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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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A- <lb/>
t v <lb/>
DO <lb/>
NO <lb/>
That the place to <lb/>
Buy your <lb/>
BOOKS <lb/>
AND- <lb/>
I STATIONERY <lb/>
I IS <lb/>
Bookstore. <lb/>
STATE <lb/>
Things Mentioned in our State Ex- <lb/>
changes that are of General Interest <lb/>
The Cream of the News . <lb/>
State Treasurer Tate, who has <lb/>
very sick for some time, has <lb/>
recovered and returned to work. <lb/>
Only one State officer will Lave <lb/>
to be elected this year. This is <lb/>
the State Treasurer, as Col. Tate <lb/>
was appointed under the law <lb/>
the next general election. <lb/>
Free A new born baby <lb/>
was found in Kinston Friday <lb/>
morning. Buzzards has picked <lb/>
it to pieces so that it could not be <lb/>
told whether it was white or black. <lb/>
Two white men, John Green <lb/>
and Herring, quarreled <lb/>
about religious matters near Fay- <lb/>
A fight followed and <lb/>
Herring was killed- Green was <lb/>
promptly arrested and placed in <lb/>
jail. <lb/>
Kinston Free Press A. short <lb/>
time ago there was a child born <lb/>
near Trenton without hands. The <lb/>
arm below the elbow was only <lb/>
about half long enough and <lb/>
perfectly developed. Two fingers <lb/>
grew out at the end of those stubs. <lb/>
There will be a meeting of the <lb/>
North Carolina Board of <lb/>
at Raleigh, Wednesday and <lb/>
Thursday, April 11th and 12th, <lb/>
at which time candidates for <lb/>
to practice pharmacy will <lb/>
be examined. <lb/>
At Durham Isaac Curtis, color- <lb/>
ed, attempted to play a practical <lb/>
joke, his victim being <lb/>
another William Bullock. <lb/>
Curtis hid himself behind a tree <lb/>
and as Bullock, who was in com- <lb/>
or several women, passed <lb/>
by, sprung out at him. Bullock <lb/>
drew a revolver and shot Curtis <lb/>
through the abdomen- <lb/>
One of the most remarkable <lb/>
transactions ever attempted in <lb/>
this State has created a sensation <lb/>
at Henderson. J. R Moss is post- <lb/>
master there. He is a <lb/>
con holdover and his attempt was <lb/>
to sell the to a <lb/>
man named A- M. Basket, who <lb/>
fives a couple of miles from Hen- <lb/>
The consideration was <lb/>
to be to be paid by Basket- <lb/>
The latter mortgaged his farm to <lb/>
raise the necessary money, and <lb/>
paid to a lawyer to prepare <lb/>
papers. He also agreed to pay <lb/>
the expenses of Moss and his at- <lb/>
to Washington to make <lb/>
the transfer. When Moss and <lb/>
lawyer returned and Basket found <lb/>
they could not deliver goods he <lb/>
raised a row and declined to pay <lb/>
any more money. The lawyer at <lb/>
once made an attempt to sell the <lb/>
the land in order to pay the cost <lb/>
of the Washington trip and other <lb/>
expenses, to <lb/>
Basket was compelled to go be- <lb/>
fore a judge and get an order re- <lb/>
straining the lawyer from selling <lb/>
his property. The Judge said <lb/>
he would have to do with <lb/>
such a case, and has referred it <lb/>
to a prominent citizen to act as <lb/>
referee. <lb/>
How <lb/>
to Live Within Your Income <lb/>
Though it May be Small. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL. XIII. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
Is place to find the <lb/>
REFLECTOR OFFICE <lb/>
along ONE DOLLAR, and <lb/>
get your Homo Paper n year. <lb/>
This for Job Printing <lb/>
MANY POSSIBILITIES <lb/>
With Fusion or Without Fusion. <lb/>
Here is a pointer for young <lb/>
wee to remember. Talking with <lb/>
a man the other who has a <lb/>
wire to support and who earns <lb/>
about a week, he said for <lb/>
a long time he was forever in <lb/>
debt- <lb/>
Try as he would he could not <lb/>
make his money hold out, though <lb/>
he knew his legitimate household <lb/>
expenses were not so heavy. <lb/>
thinking over the matter he <lb/>
concluded that his best plan was <lb/>
to avoid going in debt- He em- <lb/>
ployed unlimited credit and when <lb/>
he had no money in his pocket <lb/>
he would buy on time- <lb/>
Of course the accounts he made <lb/>
were small, but when the day of <lb/>
reckoning came around he was <lb/>
short- <lb/>
Then he made a new resolution <lb/>
to buy anything unless he <lb/>
could pay cash for it. Often he <lb/>
was tempted to violate his time and he go in <lb/>
but he clung to it, and he <lb/>
says was wonderful. <lb/>
He accounts for it in this way <lb/>
Buying on credit he found he <lb/>
purchased things he could very <lb/>
well do without. Besides this he <lb/>
soon learned that there was a <lb/>
great saving in paying spot cash. <lb/>
as everybody <lb/>
knows, and he was able to a <lb/>
email per cent, on each <lb/>
He keeps this up and though <lb/>
his earnings are small, he lives <lb/>
comfortably, owes no man any- <lb/>
thing and in the events of a <lb/>
can get along for some time <lb/>
without the of his <lb/>
Record- <lb/>
North Carolinians can be seen <lb/>
putting their heads together every <lb/>
night in the quiet places about <lb/>
the Metropolitan Hotel. Populist <lb/>
and Republican fusion is the <lb/>
principal topic, with incidental <lb/>
allusions to the senatorial and <lb/>
congressional fights. <lb/>
In the first district, represented <lb/>
by Mr. Branch, it is generally <lb/>
thought that he will be <lb/>
toil. but that he will have to fight <lb/>
a fusion candidate. It is not <lb/>
known yet who this will be- It is <lb/>
not thought that Harry Skinner <lb/>
would run on a f He <lb/>
may run as an Independent Pop <lb/>
or something of that kind, <lb/>
though many believe that he <lb/>
will stump the State with a free <lb/>
and, in case of a <lb/>
can-Populist Legislature being <lb/>
elected, will contest for Ransom's <lb/>
seat against Butler. <lb/>
In the second district every <lb/>
thing will be smooth sailing for <lb/>
Mr. Woodard, as far as the <lb/>
nation goes. Some few hint at <lb/>
W. H. being a candidate <lb/>
but indications are that Woodard <lb/>
will be re-nominated by <lb/>
His most formidable op- <lb/>
would be young Mr. W. <lb/>
W- Long, the popular and rising <lb/>
Warren county representative, <lb/>
but Mr. Long when asked about <lb/>
it to-night said that he was for <lb/>
Woodard and that Mr. Woodard <lb/>
was making such a splendid <lb/>
Representative that he would re- <lb/>
turn. There will be three tickets <lb/>
in the field, it is thought. The <lb/>
will one, and the <lb/>
Populists one. It is not thought <lb/>
that the will submit to <lb/>
association the Populists. <lb/>
The Democrats will have a fair <lb/>
than before. <lb/>
Mr. Cicero Harris, representing <lb/>
that great paper, the Charlotte <lb/>
Observer, hustles in and takes a <lb/>
peep at the hotel register <lb/>
scratches off a few lines of his <lb/>
casts his eyes around <lb/>
sizes up the whole business in a <lb/>
minute and out he goes. The <lb/>
Observer is back there by night <lb/>
the next day and Queen's news <lb/>
stand tells me that it sells more <lb/>
copies than any other paper south <lb/>
of Richmond. Sitting over to <lb/>
the left is Joseph Esq., <lb/>
a man who usually keeps his <lb/>
eyes open for pointers. But here <lb/>
comes John B. Hussey and he <lb/>
carries himself with that dignity <lb/>
that tries overcome the self- <lb/>
consciousness that he is a snake <lb/>
in the grass. He receives no <lb/>
cordial greeting. Few North <lb/>
Carolinians lower themselves to <lb/>
speak to their betrayer. He <lb/>
feels mean, for he has lost <lb/>
the once firm step and hopeful <lb/>
eye. Later on comes of <lb/>
the Richmond Dispatch, and <lb/>
Ashby, of the Times. <lb/>
seems to be a Simmons man. <lb/>
They both interest themselves in <lb/>
North Carolina matters- <lb/>
It seems to be pretty well de- <lb/>
here that it will be better <lb/>
for the and Pop- <lb/>
to fuse, as far as the De- <lb/>
is concerned. However, <lb/>
con ally and a tori ally <lb/>
speaking, it is tit for tat. But <lb/>
one thing is Fusion <lb/>
will put Tom Settle in a hole and <lb/>
carry others with him. <lb/>
It is very uncertain as to who <lb/>
will be the <lb/>
in the third district. Mr. Grady <lb/>
will hardly be returned though <lb/>
he is a splendid man. He has <lb/>
very little inclination toward <lb/>
politics and, now that he has been <lb/>
by a second term, he <lb/>
may retire at his own choice. It <lb/>
will be remembered that he was <lb/>
not a candidate for the <lb/>
when first chosen. If Mr. <lb/>
would happen to miss <lb/>
confirmation he would be the <lb/>
could win hands <lb/>
down. But if confirmed he may <lb/>
insist on having Mr. Grady run <lb/>
in three <lb/>
years as his successor. Mr. Sim- <lb/>
mons is looked upon good <lb/>
senatorial timber. If Senator <lb/>
Ransom is re-elected this time <lb/>
and Simmons gels back in Con- <lb/>
in three years, he stands a <lb/>
good chance to the senior <lb/>
Senator ; ex Governor Jarvis will <lb/>
then be too old. Bat it may be <lb/>
that Cumberland may <lb/>
to name the next man for Grady's <lb/>
seat There is no chance for a <lb/>
fusion ticket to succeed in that <lb/>
district. <lb/>
In the fourth, it pretty <lb/>
well understood that Mr. Bonn <lb/>
will not be There <lb/>
being so many aspirants who <lb/>
have been his friends all along, <lb/>
he may give way to them. Four <lb/>
good men are named for the <lb/>
Democrats to <lb/>
M. Cooke, N. B. Broughton, G- <lb/>
S. Bradshaw and Jas. H- <lb/>
Either one of them can beat <lb/>
Loge Harris or John Nichols <lb/>
fusion or no fusion. <lb/>
The fifth is the most <lb/>
of all. Only two men are <lb/>
named as probable Democratic <lb/>
candidates, should Mr. Williams <lb/>
not gain his Jno. L. King, <lb/>
of Guilford, and Jno. R. Webster, <lb/>
of Rockingham, with chances <lb/>
favoring Webster. It is generally <lb/>
admitted by Webster's enemies <lb/>
here that he can poll the biggest <lb/>
vote in any emergency, fusion or <lb/>
no fusion, and since it is <lb/>
certain that Tom Settle will <lb/>
agree to no fusion and that Web- <lb/>
popularity with the farmers <lb/>
renders it useless for the Pop- <lb/>
to name a <lb/>
date. Webster's chances of carry- <lb/>
the district would be fine. <lb/>
However the would <lb/>
have their Tom Set- <lb/>
however, will have a hard <lb/>
pull without fusion. If he refuses <lb/>
to combine he will fail at election <lb/>
while if he agrees to fusion he <lb/>
will be snowed under. <lb/>
In the sixth district, Alexander <lb/>
will come back if he fights for it. <lb/>
Otherwise Jno. D. Bellamy, Jr., <lb/>
of Wilmington, is considered next <lb/>
best. Either would be elected. <lb/>
The seventh district is a little <lb/>
complicated. Zeb Vance Walser <lb/>
will be the candidate if <lb/>
any fusion is made. Otherwise <lb/>
he will come out straight <lb/>
can. He can carry Davidson <lb/>
county heavily as a fusion <lb/>
date, but would fall short on the <lb/>
district. Mr. Henderson may <lb/>
retire, in which event Mr. Leazar <lb/>
would be the nominee of the <lb/>
Democrats if he wants to be. <lb/>
The eighth is considered safe for <lb/>
Bower, but he may have to fight <lb/>
John Brower or Dr. Wheeler, <lb/>
though neither of the latter would <lb/>
hardly agree to any fusion in <lb/>
theirs. It may be that a Populist <lb/>
may head the fusion ticker. Mr. <lb/>
Bower has been abused on ac- <lb/>
count of his trying too bard to <lb/>
keep from leaking mistakes in <lb/>
recommendations ft r office, but <lb/>
he has been making such a fault- <lb/>
less record here that no one can <lb/>
down him. It is generally ad- <lb/>
here that he has succeeded <lb/>
in getting more positions for his <lb/>
constituents than any new Con- <lb/>
from the South who <lb/>
has had no Senator or cabinet <lb/>
officer to pull for him. <lb/>
The ninth district will see a <lb/>
lively time in both conventions, <lb/>
Democratic and can- <lb/>
But it is not thought here that <lb/>
Crawford can be beaten by Rich- <lb/>
Pearson. Ex-Republican <lb/>
Candidate for Lieutenant Gov- <lb/>
J. M. Moody, of Haywood, <lb/>
told me that Crawford <lb/>
can beat Pearson, bat that the <lb/>
latter would not even <lb/>
by the Republicans. Moody <lb/>
says he is him. But <lb/>
Pearson thinks his money will <lb/>
win. When he ran against <lb/>
Gudger for the Legislature <lb/>
he spent several thousand dollars <lb/>
and beat over a thous- <lb/>
and in Buncombe. Gudger <lb/>
said he spent and <lb/>
he knows it cost Pearson f <lb/>
Hon. Elias and ex-Judge <lb/>
J. H. Merrimon may contest with <lb/>
Crawford for the nomination bat <lb/>
unless they combine, which is <lb/>
hardly probable, they cannot <lb/>
defeat him. <lb/>
Looking at the senatorial fight <lb/>
in the light of present <lb/>
it is generally thought here <lb/>
that the next Legislature will <lb/>
have to elect two Senators. Sen- <lb/>
Vance, it is thought, will <lb/>
resign even if he survives the <lb/>
present It is also be- <lb/>
that if resigns Ran <lb/>
will withdraw from the race <lb/>
for re-election. In that event <lb/>
the fight would be for two new <lb/>
Democratic Senators and the <lb/>
following names are <lb/>
Ex Governor J. Jarvis, <lb/>
Justice A. C Avery, Speaker <lb/>
Lee S- Overman, Collector F. M. <lb/>
Simmons, Chief Clerk Josephus <lb/>
Congressmen John <lb/>
Henderson and B. <lb/>
Hon.- Cyrus B- Watson, Hon- <lb/>
M. Stedman, Col. J. S- <lb/>
Carr, Ex-Go v. T. M. Holt Barring <lb/>
the choice of the Governor and <lb/>
considering the power to poll <lb/>
votes, it is thought that the <lb/>
Legislature select within <lb/>
four men, that is if they were <lb/>
Jarvis, Avery, Dan- <lb/>
s and Simmons. But all this is <lb/>
of slate makers and <lb/>
slate breakers -talk of hot heads <lb/>
and Gush How- <lb/>
ever, a few little pointers be <lb/>
gained as to the result of North <lb/>
Carolinians in Washington, put <lb/>
ting their heads <lb/>
Winston <lb/>
Sentinel. <lb/>
JUST <lb/>
CHRISTIANITY IN BUSINESS. <lb/>
An Appeal to Democrats to Forget <lb/>
Petty Jealousies, and Stand by <lb/>
the <lb/>
of the Charlotte <lb/>
There are Democrats and Dem- <lb/>
Fair-weather Democrats, <lb/>
weak-kneed Democrats, knock- <lb/>
kneed Democrats, patronage <lb/>
Democrats, or Democrats for rev- <lb/>
only; Alliance Democrats, <lb/>
Democrats, the <lb/>
of the devil and Delilah, and <lb/>
thank God, there also Simon-pure <lb/>
in season <lb/>
or out of season, in prosperity or in <lb/>
adversity, in office or out of office ; <lb/>
Democrats because they believe <lb/>
in the imperishable principles of <lb/>
Democracy. In this last kind re- <lb/>
poses the safety and success of <lb/>
our government. To them I <lb/>
would say, God bless you and <lb/>
cheer you. To the former I <lb/>
would like to utter a word of <lb/>
warning; to the weak-kneed have <lb/>
faith ; to the knock kneed stand <lb/>
firm ; to the trough-tenders do <lb/>
not despair; to the Alliance-taint- <lb/>
ed get religion, and to the hide- <lb/>
paradox, go to the <lb/>
devil. Some of you voted the <lb/>
straight Democratic ticket in <lb/>
it may be the last virtuous <lb/>
and act credited to your <lb/>
account at the final settlement- <lb/>
