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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 11 July 1894</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
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          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18940711</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 11 July 1894</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
          <dc:creator></dc:creator>
          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18940711</dc:date>
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                <p>
ct <lb />
DO <lb />
NO <lb />
That the place to <lb />
Buy your <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
STATIONERY <lb />
IS <lb />
AT <lb />
Reflector Bookstore. <lb />
STATE NEWS <lb />
Things Mentioned in our Stale Ex- <lb />
changes that are of Interest. <lb />
The Cream of the News <lb />
Mr. S- H. Wiley, a banker of <lb />
Salisbury and wealthiest <lb />
of that town, dropped dead <lb />
evening last week. <lb />
Five prisoners broke of <lb />
county jail last Friday <lb />
night One of the number was in <lb />
for robbing and burning; a <lb />
at <lb />
Prof. Collins Denny was last <lb />
week elected President of Trinity <lb />
College- He at present fills an <lb />
important chair in the <lb />
University at Nashville, Tenn. <lb />
The Charlotte News says that <lb />
there is an epidemic among the <lb />
hogs in Mecklenburg, but it is <lb />
not the cholera. The hog doctors <lb />
can do nothing with the disease. <lb />
During the storm of last Thurs- <lb />
day afternoon Mr. Jno. <lb />
son was struck instantly kill- <lb />
ed by at his home near <lb />
Maiden, says the Gastonia <lb />
There are thirty-six <lb />
of the presidential class in North <lb />
Carolina. The salaries of some <lb />
are changed. <lb />
to ; Concord, <lb />
to Shelby, <lb />
to Statesville, to <lb />
The New Journal states <lb />
that the railroad debt of Carteret <lb />
county, which has given that <lb />
county so much trouble for so <lb />
many years, has at length been <lb />
amicably adjusted, and the first <lb />
payment on the debt has been <lb />
made- <lb />
Scotland Neck Re- <lb />
a white infant was one <lb />
night left at the door of Fannie <lb />
Smith, a colored woman living in <lb />
the upper section of the county- <lb />
She took it to the county home <lb />
where it is being cared for and is <lb />
doing well. <lb />
The railroad commission has <lb />
completed the assessment of all <lb />
the railroads in the State, amount- <lb />
to an increase <lb />
of The assessed value <lb />
of the steamship lines is <lb />
a decrease of that of the <lb />
telegraph companies <lb />
Pittsboro Master <lb />
Prentiss the year-old <lb />
son of Mr- A. P- Terry, of this <lb />
place, is the champion hawk killer. <lb />
He has killed, this season, with <lb />
a breech loading <lb />
shot gun, hawks, besides de- <lb />
quite a number of nests- <lb />
He killed some of them flying. <lb />
A few nights ago minks visited <lb />
the chicken roost of Mr- <lb />
Ray, about a mile and a half <lb />
southeast of he e, and killed <lb />
half grown chickens <lb />
and carried to their den on <lb />
the backs of a creek. A short <lb />
time several were killed <lb />
in the same <lb />
Gleaner. <lb />
The trustees of the Baptist <lb />
State Female university have <lb />
accepted the plans A- G- Bauer, <lb />
of Raleigh, f main building <lb />
there It is to have feet <lb />
frontage. The central building is <lb />
deep, with wings feet <lb />
deep. The material is brick i the <lb />
cost It is proposed that <lb />
work shall begin next autumn- <lb />
Pittsboro Mr. L D <lb />
Holland, of township, <lb />
informs us that has a bunch <lb />
oats that contains beads and <lb />
that will average grains to <lb />
tho head, that is the product of <lb />
one grain- This <lb />
to one sown- Mr. <lb />
Holland these are not <lb />
party or grumbler's either. <lb />
The Raleigh of <lb />
the Wilmington Messenger <lb />
that in the Wake county jail are <lb />
two insane twins- <lb />
The <lb />
Reflector, i <lb />
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIII. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY h, 1894. <lb />
joints <lb />
Is the to find the <lb />
REFLECTOR OFFICE <lb />
Bring along ONE DOLLAR and <lb />
get your Home Paper a year- <lb />
NO. <lb />
f This Office for Job Printing <lb />
BRIGHTENING SKIES. <lb />
The reports from all parts of <lb />
the State touching the condition <lb />
of political affairs fire cheering. <lb />
Chairman Simmons says the <lb />
Democratic party is in better <lb />
shape than it was at this time in <lb />
1892- We have lately met gen- <lb />
from every section of the <lb />
State and the news they give is <lb />
the Populist party is <lb />
not dissatisfied Demo- <lb />
are becoming better <lb />
and there is an awakening <lb />
all along the line. <lb />
It is a good time now, while the <lb />
blood is cool, for me -i to look at <lb />
facts as they are and to consider <lb />
the probable advantage of a <lb />
change of administration in either <lb />
Nation or State. It is quite true <lb />
that the national Democratic ad <lb />
ministration has not been able <lb />
to checK the panic, with its <lb />
loss in values, which began <lb />
in the winter of 1890-91, <lb />
from the consequences of which, <lb />
though it has passed the acute <lb />
stage, the country continues to <lb />
suffer. It needs, however, to be <lb />
borne constantly in mind that this <lb />
panic began under a Republican <lb />
administration, that the Treasury <lb />
was depleted under a Republican <lb />
administration, and that the last <lb />
recommendation to Congress of <lb />
the last Republican Secretary of <lb />
the Treasury was that authority <lb />
be given him to issue gold bonds. <lb />
This was not given and the bonds <lb />
were not issued for the reason <lb />
that it was desired to shoulder <lb />
this load off on the Democratic <lb />
party, which had at that time <lb />
been voted into power but had <lb />
not taken possession, and make <lb />
it bear the odium of it- It is true <lb />
as we have said, that the Dem- <lb />
party has not been able <lb />
to raise prices again. It is also <lb />
true that Congress and the <lb />
dent have brought disappoint- <lb />
to the people in more mat- <lb />
than one. Bat what have <lb />
