<?xml version="1.0"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
<teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
        <titleStmt>
            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
            <author></author>
            <respStmt>
                <resp>Text encoded by</resp>
                <name>Michael Reece</name>
            </respStmt>
        </titleStmt>
	<publicationStmt>
                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
        </publicationStmt>
			<notesStmt>
				<note type="job"></note>
				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
			</notesStmt>
        <sourceDesc>
            <bibl>
            </bibl>
        </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
        <samplingDecl>
            <p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p>
            <p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p>
            <p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p>
        </samplingDecl>
        <classDecl>
            <taxonomy xml:id="LCSH">
                <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
            </taxonomy>
        </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
        <creation>
            <date></date>
        </creation>
        <langUsage xml:lang="en-US">
            <language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language>
        </langUsage>
        <textClass>
            <keywords scheme="#LCSH">
                <list>
                    <item></item>
                </list>
            </keywords>
        </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div type="dirtyOCR">
<pb facs="00017697_0001" n="1"/>
<p>
DO <lb/>
NO <lb/>
That the place to <lb/>
your <lb/>
BOOKS <lb/>
-ASP- <lb/>
IS <lb/>
AT <lb/>
Reflector Bookstore. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, <lb/>
VOL. XIII. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1894. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
Is place to find the <lb/>
REFLECTOR OFFICE <lb/>
Bring along ONE DOLLAR and <lb/>
get your Home a year. <lb/>
HP This Office for Job Printing <lb/>
mt <lb/>
IN ORDER TO OBTAIN THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICES, SHIP YOUR PRODUCE TO THE FOLLOWING OLD, LONG-ESTABLISHED AND THOROUGHLY RELIABLE COMMISSION <lb/>
W. D. SONS, <lb/>
WARREN ST., NEW YORK. <lb/>
Shipping No. Established 1813- j <lb/>
C. E. BARKER CO. <lb/>
COMMERCE ST., NEWARK, N. J. <lb/>
Established 1872. <lb/>
DOCK ST., PHILADELPHIA. <lb/>
Established 1871. <lb/>
KINGSLEY CO. <lb/>
LIGHT ST. WHARF, BALTIMORE. <lb/>
They have been thoroughly tried, not by jury, but by majority of only of Eastern Carolina, but of the United States, and have <lb/>
date of establishing to the present lime that they must have been guilty of square dealing, or they would not still be holding products <lb/>
The above Commission Men are no to you. <lb/>
than any men in the business. You can readily see from the date of establishing to the present . . . . <lb/>
say ire have been in the market with these concerns for three years or more, and refer you to a few of our shippers at each point- Had we the entire space of the Reflector we could not name them all. <lb/>
been found <lb/>
as they die <lb/>
WINCHESTER HUNT. <lb/>
COMMERCIAL ST., BOSTON, <lb/>
of returning as much or more for your products <lb/>
to years age. Now, to verify statement, we <lb/>
Chocowinity, N. C. H. H. Ross, Idalia, N. Aycock, A. E. Clark. Pantego, N. O C. G. New as spare has about given out m cannot mention more of our <lb/>
v. m j -g j j J- O. Proctor Bro, N. C. J. B. Bonner, A. if you have a friend around Mills, City, <lb/>
R. R. Geo. A Phillips, Dr. D T. Tayloe, H. Bland, W. C Hon. J. Marsh, J. E. Hughes, W. M. Marsh, N. C. Joseph Brothers, E. South Creek, N. C J. C New Bane, or any etas who raises track, we win deem it <lb/>
Lodge, Lodge Morgan, S. R. Fowle, E. S. Simmons, H. Bath, N C. C. A. A. B. Jno. T. Gaylord, , Simmons, Fairfield, N. C. H. Hampton, Plymouth, N. C. favor to us if you will write and ask them abort our are not <lb/>
W. H Stancill, Washington, N. J. E. Jones, S. L. B. Windley, N. C. W. Latham, M. D. M Edenton, N. E. E. Knight, I. L. Thigpen, J neither arc our houses, and you will have no trouble in finding out <lb/>
Grist, J. J. B. A Turnage, Mrs. F. C Saunders, J Leggett, C. G. B. Topping, R. H. C , Mildred, N. C. about us both. <lb/>
Thinking- last season that the Truckers would not want to confine themselves closely to eastern markets, we connected ourselves with the following houses further t <lb/>
SOUTH WATER STREET, CHICAGO, ILL. <lb/>
CLEVELAND, OHIO. <lb/>
PITTSBURGH; PENNSYLVANIA. <lb/>
We tent each of the houses above several cars of potatoes from the following <lb/>
raiser. oblige us by writing them G. A. Phillips. T. and closely culled stock always top of the market. Be <lb/>
T. H. E. s. T. If. Latham, J. B. O rimes and . . <lb/>
J. J. and ask them who paid the most for their truck last season, <lb/>
and let case re.-t them. <lb/>
we want to give our shippers some good advice, M follows Now if <lb/>
you want to obtain top market prices for your truck, pack it in well tilled <lb/>
sound packages and see that it is closely culled, for you can't fool a Yankee. Well<lb/>
I Remember W. E. shipping mark m <lb/>
established 1843, the oldest in America and the best j <lb/>
Stencils, Postals, etc, furnished from any of <lb/>
I he above houses on application to us. If you are a trucker <lb/>
and wish to be kept posted on the market daily from all the <lb/>
leading cities in America, drop us a postal to that effect, and <lb/>
we will see that you are kept well informed on the markets. <lb/>
Write to us at once for stencils, etc.<lb/>
Offices over Carter Store, WASHINGTON, N. C. <lb/>
Produce Soliciting Agents for North Carolina. <lb/>
of Town of Greenville. <lb/>
The Board of of the <lb/>
Town of Greenville do enact <lb/>
that for the government of said <lb/>
Town the following Ordinances <lb/>
or By-Laws shall be in force <lb/>
from and after the 15th day of <lb/>
Jane 1894, and that all <lb/>
or By-Laws heretofore <lb/>
enacted for the government of <lb/>
the said Town be and the same <lb/>
are hereby repealed, from and <lb/>
after the said d of Jane <lb/>
1894. <lb/>
Ordinance I. <lb/>
It is hereby declared to be a <lb/>
for an . person to fire a <lb/>
pistol, gun or any other species of <lb/>
fire arms, or air rifle, or the using <lb/>
of sling shot within the limits of <lb/>
the town, except in ease of <lb/>
and all persons are forbidden <lb/>
to tire off any pop roman <lb/>
candles or any lire works, <lb/>
except on Christmas or with per- <lb/>
mission of the <lb/>
The playing of foOt-LO or <lb/>
throwing any upon <lb/>
streets or public lots of the town <lb/>
is hereby forbidden. <lb/>
And any person violating this <lb/>
Ordinance shall for each and <lb/>
every pay a fine of Five <lb/>
Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance a. <lb/>
It be unlawful for any I <lb/>
person to drive or ride a or <lb/>
mule at a greater speed than <lb/>
eight miles an hour, or to drive <lb/>
or ride recklessly through any of <lb/>
the streets of the Town, or to drive, <lb/>
ride, or lead a horse or mute on <lb/>
any of the sidewalks thereof. Any <lb/>
person violating this Ordinance <lb/>
shall for and every <lb/>
pay a tine of Five Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance j. <lb/>
All persons are prohibited from <lb/>
leaving any filth or from washing <lb/>
any at or near any of the <lb/>
public pumps of the Town, <lb/>
or to a horse or a mule in <lb/>
the buckets attached to the wells, <lb/>
or to willfully or carelessly turn <lb/>
loose the buckets attached to any <lb/>
wells so that they may violently <lb/>
descend. Any person violating <lb/>
this Ordinance shall for each and <lb/>
every pay a fine Five <lb/>
Dollars <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Any and all persons are for- <lb/>
to encamp during the <lb/>
night with horses, or- oxen <lb/>
within the corporate of the <lb/>
Town. Any person violating this <lb/>
Ordinance shall for each <lb/>
every pa a Sue of Five <lb/>
Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Any all persons are forbid- <lb/>
den to cut or damage any of the <lb/>
shade trees o-i the lots or <lb/>
streets of the T n, nor shall any <lb/>
person tack post <lb/>
or notice of any kind <lb/>
said or lamp posts of <lb/>
Town, or to dig op or injure <lb/>
any of the side wit ks or streets of <lb/>
th Town. Any person violating <lb/>
Ordinance shall for each and <lb/>
f very pry a fine of Five <lb/>
Dollars- <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
All persons owning or occupy- <lb/>
any house o- lot in said Town <lb/>
are required to cleanse such of <lb/>
their lots, ho eel lira, <lb/>
or stables e offensive odors <lb/>
ard the event that <lb/>
of and notice by the Town <lb/>
to cleanse the they <lb/>
fa-n, they shall n fine <lb/>
of Dollar for each day said <lb/>
i permitted t remain <lb/>
after such notice is given. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
A -y all persons are forbid- <lb/>
den to allow his or her horse or <lb/>
mule to at large or graze upon <lb/>
tho streets or public lots of the <lb/>
Town Any person violating this <lb/>
Ordinance shall for each and <lb/>
every pay a fine of Five <lb/>
Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
If any person or persons shall <lb/>
within the corporate limits of tho <lb/>
Town engage in. or encourage the <lb/>
of dogs or chicken cocks <lb/>
for sport, he or they shall pay a <lb/>
fine of Five Dollars for each and <lb/>
every such <lb/>
Ordinance g. <lb/>
It is hereby declared to be <lb/>
lawful for any person owning or <lb/>
having any bitch or bitches, to <lb/>
permit the same knowingly to run <lb/>
at large during the erratic state <lb/>
of copulation in the Town and <lb/>
should the of said bitch or <lb/>
bitches, after one hours notice by <lb/>
the Town refuse or neg <lb/>
to confine the same at once, <lb/>
then and in that event the Town <lb/>
is hereby authorized <lb/>
to destroy or kill such bitch at <lb/>
once, and in case owner of such <lb/>
bitch can be found within a <lb/>
the Officer shall like- <lb/>
wise kill or destroy the same- <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Any and all persons hereby <lb/>
forbidden to engage in any riot- <lb/>
boisterous or any other dis- <lb/>
orderly conduct either upon the <lb/>
streets or In any public or private <lb/>
or any other place in the <lb/>
corporate of the Town. <lb/>
Any person or persons violating <lb/>
this Ordinance shall for each <lb/>
every pay a of <lb/>
five Dollars- <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Any all persons are hereby <lb/>
forbidden to keep on the public <lb/>
lots, streets, or sidewalks of the <lb/>
Town any obstructions, such as <lb/>
boxes, barrels, bales of cotton, <lb/>
work-bench, <lb/>
lumber, show of merchandise, or <lb/>
anything except for building or <lb/>
purposes, while the <lb/>
work is in progress- Any person <lb/>
violating this Ordinance after <lb/>
complaint having been made and <lb/>
notice given by the Town Officer <lb/>
to remove the same he or she <lb/>
shall be fined One Dollar for each <lb/>
day said obstruction is allowed to <lb/>
remain after such notice is given. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Any person owning an animal <lb/>
of any kind or description that <lb/>
shall die within the corporate <lb/>
limits of the Town of Greenville <lb/>
neglecting or refusing to remove <lb/>
the same within twelve hours <lb/>
from its death, shall pay a of <lb/>
Two Dollars for each and <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
The of horses or mules to <lb/>
any of the shade trees or fences <lb/>
the streets or public lots of <lb/>
the Town is forbidden. Any per- <lb/>
son violating this Ordinance shall <lb/>
for and every such <lb/>
pay a fine of Five Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
All crowds or of <lb/>
persons who shall congregate on <lb/>
the sidewalks or streets of the <lb/>
Town, thereby obstructing the <lb/>
to the inconvenience of <lb/>
pedestrians, shall be dispersed <lb/>
by the Town Officer, and any <lb/>
person or persons, who refuse to <lb/>
obey warning of such Officer, <lb/>
shall be deemed to have violated <lb/>
this Ordinance- Any person or <lb/>
persons this Ordinance <lb/>
shall for each and even such <lb/>
pay a tine of Five Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
It is hereby declared to be a <lb/>
nuisance for any person to be <lb/>
found the streets or in any <lb/>
place within the corporate <lb/>
limits of the town in a State of <lb/>
intoxication, or who shall or may <lb/>
be heard using vulgar or profane <lb/>
language, or who shall indecently <lb/>
expose his or her nakedness. <lb/>
Any person violating this <lb/>
shall for each such <lb/>
pay a fine of Ten Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Any meddling with the public <lb/>
wells or pumps of the Town or <lb/>
interference with the work there- <lb/>
of unnecessarily is prohibited- <lb/>
any person violating this <lb/>
Ordinance shall for each and <lb/>
every pay a of One <lb/>
Dollar. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
It is hereby declared unlawful <lb/>
for any person or persons to re- <lb/>
tail spirituous, vinous or malt <lb/>
liquors by the drink or in <lb/>
ties less than a gallon within the <lb/>
corporate limits of the Town with- <lb/>
out first obtaining from the <lb/>
of the a license <lb/>
signed by the Mayor counter- <lb/>
signed by the of said Town <lb/>
which license shall expire on the <lb/>
30th day of April next succeeding <lb/>
the day upon which it is granted. <lb/>
Any person or violating <lb/>
this Ordinance shall be fined Five <lb/>
Dollars for each day or part of a <lb/>
day he is guilty of its violation- <lb/>
Ordinance iS. <lb/>
It shall be unlawful for any <lb/>
itinerant of goods, wares <lb/>
or merchandise of any description, <lb/>
and concerts or traveling <lb/>
of any kind who charge an <lb/>
admission fee, to pursue their <lb/>
avocation within the corporate <lb/>
limits of the Town without first <lb/>
paying the Officer the tax <lb/>
imposed therefor. Any person <lb/>
violating this Ordinance shall tor <lb/>
and every pay a fine <lb/>
of Ten Dollars- <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
It shall be unlawful for any per- <lb/>
son to exhibit any lottery or any <lb/>
species of games of chance on the <lb/>
public squares or streets of the <lb/>
Any person violating this <lb/>
Ordinance shall pay a fine of <lb/>
Twenty-five Dollars for each day <lb/>
or part of a day in which it is so <lb/>
violated. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
It is declared to be a <lb/>
nuisance for any person to <lb/>
bit a Stallion or Jack on any of <lb/>
the public lots, streets or com- <lb/>
mons within the limits of the <lb/>
Town- It is also forbidden for <lb/>
any person to put a Stallion or <lb/>
Jack to a Mare within the <lb/>
ate limits of the Town. It is also <lb/>
declared to be a nuisance for any <lb/>
to keep a Jack Ass enclosed <lb/>
within a lot or stall within the <lb/>
corporate limits of the Town. <lb/>
Any person violating this <lb/>
for each and every <lb/>
pay a fine of Twenty-five <lb/>
Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
The storage of Guano or other <lb/>
offensive Fertilizers within the <lb/>
corporate limits of the Town, ex- <lb/>
at or near the steamboat <lb/>
or landings, is considered <lb/>
to be a nuisance and is hereby <lb/>
prohibited- Any person <lb/>
this Ordinance shall for each <lb/>
and every per day or part <lb/>
of a day pay a fine of Five Dollars- <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
It is hereby declared unlawful <lb/>
and is hereby forbidden for any <lb/>
person to sell at auction any <lb/>
goods, wares or merchandise of <lb/>
any kind or description on any of <lb/>
the streets, sidewalks or public <lb/>
lots of the Town without <lb/>
of the Mayor. Any person <lb/>
violating this Ordinance shall for <lb/>
each and every pay a fine <lb/>
of Five Dollars for every sale <lb/>
thereof. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
It shall be unlawful and is here- <lb/>
by forbidden for any circus to be <lb/>
exhibited within the corporate <lb/>
limits of the Town without pay- <lb/>
to the Town Officer tho taxes <lb/>
imposed therefor, and any per- <lb/>
son violating this Ordinance shall <lb/>
be fined Fifty Dollars for each <lb/>
day or part of a day he is guilty <lb/>
of its violation. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Any all are hereby <lb/>
forbidden and prohibited from <lb/>
emptying or pouring out any fish, <lb/>
or pork pickle, or placing <lb/>
any other offensive matters of <lb/>
any kind in tho streets or <lb/>
lots of the Town. And all <lb/>
violating this Ordinance shall for <lb/>
each every pay a fine <lb/>
of Five Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
All dealers in meats, beef, fish, <lb/>
oysters, hides or other articles <lb/>
subject to rapid decay are re- <lb/>
quired to keep their premises <lb/>
clear and free as possible of bad <lb/>
odor, and any and all persons are <lb/>
hereby strictly forbidden to cure <lb/>