of you are now viciously <lb/>
engaged in throwing rocks at <lb/>
your old political mother and <lb/>
giving comfort to her old enemy <lb/>
of nearly years, and even <lb/>
the deviltry of that <lb/>
hyena from Maine- You <lb/>
seem to forget the black days of <lb/>
when slaves wore <lb/>
put above their former masters ; <lb/>
when your wives, sisters and <lb/>
daughters insulted, your <lb/>
homes were pillaged, your county <lb/>
governments and your State gov- <lb/>
were wrecked and when <lb/>
ruin raised its ghastly bead in <lb/>
your midst. forget that <lb/>
your national Treasury has <lb/>
looted and its rich hoard dis- <lb/>
with criminal and cruel <lb/>
prodigality to bounty-jumpers <lb/>
and aliens, in order that an <lb/>
system might be <lb/>
that made the rich richer <lb/>
and the poor poorer; a system <lb/>
that with <lb/>
increased the army of <lb/>
tramps in a ratio consistent with <lb/>
the growth of millionaires- Ah, <lb/>
surely you forget all these things, <lb/>
end others as bad, when you <lb/>
is the difference between <lb/>
the Republican and the Demo <lb/>
parties <lb/>
The Democratic Congress has <lb/>
been disappointing, truly; the <lb/>
Democratic administration has <lb/>
made some mistakes surely, and <lb/>
yet they done much for <lb/>
which they should be blessed by <lb/>
all patriots, and for one, be- <lb/>
that they will do much more <lb/>
for which we can all rise up and <lb/>
call them blessed. Verdant in- <lb/>
deed must have been that voter <lb/>
who cast his thinking that <lb/>
the much-fatted sucklings of pro- <lb/>
that would lose their <lb/>
hold on teat sweet and succulent <lb/>
fountain of strength without a <lb/>
desperate fight. Selfish greed <lb/>
has not been content to have its <lb/>
infant gums glued to the govern- <lb/>
pap, but has sought to <lb/>
and succeeded in fastening its <lb/>
matured fangs into its very heart. <lb/>
It is to choke off and wean its <lb/>
greedy monster, selfishness, that <lb/>
you have engaged the Democrat <lb/>
party. Is the task an easy one, <lb/>
think you H so, be not <lb/>
ed. There will be traitors in the <lb/>
camp doubtless, and what cause <lb/>
was ever free from its Judas <lb/>
We taken a big contract on <lb/>
hand and it is as much every <lb/>
man's duty, so far as he is able, <lb/>
who voted the Democratic ticket, <lb/>
to help fill that contract, as it is <lb/>
Grover Cleveland's He may not <lb/>
be doing just to suit you but he <lb/>
is doing his duty as he sees it. <lb/>
You can rest assured of that and <lb/>
he is the man you elected to blaze <lb/>
the way, for heaven's sake and <lb/>
Democracy's quit kicking and <lb/>
just poll- Bohemian. <lb/>
Rev. Mr. Boyd Says it Cm So. <lb/>
The city yesterday morning was <lb/>
talking of Rev. J. H <lb/>
of Sunday night. His sub- <lb/>
as announced was, a <lb/>
Man be a Christian in <lb/>
have the said the <lb/>
preacher, business is one <lb/>
thing, religion another. You <lb/>
have a contempt of business <lb/>
ideas of us preachers, not from <lb/>
what you see us doing but be- <lb/>
cause you think what we preach <lb/>
from the pulpit will not do for the <lb/>
street and shop. <lb/>
mercantile life has <lb/>
of trial of which the farmer <lb/>
or mechanic lives dies <lb/>
happy There <lb/>
are more elements of uncertainty, <lb/>
more to risk, mote to worry over, <lb/>
more caution required, more plan- <lb/>
more thought- There is the <lb/>
difficulties of purchase, the hot <lb/>
rivalry, and injustice of <lb/>
the unreasonableness of <lb/>
customers, the exactness of <lb/>
tors, and the variableness of <lb/>
markets and seasons. There is <lb/>
no department of life where char- <lb/>
is so sorely tried. <lb/>
all the care and <lb/>
temptation of your life, we ask <lb/>
you be a Christian in trade <lb/>
There is but one possible. <lb/>
If you have said there is <lb/>
something the matter with your <lb/>
or with your conduct in <lb/>
your business. <lb/>
is the idea that business <lb/>
is business and religion is <lb/>
A vicious separation has <lb/>
grown up between piety and life.; <lb/>
Let it be understood that our <lb/>
whole life must he <lb/>
and regulated by <lb/>
It can be done, it has been done ; <lb/>
It must be done. It is rascally <lb/>
business spurious religion <lb/>
whore it is not done. <lb/>
are points where <lb/>
difficulties lie <lb/>
With the merchant himself. <lb/>
Every Christian man owes it to <lb/>
his soul to rigidly judge every <lb/>
principle and practice which ho <lb/>
carries with him into his business, <lb/>
and to discard all that will not <lb/>
be; r the measurement of strict <lb/>
law of right. I believe that <lb/>
are often led into shady, <lb/>
questionable dealings little <lb/>
practices of wrong by false no- <lb/>
of what is necessary to <lb/>
trade. <lb/>
example, this idea pie- <lb/>
it is right to get the utmost <lb/>
your customs. Ignorance <lb/>
is frequently made to pay high, <lb/>
while the intelligent buyer gets <lb/>
goods cheaply. <lb/>
Questionable means of get- <lb/>
ting buyers to close the trade <lb/>
talk, gabble. Not having the <lb/>
article asked for, they say is <lb/>
just as in Au <lb/>
ill fitting coat is recommended, a <lb/>
hat is declared to be becoming <lb/>
when it is not, etc. These things <lb/>
are unnecessary. It is going out <lb/>
of one's way to do wrong. <lb/>
Questionable advertise- <lb/>
I do not wish to be mis- <lb/>
understood. There is much right <lb/>
in legitimate advertising, but <lb/>
Christian merchants should be <lb/>
careful how they advertise they <lb/>
are selling at cost. I have <lb/>
never yet been able to understand <lb/>
how it was that Dun and Brad- <lb/>
street reported business good with <lb/>
few failures, when every in <lb/>
the United States had a bank <lb/>
rapt stock to be sold. <lb/>
Difficulties which from <lb/>
the character of customers. It is <lb/>
astonishing to think of the abuse <lb/>
which has been heaped upon mer- <lb/>
chants and their business- Their <lb/>
has been denounced as <lb/>
unnecessary and illegitimate, <lb/>
themselves shirkers of work, ex- <lb/>
sharpers- When they <lb/>
are to dealt with must be <lb/>
watched, discredited, circumvent- <lb/>
ed, and the customer who sets <lb/>
himself to do this has well nigh <lb/>
become a rascal and the <lb/>
reason oftentimes that the mer- <lb/>
chant deals unfairly is because he <lb/>
deals with an unfair mat. Rail- <lb/>
roads and corporations are ac- <lb/>
counted and <lb/>
in their dealings with them <lb/>
become I have <lb/>
thought there is as much fraud <lb/>
in the claims against railroads as <lb/>
in the resistance to payment. So <lb/>
in trading. The dishonesty of <lb/>
selling is to be explained by the <lb/>
dishonesty of the buyer. <lb/>
class of customers con- <lb/>
every little trade into a <lb/>
wrestling match. Starts out to <lb/>
reduce prices; to beat the mer- <lb/>
chant, the contest over the <lb/>
counter between two sharpers <lb/>
the customer is most to blame. <lb/>
way by which the <lb/>
temptations of mercantile life are <lb/>
increased is the lack of <lb/>
nation between honest and dis- <lb/>
honest men their patronage. <lb/>
The buyer starts out after a bar- <lb/>
gain and will deal with any man, <lb/>
rascal or no rascal, who will give <lb/>
him more than another. Here is <lb/>
what I mean i A merchant fail- <lb/>
ed, compromised at cents, puts <lb/>
on market, public wished <lb/>
them, the honest merchants <lb/>
see his goods unsold and drafts <lb/>
falling due. It is not right to deal <lb/>
with dishonest men. You owe <lb/>
your own soul the souls of <lb/>
you Christian brethren to dis- <lb/>
countenance all trick and fraud. <lb/>
III. from the con- <lb/>
of society. <lb/>
Our adjustments of trades <lb/>
are all on an intensely selfish <lb/>
basis. It is every man for him- <lb/>
self. <lb/>
vicious distinction be- <lb/>
tween things religious and <lb/>
has loft government and so- <lb/>
and business to take its own <lb/>
way, and while we have a nation <lb/>
and State nominally Christian, <lb/>
while the Christian men and <lb/>
men wield ought of and <lb/>
majority of votes, we have <lb/>
system of laws <lb/>
practices. It has become <lb/>
for men to do right in <lb/>
lines of business. The <lb/>
Christians of this nation have sat <lb/>
still until the railroads all run on <lb/>
Sunday. Thousands of our <lb/>
church members are involved in <lb/>
the business. Ought they all to <lb/>
quit Suppose a man of with <lb/>
family is converted. He can't <lb/>
change. No, he ought to be pro- <lb/>
by his fellow Christians- <lb/>
You have heard of Means- <lb/>
Who is responsible for her work <lb/>
If the Christian merchants and <lb/>
families had said to to the Col- <lb/>
Telephone Company <lb/>
out my telephone if you keep <lb/>
open on it would have <lb/>
been <lb/>
are Christian men in <lb/>
our who deplore Sun- <lb/>
day work and yet the law requires <lb/>
their support depends upon their <lb/>
working. Who is responsible <lb/>
Why tho Christian people of <lb/>
Charlotte. Tho office would be <lb/>
closed if they wanted it. When <lb/>
you get mail you sinned <lb/>
against your own and your broth- <lb/>
Christian's The speaker <lb/>
closed by saying he all <lb/>
would receive this practical talk <lb/>
as an exhortation to remember <lb/>
their calling and their Master's <lb/>
name in your life of business. <lb/>
God wants you to stay where you <lb/>
are. You are useful. He means <lb/>
for you to exemplify the <lb/>
his truth put to <lb/>
the objections of <lb/>
by showing that the Christian life <lb/>
can lived, Christian char- <lb/>
developed right the midst <lb/>
of all the cares and trials of the <lb/>
life of trade- The want of the <lb/>
times in Christians is all the de- <lb/>
of life- Christian doc- <lb/>
tors, lawyers, merchants, who in <lb/>
; daily contract with an unbelieving <lb/>
; world testify to the reality of re- <lb/>
I deadly skepticism of the <lb/>
day, is not questioning God's ex- <lb/>
nor Christ's divinity, nor <lb/>
i souls immortality nor inspiration <lb/>
i of Bible, but it not believe <lb/>
in us. Lot us show reality by <lb/>
living. <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
A man who would strike his <lb/>
wife is a meaner man than a horse <lb/>
thief-Exchange. <lb/>
How about the man who allows <lb/>
his wife to support him Such a <lb/>
creature is not to be mentioned <lb/>
with the horse thief, because he <lb/>
has not the energy and stamina <lb/>
of character possessed by that in- <lb/>
And yet there are such <lb/>
men, strong and healthy, who are <lb/>
recognized by their fellows, stand <lb/>
well in the church and looked up- <lb/>
on as respectable. They are <lb/>
worse than tramps because <lb/>
many instances they impose upon <lb/>
a weak woman for support where- <lb/>
as the tramp looks to the public <lb/>
at large- It is a pity there is not <lb/>
some law to compel these lazy <lb/>
loafers to earn what they get or <lb/>
go without. At any rate these <lb/>
hypocrites ought to be <lb/>
by the church and society. The <lb/>
Divine command is the sweat <lb/>
of thy face shalt eat thy, <lb/>
Gold Leaf. <lb/>
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report <lb/>
INFORMATION WANTED <lb/>
EVERYBODY. <lb/>
FROM <lb/>
When you contemplate extend- <lb/>
or improving your plant, <lb/>
when you need any additional <lb/>
machinery, tools or any supplies <lb/>
of any kind ; in fact, when you <lb/>
have any kind of a want that is to <lb/>
be filled, you will find that it will <lb/>
be greatly to your to <lb/>
send prompt information to the <lb/>
Record specifying <lb/>
just what you By doing <lb/>
this your wants will be made <lb/>
known immediately to thousands <lb/>
of manufacturers dealers in <lb/>
all parts of the country who are <lb/>
in a position to supply anything <lb/>
you want. You will thus have <lb/>
the benefit of competitive prices <lb/>
and a larger selection than you <lb/>
could otherwise obtain, except by <lb/>
very extensive correspondence- <lb/>
The Record will <lb/>
you this aid in purchasing <lb/>
without any charge whatever. It <lb/>
neither buys nor sells machinery, <lb/>
bat it has hundreds of advertisers <lb/>
who would be to have your <lb/>
orders, and that paper makes a <lb/>
specialty of showing them where <lb/>
buyers are. It makes no differ- <lb/>
you are a <lb/>
to tho M Record <lb/>
or not, its services are at your <lb/>
disposal. If you want machinery, <lb/>
tools, material of any kind, let it <lb/>
know your want it will meet j <lb/>
it. If bids are wanted for public <lb/>
buildings, municipal improve <lb/>
moots of any kind, electric light <lb/>
works, water works, etc, or if you I <lb/>
contemplate building a factory or j <lb/>
enlarging old one, developing <lb/>
a coal mine or a gold mine, build- <lb/>
a saw mill or doing anything <lb/>
else where is needed, <lb/>
write to the Re- <lb/>
cord and give particulars, even if <lb/>
only a few lines on a postal card. <lb/>
If you of any new industry <lb/>
to be established, or if business is <lb/>
improving, write to tho <lb/>
and tell about it. <lb/>
In fact, tho Re- <lb/>
cord information you <lb/>
can about everything that re- <lb/>
to the manufacturing, min- <lb/>
railroad or general business <lb/>
interests of any part of the South. <lb/>
A sample copy of the paper will <lb/>
be mailed you upon application. <lb/>
Address Richard H. Edmonds, <lb/>
editor Record, <lb/>
Md. <lb/>
Pays His Way. <lb/>
The earth is a merry go round, <lb/>
but you don't have to buy any <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
If you along you must pay <lb/>
our way, just tho same, or be a <lb/>
barnacle on somebody else. <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Thought we newspaper men <lb/>
on Orange <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
On tho contrary we pay on <lb/>
average about five times as much <lb/>
as people for tho <lb/>
so are else but <lb/>
No, brother, if everybody <lb/>
as near paying his way <lb/>
through this world as the news- <lb/>
paper man there would be a <lb/>
wonderful scarcity of the <lb/>
or <lb/>
Tin- marvelous of <lb/>
is bawd upon the coiner <lb/>
of absolute Take <lb/>
the spring months. <lb/>
DO YOU <lb/>
TO BECOME A <lb/>
MOTHER <lb/>
mm CHILD BIRTH <lb/>
N nm Sh Labor. <lb/>
My suffered more In ten minuter <lb/>
her children than she did <lb/>
with her last, after having <lb/>
r bottles of MOTHER'S <lb/>
; n customer. <lb/>
III. <lb/>
. . in HI on price, per hot <lb/>
. mailed free. <lb/>
REGULATOR CO., <lb/>
.--.- <lb/>
for Greenville C <lb/>
on the Ural Sunday eleven <lb/>
and at three <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
Mm Grove on second at <lb/>
eleven o'clock School <lb/>
House at O'clock. <lb/>
on third at eleven <lb/>
o'clock and Tripp's Chapel at three <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
Bethlehem on the fourth Sunday <lb/>
eleven o'clock, and Lang's School <lb/>
House three o'clock. <lb/>
Everybody invited to alien I, <lb/>
Baptist Services. <lb/>
Below are the regular <lb/>
of Rev. . II. of the <lb/>
Baptist church . <lb/>
At and fourth <lb/>
