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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 17 January 1894</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 17 January 1894</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18940117</dc:date>
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                <p>
.-. <lb />
-I t <lb />
Anything 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 of Envelopes all sizes, <lb />
Pens, Inks, Mucilage, <lb />
Cups. Blotters, in <lb />
great variety- <lb />
This Office for Job Printing. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. in Advance. <lb />
STATE NEWS <lb />
Things Mentioned in our State Ex- <lb />
changes that are of General Interest <lb />
The Cream of the News. <lb />
are students at the <lb />
A. M. College, Raleigh. <lb />
Mr. Morrison has been appoint- <lb />
ed postmaster at <lb />
A railway has just been com- <lb />
to Jackson, Northampton <lb />
county. <lb />
Stephen H. Lane has been <lb />
pointed collector of customs at <lb />
Hon. Hoke Smith will deliver <lb />
the address at the nest <lb />
at Chapel Hill. <lb />
Dan Carlos Harrill, a prom <lb />
farmer of Bertie county, aged <lb />
years, has married his ninth wife. <lb />
Frank Newell colored, was shot <lb />
and killed in Cumberland county <lb />
by other the result of a <lb />
row over a dog. <lb />
Secretary has awarded <lb />
the contract for the erection of <lb />
the life saving station at Ports- <lb />
mouth, N. G, to W. J. B. of <lb />
Beaufort, N. C at <lb />
Salisbury Herald It is talked <lb />
on the streets that the city fathers <lb />
will follow the example of Char- <lb />
and Greensboro and place a <lb />
license tax on <lb />
James Boylan, of Raleigh, has <lb />
invited all Carolina owners <lb />
of running horses to meet there <lb />
February 14th, for the purpose of <lb />
forming a State association for <lb />
handicap racing. <lb />
Mr. James A Bryan, one of the <lb />
wealthiest citizens of is <lb />
to be married at Princeton, N. J., <lb />
on the 18th instant to Miss Wood- <lb />
ruff- It is quite a romantic mar- <lb />
She was his sweetheart <lb />
while he was at college there <lb />
twenty-five years ago. <lb />
Paul C- Humphrey and Marion <lb />
Butler had a lively scrimmage in <lb />
Hotel Kennon, at Goldsboro, on <lb />
Sunday morning. The trouble <lb />
originated about a certain seat <lb />
Butler was occupying which was <lb />
claimed by Humphrey for his <lb />
wife, and which Butler refused to <lb />
give up. <lb />
Charlotte Rev. Mi-. <lb />
of the Episcopal church, <lb />
paid his respects to the Roman <lb />
Catholic Church in a very em- <lb />
way Sunday. Among <lb />
other things, he said that it was <lb />
a shame Charlotte Protestants <lb />
had given to help build a <lb />
Catholic church in this city. <lb />
R. P. Howell, who up to the <lb />
first of January was cashier of <lb />
the Bank of Wayne, at Goldsboro, <lb />
made an assignment Wednesday. <lb />
It was a great surprise. The <lb />
liabilities are said to be <lb />
The bank is the largest creditor. <lb />
The assignment caused a decided <lb />
sensation. Capt. Howell is one <lb />
of leading citizens <lb />
and has the finest farm in Wayne. <lb />
He gave up all his property. <lb />
Last month a desperate attempt <lb />
was made to wreck a passenger <lb />
train near Hillsboro, on the <lb />
North Carolina division of the <lb />
Richmond and Danville railroad. <lb />
Sills were placed on the track and <lb />
the engine was disabled. De- <lb />
were put at work and <lb />
William Merritt, an eighteen- <lb />
year old white boy, was arrested <lb />
Saturday week. Other arrests of <lb />
white persons living near by will <lb />
follow. <lb />
VOL. XIII. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY <lb />
NO. I <lb />
Written for the <lb />
THE KICKING MULE. <lb />
JOHNNIE. <lb />
of great men all remind <lb />
can make our lives- sublime. <lb />
And. departing, leave behind us <lb />
Foot-prints on the sands of time. <lb />
that perhaps <lb />
Sailing o'er life's solemn main, <lb />
A forlorn and ship-wrecked brother <lb />
Boeing, shall take heart again. <lb />
us then, be up and doing, <lb />
With a heart any fate; <lb />
Still achieving, still pursuing, <lb />
to labor and to <lb />
We desire to say to our citizens, that <lb />
or years we have been selling Dr. King's <lb />
Discovery tor Consumption, Dr. <lb />
King's New Life Pills, <lb />
Salve and Bitters, and have <lb />
never handled that sell as well, <lb />
or that have given such universal <lb />
faction. We do not hesitate to <lb />
tee them every time, and we stand <lb />
to refund the purchase price, if <lb />
satisfactory results do not follow <lb />
use. have won their <lb />
great popularity purely on their merits- <lb />
The Durham Sun tea that <lb />
American Tobacco Com- <lb />
has notified all of its buyers <lb />
on all markets to cease buying <lb />
the grades of tobacco of which <lb />
cigarettes are made, one of the <lb />
reasons being the action of the <lb />
ways and means committee in <lb />
increasing the tax on cigarettes. <lb />
This is characteristically <lb />
Every trust in the country whose <lb />
profits are to be affect ed by the <lb />
Wilson bill is making a great big <lb />
bluff at Congress, and the shut- <lb />
down of mills is a piece of <lb />
he same business. When they <lb />
can neither persuade nor buy a <lb />
Congress they try to bully it <lb />
Charlotte Observer. <lb />
Seeing a congregation of <lb />
people of nil descriptions com- <lb />
tilling the street opposite <lb />
my boarding place one day, as I <lb />
returned making the matron <lb />
sad on account of the quantity of <lb />
luxuries that I myself <lb />
of, I deliberately proceed <lb />
ed to the of the attraction <lb />
In the midst of this variegated as- <lb />
of people, I saw <lb />
of quite a stubborn <lb />
that persistently refused to <lb />
go ; but was flying his heels pro- <lb />
and insisting upon keeping <lb />
himself near fences and trees, <lb />
while his would be master was <lb />
mercilessly applying with spurs <lb />
and every mode of <lb />
persuasion, to induce him to <lb />
plod his weary <lb />
But all in vain- The kicking <lb />
mule held his ground with his <lb />
fore feet, and yet kept two a good <lb />
part of the time trying the <lb />
of the atmosphere <lb />
As I joined the spectators I <lb />
asked myself whether the people <lb />
or the mule was the better <lb />
with the fun. The mule was <lb />
evidently the fool for the occasion, <lb />
and received all the physical pain <lb />
inflicted by his would-be-rider. <lb />
In his failure to see himself as <lb />
others saw him, ho failed to see <lb />
the joke. <lb />
Our country is of just <lb />
mules, except they stand erect on <lb />
two feet. A good part of the <lb />
world's fun is obtained at their <lb />
expense. They laugh and <lb />
to enjoy it. They laugh because <lb />
they think they do something <lb />
smart, while the people laugh at <lb />
what is wanting. <lb />
Considering the mule as an in- <lb />
stage in Darwin's <lb />
Theory of Evolution, I am almost <lb />
compelled to agree with him, or <lb />
else believe that some men are to be true, <lb />
rapidly declining in a <lb />
scale to this sphere occupied <lb />
by family. Instead of <lb />
evolution it may be involution. <lb />
Had Darwin selected such a <lb />
character for his subject, I am <lb />
sure he would have changed his <lb />
views and taken the opposite <lb />
The stubborn bipeds, whose <lb />
character show itself so <lb />
prominent in their actions, are <lb />
not confined to any particular sec- <lb />
of country nor restricted to <lb />
any one profession. In every <lb />
avocation of life, in every com- <lb />
and on every question <lb />
that comes before the minds of <lb />
the people this smart fellow is in <lb />
the midst kicking for all his life, <lb />
and not kicking at any particular <lb />
thing. He kicks because some <lb />
more of his family is standing <lb />
near to laugh. <lb />
His small cranium affords the <lb />
nearest vacuum ever known to <lb />
man- A seven and a half hat <lb />
would get only one side of his <lb />
head, while the other side would <lb />
be exposed to the ridicule of men <lb />
of heads. What's gained <lb />
in space is lost in density. Like <lb />
his his head is quite <lb />
long with prominent top, while <lb />
his ears rise high to catch the <lb />
first sound in public opinion. <lb />
He is an old fogy and all his <lb />
ideas are stale to the better class <lb />
of men. He has not learned that <lb />
the world extends beyond his <lb />
realm. He considers everybody <lb />
opposed to him cranks and fools- <lb />
He clings to his fogyish ideas <lb />
with the same love that the miser <lb />
does his purse, still he fails to <lb />
hoard up precious jewels in his <lb />
sacred treasure. As the ancients <lb />
believed the earth the of <lb />
the universe that old Sol <lb />
submissive went in his daily <lb />
journey around, to do obeisance <lb />
to their mighty planet; so <lb />
old fogies still fondly cherish the <lb />
vain idea that they are the <lb />
of all the thinking world around. <lb />
Nothing new is ever prepared <lb />
by them. Like the mule they are <lb />
not progressive, but re- <lb />
fuse to advance, or let those, who <lb />
may wish to do so, move the <lb />
wheels of progress. Because <lb />
they did not propose the theory, <lb />
or discover the truth, or make the <lb />
invention, they at once determine <lb />
to oppose it. Their opinions are <lb />
all the public ever gets from <lb />
them. The absence of deep <lb />
thought is replaced by the ego- <lb />
whirl of the upper lip, and <lb />
the sudden contraction of the <lb />
lower jaw, to give their opinion <lb />
the proper air, tempered by their <lb />
words. <lb />
Bat their opinions <lb />
they lack depth, soon pass away. <lb />
Their bray that is sure to follow <lb />
their kicking is the last sound <lb />
that dies on the <lb />
public And short lived with <lb />
their opinions the promoters soon <lb />
pass away ; and the best said of <lb />
them is, they were, but are not. <lb />
They leave behind no one to <lb />
mourn their fate. No bier is at- <lb />
tended to their last resting place. <lb />
No sacred spot is ever strewn <lb />
with flowers to remind friends of <lb />
dear laid away to rest. <lb />
Dear reader, lets stop kicking. <lb />
Lets progress, and lets join with <lb />
Longfellow in his Psalm of Life, <lb />
remembering that <lb />
TO REPRESENT THE <lb />
AND REAL ESTATE IN- <lb />
OF THE SOUTH. <lb />
to thousands that <lb />
THE OLD COLLECTOR AND <lb />
NEW. <lb />
THE <lb />
Does Wealth Rule <lb />
Burke it is <lb />
has sought to impress the <lb />
President his view of the danger- <lb />
of an income <lb />
tax. A zealous monopoly organ <lb />
says in effect that no Northern <lb />
Democratic State or <lb />
district could be carried for <lb />
such a tax. <lb />
Has it really come to this, that <lb />
money counts for more than men in <lb />
D wealth rule <lb />
Is there any basis for the as- <lb />
that a tax large <lb />
incomes, at the most <lb />
not one voter in a <lb />
according to official <lb />
defeat tho party <lb />
responsible for it <lb />
If these things are true, are <lb />
already living under a plutocracy <lb />
the of wealth. <lb />
The World does not believe <lb />
It believes that <lb />
a fractional tax on incomes from <lb />
to and a slightly <lb />
graded tax on in <lb />
comes above the latter sum, <lb />
would be not only just but <lb />
It would oppress no one, <lb />
wrong deprive no one of <lb />
any necessary or even of an ha <lb />
luxury. <lb />
Money may decide, as it some- <lb />
times has decided, a closely con- <lb />
tested election by throwing its <lb />
weight into the balance- But it <lb />
cannot, in a republic, condemn at <lb />
the polls an equitable tax which <lb />
affects only the large incomes of <lb />
fortunate small class. Men count <lb />
for more than money. Justice is <lb />
stronger than York <lb />
World. <lb />
Autopsy of a Grip <lb />
The case of Mr- J. K. <lb />
was one that puzzled the doctors. <lb />
were confident that there <lb />
was some affection of the brain, <lb />
and they treated him in general <lb />
for the grip. His was a well de- <lb />
fined of that malady. It was <lb />
determined that in the interests <lb />
of to hold a post <lb />
examination and it was conducted <lb />
by <lb />
and Robert Gibbon, Jr. The <lb />
autopsy revealed the deadly char- <lb />
of the grip. <lb />
There was a gangrenous spot <lb />
the right lung; an effusion of <lb />
water on the brain ; an atrophied <lb />
gall bladder, and the liver and <lb />
spleen were affected. Mr. <lb />
Creight was seized with his illness <lb />
on the Saturday night before <lb />
Christmas. During the first <lb />
stages of his sickness he was <lb />
conscious, but ho became <lb />
conscious and remained so until <lb />
within a short time of his death. <lb />
Charlotte News. <lb />
Salve. <lb />
The Salve in the world for Cuts, <lb />
Bruises. Sores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum, <lb />
Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb />
Chilblains t and all skin <lb />
cures Files, or no <lb />
pay required. It Is guaranteed to give <lb />
Perfect, satisfaction, or money refunded <lb />
price cents per box. For Sale by <lb />
Satisfying Him. <lb />
have said the cap- <lb />
critic, find out what <lb />
son you can give for representing <lb />
the new year as a nude small <lb />
is responded the <lb />
the art editor, the year <lb />
does not get its close till the <lb />
of <lb />
Then the captious critic went <lb />
out and broke his nice new pledge, <lb />
because Journal. <lb />
The announcement last week <lb />
that Mr. Elias had with- <lb />
would if there from the contest of the <lb />
one to start the ball is what a ., <lb />
New England farmer writes to the , of this district did <lb />
Southern States magazine, of take tho of paper <lb />
Baltimore. From Minnesota by more <lb />
comes a letter giving a long list news that Melvin E. Carter, <lb />
of names of farmers who want to f. had been named as <lb />
go South, and with it is <lb />
ed the hope, God give j scarcely needful that we <lb />
you success in your laudable work d anything to what we said last <lb />
for the benefit of us frozen n to this change, <lb />
of the cold case in which we can with- <lb />
a . t. a . . t ilia <lb />
SHE FIGURED ON DIAMONDS. <lb />
the editor <lb />
THE DAIRY. <lb />
Kindness and confidence be- <lb />
asked, as entered the room, the <lb />
says tho Chicago She was profit. <lb />
And from the same State a on insincerity both the <lb />
have got and am and to him <lb />
ting more good points re- <lb />
the South from one copy <lb />
of the Southern States than I <lb />
would have been able to have got <lb />
whose race is The <lb />
shared fully the general <lb />
gratification felt in the State <lb />
when Mr. Elias was appointed <lb />
in a long, long, long time had I He had been so good <lb />
not chanced to have it- The so active a Democrat, and <lb />
South will beat California for <lb />
fruit. I have lived California <lb />
and know whereof I <lb />
Such letters as the foregoing <lb />
are coming to the Southern <lb />
from New England, from <lb />
the West and from tho North- <lb />
west in an eyer increasing <lb />
We confess that we have <lb />
been amazed at the number of <lb />
these letters and at the great in- <lb />
that is being aroused in <lb />
sections among farmers and <lb />
others who want to go South, and <lb />
for tho demand for information <lb />
about the South. The cry of <lb />
promises to swell to great- <lb />
volume even tho <lb />
of the past ever reached, if <lb />
the railroads and the <lb />
the South will now promptly <lb />
vigorous work to <lb />
age this growing tendency and <lb />
do it on tho same broad scale as <lb />
has characterized the work of the <lb />
Western States for many years. <lb />
Because of these facts the South <lb />
em States magazine will hence- be <lb />
forth devoted mainly to the <lb />
immigration and real estate inter <lb />