they to hope from the Republican <lb />
party and why should they want <lb />
it in power Surely we <lb />
have had enough of Republican- <lb />
ism to last a life-time, and the <lb />
choice, when we come to select a <lb />
governing power, lies between <lb />
these two Democrat <lb />
and the Republican- Besides <lb />
all this, Congress is still in <lb />
; its work is not yet before <lb />
the country ; we may in reason <lb />
hope that when it is, affairs will <lb />
take on a different aspect. <lb />
As to our State matters, there <lb />
is no room for argument The <lb />
solid white men of the State, <lb />
country and town, the tax-pay- <lb />
already have them in hand <lb />
and there is no re. why they <lb />
should surrender control. We <lb />
could not have better government <lb />
in the State and counties than we <lb />
now have, or if we could the <lb />
Democratic party is the one to <lb />
make the improvement. Certainly <lb />
no other party could improve I <lb />
upon ft. The sway of <lb />
in North Carolina is not <lb />
a fragrant memory; Populism <lb />
has brought nothing but trouble <lb />
to the States which have toyed <lb />
with it i and there is no ground <lb />
for the expectation that this <lb />
combination would bring us any- <lb />
thing but misery. <lb />
The interest of the people is <lb />
plain. They have but to meet <lb />
together this year, as heretofore, <lb />
in their primary and higher con- <lb />
and nominate for office <lb />
the men of their choice, and then <lb />
them- The Democratic <lb />
party has shown its capacity to <lb />
North Carolina and no <lb />
other ever has. It has the <lb />
confidence of the people because <lb />
it deserves to have it, and it has <lb />
but to pursue its usual policy <lb />
of nominating good and <lb />
men for the officers and the <lb />
voters will, as heretofore, do the <lb />
rest There is nothing wrong <lb />
I with the Democratic party and <lb />
people never yet dislodged <lb />
from a party which <lb />
On the same day they lost their to do do right by <lb />
reason- They have never spoken <lb />
since- Each doe, what the <lb />
other at the same <lb />
even the one docs not <lb />
the It is a case. <lb />
The men were brought from <lb />
Middle Creek township, Wake <lb />
county <lb />
The best re tn the world for Cuts, <lb />
Brine, Ulcers, Silt Rheum, <lb />
Fever Sure. Chapped Hands, <lb />
all <lb />
positively cares Pile . or no <lb />
pay an to <lb />
perfect money I <lb />
Prior a its per hex. For sale by <lb />
them Let not faint <lb />
any Democrat. The <lb />
Democratic lion is even now <lb />
and stretching himself. <lb />
In time he will pounce upon <lb />
his Landmark. <lb />
The total tenement- <lb />
house in the twenty-four wards of <lb />
New York city is with a <lb />
population an <lb />
of to each house. Of <lb />
this are <lb />
years of age are <lb />
rear tenements, with a population I <lb />
c of this <lb />
THE FADED JACKET OF GRAY. <lb />
A Poem in Prose that the <lb />
Heart. <lb />
Tho following poem in prose <lb />
was written by Smith Clayton, of <lb />
Georgia <lb />
neigh of the iron horse <lb />
and the song of the spindle <lb />
mingle merrily, and on eagle <lb />
wing, the new South sweeps to a <lb />
great and glorious future; while <lb />
in her weeds, with sad face and <lb />
heart, the old South bends <lb />
lovingly over the sacred ruins of <lb />
a brave but bitter past But the <lb />
South is still the South and the <lb />
grief of the old shall never be <lb />
forgotten in the grandeur of the <lb />
new, for between the two there <lb />
lies a sweet memorial which <lb />
binds our hearts to the past, e'en <lb />
while our hands build the future- <lb />
Faded Jacket of Gray <lb />
The violet breath is not sweeter <lb />
than the memories by which it is <lb />
shimmering stars <lb />
are not more splendid than the <lb />
glory amid which it was folded <lb />
Bring it forth to day. With gen <lb />
tie hands smooth out these <lb />
folds A thing inanimate, <lb />
it yet speaks with most eloquent <lb />
tongue- Its front tells of <lb />
the dust of righteous battle, and <lb />
its ragged edges voice the cruel <lb />
scars of vanquished veterans. It <lb />
tells the solemn but grand story <lb />
of thousands of bright swords <lb />
which sprang from their scabbards <lb />
at the call of duty. It tells <lb />
of the fiery stubborn <lb />
bleeding <lb />
dead adroit retreat <lb />
the muffled sable <lb />
plume nodding above these God- <lb />
like men who gave, and gladly <lb />
gave, all that is best in life <lb />
and life itself, for liberty <lb />
Every button has its memory, <lb />
both dark and bright; every <lb />
seam images some patriot's <lb />
daring deed ; its very silence is <lb />
the pathos of the honored <lb />
this land of the South the <lb />
Faded Jacket of Gray is a com- <lb />
heritage freighted with a <lb />
common woe. It hangs alike in <lb />
the hut on the hillside and in the <lb />
mansion of the city- In many, <lb />
alas how many homes, is it <lb />
hung upon the vacant chair, <lb />
never more to grace the form <lb />
long ago filled a Southern <lb />
soldier's grave I Its rustle is the <lb />
orphans plaintive cry, and o'er <lb />
its blight is breathed the widow's <lb />
prayer I <lb />
and worn I Yes, but the <lb />
gaudiest hue which tints the arch <lb />
of Heaven is not more bright <lb />
than this same dim shade which <lb />
dims our eyes to day, and the <lb />
tooth of Time but makes nearer <lb />
and dearer the good and true <lb />
which is newness proudly decked- <lb />
and threadbare What <lb />
matter Honor wore it, love <lb />
folded it away, grief stands <lb />
Sad, sweet <lb />
but still young, worn and yet new <lb />
you live in the glory of a grand <lb />
principle immortal as the white- <lb />
winged seraphs which circle the <lb />
great white throne <lb />
at it and the majestic <lb />
farm of Jackson rises to view; <lb />
look at ii. and the calm, noble <lb />
face of Lee peers kindly upon <lb />
yon from the buttons and the <lb />
braid; mother, look at it, and the <lb />
pale face of your dear son comes <lb />
back from a soldier's grave; son, <lb />
gaze upon it, and the honored <lb />
of your dead father seems <lb />
to rise from the earth; wife, look <lb />
upon it and the fond husband <lb />
who exchanged it for a shroud is <lb />
once more before you; sister, look <lb />
