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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 4 April 1894</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18940404</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 4 April 1894</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
          <dc:creator></dc:creator>
          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18940404</dc:date>
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                <p>
DO <lb />
NO <lb />
Thai the place to <lb />
Buy your <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
STATIONERY <lb />
IS <lb />
AT <lb />
Reflector Bookstore. <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
People must read <lb />
and they want <lb />
good Books. <lb />
If MO be had <lb />
FREE <lb />
It is all the better. <lb />
The is <lb />
HOW <lb />
books be had for nothing <lb />
Just read on and <lb />
you will learn how <lb />
to get your own <lb />
selection from the list <lb />
of splendid books printed <lb />
below, or as many <lb />
of as you want <lb />
ABSOLUTELY F RE <lb />
Here is our offer <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 months <lb />
or four subscribers for months counts <lb />
the same as one yearly subscriber. <lb />
Get as many as yon can ands. <lb />
receive a <lb />
of books. Remember <lb />
they must be new <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
D. J. WHICH Editor <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, <lb />
joints I <lb />
VOL. XIII. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1894. <lb />
NO. <lb />
Is the place to find the <lb />
REFLECTOR OFFICE <lb />
ONE DOLLAR and <lb />
get your Homo Paper a year. <lb />
This Office for Job Printing <lb />
Here is a list of the books from which <lb />
to make your selection <lb />
Under Currents. <lb />
Soldiers Three. <lb />
Lord Lady. <lb />
One Mischief. <lb />
Her Strange Amour. <lb />
Bag of Diamonds. <lb />
Earl's Error. <lb />
Major Daughter. <lb />
Crown of Shame. <lb />
Mine <lb />
Jet. <lb />
Eve, <lb />
A Life. <lb />
Carmen. <lb />
Art of <lb />
All Sort, Conditions of men. <lb />
Fast Existence. <lb />
The Lament of Dives- <lb />
Way to the Heart. <lb />
Misled. <lb />
Ball Night. <lb />
Little Rebel. <lb />
Tour of the World in Days, <lb />
Almost <lb />
Affair of Honor. <lb />
R. B. Mystery. <lb />
By Right. <lb />
Mr. Jacobs, <lb />
Nemesis. <lb />
Pioneer. <lb />
Baleful Influence. <lb />
Mexican Mystery. <lb />
House on the Marsh. <lb />
Twist. <lb />
Fortune. <lb />
Dear Life. <lb />
Avatar. <lb />
Willy Reilly. <lb />
Society. <lb />
Beyond the End. <lb />
The Gambler. <lb />
On the and OIL <lb />
His Last Passion. <lb />
Vagrant Wife. <lb />
Story of a Crime. <lb />
Matron or Maid. <lb />
At the World's Mercy. <lb />
Blind Fate. <lb />
Heroes and Hero Worships. <lb />
Angle or Devil. <lb />
Jane Eyre. <lb />
For Sake. <lb />
Yellow Mask. <lb />
Master of His Fate, <lb />
Cleverly Won. <lb />
Nurse Bevels Mistake. <lb />
Bear in these are not books <lb />
but every one of them U beautifully <lb />
bound in cloth and worth cents to <lb />
You can examine the books at the <lb />
Reflector office and see just what <lb />
you are getting. <lb />
STATE NEWS <lb />
Things Mentioned in our State Ex- <lb />
changes that are of Genera Interest. <lb />
Cream of the News <lb />
Thus far the Populists have <lb />
held conventions in twenty-three <lb />
counties. <lb />
A gold find has been made in <lb />
Chatham county, by two Mon- <lb />
Miners. <lb />
Greensboro is to have a <lb />
phone exchange. The material <lb />
has been ordered. <lb />
The farmers in several of the <lb />
eastern counties are planting <lb />
more potatoes than was ever <lb />
known before. <lb />
Kinston Free Press Mr. J. M- <lb />
of Vance township, <lb />
lost a fine cow last week. It <lb />
jumped in a ditch and broke its <lb />
neck. It was- valued at about <lb />
Lexington Bad roads <lb />
cut off trade from this and every <lb />
town from to per <lb />
cent. This has been calculated <lb />
to be a fair estimate. We need <lb />
good roads worse we need <lb />
anything else in the universe. <lb />
The commission of twelve vet- <lb />
recently appointed by Gov. <lb />
Carr to visit the battle ground of <lb />
Antietam locate the position <lb />
of North Carolina troops there, <lb />
expect to leave April 25th, to re- <lb />
main on the ground several days. <lb />
Rey. D. R. a prominent <lb />
minister of the North Carolina <lb />
Conference, died suddenly last <lb />
week at the residence of his son, <lb />
Col. Deceased was for <lb />
several years presiding elder of <lb />
the Salisbury district and <lb />
dent of Thomasville Female Col- <lb />
New Mr. Eli <lb />
committed suicide Mon- <lb />
day night, near Maysville, by cut- <lb />
ting his throat with a razor. No <lb />
cause can be for the <lb />
reckless rash deed. He was about <lb />
thirty-five years of age not <lb />
pated at all and of good steady <lb />
habits- <lb />
Concord Bill <lb />
a colored man of <lb />
Concord, died last Saturday. We <lb />
learn that his sister, who lived at <lb />
China Grove, was telegraphed for <lb />
to come down to the funeral, when <lb />
the answer came that about the <lb />
time her brother died here his <lb />
sister was struck by and <lb />
killed. <lb />
President George T. Winston, <lb />
of the University, has accepted <lb />
an invitation by the executive <lb />
committee of the South Carolina <lb />
Teacher's Association to address <lb />
that body at their annual meeting <lb />
in next July. <lb />
dent Winston is having frequent <lb />
invitations to South Carolina, and <lb />
he hopes to see fifty students at <lb />
the University from that State <lb />
next fall. <lb />
Charlotte Two <lb />
tic affairs broke the monotony of <lb />
the unusually quiet arena <lb />
day. Mr. Will Manning and Mr. <lb />
Henry got into a dispute <lb />
on East Trade street, which be- <lb />
fore it was over drew blood. Mr. <lb />
Manning got cut in the arm and <lb />
across the back of his hand. Mr. <lb />
D. met Mr. B. E. <lb />
Lawing in presented <lb />
his bill. His payment, Mr. <lb />
says, was a knock down <lb />
blow. <lb />
ATTENTION VETERANS. <lb />
A WORD WITH THE DEAD. <lb />
HEADQUARTERS UNITED <lb />
VETERANS, <lb />
New Orleans, La., March <lb />
Dear Sir J. B- Gordon, <lb />
Commanding United <lb />
Veterans, respectfully requests <lb />
the press, both daily and weekly, <lb />
of the whole country to aid the <lb />
patriotic and benevolent objects <lb />
of the United Confederate Veter- <lb />
ans by publishing date reunion is <lb />
to take place at Birmingham, <lb />
Ala., on Wednesday and Thurs- <lb />
day, April 25th and 26th, 1894, <lb />
with editorial notice of the or- <lb />
or publish this letter. <lb />
Also to urge Ex-Confederate <lb />
soldiers and sailors everywhere <lb />
to form themselves into local as- <lb />
and send applications <lb />
to these headquarters for papers <lb />
to organize in time to participate <lb />
in the great Reunion and thus <lb />
unite with their comrades in car- <lb />
out the laudable and phi- <lb />
objects of the <lb />
on. <lb />
Business of the greatest <lb />
will demand careful con. <lb />
during the Fourth An- <lb />
as the <lb />
best methods of securing <lb />
history, and to enlist each <lb />
State in the compilation and pres- <lb />
of the history of her <lb />
Citizen soldiery ; the benevolent <lb />
care through State aid or other- <lb />
wise of disabled, or aged <lb />
Veterans and the widows and <lb />
orphans of our fallen brothers in- <lb />
arms ; the care of the graves of <lb />
our known and unknown dead <lb />
buried at Gettysburg, Fort War <lb />
Camps Morton, Chase, Doug- <lb />
las, Oakland Cemetery, at <lb />
go, Johnson's Island, Cairo and <lb />
at all other points, to see that <lb />
they are annually decorated, the <lb />
headstones preserved and pro- <lb />
and complete lists of the <lb />
names of our dead heroes with <lb />
the location of their last resting <lb />
places furnished to their friends <lb />
and relatives through the <lb />
um of our camps, thus rescuing <lb />
their names from oblivion and <lb />
handing them down in history; <lb />
the consider of the different <lb />
movements, plans and means to <lb />
erect a monument to the memory <lb />
of Jefferson Davis, President of <lb />
the Confederate States of Amer- <lb />
also to aid in building <lb />
to other great leaders, <lb />
soldiers and sailors of the South ; <lb />
to aid in securing a pension from <lb />
the States lately composing the <lb />
Confederate States for Mrs. <lb />
Davis; to make such <lb />
changes in the constitution and <lb />
by-laws as experience may <lb />
and other matters of <lb />
interest. <lb />
Total number of camps now ad- <lb />
with applications in <lb />
for nearly one hundred more. <lb />
Following list of camps by <lb />
N. E- Texas Division, ; West <lb />
Texas Division, S- E. Texas <lb />
Division, N. W. Texas Di- <lb />
vision, total Texas, Ala- <lb />
; Mississippi, j Lou- <lb />
Arkansas, Ken- <lb />
South Carolina, <lb />
Florida, Georgia, Ten- <lb />
North Carolina, <lb />
Virginia, Oklahoma, Mis- <lb />
Indian Territory, II <lb />
District of Columbia; them <lb />
West Virginia, <lb />
Very respectfully, <lb />
Geo. <lb />
Gen. and Chief of Staff. <lb />
The Wilson Advance <lb />
it a fact Wilson has over <lb />
fifty business houses that don't <lb />
advertise at all in the town pa- <lb />
per Such is evidently the truth- <lb />
Many good business men here <lb />
seemingly see no advantage at <lb />
all in advertising. We think <lb />
there is, and have seen it demon- <lb />
long before we went into <lb />
the newspaper business. We <lb />
have been advertiser for years. <lb />
But, suppose it does not pay T <lb />
Can our best business men afford <lb />
to show this lack of enterprise to <lb />
the outside <lb />
Our esteemed contemporary is <lb />
right- If a merchant has any <lb />
thing worth having it is worth <lb />
advertising. If his merchandise <lb />
is a really good article for the <lb />
price at which he will sell it, it <lb />
will pay him to let the people <lb />
know it through an advertisement, <lb />
or how else will they find it out <lb />
unless he could see everybody <lb />
and tell thorn by word of mouth. <lb />
A man might have gold dollars to <lb />
sell at a quarter a piece, but if he <lb />
would stick them in his sleeves <lb />
and not let it be known, how <lb />
would anybody know such a bar- <lb />
gain could be had. The <lb />
is daily read by not less than <lb />
people, if a merchant <lb />
knows how to write an attractive, <lb />
catching advertisement, provided <lb />
he has anything worth advertising <lb />
it is easy to see what a fine op- <lb />
he has to reach the <lb />
public quickly. A live man <lb />
makes his advertising pay, but <lb />
some old who writes a <lb />
of an advertisement stands a <lb />
poor showing. Live advertising <lb />
is bound to pay and all <lb />
are fully aware of it. Thought <lb />
ought to be given to the best <lb />
methods of advertising and ad- <lb />
should be prepared <lb />
carefully, as it is a matter of the <lb />
greatest importance. <lb />
it does not asks <lb />
our contemporary, our best <lb />
business men afford to show this <lb />
lack of enterprise to the outside <lb />
The Advance might <lb />
have gone on to say that it would <lb />
pay the merchants to advertise <lb />
in order to make their town pa- <lb />
per thrifty and enterprising so <lb />
that it will be creditable to the <lb />
they can point to it with <lb />
pride, for as soon as a newspaper <lb />
man is prosperous he inevitably <lb />
makes it show in the quality of <lb />
paper he gets up. A lot of <lb />
would give a big lot of money <lb />
just to have a paper worthy of <lb />
their town, but they won't ad- <lb />
thing that will only <lb />
build up the paper but will pay <lb />
the advertiser besides. Poor ad- <lb />
poor paper; poor paper, <lb />
poor Mes- <lb />
A sharper has been reap- <lb />
a rich harvest among his <lb />
in the northern part of Louis- <lb />
He had a hair oil, which <lb />
he assured them would, by a few <lb />
use, make their hair as <lb />
straight as any white person's, <lb />
and in proof of his assertion, <lb />
showed them his own, which was <lb />
a well made wig. He traveled <lb />
from plantation to <lb />
took in a rich harvest. It is said <lb />
that on a single plantation in <lb />
southern Arkansas he took in <lb />
nearly one thousand dollars. The <lb />
oil was sold for one dollar a bot- <lb />
and there was an enormous <lb />
demand- The have been <lb />
it faithfully for the specified <lb />
time, but their wool is as kinky as <lb />
ever, and the fakir has <lb />
with his spoils. An anal- <lb />
of the hair oil shows it to be <lb />
a mixture of lard, axle grease and <lb />
kerosene. <lb />
Signs and Wonders. <lb />
SANCTITY OF THE PERSON. <lb />
Judge A. Pryor, as the <lb />
presiding official in the Court of <lb />
Common Pleas, New York, <lb />
Mr. Charles A. president <lb />
of the Southern Society, as his <lb />
referee, are interested participants <lb />
in a case that will establish a <lb />
wide-reaching point in the law of <lb />
personal liberty. During the last <lb />
Legislature, says the New York <lb />
correspondent of the Baltimore <lb />
Sun, a law was put through, with- <lb />
out attracting notice, in the inter- <lb />
est of the elevated that <lb />
requires parties suing for per- <lb />
injuries to submit to a <lb />
physical examination. A Miss <lb />
Lyon is demanding dam- <lb />
ages for injuries to her spine <lb />
received in a collision on the <lb />
North avenue line. The <lb />
ration's lawyers claimed the right <lb />
given them by this law, and Judge <lb />
Pryor had to concede <lb />
to it, and appointed Mr. <lb />
the to see that the com- <lb />
representatives conducted <lb />
it in a proper manner- <lb />
Miss Lyon's lawyer appeals <lb />
from Judge order on the <lb />
ground that it with a <lb />
decision of the United States <lb />
Supreme Court- A woman in <lb />
Indiana sued the Union Pacific <lb />
railway for injuries to her spine <lb />
caused by the fall of a sleeping- <lb />
car berth negligently constructed. <lb />
The company asked for a <lb />
cal examination by its own <lb />
and the Circuit Court of the <lb />
State held that it had no legal <lb />
right to enforce such order. <lb />
The United States Court, in an <lb />
opinion by Justice Gray, said this <lb />
decision was good, as such <lb />
examination was an invasion of <lb />
the sanctity of the person to a <lb />
degree the law did not recognize, <lb />
and that it was not until quite <lb />
lately that a court of common law <lb />
pretended to have such power as <lb />
was claimed by the company. <lb />
Justices Brewer and Brown, <lb />
however,, dissented, the former <lb />
that such actions for dam- <lb />
ages were only of recent origin, <lb />
and that if physical examinations <lb />
were undergone to prove injuries, <lb />
it would be only common-law fair- <lb />
to submit to them also to <lb />
prove the opposite of experts. <lb />
Since the Lyon case came up a <lb />
bill has been introduced in <lb />
Legislature allowing woman who <lb />
must be examined in proceedings <lb />
for damages to claim the services <lb />
of a woman doctor under order of <lb />
