<?xml version="1.0"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
<teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
        <titleStmt>
            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
            <author></author>
            <respStmt>
                <resp>Text encoded by</resp>
                <name>Michael Reece</name>
            </respStmt>
        </titleStmt>
	<publicationStmt>
                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
        </publicationStmt>
			<notesStmt>
				<note type="job"></note>
				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
			</notesStmt>
        <sourceDesc>
            <bibl>
            </bibl>
        </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
        <samplingDecl>
            <p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p>
            <p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p>
            <p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p>
        </samplingDecl>
        <classDecl>
            <taxonomy xml:id="LCSH">
                <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
            </taxonomy>
        </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
        <creation>
            <date></date>
        </creation>
        <langUsage xml:lang="en-US">
            <language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language>
        </langUsage>
        <textClass>
            <keywords scheme="#LCSH">
                <list>
                    <item></item>
                </list>
            </keywords>
        </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div type="dirtyOCR">
<pb facs="00017628_0001" n="1"/>
<p>
-v <lb/>
fl <lb/>
You Want <lb/>
in the way of <lb/>
CHEAP -AND- FANCY <lb/>
STATIONERY <lb/>
can be had at the <lb/>
Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
Blank Books, Tablets, Paper of <lb/>
all kinds Envelopes all sizes, <lb/>
Pens, Inks, Mucilage, <lb/>
Gaps, Blotters, Ac. in <lb/>
variety. <lb/>
The<lb/>
This Office for Job Printing. <lb/>
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL. XII. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
CURES RISING <lb/>
. BREAST <lb/>
child-bearing woman. I bare been ft <lb/>
mid-wife for many years, and in each <lb/>
whore bad been used <lb/>
accomplished wonders ard relieved <lb/>
suffering. It the beat remedy for rising el <lb/>
breast known, and worth the rice ft r <lb/>
alone. Mrs. W. M. <lb/>
Ala <lb/>
I ran tell all expectant mothers if Will <lb/>
a few bottles of Mother's Friend <lb/>
through the ordeal without in Mi <lb/>
suffering. May <lb/>
H. I. <lb/>
Used Mother's Friend before birth my <lb/>
eighth child. Will never cease its praise. <lb/>
Mks. J. F. Moore, Cal. <lb/>
Sent b express, charges prepaid, on receipt <lb/>
price, per bottle. <lb/>
REGULATOR CO., <lb/>
Sold by all Atlanta, <lb/>
JAMES <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
I C <lb/>
J. <lb/>
L. FLEMING, <lb/>
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW <lb/>
. N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention to business. Office <lb/>
t Tucker Murphy -s old stand. <lb/>
L. BLOW <lb/>
BLOW, <lb/>
AT-LAW, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
in all the Courts. <lb/>
I. A. B. V. <lb/>
A TYSON, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
Prompt attention given to collections <lb/>
L. C. HARRY <lb/>
T SKINNER, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N- C- <lb/>
G. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, iV C. <lb/>
Practice in all courts. Collections <lb/>
special <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb/>
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb/>
Steamers leave Washington <lb/>
ville and touching at all land- <lb/>
on Tar River <lb/>
and Friday at A. M. <lb/>
Returning leave at A M. <lb/>
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
These departures are subject to stage of <lb/>
water on Tar River. <lb/>
at Washington with steam- <lb/>
of The Norfolk, and Wash- <lb/>
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore <lb/>
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb/>
Shippers should Older their goods <lb/>
marked via Dominion Iron <lb/>
New York. from <lb/>
Norfolk <lb/>
more Steamboat from <lb/>
more. Miners from <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. SO. <lb/>
Washington N. C <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, <lb/>
Agent, <lb/>
Greenville, N C. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD MUCK STORK <lb/>
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS <lb/>
their year's supplies will find <lb/>
their interest to get our prices before <lb/>
chasing elsewhere. Is complete <lb/>
n all its branches. <lb/>
PORK <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb/>
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb/>
at Lowest Market Pricks. <lb/>
TOBACCO CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. A com <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
the times. Our goods are all bought and <lb/>
old CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb/>
to sell at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Greenville. N. C <lb/>
STATE NEWS <lb/>
Things Mentioned in our State Ex- <lb/>
changes that are of General Interest <lb/>
The Cream of the News. <lb/>
Q. M. one of the larges <lb/>
merchants in Concord, failed re- <lb/>
The preferred creditors <lb/>
amounted to <lb/>
While the court was getting <lb/>
ready for business at Rob bins ville. <lb/>
Graham county, the court house <lb/>
began to give away, rendering it <lb/>
hazardous in the extreme. The <lb/>
church was used to hold court in. <lb/>
Burlington News One of our <lb/>
Sowing Machine agents reports <lb/>
that he found a house in Ala <lb/>
county in which lives nine <lb/>
old maids, the youngest being <lb/>
years of age. We note this <lb/>
for the benefit of bachelors <lb/>
and widowers. If he can't find a <lb/>
mate there he will be hard to <lb/>
suit. <lb/>
The Shelby Aurora says that <lb/>
John Jacob Bomb, a young man <lb/>
of years of age, carried with <lb/>
him his little nephew, five years <lb/>
of age, to Thornburg's <lb/>
distillery, over the Cleveland line <lb/>
into Gaston where he <lb/>
bought whiskey, got drunk and <lb/>
made the little lad drunk. It is <lb/>
reported that he treated the boy <lb/>
shamefully in other ways. The <lb/>
little lad was unconscious for <lb/>
four days after this cruel treat- <lb/>
Mr. Frank Hutchinson's fatten- <lb/>
hog, in Mulberry township, <lb/>
was burned to death one night <lb/>
last week. Mrs. Hutchinson car- <lb/>
a light when she went to <lb/>
feed the hog that night, and some- <lb/>
time afterwards the pen was seen <lb/>
to be on fire. When they reach- <lb/>
ed the pen the hog was already <lb/>
dead and the pen almost <lb/>
Add an pal I <lb/>
Washington. <lb/>
a. <lb/>
ill I Fat- <lb/>
acted tar lost HAT PUS. <lb/>
S-ad model, or photo, with ill <lb/>
at ft Hi or set, <lb/>
till patent h <lb/>
Of PA- Off D. C. <lb/>
It Should Be Every House. <lb/>
J. B. Wilson. Clay St., Sharpsburg, <lb/>
Pa., says he will not be without Dr. <lb/>
King's New Discovery for Consumption, <lb/>
Coughs and t it cured bis wife <lb/>
who was threatened With Pneumonia <lb/>
after an attack of when <lb/>
various other remedies and several <lb/>
physicians bad done her no good. Robert <lb/>
Bat-bar, of Pa., claims Dr. <lb/>
King's New Discovery has done him <lb/>
more good than anything he ever used <lb/>
for Lung Trouble. Nothing like it. Try <lb/>
it. Free Trial Bottles at Drug <lb/>
Store. Large bottles. and SI <lb/>
THE OF THE WORLD. <lb/>
Journal of Education. <lb/>
China has a regular army of <lb/>
men and a war footing of <lb/>
Turkey has a regular army of <lb/>
men, a war footing of <lb/>
and the annual cost of the <lb/>
army is <lb/>
Italy has a regular army of <lb/>
a war footing of <lb/>
and the cost of the army <lb/>
is <lb/>
Japan has a regular army of <lb/>
a war footing of <lb/>
and the annual cost of the army <lb/>
is <lb/>
Spain has a regular army of <lb/>
a war footing of <lb/>
and the annual cost of the army <lb/>
is <lb/>
Russia has a regular array of <lb/>
a war footing of <lb/>
and the annual cost of the <lb/>
army is <lb/>
France has a regular army of <lb/>
a war footing of <lb/>
and the annual cost of the army <lb/>
is <lb/>
Germany has a regular army of <lb/>
a war footing of <lb/>
and the annual cost of the army <lb/>
is <lb/>
Great Britain has a regular <lb/>
army of a war tooting of <lb/>
and the annual cost of the <lb/>
army is <lb/>
India has a regular <lb/>
army of a war footing of <lb/>
and the annual cost of <lb/>
the army is <lb/>
has a regular <lb/>
army of a war footing of <lb/>
1.125,838, and the annual cost of <lb/>
the army is <lb/>
The United States hat a <lb/>
army of a war footing <lb/>
of and tho annual cost <lb/>
of the U <lb/>
We desire to say to our citizens, that <lb/>
for years we have been selling Dr. <lb/>
New Discovery tor Consumption, <lb/>
King's New Life Pills, <lb/>
Salve and Electric Bitters, and have <lb/>
never handled remedies that sell as well, <lb/>
or that hare given such universal <lb/>
faction. We do not hesitate to <lb/>
tee them every time, we stand <lb/>
ready to refund the purchase price, if <lb/>
satisfactory results do not follow their <lb/>
use. These remedies have won their <lb/>
great popularity purely on their merits. <lb/>
TRUE SOLDIERS OP THE CROSS. <lb/>
Men Who Know How to Serve and <lb/>
How to Oby-Toe Conference. <lb/>
The Durham Globe writing <lb/>
about Conferences has <lb/>
this to say i <lb/>
Without any preliminary or <lb/>
special advertising notice, there <lb/>
is in session at Charlotte that, in <lb/>
many respects, remarkable body, <lb/>
a Methodist Conference. <lb/>
Other gatherings, political, so- <lb/>
or scientific, have to be <lb/>
in advance by <lb/>
and and and other <lb/>
appliance, but this gathering <lb/>
meets as s as rose the walls <lb/>
of Solomon's temple without the <lb/>
noise of hammers. <lb/>
In the most exciting political <lb/>
conventions there, are vacancies <lb/>
seats are taken by proxies or <lb/>
but at Charlotte it is <lb/>
safe to say that the name of every <lb/>
living member will be answered <lb/>
to, and as for the dead, their <lb/>
names will be called too, and <lb/>
there will be those to answer for <lb/>
them, as for the Grenadier <lb/>
of on the field of <lb/>
The disc of the gathering <lb/>
at Charlotte is perfect- It always <lb/>
is at a Methodist Conference. <lb/>
The face of tho presiding bishop <lb/>
may even be new to all before <lb/>
him, but he will take his place <lb/>
dignified and self-possessed as <lb/>
all his predecessors have been <lb/>
and he will with an even <lb/>
hand. These may the right <lb/>
of an appeal from his decision, <lb/>
but it is safe to say that it will <lb/>
be exercised. The business of <lb/>
the Conference will proceed in an <lb/>
order settled by the practice of <lb/>
years, from tho beginning to the <lb/>
close, without a ripple or a jar. <lb/>
less than a week tho Conference <lb/>
will have transacted more actual <lb/>
Men may affirm or deny, stand <lb/>
with these men or against them, <lb/>
call them fanatics or apostles, the <lb/>
votaries of a decaying superstition <lb/>
or the heralds of no <lb/>
man unless he be so <lb/>
as to be ruled out from the com- <lb/>
of the fair and the just con <lb/>
refuse to them the praise due him <lb/>
who labors with a true heart for <lb/>
the good of men, and strives, <lb/>
though in weakness and tears, <lb/>
for tho final elevation of the race. <lb/>
HANDLING STUFF. <lb/>
A Traveler's on a <lb/>
Railroad. <lb/>
Ha la tho <lb/>
Happened to <lb/>
a r Who Stumbled <lb/>
and <lb/>
WHO TO MARRY. <lb/>
So long as all hinds and the <lb/>
cook are having a say about get- <lb/>
ting married we may as well be <lb/>
heard, for we congratulate our- <lb/>
selves on possessing whole chunks <lb/>
of wisdom in this particular es- <lb/>
The spirit of the age is <lb/>
that of is on the <lb/>
part of the men. This is wrong, <lb/>
and causes many disappointments <lb/>
not a few withered flowers. <lb/>
Young jump in Getting <lb/>
married is just es easy as rolling <lb/>
off a log, but don't bother your <lb/>
head about finding an angel. <lb/>
think how men as a general <lb/>
thing would match with angels <lb/>
But the have all been <lb/>
taken long ago ; do more in the <lb/>
market now. Don't marry for <lb/>
beauty exclusively ; it don't wear <lb/>
worth a cent; that is if you build <lb/>
exclusively on it. Don't marry <lb/>
for love altogether, either. It is <lb/>
too much like a worth <lb/>
much without oil. and money <lb/>
stands for oil. Marry a betwixt <lb/>
and a between. <lb/>
Never saw one of that kind <lb/>
Why, there are lots of them in <lb/>
the market. In fact, there are <lb/>
more of this kind than any other. <lb/>
She is worth more for a wife, as a <lb/>
general thing, than any angel is <lb/>
she knows more about <lb/>
and tho side of life. Au- <lb/>
business than a State Legislature i gels make bettor heroines for <lb/>
does in a month. <lb/>
Most impressive all, <lb/>
is the implicit obedience with <lb/>
which the mandates of the Con- <lb/>
will be obeyed. <lb/>
Methodist preacher, like the <lb/>
suit the soldier, asks no <lb/>
questions, but goes where he is <lb/>
sent. The associations formed <lb/>
during one, two, three or even <lb/>
four years of residence will be <lb/>
broken without a <lb/>
word; and the preacher, with his <lb/>
novels than they do wives. Don't <lb/>
marry for a family name, unless <lb/>
it is backed up with batik notes. <lb/>
Go for a girl with lots of common <lb/>
sense, some beauty, a good con- <lb/>
the by-laws <lb/>
you can arrange them between <lb/>
a light stepper, a big, warm <lb/>
heart, and you will got something <lb/>
I that will keep. Young men, just <lb/>
look out for this kind of a wife <lb/>
I and don't go sighing around be- <lb/>
cause you can't find a novel-angel. <lb/>
wife and children and house- j They would be the death and <lb/>
hold with much of you if you got one <lb/>
wend his way to of <lb/>
another there to labor <lb/>
in a new, and, stony <lb/>
field; to make friends of strangers, <lb/>
and to leave old friends to be <lb/>
strangers, thereafter. He will I <lb/>
feel, it may a sinking of the <lb/>
heart, as a few Sundays hence, <lb/>
he arises in a strange place ad- <lb/>
a congregation in which <lb/>
there may not be a familiar face; <lb/>
but whatever he may feel he <lb/>
will submit himself in silence <lb/>
to the discipline of his order. <lb/>
He will do this, too, year after <lb/>
year, until an old man and <lb/>
most certainly as poor as old, he <lb/>
will reluctantly accept a <lb/>
and even <lb/>
then his white head will be seen <lb/>
at each session of the Annual <lb/>
Conference until the day come <lb/>
when the earth shall cover his <lb/>
toil and his time-worn face from <lb/>
the sight of men- <lb/>
Other gatherings are of the <lb/>
to perfect the <lb/>
plans of men ; to organize parties <lb/>
for collective or individual <lb/>
to grasp the <lb/>
sources of wealth, or to lay the <lb/>
foundation of gather <lb/>
like this at Charlotte deal <lb/>
with none of these things. They <lb/>
concern not the laying out or con <lb/>
of any earthly thorough- <lb/>
fare of commerce, or highway of <lb/>
the straight and <lb/>
row path that leads to life enter- <lb/>
As men and citizens in other <lb/>
days of the year these preachers <lb/>
may and do concern themselves <lb/>
in the division of political parties, <lb/>
but their business at Charlotte <lb/>
relates to what they firmly believe <lb/>
is coming a division of all souls <lb/>
on the right hand or on the left <lb/>
on the of <lb/>
Not one of these at Char- <lb/>
but feels himself, however <lb/>
humble as an individual, the am- <lb/>
of the King of Kings, <lb/>
with a message which <lb/>
he dares not, if he would, refuse <lb/>
to deliver. The discipline, the <lb/>
obedience, the re he <lb/>
accepts as a soldier does the <lb/>
chances of wounds, death and <lb/>
the ca m <lb/>
must go on and on. <lb/>
Cold and Hunger. <lb/>
Richmond <lb/>
Biting winds begin to be felt <lb/>
here. Should we have such a <lb/>
winter as the last the suffering of <lb/>
the poor will be great for many <lb/>
of them are unemployed. <lb/>
chilling blast should re- <lb/>
mind us of those whose grates <lb/>
are empty and whose means <lb/>
barely suffice to provide them <lb/>
with bread. And, worse still, <lb/>
there are others who can get <lb/>
neither bread nor fuel <lb/>
Organized charities and <lb/>
charity must combine to <lb/>
relieve this suffering. Tho good <lb/>
manor woman cannot be com <lb/>
beside a glowing fire or <lb/>
at a richly-ladened table knowing <lb/>
near by are people shivering <lb/>
and starving. <lb/>
Among the despised tramps <lb/>
too, are men who are neither <lb/>
nor knaves. There are <lb/>
honest men the working <lb/>
their way from distant parts back <lb/>
to their homes- Others, madden- <lb/>
ed by failure to find employment <lb/>
at home, have started forth tramp- <lb/>
to obtain work- Some among <lb/>
these two classes tell pitiful <lb/>
stories, which carry conviction of <lb/>
truth with them. <lb/>
Those whom fortune has bless- <lb/>
ed must open their hearts and <lb/>
hands to the cries of the distress- <lb/>
ed already heard, and destined to <lb/>
grow louder as the ad- <lb/>
Times are hard, but we <lb/>
must try to soften them to the <lb/>
poor. Active exertion will be re- <lb/>
quired, and this we should <lb/>
to put forth <lb/>
Dispatch- <lb/>
The reader of this paper will be pleas- <lb/>
ed to learn that there is at least one <lb/>
dreaded disease that science has been <lb/>
able to cure in nil its stages, and that is <lb/>
Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the <lb/>
only positive cure known to the <lb/>
cal Catarrh being a <lb/>
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure <lb/>
la take- internally, act lug directly on <lb/>
the blot land mucous surfaces of the <lb/>
system, destroying tho found <lb/>
of the disease, and tiring <lb/>
by building up the con- <lb/>
a id assisting nature in doing <lb/>
work. This proprietors have much <lb/>
faith in its curative powers, that they <lb/>
offer One Hundred Dollars for any case <lb/>
it fails to core. Bend for Hat of <lb/>
testimonials. <lb/>
Address, F. J. A CO., <lb/>
O. Bold by <lb/>
I was winding in and out among <lb/>
the hills of Pennsylvania on a rail- <lb/>
road train when seized with a de- <lb/>
sire to smoke. The smoking car <lb/>
was an ordinary one, and about <lb/>
half-filled with men in blouse and <lb/>
overalls, smoking clay pipes. When <lb/>
I selected a seat I found a leather <lb/>
bag on the floor and gently kicked <lb/>
it out of the way. It moved in a <lb/>
grudging way and I sat down and <lb/>
put my feet on it. I had smoked <lb/>
my cigar about half up when one of <lb/>
the miners, having finished his pipe, <lb/>
knocked the ashes out, lounged over <lb/>
to me, and <lb/>
wouldn't down too hard <lb/>
on the stuff, <lb/>
the <lb/>
I wouldn't kick around too <lb/>
heavy on <lb/>
some tools in there you <lb/>
afraid may get broken, <lb/>
call it dynamite, <lb/>
Scott, man, but you don't <lb/>
mean to <lb/>
it's he <lb/>
observed, as he sat down beside me <lb/>
and reached for the bag. sup- <lb/>
pose you've seen it put up in car- <lb/>
before now You know how <lb/>
we use I believe they <lb/>
that each of these ten cartridges has <lb/>