of tho South, at the same <lb />
time presenting every of <lb />
tho South's general attractions <lb />
and advantages for the home seek <lb />
the investor with the same <lb />
energy with which the <lb />
Record has for ton years <lb />
labored to push forward the in- <lb />
growth and interests of <lb />
the South. The Southern States <lb />
magazine will fully this <lb />
field- It will continue from <lb />
mouth to month to publish the <lb />
letters of Northern and Western <lb />
farmers who have settled in the <lb />
South, telling of the advantages <lb />
of this section compared with <lb />
their former homes. These letters <lb />
are attracting great attention in <lb />
the North and West- It will <lb />
forth the attractions of tho South <lb />
for fruit culture, as well as for <lb />
every branch of agriculture; it <lb />
will publish special illustrated <lb />
covering tho attractions of <lb />
the South for tho pleasure and <lb />
health-seeker. Especial attention <lb />
will be given to the real estate in- <lb />
of the whole South, <lb />
reports made of all important <lb />
sales anywhere from Maryland to <lb />
Texas. <lb />
Tho leading of the next <lb />
issue wilt a general <lb />
of how to develop immigration, by <lb />
some fifteen or twenty of the moat <lb />
prominent railroad officers of the <lb />
South. Mr. R- H. Edmonds, <lb />
tor and general manager of the <lb />
Record, is also <lb />
editor of the Southern States <lb />
magazine. <lb />
She is After Him. <lb />
Congressman can <lb />
truly sing After for <lb />
Madeline Pollard, who has a <lb />
breech of promise suit against <lb />
him, has not compromised the <lb />
case. She is making a still hunt <lb />
in the district with her friends, <lb />
and they propose to make it <lb />
warm for the colonel. Miss Pol- <lb />
lard has been in Cincinnati <lb />
evidence of her visits there. <lb />
She claims that three times she <lb />
was an inmate of lying-in <lb />
during the period of her <lb />
relations with the Congressman. <lb />
The Sun, one of the <lb />
most influential papers in the <lb />
Ashland district, contains an <lb />
advocating the election of <lb />
W. C- Owens to Congress. The <lb />
has heretofore been a zealous <lb />
supporter of Colonel <lb />
ridge, but now declares that the <lb />
Pollard scandal will destroy his <lb />
usefulness in Congress- Evan E- <lb />
has announced his <lb />
against Colonel <lb />
ridge. The Colonel is making an <lb />
active canvass. <lb />
had really accomplished so much <lb />
in the conversion to Democracy <lb />
of the formerly Republican conn- <lb />
ties west of the ridge, and is, with- <lb />
so amiable attractive a <lb />
gentleman, that there a gen- <lb />
oral fooling that his reward had <lb />
bees well and, among <lb />
those who know him, a sense of <lb />
personal gratification that he ha <lb />
received it. conduct of the <lb />
office during tho brief period he <lb />
held it was entirely credible and <lb />
gave promise of an <lb />
would satisfy tho <lb />
and amply justify the appoint- <lb />
Ho estimated at its full <lb />
worth the honor tho President <lb />
had done him We are sorry he <lb />
lost it. This much we feel dis- <lb />
posed to say, feel disposed <lb />
to say nothing at all as to tho <lb />
rest. <lb />
So far as the choice of his <lb />
is concerned, it was made <lb />
great wisdom. Capt- is a <lb />
gentleman of whom almost all <lb />
Ho is <lb />
very able man, a tactful n <lb />
skillful politician, a business man, <lb />
a luau of elevated character. In <lb />
all tho district is not a fitter <lb />
man for this place- Ho will not <lb />
only mean to administer <lb />
great office in the interest of the <lb />
government and at the same time <lb />
with scrupulous regard for tho <lb />
rights and tho welfare of tho <lb />
but he will know how to do <lb />
it. He is that sort of a He <lb />
not only has ability but he has <lb />
sense- The Observer presents its <lb />
compliments to him in the full as- <lb />
that his administration of <lb />
the will give <lb />
sis to everything it has said of <lb />
him in the foregoing and that it <lb />
can speak as cordially of him <lb />
when ho goes out as it does now <lb />
that ho is just going in. And, to <lb />
wind up in good form, it can say <lb />
for tho President that, although <lb />
his administration is not yet a <lb />
year old, he has given tho west <lb />
district of North Carolina two <lb />
good collectors and we hope he <lb />
will not find occasion to give it <lb />
any Observer. <lb />
a determined looking <lb />
with sharp air that <lb />
seemed to know my <lb />
if I am from tho <lb />
am tho society said <lb />
the young man at the corner desk. <lb />
can I do for <lb />
I'm said, <lb />
in a business like way. <lb />
to be married P ho <lb />
asked. <lb />
she replied. you <lb />
think I came up here to toll you <lb />
I was engaged as a <lb />
no; not at ho assured <lb />
her. you'll give me <lb />
name tho name of your <lb />
mind tho name just <lb />
interrupted. <lb />
printed something about plain <lb />
gold engagement rings being <lb />
I remember snob, a para- <lb />
Jim tell you to do <lb />
Jim <lb />
the man I'm engaged to <lb />
Jim <lb />
I don't even known him. <lb />
should not filled <lb />
full of cream. If it is, <lb />
batter will not come quickly. <lb />
The cellar which milk is set <lb />
must not smell musty. Tho air <lb />
must pure or the milk will ho <lb />
spoiled. <lb />
It <lb />
IS just OS necessary now aH <lb />
The F i tends After Death. <lb />
put you up to <lb />
word. <lb />
I my <lb />
ho <lb />
printing that f <lb />
you my <lb />
why do you ask <lb />
sometimes <lb />
doubts about Jim. He wanted to <lb />
boy me a plain gold ring, bat I <lb />
told him diamonds were none I o <lb />
good for mo. Then he said <lb />
plain gold was the correct thing, <lb />
but I told him could not pull <lb />
the wool over ray eyes with that <lb />
kind of a story. It had got I be <lb />
diamonds or the engagement was <lb />
off. Ho seemed kind of con <lb />
then, but the next day he <lb />
brought mo that paper of yours <lb />
Baying that plain gold was <lb />
and I thought likely he'd <lb />
come hero and gave <lb />
a dollar to print <lb />
wouldn't have printed it <lb />
for if he <lb />
You can't <lb />
those items put in for <lb />
said with a sigh- <lb />
suppose it'll have to be plain <lb />
gold then, but I'd sort of figured <lb />
on I reckon I took the <lb />
wrong season to gel engaged. <lb />
Seems hard, doesn't it <lb />
in to tho dairy <lb />
and then wash them with cold <lb />
water- <lb />
It is claimed by that add- <lb />
old cream to cream that is not <lb />
sufficiently ripened will make tho <lb />
butter oily. <lb />
Butter must tho eye. <lb />
Speaking for our selves, and we <lb />
are like other people, we would <lb />
not buy white butter. <lb />
Butter that is in a granulated <lb />
slate should washed until the <lb />
liquid that comes from it is <lb />
of all milky color. <lb />
If butter is colored too deeply <lb />
it looks nasty. believe in <lb />
coloring butter tho con- <lb />
sumer wants it yellow. But too <lb />
much butter is bad. <lb />
Do not apply salt to butter <lb />
carelessly. Weigh the butter and <lb />
then add salt at tho rate of three- <lb />
quarters of an or an ounce <lb />
to the pound and work it <lb />
An of the Missouri State <lb />
Dairy Association has propound- <lb />
ed a large i umber of <lb />
for dairymen to answer, re- <lb />
minds us of our public school sys- <lb />
in Chicago, under which the <lb />
teacher is paid to teach, but <lb />
i doing it, asks the scholar <lb />
questions which he takes home <lb />
for the parents to answer. This <lb />
officer should give instructions <lb />
and not ask questions. Perhaps <lb />
lie is pot able to answer his own <lb />
questions. <lb />
The American Cultivator. hits <lb />
the nail on the head when it says <lb />
when it more and <lb />
trouble to sell butter than it does <lb />
to make it is evidently me <lb />
thing wrong in the <lb />
may be in the animals, the <lb />
or water, the stable arrange- <lb />
the manner in which the <lb />
milk or cream is handled, or the <lb />
condition in which it is put up <lb />
and Bent to market. Usually the <lb />
man of the place is responsible <lb />
for all but one of the e points. <lb />
Farmer's Voice. <lb />
Dick Mason's Dream. <lb />
people do not <lb />
attach any importance to dreams, <lb />
although some things happen in <lb />
that line which cannot under. <lb />
stood. On Saturday before the <lb />
Sunday morning on which the <lb />
late Chief Police Dick Mason j <lb />
Skin Crafting, <lb />
Perhaps tho most noteworthy <lb />
e of skin grafting in a <lb />
has been performed at Mercy <lb />
under tho direction of <lb />
Prof. E. assisted by <lb />
Do Silva and Dudley. The <lb />
subjects were ox State Attorney <lb />
George W. W. Blake and Mrs. <lb />
Blake, of Ottawa, III., who came <lb />
A father once related to his <lb />
children the following <lb />
The of a certain island <lb />
was once summoned by his lord <lb />
the king to render an account of <lb />
his government. Those of his <lb />
friends on whom ho hail placed <lb />
the greatest reliance suffered him <lb />
to depart, and did not move from <lb />
their place; others in whom he <lb />
had not a little confided went with <lb />
him only as far as the ship; but <lb />
some in whom he had scarcely <lb />
trusted at all, accompanied him <lb />
through the whole of the distant <lb />
journey, to the king's throne, <lb />
spoke in his favor, and obtained <lb />
for him the grace of the king. <lb />
The children did not understand <lb />
who these friends could be. Their <lb />
father, therefore, <lb />
also has three kinds of on <lb />
earth j which, however, for the <lb />
most part, he does not learn to <lb />
know rightly till the time when <lb />
he is called from this world to <lb />
give account of his actions and <lb />
omissions. The first class of <lb />
these friends, wealth and posses- <lb />
remain behind. The second, <lb />
his relations, accompany him only <lb />
to the grave. The third, his good <lb />
works, follow him into eternity, <lb />
even to the throne of God, where <lb />
it will be to each <lb />
according to his and <lb />
where even the cup of cold water <lb />
which is given to one who thirsts <lb />
will not be <lb />
How thoughtlessly, then, does <lb />
the man act who does not concern <lb />
himself in the least degree about <lb />
true I <lb />
died, he had a dream which has <lb />
been talked of considerably, and <lb />
tho superstitious believe that it <lb />
was that evening <lb />
Mr. Mason from a short <lb />
sleep and told the friends with <lb />
of a dream he hi He <lb />
said ho dreamed he, John <lb />
J. M. Garrison <lb />
had taken a j to- <lb />
They stopped at a hotel <lb />
in a strange city and while there <lb />
agreed to not got separated. <lb />
became separated de- <lb />
spite all their efforts to stay to <lb />
gather. Then he walked <lb />
out on tho streets to o if ho <lb />
could find either of his friends or <lb />
any that ho know. walked <lb />
down tho a considerable <lb />
way and noticed an old lady stand <lb />
on a coiner. was rubbing <lb />
her nose, and beckoned with the <lb />
other band for him to come to <lb />
her. He obeyed and when he <lb />
mot her his grand <lb />
had been dead twenty- <lb />
years and in life had a on <lb />
nose. the dream <lb />
wore both glad to each other, <lb />
but had any <lb />
the Chief waked from his <lb />
slumber. <lb />
and Garrison were <lb />
both sick at the of the dream <lb />
and the Chief himself died early <lb />
next morning- In less that a <lb />
week the three men had indeed <lb />
gone on and were <lb />
in a strange <lb />
Nows. <lb />
to Chicago two weeks ago. The <lb />
operation consisted in the removal <lb />
of 7- square of cuticle <lb />
from tho thighs of Mr. Blake In <lb />
strips of one and one-half inches <lb />
In length and half to three <lb />
quarters of inch wide, and <lb />
grafting them upon great spaces <lb />
of raw flesh on Mrs- Blake's arms. <lb />
The skin had been burned away <lb />
at their residence in Ottawa early <lb />
last fail, and the lay be- <lb />
tween grafting and the <lb />
of both arms. <lb />
Mr. Mrs. Blake were pot <lb />
under the influence of ether and <lb />
placed upon tho operating table <lb />
side by side. As each piece of <lb />
skin was cut from Mr. <lb />
thighs, it was passed a dis- <lb />
infecting solution, and then care- <lb />
fully transferred to Mrs. <lb />
arm, until sufficient number of <lb />
Square inches had been secured <lb />
to insure a now growth the <lb />
raw surface. <lb />
Several days ago the bandages <lb />
were removed from Mrs. Blake's <lb />
arm, and it was found that each of <lb />
the pieces had adhered taken <lb />
firm growth, making the opera <lb />
absolutely <lb />
Dispatch. <lb />
A contemporary, in its <lb />
report, says is weak and <lb />
brandy is Mix them and <lb />
find a happy medium. <lb />
NOW LOOK <lb />
Eastern Reflector <lb />
he Atlanta Constitution <lb />
ho New York World <lb />
ALL ONE YEAR FOR <lb />
Subscribe at Reflector office. <lb />
This Office for Job Printing <lb />
Why He Didn't Shoot. <lb />
A man with a wife who has <lb />
own ways about things <lb />
catches her now and then. <lb />
ho said the other <lb />
morning as he was dressing, <lb />
think you were right when you <lb />
told me last night that there were <lb />
burglars in the <lb />
W asked nervously. <lb />
all tho money that was <lb />
in my pocket when I went to bed <lb />
is she said with <lb />
an I-told you-so air, you had <lb />
been bravo got up and shot <lb />
tho wretch you would have Lad <lb />
all your money this <lb />
my dear, ho <lb />
said gingerly, I would <lb />
been a <lb />
She laughed then, and <lb />
gave half of it back to <lb />
don <lb />
It Should Lo in Every House. <lb />
J. II. Wilson, clay st., <lb />
Pa., nays do will not be without Dr., <lb />
King New Consumption, <lb />
Colds, it <lb />
who threatened with <lb />
after tn attack of when <lb />
various ether remedies several <lb />
ins bad done her <lb />
Barber, of Pa., claims Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery has dona him <lb />
more good than anything ha ever used <lb />
for Trouble. Nothing like It, Try <lb />
I. Free Trial at Drug <lb />
store. Large bottles. and Si <lb />
There is lately nothing <lb />
that will help you bear tho ills of <lb />
life so well as a good laugh. <lb />
Laugh all you If tho <lb />
line if tho cat tips over <lb />
the milk and the dog elopes with <lb />
the roast, if tho children fall <lb />
mud simultaneously with tho <lb />
mix out of clean aprons, if tho now <lb />
girl quits in the middle of <lb />
cleaning, and though you search <lb />
the earth with you find <lb />
none other to take place, if <lb />
the neighbor in whom you have <lb />
trusted goes on you and <lb />
keeps chickens, if the chariot <lb />
wheels of tho uninvited guest <lb />
draw near when you out of <lb />
provender and the gaping of your <lb />
parse is like tho unfilled <lb />
month of a robin, take courage if <lb />
you enough sunshine in <lb />
your heart to keep a laugh on <lb />
your lips. <lb />
State of Ohio, of <lb />
County. <lb />
Frank make ho <lb />
i i he senior of the Ann -i. <lb />
Co., in the <lb />
i In of Toledo, and States afore- <lb />
I bat -a ill will pay the sum <lb />
of one hundred for each <lb />
of Catarrh can be <lb />
the use <lb />
sworn to before me in <lb />
my this 8th of December, <lb />
A. D. 1886. <lb />
. ,,, A. <lb />
Notary Public. <lb />
Hall's Catarrh Curs is taken Internally <lb />
Oil the <lb />
surfaces the system. Bend for <lb />
free. <lb />
f. .;. Co., Toledo, <lb />
r, by Me. <lb />
It is high time for tho A limn- <lb />
to drop the Hawaiian <lb />
affair and make an effort to <lb />
some of the mistakes of the <lb />
Harrison Administration <lb />
were made nearer home- <lb />
Andrew I. Davis, a lately do <lb />
coaxed Montana man . of groat <lb />
wealth, was not noted for his <lb />
liberality as a rule, but to a friend <lb />
who was in financial straits he <lb />
