lb />
Rice and are prepared to pay the highest market prices. <lb />
OCTOBER 1st, 1893- <lb />
Senate <lb />
stationery i <lb />
This brief statement <lb />
There are further expenditures of j by the public printer in the last <lb />
30.700 for the document and mentioned in his a <lb />
rooms, for the <lb />
. for worth of eggs, yards of I tenor arrangements arc concern- <lb />
jeans, gallons of care of these devolves <lb />
worth of gold leaf, and I Senate and House re- <lb />
worth of imitation . v. Furniture and repairs <lb />
he picks from pounds means comprises all of the .,,, of <lb />
, , i j- n , leaf. Lithographed and engrave <lb />
almost any day. I bob involved in running <lb />
by no <lb />
Weldon News Last Friday <lb />
night thieves entered the yard of <lb />
Henry Pope stole one of his <lb />
bee gums. They carried it some <lb />
proceeded to sweet- <lb />
en up by robbing it of t-e honey. <lb />
The bees made th work <lb />
warm for them so they only <lb />
ceded getting out one or two <lb />
pieces of honey- <lb />
The dwelling house of Major <lb />
many left out, <lb />
are paid for out of the <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK <lb />
which <lb />
; contingent funds, is the item of <lb />
salaries for the official reporters. <lb />
i These are the men who write out <lb />
tho reports of proceedings <lb />
debates which make up the daily <lb />
publication called the <lb />
i Record. There are five of <lb />
them on the floor of the House, <lb />
who sit at a table front of the <lb />
Speaker's desk. It is their duty <lb />
John W. Graham, of Hillsboro, I to report every word that is said <lb />
was destroyed by fire Thursday from the opening to the adjourn- <lb />
The fire is said to have Being all of them rapid <lb />
been caused by the overturning ; stenographers, they by <lb />
of a lamp by a servant girl. The taking turns. As quickly as No. <lb />
building is a total loss and only a has got words put down <lb />
little furniture was saved. The ; he holds up his thumb and No. <lb />
loss of Maj. Graham is estimated ; takes up the thread, very likely <lb />
at fully with no insurance. the middle of a speech, while <lb />
. ,, ,, . i No. goes down to a room on the <lb />
I- .-.,. I <lb />
floor below, where he dictates <lb />
the words to two shorthand <lb />
words to one and <lb />
to tho other. <lb />
While the two writers <lb />
Kinston Free Press Dr. Hyatt <lb />
performed a very difficult <lb />
cal operation on Mrs. Amos Phil- <lb />
lips, of this county, about five <lb />
weeks ago, removing a <lb />
pound fibroid tumor from her <lb />
abdomen. She returned home copying off their notes quickly <lb />
j last Monday perfectly cured. I n typescript, reporter No. goes <lb />
I Dr. Hyatt probably has the to seat in <lb />
Ml. Y <lb />
-heir year's supplies will <lb />
their interest toot our prices before pa <lb />
is complete <lb />
n all <lb />
FLOUR. <lb />
RICE. TEA, c. <lb />
Patent. <lb />
TOBACCO largest surgical practice in the <lb />
we j State, and his practice is con- <lb />
He has a <lb />
nicely equipped sanatorium for <lb />
the of diseases of the <lb />
eye and general surgery. It is <lb />
illustrations for the report to which must added near <lb />
executive documents of both fuel and gas. The <lb />
House and Senate cost es of engineers, elevator <lb />
i tors and workmen come to <lb />
is fairly economical I . . . . <lb />
., . . J extra. The pay of tho capitol <lb />
with respect to its expenditure on . <lb />
. . ml , ,. policeman is per annum, <lb />
religion. The salary of the House j <lb />
is only while the <lb />
chaplain of the Senate gets the , This. <lb />
same amount. The two branches It will <lb />
HAPPINESS. <lb />
as a <lb />
Unknown, <lb />
There is enough of wildness to j <lb />
keep the mind constantly en- <lb />
gaged, and enough of civilization <lb />
to the most exacting. <lb />
Sufferers from pulmonary die- j <lb />
oases, people whose systems are <lb />
charged with malaria, or are I <lb />
by over work, find <lb />
and in many cases per ma- , <lb />
meat relief in this invigorating <lb />
climate, anew tho <lb />
fact by all intelligent <lb />
persons- whether physicians or <lb />
is the best <lb />
of the ye scrubbing the <lb />
of the great edifice, washing <lb />
the steps, etc. All this has <lb />
to do with the keeping up of <lb />
balls, j the two wing, so far as their m <lb />
In an article written for th <lb />
Lieutenant John P. <lb />
Finlay, of the United States <lb />
Weather Bureau, make i the fol- <lb />
lowing <lb />
should furnish <lb />
the bast the most varied <lb />
health resorts and sanitariums in <lb />
tho United States. her laymen, that <lb />
borders utmost every of <lb />
wasting disease should find the For <lb />
means of temporary, if not per- about or any par- <lb />
ti <lb />
This theoretical statement, from guides, maps, and descriptive lit- <lb />
of the national Legislature spend ; standpoint, of all kinds, call upon or <lb />
twice that much in the course of Lungs. Dr. King's New is fully and abundantly address following named <lb />
a year on packing boxes. These j b-V actual experience- Tue of the Southern Pacific Corn- <lb />
are made by carpenters at the be paid from I cool and bracing coast climate, <lb />
and handsomely just the thins and mid.-r devoid of any trace of r , , , n , m , <lb />
E Asst. General <lb />
together, are very use- la sample and learn the northern part . ,,., <lb />
for stowing dresses in, and a. SB J . <lb />
other purposes of store size Ma. and <lb />
which would otherwise re <lb />
devoid of any trace of malaria, <lb />
extends from the northern part of <lb />
tho State to the extreme south. <lb />
There is the choice between this <lb />
cool, humid atmosphere and the i <lb />
dry, warm atmosphere the <lb />
When inland valleys. <lb />
quire trunks. Oat of the con- <lb />
funds the of Never forsake a friend, <lb />
special committees are paid for. enemies gather around, when <lb />
Often they are very as j sickness falls on the heart, when <lb />
well as very expensive affairs,; the world is dark and cheerless, <lb />
costing thousands time to try friendship <lb />
Statesmen who travel The heart that has touched <lb />
thus at Uncle Sam's cost are; with pure gold will redouble its <lb />
usually liberal with themselves, efforts when the friend is sad and i <lb />
It is quite interesting to look over trouble. The of <lb />
E. E. Currier, New <lb />
Agent, Washington Street, <lb />
Boston. Mass. <lb />
W. o. G. W. F. A P. <lb />
, Clark Street, <lb />
W. C. Watson, General <lb />
A., Clark Street, Chicago, , , <lb />
Washington one <lb />
the matter of altitude there <lb />
is a yet greater difference. From <lb />
Palm Valley, feet below sea <lb />
level, to the upper Agent, New Orleans, La. <lb />
or above, any altitude can <lb />
be selected, and comfortable <lb />
T. H. Got General Pas- <lb />
Agent, San Francisco, Cal. <lb />
their printed accounts of dis-j Adversity tries real friendship, <lb />
They always travel who turn from the <lb />
in drawing-room cars, put up scene of distress betray their <lb />
the best hotels, e <lb />
almost <lb />
summer; during which <lb />
tho injurious germs of animal and <lb />
is <lb />
known popular as <lb />
to <lb />
so well <lb />
need no <lb />
you to buy at one profit, <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on hand and <lb />
the times. Out are all bought and <lb />
sold therefore, no risk <lb />
a close <lb />
M. <lb />
his thumb to No. who in his <lb />
turn takes up tho thread, while <lb />
No. goes downstairs <lb />
so on until No- holds <lb />
the only institution of the kind I op bis thumb to No. and the <lb />
the State. I business goes on as before. <lb />
j This renders it <lb />
at up at scene of distress betray their . . , , mention. Ail who used <lb />
the hypocrisy, and prove that decay are destroyed h .,, ,,. <lb />
iii j n thorough desiccation, is one pure, medicine docs not exist <lb />
front cf the <lb />
desk. Meanwhile No. has finish <lb />
ed his words, and held up is lo be had-1 only moves them. <lb />
It a lot of money to run the j If you have a friend who loves Bitters will cure all <lb />
j j . of the will <lb />
building which you, who has studied your remove Bolls. Salt Rheum and <lb />
Dies for business purposes. The; and happiness, be sure to sustain During the rainy season it is caused by Impure blood <lb />
. . . , . , , -i ilk- I o e ill In L-r- Will drive Malaria font Hie <lb />
capitol is under the charge of. in adversity. Let him feel usually too cool to i M M a <lb />
Architect Clark, who is allowed his love is not thrown away, and the result is, ex- j cure of Headache. <lb />
In France, in recent years, <lb />
much attention has been given to <lb />
I school hygiene. Not is <lb />
culture made compulsory in <lb />
Patent or in the Courts i . . <lb />
to have a complete type- <lb />
written report of the House pro- <lb />
ready for the printer a <lb />
few minutes after that body ad <lb />
It is the same way with <lb />
Fees. all public schools, but the plans each Congress- <lb />
We are opposite the IT. S Patent Of. f buildings, both public ; table <lb />
in i , , , u man finds on Ins mend and renew the <lb />
next morning a copy of the <lb />
Durham Sun. <lb />
a year for keeping it in <lb />
order. Seven carpenters are em- <lb />
ployed all the year round in ma- How's This <lb />
king repairs, while six painters, ,,,, ,, <lb />
devote their attention , any Catarrh that cannot <lb />
to the many acres of wall <lb />
inside outside of the <lb />
some of the val- Electric, <lb />
, , , , <lb />
an absolutely pure refunded.-Price Wets, and <lb />
The ocean winds enter- stars. <lb />
through the several . . <lb />
openings, are tempered by the <lb />
intermediate urea passed over, <lb />
and often receive desirable <lb />
in lam than j private, must be approved by <lb />
mo-e remote limn , proper authorities, and all <lb />
W.-en the U sent we f j . <lb />
as to tree of I schools are subjected to <lb />
and we no change safes we ob- j medical inspection- The <lb />
last mentioned feature is one <lb />
Supt. of the Order Did., and to which American public school <lb />
authorities, particularly in large <lb />
cities might borrow with <lb />
Review. <lb />
D, C <lb />
comprising a complete record of <lb />
everything that was said and <lb />
done in the national Legislature <lb />
on the day before. These skilled <lb />
stenographers get a <lb />
each. <lb />
There are ten of them, and so <lb />
s year for the <lb />
, , j n.; i We the have known F. i, tie <lb />
Four plumbers do nothing j i--, years b- s m taking no <lb />
tut mend and renew the him perfectly honorable In all resinous odors of tho pines and <lb />
. . i -as. business transactions financially woods on the Coast <lb />
for water and gas, while a carry out <lb />
skilled coppersmith attends to the, y their firm. <lb />
roof and sees that it does not leak g <lb />
anywhere. Ball a find difficulty <lb />
ere and a score of assistants are Hall's Cure is taken Inter- selecting a locality where <lb />
always at work on M that <lb />
grounds, while twenty-five per bottle. Sold by all j these agencies can over do to- <lb />
engaged every day Druggists. free. tho of health. <lb />
The paid admissions to tho <lb />
World's Fair on Chicago Day <lb />
enormous <lb />
aggregate of In 1876. <lb />
a i i n . n. Pennsylvania Day called to the <lb />
on the Coast , .,,,,. <lb />
, . , , . . , , grounds of tho Centennial <lb />
The skillful acquaint- ft numbering <lb />
of whom <lb />
paid for admission. For many <lb />
years that was regarded as tho <lb />
greatest crowd ever collected at <lb />
one place. <lb />
SCIENCE IN <lb />
Men at tho Who <lb />
Into <lb />
They In Treasury, <lb />
Navy, Other Depart- <lb />
I r to th <lb />
Is <lb />
There is a deal of science in Wash- <lb />
The government maintains <lb />
a sufficient number of learned gen- <lb />
who are delving into the <lb />
of nature to the <lb />
nucleus of an agreeable, inspiring, <lb />
and sometimes inspiriting . club <lb />
known as the Cosmos, which rs <lb />
on the corner of Fifteenth and <lb />
streets, In a house that has both <lb />
family and club traditions; for <lb />
aristocracy and statesmanship <lb />
have dwelt within its walls, it <lb />
has been birthplace of clubs that <lb />
excel it both m Ignorance and con- <lb />
There is no doubt that <lb />
men arc rather overlooked in <lb />
contemplation of more <lb />
and bewildering picture <lb />
by the men of politics and by <lb />
Mm women of fashion. Hut they <lb />
have their club and their own so- <lb />
they have their work, <lb />
which to a scientist <lb />
finds science <lb />
hit lea away in the most <lb />
for quarters. treasury de- <lb />
there are <lb />
the surveyors, and tho <lb />
geographers of the survey, <lb />
but there are no original <lb />
tors here. In war department <lb />
there used to be a few meteorologists <lb />
connected with signal corps, <lb />
who for many years were trying to <lb />
discover general law by which <lb />
nature's explosions arc governed. <lb />
The have all gone over <lb />
now to the agricultural department, <lb />
and their scientific investigations <lb />
aid the secretary's efforts to <lb />
late the making of hay and grow- <lb />
grain. <lb />
In army and navy there are <lb />
proficients in metallurgy who <lb />
known as the of <lb />
two services. In connection <lb />
with the navy a largo and important <lb />
astronomical observatory has been <lb />
built. This is the outgrowth of a <lb />
naval need for a to correct <lb />
chronometers, but it has developed <lb />
BO rapidly that a corps of civilian <lb />
astronomers has been employed, and <lb />
now the civilians objecting to <lb />
any longer control of a rear admiral <lb />
who may not even remember tho <lb />
astronomy that he learned when ho <lb />
was serving guns at Eric, or <lb />
on probation at the naval academy. <lb />
Harper's Weekly.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017622_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Oat in Kansas the Third party <lb />
in styled the party of <lb />
ft J. <lb />
NOVEMBER <lb />
it UM at <lb />
N. C, as mail matter. <lb />
END OF THE STRUGGLE. <lb />
When we wrote last week in <lb />
reference to the probable action <lb />
of the Senate the <lb />
bill everything looked like com- <lb />
promise and nothing But <lb />
before this was rend there was a <lb />
sudden change and compromise <lb />
was hopelessly dead, and remains <lb />
so at The cause assign <lb />
ed is that Mr Cleveland wanted <lb />
unconditional repeal and nothing <lb />
else with this bill. However, <lb />
enough never signed <lb />
the proposed compromise to en <lb />
sure its p this may have <lb />
caused its abandonment, am way <lb />
it was left quietly <lb />
since unconditional repeal <lb />
has a foregone conclusion. <lb />
The silver men themselves have <lb />
now up the fight <lb />
latest news, that brought Of Sun- <lb />
day s is that a vote <lb />
would be taken on the hill Mon- <lb />
day at o'clock. Mr. <lb />
stated in the Senate Saturday <lb />
that h should ask a vote taken <lb />
at this hour it was <lb />
that there would be no serious <lb />
made to protract the <lb />
longer. This fore- <lb />
shadowed last Friday when a vote <lb />
was taken to substitute the <lb />
bees bill for the Wilson bill <lb />
which was passed by th House. <lb />
This was by a large ma <lb />
On Saturday many of the <lb />
amendments offered were disposed <lb />
of, of being rejected by <lb />
W average majority of The <lb />
one that came the nearest passing <lb />
was the me reviving the Bland- <lb />
Allison bill- The vote on is <lb />
stood in favor to opposed. <lb />
Mr. stated that the ac- <lb />
the majority in Opposing <lb />
some of these amendments did <lb />
not show that they were opposed <lb />
to their provisions but that they <lb />
wanted this bill passed without <lb />
any conditions and then the me <lb />
might be spent in adopting meas- <lb />
which might be desirable <lb />
along that line. <lb />
It is almost that we will <lb />
not be wrong this time in saying <lb />
that when this is read, yes even <lb />
now, the repeal bill has been <lb />
passed it came from the <lb />
Finance Committee, and that the <lb />
majority have at last accomplish- <lb />
ed what ought to have been <lb />
allowed to do nearly two months <lb />
ago. The compromise that was <lb />
proposed would have been but <lb />
little better than the Sherman law <lb />
itself would have been totally <lb />
unsatisfactory to those who de <lb />
Maud the free of silver <lb />
Sow that repeal bill has been <lb />
passed is nothing in the <lb />
way but to go ahead have <lb />
legislation as will give us a <lb />
