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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<pb facs="00017689_0001" n="1"/>
<p>
DO <lb/>
NO <lb/>
That the place to <lb/>
Buy your <lb/>
BOOKS <lb/>
-AND- <lb/>
STATIONERY <lb/>
IS <lb/>
AT <lb/>
Reflector <lb/>
BOOKS <lb/>
BOOKS BOOKS <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL. XIII. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1894. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
joints <lb/>
Is the to find the <lb/>
REFLECTOR OFFICE <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR and <lb/>
pot your Homo a year. <lb/>
This for Job Printing <lb/>
AN ADDRESS TO THE VOTERS. <lb/>
Party Leaders Impeached by Min- <lb/>
Democrats. <lb/>
BOOKS <lb/>
People must read <lb/>
they <lb/>
nice, good Books. <lb/>
If can be hail <lb/>
FREE <lb/>
It is all the <lb/>
The is <lb/>
HOW <lb/>
Can books be had for nothing <lb/>
Just on and <lb/>
you will how <lb/>
get own <lb/>
select from the list <lb/>
of hooks printed <lb/>
below, or as <lb/>
of them as yon want <lb/>
ABSOLUTELY F REE. <lb/>
Here is our oiler <lb/>
Any one who Is already a subscriber to <lb/>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
rs and will bring or send us one <lb/>
, subscriber a re- <lb/>
for a year, will be <lb/>
one of the following, <lb/>
books. Two for months i <lb/>
or four subscribers for months counts <lb/>
the as one yearly subscriber. <lb/>
Get as many a you can <lb/>
receive a corresponding <lb/>
bin- of books. Item <lb/>
they must be new <lb/>
St. Paul, April 8.- <lb/>
Probably the most remarkable <lb/>
political address of the year was <lb/>
that issued this afternoon by the <lb/>
Democratic leaders of Minnesota <lb/>
through tho Democratic <lb/>
of Minnesota. It says . <lb/>
is useless to disguise the <lb/>
fact that our party is confronted <lb/>
with serious peril. It is time for <lb/>
words ; silence cow is dis- <lb/>
loyalty to oar <lb/>
In less than two after win- <lb/>
the most complete victory <lb/>
any party ever won, while in full <lb/>
possession of powers then given <lb/>
us, we present tho of <lb/>
a defeated party, while our op <lb/>
routed in the battle, wear <lb/>
all the airs victory. What has <lb/>
wrought this astounding ; <lb/>
whence this peril <lb/>
from our opponents ; not from tho <lb/>
brawling horde of protectionists <lb/>
we met and overthrew in <lb/>
1892 ; but from malignant and <lb/>
treacherous influences, allied with <lb/>
weakness or cowardice, within our <lb/>
own ranks. <lb/>
are these men who have <lb/>
interposed able obstacles <lb/>
and opposition, and made a fail- <lb/>
due to our fault and neglect <lb/>
Those an the names fit to <lb/>
alone alongside of Benedict <lb/>
Arnold in the annals of our <lb/>
try Senator Calvin S. Brice, of <lb/>
Ohio ; David Hill and Edward <lb/>
Murphy, Jr., of New York; John <lb/>
B. James Smith, <lb/>
Jr., of New Jersey Arthur P- <lb/>
Gorman and Charles H. Gibson, <lb/>
of Maryland; Johnson N. Cam- <lb/>
den, of West Virginia; Donelson <lb/>
and Edward D. White, of <lb/>
Louisiana ; John J. Morgan and <lb/>
James L- Pugh, of Alabama. <lb/>
These are the men who wear the <lb/>
mask of Democrats that they may <lb/>
the better betray our cause ; these <lb/>
are the they who have wrought <lb/>
this marvelous change, putting <lb/>
our party in the attitude of defeat <lb/>
to our opponents that <lb/>
DONE BY LEVERAGE. <lb/>
How Some of Wonderful <lb/>
Feats Are Performed. <lb/>
T. the Explain <lb/>
the or Many Tricks of <lb/>
Strength Two <lb/>
Firemen Backward <lb/>
Tho <lb/>
our <lb/>
Bo <lb/>
OUT OF DEFEAT. <lb/>
Democrats, not dis- <lb/>
nor disheartened- <lb/>
heart of the groat mass of <lb/>
beats as true as ever, <lb/>
member that every great cause <lb/>
has had its traitors, every great <lb/>
struggle for greater freedom has <lb/>
danger that observant men from treachery <lb/>
saw when the election of 1892 I of it trusted, and <lb/>
put oil our party the responsibility j be strengthened for the greater <lb/>
struggle before us by the <lb/>
thought that in tho struggles <lb/>
of tho masses for freedom against <lb/>
privileged, entrenched power tho <lb/>
; right has ever uppermost. <lb/>
Reflect that all freedom we have <lb/>
of directing national affairs <lb/>
the duty of redeeming the pledge <lb/>
of tax reform made to and accept- <lb/>
ed by the people, then a cloud no <lb/>
larger than a man's hand, has <lb/>
overspread the whole sky. What <lb/>
was our promise to the people, i, , , <lb/>
we enjoy because our an- <lb/>
so far our , , . , , , <lb/>
VII <lb/>
Hem <lb/>
i a of the books which <lb/>
to make your selection <lb/>
Under Currents. <lb/>
Soldiers Three. <lb/>
Lord and Lady. <lb/>
One Maid's Mischief. <lb/>
Bag of Diamonds. <lb/>
Earl's <lb/>
Majors Daughter. <lb/>
Crown of Shame. <lb/>
Mine Host's <lb/>
Jet. <lb/>
Ere <lb/>
A Life. <lb/>
Carmen. <lb/>
Art <lb/>
All Sorts Conditions of men. <lb/>
Past Existence. <lb/>
The Lament of Dives. <lb/>
Way to the Heart. <lb/>
M sled. <lb/>
Ball Night, <lb/>
Little Rebel. <lb/>
Tour of the World in Days. <lb/>
Almost led. <lb/>
Affair of nor. <lb/>
R. R. Mystery. <lb/>
Bight. <lb/>
Mr. Jacobs, <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/>
the End. <lb/>
The Gambler. <lb/>
On the Stage and Off. <lb/>
Last Passion. <lb/>
Vagrant Wife. <lb/>
Story of a Crime. <lb/>
Matron or Maid. <lb/>
At, the World's <lb/>
Blind Fate. <lb/>
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 Revels <lb/>
Bear in mind these are not books <lb/>
every one of them is beautifully <lb/>
bound in cloth and worth cents to <lb/>
You can examine the books at the <lb/>
office and just what <lb/>
you tire getting. <lb/>
and what has been <lb/>
We denounced <lb/>
protection as a robbery <lb/>
of the masses for the of a <lb/>
And we promised that <lb/>
taxes on imports should be laid <lb/>
with a sole view to affording <lb/>
first disappointment was <lb/>
in the departure from the declared <lb/>
policy of the party in the <lb/>
and needless measure of <lb/>
granted by the House bill, <lb/>
but, mindful of the extent to <lb/>
contact with the sharing in tho <lb/>
extortions of protection had de- <lb/>
moralized representatives in our <lb/>
we accepted it as the best <lb/>
now looked to its <lb/>
free listing of coal, iron ore, wool, <lb/>
and lumber as the entering <lb/>
wedge to be driven home by later <lb/>
and harder <lb/>
THE FATE OF THE LIST. <lb/>
House added sugar to tho <lb/>
free list sent the bill to the <lb/>
Senate. Here the error of tho <lb/>
He use became quite apparent. <lb/>
Tho compromise of principle <lb/>
there made more plenteous fruit <lb/>
in tho Senate. The concessions <lb/>
made in the House only whetted <lb/>
the appetite and tired the <lb/>
city of tho protected interests. <lb/>
With renewed energy they con- <lb/>
their efforts on tho <lb/>
smaller body, farther removed <lb/>
from the people, less responsible <lb/>
to them and more impervious to <lb/>
public opinion. To our shame <lb/>
and dismay they found Senators <lb/>
representing Democratic <lb/>
which had denounced <lb/>
protection and demanded its ob- <lb/>
literation, taking policies willing <lb/>
to aid them. In the secrecy of tho <lb/>
committee room these Senators <lb/>
browbeat the sub-committee with <lb/>
threats of open opposition to the <lb/>
bill, unless special industries they <lb/>
represented wore also granted <lb/>
protection or increase of it. <lb/>
was a weak surrender to <lb/>
the demands of these attorneys <lb/>
of the trusts and a bill was report- <lb/>
ed in which the one redeeming <lb/>
feature of tho House bill, its <lb/>
one distinctively <lb/>
feature, was eliminated, and the <lb/>
bill made hardly distinguishable <lb/>
from the one it proposes to dis- <lb/>
place. <lb/>
OUT THE <lb/>
are those men, Demo- <lb/>
in name, protectionists i n <lb/>
fact, who have thus brought dis- <lb/>
honor and shame on our great <lb/>
party Who are they who have <lb/>
betrayed the great loyal host who <lb/>
gave thorn the power thus to do- <lb/>
liver us into tho hands of the <lb/>
have risen from defeats <lb/>
have survived the treachery <lb/>
of comrades, and through all have <lb/>
kept the rudder true, and let the <lb/>
thought nerve you to further <lb/>
effort that you may give your <lb/>
children an increased measure <lb/>
of liberty. A traitors in the <lb/>
councils cannot defeat tho cause <lb/>
for which we have fought for <lb/>
years in which we won the <lb/>
victory of 1892. Chagrined, we <lb/>
are not dismayed ; betrayed, we <lb/>
are not disheartened; checked, <lb/>
we do surrender. <lb/>
lot no faltering. <lb/>
Everywhere lot Democrats de- <lb/>
and proclaim that this <lb/>
freedom's battle, once begun, <lb/>
shall not end until every citizen <lb/>
of our shall be secure in <lb/>
the right to what he <lb/>
will, ho will, and of whom <lb/>
ho will, exchanging without let or <lb/>
hindrance tho products of his <lb/>
labor for those of his fellow-la- <lb/>
borers anywhere in the wide <lb/>
Falkland Items. <lb/>
April. 8th, 1894. <lb/>
Messrs. Bro, of <lb/>
Tarboro, have opened a stock of <lb/>
spring goods in Smith's store. <lb/>
Our railroad is hustling and <lb/>
will soon be completed. Mr. <lb/>
Short gives an excursion some <lb/>
time next week. <lb/>
S- V. King returned home last <lb/>
week from a trip to Tarboro, <lb/>
Hobgood Scotland <lb/>
C V- Newton has moved into <lb/>
his new residence. <lb/>
We are glad to know Dr. J. <lb/>
Morrill has decided to remain in <lb/>
Falkland. <lb/>
Falkland is a booming, <lb/>
Watch what I say, <lb/>
Yes a hustling <lb/>
A be a city some day. <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
During the month of March <lb/>
Register of Deeds Harding issued <lb/>
marriage licenses to the following <lb/>
Democratic couples, twelve white and eleven <lb/>
Mills and <lb/>
Mills, Stocks and <lb/>
Julia Sutton, Moses Tripp and <lb/>
Lorena Tuton, J. W. Wallace and <lb/>
E. Jones, John <lb/>
land and Sarah Smith, G- H. <lb/>
Little and Rena M. Fleming, <lb/>
Mills and Mary A. Back, <lb/>
N. M. Pool and Mary E. Little, <lb/>
Lewis Kilpatrick and Nettie <lb/>
H. E- Ellis and <lb/>
Mary M. Pearce, John Braxton <lb/>
Morgan, Atlas Ham <lb/>
and Emma Whitley. <lb/>
Carroll and <lb/>
T. H. Briggs, the Englishman who <lb/>
recently made an expose of some of <lb/>
the phenomenal feats performed by <lb/>
Gaza, tho female showing <lb/>
that they were easily explained on <lb/>
the scientific principle of the lever, <lb/>
recently gave an Interesting <lb/>
of the same principle when <lb/>
plied to draft horses. <lb/>
Mr. Briggs performed some feats <lb/>
of strength that would be thought <lb/>
Incredible outside a theater or a cir- <lb/>
but he explained them all on <lb/>
scientific principles. <lb/>
He called out two of tho largest <lb/>
and strongest firemen present. They <lb/>
both grasped a pitchfork handle <lb/>
about eight feet long. Mr. Briggs, <lb/>
who weighs less than one hundred and <lb/>
sixty pounds and is undersized at <lb/>
that, stood opposite. He balanced <lb/>
himself on one foot and then, taking <lb/>
hold of the handle, told them to <lb/>
push. He easily pushed them back- <lb/>
ward, merely requiring that they <lb/>
push downward while he pushed up- <lb/>
ward, thereby getting the benefit of <lb/>
their weight. <lb/>
He next grasped the hand of the <lb/>
biggest fireman and told him to pull. <lb/>
The giant jerked him half way across <lb/>
the room. He had a spectator mount <lb/>
his back and then tried the pull. This <lb/>
time he pulled the fireman over with <lb/>
comparative ease. All this was in- <lb/>
as an exhibition, but <lb/>
seemed like or sleight of <lb/>
hand. Mr. purpose was, <lb/>
however, to illustrate the principle <lb/>
and law of the lever. He explained <lb/>
that it was strength, that <lb/>
counted in the push or pull. <lb/>
He next brought out a number of <lb/>
models of draft horses and carts at- <lb/>
and showed how the same <lb/>
principle helped or impeded a draft <lb/>
horse while pulling a load. If tho <lb/>
traces were inclined so that tho <lb/>
wagon end was lower than the horse's <lb/>
the horse gained additional <lb/>
weight and could pull more, and vice <lb/>
versa. This increased weight of the <lb/>
horse, he explained, was an ad- <lb/>
vantage only when starting a heavy <lb/>
load, after that it would only fatigue <lb/>
the animal sooner. The object, then, <lb/>
was obviously an arrangement that <lb/>
enabled the horse to have added <lb/>
weight when starting a heavy load <lb/>
and only its natural weight or less <lb/>
when moving along with it. <lb/>
When he had made this clear to <lb/>
his hearers Mr. Briggs invited them <lb/>
outside to sec a vehicle equipped <lb/>
with an automatic arrangement of <lb/>
the shafts and trace attachments <lb/>
that accomplished what was wanted. <lb/>
He showed how the horse hitched to <lb/>
this could start a heavier load than <lb/>
with ordinary traces and how the at- <lb/>
then adjusted itself so <lb/>
that the horse could travel without <lb/>
increasing its weight by a pull on <lb/>
the traces. <lb/>
Tho vehicle was placed on an in- <lb/>
plane, but none present could <lb/>
start it by pulling on the shafts. By <lb/>
taking hold the adjustment in- <lb/>
vented by Mr. Briggs, which ex- <lb/>
tended along the shaft but joined <lb/>
tho vehicle at a lower point, this <lb/>
was easily done. It was soon clear <lb/>
to those present that pulling tho <lb/>
vehicle by Mr. appliance was <lb/>
vastly easier than by the ordinary <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
GREENLAND DOVES. <lb/>
The <lb/>
Pole <lb/>
enemy Who are they who have <lb/>
thus made certain the <lb/>
of our President expressed Sophia Peyton, Hoyt Stevenson <lb/>
in his inaugural given to his jerry Starkey and <lb/>
thought tho effect of a Perkins, Samuel Andrews <lb/>
that even if insuperable obstacles I and Kennedy and <lb/>
and opposition prevent the con- Hannah Calvin Chap- <lb/>
summation of our task we shall man and Rosetta Johnson, Harry <lb/>
hardly be excused ; and if failure j Bynum and Elizabeth Parker, <lb/>
i . . i u Otis Stocks and Mary Dawson, <lb/>
can be traced to our fault or neg-, g and <lb/>
we may be sure the people Darden and Annie Chap- <lb/>
will hold us to a swift and exact-1 man, John Anderson and Winnie <lb/>
responsibility. Ann Grant- <lb/>
Little Auk of the North <lb/>