tho force <lb/>
take them I yelled, <lb/>
shrinking as far away from him as <lb/>
possible. <lb/>
course, sir, but there is no <lb/>
for alarm. I've been handling <lb/>
dynamite in all shapes forms for <lb/>
the last fifteen years and never had <lb/>
an accident. You must have con- <lb/>
to explode one of these, sir, <lb/>
and who's going to tap this one with <lb/>
a hammer, or fire it out of the win- <lb/>
against a <lb/>
be careful not to drop it on <lb/>
tho floor. Ugh Is there any more <lb/>
of the stuff in this <lb/>
a tidy bit of it, sir. <lb/>
There's twelve men of us, and I <lb/>
guess could scare up about a <lb/>
hundred cartridges like these if you <lb/>
wanted to see <lb/>
No I'll be thankful enough <lb/>
if I get clear of your ten without be- <lb/>
blown through the roof. How <lb/>
much rock, for instance, would one <lb/>
of these cartridges bring <lb/>
much rock Well, that <lb/>
would be according to the lay of <lb/>
things. If it was a cliff, with a <lb/>
goodly overhang to it, and this cart- <lb/>
ridge was placed just right, the <lb/>
downfall would be enough to build a <lb/>
fine, large warehouse with a few <lb/>
carloads of small pieces left over for <lb/>
making pavement. If it was plumb <lb/>
up and down cliff without any seams <lb/>
or crevices, and the stone was hard <lb/>
and tough, a pieces weighing <lb/>
pounds or so would be all you <lb/>
could reasonably expect. It's beau- <lb/>
stuff, sir, beautiful, and the <lb/>
who invented it was a <lb/>
you are digging 3-our own <lb/>
heels into that I shouted, as <lb/>
he moved his hob-nailed boots <lb/>
around without the slightest care. <lb/>
I was, sir, but as long as <lb/>
there was no explosion no harm has <lb/>
been done. It's the law to <lb/>
throw dynamite cartridges from a <lb/>
car window or I'd give you an ex- <lb/>
worth seeing. Tho good <lb/>
old days seem to have passed <lb/>
do you mean by the good <lb/>
old <lb/>
the time when one could <lb/>
fling one of these things out of tho <lb/>
window and make a hole in a ledge <lb/>
largo enough for the den of a <lb/>
bear. What brought out a law <lb/>
it was the mistake made by a <lb/>
near-sighted man. He threw a <lb/>
cartridge at a ledge which he sup- <lb/>
posed was all of thirty feet away, <lb/>
while it wasn't actually over eight. <lb/>
The result was that a piece of rock <lb/>
weighing one hundred pounds <lb/>
struck the first passenger <lb/>
smashed its way in, and I believe a <lb/>
man and his Wife were killed. They <lb/>
had poor Jim in jail for a year, and <lb/>
everybody cussed his eyes instead of <lb/>
feeling sorry that they had deceived <lb/>
him. That's why they passed the <lb/>
law, sir, and I'm afraid the good <lb/>
old days will never return. This <lb/>
can no longer be called the land of <lb/>
seen people killed by the <lb/>
stuff, I I said as he <lb/>
played with cartridge as if it were a <lb/>
ball. <lb/>
a piece of rock weigh- <lb/>
two hundred and fifty pounds <lb/>
scraped my cap off as it flew along <lb/>
to strike my partner in the breast, <lb/>
but didn't exactly see him die, you <lb/>
know. He yes. The fore- <lb/>
man said that if poor Ned had been <lb/>
struck by tho Pittsburgh city hall <lb/>
ho couldn't have died any faster nor <lb/>
boon in worse shape to gather up. <lb/>
As to about a dozen others, I've <lb/>
seen standing on a particular <lb/>
spot, been knocked down myself by <lb/>
the concussion, and reached my feet <lb/>
again to find a hole in the ground <lb/>
broad enough and deep enough to <lb/>
bury a span of horses in. The per- <lb/>
sons U. say <lb/>
whether they went up or down, <lb/>
though sometimes did find <lb/>
tho to that <lb/>
they mostly went <lb/>
horrible to be wiped off the <lb/>
of tho earth in that <lb/>
it's better than being <lb/>
smothered In a coal mine or run over <lb/>
a train or cars, you ever see <lb/>
the big in tho ground over at <lb/>
Fox <lb/>
a place worth seeing, sir. <lb/>
There were fourteen miners in tho <lb/>
party, I believe. They were carry- <lb/>
a lot of dynamite and sat down <lb/>
rest and smoke. One of them <lb/>
a fire to roast some chestnuts <lb/>
and it is supposed a stick of <lb/>
; mite came in contact with <lb/>
there was none of the <lb/>
fourteen left to explain matters, you <lb/>
see. One instant were <lb/>
; men enjoying their pipes about a <lb/>
I in whilst the fourteenth <lb/>
was shoving chestnuts into tho <lb/>
i In the next there was a boom <lb/>
which rattled <lb/>
windows ten miles away, and <lb/>
people reached tho spot to find a <lb/>
hole in the ground feet <lb/>
sixteen feet deep and fourteen <lb/>
j-feet <lb/>
grave of <lb/>
hardly. There was no <lb/>
need of a grave. I believe they <lb/>
found some fragments half a mile <lb/>
away in a tree top, but not enough <lb/>
have you no fear of such a <lb/>
the slightest. It's <lb/>
stuff, as I said <lb/>
nicer and cleaner to handle than any <lb/>
other explosive. I was taken with <lb/>
gunpowder for awhile, but this <lb/>
beats it out of sight. Fond of wit- <lb/>
explosions, <lb/>
indeed, I'm not, and I won't <lb/>
breathe till you men are off the train. <lb/>
It ought to be against the law to <lb/>
carry dynamite around in this <lb/>
less <lb/>
More laws it When <lb/>
tho day comes that a poor, honest <lb/>
blaster must go on foot because ho <lb/>
is obliged to carry about a <lb/>
cartridges I shall want to <lb/>
leave tho Some of us get <lb/>
off at this next station, while the <lb/>
others go a little further down the <lb/>
I said as I left <lb/>
the smoker and went back to the <lb/>
rear coach and to tho last scat in <lb/>
that. <lb/>
At the next station the train side- <lb/>
tracked to let the express pass. Four <lb/>
of the miners got off and started up <lb/>
the mountain road in the direction <lb/>
of a quarry. The man I had talked <lb/>
with looked along the train until ho <lb/>
saw my face at the window, when he <lb/>
held up a cartridge and laughed <lb/>
gave it a toss in the air. When <lb/>
he started on again his three com- <lb/>
were many In advance. <lb/>
A dozen of us were watching him as <lb/>
he broke into a trot to overtake them. <lb/>
He wasn't one hundred feet from <lb/>
tho train when he stumbled and fell <lb/>
there was a puff of Game and <lb/>
car windows shivered <lb/>
into deafening crash, and <lb/>
the man the scat ahead of <lb/>
called <lb/>
dynamite, <lb/>
Everybody went up to look at the <lb/>
spot. There was a in the <lb/>
ground deep enough to take in a <lb/>
hogshead, a lot of twisted roots <lb/>
from tho nearest trees, chips and <lb/>
splinters of stone and fragments of <lb/>
flesh, cloth and leather. Nothing <lb/>
miner had vanished off <lb/>
the face of the Free <lb/>
Press. <lb/>
Pessimisms. <lb/>
Gossip is the sugar of old women's <lb/>
tea. <lb/>
All sour grapes are out of <lb/>
reach. <lb/>
Vice is a sponge which sucks in <lb/>
honor and gives out tears. <lb/>
The man who fears being taken at <lb/>
his true value is always on the alert <lb/>
for slights. <lb/>
Humility is not necessarily a <lb/>
virtue. The violet would smell just <lb/>
as sweet on a tree. <lb/>
A brigadier general in petticoats <lb/>
and an old maid in pants are two <lb/>
things to avoided. <lb/>
The tears shed for others arc <lb/>
mellowed by inward congratulation; <lb/>
those shed for ourselves are brine. <lb/>
The old man who has forgotten <lb/>
that he ever was a boy is but a living <lb/>
tombstone to his buried youth. <lb/>
A broken pitcher at a fountain <lb/>
may touchingly symbolical, but <lb/>
it is not so suggestive as a broken <lb/>
bottle in an <lb/>
Much Longer. <lb/>
Little children sometimes find It <lb/>
hard to understand that anyone <lb/>
has had an existence before they, <lb/>
the ones, were in the world. <lb/>
Two girls, each seven years old, <lb/>
were swinging on the gate before <lb/>
the house of one of them. <lb/>
lived our said <lb/>
the little girl who was the visitor, <lb/>
since before I was <lb/>
answered the <lb/>
little girl who was at homo; <lb/>
lived in this house fifteen years <lb/>
Youth's Companion. <lb/>
Ware Kilted. <lb/>
dispatch to <lb/>
the from Milan <lb/>
persons were and in- <lb/>
in a collision at station. <lb/>
Nearly passenger on the train <lb/>
was injured. It is stated that a ma- <lb/>
of the killed and injured were <lb/>
emigrants going to America by way of<lb/>
Laid to aha Tariff. <lb/>
Boston, December <lb/>
torn Worsted company, with mills at <lb/>
Newton, Mass., has formally notified <lb/>
its operatives the of <lb/>
the tariff by the law will <lb/>
make it absolute necessary to reduce <lb/>
wages or stop the mills. These <lb/>
have been operated for years <lb/>
without <lb/>
MATTERS NOT TO BE OMITTED. <lb/>
E. Tyler, in Chronicle. <lb/>
One of the sins of the scribes <lb/>
and Pharisees, which called forth <lb/>
stern words of rebuke from the <lb/>
Savior, was that though they had <lb/>
paid tithes of mint and anise and <lb/>
they had omitted the <lb/>
weightier matters of the law, <lb/>
judgment, mercy and faith. Matt.<lb/>
I have had sufficient acquaint- <lb/>
with the so-called household <lb/>
of faith to learn, I am sorry to <lb/>
say, that there are many who <lb/>
have but a develop- <lb/>
of morality. With them to <lb/>
and sing and go to meeting <lb/>
seem to be the all-important <lb/>
things. They can run up bills at <lb/>
the store, they owe for their rent, <lb/>
they owe for their religious pa <lb/>
per, they owe the tax-collector, <lb/>
they owe the butcher, the baker, <lb/>
the candlestick maker, and about <lb/>
everybody else who trust them. <lb/>
And they seem to be perfectly <lb/>
easy, perfectly indifferent to these <lb/>
obligations. Will the Lord <lb/>
of such loose conduct <lb/>
No, he will not- A man will be <lb/>
damned as quickly for failing to <lb/>
pay his honest debts as for deny- <lb/>
tho faith or grieving the <lb/>
Spirit in any other way. I do <lb/>
think this sin is confined to <lb/>
tho laity. There are men in the <lb/>
sacred office of tho ministry who <lb/>
bills and who fail to <lb/>
make proper explanations for <lb/>
their neglect paying. Such <lb/>
arc dishonest men and unworthy <lb/>
tho confidence of Christians. <lb/>
Another matter <lb/>
omitted is regard to keeping <lb/>
engagements. A person agrees <lb/>
to at a certain at such a <lb/>
time- It is to be expected that he <lb/>
will do just as he agrees, or <lb/>
a satisfactory reason going. <lb/>
Preachers make appointments <lb/>
fail to keep them or to send a <lb/>
substitute. Why Bach looseness <lb/>
of it is disgraceful. <lb/>
The engagement should <lb/>
binding as a note, and <lb/>
often tho consequences are far <lb/>
more momentous. For where a <lb/>
preacher is expected and does <lb/>
appear some soul may <lb/>
away from tho church to come no <lb/>
more- We have no confidence <lb/>
a profession who fails to <lb/>
keep his engagements or give a <lb/>
satisfactory reason. <lb/>
In the days of our father's a re- <lb/>
man's word was as <lb/>
his note, men would go <lb/>
through of weather to <lb/>
fulfill an agreement. They con- <lb/>
it binding upon them. <lb/>
If they could not pay as they <lb/>
agreed they went just tho same <lb/>
stated their situation. To- <lb/>
day, if it is convenient and all <lb/>
things are favorable, they will <lb/>
but if not their promise is <lb/>
ignored and they take the liberty <lb/>
to do just as they please. <lb/>
meet some men who seem to have <lb/>
had no moral training their <lb/>
youth, and perhaps this is the <lb/>
for their slovenly habits- <lb/>
Justice and equity and honesty <lb/>
occupy a very small place in their <lb/>
hearts. They may be able to talk <lb/>
fluently write copiously but <lb/>
they are poor timber with which to <lb/>
make good or to fill <lb/>
pisses of trust and responsibility <lb/>
We do not like to deal with such <lb/>
men- It is that there <lb/>
are some communities still where <lb/>
such a sense of honor prevails <lb/>
that this sort of people are not <lb/>
held in high esteem. No gift nor <lb/>
grace DOT zeal will take tho place <lb/>
of strict honesty, integrity, and <lb/>
personal honor. <lb/>
honest man though e'er sac <lb/>
1- man for <lb/>
The Eastern I <lb/>
he Atlanta Constitution I <lb/>
he Now York World <lb/>
ALL ONE YEAR FOR 92.25 <lb/>
Subscribe at Reflector <lb/>
This Office for Job Printing <lb/>
the Serpent's <lb/>
In its <lb/>
BLOOD POISON lam and ulcer <lb/>
to ha <lb/>
it removes the i up the system <lb/>
A treatise on the disease and its <lb/>
mailed free. <lb/>
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. <lb/>
WHAT NAMES MEAN. <lb/>
Chandler was once a candle- <lb/>
make <lb/>
Pointer and had fathers <lb/>
who made lace. <lb/>
Skinner's great-great grand- <lb/>
father dealt in hides. <lb/>
Tanner comes from the name of <lb/>
a leather dresser. <lb/>
Payne, Paine and the con- <lb/>
tractions of Pagan. <lb/>
and formerly <lb/>
entertained travelers. <lb/>
Seymour the <lb/>
descendants of tailors. <lb/>
and Crocker had <lb/>
who made earthenware. <lb/>
Stammer and <lb/>
of physical infirmity. <lb/>
Winter <lb/>
keepers of a vineyard- <lb/>
and Plummer prepared <lb/>
feathers for hats. <lb/>
Pear, and <lb/>
kept pear or- <lb/>
chards. <lb/>
and once <lb/>
the names of manumitted slaves. <lb/>
was formerly a herd, hence <lb/>
the and <lb/>
Block, Blocker and <lb/>
are the sons of men who fashion- <lb/>
ed hats. <lb/>
Reynolds, and <lb/>
descendants of Rey- <lb/>
tho fox. <lb/>
Simon gave us Sims, <lb/>
Simpson, and <lb/>
is a descendant of the <lb/>
or dealer who handled <lb/>
foreign spices. <lb/>
Hooper, Hopper and <lb/>
came from families supported by <lb/>
was once a herd ; <lb/>
so also the Coverts <lb/>
and <lb/>
Miller, Mills, <lb/>
Mil ward, all have tho BOOM <lb/>
Armstrong was once a <lb/>
given to a soldier <lb/>
of unusual prowess. <lb/>
first name was John. <lb/>
He died in 1337. and his <lb/>
glad of it. <lb/>
is a of the <lb/>
old village watchman; so are <lb/>
Wake and <lb/>
Pattens overshoes, <lb/>
tho <lb/>
and <lb/>
was a drummer, and <lb/>
his sons are tho Tabors <lb/>
and Tubers of to-day. <lb/>
is a descendant of him <lb/>
who clinked daubed the cot- <lb/>
walls with wot clay. <lb/>
Johnson, Jones, Jenkins, Jen- <lb/>
Jacks, Jackson, Littlejohn, <lb/>
and many <lb/>
other are the sous of plain John. <lb/>
Strong, Long. Short, <lb/>
Little, Lowe, Small, Slight, <lb/>
Stout, Young, Light and Heavy, <lb/>
all given as nicknames. <lb/>
Huggins, Hutchins, <lb/>
son, <lb/>
Hughes and <lb/>
lieu are all sons of plain <lb/>
Hugh. <lb/>
A Site Place in a m. <lb/>
New York <lb/>
Tho Chippewa say that <lb/>
the beech tree is never struck <lb/>
lightning, and whenever a <lb/>
overtakes them, they <lb/>
seek shelter under its <lb/>
Strange to say, there appears to <lb/>
be some foundations for their <lb/>
curious belief. The writer <lb/>
remember ever having seen a <lb/>
I beech tree that had been shatter- <lb/>
ed by a and lumber- <lb/>
men, who have spent most of their <lb/>
lives in the woods agree with the <lb/>
Indians ; but no one seems <lb/>
to give any reason why this <lb/>
should be so favored. Tho trees <lb/>
most frequently struck by <lb/>
are oaks and elms, and it is <lb/>
wiser to remain in the open and <lb/>
I get soaked than to <lb/>
I seek shelter under them, when a <lb/>
l i is raging. <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
TIMES HAVE CHANGED. <lb/>
Obi have passed away and all <lb/>
things have Mn new. My old <lb/>
stew of good have been sold out <lb/>
and a new stock has taken its <lb/>
The old was replaced <lb/>
by the new because my <lb/>
LOW DOWN PRICES <lb/>
the people and keep the goods <lb/>
moving. Now listen to a few plain <lb/>
I know times are hard and <lb/>
money scarce just as well as the man <lb/>
who raises cotton, corn and tobacco, <lb/>
awl going to hell goods just as low <lb/>
as any honest dealer can afford to sell. <lb/>
tot every dollar spent with me you will <lb/>
get the. worth of your money. I keep a <lb/>
complete stock of <lb/>
General Merchandise, <lb/>
Dry Goods, Notions <lb/>
Boots, Shoes, Hats, <lb/>
Caps and Gents <lb/>
Furnishing Goods, <lb/>
Clothing <lb/>
at any price a man can want. Also a <lb/>
full stock of <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
Cotton Bagging Ties.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017628_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
S. J. Loiter mil <lb/>
WEDNESDAY. <lb/>
at <lb/>
N. C. as second-class mail matter. <lb/>
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb/>
I The Reflector is 1.00 per veer. <lb/>
Advertising Rates.- One <lb/>
one year, <lb/>
one-quarter column one <lb/>
Transient Inch <lb/>
wk, ; two weeks, one <lb/>
month Two week, 1.50, <lb/>
two weeks, one month, <lb/>
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb/>
Column as reading items, cents per <lb/>
line for each insertion. <lb/>
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad <lb/>
and Notices <lb/>
and Sales. <lb/>
to Non-Residents, etc., will <lb/>
be charged for at legal rates and must <lb/>
BE PAID FOR IN ADVANCE. <lb/>
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb/>
above, for any length of time, can be <lb/>
made by application to the office either <lb/>
In person or by letter. <lb/>
Copy tor Advertisements and <lb/>
all changes of advertisements should lie <lb/>
landed in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb/>
mornings in order to receive prompt in- <lb/>
the following. <lb/>
The Virgins General Assembly <lb/>
met last Wednesday, and among <lb/>
its first business was the election <lb/>
of United States Senators, one for <lb/>
a short term to fill the unexpired <lb/>
term of the late Senate <lb/>
and the other for a Ion term of <lb/>
six years. General as <lb/>
was expected was elected for the <lb/>
short term, he having been <lb/>
appointed by the Gov- <lb/>
It was also expected <lb/>
that the gallant soldier and states- <lb/>
man. Gen. Fitz Lee, would be <lb/>
elected for the long term, but by <lb/>
some unexplainable <lb/>
he was defeated, and that too <lb/>
by one Hon. Thomas S- Martin, <lb/>
who it seems was hardly known <lb/>
before except as a lawyer of some <lb/>
prominence. This was a disappoint <lb/>
not only in Virginia but <lb/>
elsewhere. Virginia papers say <lb/>
there was treachery, and many <lb/>
of the legislators have been round- <lb/>
denounced for the course they <lb/>
pursued. To say the least of it, <lb/>
the Old Dominion does herself <lb/>
no credit when she goes back an <lb/>
a Lee. <lb/>
We print on supplement to-Jay <lb/>
Mr. Cleveland's message. As a <lb/>
paper full of general information <lb/>
upon the state and condition of <lb/>
the government both foreign and <lb/>
domestic it is fine message. As <lb/>
to its recommendations they are <lb/>
Very few. The message is very <lb/>
different from what was expected <lb/>
but we don't know that this makes <lb/>
it any the less a valuable paper- <lb/>
Mr. Cleveland has convictions <lb/>
and ho dares express them and is <lb/>
very little influenced by the clam- <lb/>
ors of the people- In reference <lb/>
to our financial policy he says <lb/>
more time is necessary for wise <lb/>
action- He evidently desires to <lb/>
see the financial policy of this <lb/>
government when established by <lb/>
further legislation to be of such a <lb/>
character that it will stand the <lb/>
test and not always be a matter <lb/>
of contention. He says delay will <lb/>
enable Congress to act with more <lb/>
wisdom. In reference to the <lb/>
Hawaiian matter he fully approves <lb/>
of the action of Secretary Gresham <lb/>