upon it and once again you seem <lb />
to see the gentle face of your loved <lb />
and long-lost brother Oh, <lb />
Hope Oh, blessed <lb />
Be they or dead, all <lb />
honor to men who wore the Faded <lb />
Jacket of Gray. Palsied be the <lb />
hand that would strike a single <lb />
star from the crown of their ever <lb />
brightening fame <lb />
braver bled for a brighter land. <lb />
No land had a cause more <lb />
grand. <lb />
Nor cause a chief like Lee f <lb />
HABITS OF PRESIDENTS. <lb />
The Ton of Life at the White House <lb />
Differ With Us Various Occupants. <lb />
General Grant brought <lb />
camp into the White House. <lb />
Mr. Hayes had lived in Wash- <lb />
as a representative at a <lb />
hotel or a boarding-house. <lb />
General Garfield had settled in <lb />
the capital in a house of his own, <lb />
and had enjoyed the kind of <lb />
social life that may be had any- <lb />
where in this country, and that <lb />
runs to literary clubs that are <lb />
formed to facilitate the escape of <lb />
unpublished manuscripts. To <lb />
encourage talent and literary am- <lb />
was a great of <lb />
the President, whose murder cut <lb />
short the that would have <lb />
been marked by more geniality <lb />
and agreeable talk than is usual <lb />
at the White House. <lb />
Mr. Arthur brought city <lb />
toms manners with him. <lb />
People who did not know him <lb />
were greatly mistaken in him. <lb />
There had been a good deal of <lb />
refinement and elegance in Mr. <lb />
Arthur's home, and its influence <lb />
made the White House more of <lb />
a social than it had been <lb />
before or than it has been since. <lb />
Then came Mr. Harrison, who <lb />
had passed six years in the Sen <lb />
ate and a Washington boarding- <lb />
house, and Mr- Cleveland, who <lb />
went to the Capitol a bachelor, <lb />
having lived most of his life in <lb />
in a Buffalo business <lb />
block. <lb />
None of these men adopted the <lb />
manners and customs of court <lb />
lite, with the exception of Mr. <lb />
Arthur, who insisted that those <lb />
with whom he came in contact <lb />
should pay his office a respect <lb />
something more than the formal <lb />
decent respect of good manners. <lb />
The rest knew nothing of the <lb />
rules which Washington society <lb />
had laid down for its own and <lb />
their guidance, and which were <lb />
as conflicting as the various inter- <lb />
that invented and frequently <lb />
modified them- Moreover, they <lb />
have seemed to care a good deal <lb />
less. They or their wives or <lb />
their secretaries studied up the <lb />
necessary regulations that govern <lb />
the intercourse between the head <lb />
of the nation and the diplomatic <lb />
representative of foreign powers- <lb />
And although Mr- Jefferson in- <lb />
on taking to dinner <lb />
what woman lie would, regardless <lb />
of her husband's rank, modern <lb />
Presidents have done their best <lb />
to observe the proprieties in this <lb />
Magazine. <lb />
PRINCIPLES FIRST, LAST. <lb />
Sam Jones on Third Party ism. <lb />
i being Jive years- <lb />
Specimen Casts. <lb />
S. H. Clifford, New Wis., was <lb />
troubled with Neuralgia and <lb />
his Stomach was disordered, his <lb />
was affected to an alarming de- <lb />
appetite fell away, and he was <lb />
terribly reduced in flesh and <lb />
Three bottles of Electric Bitters cured <lb />
him. <lb />
Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, <lb />
had a run nine on hie leg of eight <lb />
Used three bottles of <lb />
Bitters and seven boxes of <lb />
and hi leg is <lb />
and John Sneaker, <lb />
ha, O. had five sores on bis <lb />
leg, said lie was incurable. <lb />
C bottle Electric Bitters and one box <lb />
Buckley's Salve cured him en- <lb />
Sold by J. L. Drug <lb />
The third party, or party of <lb />
the third part, or whatever you <lb />
may call it may go to heaven, <lb />
but they'll never get to Washing- <lb />
ton. It's not on the way. Wash- Oxford ledger, <lb />
is the wickedest place on <lb />
earth. It is the home of the <lb />
devil. The average democratic <lb />
and republican politicians are <lb />
little better than rascals, but the <lb />
third party is a fool. You can re- <lb />
form a rascal, but did yon ever <lb />
try to monkey with a fool <lb />
They want to borrow money <lb />
from the government at per <lb />
cent when the government is now <lb />
borrowing at We hear a great <lb />
deal fool talk about the rich man <lb />
getting richer and the poorer <lb />
under present law. <lb />
There never was a greater lie, <lb />
and I'll prove it. There is <lb />
the matter with the law. It's <lb />
the man that's at fault. There's <lb />
a on that side of the house <lb />
makes twenty a year. <lb />
Here's a little pettifogger whose <lb />
family are starving. The law is <lb />
not to blame. Here's a physician <lb />
making ten thousand a year. <lb />
There is a little doctor over on <lb />
the other corner that can't make <lb />
his salt. The law is not to blame. <lb />
I preach nearly every day to <lb />
people, and there's a little preach- <lb />
sitting behind me that can't <lb />
average The trouble is not <lb />
in the law, brother, it's in your <lb />
noggin. <lb />
The difference is organic If <lb />
ail the wealth in the United States <lb />
were divided out to-day each man <lb />
would get about and in <lb />
less than six months some fellows <lb />
would riding in palace cars <lb />
and others would be walking <lb />
cross-ties and howling for another <lb />
d ivy.-From the Record <lb />
Any man who kicks himself off <lb />
the Democratic platform makes <lb />
an egregious mistake- Any Dem- <lb />
who kicks himself out of <lb />
the party because Sam Slick or <lb />
Tim Titmouse or Bush <lb />
whacker failed to vote as he <lb />
pledged himself is a very wise <lb />
man, particularly if he lives in <lb />
North Carolina where the State <lb />
government and the county gov- <lb />
and popular education <lb />
are all involved. Despise if you <lb />
will lbs men who deceive you. <lb />
but do not desert your principles, <lb />
hoary with time, sanctioned by <lb />
the wisdom of the fathers, and <lb />
tested by long experience. If <lb />
you cannot get now, or at once, <lb />
all you need, all you desire, all <lb />
you demanded, take a part now <lb />
and prepare to get more next <lb />
time. Put men in office who will <lb />
act honestly and stand <lb />
up to all the laws of the <lb />