tali.- currency from the <lb />
faults of our p. system, f his <lb />
we believe t be done and <lb />
we trust that the <lb />
party early in the regular <lb />
will work along <lb />
line and never give it up until it <lb />
i accomplished fact gold and <lb />
silver have lie; i place I the <lb />
same as a money metal. <lb />
W hen a bill to this effect has <lb />
been introduced we will see quite <lb />
a cliff, lent aspect in forces <lb />
the D party the Sen <lb />
ate. Many have thought that all <lb />
v i . f <lb />
repeal hostile to silver, when <lb />
the reverse is true. Almost with <lb />
out hi those who favored <lb />
--i i c repeal are <lb />
and will so the is <lb />
sue i- ought. The only differ <lb />
be MM who I <lb />
or oppose repeal <lb />
was as i . the I <lb />
at the result- Those be <lb />
that the Sherman <lb />
should be repealed and then <lb />
subsequent legislation in refer <lb />
to opposing <lb />
believing that both should come <lb />
a difference as to <lb />
means to accomplish a certain <lb />
Who believes that in case <lb />
of on- own S that <lb />
will all that <lb />
may be its policies is will <lb />
pretty surely carry them out- We and disorder. One would think <lb />
are glad the end has been reached they had some kin folks here in <lb />
and will not utter one word of North Carolina judging from <lb />
if the party comes as remarks let drop sometimes. A <lb />
near carrying out all the promises Third party man light here in <lb />
made t Chicago as it has done Pitt county said the other day <lb />
the passage of this bill. The that he wished the country could <lb />
demanded its repeal, plunged into another war <lb />
the Democrats have repealed it. And it is not the most unusual <lb />
second, third, and fourth thing the world to hear <lb />
installments in proper silver that if certain things could j Extra <lb />
legislation, the repeal of the not be had by ballots they <lb />
election laws and the re b bullets. <lb />
of the tariff, mt <lb />
will remain Samuel . D. <lb />
this nation as long as the people D , chaplain of the House of Rep- <lb />
are allowed to express themselves died of Bright's <lb />
by their ballots. disease at his home in ashing <lb />
ton last Thursday. <lb />
Cotton and Peanuts. <lb />
Below are N prices of cotton <lb />
peanuts for day, as <lb />
by Ci., Commission <lb />
chants <lb />
Good r 1-16 <lb />
Middling <lb />
Low Middling 5-16 <lb />
Good Ordinary <lb />
PEANUTS. <lb />
; Spanish <lb />
Tone <lb />
per bu. <lb />
t. <lb />
Hood's Cures <lb />
Wan To know f Hon. A B. <lb />
r baa ever be u to Was i <lb />
W a the pace about The great d's Fair closed <lb />
to mouth i d have T. . u . <lb />
tam, hi. , any his I It has been <lb />
in of the it Mr. success Chicago has <lb />
credit in con- <lb />
a it is essential that they should ducting it- <lb />
if living Any <lb />
mat on ill regard to Ur be <lb />
gratefully t office a <lb />
r ward be p id die <lb />
hi- <lb />
WASHINGTON <lb />
We are surprised editor <lb />
should thus publicly show that <lb />
he possesses such little knowledge <lb />
of his own <lb />
district. If he a letter to <lb />
reach our Congressman, Hon. <lb />
om our Regular <lb />
Washington, D. C-, Oct, <lb />
Senator is proud, as <lb />
he has a lit to be, of the great <lb />
victor, he has won, he is all <lb />
the prouder that it was won with- <lb />
out the use of cloture. <lb />
the Republican Senators shall in- More Pleased <lb />
L. <lb />
Of Ky. <lb />
Win. A. Branch, he should not some new and <lb />
have simply addressed it to complication into the <lb />
B. Branch sent it to a city the vicious clause <lb />
several hundred thousands of, the <lb />
, ., , . which not one word of praise or <lb />
people eel mail every With been uttered during <lb />
as many careless postal officials the long memorable silver <lb />
a-there are in the it is hard debate the Senate, will be <lb />
tor a to get his mail wiped from the Statute <lb />
,, , , within less than a week. he <lb />
it is addressed properly, <lb />
and sorely a writer has no strong a tight was ever made in <lb />
to be kicking if he does not even Congress for to get the <lb />
know the name of the person bill amended so as to continue <lb />
he to write to. Again if coinage <lb />
With Hood's Tot- <lb />
and Blood <lb />
ITS. <lb />
when all else <lb />
CONVENIENT, wry It la MM. <lb />
SIMPLE, a <lb />
SURE, It aM nature to can. <lb />
SAFE, It no Bad effects. <lb />
EASY, yon take no medicine. <lb />
WHAT XX DOES It causes the body to absorb <lb />
OXYGEN, and draws from nature's laboratory the agent of its <lb />
curative effects. <lb />
Governor M. HOLT Write <lb />
always got good front . . <lb />
CO., <lb />
. C. <lb />
W V V V t w w w <lb />
V V V w <lb />
OF INDUSTRY <lb />
This space -be occupied by <lb />
H. <lb />
Look for their prices next week as their buyer <lb />
is in New York <lb />
FOR THE <lb />
ARE <lb />
Capital and Credit. <lb />
JOIN TO THESE THE Y A <lb />
TO EsTA I <lb />
MAINTAIN BOTH, AND <lb />
roe have the secret sue <lb />
WE HAVE TRIED TO JOIN <lb />
ALL THESE <lb />
UP A BUSINESS OF SOL- <lb />
MERIT, WHICH WOULD BE A <lb />
CREDIT TO TOWN. AND A <lb />
PLEASURE TO AND <lb />
CUSTOMERS TO KNOW THAT WE <lb />
HAVE SUCCEEDED BY THEIR AS <lb />
IN DOING THIS VERY <lb />
THING. FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS <lb />
WE THANE YOU AND STILL <lb />
CIT YOUR HELP A ND PA GE. <lb />
that <lb />
Stronger and Better in TTy. <lb />
I have more than pleased with Hood's <lb />
I hare suffered with break- <lb />
are cheaper than now than ever before <lb />
i began to Hood's i Known and we have taken the opportunity of <lb />
giving our and patrons the benefit of <lb />
the low prices. <lb />
of silver, found <lb />
, it was impossible to upon <lb />
Herald had kept at all any be <lb />
on the proceedings of once realizing that <lb />
it would have seen our re- they their willingness <lb />
was at his post, to allow a vote to be taken after <lb />
. ., . proposed amendments shall <lb />
on several Toted <lb />
committees, making speeches,; upon amendments <lb />
and trying to persuade j about all of the <lb />
Mr. to turn out a lot of, ideas and each of them will have <lb />
It publican postmasters. One J special defenders and will secure <lb />
., , . , , ,,. some votes, but it will be <lb />
of the good licks put them <lb />
has been patting in is; by casting their <lb />
shown right under the votes for what they <lb />
the would have improved the bill, <lb />
town fifths of the should, <lb />
on the final vote, support the <lb />
Hood's s Cures <lb />
Besides <lb />
my blood. It has mo so much <lb />
stronger and better I do not feel like the same <lb />
person at A Asses. August, Ky. <lb />
Hood's easily, yet <lb />
on the and bowels. <lb />
Yours to please, <lb />
Greene. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
virtue a of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court at March term, 1893, in the <lb />
of Jesse P. vs Samuel M. <lb />
Smith wile. Laura Smith, th <lb />
will sell for <lb />
before the Court House in <lb />
u the day of <lb />
18-3. the following described <lb />
consider I in the of Pitt and <lb />
In Swift Creek lying on the <lb />
sooth <lb />
by the land I. H. Wilson the <lb />
north, the lands of K. S <lb />
believe its own <lb />
has a Democratic post- I bill. My reason for I on the es , boo the lands of J. B. <lb />
master a result of Mr. Branch's expecting such a large vote <lb />
work. A Hug of the above <lb />
that the Herald is <lb />
more to get off a bit of <lb />
its spleen against Mr. <lb />
than it is to ascertain where he is <lb />
or what he is doing. If it is <lb />
really of facts, we <lb />
take pleasure in informing it, <lb />
without laying claim to its prof- <lb />
reward, that Mr. Branch is <lb />
tilling his position in Congress <lb />
creditably to and <lb />
to his district. <lb />
expecting such a large vote <lb />
the bill is that nearly every Sena- <lb />
tor who spoke expressed the <lb />
opinion that the purchasing law <lb />
should be repealed. <lb />
Already there are indications <lb />
part of the Republican <lb />
to make trouble. Sena- <lb />
tor Sherman while professing to <lb />
be a strong unconditional repeal <lb />
is trying to complicate <lb />
The is glad to see <lb />
natives of Pitt county reaping <lb />
honors, even if they do have to <lb />
leave their native heath and go <lb />
elsewhere to the <lb />
they are entitled to by true <lb />
worth and merit. We see that at <lb />
Western North <lb />
ion, h. Id at <lb />
Mr. J. H. Tucker, for <lb />
of this town, was chosen <lb />
of the body. The Bib <lb />
he the <lb />
wit dignity an <lb />
In speaking of Mr. Tucker, the <lb />
Citizen <lb />
II. T k -r p Of the <lb />
I'm i- a we I <lb />
ill-, Mar- <lb />
phi-. M age ii a <lb />
of e as <lb />
the senate <lb />
null f t n . <lb />
it'S her. <lb />
rites in his who i- <lb />
Mr. Tucker <lb />
and lie is a a- <lb />
was reared . <lb />
c an I onus in <lb />
H- <lb />
North Cr ad- <lb />
liar in at <lb />
In his city <lb />
sine nine i- OM <lb />
of in -t i- <lb />
i i f <lb />
ll. church a o; rt <lb />
K-i-i-- lent <lb />
the With <lb />
I v his read r-d <lb />
it I and y. <lb />
lands in I M . Smith <lb />
his lather Cannon Smith, <lb />
more or less F J A MES. <lb />
Commissioner.<lb />
Invites the ladies to inspect her <lb />
Fashionable Millinery <lb />
She has recently returned from the <lb />
TO THE PUBLIC <lb />
T HAVE OPENED THE STORE. P <lb />
FORMERLY OCCUPIED BY <lb />
J. L. LITTLE WITH <lb />
EXTENSIVE STOCK OF <lb />
matters by getting supporters for when- she attend d several <lb />
an amendment providing for an is to f at <lb />
-i . . i . the correct and for <lb />
this season. Her Pattern are <lb />
of style and lot <lb />
Cap hand Mrs. <lb />
amendment providing for an is <lb />
sue of bonds. Inasmuch as Se-n <lb />
had told Mr- Sher- <lb />
that he considered it unwise <lb />
to interject the bond issue-, which <lb />
is opposed by many Democratic <lb />
Senators, into the question, it <lb />
looks Sherman <lb />
was trying to create Democratic <lb />
rather than to secure <lb />
repeal. <lb />
Fine Potatoes. <lb />
Mr. C P Gaskins, of had a <lb />
few very flue sweet potatoes on i- <lb />
ti n h re and presented the <lb />
R with me of them. They <lb />
are of a variety known as Yam <lb />
and be says that f r excellence and <lb />
flavor they surpass an. potato he has <lb />
eve. cultivated They are large <lb />
aid prolific, the even <lb />
that of the variety. The <lb />
is b much after. <lb />
Mrs. and Miss <lb />
are with <lb />
be glad to serve yon. <lb />
K Jelly a bottle. <lb />
ACME <lb />
Missionary Entertainment. <lb />
night the V. E. <lb />
Harrow. Clod Crusher and <lb />
I have i t he agency for this <lb />
did and will lie t <lb />
haw the and it. <lb />
As its ii me implies, it is a general <lb />
will crush, cut. lift, turn, <lb />
level and pulverize, all one <lb />
n preparing the land for <lb />
small grain and also for covering the <lb />
send it lie Several <lb />
sizes made, from ft to ft. Call <lb />
and see how the Harrow w.-ks. <lb />
JOHN <lb />
Sunday <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
virtue of a decree of Superior <lb />
Court at term, in the ease <lb />
Turner and wile vb. Samuel <lb />
the <lb />
MEN SUITS and <lb />
BOYS SUITS and up. <lb />
BOYS OVERCOATS 1-25 and up. <lb />
CHECKED HOMESPUN cents. <lb />
THE <lb />
LOWEST <lb />
PRICES <lb />
IN <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
Sol. Cohen <lb />
EXT DOOR TO J. A. ANDREW <lb />
We offer yon a line of Goods that cannot be excelled in this county <lb />
for variety and For every dollar spent with us we <lb />
try to give value. We have received our <lb />
FALL STOCK <lb />
and can show yon a beautiful line of Goods. It is our intention to <lb />
sell Good Goods at the lowest prices with value <lb />
and merit. W e have the Goods. <lb />
tho Stock in Town. <lb />
We invite inspection. We invite comparison- We your pat- <lb />
We want your trade. Come see our <lb />
Dry Goods, <lb />
Dress <lb />
Notions, Hats, <lb />
Piece Goods for Making Mens and Boys <lb />
CLOTHING, <lb />
Shoes, Crockery, Tinware, <lb />
Glassware, Wood and Hardware Plows and Farming <lb />
Utensils, Harness and Whips. Hi aw ii. s and Flour a specialty <lb />
The largest and best line of PI C fr kept in <lb />
our town, consisting in part l I i I v. I J t Marble Top <lb />
Walnut Suits, Solid Oak Suits, Imitation Oak Stills, Imitation <lb />
nut Suits. Bureaus. Bedsteads, Table--, Chairs <lb />
of kinds, Cribs Safes <lb />
Bed Springs, Tables Children Ca Lice Curt tins, <lb />
Poles, Matting and Oil Colds. J A- P. Cots Best Spool <lb />
Cotton at Wholesale prices, Bagging Ties, Bigs. <lb />
We are tireless workers for trade and always <lb />
ready to make and give Bargains. <lb />
CHERRY <lb />
ESTABLISHED f <lb />
GREENVILLE. C. <lb />
On Saturday it city of <lb />
Chicago was thrown into <lb />
excitement over the assassination <lb />
of Mayor Carter H <lb />
About half past seven o'clock a <lb />
man rang the bell of Mayor <lb />
residence, called for <lb />
that gentleman, and when he <lb />
shot at him times. <lb />
T i f the balls took et <lb />
favors less than Senator was dead in less <lb />
Vance free coinage of silver an hour fled <lb />
Ransom uM for repeal <lb />
Vance it. What is true race p <lb />
in this Mt in nearly all he <lb />
of the States, by he <lb />
School pave a very enjoy, will sell for Cash. Court <lb />
e-t in the at which the Hon. in Greenville, on <lb />
, , . ,, . th- 6th November. the fol- <lb />
f p ed or of ,,,, <lb />
I Almighty In the county of Pitt aim in <lb />
Kin township, adjoining the lands <lb />
en an Henry <lb />
us. <lb />
P G. F. S . <lb />
Cory and others, <lb />
more or less, it being the <lb />
, land on which Turner Smith and wife <lb />
G o P <lb />
at ion. A M Me H <lb />
Jame. <lb />
th Mountain Top. <lb />
and <lb />
Even Pray Hading ISM <lb />
Lord ye <lb />
Recitation, Th T <lb />
M as ah Ho <lb />
Glorious <lb />
Time. <lb />
B citation, <lb />
Jug Miss Bessie Harding. <lb />
I say <lb />
I the Amen <lb />
Miss C C <lb />
M Crowning is <lb />
C mi g <lb />
Rec Famine <lb />
Miss Bessie W bite <lb />
i ion. <lb />
Hail the Power. <lb />
Benedict o. <lb />
There are enough Demo- <lb />
in Congress with the silver <lb />
Republicans and Populists to pas <lb />
r hill by a large majority <lb />
and we . this will he done, <lb />
and w. furthermore believe fiat <lb />
if ii is a oil which promises good <lb />
to the country that Mr. Cleve <lb />
land will not veto <lb />
We have faith in the Democratic <lb />
are not to <lb />
everything may <lb />
not come just in the manner we <lb />
had exp or wish. <lb />
The A this bill is <lb />
promised to make him corpora- <lb />
counsel bat not keep his <lb />
word. That man ought to swing <lb />
and but time <lb />
should be wasted trying Bad <lb />
executing him. <lb />
T Pacific mail steamer <lb />
of New York, was wrecked last <lb />
afternoon while passing <lb />
out the Golden Gate near <lb />
A heavy fog <lb />
and the steamer being <lb />
drifted from coarse by the <lb />
run upon tie rocks <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
F qualified before the <lb />
-B. <lb />
Delia Harri-. deceased. This of <lb />
duly <lb />
Court Clerk <lb />
of Dell <lb />
notice is to all <lb />
in the In make <lb />
to tin- ii ml. and all <lb />
in against the <lb />
present I lie tor be- <lb />
fore the lath day Oct-, r <lb />
notice will lie in of <lb />
of <lb />
AMANDA HARRIS. <lb />
-n Harris <lb />
in 1885. A. L BLOW, <lb />
F. G. JAMES <lb />
This October Commissioners. <lb />
Notice to <lb />
The superior Court Clerk of Pitt <lb />
having issued Letters of d- <lb />
t me, urn d, on <lb />
day of October. M <lb />
estate W, Daniel, deceased <lb />
no ice is hereby given to nil in <lb />
debt A I., th <lb />
the to a I <lb />
creditors of said to present their <lb />
claims, properly to the <lb />
within mouths after <lb />
the date of this notice, or this <lb />
will lie plead bar of their <lb />
the of October, <lb />
on the Estate of John W. Daniel <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having th. <lb />
CI. Pitt c. as <lb />
of the estate of U P. <lb />
deceased, notice Is hereby <lb />
given .-ill I to the <lb />
mil- t make Immediate payment to the <lb />
all persons having <lb />
claims against the estate <lb />
the same for payment before the 23rd <lb />
or notice <lb />
r of recovery. <lb />
ALL KM <lb />
Of f- <lb />
the of the following goods <lb />
not to be excelled in this market. And to be and <lb />
goods. GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. OTHERS, GEN- <lb />
GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS. LA- <lb />