once sent a check for <lb />
with tho message, me if you <lb />
can ; if yon cannot, never mention <lb />
Child Birth Easy, i <lb />
Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, <lb />
. by the Leading Physicians.<lb />
REGULATOR CO <lb />
ATLANTA, CA. <lb />
BY ALL. <lb />
DENTIST, t <lb />
ATTORNEY <lb />
N. O. <lb />
Prompt ion to <lb />
at Tucker old <lb />
J. <lb />
. L. BLOW <lb />
m BLOW, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
In <lb />
A. B. F. <lb />
Prompt attention given to collection <lb />
LATHAM. HARRY <lb />
ft <lb />
n. c. <lb />
M a. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE. NO. <lb />
all As a<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017676_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
county, fortunate in-iced will the <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
JANUARY IT, l-94. <lb />
at at Greenville, <lb />
N. C as mail matter. <lb />
If there is any man who deserves <lb />
a I the commendation of the people <lb />
little mistaken just now when we; of this community, that man is <lb />
said that knew of no Solicitor Woodard. In the stand <lb />
whom would more gladly he has taken to break down <lb />
than Mr. Simmons. We do vices that have long existed <lb />
know of one, and that man is Col.; here, and which have been the <lb />
J. Bryant Grimes. We have cause of leading many boys into <lb />
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE <lb />
The is per <lb />
Advertising Rates.- One <lb />
one year, one-half column one year <lb />
; one-quarter column one year, <lb />
Transient inch <lb />
one week, ; two weeks, ; one <lb />
month Two week, 91.50, <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 />
Summons 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 />
any length of time, can <lb />
made by application to the either <lb />
in person or by letter. <lb />
Copy for Advertisements and <lb />
all changes of should be <lb />
handed in by o'clock Tuesday <lb />
mornings in order to receive prompt in- <lb />
the following. <lb />
known him only to admire him, <lb />
and ho is one of the best men in <lb />
Pitt county and he knows we think <lb />
thus of him, so we are sure that <lb />
he did not construe our article as <lb />
has done. Col. Grimes <lb />
will honor any position which <lb />
may be given him and we con- <lb />
Mr. Simmons and the <lb />
people of North Carolina that <lb />
his administration is to have <lb />
so honorable and worthy a gentle- <lb />
man as Col. Grimes to assist in <lb />
the execution of its laws. Pitt <lb />
county loves to honor a son so <lb />
noble and true to Democratic <lb />
principles as he, and the <lb />
to says now that Mr. Simmons <lb />
has not made nor will make a bet- <lb />
appointment than Col Grimes <lb />
assure that we are <lb />
not criticizing nor will we do so <lb />
as long as the offices are filled by <lb />
such men as Hon. P. M. Simmons <lb />
and Col. J. Bryan Grimes. <lb />
OUR NEW VOLUME. <lb />
This is the birth- <lb />
day. This journal has made its <lb />
visits through an even <lb />
dozen years, and this morning <lb />
greets its patrons with the first <lb />
number of the thirteenth volume. <lb />
It is customary whenever these <lb />
come around to let the <lb />
public know it, and have a bit to <lb />
say about the past and make what- <lb />
ever promises may seem desirable <lb />
or necessary for the future. The <lb />
Reflector does not feel called <lb />
upon to-day to rehearse any <lb />
of the past, but <lb />
those things that are behind, and <lb />
reaching forth unto those things <lb />
which are we let the past <lb />
alone, except to profit by its ex- <lb />
and apply our thoughts <lb />
to the duties of the immediate <lb />
present. He that his duty <lb />
to-day hath no regrets of <lb />
day, and not to trouble <lb />
what over to-morrow may bring. <lb />
As to the future, <lb />
his not one solitary new promise <lb />
to make. If its twelve <lb />
earnest work in Pitt county is not <lb />
enough to let the people know <lb />
what it is and what it is here for, <lb />
then we know not word more <lb />
to say that will convince them. <lb />
Judge cur future by our past. <lb />
That we feel gratified to all who <lb />
have given us patronage, whether <lb />
little or much, and to all who en- <lb />
courage us with kind words of <lb />
approval, need not be told. e <lb />
treasure the offerings of the for- <lb />
mer in our pocket, and of the lat- <lb />
in our heart, feeling richer in haven't <lb />
purse and heart in proportion to <lb />
the offering, endeavoring to give <lb />
value received in labor and good <lb />
will to both. Permit this much to <lb />
be said, that we candidly believe <lb />
the Reflector has to-day more <lb />
friends and better friends than it <lb />
has ever had, and we shall try to <lb />
continue worthy of their esteem. <lb />
One after thought, as we re- <lb />
member that people are some- <lb />
times averse to putting their <lb />
into an enterprise unless they <lb />
know it is <lb />
owes not a dollar but what it can <lb />
pay on call, and its laborers are <lb />
not permitted to go home <lb />
day nights without their wages. <lb />
Come on with your dollar and <lb />
get the paper a whole year for it. <lb />
evil, he should have the support <lb />
of all people who love good <lb />
and good government. There <lb />
are fathers and mothers in Green- <lb />
ville who will thank Solicitor <lb />
Woodard for what he is doing. <lb />
the wrong construction. <lb />
We publish a communication <lb />
to-day signed that needs <lb />
some comment upon at our hands. <lb />
When we wrote the little editorial <lb />
squib referred to by we <lb />
did not notice that it was capable <lb />
of the construction that he puts <lb />
upon it. <lb />
We cheerfully give space to his <lb />
communication as it gives us <lb />
opportunity to write more <lb />
in reference to the matter. <lb />
There had been some talk in the <lb />
county in reference to the few- <lb />
of the appointments that Mr. <lb />
Simmons had made in this county <lb />
and in referring to those remarks <lb />
we meant to understood as <lb />
saving, that though this might <lb />
seem yet Pitt county Demo- <lb />
were not, as says, <lb />
for revenue but <lb />
were always on hand when <lb />
come on. We have not the <lb />
slightest disposition to <lb />
any act of Mr. Simmons The <lb />
course of the Reflector in <lb />
to his confirmation the <lb />
time he was nominated will con- <lb />
all that we believe that he <lb />
is th right man in the rip-lit place, <lb />
and we of no man whom <lb />
this paper will more gladly stand <lb />
by than Mr. Simmons. We know <lb />
patronage is small and his <lb />
territory is largo, and in <lb />
there must some <lb />
on the part of many <lb />
who to Mai friends lion <lb />
but far he it from us to com <lb />
plain who is doing his <lb />
work as Mr If <lb />
all his appointments are as good <lb />
as the one he from this <lb />
The banking capital of the <lb />
United Stated is estimated at <lb />
the greatest in the <lb />
world. The total dividends paid <lb />
by the United States national <lb />
banks in 1892 were <lb />
That portion of the World's <lb />
invested in banking is <lb />
at The total <lb />
net earning of the national banks <lb />
in this country in 1892 was <lb />
This term of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court is being presided over by <lb />
Judge John Gray Bynum. And <lb />
the above sentence may be taken <lb />
for just exactly what it says, as <lb />
those having any business about <lb />
the Court, or even going there as <lb />
spectators, are not long in dis- <lb />
covering- Ho has his own way of <lb />
expressing things, and does not <lb />
waste much time, nor a great deal <lb />
of breath, in coming to a point. <lb />
In fact, he says himself that he is <lb />
a plain man and calls things by <lb />
their right a thing is <lb />
white ho says its white, and if its <lb />
black he says its black, and has <lb />
no parleying about it. While he <lb />
has his own method of running <lb />
the Court, the opinion is <lb />
that he is doing it well- <lb />
His charge to the Grand Jury <lb />
at the of the term <lb />
about an hour and a half, <lb />
and though out of the ordinary <lb />
line of charges had plenty of <lb />
points of law in it and showed <lb />
the jurors their duty very plainly. <lb />
He put a clincher on the jury at <lb />
the outset by telling them he had <lb />
noticed in some counties <lb />
on the part of the jurors to <lb />
gazing about the Court room <lb />
and putting their attention on <lb />
everybody and everything except <lb />
what the Judge was to <lb />
them, and said I see <lb />
this I stop right short, and don't <lb />
waste breath on any such men, <lb />
for if they haven't got sense <lb />
enough to listen at what is being <lb />
said for their instruction, they <lb />
got sense enough to <lb />
serve on a Grand It is <lb />
needless to add that he had the <lb />
undivided attention of the jury, <lb />
and not a man of them went to <lb />
sleep- <lb />
the course of his charge <lb />
Judge Bynum said a great many <lb />
good things. A few of them we <lb />
jotted down and give them as <lb />
near as we can quote him. Of <lb />
course we give these disconnect- <lb />
and in type they lack the <lb />
Judges forceful expressions. He <lb />
said Carolina has the best <lb />
people in the world. There may <lb />
be people more highly educated, <lb />
but no where can be found a <lb />
more honest or more loyal people <lb />
than we have here in the Old <lb />
North <lb />
Carolina has twelve <lb />
Superior Court Judges on the <lb />
Bench and about two or three <lb />
thousand off of it, and these latter <lb />
are always ready with their ad- <lb />
vice and opinions as to how the <lb />
Courts ought to be <lb />
In analyzing the oath the <lb />
had taken, that they should <lb />
present no one for envy, hatred <lb />
or malice, he are <lb />
three very small words, if they <lb />
could be entirely blotted out and <lb />
there could be removed from our <lb />
being all the characteristics em- <lb />
braced within their meaning, and <lb />
along with them remove all the <lb />
mean whiskey, and there would <lb />
no more need of Criminal <lb />
More harm is being done to- <lb />
day to the rising generation by <lb />
the sale of cigarettes than by the <lb />
sale of <lb />
The seducer is the meanest <lb />
man God in His providence ever <lb />
created and allowed to live on the <lb />
Men who sell liquor without <lb />
license are thieves, and the big- <lb />
nuisance in the State. The <lb />
money paid for liquor go <lb />
to the fund for educating the poor <lb />
children of the State, and the <lb />
man who sells liquor and puts <lb />
that money in his pocket instead <lb />
of paying the license steals that <lb />
much from the poor children. <lb />
the back for <lb />
years, you will find that M <lb />
out of cases upon the criminal <lb />
docket would not have been there <lb />
but for <lb />
The amount of costs the County <lb />
Commissioners pay for <lb />
canned by liquor is four times an <lb />
much as is received for license <lb />
doctor who signs a false <lb />
prescription for a man to get <lb />
whiskey on is u contemptible <lb />
character and not belong <lb />
to the <lb />
The Governor of Florida says <lb />
that there shall be no prize fight <lb />
between Corbett and Mitchell, <lb />
and the sheriff of county <lb />
says that he will not permit it. <lb />
The next week will reveal the <lb />
quality of backbone carried by <lb />
these two gentlemen. <lb />
Seventeen fine Guernsey cattle <lb />
belonging to ex-Vice President <lb />
Morton are to be killed this week <lb />
in New York, ordered by the <lb />
State board of health, they having <lb />
been found to be suffering from <lb />
tuberculosis. <lb />
Edward Dunbar, the author of <lb />
the hymn a Light in the <lb />
Window for Thee died <lb />
a few days ago in the jail at <lb />
Kan., where he had <lb />
plied for lodging as a tramp. <lb />
It is politically rumored that <lb />
Elias will be a Democratic <lb />
nominee for Congress in the <lb />
ninth district. <lb />
A CARD. <lb />
In a short editorial in the <lb />
Eastern Reflector of January <lb />
3rd this statement <lb />
the numerous appointments Col- <lb />
Simmons is making to fill <lb />
the various revenue positions <lb />
under him, we notice that Pitt <lb />
county is conspicuously out of <lb />
How the editor, who is usually <lb />
clear in judgment and also con- <lb />
with current events, could <lb />
make such an enormous state- <lb />
I am unable to understand. <lb />
The editorial in question not only <lb />
does Collector Simmons an <lb />
but in some respects might <lb />
be construed as an inflection upon <lb />
a most worthy and intelligent <lb />
citizen of Pitt county. It is well <lb />
known to the reading public that <lb />
Pitt county was recognized <lb />
among the very first appointments <lb />
made by Collector Simmons. Mr. <lb />
J Bryan Grimes, of this county, <lb />
was appointed General Store <lb />
Keeper and Gauger, which place, <lb />
I am informed, carries a salary of <lb />
at least a thousand dollars per <lb />
In selecting Mr. Grimes <lb />
for this important and <lb />
position Pitt county was hand- <lb />
recognized. Of course we <lb />
would have been glad if other <lb />
from the county had also <lb />
met with success. But after <lb />
this county one good appoint- <lb />
and considering the <lb />
counties that had like claims <lb />
for patronage, we could hardly <lb />
expect more than we have re- <lb />
Mr. Grimes is an industrious, <lb />
intelligent, progressive farmer, <lb />
and one thoroughly identified <lb />
with the industrial and political <lb />
interests of the county. He is a <lb />
thorough going Democrat, loyal <lb />
and true in his devotion to his <lb />
party, and in every campaign his <lb />
influence and patriotic services <lb />
are felt. He has been, and I <lb />
think is now, chairman of the <lb />
Democratic Executive Committee <lb />
of the banner township of the <lb />
county, and is the present <lb />
for this county, of the Con- <lb />
Executive Committee <lb />
of the first District. I can see no <lb />
reasonable cause for any Pitt <lb />
county Democrat to complain of <lb />
Mr. Simmons. There are not <lb />
to give every one a <lb />
place. I am led to say, Mr. Editor, <lb />
that much of the criticisms we see <lb />
have no justification, and that the <lb />
many of people <lb />
the Democratic party are <lb />
Democrats not revenue <lb />
from principle and their <lb />
faith in the great doctrines <lb />
and wise policies which our grand <lb />
and noble party has ever pro- <lb />
claimed. Citizen. <lb />
January 1894. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington D. C, Jan. <lb />
President has just <lb />
given a practical demonstration <lb />
of his earnestness in turning <lb />
the settlement of the Hawaiian <lb />
complication over to Congress, <lb />
by putting the official dispatches <lb />
just received from Minister <lb />
Willis at its disposal. No one in <lb />
Washington seriously believes <lb />
that any danger is to be <lb />
from the reported prob- <lb />
ability of British marines being <lb />
landed at Honolulu. It is Well <lb />
known to the British government <lb />
that the United States will not <lb />
tolerate any by any <lb />
foreign government with Hawaii. <lb />
The Democrats of the House <lb />
have much more than held their <lb />
own in the tariff debate this week, <lb />
although some of their bent posted <lb />
men have purposely made no <lb />
in favor of the Wilson <lb />
bill. With the exception of Rep- <lb />
Tom Johnson, of <lb />
Ohio, who opposes the bill be- <lb />
it too much <lb />
and who favors free trade <lb />
without any ifs, or hut's, no <lb />
Democrat has spoken against the <lb />
underlying principle of the bill, <lb />
even Representative of <lb />
New York, who represents the <lb />
Troy district and who has been <lb />
quoted as being strongly opposed <lb />
to the bill, admitted in his speech <lb />