any green hides within the <lb/>
limits between April 1st <lb/>
and November 1st, and any per- <lb/>
son violating this Ordinance shall <lb/>
for each and every pay a <lb/>
fine of Ten Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
All persons having and using <lb/>
stoves in any building within the <lb/>
Town shall cause the pipe thereof <lb/>
to a brick flue or chimney <lb/>
built from the ground or upon the <lb/>
joists of the building through tho <lb/>
roof thereof. And in all cases <lb/>
where the stove pipe may pass <lb/>
through a wall or partition, a <lb/>
stone or earthen pipe must be <lb/>
placed in such wall or partition, <lb/>
and the stove pipe made to pass <lb/>
through the same. The condition <lb/>
of all such stove pipes may be <lb/>
examined and inspected by the <lb/>
Mayor, or any one or more of the <lb/>
Councilmen of the Town appoint- <lb/>
ed by the Mayor to examine and <lb/>
inspect the same and such <lb/>
report they find any such stove <lb/>
pipe is not arranged as required <lb/>
above or in this Ordinance and <lb/>
the owner thereof after due notice <lb/>
of such deficiency refuses or neg- <lb/>
so to arrange it in <lb/>
dance with above requirements <lb/>
for the protection of his or her <lb/>
own property and the of <lb/>
others near by, he or she shall for <lb/>
each and every so com- <lb/>
pay a fine of Twenty-five <lb/>
Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
No person shall throw or place <lb/>
in any of the streets of the town <lb/>
any filth, trash, timber, glass, <lb/>
paper, boxes, or other things of <lb/>
nuisance whatever, only at such <lb/>
time and manner as may be <lb/>
by the Town Officer for the <lb/>
of removal. Any person <lb/>
violating this Ordinance shall for <lb/>
each and every pay a fine <lb/>
of Five Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance ad. <lb/>
It is hereby declared to be <lb/>
lawful for any retailer of <lb/>
or malt liquors to permit any <lb/>
disorderly, obstreperous or <lb/>
on their premises, <lb/>
under the penalty of having their <lb/>
license revoked. <lb/>
It shall be unlawful for any <lb/>
Hotel or Boarding House keeper, <lb/>
or Horse or Male Dealer, Lawyer, <lb/>
Auctioneer or any business where- <lb/>
in a tax is required, to <lb/>
pursue their avocations they <lb/>
shall have obtained a license sign- <lb/>
ed by the Mayor and countersign- <lb/>
ed by the Clerk. Any person <lb/>
this shall for <lb/>
each and every pay a pen- <lb/>
of Five Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
No person shall deface, break <lb/>
or in any manner any of <lb/>
the lamps or lamp posts in the <lb/>
any person who <lb/>
may mutilate or otherwise injure <lb/>
any building or enclosing <lb/>
the public pound, shall forfeit <lb/>
pay the sum of Ton Dollars, <lb/>
for each every <lb/>
fine or forfeiture to be collected <lb/>
in the manner by law. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
The congregating of <lb/>
for tho purpose of swapping, <lb/>
trading or selling horses or mules, <lb/>
the streets or public lots of <lb/>
the Town is declared to be a <lb/>
and is hereby prohibited. <lb/>
Any person violating this <lb/>
shall for each and every <lb/>
pay a of Ten Dollars <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Any person or persons who fail <lb/>
to pay fines costs imposed by <lb/>
the Mayor, or any tax imposed by <lb/>
the Board of shall <lb/>
required to work on the streets <lb/>
of the Town at such sum as may <lb/>
be allowed by the authorities per <lb/>
day until the of such <lb/>
fine costs or tax is paid. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
All shops or places for the <lb/>
of spirituous, vinous or malt <lb/>
liquors shall closed on each <lb/>
Sabbath the year from <lb/>
o'clock on Saturday night to <lb/>
o'clock on Sunday night, and no <lb/>
or persons shall during or <lb/>
times, in any <lb/>
liquor Bell or give <lb/>
away any spirituous, or vinous, or <lb/>
malt liquors, except in case of <lb/>
sickness, and then only upon a <lb/>
certificate of a practicing <lb/>
and any one or more per- <lb/>
sons seen going in or out of a <lb/>
bar-room between said hours <lb/>
above mentioned shall deemed <lb/>
of the guilt <lb/>
of the proprietor of said bar-room. <lb/>
Any person violating this <lb/>
shall for the first <lb/>
pay a Five of Ten Dollars, for the <lb/>
second pay a tine of <lb/>
Twenty Dollars, for the third of- <lb/>
fence have his license revoked. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Section No person shall <lb/>
vend or sell within the corporate <lb/>
limits of Greenville, except from <lb/>
the stalls of tho Market House, <lb/>
fresh pork, frosh beef, fresh <lb/>
mutton, fresh or barbecue. <lb/>
Provided, however, that after <lb/>
o'clock, A- M- whole dressed <lb/>
hogs, beef and mutton, in <lb/>
ties not less than a quarter, may <lb/>
be sold any where in said Town, <lb/>
and that skimmers may sell fish <lb/>
caught by themselves anywhere <lb/>
in Town. Provided, further, that <lb/>
desiring to sell fresh <lb/>
fresh pork and fresh <lb/>
ton may do so by obtaining a <lb/>
license from tho Mayor by bay- <lb/>
Four Dollars therefor per <lb/>
month or part of a month in ad- <lb/>
their places of <lb/>
subject to the laws and <lb/>
governing the market <lb/>
house. Any violating this <lb/>
Ordinance shall for each and <lb/>
every pay a fine of Ten <lb/>
Dollars. <lb/>
Sec. No person shall sell <lb/>
or vend any cakes or cider except <lb/>
twenty feet of tho Market <lb/>
House. Any one violating this <lb/>
shall for each and <lb/>
every pay a fine of Two <lb/>
Dollars. <lb/>
Sec. No stalls or stands for <lb/>
the sale of said articles be <lb/>
allowed to be erected within the <lb/>
corporate limits. Any person <lb/>
violating this Ordinance shall for <lb/>
each and every a <lb/>
of Two Dollars. <lb/>
Sec. 4- No person shall sell <lb/>
the corporate limits of the <lb/>
Town any unwholesome food. <lb/>
Any person violating this <lb/>
shall for each every <lb/>
pay a of Ten Dollars. <lb/>
Sec. 5- The stalls of the Mar- <lb/>
House shall be rented an- <lb/>
on tho first day of January <lb/>
at public outcry, but any vacant <lb/>
stalls thereafter may be rented <lb/>
out by the Town authorities <lb/>
after said day, provided, <lb/>
however, no stall be rented <lb/>
for less than Four Dollars per <lb/>
month payable in advance. <lb/>
Sec. Any person renting a <lb/>
stall the Market House shall <lb/>
keep tho same clean, <lb/>
of a failure to do so, and after no- <lb/>
by the Town authorities <lb/>
refuse or neglects to clean the <lb/>
same shall forfeit the amount paid <lb/>
and the further use of such stall. <lb/>
Sec- 7- No barrels, tables or <lb/>
obstructions shall be placed in the <lb/>
passage way of said Market House <lb/>
Sec. One stall of said Mar- <lb/>
House shall kept for the <lb/>
use of the public free of charge. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Section The running of <lb/>
hogs, goats and at large in <lb/>
the corporate limits is declared <lb/>
to a nuisance and is <lb/>
forbidden. every person <lb/>
whether a citizen of the Town or <lb/>
not is prohibited from permitting <lb/>
his hogs, goats or from run- <lb/>
on the of <lb/>
Greenville, and the owner of each <lb/>
animal or fowl whether a citizen <lb/>
of tho Town or not shall for each <lb/>
and every violation of this <lb/>
pay a of Five Dollars <lb/>
for each hog and One Dollar for <lb/>
goat or goose- <lb/>
Sec. 2- Whereas it has been <lb/>
time again declared to be a <lb/>
public nuisance for hogs to run <lb/>
at large on tho streets of the <lb/>
Town of Greenville and has been <lb/>
prohibited by its Ordinances. <lb/>
And whereas it is the purpose of <lb/>
Board of Councilmen to use all <lb/>
lawful means to abate such <lb/>
and to enforce its Ordinances <lb/>
the same. But where- <lb/>
as the Board is forbidden, by an <lb/>
act of the General Assembly <lb/>
passed at a recent session to pass <lb/>
any Ordinance directing the Town <lb/>
Officers to impound any hog or <lb/>
cattle, the property of a person <lb/>
not a citizen of the Town, and <lb/>
whereas the Board desires to con- <lb/>
firm its action to the laws of the <lb/>
State and to protect its officers <lb/>
from prosecution. And whereas <lb/>
it is utterly impossible for the <lb/>
Officers of the Town to distinguish <lb/>
the hogs of those who do not live <lb/>
within the corporate limits of <lb/>
Greenville from the hogs of those <lb/>
who live in said limits- It is or- <lb/>
That in order that Town <lb/>
Officers may not, by mistake, <lb/>
pound the hogs of any <lb/>
dent it is ordered and made the <lb/>
duty of all non-residents to mark <lb/>
their hoes and to register with <lb/>
the Clerk of this Board his or her <lb/>
mark before the 15th day of June <lb/>
1894, and he shall pay therefor a <lb/>
tax of Five Dollars to Town <lb/>
and a fee of Ono Dollar to the <lb/>
Clerk. <lb/>
That on and after the said <lb/>
15th day of June, 1894, the Town <lb/>
Officer shall impound all <lb/>
marked hogs and all hogs whose <lb/>
warns have not been registered <lb/>
by their owners, unless he shall <lb/>
otherwise know them to be the <lb/>
property of a non resident, and <lb/>
deal with them according to <lb/>
Ordinances in force as to hogs <lb/>
belonging to citizens of the town. <lb/>
Provided, it shall be his duty to <lb/>
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report <lb/>
Baking <lb/>
Powder <lb/>
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb/>
release tho same to tho owner, if <lb/>
he be a non-resident, upon his <lb/>
calling for them within ton days <lb/>
and with the <lb/>
requiring them to be mark- <lb/>
ed and registered. <lb/>
The Town Officers shall not <lb/>
impound any hog known to be <lb/>
the property of a non resident, <lb/>
but it shall be his duty to insert a <lb/>
small ring the nose of the same, <lb/>
and to report the name of the <lb/>
owner thereof to the Mayor. It <lb/>
shall likewise be his duty to make <lb/>
a note of each hog found running <lb/>
at large which ho is forbidden to <lb/>
impound and report the name <lb/>
thereof to the Mayor. <lb/>
various <lb/>
adopted to protect the citizens of <lb/>
the Town against the nuisance of <lb/>
the hogs from the country run- <lb/>
at large in the town shall <lb/>
not be considered as in any way <lb/>
countenancing the or as <lb/>
waiving any of the legal rights of <lb/>
the Town to abate tho but <lb/>
it shall be the duty of the Mayor <lb/>
to proceed against the owners <lb/>
whether a citizen of the Town or <lb/>
not of all hogs running large <lb/>
in the streets under tho <lb/>
which forbid tho same, <lb/>
and under any law of the State <lb/>
which may be applicable thereto- <lb/>
All hogs, goats and <lb/>
running at large on the streets if <lb/>
not known to be the property of a <lb/>
non-resident shall be taken up by <lb/>
the Town Officer and impounded, <lb/>
and if not redeemed by the owner <lb/>
thereof shall ton days notice <lb/>
by advertising in three public <lb/>
place giving a description of the <lb/>
hog, goat or goose taken up, be <lb/>
sold at public auction, the pro- <lb/>
thereof to paid to tho <lb/>
owner of said hog, gout or goose <lb/>
after deducting the cost ex- <lb/>
The Town Officer shall have <lb/>
for feeding each hog, goat or <lb/>
goose ten cents per day, for ad- <lb/>
each hog, goat or goose <lb/>
fifteen cents. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Section The running of cat- <lb/>
at large in the corporate limits <lb/>
of the town is declared to be a <lb/>
nuisance and is forbidden- <lb/>
Sec. All cattle, tho proper- <lb/>
of residents, found running at <lb/>
large shall be taken up by the <lb/>
Town Officer, impounded, and <lb/>
it not redeemed by the owner <lb/>
thereof, shall after ten days no- <lb/>
by advertising in three pub- <lb/>
places giving a description of <lb/>
the animal taken up be sold at <lb/>
public auction, and the proceeds <lb/>
arising from such Bale be paid to <lb/>
the owner of said animal, after de- <lb/>
ducting the cost and expenses. <lb/>
Sec The Officer shall <lb/>
have for taking up each animal <lb/>
twenty-five cents, for feeding <lb/>
each animal twenty five cents per <lb/>
day, and for advertising each <lb/>
fifteen cents- <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
It shall be unlawful for any <lb/>
person to deface any monuments. <lb/>
or in the cemetery or to <lb/>
injure any shrubbery or flowers <lb/>
or receptacle for flowers in it, or <lb/>
to break or injure lock on the <lb/>
gates or any fence around the <lb/>
cemetery or to turn any cattle or <lb/>
goats therein. Any person <lb/>
this Ordinance shall pay a <lb/>
fine of Twenty five Dollars, one <lb/>
half to be paid tho informer <lb/>
one half to the Town. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Section Every person own- <lb/>
or keeping a dog or dogs <lb/>
within the corporate limits of said <lb/>
Town is hereby required to reg- <lb/>
CONTINUED ON FOURTH <lb/>
Reduced prices in <lb/>
Watch <lb/>
Have your Watches Cleaned for II <lb/>
cents. Main Springs cents, all other <lb/>
work as cheap in <lb/>
Call me at corner store post- <lb/>
office. Z. P. <lb/>
Watchmaker Jeweler, <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
tails <lb/>
V. <lb/>
Land Ami <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
at the House. <lb/>
II. <lb/>
. DENTIST. <lb/>
i, C <lb/>
K. L. I. <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
GORE <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
Opera House. Third <lb/>
T FLEMING, <lb/>
-AT-LAW <lb/>
N. O. <lb/>
Prompt attention to business. <lb/>
at Tucker old <lb/>
G. JAMES, <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N C. <lb/>
Practice all the courts. Collection<lb/>
J. JARVIS. 1-. BLOW <lb/>
BLOW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
r Practice in all the <lb/>
s. r. <lb/>
TYSON, <lb/>
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb/>
N. O. <lb/>
Prompt attention to <lb/>
HARRY <lb/>
T A <lb/>
N. C- <lb/>
HOTEL NICHOLSON, <lb/>
WASHINGTON, N. C <lb/>
Geo, A. Spencer, Mgr. <lb/>
FIRST-GLASS IN <lb/>
Special attention to Men. <lb/>
Free Dual.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017697_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
J. <lb/>
CO TO preachers their denominations <lb/>
n w lo He asked if doing all <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Editor d Proprietor <lb/>
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 13th, 1804. <lb/>
Entered at th- at Greenville, <lb/>
N. C. at mail matter. <lb/>
W.- Field, of Now York, <lb/>
died last Saturday afternoon- In <lb/>
July he was by <lb/>
President Harrison to <lb/>
Germany. In <lb/>
he returned, a basing <lb/>
been appointed, and while in <lb/>
London ho cold which <lb/>
terminated in his death. <lb/>
their power to instruct these <lb/>
brothers of theirs the <lb/>
teachings of Christ, and to see <lb/>
that they led upright lives which <lb/>
were an example and help to <lb/>
their congregations, and where <lb/>
they knew the contrary to be true, <lb/>
are they exposing the unworthy <lb/>
and relieving the of a <lb/>
pernicious and dangerous exam- <lb/>
Give the a fair chance, <lb/>
said he; them bettor homes, <lb/>
better schools, better churches, <lb/>
better teachers better preach- <lb/>
and before many years you <lb/>
will convert them into intelligent <lb/>
law-abiding citizens, and <lb/>
neither capital nor labor will <lb/>
to come <lb/>
There were other features of <lb/>
Senator admit able paper <lb/>
that are worthy special men <lb/>
but we will not consider <lb/>
General W. P. Roberts, of them now. All who are familiar <lb/>
Gates former State Audi- with th races in the South must <lb/>
, , be impressed with the honesty <lb/>
tor. has been by Pros. , q <lb/>
dent Cleveland to be at V subject, <lb/>
British Columbia. The <lb/>
is to which must ad- <lb/>
fees. It is perhaps <lb/>
the most important consulate of <lb/>
the United States this <lb/>
because of tho opium trade <lb/>
and Chinese immigration <lb/>
The Senate will have to select <lb/>
committee of five to give hear- <lb/>
to the representatives of all <lb/>
the and other <lb/>
cranks who have wild scheme to <lb/>
air, a resolution to that effect <lb/>
having this week been adopted. <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER, <lb/>
Ten young ladies of Charlotte <lb/>
whose pictures appeared in a <lb/>
group in the Sunday <lb/>
ought to take their brooms and <lb/>
go around the <lb/>
entire office of that paper. An <lb/>
ordinary newspaper cut never <lb/>
does a handsome woman justice, <lb/>
and it almost make a body weep <lb/>
to see tho features of ten in a <lb/>
all at one <lb/>
grand sweep. <lb/>
our Regular <lb/>
Washington D. C- Juno <lb/>
President Cleveland told a <lb/>
Democratic member of the House <lb/>
who asked him his opinion of the <lb/>
Senate amendments to tho tariff <lb/>
bill that his tho <lb/>
of tariff reform should be <lb/>
well enough Known without any <lb/>
additional expression at this <lb/>
time, and that he con- <lb/>
prompt action on tho <lb/>
subject by both and Sen- <lb/>
ate of far more importance to <lb/>
tho country than the more details <lb/>
of this or that schedule in the <lb/>
bill, provided, of course, that tho <lb/>
bill as is kept line with <lb/>