days in each month, morning and night, <lb/>
and every night- <lb/>
At Sunday in each <lb/>
month, morning and night. <lb/>
At Person <lb/>
one i Sunday in each month and Saturday he- <lb/>
won- I <lb/>
a Mantel <lb/>
A friend in need is a friend Indeed, <lb/>
not than one million people <lb/>
have found just such a Mend in <lb/>
King's New Discovery Consumption, <lb/>
Doughs, you have never <lb/>
used this Great Cough <lb/>
trial will convince you that it liar <lb/>
powers in all of I E <lb/>
Throat. Chest and Lungs. Bach bottle , <lb/>
is guaranteed to do all is claimed or Below are the regular appointments <lb/>
money will be refunded. Trial bottler <lb/>
free at Drug Store, <lb/>
bottles and <lb/>
Mothers and Their Children. <lb/>
M others would better realize <lb/>
before the time is past that their <lb/>
happiest period with their child <lb/>
is until they are years old <lb/>
or so. <lb/>
Up to that date these dear ones <lb/>
are theirs alone. <lb/>
They not obliged to share <lb/>
them with in any way, and <lb/>
they can feel that all their <lb/>
are lavished at home. <lb/>
and third in <lb/>
each morning and <lb/>
Sunday in each <lb/>
month, morning and evening. <lb/>
all other Sunday <lb/>
St. Sun- <lb/>
day In nub month, morning <lb/>
Holy <lb/>
Sunday <lb/>
Salve. <lb/>
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, <lb/>
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, salt Rheum, <lb/>
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb/>
Chilblains i and all Skin <lb/>
positively cures Tiles, or no <lb/>
pay required. It is guaranteed to give <lb/>
satisfaction, or money refunded <lb/>
cents box. For Sale by <lb/>
yr <lb/>
Blood <lb/>
cannot <lb/>
hope be <lb/>
it your <lb/>
BLOOD <lb/>
IS IMPURE. <lb/>
If you ave troubled <lb/>
BOILS, ULCERS or <lb/>
I PIMPLES, SORES <lb/>
blood is bad. A few bottles of S. S. will <lb/>
cleanse the system, remove all <lb/>
purities and build you up. All manner <lb/>
are . <lb/>
I CLEARED AWAY <lb/>
it use It is the best blood remedy on earth <lb/>
who used it so. <lb/>
of no enjoyment pi life. Two bottle <lb/>
gulf <lb/>
ATTORNEY -AT-I-AW <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention to Office <lb/>
at Tucker old stand. <lb/>
V . <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
Practice in nil courts. Collections a <lb/>
JARVIS <lb/>
ft <lb/>
K. L. <lb/>
AW, <lb/>
in all tho Courts. <lb/>
i. a. <lb/>
B. F. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention gives collection <lb/>
m j <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
a-l<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017684_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
S. I Sailor <lb/>
WEDNESDAY. MARCH 1894 <lb/>
at at <lb/>
K. C as lass mail matter. <lb/>
Andrew Robinson W S <lb/>
i Wooten W T Fleming <lb/>
i B S Sheppard A T Redditt <lb/>
J B Randolph C Kin <lb/>
Fulford OS, J <lb/>
B Cherry Co S Rosella Par- <lb/>
R W King R W <lb/>
W T Smith H <lb/>
T King Mrs. Jennie Forbes <lb/>
E A Bland A M Joyner <lb/>
B S Sheppard J F <lb/>
Joyner Eastern Reflector <lb/>
Dr Bagwell H T King <lb/>
Lawrence Barrett W <lb/>
. . Wilson Edwards <lb/>
The appreciates, H Harding <lb/>
folly a number of letters recently ; C T E Keel <lb/>
from its friends attest-17 Leonidas Fleming <lb/>
to the excellence of the paper Jesse L Smith J A K Tucker <lb/>
, ., 1-50 S A <lb/>
and expressing approval of Law Territory <lb/>
its course. it is seldom , Henry Brown J B Cherry <lb/>
we print Mb acts from such letters, Co J G Z A Allen <lb/>
still they are very gratifying to <lb/>
us, and we assure those who thus -Swift Creek and <lb/>
, ,. ., , it Stock Law F <lb/>
kindly express themselves about a E E Powell Gran. <lb/>
our won our efforts that they C <lb/>
encourage us to still greater en-j James White Henry <lb/>
to deserve such good White W H Tripp and <lb/>
Lewis Ives J P<lb/>
J S Keel, of the Peace, <lb/>
filed his report for which was <lb/>
ordered recorded. <lb/>
Dr. W. H. Bagwell, <lb/>
dent of Health, filed his monthly <lb/>
report which was ordered re- <lb/>
corded. <lb/>
Ordered that Harry Hyman. <lb/>
May we be pardoned for giving <lb/>
here a paragraph from a letter <lb/>
written by a gentleman who is <lb/>
now outside of the State. He <lb/>
enjoy the weekly visits <lb/>
of the very much, and <lb/>
consider it a most useful factor <lb/>
for good wherever it circulates. <lb/>
It is worth m <lb/>
Greenville and <lb/>
and deserves most hearty sup- <lb/>
port and liberal <lb/>
especially to I colored, Sam Taylor, John Porter <lb/>
the county of Pitt, Frizzle, relieved <lb/>
t , .,., from double tax and allowed to <lb/>
pay single instead. J Frank <lb/>
Hart, Green Patrick, Washington <lb/>
Wilson. W T Smith were exempt- <lb/>
ed from poll tax for <lb/>
Ordered that John Z Brooks be <lb/>
eased from poll tax in Swift <lb/>
Creek township, he being charged <lb/>
for same in <lb/>
Ordered that Bill be <lb/>
released from double tax, he <lb/>
listed in Swift Creek town <lb/>
ship. <lb/>
Ordered that the property of <lb/>
North Carolina is being honored <lb/>
with distinguished visitors. <lb/>
Week before last President Cleve- <lb/>
land spent several days within <lb/>
our borders, and last week Vice <lb/>
President Stevenson was also in <lb/>
the State. They took extreme <lb/>
sections, the President sporting <lb/>
in our waters the John Z Brooks recently purchased <lb/>
Vice-President enjoying <lb/>
beauties of our <lb/>
In our State News column on <lb/>
first page is an item a sen- <lb/>
at Henderson over a sup- <lb/>
posed attempted of the post. <lb/>
office there. It seems that the <lb/>
item originated with Col. F. A- <lb/>
Olds, of who is not the <lb/>
the i from Frizzle be put on the <lb/>
stock law tax list. <lb/>
Ordered that Sarah Ham be <lb/>
lowed to draw SO per mouth as <lb/>
pauper anti. further ordered. <lb/>
Ordered that Bill Barney be re <lb/>
leased payment of tax <lb/>
personal property. <lb/>
Ordered that be <lb/>
allowed for timber used in re- <lb/>
pairing the public road. <lb/>
Ordered that Mrs Jennie <lb/>
least adept man in the world for Forbes be allowed for timber <lb/>
sensations. The last in repairing <lb/>
Bearing up <lb/>
Henderson Gold Leaf publishes <lb/>
a statement from the postmaster <lb/>
of that town that the story is en- <lb/>
The groat Pollard <lb/>
breach of promise ease began in <lb/>
Washington City last week. <lb/>
trial so as conducted at this <lb/>
Upon motion of T. E- Keel it <lb/>
that the account of <lb/>
the Republican Senators that <lb/>
they do not possess till of the <lb/>
parliamentary knowledge and <lb/>
skill m body, but they were <lb/>
very cleverly outwitted by the <lb/>
Democrats this week in a scheme <lb/>
of their own putting up. A Re- <lb/>
publican decided to spring <lb/>
the immediate consideration of <lb/>
the Bland bill for the coinage of <lb/>
the which passed the <lb/>
House last week, the Senate, <lb/>
counting upon the votes of the <lb/>
populists, and upon forcing the <lb/>
silver Democrats to choose be- <lb/>
tween tariff and silver, their idea <lb/>
being to keep the Bland bill be <lb/>
fore the Senate for an indefinite <lb/>
period, in order to prevent con- <lb/>
of the tariff bill. The <lb/>
Democrats learned of this pro- <lb/>
gramme and gave the <lb/>
cans a surprise they have not <lb/>
yet recovered from, by taking <lb/>
the initiative in getting the Bland <lb/>
bill before the Senate, Senator <lb/>
stating that as it would <lb/>
probably be about ten days be- <lb/>
fore the tariff bill before <lb/>
the full Finance would <lb/>
be ready for the consideration of <lb/>
the Senate, and that that time <lb/>
was ample for the disposition of <lb/>
the Bland bill- Senator Sherman <lb/>
made an ineffectual effort to have <lb/>
the bill sent to committee. <lb/>
Senators Vest and <lb/>
made personal explanations <lb/>
the Senate this week concerning <lb/>
made against them, in a <lb/>
New York paper, of having spec- <lb/>
in the stock of the sugar <lb/>
trust on their knowledge of what <lb/>
the sugar clause of the tariff bill <lb/>
was to be. Senator Vest said <lb/>
may as well say now, once for <lb/>
all, that such publication as this <lb/>
is a vile slander, and the man <lb/>
who repeats it is a willful and <lb/>
malicious Senator <lb/>
said that he did some- <lb/>
times, for investment, not spec <lb/>
and that when he was <lb/>
the South some weeks ago his <lb/>
brokers, acting under a standing <lb/>
order to buy certain stocks when <lb/>
they could be had at certain <lb/>
bought shame of sugar <lb/>
stock for him. As soon as he <lb/>
returned and learned of the <lb/>
chase he instructed his brokers <lb/>
to sell the stock and to buy no <lb/>
more, as he did not wish to hold <lb/>
it while sugar was being dis- <lb/>
cussed by the Finance committee. <lb/>
The usual bids for the soldier <lb/>
vote were made by the Republican <lb/>
members of the House <lb/>
the debate on the pension <lb/>
bill. It was the old, <lb/>
old story. <lb/>
Postmaster General <lb/>
accept any halfway <lb/>
ablest men of the State were there <lb/>
to guide its action. Cool, calm <lb/>
deliberation paramount <lb/>
duty of the hour. No personal j <lb/>
ambition was to be considered, <lb/>
no discontent was to be placated, j <lb/>
Only the good of the State and <lb/>
the redemption of the people <lb/>
from the galling yoke of <lb/>
and degradation, was tho of. <lb/>
White paupers were sold <lb/>
to masters. Mixed schools <lb/>
of and whites threat- <lb/>
to be forced upon the good <lb/>
people of the State. These and <lb/>
the iniquities of the Kirk Holden <lb/>
war and thousands of private and <lb/>
public wrongs, were to be <lb/>
or civil liberty was to perish- <lb/>
Calmly, and determinedly <lb/>
that convention the <lb/>
State and that star was again a <lb/>
one and when th ; <lb/>
nation of Zebulon B. Vance, of <lb/>
Buncombe and Thomas J Jarvis, <lb/>
of Currituck, were emblazoned <lb/>
on the Conservative banner, a <lb/>
rain bow spanned the State from <lb/>
east to west and the rays of hope <lb/>
lighted up the hearts of many a <lb/>
mortal. <lb/>
That campaign rendered the <lb/>
names of Vance and Jarvis <lb/>
mortal. <lb/>
Dull must be the intellect and <lb/>
vicious the spirit of any one who <lb/>
thinks he would or could tarnish <lb/>
the memory of those men, so long <lb/>
as patriotism has a name or <lb/>
worth an admirer. <lb/>
This is no obituary. These <lb/>
live, <lb/>
field <lb/>
an- <lb/>
any <lb/>
men, thank Heaven, still <lb/>
They are still viewing the <lb/>
and while the illness of the <lb/>
prevented his taking <lb/>
active part in the campaign of <lb/>
1892, yet his spirit and letters <lb/>
were with the friends of good Gov- <lb/>
and but for the herculean <lb/>
efforts of Thomas J. Jarvis the <lb/>
State would have been lost to <lb/>
Democracy. He saw the dangers <lb/>
of the hour. Dissatisfied men as <lb/>
honest as any in the State were <lb/>
disposed to desert the party. <lb/>
must be met with sound <lb/>
logic and kindly appeals, brother- <lb/>
and not vindictive as- <lb/>
sault, and who better than Jarvis <lb/>
knows how to do that No man <lb/>
in the universe knows the people <lb/>
of North Carolina better than <lb/>
Thomas J. Jarvis and the people <lb/>
of North Carolina know no man <lb/>
better than they know him. <lb/>
A Democrat. <lb/>
Jacob Joyner for timber used in from contractors under his <lb/>
repairing public road department. The President of <lb/>
and that he be allowed the Pacific Mail Steamship <lb/>
instead of The account j was made aware of this fact, <lb/>
having been withdrawn it was this week, through an official <lb/>
ordered I notification that Hie contrast be- <lb/>
Ordered that H. Parker the Government and his <lb/>
allowed per company for the transportation <lb/>
Ordered that W-J. Kittrell of mails between Now York and <lb/>
Writing show, the Kentucky Con- If fed r m one- the of Panama, and be- <lb/>
, , , T. interest id toe Cox water tween San Francisco and the <lb/>
base rascal. U appearing j Japanese and Chinese ports, <lb/>
is a to our National same has been listed by R. made under the subsidy act of <lb/>
grass that such a man occupies a H- guardian. j the notorious billion dollar Con- <lb/>
seat in it- Ordered that the property of would be canceled, because <lb/>
j Higgs Bros, in Greenville Stock of the failure of the company to <lb/>
Law territory be on the <lb/>
I stock law tax list from to <lb/>
Ordered that tho property of J. <lb/>
C B- bin been <lb/>
pointed United States Senator <lb/>
by Govern tr Foster, of <lb/>
to fill the expire term of <lb/>
Senator White, recently appoint- <lb/>
ed Associate Justice of the <lb/>
Court. <lb/>
comply with the terms of the <lb/>
contract. Mails will continue to <lb/>
be Seat by the steamers of this <lb/>
line, but only the usual prices <lb/>
A- Brady in Greenville be will be paid for carrying them. <lb/>
ed from t- instead of an extra subsidy of fl <lb/>
Ordered that Mrs. Fannie Joy-1 a mile for all the distance covered. <lb/>
nor be released from paying don-j The canceling of this contract <lb/>
tax on and be only two Red <lb/>
paw regular tax on <lb/>
Ordered that Mrs. Laura V. <lb/>
D. line, between New York and <lb/>
the north coast of South, Amer- <lb/>
to his appointed as Anderson property be reduced on and the Ward line, between <lb/>
he Secretary <lb/>
I the tax list of 1893 from to <lb/>
, the same having been <lb/>
Avery, a sou of Avery and . <lb/>
now one of tho editors of the <lb/>
New York, Cuba and Mexico <lb/>
operating under the subsidy law, <lb/>
as the American line between <lb/>
D.-. Woo 1.4. superintendent of wrongfully <lb/>
., T , . . to him. <lb/>
the S M . ; that John G- Nelson be <lb/>
to effect do or about the placed on the pauper roll and be <lb/>
Di. George L. Kirby, allowed per month. <lb/>
of elected in his Ordered that t Sheriff <lb/>
. , , j a jury and lay out a public <lb/>
Ordered that R. J- be New York and Southampton will <lb/>
I relieved from payment of tax on-not begin to its subsidy <lb/>
of personal property,, the until next October. <lb/>
The Democratic c <lb/>
road in accordance with a petition <lb/>
from J. W. Allen, J. S. Allen, <lb/>
A sow daily paper, the Keening I Moses W. Tyson and others filed <lb/>
will appear in Raleigh meeting. <lb/>
Ordered that the Sheriff sum- <lb/>
a jury and lay out a public <lb/>
I road in with a petition <lb/>
B Barnhill, T II Baa hill, <lb/>
W J Whitehurst tiled at <lb/>
a previous meeting of tho Board. <lb/>
A from G- B- Overton, <lb/>
A- Cooper, J. L. and <lb/>
asking for a public road be- <lb/>
The Concord Tunes is nine running at the Greenville road at <lb/>
years old- It is a good weekly . William Whitehurst and <lb/>
newspaper, well gotten up and across tho lands of G- 5- <lb/>
about the of this month. <lb/>
The is <lb/>
years of age and continues to <lb/>
do valiant duty. May it ever be <lb/>
held this week, to consider the <lb/>
of making some <lb/>
change in the rules, looking <lb/>
towards an easier way of getting <lb/>
and keeping a quorum, <lb/>
nothing because it was <lb/>