the court. Under this inspiration <lb />
Judge Pryor has ordered Dr. <lb />
Kate S. Sterling to make the <lb />
examination in the second case <lb />
of this nature before of <lb />
Mary who wants <lb />
damages from the New York <lb />
Roofing Company for injuries re- <lb />
from boiling tar used by <lb />
the company's employees, <lb />
which fell on her as she was pass- <lb />
along the street. <lb />
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPERS. <lb />
The Winston Sentinel <lb />
Many a Southern city can be <lb />
blamed for an insufficient support <lb />
of its newspapers. Compare a <lb />
Southern paper with a Western <lb />
paper published in towns of equal <lb />
size, and you will see that the <lb />
Western paper has not only more <lb />
revenue but more sources of <lb />
More merchants have <lb />
learned the skill and art which <lb />
make advertising more <lb />
of results and there is <lb />
parent a more general disposition <lb />
among professional men and <lb />
others to advertise for the town's <lb />
sake and to give patronage as a <lb />
mark of gratitude for a <lb />
efforts. A recent number of <lb />
the Record <lb />
The good which has been ac- <lb />
in the development <lb />
of the South by the work of its <lb />
newspapers can never be fully <lb />
measured. Under many <lb />
and often with but <lb />
support from the business <lb />
men of the community, a ma- <lb />
of Southern papers have <lb />
been persistently, day in and day <lb />
out, laboring for the <lb />
of that section- It is to be re <lb />
that the great work which <lb />
they have done has received so <lb />
little practical encouragement. <lb />
In other sections the sup- <lb />
port of newspapers is almost <lb />
universally regarded as a matter <lb />
of necessity, and every business <lb />
man makes it a part of his <lb />
to deal liberally with his <lb />
local papers. In the South, on <lb />
the contrary, the value of news- <lb />
papers is not so fully appreciated. <lb />
Business men generally do not <lb />
seem to understand that the news- <lb />
paper is not a luxury, but a <lb />
if they want to keep <lb />
up with the times, if they want to <lb />
discover new means of developing <lb />
their business, they must study <lb />
carefully the newspapers, and not <lb />
simply regard the newspaper as <lb />
to be glanced over <lb />
hurriedly and thrown aside- <lb />
The local papers should be lib- <lb />
supported, because the life <lb />
and energy of every town is <lb />
judged by the world at large by <lb />
the looks of its papers. The city <lb />
that has live, progressive pa- <lb />
per filled with the advertisements <lb />
of live, progressive merchants <lb />
will attract very little attention <lb />
from the outside business world. <lb />
Every man an in- <lb />
vestment in any Southern town <lb />
carefully studies its newspapers, <lb />
as he can largely judge by them <lb />
the character of the business men <lb />
of the place. <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report. <lb />
v Baking <lb />
Powder <lb />
ABSOLUTELY <lb />
Beware of Humbugs and <lb />
Right. <lb />
Beware of lightning rod A very respectable looking old <lb />
who wish to sell the farmer a colored citizen called at this office <lb />
lightning rod with bright yesterday and asked if he could <lb />
for the small sum of on get a copy of the Star of February <lb />
one and two years, credit. Listen 6th. It was found and handed to <lb />
not to his siren voice, but call him. Then he inquired if there <lb />
the dogs. He talks sweetly, only was any charge for it. This gave <lb />
to ensnare and get your money, our loquacious cashier an <lb />
Beware of the immortal and ever and he waxed eloquently, <lb />
lasting steel range worth only f , Said he old man, we <lb />
with all its fancy attachments and i charge five cents for it That's <lb />
water heaters. Listen not to his tho way make our living, in a <lb />
sweet and talk, for he manner. But let me say, old <lb />
makes you pay too dear for your , friend, you are not the first man <lb />
whistle. He sells you a cook- j who ever here and made the <lb />
range for on time. ; same inquiry. There's lots of <lb />
Kick out of your house the white folks who come here and <lb />
clock man with and moon look surprised when they are <lb />
attachments, for he thinks you charged five cents a copy for the <lb />
are a fool if yon pay him for paper; but not one of thorn is <lb />
a clock that you can buy for surprised when his baker charges <lb />
cash any day. The editor was of- him five cents for a loaf of bread, <lb />
in Charlotte i And, let me toll you, my colored <lb />
clock for I brother, it costs more to run one <lb />
Where are the suckers j first-class daily paper than it does <lb />
horses mortgaged farms and run every bakery in North <lb />
homes to buy a county or <lb />
State right for a patent North <lb />
Carolina quilting machine Quilt- <lb />
belongs not to this age of <lb />
progress, but is a of another <lb />
century, yet men bit at this pat- <lb />
At the close of this eloquent <lb />
address the cashier was <lb />
applauded by the editor and <lb />
proprietor, tho old colored <lb />
citizen handed in the nickel, with <lb />
Preserve the State Government. <lb />
A number of the colored <lb />
of have become <lb />
impressed with that belief that <lb />
the end of the world is near, says <lb />
the Landmark. Some of them <lb />
have seen unusual signs in the The slogan in the coming cam- <lb />
heavens recently and many other for the Democrats of North <lb />
incidents that tend to confirm Carolina, and indeed for all true <lb />
this belief. As a result many of <lb />
He tells what he saw. Mr. J. <lb />
Clear-field Co,, Pa., <lb />
writes father caught a severe <lb />
cold in mines, and he purchased a <lb />
bottle of Er. Bull's Cough Syrup <lb />
after using it he had no more <lb />
Took Him at His Word. <lb />
One of our local pastors whose <lb />
name we need mention, just <lb />
as he had given out the closing <lb />
hymn one night recently attempt- <lb />
ed to sit down on a chair which <lb />
at that moment happened to be <lb />
absent without excuse- Picking <lb />
himself up the best way he <lb />
he turned to his congregation who <lb />
were bravely trying to keep their <lb />
faces straight and <lb />
friends, there are occasions upon <lb />
which laughing is right and <lb />
proper, and this is one of them. <lb />
Laugh just as much as you <lb />
The congregation took him at his <lb />
Herald. <lb />
Electric Hirers. <lb />
Th-s remedy is becoming so well <lb />
known and so popular as to need no <lb />
special mention. All who have used <lb />
Bitters sing the same song of <lb />
purer medicine does not exist <lb />
and it is guaranteed to do all that is <lb />
claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all <lb />
diseases of the Liver and Kidney, will <lb />
remove Bolls. Salt Rheum and <lb />
other affections caused by impure blood <lb />
Will drive Malaria from the system <lb />
and prevent as well as cure all Malarial <lb />
cure of Headache, <lb />
and Electric, <lb />
satisfaction guaranteed, <lb />
i r money SO and <lb />
per bottle at Drug store. <lb />
are continuing long at <lb />
prayer and have their lamps <lb />
trimmed and burning, awaiting <lb />
the summons. One colored sister, <lb />
who is very devout on all <lb />
asseverates that she rose <lb />
up early one morning recently in <lb />
order to have a season of prayer <lb />
before beginning the day's duties, <lb />
and that while engaged in her <lb />
devotions she distinctly heard <lb />
the word This she <lb />
firmly believes was a warning <lb />
from the other world. <lb />
Perhaps the colored brethren <lb />
are right in getting themselves in <lb />
shipshape. With hens over in <lb />
Lincoln county laying eggs with <lb />
Ye, the End is <lb />
and is printed on <lb />
them, and a pilgrim down at <lb />
Greensboro a scroll with <lb />
the ten commandments on it <lb />
skeptics have intimated <lb />
that the pilgrim was drunk but <lb />
they can't charge that on the <lb />
it may be that <lb />
Bugs. <lb />
sons of the Old North State, <lb />
should be for <lb />
However much they may differ <lb />
and disagree in Federal affairs, <lb />
yet all should unite together in <lb />
retaining Democratic supremacy <lb />
in our State government, against <lb />
which no man can utter one word <lb />
of deserved censure. No <lb />
gent and unprejudiced person <lb />
will deny that Democratic rule in <lb />
North Carolina has been just, <lb />
economical and satisfactory. Then <lb />
why change or jeopardize it <lb />
We are pleased to note that the <lb />
leading dailies of this State are <lb />
urging our people to stand to- <lb />
for a continuance of good <lb />
government in North Carolina, <lb />
even if they differ as to Federal <lb />
affairs. Our local government- <lb />
State, county and <lb />
closest and nearest to the people, <lb />
and is that in which they natural <lb />
feel the deepest interest. Let <lb />
us then by all means retain and <lb />
preserve that government in the <lb />
hands of that party which for so <lb />
many years has administered it <lb />
so acceptably. Pittsboro Record. <lb />
A writes <lb />
bug eats the farmer's <lb />
bee moth eats his honey; <lb />
the bed bug fills him full of pain, <lb />
but tho humbug scoops his <lb />
To which a brother <lb />
lightning bug can't <lb />
thunder much, the big bug has <lb />
no fame, the has no <lb />
but he gets there just the <lb />
But still there are many <lb />
a humming bug in the third party <lb />
that will not get there all the <lb />
invested their savings of the I see now. <lb />
many years and are now poorer You s <lb />
and wiser. ton Star. <lb />
Look how many clever and in- <lb />
experienced countrymen listened <lb />
to the falsehoods of the patent <lb />
wire fence man, who fascinated <lb />
only to ensnare. Good farmers <lb />
with joy and hot haste foolishly <lb />
signed notes to a stranger for <lb />
something they had not seen. <lb />
Last year a quack medicine <lb />
man sold dirty water with ammo- <lb />
and paregoric and claimed it <lb />
would cure all the ills of humanity- <lb />
price was per yet <lb />
he sold two bottles for <lb />
and hundreds bought his worth- <lb />
less medicine with cash that was <lb />
due to others on accounts for sup- <lb />
plies, and some then owed the <lb />
Aurora and failed to pay. They <lb />
listened to his slick tongue and <lb />
bought- Next day he was drunk <lb />
and and slept in the <lb />
calaboose. Sign no notes to <lb />
strangers, kick out the lightning <lb />
rod and run away from <lb />
any patent right man <lb />
A Million Friend. <lb />
A friend in need is a friend indeed, <lb />
and not less than one million people <lb />
have fount just such a friend in Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery for Consumption, <lb />
Coughs, and you have never <lb />
used this Great Cough Medicine, one <lb />
trial will convince you that it has won- <lb />
curative powers in all diseases of <lb />
Throat, Chest and Lungs. Each bottle <lb />
is guaranteed to do all that is claimed or <lb />
money will be refunded. Trial bottles <lb />
free at Drug Store, <lb />
bottles and <lb />
Late consular reports show how <lb />
the shipping tonnage of this <lb />
country compares with other <lb />
The tonnage of our <lb />
sailing vessels is tons <lb />
compared with tons for <lb />
Norway Sweden, and <lb />
tons for Great Britain. In <lb />
steam tonnage we rank fourth- <lb />
Great Britain comes first with <lb />
tons, Germany next with <lb />
tons, France third with <lb />
tons and the United <lb />
States fourth with tons, <lb />
when we should and would, if it <lb />
hadn't been for our blundering <lb />
legislation, lead all- <lb />
Home of the papers which are <lb />
opposed to the repeal of the <lb />
State bank tax contend that the <lb />
recommendation for the repeal in <lb />
the platform is not a pledge. <lb />
Literally sneaking it is not a <lb />
pledge, but constructively it is as <lb />
Large much a pledge as anything in the <lb />
Star- <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 New York. Drop a <lb />
for it and always buy <lb />
Company's <lb />
Extract of Beef. <lb />
that <lb />
Beware of Ointment for Catarrh <lb />
Contains Mercury. <lb />
as mercury will surely destroy the sense <lb />
Of smell and completely derange the <lb />
whole system when entering it through <lb />
the in neon- surfaces. Such articles <lb />
should never be used except c n pres- <lb />
from physicians, as <lb />
the will do is ten fold to <lb />
the good yo u can possibly derive from <lb />
then. Catarrh Cure <lb />
d by F. J. Co., To- <lb />
contains no and is taken <lb />
internally, acting directly upon the <lb />
and mucous surfaces of the <lb />
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh <lb />
be sure you g t the gen tine. <lb />
It is taken internally, and made in To- <lb />
Ohio, F. J; Co. <lb />
Te free. Sold by Drug <lb />
gists, per bottle. <lb />
for Greenville C <lb />
Salem on the first Sunday at eleven <lb />
o'clock and Chapel at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
Shady Grove on second Sunday at <lb />
eleven o'clock School <lb />
House at o'clock. <lb />
on third Sunday eleven <lb />
o'clock and Tripp's Impel at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
Bethlehem on the fourth Sunday at <lb />
eleven o'clock, Lang's School <lb />
House at three o'clock. <lb />
Everybody invited to attend. <lb />
G. F. Smith, . <lb />
Baptist Services. <lb />
BelOW arc the regular appointments <lb />
of Rev. J. H. pastor of the <lb />
Baptist church . <lb />
At and fourth Sun- <lb />
days in each month, morning and night, <lb />
and every Thursday night- <lb />
At Sunday in each <lb />
month, morning and night. <lb />
At Ephesus, Person <lb />
Sunday in each and Saturday be- <lb />
fore. <lb />
Episcopal Services. <lb />
Below arc the regular appointments <lb />
of Rev. A. Rector <lb />
and third in <lb />
each mouth, morning ceiling. <lb />
Sunday in <lb />
mouth, morning evening. <lb />
vices all other Sunday <lb />
St. Johns. Sun- <lb />
day in each month, morning evening <lb />
Holy Innocents, <lb />
fifth Sunday morning. <lb />
Your V <lb />
J Heart's Blood J <lb />
the most important part of <lb />
your organism. Three-fourths of V <lb />
the complaints to which the sys- X <lb />
w tern l.-subject are due to <lb />
ties in the blood. You can, there- <lb />
fore, realize how vital it is to R <lb />
J Keep It Pure <lb />
W For which purpose nothing can <lb />
equal effectually re- W <lb />
a impurities, X <lb />
cleanses the blood thoroughly <lb />
and builds up the general health, m <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
i, C <lb />
IT F. PRICE, <lb />
Land And Surveyor <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
Office at the House. <lb />
Jas. E. Moore. L. I. <lb />
Williamston. Greenville. <lb />
MOORE, <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Office under Opera House, Third St. <lb />
J. <lb />
L. FLEMING, <lb />
Our Treatise on Blood and Skin i <lb />
Free to any address. <lb />
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta. Ga. <lb />
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention to business. Office- <lb />
at Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb />
U G. JAMES. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, X <lb />
Practice in all the courts. Collections <lb />
specialty. <lb />
HAIR BALSAM<lb />
Promote, a luxuriant growth. <lb />
MU to SH <lb />
lo Hi Color. <lb />
Cum ft hair tailing. <lb />
CONSUMPTIVE<lb />
w .-a <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
Caveats, and Trade-Maria obtained and all Pat- <lb />
cot business conducted for MODERATE <lb />
OUR OFFICE I OPPOSITE PATENT OFFICE <lb />
and we can secure patent in leas time than those <lb />
remote from Washington. <lb />
Send model, drawing or photo, with <lb />
We Advise, if or not, free of <lb />
charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. <lb />
A Pamphlet How to Obtain with <lb />
cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries <lb />
J. JARVIS. <lb />
A BLOW, <lb />
ALEX. L. BLOW <lb />
Ml free. Address, <lb />
OPP. Office, Washington, d. C.<lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
in all the <lb />
SUGG. B. F. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
O V I N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention given to collection <lb />
HARRY<lb />
N. C.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017687_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Editor and Proprietor <lb />
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 4th, 1894. <lb />
Entered at at Greenville, <lb />
N. C-, as mail matter. <lb />
number in so largo a meeting as ; Carolina. <lb />
if so be hoped report of <lb />
THE HARRY SKINNER MEETING. <lb />
What was ostensibly a Third <lb />
party county convention in Green- <lb />
ville last Saturday very <lb />
properly styled a Harry Skin- <lb />
meeting, as it gave gen- <lb />
a chance to air himself <lb />
and blow his own horn in a man- <lb />
that no one seemed to relish <lb />
more than he. Some weeks ago <lb />
ho issued a call for precinct meet- <lb />
to be held throughout <lb />
county on March the <lb />
pose of such meetings being to <lb />
elect township executive commit- <lb />
tees and to send delegates to a <lb />
county convention on March 31st, <lb />
said being to ratify <lb />
what the township meetings <lb />
transacted and to elect a county <lb />
executive committee. Possibly <lb />
about half of the townships in the <lb />
county had meetings m accord- <lb />
with the Colonel's call, the <lb />
delegates to the county <lb />
in some instances having no- <lb />
on the list. But what a <lb />
change plan came about before <lb />
the the day for tho county con- <lb />
When the convention <lb />
did meet no call of delegates what- <lb />
ever was made, tho precinct meet- <lb />
tings of tho previous Saturday <lb />
were not even referred to. but <lb />
Col. Skinner just called the pro- <lb />
gathering to order by <lb />
making a speech of and a <lb />
quarter hours. And this was <lb />
a Harry Skinner speech, <lb />
full of egotism, self-praise and <lb />
demagoguery. Ho roundly <lb />
ed the Democrats and <lb />
and told how he would run tho <lb />
government if he just had the <lb />
chance, or how well the govern- <lb />
could be run if those in <lb />
charge would only adopt HIS ideas <lb />
or follow his suggestions. Yes, <lb />
in-deed-y He even told how ho <lb />
had just been over to Washington <lb />
and informed some of tho Con- <lb />
how they ought to <lb />
doing things, and what kind of <lb />
bill he would introduce if he was <lb />
there. But he's not there, and <lb />
that's not won't <lb />
From a portion of Col. Skin- <lb />
speech it is evident he has <lb />
been taking a conscience <lb />
around with him. Ho got almost <lb />
sympathetic when telling how he <lb />
had loved tho Democratic party <lb />
and had rather with it than <lb />
elsewhere, and how since leaving <lb />
it he had been and <lb />
censured on every hand- How- <lb />
ever much such a course of con- <lb />
duct might deserve it, we have <lb />
never heard tho <lb />
of the Colonel being <lb />
ed, and for that reason think his <lb />
conscience is hurting him. <lb />
After completing his speech <lb />
Col. Skinner then gave <lb />
to tho selection of a <lb />
chairman and secretary. A- <lb />
A. Forbes was made chairman <lb />
and D. S- Spain secretary- Upon <lb />
being escorted to tho chair Mr. <lb />
Forbes gave the assemblage an- <lb />
other speech of about twenty <lb />
minutes. His speech was made <lb />
up principally of several dirty <lb />
jokes of about the lowest order of <lb />
vulgarity. <lb />
Then on motion of Harry <lb />
Skinner, the editors of Reflector <lb />
and Index were elected <lb />
secretaries, but this writer, being <lb />
a Democrat, passed tho proffered <lb />
honor unheeded. <lb />
At this stage in the proceedings <lb />
a colored man tried to get the ear <lb />
of the chair, but was shut off by <lb />
Harry Skinner, who again took <lb />
floor and moved tho appoint- <lb />
the meeting would say the <lb />
occupied tho Oh, <lb />
wasn't this We happen- <lb />
ed at that time to be standing on <lb />
tho front projection of the gallery <lb />
which gave the best view that <lb />
could be had from any point in <lb />
the room, and maybe tho Colonel <lb />
did not imagine that took that <lb />
position just for the purpose of <lb />
counting tho crowd and <lb />
the body closely. Not- <lb />
withstanding the estimates made <lb />
by Col. Skinner and some of his <lb />
bowers ranging from to 1200, <lb />
a count of those present showed <lb />
that there were all told, in- <lb />
whites, blacks, <lb />
Republicans and Democrats- <lb />
About of these <lb />
and the Democrats present out of <lb />
curiosity numbered more than the <lb />
Populists. We watched the <lb />
closely during the progress <lb />
of the meeting, and when <lb />
was at its highest not to <lb />
exceed fifty took any part in the <lb />
demonstration, and when it came <lb />
to voting much loss than that <lb />
number expressed themselves. <lb />
And this was the great Third <lb />
party convention of Pitt county. <lb />
THE COLD SNAP. <lb />
There is a terrible state of <lb />
down in South Carolina be- <lb />
tween tho citizens and constables <lb />
of Gov. Tillman. On last Thurs- <lb />
day about fifteen constables went <lb />
to Darlington attempted to <lb />
search the private residences of <lb />
a number of prominent citizens <lb />
for whiskey. Tho State has what <lb />
is a Dispensary law in <lb />
which it controls the sale of all <lb />
and has depots or dis- <lb />
in each town to sell <lb />
from no person is allowed to <lb />
sell whiskey under any <lb />
constables, under <lb />
of tho Governor, go, <lb />
where they think whiskey is, and <lb />
take it away. As stated above <lb />
fifteen of tho constables went to <lb />
Darlington and attempted to en- <lb />
the private residences and the <lb />
citizens became indignant and de- <lb />
them. On Friday more con- <lb />
stables arrived, making a total of <lb />
twenty seven, went to the <lb />
Coast Line depot to embark for <lb />
Florence, when a man named Bill <lb />
Floyd another named Rogers <lb />
became involved a dispute. <lb />
About seven or eight of the <lb />
were at tho depot. F. E- <lb />
Norment told Floyd that he was <lb />
with him. At this time <lb />
one of the constables, pulled his <lb />
pistol and fired, killing Norment. <lb />
On last Tuesday morning tho This opened tho the <lb />
entire section from Norfolk to result was that F. E. Norment, <lb />
Charleston was visited by a severe Lucius Redmond, citizens, wore <lb />
cold snap which blasted the hopes killed, R. H. Pepper and <lb />
of the truck farmers and fruit, don, two of the constables <lb />
raisers. The warm and almost sum-1 killed. Chief of Police A- E. <lb />
weather of the previous L. M. Norment and Tom <lb />
few weeks had greatly advanced Lucas badly wounded. No <lb />
the growth of all kinds of one tell how many of the con- <lb />
tables and fruits, and a cold-snap stables killed as took <lb />
was anticipated with great to tho woods. Mounted horsemen <lb />
The temperature went searched the woods for I a con- <lb />
way down and had <lb />
what is <lb />
The ground <lb />
stables, but up to last report they <lb />
had not found thorn. Tho <lb />
called a black frost <lb />
was frozen hard and there threatened death to ever one <lb />
plenty of ice- The reports of the caught- Tho of Florence <lb />
weather bureau show that freezing , and Sumter were telegraphed <lb />
temperature reached as far to the to for assistance responded <lb />
South as Southern Alabama and <lb />
Northern Florida, and at the same <lb />
time had fallen in tho whole of <lb />
the Atlantic States from New <lb />
promptly- At Florence the citizens <lb />
broke tho armory of tho <lb />
company secured all the <lb />
guns and The <lb />
his <lb />
England to Key West, Florida. nor is to protect <lb />
Around Greenville there was and issued orders for the <lb />
heavy freeze and no doubt three at Co- <lb />
truck garden vegetables are h <lb />
killed or badly injured. Reports d f <lb />
mg they would disband before <lb />
acted just as he did then, taking <lb />
the course he believed to be right <lb />
and proper, believing that time <lb />
will, as it did with the tariff, bring <lb />
the dissatisfied Democrats around <lb />
to his of thinking. Some <lb />
Democrats in Congress are allow- <lb />
their disappointment to <lb />
away with their discretion, and <lb />
are saying things that they will <lb />
regret when they their words <lb />
used by Republicans against the <lb />
Democratic party. <lb />
Probably no more <lb />
gathering of prominent <lb />
Democrats ever assembled in <lb />
Washington that which at- <lb />
tended the of the <lb />
Democratic Congressional Cam- <lb />
committee, held in their <lb />
new headquarters this week. The <lb />
committee which received the <lb />
guests was composed Senator <lb />
Faulkner, chairman of the Con- <lb />
committee ; Hon. W. <lb />
F. chairman of the <lb />
National Hon. <lb />
F. Blank, president of the <lb />
National Association of Demo- <lb />
Clubs, and Mr. Lawrence <lb />
Gardner, secretary of the Con- <lb />
committee. The com- <lb />
is now ready for business, <lb />
and a quorum of the executive <lb />
committee will be at headquarters <lb />
daily until the close of the Con- <lb />
campaign- <lb />
Representative Sayers, of <lb />
believes with his great Democrat- <lb />
predecessor at the head of the <lb />
House committee on <lb />
the Samuel J. Randall, <lb />
that tho system of permanent or <lb />
continuing appropriations is <lb />
wrong and should done away <lb />
with, leaving all appropriations <lb />
to be made annually, and his bill <lb />
providing for the change will prob- <lb />
ably be favorably reported to the <lb />
Souse at an early day, and ho be- <lb />
it will pass. The late <lb />
el J. Randall introduced a similar <lb />
bill in the Forty-seventh Congress, <lb />
and it tho House, <lb />
but not tho Senate. The amount <lb />
of these continuing <lb />
over which Congress can, <lb />
under the present system, <lb />
no detail supervision is <lb />
a year Some of these con- <lb />
appropriations are <lb />
a century old are sense- <lb />
less and in some cases wasteful- <lb />
Chairman bill is <lb />
Democratic ought to <lb />
become a law. It will save money <lb />
and reform a bad system. <lb />
Senator Morgan believes that <lb />
his Nicaragua Canal bill will be- <lb />
come a law and that tho canal <lb />
will well under way before tho <lb />
close of the Fifty-third Congress. <lb />
The bill is now being considered <lb />
by the Senate committee on For- <lb />
Relations. It provides for <lb />
the guaranteeing of the bonds of <lb />
An Esteemed Pastor <lb />
Found Cure in Hood's After <lb />
Other Medicines Failed <lb />
After the <lb />
-Muscular <lb />
from all sections of Pitt are very <lb />
damaging. In tho Wilmington sec- <lb />
all the truck farms suffered <lb />
and most of them will have to be <lb />
replanted. The leaves on the <lb />
fruit trees were blackened and <lb />
withered no fruit is left- <lb />
Strawberries will thrown back <lb />
at least three weeks. All along <lb />
tho line of tho Wilmington <lb />
railroad reports come in <lb />
that peas, beans, potatoes, straw- <lb />
berries and nil kind of fruits are <lb />
burnt up. Tho damage cannot be <lb />
estimated. From the <lb />
same reports came in. Irish <lb />
were cut down <lb />
peas, beans and cabbage were <lb />
hurt but tho prospects are they <lb />
may have a half crop- Groat fear <lb />
was entertained for the trucking <lb />
around The <lb />
went down to there and <lb />
the result was tho killing of tho <lb />
truck and severe <lb />
to other crops as well as fruit. <lb />
Potatoes wore cut down, but they <lb />
will be later than they otherwise <lb />
would and tho yield somewhat <lb />
Pears are <lb />
ed, some of tho truckers do not <lb />
look for more than a fourth of a <lb />
Peas are almost a complete <lb />
loss as the blooms had put forth <lb />
some vines had young peas. <lb />
The bean crop was not all up and <lb />
therefore the to will <lb />
light. Cabbages are only <lb />
slightly injured. The strawberry <lb />
crop is entirely cut off. Fruit in <lb />
and around Charlotte, Greens- <lb />
and tho entire <lb />
State has been damaged more or <lb />
Less. At Charleston, S. C, the <lb />
freeze killed all vegetables and <lb />
of a committee consisting of j strawberrIes <lb />
back thirty days. The <lb />
names <lb />
buckets around Norfolk, Va., say <lb />
that vegetables been cut off <lb />
to half a crop. Richmond, <lb />
Danville Lynchburg the <lb />
read by himself, <lb />
chairman <lb />
retire and report resolutions and <lb />
select a executive commit- <lb />
tee. The committee was appoint- <lb />
ed and Harry Skinner arose again thermometer went down to de- <lb />
and announced that ho had M <lb />
J. B. Lloyd, of Tarboro, to were The tern- <lb />
come down and make a speech j at went down to <lb />
and while the committee was out m degrees and there was a frost <lb />
Mr. Lloyd would entertain the as to <lb />
convention. Mr. Lloyd started <lb />
Out by saying he had not come j <lb />
down to make a speech, which says <lb />
the audience was not long in dis- makes more <lb />
covering, and he had not pro- <lb />
far before he was talking <lb />
to more empty benches than any- <lb />
thing else- He stopped off short <lb />
as soon as the committee returned <lb />
to the few still remaining in the <lb />
audience <lb />
a light <lb />
It burned the vegetation <lb />
reported loss of <lb />
on truck, etc., while apparently a <lb />
loss is really destruction without <lb />
loss, as truckers will get high <lb />
prices which would not <lb />
the case if there had been a full <lb />
,. I crop. The North Carolina truck- <lb />
Harry Skinner again took the L, complaining that the <lb />
floor and read the resolutions of Norfolk truckers were up with <lb />
his own previous production, There is now a prospect <lb />
for those who anything to <lb />
to get something for it. There <lb />
will no over <lb />
after these voted on and the <lb />
executive committee announced, <lb />
on motion of Harry Skinner tho <lb />
convention adjourned. <lb />
While making his speech Col. <lb />
Skinner said the Ton seem- <lb />
ed fond of publishing the number <lb />
in attendance upon Third party <lb />
meetings, and he wondered <lb />