Democratic promises of tariff <lb/>
reform- That strikes mo as the <lb/>
proper position for every patriotic <lb/>
Democrat to take at this time- <lb/>
The bill to tin per Republican Senators <lb/>
cent, tax the issue of on the old legal maxim- <lb/>
banks was defeated in the <lb/>
last Wednesday by a vote of <lb/>
yeas to nays. Th votes in fa- <lb/>
you have case abuse <lb/>
; t lie Finding that <lb/>
I they were on the sugar <lb/>
of tho tariff bill, which <lb/>
of repeal were by they had been for weeks claiming <lb/>
Democrats. Of the neg vote-, to be confident of defeating with <lb/>
were cast by D by the aid of Democratic votes they <lb/>
T, ,,. i q i . have resorted to cry of sugar <lb/>
Republicans and S by thinking o <lb/>
All of tho North Carolina item- country to the fact that sugar <lb/>
voted f of repeal. schedule this week adopted by <lb/>
Thomas Settle, lone Democratic only <lb/>
voted with his par- the sugar abort <lb/>
. . , half of whit they are getting <lb/>
against it. the law. Sena- <lb/>
tor Jones is confident that all of <lb/>
the amendments will be adopted <lb/>
the tariff bill passed by the <lb/>
close of next week, and <lb/>
SENATOR AR VIS'S <lb/>
The Augusta. Ga <lb/>
in full Senator <lb/>
Congress recently hold in that <lb/>
city, and mikes tho following <lb/>
strong editorial comment up <lb/>
admit <lb/>
can Senators privately <lb/>
much. <lb/>
The southern Democrats the <lb/>
House were doubly disappointed <lb/>
by the defeat of the bill for the <lb/>
repeal of the tax State bank <lb/>
currency- Tin y had confidently <lb/>
of tho ablest papers read expected votes favor of the <lb/>
during the of the J it only received <lb/>
Congress, if not tho ablest, while the opposition <lb/>
was by United States Senator They claim that men who; <lb/>
UNIVERSITY COMMENCEMENT, <lb/>
Correspondence <lb/>
Chapel Hill, N. C- June <lb/>
The University has just closed <lb/>
its 99th session with the most <lb/>
brilliant Commencement in its <lb/>
history. Secretary Hoke Smith <lb/>
orator was heard by more than <lb/>
people in Memorial Hall- <lb/>
He spoke with eloquence, wisdom <lb/>
and power worthy of the great <lb/>
occasion and the brilliant <lb/>
The Faculty <lb/>
Tuesday night was attended by <lb/>
who amid strains of <lb/>
delightful music were presented <lb/>
to Secretary Smith and wife by <lb/>
Winston. The Campus, <lb/>
the College and the village of <lb/>
Chapel Hill were packed for throe <lb/>
days with hundred of visitors <lb/>
from a distance and Is of <lb/>
people from Orange, Wake, <lb/>
Chatham, and Durham counties. <lb/>
The back of the Campus was full <lb/>
of vehicles of all sizes, shapes <lb/>
and descriptions. <lb/>
The Commencement began <lb/>
with the Baccalaureate Sermon <lb/>
on It was preached by <lb/>
Rev. Dr. F. J. Murdoch of <lb/>
bury from the texts shall <lb/>
do Lord course is <lb/>
It was a manly appeal <lb/>
young for a manly life ; <lb/>
and was marked by strength, <lb/>
The Literary Societies held <lb/>
the annual meetings Monday <lb/>
night, greeted old members and <lb/>
initiated honorary <lb/>
The Board of Trustees at then- <lb/>
annual meeting a com- <lb/>
of five to investigate and <lb/>
report at the February mooting <lb/>
concerning tho Greek letter <lb/>
Life and Character of Dr. <lb/>
Chas. F. was the subject <lb/>
of the oration alumni <lb/>
association Tuesday morning. <lb/>
It was delivered by Dr. F. L. <lb/>
and was a touching, <lb/>
and masterly delineation <lb/>
of one of North Carolina's most <lb/>
gifted divines. <lb/>
Tho Senior Class Day exercises <lb/>
wore held Tuesday afternoon and <lb/>
wore the occasion of much fun <lb/>
merriment. Tho class orator <lb/>
was U. H- Atkinson, of Asheville, <lb/>
the poet Jan. Sawyer, of Asheville, <lb/>
historian T- B. Lee, of Mocks- <lb/>
tho prophet, L. E. Barnes, <lb/>
of Wilson. The singing of the <lb/>
class song closed the exercises- <lb/>
The Representatives of the <lb/>
and Philanthropic Literary <lb/>
Societies held their con <lb/>
test in oratory Tuesday <lb/>
and the medal was won by H. <lb/>
Borne of the Phi Society. The <lb/>
other speakers were J. C- <lb/>
of Ashe A. S- Dockery, of <lb/>
Richmond county. Herbert Bin- <lb/>
of a sou of Col. <lb/>
Win. L C Brogden of <lb/>
Wayne and J. O. Carr, from <lb/>
A Peculiar <lb/>
Periodic Attacks of Neuralgia In <lb/>
the free. <lb/>
I. Hood S Co., Lowell. <lb/>
write to Unit I have been a sufferer for <lb/>
four years with neuralgia In eyes. The pains <lb/>
were severe at night, causing me to suffer <lb/>
winter summer alike. Sometimes a mouth <lb/>
would lapse between spells, then I would be <lb/>
Troubled Every Week, <lb/>
especially was up at night I am a man of <lb/>
regular habits, years of age, and employed <lb/>
for the past seven years by Heath, Springs Co., <lb/>
well-known merchants bankers of this place <lb/>
and Camden. I bought a supply of Hood's Bar- <lb/>
used four bottles and believe I am <lb/>
W. J. Lancaster, South Carolina. <lb/>
Hood's PHIS Constipation by Mats <lb/>
the peristaltic action of the alimentary <lb/>
USE <lb/>
HORN <lb/>
W. g. Greer, <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
By virtue of a decree rendered in n <lb/>
certain cause pending In the Superior <lb/>
Court of county, <lb/>
If. Co., are plaintiff and <lb/>
Latham ft Skinner stall are defendants, <lb/>
i he undersigned. Commissioner duly <lb/>
authorized by said will <lb/>
the Court House door in N. <lb/>
C for cash, on Monday, July 2nd, <lb/>
tin; following described <lb/>
in the comity of a certain <lb/>
tract of land lying in Falkland town- <lb/>
ship, adjoining the land. of Margaret <lb/>
Mathews, Willis It. Williams, Mrs. <lb/>
Newton and containing by <lb/>
acres, generally known an <lb/>
the Adam Corbet t land; n certain lot or <lb/>
parcel of laud lying in the town of <lb/>
Greenville, designated a lot No In <lb/>
plan of sari town and well known as <lb/>
the old Thomas lot; a certain <lb/>
other lot in town of Greenville, a <lb/>
part f lot No. in the plan of said <lb/>
town, and the same lot which wan <lb/>
to Harry skinner by w. T. <lb/>
Marsh and wife by deed recorded in <lb/>
took II. pages and of the <lb/>
public registry of Pitt county. <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR<lb/>
We will rill them QUICK <lb/>
We will fill them CHEAP <lb/>
We will fill them WELL <lb/>
. -i is. of North on the <lb/>
Obstacles to Southern <lb/>
Senator Jarvis <lb/>
tie it very with the sub- <lb/>
and said a great many i <lb/>
valuable things. <lb/>
tho and its <lb/>
en o in keeping out immigrants, <lb/>
he took tho position that any dis. <lb/>
of the that <lb/>
six best orators of the <lb/>
had allowed to be delivered graduating bra- <lb/>
counted in favor of the bill voted , They <lb/>
against it . Asheville. Subject. <lb/>
Secretary waited until of Modern Civilization. <lb/>
A. Eilis, Louisburg. <lb/>
the fake story that ho was <lb/>
for another of bonds <lb/>
had advanced to the stage of <lb/>
pretending to all the details <lb/>
to the exact amount of <lb/>
bonds to be issued, before be <lb/>
Permanence <lb/>
E. E. Subject, A Plea <lb/>
for Education of <lb/>
i he Teacher. <lb/>
T. B. Lee, Subject, <lb/>
The State tho Child. <lb/>
C. L- Durham. <lb/>
The Influence of <lb/>
Rough Heart Framing, <lb/>
Rough Sap ; 17.00 <lb/>
Rough Sap inches <lb/>
Rough Sap Boards, A inches 7.00 <lb/>
Wait days for our Planing Mill and <lb/>
we will tarnish you <lb/>
as <lb/>
Wood ti your door for SO <lb/>
cents a load. <lb/>
Terms cash. <lb/>
Thanking yon for past patronage, <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
On Monday the 2nd of July. A. <lb/>
1801. will sell at the Court House <lb/>
door in the town of Greenville to die <lb/>
highest bidder tor cash several tracts of <lb/>
land in county <lb/>
No. One tract on the south side of <lb/>
Tar river near Grove ad- <lb/>
joining the lands of G. W. Crawford, <lb/>
the May land, the Nobles land, the <lb/>
Simmons or Hart binds, A. C. Tucker, <lb/>
L. Crawford and others containing <lb/>
six I acres wore or less, mid <lb/>
formerly known as the old Adams hind. <lb/>
No. One other track, on the <lb/>
south side of Tar river, upon e north <lb/>
prong of Meeting House branch, begin- <lb/>
at a nine in John Frye's line <lb/>
runs south poles to u pine, <lb/>
corner, thence with Frye's <lb/>
line one hundred and sixty seven poles <lb/>
to a pine on Frye's line thence <lb/>
south thirty live polis to a pine, Vim. <lb/>
Eastwood's corner, thence east one <lb/>
and twenty-two poles, to a <lb/>
light wood stump, the said Eastwood's <lb/>
corner, thence with another of East- <lb/>
wood's lines north seventy-eight poles <lb/>
to an oak, on the side of branch, <lb/>
another of the said Eastwood's corners, <lb/>
thence to the beginning, containing <lb/>
forty-live acres more or less. book <lb/>
N. page Office, Pitt <lb/>
No. One other tract, on the south <lb/>
side of river, upon the north prong <lb/>
of Mealing House brunch, beginning at <lb/>
a pine, running west eighty poles to an <lb/>
oak, north forty point to a pine, cast <lb/>
eighty poles to a Mack jack, <lb/>
poles to the beginning, containing <lb/>
twenty acres more or less. <lb/>
No. One other beginning <lb/>
at a pine Slaughter's corner, <lb/>
then north eighty, cast forty poles with <lb/>
May's line to a pine, thence north thirty <lb/>
east one hundred and twenty <lb/>
pules to a pine line, <lb/>
these, with his line north ten degrees <lb/>
seventy-two poles to a maple, In <lb/>
the Meeting House branch, and in Jesse <lb/>
King's line, thence with Kings line <lb/>
said branch, north degrees west <lb/>
eighty pole- to a white oak, said King's <lb/>
corner, thence with another of King's <lb/>
lines north twenty-live degrees west, <lb/>
one hundred and fifty three poles to a <lb/>
red oak in a branch, thence with said <lb/>
branch thirty poles to a red oak in John <lb/>
Frye's line, thence south with Frye's <lb/>
line seventy-eight poles to a <lb/>
thence west one hundred and <lb/>
thirty-seven poles to a pine thence south <lb/>
two hundred and eighty-eight poles to <lb/>
a pine in Sampson Slaughter's line, <lb/>
then with said Slaughter's line to the <lb/>
beginning, containing four hundred and <lb/>
acres more or less, patented by <lb/>
Win. Eastwood and Benjamin King. <lb/>
K. page <lb/>
The last three tracts to a de- <lb/>
of four hundred and <lb/>
seres of land by Win. Bast- <lb/>
wood to David Book Q. page. <lb/>
Said lands to the <lb/>
y of North Carolina, and levied on as the <lb/>
properly of the said University to <lb/>
an in my hands for col- <lb/>
issued by MM Clerk of the <lb/>
Court of county in favor <lb/>
of F. White collector S A. M. <lb/>
of estate of Maria <lb/>
Tills the 20th day of May, <lb/>
It. W. Sheriff. <lb/>
PIANOS <lb/>
ORGANS <lb/>
lit <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
it u American Institutions, <lb/>
not con-, w. F. Harding, Green <lb/>
the removal of the took the trouble to undo tho <lb/>
front the South as the remedy Of the gifted writers Washing- <lb/>
fort his obstacle was of fairy tales by officially <lb/>
mark. Senator said that he was <lb/>
is here Me is not to issue bonds, had not con-j Greenville. <lb/>
to blame for it even, and know no Truth and Poetry, <lb/>
can't leave if lie wants too and lie, reason why ho should consider it j modal for tho <lb/>
not if lie Senator at this time or in the immediate j oration was by C L. <lb/>
all schemes future. <lb/>
for exportation or colonization, j been during his entire public life The presents I <lb/>
either or in some known as a man who believes on various em- The handsomest line of <lb/>
SPRING U <lb/>
State of the Union its wild and the open and above board method bodying results of special re-1 <lb/>
and the people of the I of doing things, and <lb/>
south as well meet the is- <lb/>
squarely, and take the pres- <lb/>
of the <lb/>
in all plans for the d <lb/>
of the station. <lb/>
With e admitted, <lb/>
S as a starting p tint, <lb/>
then it clearly is the duty of the <lb/>
whiles as well is our interest to <lb/>
help tho in tho education <lb/>
of In <lb/>
order that, as lily <lb/>
they may h law-abiding, <lb/>
useful mid intelligent citizens. <lb/>
He he whites <lb/>
already in this but <lb/>
lamented the fact that it is not <lb/>
lie tho work of <lb/>
ting the in scale of life <lb/>
must begin at his home. If white <lb/>
labor were used the South bet- <lb/>
homes would have to <lb/>
may rest assured at <lb/>
necessity for an n issue of <lb/>
arise it be duly and <lb/>
officially announce by the Treas- <lb/>
department not by <lb/>
newspapers. It is not believed <lb/>
that it will be necessary to issue <lb/>
more bond-;, as there is no pro- <lb/>
of the tho is- <lb/>
reaching <lb/>
low condition before August, and <lb/>
by that time the increase in the <lb/>
Government receipts under tho <lb/>
new tariff law will probably be <lb/>
great enough to furnish relief. <lb/>
Tho claim for against <lb/>
tho estate of tho late Senator <lb/>
Stanford, which was filled Cal- <lb/>
this week by direction of <lb/>
Attorney-General has <lb/>
been much talked about Wash- <lb/>
pro-; The. claim is made to <lb/>
v for our laborers. Let us protect the interests of tho <lb/>
then, by doing for the eminent involved in tho <lb/>
what we would have to do for I of the Central Pacific <lb/>
successor- How where a <lb/>
tan lives has much to do with <lb/>
his characteristics and <lb/>
and if houses provided <lb/>
for laborers which the <lb/>
Railroad to the States. <lb/>
This stop is in line with a <lb/>
introduced in tho House <lb/>
sometime ago by Representative <lb/>
of Louisiana, providing <lb/>
sexes may be properly separated for the employment of counsel <lb/>
and in which they pride, to bring suits against the original <lb/>
search and Study ; some . <lb/>
the i literary, some philosophical, <lb/>
some historical. There were <lb/>
era <lb/>
honors were <lb/>
awarded to the High- <lb/>
est honors to H. H. Home of the <lb/>
Junior Class and Darius Eat <lb/>
man of Freshman Class. Bat- <lb/>
man is a painter who has worked <lb/>
his way to College, and both his <lb/>
own character and the character <lb/>
of tho University shown in <lb/>
the fact ho was elected President <lb/>
of the largest, smartest and strong- <lb/>
est class in the University. Homo <lb/>
too is a working boy, and ho has <lb/>
literally mowed down honors for <lb/>
throe years. Both boys <lb/>
The medal f r best essay by a <lb/>
graduate was awarded to G. R- <lb/>
Little; D. G. Worth for <lb/>
beat thesis in Moral Philosophy <lb/>
to L. M. Swink; the W. C. <lb/>
prize in Geology in <lb/>
to H. White; the Holt <lb/>
Mathematical modal to A. B. Kim- <lb/>
ball; the magazine prize <lb/>
H. H. Home; the Chas. G. <lb/>
Hill History prize cash <lb/>
M. Wilson. Tho subject of <lb/>
Mr. Wilson's thesis the <lb/>
Career of Ma- <lb/>
they will influenced by Central <lb/>
to better habits of iv-; posed of Stanford., <lb/>
and will become more speed Crocker, and Cotton j document <lb/>
worthy desirable money divorced them for their, Hon. Smiths oration was on <lb/>
con It is a valuable historical <lb/>
After beginning this reform in own benefit from the earnings of <lb/>
the homes of the it is j the railroad. claims <lb/>
our duty according to Senator that the Govern neut get at <lb/>
to be very careful of the least by these <lb/>
character of the persons who tea suits. The bonds upon which <lb/>
th m in the public schools. Too the railroad owes tho Government <lb/>
teacher can great <lb/>
in shaping character of the <lb/>
growing generation of <lb/>
can make them respectful <lb/>
and in their bearing and <lb/>
towards the whites, or <lb/>
can make them rude and resent <lb/>
fad. to the teacher tho <lb/>
schools, the wields the <lb/>
greatest in; u over <lb/>
the whites owe it to them <lb/>
to see that only intelligent <lb/>
and respectable colored men, <lb/>
whoso and <lb/>
re for the betterment and <lb/>
of the race should be a <lb/>
lowed to their pulpits, lie <lb/>
asked question, h- left <lb/>
without ll. <lb/>
this money are not yet but <lb/>
claim is put in now so that <lb/>
the statue of limitation cannot be <lb/>
plea should the suits be enter- <lb/>
ed after default the payment <lb/>
of the bonds. It is expected that <lb/>
this legislate upon <lb/>
tin indebtedness of all of the <lb/>
Pacific railroads to the govern- <lb/>
and C P. is <lb/>
now in Washington looking out <lb/>
his end of matter. <lb/>
Nothing startling has been <lb/>
out Hun week by the <lb/>
Senate commit too that is <lb/>
gating the charges <lb/>
tin alleged sugar trust scandal. <lb/>
The morn testimony the <lb/>
ts-e more it <lb/>
of the u in We h <lb/>
the South to a. , Oil <lb/>
if were . . <lb/>
the taut<lb/>
the and <lb/>
of He <lb/>
delighted his large and <lb/>
charmed them with his earnest, <lb/>
eloquent and plea for <lb/>
the material development of North <lb/>
Carolina. He stud that slavery <lb/>
popular ignorance bad re- <lb/>
the State's growth. With <lb/>
freedom had come free schools <lb/>
and material progress. As soon <lb/>
as North Carolina has a free <lb/>
school for every square mile of <lb/>
her territory she will be us rich <lb/>
as Massachusetts. It was pro- <lb/>
the best Commencement <lb/>
oration over made at tho <lb/>
Tho of LL. was <lb/>
conferred upon Hon. Hoke <lb/>