not itself attended by a quorum. <lb/>
There is one way in which the <lb/>
Democrats of the House could <lb/>
largely increase their popularity, <lb/>
help the party, and always have a <lb/>
simply attending <lb/>
the sessions of the House ; but <lb/>
this scorns to have been entirely <lb/>
overlooked some of them- <lb/>
THE STAR OF CURRITUCK. <lb/>
worthy <lb/>
career. <lb/>
and long <lb/>
of Wilmington <lb/>
N- C-, March 1894. <lb/>
In the dark days of our <lb/>
A- Sara Edwards, Lewis I reconstruction there was one <lb/>
The Kinston Press is <lb/>
Highsmith, Sam Moore and Mrs. <lb/>
Fannie Manning, and coming to <lb/>
the Greenville road between Sam <lb/>
Moore and Mrs. Charity Dav- <lb/>
twelve years old and as good a en port, was read and the proper <lb/>
,, ., ., notice ordered to be given, <lb/>
weekly as there is the St <lb/>
We wish editor Herbert all the I <lb/>
success <lb/>
merits. <lb/>
his excellent paper j <lb/>
MEETING. <lb/>
glimmering star, the light of <lb/>
which was only of sufficient <lb/>
strength to show the utter dark- <lb/>
that surrounded it, and re <lb/>
veal the black cloud of Radicalism <lb/>
overshadowing the brave people <lb/>
of North Carolina. It was a star <lb/>
in the East. It arose Currituck <lb/>
county and guided the wise men <lb/>
tho Commonwealth to tho <lb/>
oar Regular <lb/>
That star has never been lost <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
D. C, Mar. 1894 <lb/>
President Cleveland has, ac- <lb/>
cording to information from a <lb/>
Gainer. <lb/>
The following orders for <lb/>
were drawn <lb/>
bill, in order to protect certain <lb/>
industries their States. When <lb/>
asked to do so he is said to have <lb/>
of from that day to this, but <lb/>
. has ever guided those who follow <lb/>
Greenville, N. C-, Mar. trustworthy source, positively to the illumined path leading <lb/>
The Commissioners for Pitt fused to act as mediator between up to good government. <lb/>
This political luminary was <lb/>
Hon. Thomas J. Jarvis. <lb/>
As Speaker of tho House of <lb/>
Representatives in the first Con- <lb/>
Legislature, after the <lb/>
adoption of the Constitution of <lb/>
of 1868, his name, together with <lb/>
that of the President of the Sen- <lb/>
ate, the lamented Judge <lb/>
became household words from <lb/>
Currituck to Cherokee. <lb/>
The constitutional convention <lb/>
of 1874 had passed into history <lb/>
as had also the defeat of the Con- <lb/>
Stace ticket headed by <lb/>
those men of sterling worth, Mer- <lb/>
in 1872- The <lb/>
State Government was still in <lb/>
hostile hands and the oppression <lb/>
of the people was sore. The <lb/>
campaign of 1876 was the import- <lb/>
ant one of all that date. If the <lb/>
Radicals triumphed ruin stared <lb/>
the good people of the State <lb/>
square in the face. All hope <lb/>
would have fled and despair <lb/>
would have taken its place in the <lb/>
minds of many. But the <lb/>
met in the city of in <lb/>
Martha Nelson indulged in some very vigorous <lb/>
Bryan H D Smith j language criticisms <lb/>
Lydia Bryan Jacob which Democratic Senators have <lb/>
horn Nancy Moore made upon the of the Senate <lb/>
Susan Norris Briley j and elsewhere about his alleged <lb/>
Lucinda Smith interference with the legislative <lb/>
Henry Harris branch of the government, and to <lb/>
Benjamin Crawford expressed surprise that he <lb/>
Smith Andrews j should hare been asked to have <lb/>
Kenneth Henderson Eliza; anything to do with the matter. <lb/>
Edwards Carlos Gorham j This is accord to my under- <lb/>
J H Sam sod Amy standing of of the reasons for <lb/>
Cherry Tucker j tho President's hunting trip. He <lb/>
J O Proctor Alice Corbett j wished to be away from <lb/>
Easter Vines W. while the Democratic Sen- <lb/>
Jones Alex Harris were agreeing upon tho <lb/>
Winnifred Taylor Mary tariff bill, and was both surprised <lb/>
Lydia John j and disappointed when he re- <lb/>
Ham John G Nelson turned to find that an agreement <lb/>
Jas. Long W. H. Parker j had not been reached, feelings <lb/>
probably shared by <lb/>
The following orders for cent of the Democratic party, wot m i <lb/>
county purposes It seems difficult to month of Jane, some of the <lb/>
Missionary Mass-Meeting tn Greenville <lb/>
Saturday evening, March <lb/>
at o'clock, services will be con- <lb/>
ducted in the lecture room of <lb/>
Greenville Baptist church, by <lb/>
Brethren of Rich- <lb/>
Va., responding <lb/>
of the Foreign Mission <lb/>
Board; R. T. Bryan, returned <lb/>
Missionary from China ; and R. <lb/>
of Henderson, N. <lb/>
C , Vice President of the Foreign <lb/>
Mission Board. One of the <lb/>
above named brethren will preach <lb/>
in the Ba church Sunday <lb/>
March 25th, at o'clock, at <lb/>
M. of the same day there will <lb/>
a mass meeting in which much <lb/>
will be said of the greatest inter- <lb/>
est, as these meetings will be for <lb/>
the purpose of disseminating in- <lb/>
formation in spreading the gospel <lb/>
all over the earth. <lb/>
J. H. <lb/>
They Love Him, <lb/>
The colored of Pitt <lb/>
county, and Greenville especially, <lb/>
are not destitute of They <lb/>
view Col. I. A- Sugg as he walks <lb/>
along the street and speak of him <lb/>
as being the colored man's friend. <lb/>
A few years ago he used to drive <lb/>
in town from his country farm <lb/>
early in the morning, and when <lb/>
he saw any colored men, women <lb/>
or boys standing he would <lb/>
tell them to go out on his fat m <lb/>
and go to work- They took him <lb/>
at his word end did so and when <lb/>
their, daily toil was over would <lb/>
return to homes handsomely <lb/>
which enabled them <lb/>
to live comfortably at home- <lb/>
Greenville needs several such <lb/>
men, with a heart of an I. A. <lb/>
Sugg and there would sot so <lb/>
much idleness on the streets. <lb/>
F. J. Johnson <lb/>
The Honorable <lb/>
son, of Medicine Lodge, sees with <lb/>
his mind's forty <lb/>
Congressman in the next House <lb/>
instead of the ton or a dozen in I <lb/>
the present House, and thus he <lb/>
figures thorn a <lb/>
can becomes dissatisfied ho doe <lb/>
not go over to the Democrats, he <lb/>
to us. This is true of the <lb/>
Western Republicans. If a <lb/>
Southern Democrat gets out of <lb/>
sympathy with his party, he will <lb/>
not go to the extreme of joining <lb/>
the Republicans, he will pitch his <lb/>
tent in our We wonder <lb/>
what Jeremiah thinks of the <lb/>
cohesiveness of a party which is <lb/>
made up of people who join it <lb/>
not because they like it or believe <lb/>
the things that it for, <lb/>
but because they have gotten mad <lb/>
with some other <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
In these times of business de- <lb/>
and low prices of cotton <lb/>
it behooves the farmers to plant <lb/>
less cotton and more grain and <lb/>
other products. The farmer who <lb/>
raises all he consumes at home as <lb/>
near as possible is the one who <lb/>
will prosper. The farmers of <lb/>
j this section should pay more at- <lb/>
to raising grass, cattle <lb/>
I and stock, and other be- <lb/>
; sides cotton as money crops. <lb/>
More trouble, some say Of <lb/>
i course it is, and the man in any <lb/>
I calling not willing to take trouble <lb/>
will not succeed very well, if at <lb/>
j all. Take the trouble and go to <lb/>
. Free Press. <lb/>
Y CO. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb/>
DEGENERACY OF THE ALLI- <lb/>
Falling off at the <lb/>
Meeting of the Supreme Council Due <lb/>
to the Third Party Movement. <lb/>
Tim National <lb/>
The meeting of the Supreme <lb/>
Council of the Farmers <lb/>
at Topeka, Kan., showed a <lb/>
falling off in attendance. <lb/>
It is melancholy to contemplate <lb/>
that while at there were <lb/>
present a very large number of <lb/>
delegates from sub-Alliances all <lb/>
over the country, and the pro- <lb/>
of such an enthusiastic <lb/>
character as to have been entitled <lb/>
to wide publication all over tho <lb/>
United States, it should come to <lb/>
the point where, in the cradle of <lb/>
the Alliance, the Supreme Council <lb/>
of only twenty-nine <lb/>
members, ten of them being <lb/>
officials, and the proceedings of <lb/>
such an unimportant character <lb/>
that we have failed to find any <lb/>
mention of them until weekly <lb/>
organs of the Alliance come to <lb/>
us There must be a reason for <lb/>
this falling off. Tho fault is <lb/>
either in tho platform or in the <lb/>
attempts that have been made to <lb/>
lug the Alliance off into the third <lb/>
party We think that <lb/>
the fault lies in both places. <lb/>
First, because several of tho <lb/>
demands of the platform are <lb/>
repugnant to the <lb/>
spirit of independence, which <lb/>
repudiates, at all times and in all <lb/>
places, the idea that one of <lb/>
citizens is to be assisted at the <lb/>
expense of another; and second, <lb/>
been use the rank and tile of <lb/>
Alliance were not in agreement <lb/>
with the leaders who proposed <lb/>
that its membership should go <lb/>
into the Populist movement <lb/>
Originating third party move <lb/>
is a of the young to <lb/>
right what they to be <lb/>
wrongs.<lb/>
We freely confess that for <lb/>
twenty years of our life we were <lb/>
carried off in the same way; but <lb/>
we recognize now that there is <lb/>
only one way to political <lb/>
results, and that is through the <lb/>
one or the other of tho exist <lb/>
political parties. In order to <lb/>
secure tho interest of either of <lb/>
these parties it is necessary that <lb/>
those seeking political reforms <lb/>
should place themselves within <lb/>
the lines as active members, <lb/>
their fight there instead of <lb/>
on the outside. It is evident that <lb/>
tho bulk of the membership of the <lb/>
Alliance is in agreement with us <lb/>
on this matter. If they were not, <lb/>
there would have been a large <lb/>
at Topeka at the an- <lb/>
session- In our opinion the <lb/>
sparse attendance there is a <lb/>
proof that both the Alliance <lb/>
platform and its political program <lb/>
are in the wrong direction. The <lb/>
entire representation at tho To- <lb/>
Council, we have said, was <lb/>
twenty-nine, and they represented <lb/>
nineteen States. There were two <lb/>
from South Dakota, three from <lb/>
North Carolina, two from South <lb/>
three from Texas, one <lb/>
each from Virginia, New York, <lb/>
Nevada, California, Indiana, Min- <lb/>
Kentucky, Tennessee, <lb/>
Iowa, Nebraska, and Mississippi, <lb/>
three from Pennsylvania, two <lb/>
from Colorado, two from Georgia. <lb/>
Most astonishing of all is the fact <lb/>
that Kansas, the State in which <lb/>
the convention was held, had but <lb/>
one representative- We find that <lb/>
seven States of the West were <lb/>
represented, nine of the South <lb/>
and three of the North and East <lb/>
Taken all in all, the convention of <lb/>
the Supreme Council was a very <lb/>
sorry showing for the <lb/>
that a few years ago had two <lb/>
million members. <lb/>
A Mother's Story <lb/>
Her Boy's Suffering After <lb/>
Diphtheria <lb/>
Hood's Cave Health and <lb/>
Strength. <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD STORK <lb/>
J- their year's supplies will <lb/>
their interest to get our prices before <lb/>
chasing elsewhere is complete <lb/>
j n all its branches. <lb/>
I PORK <lb/>
FLOUR, SUGAR <lb/>
TEA, <lb/>
always at Lowest Market <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
buy at A coin <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
; on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
i the times. Our arc all bought and <lb/>
j for CASH therefore, having no risk <lb/>
to sell at a close <lb/>
Respectful I v, <lb/>
s. M. <lb/>
Greenville. N, <lb/>
I. Co., Lowell, I <lb/>
Hood's Sarsaparilla has done so much <lb/>
my boy I wish to say a few words In <lb/>
of tills wonderful medicine. Clifford was very <lb/>
with diphtheria and it left him suffering with <lb/>
disease. He was very weak, poor <lb/>
flesh and could hardly walk. Malaria fever <lb/>
soon overtook him and together with trouble <lb/>
with his liver. <lb/>
He Was in Much Misery. <lb/>
At last, almost discouraged. I decided to have <lb/>
him try Hood's Sarsaparilla. He has taken <lb/>
only a few bottles, and yet it has him more <lb/>
good than all the previous medical <lb/>
HOOD'S <lb/>
Sarsaparilla <lb/>
CURES <lb/>
and medicines combined. He has regained <lb/>
strength and flesh and looks quite healthy. It <lb/>
will always give us pleasure to tell what <lb/>
a valuable, medicine Is Hood's <lb/>
W. Kentucky. <lb/>
H. It. If yon decide to take Hood's <lb/>
do not be Induced to buy any other. <lb/>
Hood's Pills cure liver Ills, <lb/>
sick headache and constipation. <lb/>
worn aims <lb/>
I Dr. J. ., Vita. . <lb/>
Springs <lb/>
W. S. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The having duly quail <lb/>
tied before Court Clerk of <lb/>
Pin county as Administrator of F. A. <lb/>
Fleming, it hereby <lb/>
es to all person indebted to the estate <lb/>
make immediate payment to the <lb/>
an ill persons having claims <lb/>
estate most present the same <lb/>
fur payment or before the 13th day <lb/>
of or this notice will be <lb/>
plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
This 12th or <lb/>
S. <lb/>
A of F. A. <lb/>
Dissolution. <lb/>
partnership heretofore existing <lb/>
R. and b. <lb/>
Greene, under the name and of <lb/>
A has this been <lb/>
dissolved by mutual consent. All debts <lb/>
due the said l be paid to R. <lb/>
L, and all debts due by the <lb/>
said will be paid the said It. L. <lb/>
This <lb/>
K. L. <lb/>
W. B. Cheese. <lb/>
IS IT <lb/>
Who is it that will so <lb/>
known <lb/>
By every hearth and fireside home <lb/>
With bargains that win such <lb/>
renown <lb/>
BOB <lb/>
What name is this that we will <lb/>
spread <lb/>
every tree and post and shed, <lb/>
letters blue and black and rod f <lb/>
BOB <lb/>
Who cuts the prices down so low <lb/>
And tells the people they must <lb/>
Where you with bargains <lb/>
overflow I <lb/>
BOB <lb/>
Who has the store in which we're <lb/>
told <lb/>
Dry Goods and Shoes for <lb/>
young or old, <lb/>
As cheap as ever can sold <lb/>
BOB <lb/>
Who is it that has a back lot, <lb/>
Where you can tie your horse and <lb/>
not <lb/>
Be bothered with shot that are <lb/>
BOB <lb/>
widely is it that has a beautiful line <lb/>
of <lb/>
With one on, as your girl passes <lb/>
yon, she will stare. <lb/>
And call you her duckling, darling, <lb/>
dear T <lb/>
BOB <lb/>
Who is it that has Clothing so <lb/>
Dressed up in a suit all others <lb/>
you'll out shine, <lb/>
That your girl will exclaim, <lb/>
you mine f <lb/>
BOB <lb/>
Who is it that has such a brand <lb/>
new stock <lb/>
Who keeps everything from a silk <lb/>
dress to a clock, <lb/>
And his low prices gives your <lb/>
nerves such a <lb/>
BOB <lb/>
Who is it that's opened next to <lb/>
Andrew's grocery store, <lb/>
Where Jas. L. Little Co. keep <lb/>
no more, <lb/>
Who will open from a. m. to <lb/>
p. m. T <lb/>
BOB <lb/>
Yes, every one says that BOB can beat the world on <lb/>
Dry Goods, Clothing. Notions, Shoes, Hate, <lb/>
Furnishing Goods. <lb/>
Call him, he is at the store formerly occupied by Jas. L. Little <lb/>