and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
WINDOWS, SASH, BLINDS, and <lb />
W HOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different <lb />
Gin and Mill Hat, Rock Plaster op Paris, <lb />
Hair. Harness, and addles <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Seed Paint Wood and <lb />
Sails a Give me a-all and I guarantee <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By- virtue of a re of t Superior, <lb />
made at be <lb />
if Latham Skinner v-. J. B. <lb />
trustee. S. L. and W H <lb />
the undersigned <lb />
I sell for cash before the Court <lb />
House door in on Monday the <lb />
6th day of November WM at o'clock <lb />
t following described real estate Min- <lb />
In the town of Greenville and <lb />
known in said town as lots <lb />
Nob. aid and <lb />
the Hotel Macon property. <lb />
The property will he divided and sold <lb />
in lots, of each <lb />
can be by reference to the <lb />
deer e. F. JAMES. <lb />
3rd 1801 Co <lb />
Sale of Valuable Land. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of the <lb />
Con it or Pitt at <lb />
1893. we on Monday. Dec. <lb />
1893. sell at public sale before <lb />
House door in Greenville, that valuable <lb />
farm lying east of town of <lb />
ville. known is the residence and home <lb />
of late Col Edward . <lb />
W k m one hundred and <lb />
I DOUGLAS acres, more or less, and ad- <lb />
, vessel were valued <lb />
laud will do <lb />
to <lb />
will do r , ,. <lb />
T mm m <lb />
Executor's Sale of Per <lb />
Estate. <lb />
On the Hod, day of November. 1893. <lb />
t the late of Abel Smith, de- <lb />
will sell for <lb />
cash to the highest -r the personal <lb />
estate of i lie late <lb />
I of s. cattle, bus-, corn, cot- <lb />
ton, t. household and fur- <lb />
ill personal property <lb />
said estate. <lb />
October 16th. 1803. <lb />
J. H. SMITH, <lb />
of Abel Smith, decease <lb />
SHOE <lb />
sot In tho worK. <lb />
fa I. <lb />
he of the lands <lb />
of Martha Frank Johnson and <lb />
others. upon -ail premises <lb />
and in a eight room <lb />
dwelling a water cistern attached, <lb />
kitchen, stables, barn and other <lb />
buildings. Near the dwelling is a <lb />
p; lug of line water. The farm also <lb />
an orchard of a variety of fine <lb />
fruit trees and a a. d Con <lb />
cord. and other <lb />
grapes. <lb />
One-third to be paid cash, <lb />
the in two to <lb />
lie paid tit the expiration of one and two <lb />
yea.-s day of sale, the deferred <lb />
to bear eight per cent interest; ti- <lb />
withheld payment the <lb />
. money, privilege to <lb />
chaser to a greater price or all the <lb />
p money on day of sale r sooner <lb />
than due by terms paying Inter. <lb />
W. L. i to day of payment. <lb />
bottom, look U <lb />
DOUGLAS. <lb />
R. I. DAVIS, <lb />
F O. <lb />
ALEX. L. BLOW. <lb />
Ct, <lb />
C. R. Side Meat. <lb />
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb />
Flour, all grades <lb />
Sugar, <lb />
C. Sugar, <lb />
boxes Tobacco, <lb />
barrels Mills Stiff <lb />
barrel Three Thistle Snuff. <lb />
barrels Ax Sn. ff. <lb />
barrels P. Snuff, <lb />
eases Sardines. <lb />
j 50.000 I like <lb />
s t s and I <lb />
M barrels t; Cindy, <lb />
M ions Shot, <lb />
c Bread Powders. <lb />
ease- star Lye, <lb />
j ban-els Apple vinegar, <lb />
; eases Gold Dust Washing Powder. <lb />
I BOO J lb Bagging. <lb />
i bundles Ties . <lb />
Full stock of all other goods earned in my line. <lb />
H is Will i<lb />
YOU CAN BUY ONE AT FENDER'S, GOOD COOK STOVES <lb />
are now so cheap that yon can not afford to buy an inferior <lb />
-----one- Go to sad buy the Lest.- <lb />
Tinware, Oils, Glass <lb />
Stoves repaired, Tin Rooting; till kinds of Sheet Metal <lb />
done- <lb />
S- E. <lb />
COBB BROS CO.,<lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
and Correspondence <lb />
i i <lb />
J. L. SUGG. <lb />
LIFE FIRE <lb />
S. C <lb />
OFFICE OLD STAND <lb />
All <lb />
COMPANIES <lb />
AGENT FOB A SAFE<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017622_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
The Brazilian Department of <lb />
culture deplores the rapid destruction <lb />
of what were at one time looked upon <lb />
as inexhaustible forests of <lb />
rubber trees. A recent report of the <lb />
department a remedy that <lb />
plantations for the cultivation of the <lb />
tree be established, and shows by <lb />
statistics that large profits would <lb />
accrue to the planter. <lb />
The bicycle is getting t be nearly <lb />
as common in the country as in the <lb />
city, declares the New York Sun. <lb />
There is probably not a village of any <lb />
consequence in New England where at <lb />
least one performer on this <lb />
cannot be found, and the sight <lb />
of three or four machines beside tho <lb />
door of the local tavern at meal hours <lb />
is common. Nor are these obsolete <lb />
forms of bicycle, either; there are no <lb />
more tall wheels nor wooden in <lb />
the country than in town, for, in <lb />
of the high prices, tho man- <lb />
age to get the best. <lb />
The wandering St. <lb />
who are found in camps and villager, <lb />
on both sides the St. Lawrence, still <lb />
retain their own language, though <lb />
most of them English and some <lb />
of them They address one <lb />
another and their beasts dogs and <lb />
horses in the Indian tongue, and, ac- <lb />
cording to their robin <lb />
bird speaks the <lb />
The women are industrious, kindly <lb />
and shapeless in mid life, while the <lb />
men are fat and idle, after the manner <lb />
of males brought under civil <lb />
influences. <lb />
Says the Boston There <lb />
is a deficiency of bushels <lb />
in tho German rye crop this year, an <lb />
this comes with a of <lb />
bushels or wheat. Bye III <lb />
is the staple food of a large part <lb />
German people. They prefer it to <lb />
uneaten bread when they can gel both. <lb />
Owing to the tariff war with Russia <lb />
importations of rye fro n that country <lb />
are cut off. It is rye that has <lb />
heretofore supplied th I km of <lb />
what Germany requires. There is sure <lb />
to be n large for all the rye <lb />
American can produce during <lb />
the coming twelve months. It is a <lb />
crop much less exhaustive than is <lb />
wheat. It can be sown later in the <lb />
fall, and if fertilized mineral <lb />
manures it responds to liberal treat- <lb />
quite as freely as does <lb />
In many the demand for <lb />
straw makes the crop worth growing <lb />
for tho straw alone. <lb />
The California co-operative <lb />
known as Atkinson <lb />
in honor of Edward Atkinson, is at <lb />
last to It location will <lb />
be near in Kern County, where <lb />
a tract of square miles under <lb />
has been secured. A small sum <lb />
is to be paid down for the land, the <lb />
balance to be d long-term <lb />
payments. The has been <lb />
carefully guarded, but the San Fran- <lb />
Examiner professes to have seen <lb />
it and gives an account of the aims and <lb />
hopes of colonists. No <lb />
to be barre on th score of religion. <lb />
Women are to be admitted to <lb />
J shin, an the promise of wages as high <lb />
those paid to men is held out to <lb />
. i them as an to join the <lb />
colony. Payments for all services and <lb />
j exchange of commodities will be made <lb />
by means of u system of credits given <lb />
at the conclusion of each day's work. <lb />
A colonist who can show by his book <lb />
that he has will be entitled to <lb />
merchandise at the colony store. <lb />
Should he desire any article not in <lb />
stock it will be the duty of the mer- <lb />
chant to order the article and charge <lb />
a reasonable price it. The profit <lb />
will go to the common fund, which <lb />
the Board of Directors will control. <lb />
A marked point of difference between <lb />
this experiment and other is that in- <lb />
ownership of land will be per- <lb />
the community interest ex- <lb />
tending only to the products of the <lb />
soil. The funds from the sale of <lb />
will go into the treasury the <lb />
regular dividends shall be declared. <lb />
The articles of association explain that <lb />
employment will be furnished to every <lb />
colonists, and that the members will <lb />
receive full value for actual labor and <lb />
no more, so that no one or more men <lb />
in the community will be enabled to <lb />
absorb the product of any number of <lb />
fellow-colonists. To meet the <lb />
problem the <lb />
colonists propose to the in- <lb />
creased value of the land on which <lb />
colonists settle among the actual <lb />
workers every six One pro- <lb />
vision in the articles prohibits sale of <lb />
liquor within the colony. Schools <lb />
will not be established, the children <lb />
availing themselves of the instruction <lb />
furnished by the State. The colonists <lb />
are to take possession of their land <lb />
next spring, and live in tents <lb />
they an able to build with their <lb />
PITHY NEWS ITEMS. <lb />
The stockholder of the defunct Na <lb />
Bank of Miss., have <lb />
been arrested, as it is alleged owe <lb />
the bank over which is ex- <lb />
of the amount allowed by law. <lb />
A Washington, D. C, real estate <lb />
holder says that were never <lb />
in his city. are <lb />
cant in Washington, and land <lb />
values are not rising a <lb />
The English bark Lotus, forty <lb />
from Hamburg, is at Charleston <lb />
disabled. She has man on <lb />
hoard taken the wreck of a Nor- <lb />
The fall meeting of the Savannah <lb />
closed Tuesday with Geo. A. <lb />
Banker, of a winner of nine <lb />
of the sixteen races, in ten of which be <lb />
was entered. <lb />
A New York Bank of Commerce <lb />
of to New Orleans mys- <lb />
disappeared on the way. R <lb />
and one Crawley, in charge. <lb />
account for the fact. <lb />
John B. I professor of Mater <lb />
in Agricultural an i <lb />
Mechanical College, died of consumption <lb />
Tuesday. <lb />
steamship Palmer Morgan has <lb />
to Galveston, Tex., quarantine <lb />
of the wrecked <lb />
Fro ch steamer Bordeaux to <lb />
New Orleans, pi up in latitude <lb />
longitude 20.10, on October 10th. <lb />
persons were drowned, on of them <lb />
. s <lb />
A fire at Chester county, <lb />
S C. on the 22nd, burned the of <lb />
A. Co. Loss in- <lb />
new. Sam Baa ill is Virginia <lb />
in the int.-rest of the Prohibition <lb />
Tn Kev. Sam Jones, too, <lb />
will in a short while <lb />
Virginia for the same cause. <lb />
The attacking the <lb />
of the i law was tied in <lb />
the Fe courts Tuesday at Louisville, <lb />
Ky. It is bought by the Industrial <lb />
Horn Association against the East Ten- <lb />
Virginia Georgia Railroad <lb />
Company <lb />
The and Savings Bink <lb />
his be n I N. C, <lb />
with S. as president <lb />
sad A. cashier. Its capital is <lb />
The narrowest railway in North Caro <lb />
Its is that known th- Laurel <lb />
ad Hot It is twenty-five miles <lb />
long, and the is only twenty <lb />
inches. It is a r road in a mountain <lb />
c u <lb />
Contract for building the 10,000-ton <lb />
coaling station at Port Royal, C, has <lb />
let. Messrs. Bro., of <lb />
Wilmington. N. C, secured the award <lb />
at they are to complete the <lb />
it by The facilities to be <lb />
I l the completion of this work <lb />
to induce a large increase <lb />
i the of entering the <lb />
part. <lb />
Tobacco <lb />
held a meeting last week and <lb />
elected officers for the ensuing year. <lb />
The annual statement of the warehouses <lb />
a as ed. .-bowing that the receipts <lb />
for the fiscal ending September <lb />
1893, were pounds of leaf to-<lb />
The of the South Bound by <lb />
the F Central and Peninsular has <lb />
caused a change in board of <lb />
officers. The new officers, in the <lb />
main are members of the Florida Central <lb />
Peninsular directory, are <lb />
President. H. R. New York; <lb />
Vice-President. J. E Tucker, Savannah; <lb />
Directors, W. Bayard New <lb />
Fulton Cutting, New York; <lb />
John K Gap-n, New York; B. A. Den- <lb />
mark, and A. C. Haskell, <lb />
S. <lb />
The high prices for Virginia apples <lb />
are arousing much interest among <lb />
farmers in the fruit growing counties, <lb />
ind the are that more attention <lb />
will be devoted to fruit leas to <lb />
other crops in many of the <lb />
counties. New York buyers have taken <lb />
all apples offered in vicinity of <lb />
Bedford City. About worth <lb />
nave been purchased thus A re- <lb />
port county states that very <lb />
fans house has been visited by the buyers <lb />
in quest of fruit. The prices range from <lb />
to cents per bushel, th roads <lb />
ire hoed every day with teams hauling <lb />
apples to railroad stations. <lb />
crop will be worth thousands of <lb />
to Page this year, and good <lb />
prices it is bringing will go far to sup- <lb />
the low price of wheat <lb />
Th Seneca, Cotton Seed Oil <lb />
Mi was Mid at public auction to R C. <lb />
for <lb />
Fair Visitors <lb />
persons <lb />
from O., th <lb />
father aged years, a daughter, <lb />
and a son, aged lost their live <lb />
in the night in th Raiser Hotel through <lb />
their ignorance sf gas fixtures <lb />
They war found having <lb />
asphyxiated by gas from <lb />
span the <lb />
TWENTY-BITE KILLED. <lb />
A Horrible Railroad ii <lb />
Michigan. <lb />
Oar Fir the Pas- <lb />
Burned to Death. <lb />
Cub, worst <lb />
accident of the year early Fri- <lb />
day morning in yards of the <lb />
go and Grand Trunk Railroad at the <lb />
round-house here, by which st least <lb />
persons lest their lives double <lb />
many were badly injured. A Raymond <lb />
and special train of <lb />
from New and Boston was <lb />
returning to Chicago. train was in <lb />
charge of Conductor Scott, of this city, <lb />
and Engineer and took orders <lb />
st the station to meet, st Nichols, No. <lb />
the passenger going west, due <lb />
this station at o'clock this morn- <lb />
but which three hours late. <lb />
The conductor or engineer, or both, of <lb />
the disobeyed ciders <lb />
and passed Nichols station, and collided <lb />
with the express coining west at the rate <lb />
about thirty miles an hour. The two <lb />
were driven other <lb />
are a total wreck. <lb />
The cars immediately took fire in <lb />
nu were ablaze. One passenger <lb />
escaped through the <lb />
who out the s <lb />
and climbed through. Only three a- <lb />
i i fit- i from the side, and no more than <lb />
six the other side. All the rest of <lb />
die of second coach per- <lb />
The bodies were burned so badly <lb />
. s to be almost unrecognizable. Nearly <lb />
all had heads, arms or legs burned <lb />
i ff. and but few have been Identified. <lb />
The news of the terrible accident did <lb />
become generally known in the city <lb />
until o'clock, and then apparently the <lb />
entire pi began moving towards <lb />
Nichols. The railroad men and police <lb />
had all could do to keep the cu- <lb />
i ions hack, but the crowd was order- <lb />
one. The men of the Battle Creak <lb />
lire did noble After <lb />
putting out the fire, they did all the <lb />
connected with taking out the <lb />
dead bodies, which were in a horrible <lb />
condition. So badly burned and <lb />
mi d we res some of them that they <lb />
could only be taken out in pieces. The <lb />
pieces were placed blanket and bas- <lb />
and have become so mixed and <lb />
separated that it will never be known to <lb />
which h they belong. <lb />
The most horrible sight was that <lb />
by Mrs. Charles <lb />
Fort Plain, N. Y. She was getting half <lb />
way out of a window, but her legs were <lb />
fastened, and those who ran to as- <lb />
could not release her. She <lb />
turned to death before their eyes, with <lb />
of body still hanging <lb />
out of the Her agony was <lb />
terrible, but she retained her senses to <lb />
the last, giving her name and address, <lb />
and telling these who war powerless <lb />
save her, what friends to notify of her <lb />
fate. She was a teacher in the Methodist <lb />
Sunday school at home, and she died <lb />
like a Christian. <lb />
Her husband, Charles was <lb />
terribly injured, but was taken from the <lb />
wreck alive. He was removed to Nichols <lb />
Memorial Home, be also died at <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
The awful work of rescuing the <lb />
and injured was not completed until <lb />
o'clock this morning, when the last body <lb />
was from the wreck. Sufficient <lb />
stretches were not to be had, and th <lb />
nailed boards together, on which <lb />
bodies were laid carried <lb />
away as fast a they were extricated. <lb />
A temporary morgue was mad of a <lb />
freight car, in which the disfigured <lb />
bodies were placed in charge of local <lb />
So horribly burned <lb />