Smith, President J. H- Kirkland, <lb/>
of and Judge A. S. <lb/>
Seymour. The degree of D. D. <lb/>
R. T. Bryan, Mission <lb/>
to China and Rev. I. K Pit <lb/>
of Raleigh. <lb/>
R-. P D- GM pronounced <lb/>
ever held <lb/>
U Chapel Hill. <lb/>
SPRING HATS <lb/>
ever shown In <lb/>
WHAT bright, dainty creatures of <lb/>
beauty new style Spring lints <lb/>
What skill, what taste, what in- <lb/>
our mil liner artist has <lb/>
What combination of feathers and <lb/>
flowers and ribbons and straws can be <lb/>
seen at <lb/>
To Our <lb/>
You want I T <lb/>
mil <lb/>
at It y , <lb/>
. at <lb/>
our <lb/>
RELIABLE, <lb/>
MUSICALLY <lb/>
sold at <lb/>
la <lb/>
, T <lb/>
Everything to please. Call and exam- <lb/>
and see for yourself. Prices to <lb/>
suit the times. <lb/>
A J <lb/>
m know Q <lb/>
an but own M v. A <lb/>
under oar mi <lb/>
-I In If, V<lb/>
mi mm -riling on <lb/>
t . pi<lb/>
terms, mini <lb/>
Ha van tin <lb/>
III ill I I <lb/>
era. Our A <lb/>
to mm W <lb/>
lo wit-rt <lb/>
from <lb/>
your for a <lb/>
t In, W <lb/>
nil i h. <lb/>
Any In the <lb/>
our A <lb/>
mine is n V <lb/>
Aft hi t d <lb/>
profits J <lb/>
Or y <lb/>
front. All new I <lb/>
ii w <lb/>
i will v i-ii<lb/>
It ran Mil you <lb/>
BATES <lb/>
Southern Music House. <lb/>
Main House. <lb/>
tr In <lb/>
Churl It a I a <lb/>
X. CM K. Or- m <lb/>
lean. I-n. all under our direct rm <lb/>
LL<lb/>
IN AND OF- <lb/>
Boilers, Saw Mills <lb/>
O. <lb/>
Celebrated <lb/>
Machinery. <lb/>
THE BEST IN THE WORLD. <lb/>
Latest Head- <lb/>
ME BROWN COTTON GIN. <lb/>
Write for and prices. <lb/>
TOWN REPORT. <lb/>
Report of W. H. Treasurer of <lb/>
the Town of Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
May 1803. <lb/>
HO. TO WHOM <lb/>
T R Moore <lb/>
D R <lb/>
r, <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
Whichard <lb/>
s ; <lb/>
I T Smith <lb/>
W ill <lb/>
J T Smith <lb/>
II Harding <lb/>
I. <lb/>
IS WU White <lb/>
John L Daniel <lb/>
July <lb/>
Smith <lb/>
T R Moore <lb/>
Henry Sheppard <lb/>
Williams <lb/>
J C Cobb Sou <lb/>
S K Fender Co <lb/>
2-1 M R <lb/>
Daniel i <lb/>
W II White <lb/>
J II <lb/>
A It <lb/>
II V Sugg <lb/>
II White <lb/>
August <lb/>
John I. Daniel <lb/>
J Smith <lb/>
i in in- <lb/>
J I. <lb/>
H T R Moore <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
R L <lb/>
Lawrence <lb/>
D J <lb/>
O S S Co <lb/>
D D <lb/>
S K r in <lb/>
J Cobb Son <lb/>
w II White <lb/>
J T <lb/>
T R Moore <lb/>
L Daniel <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
Mn-i Will in <lb/>
J C Cobb Son <lb/>
O D J W <lb/>
A B <lb/>
J L Fleming <lb/>
SB Dudley <lb/>
M W H White <lb/>
October <lb/>
T Smith <lb/>
T R Moore <lb/>
L Daniel <lb/>
Motes William <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
W F <lb/>
S E Sh, n <lb/>
J C A Son <lb/>
B Cherry Co <lb/>
J C Cobb Son <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
November <lb/>
J T Smith <lb/>
T R Moore <lb/>
Daniel <lb/>
Moses William <lb/>
Lawrence Hooker <lb/>
E Fender Co <lb/>
W II White <lb/>
December <lb/>
T R Moore <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
J I. I in <lb/>
Mi.- Williams <lb/>
J T, <lb/>
J T Smith <lb/>
D J Whichard <lb/>
J C Cobb Son <lb/>
W II White <lb/>
January 1804. <lb/>
J I. Fleming <lb/>
J T Smith <lb/>
L Daniel <lb/>
Henry Sheppard <lb/>
Mose Williams <lb/>
T R Moore <lb/>
E Harris <lb/>
Hooker <lb/>
Alfred Forbes <lb/>
E Fender Co <lb/>
C Cobb A Son <lb/>
D i <lb/>
W II White <lb/>
so <lb/>
OS <lb/>
February <lb/>
Smith <lb/>
J L Daniel <lb/>
Williams <lb/>
Dudley <lb/>
Moore <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
S E <lb/>
J L Fleming <lb/>
S E render Co <lb/>
D J Whichard <lb/>
W II W bite <lb/>
March <lb/>
Smith <lb/>
lit T B Moore <lb/>
J D Daniel <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
m Williams <lb/>
J L Fleming <lb/>
J T Smith <lb/>
J C Cobb Son <lb/>
April <lb/>
J T Smith <lb/>
T B Moore <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
J I. Daniel <lb/>
Moses William <lb/>
Lawrence Hooker <lb/>
D D I <lb/>
S E <lb/>
S E <lb/>
W H White <lb/>
May <lb/>
J I, Fleming <lb/>
T Smith <lb/>
T B Moore <lb/>
Henry Sheppard <lb/>
John L Daniel <lb/>
Moses Williams <lb/>
John Collins <lb/>
J T <lb/>
Amie Williams <lb/>
Forbes <lb/>
III W II White <lb/>
May <lb/>
G E Harris <lb/>
W White <lb/>
AMOUNT. <lb/>
SO<lb/>
I Ml<lb/>
MOO<lb/>
RU <lb/>
SO<lb/>
ASK<lb/>
YOU ARE INTERESTED IN LOOKING FOR <lb/>
to go straight to them, stock is now complete, their store <lb/>
full of choice <lb/>
Merchandise <lb/>
Prom which genuine bargain- cm be hail. <lb/>
We buy for Cash. We sell for Cash, or on <lb/>
approved credit. We carry the stock. We <lb/>
do the business. We fear no legitimate <lb/>
competition, dread no <lb/>
stock, quality prices. Our store Is Ilia <lb/>
plane for you to buy goods at right prices, <lb/>
for the following We buy for <lb/>
Cash. We seek for quality and durability. <lb/>
deal squarely with you. We carry the <lb/>
largest stock to be found In our <lb/>
from to make your select ions. We <lb/>
do not seek to take advantage of you. We <lb/>
an responsible fur all errors or mistakes that <lb/>
may occur on our part. We do not carry <lb/>
a John stock of fob lots and Inferior <lb/>
goods and push off on you things you do not <lb/>
want. Once out customer you will remain <lb/>
our friend. Hundreds of customers visit <lb/>
our store, buy their goods right price <lb/>
are well pleased with pi rebuses, go home Now why don't you do <lb/>
the same thing and receive your money's worth. One hundred cents on the dollar. <lb/>
Look here did you know that you could buy us almost any <lb/>
article you may need in the following lines <lb/>
Dry Goods, Notions, Hats, <lb/>
Furnishing Goods, <lb/>
Caps, Shoes for Everybody, Ladies, Misses and <lb/>
Oxfords, Men's Fine and Heavy Shoes, Crockery and Glassware, <lb/>
Tinware, Hardware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings, Groceries, <lb/>
and Flour, Mattings, Curtain Poles and Lace Curtains. <lb/>
Furniture Furniture, <lb/>
Cheap and Medium Grades, Chairs, Bedsteads, Lounges, Tables, <lb/>
Sideboards, Tin Safes, Mattresses, Bed Springs, Children's Beds, <lb/>
Cradles, Bureaus and Full Suits of Bed Room Furniture. <lb/>
Take a look at our stock it will cost you nothing and may <lb/>
save you dollars. We are agents for J. P. SPOOL <lb/>
COTTON at jobbers prices. <lb/>
Come One. Come All. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb/>
J- A. Andrews, <lb/>
HT. C.<lb/>
have stock and to arrive <lb/>
Cases Sardines, <lb/>
. Bread Preparation. <lb/>
Soap. <lb/>
Star Lye. <lb/>
Boxes Cakes and Crackers, <lb/>
Stick Candy, <lb/>
Cases Matches, <lb/>
Gold Dust, <lb/>
Good Luck Baking r. <lb/>
Sacks Coffee, <lb/>
BO Molasses. <lb/>
Tons Shot, <lb/>
Kegs <lb/>
Cars Flour. <lb/>
Meat. <lb/>
I Hay, <lb/>
Tubs Laid, <lb/>
Granulated Sugar. <lb/>
P. Snuff, <lb/>
SO Ax Snuff, <lb/>
SO R. K. Mills Snug. <lb/>
M Three Thistle Snuff, <lb/>
Boxes Tobacco, <lb/>
Dukes V. M. P. Cigarettes. <lb/>
Old Va. Cheroots, <lb/>
Cases Oysters, <lb/>
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb/>
-IN- <lb/>
PR. <lb/>
G K Harris tax Hi <lb/>
fines A costs <lb/>
market rents <lb/>
Bee fr former treasurer <lb/>
-I I <lb/>
July <lb/>
Nov. <lb/>
Dec. <lb/>
Jan <lb/>
Jan. <lb/>
April <lb/>
May <lb/>
May <lb/>
12.1 <lb/>
hand GO <lb/>
s. . W II White, i. ft. John <lb/>
J C Cobb Son D D Haskett Mrs. Jarvis W White<lb/>
Cl. <lb/>
May Bee fr former <lb/>
K Harris <lb/>
Amount now on hand <lb/>
my Friends and Customers of and adjoining <lb/>
I wish to say that I have made preparation In preparing <lb/>
HEAD MATERIAL and propose giving with inside dressed <lb/>
smooth which will prevent or scrubbing your Tobacco when parking <lb/>
Also I have made special to use best Hoops made White <lb/>
Oak. The special advantages have In outline my own timber places me In a <lb/>
position to meet all competition. cheerfully promise you that I will strive to <lb/>
make it to your interest to use my Hogsheads and you can find them any time <lb/>
either my factory or at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Sawing, <lb/>
And Turned for a Specialty. <lb/>
f am prepared to do any kind of Sawing for Brackets or anything in the <lb/>
line, or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, Picket for Stairways. Mendings of <lb/>
any kind, including Piazza Hailing, and would be pleased to name you prices <lb/>
anything la the above upon application. <lb/>
GENERAL REPAIR <lb/>
done on short notice. Thanking you Mr your past patronage, lam willing to <lb/>
lo meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you me a trial <lb/>
here. Respectful <lb/>
Winterville, N. <lb/>
COBB BROS, CO., <lb/>
AND- <lb/>
Commission Merchants, <lb/>
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA <lb/>
and Solicited. <lb/>
RELIABLE <lb/>
Oilers to the buyers Pitt and surrounding counties, of the folio win <lb/>
stare not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be <lb/>
pure straight goods, DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS, SHOE.-., LA <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S FURNITURE, HOUSE FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH, BLINDS, CROCKERY <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb/>
Hat, Bock op Paris, <lb/>
rhino Hats, and addles <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent for Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb/>
jobber cents per ll per cent for Bread <lb/>
ration and Star Lye-it Jobber ices. While Lead and <lb/>
ii pure Ll <lb/>
Red Paint Wood and Wood <lb/>
Willow Ware. specialty<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017697_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
USELESS KNOWLEDGE. <lb/>
Is a Charm In <lb/>
tao Pursuit of It <lb/>
And Some Day Fart Will Br <lb/>
to In <lb/>
Work <lb/>
In spite of the teaching of school <lb/>
and of the of the <lb/>
man, says Engineering, <lb/>
still remains a marvelous <lb/>
in the pursuit of that kind of <lb/>
often denominated use- <lb/>
Is. Possibly no knowledge is ab- <lb/>
useless, tut for the present <lb/>
lines of -h yield so small <lb/>
harvest of result to which a com- <lb/>
can be assigned that <lb/>
i gain they offer is infinitesimal, <lb/>
with the labor they de- <lb/>
ad. As an example, we may <lb/>
astronomy. By the aid of its <lb/>
the mariner navigates <lb/>
I ocean and the explorer in foreign <lb/>
ids determines his position. <lb/>
matters of great importance,; <lb/>
Mainly, but they ore concerned <lb/>
with the fringe of the subject. <lb/>
fan ago these operations could be i <lb/>
with almost the same fa- <lb/>
as to-day, and yet during that <lb/>
many wonderful secrets <lb/>
wrested from the heavens, <lb/>
ch of the work has been done by <lb/>
In who followed other objects for <lb/>
and who sought rest and <lb/>
creation in intellectual problems <lb/>
I great complexity. Not only in <lb/>
but also in other sciences <lb/>
I arts, are researches being con- <lb/>
carried on without thought <lb/>
hope of reward. Men who spend <lb/>
days in offices and works <lb/>
arrow hours from the night to en- <lb/>
gage in the pursuit of knowledge, <lb/>
it more absorbing than all <lb/>
the seductions of pleasure. In <lb/>
I whose volumes have been col- <lb/>
by painstaking care and some <lb/>
self denial, and in laboratories <lb/>
cent of the glittering toys of the in- <lb/>
maker, but filled with ad- <lb/>
home-made appliances, work <lb/>
is done that would fill volumes if <lb/>
properly recorded. <lb/>
What is the practical value of <lb/>
these brilliant phenomena Frank- <lb/>
we know of none. The true lover <lb/>
of science does not ask such a <lb/>
He finds his reward in master- <lb/>
such a wayward erratic force as <lb/>
electricity, and causing it to display <lb/>
its activity in many and varied <lb/>
forms. Every time he is able to <lb/>
evoke a new phenomenon his insight <lb/>
into the operation of nature is in- <lb/>
creased. His knowledge grows with <lb/>
each development, and the thirst for <lb/>
knowledge is an appetite that is in- <lb/>
creased by each attempt to appease <lb/>
Had it not been for this our race <lb/>
would still have been enveloped in <lb/>
the obscurity of the dark ages, and <lb/>
we should have been shut to ma- <lb/>
pursuits. The possessions <lb/>
which the world holds dearest are <lb/>
pursued useless The <lb/>
monks who copied the manuscripts <lb/>
of earls t and so preserved them <lb/>
to posterity, the astrologers who <lb/>
observed the stars and left some <lb/>
of their motions, the his- <lb/>
collected traditions and <lb/>
the painters and sculptors <lb/>
from whose works we learn the beau- <lb/>
of earlier peoples; all these fol- <lb/>
lowed pursuits of little or no <lb/>
value. Yet every atom of their <lb/>
work which has survived the <lb/>
ages of is immensely precious, <lb/>
and not only do its lessons become <lb/>
clearer, but it sheds light in <lb/>
ways on kindred subjects. So <lb/>
it is iii science. Some day every <lb/>
fact will be found to have a niche in <lb/>
the cosmos, and many that are <lb/>
now merely sources of intellectual <lb/>
pleasure will become of great ma- <lb/>
importance. Faraday's dis- <lb/>
in electro-magnetic <lb/>
were once regarded by the <lb/>
as curious and strange, but <lb/>
of no practical value. Yet in com- <lb/>
few years there has been <lb/>
built upon them a new engineering <lb/>
industry, the result of which no one <lb/>
can venture to predict. <lb/>
PATHOS OF SEA ISLAND STORM. <lb/>
answered, laughing. The intonation <lb/>
of her voice was indescribable. <lb/>
de she said, after a pause, <lb/>
with a gesture that explained how <lb/>
he saved them. <lb/>
de The <lb/>
woman turned and pointed to <lb/>
her woman who was standing <lb/>
apart by the water's edge, looking <lb/>
out over the lonely marshes. <lb/>
She have <lb/>
But what this <lb/>
woman said did not run in the <lb/>
of grief. glad to God I got <lb/>
two one <lb/>
TOO MUCH TEMPTATION. <lb/>
One Woman Happy Because Goa <lb/>
Left Two of Her Little Ones. <lb/>
many lives lost around <lb/>
an old man was asked. He <lb/>
stood with his hands folded in front <lb/>
of him and his eyes seeking the <lb/>
ground, writes Joel Chandler Harris <lb/>
in Scribner's. If he had held his <lb/>
faded and flabby hat in his hands <lb/>
bis attitude would have been that of <lb/>
the peasant in Millet's picture of <lb/>
He stood stock still, <lb/>
his hare feet placed close together. <lb/>
gone deaf, said a <lb/>
an standing near. <lb/>
She touched him gently on the <lb/>
arm and instantly he was alert. The <lb/>
question was repeated. <lb/>
many lives lost around <lb/>
yes, <lb/>
voice came from far away. <lb/>
two, held up the <lb/>
fingers of one thin hand. <lb/>
He <lb/>
turned to the woman to confirm his <lb/>
figures, but she merely smiled. <lb/>
no count he went on, shaking <lb/>
his head and shutting his eyes. <lb/>
Then the old roan relapsed into hit <lb/>
former attitude. His eyes sought <lb/>
the ground, his hands clasped in <lb/>
front of him, his bare feet close to- <lb/>
The woman who had spoken for <lb/>
him formed part of a little group <lb/>
standing near. She was rubbing the <lb/>
head of a four-year-old <lb/>
many children have <lb/>
she was asked. <lb/>
Two one HY <lb/>
any of them <lb/>
Am drown, she <lb/>
SELF-POSSESSION. <lb/>
How It Helped a Young Woman on <lb/>
Delicate Occasion. <lb/>
The most self-possessed woman I <lb/>
ever saw is just now one of the belles <lb/>
down at Old Point Comfort, says a <lb/>
correspondent of the Washington <lb/>
Post. She is a perfect Juno as to <lb/>
figure, and half the manly heads of <lb/>
the place have been turned by her, <lb/>
and the other half would give all <lb/>
their hopes of the hereafter to be <lb/>
called as she calls her spaniel <lb/>
The young lady has <lb/>
played no favorites among her ad-, <lb/>
however, and an examination <lb/>
of her card at any of the dances <lb/>
would show a list of names as differ-1 <lb/>
as those on the register yonder, i <lb/>
The other day she went up for her <lb/>
usual promenade on the ramparts of <lb/>
the forts, and, as usual, was <lb/>
by her aunt, who is her chap- <lb/>
one of her rigid rules being to <lb/>
allow no man to escort her when she <lb/>
takes her morning constitutional. <lb/>
By some aggravating cause she lost <lb/>
an article which is an important <lb/>
part of the feminine apparel. It <lb/>
happened that a bright young devil <lb/>
of an army officer came along and <lb/>
picked it up. He caressed the <lb/>
row strip of blue silk, admired the <lb/>
artistic workmanship of the gold <lb/>
contraptions on either end of it, and, <lb/>
upon closer examination, deciphered <lb/>
those initials that agreed with those <lb/>
borne by the charming creature who <lb/>
was swaying along the path a <lb/>
front of him. <lb/>
honesty he hurried after <lb/>
her, and, catching up, handed out <lb/>
the article, with a bow of <lb/>
mate grace, B------, <lb/>
pardon me, but I believe this prop- <lb/>
is <lb/>
She thanked him with a cordiality <lb/>
that made him almost stutter, and, <lb/>
turning to her aunt, remarked, with <lb/>
apparent unconscious <lb/>
is such a careless <lb/>
low. . Come here, you Then. <lb/>
as the spaniel responded to her call, <lb/>
she fastened the dainty creation <lb/>
around his neck, and, bowing sweet- <lb/>