. , , ,, . ,, crops are replanting <lb />
Dave Whichard could give <lb />
Commissioner says the loss <lb />
to wheat and oats jointly through- <lb />
out the State, will be heavy. <lb />
Grapes are hurt in some cases. <lb />
In some sections the farmers have <lb />
plowed up the destroyed truck <lb />
they would go. The sheriff at <lb />
Florence was powerless and could <lb />
do nothing. Some one wont to <lb />
the dispensary store at Florence <lb />
broke it and destroyed <lb />
the contents, breaking all the bot- <lb />
and knocking out the bungs to <lb />
tho barrels of whiskey, causing a <lb />
loss to tho State of about <lb />
There is great excitement and the <lb />
whole State is under martial law. <lb />
Tho Governor has seized the rail- <lb />
roads telegraph lines and is <lb />
things to suit himself. <lb />
A majority of tho military com- <lb />
have disbanded rather than <lb />
take sides with him. <lb />
President Cleveland vetoed tho <lb />
Bland silver bill. We had ex- <lb />
that ho would sign it, but <lb />
were doomed to disappointment. <lb />
regret very much that he saw <lb />
tit to do doubt not but what <lb />
he acted as he conceived to <lb />
best for the entire country. <lb />
differ very much with him <lb />
reference to tho wisdom of his <lb />
action, and ho seems to <lb />
ed to tho use of silver as money. <lb />
This will not please tho Southern <lb />
people he will much <lb />
for his action. He gives <lb />
many reasons for the veto. One <lb />
is that the bill was defective. Mr. <lb />
Henderson of this State has in- <lb />
a bill for the coinage of <lb />
tho which is explicit <lb />
and may he will sign this when <lb />
it is passed. <lb />
Senator of Georgia, <lb />
died in Washington at his <lb />
Monday of last week. Tho <lb />
death of Mr. is a great <lb />
loss to tho United States Senate <lb />
as ho was one of its best members <lb />
and the State of Georgia has <lb />
irreparable loss. Con- <lb />
immediately adjourned in <lb />
respect to his memory. Peace to <lb />
his ashes. <lb />
The report that Congressman <lb />
wife will sue for a <lb />
divorce is denied- She probably <lb />
took him with full knowledge that <lb />
he was not an angel. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington, D. C, March. <lb />
President Cleveland, after hear- <lb />
everything that could said <lb />
on every side of tho question, and <lb />
after deeper study ho has <lb />
given to any single measure pass- <lb />
ed by this Congress, has finally <lb />
disposed of tho Bland bill for the <lb />
coinage of the His <lb />
disposition of the bill is <lb />
unsatisfactory to many <lb />
and influential members of <lb />
the party. could not have <lb />
been avoided. It would have <lb />
been precisely tho same, only it <lb />
would been a different set <lb />
of Democrats who would <lb />
been disappointed, had his action <lb />
been reversed. The situation <lb />
was not unlike that which pro- <lb />
ceded Mr. Cleveland's celebrated <lb />
tariff reform message, and he <lb />
C. W. <lb />
following comes voluntarily from a highly <lb />
clergyman of the M. E. church, pastor <lb />
of the Church Creek circuit in Dorchester <lb />
County, <lb />
Hood Co., Lowell, <lb />
I feel It a duty to the to send this <lb />
I saw In a Philadelphia paper a letter <lb />
a man who had suffered from <lb />
Muscular Rheumatism <lb />
and had been restored by tho use of Hood's <lb />
I had the grip In the winter of <lb />
and so severely that It deprived mo of <lb />
of my arms so that my wife hid to dress and <lb />
undress me, when away from home I had <lb />
to sleep In my clothes. I tried live doctors and <lb />
not one accomplished anything. Then I saw <lb />
the letter to and determined to try <lb />
HOOD'S <lb />
Sarsaparilla <lb />
CURES <lb />
Hood's. Before I had taken one I had <lb />
the use of my arms, thank God. <lb />
facts and can be verified by many persons here. <lb />
J. M. Colston, Church Creek, supplied me with <lb />
Hood's. I am pastor of tho M. E. church <lb />
C. W. Church Creek, Maryland. <lb />
N. B. If you decide to Hood's <lb />
do not be Induced to buy any other Instead. <lb />
Hood's Pills liver ills, constipation, <lb />
biliousness, Jaundice, sick headache. Indigestion. <lb />
Town Tax Sale. <lb />
As Town Tax Collector I have levied on <lb />
tho following lots in the town of Green- <lb />
ville owned by the following parties who <lb />
are delinquents. And on Monday, the <lb />
7th day May, at M-, I will <lb />
oiler the same. to the highest <lb />
bidder, at public auction, at the Court <lb />
House, in the town of Greenville to <lb />
satisfy the taxes and costs there on. <lb />
G. K. <lb />
Town Tax Collector. <lb />
Bill-banks John town lot No. 1.30 <lb />
Cherry Benjamin t town lot No. 1.64 <lb />
Cherry Wilson town lot <lb />
Wiley town lot No- <lb />
Win. C town lot No <lb />
Hopkins Nelson town lot No. <lb />
Johnson J. B. town lot No. <lb />
Kennedy Caesar t town lot No <lb />
Miller Joe town lot No. <lb />
Royster R. w. Co, 9th St. <lb />
and Dickerson Ave <lb />
Tucker Oliver town lot No. <lb />
Yellowley est. heirs <lb />
No. <lb />
Same 1893 <lb />
town lot <lb />
the canal company to the extent Harris town lot No. <lb />
of gives this <lb />
government practically the con- <lb />
of the canal, both while being <lb />
built and after it is in <lb />
The opposition to tho new <lb />
treaty with China, this week <lb />
favorably reported without amend town lot No. <lb />
, , r,, I Williams town lot <lb />
by the committee on <lb />
Foreign Relations, has been <lb />
greatly exaggerated. Demo- <lb />
so far as known has any so-1 Yellowley est. heirs town lot <lb />
objections to tho treaty, <lb />
except several from the Pacific ,, . , town w <lb />
coast, and they say WISH c. <lb />
slight modification tho treaty I Same for <lb />
would be acceptable to them. <lb />
The trial <lb />
reached its dirtiest stage this <lb />
week, notwithstanding the <lb />
request of the judge that tho filthy <lb />
details be suppressed, several of <lb />
tho local papers published them <lb />
in full- The end of the trial is <lb />
not yet in sight. <lb />
The seat in tho <lb />
that was occupied by the late <lb />
Senator is still draped <lb />
Not much interest I <lb />
Brown, B W, heirs lot No <lb />
Same for 1802 <lb />
Cherry, It guardian for <lb />
town lot No. GO <lb />
Bryant, town lot No. a-2 <lb />
Harris, II P, town lot No. <lb />
Harris, Mary, J town lot No. <lb />
Lawrence, I. guardian for Ba- <lb />
heirs f town lot N. <lb />
Lawrence, f W, guardian for Ba- <lb />
heirs j town lot so <lb />
O. acres, <lb />
Rountree, II A, for Mrs <lb />
town lots <lb />
and <lb />
is expressed who will till out I Same, town lot No. <lb />
his term, because the <lb />
new Senator will have less than a <lb />
ear to serve it is understood <lb />
that neither of the <lb />
known to be for the full <lb />
are at least two in <lb />
the House-will be appointed by <lb />
the Governor of Georgia to the <lb />
vacancy. Although it could <lb />
hardly considered tho light <lb />
of a promotion Speaker <lb />
friends are urging him to declare <lb />
himself a candidate- <lb />
Turner is understood to have <lb />
entered tho race. <lb />
Farmville Items. <lb />
March 31st, 1804. <lb />
Our farmers arc all busy, many arc <lb />
planting corn. <lb />
Prof. Whitted and daughter, have an <lb />
excellent school here. <lb />
Dr. Faulkner, of has been <lb />
us two weeks very busy with den- <lb />
work. <lb />
Mr. Taylor is In town taking photos. <lb />
Mr. A. J. Baker is doing a huge livery <lb />
business here. <lb />
Mr. W. Lane has employed Miss <lb />
Lizzie Hines, of Wilson, to take Charge <lb />
of his millinery. <lb />
Lawyer and ex-Sheriff Potter <lb />
of Snow Hill, were in town one day last <lb />
week. <lb />
Five new cottages have just been com- <lb />
in town. <lb />
The bell and belfry add quite an <lb />
to the Christian church, and <lb />
sneak well for the ladies by whom they <lb />
given. The church has a good <lb />
preacher and a good choir. <lb />
A Greene county bachelor was de- <lb />
lighted Friday night because a young <lb />
man from Greenville who had an en- <lb />
for o'clock was delayed by a <lb />
balking hone until He says an <lb />
ill wind that blows nobody <lb />
USE <lb />
W. S.<lb />
Sale of Land for Taxes <lb />
MONDAY, the 7th day of May, <lb />
I will sell before the <lb />
House door in Greenville, the following <lb />
land township, for pay- <lb />
of the taxes due thereon for <lb />
year <lb />
L. acres, <lb />
A. K. <lb />
and Tax Collector. <lb />
Bullock, Me. G., lot <lb />
lot J <lb />
Bullock, W. B. acres <lb />
Best. Cherry, <lb />
Mrs. E., I lot <lb />
Davis, M. L. T. acres <lb />
Gardner, Com L., acres <lb />
Hardy, W. C,<lb />
Keel, J. S., lot <lb />
G. acres <lb />
Shaw, J. I,., lot <lb />
Stilley, Burton, lot <lb />
acres <lb />
West, Moses, lot <lb />
CAROLINA TOWNSHIP. <lb />
Bullock, J G. acres, <lb />
Griffin, Henry, is acres <lb />
Robinson, A, acres <lb />
township. <lb />
Adams, W. II., <lb />
acres <lb />
Avery, Ah any. ii acres <lb />
Buck, C. C , acres <lb />
Boyd, acres <lb />
Cox, Fannie V., acres <lb />
Cory, Airs. Sarah acres <lb />
Dixon, acres, <lb />
Smith, J H, <lb />
Oliver, acres, <lb />
acres, <lb />
Turner. acres. <lb />
B K. acres, <lb />
W, acres, <lb />
acres, <lb />
Smith. Really A, acres, <lb />
Tucker, Mrs K A. acres <lb />
Tyson, B F, acres, <lb />
J II. acres, <lb />
TOWNSHIP. <lb />
Blount, W Sharp, acres <lb />
Warren, acres <lb />
Bell, L B, lot <lb />
Braswell, r B, 1802, lots <lb />
Braswell, E, lots <lb />
Cox. Mrs Martha K acres <lb />
Ellis, acres <lb />
Frizzle, J W. <lb />
Harrington, John W. so acres <lb />
Hardy, II H, lot, <lb />
Hardy, Isaac C. lot <lb />
Johnson, Jr. let <lb />
Jackson, Frank, acres <lb />
Jones, Wm, <lb />
Kittrell, W J, acres <lb />
A, l lot <lb />
J lots <lb />
Move, Mis Geo, acres <lb />
horn. J b. J acre <lb />
Nelson, -las E, acres <lb />
Parker, W, j <lb />
I lot I <lb />
Powell, Mrs K V. acres <lb />
Smith, Mrs Victoria. <lb />
Smith, Margaret, acres <lb />
Wingate, Henry. acres <lb />
FALKLAND <lb />
Braswell, acres <lb />
W acres <lb />
Parker, F. acres <lb />
J II, <lb />
Biker, G, l lot <lb />
Cobb, Unwell. acres <lb />
Hines, J II, acres <lb />
Joyner, Emily, acres <lb />
Noah. heir-. acres <lb />
Andrew, acres <lb />
Kitchen, J L, lot <lb />
lot <lb />
Ward, J T, acres <lb />
Anderson, Wm. l acre <lb />
Adams, Henry. acres <lb />
Wm, timber <lb />
Boyd, John P, acres <lb />
Bernard, Mrs B E, int stores <lb />
Cory, W M, acres, <lb />
Cherry, Wilson, lot. Clarke field <lb />
J, lots <lb />
Forbes, A A, acres <lb />
Fleming, lot No. <lb />
Griffin, J, acres <lb />
Harris II F, town lot <lb />
Harrington, l town lot, 1803 <lb />
town lot, 1802, <lb />
Harris, Alex, acres, <lb />
Harris. town lot <lb />
acre, Billy Moore <lb />
Jackson, J lot, <lb />
Kittrell. W <lb />
acres <lb />
Lawrence, L W, town lot <lb />
Lawrence, i. w, guardian Baker <lb />
heirs <lb />
, Latham, Peter, l town lot. <lb />
Latham, town lot <lb />
Moore, II, acres. <lb />
C, acres <lb />
B. acres <lb />
1.10 acres f <lb />
1.10 Meyers, J H. town lot <lb />
Nettle, town lot. near <lb />
1.77 I river <lb />
B B. town lot, <lb />
I Patrick, town lot, <lb />
, Parker, Mrs M I. acres <lb />
. i Royster A Co, B W, town lot <lb />
acres, <lb />
j Summered, II II, acres <lb />
Summered. Stephen, acres <lb />
Tyson, W acres <lb />
Tyson, Co acres <lb />
White, Sherwood, acres <lb />
Williams, Matthew town lot <lb />
Y CO. <lb />
1.73 <lb />
1.48 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.80 <lb />
1.73 <lb />
1.92 <lb />
1.35 <lb />
12.73 <lb />
1.00 I <lb />
98- <lb />
3.73 <lb />
2.60 <lb />
Tax Sale. <lb />
3.91 <lb />
4.49 <lb />
4.07 <lb />
1.21 <lb />
2.13 <lb />
9.23 <lb />
1.62 <lb />
6.48 <lb />
1.22 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
5.44 <lb />
2.20 <lb />
1.06 <lb />
0.19 <lb />
4.13 <lb />
1.93 <lb />
4.07 <lb />
4.25 <lb />
1.31 <lb />
1.89 <lb />
15.77 <lb />
2.13 <lb />
3.03 <lb />
3.03 <lb />
1.21 <lb />
1.16 <lb />
3.30 <lb />
2.74 <lb />
2.44 <lb />
2.69 <lb />
6.82 <lb />
3.03 <lb />
8.18 <lb />
1.46 <lb />
2.0.1 <lb />
1.44 <lb />
2.30 <lb />
1.02 <lb />
SI<lb />
2.84 <lb />
8.08 <lb />
0.46 <lb />
8.19 <lb />
5.97 <lb />
3.86 <lb />
11.64 <lb />
8.73 <lb />
3.77 <lb />
3.30 <lb />
3.45 <lb />
1.68 <lb />
1.52 <lb />
3.33 <lb />
2.54 <lb />
8.07 <lb />
8.19 <lb />
8.73 <lb />
6.78 <lb />
3.37 <lb />
1.83 <lb />
2.81 <lb />
5.50 <lb />
0.73 <lb />
9.29 <lb />
3.30 <lb />
2.97 <lb />
4.11 <lb />
8.16 <lb />
30.35 <lb />
3.30 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
4.77 <lb />
8.56 <lb />
2.08 <lb />
1.52 <lb />
To all who want goods that are all we invite <lb />
them to come to us we will make the prices <lb />
all right satisfactory. We have often <lb />
been Sold that we were a little high in <lb />
. on some lines of Goods but <lb />
our friends would always add <lb />
that the quality of your <lb />
goods is better than <lb />
the lower priced <lb />
goods costing <lb />
more and <lb />
demand- <lb />
b e t <lb />
juiced than the <lb />
interior 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 as- <lb />
and can supply your every want <lb />
-o- <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
When we that we have the largest and best line <lb />
of 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 such a <lb />
large and well selected stock <lb />
on hand. Call on us for <lb />
anything want <lb />
in Furniture <lb />
line. We have <lb />
just r e- <lb />
lovely line <lb />
of en its, <lb />
and <lb />
ROCKERS in Silk Plush, <lb />
See. 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 />
Pursuant to provision of <lb />
of the laws of 1889, I shall, beginning <lb />
Monday, May 7th, at A. M., in front <lb />
Court House door in sell <lb />
the below described land and town lots <lb />
for taxes due for the year 1893, and <lb />
paid thereon cost for advertising <lb />
the same. <lb />
B. W. KING. <lb />
Sheriff of Pitt County. <lb />
Anderson, I J, <lb />
Amos, acres <lb />
W C, acres <lb />
Parker, E S, acres <lb />
Atkinson, S, heirs. 1200 acres <lb />
1260 acres <lb />
acres <lb />
Gilbert, acres <lb />
acres <lb />
Spain, acres <lb />
Andrews, P. W., lot <lb />
Brown, Fernando, acres i <lb />
lot <lb />
Briley acres V <lb />
ii <lb />
M A. estate, acres <lb />
, W X, acres <lb />
Belcher. John P, acres <lb />
I Hale, John. acres <lb />
i Williams, Henry, DO acres <lb />
Blind, W B, Carrie, <lb />
Buck, John K. acres <lb />
W. S. I lot <lb />
I J. II., acres <lb />
i Chapman, Win. II., <lb />
. Cannon, Dennis, Abram Smith <lb />
eat, -is acres <lb />
Cox, Fred acres <lb />
. E. A. acres <lb />
s F., acres <lb />
J. I., acres <lb />
Freeman, John acre <lb />
Gardner. acres <lb />
Harris, j. Henry, 3-5 acre <lb />
Sam V., acres 8.01 <lb />
Manning, Wm. acres 2.96 <lb />
I Smith, H. Frank, acres 2.02 <lb />
Smith, S. M-, Laura acres 14.10 <lb />
4.07 <lb />
3.47 <lb />
4.00<lb />
3.15 <lb />
3.4 <lb />
3.06 <lb />
4.04 <lb />
6.74 <lb />
1.19 <lb />
1.80 <lb />
4.56 <lb />
8.52 <lb />
3.46 <lb />
3.59 <lb />
i Smith, Louis II., <lb />
I Wilson, Louis, acres <lb />
in . Wilson, M. . acres <lb />
Windley, A. Windley <lb />
I heirs, 3-5 acres <lb />
4.38<lb />
IS IT <lb />
Who is it that will be so is it that has a beautiful lino <lb />
of <lb />
By every hearth and fireside homo With one as your passes <lb />