Co., and he and his clerks will treat you fair and square. Mr. <lb/>
Dupree is with him and will be glad to see his many friends. <lb/>
Come see tho big lot of <lb/>
and books just at <lb/>
Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
Li ail Fire line Agent, <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lower, current rates. <lb/>
AGENT FOB SAFE <lb/>
To all who want goods that are all right we invite <lb/>
them to come to see we will make the prices <lb/>
all right 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 would always add <lb/>
that the quality your <lb/>
goods is better than <lb/>
the lower priced <lb/>
goods costing <lb/>
more and <lb/>
demand; <lb/>
better <lb/>
priced than the <lb/>
inferior good. This <lb/>
is what we claim 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 want <lb/>
in the Furniture <lb/>
line. We have <lb/>
just re- <lb/>
line <lb/>
of CHAIRS, <lb/>
and <lb/>
ROCKERS in Silk Plush, <lb/>
fee., These Chairs <lb/>
make nice Christmas presents <lb/>
and we would remind our friends <lb/>
not to overlook them when making <lb/>
for Christmas as they will please you. <lb/>
GUNS <lb/>
Call on us for Gun and Gun <lb/>
Implements. We have some <lb/>
nice ones on baud and will <lb/>
make the prices right. <lb/>
Wishing all our friends and tho public generally a joyous and <lb/>
happy Christmas, <lb/>
We remain, your friends. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED <lb/>
a.<lb/>
Ft.-- <lb/>
C. <lb/>
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb/>
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb/>
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb/>
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb/>
Jo my Friends and Customer of and <lb/>
I wish to that I have special preparation in preparing HO O <lb/>
HEAP MATERIAL and propose giving yo i HOGSHEADS with Inside <lb/>
smooth which will prevent cutting or scrubbing your Tobacco when packing <lb/>
I have made special to Hoops made from Whits <lb/>
Oak. Tic special have in my own timber places me in <lb/>
position, to meet all competition. I cheerfully promise yon that. I will strive to <lb/>
make it to your interest to use my Hogshead and you can find them at time <lb/>
either at my factory or at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
Scroll Sawing, ; <lb/>
And Turned Trimming for House a Specialty. <lb/>
I am prepared to do any kind of Scroll Sawing for Brackets or anything in tho <lb/>
or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, for Stairways. Mendings <lb/>
any kind, including Piazza Hailing, and would be pleased to name you on <lb/>
anything Id the above upon application. <lb/>
GENERAL REPAIR WORK <lb/>
done on short notice. Thanking you your past patronage. lam to <lb/>
to meet patronage, and kindly ask you to give me n trial before <lb/>
elsewhere. Respectfully, <lb/>
. Winterville, N. O <lb/>
N C <lb/>
COBB BROS, CO.,<lb/>
Commission Merchants, <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb/>
RELIABLE <lb/>
Otters to the buyers of surrounding counties, of the following <lb/>
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be first-clan <lb/>
mire straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, Cl <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS CAPS, BOOTS, <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SUFFERS. FURNITURE, HOUSE FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS. WINDOWS, SASH, CROCKERY and <lb/>
WARE HARDWARE, FLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb/>
Gin and Mu Hat, Rook of Paris, <lb/>
Hair, and addles <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at <lb/>
robbers cents per per cent for Bread <lb/>
ration and Star Lye t jobbers Prices, White Lead and pus LI <lb/>
Red Oil Varnishes and Paint Wood and Wood an <lb/>
Ware. Give a nail and I guarantee<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017684_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
KEEP <lb/>
YOUR EYES <lb/>
WIDE OPEN <lb/>
Anybody to Switch Ton <lb/>
Off the Trick. <lb/>
We are the People I <lb/>
We are the ; <lb/>
We are the Regulators <lb/>
Produce kind of <lb/>
Goods yon <lb/>
Need <lb/>
The prices <lb/>
To suit <lb/>
Tour pocketbooks. <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
You just ought to see the big <lb/>
cent at Reflector Book <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
daily <lb/>
OUR ENTIRE <lb/>
STOCK ME ST <lb/>
GO AND WE <lb/>
WILL MAKE <lb/>
YOU PRICES <lb/>
THAT ARE VERY LOW. <lb/>
We carry a complete line of <lb/>
Dry Goods, <lb/>
Clothing, <lb/>
Notions, <lb/>
Shoes <lb/>
and <lb/>
Cents Furnishing <lb/>
Goods. <lb/>
All <lb/>
the la- <lb/>
test styles <lb/>
and textiles <lb/>
represented in <lb/>
my mammoth stock <lb/>
It will be a pleasure to <lb/>
show you through <lb/>
my store. Re- <lb/>
member the <lb/>
place op- <lb/>
COBB A SON'S STORE. <lb/>
BROS. <lb/>
Leaders of Low Prices. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C <lb/>
New are arriving <lb/>
at Lang's. <lb/>
Peach and pear trees are look- <lb/>
lovely now, being in full <lb/>
bloom. <lb/>
goes into effect <lb/>
the birds will <lb/>
Dew<lb/>
Let's go skimming. <lb/>
n- Carriages and Wagons at <lb/>
Cherry Co's. <lb/>
Bad colds everywhere. <lb/>
When in want of shoes go to <lb/>
J. B. Co. <lb/>
Court is still in session. <lb/>
The Best Flour on earth at the <lb/>
Old Brick Stoic. <lb/>
Big frost yesterday morning. <lb/>
L. M. Reynolds Mens and Boys <lb/>
are the best. For sale by J. B. <lb/>
Fruit trees are blooming t <lb/>
along. <lb/>
Go to J. B. Cherry Co when in need <lb/>
el Furniture, they keep a stock and <lb/>
sell at prices that will please you. <lb/>
The hook and line season <lb/>
Diamond Inks, are the best. <lb/>
Sold only at Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
Advertise your business and <lb/>
push it. <lb/>
Always room for one more sub <lb/>
scriber to the Reflector- Bring <lb/>
us a dollar. <lb/>
and <lb/>
Flies are with us <lb/>
toes not far behind. <lb/>
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb/>
t the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The weather turned consider- <lb/>
ably cooler Monday. <lb/>
Remember I pay you cash for Chicken <lb/>
Eggs and v Produce at the Old <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
tops are all the go <lb/>
with the small boy. <lb/>
tobacco page is unusually <lb/>
interesting this week. <lb/>
For pure blood Jersey <lb/>
Bull. G. T. Tyson, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Do you want free books See <lb/>
our offer on fourth page- <lb/>
Read the Reflector's free <lb/>
book offer on fourth page. <lb/>
Easter is getting near at hand <lb/>
and the new bonnet is building. <lb/>
The kind of weather we had <lb/>
last week reminds us of <lb/>
Mike an old colored <lb/>
died here Sunday. He had <lb/>
four score years in age. <lb/>
We noticed a lot of handsome <lb/>
baby carriages being received by <lb/>
J. B- Cherry Co. yesterday. <lb/>
If the very little folks could read <lb/>
this item how they would smile. <lb/>
A newspaper with evidence of <lb/>
substantial support in its pages <lb/>
peaks volumes for a town. The <lb/>
fact that every has an <lb/>
advertisement in its columns <lb/>
proves that the people are up <lb/>
with the times and favorably <lb/>
E the stranger into whose <lb/>
and it chances to <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
The game law <lb/>
to-morrow <lb/>
take a <lb/>
Complete line of Dry Goods at <lb/>
Wiley Brown's. <lb/>
Call in and inspect the <lb/>
Spring goods at Lang's <lb/>
You had better not sell your <lb/>
overcoat, you may need it before <lb/>
March is gone. <lb/>
For good reliable Shoes go to <lb/>
Wiley Brown. <lb/>
I tell you the planters put in <lb/>
some good licks last week <lb/>
the lands for crops. <lb/>
Acme Guano Distributors are <lb/>
for sale by S. E Pender Co <lb/>
March is nearly half gone, but <lb/>
very little of its lion like nature <lb/>
so far been shown. <lb/>
If you wish to dress stylish this <lb/>
season buy your goods at Lang's. <lb/>
Three have been put <lb/>
in Jail since Friday. Only one <lb/>
was in there before them. <lb/>
Nothing equals the Parker <lb/>
Pen. Sold only at Re- <lb/>
Book Store. <lb/>
Business men can get good <lb/>
to <lb/>
the Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
A- G- Cox is selling the <lb/>
Cox Cotton Planter for Now <lb/>
is the time to send in your order. <lb/>
Choice canned Fruits and Veg- <lb/>
always fresh and nice, at <lb/>
J. S. Smith Co's. <lb/>
Farmers, diversify, manure <lb/>
high and cultivate well and a <lb/>
profitable harvest is yours. <lb/>
New Embroideries just <lb/>
ed by Wiley Brown. <lb/>
If you want the Reflector and <lb/>
Atlanta Constitution a year for <lb/>
21.50 bring on that amount- <lb/>
Hunters your time is up, no <lb/>
more shooting for quite a while. <lb/>
Brush up the hook and line- <lb/>
For Milch Cow <lb/>
and calf. James Galloway, <lb/>
Grimesland, N- C <lb/>
J. S- Smith Co. receive fresh <lb/>
every week the finest Cream <lb/>
Cheese, and also best Vermont <lb/>
Butter at cents per pound. <lb/>
Shoes to matter <lb/>
whether you stand or whether <lb/>
you sit, at Higgs Bros. <lb/>
Notice to Tax Payers. -All per- <lb/>
sons who fail to pay their taxes <lb/>
by March 23rd are hereby notified <lb/>
that their lands will be advertised <lb/>
and sold fur payment of same. <lb/>
R. W. Sheriff. <lb/>
Another pleasant summer day <lb/>
was last Sunday. All the church- <lb/>
es held services had good <lb/>
congregations. <lb/>
Money to improved <lb/>
Real Estate sums from 1500 to <lb/>
Apply to, <lb/>
F. G. James. <lb/>
your Cotton Seed Meal at <lb/>
the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
portion of a bicycle <lb/>
tool wallet with three wrenches <lb/>
and oiler. Finder will be reward- <lb/>
ed by leaving them at Reflector <lb/>
office. <lb/>
Just received large, bright, fat <lb/>
Mullets at the Old Brick Store- <lb/>
Mail dogs have been causing <lb/>
trouble at both Durham and <lb/>
The cur is a nuisance, <lb/>
anyway you look at him. <lb/>
Another big lot of cent tab- <lb/>
lets received at Reflector Book <lb/>
Store last week, and with these <lb/>
new ones a good lead pencil goes <lb/>
free to every purchaser. <lb/>
New assortment of Bibles from <lb/>
American B. S-, just received. <lb/>
Wiley Brown, Depositor. <lb/>
Pay your taxes by the 23rd of <lb/>
March, or your lands will be ad- <lb/>
and sold. Positively no <lb/>
longer indulgence will be given. <lb/>
R. W. Sheriff. <lb/>
The late dry weather has <lb/>
wrought an improvement in the <lb/>
condition of the public roads. <lb/>
Score one for the weather. <lb/>
Every business man should try <lb/>
a bottle of our Cream Mucilage- <lb/>
Sold only at the Reflector Book <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
For A- G. Cox's celebrated <lb/>
Back Bands call on J- B. Cherry<lb/>
Best Flour at and per <lb/>
barrel- Pepper cents a pound. <lb/>
Other goods correspondingly low. <lb/>
J. S. Smith Co. <lb/>
New Garden seeds D. M. Ferry <lb/>
Co., at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Genuine Clipper, Atlas, Boy <lb/>
Dixie, Stonewall and Climax <lb/>
Plows and Castings for sale by J. <lb/>
B. Cherry Co. <lb/>
The largest and best assorted <lb/>
line of General Merchandise in <lb/>
Pitt county, is offered for sale by <lb/>
J- B. Cherry Co. <lb/>
Sewing machines from to <lb/>
Latest improved New Home <lb/>
Wiley <lb/>
Farmers, Mechanics and Labor- <lb/>
of all professions, when in <lb/>
need of goods of any kind, call on <lb/>
friends, J. B. Cherry Co. <lb/>
Now in Stock, Ge <lb/>
late, Raisins, Prunes, Nuts, Rolled <lb/>
Oats, Buckwheat, Cream Cheese, <lb/>
Personal <lb/>
Mrs- W. A. of Hamil- <lb/>
ton, is visiting here, <lb/>
Mr. Wilson returned <lb/>
Saturday night from his northern <lb/>
trip. <lb/>
Miss Gray Hodges, of <lb/>
Washington is visiting Miss Rosa <lb/>
Mrs. N. A. Carr, of Willow <lb/>
Green, is visiting her daughter, <lb/>
Mrs. B- S- Sheppard. <lb/>
Mrs. C- T- spent last <lb/>
week with friends relatives <lb/>
in Edgecombe county. <lb/>
Mrs. Alfred Forbes was quite <lb/>
sick with grip Saturday and Sun <lb/>
day. We are glad to know she is <lb/>
much better. <lb/>
Mr. R. A. Tyson is having a <lb/>
dwelling built on his just <lb/>
west of town. Mr. J. C- Tyson <lb/>
will occupy it. <lb/>
Mr. W. B. Brown returned from <lb/>
the northern markets last week <lb/>
where he purchased a lovely line <lb/>
of spring goods. <lb/>
Mr. Claude L- Whichard,. of <lb/>
Norfolk, was here Monday visit- <lb/>
the editor and shaking hands <lb/>
with his host of friends. <lb/>
Mr- G- II- Little and Miss Rena <lb/>
Fleming, both of will <lb/>
be married in that town this even- <lb/>
by Rev. J. H. <lb/>
Mrs. Warren and <lb/>
of Penny Hill, have been <lb/>
spending the past week with her <lb/>
parents, Mr. Mrs. S. B- <lb/>
Wilson. <lb/>
Mrs. Bettie Swindell returned <lb/>
home Friday She was <lb/>
accompanied by Mrs. Win. Russ <lb/>
and little daughter, Bettie, of <lb/>
Raleigh. <lb/>
Mrs. Caroline Cherry returned <lb/>
home last week from <lb/>
Beaufort county, where she has <lb/>
been visiting her daughter, Mrs. <lb/>
It is indeed gratifying to learn <lb/>
of the improvement of Dr. Frank <lb/>
w. Brown. We he soon <lb/>
will he entirely recovered and at <lb/>
his post again. <lb/>
We had a call from <lb/>
Prof. C. H James last week and <lb/>
he says his school at is <lb/>
in a flourishing <lb/>
about scholars. <lb/>
The infant son of Mr. Mrs. <lb/>
W. L. Forbes, near Greenville, <lb/>
died Saturday night, and was <lb/>
buried in Cherry Hill Cemetery <lb/>
Monday afternoon. <lb/>
Rev. J. H- returned <lb/>
last week from his visit to <lb/>
ville. Large congregations were <lb/>
out to hear him Sunday and he <lb/>
preached excellent sermons- <lb/>
Rev. E. C. of <lb/>
dropped to see us hist <lb/>
day and we were glad to have a <lb/>
chat with him- He conducted <lb/>
prayer services that night <lb/>
at the Methodist church- <lb/>
Jarvis would be <lb/>
honor to North Carolina in <lb/>
the U. S- Senate, and would <lb/>
honestly and truly represent the <lb/>
best interest of the whole people <lb/>
of the Ledger. <lb/>
Mrs. W. R. Whichard, an aunt <lb/>
of the editor, was in town Monday <lb/>
to spend the day. She was a <lb/>
sufferer from the typhoid scourge <lb/>
that visited the northern portion <lb/>
of the county, being confined to <lb/>
her room for days with fever- <lb/>
It is gratifying to her friends to <lb/>
know that she has almost entirely <lb/>
regained her health. <lb/>
Dr. H- Johnson, of Grifton and <lb/>
Dr. W. L. Best, of <lb/>
visited Greenville last week, and <lb/>
both were welcomed callers at the <lb/>
Reflector office. Dr. Best told <lb/>
us that spiritualism is the latest <lb/>
fad around and some <lb/>
remarkable mediums are coming <lb/>
to the front- Many amusing <lb/>
things are told on some of them. <lb/>
Messrs. Hines and Hamilton, <lb/>
whom we announced last week <lb/>
had come to Greenville to take <lb/>
charge of the large lumber mills, <lb/>