that he would vote for it if the <lb />
schedule affecting the industries <lb />
of Troy was amended to meet his <lb />
wishes. Next week he and others <lb />
will have an opportunity to offer <lb />
any amendment they may desire <lb />
and the House will decide <lb />
whether they shall be adopted or <lb />
rejected. It is not thought prob- <lb />
able by any member with whom <lb />
I have conversed that any mate- <lb />
rial amendment will be adopted <lb />
before the bill is passed by the <lb />
on the 29th of January. <lb />
It is in the Senate that the friends <lb />
of the measure fear it will be <lb />
amended almost beyond <lb />
Washington is now full of <lb />
Carries interested in having the <lb />
ill amended and they are all <lb />
basing their hopes of success on <lb />
the Senate and not en the House. <lb />
The Senate Finance committee <lb />
will begin to give hearings to <lb />
those as soon as the <lb />
bill passes the House. <lb />
The Republican leaders of the <lb />
House were very cleverly taught <lb />
a little lesson by the Democrats <lb />
this week which would convince <lb />
men with less conceit that Reed, <lb />
Burrow Co., have not secured <lb />
a corner in parliamentary <lb />
edge- If was the intention of <lb />
the aforesaid Republican leaders <lb />
to get at least two days debate <lb />
out of the questions of the power <lb />
of the House to have members <lb />
arrested, and of the right of <lb />
to vote while under arrest, <lb />
when the motion for the discharge <lb />
of the arrested members came up. <lb />
This of time that properly <lb />
belonged to the consideration of <lb />
the tariff bill was not <lb />
by the Democrats who <lb />
easily defeated it by haying the <lb />
make his report <lb />
at a time when the <lb />
leaders were off their guard. It <lb />
did not take a moment for Rep- <lb />
Catchings to ask <lb />
unanimous consent for tho dis- <lb />
charge from custody of arrest- <lb />
ed members and for Speaker <lb />
Crisp to declare them discharged, <lb />
there being no objections. By <lb />
that time the know-it-all <lb />
cans had discovered what was <lb />
going on, but it was too late- <lb />
Senator of New <lb />
Jersey, who has been widely ad- <lb />
by Republican papers as <lb />
a tariff has been com- <lb />
by a troublesome throat <lb />
affection to take a trip to Florida <lb />
in search of relief, but before go- <lb />
he addressed a letter to Sena- <lb />
tor which effectually <lb />
disposes of any doubt as to his <lb />
towards tariff reform. <lb />
e says in that or- <lb />
that you and my other Demo- <lb />
colleagues on the commit- <lb />
tee may know what to expect <lb />
from me I here state that the <lb />
Democratic side of the committee <lb />
on Finance must make the tariff <lb />
bill and then every member of <lb />
said committee must stand by the <lb />
work done. To do otherwise is <lb />
to confess that we are not fit to <lb />
govern. I write thus plainly, as <lb />
I see the newspapers have placed <lb />
me in the list of those called ob- <lb />
I have not denied <lb />
the report, as I never deny any- <lb />
thing the newspapers say of me, <lb />
but I will always try to speak for <lb />
myself when the time <lb />
Secretary <lb />
this week to the members of the <lb />
Senate Finance committee and <lb />
those of the House Ways and <lb />
Means Committee the immediate <lb />
necessity for legislation to pro- <lb />
the money to meet the <lb />
deficit now staring the <lb />
Treasury in the face. His object <lb />
was not to argue in favor of the <lb />
recommendations made in his an- <lb />
report, but to impress upon <lb />
the minds of his hearers the <lb />
for action, leaving them <lb />
entirely free as to the nature of <lb />
the legislation and asking only <lb />
that it provide the money <lb />
to meet payments and <lb />
serve the credit of the govern- <lb />
It is the object of the <lb />
members of both committees to <lb />
agree upon a bill that will not <lb />
arouse sufficient opposition to <lb />
cause an extended financial de- <lb />
date in either the House or the <lb />
Senate. They recognize that <lb />
such a debate at this time would <lb />
be dangerous if not actually hurt- <lb />
to the country. <lb />
Representative says <lb />
it has not been definitely decided <lb />
whether the income tax shall be <lb />
offered as an amendment to the <lb />
tariff or as a separate measure. <lb />
BY A <lb />
Of eager buyer. The props have fallen and prices have dropped <lb />
down to actual of production. We ore not <lb />
after profits now, our sole object is to unload our shelves <lb />
and turn our enormous stock into money. Your dollars <lb />
will be more now than ever before or ever again. <lb />
Mr a. L. Townsend <lb />
Good Family Medicines <lb />
Mood's and Hood's <lb />
Pills. <lb />
regard Hood's and Hood's <lb />
Fill, the Terr belt medicines, and we <lb />
are never without thorn. I hare always <lb />
A Delicate Woman <lb />
began taking Hood's <lb />
years ago for that tired feeling. It built me up <lb />
FRANK WILSON <lb />
WILL SHOW YOU HIS SPLENDID LINE OF- <lb />
CLOTHING <lb />
Dry Goods <lb />
NOTIONS <lb />
If you will give him a call. No trouble to show goods, its a pleasure <lb />
See him this week without fail. <lb />
It it to my children whenever <lb />
with their blood, and it <lb />
little boy likes it so well hi <lb />
does them <lb />
. cries for It I <lb />
cannot find words to tell how highly I prize it <lb />
We use Hood's Fills In the family and they <lb />
Act Like a Charm <lb />
I take pleasure In recommending these <lb />
dues to all my Mends, for believe If people <lb />
Hood's x Cures <lb />
would only keep Hood's and <lb />
Pills at hand as we do, much sickness and <lb />
would be Mas. L. <lb />
Sun, <lb />
DON'T WALK <lb />
When it is Cheaper to Ride.<lb />
The John Flanagan Buggy Company <lb />
to put up their first-class work and will furnish you any kind of <lb />
at so reasonable a price that riding is cheaper than walking. <lb />
--------Besides a full line of <lb />
AND HARNESS <lb />
They sell the best AG ON offered on the market. <lb />
Don't Grub and Sweat when you can get the <lb />
and do your work <lb />
so much quicker, <lb />
cheaper and better. <lb />
This splendid farm <lb />
implement will <lb />
crush, cut, <lb />
level and pulverize <lb />
the land all in one <lb />
operation. Use <lb />
them once and you <lb />
will <lb />
out them again. <lb />
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 business like ours, and <lb />
we request all indebted to us to settle as early as possible. Thanking all r <lb />
liberal patronage in the past, and hoping to continue receiving you r <lb />
orders we are Yours to please <lb />
The John Flanagan Buggy Company. <lb />
RELIABLE <lb />
to the of and surrounding counties, of the following <lb />
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be <lb />
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS, SHOE., LA <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE, HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH, BLINDS, and QUEENS- <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different <lb />
Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rook Lime, Plaster of Paris, <lb />
Hair, Harness, Bridles 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 percent for Bread Prep <lb />
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, White Lead and pure Lin <lb />
Red and Paint Wood and Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a call and I guarantee satisfaction <lb />
Pills M yet promptly i <lb />
on toe bows. <lb />
AGENCY. <lb />
The undersigned most respectfully <lb />
announces that he has now established <lb />
an agency in Greenville the purpose <lb />
of buying and selling Real Estate in and <lb />
around the town of Greenville on reason- <lb />
able commissions, and will make the col- <lb />
of Rentals of Property a specialty, <lb />
and will say to all those who own proper- <lb />
to rent out that will do well to <lb />
place the same in my hands, as I am de- <lb />
to collect the same or keep <lb />
the houses in my charge vacant. <lb />
I am also prepared to make complete <lb />
abstracts of title to real property on <lb />
reasonable terms. Also a Notary Pub- <lb />
for Pitt county. <lb />
A live-room house, dining room and <lb />
kitchen attached, a splendid well of <lb />
water convenient, a large lot with <lb />
J nines grape vines years old. Terms <lb />
reasonable. <lb />
A five-room house on Pitt street, <lb />
convenient, a fine garden spot, <lb />
barn and stables. <lb />
A three-room house on 4th street, <lb />
kitchen convenient, a good garden spot. <lb />
For lots town, and <lb />
two fine farm- about six miles from <lb />
Yours truly, <lb />
HENRY SHEPPARD, <lb />
Real Estate Collecting Agency- <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of a decree rendered in a <lb />
certain cause pending in the Superior <lb />
Court of county, i <lb />
W. S. Forbes Co., are plaintiffs and <lb />
Latham Skinner are defendants, <lb />
the undersigned, Commissioner duly <lb />
authorized by said decree, will sell at <lb />
the Court House door in Greenville. N. <lb />
C, for cash, on Monday, Jany 22nd, <lb />
1894, the following described real estate <lb />
in the county of Pitt, a certain <lb />
tract of land lying in Falkland town- <lb />
ship, adjoining the lands of Margaret <lb />
Mathews, Willis R. Williams, Mis. <lb />
Newton and others, containing by <lb />
acres, generally known as <lb />
the Adam Corbett land; a certain lot or <lb />
parcel of Ian i lying In the town of <lb />
Greenville, designated as lot No. in <lb />
of said town and well known as <lb />
the 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 the same lot which was <lb />
conveyed to Harry Skinner by W. T. <lb />
Marsh and wife by deed recorded in <lb />
Book H. pages and of the <lb />
public registry of county. <lb />
DONNELL <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
For Malaria, Liver <lb />
BROWN'S BITTERS <lb />
Notice. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of the Superior <lb />
Court made in the civil action wherein <lb />
R. J. W. is plaintiff <lb />
and Mrs, Julia Barrett and others are <lb />
defendants, I will sell at the Court <lb />
House in Greenville, N. C, on <lb />
day the 17th day of January, 1894, the <lb />
following described One <lb />
tract of land situated in Farmville <lb />
township, Pitt county, adjoining the <lb />
lands of Wm, Barrett, J. W. Bynum <lb />
and others, it being the land whereon <lb />
I. J. Barrett lived at the time of his <lb />
death, acres more or less. <lb />
The dwelling together with acres <lb />
of land contiguous thereto, is covered <lb />
by the widow Julia Barrett's dower. <lb />
Terms cash. JNO. F. <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of a Decree of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court made at December term 1898 by <lb />
Hi- Honor W. A. Hoke Judge presiding, <lb />
in the case of Susan against <lb />
Jesse P. Brown and others, the <lb />
Commissioner will sell tor <lb />
cash before the Court House door in <lb />
Greenville on Monday the 5th day of <lb />
February, 1894, the following described <lb />
tract of land situated in the county of <lb />
and In Township, known <lb />
as the Ida Warren land, adjoining the <lb />
lands of Betsy Phillips, Benjamin Cobb, <lb />
John A. Cobb, O. B. Hathaway, J. W. <lb />
Clark and others, containing seres, <lb />
more or less. <lb />
F. G. James. <lb />
This Jan 1894. Commissioner. <lb />
Mortgage Sale. <lb />
By virtue of a power of sale contained <lb />
in a mortgage deed executed by Fer- <lb />
Brown and his wife Ann M. <lb />
Brown to the undersigned on the Elev- <lb />
day of February 1884 and duly <lb />
In the Registers office of Pitt <lb />
county in Book F on pages 86-87-88. <lb />
I shall sell before the Court House door <lb />
in Greenville, N. C. at U M. on <lb />
the 6th day of February 1801 to the <lb />
highest bidder for cash, the Real Estate <lb />
described in said mortgage. <lb />
B. J. <lb />
January 5th, 1894. Mortgagee. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county as ad- <lb />
of the estate of J. I. <lb />
ard, deceased, notice is hereby given to <lb />
all persons Indebted to the estate to <lb />
make immediate payment to the under- <lb />
signed, and those claims against <lb />
the estate must present the same for <lb />
payment before the 27th day of <lb />
1894, or this notice will be plead in <lb />
bar of recovery. This 27th of <lb />
T. H. <lb />
of J. I. Whichard. <lb />
RY <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 and satisfactory. We have often <lb />
been told that 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 />
b e e r <lb />
priced the <lb />
inferior good. This <lb />
is what we claim i That we <lb />
will meet competition on the <lb />
different lines of Goods carried by <lb />
us, quality considered. Come to <lb />
see us, we have in stock a general as- <lb />
and can supply your every want <lb />
FURNITURE. <lb />
When we say that we have the largest and best line <lb />
of FURNITURE ever kept in our town. We <lb />
make no mistake as a visit to our store will <lb />
prove. Numbers of our customers ex- <lb />
press surprise at our haying 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 />
j u s t r e- <lb />
lovely line <lb />
of CHAIRS, <lb />
and <lb />
ROCKERS in Silk Plush, <lb />
These Chairs <lb />
make nice Christmas presents <lb />
and we would remind our friends <lb />
not to overlook them when making <lb />
chases for Christmas as they will please you. <lb />
GUNS<lb />
Call on us for and Gun <lb />
Implements. We have some <lb />
nice ones on hand and will <lb />
the prices right. <lb />
Wishing all our friends and the public generally a joyous and <lb />
happy Christmas, <lb />
We remain, your friends, <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO.<lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
HEW; <lb />
WHOLESALE AND <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
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 Snuff, <lb />
barrels P. Snuff, <lb />
cases Sardines. <lb />
Full stock of all <lb />
Duke Cigarettes, <lb />
boxes Cakes and Crackers, <lb />
Ml barrels ck Candy. <lb />
kegs Band's Powder. <lb />
tons Shot, <lb />
Bread Powders. <lb />
cases Star Lye, <lb />
barrels Apple Vinegar, <lb />
eases Gold Dust, Washing Powder <lb />
rolls lb Bagging. <lb />
bundles Arrow Ties . <lb />
other goods carried in my line. <lb />
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb />
-IN- <lb />
To my Friends and Customers of Pitt and adjoining <lb />
I wish to say that I have made special preparation in preparing <lb />
HEAD MATERIAL and propose giving you HOGSHEADS with inside dressed <lb />
smooth which will prevent or scrubbing your Tobacco when packing <lb />
Also I have made special arrangements to use best split Hoops made from White <lb />
Oak. The special advantages have in cutting my own timber places me in a <lb />
position to meet all competition. cheerfully promise yon that I will strive to <lb />
make it to your interest to use my Hogsheads and you can find them at time <lb />
either at my factory at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Sawing, Making <lb />
And Turned Trimmings for Houses a Specialty. <lb />
I am prepared to do any kind of Scroll Sawing for Brackets or anything in the <lb />
line, or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, Pickets for Stairways. dings of <lb />
any kind, including Piazza Railing, and would lie pleased to name you prices on <lb />
anything In the above upon application. <lb />
GENERAL REPAIR WORK <lb />
done on short notice. Thanking you tor your past patronage, lam willing to <lb />
to meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you to give a trial before <lb />
t elsewhere. Respectful <lb />
-A-. Or. COX, Winterville, NO <lb />
N C Joshua <lb />
COBB BROS. CO. <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
J. L. SUGG, <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG k JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