party, every pledge in letter and <lb />
spirit. Principles are tho things <lb />
to fight for. Men are <lb />
as the deceived <lb />
key held. If the men fail you the <lb />
principles will not, for they are <lb />
bod rock and survived many <lb />
changes and ordeals. Some <lb />
editor well says the <lb />
of some of <lb />
our leaders may forget the com <lb />
people, but. like the French <lb />
people, we are wedded to the <lb />
Democratic though <lb />
internal commotions amounting <lb />
almost to revolution or even <lb />
itself may threaten our <lb />
progress, still, through all we <lb />
shall live to see our principle <lb />
With a true Democrat it is <lb />
always and everywhere principles <lb />
first, last, everywhere every- <lb />
how. Lock shields and fight to <lb />
the <lb />
Politics of Farming. <lb />
A conservative business man, <lb />
who has anything to say <lb />
about politics and has made <lb />
money, got into a <lb />
with a rabid Vance of <lb />
the blood and thunder species on <lb />
Mon lay last. <lb />
He said as this was election <lb />
year he looked for poor crops <lb />
cause the farmers would neglect <lb />
their crops for politics. <lb />
The replied, is the <lb />
sacred duty of every one these <lb />
times of uncertainty to look after <lb />
politics first and crops <lb />
This is part of the cause of the <lb />
the are <lb />
such a howl about. <lb />
We have seen this same Third- <lb />
go out of town with a bale of <lb />
hey and a chunk of fat meat in <lb />
his one-horse wagon, which goes <lb />
to prove the assertion he made. <lb />
What Bothers Him. <lb />
When a feller goes <lb />
a hit to watt ; <lb />
he. spends time <lb />
Vast <lb />
The papers have stated that the <lb />
managers in Alabama are <lb />
raising campaign money in the <lb />
Northern and Eastern cities. The <lb />
public will recall the exposure of <lb />
a letter written last spring by <lb />
Senator Hoar, Massachusetts, <lb />
to the Home Market Club, of <lb />
Boston, urging it to assist <lb />
in his fight. To sure the pro- <lb />
industries of the North and <lb />
East should help out the <lb />
lists- It was the example of gov- <lb />
dealing with these gentry <lb />
that gave the Populists their start <lb />
in life. They saw the govern- <lb />
coddling a lot of <lb />
and making the people <lb />
pay their support and they <lb />
naturally concluded that if the <lb />
government was to take care of <lb />
one class after this fashion, it <lb />
should take care of another by is- <lb />
suing it per capita and <lb />
sub-Treasuries where <lb />
nips, etc, could be put in hock <lb />
and money raised on them. <lb />
tho Eastern manufacturers <lb />
ought to cough up all the money <lb />
the Southern and Western <lb />
lists need for campaign purposes. <lb />
There must be a natural bond of <lb />
sympathy between the protected <lb />
interest and the Populists They <lb />
are exactly the same lay <lb />
Charlotte Chronicle <lb />
GOVERNOR JARVIS MAKES HIS <lb />
MARK. <lb />
Washington, July 2-If the <lb />
Senate ever decides to break <lb />
away from the ancient rules <lb />
which now prevail in that body <lb />
and adopt closure Senator Jarvis <lb />
is the man to place in tho <lb />
officer's chair. This afternoon <lb />
the new Senator from North <lb />
Carolina gave his Senatorial as <lb />
a sample of what a firm <lb />
and determined presiding officer <lb />
can do, even under the existing <lb />
rules. <lb />
The proposition to abrogate <lb />
the treaty was pending. <lb />
The Democratic managers of the <lb />
bill were restless at the slow <lb />
progress that was made, <lb />
because several Republican Sen- <lb />
insisted upon making sot <lb />
speeches the subject. Senator <lb />
j Jarvis was in the chair. Senator <lb />
I Harris arose to make his usual <lb />
motion to the pending <lb />
I amendment upon the and <lb />
Hoar, Dolph and <lb />
sprang to their feet <lb />
I In a firm voice Senator <lb />
Jarvis recognized the Senator <lb />
j from Tennessee, and with a <lb />
I rapidity that would have astonish- <lb />
even ex Czar Reed, or Speaker <lb />
Crisp, he put the question and <lb />
decided it carried instantly. <lb />
Senator Hoar was so <lb />
that he grew red the face <lb />
gasped for breath j his words <lb />
refused to come at his command. <lb />
other Republicans were <lb />
equally astonished at the rapidity <lb />
of the ruling of the acting <lb />
dent of the Senate, and even the <lb />
Democrats could hardly realize <lb />
what had occurred. Finally Sen- <lb />
Hoar, who had regained his <lb />
breath, but lost his temper, in a <lb />
voice quivering with suppressed <lb />
rage, took exception to the ruling <lb />
of the chairman and appealed <lb />
from his decision. <lb />
Senator Jarvis, with equal <lb />
quickness, decided that a motion <lb />
on the table took precedence <lb />
over a motion to postpone. Sen- <lb />
Hoar differed with the pres- <lb />
siding officer on that point also, <lb />
and demanded the reading of the <lb />
rule on the subject- The <lb />
read the rule, and it was <lb />
found that the Chair had ruled <lb />
correctly. the meantime Sen- <lb />
Chandler had entered a <lb />
motion to adjourn. <lb />
Senator Harris, the Democratic <lb />
held a hurried <lb />
with his associates on <lb />
the Finance committee, and con- <lb />
that such startling <lb />
methods as those of Senator <lb />
Jarvis were too great a shock to <lb />
Senatorial courtesy and <lb />
He hurried over to Senator <lb />
Chandler and induced him to <lb />
withdraw his motion to adjourn, <lb />
and at the same time agreed to <lb />
withdraw his motion to lay on <lb />
the table the pending amendment <lb />
so that further debate might pro- <lb />
The scene only occupied a few <lb />
minutes, but in that short time <lb />
Senator Jarvis demonstrated that <lb />
a clever Parliamentarian with a <lb />
little nerve may at any time <lb />
sweep away traditions of the Sen- <lb />
ate, which now block the business <lb />
of that august body. He has <lb />
frequently remarked that the <lb />
rules of tho Senate are liberal <lb />
enough if the presiding officer <lb />
has the courage to do his duty in <lb />
such an emergency, and to-day <lb />
was the first opportunity he has <lb />
had to give his associates <lb />
proof of the correctness of <lb />
hie assertion. Senator <lb />
right arm is disabled, but his left <lb />