and Mr- Blount. but says he will <lb/>
communicate farther on this mat- <lb/>
to Congress. He is now writ- <lb/>
another message upon this <lb/>
subject. His views upon the <lb/>
service will find no sympathy <lb/>
in the South. We believe the <lb/>
whole thing is a humbug. He <lb/>
advises strict economy in all pub- <lb/>
matters. He thinks the pen- <lb/>
roll should be of honor <lb/>
and in consequence favors much <lb/>
reform along this line. Upon the <lb/>
tariff he is pointed and writes <lb/>
sensibly. He takes no backward <lb/>
step but believes it tho most <lb/>
question before Congress. <lb/>
The message taken altogether is <lb/>
not equal to the former ones of <lb/>
Mr. Cleveland and in consequence <lb/>
is somewhat disappointing to his <lb/>
friends. Nevertheless it is a good <lb/>
State paper and is generally <lb/>
recognized. <lb/>
of the officials of the Treasury de- <lb/>
shown that the de- <lb/>
in revenue caused by the <lb/>
reductions in duties <lb/>
of the free list made by the <lb/>
new tariff bill would be in <lb/>
the neighborhood of <lb/>
which was some more <lb/>
than had been estimated by <lb/>
the Ways and Means com- <lb/>
This, of course, <lb/>
t revision of the internal <lb/>
revenue bill, which is to be made <lb/>
to supply the deficiency caused <lb/>
by the tariff bill. Among the new <lb/>
propositions submitted to the <lb/>
this week was one from <lb/>
Representative Hatch, of Mis- <lb/>
to tax the transactions of <lb/>
the stock and produce exchanges, <lb/>
instead of tho earnings of <lb/>
rations, which had been previous- <lb/>
agreed upon by the committee. <lb/>
Mr- Hatch thinks such a tax <lb/>
would be felt less than any yet <lb/>
proposed. <lb/>
As there is no estimate for the <lb/>
expenses of the Bureau of Amer- <lb/>
Republics in the figures sub- <lb/>
by Secretary Gresham, for <lb/>
the next fiscal year, it is safe to <lb/>
say that there will soon be no <lb/>
Bureau of American Republics. <lb/>
It was a sort of a side attachment <lb/>
to the beautiful-on <lb/>
reciprocity Its cost <lb/>
has been annually about <lb/>
for salaries, and the <lb/>
it has been to the country <lb/>
has been Sec- <lb/>
Morton regards the money <lb/>
spent at the forty-eight <lb/>
experimental stations <lb/>
one in each State and Territory <lb/>
as largely wasted, and having re <lb/>
commended in his annual report <lb/>
that they be abolished he left the <lb/>
which it would require <lb/>
to run them out of his estimates <lb/>
for next year. <lb/>
The probability of a change in <lb/>
the Senate rules is very slight, <lb/>
although there are several pro- <lb/>
posed amendments now before <lb/>
the committee on Rules, of which <lb/>
Senator Blackburn, of Kentucky, <lb/>
is chairman. The other Demo- <lb/>
on the committee are Sena- <lb/>
tors Harris, of Tennessee, and <lb/>
Gorman, of The ac- <lb/>
of the Republican caucus in <lb/>
deciding not to to <lb/>
vent a vote on the Wilson tariff <lb/>
bill when it gets to the Senate <lb/>
has weakened the desire for a <lb/>
change to a noticeable extent. <lb/>
Governor elect O. of <lb/>
Virginia, will retain his seat in <lb/>
the House until the Christmas <lb/>
recess, as his resignation will not <lb/>
take effect until the 28th inst. He <lb/>
will be inaugurated Governor on <lb/>
the first day of January and will, <lb/>
contrary to custom, deliver an in- <lb/>
address, something that <lb/>
has been done by only one other <lb/>
governor of that State the <lb/>
war. He has been warmly con- <lb/>
by his colleagues with <lb/>
whom he is deservedly popular. <lb/>
Congress got down to work <lb/>
very smoothly. The regular <lb/>
in the House is the <lb/>
bankruptcy bill, which will be <lb/>
disposed of late this week or <lb/>
early in the coming week. The <lb/>
Senate has listened to some stump <lb/>
speeches on the Hawaiian <lb/>
and taken up its routine <lb/>
work in its usually leisurely man- <lb/>
A concurrent resolution was <lb/>
unanimously adopted by Congress <lb/>
accepting the bronze statue of <lb/>
Gen. James Shields, which was <lb/>
unveiled by a daughter of Gen. <lb/>
Shields, in the Statuary Hall of <lb/>
the Capitol, Wednesday after- <lb/>
noon, thanking Illinois for <lb/>
having presented the statue- The <lb/>
ceremonies attending the unveil- <lb/>
were imposing and interest- <lb/>
and were participated in by a <lb/>
large number of prominent people, <lb/>
including Gov. whose <lb/>
oration in honor of the <lb/>
jurist and made a <lb/>
splendid impression upon those <lb/>
who heard it- <lb/>
It is not probable that any of <lb/>
the regular appropriation bills <lb/>
will be reported until it can be <lb/>
seen from the tariff and internal <lb/>
revenue bills just how much <lb/>
revenue there will to draw <lb/>
against, although Chairman <lb/>
Sayers of the Appropriations <lb/>
committee has several of them in <lb/>
a condition to be reported at an <lb/>
hour's notice. <lb/>
so <lb/>
COMMISSIONERS- MEETING. <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
our <lb/>
D C, Dec. <lb/>
Secretary has not com- <lb/>
his annual report and does <lb/>
not expect to finish it before next <lb/>
week. It will probably be one <lb/>
of the longest and most <lb/>
papers of its kind ever <lb/>
submitted to Congress, owing to <lb/>
the bad condition in which the <lb/>
Republicans left the finances of <lb/>
the country. The absence of this <lb/>
although not the only <lb/>
reason, was one of the principal <lb/>
reasons for the delay in getting <lb/>
the mm tariff bill before the <lb/>
House- It would have been <lb/>
sufficient of itself, as it is <lb/>
for that report to be in the <lb/>
hands of members before they <lb/>
take up the tariff <lb/>
Chairman Wilson's present in- <lb/>
is to report the tariff bill <lb/>
to the House next Wednesday, <lb/>
and he hopes to be able to make <lb/>
public its twin measure, the in- <lb/>
revenue bill, at about the <lb/>
same time- The last named bill <lb/>
would have been ready before <lb/>
this ha J not the revised <lb/>
N. C, Dec i, <lb/>
The Commissioners of Pitt <lb/>
county met in regular monthly <lb/>
session on the above date. Pres- <lb/>
C. Dawson, chairman, S. A. <lb/>
Gainer, T. E. Keel, Leonidas <lb/>
Fleming and Jesse L- Smith. <lb/>
The first business of the Board <lb/>
was an election of a chairman for <lb/>
the ensuing year, which resulted <lb/>
in the re-election of C- Dawson. <lb/>
The following pauper orders <lb/>
were issued <lb/>
Martha Nelson Margaret <lb/>
Bryan 3.00. H D Smith Lydia <lb/>
Bryan 2-00, Jacob <lb/>
1.50, Nancy Moore Susan <lb/>
Norris 1-50, Susan Briley 2.50, <lb/>
Lucinda Smith 1.50, Patsy Lock- <lb/>
Henry Harris 2-50, Ben- <lb/>
Crawford 1.50, <lb/>
Smith 1.50, Kenneth Henderson <lb/>
Eliza Edwards 1.50, Carlos <lb/>
Gorham 2.00, J H 2-00, Hen- <lb/>
Sam and Amy Cher- <lb/>
i-00, Fannie Tucker 1.00, J O <lb/>
6.00, Alice Corbitt 3.00, <lb/>
Jordan and Andrews 3-00, <lb/>
Polly 3-00, Patsy Stocks 1.00, <lb/>
Easter Vines Martha Bryan <lb/>
Wm A Jones 2-50, Alex <lb/>
12.00, David <lb/>
James Long 14.00, Butts <lb/>
Taylor 6.00. <lb/>
The following general orders <lb/>
were <lb/>
B S Sheppard 5.03, E A <lb/>
J A Harrington 5-15, C Kin- <lb/>
G W Edmondson 1.60, <lb/>
D C Moore Dr. B T Cox <lb/>
J D Cox 1.09, W P <lb/>
2.00, E F Williams G M Smith <lb/>
1.65, L A Wetherington 2.55, <lb/>
O Hooker W T Smith 135.06. <lb/>
Abraham Venable 2.00, W F <lb/>
Harrington F G Dupree <lb/>
C V Newton 12-84, E L Worth- <lb/>
5.60, J B Bullock 6.50, D. <lb/>
C Smith 1.10, J B Co <lb/>
2-95 Dr W H Bagwell 23-00, J O <lb/>
Horton E A Bland 13.26, Dr <lb/>
F W Brown Dr W E War- <lb/>
16.00, Dr W E Warren <lb/>
B S Sheppard <lb/>
The following persons were <lb/>
lowed to list their taxes for the <lb/>
year <lb/>
township- John <lb/>
Abrams, loom Austin, <lb/>
Webb, D S Langley, Ambrose <lb/>
Daniel, J H Langley agent T B <lb/>
Tilman, Latham, Bright <lb/>
Ellis, J J Harris, Dennis Simmons <lb/>
Lumber Co- <lb/>
Carolina C Little, <lb/>
Wm G Whitfield. <lb/>
Bethel C. Daven- <lb/>
port, J S Peel, J W Martin. <lb/>
Beaver Dam <lb/>
Strickland, James H Beardsley- <lb/>
Farmville <lb/>
Tyson, John Joyner, Windsor <lb/>
Joyner, J J Langley, Val Jordan, <lb/>
H A Kittrell, Jolly Atkinson. <lb/>
Falkland C Gard- <lb/>
agent for B F Eagles, <lb/>
Joyner, J F Edwards, Mrs Amy <lb/>
Parker, S M Crisp, J A A Forbes, <lb/>
Elias Carr agent for Atkinson <lb/>
heirs, Mattie E Vines, Wm H <lb/>
Moore, L B Harding agent for M <lb/>
E Mayo, Elias Carr, R R Cotten <lb/>
agent for N Colin Hughes, An <lb/>
drew Joyner agent for A Braswell, <lb/>
John H Johnson, Elmira Rives <lb/>
S V Joyner receiver for B S At- <lb/>
heirs. <lb/>
an, Moses Whitley, Mrs Mary <lb/>
Haddock. <lb/>
Swift Creek township B J <lb/>
Joyner, Jesse Brown, D W H <lb/>
Smith, S S Rasberry, David C <lb/>
B F Hardy, Jesse Hardy, <lb/>
Chas S Smith, J H John S <lb/>
Freeman, Wilson. J T Moore. <lb/>
township. B S <lb/>
Byrd. Marian Harris, Jas H Jones, <lb/>
Nelson, Mrs Sarah Ann <lb/>
ton, Silas W B <lb/>
Moore agent for Mary E Hardy, <lb/>
G J Russell, H H Hardy, Henry <lb/>
Tripp, J J J H Cobb, <lb/>
W J Slaughter, Caleb Worthing- <lb/>
ton agent for Wm Cash, Mrs <lb/>
Mary Haddock, Abram Cox, Pen- <lb/>
E Tripp, Isaac C Hardy, L J <lb/>
Chapman Co. <lb/>
township-J E Warren <lb/>
Marian Harris. <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Moore, F Ward administrator of <lb/>
Brown heirs, Edward Braxton, J <lb/>
A A Forbes, E <lb/>
W W R R Co, Louisa King, <lb/>
Greenville Tobacco Warehouses <lb/>
J W Allen, Wm J J <lb/>
Cherry, Jr. Mrs M J Parker. <lb/>
John N Vaughan, H <lb/>
C R A Tyson, Carolina <lb/>
Paint Manufacturing Co, <lb/>
Randolph, John <lb/>
ton, Noah W <lb/>
Tyson, J W Dr C J <lb/>
for C J Jr, <lb/>
Dr C J E C Williams, <lb/>
Wm Murray. <lb/>
Ordered that the taxes on <lb/>
D May's land be reduced from <lb/>
to <lb/>
The following were released <lb/>
from the payment of poll <lb/>
J W Hardy. H D Manning. <lb/>
Henry Ward, James Stevens, L <lb/>
B Adams, B F Exum. <lb/>
Ordered that the valuation of <lb/>
Mary Peyton's land be reduced <lb/>
from to <lb/>
Ordered that the valuation of <lb/>
acres of land of J D Cox be re- <lb/>
to <lb/>
Wm was released <lb/>
from tax on two dogs. <lb/>
Dr W H Bagwell submitted his <lb/>
monthly report as Superintendent <lb/>
of Health which was ordered on <lb/>
file. <lb/>
The Board then adjourned. <lb/>
SECOND <lb/>
December 5th, 1893. <lb/>
The Board re bled and <lb/>
transacted the following <lb/>
Warren T was <lb/>
pointed as deputy sheriff and took <lb/>
oath of office- <lb/>
The report of Henry Harding, <lb/>
Register of Deeds, was received, <lb/>
approved and ordered recorded. <lb/>
Cornelius was elected <lb/>
bridge keeper for the next <lb/>
months. <lb/>
W T Smith was elected Super <lb/>
of the Home for the <lb/>
Aged and Infirm. <lb/>
E A clerk superior court, <lb/>
H Harding, register of deeds, R <lb/>
W King, sheriff, John Flanagan, <lb/>
treasurer, presented their annual <lb/>
reports which were examined, <lb/>
proved and ordered recorded. <lb/>
E A clerk superior court <lb/>
H Harding, of deeds, R <lb/>
W King, sheriff, W E Warren, <lb/>
coroner, John B Kilpatrick, <lb/>
G W Edmondson, <lb/>
of Bethel township, J A <lb/>
constable of <lb/>
township, B J Bullock, constable <lb/>
of township, Dennis C <lb/>
Smith, constable of Swift Creek <lb/>
township, H N Gray, constable of <lb/>
Carolina township, G M Smith, <lb/>
constable of Falkland township, <lb/>
W B Carson, constable of <lb/>
township, Alfred Joyner, con- <lb/>
stable of Farmville township, <lb/>
their several official bonds <lb/>
which were examined, approved <lb/>
and ordered to be recorded. <lb/>
The following were allowed to <lb/>
list their taxes for <lb/>
A Ran- <lb/>
J W Tyson, A J <lb/>
bridge, Alice L Stancill, R W <lb/>
Stancill, T J Stancill, Mary V <lb/>
Forbes, Emma Little, Jas F Stan- <lb/>
Ella V Stancill. <lb/>
Lydia Staton, pauper, was <lb/>
lowed <lb/>
The following general orders <lb/>
were <lb/>
D J 6.00, W B <lb/>
son 65.00, W S Manning 2-95, J D <lb/>
Button R W King R <lb/>
W King 12.90, Blow <lb/>
W B Carson 1.20, C Dawson 9.80- <lb/>
Adjourned. <lb/>
RAY. <lb/>
December 6th, 1893. <lb/>
Board re-assembled, S A Gain- <lb/>
T E Keel and Leonidas Flem- <lb/>
in <lb/>
of the chairman S A Gain- <lb/>
was elected chairman pro tern <lb/>
Ordered that T E Keel and Le <lb/>
Fleming be appointed as <lb/>
committee to examine and report <lb/>
upon magistrates returns. <lb/>
Ordered that the Board as a <lb/>
committee of the whole meet on <lb/>
the 16th of December to visit the <lb/>
Home of the Aged and Infirm and <lb/>
inspect the jail. Ordered further <lb/>
that the clerk notify C Dawson <lb/>
and Jesse L. Smith to meet with <lb/>
the Board on the 16th for the <lb/>
purpose above stated. <lb/>
The resignation of Warren <lb/>
Tucker as stock law fence commit <lb/>
accepted and Jesse <lb/>
R Move appointed in his place- <lb/>
Ordered that J A K <lb/>
tax collector for 1892, be allowed <lb/>
the sum of as insolvent <lb/>
taxes for said year. <lb/>
J W Hardy was exempted from <lb/>
poll tax for 1893 and that the <lb/>
sheriff refund him the amount <lb/>
already paid for 1893. <lb/>
Ordered that the room in the <lb/>
Court House formerly occupied <lb/>
by the superintendent of public <lb/>
instruction be rented to Jesse L <lb/>
Sugg for per month, and that <lb/>
the same be subject to be revoked <lb/>
whenever needed for other <lb/>
poses. <lb/>
Ordered that the clerk place <lb/>
upon the tax list in the hands of <lb/>
sheriff all delinquent tax listers <lb/>
and charge each delinquent with <lb/>
double tax upon all the property <lb/>
listed by them on the tax list for <lb/>
1892. <lb/>
The following general orders <lb/>
were <lb/>
Albert 5.50, S A Gainer <lb/>
7.60, T E Keel 18.80, L Fleming <lb/>
11.50, Henry Harding 152-51. <lb/>
R W King, sheriff, presented <lb/>
his report showing that ht had <lb/>
summoned a jury and laid out a <lb/>
public road from to <lb/>
Bethel in accordance with <lb/>
by the Board at June meet- <lb/>
the jury agreeing that Mrs <lb/>
Martha Whitehurst shall have <lb/>
and W D Manning for <lb/>
damages to the land of Mrs <lb/>
Whitehurst and the rent thereof <lb/>
to the use of Manning. The <lb/>
Board confirmed the report upon <lb/>
condition that the petitioners pay <lb/>
the damages assessed by the <lb/>
jury as above stated. <lb/>
ported dangerously ill with <lb/>
fever. He returned Sat- <lb/>
night and reported his <lb/>
condition better. <lb/>
Our Mayor and Constable <lb/>
both went to Greenville last Mon- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Our township constable G- W. <lb/>
Edmondson is now <lb/>
ed the taxes of Bethel <lb/>
and Carolina Township. <lb/>
Miss Eloise of <lb/>
and Miss Mollie <lb/>
of Greenville, have been visiting <lb/>
Mrs. T. T. Cherry the past week- <lb/>
Mies Mary Whitehead, of Scot- <lb/>
land Neck, who has been <lb/>
her sister, Mrs. T. T. Cherry, left <lb/>
for home this morning. <lb/>
Mr. Andrew Joyner, of Green- <lb/>
ville spent Sunday and Sunday <lb/>
night in town. He delivered an <lb/>
able and eloquent lecture in <lb/>
Methodist church Sunday even- <lb/>
to a large and attentive <lb/>
on Intemperance. His speech <lb/>
made a fine impression. <lb/>
Two white men, Herbert Russ and <lb/>
Ernest Jones, near Kinston, got Into a <lb/>
dispute Saturday as to which should <lb/>
get down load of fodder and open <lb/>
a gate. After hot words both got down <lb/>
to light. Russ drew a knife and Jones <lb/>
struck him with a long cart <lb/>
ling him with the blow. Jones was <lb/>
put In jail at Kinston. <lb/>
Hood's Cures <lb/>
Annie I. Amer <lb/>
Of Ky. <lb/>
More Than Pleased <lb/>
With Hood's Tot <lb/>
and Mood <lb/>
Stronger and Better in <lb/>
I hare boon more than pleased with Hood's <lb/>
I hare suffered with totter break- <lb/>
out on my face and all over my body all my <lb/>
I never could And acting to do It good <lb/>
until I began to take Hood's I <lb/>
have now about eight bottles, and Oh, <lb/>
done me so much good that I hay the <lb/>
Hood's s Cures <lb/>
filth In It and recommend It to everyone. Besides <lb/>
purifying my blood. It has made ma so much <lb/>
stronger and better I do not like the <lb/>
parson at Augusta, p. <lb/>
Hood's Pills act easily, yet <lb/>
anciently, on the liver and bowels. Z Jo. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
Wood, postmaster <lb/>
Hill, was in town <lb/>
on Items. <lb/>
Grifton, N. C, Dec. 1893. <lb/>
Several of our citizens attend- <lb/>
ed court the past week. <lb/>
Mr. Green Harper the <lb/>
pion livery man of Kinston, was <lb/>
in town Wednesday last. <lb/>
W. <lb/>
at Fountain <lb/>
Friday. <lb/>
Capt. S. D. Pope, of <lb/>
was in town Saturday. <lb/>
The laughing man is still in <lb/>
town, Mr. E. a nice <lb/>
little girl. <lb/>
Messrs Loon Dawson and <lb/>
Charlie Spier, of Maple Cypress, <lb/>
were in town Sunday. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Johnson, of <lb/>
Centerville, were visiting relatives <lb/>
in town Sunday. <lb/>
Mr. W. J- Pope, of Fountain <lb/>
Hill, was in town Saturday. <lb/>
Rev. J. It. Tingle pastor of the <lb/>
Christian here, filled his <lb/>
pulpit on Sunday and Sunday <lb/>
night- <lb/>
Mr. Clarence Whichard, of <lb/>
Greenville, spent Saturday even- <lb/>
till Monday with friends here- <lb/>
The Ladies of the Christian <lb/>
church at this place will give for <lb/>
the benefit of the church debt an <lb/>
One of Green county's widowers <lb/>
was in town Sunday, Mr. Thomas <lb/>
He is a candidate <lb/>
and one vote will elect him- Look <lb/>
out girls. <lb/>
Our clever railroad agent, Mr. <lb/>
J- J. Rhodes has moved in town, <lb/>
much to his convenience and took <lb/>
his family over to Kinston <lb/>
day evening to visit his parents <lb/>
till Monday. <lb/>
We are glad to know that an- <lb/>
other freight has been put on the <lb/>
Scotland Neck branch from <lb/>
don to Kinston. and the traveling <lb/>
public will not be put to so much <lb/>
inconvenience on account of de- <lb/>
trains. <lb/>
Don't forget that <lb/>
FRANK WILSON <lb/>
CARRIES THE FINEST LINE OF <lb/>
In Town All the latest styles. <lb/>
-o<lb/>
A Large stock to select from. <lb/>
Parmele Items <lb/>
N. C, Dec , U. 1893. <lb/>
Master Gus returned <lb/>
last Tuesday from his home in <lb/>
Siler City, N. G <lb/>
Mr. John Crowell. foreman of <lb/>
the Martin Biggs <lb/>
Co., of Williamston, was here <lb/>
last Monday. <lb/>
Mr. E. of Rich- <lb/>
paid us a call last <lb/>
Wednesday. <lb/>
There was a reception at the <lb/>
Parmele club house yesterday. <lb/>
Your correspondent the <lb/>
turkey. <lb/>
Miss Allie Little was in town <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
Mrs. F. Gardner Co. are <lb/>
moving into their store to- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. F. have <lb/>
moved in their new house on Sam- <lb/>
street. <lb/>
Mr. Lee Bell flower will open a <lb/>
grocery business in the store for <lb/>
occupied by Gardner Co. <lb/>
Mrs. Mobley, of Everetts, is <lb/>
visiting Mrs. B- F. Gainer. <lb/>
Mr. J. Little spent yesterday <lb/>
in Bethel. <lb/>
Miss Cora Khan has returned to <lb/>
Parmele <lb/>
DRY GOODS <lb/>
NOTIONS <lb/>
Must go also with the above <lb/>
All he asked is to come and see his stock and <lb/>
he will please you. <lb/>
CLOSING AT COST <lb/>
OUR ENTIRE STOCK MUST BE DISPOSED <lb/>
JANUARY 1st, <lb/>
and in order to do so will close it out at <lb/>
Cost for Gash. <lb/>
The opportunity of a life time. Everything must go. <lb/>
On the 1st of January a oh in our business will take place <lb/>