Neighborhood. <lb/>
A few weeks ago a very odd-look- <lb/>
bird was seen on the ocean beach <lb/>
at Conn. It is a pity <lb/>
that it could not have caught, <lb/>
instead of being shot as it was, for a <lb/>
local ornithologist discovered it to <lb/>
be a little auk that had strayed <lb/>
away from its home within the arctic <lb/>
circle. <lb/>
The man who shot it it mount- <lb/>
ed, and set it up in his home. It Is <lb/>
as big as a full-blown <lb/>
blossom, plump as a pullet, with <lb/>
little, short wings. About its head, <lb/>
neck and shoulders is a cape of black, <lb/>
i glossy feathers, while its breast is <lb/>
as white as snow. Its dark wings <lb/>
arc tipped with white patches, and <lb/>
its bill is as black as coal. It is <lb/>
web-footed, and, from the tip of its <lb/>
bill to the end of its tail feathers, it <lb/>
is eight inches long. <lb/>
Mariners who sail in Arctic waters <lb/>
call the little auk the Greenland <lb/>
dove. It especially loves the snowy <lb/>
region invested by the arctic circle, <lb/>
and ornithologists say that If the <lb/>
north pole should ever be discovered <lb/>
flocks of these little birds will be <lb/>
found in the neighborhood. <lb/>
In of its short wings the <lb/>
little auk travels through the air <lb/>
like a rifle shot; it dives expertly <lb/>
and can swim under water. It is <lb/>
perfectly at home whether afloat or <lb/>
ashore, and when weary of sea- <lb/>
faring tucks its head under Its wing <lb/>
and goes to in the <lb/>
cradle of the It subsists on <lb/>
fish and small crabs and lays one <lb/>
egg of a pale greenish blue, like the <lb/>
northern Days. <lb/>
Love and anger need co <lb/>
Nothing is sure in politics but <lb/>
certainty. <lb/>
Many men lightly spoken of as <lb/>
would starve if <lb/>
less. <lb/>
THE BEST MAN. <lb/>
His Arduous Duties Before and After <lb/>
the Wedding. <lb/>
For twenty-four hours before the <lb/>
wedding the best man is the <lb/>
owner of the groom. He tacitly <lb/>
undertakes to produce the groom at <lb/>
the church, suitably <lb/>
and in his right mind or else <lb/>
to take his place. If the groom <lb/>
shows symptoms of running away <lb/>
ha must shackle him. Some best <lb/>
men invariably handcuff themselves <lb/>
to their grooms in the morning of <lb/>
the day before the wedding as a <lb/>
precaution against <lb/>
dents, for when the best man's con- <lb/>
has been abused once or <lb/>
twice it makes him cautious. He <lb/>
up early tho next morning, <lb/>
must see that the bridesmaids have <lb/>
all received their bouquets, that he <lb/>
has the minister's money in the right <lb/>
pocket, that he has a wedding ring <lb/>
in each of his pockets, that the car- <lb/>
orders arc understood, that <lb/>
the has made adequate pro- <lb/>
visions for his wedding journey and <lb/>
that the ushers are presentable and <lb/>
can walk. All this he must do with- <lb/>
out letting the groom his sight. <lb/>
When the wedding is over and he <lb/>
has consigned his charge to the care <lb/>
of the bride he. takes the groom's <lb/>
place as host and sees, in particular, <lb/>
that the groom's friends from out of <lb/>
town arc suitably entertained and <lb/>
shipped home at convenient inter- <lb/>
on their proper trains. Only <lb/>
when the lust of them is pone can he <lb/>
call his man and go home to bed. <lb/>
Is a man ever best man more than <lb/>
once <lb/>
Some, very popular men have been <lb/>
best man as often as a dozen times, <lb/>
but usually one or two experiences <lb/>
are enough to convince the <lb/>
that matrimony itself is a <lb/>
less trying Y. Life. <lb/>
ENGLAND'S FISCAL SYSTEM. <lb/>
Great Britain's Many Sources of Na- <lb/>
Income. <lb/>
Great Britain has a wider range <lb/>
of sources of national income than <lb/>
the United States. Instead of two <lb/>
main sources the British govern- <lb/>
has four. The two largest are <lb/>
like our duties and in- <lb/>
revenue on spirits. <lb/>
The other two arc the income tax <lb/>
and a series of imposts known as <lb/>
stamp taxes. These stamp taxes <lb/>
are collected on all kinds of legal <lb/>
transactions, and tho great bulk of <lb/>
these pertain to the settling of es- <lb/>
and arc known us death duties <lb/>
i. e., taxes upon the probating of <lb/>
upon legacies and upon <lb/>
cessions. Stamps upon deeds, re- <lb/>
insurance policies, patent <lb/>
medicine packages and various <lb/>
papers and transactions make up <lb/>
the rest. There is a small national <lb/>
land tax and a house duty that yield <lb/>
some revenue, and the operation of <lb/>
the post office is somewhat profit- <lb/>
able. The elastic clement in the <lb/>
English system is the income tax, <lb/>
which is made higher or lower to <lb/>
meet the situation. The condensed <lb/>
exchequer receipts and expenditures <lb/>
for the British fiscal year 1802-93 in <lb/>
pounds sterling about <lb/>
to are as <lb/>
Income tax. <lb/>
on <lb/>
Land tax and debt 58,3.18,000 <lb/>
house duty. 2.440,003 <lb/>
Including gross income from post <lb/>
office and various miscellaneous <lb/>
items of revenue, the total income is <lb/>
Including expenses of postal and <lb/>
telegraph service and other <lb/>
outgoes, the total <lb/>
is of <lb/>
SCHOOL CLOSING. <lb/>
The school taught by Miss <lb/>
Mary Cannon in district No. <lb/>
closed April 1894. <lb/>
Her entertainment that night was <lb/>
an entire was enjoy- <lb/>
ed by all present. <lb/>
Tho exorcises began at <lb/>
o'clock with a song, Old <lb/>
North State by the <lb/>
school, and wore continued in <lb/>
succession by the following <lb/>
I. Welcome-by <lb/>
and Eugene Cannon. <lb/>
2- Recitation-The Grand-moth <lb/>
by Miss Hattie Cannon. <lb/>
-Pride, by Misses <lb/>
Alice and Blanche Brown. <lb/>
4- Talk, by <lb/>
Johnnie and Clarence Cannon, <lb/>
Eddie and Johnnie <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
6- by Miss- <lb/>
es Minnie Forbes, Delia <lb/>
and and Hattie <lb/>
C. Mother Goose Concert, by <lb/>
Miss Daisie and the <lb/>
children. <lb/>
Texas Miss <lb/>
Delia and J. E. Cannon. <lb/>
Mary's <lb/>
Story, by Miss Alice <lb/>
Faults, by <lb/>
Misses Minnie Forbes, Mattie <lb/>
Cannon, Delia S M <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
10- your own <lb/>
business, by several girls and <lb/>
boys. <lb/>
II. Distant <lb/>
by Misses Daisie <lb/>
Cannon and Delia <lb/>
Fate of <lb/>
Charlotte Miss Minnie <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
Cantata or the Crown of <lb/>
girls. The crown <lb/>
was carried by little Blanche Can <lb/>
non and Bertha <lb/>
Colored <lb/>
Witness, by S- M. Smith, B. C <lb/>
Cannon, J. R. and J. E- <lb/>
Cannon. <lb/>
Night, by the <lb/>
school. <lb/>
Each one did their part well <lb/>
and deserves much praise. The <lb/>
patrons of school should be <lb/>
very thankful to Miss Mary for <lb/>
her excellent training of the <lb/>
as was shown in tho per- <lb/>
of their pieces. <lb/>
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report. <lb/>
Baking <lb/>
Powder <lb/>
AN IMPOTENT PLEA. I ABOVE PERSONAL INTERESTS <lb/>
The Society of the Cincinnati. <lb/>
The late George W. Childs was one <lb/>
of the members of the Society of tho <lb/>
Cincinnati who was not actually de- <lb/>
from somebody who in <lb/>
the He was a generous <lb/>
contributor, however, and paid a <lb/>
good, share of the expenses of more <lb/>
than one good dinner. The <lb/>
members in Philadelphia are still <lb/>
worrying themselves over where to <lb/>
put the monument to Washington <lb/>
which the people subscribed to build <lb/>
years and years ago. Although it <lb/>
is settled that it is not to go into <lb/>
Independence square, it seems to be <lb/>
as much a problem as ever. <lb/>
Chicago Hospitality. <lb/>
The young lady entered a Chicago <lb/>
book store hesitatingly, as if she <lb/>
were uncertain of her location. <lb/>
I do anything for you, <lb/>
asked the polite clerk. <lb/>
I want you to send four or <lb/>
five dozen books to our house on <lb/>
Prairie avenue. Here's the address. <lb/>
Send the bill with the <lb/>
books do you wish, <lb/>
inquired the clerk. <lb/>
any will do, so long as there's <lb/>
enough of them. I'm going to have <lb/>
a girl from Boston visit mo and I <lb/>
want to make her feel at <lb/>
Detroit Free Press. <lb/>
Not Conclusive Evidence. <lb/>
young proposed <lb/>
asked a Harlem mother of one <lb/>
of her numerous unmarried <lb/>
yet; but I think he is going <lb/>
to pretty soon. There are some <lb/>
pretty strong indications. He has <lb/>
got orange blossoms on his <lb/>
like to know why you think <lb/>
he has orange blossoms on his <lb/>
we were at the soda-water <lb/>
fountain yesterday evening he took <lb/>
orange Sittings. <lb/>
Populism means hate, discord, <lb/>
Look at the two <lb/>
or three States that have <lb/>
list Governors. They in a <lb/>
constant state of turmoil and are <lb/>
almost continually on the verge of <lb/>
anarchy and civil war. Kansas <lb/>
has had her war over the <lb/>
in which Governor <lb/>
came out in disgrace almost <lb/>
as deep as when the female crank <lb/>
and agitator, Mrs. Lease, trapped <lb/>
him in the courts. Governor <lb/>
of Oregon, has had his <lb/>
various and sundry wordy wars. <lb/>
Governor Waite, of Colorado, has <lb/>
also fought with his mouth <lb/>
with great bold- <lb/>
even threatening to ride up <lb/>
to his bridle bits in blood if all <lb/>
things were not arranged to suit <lb/>
him, but. he never met grim-vis- <lb/>
aged war face to face, with his <lb/>
shooting irons in his hand, till <lb/>
the other day. The <lb/>
did not find the Governor in a <lb/>
mood to make an object lesson of <lb/>
his name. He did not wait but <lb/>
hurried away. The origin of the <lb/>
war is an indifferent matter. <lb/>
Certain police commissioners of <lb/>
Denver were ordered by the Gov- <lb/>
to resign and got out an in- <lb/>
junction from the <lb/>
the Governor to <lb/>
in demand for their <lb/>
nation till the matter be <lb/>
decided. He refused to <lb/>
wait, but called out the militia <lb/>
and marched in the city hall to <lb/>
dispossess tho police commission- <lb/>
These worthies had collect- <lb/>
ed their police and a special gang <lb/>
of a hundred or so bold, bad men <lb/>
from Bloody Gulch, who had rep <lb/>
as all arm- <lb/>
ed to the teeth, and they were <lb/>
quietly waiting to give the Gov- <lb/>
and his militia a rousing <lb/>
reception The Governor's ardor <lb/>
cooled and he decided at last to <lb/>
wait, calling on Grover Cleveland, <lb/>
the President he has abused so <lb/>
much, to send General <lb/>
and a regiment of S- troops to <lb/>
Denver to protect him. The only <lb/>
moral there is in this is the on e <lb/>
that shows to what a lamentable <lb/>
condition a community is brought <lb/>
that listens to a of ignorant <lb/>
extremists and bow eager the <lb/>
boldest dreamer is to seek the <lb/>
assistance of the true and <lb/>
cal pilot when the storm arises <lb/>
and the mad waves threaten to <lb/>
overwhelm Topic. <lb/>
A little better is being <lb/>
gotten now of tho <lb/>
case. The testimony of <lb/>
Col. throws a good <lb/>
deal of light upon it. It appears <lb/>
that this bad one all <lb/>
the for him and cap- <lb/>
him. She herself <lb/>
to him and stuck Ho tried to <lb/>
her off and <lb/>
would not be shaken. She clung <lb/>
to him an old of the sea. I <lb/>
had him in her power, <lb/>
held him, under at one <lb/>
time of exposure and at another <lb/>
of assassination. Ho would glad-1 <lb/>
been free of her, but <lb/>
would not permit him to have his <lb/>
wont on ; he <lb/>
finally defied married Mrs. <lb/>
Wing, and then the explosion <lb/>
came. This, at this time, appears ; <lb/>
to about tho size of it. -Char-1 <lb/>
lotto Observer. <lb/>
Of course, tho is to <lb/>
blame. They usually are in mat- <lb/>
of this kind. At any rate <lb/>
get tho of it so <lb/>
receive tho censure of tho public <lb/>
while tho generally gets tho <lb/>
sympathy and applause- But <lb/>
whoso fault was it that this bold, <lb/>
bad first captured tho old <lb/>
gray <lb/>
to him and stuck V Was <lb/>
not he as willing as and does <lb/>
not tho whole affair reveal the <lb/>
fact that he was as deep mud <lb/>
as she was in tho And yet, <lb/>
the cowardly old hypocrite under- <lb/>
takes to excuse himself upon tho <lb/>
lame and impotent idea that he <lb/>
was the person seduced and not <lb/>
tho Pollard woman. Moan <lb/>
contemptible wretch ho ought to <lb/>
kicked out of society and <lb/>
spurned by all decent people- <lb/>
if his constituents Ken- <lb/>
do not retire him to private <lb/>
life and his name to the <lb/>
shades of obscurity and oblivion <lb/>
after this we pity manhood <lb/>
and the code of morals recognized <lb/>
by such a people. Col Brock- <lb/>
prominence in public <lb/>
life, his high abilities and social <lb/>
attainments make it ail tho worse <lb/>
for him, because w. had a right <lb/>
to different of such a <lb/>
Henderson Gold Loaf <lb/>
Kites and Men. <lb/>
Men are but children of a <lb/>
growth, and tho youth ab- <lb/>
just now in his re- <lb/>
of kite flying is a true <lb/>
prototype of tho man that shall <lb/>
come after him. That boy's kite <lb/>
goes dangling along in the dust <lb/>
with only an occasional rise <lb/>
which buoys the boy's hope for <lb/>
tho moment, but ho is doomed to <lb/>
despair as an unfavorable move <lb/>
sends his kite and his hopes to <lb/>
the ground- Some men never <lb/>
rise above the ground and the <lb/>
trials of their <lb/>
earthly career are only lighted <lb/>
by momentary gleams of <lb/>
tho brief rise fall of the <lb/>
paper kite kite catches <lb/>
favorable breeze and goes soar- <lb/>
up, is no limit to <lb/>
ascent in life, just as the success- <lb/>
man, the one whose luck is <lb/>
phenomenal, knows no limit but <lb/>
death and the grave. The ear- <lb/>
and enthusiasm of the <lb/>
youthful kite is truly typical <lb/>
of tho absorption the man gives <lb/>
to his business pursuits just <lb/>
as patience, environment and fair <lb/>
winds contribute to the success <lb/>
of the boyish pastime so are they <lb/>
the main factors in determining <lb/>
every man's career. <lb/>
There seem to be some <lb/>
that the North Carolina <lb/>
campaign for the Democratic <lb/>
party this year will be narrowed <lb/>
to the of personal interests- <lb/>
We hope are mistaken in our <lb/>
prognostications, for tho public <lb/>