With bargains that win such great you, will stare, <lb />
renown And call you her duckling, darling, <lb />
BOB dear. <lb />
t, -n BOB <lb />
What name is this that we will <lb />
see spread j Who is it that has Clothing so fine <lb />
every tree and post and shed, Dressed up in a suit all others <lb />
letters blue and black and rod t J shine, <lb />
BOB That your will exclaim, <lb />
Who cuts the prices down so low <lb />
And tells the people they must go, i <lb />
Where yon with bargains it that has such a brand <lb />
overflow <lb />
BOB <lb />
Who has the store in which we're <lb />
told <lb />
Are Dry Goods and Shoes for <lb />
young or old, <lb />
As 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 hot <lb />
BOB <lb />
new stock <lb />
Who keeps everything from a silk <lb />
dross to a clock, <lb />
j And his low prices gives your <lb />
nerves such a shock <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 />
j Who will open from a. m- to <lb />
p. m. I <lb />
BOB <lb />
Yes, every says that BOB can beat the world on <lb />
Dry Notions, Shoes, Hals, <lb />
Furnishing Goods. <lb />
Call on him, he is at the store formerly occupied by Jas. L. Little <lb />
Co., and ho and his clerks will treat yon fair and square. Mr- <lb />
Dupree is with him and will be glad to see his many friends. <lb />
GUNS <lb />
Call us for Guns and Gun <lb />
Implements. We have some <lb />
ones hand and will <lb />
make the prices right. <lb />
Wishing all our friends and the generally a joyous and <lb />
happy Christmas, <lb />
We remain, your friends, <lb />
J. B. CHERRY <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1833. <lb />
--------WHOLESALE AND RETAIL------ <lb />
Ft.- <lb />
C. <lb />
barrels Obelisk Flour <lb />
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb />
barrels. Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb />
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb />
lo my Friends and Customers of Pin joining <lb />
I wish to say that I have made special preparation in preparing lino <lb />
MATERIAL and propose Riving yon with inside <lb />
smooth which will prevent cutting or scrubbing your Tobacco when packing <lb />
Also have made special arrangements to use spill Hoops made White <lb />
Oak. Hie special advantages I have in outline toy own Umber places <lb />
position to meet all I cheerfully promise that I will strive to <lb />
make it to your interest to use my Hogsheads and you can find them at any <lb />
either at my factory at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. C. <lb />
w, m <lb />
Ti <lb />
prepared to do any Scroll Sawing for Brackets or anything In the <lb />
line, or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, Pickets for Stairways. Mendings of <lb />
any kind, Piazza Railing, and would be pleased to name you prises on <lb />
anything In the above upon application. <lb />
GENERAL REPAIR WORK <lb />
done on short notice. Thanking you tor your past patronage, Iain willing to <lb />
meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you to give me a trial before <lb />
Ranging elsewhere. Respectfully, <lb />
COX, Winterville, N. <lb />
R J c, <lb />
COBB BROS. CO.,<lb />
-AND- <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited.<lb />
RELIABLE VILLE, <lb />
Offers to the buyers surrounding counties, a line of following <lb />
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be <lb />
GOODS DOORS, WINDOWS. SASH, and <lb />
WARE HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of different <lb />
Gin and Belting, Rock Lime, Plaster op Paris, <lb />
Hair. Harness, Bridles addles <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
gent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at <lb />
prices, cents per percent for Cash, Bread <lb />
ration and Star Lye at jobber Prices, Whit. Lead and para U <lb />
lied Oil Varnishes and Paint Wood and Wood an <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017687_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
KEEP <lb />
YOUR EYES <lb />
WIDE OPEN <lb />
Allow Anybody to Switch Yen <lb />
Off the Track, <lb />
We are the <lb />
We are the Producers <lb />
We are the <lb />
Produce kind of <lb />
Goods you <lb />
Need and <lb />
The prices <lb />
To suit <lb />
Your pocketbooks. <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
OUR ENTIRE <lb />
STOCK MUST <lb />
j i <lb />
GO AND WE <lb />
WILL MAKE <lb />
YOU PRICES <lb />
j i <lb />
THAT ARE VERY LOW. <lb />
We carry a complete line of <lb />
Dry Goods, <lb />
Clothing, <lb />
ens <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 Sod, <lb />
BROS. <lb />
Leaders of Low Prices. <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
Bad weather since Easter. <lb />
Just received a new lot of <lb />
Carriages and Cribs. <lb />
J. B- Cherry Co. <lb />
Superior Court session- <lb />
Win in want of Rood shoes to <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
The northern sky was brightly <lb />
lighted by the aurora <lb />
Friday night. <lb />
Dove Tail Cutaways and Long <lb />
Cut Sacks at Frank Wilson's. <lb />
Jack Clark, a very old and well- <lb />
colored man of this town, <lb />
died last Friday. <lb />
Dotted Swiss and Pique Welts <lb />
at Lang's- <lb />
The interior of Herbert Ed- <lb />
barber shop has been <lb />
given e new dress of paint. <lb />
For good reliable Shoes go to <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
Sheriff King and Town Tax <lb />
Collector Harris both advertise <lb />
their delinquent lists to day. <lb />
Business men can set good <lb />
to <lb />
the Reflector Book Store. <lb />
Fish have begun to bite. But <lb />
they not dangerous if one <lb />
keeps away from the stream. <lb />
Hon. G- W. Venters says what <lb />
makes my Hens lay so many eggs <lb />
and keep so healthy is Pratt <lb />
Food, at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Wonder who that J was that <lb />
picked up that pocket-book with <lb />
a string tied to it on April 1st <lb />
Cloth <lb />
suits at <lb />
for boy's <lb />
wash<lb />
One m to election- <lb />
For sis room dwell- <lb />
in Forbes garden, <lb />
good water. A. Forbes. <lb />
Look out for big stories. <lb />
I,. M. and Boys <lb />
shoes are the best. For sale by I. B. <lb />
Cherry i Co. <lb />
Who did you catch on April 1st <lb />
Go to B. Cherry Co when in need <lb />
of Furniture, they keep a stock and <lb />
tell at prices that will please you. <lb />
Last Thursday looked like a <lb />
little March- <lb />
Walter Wilson's Best Vermont <lb />
Butter received weekly and for <lb />
sale by J. G Cobb k Son. <lb />
One-fourth of the year passed <lb />
away with last month. <lb />
A large stack of Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick Sore. <lb />
If April keeps up its reputation <lb />
showers will be in order. <lb />
Remember I pay you cash tor Chicken <lb />
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
girl may be ever so <lb />
straight and yet bent on <lb />
Read the Reflectors free <lb />
book offer on fourth page. <lb />
For A- G- Cox's celebrated <lb />
Back Bands call on J- B- Cherry<lb />
The fragrant yellow <lb />
is in full bloom the outskirts of <lb />
town. <lb />
You just ought to see the big <lb />
cent Tablets at Reflector Book <lb />
Store. <lb />
Higgs Bros- ore building sever- <lb />
small houses on their College <lb />
City property just west of town. <lb />
These new buildings make quite <lb />
improvement out there. <lb />
Complete line of Dry Goods at <lb />
Wiley Brown's. <lb />
Acme Guano Distributors are <lb />
for sale by S- E Pender Co. <lb />
Shoes to matter <lb />
whether you stand or whether <lb />
you sit, at Higgs Bros. <lb />
New Garden seeds D. M. Ferry <lb />
C-. at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Bear in mind that next week it <lb />
a good time to bring a dollar <lb />
and get the Reflector a whole <lb />
year. Bring 1-50 and get this <lb />
paper and the Atlanta <lb />
both. <lb />
A new paper called the Greene <lb />
County Champion has been start- <lb />
ed at Snow Hill G- B. <lb />
New Embroideries just <lb />
ed by Wiley Brown. <lb />
The man who a short while ago <lb />
was bragging about his fine gar- <lb />
den is letting somebody else do <lb />
the boasting now. <lb />
D. M. Ferry's New Garden Seed <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
If you want the Reflector and <lb />
Atlanta Constitution a year for <lb />
bring on that amount. <lb />
The young ladies will soon be- <lb />
gin to read the signs as <lb />
she goes by on the arm of her <lb />
best beau. <lb />
My Hardware Store will be <lb />
open from A- M. to P. M. <lb />
the spring and summer months <lb />
D. D- Haskett. <lb />
Some Tarboro boys got up a <lb />
show troupe and started out on <lb />
the road. The Rocky Mount folks <lb />
gave them egg reception. <lb />
See Frank Wilson's Clothing. <lb />
The musical club were out on <lb />
last Friday night serenading and <lb />
discoursed some sweet music to <lb />
the delight of their many friends. <lb />
Striped and Checked Dimities <lb />
white Lang's. <lb />
Let the ward meetings be held <lb />
early this mouth to select <lb />
dates for Councilmen to be <lb />
the first Monday in May. Got <lb />
good men from each ward. <lb />
Money to improved <lb />
Real Estate in sums from to <lb />
Apply to, <lb />
F. G. James. <lb />
During April we will give every <lb />
new subscriber to the Reflector <lb />
for a year a nice piece of stand- <lb />
ard sheet music, either vocal or <lb />
instrumental. Subscribe at once <lb />
and get the music free. <lb />
Wool Suitings in new and novel <lb />
designs at <lb />
Everything is <lb />
Sugar best Coffee <lb />
best Flour at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
All the ladies who have exam- <lb />
the stock of standard sheet <lb />
music at the Reflector Book Store <lb />
pronounce it the very best We <lb />
sell for cents such selections <lb />
as cost you cents <lb />
your Cotton Seed Meal at <lb />
the Old Brick Store- <lb />
The children of the Episcopal <lb />
Sunday School had an Easter <lb />
hunt across the bridge last <lb />
Friday afternoon. It was a very <lb />
enjoyable occasion both for the <lb />
little folks and those man- <lb />
aged it for them. <lb />
New assortment of Bibles from <lb />
American B. S-, just received. <lb />
Wiley Brown, Depositor- <lb />
Organdies, Irish Lawns and <lb />
Soft Percales at Lang's. <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mr. S. V- Joyner, of Kenly, is <lb />
here attending court. <lb />
Mr. G M. Bernard spent last <lb />
week in Washington City. <lb />
Mr. Frank L. Dancy has ac- <lb />
a position in <lb />
Mr John Battle of Tarboro is <lb />
in town looking after the shoe <lb />
trade. <lb />
Mrs- S- M- Merritt returned last <lb />
Wednesday from a visit to South <lb />
Carolina. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Fleming, <lb />
of Hamilton, have been here the <lb />
past week. <lb />
Miss Jennie Williams has closed <lb />
her school near Falkland and re- <lb />
turned home. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Forbes re- <lb />
turned Thursday night from their <lb />
trip. <lb />
A little daughter of Mr. H. A. <lb />
Blow is quite sick at the home of <lb />
her uncle in Nashville. <lb />
His many friends are glad to <lb />
see Dr. Frank W. Brown out <lb />
after his recent severe illness- <lb />
Miss May Abbott, of Grifton, <lb />
spent Saturday and Sunday here <lb />
visiting Miss Bagwell. <lb />
Mr. Henry C- Hooker leaves <lb />
this week for Alabama to accept <lb />
a position. We wish him success. <lb />
Mr. J- J. Burgess, of Norfolk, <lb />
has been here the past week at- <lb />
tending Court and looking after <lb />
business- <lb />
Mr. J. J. Cherry, agent O. D. S- <lb />
S- Co., left Monday for <lb />
Richmond and Baltimore on a <lb />
business trip. <lb />
Mr. J- R. Moore died yesterday <lb />
morning at his home six miles <lb />
from Greenville. He had been <lb />
sick for some time- <lb />
Rev. J. H. left for <lb />
Person county, Friday, to fill his <lb />
first Sunday appointment there. <lb />
He was expected to return last <lb />
night. <lb />
Miss Cherry returned home <lb />
last week from her visit to <lb />
Miss Jennie James is <lb />
expected to return this evening, <lb />
Miss Ruth Harris accompanying <lb />
her. <lb />
Mrs- M. D. Higgs and Mrs. <lb />
Georgie Pearce returned <lb />
day night from their purchasing <lb />
tour. They will show some love- <lb />
styles in millinery. <lb />
Mr. J. H. Tucker, of Asheville, <lb />
accompanied by his little son <lb />
Powell, came down last week to <lb />
spend some days here and look <lb />
after business before the Court <lb />
The Reflector force were de- <lb />
lighted to see out Monday <lb />
and able to walk down to the <lb />
office for a short while. We all <lb />
miss him and hope he will be able <lb />
to return to his case by next <lb />
week. <lb />
Mr- J. G- returned from <lb />
the north last Thursday evening. <lb />
He said the weather was bitter <lb />
cold in New York, but it did not <lb />
interfere with his buying a bean- <lb />
of goods that his firm is <lb />
now receiving. <lb />
Mr. W. S. Greer, of Baltimore, <lb />
has been in town part of the past <lb />
week looking after his large trade <lb />
here. His fund of good jokes is <lb />
inexhaustible he shakes up <lb />
his friends with many a <lb />
laugh- <lb />
Mr. Warren, junior <lb />
of the firm of Allen Warren <lb />
Son, Riverside Nursery, left <lb />
Monday morning for a tour of <lb />
two months selling the nursery <lb />
goods. Riverside Nursery has a <lb />
wide reputation and we <lb />
hope that he may be successful <lb />
beyond expectation. <lb />
Mr. J. R. Whichard, editor of <lb />
the Salisbury Herald, <lb />
by his little son Robert, has <lb />
been spending the past week with <lb />
relatives here- and going a-fish- <lb />
The big fish stories the <lb />
Reflector has been printing <lb />
turned his head and he could not <lb />
the to come try <lb />
his hand. <lb />
Negligee Shirts- <lb />
Frank Wilson's. <lb />
-2 <lb />
Every business man should try <lb />
a bottle of our Cream Mucilage. <lb />
Sold only at the Reflector Book <lb />
Store. <lb />
Tan and Hose for ladies <lb />
misses and children at Lang's. <lb />
Mr. J. A- Hyman tells us that <lb />
while riding along just after a <lb />
rain, a days ago, he picked <lb />
up a large pike in the road. The <lb />
fish had fallen in a small sink that <lb />
held enough water for it to swim <lb />
in- <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 <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
machines from to <lb />
Latest improved New Home<lb />
Wiley Brown-<lb />
Butcher's Linen and <lb />
Silk at Lang's. <lb />
Beautiful line of all <lb />
shapes at Frank Wilson's. <lb />
Farmers, Mechanics and Labor- <lb />
of all professions, when in <lb />
of goods of any kind, call on <lb />
your friends, J. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
A visitor to Greenville remarked <lb />
the other ought to <lb />
have gas in this He was <lb />
told that there is more gas here <lb />
than any thing else, and that what <lb />
the town needs is more work and <lb />
less gas. <lb />
The Wilmington Star now is- <lb />
sues an column Sunday edition, <lb />
adding to the attractiveness and <lb />
of that already excel- <lb />
lent paper. The Star also recent- <lb />