and we are to close entire stock out at cost- Come <lb/>
in look over our stock and see how cheap they are. <lb/>
GREENE, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
Mr. L Whitley has been <lb/>
added to the police force- <lb/>
By virtue of a decree rendered in a <lb/>
certain cause pending In the Superior <lb/>
to Stay until Christ Court of county, wherein <lb/>
Forbes A Co., are plaintiffs and <lb/>
Latham Skinner et are defendants, <lb/>
the undersigned, Commissioner duly <lb/>
authorized said decree, will sell at <lb/>
the Court House door In N. <lb/>
C. for cash, on Monday, Jany <lb/>
1894, the described real estate <lb/>
In county of Pitt, certain <lb/>
tract of land lying in Falkland town- <lb/>
ship, adjoining the lands of Margaret <lb/>
Willis B. Williams, Mis. <lb/>
Mr. William J. Bland had two <lb/>
before the Mayor last <lb/>
Saturday for stealing his watch. <lb/>
They were released because there <lb/>
was not sufficient proof of their <lb/>
guilt-<lb/>
Bethel Items. <lb/>
Bethel. N. C pea 1893, <lb/>
Mr. R. F- Gainer, of Parmele <lb/>
spent Sunday in town- <lb/>
Mr. T- T. Cherry made a flying <lb/>
trip to Hobgood to day on <lb/>
Mr. W. B. Highsmith of <lb/>
ton, New Jersey, is visiting his <lb/>
parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. High- <lb/>
smith in Carolina Township- He <lb/>
was in town to-day. <lb/>
Mr. Ford went to Fortress <lb/>
Monroe last Thursday to see his <lb/>
brother-in law who re- <lb/>
Newton and others, containing by <lb/>
acres, generally known as <lb/>
the Adam land; a certain lot or <lb/>
parcel of lying In the town of <lb/>
designated as lot No. In <lb/>
plan of said town and well known as <lb/>
I he old Thomas Nelson lot; a certain <lb/>
other lot in the town of Greenville, a <lb/>
part of lot No. In the plan of said <lb/>
town, and being same lot which was <lb/>
Conveyed to Harry Skinner by W. T. <lb/>
and by deed recorded In <lb/>
Book II. pages and lot of the <lb/>
public registry of Pitt county. <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
Seeding . <lb/>
u Is m <lb/>
aM <lb/>
To all who want goods that are all right we invite <lb/>
them to come to see us we will make the prices <lb/>
all right and satisfactory. We have, often <lb/>
been told we were a little high in <lb/>
price on some lines of Goods but <lb/>
our friends would always add <lb/>
that the quality of your <lb/>
goods is better than <lb/>
the lower priced <lb/>
goods costing <lb/>
more and <lb/>
demand- <lb/>
priced than the <lb/>
inferior goods. This <lb/>
is what we claim That we <lb/>
will meet competition on the <lb/>
different lines of Goods carried by <lb/>
us, quality being Come to <lb/>
see us, for we have stock a general as- <lb/>
and can supply your every want. <lb/>
FURNITURE. <lb/>
When we say that we have the largest and best lino <lb/>
of FURNITURE ever kept in our town. We <lb/>
make no mistake as a to our store will <lb/>
prove. Numbers of our customers ex- <lb/>
press surprise at our having such a <lb/>
large and well-selected stock <lb/>
on hand. Call on us for <lb/>
anything you may want <lb/>
in the Furniture <lb/>
line. We have <lb/>
just re- <lb/>
lovely line <lb/>
of CHAIRS. <lb/>
and <lb/>
ED ROCKERS in Silk <lb/>
Plush, Ac. These Chairs <lb/>
make nice Christmas presents <lb/>
and we would remind our friends <lb/>
not to overlook them when making <lb/>
purchases for Christmas as they will please. <lb/>
Sale of Valuable Per- <lb/>
Property. <lb/>
On 20th, ISM, at <lb/>
home of the late Samuel <lb/>
will expose to public sale, t the highest <lb/>
bidder for cash the following described <lb/>
personal property, to Five horses, <lb/>
seven mules, about bushels of cotton <lb/>
seed, fourteen head of cattle, five carts, <lb/>
two wagon, two buggies and <lb/>
phaeton, about barrels of <lb/>
about pounds of fodder, two corn <lb/>
two grain fans, about nineteen <lb/>
hogs, about thirty-live bales of cotton <lb/>
raised the present year, upon the Sam- <lb/>
farm, and also a lot of <lb/>
plows, hoes, gear and farming <lb/>
This sale is made by the power and <lb/>
authority given In two separate <lb/>
gages, the first executed by <lb/>
A. to Jemima Jan. <lb/>
nary 13th and duly recorded In <lb/>
the Register's of Pitt county In <lb/>
Book 476-70; the second <lb/>
given as additional security, executed <lb/>
by A. and Samuel <lb/>
to Jemima <lb/>
and recorded In Book <lb/>
MS- page The sale on the <lb/>
day above mentioned Is by agreement <lb/>
ind both the mortgagor and <lb/>
Sale will commence at <lb/>
o'clock A. M. <lb/>
JEMIMA <lb/>
This Nov. 26th, <lb/>
GUNS. <lb/>
Call on us for Guns and Gun <lb/>
Implements. have <lb/>
nice ones on hand will <lb/>
make the prices right. <lb/>
generally a joyous and <lb/>
Wishing all our friends and tho public <lb/>
happy Christmas, <lb/>
We remain, your friends, <lb/>
CHERRY CO. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED <lb/>
A. <lb/>
-WHOLESALE AND RETAIL <lb/>
SO Boxes C. R. Side Meat. <lb/>
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb/>
barrels Flour, all grades <lb/>
barrels Granulated Sugar, <lb/>
barrels C. Sugar, <lb/>
boxes Tobacco, <lb/>
barrels Mills <lb/>
barrels Three Thistle Snuff, <lb/>
barrels Gail Ax Sniff, <lb/>
barrels P. Snuff, <lb/>
cases Sardines. <lb/>
60.000 Luke Cigarettes, <lb/>
box s Cakes and Crackers, <lb/>
barrels ck Candy. <lb/>
kegs Rand's Powder. <lb/>
tons Shot, <lb/>
Broad Powders. <lb/>
cases Star Lye, <lb/>
barrels Apple Vinegar, <lb/>
cases Gold Dust Washing Powder <lb/>
rolls lb Bagging. <lb/>
i bundles <lb/>
Full stock of all other goods carried in my line. <lb/>
I is Hie a <lb/>
COOK STOVE f <lb/>
YOU CAN BUY ONE AT FENDER'S, GOOD COOK STOVES <lb/>
are now so cheap that you can not afford to buy an inferior <lb/>
Go to and buy the best <lb/>
THE <lb/>
THE <lb/>
GOLDEN <lb/>
GRAIN <lb/>
COOK <lb/>
FROM <lb/>
to <lb/>
ELMO, <lb/>
LIBERTY, <lb/>
THE <lb/>
ALLIANCE <lb/>
COOKS a <lb/>
tolls <lb/>
Tinware, Palate, Oils, Glass, Lamp Goods, <lb/>
and all kinds of Sheet Metal work <lb/>
Stoves repaired, Tin Roofing <lb/>
done- <lb/>
S. E. PENDER CO., <lb/>
N C Joshua <lb/>
COBB BROS CO.,<lb/>
AND---- <lb/>
Commission Merchants, <lb/>
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
Consignments and Correspondence Solicited. <lb/>
L. SUGG <lb/>
AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
OFFICE ft JAMES OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rates, <lb/>
AGENT FOB A FIRST-CLASS FLUE PROOF<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017628_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR-SUPPLEMENT.<lb/>
. . . <lb/>
Will be made on all Goods at <lb/>
LANG'S. <lb/>
mates attorneys, ox <lb/>
federal courts and United States com- <lb/>
missioners should be abolished with <lb/>
as little delay as possible. It is clearly <lb/>
in the interest of the community that <lb/>
the business of the courts, both civil <lb/>
and criminal, shall be as email and <lb/>
inexpensively transacted as the ends <lb/>
of justice will allow. <lb/>
I also heartily join the attorney <lb/>
general in recommending legislation <lb/>
fixing the degrees pf the crime of <lb/>
within the federal jurisdiction, as <lb/>
has been done in many of the states, <lb/>
authorizing writs of error on behalf of <lb/>
the government in cases where final <lb/>
is. rendered against the <lb/>
of an indictment or against <lb/>
the government upon any other <lb/>
arising before actual trial; limit- <lb/>
the right of review of cases of <lb/>
punishable only by fine and <lb/>
to the circuit court of <lb/>
peals and making speedy provision for <lb/>
the construction of such prisons and <lb/>
reformatories as may be tor <lb/>
the confinement of United States con- <lb/>
IN THE <lb/>
The of I the postmaster gen- <lb/>
contains a detailed statement of <lb/>
the operation of the depart- <lb/>
during the last fiscal year and <lb/>
much information touch- <lb/>
this branch of the pub- <lb/>
service. <lb/>
The business of the mails indicates <lb/>
with absolute certainty the condition <lb/>
pf the business of the country, and de- <lb/>
in financial affairs inevitably <lb/>
and quickly reduces the postal <lb/>
Therefore, a larger <lb/>
than usual between the post- <lb/>
receipts and expenditures is the <lb/>
and unavoidable result of <lb/>
distressing stringency which has <lb/>
prevailed throughout the country <lb/>
mack of tee time covered by the <lb/>
postmaster general's report. <lb/>
The receipts for the last <lb/>
fiscal year amounted to <lb/>
its expenditure to <lb/>
This deficiency would <lb/>
disappear if less matter was carried <lb/>
free thorough the an item of <lb/>
which is upward three hundred <lb/>
tons of seeds and grain from the <lb/>
cultural department <lb/>
The total number of In <lb/>
the United States on the 30th of June, <lb/>
1892, was in increase of 1,284 <lb/>
over the preceding year. Of these <lb/>
were presidential, an increase <lb/>
in that class of over the preceding <lb/>
There are now connected to the post- <lb/>
office establishment who <lb/>
He in the service. <lb/>
VALUE OF THE SERVICE. <lb/>
The head of this department gives <lb/>
inclusive evidence of the value of civil <lb/>
reform, when, after an experience <lb/>
that renders his conclusion reliable, he <lb/>
the opinion that without the <lb/>
benefit of this system would be <lb/>
to conduct the vast business en- <lb/>
trusted to him. <lb/>
I desire to commend as especially <lb/>
of prompt attention, the <lb/>
of the postmaster general relating <lb/>
to a more sensible and business-like or- <lb/>
and a better distribution of <lb/>
responsibility in his department. <lb/>
navy. <lb/>
The report of the secretary of the navy, <lb/>
contains a history of the operations of; <lb/>
department during the past year, <lb/>
exhibits a condition <lb/>
f the personnel of our navy. He <lb/>
tents a of the pro- <lb/>
which has been made in the <lb/>
of vessels and makes a number <lb/>
A recommendations to which attention <lb/>
is especially invited. <lb/>
f gm distinctly in favor con- <lb/>
the policy we have <lb/>
inaugurated of P a thorough <lb/>
and efficient refrain from <lb/>
the suggestion that should <lb/>
carefully take into account the <lb/>
vessels on hands and the de- <lb/>
our treasury in con- <lb/>
the propriety of an <lb/>
time to begin new work. <lb/>
SERVICE. <lb/>
The continued intelligent execution <lb/>
of hie the <lb/>
approval people by <lb/>
are most-gratifying. <lb/>
I am, if possible, more than ever con- <lb/>
of the incalculable benefits con- <lb/>
by the service law, not <lb/>
only in its upon the public <lb/>
vice, but also what is even more <lb/>
in its effect in elevating the <lb/>
generally. <lb/>
-TARIFF REFORM. <lb/>
After tariff reform <lb/>
attention an not- <lb/>
so clear presents itself ate <lb/>
a opportunity tend a duty, an <lb/>
j- too gratitude of our <lb/>
citizens and a duty imposed <lb/>
Upon Hf oft-repeated <lb/>
and by the-emphatic mandate of <lb/>
run <lb/>
men have spoken in favor of this re- <lb/>
form, and they have confided the work <lb/>
of its accomplishment to the hands of <lb/>
those who are solemnly pledged to it. <lb/>
Nothing should intervene to distract <lb/>
our attention or disturb our effort <lb/>
this reform is accomplished by wise <lb/>
and legislation. <lb/>
THE BILL. <lb/>
A been prepared by the <lb/>
appropriate congressional committee, <lb/>
embodying tariff reform on the lines <lb/>
herein suggested, which will be <lb/>
promptly submitted for legislative ac- <lb/>
It is the result of much patriotic <lb/>
and unselfish work, and I believe it <lb/>
deals with its subject consistently and <lb/>
as thoroughly as existing conditions <lb/>
permit. <lb/>
FOR AN INCOME TAX. <lb/>
The committee, after full <lb/>
and to provide against a temporary <lb/>
deficiency which may exist before the <lb/>
of the country adjusts <lb/>
to the new tariff schedules, have wisely <lb/>
embraced in their schedule a few <lb/>
internal revenue taxes, including <lb/>
a small tax upon income derived from <lb/>
certain corporate investments. <lb/>
These new assessments are not only <lb/>
absolutely just and easily borne, but <lb/>
they have the further merit of being <lb/>
such as can be remitted without <lb/>
hut-mess disturbance whenever <lb/>
the necessity for their imposition no <lb/>
longer exists. <lb/>
In my great desire for the success of <lb/>
chis measure. I cannot restrain the <lb/>
that its success can only be at- <lb/>
by means of unselfish counsel on <lb/>
the part of tariff reform, and us a result <lb/>
of their willingness to subordinate per- <lb/>
desires and ambitions to the gen- <lb/>
good. The local interests affected <lb/>
by the proposed reform are so numerous <lb/>
and so varied that if all are insisted <lb/>
upon the legislation embodying the re- <lb/>
form must inevitably fail. <lb/>
IN CONCLUSION. <lb/>
conclusion, my intense feeling of <lb/>
responsibility impels me to invoke for <lb/>
the manifold interests of a generous and <lb/>
confiding people the most scrupulous <lb/>
care, and to pledge my willing support <lb/>
to every legislative effort for the ad- <lb/>
of the greatness and pros- <lb/>
country, <lb/>
Executive Mansion, Washington, D. C, <lb/>
December <lb/>
THE INCOME TAX, <lb/>
It be a Feature of the Tariff <lb/>
Bill. <lb/>
THE COMMITTEE HAS SO DECIDED. <lb/>
To Apply Only to Inheritances and <lb/>
rations-Tho Tax not Fixed- <lb/>
Ten rents <lb/>
Only Deficiency. <lb/>
members proposition <lb/>
ably. <lb/>
fate uncertain. <lb/>
The committee has reached no <lb/>
as yet, regarding <lb/>
It is not likely that the tax will be in- <lb/>
creased beyond ten cents a gallon, <lb/>
with a fair probability that it may re- <lb/>
main untouched. <lb/>
The convention, called by <lb/>
Bishop Turner, of Georgia, met at <lb/>
last Tuesday, and was largely <lb/>
attended. Among the remedies pro- <lb/>
posed for inching was one by C. H. J. <lb/>
Taylor, providing for more speedy <lb/>
legal trial and the death penalty for <lb/>
rape. Bishop Turner advocated gov- <lb/>
eminent aid to African emigration. <lb/>
IN HATS. <lb/>
BRUNSWICK <lb/>
Washington, December in- <lb/>
come tax will be a conspicuous feature <lb/>
of the internal tax schedules, upon <lb/>
which a majority of the members of <lb/>
the ways and means committee are <lb/>
now working. <lb/>
The details of the plan are gradually <lb/>
assuming a definite form. <lb/>
It will exempt individual incomes <lb/>
and will apply only in-a general way <lb/>
to inheritance and corporations. <lb/>
how it worked <lb/>
Data furnished by the treasury de- <lb/>
shows that during the ten <lb/>
years the tax was in existence, the re- <lb/>
in round numbers were <lb/>
The high water mark was <lb/>
reached in During that year, <lb/>
the receipts aggregated <lb/>
in the year following they were <lb/>
000.000. <lb/>
The great increase in population <lb/>
and wealth since then leads the com- <lb/>
to believe that a tax on <lb/>
rations alone will furnish a <lb/>
amount of the revenue needed to <lb/>
supply the deficit caused by the <lb/>
in tariff duties. <lb/>
MILLION <lb/>
Chairman Wilson now believes that <lb/>
will cover the decrease in <lb/>
the revenue from imports caused by <lb/>
the bill just made public. He reached <lb/>
this conclusion after a careful <lb/>
nation of the tariff bill, and this con- <lb/>
is shared by Secretary <lb/>
with the chairman has had re- <lb/>
conference. <lb/>
TO TAX CARDS. <lb/>
A tax of ten cents a pack on playing <lb/>
cards has been suggested, and will, no <lb/>
doubt, be adopted, as all the <lb/>
There Is the Air on Account of <lb/>
of the Fever. <lb/>
November <lb/>
Brunswick is alive tonight and en- <lb/>
runs high. Returned <lb/>
gees and citizens are joining hands <lb/>
and congratulating one another over <lb/>
the end of the epidemic, while Lee <lb/>
Godfrey, with the county <lb/>
colored cornet band, is parading the <lb/>
streets playing for all it is worth. <lb/>
Everybody is happy and a large crowd <lb/>
congregated in front of Wallace's res- <lb/>
while the band serenaded the <lb/>
proprietor as a token of appreciation <lb/>
of the aid he rendered the poor <lb/>
during the siege in the way of free <lb/>
meals, soups and nourishments for <lb/>
the sick. Afterwards the band pa- <lb/>
the streets until o'clock <lb/>
and brought out a large crowd of <lb/>
people. <lb/>
BRUNSWICK, Ga., November <lb/>
Murray gives Brunswick double <lb/>
cause for celebrating thanksgiving day <lb/>
by removing the government <lb/>
tine around the city. Surgeon Murray <lb/>
have removed the quarantine. <lb/>
Any one can enter Brunswick now <lb/>
without a certificate. A surveillance <lb/>
will be kept upon any outgoing bag- <lb/>
gage or household goods. The rail- <lb/>
roads will resume their regular <lb/>
tomorrow, and so will the steam- <lb/>
ship lines. There have been no new <lb/>
pases of fever among the returning <lb/>
refugees. The conditions of <lb/>
wick warrant the statement that the <lb/>
city is practically <lb/>
UNCLE SAM'S BOATS. <lb/>
Secretary Herbert Reports the Condition <lb/>
of the Navy. <lb/>
Washington, December an- <lb/>
report of the secretary of the <lb/>
navy gives in detail advances made in <lb/>
the building of the new navy during <lb/>
the past year. Up to the present time <lb/>
the grand total of new vessels in <lb/>
vice, serviceable for war purposes, is <lb/>
nineteen, with twenty-two building. <lb/>
Of vessels for war <lb/>
poses, the United States has sixty-four <lb/>
in commission, thirteen of them single <lb/>
turret monitors in such condition of <lb/>
deterioration as to be practically use- <lb/>
less for war purposes. The United <lb/>
States now ranks seventh as a naval <lb/>
power. Of the old wooden ships, with <lb/>
the exception of the Hartford and the <lb/>
both of which are specially <lb/>
excepted by act of congress, all will <lb/>
disappear from active service within <lb/>
three years under the operations of the <lb/>
per cent limit. <lb/>
MOT A HOUSE LEFT- <lb/>
The Terrible Destruction Wrought by the <lb/>
Earthquake at <lb/>
London, December second <lb/>
edition of The Times publishes a dis- <lb/>
patch from its correspondent at The- <lb/>
ran, who has just visited the <lb/>
town which was recently destroyed <lb/>
by AH earthquake, which caused <lb/>
loss of life. The Times <lb/>
says that is a heap of <lb/>
ruins and that not a house is stand- <lb/>
He adds that the scene is <lb/>
Bodies are still being re- <lb/>
covered and the smell from the <lb/>
faction is overpowering. The earth- <lb/>
quake shocks, the correspondent <lb/>
graphs, were by loud re- <lb/>
ports. In the westward <lb/>
of town, earthquake shocks con- <lb/>
to be felt The adjacent <lb/>
escaped with little damage. <lb/>
There is talk of building a new town <lb/>
to eastward of <lb/>
Tho Killing of Bright Plumed Birds <lb/>
for Ornamental Purposes. <lb/>
Walter Upholds This to <lb/>
the Demands of English <lb/>
Woman Also In Defense <lb/>
of Her Sex. <lb/>
Again tho cry against the use of <lb/>
birds and plumage has been raised. <lb/>
This time the English papers <lb/>
taken up the cudgels in defense of <lb/>
the feathered tribe. A certain <lb/>
naturalist. Mr. Hudson, opened <lb/>
the ball with a letter to the Times. <lb/>
That paper forthwith seized upon <lb/>
the subject as a good theme upon <lb/>
which to thunder its denunciations. <lb/>
And then there was an avalanche <lb/>
from all sides of such phrases as <lb/>
ex- <lb/>
miserable perishing of the cal- <lb/>
low and so on. For all of <lb/>
which woman, double-dyed guilty <lb/>