weal rises above the interests of <lb/>
one, two, ten, or a thousand men <lb/>
Two ago tho nation- <lb/>
Democratic party was greatly <lb/>
divided in strong preference for <lb/>
Cleveland by some and as strong <lb/>
preferences for Hill by others, <lb/>
tho Democrat said, lay thorn both <lb/>
aside. said then, as we <lb/>
say now, that it was useless for a <lb/>
great political party to divide and <lb/>
bitterly disagree over men. How <lb/>
wise were our admonitions do <lb/>
not pretend to say. We only <lb/>
know that Cleveland has greatly <lb/>
disappointed people in every <lb/>
section of the country; and we <lb/>
have no reason to believe that it <lb/>
would have boon bettor if Hill <lb/>
had boon nominated elected, <lb/>
for he has greatly diminished <lb/>
tho estimation of tho public <lb/>
tho past few mouths. <lb/>
And give tho word of warn- <lb/>
now that if should <lb/>
spring up a difference over the <lb/>
interests of men or any set of men <lb/>
in North Carolina, lot it all be <lb/>
thrown aside. The interest of <lb/>
tho people is too big a thing for <lb/>
to considered in the <lb/>
matter. <lb/>
Principles, and not individual <lb/>
interests, must control our <lb/>
cal Neck <lb/>
Democrat. <lb/>
for Greenville Circuit. <lb/>
Baton on Sunday at <lb/>
o'clock and at three <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
Grove on second Sunday at <lb/>
eleven o'clock School <lb/>
Ho ice at o'clock. <lb/>
on third Sunday at eleven <lb/>
o'clock Impel at three <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
u the fourth Sunday at <lb/>
eleven O'clock, and School <lb/>
House at three o'clock. <lb/>
, Everybody Invited to attend. <lb/>
Baptist Services. <lb/>
Below are the regular appointments <lb/>
of Rev. J. II. pastor of the <lb/>
; Baptist church i <lb/>
At and fourth <lb/>
; days in each month, morning and night, <lb/>
; and every night- <lb/>
At Sunday in each <lb/>
mouth, morning and night. <lb/>
At. Person <lb/>
Sunday each month J Saturday be- <lb/>
fore. <lb/>
Episcopal Services. <lb/>
are regular appointments <lb/>
of Key. A. Hector <lb/>
third Sundays In <lb/>
each month, and evening. <lb/>
Sunday in each <lb/>
month, and evening. <lb/>
, all other Sunday morning-. <lb/>
St. Sun- <lb/>
day in each month, morning and evening <lb/>
Holy Innocents, <lb/>
; fifth Sunday morning. <lb/>
Carte <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
i, G <lb/>
II F. <lb/>
Land And <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Office St the King House. <lb/>
e. L. i. Moors,<lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Office under Opera House. Third St. <lb/>
Those <lb/>
Pimples <lb/>
Are tell-tale symptom Hint blond <lb/>
U not right-full of impurities, <lb/>
and unsightly <lb/>
A bottles of H. S. will <lb/>
all foreign impure matter, cleanse <lb/>
the blood thoroughly, and give a clear <lb/>
and rosy It is most effect- <lb/>
and entirely harmless. <lb/>
Thai. Laurel Street, say <lb/>
have for a humor in blond <lb/>
made to shave, as small boils or <lb/>
would tie cut, thus causing shaving to <lb/>
p. annoyance. A three bottles <lb/>
V HI tare is all clear and smooth <lb/>
H be-appetite <lb/>
S steep well and like running a <lb/>
all for the use of S. S. S. <lb/>
Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free. <lb/>
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., <lb/>
J. <lb/>
L. FLEMING, <lb/>
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW <lb/>
N. O. <lb/>
Prompt attention to business. <lb/>
at Tucker old stand. <lb/>
P JAMES, <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N I; <lb/>
Practice In the courts. Col a <lb/>
specialty. <lb/>
X. L. BLOW <lb/>
J. <lb/>
BLOW, <lb/>
W, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
in all the Court. <lb/>
B. r. <lb/>
TYSON, <lb/>
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb/>
Prompt attention given to collection <lb/>
L. C. LATHAM. HARRY <lb/>
T SKINNER, <lb/>
B. C.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017689_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Tho next mooting of tho North v The groat Cotton and Peanut. <lb/>
Association that has been finishing <lb/>
be in May tho scandal mongers tor sever A Co., <lb/>
-Rand 24th. A circular out weeks, came to its of <lb/>
evening. The jury rendered a-3 . <lb/>
I. . , , i t . f ii i Middling <lb/>
that it is going to be a in favor of the <lb/>
B, I Editor and <lb/>
and enjoyable mooting gave her Middling <lb/>
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 18th, Association. is gave notice of <lb/>
at <lb/>
S. C, as mail matter. <lb/>
beautiful, flourishing town and <lb/>
will give the editors a h-arty <lb/>
SENATOR VANCE DEAD. <lb/>
To-day all North Carolina is in <lb/>
mourning- There is scarcely a <lb/>
home that is not saddened. A <lb/>
write fit ceremonies are being <lb/>
in all parts of the State and <lb/>
nearly church bell is being <lb/>
tolled for tho illustrious dead. <lb/>
Senator Zebulon Vance is <lb/>
no more on earth- The of <lb/>
death has called for him and h <lb/>
has ceased from his labors. Sen- <lb/>
Vance died in Washington. <lb/>
D. C-. on last Saturday at <lb/>
o'clock. He had been in <lb/>
feeble health for a long while- <lb/>
and on last Saturday had a stroke <lb/>
of apoplexy and only survived a <lb/>
few hours. He was unconscious <lb/>
until just before death. <lb/>
Zebulon Band Vance was born <lb/>
in county in and <lb/>
have been old on <lb/>
the 13th of the coming May. He <lb/>
was educated at the University of <lb/>
North Carolina. No man has <lb/>
held more responsible positions in <lb/>
this State than he and be has <lb/>
been true to every trust. Senator <lb/>
Vance served in the House of <lb/>
Commons in 1850. He entered <lb/>
There was considerable com- <lb/>
plaint again last over the ab- <lb/>
of a quorum in Congress, re <lb/>
suiting in giving the Republican <lb/>
another opportunity to have <lb/>
things their own way and cause a <lb/>
dead-lock business. We are <lb/>
glad to note that all the members <lb/>
from North Carolina are in <lb/>
places, and doing what they con- <lb/>
to be to the best interests <lb/>
of the people they present. <lb/>
The terms of thirty Senators- <lb/>
will expiry the Fifty-third <lb/>
Congress. Fourteen Democrats <lb/>
will their seats sixteen <lb/>
Republicans. Among the more <lb/>
prominent members whose term <lb/>
ire approaching expiration are <lb/>
Messrs. Chandler, Dolph, <lb/>
Frye, Harris, Hoar, <lb/>
Morgan, Ransom, <lb/>
and The <lb/>
States which vacancies will <lb/>
Arkansas, South Caro <lb/>
Louisiana. West Virginia, <lb/>
Wyoming, New Hampshire, Tex- <lb/>
ts. Illinois, Georgia, Is <lb/>
land, Oregon. Maine, <lb/>
Delaware. Massachusetts, <lb/>
Kentucky, Nebraska, Kan <lb/>
Michigan, New Jersey. Ala <lb/>
South Dakota, Montana. <lb/>
motion for a new trial. We hope <lb/>
his efforts this direction <lb/>
. . , , , Prime <lb/>
public has heard <lb/>
of tho trial and is satisfied of <lb/>
i -l -I, i . B <lb/>
defendants guilt. What <lb/>
I , , U The is an extract from a let- <lb/>
done is for Congress . <lb/>
take immediate steps to kick of last <lb/>
spot market has eased off some- <lb/>
whit, for the tow days owing to the <lb/>
out of that body to which <lb/>
longer membership is a <lb/>
to tho whole country. The Pol <lb/>
lard woman should also r <lb/>
to tho shades of oblivion. <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER, <lb/>
the Confederate Army if the Carolina, Idaho, <lb/>
ginning of the war as Minnesota, Iowa and Comrade <lb/>
and was promoted to Colonel <lb/>
the 20th N. C Regiment. He <lb/>
came out of the army to accept <lb/>
the Governorship of his native <lb/>
State was our faithful and <lb/>
true Governor through the on <lb/>
tire war. He was elected Senator <lb/>
in 1870 but his disabilities had <lb/>
not removed and he was de- <lb/>
participation the National <lb/>
council. He was Governor again <lb/>
of the State from to 1879 <lb/>
when he was again elected Sena- <lb/>
tor. Ho has held the position <lb/>
continuously since then, and was <lb/>
at the post of duty when sum- <lb/>
to pass over the river <lb/>
rest the shade of the trees. <lb/>
No North Carolinian in the <lb/>
history of the State was ever so <lb/>
well, so truly and so universally <lb/>
loved. No man has ever been so <lb/>
popular with the masses as Sena- <lb/>
tor Vance- No man will <lb/>
ever be so sadly mourned for <lb/>
as he. There is hardly a child <lb/>
in the State but knows something <lb/>
of this great good man. <lb/>
probably better <lb/>
than that of any living or dead <lb/>
North Carolinian hardly any <lb/>
man knew him who did not love <lb/>
and admire him. <lb/>
His life has been one of labor- <lb/>
our <lb/>
Washington- D- C April <lb/>
Senator Harris very cleverly <lb/>
the Republican Sena <lb/>
tors this week and put an end, <lb/>
the present at least, to Republican <lb/>
to delay the tariff <lb/>
Ho made a bluff of in <lb/>
rending to offer a resolution pro- <lb/>
for meeting at o'clock <lb/>
sitting until each day. This <lb/>
frightened the Republicans <lb/>
they made the proposition that <lb/>
for a week the Senate take up the <lb/>
tariff bill at o'clock and continue <lb/>
us debate without roll calls <lb/>
interruptions until o'clock- <lb/>
This was exactly doubling the <lb/>
that had previously <lb/>
devoted to the tariff bill and being <lb/>
note than the Democrats expect- <lb/>
ed to get without a struggle was <lb/>
promptly accepted. <lb/>
is perfectly willing that this <lb/>
should continue in <lb/>
force for ten days or two weeks <lb/>
longer. Then he will begin to <lb/>
put on the screws in earnest, to <lb/>
bring the debate to an end, be- <lb/>
ginning by adding an hour a day <lb/>
to the sittings continuing <lb/>
until they <lb/>
the Republicans to keep a <lb/>
speaker on tho at all times. <lb/>
Senator Morgan is tho only <lb/>
Senator who has publicly noticed <lb/>
extraordinary address lately <lb/>
as emanating from ii <lb/>
Minnesota Democratic association <lb/>
to twelve Senators at <lb/>
and op <lb/>
to the tariff bill. Hi <lb/>
made a personal explanation on <lb/>
the floor of the Senate <lb/>
lie characterized that address an <lb/>
being like the French method of <lb/>
trying a man in his absence and <lb/>
without g notice upon him <lb/>
He expressed himself as satisfied <lb/>
with the tariff bill as it now stands <lb/>
and announced his intention U <lb/>
rote for it his willingness, if <lb/>
necessary, to stay on the oil <lb/>
he Senate several <lb/>
lays and nights, as ho had done <lb/>
in other occasions, to to <lb/>
speech <lb/>
against it. He said be bad <lb/>
be u a tariff reformer long before <lb/>
has made many warm who formulated the <lb/>
Pitt all of whom him. and expected <lb/>
be clad could be return hero remain until we get a fail <lb/>
any time. There has been of tariff taxation. <lb/>
diminishing of dockets <lb/>
Judge John Gray <lb/>
held three consecutive terms <lb/>
Pitt Superior Court, and tin <lb/>
believes that <lb/>
who has been here has given <lb/>
more general satisfaction than he. <lb/>
Ho dispatches rapidly, <lb/>
and like we said at his first term <lb/>
here, when he takes his seat up <lb/>
on the bench he shows <lb/>
that he is the head of the <lb/>
Court. He allows no dilly-dally <lb/>
but open any question <lb/>
expresses his opinion firmly <lb/>
and pointedly, and when he says <lb/>
a thing it is said. Judge <lb/>
is not only an excellent Judge, <lb/>
but outside of the Court room ht <lb/>
is an exceedingly clever and <lb/>
gentleman, making- hi nisei <lb/>
agreeable and pleasant to <lb/>
with whom he comes in contact <lb/>
depression brought about <lb/>
free movement at the ports, which ex- <lb/>
that of the correspond x week <lb/>
of last year about The loss <lb/>
stocks at interior towns for I he past <lb/>
week was The Co <lb/>
rive excess the port it for <lb/>
the past few days is due, it is said, to <lb/>
eastern mills buying; largely at the <lb/>
Owing to the unsettled tariff <lb/>
which been agitating the <lb/>
of null men for some months past, it i.- <lb/>
very evident that they have been run- <lb/>
hind to the <lb/>
that they are coming into the mar- <lb/>
which is not only demonstrated by <lb/>
hearsay but by the significance of tin <lb/>
overland movement for the past <lb/>
week, is gratifying to the friends of cot-l <lb/>
ton and should be to the entire <lb/>
world, for it seems to us that <lb/>
means nothing less than a revival in <lb/>
trade generally, which, if true, means a <lb/>
est oral ion of lost confidence and will <lb/>
lend to wing about a higher plane of <lb/>
values. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
To whom it may My <lb/>
Patsy A. White having left place <lb/>
without my consent and refuses to re- <lb/>
torn my bed and board, this is to for- <lb/>
Md all persons not to fur- <lb/>
board or house or in any way bar- <lb/>
nor her. order that sin- may return to <lb/>
home. JOHN WHITE. <lb/>
Till April 13th 1894. <lb/>
SPRING <lb/>
nest line of <lb/>
SPRING HATS <lb/>
in Greenville <lb/>
ever sin, <lb/>
bright, dainty creatures of <lb/>
beauty the new style Spring <lb/>
What skill, what taste, what in- <lb/>
has displayed, <lb/>
combination of feathers and <lb/>
mowers and ribbons and straws can b <lb/>
at <lb/>
m m, mm <lb/>
EMPORIUM. <lb/>
Everything please. Call and <lb/>
and see yourself. Prices to <lb/>
mil the limes. <lb/>
Land. Sale. <lb/>
The most notable feature of the <lb/>
held by Democratic mom <lb/>
of the House this week, all <lb/>
which resolutions endorsing the <lb/>
repeal of the tax on State bank <lb/>
cum were adopted, wee the <lb/>
virtue of two decrees <lb/>
December term, 1888, other <lb/>
term, of <lb/>
lit the ea-e of Susan vs. <lb/>
1.1. and others, the undersigned <lb/>
r will sell for cash <lb/>
Court House door, in on <lb/>
the 7th day of May, 1881, <lb/>
following described tracts o land <lb/>
in the county of Pitt, and in <lb/>
township. One known as <lb/>
Ida Warren land, adjoining the lands <lb/>
Betsy Cobb, John A <lb/>
B. Hathaway and others, con- <lb/>
acres. Also one other <lb/>
f land adjoining tin- said Warren tract <lb/>
Hathaway, H. Clark and other <lb/>
Known as the Brown land <lb/>
acres, more or less. <lb/>
23rd, 1881. Commissioner. <lb/>
work for the people and his <lb/>
death was evidently hastened by <lb/>
the continuous strain which <lb/>