have moved their families here. <lb/>
Mr. Hines occupies the Hearne <lb/>
building and Mr. Hamilton <lb/>
boards at Mrs. Mr. Hall, <lb/>
foreman of the mills, has also <lb/>
moved his family here and <lb/>
pies the Fleming house. <lb/>
last Wednesday evening <lb/>
Mr- H- A. Blow received a <lb/>
gram announcing the sad news of <lb/>
the death of his brother-in-law, <lb/>
Mr. G- of Nash- <lb/>
ville, N- O, of He <lb/>
was universally popular and be- <lb/>
loved at home had a large <lb/>
of friends all over the <lb/>
State. He was buried at the <lb/>
home of his brother, J. B. <lb/>
on last Thursday. <lb/>
Dr. of Richmond, <lb/>
Secretary of the Foreign Mission <lb/>
Board of the Southern Baptist <lb/>
Convention; Rev. R- <lb/>
of Henderson, one of the Vice- <lb/>
Presidents of the Board, and <lb/>
Rev- R- T- Bryan, a returned mis- <lb/>
from China, will be in <lb/>
Greenville on Saturday and Sun- <lb/>
day, March 24th and 25th, and <lb/>
hold meetings then in the <lb/>
church. These will be inter- <lb/>
meetings, and our people <lb/>
will have opportunity of hearing <lb/>
talks from great missionary work- <lb/>
which they should not miss. <lb/>
Special Meeting. <lb/>
The Board of of <lb/>
the town of Greenville will meet <lb/>
special session on Friday night <lb/>
16th to transact such <lb/>
as may properly come before <lb/>
them. Henry <lb/>
This March 5th, Clerk. <lb/>
Colored Boy Drowned. <lb/>
Mr. J. A. of Falkland, <lb/>
the Reflector that Joe <lb/>
Parker, a year-old colored boy, <lb/>
was drowned at Parker's landing <lb/>
Tar river, about o'clock Sat- <lb/>
night. He was skimming <lb/>
with Nathan Little must have <lb/>
been asleep or had a fit and fell <lb/>
out of the canoe. The body was <lb/>
found next morning about <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
Fire at Bethel. <lb/>
Just after our going to press on <lb/>
last Tuesday night Mr. R. J. W. <lb/>
Carson, of Bethel, who was <lb/>
here attending court, received a <lb/>
telegram informing him that his <lb/>
dwelling house was burned to the <lb/>
ground. He saved but few his <lb/>
household effects. He had no <lb/>
insurance at all on building or <lb/>
furniture. It was supposed to <lb/>
be set fire by rats. Judge <lb/>
Bynum promptly excused him <lb/>
from further attendance at court <lb/>
that he might go home. <lb/>
Hew They Catch <lb/>
The market was full of shad <lb/>
early Monday morning. It seems <lb/>
that shad run better day <lb/>
Monday than any other <lb/>
time, hut as Jack White says, <lb/>
they have a way of spoiling much <lb/>
sooner than those caught on any <lb/>
other morning. This might <lb/>
sound strange but for the fact <lb/>
that with some of the fishermen <lb/>
day Monday is <lb/>
all the way from sunset Saturday <lb/>
evening until sunrise Monday <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
Building and Loan. <lb/>
Mr. J. C who has been <lb/>
here some weeks in the interest <lb/>
of the Commercial Building <lb/>
Trust, of Ky., organized <lb/>
a branch in Greenville with <lb/>
shares. The officers of the local <lb/>
board <lb/>
H. <lb/>
J. R. President- <lb/>
H- <lb/>
J. L. and Treas. <lb/>
L. H. B- Wilson, <lb/>
Wiley Brown, R. J. Cobb and G- <lb/>
E. Harris, Directors. <lb/>
I Go a-Fishing. <lb/>
We used to how, but <lb/>
seem to have lost the art. Time <lb/>
was, in our boyhood days, when <lb/>
we ourself on being as good <lb/>
a hand to paddle a net on a shad <lb/>
as any little fellow who held <lb/>
the stern of a canoe. <lb/>
Friend Joe Evans offered to take <lb/>
us out for a few trips Friday eve <lb/>
and though ten years had <lb/>
since we went skimming <lb/>
concluded that for the fun of the <lb/>
thing we'd try it once more. We <lb/>
tramped up to Goff Landing and <lb/>
launched out, paddle in hand, <lb/>
while Joe paid his attention to <lb/>
the net. For fifteen straight <lb/>
trips we stuck to but <lb/>
didn't get a bite, walked back <lb/>
home without even a hickory <lb/>
scale. There was a world of <lb/>
difference between the softness <lb/>
of that canoe seat and the Re <lb/>
office chair, but the <lb/>
has put a patch on the <lb/>
exposed part of our pants, and by <lb/>
using extra caution standing <lb/>
up part of the time we are still <lb/>
able to write locals. Verily as a <lb/>
fisherman we are not a <lb/>
success. <lb/>
The Meeting Sunday. <lb/>
Let every bear in wind <lb/>
that the protracted meeting will <lb/>
commence in the Methodist <lb/>
church next Sunday. There will <lb/>
services every morning at <lb/>
o'clock and at night. All are <lb/>
and expected- clip the <lb/>
following from the Danville. Ya. <lb/>
Methodist, of March 1st, re- <lb/>
to Mr. <lb/>
Mr. is no ordinary <lb/>
itinerant evangelist. He is a man <lb/>
of wealth, a leading merchant <lb/>
and manufacturer of the oily of <lb/>
for many years. <lb/>
he states, he was convinced that <lb/>
he was called to at <lb/>
once began a work in which he is <lb/>
giving his best energies and his <lb/>
masterly ability. <lb/>
He is a fine specimen of <lb/>
cal man, six feet three inches, <lb/>
broad shoulders, as straight as <lb/>
Indian, strong, but pleasant voice, <lb/>
well developed face and head. <lb/>
His sermons show careful prep- <lb/>
as clean and as pungent <lb/>
as Mr. Moody; as direct and at <lb/>
times as scathing as Sam Jones. <lb/>
Men hear and respect because the <lb/>
man who speaks is full of his sub- <lb/>
deeply pious, intensely in <lb/>
earnest. <lb/>
Mr. does not believe <lb/>
in sensation, says but little to <lb/>
touch the sensational side of a <lb/>
man, but with sledge-hammer <lb/>
arguments he storms the citadel <lb/>
of reason. His work in Bramble- <lb/>
Ion has been eminently successful, <lb/>
and the church he is now serving <lb/>
is greatly The charge <lb/>
so frequently made against <lb/>
that they are preaching <lb/>
for money will fall harmless if <lb/>
directed to James E <lb/>
who has never yet received a <lb/>
for months of the most faith- <lb/>
and arduous work. <lb/>
He will be assisted by Mr. <lb/>
Ramsay who is a singer of ranch <lb/>
note. <lb/>
Lights. <lb/>
i The that shines o. <lb/>
the was walking down <lb/>
I the street, Saturday afternoon, <lb/>
and when in front of Lang's store <lb/>
picked up b by Larry <lb/>
taken inside and laid <lb/>
out the much to the <lb/>
of <lb/>
didn't get time to announce <lb/>
goods, just <lb/>
importation, all wool and a yard <lb/>
before Mr. F. M. Smith <lb/>
pretty light, <lb/>
ain't To this Mr. re- <lb/>
he has resided two <lb/>
Two years ago, light our and <lb/>
Israelite Both lights <lb/>
promptly wont out. <lb/>
Almost Dead. <lb/>
In one of the back lots of the <lb/>
town Sunday morning Chief of <lb/>
Police J. T Smith picked up a <lb/>
man who was in o critical <lb/>
being unconscious and to <lb/>
all appearances almost dead. <lb/>
The officer took the man to the <lb/>
station house and called Dr. Zeno <lb/>
Brown to attend him. Under <lb/>
the care of the doctor and officer <lb/>
the man had revived by night but <lb/>
could not give much account of <lb/>
himself. From the little <lb/>
he gave coupled with some <lb/>
book, <lb/>
his name was supposed to be C- <lb/>
R. Pool, and he said he was from <lb/>
Person county. Tho man was <lb/>
evidently off of a spree. <lb/>
He had about in money. <lb/>
Officer Smith Mon- <lb/>
day to tho Sheriff of Person county <lb/>
about the man, but had received <lb/>
no reply up to this writing. <lb/>
Johnson Mills Items <lb/>
March, 12th 1894. <lb/>
Tho new Post office was opened <lb/>
here last Monday. <lb/>
Dr. Best went to last <lb/>
Friday and returned Saturday. <lb/>
Rev. filled his <lb/>
regular appointment at St Johns <lb/>
yesterday, <lb/>
cause of Delayed Mail. Messrs. E. A. Johnson John <lb/>
t ., , t . Nelson and Dr. Best went to <lb/>
Our Bethel correspondent com- last Monday, <lb/>
pained to his letter last week Miss Jennie Hodges left <lb/>
about mails that formerly reach- f Vanceboro last Wednesday <lb/>
eel Bethel on the morning trains f spending several days <lb/>
not getting there until he I . <lb/>
evening trams, and thought that took of <lb/>
the fine weather last, week and <lb/>
turned off lots of work. <lb/>
Misses Brooks and <lb/>
Frigate wont <lb/>
Wednesday. <lb/>
to <lb/>
J. A- Andrews <lb/>
flour at Read <lb/>
sells <lb/>
his advertise- <lb/>
The street force began <lb/>
day widening and improving <lb/>
Fifth street from the Pitt street <lb/>
crossing to the railroad. <lb/>
The Band was out <lb/>
on parade Saturday evening and <lb/>
discoursed sweet music. There is <lb/>
an improvement in their playing. <lb/>
Moses can hang up his street <lb/>
lamps now while the moon is get- <lb/>
ting in a few night's work. We <lb/>
hope he will save some matches, <lb/>
however, and not wait for the <lb/>
nocturnal luminary to fade clear <lb/>
New Bank Building. <lb/>
It was our pleasure to be <lb/>
shown through the new brick <lb/>
bank building of Messrs. Tyson <lb/>
Rawls one evening last week <lb/>
by Mr. W. S. Rawls and it is a <lb/>
marvel of beauty and convenience. <lb/>
As you enter the front door the <lb/>
first thing to greet your eyes is <lb/>
the handsome railing and <lb/>
The counter is made of solid oak <lb/>
and varnished until you can <lb/>
most see your face in it. The <lb/>
railing is made of grilling of a <lb/>
handsome design and chip glass. <lb/>
The counter is about seven feet <lb/>
high and takes up a little over <lb/>
half the front room, commencing <lb/>
a good distance from the front <lb/>
door, to the left as you enter, and <lb/>
extending out a little over half <lb/>
way across the room, there <lb/>
a curve and running back to <lb/>
the vault. At the curve is the <lb/>
Teller's window and a little be- <lb/>
low is the Cashier's. The vault is <lb/>
made of two walls of brick and <lb/>
cement twenty five inches thick <lb/>
with air chambers throughout, <lb/>
girded by seventeen bars of iron <lb/>
half an inch thick. The is <lb/>
feet and inside of this will <lb/>
be a large burglar and fire proof <lb/>
safe. The vault will be provided <lb/>
with lock boxes for the use of <lb/>
patrons of the The door to <lb/>
the vault is of the Herring-Hall- <lb/>
Marvin Co's make of lock com- <lb/>
with five tumblers- In the <lb/>
rear of tho vault is a room <lb/>
feet to be nicely fitted up for <lb/>
business and Director's office. <lb/>
The ceiling overhead is of native <lb/>
pine and placed in such a <lb/>
as to appear an octagon <lb/>
shape. It is an original idea of <lb/>
Mr. Mr. Jas. L. Little is <lb/>
Cashier and Mr. Jas. C. Tyson <lb/>
is Teller, both of whom will be <lb/>
glad to see their friends and will <lb/>
extend to them their best service. <lb/>
On the outside of the a <lb/>
desk will be placed for the con- <lb/>
of the public, where will <lb/>
be found full supply of paper, en- <lb/>
blanks, checks, notes, <lb/>
and ink- Greenville has a <lb/>
good bank building and wishes <lb/>
the proprietors success. The Re- <lb/>
is always glad to see en- <lb/>
of any nature and its <lb/>
columns are always open to the <lb/>
up-building of our town- The <lb/>
bank will soon be moved into its <lb/>
new quarters. <lb/>
blame for the delay. We have <lb/>
looked into this matter find <lb/>
that the fault is not with the <lb/>
clerks but with the schedules by <lb/>
which the trains are run. The <lb/>
Bethel mail was formerly carried <lb/>
by the Plymouth and Rocky <lb/>
Mount train, but now mails on <lb/>
that train are only handled be <lb/>
Plymouth and Parmele, <lb/>
and the points between Parmele <lb/>
and Tarboro are supplied by tho <lb/>
trains running from Washington <lb/>
to Tarboro. the new <lb/>
this latter train docs not <lb/>
connect with either the Greenville <lb/>
or Plymouth trains at Parmele <lb/>
but goes on ahead, so that if <lb/>
either of these other trains has <lb/>
mail for Bethel or points between <lb/>
Parmele and Tarboro it is turned <lb/>
over to the train from Greenville <lb/>
and goes either by way <lb/>
of Hobgood or Halifax to Tarboro I caught on fire, <lb/>
then on to its destination by the dwelling house <lb/>
the evening train. This causes <lb/>
mail going from Greenville in the <lb/>
morning not to get to Bethel <lb/>
that evening. It is a round <lb/>
about way for the mail to go, but <lb/>
the fault is in the railroad <lb/>
If tho morning from <lb/>
Washington to Tarboro was held <lb/>
a few minutes at for the <lb/>
arrival of the trains from Green- <lb/>
ville and Plymouth, the <lb/>
would be and the <lb/>
mails go through on good time- <lb/>
As it is the people who get mail <lb/>
at Bethel and other offices be <lb/>
tween Parmele and Tarboro are <lb/>
subjected to a great deal of <lb/>
necessary delay and annoyance. <lb/>
Tho matter should be placed be- <lb/>
fore the proper authorities and <lb/>
remedied. <lb/>
Nan- <lb/>
Kinston last <lb/>
1894 SPRING <lb/>
E,<lb/>
------A T------<lb/>
To fully appreciate this old but true adage you will have to call at <lb/>
SWELL <lb/>
-and examine their largo stock of--------- <lb/>
Higgs Bros want to get <lb/>
your eyes wide open and read <lb/>
their new advertisement to day. <lb/>
It tells the news of their nice <lb/>
goods low es. <lb/>
Ain't the show windows at <lb/>
Co's just <lb/>
beautiful It almost makes your <lb/>
mouth water to look at <lb/>
exhibit of spring goods. <lb/>
Bethel Items. <lb/>
12th, 1894. <lb/>
Mr. Ford has two sick <lb/>
children. <lb/>
W. B. Kendrick, of <lb/>
is in town to <lb/>
Messrs. Ward are <lb/>
moving the Bryan V Peal saw <lb/>
mill from to Bethel. <lb/>
wish them success. <lb/>
Prof. T. C. Manning, who is <lb/>
now teaching penmanship at <lb/>
Wilson, made a <lb/>
flying trip home Saturday. He <lb/>
returned Sunday morning. <lb/>
Little Belle, daughter of Mr. J <lb/>
L- Peal, while playing out in the <lb/>
old mill yard last Tuesday even <lb/>
She ran to <lb/>
which was <lb/>
about one hundred yards, but <lb/>
was so badly burned before tho <lb/>
flames could extinguished <lb/>
she died that night. She was <lb/>
buried Wednesday evening. <lb/>
services were conducted at <lb/>
tho grave by the Rev. W- A- <lb/>
Forbes. extend our heartfelt <lb/>
sympathies to the bereaved family <lb/>
Mr. R. J. W. Carson who lives <lb/>
about one mile from Bethel had <lb/>
the misfortune to have his dwell <lb/>
house and a portion of his <lb/>
furniture destroyed by fire last <lb/>
Tuesday evening. The tire is <lb/>
supposed to have caught by <lb/>
matches from rats. It was dis <lb/>
covered about six o'clock. In a <lb/>
short while a large crowd had as- <lb/>
by hard work man- <lb/>
aged to tho greater part of <lb/>
the furniture and the smoke <lb/>
house which was near by. A largo <lb/>
portion of the bed clothing <lb/>
and his daughter's and son's <lb/>
clothes were burned. The loss is <lb/>
about no insurance. Mr. <lb/>
Carson has the sympathy of tho <lb/>
entire community. He was away <lb/>
from home at the time at Green- <lb/>
ville serving as a juror knew <lb/>
nothing of it he received a <lb/>
telegram Tuesday night. He re <lb/>
turned home Wednesday morning <lb/>
New Spring Goods <lb/>
which are of the latest styles colors are being sold at prices <lb/>