FOE A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017676_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
ill Salt <lb />
Great <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Vol. XIII. No. <lb />
birth- <lb />
-IN- <lb />
PRICES. <lb />
In order to reduce our <lb />
We will sell for the <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 />
This is the <lb />
day. <lb />
bales of Tobacco <lb />
cloth at<lb />
widths <lb />
Beaufort county is building <lb />
new jail. <lb />
Floor Oilcloth in four <lb />
at Lang's. <lb />
promises to be a better <lb />
year than 1893. <lb />
Eggs were selling from to <lb />
cents here last week. <lb />
Green pork was <lb />
cents by the pig. <lb />
test White Oil at <lb />
at D. D. <lb />
selling for <lb />
cents<lb />
per<lb />
Clothing <lb />
Clothing <lb />
Clothing <lb />
Clothing <lb />
Our must be sold <lb />
out regard to cost- <lb />
with <lb />
OTIS <lb />
and <lb />
the same way, to we add <lb />
Cheap to make any reduction. <lb />
ANY DAY YOU COME. <lb />
BROS. <lb />
Leaders of Low Prices. <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
Carriages and Wagons at <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co's. <lb />
When in want of good shoes go to <lb />
T. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
Breech Loading Guns and <lb />
for sale by J. B. Cherry Co <lb />
t j at the <lb />
for <lb />
The Best Flour on earth <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Cotton pay cash <lb />
Cotton it the Old Brick Store. <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 it Co. <lb />
Go to J. B. Cherry it Co when in need <lb />
of Furniture, they keep a stock and <lb />
sill at prices that will please you. <lb />
Fob room dwelling house <lb />
in kitchen and dining room <lb />
attached. Apply to <lb />
Come on while you get the Re- <lb />
the Atlanta Constitution and <lb />
the New York World, all three papers a <lb />
year for <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Orders for the New World Al- <lb />
for 1891 should be left at the Re- <lb />
office. Our subscribers can <lb />
get them less than the regular price. <lb />
Remember I pay you cash for Chicken <lb />
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
Appointments for Greenville C <lb />
Salem on the first Sunday at eleven <lb />
o'clock and Jones Chapel at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
Shady Grove on second Sunday at <lb />
eleven o'clock and School <lb />
House at o'clock. <lb />
Ayden on third Sunday at eleven <lb />
o'clock and Tripp's Chapel at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
Bethlehem on the fourth Sunday at <lb />
eleven o'clock, and Lang's School <lb />
House at three o'clock. <lb />
Everybody invited to attend. <lb />
Notice of Sale <lb />
By virtue of a power of sale <lb />
In a mortgage deed executed by W. N <lb />
to E. A. Little, dated 13th day <lb />
of Sept. 1887 and recorded in the Regis- <lb />
office of Pitt Co., in Book V page <lb />
which is herein referred to, I will <lb />
offer for sale at public auction at the <lb />
Court House door in Greenville Pitt <lb />
Co., N. C, on Tuesday the 13th day of <lb />
1891 at o'clock noon all the <lb />
pine and timber, of and above <lb />
the size of inches in diameter at the <lb />
stump, standing or growing upon <lb />
tract of land situated in Pitt county <lb />
and described as follows, to <lb />
tract of land adjoining the lands of J. <lb />
T. Mobley, A. A. Baker, T. J. Shep- <lb />
herd and others, known as lot No. in <lb />
the division of the B. F. lands; <lb />
for full description see the division be- <lb />
tween the heirs of B. F. about <lb />
the year 1872; together with all the <lb />
rights of way and other privileges con- <lb />
in a deed from E. A. Little to <lb />
said W. N. dated 13th day of <lb />
Kept 1387, and recorded in the Register's <lb />
office of Pitt Co. in Book T page <lb />
which is herein referred to. Terms of <lb />
This the day of 1884. <lb />
E. A . LITTLE, Mortgagee. <lb />
Jno. H. Small, Attorney. <lb />
Fob seed oats at <lb />
J. B. Cherry <lb />
Mr. Elijah W. Bawls has been <lb />
made of Tarboro. <lb />
Steel Nails at cents <lb />
pound at D- D- Haskett s. <lb />
Keep this in Work for <lb />
your town, talk for your town. <lb />
The Perfect Kelly Axe, all steel <lb />
for cents at D. D. <lb />
Lang is determined to sell out <lb />
his winter goods at very low prices <lb />
The Celebrated Red Warrior <lb />
Axe for cents at D. D. <lb />
The way of the transgressor is <lb />
their sins are found <lb />
out. <lb />
If you want Hardware and <lb />
Stoves -heap, see D D. Haskett <lb />
before buying. <lb />
The young colored men the <lb />
town are getting up another brass <lb />
band. <lb />
We are closing out our entire <lb />
stock of winter clothing at greatly <lb />
reduced rates at Lang's <lb />
Shad have been m both the <lb />
and Washington <lb />
markets. <lb />
Houses fob to <lb />
Henry Sheppard, Real Estate <lb />
and Collecting Agent. <lb />
Don't mention the public roads <lb />
are just not <lb />
talking about <lb />
A nice drove of mules came <lb />
on last Thursday s train. They <lb />
belong to Mr. Bob Smith. <lb />
Shoes, Hats, Trunks and Gen- j <lb />
furnishing goods will be <lb />
sold at a great sacrifice at Lang's. <lb />
de <lb />
personal. <lb />
Mrs. V. L left last <lb />
week for Warrenton. <lb />
Mrs. G. F- Smith is visiting <lb />
relatives Beaufort. <lb />
Miss Minnie of Hal- <lb />
was visiting friends here last <lb />
week. <lb />
Mr. J. F. Joyner has moved his <lb />
family to his farm live miles from <lb />
town. <lb />
Miss Pat Hardison, of Williams- <lb />
ton, has been visiting Mrs. E. II <lb />
the past week. <lb />
His friends here were <lb />
glad to see Mr. Alex. <lb />
in town past week. Alex, has <lb />
a position in New York and likes <lb />
city life. <lb />
Greenville had two weighty <lb />
visitors last week, Capt. W. W., <lb />
of Lenoir, and Mr- H. I <lb />
of South <lb />
The latter was here organizing a <lb />
lodge of Chosen Friends, and <lb />
obtained a number of members. <lb />
Our old friend Prof. W. H. <lb />
formerly of <lb />
has been elected Superintendent <lb />
of Public Schools in Pitt county. <lb />
He stands in the front rank as an <lb />
educator and we congratulate the <lb />
good old county of Pitt upon <lb />
such an gentleman <lb />
to look after her educational <lb />
Ledger. <lb />
Miss Lissie Moore, who was for <lb />
some weeks at attend- <lb />
Mrs. J. R. Davenport, re- <lb />
turned home last week, Mrs. <lb />
Davenport's friends are glad to <lb />
know that she has very much <lb />
proved and hopes to soon be <lb />
recovered from her recent long <lb />
and severe attack of fever. We <lb />
are glad to learn that her mother. <lb />
Mrs. Sydney Fleming, has also <lb />
greatly from the injuries <lb />
she received in a fall. <lb />
Messrs. John A. Purvis and <lb />
Peter R. two farmers from <lb />
near Hamilton, were here <lb />
day. Mr. Purvis called the <lb />
aDd said everything <lb />
looks a great deal more lively and <lb />
progressive around here than over <lb />
in his section. He is thinking of <lb />
moving to some town in order to <lb />
give his children better <lb />
advantages, and we would <lb />
glad if Greenville could claim <lb />
him. Mr. was for some <lb />
years a citizen of Pitt <lb />
Doing Away With Pistols. <lb />
If the importation and sale of <lb />
pistols in the State could be <lb />
stopped, and all the Judges would <lb />
adopt the plan of Judge <lb />
in a short while there would be <lb />
fewer pistols in the State than at <lb />
present In the convictions at <lb />
this term of Court for carrying <lb />
concealed weapons the Judge has <lb />
made it a condition of suspend- <lb />
judgment upon payment of <lb />
costs that the defendant make <lb />
the Court a present of the pistol- <lb />
When the pistol was brought it <lb />
was turned over by the Judge to <lb />
the Sheriff with instructions that <lb />
he take it down and break it in <lb />
pieces and return the fragments <lb />
to the Court. Several wont be- <lb />
tween the anvil and hammer <lb />
this order. <lb />
Dress goods and trimmings <lb />
have been marked down <lb />
and we will sell them <lb />
cheaper than eyer at Lang's <lb />
The has received a <lb />
copy of the report of the State <lb />
Railroad Commission, a nicely <lb />
bound book that contains much <lb />
information. <lb />
Sunday was as pretty and <lb />
a day as could be <lb />
Not so Monday. <lb />
We are requested to announce <lb />
that the Pitt County Alliance will <lb />
meet in Greenville on the last <lb />
Thursday in this month, 25th, at <lb />
which time a full attendance is <lb />
Mr. Chas. W. Taylor has been <lb />
made Postmaster at Washington, j The returns thanks <lb />
Let the good work proceed. I to Messrs. W- C Jackson and Joe <lb />
I for an invitation to first <lb />
You can get a very pretty j annual oratorical contest for a <lb />
Hood s calendar by medal at the A. M. College, <lb />
calling at Wooten s drug store. The invitation is <lb />
The Rifles had a meeting beautiful work of art- <lb />
day afternoon, but ii was so cold <lb />
they engaged in no out door drill. <lb />
We learn that Mr. T. E. Keel, <lb />
of Farmville, lost a large pack <lb />
house full of tobacco by lire one <lb />
night last week. <lb />
Everybody was glad to see the <lb />
bright day Friday, and they did <lb />
not mind the cold coming along <lb />
with the sunshine. <lb />
Despite the bad weather the <lb />
ladies were right successful at <lb />
their festival, last Tuesday night <lb />
and realized a good sum. <lb />
The farmers speak <lb />
of their small grain crops. <lb />
The winter has thus for been <lb />
favorable to wheat and oats. <lb />
Only a few of those beautiful <lb />
and stylish Cloaks and Caps left <lb />
which we are determined to close <lb />
at starvation prices at Lang's. <lb />
Mr. W. S. Wooten, cf Swift <lb />
Creek, was out hunting, the other <lb />
day, and at seventeen shots got <lb />
fourteen partridges and a fox. <lb />
The past week has given an- <lb />
other strong evidence of Green- <lb />
need of a good hotel. But <lb />
every day shows the need of it, <lb />
as to that. <lb />
A Charlotte minister forgot <lb />
that he had an appointment to <lb />
officiate at a marriage and kept the <lb />
couple waiting an hour. He had <lb />
to be sent after even then. <lb />
A carrying a large goods <lb />
box on his shoulder, the other <lb />
day, dropped it against one of <lb />
the windows of J. B. Cherry <lb />
Cos. store and smashed a largo <lb />
glass. <lb />
Do you want it New York <lb />
World Almanac for so <lb />
subscribe to the your- <lb />
self and bring us one new sub- <lb />
scriber and you get the book free. <lb />
A body that did not know they <lb />
had big sales might wonder what <lb />
was going to be done with all <lb />
that flour before W. H. White's <lb />
and J. A- stored last <lb />
Friday. <lb />
The subscription of many of <lb />
our town patrons has expired, <lb />
and we have as yet been too busy <lb />
to the round to see them. <lb />
We will appreciate it if as many <lb />
who can will drop in at the office <lb />
and renew without waiting for us <lb />
to call on them. <lb />
I have reduced the price on my <lb />
popular selling Stoves as <lb />
Seminole No. from to <lb />
Seminole No. from <lb />
to <lb />
to No. from <lb />
to These prices good <lb />
March 1st 1894. Haskett. <lb />
One night last week Mr. John <lb />
Elks, of township, lost <lb />
his barns, stables, forage and <lb />
one hundred and twenty-five bar- <lb />
of corn by an incendiary fire. <lb />
He his team by very hard <lb />
work. The fire occurred about <lb />
midnight <lb />
The feels decidedly <lb />
encouraged over its prospects for <lb />
the new year. More new sub- <lb />
have been enrolled since <lb />
the first than for the correspond- <lb />
period of any year as far back <lb />
as we have figures for comparison- <lb />
All who a blue cross mark <lb />
after their names on margin of <lb />
the are thereby <lb />
that their subscription has <lb />
and they are invited to <lb />
come and renew. At our low sub- <lb />
price we cannot afford <lb />
to send the paper on credit <lb />
Henry Vines and Cherry <lb />
who were convicted at court <lb />
last Wednesday and placed in <lb />
jail, ended their imprisonment by <lb />
getting married that night. The <lb />
marriage took place in the Sher- <lb />
office, Rev. G. F. Smith <lb />
ting. <lb />
The wholesale indictments by <lb />
the Grand Jury of persons for <lb />
selling whiskey to minors, and of <lb />
many others for gambling, caused <lb />
no little consternation among <lb />
those who had been participating. <lb />
The eradication of such evils <lb />
from the community meet <lb />
the approval of all right thinking <lb />
people- <lb />
Stop Borrowing. <lb />
The man who is too stingy to <lb />
subscribe for his county paper <lb />
certainly should be too proud to <lb />
borrow, it from his neighbor. <lb />
One would never think of <lb />
ling a neighbor week after week <lb />
for the loan of hoes, plows, cook <lb />
stoves, wash tubs, and such, when <lb />
he is amply able to buy them for <lb />
himself. You should be just as <lb />
far from continually troubling a <lb />
neighbor for the loan of a paper <lb />
which he pays for. This item is <lb />
for the borrower. <lb />
A Fraud. <lb />
Rabbi John Israel, <lb />
claiming to be a Christian Jew, <lb />
came to Greenville last Friday, <lb />
and occupied the pulpit of the <lb />
Methodist church Sunday morn- <lb />
and evening. Sundays <lb />
papers published a <lb />
lengthy expose of the Rabbi and <lb />
gave evidence that ho is not what <lb />
he claims to be. He is represent- <lb />
ed as a gross We are <lb />
sorry that our people should have <lb />
been by the Rabbi, <lb />
but the evidence against him <lb />
came just a day too late- <lb />
Married, <lb />
On Tuesday evening, Jan- <lb />
at o'clock, in the home of the <lb />
bride's father, Mr. J. L. Wilson, <lb />
near in the presence of <lb />
invited friends and relatives, Mr. <lb />
J. R. Overton and Miss Mary J, <lb />
Wilson wore united in marriage <lb />
by Rev. J. H- pastor of <lb />
Greenville Baptist church. Soon <lb />
after the ceremony was over Mr. <lb />
and Mrs. Overton went up to <lb />
where they will occupy the <lb />
beautiful residence formerly <lb />
by Dr. W. H. Bagwell. <lb />
May God's blessings abide with <lb />
them through life. J. L <lb />
A Mink Kills Pigs. <lb />
Mr. John F- Whichard, of Caro- <lb />
tells us of the peculiar capers <lb />
of a mink in his <lb />
The mink stole a litter of pigs <lb />
from a sow and killed them. The <lb />
sudden disappearance of the pigs <lb />
led the owner to a bear <lb />
had got them and a hunt for <lb />
bruin was inaugurated among the <lb />
neighbors. While the hunt was <lb />
in progress one of the dogs was <lb />
noticed coming out of a ditch <lb />
with a dead pig in his mouth. <lb />
An examination disclosed a <lb />
low under some roots from which <lb />
the dogs brought three other <lb />
dead pigs. The hollow was too <lb />
small for a bear, and all were <lb />
puzzled as to what sort of var- <lb />
could have put the pigs <lb />
there. A steel trap was set at <lb />
the mouth of the hollow and the <lb />
result waited for with interest. <lb />
Next morning there was a big <lb />
mink in the trap. <lb />
Some Do This Way. <lb />
A Northern man who sees the <lb />
every week and takes <lb />
notice of its advertisers, expressed <lb />
some that the advertising <lb />
patronage of the paper was small- <lb />
since Christmas than during <lb />
the fall. He said it always looked <lb />
peculiar to him that any business <lb />
man should want to advertise <lb />
only three months in the year, <lb />
just about long enough to begin <lb />
getting himself before the public, <lb />
and then throw away the benefit <lb />
he would receive from it by stop- <lb />
ping the advertisement and letting <lb />
the people forget all about him. <lb />
This gentleman expressed a sen- <lb />
view of the matter. It is <lb />
much easier for a man's business <lb />
to be forgotten than it is to make <lb />