entered its half <lb />
yearly volume. <lb />
The Rough and Ready firemen <lb />
accompanied by both the Tube- <lb />
rose and Elmo bands paraded the <lb />
streets Monday afternoon. They <lb />
all drew up front of the Re- <lb />
elector office and gave us a nice <lb />
serenade. Both the bands are <lb />
making good progress in their <lb />
music. <lb />
Vestry Elected <lb />
The following have been <lb />
vestrymen of St Paul's <lb />
church for the <lb />
Messrs. H. Harding, W. B. Brown, <lb />
Chas. Skinner, W. F. Morrill, <lb />
James Joyner, Miss Leila Cherry <lb />
and Mrs. Bettie Swindell. <lb />
Got Out the Coop <lb />
Did you ever have the pleasure <lb />
of chasing a guinea chicken <lb />
They are as much like a flea to <lb />
catch as two things can possibly <lb />
be, you got him but now you <lb />
ain't. One got away from Mr. <lb />
Sam Schultz last Friday and at- <lb />
quite a he flew to <lb />
the top of the tree in front of Mr. <lb />
J. R. Cory's harness shop and <lb />
viewed the landscape o'er. He <lb />
then flew down on Mr. Alfred <lb />
store and is there now for <lb />
what we know. <lb />
March Weather. <lb />
Mr. Allen Warren, of Riverside <lb />
Nursery, who keeps a record of <lb />
temperatures taken at o'clock <lb />
each day, gives the Reflector <lb />
the following comparisons be- <lb />
tween <lb />
In March, 1893, the coldest day <lb />
was the 18th, the temperature <lb />
being and the hottest day on <lb />
the 24th with the temperature at <lb />
Snow fell on the 4th, 17th <lb />
and 18th. In March 1894 the <lb />
lowest temperature at was <lb />
on the and the highest <lb />
on the 23rd. Snow fell on the <lb />
26th. <lb />
The Juries. <lb />
At this term of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court the juries are composed of <lb />
the <lb />
Grand J- <lb />
Foreman. Allen Adams, Win. A. <lb />
Nichols, J. J. Elks, G- <lb />
lock, H. C G A. <lb />
Smith, Ashley Dupree, W H. <lb />
Galloway, Albert Horton, John <lb />
Dunn, Alfred Cannon, Joseph <lb />
Royal, J. R. Noah <lb />
ton, John G. Taylor, W. G. Little, <lb />
Warren <lb />
G- Is- <lb />
Edwards, W. M. Brown, E- <lb />
F. Williams, Atlas H. Ham, Fer- <lb />
Harris, W. H. May, Jr., T. <lb />
H. Cory, Win. S. Manning, Jas <lb />
Long, D. C. Davenport, Samuel <lb />
Edwards, R. L. Davis, J. G Cook, <lb />
J. M. Cox, Chas. S- <lb />
Superior Court. <lb />
and Solicitor <lb />
Woodard both arrived Saturday <lb />
night and were ready to <lb />
Court promptly at o'clock Mon- <lb />
day morning. The work of the <lb />
started off in the business <lb />
like way characteristic of these <lb />
two gentlemen. The Judge's <lb />
charge occupied about an hour. <lb />
It was good and covered all points <lb />
he deemed necessary to bring to <lb />
the attention of the jury. The <lb />
docket was taken up prompt- <lb />
and before the noon recess <lb />
Judge Bynum had imposed <lb />
fully a dozen fines rang- <lb />
from to and <lb />
ting near At this rate the <lb />
State docket will be cleared up in <lb />
rapid order. <lb />
Almost a fire. <lb />
A little excitement was created <lb />
last Wednesday evening in Mr- <lb />
M. R- Lang's emporium, by some <lb />
one carelessly dropping the stump <lb />
of a cigarette in a corner where <lb />
Larry kept his brooms. Lucky <lb />
that it was discovered time to <lb />
save a serious loss. The only <lb />
damage was the burning of two <lb />
brooms and scorching the back <lb />
of the store cat and the <lb />
left hand corner of <lb />
mustache. It was worth the <lb />
price of a porous plaster to see <lb />
Larry as he gave a hop, skip and <lb />
a jump, grasped the handle of the <lb />
water bucket and after running <lb />
the whole length of the store to <lb />
discover that there was no water <lb />
in it, and then called all hands to <lb />
the scene and tried to get them <lb />
to spit on those brooms and put <lb />
them out. He was spitting all <lb />
the time between spits he was <lb />
heard to town <lb />
ought to a fire company and <lb />
I want to be the <lb />
Twelve persons united with the <lb />
Baptist church at the service held <lb />
last Thursday night, and twenty <lb />
united with the Methodist church <lb />
on Sunday There will <lb />
be other additions to the church- <lb />
es here as a result of the recent <lb />
meeting hold by Evangelist <lb />
Agent Moore received a <lb />
gram from the Coast Line agent <lb />
at Birmingham, Ala, on Friday, <lb />
saying that a colored man named <lb />
Louis Wilson had been found in <lb />
an unconscious condition by the <lb />
side of the railroad near Annis- <lb />
ton, and papers found on his per- <lb />
son indicated that he was from <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
He Came. <lb />
The following telegram was re- <lb />
at this office at o'clock <lb />
yesterday <lb />
Greenville, N. C. Mar. 28- <lb />
J. R. Whichard rising. <lb />
Shad running. Oyster boat here. <lb />
Come on. Answer. <lb />
D. J. Whichard. <lb />
This telegram was received just <lb />
eighteen hours too late to reach <lb />
the of the Herald, who <lb />
with bait kettle and fishing pole, <lb />
took the train the evening before. <lb />
Now this D. J. Whichard is the <lb />
editor of the Greenville , <lb />
Reflector, who ha-, been throw-1 <lb />
temptations in the way of the <lb />
of the Herald for the <lb />
past six weeks by printing big <lb />
fish stories, alligator yarns and <lb />
whale to induce him <lb />
to visit Greenville and go fishing. <lb />
We thought at one time that the <lb />
would be firm and not <lb />
yield, but alas so- The <lb />
temptation proved too great for <lb />
him to resist, despite our re- <lb />
monstrances, he resolved he <lb />
would he went We wish <lb />
him big luck, a good time, and all <lb />
of that, but if Dave Whichard <lb />
don't stop sending fish yarns to <lb />
this office there will be a first- <lb />
class funeral Greenville ere <lb />
long and Dave will be <lb />
in Herald. <lb />
If Joe the galoot who <lb />
wrote the above, was allowed to <lb />
get his finger in the bucket of <lb />
oysters that went up Saturday, no <lb />
doubt he spent Sunday repenting <lb />
in sack-cloth and ashes forgetting <lb />
off any such talk about the <lb />
nary of this encyclopedia. How- <lb />
ever, if he is pale of re- <lb />
and is still for a <lb />
tight, our buzz saw is ready to <lb />
accommodate him any day he <lb />
will show up. <lb />
Yes, Joe's got here <lb />
on good time, and its amusing to <lb />
see what a dismal failure he is <lb />
when it comes to fishing. Joe <lb />
Evans has had him out three <lb />
times and worked him one whole <lb />
night, the sum total of his catch <lb />
being one little shad. He bragged <lb />
in the Herald how he <lb />
could come down here and learn <lb />
us how to fish, but his attempts <lb />
have proven him to be a back <lb />
number long out of date. We <lb />
have become disgusted with the <lb />
as a fisherman and will <lb />
have to ship him back to <lb />
bury to try his luck in the mud <lb />
holes of Re wan. If Joe <lb />
gets a shad this scribe will have <lb />
to send it to him but he must <lb />
evidence of his <lb />
before he gets it. <lb />
Since we wrote the above the <lb />
tried his luck again, <lb />
Monday night and caught four. <lb />
Parmele Items. <lb />
April 2nd. 1894. <lb />
Messrs. G. J. Cherry and F. G. <lb />
spent yesterday In Bethel. They <lb />
say they had a narrow escape from Cu- <lb />
arrow. <lb />
Sheriff Dick King, of Pitt, was here <lb />
one day lust week. <lb />
Mrs. R. F. Gainer spent last week In <lb />
Williamston. <lb />
Madam Rumor Mr. F. S Gardner <lb />
will soon take unto himself a bride. <lb />
Mr. A. G. has moved into <lb />
hi new house. <lb />
Painters are putting the finishing <lb />
touches on Mr. D. S. Powell's new <lb />
A dollar was offered the other day to <lb />
the person who could not whistle <lb />
the Mr. F. Whitley won. <lb />
Messrs. F. U. John Mat- <lb />
thews and M. F- Klein spent yesterday <lb />
in Tarboro. <lb />
Most of our sports attended church at <lb />
Flat Swamp yesterday. <lb />
Misses Lula and Johnson and <lb />
Mollie Manning, of Bethel, were here <lb />
Saturday. <lb />
Old uncle Sam Powell tells us the re- <lb />
snap did not kill all the peaches <lb />
Mr. J. A. who got his foot <lb />
mashed a few days ago, has laid aside <lb />
his crutch. <lb />
Johnson Items <lb />
April 2nd, 1894- <lb />
Sheriff King was down here on <lb />
business last Wednesday. <lb />
Dr. Best went to Greenville to- <lb />
day business. <lb />
Miss Maggie Dawson, of Maple <lb />
Cypress, is visiting in <lb />
Misses Rosa and Annie Lane, of <lb />
Fort are visiting their <lb />
sister, Mrs. J. M. Wooten. <lb />
Married. <lb />
At the home of Bass, in <lb />
Farmville township, on March <lb />
28th, Mr. Atlas Ham and Mrs. <lb />
Emma Whitley were married by <lb />
E. G Smith, of Newport. <lb />
There is something a little <lb />
usual about this marriage. Elder <lb />
Smith and Mr. Ham were play- <lb />
mates together in childhood and <lb />
used to gather several children of <lb />
the neighborhood together and <lb />
play Young <lb />
Smith would get on a box and <lb />
imitate the preacher, the lit <lb />
tie folks all had a good time. <lb />
One day young Ham said to <lb />
young Smith, you will be <lb />
a preacher some day, and I will <lb />
get you to marry Young <lb />
Smith agreed. As the years went <lb />
on and they grew to manhood, <lb />
sure enough young Smith became <lb />
a preacher, but neither of them <lb />
thought any more of their boy- <lb />
hood jesting. For sometime <lb />
Elder Smith has been living at <lb />
Newport, and recently came to <lb />
this country to fill some appoint <lb />
Last Wednesday he and <lb />
his brother while going to an <lb />
stopped at Mr. Ham's <lb />
and found him making <lb />
to get married. As soon as <lb />
they met Mr. Ham recalled the <lb />
boyhood promise and told Elder <lb />
Smith he must go perform the <lb />
ceremony. It wag a pleasant <lb />
coincidence all around. <lb />
Grifton Items. <lb />
April 2nd, 1894. <lb />
Rev- J- L- Keen filled his <lb />
appointment here last Sunday <lb />
night, preaching an able sermon- <lb />
Mr- Joe Parrish, of <lb />
was in town one day last week. <lb />
Misses Gay Coward Carrie <lb />
Miller, of Hookerton, spent a part <lb />
of last week with Mrs. L- A. Cobb- <lb />
Miss Winnie Burney, of <lb />
ville, spent last week visiting Mrs. <lb />
Calvin Tucker. <lb />
Profs. and Davis spent <lb />
Saturday and Sunday at their <lb />
homes, returning Monday morn- <lb />
Messrs- and J. Z. Brooks <lb />
went over to Greenville today. <lb />
The ball was quite a sue- <lb />
last Friday night They all ex- <lb />
press themselves as enjoying it <lb />
hugely. <lb />
The spiritualists are progressing <lb />
rapidly with their good work. <lb />
They are now taking great inter- <lb />
est in finding and digging money- <lb />
Some of the young men of the <lb />
town contemplate getting up a so- <lb />
club for the entertainment of <lb />
their members. Such a club <lb />
would be a benefit to the young <lb />
men of the town, for there they <lb />
could spend their evenings very <lb />
pleasantly leading, debating, <lb />
and would keep many out of <lb />
temptation. Let's have it by all <lb />
means. <lb />
Laud Sale. <lb />
By virtue of two decrees made, one <lb />
at December term, 1883, the other at <lb />
March 1894, of Superior <lb />
Court, In of Susan vs. <lb />
J. P. Brown and others, the undersigned <lb />
Commissioner will sell for cash before <lb />
the Court House door, in Greenville, on <lb />
Monday, the 7th day of May, 1894, the <lb />
following described tracts of land situ- <lb />
in the county of Pitt, and in Bel <lb />
township. One tract known as the <lb />
Ma Warren land, adjoining the lands of <lb />
Betsy Cobb, John A. <lb />
Cobb. O. and others, con- <lb />
acres. Also one other tract <lb />
of land adjoining the said Warren tract <lb />
O. B. Hathaway, J. H. Clark and others <lb />
known as the Brown land containing <lb />
, acres, more or less. F. G. JAMES, <lb />
Mar. 93rd, 1894. Commissioner. <lb />
THE LAST CONVENTION. <lb />
Held in Greenville, N. C, Adopted the <lb />
Following Resolutions. <lb />
N- C-, <lb />
April 3rd, 1894. <lb />
Resolved 1st, That while we <lb />
entertain due respect for the <lb />
existing political parties, we <lb />
are that now is the <lb />
time and that our necessities de- <lb />
that there shall be a Fourth <lb />
party, that the interest of the <lb />
general public may be protected. <lb />
Resolved 2nd, That every man, <lb />
woman and child in the State to <lb />
better their condition mutt adopt <lb />
the Cash System and shop econ- <lb />
and you do this <lb />
at stores where per cent profit <lb />
are put on goods you need in <lb />
every day life, you must single <lb />
out the merchant who sells for <lb />
cash and cash only. <lb />
Resolved 3rd, That for a mer- <lb />
chants to do a credit business it <lb />
is necessary to make large profits <lb />
on customers who will pay, so as <lb />
to cover the extra expense of do- <lb />
a credit business, and the bad <lb />
debts which are the natural re- <lb />
of this system. <lb />
Resolved 4th, That while it is <lb />
very convenient to have goods <lb />
charged, we have to pay for it. <lb />
Resolved 5th, That we, the <lb />
people of Greenville, Pitt county, <lb />
and adjoining counties, having <lb />
adopted the above resolutions do <lb />
hereby elect that <lb />
Co., shall be our head- <lb />
quarters, where the best goods <lb />
for the least money can be ob <lb />
Resolved 6th, That Boswell, <lb />
Co. on hand a <lb />
line of Dry Goods, Shoes, Hats <lb />
and Clothing, fine Dress Goods <lb />
and Trimmings a specialty, which <lb />
they are offering at very low <lb />
prices and ask you to examine <lb />
before purchasing. <lb />
Cash, Chairman. <lb />
Boswell, Co. <lb />
Clerks. <lb />
spring- <lb />
AND- <lb />
SUMMER. <lb />
VS <lb />
FRANK WILSON <lb />
LEADER OF <lb />
Styles and Prices.<lb />
We have just received and are opening the largest stock of <lb />
FINE CLOTHING <lb />
EVER BROUGHT TO GREENVILLE <lb />
-o <lb />
Suits for Men, Youths, Boys and Children. <lb />
in Round Cut, Cut Double Breasted, Prince Albert, Lon- <lb />
don Sack and Dove Tail Cutaway, <lb />
In connection with the above I have purchased a lovely lino of <lb />
Gents Furnishing Goods <lb />
Dry Goods, <lb />
yd ARE OPENING NEW <lb />
GOODS and CAN'T STOP <lb />
TO A NEW <lb />
FOR THIS ISSUE, <lb />
BUT WATCH THIS SPACE <lb />
WE ARE GOING TO OPEN <lb />
YOUR EYES. <lb />
C. T. <lb />
-i <lb />
Depository <lb />
JAm. Bible <lb />
Agent New<lb />
-I HAVE RECEIVED A COMPLETE LINE OF- <lb />
SPRING G <lb />
NOVELTIES, <lb />
and would earnestly solicit examination- <lb />
f SHOES <lb />
Embroideries, White Goods <lb />
and Laces. <lb />
I need not say anything about except that I have received a now <lb />
line. Prices lower than ever. I thank you for your past favor <lb />
and if close prices will avail me anything I will merit a continuance <lb />
Sewing Machines from up. New Home latest improved <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
WILEY BROWN, <lb />
New Home Sowing Machines Depositor for American So <lb />
I. L. SUGG <lb />
Li Fin Inn Apt, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current rates. <lb />