has been for the past years <lb/>
in laboring for the relief of his <lb/>
people. His memory cannot b <lb/>
too highly reverenced. His la- <lb/>
can never be fully <lb/>
because they will never <lb/>
be truly known. To fully and <lb/>
well appreciate him we would <lb/>
have to know his every <lb/>
thought and deed through <lb/>
long, cruel civil war, when he <lb/>
was at the helm of State and; <lb/>
when every soldier, every <lb/>
woman and child loved him as a <lb/>
father. We would to go <lb/>
Several papers this State <lb/>
recently published an article <lb/>
written to the Winston <lb/>
t by its Washington <lb/>
dent, purporting to be an inter <lb/>
view with ex-Gov. T. J Jarvis. <lb/>
Some of tho papers that copied <lb/>
speech made by Representative <lb/>
of New York, in <lb/>
f the resolutions. He told tin <lb/>
caucus that the people of New <lb/>
had cast their votes for the <lb/>
Democratic candidates with <lb/>
of the contents of the <lb/>
Sale of Land. <lb/>
By virtue of a power of sale contained <lb/>
ii a d-.-d of trust executed by Wm. <lb/>
Brown and wife to the <lb/>
jive in V. page 185-7, Reg <lb/>
Office of I'll county. I sell <lb/>
it the Court Rouse door in the town <lb/>
Greenville, H. C, on Wednesday Pk <lb/>
day of May 1884, at noon for cash, <lb/>
it public auction to the highest <lb/>
following property, to A <lb/>
such utterances. In this belief <lb/>
they arc entirely correct. The <lb/>
called on Gov. Jams <lb/>
he said the first knowledge <lb/>
he bad of the matte v. as <lb/>
the article in tho be possible to pass a bi <lb/>
Got. Jarvis has been the law which imposed <lb/>
. , i upon the <lb/>
since, by State banks. <lb/>
the correspondent s by less <lb/>
was the product of his own one half of the Democratic <lb/>
imagination, and his intent ion membership the House. <lb/>
land, boundaries, <lb/>
Senator <lb/>
thereto. Teams and <lb/>
one horse. Also the land and farm <lb/>
known as the land, containing <lb/>
acres more of less on the north side <lb/>
of Tar river adjoining Edward Dixon, <lb/>
and others, conveyed <lb/>
Win. M. P. Brown by S. II. <lb/>
wife and Marina Also out <lb/>
and Io In Greenville. N. c, on- <lb/>
the residence of Mrs Win. n. B, <lb/>
with him through that long no doubt, to willfully mis- <lb/>
for civil <lb/>
Carolina during the <lb/>
days immediately after Jarvis says be is the of obtaining the consent <lb/>
war, and then as oar Democrat he has that government to the <lb/>
i- i , i lie result Mrs H in. <lb/>
in tho was V . to <lb/>
n ,;, t J . the President to , and streets, <lb/>
the about whom he m, Mexico for of lot No. Also lots Nos. <lb/>
again, and finally through these <lb/>
many years of <lb/>
ceasing toil in the Nation's <lb/>
for the uplifting and benefit- <lb/>
his fellow men from the most <lb/>
laborer to the one the <lb/>
highest position either of wealth <lb/>
or power. <lb/>
Senator Vance knew no diner <lb/>
between bis fellow citizens. <lb/>
His counsel will be missed in the <lb/>
State the Nation. Ail honor <lb/>
to the honorable dead. He was <lb/>
great in life. He is honored in <lb/>
death. His memory will never <lb/>
fade as long as there lives a true <lb/>
North Carolinian. For him <lb/>
mourn, but in his record and fame <lb/>
we rejoice with thousands and <lb/>
thousands of his fellow citizens <lb/>
who knew him only to love <lb/>
to honor him- Peace to the ashes <lb/>
of the greatest of North Carolina's <lb/>
great. <lb/>
The funeral car bearing the re <lb/>
mains of Senator Vance <lb/>
lit; and In said town adjoining <lb/>
the brick yard lo <lb/>
Persons <lb/>
es time our mints of standard. Mexican y of the <lb/>
ill dollars for export to property are invited m <lb/>
eastern countries, isl respond with mo at Washington, N. C, <lb/>
oft <lb/>
been, and when it comes <lb/>
him to speak ho will <lb/>
himself in words that can as a bit oft G. <lb/>
understood by no one. on the part of April 1- <lb/>
. intended to please the <lb/>
of silver. Few <lb/>
The April term of that Mexico will <lb/>
Court overstepped the limit a request. <lb/>
the <lb/>
continued over into this week by a Young <lb/>
two days. Tho cause of At last Sunday <lb/>
a long railroad suit that <lb/>
last Thursday an <lb/>
well it tho <lb/>
made that it could very i <lb/>
by Saturday night. In order thought to be serious. <lb/>
meet a special case being tried was showing tho young <lb/>
Vance county, while the last to <lb/>
even g <lb/>
Lucy <lb/>
r. B. E. Thomas <lb/>
West Va. <lb/>
A Narrow Escape <lb/>
From Loss of a Limb <lb/>
Dreadful Case of White Swelling <lb/>
A Perfect Cure. <lb/>
One of the most serious forms of scrofula <lb/>
no of tho most difficult to cure IS that of while <lb/>
welling. Sarsaparilla has accomplish- <lb/>
ed many wonderful cures of white swelling, <lb/>
one of which is related below by Mr. B. K. <lb/>
Thomas, a manufacturer of harnesses <lb/>
etc., at W. Va. Road his <lb/>
C. I. Hood Co., <lb/>
In 1862 I was with a severe attack of <lb/>
white swelling. Five years later I bad to <lb/>
the flesh on my cut open and the bone <lb/>
scraped. After the flesh healed up I was not <lb/>
troubled again until January, I was taken <lb/>
down tho grip which settled In Urn previous- <lb/>
affected limb, sores gathering where <lb/>
been scars, one In particular penetrating to <lb/>
The whole front of my leg from knee <lb/>
Bullock, <lb/>
lot f <lb/>
w. H acres <lb/>
Best. Cherry, lo-. <lb/>
i artiste, Mrs. Mary E., l lot <lb/>
Davis, M. I,. T. <lb/>
Cora acres <lb/>
Hardy, c. i<lb/>
Keel, J. S., lot. <lb/>
Lewis, Mo. o. acres <lb/>
Shaw, J. lot <lb/>
Stiller, lot <lb/>
West, Moses, lot <lb/>
CAROLINA <lb/>
Bullock. J G. acres, <lb/>
IS acres <lb/>
W. II., <lb/>
acres <lb/>
A very. Ah any. acres <lb/>
Buck, C , acres <lb/>
Boyd. II. A., l'S <lb/>
Fannie acres <lb/>
Airs. Sarah Jane, acres <lb/>
B. M., <lb/>
Sn II, acres. <lb/>
Oliver, nines, <lb/>
acres, <lb/>
Turner. acres, <lb/>
Button, Ii acres, <lb/>
Geo <lb/>
acres, f <lb/>
1.02 <lb/>
1.21 <lb/>
6.63 <lb/>
i , <lb/>
4.491 <lb/>
1.2,1 <lb/>
2.131 <lb/>
1.22 <lb/>
3.0 <lb/>
5.48 <lb/>
2.2 <lb/>
1.00 <lb/>
saddles, j acres, J <lb/>
is Really A, acres, <lb/>
Ii F, SO acres, <lb/>
res,<lb/>
the hone. <lb/>
to ankle to <lb/>
A Mass of Corruption. <lb/>
I get but little and comfort and less <lb/>
benefit from the medical treatment I received. <lb/>
Some of my friends advised me to have the leg <lb/>
amputated, but I hesitated, not wanting to lose Jr, <lb/>
a Perchance i saw Frank, acres <lb/>
W Sharp, i acres <lb/>
L i <lb/>
Braswell, P K, 1892, lots <lb/>
Braswell, PK, i lots <lb/>
Martha B acres <lb/>
Bills, <lb/>
Frizzle, acres <lb/>
Harrington, John w. acres <lb/>
Hardy, II <lb/>
Hardy, Isaac C, lot <lb/>
IS THAT THE PLACE TO GET------ <lb/>
i i <lb/>
a paper embracing a testimonial for Hoods <lb/>
from one Mr. John telling <lb/>
Cures <lb/>
what Hood's done for his son. I j <lb/>
concluded to try bought j <lb/>
six bottles of It about three months ago. I had I <lb/>
not taken It two months when I could see It Margaret, Here <lb/>
doing me more good than anything I hail taken. B,,. ; u.,. on .,., <lb/>
I now used about bottles. The sore I . <lb/>
Jones, Win, <lb/>
Mattie A, I lot <lb/>
J D, <lb/>
J acre <lb/>
Nelson, -ins E, acres <lb/>
Powell, Mrs K V, acres <lb/>
Smith, Victoria, acres <lb/>
FALKLAND TOWNSHIP <lb/>
acres I <lb/>
ores i <lb/>
The sore <lb/>
all healed up and <lb/>
My Limb Is Perfectly Sound. <lb/>
It has also benefited my general health and W <lb/>
am now able to work at my trade. Hood's <lb/>
receives all the praise and I cannot I <lb/>
recommend it enough for the good It has dona <lb/>
B. K. Thomas, W, G, lot <lb/>
Hood's Pills liver ills, constipation. Cobb, acres <lb/>
II. acres <lb/>
heirs, acres <lb/>
Town Tax Sale. <lb/>
As Town Tax Collector I have levied on , , <lb/>
he following lots in the town of Green- <lb/>
stile owned by the who township. <lb/>
Ami on Monday, the Anderson, Wm, l acre <lb/>
7th of May. at M-, I will Adams, Henry, aces <lb/>
the same for cash, to the Wm, timber <lb/>
bidder, at public auction, at the Court Boyd, John F, acres <lb/>
loose, in the town of Greenville to Cherry, Wilson. lot. field <lb/>
tin- taxes and costs there on J J, lots <lb/>
G. K. A A. acres <lb/>
Town Tax Collector. acre- <lb/>
Harris F. I town lot <lb/>
Harrington, Joe, I town lot, 1898 <lb/>
town lot, 1802, <lb/>
Harris, Alex, acres, <lb/>
Abram, town lot<lb/>
IS AT THE STORE OF <lb/>
town lot No. 1.80 <lb/>
Cherry Benjamin town lot No. 1.64 <lb/>
i W town lot <lb/>
Clark Wiley J town lot No. ID <lb/>
Hanrahan Win. C. town lot So <lb/>
Harris Abram j town lot So. <lb/>
Hopkins Nelson town lot Bo, <lb/>
J. ; limn lot No. <lb/>
Kennedy Caesar t town lot No <lb/>
Miller Joe town lot No. S <lb/>
K. W. Co, 9th St. <lb/>
and Dickerson Ave <lb/>
rocker Oliver town No. <lb/>
Wilkins Louisa town lot No. <lb/>
Matthew town lot <lb/>
est. heirs J town lot <lb/>
No. <lb/>
for <lb/>
fellow est. heirs town lot <lb/>
same for 1888 <lb/>
est. heirs i town lot<lb/>
Same for 1802 <lb/>
Brown, B W. heirs lot No Skin- <lb/>
Same for <lb/>
l, guardian for <lb/>
town lot No. <lb/>
Bryant, town lot No. <lb/>
Harris. II F. town lot No. 3-5 <lb/>
Harris, Mary, j town lot No. <lb/>
Lawrence, I. for <lb/>
heirs tOWn lot No. <lb/>
Lawrence, L W, guardian for <lb/>
heirs J town lot No. <lb/>
K O. No. acres, <lb/>
II A, for Mrs <lb/>
tow u lots <lb/>
and <lb/>
Same, town lot No. lit <lb/>
ace, Billy Moore <lb/>
Lawrence, L W, town lot <lb/>
1731 Lawrence, W, guardian Baker <lb/>
heirs <lb/>
Moore, Tims II, acres, <lb/>
II C, acres <lb/>
B. -7 acres <lb/>
acres <lb/>
K O, acres<lb/>
Walter, l town lot, near <lb/>
river <lb/>
B B. lot, <lb/>
Chas, l town lot, <lb/>
Mrs M l. in; acres <lb/>
1.821 <lb/>
1.831 <lb/>
18,78 <lb/>
1.601 <lb/>
Lin <lb/>
1.10 <lb/>
1.00 <lb/>
1.00 <lb/>
Co, It W, town lot <lb/>
Sutton, James, acres, <lb/>
Summered, I <lb/>
Stephen, acres <lb/>
Tyson, <lb/>
Tyson, Co acres <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
M A. estate, <lb/>
W N. acres <lb/>
acres <lb/>
I 2- <lb/>
Si <lb/>
8.8 <lb/>
8.861 <lb/>
11.01 <lb/>
3.461 <lb/>
1.5-1 <lb/>
1.621 <lb/>
8.831 <lb/>
8.05 <lb/>
7.331 <lb/>
5.501 <lb/>
9.251 <lb/>
3.30 <lb/>
2.971 <lb/>
4.11 <lb/>
3.1-, <lb/>
. <lb/>
-r. <lb/>
J. B. CHER RY <lb/>
EVERY READER OF THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
IS INVITED TO WATCH THIS SPACE <lb/>
NEXT WEEK AND SOMETHING TO <lb/>
YOUR INTEREST WILE LEARNED <lb/>
A ROUT THE ELEGANT STOCK WE Alt <lb/>
OFFERING. <lb/>
o o c o <lb/>
coco <lb/>
o o c o <lb/>
Belcher. John I <lb/>
John, <lb/>
ii Henry, acres <lb/>
SWIFT <lb/>
Bland, W B, Carrie, <lb/>
f Buck, John B. Mary, acres 3.4 ii <lb/>
1.85 W. lot <lb/>
8.73 fox, acres <lb/>
Win. H., <lb/>
Dennis, Abram Smith <lb/>
est, acres <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1888. <lb/>
I. A. <lb/>
-------WHOLESALE RETAIL------- <lb/>
1ST. C. <lb/>
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb/>
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb/>
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb/>
Tax Sale. <lb/>
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb/>
8.611<lb/>
Fred acres <lb/>
E. A. liens <lb/>
lark. James acres <lb/>
I. . acres <lb/>
,. J. <lb/>
to of j. 3- acre <lb/>
the of 1889, shall, beginning <lb/>
May at A. M. in front, manning Wm. acres <lb/>
if House door In acres 2.92 <lb/>
he below described land and town s v. acres <lb/>
taxes due for year and Louis II. <lb/>
thereon cost for advertising Wilson, acres my Friends and Customers of and adjoining <lb/>
I wish to that I have special preparation In preparing HOG <lb/>
MATERIAL and propose Hiving HOGSHEADS with inside <lb/>
which or Tobacco when packing <lb/>
Also have made special to use best spill Hoops White <lb/>
The special advantaged I have In toy own timber places me in a <lb/>
to meet all I cheerfully promise yon I will strive to <lb/>
the <lb/>
t co-t acres <lb/>
,. r rive I M- Mt <lb/>
. w. K. A. <lb/>
of Pitt ; <lb/>
DAM TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Anderson. <lb/>
Amos. acres <lb/>
W C. acres <lb/>
, E S, acres <lb/>
Atkinson. 1260 acres <lb/>
A acres <lb/>
Gilbert, <lb/>
acres <lb/>
acres l <lb/>
Andrews. W., lot <lb/>
Brow n. Fernando, acres I <lb/>
l lot 10.19 <lb/>
Marcellus. <lb/>
IS acres J 4.27 <lb/>
-USE- <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
make it to Interest to my Is mid yon can them any tine <lb/>
either at my factory the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
cm AS <lb/>
tho <lb/>
in <lb/>
, when the weapon dis-H <lb/>
was in session, <lb/>
could not be completed by pistols eve rather <lb/>
end of the regular term of toys to have around, <lb/>
a petition was sent to the <lb/>
for the think southern men <lb/>
passage of a bill providing foil <lb/>
the of the Court <lb/>
and Third <lb/>
ease be To d. <lb/>
this tho Legislature had to <lb/>
Monday night to ,., <lb/>
arrived in yesterday <lb/>
quite a jubilee at <lb/>
morning where the body lay of <lb/>
state in the capitol until i o R o <lb/>
P. M- From Raleigh the remains,,,,,. completed the end <lb/>
were taken to Asheville, UH <lb/>
night, in which city ,,,,, ; <lb/>
takes place this morning. tho <lb/>
on <lb/>
the 9th inst., to celebrate the BUT-1 <lb/>
render of that great and goo; <lb/>
Robert E. Lee. <lb/>
though this meeting was in <lb/>
a good many were present; <lb/>
from our county, I Ban sorry <lb/>
ashamed to say. The <lb/>
days here this week <lb/>
fur Franklin <lb/>
had. Use <lb/>
Last the <lb/>
its <lb/>
That is a age, it Judge <lb/>
the of years that <lb/>
good paper has been in <lb/>
coloredS <lb/>
band from was <lb/>
were made by the Rev. <lb/>
Mr. Phillips, a Third party <lb/>
and Dr. Pitt of Dam <lb/>
refrain from comment <lb/>
upon meeting- I <lb/>
how can decent Southern mens <lb/>
with those that meet <lb/>
to rejoice over tho <lb/>
render of the great V C <lb/>
IS IT <lb/>
And Turned for Mouses a Specially. <lb/>
am prepared to do any kind Sawing for Brackets or anything in the <lb/>
or turning Balustrades for Piazza, Pickets for stairways. Mending of <lb/>
including Piazza and w mid be pleased to name you prim on <lb/>
in the above upon <lb/>
GENERAL REPAIR WORK <lb/>
on short notice. Thanking you p <lb/>
I am willing to <lb/>
ask me a trial before <lb/>
j. Winterville, N. <lb/>
renown <lb/>
ROB <lb/>