it known. <lb />
Superior Court. <lb />
The following cases upon the <lb />
criminal docket were disposed of <lb />
to Monday afternoon <lb />
John Bell, Jr., C W., pleads <lb />
guilty, judgment suspended on <lb />
payment of costs. <lb />
George Darden and Rena Dar- <lb />
den, larceny, not guilty. <lb />
Mary Grimes and Isaac <lb />
F. A., not guilty. <lb />
Henry Vines and Cherry Bell, <lb />
F. A A., guilty, judgment <lb />
on payment of costs. <lb />
Ernest Carney, A- with D- W., <lb />
not guilty. <lb />
Ricks James, A. with D. W., <lb />
guilty. <lb />
Richard Burney, A. with D. W-, <lb />
pleads guilty, judgment suspend- <lb />
ed upon payment of costs. <lb />
Robt Cog-gins, J. E. Mayo, <lb />
Robinson, Edward Warren, <lb />
larceny, Mayo guilty, others not <lb />
guilty. <lb />
John Norman, injury to stock, <lb />
guilty. <lb />
Augustus Harrell, C- C- W-, not <lb />
guilty. <lb />
Augustus Harrell, A. with D. <lb />
W., pleads fined and <lb />
costs. <lb />
Henry C. C. <lb />
judgment upon pay- <lb />
of costs- <lb />
Henderson West and Walter <lb />
affray, guilty, judgment <lb />
suspended upon payment of costs. <lb />
Henderson West pointing gun <lb />
or pistol, pleads guilty, fined <lb />
costs. <lb />
Elder David House. <lb />
The subject of this sketch was <lb />
born August 14th, 1816, and died <lb />
at his home three miles from <lb />
Greenville, on Thursday, January <lb />
11th, 1894. In his death Pitt <lb />
county loses one of the best men <lb />
who ever lived within her borders. <lb />
His walk was always that of an <lb />
upright Christian gentleman. Ho <lb />
had the respect and love of all <lb />
who knew him, and no man could <lb />
ever say aught against him. On <lb />
the fourth Sunday in July, 1847, <lb />
he was received as a member of <lb />
the Baptist church at Great <lb />
Swamp. Six years later, on the <lb />
fourth Sunday in November, 1853, <lb />
he was ordained to the ministry, <lb />
and served bis church faithfully <lb />
until enfeebled by old age. At <lb />
the time of his death he was the <lb />
oldest member of the <lb />
Association. <lb />
Elder House was twice married, <lb />
first wife was Miss Felicia <lb />
Fleming, to whom he was married <lb />
in February, 1836. To this union <lb />
twelve children were born, seven <lb />
daughters and five sons. The first <lb />
son died at the age of thirteen <lb />
years, and all the other children <lb />
are now living. They are Mr. M- <lb />
J. House, who lives in Martin <lb />
county, Messrs. W. C House, G. <lb />
T. House and D. E. House, <lb />
ding in Pitt, Mrs. Little. <lb />
Mrs. Naomi Lawrence, of Hamil <lb />
ton. Misses Bettie, M., Sue, <lb />
Felicia and House, all <lb />
of the latter living with their <lb />
until his death. Any man <lb />
might well feel proud of raising <lb />
such a family as did Elder David <lb />
House. <lb />
His second wife was Mrs. Caro- <lb />
line Jones, to whom he was mar- <lb />
in 1881, and who now survives <lb />
him. No children were born to <lb />
his second marriage. <lb />
Elder House loved truth and <lb />
honesty in everybody. Politically <lb />
he never countenanced anything <lb />
but Democracy. He was a just <lb />
man and his memory will be bless- <lb />
ed. <lb />
To make room for his <lb />
Falkland Items. <lb />
January, 15th, 1894. <lb />
Miss Jennie Williams, of Green- <lb />
ville, opened a school of twenty <lb />
five pupils here last Monday. <lb />
Mrs. V- E. French, of Jasper, is <lb />
visiting relatives near Falkland. <lb />
Miss May Harris went to <lb />
Goldsboro last week to attend <lb />
the of her friend, Miss <lb />
Lizzie Giddens. <lb />
Mr. William Harris, has been <lb />
quite sick with the grippe but is <lb />
Greenville, N. C-, December 26th, 1893. <lb />
We have this day formed a co-partnership to conduct a General <lb />
Mercantile Business, sell Fertilizers and buy Cotton, Peanuts and <lb />
Rice in the town of Greenville under the firm name of Boswell, <lb />
Co. W. I. BOSWELL, <lb />
JESSE <lb />
C M. JONES. <lb />
Greenville. X. C. Dec. 1893. <lb />
Referring the above card we have <lb />
his day sold our entire business, <lb />
of n and fertilizers, store fix- <lb />
and good will to Mess. Boswell, <lb />
Greenville, X. Dec. 1893. <lb />
beg to announce that having <lb />
chased the business formerly conducted <lb />
Mess Young at this place, <lb />
we shall continue to occupy the same <lb />
Darling Haddock, A- B., not able to be out. <lb />
guilty. <lb />
W. H. from <lb />
Mayor's court, guilty. <lb />
Wade Butts and Wilson Stan <lb />
Butts pleads guilty, <lb />
Stancill not guilty. <lb />
William Staton, larceny, guilty, <lb />
judgment suspended upon pay- <lb />
of costs. <lb />
John Taylor, A. with D. W-, <lb />
guilty. <lb />
Will Taylor, C. C W-, pleads <lb />
guilty. <lb />
William Baker, burning barn, <lb />
guilty, sentenced years in <lb />
W. R. Baker, L. R, pleads <lb />
guilty, judgment suspended upon <lb />
payment of costs. <lb />
Henry Smith, L R., pleads <lb />
guilty. <lb />
W. Thornton, George Rob- <lb />
and Shepherd Page, affray, <lb />
Thornton not guilty, others guilty, <lb />
Roberson fined and costs, <lb />
judgment suspended over Page <lb />
upon payment of costs. <lb />
Jones, Sr., and <lb />
Jones, Jr., larceny, plead guilty, <lb />
Judgment suspended as to Jones, <lb />
r., Jones, Sr., sentenced to <lb />
for two years. <lb />
John Daniel and Andrew Lane, <lb />
affray, guilty, judgment suspend- <lb />
upon payment of costs- <lb />
Wiley Dupree, A. with D. W. <lb />
pleads guilty, fined and costs. <lb />
Mark Patrick, larceny, pleads <lb />
guilty- <lb />
Moore, larceny, guilty, <lb />
one year in <lb />
Allen Gray, larceny, guilty, <lb />
sentenced one year in <lb />
Lewis May, Robert May and <lb />
James Moore, affray, Moore not <lb />
B. R. King went to Baltimore <lb />
on a business trip Monday and <lb />
returned Saturday. <lb />
Cotton and <lb />
Below arc Norfolk ton <lb />
and peanuts for yesterday, <lb />
by Co. Commission <lb />
chants of <lb />
Good <lb />
9-16 <lb />
Low <lb />
Good 7-1 <lb />
Extra <lb />
Notice of Sale. <lb />
In pursuance of an order of Court I <lb />
will sell at public auction before the <lb />
Court Home door, the town of <lb />
Greenville, on Monday, February <lb />
1894, the following described tract o <lb />
land Lying in Greenville township, <lb />
adjoining the lands of W. K. <lb />
the lauds heirs, and <lb />
others, containing thirty-one acres, <lb />
more or less. Terms of sale cash. <lb />
W. H. HARRINGTON. <lb />
of A. D. <lb />
Co. They will and shall be pleased to have all <lb />
to net the business formerly car- of our friends to sec us. shall he <lb />
on by us at our old stand. They re- j very thankful a continuance of the <lb />
the control for this territory of those patronage of their former customers and <lb />
brands of fertilizers formerly sold by shall strive to merit their confidence <lb />
us, National, Capital and trade. <lb />
and Beef, Blood and Bone. They will; Having bought the of <lb />
continue to buy cotton, peanuts and disc of Mess. Young at a very <lb />
rice, and are prepared to pay the high- liberal discount from first New York <lb />
est ma prices. we arc enabled to offer many <lb />
We desire to return thanks to and shall continue to sell <lb />
man;, -friends who have so kindly pat-stock at greatly reduced prices. We <lb />
Mated us in the past and to them and i are also now receiving a large stock of <lb />
die public generally we most just bought the lowest <lb />
recommend the firm which succeeds we are <lb />
us, and with our intimate j to save you money on any <lb />
of man wears with each of them, know- Purchase may make, will pay <lb />
lag their strict so of honor and in- <lb />
carry a full stock of Dry Cloth- <lb />
we lee justified in r, Hardware, <lb />
continuance of your patronage Implements and Groceries. We <lb />
we can assure they will appreciate haw also arranged to continue the <lb />
those well established brands of <lb />
Utilizers, National, Cap. <lb />
Mr. c. Vi. will fettle up and Beef, Blood and Hone, also <lb />
business of Young and hi.-, Acid Phosphate and We <lb />
address after January 1st will be <lb />
,, , , ,,., ,, . . . and are prepared to pay the highest <lb />
Buchanan s Wharf, Baltimore, ltd,, in market prices, <lb />
care of The Fertilizer Co. Trusting u be favored a liberal <lb />
Yours truly, V w are <lb />
c J ours truly, <lb />
YOUNG A CO. <lb />
m; ; <lb />
Notice of Sale. <lb />
By virtue of a power of sale contained <lb />
in a Deed of Trust executed by W. N. <lb />
to the undersigned, dated the <lb />
day of 1893 and recorded in <lb />
the Register's Office of Pitt County In <lb />
Book M pages to inclusive, <lb />
is herein referred to, I will oner <lb />
for sale at public auction at the Court <lb />
House door In Pitt county, <lb />
N. C, Tuesday the 13th day of <lb />
1894, at o'clock noon, all <lb />
that certain standing timber upon the <lb />
lands hereinafter described, situated <lb />
Pitt county, to <lb />
the pine and poplar <lb />
of and above the size of Inches in <lb />
diameter at the stump standing or <lb />
growing upon a tract of laud adjoining <lb />
land- of J. T. Mobley, A. A. Baker <lb />
known as <lb />
the <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 GOODS TO BE <lb />
CHEAP. <lb />
ft <lb />
--Hi<lb />
Having- bought my brother out I Ma determined to soil my en- <lb />
tire stock exceedingly close. Come for yourself. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
WILEY BROWN <lb />
Home Sewing Machines and Depositor for American Bible <lb />
s- <lb />
guilty, others judgment J- Shepherd and others, <lb />
upon payment of cost, i <lb />
FT , , r, m of B. K and rally <lb />
C. L. Patrick and C- T. Savage, described in said division, which hi re- <lb />
disposing of liquor to minor, to; eight hundred <lb />
entity. more or less; it b the lame <lb />
t i n conveyed by K. A. to W. <lb />
John Daniel, C. 0- W-, pleads by deed dated of <lb />
guilty, judgment upon 1881 and recorded in <lb />
payment of costs, , of Pitt county in <lb />
Andrew Dane, C. G, W-. plead. I <lb />
guilty, <lb />
-MANUFACTURER <lb />
of p <lb />
The Grand Jury on <lb />
day of last week found a true bill <lb />
G- F. Smith. Judge By- <lb />
ordered that a of one <lb />
hundred be summoned from which <lb />
to select the jury and set the case <lb />
for Monday morning of this week. <lb />
The hundred men were on hand <lb />
Monday morning, but because of <lb />
some irregularity for the <lb />
challenged the entire <lb />
and objected to the jury be- <lb />
selected from them. Then by <lb />
agreement another of one <lb />
hundred and fifty was drawn from <lb />
the regain jury box and the <lb />
for <lb />
rs <lb />
page <lb />
mi all, the rights of nay and <lb />
conveyed in said deed, winch <lb />
1- referred to. <lb />
certain lot of Pine timber <lb />
not exceeding one. feet, standing <lb />
or growing upon a tract of land ululated <lb />
the South side Tar adjoin- <lb />
the lands of Augustus on Ike <lb />
the lands of Jno. Randolph on <lb />
West, the hinds of Thomas <lb />
James C. on the <lb />
and bounded the by the main <lb />
road leading from to Tar- <lb />
containing seven hundred acres <lb />
more or less; being the panic conveyed <lb />
by J. F. wife to W. N, <lb />
by deed duly recorded In the <lb />
Registers office of Pitt county in Book <lb />
V i CO, together with all the rights <lb />
of way and privileges therein contained, <lb />
which, is referred to a <lb />
of the land of which said timber is I <lb />
located and the rights and privileges <lb />
therein conveyed, terms of sale <lb />
This the day, of UM. J <lb />
JNO. SMALL, <lb />
-ALE KINDS OF <lb />
REPAIRING SHORT <lb />
W. H. WHITE. <lb />
Old thing- have pasted away and all <lb />
thing have new. My old <lb />
Of goods have been sold out <lb />
and a has taken its <lb />
place. 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 arc hard and <lb />
money scarce just as well as the man <lb />
who raises cotton, corn and tobacco, <lb />
and am going to sell goods just as low <lb />
as any dealer can afford to sell. <lb />
For every dollar spent with me you will <lb />
get the worth of your money. Weep a <lb />
complete stock Of <lb />
General Merchandise <lb />
Goods, Notions <lb />
Boots, Shoes, <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 />
ESTABLISHED <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK STORK <lb />
-1- their year's supplies will <lb />
their interest our prices before <lb />
It complete <lb />
n nil its branches. <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
at Market Pricks. <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF A, CIGARS <lb />
we boy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A com <lb />
stock of <lb />
u u <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices <lb />
the times. Out goods are all bought and <lb />
sold for CASH therefore, having no risk <lb />
to sell at a close <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. <lb />
N, <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK <lb />
For Cure a all losses <lb />
This has in use <lb />
tidy and wherever know ha <lb />
been in steady demand, it hat been <lb />
the leading physicians all <lb />
country, and d cures when <lb />
all other remedies, v the attention <lb />
the experienced physicians, <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment la <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which It has obtained Is owing <lb />
o it- own efficacy, as little effort <lb />
ever been made to brim; it before the <lb />
public. One bottle this will <lb />
he -em to any address on receipt of <lb />
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
communication- to <lb />
T. r. <lb />
N. C <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb />
villa and Tarboro touching at all bind <lb />
lugs on Tar Monday, <lb />
and Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at A M. <lb />
Tuesdays. Thursdays Saturdays <lb />
Greenville A. ht. same days. <lb />
These departures are subject to stage of <lb />
water on Tar <lb />
Only first-class workmen and material allowed in my shops- The many <lb />
will testify to the and durability of buggies <lb />
vehicle guaranteed. line of <lb />
at with steam <lb />
era of The and Wash- <lb />
Norfolk. Baltimore <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and <lb />
Shippers should their goods <lb />
marked vi-i Dominion iron <lb />
Hew York. from <lb />
Norfolk <lb />
more from Ball I- <lb />
i lore. Miners from <lb />
Boston, <lb />
JNO. SON. <lb />
A t <lb />
Washington N. C <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Greenville. N. C <lb />
Come and sea us at Bros, <lb />
old stand, where we are ready <lb />
to serve you a full line of <lb />
who have used my work <lb />
turned out at my shops. <lb />
HARNESS<lb />
i .<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017676_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
EACH OTHER. <lb />
Ghost Stories Work on the <lb />
of Two <lb />
Hew the Twit- of a Winter Evening <lb />
Incitement Our <lb />
Heroine Clutch at the <lb />
of Their <lb />
It was a winter's evening. <lb />
just such a one as nature gives for <lb />
the proper coloring to stories of the <lb />
imaginative character. Ghosts could <lb />
be seen dancing Mid holding high <lb />
carnival on the glistening snow- <lb />
banks outside, and fairy forms <lb />
hobgoblins seemed to burst at <lb />
every crack of the bright logs in the <lb />
big open grate. <lb />
As we sat there in the parlor of <lb />
the big farmhouse, watching the <lb />
glowing logs, we fully bent ourselves <lb />
to the surroundings and our <lb />
had sway. Uncle Fred <lb />
related long and blood-curdling <lb />
yarns which he had heard in the <lb />
west; the girls told some wonderful <lb />
ghost stories and I fairly let myself <lb />
loose in anecdotes of crime which <lb />
hail come under my observation as <lb />
a police says a <lb />
dent of the New York Journal. <lb />
When at last we went to bed our <lb />
minds were keyed up to a very high <lb />
pitch, and I noticed that the girls <lb />
used precautions that night in <lb />