AGENT FOB. FIRST-GLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE <lb />
Henry Sheppard, <lb />
REAL ESTATE COLLECTING <lb />
AGENCY. <lb />
nice residence on <lb />
Green street, rooms, kitchen, barn <lb />
and tables, good well water, <lb />
A small house, loom, kitchen con- <lb />
nice neighborhood. <lb />
House and lot in or <lb />
rooms, all necessary building, well <lb />
I have several houses lots for <lb />
parties wishing to purchase would do <lb />
well to see me before buying. <lb />
I will also make abstracts of title <lb />
to satisfaction guaranteed. <lb />
Terms reasonable. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
M. Schultz. <lb />
OLD WORN <lb />
Notice to Farmers. <lb />
II all sons who will want CANS <lb />
MILLS EVAPORATORS next <lb />
fall will tile their orders with me at an <lb />
early day, I will be able to get the <lb />
Mills at a liberal discount by ordering <lb />
nil once and will the purchaser <lb />
the benefit of the discount. <lb />
II. HARDING, <lb />
Agent. <lb />
MERCHANTS BUY <lb />
their year's supplies will find <lb />
their interest to get our prices before <lb />
here Is complete <lb />
I D all its branches. <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE SUGAR <lb />
RICE, TEA, <lb />
at Lowest Market Prices. <lb />
; TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
I we buy direct from Manufacturers, en <lb />
i Wing you to buy at one profit. A com <lb />
stock <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb />
the times. goods are <lb />
sold for CASH therefore, having no risk <lb />
to sell at a close <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb />
Greenville, N, <lb />
WILLIAMSON<lb />
-MANUFACTURER OF- <lb />
-ALL KINDS OF- <lb />
A call from everybody appreciated- No trouble to show goods. <lb />
FRANK WILSON. <lb />
REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE <lb />
Only first-class workmen and material allowed in my shops. The many <lb />
who have used my work will testify to the beauty durability of <lb />
turned out at my shops. Every vehicle guaranteed. I also carry <lb />
HARNESS WHIPS.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017687_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
Before buying your new bicycle look <lb />
the field over carefully. The superiority <lb />
of Victor Bicycles was never so fully <lb />
demonstrated as at present. Our line <lb />
will bear the most rigid scrutiny, and we <lb />
challenge comparison. <lb />
There's but one <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
BOSTON. <lb />
NEW YORK. <lb />
PHILADELPHIA. <lb />
CHICAGO. <lb />
SAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
DETROIT. <lb />
DENVER. <lb />
Wives <lb />
and Daughters <lb />
Often lose the benefit of life <lb />
assurance, taken out for their <lb />
protection, because of ill-ad- <lb />
vised investments. Again, <lb />
the intentions of the assured <lb />
sometimes fail of realization <lb />
through the prodigality of a <lb />
son to whom the sudden <lb />
session of so much money <lb />
proves too great a temptation. <lb />
The <lb />
Equitable Life <lb />
has provided against these <lb />
contingencies by offering The <lb />
Installment Policy. <lb />
The premiums per thousand <lb />
are much less than under <lb />
older forms of insurance, and <lb />
the amount is payable in <lb />
or annual payments, thus <lb />
comfortable income <lb />
for the beneficiary. Write to <lb />
W. J. Manager, <lb />
Far the Carolina, <lb />
ROCK HILL, S. C. <lb />
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb />
lay- O. X. Proprietor Eastern <lb />
TAR HEEL YARNS. <lb />
A Brace Them and They are <lb />
Fiction Either. <lb />
Not <lb />
NOTES AND TOBACCO <lb />
JOTTINGS <lb />
Fortune, loss than a decode ago <lb />
did more than the to- <lb />
planters of county <lb />
N. C. The fickle was in <lb />
the best possible humor, <lb />
laughed loud and long and a <lb />
and aims are both the though it is to noted <lb />
Premiums are offered at fairs in that what we now call smoking <lb />
order to get only the most choice was then tobacco. <lb />
The cold snap of last week of each in The term, no doubt, originated in <lb />
greatly retarded the growth of; These are placed on public the custom of inhaling the smoke people in chorus. <lb />
tobacco plants. and being of a higher and allowing it to through Th horny-handed toilers of the <lb />
It is rumored that some of the average not the fashion in which it <lb />
Wilson anticipate as a very strong object was originally enjoyed by the in- <lb />
moving to Greenville next lesson on which to improve <lb />
Eczema, <lb />
year <lb />
the <lb />
Those interested in bright tobacco average, but at the same time the <lb />
Greenville <lb />
Market. <lb />
of O. L. Joyner. <lb />
N. C, April 1894. <lb />
QUOTATIONS. <lb />
Tips, green to <lb />
Greenish yellow to <lb />
Smokers, common to good to <lb />
good to fine to <lb />
Cutters, common to good to <lb />
good to tine to <lb />
fine to fancy <lb />
Wrappers, common to <lb />
medium to <lb />
good to <lb />
tine to fancy to 75- <lb />
could not go to a better place in <lb />
America- <lb />
Some of the Greenville people <lb />
are beginning to take more inter- <lb />
est in the tobacco market than <lb />
ever before- are glad this is <lb />
so. because if the home people <lb />
take advantage of the op- <lb />
offered here <lb />
dents surely will. <lb />
With four more large leaf <lb />
then another ware- <lb />
house, Greenville would sell <lb />
under ordinary circumstances <lb />
next year close on to five million <lb />
pounds of the weed. In that <lb />
event let's see how much it would <lb />
pay Greenville in the handling of <lb />
this tobacco. At cents per <lb />
hundred, which re-order- <lb />
and prizing, it would amount <lb />
to over paid to day hands. <lb />
mo <lb />
Become afflicted and remain so, <lb />
untold miseries from a sense <lb />
of they cannot overcome. <lb />
FEMALE REGULATOR, <lb />
by dating and arousing to <lb />
healthy action all her organs, , <lb />
as <lb />
A SPECIFIC. <lb />
pounded from . <lb />
widely used by <lb />
cal authorities and are re- <lb />
in a form ti;. s be- <lb />
coming the fashion every- <lb />
It causes health to bloom on the <lb />
cheek, and joy to reign throughout <lb />
frame. It never fails to cure. <lb />
The Ml Mt for <lb />
has laW under cf <lb />
of Brad field's <lb />
cm a MM and <lb />
S. Henderson, <lb />
REGULATOR CO., <lb />
t 81-00 per <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly <lb />
before the Superior Clerk of <lb />
SB Administrator of F. A. <lb />
Fleming, notice la hereby <lb />
en to persons Indebted to the estate <lb />
to make immediate payment to the <lb />
and nil claims <lb />
against the estate must present the same <lb />
for payment on or before the 12th day <lb />
, of February, 1895, or this will be <lb />
plead in bur of recovery. <lb />
This 12th of Feb. 1894 , , <lb />
A. CONGLETON, <lb />
of F. A. Fleming. <lb />
but promptly <lb />
stomach and <lb />
dyspepsia, . n<lb />
; ache. One taken <lb />
first symptom <lb />
; biliousness, dizziness, <lb />
after eating, or depression <lb />
spirits, and <lb />
remove the v. ;. I. <lb />
. . <lb />
of nearest ; L <lb />
n. <lb />
The partnership heretofore existing <lb />
R. L. and W B. <lb />
Greene, under the name and style <lb />
Greene, has this day been <lb />
dissolved by mutual All debts <lb />
due the Said firm should be paid to R. <lb />
L, and all debts due by the <lb />
said firm will be paid by the said It. 1- <lb />
This Feb. <lb />
R. L. <lb />
Several farmers from Craven <lb />
county were in Greenville a few <lb />
days ago buying tobacco s- <lb />
Those of our Greenville people <lb />
who think the merchants have <lb />
never been by the in- <lb />
of tobacco culture con- <lb />
our hardware merchants, they <lb />
will tell a different tale. Messrs. <lb />
S. E. Ponder Co. and D. D. <lb />
Haskett have both at all times <lb />
manifested an interest the to- <lb />
market and we sincerely <lb />
hope that our tobacco farmers <lb />
will so patronize them that they <lb />
will never have cause to regret it <lb />
We are in receipt of a letter <lb />
from Mr. J. J. Rives, who was <lb />
formerly a buyer on this market <lb />
and who it was said by a tobacco <lb />
drummer a few weeks ago, had <lb />
made sis hundred dollars on this <lb />
market shipping to another, in <lb />
which he says ho is glad that we <lb />
corrected the statement made by <lb />
the drummer. He says he never <lb />
shipped a of tobacco to <lb />
any market except his homo <lb />
market his per cent fails to <lb />
show up any such credits as were <lb />
reported. At the time we wrote <lb />
the article referred to while we <lb />
knew nothing of Mr. <lb />
affairs we knew him well <lb />
enough to know ho possessed too <lb />
much secretiveness to telling <lb />
his private to such men <lb />
as this <lb />
branded the statement as <lb />
false- <lb />
premium offered is an induce- <lb />
and encouragement for all <lb />
to strive to have the best, and <lb />
even though some may never get <lb />
premiums yet they are more than <lb />
paid for their efforts in the <lb />
to which they have raised <lb />
their product. <lb />
The writer says he is opposed <lb />
to the fair also on grounds of <lb />
morality. That from his <lb />
edge of the way fairs are conduct- <lb />
ed they are mere gambling dens, <lb />
If he will expand his <lb />
mental vision he will soon find <lb />
that there is no profession or <lb />
in this laud that could <lb />
not polluted by at evil baud <lb />
tinder misguided direction. If <lb />
wore to abandon a project be- <lb />
cause in it there was a loop hole <lb />
for sin, civilization would soon <lb />
at a standstill, business would <lb />
stagnate, progress would be at an <lb />
end the wheels of thrift <lb />
ingenuity would soon cease to <lb />
roll. Nothing has ever been <lb />
started but that there was some- <lb />
thing in it that would detract <lb />
from ifs real merit if left <lb />
died. Suppose the church of <lb />
Jesus Christ were to disband be- <lb />
cause there are deep-dyed <lb />
and assassins hiding under <lb />
its cover. Suppose the standard <lb />
literary authors of the <lb />
were to discontinue their <lb />
work of elevating and <lb />
the world because there are <lb />
writers of trashy fiction and vice <lb />
that allure and lead astray a small <lb />
cent- of the human race, why <lb />
what would the result be I The <lb />
thing to do is not to allow <lb />
ling and other evil vices when- <lb />
ever it can be avoided, but fair or <lb />
no fair, there is a certain class of <lb />
people the t are going to gamble <lb />
anyway. But because there is a <lb />
possibility of somebody <lb />
because of fair is not productive <lb />
of all good nothing bad, let's <lb />
don't condemn it but go to work <lb />
and inaugurate a fair and <lb />
men as officers who will <lb />
use their host endeavors to <lb />
vent the commission of crime of <lb />
this kind.<lb />
are to take. <lb />
j quick to act, s <lb />
I save . ti <lb />
I tor's <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK <lb />
Tor the Cure all <lb />
This Preparation has been In use <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know ha <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en <lb />
by the leading physicians all <lb />
country, and has effected cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. This Ointments <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which It has obtained is owing entirely <lb />
its own 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 Orders promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
communications to <lb />
T. F. CHRISTMAS, <lb />
Greenville. N. C- <lb />
R. R. <lb />
and <lb />
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb />
No No No <lb />
Oct. Its, daily Fast Mail, <lb />
daily ex <lb />
12,35 pm pm <lb />
Ar pm pm <lb />
pm <lb />
Tarboro pm <lb />
Rocky Mt p pm <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar Florence <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar <lb />
TRAINS GOING NORTH <lb />
No No <lb />
daily daily <lb />
ex Sun<lb />
am<lb />
TOBACCO IN THE LONG AGO. <lb />
Bits of History Relative to its Early <lb />
Use in England. <lb />
Florence <lb />
Fayetteville <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilmington <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Office Furniture <lb />
COMPANY <lb />
JACKSON, TENN. <lb />
MANUFACTURERS OF-<lb />
AND OFFICE <lb />
Schools and Churches seated <lb />
in the beet manner. Offices <lb />
furnished. Send for <lb />
Ai-Rocky Mont <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
v Tarboro p <lb />
Daily except <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Boat <lb />
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. m. Halifax 4.41 <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck 4.-18 p. <lb />
Greenville 0.28 p. m., p <lb />
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. <lb />
Greenville a. m. Arriving Hal <lb />
at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. m. <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch <lb />
Washington 7.00 a, m. arrives <lb />
8.40 a. m., Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m., 6.00 <lb />
p. arrives Washington 7.30 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via Alb <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except <lb />
day, P M, Sunday PM, <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, 10.25 AM 12,20. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M <lb />
Strive N C, AM. Re <lb />
retuning laves M C AM <lb />
arrive Goldsboro, NO A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Spring Hr-j-c e A M, Nashville <lb />
8.30 arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
M. daily except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Branch R. R. <lb />
Latta 7.30 p. arrive Dun bar 8.40 p <lb />
m. Returning leave a. <lb />
arrive Latta 7.15 a. m- <lb />
Sunday <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves <lb />
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, at <lb />
and M Returning leave <lb />
ton at A M, and P. SI. conn it <lb />
Warsaw and <lb />
Train No. makes <lb />
Weldon for all points North daily, <lb />
ail via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb />
daily except Sunday with Norfolk <lb />
railroad for Norfolk and <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
R. Transportation <lb />
In last weeks of the <lb />
appeared an article in op- <lb />
position to a Pitt county fair. We <lb />
were never more surprised at any <lb />
thing our life than at this, for <lb />
the probabilities of a fair <lb />
have been discussed in this paper <lb />
numerous words of encourage- <lb />
have been spoken by men <lb />
from whom we expected least en- <lb />
In fact we <lb />
heard no opposition whatever <lb />
from any source until saw this <lb />
Although the writer of the article <lb />
may acquainted with the <lb />
sentiments of the people of Pitt <lb />
county in regard to a fair than <lb />
we, yet we are of the opinion that <lb />
the great majority of the <lb />
of every profession in the county <lb />
to-day favor a fair. The writer <lb />
says ho is opposed to the <lb />
first, because it will cost the <lb />
of the county more than the <lb />