that will make you think you are getting double your money's <lb/>
worth. To see is to believe and to believe you will only <lb/>
have to examine the many bargains are offering in <lb/>
all of which have an especially <lb/>
examine our goods which it <lb/>
attractive line. Call to see us and <lb/>
affords us pleasure to show. <lb/>
The must courteous attention extended to all. <lb/>
at <lb/>
We are headquarters the most popular brands of <lb/>
of which we have a large stock on hand and which are <lb/>
prices to suit the times. <lb/>
always on hand. So when you call if you do not what you want <lb/>
ask for it. Remembering always we are yours to please, <lb/>
well, Co., <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
.-.-.-- <lb/>
Depository <lb/>
Bible <lb/>
New <lb/>
Agent <lb/>
Mil <lb/>
fl<lb/>
I HAVE RECEIVED A COMPLETE LINE OF- <lb/>
SPRING G <lb/>
NOVELTIES, <lb/>
and would earnestly solicit your examination. <lb/>
I always <lb/>
a specialty. <lb/>
SHOES <lb/>
FROM THE NORTHERN MARKETS BUT TOO BUSY <lb/>
RECEIVING AND DISPLAYING <lb/>
Mountain Butter away with old age before <lb/>
cents, at tho Old Brick Store. earning his rounds. <lb/>
TO <lb/>
WRITE ALL WE WANT TO SAY TO YOU THIS WEEK <lb/>
Embroideries, White Goods <lb/>
and Laces. <lb/>
I need not say anything about except that I have received a new <lb/>
line. Prices lower than ever. I thank you for your past favors <lb/>
and if close prices will avail mo anything will merit a continuance <lb/>
Sewing Machines from up. New Howe latest improved <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
WILEY BROWN, <lb/>
Now Homo Sowing Machines and Depositor for American Bible So <lb/>
MANUFACTURER OF- <lb/>
Bus, Carts l Dim <lb/>
-ALL KINDS OF <lb/>
Pitt County Rifles were <lb/>
out on drill last Friday evening <lb/>
with men. They made a fine <lb/>
showing on the streets and Cap- <lb/>
Smith says the boys are get- <lb/>
re ting of sight on the tactics. <lb/>
Watch this space and it will tell you all about it. <lb/>
WILSON. <lb/>
REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE <lb/>
Only first-class workmen material allowed my shops. The many <lb/>
who have my work will testily to the beauty and durability of <lb/>
turned out at my shops. Every vehicle guaranteed. I also carry a complete line o <lb/>
HARNESS WHIPS.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017684_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
TOBACCO <lb/>
O- L. Proprietor Eastern <lb/>
CAL AND <lb/>
JOTTINGS <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
It is accurately estimated that <lb/>
not more than per cent of the <lb/>
eastern crop is still in the far- <lb/>
of our neighboring advantages before the world. <lb/>
co markets seem to take a special <lb/>
delight in misrepresenting tho <lb/>
Greenville market. Why this <lb/>
is true we do not know but as <lb/>
envy breeds strife we should at <lb/>
mere hands and we seriously that These <lb/>
reports, know, are unworthy <lb/>
of notice on that account we <lb/>
have failed to pay attention <lb/>
whatever to a great many that <lb/>
have come to our knowledge, but <lb/>
here is one that is so amusing <lb/>
and outrageously false in every <lb/>
detail that we give it as a sample <lb/>
of a great many that are given out <lb/>
by drummers from other markets. <lb/>
A few days age a drummer, we <lb/>
suppose he was, came in the ware- <lb/>
house just before sale. From his <lb/>
somewhat <lb/>
we sized him up as a smart Aleck <lb/>
and paid him no further attention. <lb/>
We walked around the <lb/>
warehouse until after the sale and <lb/>
then we suppose lie went out <lb/>
drumming. At a country home, <lb/>
about three miles from town, he <lb/>
spent the night and this is the <lb/>
impression he left of Greenville. <lb/>
He said there were no orders on <lb/>
the Greenville market, that there <lb/>
had been but they had bean taken <lb/>
that he witnessed a sale in <lb/>
Greenville and that offered a <lb/>
certain buyer a handsome <lb/>
profit on what he bought that day, <lb/>
that cutters sold as high as <lb/>
on his market, and worst of all <lb/>
that Mr. J. J. Rives had made <lb/>
in the last mouth buy- <lb/>
tobacco in Greenville and <lb/>
shipping to his market. He said <lb/>
also that Mr. F- M. Smith had a <lb/>
load of tobacco on the floor, of the <lb/>
Eastern and that we paid him <lb/>
high prices because he was there <lb/>
and Mr. Smith had taken some <lb/>
off our floor before and shipped <lb/>
to his market and had made money <lb/>
on it. We will answer the last <lb/>
charge first and say of the whole <lb/>
that there is not the slightest <lb/>
of truth in any <lb/>
thin he said. It is true Mr. <lb/>
Smith had a very fine load of to- <lb/>
on the floor tho clay spoken <lb/>
doubt there being that much- <lb/>
Eastern North Carolina is the <lb/>
natural home of the tobacco plant. <lb/>
In our rich eastern soils <lb/>
its greatest development is at- <lb/>
and it requires <lb/>
and judicious management <lb/>
to make it the heaviest money <lb/>
crop that we have. <lb/>
are frequently asked about <lb/>
the future price of tobacco, on <lb/>
what the or value depends <lb/>
and whether it will be worth as <lb/>
much next year as it was this, <lb/>
These are important questions to <lb/>
the farmers and it is well that <lb/>
they make such inquiries. It <lb/>
shows that the farmer is begin- <lb/>
to think and for <lb/>
himself, which is an important <lb/>
step to success anything. <lb/>
While we have very decided views <lb/>
about the future value of bright <lb/>
tobacco, yet its price is largely <lb/>
dependent on artificial causes <lb/>
and conditions which are too nu <lb/>
at present to mention in <lb/>
detail but in the course of two <lb/>
or three weeks we shall endeavor <lb/>
to give to our readers the leading <lb/>
natural causes affecting the price <lb/>
not only of tobacco but of a great <lb/>
many other crops with which <lb/>
eastern farmers have to deal. <lb/>
About three miles from Green- <lb/>
lives a farmer who ton years <lb/>
ago worked as zealously as he <lb/>
does now. still he had but little <lb/>
money. When his neighbors be- <lb/>
growing tobacco he waited <lb/>
for them to try the experiment <lb/>
before he planted any. Seeing it <lb/>
was a good thing properly man- <lb/>
aged he commenced by planting <lb/>
an acre or so the first year and in- <lb/>
creasing gradually as he learned <lb/>
more of it until now he plants <lb/>
about fifteen acres. year <lb/>
since he planted his first he has <lb/>
made money from his tobacco <lb/>
crop and he has done it by <lb/>
cultivation and planting only <lb/>
what he could attend to. While <lb/>
to-day he is not what is called a <lb/>
The inducements and advantages <lb/>
offered to investors and home- <lb/>
seekers in Georgia are no greater <lb/>
than in many other southern <lb/>
States. The light of commerce <lb/>
and progressive thrift is not re <lb/>
fleeted from other States as it is <lb/>
in Georgia, hence the proud name <lb/>
which it so deservedly has, the <lb/>
Empire State of the <lb/>
northern manufacturer who <lb/>
was discussing the coming <lb/>
val of six largo New England cot <lb/>
too mills to the South is quoted <lb/>
as saying southern towns <lb/>
that sit down quietly and expect <lb/>
a millionaire to drop down on it <lb/>
and build factories will be <lb/>
pointed. The northern <lb/>
who goes south wants to <lb/>
place his mill by the side of an- <lb/>
other which is already successful. <lb/>
I am that the South <lb/>
will boom as soon as the tariff <lb/>
question is settled one way or the <lb/>
We have long been so <lb/>
thoroughly convinced of the <lb/>
soundness of this view that we <lb/>
never ceased to urge the <lb/>
people of every southern <lb/>
to got together and pull for <lb/>
their town. They should show <lb/>
their faith in their home city and <lb/>
their by their <lb/>
money in its industrial enterprises <lb/>
and in every movement <lb/>
to aid development and pro- <lb/>
This policy has made At- <lb/>
what it is. Northern capital <lb/>
and enterprise have come hero <lb/>
because our people have put their <lb/>
and their energy into our <lb/>
home enterprises and made them <lb/>
successful. From the day when <lb/>
Hardy Ivy built the first cabin <lb/>
here in 1830 down to the present <lb/>
time Atlanta has never failed in <lb/>
any undertaking. We must keep <lb/>
up the lick. If we should permit <lb/>
the exposition to fall through the <lb/>
world would it a back- <lb/>
ward step, and legions of prophets <lb/>
material would predict similar disasters in <lb/>
future. The confidence of our <lb/>
people would be shaken, and they <lb/>
would hampered by doubts and <lb/>
fears to such an extent as to make <lb/>
BOOKS <lb/>
BOOKS <lb/>
BOOKS <lb/>
E BOOKS <lb/>
Quotations the Greenville <lb/>
Market. <lb/>
Tobacco <lb/>
of mid it sold for good prices but <lb/>
not for more than it v as worth progress impossible for years to <lb/>
and as to our paying high prices Undoubtedly, we need <lb/>
because Mr. Smith had taken expect millionaires to drop <lb/>
some floor and shipped ft down among us unless we go to <lb/>
rich man vet he is independent j g.,,.,.,. was never thought of- to help ourselves. We must <lb/>
Mr. Smith did take some off our j pull for <lb/>
floor and sold it elsewhere at <lb/>
about dollars less than it <lb/>
brought here. <lb/>
Going back to his first charge of <lb/>
there hiving been orders on this <lb/>
market and there are <lb/>
What caused it Any one with <lb/>
a grain of sense about tobacco <lb/>
would say that extreme high <lb/>
prices would kill an order <lb/>
anywhere. The buyer <lb/>
whom he says he offered a profit <lb/>
his purchases that day is in <lb/>
our while we write and says <lb/>
is on a prosperous road to <lb/>
His views on tobacco <lb/>
culture are as good as those of <lb/>
any eastern North Carolina, <lb/>
and while he is not an assuming <lb/>
personage any means, yet he <lb/>
will take great pleasure in giving <lb/>
advice to those who wish it. The <lb/>
gentleman referred to is Mr. F. <lb/>
M. Smith. Sr. <lb/>
Richmond. making <lb/>
efforts to become the lead <lb/>
loose in the world. <lb/>
it was that the tobacconists <lb/>
of Richmond got together and <lb/>
offered to Davis v Gregory, of <lb/>
Oxford, large inducements to <lb/>
move there and operate the Plan <lb/>
tars Warehouse, thinking by this <lb/>
they they would control largely <lb/>
the county crop. In <lb/>
this they failed for <lb/>
good to fine <lb/>
fine to fancy <lb/>
the drummer never made him any j Wrappers, common <lb/>
offer whatever. The cutters that I <lb/>
Office of O. L Joyner. <lb/>
N. C, Mar. 1804- <lb/>
QUOTATIONS. <lb/>
Tips, green to <lb/>
Greenish yellow to <lb/>
Smokers, common to good to <lb/>
good to lino B to IS <lb/>
Cutters, common to good to <lb/>
to <lb/>
motel <lb/>
to <lb/>
medium <lb/>
ho speaks of as selling for <lb/>
with us are white wrappers and <lb/>
sell for Cutters sold for <lb/>
in ten years, if they ever did. <lb/>
Mr. J. J. Hires had not bought <lb/>
place of Davis Gregory was worth of tobacco in two <lb/>
filled by some one else and months he left and he <lb/>
the world and business continue <lb/>
to wag along. They Rich- <lb/>
next came to East- <lb/>
North Carolina and took from <lb/>
Rocky Mount Mr. 8- 8- Berger. <lb/>
seemed to be the most <lb/>
e warehouseman there. Since <lb/>
his going to Richmond nothing <lb/>
much has been heard of him in <lb/>
the way of controlling Eastern <lb/>
never shipped a pound of tobacco <lb/>
to his mar let he was in <lb/>
Greenville. Only a few days be- <lb/>
fore Mr. Rives left we heard him <lb/>
speak of selling one package of <lb/>
tobacco in Danville, Va., and <lb/>
losing twenty dollars on it. This <lb/>
of course is not the half of what <lb/>
he said but every statement that <lb/>
he made of importance about the <lb/>
good <lb/>
fine to fancy <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
It to generally conceded iv alt who <lb/>
have tried and their <lb/>
Salvation Oil is the best liniment <lb/>
in the market to-day. It is coin pound- <lb/>
ed only of the beet ingredients, and i <lb/>
guaranteed to he positively pure. e B. <lb/>
Interpreting a Dream Book, <lb/>
North Carolina tobacco. Greenville market was an untruth <lb/>
suppose Rocky Mount sold as <lb/>
much this year as They <lb/>
next tried the buyers and carried <lb/>
from Rocky Mr. <lb/>
man one of their principal buyers <lb/>
but his place was soon tilled and <lb/>
then Mr. R- W. Royster, who it <lb/>
was thought at one time held the <lb/>
lock and key to the Greenville- <lb/>
market, was induced to make <lb/>
Richmond his home. <lb/>
standing all this each place has <lb/>
been thoroughly and promptly <lb/>
and the eastern markets <lb/>
have gained every year. To our <lb/>
mind it is clear that the farmers <lb/>
will never be gulled into <lb/>
any market to the exclusion <lb/>
of their home market, and the <lb/>
ruination of their own <lb/>
so plain that his hearers, or some <lb/>
of them, became disgusted. <lb/>
remedy is becoming so well <lb/>
known and so popular a- to need no <lb/>
mention. All ham used <lb/>
Electric hitters the Hung <lb/>
purer medicine doe- not exist <lb/>
Hid it la guaranteed to do all that is <lb/>
claimed. Electric Hitlers will cure all <lb/>
M-es of the Liver and Kidney, <lb/>
remove Boils. Salt Rheum and <lb/>
affections caused impute Mood <lb/>
Will drive Malaria from the system <lb/>
and prevent as well a cure all <lb/>
cure of Headache. <lb/>
and Electric, <lb/>
guaranteed, <lb/>
r money Price <lb/>
per t us brag <lb/>
People must read <lb/>
and they want <lb/>
nice, good Books. <lb/>
If they can ; had <lb/>
FREE <lb/>
. The following <lb/>
editorial <lb/>
seared in last week's Atlanta <lb/>
Constitution, in our opinion the <lb/>
is the life of trade and I ablest paper published <lb/>
whenever the farmers Rich j of the capital city and truly <lb/>
or any other market in all its teaching, <lb/>
monopolize their crops compel, article covers so nearly the <lb/>
is killed and hence the life in <lb/>
trade is gone. <lb/>
i same ground which we were <lb/>
j preparing to write, when look <lb/>
Beware of Ointment fir Catarrh Over the editorial page, we <lb/>
Contains Mercury. j thoughts embodied in <lb/>
we <lb/>
whole system w hen entering; it can command and hence we re <lb/>
the surfaces. Such articles ; invite every citizen of <lb/>
should never be except in , <lb/>
fr m reputable physicians, as ; to read nod think it. <lb/>
ten to; we were a gm ,. b <lb/>
good you can possibly derive from . . , . , J , -y <lb/>
Cure starting to school we <lb/>
d by F. J. A Co., To- ed why was it that Georgia was <lb/>
contains no aim is MM I ,. ,, . ,, . , ,, . <lb/>
the Empire State of the <lb/>
A married woman, living <lb/>
in the East End, had a peculiar <lb/>
dream the evening. She <lb/>
dreamed that she was down town <lb/>
on Euclid avenue with her baby <lb/>
and was preparing to board a car <lb/>
to go home. The step of the new <lb/>
Euclid avenue motor was rather <lb/>
high and she requested a gentle- <lb/>