woman, was responsible. <lb/>
But in the midst of the universal <lb/>
condemnation Walter has <lb/>
piped boldly up, ho generally <lb/>
does, and wants to know if <lb/>
isn't a grain of unfairness in laying <lb/>
the whole blame women. <lb/>
He reminds people that women do <lb/>
dot the birds at all, and that if <lb/>
noble, tender-hearted, pitying man- <lb/>
kind would not go out and enjoy the <lb/>
dear delight of shooting them, cold <lb/>
and stony womankind could not then <lb/>
wear them on its bonnet. <lb/>
he further remarks, one <lb/>
is to be governed in fashion by the <lb/>
principle of wearing nothing that <lb/>
comes from any slaughtered creature <lb/>
we should be reduced to wool and <lb/>
flannel and cotton. Most of tho <lb/>
of feathers, the sealskins and <lb/>
furs of every would have <lb/>
to be laid aside. Some people more <lb/>
sensitive than others, might even <lb/>
cry out upon the cruelty of <lb/>
the cocoon of the chrysalis <lb/>
that he has, poor <lb/>
then we should have no silk. Nor is <lb/>
it more cruel to shoot a bird for its <lb/>
plumage than for its carcass. Tho <lb/>
dying bird, I am quite sure, docs <lb/>
not inquire why it is <lb/>
And still another defier of tho <lb/>
present wave of sentiment has her <lb/>
little say in the same line. Mr. <lb/>
Hudson, who evidently knows <lb/>
about natural history than about <lb/>
fashion, had held forth long and <lb/>
mournfully on the destruction of <lb/>
song birds and those with gay plum- <lb/>
age in order to fill the hungry maw <lb/>
of fashion. The writer naturally <lb/>
seizes with great glee upon this <lb/>
in his protest. <lb/>
she says, man that he is, <lb/>
is obviously the merest dabbler in <lb/>
fashion, else would he know that <lb/>
quills are the order of the day, while <lb/>
cock's feathers are ruling the <lb/>
roost. And we must not en- <lb/>
courage the interference of man, <lb/>
mere practical man, with our <lb/>
devices that make up beauty. <lb/>
Why, soon we shall have some <lb/>
botanist writing to accuse us of <lb/>
all uncharitableness because we <lb/>
wear flowers that have been cut <lb/>
from the living stem. After all, <lb/>
even in this present case, do we not <lb/>
secure these feathers and these birds <lb/>
through the means of male purvey- <lb/>
ors who have bought them from the <lb/>
men who killed the birds <lb/>
are not cruel at all; we <lb/>
simply amiable, adapting ourselves <lb/>
to fashion; and of fashion it may <lb/>
be written that her manners are <lb/>
none and her customs are brutal <lb/>
She never says your or <lb/>
you she simply says, <lb/>
there be and there <lb/>
preys; there be <lb/>
and . But <lb/>
let Mr. Hudson persuaded that <lb/>
woman is not yearning after the de- <lb/>
of his beloved birds. Our <lb/>
simple make raids upon the <lb/>
quills of the fretful barn-door fowl <lb/>
and the feather of the ostrich. And <lb/>
by the way, no one ever utters a <lb/>
cry on behalf of the ostrich. Yet I <lb/>
do not fancy that is any <lb/>
for declaring that he likes to <lb/>
have his feathers plucked out one by <lb/>
one. Personally, I am convinced <lb/>
that he hates the sight of it, and <lb/>
buries his head in the sand solely to <lb/>
be able to bear his pain with self-re- <lb/>
But all the talk for effect of <lb/>
two writers who defend the slaughter <lb/>
of innocent, birds, <lb/>
docs not mask the of tho <lb/>
practice to every thoughtful, tender- <lb/>
hearted woman. <lb/>
As It Is in England. <lb/>
In London the cigarette habit has <lb/>
made such progress among tho nice <lb/>
women that there exists a <lb/>
women's employment cigarette <lb/>
which furnishes <lb/>
gentlewomen with cigarettes. It <lb/>
was founded a few years ago and is <lb/>
managed by Miss E. E. Wolff. <lb/>
arc made order, whatever <lb/>
brand of paper and tobacco each <lb/>
prefers being used in her sup- <lb/>
ply. Only two brands of foreign <lb/>
are kept in stock, and <lb/>
those are supposed to be medicinal, <lb/>
being used for influenza and asthma. <lb/>
Isn't Haggles a man of very de- <lb/>
guns yes; <lb/>
his wife decides all of them for <lb/>
HIS PET PHRASE. <lb/>
It Was Good for All Occasions, and <lb/>
He Used It Accordingly. <lb/>
In the of Henry Comp- <lb/>
published in London some <lb/>
years ago, there is an amusing <lb/>
story which has an obvious lesson. <lb/>
Mr, Watlington was a man from his <lb/>
birth of an even temper and an easy <lb/>
disposition. Ho went through <lb/>
with the greatest indifference as to <lb/>
its cares and its troubles. One <lb/>
phrase he used on all <lb/>
may be so, but again it may <lb/>
On paying him a visit one day, <lb/>
says the writer, I asked him if he <lb/>
thought it would be fine. <lb/>
replied he, may rain, but <lb/>
again it may <lb/>
Seeing him reading <lb/>
I inquired if ho ever went <lb/>
on a hunting excursion. <lb/>
said he, did go <lb/>
once on a bit of a jaunt of the sort, <lb/>
but I made a sorry set out of it. I <lb/>
borrowed a gig of a friend, and <lb/>
started for a day's pleasure, as I <lb/>
thought; but the horse was a <lb/>
stranger to me, and so, not having <lb/>
received a regular introduction to <lb/>
him, as soon as the chase began, off <lb/>
he set at full speed, with me inside <lb/>
the gig. <lb/>
began to be alarmed. Thinks <lb/>
danger here; I may go a <lb/>
little farther without being turned <lb/>
over, but then again I may <lb/>
Well, away he tore, over furrow and <lb/>
field, leaping every ditch and bank <lb/>
that came in his way. Presently I <lb/>
saw we were a horse-pond, <lb/>
and I began to say to may <lb/>
get past this horse-pond without be- <lb/>
dropped in the middle of it, but <lb/>
then again I may <lb/>
after running a <lb/>
risk, I escaped a broken <lb/>
neck that time, and after getting <lb/>
pretty safely through the remaining <lb/>
part of the chase, says I to myself, <lb/>
says I may tempted to <lb/>
go a-hunting again, but then again I <lb/>
may<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017628_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
CLAUS <lb/>
The Old Man will soon be here and we are ready for him with an immense and beautiful line of- <lb/>
We have something suitable tor everybody, old and young, rich and poor. <lb/>
FIREWORKS m <lb/>
TOTS, DOLLS, <lb/>
TOYS, DOLLS, <lb/>
TOYS, DOLLS, <lb/>
TOYS, DOLLS, <lb/>
TOYS, DOLLS, <lb/>
TOYS. DOLLS, <lb/>
TOYS, DOLLS, <lb/>
TOYS, DOLLS, <lb/>
TOYS, DOLLS. <lb/>
All Kinds and Sizes. <lb/>
BOOKS, VASES, <lb/>
BOOKS, VASES, <lb/>
BOOKS, VASES, <lb/>
BOOKS, VASES, <lb/>
BOOKS, VASES, <lb/>
BOOKS, VASES, <lb/>
BOOKS, VASES, <lb/>
BOOKS, VASES. <lb/>
The Latest and Newest. <lb/>
FRUITS AND CONFECTIONS. <lb/>
APPLES, ORANGES, <lb/>
BANANAS AND <lb/>
CITRONS, CURRANTS, <lb/>
FIGS, CAKES CRACKERS, <lb/>
FRENCH AND PLAIN <lb/>
CANDIES, NUTS, RAISINS, <lb/>
fee, <lb/>
All Pure, Fresh and Nice. <lb/>
Come see me. <lb/>
FANCY LAMPS, <lb/>
TOILET CASES, <lb/>
SMOKER'S SETS, <lb/>
WORK BOXES, <lb/>
AND IN FACT <lb/>
ANYTHING <lb/>
YOU May Want <lb/>
FOR A PRETTY <lb/>
Xmas PRESENT. <lb/>
Come and see my goods. <lb/>
FIREWORKS, <lb/>
FIREWORKS, <lb/>
FIREWORKS, <lb/>
FIREWORKS, <lb/>
FIREWORKS, <lb/>
FIREWORKS, <lb/>
FIREWORKS. <lb/>
FIREWORKS, <lb/>
FIREWORKS. <lb/>
Every kind you want. <lb/>
S. E. GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
THE MESSAGE. <lb/>
The Important Document Read <lb/>
to Our Law Makers. <lb/>
WHAT THE PRESIDENT THINKS <lb/>
Washington, December reg- <lb/>
session of Congress convened at <lb/>
noon today, with a full attendance. <lb/>
Immediately after organization, the <lb/>
presidents message was received and <lb/>
read, as <lb/>
To the Congress of the United <lb/>
The constitutional duty which re- <lb/>
quires the president from time to time <lb/>
to give to the congress information of <lb/>
the state of the Union and recommend <lb/>
to their consideration such measures as <lb/>
he shall judge necessary and expedient <lb/>
is fittingly entered upon by commending <lb/>
to the congress a careful examination <lb/>
of the detailed statements and well <lb/>
supported recommendations contained <lb/>
in the reports of the heads of depart- <lb/>
who are chiefly charged with the <lb/>
executive work of the government. <lb/>
In an effort to abridge this <lb/>
cation as much as is consistent with its <lb/>
purpose, I shall supplement a brief ref- <lb/>
to the contents of these depart- <lb/>
mental reports by the mention of such <lb/>
executive business and incidents as are <lb/>
not embraced therein, and by such rec- <lb/>
as appear to be at this <lb/>
particular time appropriate. <lb/>
While our foreign relations have not <lb/>
at all times during the past year been <lb/>
entirely free from perplexity, no em- <lb/>
situation remains that will <lb/>
not yield to the spirit of fairness and <lb/>
love of justice, which, joined with con- <lb/>
firmness, characterize a truly <lb/>
American foreign policy. <lb/>
My predecessor having accepted the <lb/>
office of arbitrator of the long standing <lb/>
mission beyond any dispute tendered to <lb/>
the president by the Argentine <lb/>
lie and Brazil, it has been my agreeable <lb/>
duty to receive the special envoys com- <lb/>
missioned by those states to lay before <lb/>
me evidence and arguments in behalf of <lb/>
their respective governments. <lb/>
THE TROUBLES IN BRAZIL. <lb/>
The outbreak of domestic hostilities in <lb/>
the republic of Brazil bound the United <lb/>
States to watch the interests of our <lb/>
in that country, with which we <lb/>
carry on important commerce. Several <lb/>
vessels of our new navy are now and <lb/>
for some time have been stationed at <lb/>
Rio de Janeiro. The struggle being be- <lb/>
tween the established government <lb/>
which controls the machinery of the <lb/>
administration and with which we <lb/>
maintain friendly relations, and certain <lb/>
officers of the navy employing the <lb/>
of their command in an attack upon <lb/>
the capital and chief seaport, and lack- <lb/>
as it does, the elements of divided <lb/>
administration, I have failed to see that <lb/>
the insurgents can claim recognition as <lb/>
belligerents. <lb/>
Thus far the position of our govern- <lb/>
has been that of an attentive but <lb/>
impartial observer of the unfortunate <lb/>
conflict. Emphasizing our policy of <lb/>
partial neutrality in such a condition as <lb/>
now exists, I deemed it necessary to <lb/>
disavow in a manner not to be <lb/>
the unauthorized action of our <lb/>
late naval commander in those waters <lb/>
in saluting the revolted Brazilian ad- <lb/>
being indisposed to countenance <lb/>
an act calculated to give gratuitous <lb/>
sanction to the local insurrection. <lb/>
THE CHILEAN CLAIMS. <lb/>
The convention between our govern- <lb/>
and Chile, having for its object <lb/>
the settlement and adjustment of the <lb/>
demands of the two countries against <lb/>
each other, has been made effective by <lb/>
the organization of the claims <lb/>
provided for. <lb/>
The two governments failing to agree <lb/>
upon the third member of the <lb/>
the good offices of the president of <lb/>
the Swiss republic were invoked, as pro- <lb/>
in the treaty, and the selection of <lb/>
the Swiss representative in this <lb/>
to complete the organization was <lb/>
gratifying alike to the United States <lb/>
EGAN's BREAK REVIEWED. <lb/>
The vexatious question of so-called <lb/>
legation asylums for offenders against <lb/>
the state and its laws, was presented <lb/>
anew in Chile by the unauthorized ac- <lb/>
of the late United minister <lb/>
in receiving into his official residence <lb/>
two persons who had just failed in an <lb/>
attempt at revolution, and against whom <lb/>
charges were pending, grow- <lb/>
out of a former abortive disturb- <lb/>
The doctrine of asylum as applied to <lb/>
this ease is not sanctioned by the best <lb/>
and. when allowed, to <lb/>
Of the Leading Questions that Affect the <lb/>
Body Remedies <lb/>
Recommended. <lb/>
encourage Sedition aimer no <lb/>
circumstances can the representatives of <lb/>
this government be permitted, under the <lb/>
ill-defined fiction of extra <lb/>
to interrupt the administration of <lb/>
justice in the countries to which <lb/>
they arc accredited. A temperate de- <lb/>
having been made by the Chilean <lb/>
government for the correction of this <lb/>
conduct in the instance mentioned, the <lb/>
minister was instructed to no longer <lb/>
harbor the offenders. <lb/>
AS TO THE GEARY LAW. <lb/>
The legislation of last year known as <lb/>
the Geary law, requiring the registration <lb/>
of all Chinese entitled to residence in the <lb/>
United States, and the deportation of all <lb/>
not complying with the provisions of the <lb/>
act within the time prescribed, met with <lb/>
much opposition from Chinamen. Acting <lb/>
upon the advice of eminent counsel that <lb/>
the law was unconstitutional, the great <lb/>
mass of Chinese laborers, pending <lb/>
inquiry as to its validity, in good <lb/>
faith seemed to apply for the certificates <lb/>
required. A test case upon proceeding <lb/>
by habeas corpus was brought before <lb/>
the supreme court, and on May 15th, <lb/>
1893, a decision was made by that <lb/>
sustaining the law. <lb/>
It is believed that under the recent <lb/>
amendment of the act extending the <lb/>
time for registration, the Chinese <lb/>
laborers thereto entitled, who desired <lb/>
to reside in this country, will now <lb/>
avail themselves of the renewed <lb/>
thus afforded of establishing by <lb/>
lawful procedure their right to re- <lb/>
main, and that thereby the necessity <lb/>
of enforced deportation may, to a great <lb/>
degree, be avoided. . <lb/>
MISSIONARY MURDERS IN CHINA. <lb/>
It has developed upon the United <lb/>
States minister at as dean of <lb/>
the diplomatic body, in the absence of <lb/>
a representative of Sweden and Nor- <lb/>
way, to press upon the Chinese gov- <lb/>
reparation for the recent <lb/>
murder of Swedish missionaries at <lb/>
Sung Per. This question is of vital <lb/>
interest to all countries whose cit- <lb/>
engage in missionary work in <lb/>
the interior. <lb/>
THE SURRENDER OP WEEKS. <lb/>
Costa Rica has lately testified its <lb/>
by surrendering to the <lb/>
United States; in the absence of a <lb/>
convention of extradition, but upon <lb/>
duly submitted evidence of criminals <lb/>
a noted fugitive from justice. II <lb/>
is trusted that the negotiations of a <lb/>
treaty with the country to meet recur <lb/>
ring cases of this kind will soon be ac- <lb/>
In my opinion, treaties <lb/>
for reciprocal extradition should be <lb/>
concluded with all those countries <lb/>
with which the United States has not <lb/>
conventional arrangements of <lb/>
that character. <lb/>
I have deemed it fitting to express <lb/>
to the governments of Costa Rica and <lb/>
Colombia the kindly desire of the <lb/>
States to see their pending bound- <lb/>
dispute finally closed by <lb/>
in conformity with the spirit of <lb/>
the treaty concluded between them <lb/>
some years ago. <lb/>
OUR EUROPEAN RELATIONS, <lb/>
Our relations with France continue <lb/>
to be intimate and cordial, I sincerely <lb/>
hope that the extradition treaty with <lb/>
that country, as amended by the sen- <lb/>
ate, will soon be in operation. <lb/>
While occasional questions affecting <lb/>
our naturalized citizens returning to <lb/>
the land of their birth have arisen in <lb/>
our intercourse with Germany, our re- <lb/>
with that country continue <lb/>
satisfactory. <lb/>
The questions affecting our relations <lb/>
with Great Britain have been treated <lb/>
in a spirit of friendliness. <lb/>
are in progress between the two <lb/>
governments with a view to such con- <lb/>
current action as will make the award <lb/>
and regulations agreed upon by the <lb/>
Bearing sea tribunal of arbitration <lb/>
practically effective; and it is not <lb/>
doubted that Great Britain will co-op <lb/>
orate freely with this country for the <lb/>
accomplishment of that purpose. The <lb/>
dispute growing out of the <lb/>
tolls imposed in the Welland <lb/>
canal, upon cargoes of cereals bound <lb/>
to and from the lake ports of the <lb/>
States was adjusted by the <lb/>
of a more equitable of charges, <lb/>
and my predecessor thereupon <lb/>
pended his proclamation imposing dis- <lb/>
tolls upon British transit <lb/>
through our Canals. <lb/>
A request for additions to the list of <lb/>
extraditable offenses covered by the <lb/>
existing treaty between the two <lb/>
tries is under consideration. <lb/>
PRANCE AND <lb/>
A notable part of the southeasterly <lb/>
coast of Liberia, between the <lb/>
and San Pedro rivers, which for nearly <lb/>
half a century has been generally rec- <lb/>
as belonging to that republic by <lb/>
cession and purchase has been claimed <lb/>
to be under the protectorate of France <lb/>
in virtue of agreements entered into by <lb/>
the native tribes over whom Liberia's <lb/>
control has not been well maintained. <lb/>
More recently, between the <lb/>
representative <lb/>
resulted in the signature at <lb/>
of a treaty whereby, as an ad- <lb/>
Liberian territory is <lb/>
ceded to France. This convention at <lb/>
last advices had not been ratified by the <lb/>
Liberian legislature and executive. <lb/>
Feeling a sympathetic interest in the <lb/>
fortunes of the little commonwealth, <lb/>
the establishment and development of <lb/>
which was largely aided by the <lb/>
of our countrymen, and which; <lb/>
constitutes the only independently <lb/>
state on the west coast of Africa, <lb/>
this government has suggested to the <lb/>
French government its earnest concern. <lb/>
lest territorial in Liberia <lb/>
should take place without her <lb/>
strained consent. <lb/>
MEXICO ALL <lb/>
Our relations with continue to <lb/>
be of that close and friendly nature <lb/>
which should always characterize the <lb/>
intercourse of two neighboring <lb/>
NICARAGUA'S CIVIL TROUBLES. <lb/>
Nicaragua has passed through two <lb/>
revolutions, the party at first success <lb/>
f having in turn been displaced by <lb/>
another, and our newly appointed <lb/>
minister, by his timely good offices, <lb/>
aided in a peaceful adjustment of the <lb/>
controversy involved in the first con- <lb/>
The large American interests <lb/>
established in that country in <lb/>
with the Nicaragua canal were <lb/>
not molested. <lb/>
The United States are especially in- <lb/>
in the successful achievement <lb/>
of the vast undertaking this company <lb/>
has in charge. That it should be ac- <lb/>
under distinctively <lb/>
can auspices and its enjoyment assured <lb/>
not only to the vessels of this country <lb/>
as a channel of communication be- <lb/>
tween our Atlantic and Pacific sea- <lb/>
boards, but to the ships of the world <lb/>
in the interest of civilization, is a prop- <lb/>
which, in my does <lb/>
not admit of question. <lb/>
NEW EXTRADITION TREATIES, <lb/>
An extradition treaty with Norway <lb/>
has recently been exchanged and pro- <lb/>
claimed. <lb/>
The extradition treaty with Russia, <lb/>
signed in March 1887 and amended and <lb/>
confirmed by the senate in February <lb/>
last, was duly proclaimed last June. <lb/>
CLAIMS AGAINST SPAIN. <lb/>
More than fifteen years ago this gov- <lb/>
preferred a claim against <lb/>
Spain in behalf of one of our citizens <lb/>
for property seized and confiscated in <lb/>
Cuba. In 1880 the claim was adjusted, <lb/>
Spain agreeing to pay <lb/>
ally, as a fair indemnity, <lb/>
A respectful but earnest note was <lb/>
recently addressed to the Spanish gov- <lb/>
insisting upon the prompt <lb/>
fulfillment of its long neglected <lb/>