to the officer, passed on with the <lb/>
wondering animal scampering in <lb/>
front of her. If her pet had been a <lb/>
toy terrier she would have been lost. <lb/>
It is scarcely necessary to add that <lb/>
when Sweetheart returned to the <lb/>
hotel he was not sporting a blue <lb/>
with sold clasps on It. <lb/>
A Suspicious Room-Mate and His <lb/>
Idea of Honesty. <lb/>
I arrived in a small town in Ken- <lb/>
late at with three other <lb/>
men. and when we reached the hotel <lb/>
two of us were assigned to a room. <lb/>
The one I got had two beds in It, <lb/>
however, and I was not disposed to <lb/>
find fault. My room-mate seemed <lb/>
to be a suspicious kind of a chap <lb/>
and when I tumbled into bed with a <lb/>
good night to him he scarcely <lb/>
deigned to reply. I was asleep in <lb/>
ten minutes, but two hours later I <lb/>
awoke to find him still up and wide <lb/>
awake. <lb/>
What ails I asked. <lb/>
with <lb/>
all <lb/>
of <lb/>
be honest with you, stranger, <lb/>
I he admitted. <lb/>
seems funny. <lb/>
Do look like a <lb/>
you don't; but I've done some <lb/>
figuring on this. You gave the <lb/>
landlord your wallet and watch, <lb/>
didn't <lb/>
there's more value in them <lb/>
than he's ever seen before. He'll <lb/>
skip with your stuff before <lb/>
then you'll have to rob me <lb/>
to get on. Stranger, I'm a man as <lb/>
don't take no chances. I have a re- <lb/>
here, and the first move you <lb/>
make to get out of bed I'll plug <lb/>
I turn <lb/>
but be powerful careful <lb/>
about it, for I'm up to <lb/>
I turned over and went to sleep <lb/>
again, and when morning came his <lb/>
moving around awoke me. I tried <lb/>
to him, but he was sour and <lb/>
morose and wouldn't take it. When <lb/>
went downstairs it was to find <lb/>
the colored help sitting in the early <lb/>
sun with no move toward breakfast. <lb/>
the I asked. <lb/>
has done de <lb/>
place In de night, no- <lb/>
body to boss dis he re- <lb/>
plied. <lb/>
My room-mate had figured right <lb/>
smart the night <lb/>
A willing Subject <lb/>
A recent issue of the Medical <lb/>
printed the following remark- <lb/>
able desiring to <lb/>
obtain a subject on which to observe <lb/>
the process of digestion or other <lb/>
workings cf the vital organs, or on <lb/>
whom to try the effects of poisons <lb/>
and their antidotes, may probably <lb/>
do so by communicating with the <lb/>
editor of the Bulletin. Subject is <lb/>
unmarried and <lb/>
ties or f acting <lb/>
in this matter as he chooses, and <lb/>
does not object to a pro. able fatal <lb/>
termination of the<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017697_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
AX AWFUL FIX. <lb/>
It was Kitty who first suggested <lb/>
to that our proscription was not <lb/>
working well. As soon as she spoke <lb/>
I was hound to admit it. had <lb/>
that Jack would easily get I <lb/>
over his unfortunate attachment; f <lb/>
expected that, after a quiet i <lb/>
weeks with us. he would forget Clara <lb/>
Wilkinson and her disgraceful treat-1 <lb/>
meat of him. <lb/>
is setting no good at all <lb/>
she said most positively. <lb/>
bis own interest must, ask you to <lb/>
send him <lb/>
girl has spoiled his whole <lb/>
I cried, angrily. <lb/>
Kitty looked at me for B moment, <lb/>
but said nothing. <lb/>
suppose you are right. <lb/>
would he better in a livelier <lb/>
course he would, you dear oM <lb/>
said Kitty. <lb/>
I did Dot see that had been <lb/>
stupid. <lb/>
nothing to distract his <lb/>
thoughts said. <lb/>
you speak to him, <lb/>
asked Kitty, anxiously. <lb/>
She was very much in earnest. <lb/>
woman does these tilings so <lb/>
delicately and I <lb/>
couldn't think of it, <lb/>
said Kitty, blushing. <lb/>
I admired her delicacy. <lb/>
He was pacing up and down the <lb/>
walk, hitting at my flowers <lb/>
with his stick, and smoking one of <lb/>
cigars. When I joined him and <lb/>
ed arm through his he <lb/>
started. <lb/>
I, you be <lb/>
better away from here Come, you <lb/>
know what mean. You are no <lb/>
great hand at a <lb/>
he began, stammering, <lb/>
and in great confusion. <lb/>
know all about said en- <lb/>
thought you'd get <lb/>
good out of the place, but it's clear <lb/>
you the contrary. <lb/>
You want to see new things and <lb/>
new people and forget I <lb/>
paused a word, and ended <lb/>
unhappy mistake of <lb/>
my honor, you are a good <lb/>
he exclaimed. don't <lb/>
know another man who would have <lb/>
treated me a- you have, be <lb/>
i r Ids eyes with his hand. <lb/>
Oh. nonsense; it's nothing. I <lb/>
I'm always willing to do my <lb/>
friends a turn. But it's no use, is <lb/>
ii It gets worse and <lb/>
said with a sigh; <lb/>
won't stay a minute. After <lb/>
you say I couldn't. And, old man. <lb/>
don't know how to thank you. Many <lb/>
fellows would have taken the way I <lb/>
have been going on badly; most<lb/>
M allowance for you. <lb/>
Young men mustn't be judged too <lb/>
a true friend. It <lb/>
makes me feel bad. can tell you, <lb/>
you'll soon forget it when <lb/>
you're on the <lb/>
try. By Jove, I he ex- <lb/>
claimed, earnestly. <lb/>
it only needs a little <lb/>
Because, between ourselves, . <lb/>
you know, you ought n t to be . . <lb/>
Except before strangers <lb/>
and now you Keep IT <lb/>
think to see you well, it is brave. <lb/>
It would kill me in a month. It's <lb/>
brave, that's what it <lb/>
are you talking about, lad <lb/>
I spoken to her for three <lb/>
my opinion, Jack, you've had <lb/>
an escape. And you can take my <lb/>
word for it. Remember, know the <lb/>
pretty <lb/>
you mustn't say a word <lb/>
at all. I <lb/>
here she comes II can't <lb/>
meet her <lb/>
here <lb/>
I turned around my <lb/>
wife. With a gasp I fell back a step, <lb/>
against her, he protested; she s . . , . , <lb/>
tore past Kitty and vanished <lb/>
through the open window of the <lb/>
room. <lb/>
he asked <lb/>
tty <lb/>
I could say nothing. <lb/>
been all that's good, kind, <lb/>
course, say I <lb/>
. , drawing-room <lb/>
impatiently, i suppose ,,.,. , <lb/>
bound to, but it won't go. l <lb/>
. <lb/>
down with me. If ever there was a <lb/>
heartless, worthless <lb/>
lie started away from me. <lb/>
he cried. <lb/>
But I was determined he should <lb/>
hear the unvarnished truth. <lb/>
ever a I pursued, <lb/>
a young fellow on deliberately. <lb/>
hope you were gentle with him. <lb/>
He is a nice boy. though a <lb/>
silly one. He meant no harm. <lb/>
I stammered. <lb/>
the dickens does it <lb/>
that he has quite forgotten <lb/>
never meaning anything Wilkinson, <lb/>
except to get him in her tons and <lb/>
turn him adrift with a laugh <lb/>
that's what she meant with you. Oh, <lb/>
I know one <lb/>
The unhappy young man turned <lb/>
pale and his lips trembled. <lb/>
you know the truth about <lb/>
I hope you'll proceed to <lb/>
put b r image out of your I <lb/>
said. <lb/>
nave staked my life on <lb/>
be murmured. seemed <lb/>
so different, Bob, I could not help it. <lb/>
n.-v <lb/>
that you have got rather a <lb/>
she whispered. <lb/>
you say anything about <lb/>
I looked at her for a moment. <lb/>
anything about I re-<lb/>
I didn't know whether he <lb/>
very sorry at thought of <lb/>
leaving she stammered, flush- <lb/>
course he <lb/>
a foolish boy he is to fall <lb/>
love with a woman who <lb/>
with a sore, bleeding heart. Think- <lb/>
constantly of the bliss he had <lb/>
lost, he began to watch our <lb/>
Suddenly he made a startling <lb/>
He found that he was in <lb/>
love with another woman. That <lb/>
woman was I. But he was a loyal <lb/>
friend, and I a true, loving <lb/>
thought her husband the best, <lb/>
and noblest of men. Of course, yon <lb/>
understand that he didn't tell <lb/>
that he had made such an awful <lb/>
but trust a woman <lb/>
out that a man is fond of <lb/>
. I cried, <lb/>
rushed Into the <lb/>
That young man would go and <lb/>
all the club that my wife and I- <lb/>
Lord. <lb/>
Jack, Jack; you you <lb/>
I yelled despairingly. <lb/>
The butler appeared. <lb/>
Vincent, sir, has just jump <lb/>
into the dog-cart, was at t <lb/>
door by your driven <lb/>
like mad. Hi-said he was summon <lb/>
to town, <lb/>
I sank <lb/>
Kitty earn- in, laughing. <lb/>
she said, <lb/>
thought you were so very nice <lb/>
considerate in pretending not I <lb/>
see <lb/>
Then the silly little woman <lb/>
. into a tit of <lb/>
her, <lb/>
of her i out <lb/>
Vincent carried <lb/>
with we began to <lb/>
But the young ruffian <lb/>
he may Break his heart next <lb/>
and i bad gone straight. <lb/>
. ., ,, . . . t love with a who cares ,, , . <lb/>
were the victim, I in- .,. , . , , , ., club. I <lb/>
, , . ,. , ,, nothing for him, and who, besides ,,., , . . , <lb/>
patting his shoulder. n. . ,, , , ,, When there now <lb/>
in t That woman should herself ,, . ., .,. ,, <lb/>
shall go at once. I cant , , , ,. ,. . matters a--, <lb/>
. , . to have won his esteem, I , . , , <lb/>
star here. This . better. . they mean. <lb/>
. ,, . cried. v , , <lb/>
telling me the truth, aren't you, <lb/>
to the best of my <lb/>
I answered, firmly. <lb/>
said he <lb/>
are you Why, any <lb/>
of the fellows at the club could have <lb/>
told you the same old <lb/>
he murmured, gazing at <lb/>
said i. <lb/>
to make too much of such a <lb/>
trouble as this. When one's eyes <lb/>
are once opt and I ended <lb/>
with a shrug of the shoulders. <lb/>
Suddenly he held out his hand. <lb/>
hands, old he said <lb/>
I shook bands. He was much <lb/>
moved and I didn't wish to , <lb/>
shall <lb/>
morning will him <lb/>
to-night; the next t rain. And <lb/>
she said Kitty, <lb/>
softly. can <lb/>
there a better fellow I <lb/>
demanded. <lb/>
great deal, <lb/>
N. Y. Journal <lb/>
; a be that the man <lb/>
who ranch over night t <lb/>
heavy II In his face, and becomes <lb/>
. , , , . , . .-it the brows and <lb/>
What to do with ,; ., .,., <lb/>
i that has done as <lb/>
i over things that are <lb/>
Why I am not in the position to ., . ,.,,.,.;. r. <lb/>
stand between Jack and his love. . . . ,. , . . , f;, u <lb/>
Oh, indeed pouting M fr. m the lines of thought and <lb/>
Of coarse not. If I could e f the <lb/>
him to the arms of then man he ,, . wt <lb/>
I would do so with a glad .,,.,. . v of his I <lb/>
van. But you say he has forgot- ;. , it never an- <lb/>
ten Clara Wilkinson utterly has a little <lb/>
am sure that he his. . ., ,. , , . ; <lb/>
am glad of it. would rather ;., and <lb/>
love with any woman ,. , . . ion <lb/>
is . . i s. and be has an <lb/>
you you must stay you foolish old i .- . disinclination to <lb/>
course I must stay I my v. really believe . If, He is not much <lb/>
said, staring in my turn. don't know who the new love i though for a <lb/>
bad for me, old he I don't. It a to visit t <lb/>
said, laying a hand on my shoulder, i she said, laying one or three time <lb/>
by Jove, what must it be for hand upon arm. seen about <lb/>
you dear old fellow, J thought you , <lb/>
exclaimed. in all about it Now, don't in <lb/>
do you once until I have bold <lb/>
he all about it. Jack here <lb/>
am Not- <lb/>
. and his <lb/>
-N. Y.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017697_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
r t <lb/>
Local Reflections <lb/>
Potato buyers are thick and <lb/>
hustling. <lb/>
Tobacco Flues are now read, <lb/>
for delivery by S- E- Fender Co <lb/>
The boys seem to be enjoying <lb/>
vacation. <lb/>
Blank tax notices for <lb/>
tale at Reflector office. <lb/>
A club will be organized <lb/>
hero this week. <lb/>
Oblique cents <lb/>
Reflector Book Store- <lb/>
For good reliable Shoes go <lb/>
Wile Brown. <lb/>
at <lb/>
Poor make vegetables <lb/>
scarce this season. <lb/>
Standard Music only cents <lb/>
a copy at Reflector Book Store- <lb/>
Blackberry dumplings and <lb/>
plum pie are in order. <lb/>
If you wish to save MONEY <lb/>
to store, he is soiling <lb/>
Clothing at Cost. <lb/>
Mr. R. Greene moved into <lb/>
new yesterday. <lb/>
The Reflector and Atlanta <lb/>
Constitution both for <lb/>
See Notice to Creditors in this <lb/>
issue by W. E- <lb/>
to improved <lb/>
Real Estate in sums from to <lb/>
Apply to, <lb/>
F. G. James. <lb/>
cents gets the Reflector <lb/>
until the first of January. <lb/>
New assortment of Bibles from <lb/>
American B. S-, just received. <lb/>
Wiley Brown, Depositor. <lb/>
See land sale by Mrs. Mattie <lb/>
Vines, mortgagee, in this issue. <lb/>
Summer stock is the best <lb/>
prices are correct. Come <lb/>
us. <lb/>
this issue by the <lb/>
eh f Police regard to gates. <lb/>
Clipper, Atlas, Boy <lb/>
lei <lb/>
Stonewall and Climax <lb/>
is offered for sale by <lb/>
and Castings for sale by J. <lb/>
IT <lb/>
mew and of Victor <lb/>
can be had at Reflector <lb/>
largest and best assorted <lb/>
General Merchandise in <lb/>
dis,<lb/>
Ian <lb/>
Wake Forest com- <lb/>
both in progress this <lb/>
pert Sweet Fresh <lb/>
yet its all right at the <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
machines from to <lb/>
Mi improved New Home <lb/>
Wiley Brown. <lb/>
re, were shown a radish by <lb/>
last week <lb/>
pounds. <lb/>
Mechanics and Labor- <lb/>
all professions, when in <lb/>
goods of any kind, call on <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co. <lb/>
e young folks of the town <lb/>
had several storm <lb/>
es. <lb/>
New at the Old <lb/>
ck Pickled <lb/>
if Grated <lb/>
received a new lot of <lb/>
a Carriages and Cribs. <lb/>
J. B. Co. <lb/>
f you let these June days go <lb/>
without listing your taxes the <lb/>
at is with you. <lb/>
When in want of good shoes go to <lb/>
I. B. Cherry Co. <lb/>
Minors should observe that one <lb/>
of the new town ordinance forbids <lb/>
their entering barrooms- <lb/>
L. M. Reynold-. Mens and Boy <lb/>
i are the best. For tale by J. B. <lb/>
Cherry Co <lb/>
Mr. L. H. Pender received a <lb/>
new model Rambler bicycle <lb/>
week- It is a handsome wheel. <lb/>
A- G Cox can furnish you good <lb/>
Potato at low prices and <lb/>
you would do well to send in <lb/>
your orders as early as possible. <lb/>
It does not look like Greenville <lb/>
is to L a game of ball this sea- <lb/>
son. The town is without a club. <lb/>
Go to J. B. Cherry Co when in need <lb/>
Furniture, they keep a stock and <lb/>
sell at prices that will please you. <lb/>
Clarence was the first <lb/>
to report ripe pea-mes th b season. <lb/>
He had some very nice ones last <lb/>
Wednesday. <lb/>
A -tuck of nice Furniture cheap <lb/>
M th e Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Mr. A. Sutton begins this <lb/>
week the erection of a neat cot- <lb/>
on the remainder of the lot <lb/>
opposite his residence <lb/>
Remember I you cash for Chicken <lb/>
Eggs and Count iv Produce at the Old <lb/>
Brick Mm <lb/>
day was certainly a hot <lb/>
day, yesterday also, there is <lb/>
no tolling how the weather will be <lb/>
by the time this item is read. <lb/>
For A- G. Cox's celebrated <lb/>
Back call on J. B- Cherry <lb/>
ft Co . <lb/>
The es of the town are <lb/>
published on the outside pages <lb/>
of the to-day. These <lb/>
should be carefully read and at- <lb/>
given to their observance <lb/>
Complete line of Dry Goods at <lb/>
Wiley Brown's- <lb/>
The outlook doe a not indicate <lb/>
a decline in the potato market <lb/>
and the planters should not be in <lb/>
too great hurry to dig them- <lb/>
Let fully mature. The <lb/>
stock prices <lb/>
Can be had. <lb/>
Personal. . <lb/>
Mr- Ed Greene is in Kinston. <lb/>
Mr. L. I. Moore returned Fri- <lb/>
day a visit to Wilson. <lb/>
Mr. J. C. Lanier, of Wilson, <lb/>
spent part of last week here. <lb/>
Miss Becky of <lb/>
Farmville, is visiting relatives <lb/>
here. <lb/>
Mr. J. D. Williamson has gone <lb/>
to to spend several <lb/>
weeks. <lb/>
Mr. E A. clerk of Sup- <lb/>
court, left yesterday for a <lb/>
trip north- <lb/>
Mrs. Susan Proctor, of Wash- <lb/>
is visiting her son, Mr <lb/>
R. J. Proctor. <lb/>
Mr. Larry has been <lb/>
spending the past week with re- <lb/>
in Tarboro- <lb/>
Rev. J. H. left yes- <lb/>
to attend the Forest <lb/>
commencement. <lb/>
The editor left yesterday morn- <lb/>
to attend the Press <lb/>
at Morganton. <lb/>
Misses May Murray and <lb/>
left Friday to visit re- <lb/>
at Trenton. <lb/>
Mrs. Charles Skinner and two <lb/>
children returned Friday from a <lb/>
visit to Bertie county. <lb/>
His many friends are glad to <lb/>
see Mr. H. Rountree out again <lb/>
after his recent illness. <lb/>
Misses Ada and Mattie <lb/>
arrived bore Friday from <lb/>
Littleton Female College. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Crow, of <lb/>
Goldsboro, is visiting the family <lb/>
of W. H. Cox in <lb/>
Mrs. S- M- and children <lb/>
returned yesterday from visit <lb/>
her parents in Rocky Mount- <lb/>
Mr. J. I. Faust, wife and child, <lb/>
of Wilson, visiting Capt. and <lb/>
Mrs. H. F. Price, at the King <lb/>
House. <lb/>
Mr- J. T. came home <lb/>
Monday from Elm City, where he <lb/>
ha been conducting a <lb/>
school. <lb/>
Mr. Richard Hosier returned <lb/>
last week from Suffolk, Va., <lb/>
whore he has for several <lb/>
months. <lb/>
Mrs. J. W. Gardner Mrs. <lb/>
John Hutchins, of came <lb/>
down last week to visit Mrs. S- T. <lb/>
Hooker. <lb/>
Miss Julia of Mt. Olive, <lb/>
and Miss Pearl of <lb/>
Greene county, visiting the <lb/>
family Mr. B. F. <lb/>
Miss Lola White reached home <lb/>
Friday evening from In- <lb/>
Virginia, which she has <lb/>
been attending the past <lb/>
Misses Addie Johnson and <lb/>