man to hold her baby while she <lb/>
boarded the car. He consented, <lb/>
but before he could retort; the <lb/>
to the arms of its mother, <lb/>
the car started and left without <lb/>
child. grief of the <lb/>
woman was so intense and so <lb/>
troubled was her mind that she <lb/>
awoke. Her relief at finding <lb/>
all a dream was so great that she <lb/>
decided to buy a book on dreams <lb/>
and learn what it all signified. <lb/>
Yesterday she called at a down <lb/>
town book store related her <lb/>
dream to the clerk, who chanced <lb/>
to be an acquaintance. She <lb/>
chased tho book and turned to the <lb/>
index, where she found that such <lb/>
a dream as she experienced fore <lb/>
told the dreamer would re- <lb/>
twice as much as she had <lb/>
lost. <lb/>
would I the said <lb/>
to the clerk, innocently, <lb/>
would be twice as much as she <lb/>
had lost. <lb/>
would I sh- said <lb/>
to the clerk, innocently, <lb/>
would be twice as much to as <lb/>
my baby <lb/>
said the clerk <lb/>
and she has not to <lb/>
him Deal <lb/>
era. <lb/>
It is all the better. <lb/>
The question is <lb/>
HOW <lb/>
Can hooks be had for nothing P <lb/>
read and <lb/>
you will learn how <lb/>
to get own <lb/>
selection from the list <lb/>
of splendid books printed <lb/>
below, or as many <lb/>
of th m as you want <lb/>
ABSOLUTELY <lb/>
Here is our oiler <lb/>
Any one who Is already a subscriber to <lb/>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
and will bring or send us one <lb/>
NEW subscriber a re- <lb/>
for a year, will be <lb/>
one of the following <lb/>
books. Two subscribers for mouths <lb/>
or four subscribers for months counts <lb/>
the same as one yearly subscriber. <lb/>
Get u many as you Ban <lb/>
receive a corresponding <lb/>
her of books. <lb/>
they must be now <lb/>
Notice to Ore <lb/>
The undersigned having outlined as <lb/>
administrator on the estate of J. J. B. <lb/>
Barber on the 3rd day of February <lb/>
1394. this is to notify all persons <lb/>
claims against, the estate to preset. <lb/>
them within mouths from this date <lb/>
for pay or notice will be plead <lb/>
in oar of their recovery, all persons <lb/>
wing the estate will I and <lb/>
at one e. Fob, 3rd, 1894. <lb/>
B. F. PATRICK, <lb/>
Ad of J- J. B <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
TRADE <lb/>
MARK <lb/>
For the Cure o all Skis <lb/>
This Preparation baa Men in use <lb/>
years, and wherever know ha <lb/>
been in steady demand. It has been en <lb/>
by the leading physicians all <lb/>
-be country, and has effected cures <lb/>
all other remedies, with attention <lb/>
the most experienced physicians, <lb/>
for years failed. This Ointment is <lb/>
long standing and the high reputation <lb/>
which it has obtained is owing entirely <lb/>
x its efficacy, as but little effort ha <lb/>
ever been made to bring It before the <lb/>
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb/>
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb/>
Dollar. All Cash Olden promptly at- <lb/>
tended to. Address all orders and <lb/>
communications to <lb/>
T. F. <lb/>
Greenville. N. <lb/>
La <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb/>
Here is a lit of I he books from which <lb/>
to make your selection <lb/>
Under Currents. <lb/>
Mi non. <lb/>
Soldiers Three. <lb/>
Preachers. <lb/>
Lord nod Lady. <lb/>
One Maid's Mischief. <lb/>
Her Strange Amour. <lb/>
Bag of Diamonds. <lb/>
Error. <lb/>
Majors Daughter. <lb/>
Crown of Shame. <lb/>
Mine Host's Dangler. <lb/>
Jet. <lb/>
Eve, <lb/>
A Life. <lb/>
Carmen. <lb/>
art <lb/>
All Sons an I Conditions of men. <lb/>
Fast Existence; <lb/>
The Lament of Dives. <lb/>
Way to tie Heart. <lb/>
II tied. <lb/>
Ball Night. <lb/>
Little. Rebel. <lb/>
Tour of the World in Days. <lb/>
Almost <lb/>
Affair of Honor. <lb/>
I R. Mystery. <lb/>
By Right. <lb/>
Oriental Mr. Jacobs. <lb/>
Ni meats. <lb/>
Pioneer. <lb/>
Mi Mystery. <lb/>
House on the Marsh. <lb/>
Oil Twist. <lb/>
Fortune. <lb/>
Dear Life. <lb/>
Willy Reilly. <lb/>
Sock t y. <lb/>
Beyond the End. <lb/>
Gambler. <lb/>
the Stage and <lb/>
His Last <lb/>
wile. <lb/>
Story a Crime. <lb/>
Vat or <lb/>
At the Merer. <lb/>
Blind Fate. <lb/>
Heroes Hero <lb/>
Angie or Devil. <lb/>
Lyre. <lb/>
Sake. <lb/>
of His <lb/>
ii Won. <lb/>
Bear these are in t books <lb/>
hut every one of them <lb/>
in and north cents to <lb/>
You can tie ks at <lb/>
K office and see just what <lb/>
you are <lb/>
TAR SERVICE <lb/>
Steamers leave Washington for Green- <lb/>
ville and touching at all land- <lb/>
on Tar River <lb/>
and Friday at A. M. <lb/>
Returning leave at A Id. <lb/>
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb/>
Greenville A. M. same days. <lb/>
These depart u res are subject of <lb/>
water on Tar River. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with steam <lb/>
era of The Norfolk, and Wash- <lb/>
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore <lb/>
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb/>
Shippers should their goods <lb/>
marked via Dominion Iron <lb/>
New York. from <lb/>
Norfolk <lb/>
more Steamboat from <lb/>
more. Miners from <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. SON. <lb/>
Age <lb/>
Washington N. U <lb/>
CHERRY, <lb/>
Agent, <lb/>
Greenville, N C. <lb/>
Miss Maria <lb/>
BOOK <lb/>
containing receipts which she has <lb/>
lately written for the <lb/>
SENT FREE <lb/>
on application to Co., <lb/>
Park Place, New York. Drop a <lb/>
for it and always buy <lb/>
Company's <lb/>
Extract of Beer. <lb/>
internally, directly upon the <lb/>
Mod surf-ices of tie South. Reasons wore of I , , Miss <lb/>
in buying Halls Catarrh , . ,, , ., h- N. J., <lb/>
tun if sure ran the the real her was <lb/>
made in To-. the Atlanta Constitution other I several months a s- <lb/>
J. . .-.- ., ere cough would have turned , <lb/>
hf papers and men as but for the u e of lot <lb/>
j battle. i editors have in placing Cough -syrup.- <lb/>
. it if <lb/>
F. <lb/>
Is <lb/>
i. <lb/>
Ml COLLECTING <lb/>
AGENCY. <lb/>
RUNT A <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
en barn and stables, <lb/>
A small house, con- <lb/>
I'm nice neigh- <lb/>
lot on Greene street, <lb/>
rooms and kitchen, splendid <lb/>
A small house just an I <lb/>
a lion- es. <lb/>
Also sale or --put ab mt acres <lb/>
land, good tenement house, tine fruit <lb/>
trees end patch, adjoining <lb/>
corporate limits. Term <lb/>
nice residence. <lb/>
and stables, splendid <lb/>
A fine vacant lot, x <lb/>
A flue residence m <lb/>
house and lot, <lb/>
JACKSON <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
COMPANY <lb/>
MANUFACTURERS OF <lb/>
-f <lb/>
AND OFFICE <lb/>
FURNITURE. <lb/>
and Churches seated <lb/>
in the manner. Offices <lb/>
Send for <lb/>
ATLANTIC NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
R. R. TIME TABLE. <lb/>
In Effect December <lb/>
LAST. <lb/>
GOING W ET. <lb/>
Pas. Daily <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
I'M. <lb/>
P. M<lb/>
P. M <lb/>
I Pass. Daily <lb/>
STATIONS Ex Sun. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
r-8 <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
Train connects with Wilmington <lb/>
train bound No. th, leaving <lb/>
a. m., and with D. <lb/>
train West, leaving Goldsboro p. m. <lb/>
Train connect with Richmond <lb/>
Danville train, arriving at <lb/>
p. m., and with W. A W. train <lb/>
from the North at p. m. <lb/>
S. L. <lb/>
Superintendent. <lb/>
rooms and kitchen. <lb/>
IR BALSAM<lb/>
CONSUMPTIVE <lb/>
la <lb/>
Isn't This Worth Investigating <lb/>
CONVINCER NO. <lb/>
medicine will give <lb/>
the permanent relief that <lb/>
the does. In <lb/>
my own case of <lb/>
Dyspepsia it cured me after <lb/>
all else <lb/>
W. R. French, <lb/>
Wilmington, N. C. <lb/>
CONVINCED NO. <lb/>
W solicit bi will be <lb/>
IT HAM CURED <lb/>
I got tired taking mod <lb/>
and bought an <lb/>
i two ago. It <lb/>
has done me an infinite <lb/>
good. Am as well <lb/>
as ever in my <lb/>
Wm. E. Worth, <lb/>
Wilmington, N. C. <lb/>
glad to Information about <lb/>
ATLANTIC D. O. <lb/>
Oft <lb/>
i J <lb/>
With the only complete bicycle plant in the world, <lb/>
every part of the machine is made from A to Z, is it <lb/>
any wonder that Victor Bicycles are acknowledged leaders <lb/>
There's no bicycle like a Victor, and no plant so grandly <lb/>
complete as the one devoted exclusively to the manufacture <lb/>
of this king of wheels. <lb/>
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb/>
BOSTON, <lb/>
DENVER, <lb/>
SAN <lb/>
J. S. JENKINS CO., <lb/>
LEAF TOBACCO BROKERS <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
Ample Facilities for Re-drying. Large Stock <lb/>
Order <lb/>
Bawls, Bankers, and Board of Trade Greenville <lb/>
WHEN IT COMES TO- <lb/>
Yon miss it if you fail to cull for <lb/>
what yon want in this line at tho <lb/>
make a specialty of this class of goods and if <lb/>
Quality, Quantity <lb/>
count for anything with you, come to us. <lb/>
a pack up- <lb/>
a up. <lb/>
Letter, Fools Cup and <lb/>
Legal Cap equally low. <lb/>
Tablet from cent up. <lb/>
Pencils cents per <lb/>
dozen up. <lb/>
Pencils dos. up. <lb/>
Points fit in cents <lb/>
per dozen u p. <lb/>
A FEW SPECIALTIES <lb/>
We ate solo agents for A <lb/>
tho very best for school and <lb/>
purposes. Our Cream Mucilage boats any <lb/>
on the market. Our Diamond <lb/>
and Magic Cement will anything but broken <lb/>
hearts. <lb/>
Every business man should have a D <lb/>
KER FOUNTAIN <lb/>
last a life time and are sold nowhere else in <lb/>
town. <lb/>
Our Box Paper for polite correspondence <lb/>
the prettiest in town. We also keep Mourning <lb/>
Paper. Then have Slates, Blank Books, <lb/>
Memorandum Books, Time Books, Erasers, Rub- <lb/>
Bands, Pencil Holders. Automatic Pencils, <lb/>
Sponge Cups, Ink Stands, Paper Cutters, Book <lb/>
Marks, Pen Holders and lots of other things. <lb/>
BOOKS AND NOVELS. <lb/>
If you want anything to read come look over <lb/>
our supply. Any book not on hand will or- <lb/>
toe yon. <lb/>
Now remember the place -and the only place <lb/>
at which you can get these goods at such low <lb/>
prices, <lb/>
BOOK STORK. <lb/>
ft <lb/>
hEAR FIVE POINTS <lb/>
The <lb/>
Least M <lb/>
. L DOUGLAS <lb/>
SHOE <lb/>
and Dress Shoe. <lb/>
83.60 Police Shoe, Soles. <lb/>
82.50, for <lb/>
and 81.75 for Boys. <lb/>
LADIES AND MISSES, <lb/>
82.60 <lb/>
ofTer W. I. <lb/>
hoes t a rod <lb/>
m tho <lb/>
om tho bottom, put him <lb/>
down as n <lb/>
re easy fitting, give better <lb/>
, ice advertised than any other make. Try one and be con- <lb/>
of W. L. name and price on the which <lb/>
, thousand; dollars annually to those who wear them. <lb/>
, of W. L. Shoes gain customers, which helps to <lb/>
In heir full line of can afford to mil at a la <lb/>
an in footwear of dealer <lb/>
Us, . I. w. Mass. <lb/>
R. L. BRO. Farmville. N. C. <lb/>
; in <lb/>
Capitalist. <lb/>
V I i come a capitalist <lb/>
v . it income mid invest- <lb/>
i it in policy of the <lb/>
Suitable Life; <lb/>
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cure n capital fr <lb/>
m capital of thus <lb/>
acquiring estate which <lb/>
i c to your heirs, or re- <lb/>
. i as a fund for own <lb/>
t old age, if your life <lb/>
ill <lb/>
a stop v ill prompt <lb/>
t nave, will strengthen your <lb/>
will increase your con- <lb/>
, will you from <lb/>
cars will give you lasting <lb/>
satisfaction, <lb/>
Is <lb/>
The Security Absolute. <lb/>
I i i perfect develop i <lb/>
of life is <lb/>
the right time to pet facts <lb/>
figures. Address <lb/>
W. J. Manager, <lb/>
ROCK C. <lb/>
BREAKFAST-SUPPER. <lb/>
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. <lb/>
COCOA <lb/>
BOILING WATER OR MILK.<lb/>
I . <lb/>
T.- <lb/>
com- i <lb/>
pounded from a n <lb/>
widely used by the best <lb/>
en authorities are <lb/>
in a form is be- <lb/>
coming the every- <lb/>
I . <lb/>
. <lb/>
but promptly upon ll <lb/>
stomach an I Intestines; . <lb/>
dyspepsia, habitual <lb/>
offensive breath and <lb/>
One en at the <lb/>
first symptom in.,. <lb/>
biliousness, dizziness, <lb/>
after eating, or depression of <lb/>
spirits, will surely and quickly <lb/>
remove the whole difficulty. <lb/>
may or <lb/>
of nearest druggist.<lb/>
Tab <lb/>
are easy to take, <lb/>
quick to act, and <lb/>
save B doc-t <lb/>
tor's<lb/>
WELDON B.<lb/>
TRAINS <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
Oct daily Fast Mail, <lb/>
ex <lb/>
Weldon 12,35 pm pm <lb/>
Ar pm pm <lb/>
K pm <lb/>
pm <lb/>
Mt p m pm <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar Florence <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
TRAINS NORTH <lb/>
No <lb/>
daily daily <lb/>
ft <lb/>
Florence <lb/>
Fayetteville <lb/>
Selma <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson<lb/>
am<lb/>
am p <lb/>
No <lb/>
dally <lb/>
ex Sun. <lb/>
Ai Rocky Mont <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
pm <lb/>
except <lb/>
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb/>
Weldon 3.40 p. tn. Halifax 4.40 <lb/>
m., arrives Scotland Neck 4.48 p. <lb/>
Greenville p. m., Kinston p <lb/>
leaves Kinston 7.20 a. <lb/>
Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving Hal <lb/>
at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. m, <lb/>
except <lb/>
Trains on Washington leave <lb/>
Washington 7.00 a, in. arrives <lb/>
8.40 a. in. Tarboro 9.60; returning <lb/>
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m., Parmele 6.00 <lb/>
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.30 p, m. <lb/>
Daily except Sunday. <lb/>
trains on Neck Branch. <lb/>
leaves Tarboro, N C, via Alb <lb/>
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sit <lb/>
day, M, Sunday a P M, <lb/>
Plymouth 9.20 p. m., 5.20 p. <lb/>
Returning leaves Plymouth daily <lb/>
6.30 a. m., Sunday 10.00 <lb/>
N C, 10.86 AM 12,80. <lb/>
on Southern Division, <lb/>
Fayetteville Branch leave Fayette- <lb/>
ville a m, arrive Rowland p m. <lb/>
Returning leave p m- <lb/>
Fayetteville p m. Daily ex- <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Train cm Midland N C Branch l av <lb/>
daily except Sunday, CO A M <lb/>
rive Smith Held, N C, AM. Re <lb/>
N C AM <lb/>
Iva Goldsboro, NO A M, <lb/>
Train <lb/>
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville SO <lb/>
P Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
Hope A M, Nashville <lb/>
arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
M, except <lb/>
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. Iv <lb/>
Latta 7.30 p. m arrive D unbar p <lb/>
m. Returning leave Dun bar a. m. <lb/>
arrive 7.16 a. ls <lb/>
Sunday <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch <lb/>
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, it <lb/>
leave <lb/>
ton at A M, and P. X conn X <lb/>
Warsaw with Nos. ind <lb/>
Train No. <lb/>
Weldon tor all point North dally, <lb/>
vis Richmond, and except Stir-. <lb/>
day via Bay Line, alto at Rocky Moan l <lb/>
daily except, Sunday with Norfolk A <lb/>
railroad tor Norfolk and <lb/>
points via Norfolk, <lb/>
General <lb/>
R. <lb/>
v, <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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