locking the doors and windows. The <lb />
fact that a couple of suspicious-look- <lb />
tramps had been turned away <lb />
in the evening by my grand- <lb />
father tended to make us more <lb />
than usually careful. <lb />
The girls retired to a V room, just <lb />
at the head of the stairs, a great big <lb />
chamber, such as is always set aide <lb />
as the spare room, furnished with a <lb />
big double bed, with four <lb />
high posts. My Uncle Fred <lb />
and I slept in the low-ceiling <lb />
in the other wing of the house. A <lb />
long, narrow hall, winding around <lb />
the top of the open staircase, <lb />
rated the two apartments. <lb />
Uncle Fred and I had been asleep <lb />
about two hours when we were sud- <lb />
awakened by the sound of a <lb />
struggle. For a moment we listened <lb />
and then we heard a high soprano <lb />
which we recognized as Flora's <lb />
Help There's a man in <lb />
the <lb />
At the same instant another voice <lb />
which we knew at once was Minnie's <lb />
gave another and even more <lb />
yell of He's killing<lb />
Free was on his in an instant <lb />
and as he pulled his pistol out of <lb />
drawer I grabbed the lamp. It only <lb />
took us a minute rush out into <lb />
the hall, but in s seconds of <lb />
space we heard enough to convince <lb />
us that a most horrible sight would <lb />
meet our eyes. <lb />
Around the ball we bounded and u <lb />
kick from Fred sent the door of the <lb />
girl's room bounding inward. He <lb />
cocked the and I shoved in the <lb />
light. As the rays from the lamp <lb />
shone round the apartment we failed <lb />
to discern any traces of the man. A <lb />
glance at the bed told the story. <lb />
girls were sitting upright <lb />
Flora had a tight grip on Minnie's <lb />
bangs and Minnie was clutching <lb />
Flora's hair with I Both <lb />
were screaming at the Lop of their <lb />
voices and both were f . ;. <lb />
It didn't take as long to solve the <lb />
mystery after getting the girls <lb />
awake. Flora, la her slumbers, <lb />
dreamed of burglars, and tossing <lb />
about had grabbed Minnie by the <lb />
hair. As she did so she d <lb />
she had caught a burglar and yelled. <lb />
Minnie, who was also thinking of the <lb />
ghost stories, instantly surmised <lb />
that a robber had her, and self- <lb />
defense she had grabbed i <lb />
hair. Doth had pulled for <lb />
had yelled at the same time. <lb />
When the matter was explained at <lb />
the breakfast table next morning <lb />
grandfather put an emphatic em- <lb />
oil an- more ghost stories. <lb />
SAILOR LOY'S FORTUNE. <lb />
From Beggary California to a <lb />
Competence in England. <lb />
of Wild Adventure Lead a Tooth to <lb />
Away to Life <lb />
. of <lb />
the Inheritance. <lb />
Thomas Stone, an eighteen-year- <lb />
old English sailor, who has been <lb />
I a hand-to-mouth existence in <lb />
Oakland during the last seven <lb />
months, fallen heir to the estate <lb />
of his father, valued at over <lb />
says the San Francisco Examiner. <lb />
It was an early hour of a stormy <lb />
morning last March when a <lb />
and woman young man <lb />
plied at the home of Michael <lb />
for a meal. He told a <lb />
ward story about deserting his ship <lb />
in the bay the day before, and said <lb />
he had slept under the bridge all <lb />
night. Mr. took compassion <lb />
on the desolate sailor, and supplied <lb />
him with food and warm clothing. <lb />
As Stone proved willing to work, and <lb />
there was a good deal of labor to be <lb />
performed about the place, Mr. Rig- <lb />
permitted him to remain, and <lb />
since then he has made the <lb />
homo his headquarters. <lb />
During his leisure hours Stone <lb />
spent his time instructing a young <lb />
son of the in the trade of <lb />
boat building. In a lot adjoining <lb />
the house he established a miniature <lb />
shipyard, with cradle, blocks and <lb />
ways, and there he built a full-sized <lb />
steam launch, which lacks nothing <lb />
but an engine to make it complete. <lb />
The tale the stranger told was about <lb />
as Five years ago he was a <lb />
schoolboy in England and had a <lb />
penchant for reading tales of <lb />
His reading made him so <lb />
long for travel that he ran away and <lb />
went to sea. When he home <lb />
his father took him to Liverpool and <lb />
bound him over to a sea captain for <lb />
a voyage to and from Australia. He <lb />
was signed for two years, but long <lb />
before the voyage had been finished <lb />
the boy's dreams had disappeared <lb />
and ho had determined to desert. <lb />
When the vessel reached San Fran- <lb />
on the homeward voyage he <lb />
accordingly got ashore and stayed <lb />
there. He was penniless, hence his <lb />
application for charity at the homo <lb />
of the <lb />
During the voyage from England <lb />
to Australia the sailor's father died, <lb />
leaving him a fortune of more than <lb />
thirty-two thousand pounds. But <lb />
the news to this effect came only <lb />
very recently. <lb />
Young Stone wrote from Oakland <lb />
to his father several times, but re- <lb />
no response, so when Walter <lb />
Seawell, Oakland contractor, left <lb />
for a visit to England a few months <lb />
ago, he was commissioned by the <lb />
young man to hunt up his father and <lb />
see why ho failed to respond to the <lb />
communications addressed to him. <lb />
Mr. Seawell found that the elder <lb />
Stone was dead, and notified the son <lb />
of this fact and of the further fact <lb />
that ho was no longer poor. The <lb />
news has since been confirmed by <lb />
the British consul at San <lb />
Auntie Didn't Know. <lb />
Power of a Whale. <lb />
An interesting study of the horse <lb />
power of the whale has been made <lb />
by the eminent anatomist, Sir <lb />
Turner, of the University of <lb />
Edinburgh, Scotland, in conjunction <lb />
with Mr. John Henderson, the equal- <lb />
eminent Glasgow ship builder. The <lb />
size and dimensions of a great whale <lb />
stranded several years ago on the <lb />
shore at furnished the <lb />
necessary data for a computation of <lb />
the power necessary to propel it at <lb />
the rate of twelve miles an hour. <lb />
This whale measured eighty feet in <lb />
length, twenty feet across the <lb />
flanges of the tail, and weighed <lb />
tons. It was calculated <lb />
that one hundred and forty-five, <lb />
horse power was necessary to at <lb />
the speed mentioned. <lb />
Which <lb />
Orders had been given to the <lb />
to arrest all mendicants <lb />
whom they found on the street. In <lb />
obedience to his instructions a Nine- <lb />
district policeman took into <lb />
custody an old colored woman, whom <lb />
he found soliciting alms at Eighth <lb />
and Chestnut streets. When she <lb />
arrived at the station house, the <lb />
geant in charge looked at her over <lb />
desk in surprise. She was old, <lb />
and her hair had faded to gray, but <lb />
her eyes shone brightly. She made <lb />
a queer lit tie bow, and <lb />
After had given her <lb />
name, the police officials asked her <lb />
age. <lb />
sake, I know. Been <lb />
putty long ago since my mammy <lb />
me, I clean gone She smiled <lb />
and so did he. <lb />
you married or <lb />
came the answer. <lb />
The sergeant looked up <lb />
founded. <lb />
don't queried he. <lb />
said she, shaking her <lb />
head. <lb />
don't you <lb />
a grass re-<lb />
Press. <lb />
Deacon Randolph's Philosophy. <lb />
de eat no <lb />
remarked Deacon Ran- <lb />
the other morning. <lb />
feel replied the <lb />
Randolph heir-apparent. eat <lb />
sum lobster salad night it <lb />
agree <lb />
The deacon fixed him for a mo- <lb />
with his glittering eye and <lb />
then <lb />
got a delicate <lb />
a young buck Was <lb />
it lobster salad made tack <lb />
all de street an hour, like <lb />
de Puritan in a head wind, <lb />
cud de gate Was it lobster <lb />
salad made fall up do <lb />
front so hard oat wake up <lb />
Did lobster salad <lb />
hang shoes on de gas <lb />
burner, on de <lb />
go bed hat on Go <lb />
had said <lb />
gin was de den <lb />
bin as good a man as <lb />
but now no <lb />
A lady leading a St. Bernard dog <lb />
passed the window of a club at which <lb />
some of the member, were sitting, <lb />
when one of them exclaimed, loud <lb />
enough to be a <lb />
beautiful <lb />
Feigning resentment, she turned <lb />
to a policeman and <lb />
hear that insolent man He called <lb />
me a beautiful <lb />
think you are mistaken, <lb />
replied the policeman; referred <lb />
to the <lb />
Has Telescoping Masts. <lb />
A queer craft is the British steamer <lb />
which has completed her <lb />
maiden voyage to this port, says the <lb />
New York Herald. She now lies <lb />
anchored near Robbins reef. <lb />
The is the first vessel to <lb />
arrive here which was <lb />
built to go through the big ship <lb />
canal from Manchester to Mersey in <lb />
England. Her lower masts are <lb />
low and of iron. <lb />
Her wooden topmasts are so <lb />
ranged that they can be made <lb />
telescope into the lower masts. <lb />
She can go under the bridges over <lb />
the Manchester canal without <lb />
The vessel is schooner rigged, and <lb />
comes now from East Indian ports. <lb />
She is laden with sugar and spices. <lb />
SIMPLY A GAMBLING AFFAIR. <lb />
History of Postage Stamps. <lb />
Mr. II. A. Kelly, of the stamp <lb />
vision of the post office department, <lb />
wrote a brief descriptive history <lb />
the different United States stamps <lb />
issued since we have had stamps, for <lb />
the annual report of the third <lb />
postmaster general. It is the <lb />
first story of the stamps which <lb />
included them all. Mr. Kelly <lb />
pretty nearly everything about <lb />
stamps. He has been a long time <lb />
in the stamp <lb />
Capitol. <lb />
Did Not Improve Matters. <lb />
A newly married couple boarded <lb />
the train from Boston at <lb />
amid a shower of <lb />
that resembled a November snow <lb />
storm. The bride removed a white <lb />
bow from the coat of the groom <lb />
threw it away. Then the <lb />
entered, picked up the discarded <lb />
ribbon and asked the groom if it <lb />
belonged to him, whereat <lb />
the train smiled, and two of then <lb />
I Transcript. <lb />
Is The Fight. <lb />
The week of prayer service was <lb />
held at the First Presbyterian <lb />
church last night. Rev. Mr. <lb />
tin could not be present, so the <lb />
duty of lea ling and talking de- <lb />
entirely on Rev. Dr. <lb />
His theme was for Na- <lb />
Rulers Governors, the <lb />
suppression of the liquor traffic, <lb />
opium and slave From <lb />
his remarks were taken the fol- <lb />
lowing <lb />
are to pray for rulers ; that <lb />
is, that God will give us Christian <lb />
rulers. Then we to pray that <lb />
they may rule for the prosperity <lb />
of our laud, both moral and <lb />
We not simply to <lb />
pray, but we are to help thorn <lb />
execute the law to this <lb />
this connection I would say <lb />
that it is sad that there is not <lb />
a more outspoken and decided <lb />
stand taken by the good people <lb />
of our laud on the side of the <lb />
Governor of one of our sister <lb />
States his efforts to sustain the <lb />
law and prevent the brutal prize <lb />
light published to take place in <lb />
defiance of the Governor's pro- <lb />
tests and the decision of the At- <lb />
General. Such a right <lb />
must be revolting to the mind of <lb />
every Christian man and woman <lb />
of our regular gambling <lb />
affair and brutal in the extreme. <lb />
We need not pray for ourselves <lb />
with our lips if we do not lift a <lb />
finger or raise our voice in pro- <lb />
test against these outrages against <lb />
society and Christianity. <lb />
men, Governor and Attorney Gen- <lb />
have spoken ; they ought to <lb />
be heard and helped. <lb />
THE LIQUOR TRAFFIC <lb />
the arrangement of themes <lb />
f the week, without pro-arrange- <lb />
it seems to have fallen to <lb />
my lot, by providential direction, <lb />
to talk on the question which I <lb />
have had to discuss <lb />
in this sup- <lb />
of the liquor traffic. I <lb />
do not shrink from it. If there is <lb />
any other one thing that does <lb />
more to retard the interests of our <lb />
land, temporally or spiritually, <lb />
than intemperance, I do not know <lb />
what it is. I do not by in- <lb />
temperance tho man, only, who <lb />
drinks to what is culled excess ; <lb />
that and falls, but tho <lb />
also who takes his regular <lb />
drinks day and night I believe <lb />
the who gets and <lb />
down, has his spree, and then <lb />
stops, for a period at least, will <lb />
out better in the end than <lb />
the who takes his two, three, <lb />
or six drinks every day. The one <lb />
is like a man sick with fever or <lb />
other disease from which he re- <lb />
covers and gains his usual <lb />
strength. The other, who prides <lb />
himself as a temperate man, is <lb />
like a consumptive or cancer <lb />
patient, without hope of <lb />
or cure, his life being <lb />
away day by day. Oh the <lb />
blight, promising young men of <lb />
our country who are walking <lb />
surely and steadily this <lb />
fearful road to ruin and death <lb />
The committee who arranged for <lb />
this week of prayer wore <lb />
ed of various denominations and <lb />
they saw and felt the importance <lb />
of putting in this topic, and well <lb />
they might. <lb />
us look at our own city. <lb />
I feel proud of our City. <lb />
So many beautiful temples for the <lb />
worship of God ; so many church- <lb />
going here. My heart <lb />
bounds with joy and gratitude on <lb />
Sunday mornings as the side- <lb />
walks are thronged with our <lb />
on their way to church, and <lb />
I sometimes think that, though <lb />
unheard by mortal ears, tho an- <lb />
join tho anthems of praise. <lb />
But stop there is a sad picture <lb />
besides this one. and perhaps <lb />
there are fiends from the lower <lb />
world who clap their hands with <lb />
hellish glee along tho streets and <lb />
in the alleys, every day and night <lb />
as they see the many saloons <lb />
open an their victims, in our <lb />
city. Though we have many <lb />
churches, there are more saloons <lb />
with their pictures, music and at- <lb />
tractions for the young, and each <lb />
man pays more for the privilege <lb />
to ruin than many pastors <lb />
get for the service rendered the <lb />
Church. I charge in par- <lb />
but there is a wrong <lb />
somewhere. If the Christian <lb />
people of this city would say the <lb />
word, the saloon would have to <lb />
go. Then why not say it It <lb />
causes more broken vows to the <lb />
Church, to tho bride at tho altar, <lb />
the mother and to God, then any- <lb />
thing else of which I have heard <lb />
or known. <lb />
may not be suppressed; <lb />
some say it will not. I think it <lb />
will. But one I do <lb />
if it is not, there will be broken <lb />
hearts, ruined lives, <lb />
death, and a drunkard's hell while <lb />
time shall last. But God bus <lb />
that to the <lb />
shall be written on the bells <lb />
of tho horses, and on the door <lb />
posts and lintels of the <lb />
I believe that will take the place <lb />
of gilded signs and word <lb />
Let us Bias for it, and <lb />
may God hasten the <lb />
Observer. <lb />
A ROLL OP HONOR. <lb />
The Grand Army Gazette and <lb />
National Guardsman, a monthly <lb />
magazine published in New York, <lb />
and largely devoted to inter- <lb />
est of the soldiers and sailors of <lb />
the late war, the army, navy and <lb />
National Guard of the United <lb />
States, puts in a strong plea for a <lb />
correction of the pension abuses <lb />
which have made the pension <lb />
list a roll of dishonor instead of <lb />
one of honor. In the number for <lb />
the current month the Gazette <lb />
gives extracts from official <lb />
the abuses, and <lb />
says <lb />
a quarter of the truth as <lb />
to the way the Pension Office was <lb />
by the Tanner and <lb />
regimes has been told to tho <lb />
Some of the papers have <lb />
been afraid to speak for fear they <lb />
would called copperheads or <lb />
and attacked by such <lb />
fellows the so-called colonel <lb />
really bass drum pounder and <lb />