r bar red are the bodies lying <lb />
morgue it is hardly <lb />
that their names will ever be <lb />
New Orleans <lb />
limited over the Illinois Central was <lb />
wrecked by with a coal train, <lb />
three miles beyond Kankakee at <lb />
Two parsons <lb />
six others slightly injured. <lb />
A Dumb Girl Made to Speak. <lb />
, week Miss <lb />
lie was dumb. Now she talks <lb />
fluently. The cause of her being speech- <lb />
less was daft palate, a misfortune from <lb />
birth Her voice Is clear and words <lb />
are uttered distinctly. This change has <lb />
been wrought by means of an artificial <lb />
palate mad of and <lb />
rubber. It was made by a dentist of this <lb />
city. Formerly Miss experienced <lb />
great difficulty swallowing. The den- <lb />
learned of her misfortune, after <lb />
making examination, decided to try <lb />
ea experiment. For several weeks he <lb />
has worked th artificial palate oh <lb />
Last week it was completed. <lb />
Miss came a visit bar <lb />
Cat. R. C. Cannon aha was <lb />
presented with the palate as a <lb />
free gift It was adjusted bar mouth <lb />
for th first time her life she <lb />
a ward. Like a little child, ah <lb />
began to talk from the simple words <lb />
common use until today aha converses <lb />
with her friends. Mia Bullard is <lb />
years of age, is pretty. <lb />
SURPRISE IN SUPREME <lb />
A Point of Law that of the <lb />
ties Seem to Have Forgotten. <lb />
Washington. D. C. Some of the <lb />
m of the Supreme the <lb />
of the United States a revival of in- <lb />
formation upon a point of law that <lb />
seemed to surprise them. Ex-Assistant <lb />
At General Chaney moved <lb />
court for leave to file a petition for a <lb />
writ of habeas corpus for the release of <lb />
John H. by order <lb />
of the Indian Territory court in the <lb />
Iowa penitentiary. The Chief Justice <lb />
asked if the lows court had been asked <lb />
for relief. <lb />
responded Mr. <lb />
heard the case refuse i <lb />
the <lb />
an appeal been taken hi-, <lb />
asked the Chief Justice. <lb />
The Chief Justice it was the <lb />
to require attorneys to take appeals <lb />
in such cases and not to bring the mat <lb />
up originally in the Supreme Court <lb />
of the United States. <lb />
At this point an idea occurred to <lb />
Jackson. He asked Mr. <lb />
the application made to the <lb />
court below at the Chamber or in th <lb />
the attorney re- <lb />
idled. <lb />
there no appeal from the <lb />
of the Court at Ch in such <lb />
asked Justice Gray, with an in- <lb />
credulous air, looking from the attorney <lb />
to Justice Jackson. <lb />
so understand the said Mr. <lb />
Chaney. <lb />
is Justice Jackson. <lb />
Chief Justice repeated the same <lb />
question receiving same answer, <lb />
well, we will take the <lb />
Bonner was sentenced to one year's <lb />
imprisonment in the and <lb />
fined for two cows. <lb />
Judge refused to interfere, <lb />
says, on the that the <lb />
of the court below void, and <lb />
that relief in another direction. <lb />
In th meantime, however, the prisoner <lb />
would probably out his and <lb />
Mr. Chaney to bring the <lb />
case to die Court of <lb />
States. <lb />
PRISONERS ESCAPE. <lb />
Two Colored Convicts Play it Smart <lb />
on the Sheriff of <lb />
Durham, N. C The mixed train <lb />
which left Greensboro night <lb />
st o'clock for on board <lb />
Sheriff D. T. Baird, of <lb />
with four prisoners bound for the State <lb />
penitentiary. Their names were William <lb />
Davis Columbus, white, <lb />
sentenced to two and three years re <lb />
Finley Bell William <lb />
Pharr, colored, the former sentenced <lb />
to two the Utter to four years for <lb />
stealing. <lb />
Soon after the train left <lb />
is about twenty miles west of <lb />
the two prisoners requested to be <lb />
allowed to go in the closet. As their legs <lb />
were securely chained together they were <lb />
allowed to do sheriff stationing <lb />
himself at the closet door. <lb />
About seven minute later, before the <lb />
train reached the Sheriff cal- <lb />
led the made him open <lb />
the door, when jail birds were <lb />
gone. They had made escape <lb />
through the window, although the train <lb />
was very good time. <lb />
and chagrin of sheriff <lb />
can better be imagined than described. <lb />
He passed through here with I is two <lb />
white prisoner for Raleigh, sad will <lb />
return make diligent search for the <lb />
escaped culprits, and they will probably <lb />
be recaptured, as they were chained to- <lb />
and ere doubtless to <lb />
more or less extent, when they jumped <lb />
from the window of the moving train. <lb />
O Cotton Seed Oil <lb />
Ml sold at public to R. C. <lb />
for <lb />
gnat Water-power <lb />
The committee appointed by the bus- <lb />
men of M. C, at their <lb />
meeting about two weeks ago, to <lb />
gate the standing reliability <lb />
of the Limited Industrial had <lb />
made proposition to the city aldermen <lb />
looking to the establishment of mammoth <lb />
knitting factories above site of the city <lb />
water works on the river, bare <lb />
reported favorably on the standing of <lb />
member of the Limited Industrial Co. <lb />
propositions submitted by agent <lb />
of Limited Industrial Co., included <lb />
he construction ultimate operation <lb />
of enough mills to employ or <lb />
operatives. It is stated that as the char- <lb />
of the company has been establish <lb />
ed, there is a probability that some <lb />
decisive action will be token by <lb />
Asheville board of without do- <lb />
lay. The business man of that city are <lb />
disposed to make r in <lb />
order to i company to locate <lb />
its plant there. <lb />
HOURS AND MINUTES. <lb />
Bicyclist Make Quick Ride Between <lb />
and <lb />
Staunton, mayor of this <lb />
city, at o'clock, sent a letter to <lb />
Pa., by meant of <lb />
couriers, rider being relieved <lb />
every fifth mile. The object of the trial <lb />
was to test the practical speed of the <lb />
wheel for courier service, the ex- <lb />
was made under the auspices <lb />
of the League of American <lb />
the wheel used being the pneumatic <lb />
A telegram just received <lb />
says the last delivered his <lb />
letter to the Chambersburg mayor at <lb />
p. m . the miles being covered <lb />
in hours and minutes, or at a 16- <lb />
mile an hour clip. The country traveled <lb />
was very hilly at places. <lb />
To Teat the of the <lb />
Dispensary Law. <lb />
Charleston, S. C The whiskey <lb />
assumed an entirely different <lb />
day when Mr. the <lb />
for the State, filed a pet Ion in the <lb />
United States Court asking Judge Him <lb />
on to i sue an order to the receive <lb />
of the forbidding <lb />
that road to receive any intoxicating <lb />
I for transportation Into the Hate <lb />
unless it has the stamp of the <lb />
State Dispensary of i The ion <lb />
an interpretation of the Inter <lb />
States Commerce laws. B miking t <lb />
application the S sub nits the <lb />
ion to the court its <lb />
The of Ike Di-. <lb />
set will, the e ore. be <lb />
in question. <lb />
Carried off and Killed Them. <lb />
night the <lb />
jail of county <lb />
by two men who said they were <lb />
They had a third man, <lb />
to be a The jailer <lb />
and armed men <lb />
arose took s-in of the jail. <lb />
They seized Jim <lb />
Dickson. two prisoners, and after <lb />
tying their hands and feet, threw their <lb />
two ho and rode off in <lb />
the darkness. <lb />
Nothing more tins been heard of the <lb />
marauders, except that they rode into <lb />
swamps near Factory, where <lb />
the were put to death. The <lb />
for which the men lynched who <lb />
were in prison was murder of Con- <lb />
James Hall and the shooting of <lb />
Town Marshal of <lb />
About Copyright, <lb />
To get a book copyrighted, you Ham <lb />
two copies of the title-page, which you <lb />
can have printed from the <lb />
book itself, with the lea. To perfect <lb />
copyright, you must file two copies <lb />
of the book as it in printed. <lb />
This protests the author fully, of <lb />
course. There are no regular terms <lb />
from author to publishers. A well- <lb />
and author gets a very <lb />
good percent age; author <lb />
is often required to pay for putting <lb />
tho book in type printing the first <lb />
one thousand copies. <lb />
In fact, the is to send MS. to pub- <lb />
and when you find one willing <lb />
to it, accept <lb />
lurk Journalist. <lb />
Lynched for Stealing- <lb />
Knox Point <lb />
Bossier Parish, twenty miles above <lb />
two were lynched Thurs- <lb />
day the new of which has just <lb />
reached city. The are said <lb />
to have been hog thieves, sod <lb />
it is stated, composed cf <lb />
both whites blacks. <lb />
Th- nasal has differ <lb />
several <lb />
remarks the New York Independent <lb />
and particularly that manufacturers, <lb />
producers and tho general business <lb />
public have been for months <lb />
for what we have experienced <lb />
summer. There ha- for a Ion-; <lb />
time a <lb />
on hand in almost every branch <lb />
the result being that stocks <lb />
of goods of all sorts at time are <lb />
smaller than they have <lb />
been for a great many years. This <lb />
fact will start mills and shops into <lb />
prompt activity to meet the demand <lb />
which must inevitably come. <lb />
Evans, the Quiet Citizen. <lb />
Wade, the no d <lb />
rode into the town of Webb, Miss. <lb />
Tuesday afternoon, with a rifle, <lb />
a brace of and a butcher <lb />
He soon cleared the streets, with the <lb />
exception of J. M. Evans, s quiet citizen <lb />
who was sitting in front of his store <lb />
Wade opened fire on Evans, and the lat- <lb />
returned it, with such unerring aim <lb />
that when smoke cleared <lb />
found with six bullet holes through <lb />
his heart Evan is but not <lb />
fatally wounded. <lb />
The Ban Francisco <lb />
The millionaire fortune in <lb />
New York City have come from two <lb />
One, the enormous growth <lb />
in the value of real estate, called by <lb />
Henry George <lb />
the other, by getting possession for <lb />
nothing from the State or city of <lb />
franchise, really give the <lb />
owner a sum which, if paid to the city <lb />
or State, would relieve us from all <lb />
taxation. <lb />
There are in Great <lb />
which insure against clop <lb />
Jaw <lb />
Mr. Stephen of <lb />
Hungary, told of a novel way <lb />
recently introduced in of <lb />
disseminating the news of tho day, <lb />
according to the Kansas City Star. <lb />
The editor of the Telephonic Gazette <lb />
furnishes all the news of the day to <lb />
his subscribers by telephone at a rate <lb />
equivalent to sixty cents a month. <lb />
The subscribers a telephone <lb />
of special pattern, for which they pay <lb />
It receives does not transmit <lb />
sounds, excepting from the central <lb />
office, which is the office of the <lb />
phonic Gazette. <lb />
Tho telephonic instrument <lb />
A apace of about five inches <lb />
and two car pieces, so that two <lb />
persons can listen to the sounds on tho <lb />
wire at once. At o'clock in too <lb />
morning the first edit the Gazette <lb />
is announce by tho simultaneous <lb />
ringing of n bell in the houses the <lb />
the business man and <lb />
bis wife listen to the stories of <lb />
events of the night The editor is <lb />
talking to U of other <lb />
tho some time, and he has <lb />
the instrument so in- <lb />
housewives must content <lb />
themselves with his statement <lb />
of the news, not ask. <lb />
The second edition at <lb />
o'clock, when foreign news comes <lb />
over the wire in a condensed form for <lb />
twenty minutes or less, according to <lb />
tho on band. At o'clock <lb />
the story f the meeting of Parliament <lb />
Is told, along divers items of a <lb />
local and political nature. The <lb />
of stocks i given, and tho wise broker <lb />
may to hustle out and <lb />
or on certain in <lb />
time to Have his bank At <lb />
o'clock the editor give a concise state- <lb />
of the debate in Parliament. <lb />
At o'clock the editor up on <lb />
local news again. He tells about fires, <lb />
riots and other happenings of the day <lb />
He gives his <lb />
a chance to rest then until <lb />
o'clock, when he gives literary and so- <lb />
news. Sometimes he repeats the <lb />
latest poem at o'clock. This G o'clock <lb />
edition is popular with the women, <lb />
and the editor speaks in a soft voice. <lb />
The o'clock edition is the last. It <lb />
gives the reports of concerts and plays <lb />
in progress. <lb />
Bull and In Combat. <lb />
John owns n forty-acre <lb />
farm on tho Rock ford fork of Brush <lb />
Creek, just over tho line from <lb />
county, says Oakland <lb />
of the St. Louis Republic. <lb />
The most valuable stock he has on the <lb />
farm is, or rather n fine Durham <lb />
and stallion of good brood. He <lb />
has lost them both aft.-r tho fiercest <lb />
fight two strong fierce <lb />
bad always turned his <lb />
stallion into name lot, and <lb />
there apparently the bail feel- <lb />
between One recently, <lb />
however, the bull began frantically ca- <lb />
around the barnyard. Th <lb />
stallion for a time looked with <lb />
consternation at the queer antic <lb />
of his erstwhile sober friend, and then <lb />
he began trotting after the in- <lb />
animal as it from one side <lb />
of the enclosure to the other. Finally <lb />
almost exhausting him- <lb />
self in an effort seemingly to throw <lb />
something oil, suddenly turned and <lb />
for the Th new <lb />
tics of tho bull took the by <lb />
prise, and it only after flank <lb />
bad severely gored he real- <lb />
the situation, and then began a <lb />
battle that would have thrilled <lb />
heart of a Spanish fighter. <lb />
The stallion made no attempt to kick, <lb />
but struck viciously with fore foe <lb />
and tore great chunks of <lb />
flesh of the bull with his teeth. <lb />
The terrific of the battle brought <lb />
Mr. from an adjoining field, <lb />
but he knew it was death to <lb />
the yard. At last, after struggling all <lb />
over the yard, the bull made one grand <lb />
rush, catching a horn in the <lb />
groin and him. The <lb />
noble animal sank to the with <lb />
a and expired. The bull stag- <lb />
away a short distance and fall. <lb />
Mr. who had witnessed <lb />
the mutual destruction of the best part <lb />
of i fortune, now ventured in. Th <lb />
bull still living, and, wrapped <lb />
I r about one of hi bind legs, he <lb />
the cause of all the bloody <lb />
battle It was nothing more nor lea <lb />
than a little blacksnake two feet <lb />
long, which had coiled about the <lb />
leg and caused him snob <lb />
terror that he completely lost bis head. <lb />
The snake showed no disposition to <lb />
more on, and Mr. killed it <lb />
where it was. Tho so badly <lb />
that ho was shot. <lb />
The Association of Engineers of <lb />
I It me ting st <lb />
Vs , October and<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017622_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
MINK. <lb />
Shaft Is dark deep, <lb />
Sight loot etch deep, <lb />
Bough the and the tori, <lb />
as the arm of Ford. <lb />
Never look <lb />
Stick to the tare I <lb />
That the saying at <lb />
A stranger to Shaft, <lb />
to em how the minor laughed I <lb />
White la the roller and Miff In the hat, <lb />
boots and Mi silk <lb />
his way <lb />
Dainty and <lb />
Stopping on tiptoe to Mine. <lb />
Tearing from said; <lb />
It copper they dug for. or tin, or <lb />
Where they find How did it come <lb />
II be tried with a shore he get some <lb />
Stooping o <lb />
Was had for the <lb />
An wasn't ft in Mine <lb />
like two worlds met that day <lb />
The world of work and the world of play i <lb />
At the grimy lads fro-n the reeking shaft <lb />
ea-h other, and grinned and chaff I, <lb />
all <lb />
of <lb />
Co ran the banter at Mine. <lb />
An I Bob. the wit, <lb />
him the fa-t shoot th- pit. <lb />
How they bored th the brimstone <lb />
smell <lb />
them off fro-n tapping- well. <lb />
He what. <lb />
Bat they took It a <lb />
To die no In Mine. <lb />
T--ii. and peering in. <lb />
V.- point in oat whit he sill was <lb />
the a <lb />
A a bar <lb />
Gone hi <lb />
h the lip- that laughed <lb />
th- pale fares Shaft <lb />
Ft down on a ledge <lb />
T t aw to the crumbling <lb />
barbel HI. mm. stay <lb />
T rope ain't f w away <lb />
He's taking his <lb />
ova the <lb />
Lord be with <lb />
Mine. <lb />
him Pull with a <lb />
will <lb />
He's still, <lb />
he------Lord saVe Bowl what's that <lb />
Well. <lb />
II It our swell <lb />
heart la <lb />
If is <lb />
your bun Mine. <lb />
A Conan Doyle, In Mall Magazine. <lb />
A Pullman Car <lb />
Vt CLARK. <lb />
i HAD dropped <lb />
my numerous traps <lb />
on the front seat of <lb />
section eight, car <lb />