Who i it that will be so is it that has a beautiful to your future a <lb/>
known of <lb/>
By every and fireside With on, as your <lb/>
With bargains that win such great j you, she will stare, <lb/>
i call yon her duckling, darling, <lb/>
dear I <lb/>
. f <lb/>
is this that we will J <lb/>
spread Who is it that has Clothing so f- <lb/>
every tree and post Dressed up in a suit all <lb/>
In letters and black and red you'll out shine, <lb/>
BOB your gill will exclaim, <lb/>
Who cuts the prices down so low <lb/>
And tells the people they must go. <lb/>
you with bargains he'll is it that has such a <lb/>
overflow new stock y <lb/>
BOB ; keeps everything from a silk <lb/>
. . ii i i to a clock, <lb/>
toll W his and Correspondence Solicited. <lb/>
, i i . . I nerves such a shock <lb/>
Are Dry Goods and Shoes ROil <lb/>
young or old, <lb/>
as ever can be sold <lb/>
BOB <lb/>
BROS. CO., <lb/>
Commission Merchants, j <lb/>
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA <lb/>
j Who is it that's opened next to <lb/>
RELIABLE <lb/>
i Where L Little k Co <lb/>
no mote, <lb/>
Pitt and counties, of the following <lb/>
THE <lb/>
ONLY PERFECT <lb/>
stile by<lb/>
ii Woods, Notions. Shoes. Hats, <lb/>
Furnishing Goods <lb/>
Hair. Harness. and <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Clark's O. H. T. Spool which I offer to the t <lb/>
per cent tor Pa <lb/>
Call on he is at the store formerly occupied by Jas. L- Little Star Lye at jobbers Prices. Le White Lead and par Li <lb/>
treat fair and square- Mr. Paint Wood and Wood an <lb/>
glad to sec his many friends. Ware. Nails a ea<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017689_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
m. <lb/>
I HE El. <lb/>
OTHER LOCAL. <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
Local Reflections <lb/>
eek. <lb/>
Mr. S. M. Daniel went to Nor <lb/>
folk Monday. <lb/>
Johnson Mills <lb/>
April 1804. <lb/>
. filled his <lb/>
appointment at <lb/>
Turn on the electric lights. <lb/>
Stylish at F. Wilson- <lb/>
is to have a circus keen s <lb/>
A Home Wedding. <lb/>
sick i To-night at the residence of <lb/>
Alfred Forbes, in this town, John White warns people; Rev. C. W. <lb/>
daughter, Miss Rosa W. harboring his wife. <lb/>
will be married to Mr. Mark to-day. <lb/>
I of Kinston. Ci. , <lb/>
W. Smith performing the Mrs. K. T. Daniels is H. Cox, accompanied <lb/>
marriage will rooms built to Robert, spent Sunday <lb/>
morrow morning card will on Pitt street. Might with her sister, Mrs L. B. <lb/>
Mr. Frank Tisdale, of Newborn. the couple <lb/>
Thought Burglars Him. <lb/>
Mr. W, H. White came down . <lb/>
town the other morning telling- of <lb/>
preaching an ex <lb/>
The youngest of Mr. <lb/>
B. Wilson is quite sick. <lb/>
Salem experience he had the., <lb/>
sermon. with a supposed, <lb/>
, . burglar. Ho was sick that eighth <lb/>
weeK- <lb/>
Base Ball and Tennis shoes <lb/>
at Lang's- <lb/>
began shipping peas <lb/>
last week- <lb/>
For good reliable Shoes go to <lb/>
Wiley Brown. <lb/>
;. Fifty cents will get the <lb/>
for the campaign. <lb/>
Business men can get good <lb/>
to <lb/>
the Reflector Book Store- <lb/>
The weather has settled to <lb/>
spring feeling once more- <lb/>
G W. Venters says what <lb/>
makes my Hens lay so many <lb/>
and keep so healthy is <lb/>
Food, at the Old Brick Store- <lb/>
April Las us another <lb/>
week of real March weather. <lb/>
there- <lb/>
few to o'clock, <lb/>
Sand accompanied by a party of <lb/>
Es Gov. T J. Jarvis left on the <lb/>
Jay to attend the funeral of Sen- <lb/>
at or Vance. <lb/>
Miss Minnie Caraway, of Be- <lb/>
spent Sunday with Miss <lb/>
Myra Skinner. <lb/>
Miss Mamie of Wilson. <lb/>
has been visiting Miss Etta Hines <lb/>
part of the past week. <lb/>
Mr. Henry Sleds-e. of Tarboro. <lb/>
spent from Saturday to Monday <lb/>
Mi. L- H. <lb/>
Mr. Chas. Campbell, of Wash <lb/>
spent last week visiting; <lb/>
sister, Mrs. A. J- Griffin. <lb/>
Kinston- The <lb/>
Reflector joins a host of friends <lb/>
in wishing the young couple <lb/>
limited happiness. <lb/>
Odd Fellow's Celebration. <lb/>
On Thursday of next week, 26th <lb/>
inst., Covenant Lodge I. O- O- F- <lb/>
will celebrate the seventy-fifth an-1 <lb/>
of their order. <lb/>
preparations are being made have the, <lb/>
for the celebration and <lb/>
Up country rains last <lb/>
caused the river to rise here and <lb/>
the water is very muddy. <lb/>
The ladies should read Mrs. <lb/>
millinery advertisement <lb/>
to-day and go see her new good <lb/>
neighboring lodges will be <lb/>
sent. J- Hall, D- D-, pas <lb/>
tor of Park Avenue Baptist church- <lb/>
of Norfolk, has accepted the in-i <lb/>
to deliver the address of <lb/>
the occasion. Dr. Hall has a <lb/>
Miss Nannie of reputation as eloquent <lb/>
over Monday morning and all our people <lb/>
be present at the wedding to themselves of the <lb/>
English sparrows have taken <lb/>
possession of the martin boxes <lb/>
around town and keep the latter <lb/>
driven away their old haunts- <lb/>
Court is over. Now why not <lb/>
have the ward meetings and let <lb/>
e known who they are <lb/>
Misses Lula Anise <lb/>
Jones and Myrtle Tucker and <lb/>
Mr. Frank Hill, of Lenoir, spent <lb/>
Saturday at Mr. L. B- Cox's. <lb/>
Grifton Items. <lb/>
April 16th, 1894. <lb/>
The river is getting low again. <lb/>
The boats can't get up further aroused by a sharp report like <lb/>
D- M. Ferry's New Garden Seed children of Mr- W. B. Wilson re- <lb/>
at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
H- T. King receives <lb/>
to the Atlanta Constitution. <lb/>
My Hardware Store will be <lb/>
open from A. M- to P. M. <lb/>
spring and summer months <lb/>
D. D. Haskett. <lb/>
The and Atlanta <lb/>
Constitution both a year for <lb/>
clothing takes <lb/>
the lead- <lb/>
The colored people had another <lb/>
at the river last Thurs- <lb/>
day afternoon. <lb/>
Money to improved <lb/>
Real Estate m sums from to <lb/>
Apply to. <lb/>
F. G. James. <lb/>
Eggs retail now at three dozen <lb/>
for They are cheap eat- <lb/>
at that price. <lb/>
Miss Nannie Wilson and <lb/>
turned last week from their visit <lb/>
to Plymouth. <lb/>
Mrs. spent <lb/>
last week visiting her mother. <lb/>
Mrs. W. M King, and left Mon <lb/>
day for Rocky Mount. <lb/>
Mrs. M-. D- Higgs is <lb/>
lumber hauled preparatory to en I <lb/>
nor residence, corner <lb/>
Pitt and Third streets. <lb/>
of hearing him. The address <lb/>
will be public. After the address <lb/>
there will be a barbecue <lb/>
in one of the tobacco warehouses.; <lb/>
Greenville Lodge A- F. k A-i <lb/>
has been cordially invited b <lb/>
Odd Fallows to be present at <lb/>
the celebration and dinner. Th <lb/>
invitation was read at the Mason- <lb/>
Sic meeting, Monday night, and <lb/>
accepted with appreciation. <lb/>
At the Opera. <lb/>
A large and appreciative <lb/>
assembled at the Opera <lb/>
to vote for to serve as Councilmen <lb/>
the next year. <lb/>
Electric lights, artesian wells, <lb/>
and street improvements <lb/>
have all been discussed the past <lb/>
week. We hope these matters <lb/>
will not in talk. <lb/>
Observer always <lb/>
his patriotism- He has <lb/>
displaying his signal flags <lb/>
half mast in honor of the <lb/>
death of Senator Vance- <lb/>
Mrs. M E- Fort, Misses Annie <lb/>
Fort and Minnie Matthews, of <lb/>
Kinston, are visiting the family <lb/>
of Mi. John Matthews. <lb/>
If you are a new comer to <lb/>
or have <lb/>
to a different ward, don't <lb/>
forget to look after your <lb/>
for the coming town election; <lb/>
The roof of the kitchen at Hotel <lb/>
caught fire, Sunday night. <lb/>
sparks from the chimney fall- <lb/>
on it. The fire was put out <lb/>
on last Friday night any damage was and <lb/>
than here. <lb/>
Mr. Bo Cherry, of Greenville, <lb/>
is in town selling ready made <lb/>
Mr. B. F. Sugg, of Greenville, <lb/>
is in town attending to business. <lb/>
Mr. Mark of Kinston, <lb/>
spent part of Monday here. <lb/>
Miss May, of <lb/>
ville, is visiting Miss Anna Pitt- <lb/>
man. <lb/>
Miss May Abbott came horn <lb/>
from near Ayden where she has <lb/>
been teaching school. <lb/>
Mr. L. H- Rountree passed <lb/>
through here Sunday on his wheel. <lb/>
Mrs. W. H. New <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Mr. Sam Bland went to <lb/>
ville Monday. <lb/>
and not being able to sleep <lb/>
about o'clock and spent th <lb/>
remainder of the night reclining <lb/>
on a lounge before the <lb/>
About day ho heard the back door <lb/>
of his hall, which was unlocked, <lb/>
lightly open and thinking some <lb/>
one was coming in kept still to <lb/>
wait developments. Hearing no <lb/>
further sounds he soon dropped <lb/>
into a slight doze. The <lb/>
thing he knew he was suddenly <lb/>
pistol right near him, and spring <lb/>
mg up, grabbed the tongs and <lb/>
struck an attitude of at his <lb/>
room door. He thought a bur <lb/>
ERIE STOCK. <lb/>
gar had come and tried t <lb/>
shoot him, but heard nothing <lb/>
INT DRESS GOODS we've got everything that's <lb/>
new, stylish and desirable- <lb/>
OUR WHITE GOODS WASH FABRICS receive <lb/>
pleasant commentaries on all sides. Everything that is <lb/>
and beautiful can seen in this department- <lb/>
OUR UMBRELLA SUNSHADE Department com <lb/>
plow with everything to protect one from heat or rain- <lb/>
line of clothing from C <lb/>
Two horses, buggies and bar- T. immense No <lb/>
for sale by B. F. Sugg. <lb/>
Everything is <lb/>
Sugar best <lb/>
best Flour at the <lb/>
Old Stoke- <lb/>
The seines below town made <lb/>
good catches of shad the last half <lb/>
of the past week- <lb/>
your Cotton Seed Meal at <lb/>
the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
New assortment of Bibles from <lb/>
American B- S-, just received. <lb/>
Wiley Depositor. <lb/>
The second lot of elegant Laces, <lb/>
black, butter, tan, cream and <lb/>
white just received at Lang's. <lb/>
witness the presentation <lb/>
Greenville Amateurs, of <lb/>
for the benefit cf the <lb/>
Episcopal church. From the <lb/>
of the to its fall it was <lb/>
enjoyed, and we <lb/>
never seen the performers at a <lb/>
The scene <lb/>
home, <lb/>
where love good will reigned <lb/>
Royal Manning, <lb/>
young husband, just returned <lb/>
from war very much loved by his <lb/>
beautiful young wife. May Man <lb/>
who was also proud of hi <lb/>
war record. In this home lived <lb/>
Bess Bradley, a foster sister of <lb/>
Manning who was <lb/>
love with Marcus a <lb/>
military drummer and a <lb/>
a school at Durham s Creek. in, , him <lb/>
Beaufort county, finished <lb/>
Misses Tattle Williams and <lb/>
Mary of <lb/>
spent Monday and yesterday-, <lb/>
with Mrs Wiley letter advantage. <lb/>
They were returning home <lb/>
visit to Kinston. <lb/>
Mr. R. D. Cherry went to <lb/>
ton taking with him U <lb/>
will make many <lb/>
down there. <lb/>
Miss Josie L. <lb/>
since last fall has had charge of <lb/>
school at Durham's Creek, <lb/>
Genuine Clipper, Atlas. Boy <lb/>
Dixie. Stonewall and Climax <lb/>
Plows Castings for sale by J- <lb/>
B- Cherry k Co. <lb/>
It is time all our merchants <lb/>
were adopting the early <lb/>
rule until the fall. <lb/>
The largest best assorted <lb/>
line of General Merchandise in <lb/>
Pitt county, is offered for by <lb/>
J. B- Cherry k Co. <lb/>
Latest styles Spring Hats <lb/>
Frank Wilson. <lb/>
If March considers the lease <lb/>
on April expired some better <lb/>
weather Hay be <lb/>
term and returned to her home in j <lb/>
this county last week. <lb/>
Rev. J. H. is assist- <lb/>
Rev. D. of Washing-j <lb/>
ton. in a protracted meeting <lb/>
the Washington Baptist church- <lb/>
Mr- will occupy <lb/>
pulpit in Greenville <lb/>
next Sunday. <lb/>
Electric Lights. <lb/>
A meeting of citizens was held <lb/>
id the House, last <lb/>
day night, to consult about the <lb/>
establishment of electric light <lb/>
plant. W. S. Bawls was made <lb/>
chairman of meeting. <lb/>
agent of the Houston <lb/>
-elf of all stain married Bess. <lb/>
Miss Nancy a house girl <lb/>
in the house of Royal <lb/>
W is very much in love with Simon <lb/>
Stone, who would not stick to a <lb/>
longer than h. got it- The <lb/>
character of Matt a <lb/>
during the war of Royal <lb/>
Manning, was a powerful one, he <lb/>
saved the life of Royal Manning <lb/>
nothing was too good for him. <lb/>
tie became a tramp and drunkard <lb/>
staggered in the homo of the walks and public lots <lb/>
Hill Cemetery nicely cleaned up. <lb/>
Light Company was present, <lb/>
through Larry jack-of-all trades, Mr. R <lb/>
a statement of costs of a ; Hay <lb/>
Manning and was recognized by <lb/>
him he reformed him- The <lb/>
east of characters as follows; <lb/>
Royal Manning, Mr. Harry <lb/>
bee Matt tramp, Mr. <lb/>
Laughinghouse; Marcus <lb/>
Mr. Larry Moore; Simon Stone, <lb/>
I Hy <lb/>
s wife, <lb/>
profits arising therefrom. Carrie Cobb; Bessie Brad- <lb/>
Several of those present made Hey, Miss Belle Greene; Nancy <lb/>
brief talks. It was decided to Miss Annie <lb/>
point a committee to report We cannot the per <lb/>
mother meeting to-night, were at their best and the <lb/>
work of the committee to be were assumed as well as <lb/>
hided as follows E. A- we have ever seen, there was <lb/>
alarm was given. <lb/>
There are few streets Green <lb/>
ville but on which some building <lb/>
repairing is going on. <lb/>
more contracts are con <lb/>
So much makes <lb/>
better times for the mechanic. <lb/>
Rev. G- F-Smith says the <lb/>
meetings out at Bethlehem <lb/>
are having good success. <lb/>
Several professions were made <lb/>
during last week. The meeting <lb/>
I will go on through this week. <lb/>
The cold weather here last <lb/>
week was a breath from the <lb/>
and storm that <lb/>
throughout the North and <lb/>
West. those sections it was <lb/>
the severest April storm that has <lb/>
forty years. Great <lb/>
has been reported. <lb/>
Tho missing word in the <lb/>
Constitution guessing contest <lb/>
for March was <lb/>
Only two in Pitt county <lb/>
the correct word this <lb/>
time. They were H. T- King and <lb/>
D. J. Whichard, their part of the <lb/>
prize amounting to <lb/>
Policeman Moore has just had <lb/>
Hairy Skinner and H. T. a break or to the entire <lb/>
expected upon the and we think <lb/>
get the town interested as a entire audience <lb/>
C. T. W. say was the <lb/>
machines from SIS Moore to it should be repeated. <lb/>
Latest improved New . j R D realized about <lb/>
85- to ascertain what <lb/>