Bertha of Grifton, and <lb/>
Miss Viola Davis, of Warren, <lb/>
are visiting Miss Rosalind <lb/>
tree. <lb/>
OTHER LOCALS. <lb/>
Fenders are being built above <lb/>
each side of the draw arch at the <lb/>
bridge to protect it against the <lb/>
rafts of logs coming <lb/>
down the river. A raft passed <lb/>
through the other day that con- <lb/>
over seven hundred logs- <lb/>
Col. W. E. Williamson, of Ashe- <lb/>
the champion big fish catch- <lb/>
es at last season, was <lb/>
on the Washington train Friday <lb/>
to that resort. <lb/>
He sent word over to us that he <lb/>
was on the way, and to come <lb/>
down and him. We will try <lb/>
to get with Colonel, in a few <lb/>
weeks, and then lookout for big <lb/>
fish. <lb/>
It gives us pleasure to note <lb/>
the high standing and prominent <lb/>
mention of Pitt boys <lb/>
who were members of the <lb/>
class at the State University <lb/>
last week. They are Mr. W. F. <lb/>
of Greenville, and Mr. <lb/>
G. R. Little, of Bethel. Old Pitt <lb/>
held her own wherever she <lb/>
this year. <lb/>
The Teachers Assembly meets <lb/>
at Morehead City next <lb/>
day. The Coast Line is selling <lb/>
tickets from via Kin- <lb/>
at from House <lb/>
from from Which- <lb/>
Ayden Grifton <lb/>
Parmele The rate <lb/>
from Greenville via Goldsboro is <lb/>
from Bethel <lb/>
We understand that the rumor <lb/>
has been circulated throughout <lb/>
the country that was <lb/>
epidemic in Greenville. The <lb/>
rumor is untrue and does <lb/>
to the business of the town. <lb/>
There were two cases here, but <lb/>
those were promptly and proper <lb/>
quarantined and kept so until <lb/>
entirely removed. There is not <lb/>
a trace of it here now, and Green- <lb/>
ville keeps up record of be <lb/>
the healthiest towns <lb/>
in North Carolina. <lb/>
The Teachers <lb/>
and Summer School will begin <lb/>
its first session at Littleton Fe- <lb/>
mate College July 2nd, and con- <lb/>
four weeks. There will be <lb/>
four Departments of Instruction, <lb/>
a of subjects will be <lb/>
taught. Board may be secured at <lb/>
the College, or at any one of the <lb/>
hotels or private boarding house <lb/>
at rates For further <lb/>
information address J. M. <lb/>
Rhodes, Littleton, N- C <lb/>
COMMISSIONERS O. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C June 1894- <lb/>
The Board of Commissioners <lb/>
for Pitt met this day, <lb/>
sent G Dawson, chairman, Jesse <lb/>
L Smith, Leonidas Fleming, T- <lb/>
E Keel and S. A. Gainer. <lb/>
The following pauper orders <lb/>
were <lb/>
Martha Nelson 2.00, Margaret <lb/>
Bryan H D Smith Lydia <lb/>
Bryan Jacob <lb/>
1-50, Nancy Moore Susan <lb/>
Norris Susan <lb/>
Smith 1.50, Patsy Lock <lb/>
2-00, Henry Harris <lb/>
Crawford Smith <lb/>
1-50, Hettie 3-00, Ken- <lb/>
Henderson 2-00 <lb/>
Parmele Items. <lb/>
June 11th, 1894. <lb/>
Miss James spent <lb/>
day in the city. <lb/>
No applicants for lodging at the <lb/>
station house last week. <lb/>
We are glad to see W. C <lb/>
man again, after an illness of <lb/>
two weeks with chronic malaria- <lb/>
Misses Dora of Grin- <lb/>
and Bettie Craft, of <lb/>
are the of Mrs. D. S- <lb/>
Mrs. D. S- Harper has returned <lb/>
from Bethel her health is<lb/>
Items. <lb/>
June 11th, 1894. <lb/>
Rev. filled <lb/>
appointment at St. Johns last <lb/>
Sunday, <lb/>
The farmers are very busy just <lb/>
now shipping A good <lb/>
crop is reported. <lb/>
Mr. Frank Hill, of Lenoir <lb/>
spent last Saturday and Sun- <lb/>
day at Mr. L. B. Cox's. <lb/>
Messrs. B. F. and J. L. Sugg, <lb/>
of Greenville, were down here <lb/>
Wednesday on <lb/>
Myrtle Taylor returned <lb/>
home to-day after spending a <lb/>
wards 1-50, Carlos Gorham <lb/>
J H Henry <lb/>
imProved time visiting relatives here. <lb/>
Married. <lb/>
the <lb/>
of Mrs. Quinn, on Wednesday <lb/>
at o'clock, June 1894, <lb/>
Mr. Thomas R. Moore, and Miss <lb/>
Ida I Moore, were united in mar- <lb/>
. Quite a crowd of relatives, <lb/>
friends, and boarders, assembled <lb/>
in the parlor, to witness tho <lb/>
performed by the bride's <lb/>
pastor, J. H. May <lb/>
they be as happy as it is their <lb/>
privilege to be. <lb/>
Prof Silas E- Warren, principal <lb/>
of Wilson Collegiate Institute, <lb/>
died in that town on last Friday <lb/>
night. He had relatives in Green- <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
Mrs- L. C- King, of Norfolk, <lb/>
has been spending some days <lb/>
with relatives in this section. <lb/>
Her daughters, Misses Alice and <lb/>
Helen, who been at school <lb/>
near Clinton, met her here Friday. <lb/>
Mr. F. C- Harding, librarian of <lb/>
the University came home Friday <lb/>
to spend a few days with his <lb/>
His brother, Mr. W. F. <lb/>
who graduated last <lb/>
week, will remain at the <lb/>
until he returns there. <lb/>
Isadore Lichtenstein, a <lb/>
former citizen and merchant of <lb/>
Greenville, was married in New <lb/>
York, last Wednesday, to Miss <lb/>
Goodman. They are now on a <lb/>
bridal tour through Canada. <lb/>
Mr- Lichtenstein has the <lb/>
wishes of his many friends here. <lb/>
Another sudden change tho <lb/>
weather last Wednesday. The <lb/>
temperature was in the eighties <lb/>
during the morning and fires were <lb/>
comfortable before night. <lb/>
Weather prophet Hicks says <lb/>
June is to be such a stormy <lb/>
month that it will bear watching <lb/>
all through. Tho first half of the <lb/>
month has been somewhat that <lb/>
way. <lb/>
We were glad see Mr. Harry <lb/>
Boyd in town Sunday evening. <lb/>
He recently returned to his home <lb/>
in this county after spending <lb/>
three years in the western part <lb/>
of the State <lb/>
Seeing a gathering of them <lb/>
around the depot, Monday after- <lb/>
noon, a gentleman remarked <lb/>
are more pretty girls in <lb/>
Greenville than any town the <lb/>
same size in the world. <lb/>
Died. <lb/>
At the family about <lb/>
ten miles from Greenville, on last <lb/>
Saturday night at o'clock, <lb/>
Mrs- L- Little, consort of <lb/>
Mr. W. G. Little, aged years, <lb/>
she was a consistent member of <lb/>
the Great Swamp Primitive <lb/>
church- She leaves a <lb/>
band four children, Mess. <lb/>
James L. and W. O. Little, Mrs. <lb/>
Barnhill and Mrs. <lb/>
Frank Thigpen. to mourn her <lb/>
lost. She had been a great <lb/>
for about years but bore <lb/>
it with Christian fortitude- A <lb/>
good woman has gone to reap <lb/>
her reward and the Reflector <lb/>
extends deepest sympathies to <lb/>
the bereaved family. She was <lb/>
buried on Monday evening at <lb/>
o'clock at tho family <lb/>
grounds. <lb/>
They Aggregate 1886 Pounds. <lb/>
The item the pub <lb/>
last week in reference to <lb/>
the weight of Capt- W. H- <lb/>
and two of his boys has made <lb/>
some of our readers anxious to <lb/>
know what the whole family <lb/>
weigh, and the Captain, always <lb/>
being accommodating, has given <lb/>
the weight of his entire outfit. <lb/>
Capt. Bill himself holds the beam <lb/>
at pounds; Mrs. is <lb/>
a small woman and weighs exactly <lb/>
six daughters weigh respect- <lb/>
and <lb/>
four sons respectively <lb/>
and making an <lb/>
gate of 1886 pounds for the <lb/>
of twelve people or an average <lb/>
of a fraction over pounds <lb/>
each- If there is another large <lb/>
family that can beat this the Re- <lb/>
would be glad to hear <lb/>
from them. <lb/>
Sam and Amy Cherry Fan <lb/>
Tucker 1.50, J O Proctor 6.00, <lb/>
Alice Corbett 6.00, Easter Vines <lb/>
1.50, Alex Harris 1200, Winnifred <lb/>
Taylor 6.00, Mary <lb/>
Lydia Staton 1.50, John Ham <lb/>
2.00, W H Parker J G <lb/>
son Daniel Webster 2-00. <lb/>
Winnie Chapman Henry <lb/>
Funk James Long 14.00. <lb/>
The following orders for <lb/>
county purposes were issued <lb/>
W S Manning A M Joyner <lb/>
5.10, H T King Edwards <lb/>
Broughton 7.55, J M 2.35, <lb/>
J F Miller 2-25, A D Johnson <lb/>
35.75, C 24.00, D C Smith <lb/>
Chas Tyson H T King <lb/>
E A W F Harrington <lb/>
G M Smith 1.50, W T <lb/>
Smith 206.53, G W Edmundson <lb/>
1.30, J J Elks 2.00, R T Hodges <lb/>
3-79, R W King D J Which, <lb/>
ard H W Howell, 1.00, F G <lb/>
Andrews 1.00, John R Jenkins <lb/>
2.50, H Harding 23.56, T E Keel <lb/>
3.70, Andrew Robinson 15.50, C <lb/>
Dawson Leonidas Fleming <lb/>
S A Gainer 9.20, Jesse L <lb/>
Smith Dr W H Bagwell <lb/>
32.75. <lb/>
and Swift Creek <lb/>
Stock Law Laugh- <lb/>
C M Smith <lb/>
Ordered that Susan Norris and <lb/>
John Ham each be allowed to <lb/>
draw per month as pauper in- <lb/>
stead of <lb/>
Ordered that B F Jolly be re- <lb/>
of poll tax, tho same <lb/>
wrongfully charged on <lb/>
delinquent list and taxed. <lb/>
Ordered that G A Stancill be <lb/>
relieved of double tax allowed <lb/>
to p iv single tax acres of <lb/>
land listed Bethel township on <lb/>
delinquent list. <lb/>
John Hall and James F. <lb/>
caster were relieved of poll tax <lb/>
upon petition it was ordered that <lb/>
B. F- Bryan and J. C W. A. <lb/>
be relieved of the tax on <lb/>
town lot Bethel, the same hay- <lb/>
been listed by B. F. Bryan. <lb/>
A petition to remove the <lb/>
place in Carolina from <lb/>
to store was deferred <lb/>
next meeting. <lb/>
S- A. Gainer Jesse L. <lb/>
Smith, who were appointed to <lb/>
settle with the Sheriff reported <lb/>
that they were unable to settle <lb/>
with the Sheriff until the solvent <lb/>
tax list was allowed, and asked <lb/>
for further time to make a final <lb/>
report. <lb/>
Dr. W. <lb/>
dent of Health, made his <lb/>
report which was ordered filed. <lb/>
A petition was filed asking for <lb/>
a public road from Ayden to the <lb/>
Snow Hill and Washington road <lb/>
via. Carolina Christian College <lb/>
over the lands of J. S. W- <lb/>
H. and W. H. Harris, <lb/>
and deferred until next meeting <lb/>
for proper to be made. <lb/>
Good Reading at Small Cost. <lb/>
Public Opinion, published at <lb/>
D. Rountree received a Washington. D. C, is a weekly <lb/>
letter last week stating that his <lb/>
father, Mr- Charles Rountree, of <lb/>
Charlotte, is in very feeble health. <lb/>
He has not been well enough to <lb/>
leave his house in several months- <lb/>
His many here will regret <lb/>
to learn of his poor health. <lb/>
Many people always ready <lb/>
journal devoted to the <lb/>
is condensed form, of care- <lb/>
fully selected magazine articles <lb/>
and of editorial comment from <lb/>
the representative daily and <lb/>
weekly press of all political par- <lb/>
ties and from all parts of the <lb/>
country- The readers of Public <lb/>
Opinion get sides of every <lb/>
to bite at every swindle that j question, it is just the paper <lb/>
comes along and are easy prey that the farmer and villager need <lb/>
for general reading. It keeps <lb/>
for the sharpers. An evidence <lb/>
of this is the way a large number <lb/>
were taken in here, Saturday <lb/>
afternoon, by a quack medicine <lb/>
Rev. W. D. Morton, D. D. <lb/>
rived yesterday evening to con- <lb/>
duct the series of meetings in <lb/>
the Presbyterian church. Rev. <lb/>
Mr. Hines preached Sunday <lb/>
morning and evening and Rev- <lb/>
Mr. preached Monday <lb/>
night. Dr. Morton will hold <lb/>
vices twice each day in after- <lb/>
noon at night. AH Christians <lb/>
in the community should work <lb/>
and pray earnestly for the success <lb/>
of the meeting. There are many <lb/>
unconverted here, and they can <lb/>
be reached through <lb/>
prayer. <lb/>
It <lb/>
its readers fully abreast of the <lb/>
times and supplies them with the <lb/>
best thought of the day in the <lb/>
fields of Polities, Foreign Affairs, <lb/>
Sociology, Commerce, Finance, <lb/>
Religion, Science, Education, Art, <lb/>
and New Books- Public Opinion <lb/>
and the rural weekly supplement <lb/>
each other admirably. Together <lb/>
they give the farmer or villager <lb/>
and his family more of current <lb/>
news, editorial comment, and <lb/>
magazine literature than can be <lb/>
had in any other way for five <lb/>
times their cost The price of <lb/>
Public Opinion has been reduced <lb/>
from to per year. We <lb/>
have just completed arrangements <lb/>
by which we can offer Public <lb/>
Opinion and the for <lb/>
cash per year. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
All property owners are hereby <lb/>
to their rates on or <lb/>
before the but, as required in <lb/>
W. <lb/>
Chief Police. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Letters of administration u the <lb/>
estate of Sherrod Belcher deceased <lb/>
been issued to the undersigned, on <lb/>
the 4th day of June 1891, by the Clerk <lb/>
of the Superior Court of Pitt County, <lb/>
notice is hereby given to all persons <lb/>
haying claim- against said estate to <lb/>
present them to the undersigned on or <lb/>
before the 13th day of June 1895 or this <lb/>
notice will be plead bar of their re- <lb/>
All persons indebted to said <lb/>
estate are requested to make immediate <lb/>
payment to me. This the 13th day of <lb/>
June 1894. W. E. BELCHER, <lb/>
Adm. of Sherrod Belcher. <lb/>
Misses Claude <lb/>
Vesta Whichard, of Palmyra, <lb/>
visiting Miss Isabella Whichard <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
Miss Verna Little returned <lb/>
from LaG range last week, bring- <lb/>
with tho charming Miss <lb/>
ton, of Kinston. <lb/>
Messrs. H. G- Burton, Hughes <lb/>
Mayo and F. G. spent <lb/>
Sunday in Mildred. They report <lb/>
a charming pleasant trip. <lb/>
Mr. Wm. Bland died on tho <lb/>
night of the 5th after a con- <lb/>
illness. We extend the <lb/>
bereaved husband and children <lb/>
our warmest sympathy. <lb/>
The conversation party given <lb/>
complimentary to Misses John- <lb/>
son and Bowen, at Mr. Win. <lb/>
Powell's last Friday night, was <lb/>
with of the colored serenade, quite <lb/>
an enjoyable affair. <lb/>
Mr. G. R. Little, who <lb/>
with distinction at the <lb/>
of North Carolina, came <lb/>
home last Friday. We extend <lb/>
our best wishes for a successful <lb/>
life to Mr. Little. <lb/>
Miss Nettie Kilpatrick left yes- <lb/>
morning to spend some <lb/>
time visiting <lb/>
A hail storm passed through <lb/>
this section last Wednesday do- <lb/>
to tho <lb/>
stops. <lb/>
Bethel Items <lb/>
June 1891. <lb/>
Crops are suffering for want of <lb/>
rain this section. <lb/>
Mr. Graham Guilford, of Rob- <lb/>
is in town to-day. <lb/>
Mr. F. S. Gardner and wife, of <lb/>
Parmele, in town to-day. <lb/>
Miss Emily Cobb, of Great <lb/>
Swamp, is visiting her sister, Mrs. <lb/>
F. B. Knight. <lb/>
Mr. W. W. Thomas a fly <lb/>
business trip to one <lb/>
day last week- <lb/>
Mr. Peal, of Berkley, <lb/>
Va., was here last week visiting <lb/>
his mother, Mr. J. H Johnson. <lb/>
There were two cases up before <lb/>
Mayor Moore last week and throe <lb/>
cases wore disposed of in Justices <lb/>
court. <lb/>
Everybody invited to and look at the greatest values ever <lb/>
offered to the people of North Carolina.<lb/>
-IS OFFERING ALL-- <lb/>
Summer DRESS GOODS <lb/>
We received through <lb/>
Congressman W. A. B. Branch a <lb/>
large volume entitled of <lb/>
Industrial It is a very in- <lb/>
document, showing by <lb/>
illustrations the progress that has here last business, <lb/>
been made in almost every <lb/>
industry. <lb/>
Wm. Ha slip, of Hamil- <lb/>
ton, and R. L. Roberson, of Rob- <lb/>
two of the <lb/>
of Martin were <lb/>
Cotton and Peanuts. <lb/>
Below are Norfolk prices of cotton <lb/>
peanuts for yesterday, as furnished <lb/>
by Cobb Bros. Co., Commission Mer- <lb/>
chants of <lb/>
cotton. <lb/>
Good Mi Ml 7-11; <lb/>
Middling <lb/>
Low Middling 11-16 <lb/>
Good Ordinary <lb/>
Prime <lb/>
Extra Prime <lb/>
Fancy <lb/>
Spanish <lb/>
Mrs. Bettie Manning, wife of <lb/>
Herbert Manning, died last Fri- <lb/>
day night. Funeral services at <lb/>
the residence, after which she was <lb/>
buried at family burying ground. <lb/>
The grief stricken husband has <lb/>
our heartfelt, sympathy. <lb/>
The requiring <lb/>
to be hung so to swing inside <lb/>
on the premises when open will <lb/>
require lots of changes to be <lb/>
made during tho next few days. <lb/>
i; i None of our should ob- <lb/>
to making the change, for <lb/>
gates should not stand out and <lb/>
obstruct tho sidewalk. <lb/>
at greatly reduced puces for the next days. <lb/>
Yard-Ward good and only per yard. <lb/>
Standard brands of Calico, all kinds, only cents per yard. <lb/>
Shoes from cents up, wt can suit everybody. <lb/>
MENS WOOL SUITS REGULAR PRICE 6.00 <lb/>
4.98, <lb/>
7.59, <lb/>
Come bring tho hard cash and be-convinced, <lb/>
Your friend, <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
FINE CLOTHING <lb/>
A few more o For the our sum they can- <lb/>
of nice o thirty be ex- <lb/>
o we will fit, style <lb/>
cheap suits, o special it. <lb/>
DRY GOODS, <lb/>
Gents Furnishing Goods <lb/>
-I RECEIVED A COMPLETE LINE OF- <lb/>
NOVELTIES, <lb/>
and would earnestly solicit your examination. <lb/>
Shoes <lb/>
Embroideries, White Goods <lb/>
and Laces. <lb/>
I need not say anything except that I received a new <lb/>
line. Prices lower than over. I for your past favors <lb/>
and if close puces will avail me anything I will merit a continuance <lb/>
Sowing Machines from up. Now Home latest improved f 35.00 <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
WILEY BROWN, <lb/>
Ne Home Sewing; Machines and Depositor American Bible So <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
By of two mortgages <lb/>
ed to the by J. R. <lb/>
Cobb an. Laura his wife, dated <lb/>
1890 an I recorded in the <lb/>