Other claims preferred by the United <lb/>
States against Spain, in behalf of Amer- <lb/>
citizens, for property confiscated in <lb/>
Cuba, have been pending for many <lb/>
years. <lb/>
At the time Spain's title to the Carolina <lb/>
Islands was confirmed by arbitration, <lb/>
that government agreed that the rights <lb/>
which had been acquired there by Amer- <lb/>
missionaries, should be recognized <lb/>
and respected. It is sincerely hoped that <lb/>
this pledge will be observed by allowing <lb/>
our missionaries, who were removed <lb/>
from to a place of safety by a <lb/>
United States war ship during the late <lb/>
trouble between the Spanish garrison <lb/>
and the natives, to return to their field <lb/>
of usefulness. <lb/>
TROUBLE WITH THE TURKS, <lb/>
Important matters have demanded our <lb/>
attentions to the Ottoman Porte. <lb/>
The firing and partial destruction, by <lb/>
an unrestrained mob, of one of the <lb/>
school buildings of Anatolia College, es- <lb/>
by citizens of the United States <lb/>
at and the apparent <lb/>
of the Turkish government to the <lb/>
outrage, notwithstanding the complicity <lb/>
of some of its officials, called for earnest <lb/>
remonstrance, which was followed by <lb/>
promises of reparation and the punish- <lb/>
of the offenders. Indemnity for <lb/>
the injury to the buildings has already <lb/>
been paid, permission to rebuild given, <lb/>
registration of the school property in <lb/>
the name of the American owners <lb/>
cured, and efficient protection <lb/>
teed. <lb/>
special messenger an <lb/>
investigation of the circumstances <lb/>
attending the chance of government, <lb/>
and of all the conditions bearing upon <lb/>
the subject of the treaty. <lb/>
After a thorough exhaustive ex- <lb/>
examination, Mr. Blount submitted <lb/>
to me his report, showing beyond all <lb/>
question that the constitutional gov- <lb/>
of Hawaii had been sub- <lb/>
with the active aid of our rep- <lb/>
to that government and <lb/>
through the intimidation caused by <lb/>
the presence of armed naval force of <lb/>
the United States which was landed <lb/>
that purpose at the instance of our <lb/>
minister. <lb/>
Upon the facts developed, it seemed <lb/>
to me that the only honorable course <lb/>
for our government to pursue was to <lb/>
undo the wrong that had been done <lb/>
by those representing us, and to re- <lb/>
Store, as far as practicable, the status <lb/>
existing at the time of our forcible in- <lb/>
PROGRESS OP <lb/>
By a concurrent resolution passed by <lb/>
the senate February 1890, and by the <lb/>
house of representatives on the 3rd of <lb/>
April following, the president was re- <lb/>
quested invite from time to time, as <lb/>
fit occasions may arise, negotiations <lb/>
with any government with which the <lb/>
United States has or may have <lb/>
relations, to the end that any <lb/>
or disputes arising between the <lb/>
two governments which cannot be ad- <lb/>
justed by diplomatic agency, may be <lb/>
referred to arbitration and be peaceably <lb/>
adjusted by such <lb/>
April the International <lb/>
American Conference of Washington, <lb/>
by resolution expressed the wish that <lb/>
the controversies between the republics <lb/>
of America and the nations of Europe <lb/>
might be settled by arbitration and rec- <lb/>
that the government of each <lb/>
nation represented in that conference <lb/>
should communicate this wish to all <lb/>
friendly powers. <lb/>
A favorable response has been re- <lb/>
from Great Britain in the shape <lb/>
of a resolution adopted by the <lb/>
July 16th, last, cordially <lb/>
with the purpose in view and <lb/>
expressing the hope that her majesty's <lb/>
government will lend ready co-operation <lb/>
to the government of the United States <lb/>
upon the basis of the concurrent <lb/>
above quoted. <lb/>
It affords me signal pleasure to lay <lb/>
this parliamentary resolution before the <lb/>
congress, and to express my sincere <lb/>
gratification that the sentiment of two <lb/>
great and kindred nations is thus <lb/>
manifested in favor of the <lb/>
rational and peaceable settlement of <lb/>
international quarrels by honorable re- <lb/>
sort to arbitration. <lb/>
STATE OP THE TREASURY. <lb/>
The secretary of the treasury reports <lb/>
that the receipts of the government <lb/>
from all sources during the fiscal year <lb/>
ending June 1893, amounted to <lb/>
and its expenditures to <lb/>
8459,374,674.29. There was collected <lb/>
from customs and from <lb/>
internal revenue 8161.027,623.93. Our <lb/>
dutiable imports amounted to <lb/>
an increase of over the <lb/>
preceding year, and importations <lb/>
of duty amounted to <lb/>
crease from the preceding year of <lb/>
13,455,447- Internal revenue receipts <lb/>
the year by <lb/>
of <lb/>
re- <lb/>
HAWAIIAN <lb/>
It is hardly necessary for mo to stats <lb/>
that the questions arising from our <lb/>
relations with Hawaii have caused <lb/>
embarrassment. <lb/>
prior to the installment of the <lb/>
present administration, the existent <lb/>
government of Hawaii had been sud- <lb/>
overthrown, and a treaty of an- <lb/>
had been negotiated be- <lb/>
tween the provisional government of <lb/>
the islands and the and <lb/>
submitted to the senate for <lb/>
This treaty withdrew for <lb/>
nation and dispatched Hon. James H. <lb/>
of Georgia, to Honolulu as a <lb/>
exceeded of <lb/>
It is estimated upon the basis <lb/>
the present revenue laws that the <lb/>
of the government, for the year <lb/>
ending June 1894, will be <lb/>
305.38 and its expenditures <lb/>
in a <lb/>
On the first day of November, 1893 <lb/>
the amount of money of all kinds in <lb/>
circulation, or not included in treas- <lb/>
holdings, was 81,718,544,682. an in- <lb/>
crease for the year of <lb/>
Estimating our population at <lb/>
at the time mentioned, the per <lb/>
capita circulation was <lb/>
During the year banks were or- <lb/>
In thirty-two states and <lb/>
with a capital stock of <lb/>
distributed as <lb/>
Forty-four with a capital stock of <lb/>
in the eastern states; forty- <lb/>
one with a capital stock of <lb/>
west of the Mississippi river, and <lb/>
with a capital stock of <lb/>
in the central and southern states. <lb/>
Within the same period banks <lb/>
suspended with a capital stock of <lb/>
Of this number eighty-six <lb/>
with a capital stock of re- <lb/>
and sixty-five passed into the <lb/>
hands of receivers, with a capital stock <lb/>
of <lb/>
THE SHERMAN LAW REPEAL. <lb/>
The recent repeal of the provision of <lb/>
law requiring the purchase of silver <lb/>
bullion by the government as a feature- <lb/>
of our monetary scheme has made a <lb/>
entire change in the complexion of oar <lb/>
currency affairs. I do not doubt that <lb/>
the ultimate result of this action be <lb/>
most salutary and <lb/>
In the nature o things, however, it i. <lb/>
mow av time precisely <lb/>
What conditions will be brought about <lb/>
by the change, or what, if any. supple- <lb/>
legislation may, in the light of <lb/>
such conditions, appear to be essential <lb/>
or expedient. <lb/>
Of course, after the recent financial <lb/>
perturbation, time is necessary for the <lb/>
re-establishment of business confidence. <lb/>
When, through this restored <lb/>
confidence, the money which has been <lb/>
frightened into hoarding places is re- <lb/>
turned to trade and enterprise, a survey <lb/>
of the situation will probably disclose a <lb/>
safe path leading to sound <lb/>
currency abundantly sufficient to meet <lb/>
every requirement of our increasing <lb/>
population and business. <lb/>
In the pursuit of we should <lb/>
resolutely turn away from alluring <lb/>
and temporary expedients, determined <lb/>
to be with nothing less than a <lb/>
lasting and comprehensive financial <lb/>
plan. <lb/>
REASONABLE THE BEST. <lb/>
In these circumstances I am convinced <lb/>
a reasonable delay in dealing with <lb/>
this subject, instead of being injurious, <lb/>
will increase the probability of wise ac- <lb/>
THE CONFERENCE. <lb/>
The monetary conference which as- <lb/>
at Brussels upon our <lb/>
was adjourned to the 30th day of No- <lb/>
in the present year. <lb/>
The consideration just stated and <lb/>
the fact that a definite proposition <lb/>
from us seemed to be expected <lb/>
the reassembling of the conference <lb/>
led to express a willingness to <lb/>
the meeting still further postponed. <lb/>
It seems to me that it would be wise <lb/>
to give general authority to the <lb/>
dent to invite other nations to such a. <lb/>
conference at any time when there <lb/>
should be a fair prospect of <lb/>
an. international agreement <lb/>
on the subject of coinage. <lb/>
AS TO A BOND ISSUE. <lb/>
I desire also to earnestly suggest <lb/>
the of amending the existing <lb/>
statutes in regard to the issuance of <lb/>
government bonds. <lb/>
-The authority now in the <lb/>
secretary of the treasury to Issue, <lb/>
bonds is not as clear as it should be <lb/>
and the bonds authorized are <lb/>
to the government, both <lb/>
to the time of their maturity and <lb/>
rate of interest. <lb/>
OUR MILITARY FOOTING. <lb/>
The secretary of war reports that the <lb/>
strength of the army on 30th day of <lb/>
hist was enlisted men <lb/>
and officers. The total <lb/>
of the department for the year <lb/>
ending June 1893, amounted to <lb/>
181.903,074.80. Of this ram 81,992,581.05 <lb/>
was for salaries and contingent ex- <lb/>
377,828.88 for the support of <lb/>
the. military establishment, <lb/>
for miscellaneous objects and <lb/>
631.41 for public works. This latter <lb/>
includes for river and <lb/>
improvements and <lb/>
fortifications and other works of <lb/>
defense. <lb/>
The total enrollment of the militia of <lb/>
the several states was on the 31st of <lb/>
October of the current <lb/>
officers end enlisted men. The officers <lb/>
of the army detailed for the inspection <lb/>
and instruction of this reserve of our <lb/>
military force, report that increased in- <lb/>
and marked progress are <lb/>
rent in the discipline and of <lb/>
the organization. <lb/>
It is gratifying to note that we have <lb/>
to gain results in the <lb/>
comprehensive scheme of de- <lb/>
and fortification entered upon <lb/>
eight years ago. A large Sum has been <lb/>
already expended, but the cost of main- <lb/>
will be iD considerable as com- <lb/>
pared with the of construction <lb/>
and ordnance. At the end of the cur- <lb/>
rent calendar the war <lb/>
will have guns, ten- <lb/>
inch and guns ready to be <lb/>
on gun and carriages., and <lb/>
h mortars. In addition to <lb/>
the t of the army gun factory, <lb/>
now comp at the gov- <lb/>
contracted private <lb/>
parties fr n the purchase of one hundred <lb/>
guns of these calibers, the first of which <lb/>
should be delivered to the <lb/>
for test, before <lb/>
w of the military <lb/>
W st Point and the several schools <lb/>
the special instruction Of <lb/>
j, showed marked advance ii the <lb/>
in the army and a <lb/>
ambition to fit the for the <lb/>
D of the country. <lb/>
THY; LEGAL <lb/>
The report of the <lb/>
contains the usual summery of <lb/>
affairs and proceeding of the depart <lb/>
of justice for the past tO <lb/>
with certain r commendations <lb/>
as to needed legislation on various <lb/>
subjects. <lb/>
I cannot too heartily endorse the <lb/>
proposition that the fee system as <lb/>
to the thin<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017628_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
Great Reduction <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
-IN- <lb/>
PRICES. <lb/>
In order to reduce oar <lb/>
Mammoth Stock <lb/>
We will sell for the <lb/>
NEXT <lb/>
at far below regular prices. <lb/>
MUST BE <lb/>
SOLD <lb/>
AT SOME <lb/>
PRICE. <lb/>
WE HAVE <lb/>
TOO <lb/>
MANY GOODS <lb/>
AND THEY <lb/>
Clothing <lb/>
Clothing <lb/>
Clothing <lb/>
Clothing <lb/>
Our must be sold with- <lb/>
out regard to cost- <lb/>
potions <lb/>
and <lb/>
the same way, to these we add <lb/>
gapes <lb/>
SUES <lb/>
Cheap to make any reduction. <lb/>
MY <lb/>
ANY DAY YOU COME. <lb/>
HIGGS BROS., <lb/>
Leaders of Low Prices- <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
SPARKS. <lb/>
Sell your chickens and <lb/>
Axes at and cents at D. D.<lb/>
and lot for sale. <lb/>
ii. Haskett. <lb/>
Apply to D. <lb/>
Children Carriages and Wagons at <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co's. <lb/>
reductions in Hardware for <lb/>
days at D. D. <lb/>
Just a large lot of Boots and <lb/>
Shoes at <lb/>
Don't fall to look at my axes before <lb/>
you buy. D. D. Haskett. <lb/>
When In want of good shoes go to <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co. <lb/>
Breech Loading and Muzzle Gun and <lb/>
equipments for sale by Cherry Co <lb/>
The Flour on earth 14.40 at the <lb/>
Old Brick <lb/>
Cotton pay cash for <lb/>
Cotton Seed it the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
J. C. Cobb A Son have the prettiest <lb/>
Shoes in town. See our Men's<lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co Keep a full stock <lb/>
of General Merchandise and solicit <lb/>
your trade. <lb/>
L. M. Reynolds Mens and Boys <lb/>
shoes are the best. For sale by J. B. <lb/>
Cherry Co. <lb/>
Go to J. B. Cherry Co when in need <lb/>
of Furniture, they keep a full stock and <lb/>
sell at prices that will please you. <lb/>
Mrs. has a nice line <lb/>
of sample Hats, Feathers, etc. <lb/>
that she will sell cheap. Full line of <lb/>
millinery goods. <lb/>
Just received a car load of Bagging <lb/>
and Ties at J. C. Cobb Son. See them <lb/>
before buying. <lb/>
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb/>
at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Remember I pay you cash for n <lb/>
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old <lb/>
Brick Stow. <lb/>
Look for the swinging sign <lb/>
eat Cash Store on Higgs <lb/>
Bros- <lb/>
Milliner v. <lb/>
We also you attention to a full Km <lb/>
of trimming fur, Angora, Satins, <lb/>
. lines, Madras and Wadding. <lb/>
Mrs. M-T. Co well Co. <lb/>
on; <lb/>
pun paw <lb/>
JO <lb/>
on- <lb/>
wt <lb/>
eH <lb/>
The grippe is getting around again. <lb/>
The next Baptist State Convention <lb/>
goes to Charlotte. <lb/>
The children are getting up their let- <lb/>
to Santa Claus. <lb/>
tail to see James large <lb/>
stock of Christmas goods. <lb/>
Mrs. M. D. Higgs has a beautiful line <lb/>
of goods and novelties. <lb/>
Higgs Bros are selling at low prices <lb/>
to educe stock. See advertisement. <lb/>
A fantastic parade would be amusing <lb/>
for C day. What say the boys. <lb/>
Go to your Toys <lb/>
Christmas Goods and Confections. <lb/>
Sachet Bisques, Perfume Baskets and <lb/>
Toilet Bottles at Wooten's Drug Store. <lb/>
Full assortment of Perfumes and nice <lb/>
Toilet S--ts at Wooten's Drug Store. <lb/>
Flagons, Sachet <lb/>
Smokers Sets, at Wooten's Drug <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Dec. to-day Sweet <lb/>
Butter at Me a pound, at the Old <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
Mr. H. A. Blow has had built a large <lb/>
platform scale near the depot for weigh- <lb/>
loaded wagon-. <lb/>
If you want nice Christmas and <lb/>
day goods at low prices, go to Jaine <lb/>
Long's. <lb/>
Toys Toys Toys The largest <lb/>
and best selected stock ever in Green- <lb/>
ville, at <lb/>
Go select your present for Christmas. <lb/>
wait until they are picked over. <lb/>
For the next days beginning <lb/>
Dec. 1st, I will sell Hardware at greatly <lb/>
reduced prices. D. D. Haskett. <lb/>
Only two of the force on <lb/>
list this week, but the paper <lb/>
wouldn't show it if we hadn't told It. <lb/>
Doors windows made Of North <lb/>
Carolina pine, price reduced for the next <lb/>
days. D. D. HASKETT. <lb/>
Don't is <lb/>
headquarters for Toys Christmas <lb/>
Goods. Come see them. <lb/>
The streets took of the <lb/>
weather and got almost as bad as mud <lb/>
could make them. <lb/>
Oranges, apples, nuts, candies, raisins <lb/>
lemons, toys, bananas, <lb/>
chestnuts, cakes, for at the <lb/>
Old Brick Mara. <lb/>
Owing to the heavy sleet last week <lb/>
Greenville was without telegraphic com- <lb/>
for three days. <lb/>
For the next days I will sell <lb/>
and inch Rubber Belting at Cost. I <lb/>
have the best Brand, The Diamond. <lb/>
D. D. Haskett. <lb/>
The street committee ought to look <lb/>
after the bridge crossing the branch on <lb/>
Sutton It is a dangerous con <lb/>
Toys dolls, fireworks of all kinds <lb/>
limits, candies, in fact everything for <lb/>
Christmas, at just the prices you are <lb/>
looking for. James <lb/>
There are two taffy tents in town now. <lb/>
With these and the number of <lb/>
stores we have the people ought to <lb/>
keep sweet. <lb/>
delay if you want to get the <lb/>
Eastern Reflector, the Atlanta <lb/>
and the New York World all <lb/>
a year for <lb/>
Applications are now for <lb/>
dwelling houses for next year. This <lb/>
reminds us that there to be more <lb/>
houses in Greenville. <lb/>
Our offer of three good papers a year <lb/>
the best opportunity you have <lb/>
had for cheap reading. See what it says <lb/>
on top of last on first page. <lb/>
A life saving crew establish <lb/>
their headquarters along the sidewalks <lb/>
now to save people about to get lost in <lb/>
the mud on the streets. <lb/>
The bad roads throughout the country <lb/>
are getting their share of abuse now. <lb/>
They it, for they re a disgrace <lb/>
to an intelligent people. <lb/>
How very near Christmas is to us <lb/>
only days off. These will pass and <lb/>
the joyous day will be with us and gone <lb/>
almost before we can realize it- <lb/>
For Sale On good <lb/>
nice Parlor Organ, also some articles of <lb/>
House furniture and volumes of <lb/>
Encyclopedia very bes <lb/>
binding. Apply at once to Isaac A. <lb/>
Sugg. <lb/>
There were eight applications re <lb/>
the Board of County Commissioners last <lb/>
week, for the Superintendency of the <lb/>
Home of the Aged and Infirm. <lb/>
Fob the Little <lb/>
Arums, wagons, mechanical toys, jump- <lb/>
jacks, horns, and other things too <lb/>
numerous to on me for <lb/>
your Christmas goods. Mrs. M. D <lb/>
Higgs. <lb/>
For the sake of the merchants and <lb/>
holiday purchasers we do hope there <lb/>
will be some good weather now. It has <lb/>
been so bad as to interfere with trading. <lb/>
The Scotland Neck Democrat last <lb/>
week begun Its tenth volume. Editor <lb/>
gets out a clean, neat, high <lb/>
toned, readable paper, and it has done <lb/>
great good for its town and section. <lb/>
Scotland Neck ought to be doubly proud <lb/>
of It. <lb/>
calendars <lb/>
jewel caskets, toilet sets, albums, <lb/>
easels, paintings; vases, work <lb/>
baskets and boxes, glove and <lb/>
chief boxes, writing cabinets, perfume <lb/>
bottle, vases, water sets, and many <lb/>
other holiday articles at Mrs. M. D. <lb/>
Higgs. <lb/>
A Washington correspondent of the <lb/>
Richmond Dispatch says that President <lb/>
Cleveland stated Saturday that he was <lb/>
going to appoint Judge Simonton, South <lb/>
Carolina, to the vacant U. S. Circuit <lb/>
Judge ship. <lb/>
Fine Horse Fob will sell <lb/>
at public sale before the Court House <lb/>
door on Saturday the 16th of Dec. at <lb/>
o'clock in. My fine black mare colt <lb/>
SI months old sired by George <lb/>
known as Horse a perfect animal <lb/>
without a blemish Terms cash. I. A. <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Mrs. C. Stephens has been quite sick <lb/>
the last few days. <lb/>
Mr. Josh recently moved his <lb/>
family to Greenville <lb/>
Mr. S. V. Joyner, of Kenly is chatting <lb/>
his friends here this week. <lb/>