twelve, of <lb />
the Chicago <lb />
limited, which left <lb />
New York City on <lb />
Tuesday of last <lb />
week, when the <lb />
brakeman cried <lb />
the <lb />
engineer opened the throttle, the <lb />
began to labor, and by the <lb />
time the last car hail reached the <lb />
cad of that vast Jersey City shed <lb />
train was at full speed, bear- <lb />
its precious say <lb />
because every one had a fall <lb />
pocket-book, and <lb />
the World's Fair. <lb />
Unlike most men, I travel without <lb />
either a silk skull-cap, a <lb />
jacket, a or a pair of home- <lb />
made slippers, for my street clothes <lb />
and etceteras are comfortable enough, <lb />
and if they were torture, <lb />
vanity forbids that <lb />
should make an spectacle of <lb />
my carefully-adorned person, some <lb />
sybarites are <lb />
wont to do in their journeying. So, <lb />
without time in getting into <lb />
I sank into the unoccupied <lb />
scat and viewed the passing landscape <lb />
until my head began to ache. Then I <lb />
turned my attention, not to a book, <lb />
to my fellow-passengers. <lb />
Bitting directly opposite me was a <lb />
girl. One glance enough to tell <lb />
me that she was divine in features, <lb />
form and dress. Of course, having <lb />
glanced once I glanced again, and at <lb />
the second glance I thought I detected <lb />
something familiar about her. Where <lb />
bad I seen her The third glance <lb />
solved the question. <lb />
Five years ago, when twenty-one, <lb />
spent the summer at and <lb />
there met Margie Fen ton. Margie was <lb />
fair, with laughing ayes, cherry lips, <lb />
and a figure of willowy grace. Margie. <lb />
too, at least, her father <lb />
was. Can you blame me for falling in <lb />
love with her <lb />
An, what a summer we spent t Bides, <lb />
drives, dinners, luncheons, <lb />
tennis, moonlight rambles, and best <lb />
all, long talks in dark corners where <lb />
were clasped and vows of <lb />
love were exchanged. And so we lived <lb />
In the pleasures of each day <lb />
marred by regret that its passage <lb />
the season nearer to its close. <lb />
September the day set by <lb />
tho for their departure. <lb />
ha to stay longer because my mother, <lb />
i r in her ownership of the pock et- <lb />
k, so wished. Shall I ever forget <lb />
tho day The train left in the early <lb />
forenoon, with it went sun- <lb />
shine of my life, leaving me <lb />
able. My only comfort was in writ <lb />
letters. This did at the rate <lb />
five a day for one week; but as Mar- <lb />
wrote only seven in that time, I, <lb />
fearing that I would annoy her, <lb />
dropped to the same number. W <lb />
kept it up for two months. Then sue <lb />
began to skip a day now and then, and <lb />
so did I. After a little her ardor was <lb />
represented by only two letters a <lb />
week; mine by the same number. <lb />
This rate was continued for about sis <lb />
months, when all of a sudden <lb />
entirely, and I did likewise. <lb />
Thus ended the same old story. <lb />
However, her eyes, her lips and he <lb />
figure had remained fresh in my <lb />
Glancing once more lier <lb />
i he way I felt almost certain that sh <lb />
nils Margie Fenton. There wan a <lb />
in her figure, to be sure. <lb />
grown more plump, as healthy <lb />
iris are apt to do as the years go on; <lb />
hair, too, was probably a <lb />
lighter, bat that often happens <lb />
druggist's aid. But the nose, tho <lb />
eyes, the month, I could not be mis- <lb />
taken in them. if it is she why <lb />
doesn't she recognize I asked <lb />
myself. she doesn't blame <lb />
me for breaking our summer engage- <lb />
She evidently did, however, <lb />
for she never looked up from the book <lb />
she held before her, though she knew <lb />
that I was intently watching her. But <lb />
this knowledge apparently caused her <lb />
no annoyance, for her face wore a <lb />
smile, which could not have <lb />
been provoked by the contents of her <lb />
novel, since she was professing to read <lb />
and looking at the pages <lb />
near its painfully sad end. So I came <lb />
to the conclusion that she was Margie, <lb />
quite willing to renew acquaintance, <lb />
but wanting for me to make the ad- <lb />
This I was ready to do, for the <lb />
sight of her dear face aroused all my <lb />
old affection, and renewed the bonds <lb />
which I wore with such pleasure in the <lb />
days gone by. <lb />
While I sat trying to muster up <lb />
courage to address her, and just about <lb />
the time I had succeeded, the porter <lb />
i me through the train announcing, <lb />
now ready in tho dining- <lb />
The words acted upon my <lb />
divinity with She <lb />
dropped her book, utterly regardless <lb />
of her place, and rising from her seat <lb />
even glancing in the mirrors <lb />
that arc so numerous in Pullman cars, <lb />
passed out with a smile, but never a <lb />
look in my direction. My first <lb />
pulse was to follow her, on second <lb />
thought I decided differently. She <lb />
answered the porter's call with such <lb />
avidity I reasoned that her hunger was <lb />
her first consideration for the nonce; <lb />
and when a girl is hungry there is a <lb />
woeful lack of sentiment about her. <lb />
So I was still, framing a conversation <lb />
for later use. I thought of many <lb />
pretty things to say ; then I thought <lb />
of many more. An age seemed to have <lb />
passed, but she ate. <lb />
I glanced over a <lb />
which was stuck in n frame near the <lb />
door; then I glanced over it again <lb />
she kept on eating. walked to <lb />
the other end of the car and dropped <lb />
into a scat which was occupied by a <lb />
newspaper, from which I read <lb />
still she ate. I looked <lb />
at my watch ; she had been gone forty- <lb />
five minutes. so lovely a <lb />
creature have so vulgar an <lb />
I said, aloud. I <lb />
A ray of sunshine shiv- <lb />
the car. I looked up, and there <lb />
she I gathered my courage, <lb />
gave a hasty thought to my pretty say- <lb />
and with a beating heart walked <lb />
up to her and <lb />
beg your pardon, but are you not <lb />
Mia Fenton, Miss Margie Fenton, of <lb />
New <lb />
She gazed up into my face, and <lb />
the color slowly mounted her cheeks, <lb />
and a hundred little imps played <lb />
games in her eyes, but <lb />
I've been mistaken for her very, very <lb />
I was flat the <lb />
but forcible colloquialism has it <lb />
and could only <lb />
pardon me. Pray don't think me for- <lb />
ward, will <lb />
no, quite the contrary. Miss <lb />
Fenton was a very pretty girl, and to <lb />
be taken for her in quite flattering. <lb />
was also a dear friend of mine, and <lb />
If you were acquainted with her that <lb />
is sufficient recommendation. Won't <lb />
you be And here the <lb />
little imps tugged at her pretty <lb />
mouth until they had arched it in a <lb />
most mischievous smile. She removed <lb />
the books and boxes which littered the <lb />
seat beside her, saying that I preferred <lb />
riding backward, which was the truth, <lb />
I wanted to study her face. <lb />
This she seemed to understand, for <lb />
taking a heavy veil from her satchel, <lb />
she tied it about her face just low <lb />
low enough to conceal her eyes, giving <lb />
as an excuse for her action that the <lb />
jarring of the train loosened her curia. <lb />
There is something mysterious about <lb />
m lady, I thought, I hastily <lb />
glanced at her traps in the hope of as- <lb />
her name. She watched me <lb />
closely, and just as my eye caught <lb />
sight of the little silver plate on her <lb />
hand-bag she reached for it and placed <lb />
it piste downward in her lap. Her <lb />
object was so apparent that it <lb />
both very much, but being a <lb />
man I recovered more quickly <lb />
and set i trap. <lb />
snitched that satchel as though <lb />
I were a t ., <lb />
Km the bait Miss at <lb />
sh; r Mrs. <lb />
To-run <lb />
yon are An half <lb />
my interest in this pretty woman went <lb />
out with the question. <lb />
sod Miss Fenton st my <lb />
She was silent a moment, <lb />
And then believe, too. <lb />
that that was the last social she <lb />
ever <lb />
There seemed to be a of sad- <lb />
in her voice. All kinds of <lb />
things suggested themselves to my <lb />
The love of the summer of <lb />
same rushing upon me with <lb />
force. With a gigantic effort I man- <lb />
aged to she <lb />
Mrs. Tommy Trenton Trix raised <lb />
her veil and solemnly <lb />
Those hundred little imps were now <lb />
holding high carnival. Her eyes <lb />
beamed; her pretty lip-, were parted <lb />
with impish mirth, even the dimples <lb />
in cheeks seemed to smile es she <lb />
To Mr. Tommy <lb />
you But here tho <lb />
dining-car man entered, <lb />
call for <lb />
I hope Mrs. Tommy Trenton Trix <lb />
did not hold the on me, for I <lb />
gone for many, many hours. <lb />
row in a good bit like <lb />
hard to drown. That's what kept <lb />
o Leslie's Weekly. <lb />
el the Mark. <lb />
Not leas than a of theories <lb />
been as to the origin of the <lb />
dollar mark Of th-- the St. <lb />
Louis believes the following <lb />
to be the most <lb />
That it is a combination of the <lb />
tho initials of the United <lb />
States. <lb />
That it is a modification of the <lb />
figure the dollar formally called a <lb />
of <lb />
That it is derived from a <lb />
of the Pillars of Hercules, <lb />
consisting of two needle-like towers or <lb />
pillars connected with a scroll. Tin <lb />
old Spanish coins marked with the <lb />
device were frequently referred to <lb />
as <lb />
That it is a combination of <lb />
the ancient Roman mark of <lb />
unit. <lb />
That it is a combination of P. and <lb />
S. from peso signifying <lb />
In Spanish accounts peso <lb />
contracted by writing the over the <lb />
P and placing it after the sum. <lb />
According to one writer the <lb />
of tho dollar is a monogram of the let- <lb />
and the dollar <lb />
originally a coined in the <lb />
valley of Sent Joachim, Bohemia, and <lb />
known as a and the <lb />
monogram the initials of the words, <lb />
Sent The editor <lb />
of the London Whitehall Review, s <lb />
very able writer, in giving his opinion <lb />
of No. as given above, <lb />
American symbol for dollar is <lb />
taken from the Spanish dollar, and the <lb />
origin of the sign, of course, must be <lb />
looked for in associations of Spanish <lb />
coins. On the reverse side of the <lb />
Spanish dollar is a representation of <lb />
the Pillars of Hercules, and around <lb />
each pillar is a scroll with the <lb />
This device in course <lb />
of time has degenerated into the sign <lb />
which at present stands for American <lb />
as well as Spanish dollars, The <lb />
scroll around the pillars represent the <lb />
two serpents sent by Juno to destroy <lb />
in his <lb />
A Cat <lb />
A Angora cat is the <lb />
possession of a <lb />
family. The cat, which is a very <lb />
able animal, developed a tendency a <lb />
few months ago to walk abroad at <lb />
night, a dissipation that previously <lb />
had been entirely foreign to the nature <lb />
of that most aristocratic feline. Every <lb />
effort of the family to keep the eat at <lb />
home failed. One night about two <lb />
weeks ago the man of the house <lb />
watched the cat as it lay asleep on a <lb />
dainty cushion in the parlor. Sud- <lb />
the oat arose and started for the <lb />
door. The man caught the oat and <lb />
shook it roughly. The cat scrambled <lb />
about and screamed as a human <lb />
would do, and afterward lay <lb />
trembling violently. Several times <lb />
since the eat has been caught in the <lb />
same way, and each time showed <lb />
that it was a confirmed sleep <lb />
Reword. <lb />
AM<lb />
The necessity for a variety of food <lb />
for chickens is generally understood, <lb />
but few people are aware of the <lb />
value of sunflowers hen fold. They <lb />
are very productive of oil, are eaten <lb />
greedily and a peculiar to <lb />
the feathers. I one-eighth of <lb />
planted in this crop, and propose <lb />
to bind them into bundles and stow <lb />
them away for use. <lb />
The heads thrown into the <lb />
house, tho chickens will <lb />
soon pick the seeds, thus i in <lb />
them as well as variety. <lb />
plenty of other grain within reach they <lb />
will eat no more seeds thin <lb />
are beneficial to them. The seed can <lb />
be bought at our reed stores for <lb />
per bushel, at which price it ought to <lb />
be more generally used than it is. <lb />
think a great plot of sunflowers, with <lb />
their great yellow faces to the <lb />
sun, an agreeable <lb />
Farmer. <lb />
BLACK II SWIMS. <lb />
Symptoms of black teeth in swine <lb />
are many, writer a correspondent. <lb />
Loss of with continual squeal- <lb />
and a stunted growth the first <lb />
symptoms with some pigs. I have a <lb />
pig which had a good appetite, grew <lb />
fat and didn't squeal, except when <lb />
hungry, that had black teeth. I de- <lb />
thorn by a weakness in bis hind <lb />
legs an enlargement of the joints. <lb />
I have seen heavy with their hind <lb />
legs nearly ruined by having black <lb />
teeth. We knock or pulled out <lb />
these teeth; then the legs soon get <lb />
straight and strong and the hog does <lb />
well. I knew a farmer who bad <lb />
at one time five pigs that bad lost the <lb />
use of their bind legs and were stunted <lb />
in growth. He became disgusted with <lb />
the bad condition of these pigs and <lb />
shot them. He afterward learned that <lb />
black teeth caused the trouble. Black <lb />
teeth are found on both upper and <lb />
lower jaw, front These teeth are <lb />
sometimes brown instead of black <lb />
The only remedy that I know of for <lb />
black teeth to rid the swine of them, <lb />
and the sooner the better, as no hog <lb />
or pig can thrive and do well that has <lb />
them long. far my experience <lb />
goes black teeth come only once, and <lb />
With the -New York Tribune. <lb />
Gleanings in Bee ore <lb />
mends a mixture ate lead and <lb />
for painting putting on <lb />
first a coat of lead a primer, then <lb />
mixing lead and lino finish the paint- <lb />
This paint will not flake off as <lb />
either lead or lino will do if used <lb />
It requires about bees to make <lb />
a pound weight Some tests are re- <lb />
ported by Professor in the Glean- <lb />
in which by careful estimates the <lb />
number of bees varied from to <lb />
The average of these figures <lb />
was Swarms of bees vary from <lb />
four to nine pounds, but are usually <lb />
between four and five pounds, or be- <lb />
tween and bees. <lb />
Bees do not rob honey is <lb />
plentiful. They will not rob other <lb />
been during a temporary shutdown of <lb />
work from storm or other cause. They <lb />
like a as do, lint <lb />
after twenty-four they <lb />
patient to go to work. If there is no <lb />
honey for to gather there will be <lb />
liability that they will take to <lb />
bing. <lb />
A correspondent of in <lb />
Culture duos not believe that <lb />
robbing bees permanently retain this <lb />
bad The saying a robber <lb />
always a has no truth in it <lb />
If honey flowers plentiful the <lb />
robber bees will go to work again. <lb />
it must be added that when rob- <lb />
get notion of attacking <lb />
a weak hive had be destroyed, <lb />
n it nearly impossible to keep than <lb />
from it thereafter. <lb />
FARM AND <lb />
On generally lay at sight or very <lb />
early in the morning. <lb />
At seven or eight years cows are at <lb />
their most profitable age. <lb />
A fowl is a nuisance, but many <lb />
fowls are a calamity. <lb />
The from stolen nests are <lb />
generally strong and lively. <lb />
Cows should be milked daily at <lb />
same time and by same person. <lb />
Dust fowls well with insect powder, <lb />
to be had at any drag store, to kill <lb />
lie. <lb />
A little carbolic added to tho <lb />
whitewash will kill in hen- <lb />
house. <lb />
To harvest barley begin <lb />
early, while tho grain is comparatively <lb />
It is said that when are fed on <lb />
the rises slowly and is hard <lb />
to churn. <lb />
It is claimed that the slug of pear <lb />
and grape leaves may be <lb />
with hellebore In weak <lb />
emulsion, sprayed on with a fine <lb />
rose. <lb />
It is pampering which pure-bred <lb />
fowls get that causes lack of eggs and <lb />
infertility. <lb />
Stony land that is unfit for anything <lb />
else will often raise the best fruit Do <lb />
not let such land lie idle, but plant <lb />
something that will at least Keep m <lb />
weed from growing. <lb />
The appearance of vegetables, etc., <lb />
the farm much with <lb />
which they bring in the market. <lb />
It pays to have them look neat when <lb />
they are offered for sale. <lb />
After the potatoes are dug, throw <lb />