Farmers. Mechanics and of lights be rented. Presbyterian Church opened. <lb/>
of all professions, when Meeting. The first were held in <lb/>
i i r -ii new Presbyterian church on <lb/>
M Yesterday added <lb/>
need of goods of any kind, call on <lb/>
your friends. J. B. Cherry k Co. ; <lb/>
Just received a new lot of <lb/>
Carriages and Cribs- <lb/>
J. B- t Co. <lb/>
Hamilton's <lb/>
Sunday, according to <lb/>
of honors to the memory of <lb/>
Sour illustrious statesman, Senator <lb/>
Z. B. Vance. At o'clock <lb/>
Shells of the churches of the <lb/>
tolling, for one <lb/>
Ions announcement, Rev. J. N. H. <lb/>
delivering excellent <lb/>
both and even <lb/>
Ho prefaced his <lb/>
Messes. lines k deep toned expression to the <lb/>
mills are turning out lumber that tills the hearts of our <lb/>
and meet, a , , o'clock the <lb/>
and the churches of Green- <lb/>
for tho <lb/>
for all their output- <lb/>
Are you for higher taxes and <lb/>
improvements, or no ad- <lb/>
the town <lb/>
surrounding country <lb/>
in the Court House to give public- <lb/>
utterance to the loss all have <lb/>
. i n, to loss an have <lb/>
ranee of taxes t same the death of this great <lb/>
system of just dragging <lb/>
they had given him, and <lb/>
Now if the citizens who own lots <lb/>
there will have them cleaned off <lb/>
at once it will be In keeping with <lb/>
what has already been done and <lb/>
will help to beautify the <lb/>
We heard the opinion express <lb/>
ed the other day that the Al- <lb/>
mighty sent the late freeze and <lb/>
up things so because <lb/>
the people had been crying hard <lb/>
times so long and so The <lb/>
gentlemen who made the remark <lb/>
said he saw people have as <lb/>
much to eat as they have now. <lb/>
Lenoir Topic. <lb/>
Mr. Alfred Joyner, of Farmville <lb/>
township, had the misfortune to <lb/>
have his dwelling burned one <lb/>
last week, while he and his <lb/>
sister were at Chapel, at <lb/>
Church. The neighbors <lb/>
the fire in time to save only- <lb/>
one or two beds. Mr. Joyner is <lb/>
a most industrious worthy man <lb/>
this loss falls very heavily on <lb/>
Bethel Items. <lb/>
April th, <lb/>
Andrew Joyner, editor of tho <lb/>
Index, was in Friday. <lb/>
Mr. Warren Cobb, of <lb/>
was in to day. <lb/>
Mr. J. L- Davenport, of Hamil- <lb/>
ton, was hero to-day. <lb/>
Hon. J. E. Moore passed <lb/>
through town this <lb/>
Town Constable W. C- Nelson <lb/>
wore pleasant smiles <lb/>
is a girl. <lb/>
Mrs- Mollie who has <lb/>
been visiting Mrs. J. L. Daven <lb/>
port near Hamilton, returned <lb/>
home to day. <lb/>
Mr. T. R Bullock has moved in <lb/>
of tho stores of R. J. W. Car- <lb/>
on tho east side of main <lb/>
s. W. A. W. E. Knox <lb/>
have opened a stock of goods <lb/>
store on main street under <lb/>
the firm name of Knox t Co. <lb/>
Notice to Delinquent <lb/>
Tax Payers. <lb/>
Whereas .-1 sales of land for non- <lb/>
of taxes made by J. A. K. <lb/>
fucker of Pitt on the, <lb/>
of May. 4th tiny of May, <lb/>
1891, 2nd day of May, ISM, and 2nd day <lb/>
of May. 1898, Many or of <lb/>
land bid oil by the notice <lb/>
is hereby given that the parties who own <lb/>
further of any intruder. The CLOTHING Department is unsurpassed in styles and <lb/>
All ask is an inspections before buying. The latest <lb/>
thing in Head for gentlemen and boys. <lb/>
OUR SHOE DEPARTMENT is all could ask. <lb/>
you not suited take your measure and have them made <lb/>
to order. <lb/>
------Come and look at our stock, such as------ <lb/>
TICKINGS, FURNISHING GOODS, to. <lb/>
Prices beyond reach of all competition. <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
was all a mystery until <lb/>
tho middle of the day be <lb/>
that an iron plate in <lb/>
the back of tho place had <lb/>
burst open, and this was the <lb/>
secret of the that so <lb/>
rudely awakened him from his <lb/>
In his house this <lb/>
iron had been placed firmly be <lb/>
the bricks and not having <lb/>
room to expand from <lb/>
burst open when it became too <lb/>
hot. Tho first noise heard at the <lb/>
hall door was a servant coming <lb/>
in earlier than <lb/>
THE LAST CONVENTION <lb/>
Held in Greenville, N. C, Adopted the <lb/>
Following; Resolutions. <lb/>
N. C-, <lb/>
April 3rd, 1804. <lb/>
Resolved 1st. That while we <lb/>
entertain due respect for tho soy <lb/>
oral existing political parties, w <lb/>
arc convinced that now is th <lb/>
time that our necessities de- <lb/>
that there shall be a Fourth <lb/>
party, that tho interest of <lb/>
general public may be protected. <lb/>
Resolved 2nd, That every man, <lb/>
woman child tho State to <lb/>
better their condition mutt adopt <lb/>
the Cash SYSTEM and shop <lb/>
and you cannot do <lb/>
at stores per cent, <lb/>
are put on goods you need in <lb/>
every day life, you must single <lb/>
tho merchant who soils for <lb/>
and only. <lb/>
f; <lb/>
Bible <lb/>
j agent New a <lb/>
-I HAVE RECEIVED A COMPLETE LINE OP- <lb/>
SPRING G <lb/>
NOVELTIES, See. <lb/>
would earnestly your examination <lb/>
SHOES SHOES <lb/>
Embroideries, White Goods <lb/>
and Laces. <lb/>
mid will be to to do a credit business it <lb/>
the MM appearing before the Board I <lb/>
of paying to is necessary to make largo profits <lb/>
Treasurer all amounts due , . <lb/>
on customers who will pay, so as <lb/>
of MOW. <lb/>
The list of the owners and the <lb/>
due thereon is as follows <lb/>
use, <lb/>
Pittman <lb/>
It J <lb/>
Jenkins <lb/>
Bryant Taylor <lb/>
Wiley Pierce <lb/>
Austin Atkinson <lb/>
Kilpatrick <lb/>
Noah heirs <lb/>
Frederick White <lb/>
Resolved 3rd, That for a mer say anything about except that I have received a now <lb/>
line. Prices lower than ever. I thank you tor your past <lb/>
Md if close prices will avail mo anything will merit a continuance <lb/>
Now Home latest improved 188.00 <lb/>
I. I k <lb/>
V II <lb/>
Arnold Spain <lb/>
A ti S <lb/>
E N Batten <lb/>
1892. <lb/>
While driving alone Monday <lb/>
Miss Clara Bruce Forbes <lb/>
made too short a turn around a <lb/>
corner a front wheel of the <lb/>
buggy came in contact with th- <lb/>
guard post. Tho wheel <lb/>
was smashed and the young lady <lb/>
have been thrown violently <lb/>
along <lb/>
Mrs. my boy <lb/>
does wear out his clothes. I don t <lb/>
know what in the world I will <lb/>
Why you get <lb/>
him one of those combination <lb/>
suits with two pair of pants to <lb/>
one jacket. They can be found <lb/>
at Lang's. <lb/>
When in want of <lb/>
J. B. A to. <lb/>
good shoes go to <lb/>
I,. M. Reynolds and <lb/>
boas are the beat For sale by <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
to J. B. Cherry i o when in need <lb/>
of Furniture, they keeps stock and <lb/>
sell at prices that will please you. <lb/>
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb/>
at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Remember I pay you for Chicken <lb/>
Eggs and Count y Produce at the <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
Tine Clothing still arriving at <lb/>
Frank Wilson's. <lb/>
A- G. Cox's celebrated <lb/>
Back call on J. B. Cherry <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
You just ought to see the big <lb/>
cent Tablets at Reflector Book <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
lino of Dry Goods at <lb/>
Brown's. <lb/>
Acme Guano Distributors are <lb/>
for sale by S- E Fender it Co. <lb/>
matter <lb/>
whether<lb/>
Tho meeting was called <lb/>
by L. C Latham, <lb/>
its object a few <lb/>
remarks and moved that <lb/>
C- J- O be made chair <lb/>
Jinan. Upon taking the chair Dr. <lb/>
made a brief address <lb/>
paying a beautiful tribute to <lb/>
Vance, declaring him in <lb/>
every sphere the peer of any man <lb/>
the nation had produced. <lb/>
Andrew Joyner and D. <lb/>
were made Secretaries <lb/>
liberal assistance in carrying <lb/>
forward the enterprise- He <lb/>
Sated that the dedicatory services <lb/>
would not be held until the build <lb/>
ling is fully completed and em <lb/>
relieved from debt. All re <lb/>
to be done now is car- <lb/>
the rooms, supplying bell <lb/>
laud chandeliers, finishing the ex- <lb/>
painting and enclosing <lb/>
lot. When this is completed <lb/>
will be made for the <lb/>
dedication. The morning <lb/>
which went to helping <lb/>
the indebtedness, amounted to <lb/>
from the buggy, but was fortunate <lb/>
enough to catch and prevent the <lb/>
fall. It was a narrow escape. <lb/>
We ask those who receive this <lb/>
issue of the Reflector with <lb/>
cross mark after their name <lb/>
take notice that their <lb/>
has expired, and hope all <lb/>
will renew promptly. Payments <lb/>
must be made in advance. Our <lb/>
terms are only per year, which <lb/>
is low enough to be in reach o <lb/>
every one. Or you can get tho <lb/>
Reflector and Atlanta <lb/>
both for <lb/>
Win Matthews <lb/>
A Q Daniel <lb/>
Allen <lb/>
T Anderson <lb/>
A Cox and wife <lb/>
E N Batten and wife <lb/>
I, A Joyner <lb/>
W Wilson <lb/>
A Mills <lb/>
W E <lb/>
s Dawson <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Charles Stocks <lb/>
j B Pollard <lb/>
Aaron Mine- <lb/>
0-i <lb/>
i a <lb/>
IS <lb/>
Ms <lb/>
I at <lb/>
; on<lb/>
SO <lb/>
Hy order of Hoard, <lb/>
II. <lb/>
Clerk of <lb/>
to the extra expense of do- <lb/>
a credit business, and the bad <lb/>
which are tho natural re- <lb/>
of this system. <lb/>
Resolved 4th, That while it i <lb/>
very convenient to goods <lb/>
we have to pay for it. <lb/>
Resolve 5th, That we. tho <lb/>
people of Greenville, Pitt county. <lb/>
adjoining counties, <lb/>
adopted tho above resolutions do <lb/>
hereby elect, that <lb/>
A Co., shall be our head <lb/>
Barters, where the best goods <lb/>
for the least be ob <lb/>
Resolved 6th, That <lb/>
i. on hand a <lb/>
Hue of Dry Goods, Shoes, Hats <lb/>
Clothing, lino Dross Goods <lb/>
Trimmings a specialty, which <lb/>
they offering at very low <lb/>
prices and ask you to examine <lb/>
before purchasing. <lb/>
Cash, Chairman. <lb/>
Boswell, k Co. <lb/>
Clerks. <lb/>
Sewing up. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
WILEY BROWN, <lb/>
Now Homo Sewing Machines and Depositor for American So <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
COURT <lb/>
All kinds placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
lower tat <lb/>
AGENT FOB ASS FIRE PROOF <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
HEAL ESTATE ASH COLLECTING <lb/>
AGENCY. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb/>
BRICK STORK <lb/>
Sale of Laud for <lb/>
ON MONDAY, the May, <lb/>
the meeting- . , <lb/>
Upon motion of Hon. L. ls a <lb/>
a committee was appoint ornament to he <lb/>
led to draft resolutions to he re in style, gable <lb/>
ported at another meeting to will sell before the <lb/>
held in Greenville next windows are stained door in Greenville the following <lb/>
T. very pretty design. The in township, for pay- <lb/>
of the taxes due for <lb/>
year <lb/>
L. J. Barrett, W <lb/>
J. A. K. TUCKER, <lb/>
and Tax <lb/>
AND- <lb/>
SUMMER. <lb/>
Shoes to Fit No <lb/>
whether you stand or <lb/>
you sit, at Higgs Bros. <lb/>
A well on the premises of Smith <lb/>
Savage's livery stables created <lb/>
some excitement one day last <lb/>
week. A hissing noise like steam <lb/>
escaping from an <lb/>
heard in the well. cause of <lb/>
The committee consists of L. <lb/>
Latham, Andrew Joyner. E. <lb/>
F- G. James and Harry <lb/>
Skinner. <lb/>
His Honor. Judge John Gray <lb/>
Bynum was invited to make some; <lb/>
remarks to the audience, which <lb/>
ho did with much feeling and ten <lb/>
His long familiarity <lb/>
with and relation to Sena-L, <lb/>
tor Vance eminently qualified tower into both rooms, <lb/>
to speak of both the public at P <lb/>
private life of the man overhead I. <lb/>
memory we had met to <lb/>
and of his great love for North <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
Capt. Swift Galloway also spoke <lb/>
briefly of the grand achievements <lb/>
and peerless worth of Senator <lb/>
pretty <lb/>
auditorium is feet, <lb/>
persons. To the left of the <lb/>
pulpit is an annex or lecture room <lb/>
feet seating this is con- <lb/>
with the main auditorium <lb/>
by folding doors. The <lb/>
irises in the angle formed by the <lb/>
of the annex and main <lb/>
building. The entrance is through <lb/>
The <lb/>
feet <lb/>
the <lb/>
floor- It is finished in North <lb/>
Carolina pine, walls plastered <lb/>
from angle to wainscoting. The <lb/>
aisles are verging with entrance <lb/>
running across the church- <lb/>
The building so far has cost <lb/>
LEADER IN <lb/>
-Styles and Prices.<lb/>
A MERCHANTS BUY <lb/>
their will <lb/>
p. <lb/>
n ail it. <lb/>
FOR nice on <lb/>
gOOd Well line <lb/>
A kitchen con- <lb/>
nice neighborhood. <lb/>
and lot In B <lb/>
om., all building, well <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb/>
RICK. TE A, <lb/>
at <lb/>
TOBACCO CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direst from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one A <lb/>
stock <lb/>
I have home asp <lb/>
wishing to would <lb/>
well to me before buying. <lb/>
I will also of title <lb/>
to property, <lb/>
reasonable. <lb/>
Notice to Farmers. <lb/>
. <lb/>
the tunes, Om ere nil bought and <lb/>
If all will <lb/>
X W- p <lb/>
the of the. disc unit. <lb/>
II. <lb/>
Agent. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
firing -Millinery <lb/>
Vance, and with the deep and will <lb/>
of his soul told how the Th <lb/>
throughout the length to the church includes <lb/>
breadth of the State were whole of the lot lying between <lb/>
. CALL AT OUR STORE, <lb/>
Because yon can <lb/>
FANCY GOODS, <lb/>
Notions and Trimmings, <lb/>
m reasonable prices. <lb/>
the noise has not been ascertain <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
Greene street and Mr. W. H <lb/>
White's lot. <lb/>
Mr. announced that <lb/>
the nest service would be held on <lb/>
the first Sunday evening in May <lb/>
In the afternoon a Sunday <lb/>
Mrs. King is going to was organized, Mr. B. D. <lb/>
story to the King being made <lb/>
this summer. She gets and Mr. J. R. Moo- <lb/>
the death of the beloved <lb/>
The then declared <lb/>
the meeting adjourned until nest <lb/>
Saturday at o'clock. <lb/>
AT prices not forced down by <lb/>
but made low from the start <lb/>
by judicious purchasing and <lb/>
contentment with small Our <lb/>
new Millinery arrived- A call <lb/>
you. <lb/>
We have just received and opening tho largest stock of <lb/>
FINE CLOTHING <lb/>