Mr. E. B. M ore of Washington, came <lb/>
up Monday to spend a few days- <lb/>
J. C. returned home <lb/>
Friday from Indian Territory. <lb/>
Rev. Mr. will <lb/>
preach in the Court House to-night. <lb/>
Mr. W. F. of Snow Hill, <lb/>
engage in the brokerage business here. <lb/>
Messrs. G. B. King an I C. D. <lb/>
went to Washington City yesterday. <lb/>
Mr. W. O. Little has entered the <lb/>
drug store of J. L. Wooten to learn <lb/>
pharmacy. <lb/>
Mrs. B. R. King, Of Falkland, spent <lb/>
last week visiting the family of Sheriff <lb/>
B. W. King. <lb/>
Mrs. Lula Cleve returned Saturday <lb/>
from visiting the family of Mr. F. Ward, <lb/>
in the country. <lb/>
Williams, returned home <lb/>
last week from a visit to her sister, Mrs <lb/>
Ru- at Raleigh. <lb/>
Mr. R. J. Proctor has brought his <lb/>
family back to Greenville. He is run <lb/>
a candy tent. <lb/>
Ex-Gov. T. J- Saturday to <lb/>
attend the N. at <lb/>
ton, returning Monday. <lb/>
Mr. L. D. Ames, of Belleville, Va., <lb/>
has been spending the past week with <lb/>
his daughter, Mrs. W. B. Brown. <lb/>
Mr. John Matthews, of has <lb/>
moved to Greenville and taken a <lb/>
with the John Flanagan Buggy Co. <lb/>
Miss Warren was among the <lb/>
visitors from Greenville to the Confer- <lb/>
at Wilmington. She returned Mon- <lb/>
day night. <lb/>
Messrs. Moore, of <lb/>
of Tarboro, Galloway <lb/>
of Snow Hill, have been the visiting at- <lb/>
at Court. <lb/>
Mr. J. B. who has been living <lb/>
in for some tune, has returned <lb/>
to Greenville and taken a position with <lb/>
the John Flanagan Buggy Co. <lb/>
Mr. T. K. Randolph returned Monday <lb/>
night from Pearly. Ga., where he has <lb/>
been keeping books for a large <lb/>
tine for the past two years. <lb/>
The whole number of marriage <lb/>
issued by Register of Deeds <lb/>
Harding in Pitt county for the year end- <lb/>
December 1st, was This is a <lb/>
decrease of from the number issued <lb/>
during the previous year. <lb/>
Mr. II. D. representing the <lb/>
circulating department of the N. Y. <lb/>
World, was here Monday In the interest <lb/>
of that paper. The Reflector office <lb/>
will supply all wants for the World <lb/>
either in subscriptions or copies of the <lb/>
daily and Sunday edition. <lb/>
Come And See It. <lb/>
There is a curiosity on exhibition at <lb/>
the R office the of w <lb/>
has not before been seen In this com- <lb/>
It Is a cluster of three cocoa- <lb/>
nuts just as they were taken from the <lb/>
tree in the West Indies. They are <lb/>
by a hull after the manner of the <lb/>
hickory nut. Miss Bottle Warren brought <lb/>
the bunch home with her from <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
Civil Court-Lone Case. <lb/>
The business at this term of Pitt <lb/>
Court, which is for civil eases <lb/>
only, has moved along very slowly, seven <lb/>
days of the term being consumed in <lb/>
disposing of the cases set on the <lb/>
for the first day. One case, that of <lb/>
vs. W. W. R. R. Co. <lb/>
five days, beginning Wednesday <lb/>
morning and closing Monday evening. <lb/>
This suit was for damages to laud <lb/>
for obstructing water course in not <lb/>
having sufficient culverts and causing <lb/>
injury to laud. The Jury gave the plain- <lb/>
tiff a verdict of 1200 damages. The <lb/>
plaintiff was represented by Messrs. J. <lb/>
L. Fleming Swift Galloway, the <lb/>
defendant by Messrs. Latham Skin- <lb/>
J. E. Moore. There was some <lb/>
good speeches on both sides. <lb/>
One attorney was decidedly amusing <lb/>
in his to sandwich his speech <lb/>
with Third party doctrine, but he could <lb/>
not make government ownership of <lb/>
railroads and corporation attorneys <lb/>
blend together well, and the points were <lb/>
pretty much spoiled by council on the <lb/>
other side remarking in turn that he <lb/>
didn't think politics had any place in <lb/>
a trial before court. <lb/>
Pension Warrants. <lb/>
Register of Deeds Harding <lb/>
ed from the State Auditor the warrants <lb/>
for pensioners In Pitt county and they <lb/>
can be had at his office. The list em- <lb/>
braces soldiers and widows, viz <lb/>
Boothe, William L. <lb/>
Bryan Buck, Bennett Dunn, <lb/>
Lewis Edwards, W. II. Gurganus, Gray <lb/>
Harris, G. Jack on, Isaac Joyner, James <lb/>
R. Mayo, John II. Nelson, J. B. <lb/>
Edward J. E. Randolph, T. <lb/>
M. Rots, Robert Richmond, Jesse <lb/>
pen, she in Tyson, W. John <lb/>
Elks, John T. Jones, W. G. Mears, John <lb/>
Moore, W. F. Mills, C. J. Smith, W. <lb/>
Dunn, J. C. Wetherington, G. S. John- <lb/>
son, J. E. Bullock, Phil B. C <lb/>
Joseph J. Whichard. <lb/>
A. Carney, <lb/>
Dudley, Sarah E. Manning, Sal <lb/>
lie A. Matthews, Eliza <lb/>
Parsons. Susanna Spain, Lucky Ann <lb/>
Smith, Nancy Stokes, Sarah J. L. <lb/>
Clark, <lb/>
Fleming, M. Mary <lb/>
Louisa Oakley, Susan M. A. <lb/>
Elizabeth Warren, E. Craw- <lb/>
ford, Dew, K. Vt <lb/>
A. Harris. <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co call to <lb/>
their new goods to-day. If you want <lb/>
good goods that are all right go see <lb/>
them. <lb/>
Revs. T. F. and T. H. Harrison, the <lb/>
twin preachers and singing evangelists, <lb/>
will lecture in the Opera House <lb/>
day and Friday nights. <lb/>
The correspondents now say that <lb/>
Elias is not going to resign bis place or <lb/>
Collector for the Western District, but <lb/>
that the President will again send <lb/>
mime to the Senate, <lb/>
Jim Edmonds horses were left <lb/>
standing in front of the Fri- <lb/>
day night, and ran away. They broke <lb/>
down n telegraph pole smashed the <lb/>
somewhat. <lb/>
The cotton market has gone all to <lb/>
pieces the past week and the local price <lb/>
is down to This is discouraging. <lb/>
The receipts at the ports continue <lb/>
the crop reports are large. <lb/>
Lang announces on our supplement <lb/>
to-day that for the holidays he will <lb/>
make sweeping reductions on all goods <lb/>
in stock. This is something you will <lb/>
want to take advantage of. <lb/>
Our carrier was sick again last week, <lb/>
and to send the papers around <lb/>
by another boy who was not familiar <lb/>
with the route made it later than usual <lb/>
getting the Reflector to the town <lb/>
patrons. <lb/>
Congressman A. B. Branch has <lb/>
pointed William Saunders, of Beaufort <lb/>
comity, to the position of page in the <lb/>
House that was at his disposal. Young <lb/>
Saunders is a sou of the late Col. <lb/>
II. Saunders of this county. <lb/>
We have heard complaint about boys <lb/>
whistling around church doors during <lb/>
services. Perhaps the boys never think <lb/>
of the liability they place themselves <lb/>
under by such conduct. They should <lb/>
stop It. <lb/>
The Pitt county Rifles had their an- <lb/>
election of officers last Thursday. <lb/>
The old officers were re-elected, Capt. <lb/>
J. T. Smith. 1st Lieut. B. F. Sugg, and <lb/>
Lieut. J. A. Teel. The company Is in <lb/>
good condition. <lb/>
On the supplement to day you will <lb/>
find Christmas <lb/>
he has an immense line of toys <lb/>
thing else In the way of holiday goods, <lb/>
something that will please everybody. <lb/>
Go make your selection early. <lb/>
The biggest excitement on the street <lb/>
Saturday was one of Mr. W. H. <lb/>
horses running away with a <lb/>
sulky. No damage was done but two <lb/>
or three people were given a close shove <lb/>
when the horse got on the sidewalk. <lb/>
The John Flanagan Buggy Co. has <lb/>
added more workmen and the outfit of <lb/>
their factory is now one buggy a day. <lb/>
Even at this rate they are unable to <lb/>
keep up with orders. This week they <lb/>
turned out an order for a town in Texas. <lb/>
It is about the season now when <lb/>
are ordering papers magazines <lb/>
for another year. Bear in mind that <lb/>
for any periodical are taken <lb/>
at the Reflector office and we can <lb/>
ways save you the trouble and expense <lb/>
of ordering. <lb/>
Mrs. Polly Dull, a lady said to be <lb/>
years of age, died last Friday morning <lb/>
at the home of her son, Mr. Theophilus <lb/>
Dall, miles from Greenville, and was <lb/>
buried Sunday. She retained her <lb/>
remarkably well for a woman of <lb/>
such advanced age. Her is now in <lb/>
bis Both year. <lb/>
Mills Items. <lb/>
Mills, N. C, Dec. 1803. <lb/>
Mr. went to Greenville <lb/>
on business last Thursday. <lb/>
Miss Winnie Burne is visiting Mi-- <lb/>
Sallie Patrick this week. <lb/>
Mrs. Lena spent hist Friday <lb/>
and Saturday in Grifton. <lb/>
Miss Nannie school closed <lb/>
last Friday for the holidays. <lb/>
Mr. Theo Bland got his knee injured <lb/>
last week by a horse running away <lb/>
with him. <lb/>
There will be a basket party at Tim- <lb/>
next Friday night, proceeds go to <lb/>
the church. <lb/>
Mr. Charlie and sister <lb/>
returned home last Wednesday after a <lb/>
pleasant stay in <lb/>
Mr. L. B. has made about <lb/>
1590 gallons of cane syrup this fall. <lb/>
Mr. Job Moore took the premium on <lb/>
rice at the Columbian exposition. Pitt <lb/>
county never fails to get there. <lb/>
Probably the oldest horse in this <lb/>
county died last week. She was owned <lb/>
by Mr. Alfred Smith was thirty- <lb/>
two old. <lb/>
Cotton and <lb/>
Below are Norfolk <lb/>
and peanuts for yesterday, <lb/>
by Cobb Bros. Co., Commission <lb/>
chants of <lb/>
Good <lb/>
3-10 <lb/>
Low <lb/>
Good <lb/>
Extra <lb/>
-C-i <lb/>
Extends to each and every one <lb/>
A MERRY AND HAPPY CHRISTMAS <lb/>
PREPARE FOE CHRISTMAS I <lb/>
You cannot have Xmas full of cheer and happiness <lb/>
without coming to see our mammoth stock of <lb/>
CLOTHING. CLOTHING CLOTHING. <lb/>
Ladies, <lb/>
Men, <lb/>
I Misses, <lb/>
Baby. <lb/>
in fact we can fit everybody in a pair of Solid Leather <lb/>
Shoes. Only this week we received direct <lb/>
from the factories <lb/>
PAIRS MEN SAMPLE SHOES <lb/>
PAIRS BOYS AND CURLS SAMPLE <lb/>
PAIRS LADIES SAMPLE SHOES. <lb/>
PAIRS BABY SAMPLE SHOES. <lb/>
BE <lb/>
The subject of this memorial <lb/>
Mayo was the daughter of Luke S. and <lb/>
Martha Fleming, born Not. 6th. <lb/>
1870. She was happily married to <lb/>
C. Mayo Nov. 9th. 1891. To <lb/>
them a baby was born May 11th. 1893. <lb/>
It died July 8th, 1893. She never re- <lb/>
gained her health after the death of <lb/>
their baby. with grief for <lb/>
her child she contracted consumption <lb/>
and died December the Ind, 1898. <lb/>
A good woman us. <lb/>
Gone home to her baby child ; <lb/>
Husband and relatives in God trust. <lb/>
We will have to wait only a short while <lb/>
Fast away this lite doth fleet. <lb/>
Soon we too will be called to the <lb/>
other shore. <lb/>
Let us watch and be ready to meet <lb/>
The loved ones gone on before. <lb/>
L. A. M. <lb/>
HAIR <lb/>
and <lb/>
ft <lb/>
Sit to <lb/>
to lo <lb/>
CONSUMPTIVE <lb/>
and shut up hard-earned dollars in these days of hard times and low cotton and <lb/>
tobacco. Don't throw your hard earned cash away for things that no earthly benefit but <lb/>
come to my place of business and buy for your wives, boys, girls and babies an <lb/>
elegant pair of Hand Shoes, or a Boys Suit, in fact anything you may want the <lb/>
way of wearing material have trot it to suit you. <lb/>
MM <lb/>
Dress Goods Department. <lb/>
In this department have cut prices than ever. <lb/>
get our special cut prices. <lb/>
Come and <lb/>
CLOTHING. <lb/>
CLOTHING. <lb/>
Special Hue of BOYS CLOTHING for the HOLIDAY TRADE. All of our <lb/>
stock at reduced prices. must go at some <lb/>
Everybody and look over our lovely stock can certainly please you. <lb/>
o a n-mm; <lb/>
for Co., Fremont, Ohio. <lb/>
Cm <lb/>
It<lb/>
own <lb/>
O. T <lb/>
THE CHEAP CASH MAN. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N C.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017628_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
and <lb/>
Riders of Victor Pneumatics carry an extra inner tube <lb/>
to be used in case of accident. By simply removing a <lb/>
inner tube through a hole in the rim, <lb/>
effected in five minutes by replacing with a new one. <lb/>
If you are going to ride why not ride the best <lb/>
BOSTON. <lb/>
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb/>
WASHINGTON, t DENVER, SAN FRANCISCO. <lb/>
DON'T WALK <lb/>
When it is Cheaper to Ride. <lb/>
The John Flanagan Buggy Company <lb/>
t put up their work and will you any kind of <lb/>
at so reasonable a price that riding is cheaper than walking. <lb/>
---------Besides a full line of--------- <lb/>
BUGGIES AND HARNESS <lb/>
They sell the best offered on the market. <lb/>
Don't Grub and Sweat when you can set the <lb/>
; .-<lb/>
and do your work <lb/>
so much quicker. <lb/>
better. <lb/>
This splendid farm <lb/>
m p e e will <lb/>
crush, cut, <lb/>
. level and pulverize <lb/>
the land all in one <lb/>
operation. Use <lb/>
them once and you <lb/>
will never be with- <lb/>
out them again. <lb/>
v We sell these <lb/>
rows in several <lb/>
sizes, from feet to <lb/>
feet. <lb/>
LAST BUT NOT LEAST <lb/>
IT OF COURSE requires some money to carry on a like ours, and <lb/>
we request all indebted to m to a early a- possible. Thanking all for <lb/>
liberal patronage in the past, and hoping to continue receiving your <lb/>
are to please <lb/>
The John Flanagan Buggy Company. <lb/>
J. S. JENKINS CO <lb/>
LEAF TOBACCO BROKERS <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Ample Facilities for Re-drying. Large Stock <lb/>
Buys on Order Exclusively. <lb/>
A Raw Is. Hankers, and Tobacco Board of Trade, Greenville <lb/>
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb/>
ind adjoining . <lb/>
preparation in preparing <lb/>
HOGSHEADS with inside dressed <lb/>
your Tobacco when packing <lb/>
t. use best split Hoops made from White <lb/>
ii own timber places me in a <lb/>
promise that I will strive to <lb/>
yon can find them at any time <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
To my Friends and Customers of Pitt <lb/>
I wish to that have nude <lb/>
HEAD MATERIAL and <lb/>
smooth which will prevent cutting or <lb/>
Also I have made special <lb/>
Oak. The special advantage-; have I <lb/>
position to meet all competition. <lb/>
make it to your interest to use my Ho <lb/>
either at my factory or at the <lb/>
Scroll Sawing, <lb/>
And Trimmings or Houses a <lb/>
I am prepared to do any kind of Scroll Sawing for Brackets or anything In the <lb/>
or turning Balustrades for Picket for Stairways. of <lb/>
including Piazza Balling, and would be pleased to name you prices on <lb/>
anything la the above upon application. <lb/>
GENERAL REPAIR WORK <lb/>
done on short notice. Thanking you your past patronage, I am willing to <lb/>
to meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you to give me a trial before <lb/>
elsewhere. <lb/>
Gr. COX, Winterville, N. C <lb/>
0- <lb/>
-Manufacturer of- <lb/>
PHOTONS, CARTS <lb/>
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT <lb/>
O. I. JO X Eastern <lb/>
LOCAL <lb/>
NOTES AND <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
Is well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing <lb/>
bat We keep up with the times and the improved style <lb/>
Beat material in all work. All styles of springs are use., you can select from <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King <lb/>
We also keep on hand a full line of Ready Made Harness Whips which w <lb/>
at the rates. Special attention given to repairing. <lb/>
J. x. <lb/>
Greenville, N C <lb/>
CUBES. <lb/>
The Eastern was the recipient <lb/>
of a car load of tobacco from the <lb/>
and Black Greek sections <lb/>
of Wilson county last week- <lb/>
We have seen several new to- <lb/>
buyers looking after the <lb/>
offerings of the Greenville market <lb/>
recently and are informed that <lb/>
they are doing so with a view to <lb/>
locating here. right boys <lb/>
we have got the tobacco you want <lb/>
it and so that is the thing to do <lb/>
come here after it. <lb/>
We see from the Winston <lb/>
Journal that Wilson has sold up <lb/>
to date about two million <lb/>
pounds and expects to sell five <lb/>
before the close of the season. If <lb/>
this be true then Greenville <lb/>
stands a very good chance to <lb/>
wind up with somewhere in the <lb/>
neighborhood of four million. <lb/>
At a regular meeting of the <lb/>
Greenville Tobacco Board of <lb/>
Trade last Monday, it was decided <lb/>
to close the market for the Christ- <lb/>
mas holidays on Thursday Dec. <lb/>
and resume again Tuesday <lb/>
Jan 1894- This gives the to- <lb/>
buyers a very good <lb/>
and we will say here, <lb/>
order to be in time and ahead of <lb/>
anyone a merry and happy <lb/>
Christmas to them all. <lb/>
It is estimated that Greenville <lb/>
has sold a larger per cent of <lb/>
wrappers and tine cutters this <lb/>
year in proportion to the eastern <lb/>
markets. There are two reasons <lb/>
for this. 1st, Pitt county pro- <lb/>
more of this class of <lb/>
co this year than any other east- <lb/>
county and 2nd we have <lb/>
several wrapper buyers and live- <lb/>
competition in the cutter line. <lb/>
Farmers listen Here in Pitt, <lb/>
Greene and counties we <lb/>
grow and market the brightest <lb/>
and most silky textured tobacco <lb/>
in the world and in order to com- <lb/>
the highest prices obtain- <lb/>
able for this particular kind of <lb/>
tobacco, we want you to unite <lb/>
with our warehouse people and <lb/>
let's make Greenville the largest <lb/>
bright tobacco market in the <lb/>
State. <lb/>
Cooper's Warehouse, at Hen- <lb/>
N. C, has been making <lb/>
the past week, fine sales of new <lb/>
bright tobacco. All 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/>
THE MARCH OF PROGRESS. <lb/>
Coming Revolution In Canal <lb/>
The substitution of modern <lb/>
propulsion for the four-footed <lb/>
article will rob the Erie canal of its <lb/>
last feature. With the <lb/>
disappearance of the canal horse <lb/>
But the Toothache Is One Case In <lb/>
Which They AU Tail <lb/>
If there is a test of how much <lb/>
know It is the toothache. Get <lb/>
one and you will see. <lb/>
in hot says A, <lb/>
it at <lb/>
You try it and the cure fails. <lb/>
salt in a says B. <lb/>
Instantly you order hot salt. The <lb/>
same result. <lb/>
of cloves In tho says <lb/>
is <lb/>
It is not in your case. <lb/>
mind says D, <lb/>
process is very You <lb/>
you have no pain, and you say <lb/>
that, anyhow, pain is only <lb/>
pleasure. In fact you separate <lb/>
your mind from your body, and as <lb/>
all pain is felt by the mind You <lb/>
You say you do. You try this a <lb/>
little while. Then D returns, with <lb/>
a beaming smile, and <lb/>
are you <lb/>
And she sees that in your eye <lb/>
which warns her to fly for her life. <lb/>
After this E proposes a mustard <lb/>
plaster. When the skin is all off <lb/>
your check and you have ceased to <lb/>
dance with pain, you find that the <lb/>
tooth is worse than ever. <lb/>
Just then P calls. F is scientific, <lb/>
and has made a study of animal mag- <lb/>
He proposes to magnetize <lb/>
your pain away. After he has fixed <lb/>
you with a stony glare for some mo- <lb/>
he makes passes at you <lb/>
bis hands. At any other time you <lb/>
would laugh, but in the agony of the <lb/>
toothache symptoms suggestive of <lb/>
delirium begin to display <lb/>
themselves. Your scientific friend, <lb/>
declares that you are thwarting his <lb/>
purposes by not becoming <lb/>
and departs offended. <lb/>
Inspired probably by the mind <lb/>
cure and the magnetism, comes G, <lb/>
out of the kitchen, <lb/>
and informs you that three hairs <lb/>
from a black cat's tail worn in a bag <lb/>
on your chest will prove Infallible; <lb/>
but the family cat is white, and the <lb/>