hospital <lb />
of the who <lb />
goes around with a chip his <lb />
shoulder, eager to attack tho hon <lb />
records of men who are in <lb />
finitely Ins superiors as soldiers <lb />
citizens, in honesty and<lb />
dare tell the truth, for our <lb />
record as a soldier and a citizen is <lb />
too well and too clean to <lb />
be smirched by lying stories <lb />
Base -Drum-Pounder <lb />
Pharisaical sheet or in any other. <lb />
Nothing they can say shall deter <lb />
us from doing our duty in assist <lb />
to purge the pension roll and <lb />
again make it the roll of honor it <lb />
used to <lb />
Of course, the editor of the <lb />
Gazette stands in great danger of <lb />
being read out of the G- O P. be- <lb />
cause of his manly utterances, <lb />
but all the same he will have tho <lb />
satisfaction of knowing that <lb />
sentiment of the people accords <lb />
in this matter with his own and <lb />
that it is <lb />
Ran Away With the Money, <lb />
like a women will <lb />
say when they read this. <lb />
He hails from Rockingham. <lb />
He courted a girl, got ready to <lb />
get spliced, didn't have the money <lb />
to buy a license, so tho of <lb />
tho tho girl, <lb />
gave hi in five dollars to buy it- <lb />
Ho took tho boodle and ran <lb />
away. <lb />
Sat down cried did she <lb />
Not much. She got a on <lb />
The ascertained whether he <lb />
had gone and followed him. <lb />
He came to this <lb />
Deep River she <lb />
found him, had him arrested, put <lb />
in jail this morning officer <lb />
took him back to Wentworth to <lb />
answer a charge with <lb />
five dollars instead of with a girl. <lb />
Ho went away singing <lb />
girl I left behind but about <lb />
the time he the State prison <lb />
he will sing another tune. He <lb />
will be for obtaining <lb />
under fake pretenses <lb />
Record. <lb />
No other has equaled <lb />
in the relict it gives in severest <lb />
of dyspepsia, sick headache, <lb />
etc. <lb />
Up to Date Proverbs. <lb />
It takes a giddy woman to dis <lb />
the equanimity of men. <lb />
No girl ever leans much at <lb />
school she begins to press in <lb />
her books the flowers the boys <lb />
give her. <lb />
The scolding whose <lb />
band is a chemist wants to look <lb />
out for his retorts. <lb />
Some people take advice all-well <lb />
enough, but never any of <lb />
it- <lb />
One of the safest clubs <lb />
a man can belong to is family <lb />
The fool thinks he must get mad <lb />
because somebody him. <lb />
Kind nature warns man o <lb />
approach of fate. <lb />
When a man has no right left <lb />
then he begins to assort his <lb />
wrongs. <lb />
Lovers fancy that the universe <lb />
is merely a candy factory. <lb />
will it and no Airs. <lb />
Nellie N. J. uses this <lb />
emphatic language. have Dr. <lb />
Ball's Syrup in my house three <lb />
yens would not. lie without it. It <lb />
cured my which I months. <lb />
I will always use it and no <lb />
Same For North Carolina. <lb />
We have said before, and we <lb />
beg leave to remark again, that <lb />
the Democrats of Virginia want <lb />
all of the offices which they are <lb />
entitled to by reason of the <lb />
of November, 1892- <lb />
Tho Congressional elections <lb />
occur this fall, and long before <lb />
even the preliminary canvass is <lb />
opened the Democrats should be <lb />
in possession of the fruits of <lb />
won in 1892, but to a large <lb />
extent undelivered yet. <lb />
Our have patiently <lb />
borne the know that <lb />
Mr. Cleveland and Mr. <lb />
have been very the <lb />
time for action has now come. <lb />
Further delay will be <lb />
Richmond Dispatch. <lb />
The greatest cure for pains of all <lb />
kinds, whether proceeding from cuts <lb />
and burns, or from other ailments such <lb />
neuralgia and rheumatism is <lb />
Salvation Oil. popular <lb />
and effective remedy continually <lb />
gained in the confidence of the people <lb />
until it has e a household <lb />
No dwelling is completely <lb />
equipped without It.<lb />
Julian Hawthorne is soon to re- <lb />
move his family and his from <lb />
the of the Seven <lb />
at Sag Harbor to establish them for <lb />
a year or he <lb />
yields to the fascination of the place <lb />
as Stevenson has to the charms of <lb />
the island of Jamaica in <lb />
the West Indies. From there, us- <lb />
Kingston, perhaps, as <lb />
he expects to roam about with <lb />
a freebooter's freedom in the old <lb />
haunts of pirates and to make an ex- <lb />
to the Sargasso sea, the <lb />
gulf stream's dead center, where the <lb />
congregate. <lb />
The Only Tune Harrison Likes. <lb />
During the darkest days of the <lb />
war, when military tunes and <lb />
lads were sung everywhere till <lb />
were about sick of them, there <lb />
was played in New York, says tho <lb />
Press of that town, a soldier's <lb />
march which was immediately pop- <lb />
all over the country. It was <lb />
tho late Charles Gounod's Sol- <lb />
from and <lb />
after a year or two America got as <lb />
tired of it as it recently did of <lb />
Ex-President Harri- <lb />
son first heard it played by one of <lb />
the army bands in Sherman's army. <lb />
It is the only air he ever liked. In <lb />
the of most tunes he did not <lb />
know one from tho other, and he is <lb />
probably the only person in the <lb />
United States to-day who hears the <lb />
played and feels <lb />
inspirited by it. <lb />
The piano-organist had put <lb />
whole soul into his performance. A, <lb />
small coin was thrown and he <lb />
accepted it with a bow and a smile. <lb />
Then an expression of doubt swept <lb />
over his face, and he advanced to <lb />
within speaking distance. <lb />
he said, you <lb />
tell me one ting, if you <lb />
is <lb />
sec, you new customer of <lb />
mine. I you to tell me If you <lb />
pay for tune or for me to go <lb />
Star. <lb />
JACKSON <lb />
Office Furniture <lb />
COMPANY <lb />
JACKSON, TERN. <lb />
MANUFACTURERS OF <lb />
SCHOOL, CHURCH, <lb />
AND OFFICE <lb />
Schools and Churches seated <lb />
in best manner. Offices <lb />
furnished. Send for <lb />
European Echoes. <lb />
The deaths from cholera in <lb />
Constantinople average five per <lb />
day- <lb />
A royal decree has proclaimed <lb />
Sicily to be in a state of siege, <lb />
owing to anti-tax riots. <lb />
A heavy fall of snow has com- <lb />
interrupted the horse car <lb />
omnibus service throughout <lb />
Rome. <lb />
St- will hold an in- <lb />
exhibition in 1903, the <lb />
200th anniversary of founding <lb />
of the city. <lb />
The French wine vintage of <lb />
has reached <lb />
double tho yield j <lb />
of any previous year since 1880. <lb />
Extreme cold weather prevails <lb />
in England and on the Continent. <lb />
The gale on the English Channel <lb />
i is so severe that the mail boats are <lb />
to cross. <lb />
Pin <lb />
Lap. <lb />
You can a capitalist at <lb />
once by laying small part of <lb />
your yearly and invest- <lb />
it in a policy of the <lb />
equitable Life <lb />
For you can instantly <lb />
cure a capital of for <lb />
a capital of thus <lb />
acquiring an estate which you <lb />
may leave to your heirs, or re- <lb />
as a fund for your own <lb />
support in old age, if your life <lb />
be prolonged. <lb />
Such a step will prompt you <lb />
to save, will strengthen your <lb />
credit, will increase your con- <lb />
will preserve you from <lb />
care and will give you lasting <lb />
satisfaction. <lb />
The Plan is <lb />
The Security Absolute. <lb />
It is the perfect development <lb />
of the life policy. To-day is <lb />
the right time to get facts and <lb />
figures. Address <lb />
W. J. Manager, <lb />
For the Carolina. <lb />
ROCK HILL. C. <lb />
Is Essential <lb />
health <lb />
You cannot <lb />
ho pet-, be well <lb />
II your <lb />
BLOOD <lb />
impure, j <lb />
If you m troubled <lb />
BOILS, ULCERS or <lb />
PIMPLES, SORES <lb />
is lad. A few bottle, of S. S- <lb />
cleanse the system, remove all <lb />
-n J build you up. All manner of <lb />
CLEARED AWAY <lb />
it use. It is the best blond remedy on earth, j <lb />
who h used it so. <lb />
My la <lb />
Two <lb />
me<lb />
Ohio <lb />
on Mord and kin diseases mailed <lb />
CO., Atlanta. Ga. <lb />
w V V <lb />
Scientific <lb />
it <lb />
Simple<lb />
Safe <lb />
Sure. <lb />
MEDICINE.; <lb />
Testimony of Mr. W. G. <lb />
NEW BERN, N. C. <lb />
I began the use of the in <lb />
last, discarded medicine entirely, and am <lb />
now much improved In health. Am last- <lb />
obligations for the it done <lb />
WRITE US. <lb />
We send all information and <lb />
FREE. <lb />
CO., <lb />
Washington, D. C <lb />
Notice. <lb />
Allen Warren, of Manning <lb />
against <lb />
w. J. Manning, Jesse Baker and wife. <lb />
Addle, Henry A. Manning and <lb />
J. <lb />
To Job. J. Manning one of the above <lb />
named <lb />
Yon are hereby recognized, to appear <lb />
and answer or demur to the petition <lb />
Bled in thin special proceeding before <lb />
Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt <lb />
county, at his office in Greenville, <lb />
at February, purpose of <lb />
this proceeding Is to Cave <lb />
of court to sell the lauds of B. K. <lb />
for I he purpose of <lb />
Which to debts of tile <lb />
said e and no other relief is <lb />
sought defendant <lb />
This of December. 1893. <lb />
B. A. MOVE, <lb />
Superior Court. <lb />
inUres <lb />
and Improvements <lb />
Riders of Victor Pneumatics carry an extra inner tube <lb />
to be used in case of accident. By simply removing a <lb />
inner tube through a hole in the rim, repair is <lb />
effected in five minutes by replacing with a new one. <lb />
If you are going to ride why not ride the best<lb />
arc com- <lb />
pounded from a prescription <lb />
widely used by the best <lb />
cal authorities and arc re- j <lb />
in a form that is be- <lb />
coming the fashion every- <lb />
where.<lb />
-J <lb />
but promptly i <lb />
stomach and tin . ; re <lb />
dyspepsia, habitual <lb />
offensive breath i <lb />
ache. <lb />
first symptom ind <lb />
biliousness, dizziness, <lb />
after eating, or depression i <lb />
spirits, will surely and . <lb />
remove the whole difficulty, <lb />
may be on <lb />
of nearest druggist <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
WASHINGTON, <lb />
DENVER, <lb />
SAN <lb />
J. S. JENKINS CO <lb />
LEAF <lb />
BROKERS <lb />
Greenville, N. n. <lb />
-0- <lb />
Ample Facilities for Re-drying. Large Stock <lb />
Buys on <lb />
Tyson Rawls. Bunkers, and of <lb />
HOW IT. <lb />
Every person wanting the ORE AT WORLD ALMANAC for 1894 <lb />
it for by being a subscriber to the THE EASTERN <lb />
REFLECTOR. Or any subscriber who will bring the- REFLECTOR <lb />
new subscriber for a year can get the Almanac FREE. <lb />
;, c.- <lb />
Salvation <lb />
Ir, <lb />
arc i <lb />
are easy to take, <lb />
quick to act, <lb />
save many a <lb />
tor's <lb />
It. R. <lb />
Schedule <lb />
SOOTH. <lb />
No No No <lb />
Oct. Us, daily Fast Mail, <lb />
daily ex Sun <lb />
Weldon 12,35 pm pm MUD <lb />
Ar pm pin <lb />
pm <lb />
SI pm <lb />
Mt p m pm<lb />
Ar Florence <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Goldsboro<lb />
TRAINS GOING NORTH <lb />
No No <lb />
daily daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
Florence <lb />
Fayetteville <lb />
-19 <lb />
Ar Wilson II <lb />
Wilmington <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Ar Wilson p m <lb />
Ai Rocky Mont <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. m , Halifax 4.40 <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck 4.48 p. m. <lb />
0.28 p. m., Kinston p. in. <lb />
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. <lb />
Greenville 8.22 a. in. Arriving Halifax <lb />
at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. m. daily <lb />
except <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb />
Washington 7.00 a, arrives <lb />
8.40 a. in. Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m., Parmele 6.00 <lb />
p. m arrives Washington 7.30 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Scotland Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via Alb <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun <lb />
day, P M, Sunday PM, arrive <lb />
Plymouth 9.20 p. m., 5.20 p. in. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
6.30 a. m., Sunday 10.00 a. m <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N C, 10.26 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 p m. <lb />
arrive Fayetteville p m. Daily ex- <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb />
daily except Sunday, A M <lb />
rive N C, A M. Re <lb />
C AM <lb />
Goldsboro. NO A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
at P M, arrive Nashville W <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
8.86 arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
M, except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. leave <lb />
7.80 p. m., arrive Dunbar 8.40 p. <lb />
in. Returning leave Dunbar a. m., <lb />
arrive 7.15 a. m. except <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton except Sunday, at <lb />
Clio <lb />
ton at A M, and P. M. <lb />
at Warsaw with and <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Weldon for all point North daily. <lb />
-ail via Richmond, and dally except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb />
daily except Sunday with Norfolk <lb />
railroad for Norfolk and all <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
Genera <lb />
J. K. Transportation. <lb />
V, <lb />
TIT <lb />
. u <lb />
ENCYCLOPEDIA FOR 1894. <lb />
The Book Printed. <lb />
Everything up to Date and <lb />
1300 <lb />
BY STATESMEN, EDUCATORS, AND <lb />
EVERYWHERE. <lb />
a State of <lb />
a Veritable <lb />
; Tacts and Events, <lb />
Down to January <lb />
First, <lb />
Edition cf has been prepared <lb />
. c of editors. It will <lb />
hi cover, wide mar- <lb />
. is printed <lb />
, . more and better <lb />
j It is <lb />
M BOOK.<lb />
CENTS. <lb />
City. <lb />
HOW MM <lb />
You can et THE EASTERN REFLECTOR, THE ATLANTA <lb />
CONSTITUTION, THE NEW YORK WORLD all one year for <lb />
Or you can get any two of above papers a year for <lb />
Subscribe at the Reflector Office. <lb />
The Best <lb />
B Least Money <lb />
L DOUGLAS <lb />
SHOE <lb />
FOR <lb />
GENTLEMEN, <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained and all Pat- <lb />
business conducted fr Fee. <lb />
is Opposite <lb />
and can secure patent in less tune loan <lb />
remote from Washington, <lb />
Send model, drawing or photo., with <lb />
We advise, if patent able or not, free of , <lb />
-chary. Our fee not due till patent is secured. <lb />
A How to Obtain with <lb />
cost of same in the U. S. and countries <lb />
sent free. Address, <lb />
Orr. D. C. <lb />
PARKER'S <lb />
HAIR BALSAM <lb />
and has <lb />
s growth <lb />
r Falls to <lb />
. to its Youthful <lb />
On a <lb />
id <lb />
PARKERS-------- <lb />
HAIR BALSAM <lb />
and hair. <lb />
in a <lb />
Never Fails to <lb />
Hair to Youthful Color. <lb />
Cure rt a<lb />
DYSPEPSIA <lb />
Us Iran <lb />
recommend it. <lb />
Ail s P It i<lb />
L rig. t.<lb />
and Dress Shoe. <lb />
Police Shoo, Solos. <lb />
and 81.75 for Boys. <lb />
LADIES AND MISSES, <lb />
any <lb />
offer, <lb />
at m <lb />
or he has them h- <lb />
out th. Damn <lb />
th. bottom, pat h In <lb />
down <lb />
W. L. Show re easy fitting, give better <lb />
satisfaction at the pries advertised than any other make. Try one pair and be con- <lb />
The of W. L. name and price on the bottom, which <lb />
guarantees their value, saves thousand of dollars annually to those who wear them. <lb />
Dealers who push the sale of L. Shoes gain customers, which helps to <lb />
increase the sales on their full line of goods. They can to at at <lb />
and we believe yon ran mt. money having all footwear of the dealer <lb />
tree upon application. W. X. DOUGLAS, <lb />
R. L. DAVIS BRO., N. C <lb />
Th Consumptive and Feeble and <lb />
, ,, in, d lit-Parker <lb />
Tonic. I . <lb />
, i a L <lb />
for Corns <lb />
. V . i J at i u <lb />
CONSUMPTIVE <lb />
I Tonic. la. C.-S, <lb />
Th. only mm ear for <lb />
a . v. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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