o Mice of the Register of Deeds of Pitt <lb/>
County in Book pages <lb/>
a the other executed by W, <lb/>
H. Dunn, dated February 4th 1893 and <lb/>
recorded in the said Registers office in <lb/>
Book page t will on <lb/>
July 1891, sell at public sale before <lb/>
the Court House door in Greenville, to <lb/>
the highest for cash, a certain piece or <lb/>
parcel of land County situated <lb/>
on the waters of Meadow Branch, ad- <lb/>
joining the lands of G. Cobb, Ben- <lb/>
M. and others, contain- <lb/>
acres more or less. This the 6th <lb/>
day June 1894. <lb/>
we i stock i m i <lb/>
AND GOES WITHOUT <lb/>
SAYING THAT WE <lb/>
HAVE THE LARGEST <lb/>
AND MOST STYLISH <lb/>
STOCK IN TOWN. <lb/>
Give a call and look for yourself and you cannot go away <lb/>
without <lb/>
FRANK WILSON, <lb/>
THE LEADING CLOTHIER. <lb/>
J. L <lb/>
ii lire Mi, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
U AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb/>
All placed in <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At cu rates. <lb/>
AGENT FOE FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE <lb/>
Don't <lb/>
Miss to j <lb/>
CHEAP <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb/>
AT TUB <lb/>
OLD BRICK STORE <lb/>
their interest to get our prices before pat <lb/>
chasing elsewhere stock is <lb/>
n all its branches. <lb/>
-NOT TO THE- <lb/>
RAMBLER <lb/>
For by <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
The K AM It took five of the high- <lb/>
est awards at the Fair and <lb/>
holds World's Records. The <lb/>
pion rider of the South rides the Ram- <lb/>
1883 make at reduced price. 1894 <lb/>
8.135.00. all strictly highest <lb/>
grade. We mike <lb/>
and do all kinds of Tin work. Roofing. <lb/>
S. E. PENDER CO. <lb/>
---------BUT TO SEE THE-------- <lb/>
BARGAIN COUNTER OFFER <lb/>
by <lb/>
CO., <lb/>
For the month of June we are offering many Attractive Bargains. <lb/>
Ladies White Slippers worth 81.25 for Indies Red Slip err for <lb/>
Ladies Black Slippers at own price almost <lb/>
In fact all our SHOES and SLIPPERS for Ladies, Men and Children are <lb/>
remarkably cheap. <lb/>
DRESS GOODS of all kinds are being offered at much <lb/>
less than the real <lb/>
Gingham worth and for Silk worth for <lb/>
Wool worth for Lawns, On lugs and many other things <lb/>
sold same way. Several styles of Lawns and you can buy for I <lb/>
cents per yard. Every yard is worth and will cost you elsewhere yard. <lb/>
Our prices on are of they are so <lb/>
low. See <lb/>
Mens Suits for 83.50 worth 8-00. Boys Suits for cents. Pants for II <lb/>
cents worth cents. Straw Hats cheaper than over. <lb/>
Straw Matting, Curtain Goods and Mull at less than their value. Good <lb/>
Coffee cent, cents. Best Granulated Sugar cents, Good Chewing <lb/>
Tobacco at cents a plug, cents per <lb/>
Come and spend your Cash where you can get the moat for It. <lb/>
A BARGAIN COUNTER FOR ALL. <lb/>
Yours to please. <lb/>
BOSWELL, CO., <lb/>
Cr R I FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT<lb/>
I am sidling the best <lb/>
Leghorn and White <lb/>
Chipped <lb/>
at reduced prices. <lb/>
FLOOR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb/>
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb/>
west M <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF k <lb/>
we buy direct from ens <lb/>
Wing yon to buy at one profit. A com <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
Have also just received a new of <lb/>
Moire Ribbons, Laces, Insertions, Ac., <lb/>
that will be sold cheap. All these goods <lb/>
arc very desirable and you should cal <lb/>
early if to get the benefit of <lb/>
the low prices. <lb/>
M, T. Co. <lb/>
Notice to Farmers. <lb/>
If all nelson who lilt <lb/>
MILLS and EVAPORATORS , <lb/>
fall will file their mo at. an hand sold at prices to suit <lb/>
early day, I will be able to get th Our goods are all bought and <lb/>
ordering CASH therefore, having no risk <lb/>
purchaser to at a close margin. <lb/>
Mill- at a liberal discount by <lb/>
i at once and will give the <lb/>
the of the discount. <lb/>
H. HARM NO, <lb/>
Manufacture Agent. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
Greenville. N. <lb/>
WILLIAMSON, <lb/>
-MANUFACTURER OF- <lb/>
-ALL KIND; OF <lb/>
REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE <lb/>
workmen and material allowed in my The ma <lb/>
who used my work testify the MM and <lb/>
out at ray Every vehicle guaranteed. <lb/>
of bur <lb/>
carry a <lb/>
HARNESS 5- WHIPS.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017697_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
I buying your new bicycle look <lb/>
the field over carefully. The superiority <lb/>
of Victor Bicycles was never so fully <lb/>
demonstrated as at present. Our line <lb/>
will bear the most scrutiny, and we <lb/>
challenge comparison. <lb/>
There's but one <lb/>
OVERMAN WHEEL CO, <lb/>
NEW <lb/>
PHILADELPHIA. <lb/>
CHICAGO. <lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO. <lb/>
DETROIT. <lb/>
DENVER. <lb/>
WILMINGTON B. B. <lb/>
AND BRANCHES. <lb/>
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD. <lb/>
Condensed Schedule. <lb/>
TRAINS SOOTH. <lb/>
May <lb/>
I. <lb/>
Leave <lb/>
Ar. Mt <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
A. M.<lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
Rocky Lr Wilson Ar. OS c a <lb/>
Thia remedy is so well <lb/>
known and so popular as to <lb/>
special All Who have used <lb/>
Hitters the same of <lb/>
purer medicine does not ex- <lb/>
and it is guaranteed to do all that is <lb/>
claimed. Elect i; Bitten will cure all <lb/>
I diseases of the Kidneys, will <lb/>
remove Pimple. Bob. Salt Rheum <lb/>
other affections by Impure <lb/>
d Malaria from the <lb/>
system and prevent m all <lb/>
Malarial cure of <lb/>
Constipation and Indigestion try <lb/>
satisfaction <lb/>
guaranteed or money <lb/>
and per bottle at John L. <lb/>
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
O- L. Proprietor <lb/>
LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO <lb/>
JOTTINGS. <lb/>
WASHINGTON IN <lb/>
Now is tho plow tobacco <lb/>
deep <lb/>
place of some souls. All its <lb/>
buildings were of wood except <lb/>
the Tryon Palace, which was built <lb/>
of imported bricks at a cost of <lb/>
Town Ordinances. <lb/>
Mr. Irving Allen, in the <lb/>
number the New England <lb/>
Magazine, has happily recalled and was regarded by the <lb/>
cultivation of tobacco I the incidents of General Washing- masses of the population as a <lb/>
at this season of the year will pay ton's visit to the New England grievous tax and a wanton piece <lb/>
a per cent, dividend in States in October, 1789, while ho of extravagance. The main <lb/>
was first President of the United was destroyed by fire soon <lb/>
States. Possibly an episode which after tho ball, but the right wing <lb/>
occurred in the course of his con- <lb/>
tour through the Son Ii At- <lb/>
Seaboard fifteen mo <lb/>
later, will be graciously <lb/>
through an antipodal medium. <lb/>
It was in the city of New <lb/>
N. G, whore a reception was given <lb/>
him April 1791, with which <lb/>
his diary declares he was well <lb/>
October. <lb/>
Work is rapidly progressing on <lb/>
the now tobacco houses- Quite <lb/>
a number of hands are employed <lb/>
they make, things lively <lb/>
around the tobacco quarters. <lb/>
Greenville N. C-, is working <lb/>
hard to build a tobacco market <lb/>
It takes time and energy to build <lb/>
up a good To- <lb/>
Grocer. <lb/>
have plenty of down pleased. This was just years <lb/>
hero and father times seems to j ago. As in the Eastern States he <lb/>
be dealing with us very well. in his private carriage <lb/>
handsome buildings by bis <lb/>
now the laud which five <lb/>
p. V. <lb/>
i W <lb/>
OB <lb/>
Magnolia I <lb/>
Ar Wilmington <lb/>
P. <lb/>
and <lb/>
i ALLEN'S Advertising <lb/>
Indexed <lb/>
RECORD, to enter on <lb/>
I the left hand page the Advertiser's name <lb/>
I alphabetically, commission, <lb/>
. vi -in., e. rate, number of <lb/>
j- j trails, beginning, date ending <lb/>
when <lb/>
Dated <lb/>
May <lb/>
1804. <lb/>
it <lb/>
and end. Prices, pages, or one <lb/>
to the letter, flexible, <lb/>
pages. to a letter, hall roan <lb/>
82.00; pages, SOU pages, 61.00 <lb/>
pages, s <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
Flora ; SO S <lb/>
MM <lb/>
l- <lb/>
Ar n <lb/>
A. If. <lb/>
Magnolia<lb/>
Ar Wilson ; -10 <lb/>
Circuit. <lb/>
on the drat Sunday eleven <lb/>
and Jones Chapel at three <lb/>
Shady Grove second Sunday at <lb/>
eleven o'clock and <lb/>
Horse at o'clock. <lb/>
on third Sunday at eleven <lb/>
o'clock and el at three <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
the fourth Sun-lay at <lb/>
eleven <lb/>
and Lang's School <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar Rocky<lb/>
tit <lb/>
IS <lb/>
Ar Tarboro W <lb/>
Mt <lb/>
Ar , <lb/>
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Boat <lb/>
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. Halifax <lb/>
arrives Scotland Neck at . p. <lb/>
n., Greenville p. m., Kinston <lb/>
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 <lb/>
a. Greenville a. n. <lb/>
Halifax at a. m . Weldon 11.30 a. <lb/>
m., daily except Sunday. <lb/>
Trains on hue <lb/>
Washington Parmele <lb/>
8.40 a. m. Tarboro <lb/>
leaves 4.- p. m. Parmele <lb/>
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.83 p. m. <lb/>
except <lb/>
trains on Neck Branch. <lb/>
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb/>
ft K. R. daily <lb/>
day, at p. in. S X; <lb/>
arrive P. M. 5.20 p. in. <lb/>
Plymouth <lb/>
MO a. m. Sunday 0.30 <lb/>
arrive Tarboro n. m. and <lb/>
a. <lb/>
Train on Midland X C Branch <lb/>
daily except Sou lay, SOS a. <lb/>
m. K- <lb/>
leaves f a. in <lb/>
v II a. m. <lb/>
Train- on Nashville lea-.- <lb/>
at p. in., arrive <lb/>
p- m-, spring Hope 5.30, <lb/>
p. in. leaves Spring <lb/>
S a. in. a. n-. arrive <lb/>
at Rocky Mount in. <lb/>
Sun <lb/>
Trains on U. <lb/>
R. 8.3 i. arrive <lb/>
bar p.-i leave l-.- <lb/>
i. in. arrive a. m. <lb/>
Daily <lb/>
rail oil h Hi it leaven War- <lb/>
saw. X <lb/>
a. in. in tun <lb/>
at . . <lb/>
ma a line . <lb/>
Train No. -t- <lb/>
at Weldon for all <lb/>
via except <lb/>
Sunday via and Bay Line <lb/>
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk <lb/>
railroad to.- Norfolk daily and <lb/>
all via Norfolk, daily ex- <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
JOHN V DIVINE, <lb/>
General <lb/>
House at e o'clock. <lb/>
Everybody Invite I to <lb/>
U. F. Smith, <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Baptist Services. <lb/>
are appointments <lb/>
of Rev. II. pastor of <lb/>
Baptist church <lb/>
Second and <lb/>
In each month, night, <lb/>
and every I <lb/>
At Sunday i I each <lb/>
morning and night. <lb/>
At Person <lb/>
Sunday in each month and Saturday be- <lb/>
fore. <lb/>
Episcopal Services. <lb/>
Below are the appointments <lb/>
A. av .-. <lb/>
Kinston Sir days in <lb/>
.; morning arid evening. <lb/>
Sunday in each <lb/>
in morning and evening. <lb/>
v--e.- Sunday <lb/>
S . Johns, Sun- <lb/>
day in each morning and evening <lb/>
Innocents, <lb/>
Sunday <lb/>
Services. <lb/>
Every morning and <lb/>
alternating between Rev. J. N. <lb/>
II. and J. W. <lb/>
Sunday School every Sabbath morn- <lb/>
at D. S <lb/>
years ago, when were a school <lb/>
boy, was a blooming corn field <lb/>
closed in by a jagged fence row. <lb/>
The town is rapidly building out <lb/>
this way and in ten years from <lb/>
now no doubt but that South <lb/>
Greenville will tho center of <lb/>
business- <lb/>
The Tobacco Review which for <lb/>
some time was published Dur- <lb/>
ham has been succeeded by The <lb/>
National Tobacco Grocer a six- <lb/>
teen page journal <lb/>
It is neat in bright <lb/>
newsy and very in- <lb/>
deed. Durham ought to have a <lb/>
trade Tobacco <lb/>
Grocer rills the bill, <lb/>
Mr. Mrs. J. W. Morgan <lb/>
loft last week for N- C-, <lb/>
where they will spend some time <lb/>
with his relations and friends, <lb/>
they will go to Greenville <lb/>
the home of Mrs- Morgan, <lb/>
They will leave there in time to <lb/>
reach Greenville N- C. for the <lb/>
opening of the tobacco market- <lb/>
No tobacco buyer has ever lo- <lb/>
in Greenville that has <lb/>
a more intense in the <lb/>
than has Mr- Morgan and <lb/>
it can Lo truthfully said that tho <lb/>
American Tobacco Company <lb/>
had a gentleman their <lb/>
employ who takes a greater inter <lb/>
i the protection of their <lb/>
every interest than J. Morgan. <lb/>
We see that J- Redding, <lb/>
director of the Georgia state ex <lb/>
station, has given his <lb/>
testimonial to X. S. I. Co of <lb/>
Richmond. N. S. I. as it is called <lb/>
is North State Insecticide and <lb/>
up in pound packages. It is a <lb/>
powder said to kill the horn <lb/>
which is so to <lb/>
tobacco. If this powder is really <lb/>
what it is claimed to be to <lb/>
farmer ought to provide <lb/>
with a fall supply of it. <lb/>
Some time ago procured a <lb/>
the same with the Town <lb/>
Tax Collector, pay the tax hereto <lb/>
fore imposed upon them and re- <lb/>
from the said Tax Collector <lb/>
a collar with the Town device <lb/>
upon it on or before the 1st day <lb/>
of July, and for every day <lb/>
thereafter the tax remains unpaid <lb/>
and any dog remains in said Town <lb/>
without the said collar the owner <lb/>
or keeper, if a resident of said <lb/>
Town, shall pay a fine of Ono <lb/>
Dollar, and the absence of the <lb/>
said collar upon any dog shall be <lb/>
evidence of the viola- <lb/>
of this Ordinance by the <lb/>
owner or keeper. <lb/>
Sec. It is hereby declared <lb/>
lawful for any bull dog or other <lb/>
always was a vicious dog to at large in said <lb/>
It was settled by keeper of- <lb/>
such dog or dogs found so running <lb/>
still stands, and is used as a chap <lb/>
el and schoolhouse- <lb/>
New <lb/>
country place. <lb/>
Baron de and re- j ft of Five <lb/>
official private secretaries <lb/>
six servants. At the Neuse- <lb/>
river crossing he was met by a <lb/>
small party of horse, the Dis- <lb/>
Judge, and the principal <lb/>
residents, who took him to the <lb/>
Stanly Mansion, exceedingly <lb/>
good by his own ac- <lb/>
count, where he was feasted in <lb/>
good style, but noted the absence <lb/>
of griddle cakes. This <lb/>
building is now owned and <lb/>
pied by James A Bryan, Esq., <lb/>
the president of the First Nation- <lb/>
Bank, and is in excellent repair <lb/>
with broad concrete walls and <lb/>
grounds stocked with <lb/>
exotics and semi tropical plants <lb/>
and fruit trees, the blooms of <lb/>
honeysuckles, cape <lb/>
roses mingling with figs, <lb/>
and magnolias. <lb/>
The mansion is of wood, <lb/>
though much over a century old, <lb/>
remains of the chief <lb/>
ornaments of the town, with <lb/>
its imposing square front and its <lb/>
interior decorations, rich with <lb/>
and wainscoting. It <lb/>
is invariably out to <lb/>
strangers. <lb/>
AND <lb/>
In tho evening of the eventful <lb/>
day there was a supper and a <lb/>
JACKSON <lb/>
MANUFACTURERS OF <lb/>
AND <lb/>
at tho Tryon Palace, at <lb/>
foot of George street, which was <lb/>
still social rendezvous of the <lb/>
quality people of tho period, <lb/>
it may be remarked right <lb/>
that the memorable affair <lb/>
was faithfully reproduced three <lb/>
years ago on the 24th of April <lb/>
1891, on the occasion of its <lb/>
anniversary, the invitation <lb/>
cards and orders cf dancing be- <lb/>
in simile, and even some <lb/>
of the identical dresses being <lb/>
worn which appeared the <lb/>
century. General Wash- <lb/>
and Lady Washington <lb/>
were by Mr. W. P. M. <lb/>
and Miss M T. Oliver, <lb/>
package of it sent it to <lb/>
H. B. Battle, director of the citizens re- <lb/>
experiment station asked . . <lb/>
him to it write us if <lb/>
J. K. Coal Manager. I fl j fl TI <lb/>
I. V, Manager U j U I K H <lb/>
NORTH L I <lb/>
A R. R. TIMETABLE. <lb/>
Effect 1888. <lb/>
GOING <lb/>
GOING V <lb/>
P. <lb/>
Pat- Dally <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
M. I. M , <lb/>
t I Ki <lb/>
ft <lb/>
P. <lb/>
Train h Wilmington <lb/>
train North, leaving <lb/>
a, and with D. <lb/>
train West, <lb/>
Train <lb/>
Danville train, arriving at Goldsboro <lb/>
p. in., and with W. A W. train <lb/>
the North at p. <lb/>
S. L. DILL, <lb/>
Superintendent. <lb/>
Schools and seated <lb/>
in the best Offices <lb/>
furnished. Send for <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
there was any poisonous <lb/>
to tobacco in it. He wrote <lb/>
immediately that he had received <lb/>
tin. package and as soon as the <lb/>
busy guano season was over ho <lb/>
would report on it, but as yet we <lb/>
have heard nothing from him- <lb/>
D. L- Taylor, of Wadesboro. <lb/>
formerly of Lancaster county <lb/>
. in the May number of the <lb/>
Southern States Magazine, gives <lb/>
quite a detailed treatise of the <lb/>
cultivation and management of <lb/>
bright tobacco in North Carolina. <lb/>
Among other things he says <lb/>
Golden leaf is a distinct species <lb/>
as much so as the seed <lb/>
leaf. It is a small variety seldom <lb/>
yielding more than a thousand <lb/>
pounds to the acre. The soil <lb/>
best adopted to bright tobacco <lb/>
growing is comparatively poor <lb/>
land The finest soil so tar dis- <lb/>
covered is on the Raleigh t Gas <lb/>
rail road the counties of <lb/>
Vance and If this <lb/>