fence cat's gray, and your neigh-; <lb/>
a tortoise shell, so the hairs <lb/>
are not procurable. <lb/>
H prescribes Failure.; <lb/>
I, at juncture, suggests send- <lb/>
for a doctor. <lb/>
Now this is maddening. No doctor <lb/>
ever took a simply as a <lb/>
toothache. He always ignores it <lb/>
tells you it is merely a symptom of <lb/>
some awful affliction with a Latin <lb/>
name, and provides you with several, <lb/>
large bottles of medicine to take; <lb/>
calls three times a day; gets you <lb/>
down low; builds you up again, if he <lb/>
can, and sends in a bill of enormous <lb/>
length for you to settle; and all the <lb/>
while you keep your toothache. <lb/>
Your reply to I is that if the doctor <lb/>
is sent for you will shoot him. You <lb/>
have no pistol, and do not know how <lb/>
to fire one if you had It, but I retires <lb/>
appalled, and sends you a new <lb/>
prayer-book, with tho book-mark in <lb/>
the right place at the command- <lb/>
shalt not <lb/>
J, who is very gentle and timid, <lb/>
knows that, though it is astonishing <lb/>
to think of, ice-water will stop some <lb/>
toothaches. <lb/>
You try it. A moment after, the <lb/>
heads of all the neighbors are stick- <lb/>
out of their windows. They <lb/>
think the menagerie is passing, and <lb/>
that the lion has roared. <lb/>
K is sympathetic, and explains <lb/>
and his driver a canal boat will be ., <lb/>
no more charming than a street water-as near boiling <lb/>
car. The general effect will be that <lb/>
of putting a gas engine into a <lb/>
gondola. With the horses will <lb/>
disappear, too, the tow path, the <lb/>
grass bordered thoroughfare wind- <lb/>
through the country, and all the <lb/>
association connected with it, as <lb/>
embalmed in stories and in songs, <lb/>
such as Wreck of the <lb/>
which fifty years ago was heard the <lb/>
whole length of tho <lb/>
and which even penetrated <lb/>
to far western regions. The trolley <lb/>
will never be surrounded by the <lb/>
glories which illuminated the canal <lb/>
horse who pulled the boat, or when <lb/>
not to the went <lb/>
aboard the boat and was pulled <lb/>
along himself. And what electrical <lb/>
contrivance will supply the of <lb/>
the human being who guided the <lb/>
team, and whose picturesque ad- <lb/>
to the English language re- <lb/>
echoed among the surrounding hills <lb/>
like the rattle of a Gatling gun All <lb/>
must go before the advance of <lb/>
science and the demands of com- <lb/>
It would seem now that all <lb/>
the world's a battery and all the <lb/>
men and women in it only operators. <lb/>
Kansas City Star. <lb/>
A SUBMARINE BRIDGE. <lb/>
A Project for the Connection of Den- <lb/>
mark and Sweden. <lb/>
Rudolph the famous <lb/>
Swedish engineer, was in Toronto <lb/>
recently, says the Empire. He spent <lb/>
two weeks inspecting the work ac- <lb/>
by the Canadian Pacific <lb/>
railway engineers in the Rocky <lb/>
mountains. <lb/>
There is probably no man. in the <lb/>
profession so well known through- <lb/>
out Europe as M. His <lb/>
latest idea is to construct a <lb/>
bridge between Denmark and <lb/>
Sweden under the a <lb/>
row strait which divides the two <lb/>
countries. At present there is an <lb/>
Immense shipping traffic upon the <lb/>
strait, which impedes the operations <lb/>
of the ferry and causes great loss of <lb/>
time in delivering the mails. To <lb/>
obviate this the Swedish engineer <lb/>
proposes his bridge, <lb/>
which, he says, will be half tunnel <lb/>
and half bridge. The whole affair <lb/>
will be a gigantic tuba resting upon <lb/>
piles sunk out of reach of the bottom <lb/>
of the largest the diameter <lb/>
being sufficient for two railway <lb/>
tracks and one driveway. It will be <lb/>
five miles long, and will cost about <lb/>
one million dollars. M. <lb/>
be hopes to see enterprise <lb/>
completed in 1896. i <lb/>
as you can end your <lb/>
But you don't try it. <lb/>
L is the next one. She is practical <lb/>
and stumpy. She never gets tooth- <lb/>
ache. She wears fur car-flaps when <lb/>
she goes out, a big blue veil and a <lb/>
comforter. She advises you to adopt <lb/>
the same costume. Thick boots, in- <lb/>
soles and arctics outside of all. <lb/>
This, with double flannels, a cloth <lb/>
dress and an ulster, with a large <lb/>
shawl outside of all, and mittens <lb/>
over your gloves, will keep you from <lb/>
catching cold, declares, but adds <lb/>
that nothing cures but <lb/>
go with she continues, <lb/>
you'll go and have it <lb/>
You accept her escort. All you <lb/>
remember of the scene is a false as- <lb/>
made by the dentist that ho <lb/>
hurt Then he stands <lb/>
before you with your tooth in his <lb/>
forceps, while you solemnly assert <lb/>
that he has pulled your whole jaw <lb/>
out and that you are dying. <lb/>
You recover, however, but with a <lb/>
fixed conviction that nobody knows <lb/>
anything, which conviction remains <lb/>
with you all tho rest of your life. <lb/>
N. Y. Ledger. <lb/>
The River Amazon. <lb/>
negative, and the missionary asks <lb/>
the reason. <lb/>
comes the reply, <lb/>
is so difficult. You must speak to <lb/>
The missionary then calls the <lb/>
young woman to him and <lb/>
think it is time that you <lb/>
she replies, do not wish <lb/>
to <lb/>
Is a adds the mis- <lb/>
I have a husband for <lb/>
is asks the maiden. <lb/>
The missionary names the <lb/>
date for her love. <lb/>
he is not worth anything. I <lb/>
will not have <lb/>
suggests the mission- <lb/>
is a good fellow, and at- <lb/>
tends well to his house. He throws <lb/>
a good harpoon and he loves <lb/>
The Greenland beauty listens at- <lb/>
but again she declares <lb/>
that she will not accept the man as <lb/>
her husband. <lb/>
goes on the mission- <lb/>
do not wish to force you. <lb/>
shall easily find another wife for so <lb/>
good a <lb/>
The missionary then remains Si- <lb/>
lent, as though he looked upon the <lb/>
incident as closed. But in a few <lb/>
minutes she if you <lb/>
wish <lb/>
answers the pastor; <lb/>
if you wish it. I do not wish to <lb/>
Another sigh follows and the pas- <lb/>
tor expresses regret that she can- <lb/>
not accept the man. <lb/>
she then breaks out, <lb/>
fear he is not <lb/>
did he not kill two whales <lb/>
last summer while the others killed <lb/>
none Will you not take him <lb/>
yes; I <lb/>
bless you answers <lb/>
the pastor, and he joins the two in <lb/>
Try Cooper, at Henderson, with <lb/>
some fine white tobacco and he <lb/>
will please yon. Send your to- <lb/>
where you can get the cash <lb/>
for it. Cooper is always <lb/>
Cooper, at Henderson, pays <lb/>
you for your tobacco in currency <lb/>
or his check as yon may desire. <lb/>
Salve. <lb/>
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, <lb/>
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt <lb/>
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb/>
Chilblains Comes, and all Skin <lb/>
and positively cures Piles, or no <lb/>
pay required. It. Is guaranteed to <lb/>
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded <lb/>
Price cents per box. For Sale by <lb/>
WHAT THE <lb/>
IS <lb/>
when all <lb/>
CONVENIENT, ion cu II la Tow <lb/>
SIMPLE, II a borne remedy. <lb/>
S J E, became It aid to <lb/>
SAFE, It leaves no bad <lb/>
K. because you take no medicine. <lb/>
IT 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 us <lb/>
not good results from tho . .-. <lb/>
ATLANTIC <lb/>
I. C. <lb/>
,, . <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
TRADE <lb/>
MARK <lb/>
INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEIR <lb/>
To see the bargains they are offering on a line of <lb/>
DRY GOODS, CLOTHING <lb/>
Boots, Shoes and Hats <lb/>
For Fall and Winter Service. <lb/>
For its Care of ill Skin <lb/>
This has been In use over <lb/>
fifty years, and wherever know ha <lb/>
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb/>
forced by the lending physicians all over <lb/>
e country, and effected curs where <lb/>
other remedies, with the attention of <lb/>
the most experienced have <lb/>
for years failed. This is of <lb/>
long standing sad the. high reputation <lb/>
which it has is owing entirely <lb/>
its own efficacy, as but little has <lb/>
ever been made to bring it before the <lb/>
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb/>
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb/>
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at- <lb/>
tended to. Address nil orders and <lb/>
communications to <lb/>
T. V. <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
We can salt the Ladies exactly on <lb/>
Dress Goods Trimmings. <lb/>
-o <lb/>
A more complete <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
NOTIONS <lb/>
cannot be found on <lb/>
the market <lb/>
continue to sell C. B. Corsets at cents <lb/>
The balance of Lang's stock of Clothing and Shoes <lb/>
AT AND BELOW COST. <lb/>
Scrofula, whether hereditary or <lb/>
quired, is thoroughly expelled from that <lb/>
blood by Hood's Sarsaparilla, the great <lb/>
blood purifier. <lb/>
A CUP <lb/>
made in three minutes, <lb/>
Palatable, Pure Re- <lb/>
freshing and Simulating <lb/>
Take a cup of <lb/>
boiling hot <lb/>
stir a <lb/>
teas <lb/>
not of <lb/>
Company's <lb/>
Extract of Beef, <lb/>
Then add an egg and <lb/>
some y If d <lb/>
season care full y. <lb/>
BROWN HOOKER'S NEW STORE <lb/>
----TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED WORTH OF---- <lb/>
To be sold at reduced <lb/>
prices, together with a large <lb/>
assortment of Fall and <lb/>
winter <lb/>
Ac. IN SHORT A COMPLETE <lb/>
STOCK OF GOODS TO BE SOLD <lb/>
Fundamental <lb/>
Principle of <lb/>
Life Assurance <lb/>
is protection for the family. <lb/>
Unfortunately, however, the <lb/>
beneficiaries of life assurance <lb/>
are often deprived of the pro- <lb/>
vision made for them, through <lb/>
the loss of the principal, by <lb/>
following bad advice regard- <lb/>
its investment. <lb/>
Under the Installment <lb/>
Policy of <lb/>
The Equitable Life <lb/>
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 Rock Hill, S. C. <lb/>
WILMINGTON B. P. <lb/>
and <lb/>
INS SOOTH. <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
Oct. Its, dally Fast Mail, daily <lb/>
daily ex Sun <lb/>
Weldon 12,35 pm pm <lb/>
Ar pm pm <lb/>
pm <lb/>
Ly pm <lb/>
Rocky Mt p mi pm <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ly <lb/>
Ar Florence <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
Magnolia<lb/>
TRAINS GOING <lb/>
No <lb/>
daily <lb/>
Mm. <lb/>
Florence<lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Wilmington<lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
Ar Wilson<lb/>
The largest river Is the <lb/>
It rises sixty miles the Pacific <lb/>
ocean and traverses the whole width <lb/>
of the continent, a distance of four <lb/>
thousand miles. It is navigable for <lb/>
large-sized ships twenty-two <lb/>
miles from Its mouth. In the <lb/>
last three hundred or four hundred <lb/>
miles of its course its width is so <lb/>
great that from one shore the <lb/>
site bank is invisible. The strength <lb/>
of its current carries its fresh <lb/>
a distance of more than two <lb/>
hundred miles out to sea. <lb/>
courtship. <lb/>
A Where Missionaries and <lb/>
Figure in the Operation. <lb/>
the Danish missionaries have <lb/>
gained the confidence of the natives <lb/>
of Greenland, marriages in tho far <lb/>
north are celebrated by the <lb/>
of the church. In a re- <lb/>
cent issue of one of the Danish pa- <lb/>
one of the missionaries gives <lb/>
the following account of the way <lb/>
courtship and marriages are brought <lb/>
Tho man calls on the missionary <lb/>
and wish to take unto my- <lb/>
self a <lb/>
asks missionary. <lb/>
The man gives bar name. <lb/>
yon spoken with <lb/>
bu As a rule the answer in the <lb/>
A. Rocky Mont OS <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Tarboro p m <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Scotland Branch Road <lb/>
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. m., Halifax 4.40 <lb/>
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck 4.48 p. m. <lb/>
6.28 p, m., <lb/>
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m., <lb/>
Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving Halifax <lb/>
at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. daily <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Trains on Washington Branch <lb/>
Washington 7.00 a, m. arrives <lb/>
8.40 a. m Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb/>
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m., Parmele 8.00 <lb/>
p. m arrives Washington 7.30 p. m. <lb/>
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb/>
trains on Scot In Neck Branch. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via Alb <lb/>
A Raleigh R. R. dally except Sun <lb/>
day, P M, Sunday P If, arrive <lb/>
Plymouth 9.20 p. m., 6.20 p. m. <lb/>
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb/>
6.80 a. mt, 10.00 a. m <lb/>
arrive Tarboro, N C, 10.25 AM 12,20. <lb/>
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb/>
and Fayetteville Branch leave Fayette- <lb/>
ville a m. arrive Rowland p m, <lb/>
Returning leave Rowland 1215 p m. <lb/>
arrive Fayetteville ; m. Dally ex- <lb/>
Sept Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb/>
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M <lb/>
N C, A M. Re <lb/>
retuning N C AM <lb/>
Goldsboro. N C A M. <lb/>
Train <lb/>
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville <lb/>
P Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb/>
arrives Rocky Mount <lb/>
M, daily except <lb/>
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. <lb/>
7.80 p. m., arrive Dunbar 8.40 p <lb/>
m. Returning leave Dunbar a. <lb/>
arrive Latta 7.15 a. m. except <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves <lb/>
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at <lb/>
and leave Clio <lb/>
ton at A M, and P. X. <lb/>
at Warsaw Nos. and <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection at <lb/>
Weldon for all points North daily, <lb/>
all via Richmond, and dally except Sun- <lb/>
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb/>
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb/>
railroad tor Norfolk and all <lb/>
points via Norfolk. <lb/>
General <lb/>
J. K. Transportation. <lb/>
T. V, <lb/>
CHEAP. <lb/>
bought my brother out I am to soil ray <lb/>
tire stock exceedingly close. Come and see for yourself. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
WILEY BROWN. <lb/>
New Home Sewing and Depositor for American Bible So <lb/>
RELIABLE <lb/>
the buyers of Pitt line of the following goods <lb/>
not to be excelled in this market. And to be and <lb/>
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN- <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS, LA- <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS. HOUSE FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS, SASH. BLINDS, and QUEENS- <lb/>
WARK, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different <lb/>
Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster of Paris, <lb/>
Hair, and -addles <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent for Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb/>
jobbers cents per per cent for Bread Prop <lb/>
ration and Hall's Star Lye it Jobbers Prices. White Lead and pure Lin <lb/>
Red Oil. Varnishes and Paint Wood and Wood <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a call and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
SPLENDID FARM. <lb/>
For Rent. <lb/>
A portion of the John Peebles farm, <lb/>
lying on Tar river, lies from Green- <lb/>
ville, one hundred and sixty acres in <lb/>
field to f, or easily sub-divided to <lb/>
suit renters. Good six-room dwelling, <lb/>
tenant houses, excellent <lb/>
and grapes and water. This land <lb/>
has rested two years. Is in the heart <lb/>
of the best tobacco section in the east. <lb/>
acres capital tobacco land, <lb/>
barns and large celled pack-house <lb/>
Fine corn, cotton, peanuts and tobacco <lb/>
farm. Rails for fencing furnished free <lb/>
of charge by owner. Apply to <lb/>
ANDREW JOYNER, <lb/>
At Greenville. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The Court Clerk of Pitt <lb/>
county having issued letters of <lb/>
to me, the undersigned, on the <lb/>
1st day of November, 1898, on the estate <lb/>
of Harmon Harrell, deceased, notice is <lb/>
hereby given to all persons indebted to <lb/>
the estate to make immediate payment <lb/>
to the undersigned, and to all creditors <lb/>
of said to present their claims, <lb/>
properly authenticated, to the under- <lb/>
signed within twelve months after the <lb/>
date of this notice or this notice will be <lb/>
plead In bar of recovery. <lb/>
This November the 6th, <lb/>
W. H. HARRINGTON, <lb/>
on estate of Harmon Harrell <lb/>
Annual Statement. <lb/>
Of per diem and mileage allowed Board <lb/>
of Commissioners for Pitt county for <lb/>
the year ending December <lb/>
Council Dawson hath attended days. <lb/>
Jesse L. Smith hath attended <lb/>
Fleming attended <lb/>
S. A. Gainer hath days. <lb/>
T. E. Keel hath attended days. <lb/>
COUNCIL DAWSON. <lb/>
days as commissioner, 28.00 <lb/>
days as 20.00 <lb/>
miles traveled, 33.50 <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/>
but promptly upon <lb/>
stomach and intestines; <lb/>
dyspepsia, habitual <lb/>
cad- <lb/>
ache. One <lb/>
first symptom of ind <lb/>
biliousness, dizziness, <lb/>
after eating, or depress <lb/>
spirits, and quickly <lb/>
remove the whole <lb/>
may I e re- <lb/>
of nearest i <lb/>
are easy to take, <lb/>
quick to act, and <lb/>
save many <lb/>
tor's <lb/>
a doc- <lb/>
JESSE L. SMITH. <lb/>
days as commissioner, <lb/>
S days as <lb/>
miles traveled, <lb/>
81.60 <lb/>
830.00 <lb/>
4.00 <lb/>
13.00 <lb/>
17.00 <lb/>
Send in Your Orders. <lb/>
We have a nice assortment of <lb/>
Apples, Pears, Plums, <lb/>
Peaches, Chestnuts, Pecans, Grape- <lb/>
vines, J Raspberries, Straw- <lb/>
berries, Dewberries, and Blackberries. <lb/>
Also <lb/>
AID <lb/>
Shrubs. Roses, Greenhouse Plants, <lb/>
ah I las Hyacinths. Tulips, Lilies, Ac. <lb/>
orders solicited and will be <lb/>
the proper time for trans- <lb/>
ti n Semi for <lb/>
ALLEN WARREN A SON, <lb/>
Riverside Nursery. Greenville, r. <lb/>
LEONIDAS FLEMING. <lb/>
days as commissioner, <lb/>
days as <lb/>
miles traveled. <lb/>
10.00 <lb/>
9.00 <lb/>
S. A. GAINER. <lb/>
days as commissioner, <lb/>
days as <lb/>
miles traveled. <lb/>
T. E. <lb/>
days as commissioner, <lb/>
days <lb/>
miles traveled. <lb/>
15.00<lb/>
8.00 <lb/>
31.00 <lb/>
73.90 <lb/>
Total amount allowed Board, <lb/>
State of North Carolina, <lb/>
Pitt County. <lb/>
I, Henry Harding, of <lb/>
the Board of Commissioners, for the <lb/>
aforesaid county, do certify that the <lb/>
foregoing is a correct statement, as <lb/>
doth upon record in my <lb/>
Given under my band and <lb/>
seal of said Board at <lb/>
office In Greenville, this 9th <lb/>
day of ember, 1893. <lb/>
H. HARDING. <lb/>
Board Commissioner <lb/>
SOLD <lb/>
COol MM <lb/>
YOUNG <lb/>
Sole Agents, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
W. L. DOUGLAS <lb/>
SHOE <lb/>
la try a <lb/>
Mt In the world. <lb/>
II <lb/>
4.00 <lb/>
3.50 <lb/>
2.50 <lb/>
2.28 <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
MR <lb/>
3.00 <lb/>
12.00<lb/>
If s las SHOE a I <lb/>
Mai. to IS, M, 14.00 <lb/>
She filial<lb/>
k by W. L Show. <lb/>
ark. stamped M tho bottom, look for It Km WM <lb/>
SM <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS, H. C<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>