the old vines in heaps and burn as <lb />
soon as dry enough. In this way spores <lb />
fungus may be destroyed, which <lb />
would do much another year. <lb />
Not only our butter makers but <lb />
cheese makers arc beginning to realize <lb />
that a salable article cannot be pro- <lb />
from milk from cows that drink <lb />
stagnant water or are Kept in foul <lb />
barns. Cleanliness and oration are <lb />
becoming more and more popular. <lb />
Broiled the <lb />
sort, lay them on a small grid- <lb />
iron over bright coals, the stalk tip- <lb />
ward. Broil quickly, and serve with <lb />
butter, pepper, and salt over. <lb />
them for an hour <lb />
in cold water; remove the out- <lb />
side leave and the stalk and put on to <lb />
cook in boiling water. Cook gently <lb />
for half an hour, then turn off the <lb />
water and add one pint of milk and a <lb />
Wits s <lb />
An Indian contemporary <lb />
gentleman of met with a <lb />
very curious experience. He was sail- <lb />
in a boat in Ganges between <lb />
nine and ten in morning. <lb />
in midstream he allowed the boat tar <lb />
drift with the stream. Suddenly be- <lb />
thought he felt something hard grate <lb />
against tho keel for a few seconds, and <lb />
then all was still again, but on a re- <lb />
of the noise he stood upright <lb />
in tho endeavored to <lb />
ltd Seeing nothing either <lb />
aide, and unconscious of imminent <lb />
danger, he went to the tiller, over <lb />
which be stooped, and, to his horror, <lb />
the large snout of a <lb />
n close against tho stem. As <lb />
v. was totally he made <lb />
attempts to dislodge the crocodile <lb />
by kicking the upper portion of its <lb />
snout, but with no result except that <lb />
the brute bit more deeply into tho soft <lb />
wood. The butt end of oar <lb />
next used, bat saurian simply re- <lb />
by whacking the boat with <lb />
sledge-hammer force. The boat swung <lb />
from side to side, and threatened to <lb />
To continue the story in the teller's <lb />
words, at my wit's end to <lb />
obtain an implement of some sort to <lb />
release me from the brute. When all <lb />
attempts proved useless, I forced the <lb />
oar into its month, and in so doing <lb />
broke a number of teeth. This <lb />
my object. With a terrific <lb />
sweep of the tail he struck the boat <lb />
I found myself doing a somersault in <lb />
the air, and with a thud fell into the <lb />
bottom of the boat. In a second I <lb />
pint of boiling water and a tablespoon- <lb />
of salt Simmer half an hour I my energies, and got my boat <lb />
longer. Take up with a j , f my foe, who seemed <lb />
skimmer. Four over this a cream on doing damage. Scarcely had <lb />
I gained a hundred yards when once <lb />
more I noticed the raspings under the <lb />
sauce and serve. <lb />
Floating thoroughly <lb />
the whites of six eggs, add half a box <lb />
of guava jelly and half a tumbler of <lb />
currant Beat together until well <lb />
incorporated. Set on the ice. Make <lb />
a rich cream custard, and when cold <lb />
and ready to serve, pour it pretty <lb />
glass drop the island by <lb />
eel. Th-i brute was trying to over- <lb />
turn my boat, but often as its snout <lb />
above the sides, so often did I <lb />
boat it under water. By some special <lb />
dispensation the boat went in the <lb />
of the shore, which I hail left <lb />
an hour ago. Presently I <lb />
on tho custard. Serve it and <lb />
with cake or crackers that have been dozen the <lb />
buttered and browned in the oven. . rudder- WM the crocodile, coming up <lb />
r, with all its might. I ran up the bank <lb />
Pigeons With Green , , , . . . <lb />
, . . I as my legs permitted, but had <lb />
four pigeons for ten . . ,, . . <lb />
. . .-ii. missed my footing I have been <lb />
them off the spit and split them, and <lb />
, .,, ,, . snapped up in a few seconds, the <lb />
lay them in a saucepan with three , . , <lb />
ounces of butter. As soon the but- <lb />
has melted, pour in a pint of young <lb />
green peas, add a little salt, a pinch of <lb />
white pepper and two or three table- <lb />
of stock. Stow for twenty <lb />
minutes, shaking the pan frequently <lb />
while cooking. Serve pigeons in the <lb />
middle of the platter, surrounded by <lb />
tho peas and <lb />
Note. <lb />
When Andrew Jackson was President <lb />
a housekeeper <lb />
had a number of department clerks in j <lb />
her house, who were very dilatory <lb />
paying for what they got. She tried <lb />
dunning them in every reasonable way, <lb />
but they had skins as thick as a <lb />
rhinoceros consciences as <lb />
as an asphalt pavement She <lb />
finally got tired of being systematically <lb />
robbed, and hiving known the <lb />
dent before his ejection, he having <lb />
been an of hers, she went <lb />
to him with her at. He heard <lb />
the story, lot i to get the <lb />
worst of the give her his <lb />
note for tho due her. <lb />
This she readily the man <lb />
fondly imagining there was no easier <lb />
or more way of settling <lb />
with her. But had gotten <lb />
the note he carried it up to tho White <lb />
House and Jackson coolly endorsed it <lb />
on the back. You may guess when his <lb />
landlady carried that note back tho <lb />
man start- out to with <lb />
the to meet it, as it was <lb />
not likely that he would let it go to <lb />
protest with tho President's signature <lb />
on the back t the story not <lb />
out and the rest of the clerks saw what <lb />
an interest tho Chief Executive <lb />
taking in their board bills skate a <lb />
general revolution in their la at <lb />
meeting <lb />
limes. <lb />
SUM in the Family. <lb />
A young men returned home a few <lb />
days ago from a trip to South Africa <lb />
for his health, and in narrating his <lb />
adventures to his father be told him <lb />
he had bought a silver mine for <lb />
knew they'd swindle you ex- <lb />
claimed tho old man. you were <lb />
fool enough to buy a humbug <lb />
I lose anything. I <lb />
formed a company and sold half the <lb />
took to a Londoner for <lb />
gasped the old man, <lb />
he turned white. bet a guinea <lb />
I'm the one who bought <lb />
know you coolly observed <lb />
the young man, as he crossed his legs <lb />
and tried to appear very much at <lb />
home. <lb />
reptile was close upon me. I went in <lb />
quest of my fowling piece, which I <lb />
loaded, made for the bank, but <lb />
before I got there my friend had taken <lb />
to the water. Now that all the <lb />
I inspected the boat. Two <lb />
large holes had been made at the stem <lb />
and tho side plankings were rendered <lb />
useless. The rudder was a <lb />
FUN. <lb />
Advice to <lb />
All things come to those who credit <lb />
out <lb />
Money is we all root after to <lb />
keep away <lb />
Some people think electricity is a <lb />
dangerous thing, but there <lb />
who make light of <lb />
When a couple of lovers meet in a <lb />
dark corner it may be called <lb />
Journal. <lb />
All gall may lie divided into <lb />
parts; some fortunate individuals <lb />
have certainly repaired the fractures <lb />
The true bread-fruit tree has tho <lb />
trunk of stability, the limbs of <lb />
try, and mighty few leaves of absence. <lb />
Puck. <lb />
Man to his hobby ; woman <lb />
to her hubby. Riches have wings; <lb />
and they often make of an <lb />
ordinary girl. Puck. <lb />
goes Miss Sykes with <lb />
a that remark- <lb />
not; but at <lb />
her age it in <lb />
Chicago is in the same latitude as <lb />
Rome, Saragossa, and <lb />
But the average citizen in the Paris of <lb />
the West thinks Chicago is without a <lb />
Globe. <lb />
My son, conservative. It is <lb />
to be a good dry-goods than <lb />
to plunge into literature; for tho law <lb />
compels people to wear clothes, <lb />
does not compel thorn to read poetry. <lb />
Puck. <lb />
should like to know when yon are <lb />
going to pay that bill; I can't come <lb />
here every day in the <lb />
day would suit you <lb />
well, then, you can call <lb />
every <lb />
According to a writer, rather more <lb />
than sixty-nine persons in every <lb />
in London are living in comfort, <lb />
while rather more than thirty in every <lb />
hundred are in poverty. Of <lb />
these twenty-two poor and <lb />
very poor, while not quite one <lb />
In every hundred belongs to the<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017622_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
Dollar, <lb />
AND <lb />
E REFLECTOR. <lb />
Personal. <lb />
i- Grifton v lug <lb />
Visa Nannie <lb />
rain and Bullion <lb />
the wheels upon which rest <lb />
ml run the business of the <lb />
world. Some have <lb />
the other and on <lb />
the <lb />
few have <lb />
both Not to <lb />
take the trouble <lb />
to Bee and buy our <lb />
is to prove one <lb />
of the three things i <lb />
N- v, <lb />
in <lb />
Weldon fair <lb />
For Now at Lang's <lb />
Sell yo i chicken s <lb />
T a Rifles have not bad drill in <lb />
sometime. <lb />
C Chestnuts at the <lb />
N the best collector<lb />
Either you have the sense with- <lb />
out the dollars, or <lb />
The dollars without the or <lb />
Neither the doll a is nor the sense. <lb />
Just arrived X. <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Jo Blow says lit <lb />
in town. <lb />
trouble about of <lb />
It can be had. <lb />
Just n a large lot of Boots and <lb />
Shoes at Cobb's. <lb />
style of and <lb />
NOW LISTEN <lb />
We have just from New <lb />
York with the largest and <lb />
most select line of <lb />
DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, <lb />
Boots Shoes <lb />
Come <lb />
look it. our we <lb />
lend yon home rejoicing. <lb />
BROS., <lb />
of Low Prices. <lb />
ville, N C<lb />
meet n <lb />
Monday It will l <lb />
. a me ting of tie <lb />
h new year beginning the first <lb />
y in December. <lb />
fall c op of Ir sh is very <lb />
We d a fa mer say Thu -day <lb />
did nor think it would be <lb />
import a barre into t county <lb />
ed next p so man have been <lb />
And that means the saving of <lb />
lot of mo the county. <lb />
the line of through railroads in <lb />
W-stern p of the <lb />
there is much about <lb />
so numerous. They are <lb />
this way time <lb />
c h id as well rub up a <lb />
bat and let the d get a bit <lb />
Ty. <lb />
Work Unless Co led To. <lb />
i lay ;. farmer was discussing <lb />
l us ab the of me t. hen <lb />
remarked that the high price of it <lb />
s a g to ill as It caused <lb />
many of them to raise their meat at <lb />
he s id is true, and it <lb />
a because it I to <lb />
et so work done on our <lb />
than when meat is Take <lb />
meat at C a pound and cotton at <lb />
and the can make in a <lb />
day's work to p -ion- a week <lb />
And a of colored labor. <lb />
om white people are that way. <lb />
be d to work as long <lb />
as the b any s end. When <lb />
meat is high thee is far less idleness <lb />
among then than w it is w, and we <lb />
can there o e get more work <lb />
Meeting. <lb />
meeting will be he'd in the <lb />
Baptist ch both Thursday and Fri- <lb />
day night- of this week a <lb />
the e of meetings to on Sun- <lb />
day night, and from then on services <lb />
be he d night <lb />
ext week and as long as Interest <lb />
In the meeting warrants- <lb />
will be In the Methodist church on <lb />
ht. as both <lb />
will worship together the <lb />
church. D J. D. of Tarboro, <lb />
is expected to be here during the ft -st <lb />
week of the meeting. Greenville is <lb />
much in need of a great revival of re- <lb />
and all Christians shoal I pray <lb />
earnestly that t may come this <lb />
meeting. <lb />
The very latest <lb />
Cloaks at Land's. <lb />
The Synod began in <lb />
Wanted. pounds of old Cast <lb />
Iron for cash. Ellington <lb />
yards around town are <lb />
now with <lb />
Heating Stoves, Cook Stoves and <lb />
Stove Pip- at <lb />
The sidewalk in front of the Ki <lb />
House has been c with plank. <lb />
Our Second Lot of Shoes has <lb />
just ed at M. R. Lang's. <lb />
drug store received a reno- <lb />
and new of paint last week. <lb />
My Stove is made of the b st <lb />
Iron. D. D. <lb />
We see that Dr. D- S. the <lb />
is in Tarboro for a short while. <lb />
The Beat Flour on th at the <lb />
OM Store. <lb />
has got in less than two <lb />
mouths of us and nearer day <lb />
and Gents Good <lb />
cheap for cash at Lang's. <lb />
Thanksgiving Day conies on the 30th <lb />
the Thurs av and the last day of <lb />
the month. <lb />
New Lot of Beats in the <lb />
shades Just M. R. I an-. <lb />
The rest seas or for the buds expired <lb />
yesterday and the hunters are after <lb />
them to- lay. <lb />
Doors aren't they fine. <lb />
Made of Carolina pine. <lb />
At D. D. <lb />
Did see the Sheriff about your <lb />
taxes Time's up and he is going to add <lb />
cost now. <lb />
in all stiles of Dress trim- <lb />
among the lots arrived at It. R.<lb />
This s for five Wednesday-, <lb />
five Thursdays live and <lb />
Thanksgiving Day. <lb />
Cotton pay cash for <lb />
Cotton at the Old Store. <lb />
The t way up the i <lb />
i neatly in the ware- <lb />
houses on the <lb />
Bunt, of keys nine on ring. <lb />
tier call on II. C. Hooker and for <lb />
A decided change the weather took <lb />
place and it has since felt a <lb />
bit <lb />
Do want a good Axe for cents <lb />
or a Corn Sheller for then sec D. <lb />
D. Haskett. <lb />
Mis Nannie , of is vis- <lb />
Rosa <lb />
Mr. II A. from <lb />
a short visit In h county. <lb />
Mr. of Kin ton spent <lb />
part of las week with Mr i I <lb />
lies. <lb />
ha go e to Aurora, <lb />
in county, t t. , of a <lb />
school there. <lb />
Mrs. John was quite sick <lb />
last eek W c are glad to learn she Is <lb />
improving. <lb />
Rev. J. II. will fill his <lb />
tat next Sun- <lb />
day morning at o'clock. <lb />
Miss Minnie of Fa who <lb />
his been spending some days with Miss <lb />
S returned home <lb />
Mr. Am F Taylor of Washington was <lb />
seen on our streets yesterday. A more <lb />
courteous tr popular sale-man seldom <lb />
visits our markets. <lb />
Ayden Items <lb />
A vi in. X. C, Oct. sot. <lb />
Th cotton as Been very dull <lb />
recent y. <lb />
Po Ice look boy to <lb />
last week st a lug a lilt Hart <lb />
A lug on. <lb />
Prof. i and Rev. <lb />
Swain, of , attended tin <lb />
i on vent ion at Washing on <lb />
week. <lb />
. S. <lb />
is i- <lb />
Died. <lb />
Miss Ann Elizabeth Phelps, <lb />
daughter of Mr. E. S. Phelps, two <lb />
l below e, died at o'clock <lb />
y morning of U <lb />
She had a chill about i on Wed- <lb />
morning and nineteen ham <lb />
thereafter a corps. Miss Phelps <lb />
was only a few weeks past years old, <lb />
and was an excellent young The <lb />
family have our <lb />
ii <lb />
co .- <lb />
with <lb />
Our rood f lend a w ck, <lb />
of the w . has been <lb />
fitted to his room tor several days <lb />
fever. Is out again. <lb />
Mr. Lewis Brown and Miss Annie <lb />
were married S evening. <lb />
Rev F. ting. <lb />
-heir joys be as deep as I he ocean <lb />
And their sorrows as light as its <lb />
Friends of College have organized <lb />
a Sunday School with Rev P. S. Swan <lb />
as Sup i Mr. Swain has been <lb />
Sunday School Evangelist for some <lb />
time, and is when presiding <lb />
over a Sunday School. <lb />
Hills Items. <lb />
X. C, Oct. <lb />
C Is selling for cents. <lb />
Mad dogs arc getting to be <lb />
plentiful. <lb />
quite <lb />
Mrs Jennie <lb />
lung trouble. <lb />
Best Is quite sick wit <lb />
At the K. C. Christian l <lb />
held in Washington <lb />
the following board of trustees of Chris- <lb />
college was elected; <lb />
A, Dr. H. p. Harper, C. W. <lb />
J. B, Gardner, Jess- Cannon, <lb />
Cats Can on, J. R Tingle, I. L. <lb />
Chestnut. Capt. Ki g, R <lb />
and R. h. <lb />
Money was contributed at he <lb />
for the purchase of a piano for the <lb />
college. Another it was do- <lb />
by II of Winston in <lb />
memory of his Mattie <lb />
Bowen. These two <lb />
will add g eat to of the <lb />
departments, which is con- <lb />
The Reflector has had a pull the <lb />
past week with part of the force sick, <lb />
but here we are on time. <lb />
Look out for hob Smith, he has gone <lb />
after finest lot of Horses and <lb />
Mules ever off red on this <lb />
The weeds are dying a <lb />
natural death. The hoe ought <lb />
to have been sent after them. <lb />
The ladies should see th pretty mil- <lb />
at Mrs. M D <lb />
Casts arc being made, will <lb />
begin far two or three <lb />
to be given during the holidays. <lb />
J. C. Cobb Son have the prettiest <lb />
shoes town. See our Card Men's<lb />
The farmer who raises wheat enough <lb />
to make the fl consumed by his I. mil y. <lb />
saves that much money. Wheat sowing <lb />
is in order. <lb />
Jut received a car load of <lb />
Ties at J. C. Cobb Son. See them <lb />
before buying, . <lb />