is all right, and the way he man- <lb />
gavel this evening <lb />
during his brief occupancy of the <lb />
President's chair will not soon be <lb />
forgotten by his associates, es- <lb />
Senators Hoar, Dolph, <lb />
and Harris. <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Report <lb />
Baking <lb />
Powder <lb />
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb />
A YEAR MEN. <lb />
It is going to be largely a mat <lb />
i of men this year. Party <lb />
I bonds sat more lightly <lb />
upon the people. We are in the <lb />
habit of saying, men are nothing; <lb />
principles are everything ; and it <lb />
i is so ; but this of the years <lb />
when the will look less to <lb />
principles and more to men than <lb />
they have been in the habit of <lb />
doing. It therefore behooves the <lb />
conventions of the Democratic <lb />
party to consider well the men <lb />
whom they offer to the people. <lb />
There should be no suspicion as J <lb />
I to their capacity or integrity; I <lb />
I moreover, they should be men of <lb />
acceptability; and all these re- <lb />
fulfilled, Democratic <lb />
victory will be easy. As to the <lb />
fulfillment of them, there should <lb />
be no difficulty. It has such a <lb />
wealth of material of the <lb />
sort for all the places to be filled, i <lb />
that mistakes will border on to I <lb />
crimes. No matter how great <lb />
the dissatisfaction with affairs at <lb />
it is not near <lb />
as great as many people suppose <lb />
the Democracy of North Caro. <lb />
is easily able to carry the <lb />
State this year upon the person- <lb />
of its candidates, and it <lb />
will be its own fault if these are <lb />
not so capable and so acceptable <lb />
as to compel the support of the <lb />
Landmark. <lb />
Wrinkles. <lb />
A life of crime is often the re- <lb />
of running debt- <lb />
The who has suffered has a <lb />
key that can unlock many hearts. <lb />
Tho day becomes longer every <lb />
time a lazy looks at the <lb />
clock. <lb />
Put a pig a parlor, and it <lb />
would immediately begin to look <lb />
for mud. <lb />
The man who is cheated is <lb />
much better than the one who <lb />
cheats- <lb />
The old man is a drunkard be- <lb />
cause the boy decide not to <lb />
take his first drink- <lb />
The must feel proud of his <lb />
work whenever he looks at the <lb />
man who never has a kind word <lb />
to say to his wife. <lb />
D. W. Fuller, of X. Y., <lb />
its that he always keeps Dr. King's <lb />
New Discovery in the house and his <lb />
family has always found the very best <lb />
result follow Its use ; that he would <lb />
not he without it, it p curable. G. A. <lb />
Druggist, X. Y., <lb />
says that Dr. King's New Discovery U <lb />
the bes; ; <lb />
that he has used in his family for <lb />
eight years, and t has never failed to <lb />
that is claimed for it Why not <lb />
try remedy so long tried and re-fad. <lb />
trial tree at J. L. Wooten's <lb />
According to an interesting re- i <lb />
port sent the Charleston News <lb />
and Courier by its Washington <lb />
correspondent, Senator Jarvis, <lb />
temporarily Monday, <lb />
stirred up the animals mightily <lb />
by the way in which he chucked j <lb />
I the of the out j <lb />
j of the window and proceeded to <lb />
get before the body and j <lb />
dispatch it. His senatorial as-1 <lb />
may it but he <lb />
is an old hand as a presiding <lb />
officer. He has been Speaker of <lb />
the House of Representatives and <lb />
President of the Senate of North <lb />
Carolina, and neither body ever <lb />
had a more prompt, accurate or <lb />
presiding officer. <lb />
He know any better than <lb />
to suppose that legislative bodies <lb />
assemble tho purpose of <lb />
transacting business and when he <lb />
presides over them he sees to it <lb />
that they do Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
The Danville Register point, <lb />
out that the cost of government <lb />
to the people of North Carolina <lb />
is per capita, while to the <lb />
people of Virginia it i per <lb />
capita; and the Register wants <lb />
to know it one can point <lb />
a blessing of government enjoyed <lb />
by Virginians that North <lb />
do not also enjoy. No; <lb />
nobody do it hare no <lb />
doubt that North has a <lb />
better government than State <lb />
in the Union that pays three <lb />
as much for it. yet <lb />
there among a few people <lb />
of ordinary good sense <lb />
average who want U <lb />
change the administration of this <lb />
government of <lb />
Observer. <lb />
No matter what of <lb />
is elected this year, it <lb />
ought to have the grit to <lb />
do two some kind <lb />
of a dog law, and repeal the law <lb />
authorizing the merchants tax <lb />
Charlotte News. <lb />
puses in<lb />
yew Watches cleaned for <lb />
cents. Main Springs cents, all other <lb />
work M cheap in <lb />
Call on me at corner store near post- <lb />
office. Z. P. <lb />
Watchmaker Jewel-r, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
reader of paper will la-pleas <lb />
cl to learn that there at least one <lb />
dreaded been <lb />
I able lo cure in all its and that is <lb />
Catarrh, Hall's Cure is the <lb />
only positive cure known to the medical <lb />
fraternity. Catarrh a <lb />
disease, requires n constitutional <lb />
treatment. Ball's Catarrh Cure is <lb />
taken internally, acting directly on the <lb />
Wood and mucous surfaces of the sys- <lb />
thereby the foundation <lb />
of the disease, and giving patient <lb />
strength by building up the <lb />
and nature in doing its <lb />
work. The proprietors have so much <lb />
faith its curative powers, that they <lb />
offer One Hundred Dollars for any case <lb />
that it fails to Send for list of <lb />
testimonials. <lb />
Address. K. <lb />
by Toledo, O <lb />
u f. <lb />
Land And Si <lb />
Greenville. X. C. <lb />
Office at the House. <lb />
DENTIST. <lb />
Jas. E. Moore. I. <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
MOORE. <lb />
N E AT-L AW, <lb />
X . C <lb />
Office under Opera House. Third St. <lb />
Senator Double. <lb />
Ex-Governor Thomas C Fletch <lb />
of Missouri, was in <lb />
front of the Riggs House last <lb />
night chatting with some friends, <lb />
when a member of the newspaper <lb />
fraternity ca me and <lb />
I want to congratulate <lb />
yon on the excellence of your <lb />
rulings to-day. The gavel is in <lb />