respondent of of the most <lb/>
journals that circulates <lb/>
in the South could see <lb/>
Eastern North Carolina pro- <lb/>
duct placed down by the sine of <lb/>
Vi and Warren co it <lb/>
co and could also see the lands <lb/>
on which our tobacco is grown <lb/>
are of tho that he <lb/>
would grow enthusiastic and <lb/>
write again from adopted <lb/>
homo that in the <lb/>
ties of Pitt. Green and <lb/>
can be found the finest soil in the <lb/>
United States for the production <lb/>
of the golden weed- It is true in <lb/>
Vance Warren very <lb/>
tine tobacco with plenty of body <lb/>
and oil can be grown but as to <lb/>
color everyone that knows any <lb/>
thing about our Eastern N. C- <lb/>
says it is the they <lb/>
have ever seen grown anywhere, <lb/>
and white is the kind <lb/>
wanted. <lb/>
presented tho republican court <lb/>
The ceremonies took the <lb/>
spacious hall of the new court <lb/>
house, which was tastefully <lb/>
orated with flowers, flags, and <lb/>
evergreens. After a few <lb/>
introductory remarks by <lb/>
Mayor Battle, the ladies <lb/>
and gentlemen of the court, in <lb/>
s of olden were <lb/>
ushered tho room and took <lb/>
positions on either side of a dais, <lb/>
General and Lady Washing- <lb/>
ton followed and took places on <lb/>
the platform, the latter in <lb/>
attire. <lb/>
OLD <lb/>
Under strains of sweet music <lb/>
from the Italian band, the <lb/>
formally presented themselves <lb/>
and were received in the most <lb/>
dignified and courtly manner, <lb/>
tho approved regime. Then <lb/>
the court minuet was by <lb/>
ten couples of the city's elite <lb/>
The Spangled and <lb/>
Old North were <lb/>
sung by thirty trained voices; a <lb/>
solo followed, and then a flower <lb/>
cc by young ladies in fancy <lb/>
each bearing a colored <lb/>
and a basket of flowers. <lb/>
Supper ensued, and the novel <lb/>
affair concluded with the <lb/>
Virginia which nearly <lb/>
every one present participated. <lb/>
The occasion was most enjoyable <lb/>
and the instructive <lb/>
and impressive. Next morning, <lb/>
after the night <lb/>
of the Earl of Craven, <lb/>
from whom the county was named, <lb/>
and these were followed by thrifty <lb/>
Huguenots and Scotch <lb/>
in after years. Her <lb/>
had always beep, well to do. <lb/>
From 1738 until 1747 it the <lb/>
seat of the provincial government <lb/>
and subsequently, in 1777, of the <lb/>
State Legislature, and from <lb/>
when Sir Arthur Dobbs, the first <lb/>
Governor, took up his <lb/>
residence there until the <lb/>
of tho pompous Lord Tryon <lb/>
in 1771 it was the of re- <lb/>
beauty, and groat dis- <lb/>
1791, not only Gen- <lb/>
Washington, but his com- <lb/>
patriot-. General Greene, honored <lb/>
it with a visit, holding republican <lb/>
levees at the house of the patriot, <lb/>
John Stanly, as above stated, to <lb/>
whom the country was but <lb/>
debtor for in good <lb/>
money loaned in its hour of need <lb/>
And subsequently <lb/>
broke bread at tho <lb/>
residence of Judge <lb/>
on the east front, which still <lb/>
IX ENVIABLE PLACES. <lb/>
During the Revolution several <lb/>
wealthy citizens fitted out <lb/>
and brought in much prize <lb/>
money; and atone time, during the <lb/>
flush period of her West India <lb/>
trade, no less than forty square-rig <lb/>
vessels and seventy coasters <lb/>
were owned and employed <lb/>
Even to this day many of the <lb/>
private dwellings re- <lb/>
main, crowned with the railed <lb/>
platforms, built between the <lb/>
chimneys, which served as look- <lb/>
outs for incoming argosies. In- <lb/>
deed New Berne's lines have <lb/>
always fallen in enviable places- <lb/>
The tenor of her life has been as <lb/>
smooth the flow of the broad <lb/>
on her eastern front. <lb/>
Even the civil war did not mar her <lb/>
actual beauty. a wisp of <lb/>
her charming frontage was dis- <lb/>
arranged. Only a few suburban <lb/>
residences on the Trent, which <lb/>
chanced to be within tho lines of <lb/>
investment, were destroyed, while <lb/>
tho earthworks, gracefully <lb/>
which environ the <lb/>
city, constitute no eyesore, but, <lb/>
brush-grown and tapestried with <lb/>
and sweet serve <lb/>
to vary the whilom monotony of <lb/>
a dead level traced with rows of <lb/>
garden peas and cabbage <lb/>
in Southern <lb/>
States Magazine. <lb/>
W, <lb/>
Rev. Dr. F. L. REID <lb/>
AS <lb/>
CHRISTIAN <lb/>
publish In till- throe <lb/>
., at to tho <lb/>
by that tho <lb/>
Its Is .-m-.,. y m-v-el- <lb/>
h . It In our <lb/>
to pretty to It, and <lb/>
we had of <lb/>
to Justify us Id <lb/>
ft in I. it-o <lb/>
to We on <lb/>
of our has made almost <lb/>
new man, physically of him. We know <lb/>
others who hare It thoroughly, and <lb/>
speak In the praise of It, We <lb/>
every afflicted person who can would do well <lb/>
to Eire It r. <lb/>
Such testimony Is ab- <lb/>
unimpeachable <lb/>
If you desire to <lb/>
i gate further, write to us. <lb/>
Cure <lb/>
ATLANTIC CO., <lb/>
D. C. SI <lb/>
wills U absolutely tin <lb/>
us a purifier strength- <lb/>
It is I spring <lb/>
medicine. Try it. <lb/>
Dollars, and in the event that no <lb/>
owner can be found, or the owner <lb/>
after notice neglects or to <lb/>
confine dog, the police shall <lb/>
kill or destroy the same, and this <lb/>
last clause shall not be construed <lb/>
to relieve the owner or keeper <lb/>
from penalty herein imposed. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
It shall be the duty of all land <lb/>
owners to put and keep in good <lb/>
repair tho sidewalks adjoining <lb/>
their property, and if any one <lb/>
shall fail to do so after being no- <lb/>
by the street committee of <lb/>
the Town, it shall be the duty <lb/>
said committee to have the <lb/>
work done and to charge <lb/>
the thereof to such land <lb/>
owner, and if such owner fails to <lb/>
pay the same thirty days, <lb/>
lie or she shall pay a fine of <lb/>
double such charge. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
The street and drains <lb/>
shall be kept up by the Town <lb/>
of the street <lb/>
committee and paid for out of the <lb/>
the treasury. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Any person who shall keep any <lb/>
shop or store open on Sunday <lb/>
shall to a fine of Ten <lb/>
Dollars. Provided, that this does <lb/>
not apply to drug stores, and ice <lb/>
dealers, sales for burial put- <lb/>
poses. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
Section That any <lb/>
keeping a disorderly shall <lb/>
be to a of Twenty <lb/>
Dollars, and the occupants of any <lb/>
disorderly house or house of ill <lb/>
fame, who shall refuse to open <lb/>
the door of the same to tho Town <lb/>
Officer when commanded so <lb/>
in his official capacity, shall <lb/>
subject to n tine Twenty Dollars. <lb/>
Sec. 2- That any female per- <lb/>
son of suspicious virtue found <lb/>
loitering around tho streets by <lb/>
the Town Officer shall be subject <lb/>
to a fine of Five Dollars. <lb/>
any such female so found loiter- <lb/>
around the streets <lb/>
be guilty. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
All residents of the <lb/>
Town of Greenville are hereby <lb/>
forbidden entering any bar-room <lb/>
or unless employed there- <lb/>
in, under a penalty of Two <lb/>
for each <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
That any engineer or other <lb/>
officer of a railroad company <lb/>
which shall run any train through <lb/>
the Town a speed exceeding <lb/>
ten miles per hour, or shall fail <lb/>
to ring the bell while running in <lb/>
the Town, or shall permit any <lb/>
train to stop across the street for <lb/>
a longer time than ten minutes, <lb/>
shah subject to a fine of Ten <lb/>
Dollars. <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
That any one keeping a hog <lb/>
pen within bundled of <lb/>
any occupied building, after due <lb/>
notice of objection by the <lb/>
pant of the Building shall sub- <lb/>
to a of Dollar for <lb/>
remain <lb/>
IT COMES TO- <lb/>
STATIONERY <lb/>
You miss it time if you fail to <lb/>
-what you want in this line at <lb/>
make a specialty of this class of goods and if <lb/>
Quantity <lb/>
count for anything with yon, come to us. <lb/>
a pack up <lb/>
Noe Paper a quite up. <lb/>
Letter, Fools Cap and <lb/>
Legal Cap equally low. <lb/>
from cent up. <lb/>
cents per <lb/>
dozen up. <lb/>
Lend Pencils doz. up. <lb/>
Pen Points in cents <lb/>
i per dozen up. <lb/>
A FEW SPECIALTIES <lb/>
are agents for A M <lb/>
the very beat for school and <lb/>
m- <lb/>
INKS, <lb/>
Care ts, and obtained and n Pat-J <lb/>
cm b I r Et <lb/>
our u. a. <lb/>
i c on in ks <lb/>
mow Washington. <lb/>
Stud model, or photo., will <lb/>
don. advise. or not, tree <lb/>
doe till patent a <lb/>
a How to Obtain <lb/>
oil of the U. S. and foreign J <lb/>
free, <lb/>
or. D-f <lb/>
tis Cure all Skin <lb/>
Tills has been In use <lb/>
and wherever know ha <lb/>
Steady demand. It has been en <lb/>
lending physicians all <lb/>
and I ins effected cures <lb/>
. oilier with the attention <lb/>
be experienced physicians, <lb/>
far is <lb/>
and the high reputation <lb/>
U obtained Is owing entirely <lb/>
j- r- v, as but lit lie ha <lb/>
v en before th <lb/>
One of this Ointment will <lb/>
ii tn y on receipt of <lb/>
promptly St <lb/>
all orders and <lb/>
to <lb/>
r- <lb/>
WOMB <lb/>
afflicted and remain so, sin <lb/>
ring untold miseries from a <lb/>
ii delicacy they cannot overcome. <lb/>
FEMALE REGULATOR. <lb/>
by stimulating and arousing to <lb/>
healthy action all her organs, <lb/>
It causes health to bloom on th <lb/>
cheek, and joy to reign <lb/>
the frame. It never fails to core. <lb/>
He Bed mm <lb/>
hat treatment of<lb/>
i. . <lb/>
N. <lb/>
CO., <lb/>
Manifold <lb/>
Disorders <lb/>
A-e y an impure and fan- <lb/>
of the blood. MM <lb/>
impurities, if not develop Into i <lb/>
serious mAladies, such as <lb/>
SCROFULA, <lb/>
RHEUMATISM <lb/>
an diseases. To cure <lb/>
i rt , <lb/>
free from any ingredient, <lb/>
J purely vegetable. Such <lb/>
It all <lb/>
f rot-1 the blood r d t Eh- <lb/>
the of <lb/>
c the forms dis- <lb/>
ease have b-n <lb/>
Curd h-j S. S. S, <lb/>
Tr- I <lb/>
X CO., Atlanta, Ga. <lb/>
f as <lb/>
r, <lb/>
purposes. Our beats <lb/>
on the market Our Diamond <lb/>
and Magic will mend anything but broken <lb/>
hearts. <lb/>
Every business man should have a A O <lb/>
KER <lb/>
last a life and are sold nowhere in <lb/>
town. <lb/>
Our Box Paper for polite correspondence are <lb/>
th prettiest in town. We also keep Mourning <lb/>
Paper. Then we Slates, Blank Books, <lb/>
Memorandum Books, Time Books, Erasers, Rub- <lb/>
Bands, Pencil Holder. Automatic Pencils, <lb/>
Sponge Cups, Ink Stands, Paper Cutters, Book <lb/>
Marks, Pen Holders and lots of other things- <lb/>
BOOKS AND NOVELS. <lb/>
If you want, anything to read come look over <lb/>
our supply. book not on hand will or- <lb/>
for you. <lb/>
Now remember tho tho only place <lb/>
at which you can got these goods at such low <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
STORK. <lb/>
shall <lb/>
The render of this paper will be pleas- <lb/>
ed to learn that is at least one <lb/>
dreaded that has been <lb/>
lo cure in its stages and that is <lb/>
Catarrh, Hall's Cure is the <lb/>
only positive c known to tho medical <lb/>
fraternity. Catarrh being a <lb/>
n constitutional <lb/>
treatment. Catarrh Cure Is <lb/>
taken internally, directly en the <lb/>
blood and of the sys- <lb/>
of visitation, a item, thereby the foundation <lb/>
. , ., I of the disease, and the patient <lb/>
select party of horse escorted Dy up the <lb/>
guest out of town,; and nature in doing its <lb/>
Ma . The proprietors s <lb/>
In Its curative powers, that II <lb/>
and the President continued his <lb/>
tour. His diary mentions <lb/>
that at seventy ladies <lb/>
met him on horseback and the <lb/>
ovations went on. <lb/>
NOW A <lb/>
New at this time was a <lb/>
Two Lives <lb/>
Mrs- Thomas, of <lb/>
III., was told by her doctors she <lb/>
had and that was <lb/>
no hope for lies but two of Dr, <lb/>
King's New Discovery com pie cured <lb/>
her and she says It saved her life. <lb/>
The. peers. Florida San Fran- <lb/>
Buffered from a dreadful cold, <lb/>
Consumption, tried without <lb/>
result raw then bought one <lb/>
bottle of New <lb/>
in two weeks was cured. He m <lb/>
It of <lb/>
samples, prove the won- <lb/>
efficacy I In <lb/>
and Free trial bottle at <lb/>
John Drug Store. Regular <lb/>
size and <lb/>
offer One Dollars any <lb/>
that It to ems. Send for Hat of <lb/>
Address, F. J. A CO., <lb/>
Sol I by Druggist, Toledo, O <lb/>
best Salve In the world for Cut <lb/>
Salt <lb/>
Fever Sores, Chapped <lb/>
Chilblains, Corns, and <lb/>
and positively cures Files, or no <lb/>
pay required. It B guaranteed la give <lb/>
P inn or money refunded <lb/>
Price cents par For sale by <lb/>
John b Wooten, <lb/>
HERBERT <lb/>
TONSORIAL <lb/>
Under Opera e, <lb/>
; N. C. <lb/>
Call In when you want good <lb/>
each day the <lb/>
after such<lb/>
All property owners are hereby <lb/>
required to their gates hung <lb/>
so as to on the inside of <lb/>
their lots and any property owner <lb/>
having a gate Dinged so as to <lb/>
open on t sidewalk and failing <lb/>
b name after three days <lb/>
notice shall to a lino of <lb/>
One Dollar for each day or part <lb/>
of a day that the gate is so allow- <lb/>
ed to n main. , <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
It is hereby declared unlawful <lb/>
for v person or persons owning <lb/>
a building in the thickly settled <lb/>
portions of the town to allow such <lb/>
. to in such bad <lb/>
repair as to endanger from fire <lb/>
that Lie. neighboring buildings <lb/>
and any net-son or persons owning <lb/>
such in bad repair upon <lb/>
failing to repair tho thirty <lb/>
days after being notified to do so <lb/>
shad pay a fine of Twenty-five <lb/>
Dollars and the Board of Conn- <lb/>
shall condemn such build- <lb/>
cause it to be <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
It is hereby declared unlawful <lb/>
for any person to ride a bicycle <lb/>
on tho sidewalks of Evans street <lb/>
between the Court House and <lb/>
Five Points or to ride on any <lb/>
sidewalk of tho Town after <lb/>
night without a lighted lantern, <lb/>
and in all on tho bicycle rider <lb/>
give of way to <lb/>
A violating <lb/>
Ordinance shall pay a lino of <lb/>
Five Dollars for each <lb/>
Ordinance <lb/>
That the before whom <lb/>
action for of any <lb/>
Town Ordinance may be tried, <lb/>
may after due consideration of, <lb/>
an judgment Laving been en- <lb/>
against such offender, <lb/>
for violating or <lb/>
Ordinances of said Town of <lb/>
Greenville, have power to re- <lb/>
duce or hue imposed <lb/>
therein to a sum not loss than one <lb/>
penny costs. <lb/>
The Is a true cop, of <lb/>
the Ordinances for the govern <lb/>
of the Town of Green <lb/>
from and after the 15th day of <lb/>
as passed and ratified <lb/>
by tho Board of <lb/>
for Town of <lb/>
thin 1st day of June, <lb/>
J. L. FLEMING, <lb/>
G E. HARRIS, Mayor. <lb/>
Clerk- <lb/>
DOUGLAS <lb/>
3.50 Dress Shoe. <lb/>
Soles, <lb/>
for Workingmen. <lb/>
1.70 for Boys. <lb/>
AND MISSES, <lb/>
, 82.50 <lb/>
if hot dealer <lb/>
j on W. I-. <lb/>
hoer At B <lb/>
-r nays he has them with- <lb/>
out name <lb/>
n tit bottom, pat him <lb/>
down as a f <lb/>
Shoe are and belief <lb/>
advertised than oilier make. OM pair and be con- <lb/>
W. L. name price on the bottom, which <lb/>
, saves thousand of to those who wear them, <lb/>
W. I-. I . Shoes rain customers, which helps to <lb/>
r full line of . . tr, at m profit. <lb/>
ire . -of <lb/>
upon r <lb/>
BOWELL, CO., Greenville. <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS BRO., Farmville N. C. <lb/>
Every Man <lb/>
A Capitalist. <lb/>
You can become a capitalist at <lb/>
once by laying by a small part of <lb/>
your yearly income and <lb/>
it in a policy of the <lb/>
Equitable Life <lb/>
For you can instantly <lb/>
cure a capital of for <lb/>
a capital of thus <lb/>
acquiring an estate which you <lb/>
may leave to your heirs, or re- <lb/>
as a fund for your own <lb/>
support in old if your life <lb/>
be prolonged. <lb/>
Such a step will prompt you <lb/>
to save, will strengthen your <lb/>
credit, will increase your con- <lb/>
will preserve you from <lb/>
care and will give you lasting <lb/>
satisfaction <lb/>
The Wan is <lb/>
The Security Absolute. <lb/>
It is the perfect development <lb/>
of life policy. To-day is <lb/>
the right time to get facts and <lb/>
Address <lb/>
W. J. Manager, <lb/>
For the <lb/>
ROCK HILL. C <lb/>
LOTION LINE.<lb/>
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb/>
leave Washington for <lb/>
ville and touching at all <lb/>
on Tar <lb/>
and Friday at A. M. <lb/>
Tarboro at A if. <lb/>
Thursdays and Saturdays <lb/>
Greenville A. M. same day. <lb/>
These rt are subject to t ago of <lb/>
water on Tar River. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
erg of The Norfolk, and Wash- <lb/>
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore <lb/>
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb/>
Shippers should order their <lb/>
marked via Dominion Iron <lb/>
New York. from <lb/>
Norfolk A <lb/>
more Steamboat from <lb/>
more. S Miners from <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. SON. <lb/>
Agent, <lb/>
Washington N. <lb/>
Agent, <lb/>
Greenville, N C. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>