A coach of the train got off <lb />
the this side of Hobgood. F. <lb />
evening, and delayed the train an hour. <lb />
damage was done. <lb />
Do you want to make your grading <lb />
house comfortable, then see D. D. <lb />
Haskett and get a Heating Stove. <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick S ore. <lb />
Mrs. M. has the very latest <lb />
styles In new fall millinery and can <lb />
please all patrons. <lb />
Remember I pay you cash for Chickens <lb />
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick <lb />
Robeson Institute, X. C. <lb />
of which Prof. John is <lb />
has a large attendance of <lb />
Already have enrolled, about of <lb />
whom are boarders. Several young <lb />
men are studying for the ministry. <lb />
Th re are flee teachers, and it Is con- <lb />
to employ another teacher in <lb />
a short time. <lb />
The best U the cheapest Bay <lb />
the Richmond Stove Stoves at <lb />
D. D. <lb />
Freight Needed. <lb />
Ai other freight fain is ceded <lb />
on th. B i road. <lb />
There is only one f eight the <lb />
line and the r train carrying <lb />
the mail and express baa to do <lb />
work The often null heavy <lb />
flat ears leaded with logs. The lives of <lb />
the an endangered am it <lb />
causes id d be- <lb />
hind time. hat the <lb />
authorities m ill look Into the matter and <lb />
give the ed relief. The work on <lb />
the line at this season is quite heavy and <lb />
there sh- ill b a daily freight. <lb />
Weldon <lb />
The along the line cf the road <lb />
are entirely in accord what the <lb />
X the need of <lb />
freight train. Since the train <lb />
h s been compelled to freight work <lb />
it is on and trains <lb />
a e annoying both to a d <lb />
t of the ho are <lb />
dent upon Che trains for their mail, ex <lb />
press etc. Speaking of the <lb />
danger to p on mixed t <lb />
the c of the passenger ch getting <lb />
I he Lack at Hobgood. F even- <lb />
was no doubt ab e Io t <lb />
to taking on several <lb />
oars there. hope <lb />
f eight teal s will be put on to do th <lb />
heavy freight let the <lb />
trails do oily work p <lb />
belonging to them.<lb />
flying <lb />
Mrs spent <lb />
; if ton. <lb />
Mr. L B. made a <lb />
trip to Kin-t hi last week. <lb />
Mr. L. A. and wife are visiting <lb />
relatives in this <lb />
Mr. Jo went o <lb />
Saturday r turning Sunday. <lb />
Mr J. C. of Ki spent <lb />
last in <lb />
Mr. went to <lb />
last We lay returning Saturday. <lb />
Quite a number of our citizens <lb />
ed the is Convent held in <lb />
in last week. <lb />
Misses and Ma Harding <lb />
went to last to <lb />
the County Sunday School con- <lb />
Several cases of hemorrhagic fever <lb />
Ii b en in this section. Mr. <lb />
Isaac Joyner Is now a of the <lb />
dreadful de <lb />
-IS SHOWING ALL THE----- <lb />
as <lb />
CASHMERES IN ALL THE LATEST COLORS <lb />
-o <lb />
Look for s swinging sign <lb />
eat Cash Store on <lb />
Bros, <lb />
Higgs <lb />
New Moon- <lb />
Butter, Prunes, Mack- <lb />
. at the <lb />
Brick Store. , <lb />
H F. Keel has connected himself <lb />
with the well known Ware- <lb />
house of Henderson and will be glad to <lb />
have bis Men is give him a trial, be- <lb />
that Warehouse is the <lb />
place to get the very best prices for <lb />
heir tobacco. Hogsheads tarnished <lb />
raft on <lb />
Pitt County S. S. Convention. <lb />
Haskett a me her of the Executive <lb />
Coin and opened with payer by <lb />
Rev. R. D. oil. <lb />
In the o he President a d <lb />
Secretary the following temporary of- <lb />
were elected President. J. D. <lb />
Cox. Secretary. A. L. Blow. <lb />
After singing Lover of m. <lb />
the of d legates was <lb />
and the following present <lb />
the following <lb />
Greenville M. G. F. Smith. <lb />
D. D. Haskett, Supt., A. L. Blow and J. <lb />
st I. Rountree <lb />
Supt, and I A. Sugg. <lb />
Parker.- X Roads- James Joyner, <lb />
Salem School H- <lb />
Supt. and W. E. Tucker. <lb />
R. D. Carroll, Bryan <lb />
Jackson, Supt., W. M. Carroll and F. <lb />
O. OX. <lb />
Hope B. Carroll Supt., J. L. <lb />
Jackson and Miss Lena <lb />
White's Sc S. Evans and <lb />
Mrs. M. V. Forbes. <lb />
St. John's Miss Annie Harding and <lb />
G. F. <lb />
School <lb />
son. <lb />
St. Michaels -Miss Lula Cox. <lb />
by V L. <lb />
Blow on the subject of I he Relation of <lb />
Parents to the Sunday by <lb />
Rev. R. D. Carroll on the subject of <lb />
Bible Sunday S and <lb />
by Jam s Joyner on the subject of <lb />
The ion then a recess <lb />
Ml P. M. <lb />
iN SESSION. <lb />
Convention called I i order J. D. <lb />
Cox, Pr <lb />
The following additional <lb />
were <lb />
Ml. A. Mayo Supt. <lb />
Col. I. A. Sugg the <lb />
convention on and <lb />
and Rev. G. F. Smith on the <lb />
subject of m of exciting <lb />
interest in Sunday School and <lb />
by W H. o the subject <lb />
Sunday <lb />
Mrs. J. D. Cox one the <lb />
from this count. to the State Sunday <lb />
School Convention gave a verbal rep rt <lb />
of its she did in an <lb />
Interesting and entertaining manner, <lb />
showing the importance of success of the <lb />
work in Carolina, and urged upon <lb />
this convention the necessity of a per. <lb />
fret in the county and a <lb />
complete compilation of Sunday School <lb />
statistics to be submitted to the next <lb />
State Convention. On motion Mrs. <lb />
Cox was requested to a written re- <lb />
port for the benefit of the convention. <lb />
The convention then proceeded to the <lb />
e of officers with the following <lb />
II. <lb />
1st. D. Cox. <lb />
2nd. A. Mayo. <lb />
D. Haskett. <lb />
Corresponding B. Brown. <lb />
A. <lb />
L. Blow, A O. <lb />
Cox, Henry Harding. <lb />
EVENING <lb />
Song service and opening the question <lb />
box. <lb />
Several questions of interest <lb />
ed and answered by persons in the <lb />
potable among the questions <lb />
asked What has this convent ion <lb />
and what should he <lb />
com <lb />
Items. <lb />
X. . Oct. 1891 <lb />
Mr. E. J. is with this <lb />
week. <lb />
Dr. J. has moved to <lb />
and opened a grocery store. <lb />
W. King spent last <lb />
day in town collecting taxes. <lb />
Rev. T R. and Mr tr. f. <lb />
Lamb, of bar Friday <lb />
in town. <lb />
Messrs. W. A. Manning , have <lb />
o. a n w stock o goods in the new <lb />
Ir. W. J. me o main street. <lb />
Mr. J. P. Will h is o I I <lb />
stack of goods In the store . <lb />
c pied by ins on <lb />
Rev. Dr. a former of <lb />
K Church her. is pending a <lb />
few day He preached two <lb />
excel cut on Sunday. <lb />
Our me ch must think the e <lb />
e la e of k raised in this <lb />
ration this yea- a there have b en <lb />
ear of salt h <lb />
On- town was thrown <lb />
soon last Thu morning b.- a t e- <lb />
The to what is <lb />
known as the Mil. the <lb />
railroad exp oded, but <lb />
no one . <lb />
FORGET <lb />
OUR <lb />
-STOCK OF- <lb />
Parmele Items. <lb />
X. C , Oct, 1893. <lb />
Mr. J T of was her. <lb />
. day last week on business. <lb />
Mr. F X Samuels <lb />
of rt with his dogs <lb />
s now ha lots <lb />
and new gun <lb />
Justice who was badly hurt <lb />
when I had was I, is report- <lb />
ed bettor <lb />
Mr. G. J. Cherry is a sufferer h <lb />
acute rheumatism. He talk- of taking <lb />
a trip for his health. <lb />
Miss Allie Little was <lb />
days sh an <lb />
brother, W. J. Little <lb />
in town a few- <lb />
calling on her <lb />
There was a shooting affair it <lb />
in which several were badly <lb />
hurt. All were <lb />
It is said that Mr. F. S. Gardner <lb />
soon take unto himself another <lb />
W e wish him much success. <lb />
Our townsman, Mr. D S. Powell. <lb />
ho h is been on the sick list for several <lb />
days is now convalescent. <lb />
Mr J. C Miss <lb />
Allie Parmele, of York, we e call- <lb />
at the Club House last <lb />
Tuesday. <lb />
Messrs J. C. and C. R <lb />
r turned on this A. M. train <lb />
where they <lb />
spending a few days i h friends. <lb />
j Mr. F. G. and his two broth <lb />
I a d were summoned <lb />
last Thu to the bedside of t <lb />
sick father, who is t be very <lb />
low- with typhoid fever. <lb />
Grifton <lb />
X C, Oct. <lb />
Hen fruit scarce and high and cotton <lb />
gone don below Mr. <lb />
Mr. Unfits of Greene <lb />
ti w s in town build <lb />
Mr. C P. Gaskins made a business <lb />
trip to Greenville Saturday. <lb />
Several commercial men <lb />
were in town the past week. <lb />
The steamboat and timber men are <lb />
happy again, plenty of water for trans- <lb />
Our Ion had quite a heavy rain <lb />
Friday night and we are now enjoying <lb />
the nice cool fall weather. <lb />
Our tobacco farmers arc so pleased <lb />
over the p-ices they are getting for <lb />
tobacco, a e all smiles. <lb />
We have three steamers regularly <lb />
our stream f om Hooker on, <lb />
Snow Hill and other points <lb />
Prof. principal of the Grifton <lb />
Institute visited friends in o <lb />
Saturday and returned <lb />
morning. What's her name, Jack <lb />
Corn juice got the better of some of <lb />
our citizens Saturday night, and their <lb />
f ices on Sunday looked as If they had <lb />
been struck by a cyclone, or beer bottle. <lb />
O our Is driving double <lb />
team nearly all the while <lb />
Wonder if there is not something in hut <lb />
head besides the study of medicine. <lb />
Ladles I think he would make a <lb />
A man the road the ether day met <lb />
two little boys, and heard, one of them <lb />
exclaim for a thousand <lb />
asked the boy what he ed with <lb />
i so many tongues and the said <lb />
lick has made plenty of It <lb />
If you want a Suit and <lb />
Perfect Fit. <lb />
C. <lb />
CLOTHIER HAT <lb />
-D, <lb />
SOLE AGENT FOR <lb />
P. <lb />
Ladies Fine Shoes, <lb />
FOR <lb />
MEN, <lb />
Button and Lace--all styles and Prices. <lb />
Don't forget me if you have a dollar to spend as I <lb />
can save you money and give you the best of Goods. <lb />
No trouble to show goods or furnish samples. <lb />
Yours anxious to please, <lb />
THE LOW PRICE CASH MAN. <lb />
Next door north of A. Forbes, and opposite Old Brick; Store.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017622_tn_0006" n="6" />
                <p>
With the only complete bicycle plant in the world, <lb />
every part of the machine is made from A to Z, is it <lb />
any wonder that Victor Bicycles are acknowledged leaders <lb />
There's no bicycle like a Victor, and no plant so grandly <lb />
complete as the one devoted exclusively to the manufacture <lb />
of this king of wheels. <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
BOSTON, DENVER, SAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT just LOOK Ml FRIEND <lb />
O- Proprietor <lb />
LOCAL <lb />
MOTES AND TOBACCO lively competition in <lb />
the of <lb />
evidences of an ; <lb />
Winston Tobacco Journal comes the assurance arid the <lb />
congratulates the mar-1 that seeking <lb />
The joints muscles are so <lb />
by Hood's that <lb />
rheumatism and stiffness soon <lb />
net only Hood's. <lb />
BUYER ill Ayden, N. cT <lb />
not Fail to Call on <lb />
S. <lb />
Heals <lb />
i have op an office in I r <lb />
the of <lb />
i i u can rely on <lb />
before they will invest their <lb />
Up to date the Greenville mar-; money. E. A. <lb />
in Messrs. advantages must have <lb />
and Bray to locate here. <lb />
Whenever in our opinion there v <lb />
is I is anything in sight that for <lb />
has passed the half million <lb />
pounds mile post and <lb />
on to a million- Nearly double j the of lie we <lb />
what it sold last year up to this be found in the front ranks <lb />
J. S. JENKINS CO. <lb />
LEAF TOBACCO BROKERS <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
Ample Facilities fur Re-drying. Large Stock. <lb />
a Banters, and Board of Trade, <lb />
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb />
To Friends an. Customers of Pin and <lb />
I have made special preparation I <lb />
HEAD and propose Hiving j <lb />
which will prevent elating <lb />
Also I have special I <lb />
Oak <lb />
DO <lb />
make <lb />
preparing II u <lb />
i Ira <lb />
your Tobacco when <lb />
best spill made tram <lb />
timber places me in <lb />
to <lb />
The advantage have in my own <lb />
to nice, all . promise will <lb />
it to to us my and yon cam find at any <lb />
st my factory at the Eastern Greenville. N. C. <lb />
Scroll <lb />
Stairways. <lb />
name <lb />
that <lb />
you <lb />
. <lb />
Turned or Houses a <lb />
I prepared t any of Sawing or <lb />
line. Balustrades for Piazza. Picket, for <lb />
any kind, would <lb />
the <lb />
By S <lb />
arranging elsewhere. y. <lb />
Winterville, N. C <lb />
mm <lb />
willing <lb />
o. <lb />
aft <lb />
of- <lb />
BU <lb />
-7 TI JO, <lb />
time. <lb />
Mr. R- P. Lindsey, of Rocky <lb />
Mount, Mr. of Oxford <lb />
and Messrs. Clark, of Lynchburg, <lb />
Ya., and Jas. N- Boyd, of Rich- <lb />
were on our breaks this <lb />
week looking after our bright <lb />
tobacco. <lb />
A days ago we heard a <lb />
prominent tobacconist remark that <lb />
if every available foot of ground <lb />
for tobacco in Eastern Car- <lb />
was planted in tobacco it <lb />
would only slightly, if at all, affect <lb />
the trade in brights, because of <lb />
the limited acreage that will grow <lb />
that kind of tobacco, and the in- <lb />
creasing demand for it. <lb />
Mr. R. R. Cotten, the most ex- <lb />
tensive tobacco former east of the <lb />
W. W. railroad, cured <lb />
this year sold a large <lb />
lot on the floor of the Eastern a <lb />
few days ago. Though this was <lb />
a sample of his common storm <lb />
struck tobacco he expressed him- <lb />
self well pleased with the <lb />
sales. If Mr. Cotton will try <lb />
Greenville with some of his good <lb />
tobacco we are he will be a <lb />
Greenville man afterward. <lb />
Mr. W. R. Home, that wide <lb />
awake and systematic farmer of <lb />
township was also with <lb />
us a few days ago. Mr. Home <lb />
says he intents beginning at <lb />
home this year and if he <lb />
to get prices he will sell <lb />
his crop here. Don't fear Billy, <lb />
we will take care of you whenever <lb />
you come. Mr. F. M. <lb />
who has been selling elsewhere <lb />
tried Greenville with a load this <lb />
week and was so well pleased that <lb />
we confidently look for him again. <lb />
He is that kind of a man, when <lb />
satisfied will say so, and vice <lb />
of those who are trying to secure <lb />
it. So we say let anything and <lb />
everything come that will be for <lb />
the benefit of the whole people, <lb />
and lets don't a stumbling <lb />
block in the way of it because <lb />
some one else will make <lb />
cents where we only get a dollar. <lb />
I wish Invite to <lb />
NEW FALL MILLINERY. <lb />
I have tin- latest In Felt <lb />
mid Straw Goods. Very com- <lb />
line or Pretty and Cheap Rib- <lb />
Tips and Fancy Fe it hers. <lb />
You will save money by getting my <lb />
prices before you purchase elsewhere. <lb />
MRS. L. GRIFFIN. <lb />
Cooper's Warehouse, at Hen- <lb />
N. C, has been making <lb />
the past week, fine sales of new <lb />
bright tobacco. AH bright to <lb />
free from green is selling <lb />
at Cooper's fully as well as at this <lb />
date last year. Try him with a <lb />
Of bright tobacco. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
State North <lb />
Pitt County. <lb />
In the Superior <lb />
Court. <lb />
Judge Hugh L. Bond, of the <lb />
United States Circuit Court, died <lb />
at his home in Baltimore Tuesday <lb />
morning. His death duo to <lb />
failure though he had been in ill <lb />
health for some time. He had <lb />
been unable to attend to his <lb />
duties on the bench since Sept- <lb />
Salve. <lb />
The Beat in the for Cuts, <lb />
Browse, Bone, Clears, Salt Rheum, s . <lb />
Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb />
Chilblains and all skin <lb />
and positively cures Piles, or no <lb />
pay required. It guaranteed to give <lb />
or money <lb />
Price H cents per box. For Sale <lb />
Wooten. <lb />
E. A. MOTE. <lb />
C. S. C. County. <lb />
It is said that it costs a <lb />
year to finish a girl's education in <lb />
the fashionable schools of New <lb />
York, and when finished it isn't <lb />
worth a continental. <lb />
Try Cooper, at Henderson, with <lb />
I some white tobacco he <lb />
I will please you. Send your to- <lb />
where you can get the cash <lb />
for it Cooper is always <lb />
Cooper, at Hen pays <lb />
for your tobacco in currency <lb />
or his check as you may desire- <lb />
OUR FUTURE. <lb />
is well equipped with the beat put up <lb />
but fa up with limes and the improved <lb />
Best material used in all work. All of springs are you can select <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Raw- Horn, <lb />
We also keep on hand <lb />
ell at the lows, <lb />
T. <lb />
of Beady Made Harness Whips which e <lb />
s attention <lb />