good hands when you are in the <lb />
newspaper man had only <lb />
a survey of the gen <lb />
from Missouri and mis- <lb />
took him for Senator Jarvis, of <lb />
North Carolina, whereupon <lb />
Governor Fletcher remarked that <lb />
it was the third time within a <lb />
week that he had been taken for <lb />
vis.- Washington Post. <lb />
ML <lb />
Here's Size Of It. <lb />
the Republican Con- <lb />
convention in Weldon <lb />
last week, Solicitor Geo. H. <lb />
White, in the course of a violent <lb />
is reported to have said <lb />
that if the Populists wish <lb />
they must go to the <lb />
cans. said White, <lb />
little camp is too small to ask us <lb />
into and you are too young- <lb />
You must come to us ; we cannot <lb />
go to <lb />
Now, the question for the Pop- <lb />
is, will they fiddle along <lb />
and do nothing by themselves, <lb />
go to the Republicans out and <lb />
out or remain with the Democrats, <lb />
where they <lb />
Neck Democrat <lb />
Come one has very pertinently <lb />
said that it is a wise provision of <lb />
Providence that a man can <lb />
neither himself nor pat him- <lb />
self on back- If such were <lb />
p the average man would <lb />
be engaged in the one or the <lb />
greater part of the timer- <lb />
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW <lb />
N. O. <lb />
Prompt attention to <lb />
at Tucker old stand. <lb />
JAMES, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LA <lb />
GREENVILLE, X <lb />
Practice in all the court. <lb />
special <lb />
U I. SLOW <lb />
J. JARVIS. <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
KY S-AT-L A W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
In all the Courts. <lb />
S. K.<lb />
TYSON, <lb />
Prompt attention Riven to col <lb />
LATHAM. <lb />
T A SKINNER,<lb />
HOTEL NICHOLSON, <lb />
WASHINGTON, X. C <lb />
A. Spencer, <lb />
attention<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017701_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
., Editor aid Proprietor <lb />
WEDNESDAY. 1-th, 1894. <lb />
Entered at Greenville, <lb />
K. C, as l law mail matter. <lb />
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC <lb />
A convention of the Democratic <lb />
party of Pitt County will be held <lb />
at the Court House in Greenville <lb />
on Thursday, July 1894, at <lb />
o'clock, M-, for the purpose of <lb />
pointing delegates to the State. <lb />
Congressional and Judicial Con- <lb />
Tent ions- <lb />
township will he entitled <lb />
to elect to said Convention one <lb />
delegate and one alternate for <lb />
every twenty-five Democratic <lb />
and one delegate and one <lb />
alternate for fractions of fifteen <lb />
or more votes cast in the last <lb />
Gubernatorial election, that is to <lb />
Beaver Dam is entitled to <lb />
votes. <lb />
is entitled to votes. <lb />
Bethel is entitled to votes. <lb />
Carolina is entitled to C votes. <lb />
is entitled to votes. <lb />
is entitled to <lb />
Totes. <lb />
Falkland is entitled to votes. <lb />
is entitled to votes. <lb />
Greenville is entitled to <lb />
is entitled to votes. <lb />
Swift Creek is entitled to <lb />
votes. <lb />
In accordance with the party <lb />
plan of organization the Demo- <lb />
voters in each township <lb />
are requested to meet in their <lb />
respective township, at the usual <lb />
place of meeting on Saturday, <lb />
July 21st. 1894, at o'clock, P. M <lb />
for the purpose of appointing <lb />
delegates to said County <lb />
By order of the Democratic <lb />
Executive Committee of Pitt <lb />
County. Alex. L. Blow. <lb />
R. Chairman. <lb />
Secretary- <lb />
JUDICIAL CONVENTION. <lb />
The Democratic Convention to <lb />
nominate candidates for Judge <lb />
and Solicitor of the Third Judi- <lb />
District will meet at <lb />
Mount. Wednesday, August 1st, <lb />
1894, at o'clock P. <lb />
By order of committee, <lb />
F. S- Chairman. <lb />
In the District of Columbia, <lb />
Massachusetts, <lb />
land, Now Hampshire, Now <lb />
New York, North Carolina, <lb />
Island, South Carolina <lb />
and Virginia there are more <lb />
males than males. <lb />
The Concord Times, Secretary <lb />
J- B- excellent paper, <lb />
celebrated its twelfth birthday <lb />
last week by putting on a hand- <lb />
some dress of type. We <lb />
glad to note this evidence of <lb />
prosperity with the Times. No <lb />
paper is more deserving. <lb />
Durham is said to be a <lb />
town now. All liquor licenses <lb />
expired on the 30th of June and <lb />
the Board of County Commission- <lb />
refused to renew them be- <lb />
cause the saloon-keepers had <lb />
been convicted of selling to <lb />
minors, in consequence of which <lb />
the had to close. If this <lb />
ruin had applied in Pitt county <lb />
there would have been some closed <lb />
bar rooms in to-day. <lb />
It ought to be the that when <lb />
a saloon keeper <lb />
h law under which his business <lb />
is licensed and is convicted <lb />
for, it should a barrier to bid be- <lb />
considered a competent man <lb />
to have a license. <lb />
The Tariff bill passed the Sen-1 <lb />
ate on Tuesday of last week by a <lb />
vote of to Senator Hill <lb />
was the only Democrat who voted <lb />
against the bill. The Senate also <lb />
appointed a conference committee <lb />
and requested the House to do <lb />
likewise to which the bill shall <lb />
be referred for a final adjustment <lb />
of the differences between them, <lb />
and as soon as this is done, which <lb />
is expected to require only a few <lb />
days, the measure will be ratified <lb />
by the House and Senate <lb />
and go to the President for <lb />
In only a short while now <lb />
the bill will go into effect and its <lb />
beneficial influences will be felt <lb />
throughout the country. <lb />
During the past week all other <lb />
topics have been overshadowed <lb />
by interest in the great that <lb />
has prevailed in Chicago and the <lb />
west, the influence of which has <lb />
been felt to more or less extent <lb />
throughout the entire country. <lb />
The strike first started with the <lb />
operatives of the Pullman com- <lb />
and through sympathy with <lb />
these the American Railway <lb />
Union took it up and instituted a <lb />
boycott against all the western <lb />
railroads that carried Pullman <lb />
cars and a general strike followed. <lb />
Tho men refused to handle trains <lb />
that carried Pullman cars and <lb />
would not others willing to <lb />