EVER BROUGHT TO GREENVILLE. <lb/>
Suits for Men, Youths, Boys and Children, <lb/>
in Round Cut, Square Cut, Double Albert, Lou <lb/>
Sack and Tail Cutaway, <lb/>
WILLIAMSON <lb/>
MANUFACTURER OF- <lb/>
In connection with the above have purchased a. lovely <lb/>
ALL KINDS OF-<lb/>
T.<lb/>
Gents DONE ON SHORT NOTICE <lb/>
y Goods, <lb/>
Only workmen and material allowed my shops. The many <lb/>
have used my work will testily to the and durability of <lb/>
Lamed out at my Every vehicle guaranteed. <lb/>
boarders that more room The i <lb/>
of the school <lb/>
be held at Sunday <lb/>
mornings. <lb/>
n. PITT, <lb/>
SPECIALIST, <lb/>
Now renders to the public his profession- <lb/>
service in curing Cancers. <lb/>
Address, DR. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
A call from everybody appreciated. No trouble to show goods. <lb/>
S WHIPS.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017689_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
There's No Choice in Bicycles. <lb/>
The Victor Pneumatic tire has no <lb/>
rival. It is more durable than any <lb/>
other and the inner tube can be re- <lb/>
moved in case- of puncture in less <lb/>
than five minutes. <lb/>
The only inner tube removable <lb/>
through the rim. <lb/>
All Victor improvements are abreast <lb/>
with the times and meet re- <lb/>
Victors <lb/>
are <lb/>
BEST. <lb/>
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb/>
BOSTON. <lb/>
NEW YORK. <lb/>
Philadelphia. <lb/>
CHICAGO. <lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO. <lb/>
DETROIT. <lb/>
DENVER. <lb/>
What is <lb/>
Life <lb/>
Assurance <lb/>
An easy means of <lb/>
wife and family <lb/>
against want in the event <lb/>
of your death. <lb/>
A creditable means of <lb/>
curing a better financial <lb/>
standing in the business <lb/>
world. <lb/>
The most safe and profit- <lb/>
able means of investing <lb/>
your savings for use in <lb/>
after years. <lb/>
All Life Insurance is <lb/>
good. The <lb/>
Equitable Life <lb/>
is the best. <lb/>
For I <lb/>
W. J. Manager, <lb/>
, Rock Hill, <lb/>
Quotations of the Greenville Tobacco <lb/>
Market. <lb/>
Office of O. L- Joyner. <lb/>
April 1804- <lb/>
QUOTATIONS. <lb/>
Tips, green H to <lb/>
Greenish yellow to <lb/>
Smokers, common to good to 5.1 <lb/>
to fine to <lb/>
Gotten, common to good to <lb/>
good to tine to <lb/>
fine to fancy <lb/>
Wrappers, common S to <lb/>
medium to <lb/>
good to <lb/>
line to fancy to <lb/>
rive <lb/>
Who are for the first time i <lb/>
undergo woman's severest <lb/>
we offer <lb/>
I A remedy which, if as directed a <lb/>
i weeks before confinement, robe it of H <lb/>
PAIN, HORROR AND RISK TO <lb/>
of both mother and as thousands v. hi <lb/>
testify. <lb/>
i .- I two of <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
Ripens<lb/>
if <lb/>
Sent n <lb/>
1.1 <lb/>
; i <lb/>
Co , I <lb/>
pound. . <lb/>
v i .-. <lb/>
., <lb/>
. .- in a brr <lb/>
from a -ires i <lb/>
M . <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The duly <lb/>
fled before the Superior of <lb/>
as A. <lb/>
Fleming, deceased, notice <lb/>
en to all indebted to <lb/>
o make immediate payment to it i- <lb/>
an all <lb/>
be i state urns, present she same <lb/>
for on or day <lb/>
of February, or this notice will <lb/>
plead in bar of <lb/>
12th of Feb. <lb/>
S. A. CONGLETON, <lb/>
F. A. Fleming.<lb/>
I . <lb/>
I first . <lb/>
us <lb/>
I a r . <lb/>
its, <lb/>
remove .- <lb/>
Rips T . i k <lb/>
are lo i . <lb/>
t act. ,; <lb/>
save man. <lb/>
tor's bit. <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
Dissolution. <lb/>
The partnership heretofore <lb/>
B. I., and W B. <lb/>
Greene, under name and of <lb/>
Greene, haw day <lb/>
dissolved by mutual consent. <lb/>
due the bald firm i i lie lo D. <lb/>
debts due by the <lb/>
said firm will be paid L. <lb/>
This . <lb/>
K. L. Mi <lb/>
W. B. <lb/>
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
by O. Proprietor Tobacco <lb/>
LOCAL. NOTES AND <lb/>
JOTTINGS. <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
REVIEW OF THE MARKETS <lb/>
S WELDON B. R. <lb/>
and t <lb/>
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
Oct. Its, daily Fast Mail, <lb/>
ex <lb/>
Weldon pin S U Ma <lb/>
I pm pm <lb/>
pm <lb/>
pm <lb/>
Bock Mt H C pm <lb/>
Wilson s i us S <lb/>
i lie s <lb/>
Ar Florence <lb/>
; Wilson <lb/>
J-i <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar IS JO <lb/>
TRAINS GOING <lb/>
No <lb/>
MARK <lb/>
Tor Cure it <lb/>
Florence <lb/>
Fayetteville <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
daily <lb/>
daily <lb/>
SO<lb/>
am p m<lb/>
OS <lb/>
No <lb/>
ex Sun <lb/>
s SO <lb/>
We are receipt of several let- <lb/>
from parties in different <lb/>
places relative to locating in <lb/>
Greenville. know of three <lb/>
men who will want three prize <lb/>
houses next season more than we <lb/>
have. <lb/>
This is a mighty good time to <lb/>
talk up a smoking tobacco factory <lb/>
for this place Maj- Harding <lb/>
says he can get all the needed <lb/>
machinery for manufacturing for <lb/>
1600 and there are plenty of good <lb/>
houses that could be had for that <lb/>
purpose at reasonable prices. <lb/>
Mr, F- M. Smith showed <lb/>
some tobacco plants a few days <lb/>
ago that beats anything we have <lb/>
seen this season. Mr Smith says <lb/>
he has plants plenty large set out <lb/>
and he will commence setting his <lb/>
crop in a short time- <lb/>
Mr. F. If. Hodges, who for the <lb/>
past year has made his home in <lb/>
Greenville as accountant for Mr. <lb/>
J. W. Morgan left a few days ago <lb/>
to spend the summer in Washing- <lb/>
ton. He is expected to report in <lb/>
Greenville for business next Aug- <lb/>
but we expect to see him be- <lb/>
fore that for when shook <lb/>
his cordial hand good-bye, with <lb/>
evident signs of a tear his eye <lb/>
he said I may <lb/>
come back on a the <lb/>
summer. Franky. <lb/>
see from the Winston To- <lb/>
Journal that the Wilson <lb/>
Advance is reported as saying <lb/>
the Tobacco acreage around <lb/>
Wilson will be about the same <lb/>
this year as is was last while Pitt <lb/>
and Greene will double- Where <lb/>
the Wilson Advance found this <lb/>
information we are unable to say- <lb/>
but in regard to the Pitt county <lb/>
acreage it is decidedly in error <lb/>
and it should be corrected. The <lb/>
Pitt county acreage will not be <lb/>
increased per cent- while <lb/>
Greene may very near double, but <lb/>
should this be done her acreage <lb/>
the n will not J as largo as Pitt <lb/>
and will not much effect <lb/>
the quantity made- Winston <lb/>
please copy. <lb/>
Reports from various sections <lb/>
in Western North Carolina, Ten- <lb/>
Kentucky, Ohio and <lb/>
portions of Virginia show the <lb/>
tobacco plants to be seriously <lb/>
damaged. The low prices of <lb/>
common tobacco coupled with the <lb/>
recent cold spell which will, in a <lb/>
great many places, cause a late <lb/>
and another inferior crop has in. <lb/>
a great many farmers to <lb/>
abandon the idea of planting n <lb/>
crop of tobacco and they are <lb/>
paring their tobacco laud for a <lb/>
corn crop. The extent of the <lb/>
damage in Eastern Caro- <lb/>
caused by the cold weather <lb/>
cannot as yet thoroughly as- <lb/>
From some localities <lb/>
plants are reported seriously <lb/>
damaged while they are <lb/>
not hurt at all. On some farms <lb/>
the plant beds in one place do <lb/>
not seem to be hurt at all while <lb/>
probably not far away the plants <lb/>
are nearly all hurt. There is a <lb/>
fault in the selection of laud and of <lb/>
properly adjusting the bed cloth- <lb/>
However, the general impression <lb/>
now is unless flea bugs and <lb/>
pestiferous that arc <lb/>
very numerous and destructive in <lb/>
some sections destroy the <lb/>
HUNTING <lb/>
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/>
and <lb/>
Ai <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
v Tarboro p m <lb/>
Daily except Sunday. <lb/>
on Scotland Neck <lb/>
Weldon 3.40 p. in. Halifax 4.4 <lb/>
in., arrives Scotland Neck 1.18 p. m <lb/>
all win, he G Huston p <lb/>
he most l. 7.20 a. <lb/>
or years failed. Ins ., m Greenville a. m. Arriving <lb/>
long and tie high rep at on ; u S <lb/>
it has obtained is owing i ,. <lb/>
its own efficacy, as but little ha- . , , <lb/>
been made to bring it before th on Washington Branch leave <lb/>
public. One bottle of this Ointment Washington 7.00 a. in. <lb/>
be sent to any address on receipt of One ; a- m. 9.40; <lb/>
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at- leaves 4.40 p. in. 6.00 <lb/>
tended to. Address all orders and ft arrives Washington 7.30 p. m. <lb/>
communications to , Daily except Sunday. Connects wit <lb/>
T. F. trains on Scotland Branch. <lb/>
Greenville. N. C Tram leaves Tarboro, X C, via Alb <lb/>
Raleigh R. R. daily except <lb/>
day, P ii. Sunday PM, <lb/>
Plymouth p. m., p. <lb/>
I A f Returning leaves Plymouth daily <lb/>
l 5.30 a. m., 10.00 <lb/>
N C, 10.25 AV <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch tea <lb/>
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, a M <lb/>
X C. AM. Re <lb/>
laves N C AM <lb/>
vitro Goldsboro. K V A M. <lb/>
Train <lb/>
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville <lb/>
P Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
slaves spring Hope k a M. Nashville <lb/>
8.35 A, M. arrives Rocky Mount all A <lb/>
M, except Sunday. <lb/>
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. <lb/>
7.30 p. arrive Dunbar 8.40 p <lb/>
m. It Horning leave a. la. <lb/>
arrive Latta 7.15 a. m. <lb/>
Sunday <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton daily, except Sunday st t i <lb/>
and II leave <lb/>
ton at A M, and P. M. conn, t <lb/>
in at Warsaw with Nos. ind <lb/>
Office Furniture <lb/>
COMPANY <lb/>
JACKSON, <lb/>
From the Southern Tobacco <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
The week has been a quiet one <lb/>
on the leaf marker, the sales be- <lb/>
uniformly small. The <lb/>
was against handling tobacco. <lb/>
Several lots of pretty good old <lb/>
stock were offered, and were <lb/>
knocked out at high ii <lb/>
Prices are unchanged. <lb/>
President of the <lb/>
Winston Tobacco Association, re- <lb/>
ports the amount of leaf sold on <lb/>
this market during the mouth of <lb/>
March just passed to have <lb/>
pounds; for the same <lb/>
mouth last year, pounds <lb/>
a decrease of pounds. <lb/>
This appears to be a considerable <lb/>
falling off, but tho figures for tho <lb/>
season's sales made a better show- <lb/>
The sales from October <lb/>
to April 1891, were <lb/>
pounds, against <lb/>
pounds for the same period of the <lb/>
previous season, the decrease be- <lb/>
pounds. <lb/>
The revenue collections at the <lb/>
office daring March, 1894 <lb/>
amounted to This is <lb/>
an advance over the mouth <lb/>
year, when the stamp sales <lb/>
were The quantity of <lb/>
goods shipped by our <lb/>
last month was <lb/>
pounds. <lb/>
Business with our <lb/>
tho past quarter of this year <lb/>
has been particularly good, every- <lb/>
thing taken into consideration <lb/>
and indicates the popularity and <lb/>
steady demand for Winston <lb/>
goods. The stamp office collect- <lb/>
ed during January, February and <lb/>
March, 1893, the sum of <lb/>
for tho same three mouths <lb/>
tho collections amounted to <lb/>
increase of 0,002-- <lb/>
In pounds tho increase is <lb/>
A number of our factories are <lb/>
working it will not be long <lb/>
before all of them will in <lb/>
full operation. A tight money <lb/>
market is tho only obstacle <lb/>
to a most prosperous year, and it <lb/>
is hoped that will be removed in <lb/>
the near future. <lb/>
TESS. <lb/>
Sales this week, <lb/>
Receipts this week, <lb/>
Market strong active at fol- <lb/>
lowing quotations. Three days <lb/>
of very cold, freezing weather <lb/>
has done some damage to the <lb/>
plant beds, which <lb/>
were more forward at this season <lb/>
than usual, still there is plenty <lb/>
time left to repair the damage be- <lb/>
fore the planting season. <lb/>
Loose sales have been light <lb/>
since our last report, the <lb/>
market without feature deserving <lb/>
special comment. The best part <lb/>
of the crop of last year, both as <lb/>
to quality and quantity, seems to <lb/>
have been already marketed- A <lb/>
sharp lookout is kept for good <lb/>
stock, which always sell for high <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
MOUNT. <lb/>
After making full inquiry <lb/>
find that the cold and frost did <lb/>
but little damage to tobacco <lb/>
plants. Some few were nipped <lb/>
by the frost, yet the only trouble <lb/>
caused will a delay in <lb/>
their for transplanting, <lb/>
with good weather we believe <lb/>
time. <lb/>
LOUISVILLE. <lb/>
New were <lb/>
large. Prices were strong and <lb/>
. first-class war story. Hut he t. <lb/>
Col. Encounter <lb/>
Col. Streeter, a Floridan, told the <lb/>
zoological reporter of the Washing- <lb/>
ton Star a good one the other night at <lb/>
the One of the colonel's hands <lb/>
was missing, and, knowing the sec- <lb/>
from which ho hailed, tho <lb/>
early in the month, but for <lb/>
the last two weeks they gradually <lb/>
declined on all grades, particular- <lb/>
on soft tobaccos, which form- <lb/>
ed the greater part of the offer- <lb/>
Prices are quite reason- <lb/>
able now. <lb/>
Old offerings <lb/>
are small, prices are low, the de- <lb/>
being very limited. <lb/>
Green few offered <lb/>
sold at low prices. Old are scarce <lb/>
command unchanged prices. <lb/>
New is selling <lb/>
slightly better, but is still cheap <lb/>
compared to lugs, which in <lb/>
safe order are promptly at <lb/>
full figures in anticipation of Re- <lb/>
contracts. These lugs are <lb/>
thin, greenish without special <lb/>
merit, showing no improvement <lb/>
in quality. if too low or <lb/>
too soft for Spain, are neglected <lb/>
and selling at figures ruling a few <lb/>
years back. <lb/>
Old dark-Very few offered, <lb/>
with demand slack. <lb/>
The severe frost of week <lb/>
has undoubtedly destroyed a <lb/>
great number of they be- <lb/>
very forward consequence <lb/>
of tho mild seasons. But for this <lb/>
mishap we would no doubt have <lb/>
had a large and early planting. <lb/>
While there is ample time to re- <lb/>
sow, tho planting period will be <lb/>
more circumscribed this may <lb/>
cause a smaller planting. There <lb/>
is some talk of scarcity of seed, <lb/>
but enough be to an- <lb/>