Greenville, C <lb />
PAINT <lb />
SOLD UNDER <lb />
COST GAL. <lb />
YOUNG- <lb />
Sole Agents, <lb />
GREENVILLE, X. C. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By of the vested in <lb />
me by a decree of the <lb />
in the B. A. 1- <lb />
E. Bullock . B. <lb />
Hathaway, <lb />
Wyndham and wile, setters, I <lb />
expose to public sale, for rash before <lb />
the Court door in on <lb />
Monday the 6th day of <lb />
the tract or parcel <lb />
of adjoining the Inn <lb />
T. A. Dr. J 1-. Knight. J. A. <lb />
Cobb and others known <lb />
Robinson land containing to <lb />
and twenty acres more or less and <lb />
fully described in Book A Page<lb />
Oct. 2nd 1803. <lb />
Important Ta <lb />
Property. <lb />
By el a f <lb />
Coon Pitt c Minty in <lb />
T. vs I. A. wife, mud <lb />
a em, MM. of I t III. <lb />
11.1 e t <lb />
rt will Bell in <lb />
in the town <lb />
of on the <lb />
f M, de- <lb />
real A ear- <lb />
t of land in town of <lb />
the said I. A. <lb />
wile i resole, adjoining <lb />
of <lb />
A few evenings we MN <lb />
with a who <lb />
live in this place, but who <lb />
had an eye on it ever since it <lb />
tobacco market it <lb />
would not surprise us at any <lb />
time to know of his coming <lb />
to live for he is a tobacco man of <lb />
and one <lb />
is very in <lb />
our eastern and in com- <lb />
paring Greenville with the other <lb />
markets namely Wilson <lb />
and Rocky Mount, he said that <lb />
had been on all three of the <lb />
eastern markets, during the fall <lb />
and he was confident that Green- <lb />
ville was selling tobacco higher <lb />
by far than either of the other <lb />
two. He said he had told every <lb />
farmer so, that had asked his <lb />
opinion about it. Of course, said months slip by. It becomes hard <lb />
he. I am drumming for finally that only the cold chisel can <lb />
, , . , , . T CUt <lb />
market it is natural that <lb />
W. H. WHITE. <lb />
TIMES HAVE CHANGED. <lb />
Old thing- hive passed and all <lb />
have new. My old <lb />
stock of goods have been out <lb />
and a new has taken Us <lb />
place. The old was replaced <lb />
by the new because my <lb />
LOW DOWN PRICES <lb />
catch the people and keep the goods <lb />
Now listen to a few plain <lb />
I times arc hard and <lb />
money scarce just as well as the man <lb />
who col ton, corn and tobacco, <lb />
and Mil to sell goods just as low <lb />
as honest dealer can afford to sell. <lb />
every dollar spent with me yon will <lb />
gel the if your money. I keep a <lb />
of <lb />
General Merchandise, <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions <lb />
Boots, Shoes, Hats, <lb />
Caps and Gents <lb />
Furnishing Goods, <lb />
Clothing <lb />
at Hi v price a in in can want. Also a <lb />
full of <lb />
Groceries <lb />
MACHINE BELTS OF PAPER. <lb />
This Is One of the Latest Novelties in <lb />
Paper belting for the purpose of <lb />
transmitting power is the next thing <lb />
which i going to astonish the man- <lb />
fraternity. The <lb />
inventor was for five years as- <lb />
to the superintendent of <lb />
power of of the great factories <lb />
in Lowell, Mass. It was while in <lb />
this position, in which he had much <lb />
to do with lacing and tightening <lb />
bolts that he conceived the idea that <lb />
belting made of paper could be made <lb />
better work than either leather, <lb />
rubber or cotton. He argued that <lb />
as a thick piece of paste board can iX <lb />
be made to lake on a very firm, . . .- <lb />
smooth and durable surface by <lb />
holding the same against an- <lb />
other moving surface for <lb />
minutes, that a larger piece of <lb />
paper made in the form of a belt and i <lb />
permit to run up on the surface of <lb />
a pulley day after day would soon , <lb />
create upon its surface a firm, hard <lb />
shining coating that would last a <lb />
long time. <lb />
In making the belts, links made <lb />
from paper pulp are used. As soon <lb />
as a belt is put into working order a <lb />
hard, shining coating appears upon <lb />
the surface next the pulleys, and this <lb />
becomes harder and harder as the <lb />
should say my market is ahead <lb />
of any, but question of <lb />
doubt Greenville is leading the <lb />
eastern markets this year in the <lb />
way of high prices. <lb />
In response to our remark that <lb />
if Greenville had rail road and <lb />
Other facilities for inducing <lb />
to come here, said, <lb />
within less than one ye Green- <lb />
ville will have all the railroad <lb />
facilities that she will need. The <lb />
extensive and undeveloped timber <lb />
lands of Eastern North Carolina <lb />
of almost every and quality, <lb />
the interest that is annually in- <lb />
creasing in the way of fruit grow- <lb />
in, tracking, dairying and stock- <lb />
raising, and last but by no means <lb />
others on the least alluring in <lb />
it. Such a surface works <lb />
well on the <lb />
tin. <lb />
TEN YEARS HENCE. <lb />
t, J. T. Mere and others <lb />
f on the extension of I <lb />
I on tin- The said i toll <lb />
rope i one of the most <lb />
the toe it, <lb />
and which by <lb />
-J i <lb />
well of water. <lb />
a grove of shade trees. <lb />
a varlet of fruit and <lb />
the elevation in the <lb />
corporate Halts of town of Green- <lb />
ville. and one hundred yard from the <lb />
Terms of sate cash, hut <lb />
-iring do so saw make <lb />
par and <lb />
on <lb />
17th. 1893. <lb />
J. <lb />
Administrator's Sale. <lb />
B order of the <lb />
Court of Pitt county on the 14th day of <lb />
in the cause of <lb />
i. B. N. of J. S. <lb />
Taft, vs. Ina <lb />
a Taft, Taft and Minnie Taft <lb />
the heirs of law of John S Taft, the <lb />
a ill for sale before <lb />
the Mouse in th town of <lb />
on 6th of <lb />
one tract land adjoining the <lb />
J. Tucker. Harry Skinner. <lb />
G. K VT. IV. an I others <lb />
and known a the lands <lb />
late containing <lb />
hundred and fifteen acres. <lb />
Terms of sale cash. <lb />
AM W II B V <lb />
v-. -j-. of <lb />
i in the rich and fertile <lb />
fields of Eastern North <lb />
that grow and mature <lb />
ts richness of <lb />
textile and beautiful color has <lb />
won for itself a proud <lb />
nearly all the largest navy <lb />
manufacturing and cigarette con- <lb />
in the world, has induced <lb />
the Seaboard Air Line to con- <lb />
template the building of a road <lb />
from the city of Greensboro via <lb />
Henderson and <lb />
or Rocky Mount, <lb />
Greenville and Washington where <lb />
they will connect with ocean <lb />
vessels <lb />
We are informed that <lb />
and Henderson have already <lb />
voted their appropriation. In <lb />
turn will come other towns along <lb />
the route. Let Greenville ex- <lb />
tend the road a welcome and offer <lb />
her proportional share of the in- <lb />
to get it. <lb />
with the building of enough <lb />
rail road our to <lb />
We May Hope to Go from New York <lb />
to Europe in Four Days. <lb />
J. H. Biles, designer of the ocean <lb />
steamships New York and Paris, be- <lb />
that in third of the <lb />
twentieth or within ten <lb />
years, the best transatlantic steam- <lb />
ships will be able to leave New York <lb />
at noon and arrive at Southampton <lb />
in four Such n exploit would <lb />
require a speed of almost thirty-five <lb />
miles an hour. To attain this <lb />
speed, Mr. Biles believes that <lb />
j it is only necessary to introduce the <lb />
following improvements, all of which <lb />
are comparatively easy of attain- <lb />
Carrying a smaller cargo, <lb />
but more machinery. Using a <lb />
lighter metal, such as nickel steel, in <lb />
the construction of machinery. <lb />
Using boilers, with the <lb />
water inside and the fire outside the <lb />
tubes. Substituting oil for coal, <lb />
and thus saving one-half in the <lb />
weight of fuel. Improving the <lb />
forced Of all these, the <lb />
most important is probably the sub- <lb />
of oil for coal. Most of <lb />
them are very expensive. <lb />
The British navy is to have three <lb />
torpedo boats with a guaranteed <lb />
speed of twenty-seven knots or a <lb />
little more than thirty-one miles an <lb />
Send is Your Orders. <lb />
We have a nice assortment of <lb />
Apples, Pears, Plums, <lb />
Pecans, Grape- <lb />
vines, Raspberries, Straw- <lb />
berries, Dewberries, and Blackberries. <lb />
Also <lb />
AND MOO <lb />
and Roses, Greenhouse Plants, <lb />
Dahlias, Hyacinths. Tulips, Lilies, Ac. <lb />
Early solicited will be <lb />
tilled at the proper time for trans- <lb />
planting. Semi for <lb />
W A <lb />
l . <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- i <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 whole difficulty. <lb />
may be ob- <lb />
of nearest druggist <lb />
are easy to take, <lb />
quick to act, and <lb />
save many a doc- <lb />
tor's bilL <lb />
the- <lb />
fl A MM I <lb />
GREENVILLE, X. <lb />
Can still be found <lb />
at the Old <lb />
stand. <lb />
pared lo do <lb />
FIRST-CLASS WORK <lb />
on anything n the <lb />
108.7 USE. <lb />
Fine Vehicles Specialty <lb />
Repairing done prompt- <lb />
and in best manner <lb />
FRANK WILSON <lb />
; as he has just returned from the with a <lb />
beautiful line of <lb />
low, BOOTS <lb />
GENT'S FURNISHING , <lb />
And. as I make a <lb />
SPECIALTY OF CLOTHING <lb />
I can suit you both as to pocket and quality. <lb />
Cures <lb />
S. <lb />
Sores. <lb />
w. II. of <lb />
A. P. I Summons <lb />
vs. I for <lb />
N. Lewis T. lief before <lb />
Henry K. A. <lb />
and Laura <lb />
n minor v. a Clerk, <lb />
Petition to Land for Assets <lb />
The defendant X. is <lb />
hereby notified be and appear before <lb />
K. A. Clerk Superior Court for <lb />
heart the county of Put, his office In <lb />
Greenville, on Wednesday, the 8th day <lb />
of Nov t, and answer the <lb />
complaint, a copy which will be Bled in <lb />
my office within MM days from the dale <lb />
of this summons, and let the said de- <lb />
take notice that it he fail to <lb />
answer the said complaint that <lb />
lime, the plaintiff will apply to <lb />
the court for relief demanded in <lb />
complaint. Hereof fail net Given <lb />
under hand this the 18th day of <lb />
the Serpent's <lb />
Sting. <lb />
CONTAGIOUS <lb />
BLOOD POISON <lb />
S. <lb />
sores and <lb />
yield to healing <lb />
poison and builds up the system <lb />
2nd it treatment <lb />
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. <lb />
It removes t,. <lb />
A treatise <lb />
mailed free. <lb />
CALL AT THE RED FRONT OPPOSITE THE OLD BRICK <lb />
STORE AND WE WILL CERTAINLY PLEASE YOU. I WANT <lb />
TO IMPRESS UPON THE PUBLIC THAT MY STOCK IS EN- <lb />
NEW, THE GOOD TRADE I HAD DURING THE LAST <lb />
SPRING AND SUMMER RELIEVED ME OF ALL <lb />
STOCK AND I AM BEFORE YOU BEADY WITH A <lb />
SPARKLING, BRAND NEW STOCK OF GOODS. <lb />
YOURS TO SERVE. <lb />
FRANK <lb />
SALE <lb />
OF <lb />
On the Washington Branch Railroad, and the <lb />
Scotland Branch Railroad. <lb />
I OPPORTUNITY PAYING <lb />
YOU AFFORD TO MISS IT, <lb />
THE <lb />
THE <lb />
WHARTON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER to A It <lb />
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1898, M. <lb />
WHICHARD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1.1898, M. <lb />
have Mil some Lois for sale De on the and Kin <lb />
Railroad, that we will offer at public auction as <lb />
GOOSE NEST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1893.10 to A. If. <lb />
HOBGOOD, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 1893, P. M. <lb />
AYDEN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER A. M- <lb />
The above Towns on ibis road are well established Mid prosperous, and <lb />
are too well known lo need any extended at tins time. Persona <lb />
Homes in a section of country that has a future before it, and a soil and <lb />
climate lo sustain lusting will do to attend these where <lb />
great Bargain.-- Can lie secured on easy terms. <lb />
or if one-hail cash, and balance on hi lime <lb />
percent. Interval note. <lb />
The-e in be and is opportunity. <lb />
J. B. EDGERTON, AGENT. <lb />
BROWN <lb />
INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEIR <lb />
STORE <lb />
To see the are offering on ft full line of <lb />
DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, <lb />
Boots, Shoes and Hats <lb />
For Fall and Winter Service. <lb />
We can suit the Ladies exactly on <lb />
Dress Goods Trimmings. <lb />
Principle of <lb />
Life Assurance <lb />
is protection for die family, <lb />
h the <lb />
beneficiaries of life assurance <lb />
arc often deprived of the pro- <lb />
vision made for them, through <lb />
the loss of the principal, by <lb />
bod advice <lb />
its investment <lb />
Under the Installment <lb />
Policy of <lb />
The Equitable Life <lb />
you are provided with an ab- <lb />
solute safeguard against such <lb />
misfortune, besides securing <lb />
a much larger amount of in- <lb />
for the same amount <lb />
of premiums paid in. <lb />
For facts and figures, address <lb />
W. J. Manager, <lb />
For the Carolina, Rock Hill, S. C. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
M K <lb />
k the ill <lb />
Tins has in in In use over <lb />
years, wherever know has <lb />
been In steady demand. It has been on- <lb />
the leading physicians all over <lb />
e conn try, and ha effected where <lb />
all oilier attention of <lb />
the experienced physicians, have <lb />
for year failed. This Ointment is of <lb />
standing and the high reputation <lb />
which ii has obtained i- owing entirely <lb />
it- hut little effort has <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
nubile. One bottle of this Ointment win <lb />
be to address on receipt of one <lb />
Dollar. Sample free. The <lb />
discount to Druggist. All Cash <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
communication <lb />
T. V. MAX, <lb />
Bole Mai<lb />
A K. It. <lb />
s. <lb />
SOUTH. <lb />
Ne Noll <lb />
Oct daily I a-l <lb />
ex Min <lb />
Wei Ion pm p i <lb />
Ar pm b pin <lb />
-O <lb />
A NOTIONS <lb />
cannot be found on <lb />
the market <lb />
o- <lb />
We continue to sell C. B. Corsets at cents <lb />
The balance of Lang's stock of Clothing and Shoes are going <lb />
AT AND BELOW COST. <lb />
BROWN HOOKER'S NEW STORE<lb />
TWENTY FIVE WORTH OF---- <lb />
To be sold at reduced <lb />
j prices, together with a <lb />
assortment of Fall and <lb />
winter <lb />
Ac. IN SHORT A COMPLETE <lb />
STOCK OF GOODS TO BE SOLD <lb />
CHEAP. <lb />
Having bought my brother out I am determined to soil ray en <lb />
tire stock exceedingly close. Como and see for yourself. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
WILEY BROWN. <lb />
New Home Sowing Depositor for American Bible So, <lb />
Ar <lb />
Rock i p <lb />
t.- <lb />
i A <lb />
Ar<lb />
Ho M <lb />
daily-ex Sun.<lb />
Ar W<lb />
Ar p m <lb />
0.1 <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
pa <lb />
Dally Sunday. <lb />
Train on Scotland Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 3.40 Halifax 4.40 p . <lb />
arrives Scotland Neck at p in. <lb />
p. in. Kinston 7.03 <lb />
leaves 7.20 a. in., <lb />
Greenville s. m. Arriving Halifax <lb />
a. m 11.20 a. m. daily <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
I on Washington Branch leave <lb />
Washington a. arrives <lb />
8.40 a. in. Tarboro <lb />
leaves p. in. <lb />
p. in,, arrives n p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. with <lb />
trains on n i Seek <lb />
Train leaves N via <lb />
A Raleigh It. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
P M, <lb />
p. in. 3.20 p. m. <lb />
Returning leaves daily except <lb />
Sands- a. m., 10.00 a. m <lb />
arrive Tarboro, K C, 10.25 AM 12,20. <lb />
Trains on Division, Wilson <lb />
Branch <lb />
ville a in. arrive m. <lb />
have Rowland IS II p <lb />
at. Daily ex- <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch <lb />
dally except Sunday. A M <lb />
a. rive K . a M. Re <lb />
laves S AM <lb />
arrive N A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
Mount at V M, arrive Nashville M <lb />
P 1.1 M. <lb />
Hope AM, Nashville <lb />
Ml A M. arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
Trains on Branch R. R- leave <lb />
arrive Dunbar 8.40 p. <lb />
m. Returning leave a. <lb />
arrive a. m- y <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Hilton Branch leaves W <lb />
for daily, Sunday, <lb />
and M Returning till <lb />
ton at A M. and P. M. <lb />
Warsaw with No. ind c <lb />
Train No. makes <lb />
Weldon for all points North dally, <lb />
via Richmond, and dally except <lb />
Via Bay Line, also <lb />
dally except Sunday with Norfolk <lb />
Carolina railroad for Norfolk <lb />
point via <lb />
B. as <lb />
r. v, <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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