work to take their places, thus <lb />
putting a to the passage of <lb />
mails and blocking passenger and <lb />
freight traffic. The strikers failing <lb />
to carry their point, the rail- <lb />
roads refusing to yield to them, <lb />
they gathered great riotous <lb />
mobs and set to work burning <lb />
property, committing murder and <lb />
other acts of lawlessness, setting <lb />
at defiance law and order. <lb />
Gov. of Illinois, being <lb />
himself a sympathizer with an- <lb />
took; but little interest in <lb />
quelling such disturbances, and <lb />
the he did <lb />
make for efforts in that direction <lb />
proved so inadequate to the needs <lb />
of such an occasion of disorder <lb />
and riot tho United States <lb />
government was appealed to. <lb />
President Cleveland called his <lb />
Cabinet together to consult over <lb />
tho situation and in order prevent <lb />
tho stoppage of mails and tho in- <lb />
inter-State com <lb />
ordered U S- troops to <lb />
Chicago to suppress the troubles. <lb />
Alt geld exceptions at this <lb />
and raised objection to the gov- <lb />
troops into his <lb />
State, but he found that <lb />
dent Cleveland was a little bigger <lb />
man than himself, and that <lb />
his objections it was within <lb />
the province of the government <lb />
to do just what the President had <lb />
ordered done. <lb />
The extent of the damage done <lb />
by the strikers and rioters is <lb />
palling, and the daily papers have <lb />
been filled with long accounts of <lb />
the outrages. Thousands o <lb />
freight cars and much other <lb />
property was destroyed, entailing <lb />
a loss of millions of dollars, to say <lb />
nothing of the losses arising from <lb />
tho interruption of business and <lb />
the shutting down of many in- <lb />
That such a and its <lb />
riots and outrages has <lb />
is really deplorable, and <lb />
the sooner those engaged in it <lb />
are made to realize there are <lb />
laws in this government which <lb />
must be respected, the better it <lb />
will be for the whole country. <lb />
At last accounts the soldiers <lb />
had fired several volleys into the <lb />
mobs, killing some of them, and <lb />
natters becoming more <lb />
and orderly. <lb />
COMMISSIONERS MEETING. <lb />
The Populists of this county <lb />
held their convention here en the <lb />
4th The crowd in town that day <lb />
was large, though were far <lb />
from all being Populists. Part of <lb />
the force being sick <lb />
and matters at the office requiring <lb />
our personal attention we were <lb />
prevented from getting about the <lb />
Court House at ell during the <lb />
progress of their meeting, but <lb />
have been told that it was very <lb />
the same meeting with <lb />
about the same crowd that they <lb />
had at their meeting in March, <lb />
only additional work done <lb />
being the appointing of <lb />
to their State end District con- <lb />
s. Col. Harry Skinner <lb />
was chief speaker filled <lb />
up his time largely with abuses <lb />
of Cleveland and the Democratic <lb />
party. The almost pathetic <lb />
peal to the to come over <lb />
and join tho Populists was very <lb />
noticeable. Upon the whole it <lb />
was the mot disorderly day <lb />
Greenville has had in sometime. <lb />
There were several fights, a still <lb />
larger number of drunks, and the <lb />
police were busy making arrests <lb />
trying to keep order. If the <lb />
claim the 4th as <lb />
it goes without -saying that <lb />
they-added no new Ian i els to <lb />
their already <lb />
strength to their<lb />
N. C July <lb />
The Board of Commissioners <lb />
of Pitt county met this day, pres- <lb />
C- Dawson, chairman, S. A- <lb />
Gainer, J- L. Smith. <lb />
Fleming E- Keel. <lb />
The following orders for <lb />
were <lb />
Martha Nelson Margaret <lb />
Bryan 3.00, H. D- Smith <lb />
Lydia Bryan 2.00, Jacob <lb />
born 1.50, Nancy 3.00, <lb />
Norris Susan Briley <lb />
2.50, Lucinda Smith 1.50, Pat- <lb />
2.00, Henry Harris <lb />
2.50, Crawford 2.50, <lb />
Smith 1.50, Hettie Andrews 3-00, <lb />
Kenneth Henderson 8-00, Eliza <lb />
Edwards Carlos Gorham <lb />
2.00, J H Henry <lb />
Sam and Amy Cherry 4.00, <lb />
Fannie Tucker J O Proctor <lb />
6.00, Alice Corbett 3.00. Easter <lb />
Vines Alex Harris 12.00, <lb />
Winnifred Taylor COO, Mary <lb />
5.00, Lydia John <lb />
Ham 1.50, w H Parker 6.00, J G <lb />
Nelson 1.50, Daniel Webster <lb />
Winnie Chapman 1.50, Henry <lb />
Punk 2-00, David <lb />
10-00, J W 1.50, James Long <lb />
14.00, Polly Adams 1.50, Henry <lb />
Tyson 5.00. <lb />
following claims for <lb />
county purposes were allowed <lb />
and orders issued <lb />
J W Smith John <lb />
Buggy Co. T A Thigpen <lb />
E A Move C <lb />
B S B <lb />
Sheppard G M Tucker L <lb />
H Spur W H Williams <lb />
B E F <lb />
Williams B M Lewis <lb />
Tucker G H Little <lb />
Henry Brown Reuben <lb />
Clark Henry Taft Dr W II <lb />
Henry <lb />
T A Thigpen B W <lb />
D J <lb />
Barrow W T Smith <lb />
D C Moore D C <lb />
Moore G W <lb />
SO, W F Harrington Dr <lb />
W E Warren J B <lb />
rick S A Gainer H <lb />
Harding C Dawson J <lb />
L Smith T E Keel Le- <lb />
Fleming S A Gainer <lb />
Greenville Lumber Co <lb />
The following for Swift Creek <lb />
stock law <lb />
J W L H Spier <lb />
L B E B <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
Jerry 87- <lb />
Upon petition made in due <lb />
form of law the Sheriff was direct- <lb />
ed to issue licenses to retail <lb />
to the following persons at <lb />
their several places of <lb />
S. Hicks, J. T. <lb />
ft Co. <lb />
Beaver D. Smith. <lb />
Staton, J. S- <lb />
Powell. <lb />
E. Fleming. <lb />
J. <lb />
and J. S. J. B. Garris, <lb />
Bryan Gardner, E. O- Edwards, <lb />
E- Lang. <lb />
M- Moore Co, <lb />
J. O. Proctor A Bro. <lb />
T. Pierce, L. N- <lb />
Dudley <lb />
B- Burnett, T. <lb />
L. Turnage, W. J. and <lb />
J. I. Baker, S. S. Harris. <lb />
C. Edwards, J. <lb />
A. Brady. B. F. Anderson Co, <lb />
W. E. Belcher, Lawrence Hooker, <lb />
Oscar Hooker. S. Fleming. <lb />
R. Davenport. <lb />
Swift A- Bland. <lb />
Prof. W- H- appeared <lb />
before the Board, received the <lb />
official oath was duly <lb />
as of Public <lb />
Instruction. <lb />
Ordered that J. W. Crisp be <lb />
allowed to draw 1.50 per mouth <lb />
as pauper. <lb />
H- N. Gray filed his resignation <lb />
as Constable of Carolina township <lb />
and tho office was declared vacant. <lb />