all purposes. <lb/>
of the Cigar. <lb/>
plants there will be plenty they will be ready in g <lb/>
The farmers are busy with <lb/>
Cigars are divided by tho trade <lb/>
into certain kinds classes, such <lb/>
as etc. <lb/>
Consumers divide them into <lb/>
certain other kinds or classes <lb/>
which the trade does not <lb/>
They <lb/>
The stovepipe has <lb/>
a filling that is proof against <lb/>
analysis a fireproof wrapper- <lb/>
Its personal is pleas- <lb/>
but it is a base deceiver. The <lb/>
filling slowly away, <lb/>
leaving the wrapper in tact, and <lb/>
while the is wondering <lb/>
why his cigar is no <lb/>
shorter, the internal conflagration <lb/>
suddenly bursts through a weak <lb/>
spot in the wrapper, about an inch <lb/>
from a tip, and burns his fingers. <lb/>
The half-and-half <lb/>
is half bad half not half bad. <lb/>
The not half bad half is at the <lb/>
forward end, and when it is light- <lb/>
ed the smoker flatters himself <lb/>
that he has had a good smoke. <lb/>
If he continues to smoke after <lb/>
the equator is passed ho discovers <lb/>
that all is not tobacco that burns- <lb/>
The air-tight is a <lb/>
laster, for it is not provided with <lb/>
a draft, and is not sufficiently <lb/>
inflammable to burn without one. <lb/>
If you really have to smoke a <lb/>
cigar of this kind have a hole <lb/>
drilled through it from end to <lb/>
end. But better, give it away and <lb/>
borrow a pipe and some tobacco. <lb/>
The rapid fire is a <lb/>
loosely rolled afterward in- <lb/>
with air. It smokes as <lb/>
freely as the stack of a river steam <lb/>
and the same flavor- <lb/>
It is very popular in places that <lb/>
are not mentioned in the postal <lb/>
Bits. <lb/>
The hand was not lost in the <lb/>
struggle. It. was tho work of <lb/>
an alligator, or, as they call them in <lb/>
the land where the reptile builds its <lb/>
nest and rears its young, a <lb/>
it happened a long time <lb/>
said Col. Streeter, if I <lb/>
had not told tho story so oil en I <lb/>
think I should have forgotten it. <lb/>
When I was a young fellow, <lb/>
of dazzling dreams and ambitious <lb/>
schemes, I used to hunt gators for a <lb/>
living. The hide of one of these <lb/>
brutes is worth ail way from one <lb/>
dollar to four according to <lb/>
size, condition and age. I bad a big <lb/>
flat-bottom boat, sort of a <lb/>
a and a sand- <lb/>
scow, and used to cruise at night <lb/>
on a lake not out of Tampa. One <lb/>
dark night I shoved off. After I <lb/>
had reached the most <lb/>
part of the lake I lit a fire on one <lb/>
end of the boat. These craft arc <lb/>
arranged especially tor this, so there <lb/>
isn't much danger of the whole <lb/>
thing going in Well, <lb/>
when my rosin knots scan to blaze <lb/>
and splutter an I sizzle as rosin <lb/>
knots will, it wasn't long before a <lb/>
big raised his head out of the <lb/>
lake to see what tho illumination <lb/>
meant. To a newcomer there isn't <lb/>
anymore horrible sight this side of <lb/>
the oilier world in a great long <lb/>
lying close to <lb/>
i,; i at you with his ripsaw ivories <lb/>
under tho <lb/>
But th this, for I was <lb/>
an old hand the . Bang, <lb/>
and a SI jun n that <lb/>
tor of all c re and trouble <lb/>
hauled him in and I him out <lb/>
in bottom of my boat. It was <lb/>
a good night for the sport, and <lb/>
seem d to especially in- <lb/>
OS to the meaning of that <lb/>
fitful light. Thai trusty rifle spike <lb/>
and again, and one by one I <lb/>
lauded the victims in the old boat. <lb/>
The la one ca no to th top pretty <lb/>
close He a savage- <lb/>
looking Ho was what <lb/>
with propriety w a hard- <lb/>
shell He I d me Id an <lb/>
Insulting of Ires i <lb/>
his In m i him <lb/>
into th boat Tl; vis where <lb/>
made my n I alligator <lb/>
wasn't all the . He seemed <lb/>
to have lots of i y stored up <lb/>
where, and ha I mo. <lb/>
We had a right r in tho <lb/>
boat. Before c a I ; mp some <lb/>
pills into him he hi I a <lb/>
wrestling match it Young <lb/>
man, that's what's with <lb/>
the end of that <lb/>
nil else <lb/>
CONVENIENT, yon can carry It In pocket. <lb/>
because Ii la a homo remedy. <lb/>
SURE, became It nature lo cure. <lb/>
SAFE, leaven no hail <lb/>
EASY, you take no medicine, <lb/>
IX ft causes body to absorb <lb/>
OXYGEN, drawl from nature's laboratory the of its <lb/>
curative effects. <lb/>
Governor M. HOLT M i m <lb/>
-1 always good result, tho o. <lb/>
Eli<lb/>
it ever-- time if <lb/>
what yon want U <lb/>
f to II <lb/>
s line <lb/>
We make a specialty of this class of goods and if <lb/>
prices, Quality, Quantity <lb/>
count for anything you, come lo us- <lb/>
Envelopes a pack r <lb/>
a . <lb/>
Ci j <lb/>
Cap Jo. <lb/>
Tablet cent u,. <lb/>
Slate cents per <lb/>
I I doz. <lb/>
q per dozen op. <lb/>
A FEW SPECIALTIES <lb/>
We solo agents for I AV <lb/>
tho very best for school and <lb/>
left to set the crop. <lb/>
One Brand For Thirty Years. <lb/>
OF<lb/>
AND OFFICE <lb/>
dealers have carious <lb/>
towers, and one speaking on the <lb/>
subject the other day <lb/>
had a peculiar experience with a <lb/>
customer never saw. He <lb/>
bought from us one peculiar brand <lb/>
of He dealt with us for <lb/>
nearly thirty years, and, as he <lb/>
was in Kentucky, we never saw <lb/>
him. Every month or two his <lb/>
orders regularly came, and were <lb/>
promptly tilled charged. <lb/>
Sometimes his account <lb/>
to or but more. <lb/>
Then a draft would be sent <lb/>
full of We always had <lb/>
a curiosity to meet our oldest <lb/>
customer, but if he ever came to <lb/>
town he failed to make himself <lb/>
known. Finally his account <lb/>
reached and some odd cents. <lb/>
To the statement sent him there <lb/>
came do reply, and his orders for <lb/>
tobacco ceased. We wondered <lb/>
what was the matter. After a <lb/>
few months had a reply from <lb/>
his widow. He was dead, and <lb/>
she stated that their farm would <lb/>
be sold, and she would pay the <lb/>
But she never had a <lb/>
chance as we sent her a receipted <lb/>
bill. I have frequently wondered <lb/>
what kind of a man he was, who <lb/>
Train No. makes used one brand of tobacco <lb/>
for all points North daily, <lb/>
ail via Richmond, and daily <lb/>
day via Bay Line, Rocky Mount <lb/>
for thirty This is <lb/>
curious, but more so than an- <lb/>
daily except Sunday with Norfolk A a <lb/>
railroad tor Norfolk and j bAS a <lb/>
Schools and Churches seated <lb/>
in the best manner. Offices, <lb/>
Send for <lb/>
points via Norfolk. <lb/>
DIVINE, <lb/>
General <lb/>
R. Transportation <lb/>
M, t <lb/>
for fifteen years, who buys <lb/>
cigars every Saturday, but in all <lb/>
that time has never <lb/>
puts down the money holds <lb/>
out his <lb/>
their work and as far advanced <lb/>
as usual. <lb/>
Our sales have been small. <lb/>
Prices about the same. <lb/>
OXFORD. <lb/>
The breaks have been quite <lb/>
small this week Nothing of in- <lb/>
to report. <lb/>
DANVILLE. <lb/>
We have to report light sales <lb/>
this week, composed largely of <lb/>
shipped and tobacco. <lb/>
Very little good desirable stock <lb/>
offered. Our market shows con- <lb/>
more animation and <lb/>
prices have advanced on most <lb/>
grades. The advance has been <lb/>
mote perceptible in wrappers <lb/>
good fillers of both the old and <lb/>
new. The in values on <lb/>
fillers is due to several of our lo <lb/>
cal manufacturers coming on the <lb/>
market, and they find good and <lb/>
tine fillers suitable for their brands <lb/>
very scarce in the crop; hence <lb/>
They Sneezed in Chorus, <lb/>
Rev. R. S. Hawker, In the course <lb/>
of some of aged <lb/>
friend of his, tea on an <lb/>
which this trend, himself a clergy- <lb/>
man, was of telling. it <lb/>
n d a <lb/>
snuff, I, I i the narrator's o a <lb/>
language, runs t <lb/>
. ways cu m i. c <lb/>
lays I r lb an, <lb/>
marriage. I i lute th <lb/>
b for any r person. V. <lb/>
so that bad n a <lb/>
very buxom, rosy yo and <lb/>
when it was over I pr led <lb/>
i i <lb/>
But I had enormous <lb/>
of snuff; so no <lb/>
sooner had tho bride received my <lb/>
I gave her a smart kiss <lb/>
for her good looks- than she began <lb/>
; sneeze. The kissed <lb/>
her, of course, aid he began also. <lb/>
Then the b -t man advanced to <lb/>
the . Better ho hadn't, <lb/>
b -ran to to at fully; and by <lb/>
an they <lb/>
were In turn, till tho <lb/>
whole sneezing down <lb/>
tho last thing I heard <lb/>
the church door was <lb/>
ti ti h till th n a a drowned <lb/>
TRICKS OF THE TRADE. <lb/>
The Will Not Work Equally <lb/>
in All Cases. <lb/>
best story I ever said <lb/>
John Thomas to the St. Louis Globe- <lb/>
Democrat's corridor man, <lb/>
vouched for by Capt. Rivers, of the <lb/>
Forth Worth Denver railroad. A <lb/>
Russian Hebrew came to this <lb/>
try and established a dry goods and <lb/>
notion business, lie was so success- <lb/>
that he sent for his younger <lb/>
brother and started to educate him <lb/>
in the business. The boy was slower <lb/>
to learn the ways of the world than <lb/>
his brother had been, and the latter <lb/>
sometimes grew impatient. One day <lb/>
;. <lb/>
do. a <lb/>
lady asked to see some silk, <lb/>
which was shown, apiece at two <lb/>
a yard. <lb/>
I saw some like it a few days <lb/>
afro for one dollar and fifty <lb/>
she said. <lb/>
doubt id, madam; but <lb/>
dot some days I selling <lb/>
goods at dot until <lb/>
purposes. Our Cream Mucilage bents <lb/>
on the market. Our Diamond Glue <lb/>
and Magic Cement will mend anything but broken <lb/>
Every business man have a <lb/>
KER FOUNTAIN <lb/>
fl life time and are else in <lb/>
to -i- <lb/>
Box Paper for polite correspondence <lb/>
the in also keep Mourning <lb/>
Then we have Slates, Blank Looks, <lb/>
Memorandum Books Time Books. Erasers, Rub- <lb/>
Pencil Holders. Automatic Pencils, <lb/>
Or l-k Stands, Piper Cutters, Book <lb/>
Marks, Pen Holders and lots of other things. <lb/>
BOOKS NOVELS. <lb/>
If yon want anything to read come look over <lb/>
our Any book not on hand will or- <lb/>
de foe yon. <lb/>
Sow remember the the only place <lb/>
at e i yon gel these goods at such low <lb/>
BOOK STOKE.<lb/>
The <lb/>
for Money.<lb/>
mm <lb/>
A Congressman's Start In Life. <lb/>
Joe Hendrix, congressman and <lb/>
a groat bank, laid the <lb/>
foundation of prosper- <lb/>
by feeding on peanuts and <lb/>
when hustling for the Sun in <lb/>
Brooklyn. His economy made <lb/>
his great success in life. He <lb/>
eats apples occasionally, but says it <lb/>
is only from force of habit. Unlike <lb/>
some newspaper men who have <lb/>
found the pot of gold and been <lb/>
graduated from the ranks, is one <lb/>
of the most approachable of men, <lb/>
that is to newspaper men. He <lb/>
ways sees them and tells them what <lb/>
they want to know if it is in bis pow- <lb/>
Y. America. <lb/>
each pile is made to bring its full day. we got dot all the silk <lb/>
in China dead, <lb/>
value. <lb/>
The receipts are much lighter <lb/>
his week, on account of harsh, <lb/>
dry weather. They will continue <lb/>
light we have a season so <lb/>
that the farmers can handle their <lb/>
tobacco. <lb/>
Prices tho same as <lb/>
last week. All good grades com- <lb/>
good prices. Common <lb/>
grades are low and neglected. <lb/>
BURLINGTON- <lb/>
We have had a dull week, not <lb/>
much tobacco being offered. <lb/>
Prices keep up on desirable <lb/>
grades. <lb/>
goods cost us more as two <lb/>
lady was satisfied and <lb/>
chased the silk. <lb/>
you see how dot done, j <lb/>
a lady now; you on <lb/>
he said to his brother. <lb/>
lady entered and asked for <lb/>
tape. The young man was all <lb/>
and the desired article was <lb/>
speedily produced. <lb/>
the lady asked. <lb/>
cents a <lb/>
I saw some for eight <lb/>
doubt it, madam; but I <lb/>
dot some days ago. to- <lb/>
day heard dot all de <lb/>
dead, and would be no more <lb/>
r j v a MM, <lb/>
horn circle complete. This <lb/>
makes home circle complete. This <lb/>
great Drink <lb/>
to every member of <lb/>
A package make gal- <lb/>
and get the genuine. <lb/>
Sold everywhere. only by <lb/>
The Chas. E. Hires Co.; <lb/>
Send f-f and <lb/>
i jAy <lb/>
and less time .-.;. <lb/>
remote i <lb/>
in drawing or photo,, <lb/>
i i advise, if or not, free <lb/>
charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. , <lb/>
A How to Obtain <lb/>
cost of same in the U. S. and foreign <lb/>
sent free. Address, <lb/>
op. Patent d. C. <lb/>
end Dress Shoe. <lb/>
83.60 Police Shoe, Soles. <lb/>
for Workingmen. <lb/>
and 61.75 for Boys. <lb/>
LADIES AND MISSES,<lb/>
This is the <lb/>
any dealer <lb/>
you W. L. Done I as <lb/>
at a <lb/>
with- <lb/>
out name slumped <lb/>
on th bottom, put <lb/>
down as a fraud. <lb/>
was <lb/>
AS Shoes are fitting, and give better <lb/>
, i than any oilier make. Try one pair and be con- <lb/>
; of W. L. i and price on the bottom, which <lb/>
, saves of annually to those who wear <lb/>
sale of I. gain customers, which help to <lb/>
full line of . . . ma to at f <lb/>
i.-. you, of tho dealer <lb/>
free . I Mm. <lb/>
BOSWELL CO., Greenville <lb/>
R, L. BRO. Farmville, <lb/>
BREAKFAST-SUPPER. <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb/>
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb/>
COCOA <lb/>
WATER OR MILK. <lb/>
NORTH <lb/>
TABLE. <lb/>
In 4th. <lb/>
GOING CAST. <lb/>
GOING W <lb/>
leave <lb/>
Tarboro at <lb/>
inn on Tar <lb/>
and Friday at A. M. <lb/>
Tarboro at A <lb/>
Th <lb/>
A. M. wine <lb/>
These n res are s to st age <lb/>
water on Tar <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington <lb/>
en The Norfolk. and ash- <lb/>
for Norfolk. Baltimore <lb/>
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb/>
Shippers order their good <lb/>
via Dominion <lb/>
Vow York. from <lb/>
Ex <lb/>
M M A.<lb/>
SO<lb/>
P. M <lb/>
Now i -1 u connect with <lb/>
; t t,.,,,,., <lb/>
more Steamboat Company f om Bi U w w <lb/>
more. -Merchant. from i r <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. SON. <lb/>
Agent, <lb/>
Washington N. <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, <lb/>
Agent, <lb/>
Greenville, a C <lb/>
Train connects Wilmington A <lb/>
Weldon North, leaving <lb/>
a. in., and with D. <lb/>
West, p. m. <lb/>
with Richmond <lb/>
rain <lb/>
S. L. <lb/>
LADIES <lb/>
Keeping n or children who <lb/>
lug up, should take <lb/>
BITTERS. <lb/>
II I. cores <lb/>
Liver and <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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