State and county tax will amount <lb />
to in a year, second, he be- <lb />
fairs are hot beds for <lb />
dissipation. The <lb />
seems to think that the only <lb />
benefit to be derived from a fair <lb />
is to see and to seen, if which <lb />
was true we would join with him <lb />
in his opposition. We ask the <lb />
writer of that article to go with <lb />
us now and let's see if we can't <lb />
convince him that a county fair <lb />
would be of incalculable benefit to <lb />
the agricultural and industrial in- <lb />
of the public. Such <lb />
a fair as we have in mind, and as <lb />
we have before suggested, would <lb />
to the agricultural; mechanical <lb />
and industrial interests of Pitt <lb />
county just what the Teacher's <lb />
Institute is to the educational in- <lb />
of the county, a school <lb />
room in which to educate and de- <lb />
the latent resources which <lb />
have in our possession. <lb />
The object of the Teacher's <lb />
Institute is to raise the standard <lb />
and make more perfect discipline <lb />
of the teachers profession so that <lb />
the influence imbibed by the <lb />
teachers in attendance may be <lb />
thus shed over the little ones in <lb />
the school room under their con- <lb />
So is the object of a county <lb />
fair to raise the standard of the <lb />
county's resources and strengthen <lb />
and materialize each undeveloped <lb />
industry. Though a fair and an <lb />
institute conducted on entire- <lb />
V, J y different t the <lb />
The Elizabethan courtiers were <lb />
luxurious in their ideas, and en- <lb />
joyed the as <lb />
Spenser calls it, through the me- <lb />
of silver pipes. Men of <lb />
commoner clay and shorter purses <lb />
made use of walnut shell and <lb />
a One pipe used to be <lb />
handed from man to man round <lb />
the tables, a practice indulged in <lb />
by men of all grades, somewhat <lb />
after the custom in vogue among <lb />
the redskins of the Far West. <lb />
Every schoolboy has hoard of the <lb />
unexpected bath Sir <lb />
Raleigh received at the hands <lb />
of his frightened housekeeper <lb />
when she discovered him in the <lb />
act of smoking; but it is worth <lb />
mentioning that this curious an- <lb />
is reported of other per- <lb />
sons, his Irish Hubbub, <lb />
published in 1619, gives this <lb />
of the a <lb />
pretty just of tobacco, which was <lb />
this. A certain com- <lb />
newly to London, be- <lb />
holding one to take tobacco, <lb />
ever seeing the before, and <lb />
not knowing the manner of it, <lb />
but perceiving him vent smoke <lb />
so fast, supposing his inward <lb />
parts to be on fire, cried out, <lb />
man, for the passion <lb />
of Cot for by Cot's <lb />
on and having a <lb />
of in the hand, threw <lb />
it at the other's face to quench <lb />
his smoking Here again, <lb />
then, Sir Walter must share his <lb />
fame- <lb />
Tho art of smoking must have <lb />
made rapid headway in England, <lb />
for about ten years after its intro <lb />
we find tho satirists be- <lb />
ginning to inveigh against the <lb />
prevalence of tho habit. But it <lb />
was too firmly rooted to be torn <lb />
up by the claws of their <lb />
the ; and to take tobacco a <lb />
was looked upon as the <lb />
necessary qualification of a gen- <lb />
just as in the Georgian <lb />
era every one who made any <lb />
to that title <lb />
considered it indispensable that <lb />
ho would be able to indulge in <lb />
unlimited without show- <lb />
outward and visible signs of <lb />
their To so great an ex <lb />
tent did the habit obtain, and so <lb />
fashionable did it become, that it <lb />
is recorded by the veracious <lb />
chroniclers of tho period that <lb />
young gallants lessons in <lb />
The was thus de- <lb />
scribed until the middle of the <lb />
seventeenth century ; for the <lb />
of Reuben's effects, sent <lb />
over by Sir to <lb />
Charles I, calls a Dutch <lb />
picture of smokers tobacco- <lb />
The commencement of the <lb />
century has been do- <lb />
scribed as the golden age of to- <lb />
was by <lb />
says one writer, valued for <lb />
imputed virtues more than it <lb />
It received a large amount <lb />
of literary notice; larger than <lb />
ever after foil to its share. Poets <lb />
were inspired with a desire to <lb />
sing its praises, their <lb />
fancy in its Even ladies <lb />
smoked. tho famous <lb />
against stage- <lb />
plays, tells us that in his time <lb />
ladies at the were some- <lb />
times the <lb />
as a of apples <lb />
which appear to been <lb />
Nor was tho <lb />
custom confined to tho ladies <lb />
and Miss Par <lb />
doe, her History of the Court <lb />
of Louis XIV., has shown that <lb />
the daughter of the <lb />
did not disdain the <lb />
of tho pipe, though Louis <lb />
himself had great dislike to to- <lb />
It is remarkable that the habit <lb />
should have become so popular <lb />
in England on tho Continent, <lb />
for tobacco was necessarily an ex- <lb />
pensive luxury, one of the <lb />
earliest objections made to the <lb />
custom of smoking was its ruin- <lb />
cost. Within three years of <lb />
its introduction to to- <lb />
was sold at three shillings <lb />
an which is to <lb />
about eighteen shillings of the <lb />
present money. Aubrey narrates <lb />
that his early days was sold <lb />
then for its I <lb />
heard some of our old <lb />
men say, that when <lb />
to or <lb />
Market they called out their big- <lb />
shillings to lay in the scales <lb />
against the tobacco; now <lb />
the of it are the greatest <lb />
his majestic An enter- <lb />
account of the develop- <lb />
of the tobacco trade Lou- <lb />
don is tho following <lb />
extract from Rich's of <lb />
this Age is not so <lb />
base a comes into an <lb />
to call for his but <lb />
he must have his of tobacco <lb />
for it is a commodity that is <lb />
as vendible in wine <lb />
as wine, ale. <lb />
or for <lb />
shops, shops, <lb />
shops, are never <lb />
without company, that from <lb />
morning till night are still taking <lb />
of tobacco. What a number <lb />
there besides, that doe <lb />
houses, sot that <lb />
hath no other trade to live by, <lb />
but by the selling of tobacco. <lb />
have hoard it told that now <lb />
very lately there hath been a cat- <lb />
of all those now erected <lb />
houses that sett up that trade <lb />
of selling tobacco in London, and <lb />
near about London ; if a man <lb />
may believe what is confidently <lb />
reported, found to <lb />
upwards of seven thousand houses <lb />
that doth live by that trade. I <lb />
cannot say whether number <lb />
shops <lb />
shops the <lb />
but let it boo that those <lb />
were thrust to make up the <lb />
number; let us now look a little <lb />
into tho of the matter, <lb />
let us cast but a slight ac- <lb />
count what the might <lb />
that is consumed in <lb />
If it that there be <lb />
seven thousand shops <lb />
about London, that doth vent to- <lb />
tobacco, as it is credibly reported <lb />
that there be over and above that <lb />
number, it may well be supposed <lb />
to be but an shop <lb />
that taketh not five shillings a <lb />
day, one day with another, <lb />
throughout the whole year; or, <lb />
if doth take two other <lb />
may take more ; but lot us the <lb />
envy of tho master pilot, make <lb />
our after two shillings <lb />
sixpence a day, for he that taketh <lb />
less than that would be ill to <lb />
pay his or to his <lb />
shop windows; neither would <lb />
tobacco houses make such a <lb />
tor as they do, and that almost in <lb />
every lane, and in every <lb />
round about London. Lot <lb />
us reckon thus, seven thousand <lb />
a day, <lb />
to three hundred nineteen thous- <lb />
and, three hundred <lb />
pounds a year, ma all <lb />
spent in What would <lb />
our worthy author have said had <lb />
he lived in our day <lb />
n c. Am <lb />
Y. I . of <lb />
. I . M r ITO <lb />
-tn. In tight weeks II b I -I <lb />
. . Your <lb />
A. P <lb />
I Why ft, <lb />
My rife-1,.,. fr--n ti. w t <lb />
, t In. . ,. <lb />
mint i- i w two I la It-. <lb />
in bun Tor win. <lb />
Mr 1-1 three of Kl- <lb />
I i-.-iii mm 1.-I <lb />
n. <lb />
N C. m. <lb />
. , r M hi- <lb />
Miter A-<lb />
1.1 . <lb />
l u <lb />
field had plenty of money. Near- <lb />
every man you met carried a <lb />
roll of bills as big as your wrist. <lb />
drove fine horses, and owned <lb />
stylish baggies and phaetons, and j <lb />
wore good clothes, and carried to <lb />
their comfortable homos <lb />
and fancy by tho wagon <lb />
load. their sous and <lb />
daughters to the best colleges <lb />
and seminaries. Leaf dealers <lb />
made dollars then where they <lb />
make cents now, tho markets <lb />
of tho famed golden belt were <lb />
busy, flourishing, progressive and <lb />
rapidly growing towns. am <lb />
of all this by Dr. Kings- <lb />
recent article on profitable <lb />
farming <lb />
It was a very ordinary occur- <lb />
for a planter to got fifty <lb />
a hundred for his crop, in- <lb />
scraps. I remember one <lb />
wagon load of tobacco fetching a <lb />
price. That was at a <lb />
premium at tho Old <lb />
Warehouse, Oxford, ton years <lb />
ago. Mr. P. half- <lb />
brother of the editor of the <lb />
was tho <lb />
proprietors of the house. Tho <lb />
capital prise was a beautiful bug <lb />
was offered for tho largest <lb />
and finest load. <lb />
This prise was carried off by <lb />
Mr. Fielding the most <lb />
tobacco grower of the <lb />
county. Beginning just after the <lb />
war with almost nothing, by <lb />
and industrious farming <lb />
ho a had shrewd and level <lb />
on his ho has <lb />
made an independent fortune. <lb />
On tho morning of the <lb />
able Mr. elongated his <lb />
wagon, on a hay body, filled <lb />
it chock full of fine wrappers, <lb />
hitched up a pair of big horses <lb />
drove into town, a distance <lb />
of several miles- That load was <lb />
a sight to behold, end <lb />
among tho many notable <lb />
offerings that day. When it was <lb />
put on the floor the auction- <lb />
stood the piles and tho <lb />
buyers and spectators crowded <lb />
around, the bidding was wonder- <lb />
fully spirited. sixty, <lb />
seventy, ninety, <lb />
along <lb />
That is tho way it went <lb />
off. <lb />
Tho load sold for between four- <lb />
teen and fifteen hundred dollars, <lb />
and including tho value of tho <lb />
prizes awarded Mr. netted <lb />
him more than sixteen hundred <lb />
dollars. This has never been <lb />
passed, I think- <lb />
But that was all <lb />
golden days that used to <lb />
to recall them sometimes <lb />
tho memory saddens so great <lb />
a has time wrought <lb />
HE GOT AN <lb />
A warehouseman whoso name I <lb />
will refrain from mentioning, lo <lb />
on of tho North Caro- <lb />
which shall also <lb />
nameless, was for satisfying <lb />
customers who for real or fancied <lb />
cause wanted to their to <lb />
Ho nearly always <lb />
ed in talking them over- as ho was <lb />
glib of tongue, of inventive mind <lb />
and his business. <lb />
a man and a <lb />
divided a barn of good <lb />
each taking half every grade. <lb />
They brought this tobacco <lb />
wagons to this warehouse- <lb />
man, and the man's load <lb />
sold for prices than did <lb />
that of the It will <lb />
that way sometimes, due to a <lb />
in light, caprice of the <lb />
buyers or sometimes something <lb />
else is a good of <lb />
chance about it anyway. After <lb />
the sale the descendant of Ham <lb />
approached tho warehouseman. <lb />
boss V he asked; <lb />
Mr. <lb />
same barn, <lb />
like, <lb />
huh t tuck <lb />
my in tuck it back <lb />
no reason to complain, <lb />
Uncle replied the ware- <lb />
housemen ; nil right. Sup- <lb />
Mr. Blank did get a higher <lb />
price by the That doesn't <lb />
matter- What folks are after is <lb />
on the load. <lb />
you wanted an <lb />
didn't you <lb />
confidentially button- <lb />
holing the got an <lb />
fact, boss <lb />
you <lb />
of I got average <lb />
dot's all I <lb />
And ho departed satisfied. <lb />
Fever. <lb />
nil else <lb />
WRITS FOR hook. <lb />
ATLANTIC CO. Washington. P. C <lb />
ft C<lb />
You miss it time if you fail to CS <lb />
what you want in this line the <lb />
We make a specialty of this class of and if <lb />
prices, Quality, Quantity <lb />
count for anything with you, come to <lb />
Envelopes -l a pack up- <lb />
Note Paper a quire up. <lb />
Letter. Pools Cap and <lb />
Legal Cap equally low. <lb />
from cent up- <lb />
I Slate Pencils cents per <lb />
up- <lb />
Lead dos. up. <lb />
Pi Points fr in <lb />
j up. <lb />
A FEW <lb />
We are <lb />
DIAMOND <lb />
the best for school and <lb />
purposes. Our Cream Mucilage beats any <lb />
on the market- Our Diamond Glue <lb />
and Magic will mend anything but broken <lb />
hearts- <lb />
INKS, <lb />
Every business should a D, <lb />
KER FOUNTAIN <lb />
hist a life time and are sold nowhere in <lb />
town. <lb />
Our Paper for polite correspondence <lb />
the prettiest in town. We also keen Mourning <lb />
Paper. Then we Slates, Blank Books, <lb />
Memorandum Hook-. Time Books, Erasers, Rub- <lb />
Bands, Pencil Holders. Automatic <lb />
Sponge Cups, Ink Stands, Paper Cutters, Book <lb />
Marks, Pen Holders and other things- <lb />
BOOKS AND NOVELS. <lb />
If you want anything to read some look over <lb />
our supply- Any book not en hand will be or- <lb />
for you. <lb />
Now remember the the only place <lb />
at which you can get these goods at low <lb />
BOOK STORK. <lb />
MISSES, <lb />
and give better <lb />
th-n other make. Try one pair be con- <lb />
; of W. L. line oil bottom, which <lb />
, saves thousand of; to those who them <lb />
of L. I which <lb />
. full line of . TI . lo n <lb />
In if i ; f <lb />
i Mum. <lb />
BOSWELL, CO., Greenville <lb />
R. L. A. BRO. Farmville. N, C <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINK. <lb />
Salve. <lb />
The Salve in tin- for Cuts, <lb />
Bruises. Sores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum, <lb />
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb />
Chilblains cornea, all f-kin <lb />
positively cures Tiles, or no <lb />
nay required. It Is to <lb />
Perfect satisfaction. r money refunded <lb />
price cents per box. For Sale by <lb />
TAR SERVICE<lb />
for <lb />
I NORTH CAROLINA <lb />
It. R. <lb />
In Effect December 4th, 189-1. <lb />
GOING <lb />
Steamers leave for n- <lb />
ville and Tarboro touching at all land- <lb />
on River Monday, We <lb />
Friday A. M. <lb />
Returning leave oh A. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursday, <lb />
in A. M. days. I <lb />
These depart n res are to stage of r, Ni <lb />
water on Tar River. j <lb />
M. <lb />
Paw. Dally <lb />
Sun. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
M. <lb />
STATIONS<lb />
Daily <lb />
sun. <lb />
P. Ml<lb />
Kinston<lb />
XI. <lb />
P. M. <lb />
Washington with .-team <lb />
era of The Norfolk. Newborn and Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk. <lb />
Philadelphia. Blew <lb />
more. <lb />
JNO. SON. <lb />
A gen <lb />
Washington N. C <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Greenville, N C <lb />
Train Wilmington A <lb />
Weldon train bound North, leaving <lb />
Goldsboro a. and with D. <lb />
S. L. DIM., <lb />
LAMp <lb />
Needing a tonic, or children <lb />
up,<lb />
It In pleasant; Malaria, <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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