Dr. W. H. Bagwell tendered his <lb />
monthly report as Superintendent <lb />
of Health which was ordered <lb />
filed. <lb />
that the report of A- <lb />
L. Blow in regard to the tax of <lb />
Latham Skinner he confirmed, <lb />
that is that Latham Skinner be <lb />
relieved of the taxes on acres <lb />
of laud in town <lb />
ship valued at the same <lb />
having listed and tax paid <lb />
by T. A. also on <lb />
acres known as Daniel land in <lb />
township at <lb />
it appearing that the same <lb />
was not their property and <lb />
been and tax paid by O- E. <lb />
R. T. Whichard. Ordered <lb />
further that they be relieved of <lb />
double tax charged against them <lb />
in township and allowed <lb />
to pay tax on such property <lb />
as own in said township. <lb />
A petition asking that the road <lb />
leading from the tar road in <lb />
township running <lb />
east miles across the <lb />
lands of S. F. to <lb />
a new road leading from <lb />
road to White's road he made a <lb />
public road, was filed and or- <lb />
continued until next regular <lb />
meeting property advertised. <lb />
Tho Sheriff was ordered to sum- <lb />
a jury lay out n public <lb />
road from Ayden to the Snow Hill <lb />
and Washington road via Carolina <lb />
Christian College, in accordance <lb />
with petition tiled at last meeting. <lb />
The following jurors were <lb />
drawn for September term of Pitt- <lb />
Superior Court. <lb />
FIRST Jones, Luke <lb />
C Tripp, JO Nobles, <lb />
Cornelius Barnhill, R A Tyson, <lb />
D II Williamson, T L Williams. <lb />
J C Taylor, Washington Mills, J <lb />
D Jones, O W Harrington, Wm <lb />
H Harrington, B M Whitehurst, <lb />
H R Robinson, W G G T <lb />
Allen. W J Laughinghouse, J L <lb />
B Fleming, Jas Tingle, Jno <lb />
Branch, W J Turnage, E A John <lb />
son, B Barnhill, W F Carroll, J <lb />
Bryan Grimes. H Barrett, J <lb />
D T House, Joshua L <lb />
Nobles, W F Keel, S G Williams, <lb />
H C Braxton, J E Tucker, Abram <lb />
Baker, D C Barrow. <lb />
SECOND S Galloway, <lb />
Robt Dixon, Fleming W <lb />
A Taylor, J A Thigpen, E S Ed- <lb />
wards, Jas M Williams, Joel Pat- <lb />
rick, J M Loyd, W T H <lb />
Carson, J T Hodges, T F <lb />
Christman, Jno J Buck, Freeman <lb />
Vines, Jno M Gay. <lb />
Ordered that J H Smith be re- <lb />
of payment of <lb />
charged against him for the hire <lb />
of Silas Harris, it appearing that <lb />
absconded before Smith <lb />
had received benefits enough <lb />
from him to pay for expenses in- <lb />
curred. <lb />
Ordered that A. B. Garris and <lb />
G. B. be notified to <lb />
appear the Board at next <lb />
regular meeting and show cause <lb />
why valuation placed upon prop- <lb />
listed by them should not be <lb />
increased- <lb />
Ordered that the name of Polly <lb />
Adams be placed upon pauper <lb />
roll she be allowed to draw <lb />
month- <lb />
Ordered that G A Stancill be <lb />
notified to appear before the <lb />
Board at regular meeting in <lb />
August and show cause why the <lb />
valuation of certain property list- <lb />
ed by him should not in- <lb />
creased- <lb />
The commissioners appointed <lb />
by and Pitt counties <lb />
to settle and fix the dividing line <lb />
in dispute between said counties, <lb />
made their report, showing they <lb />
and marked the follow- <lb />
line ; at a Black <lb />
Gum in Crisp Creek and running <lb />
South degrees, East poles <lb />
to a stake in Joseph H. <lb />
field Wallace <lb />
Tho commissioners appointed <lb />
by the counties of Martin and <lb />
Pitt to settle a line in dispute be <lb />
these counties, made their <lb />
report showing that they had <lb />
fixed and marked the following <lb />
a stake in <lb />
Joseph H. Ward's field <lb />
Wallace Andrews and run- <lb />
South degrees East 1864 <lb />
poles to a Willow transplanted in <lb />
Cypress stump where the <lb />
Cypress stood in run of <lb />
Fiat Swamp up the swamp from <lb />
the crossing of the public road <lb />
near J. B. <lb />
VOTES IN CONVENTION. <lb />
The counties composing the <lb />
1st Congressional and 3rd Judi- <lb />
Districts will be entitled to <lb />
the following votes in the Demo- <lb />
to Wit <lb />
CONGRESSIONAL. <lb />
Ch o wan. <lb />
JUDICIAL. <lb />
Franklin. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
C, July <lb />
small attendance in both <lb />
House and Senate shows that <lb />
lots of Senators and <lb />
are disposed to extend their <lb />
holiday over the rest of the week. <lb />
For the ten days previous to the <lb />
passage of the tariff bill the Sen- <lb />
ate certainly had a hard time <lb />
with daily sessions from to <lb />
o'clock or later and the <lb />
constantly in touching <lb />
to ninety degrees. It is <lb />
not surprising that the passage <lb />
of the bill, a few minutes before <lb />
the beginning of Independence <lb />
Day, by a vote of to should <lb />
have been followed by an exodus <lb />
to the mountains and seashore <lb />
that the wilted Senators <lb />
should be a little slow in return- <lb />
to their duties. However, no <lb />
time is really being lost on ac- <lb />
count of their absence, as the <lb />
work of preparing the <lb />
for action is going right <lb />
along in the Senate <lb />
Committee, and the conferees <lb />
the part of the Senate on the <lb />
tariff <lb />
Harris, Vest, Jones, Sherman. Al <lb />
and be on <lb />
hand as soon as wanted by the <lb />
conferees on the part of the <lb />
House. No surprises were con- <lb />
with the final on the <lb />
tariff bill, unless the vote of Sen <lb />
Hill against it can be so con <lb />
The populists <lb />
Allen Kyle voting for the <lb />
bill and Stewart <lb />
against it. <lb />
is speculating on <lb />
what the result of the con- <lb />
the bill will be, and <lb />
everybody is agreed that many <lb />
changes will be made, but there is <lb />
no agreement as to the nature of <lb />
the changes, further than that <lb />
they are likely to be mostly <lb />
towards the original Wilson bill- <lb />
Representative says on <lb />
the is an almost in- <lb />
variable rule that if there is an <lb />
overwhelming sentiment the <lb />
House for a particular lino of <lb />
action it finds expression and <lb />
overcomes all delays and <lb />
of parliamentary <lb />
I feel certain that in the issue be- <lb />
tween the Senate and House the <lb />
latter will carry the Mr. <lb />
Holman also says that his Con- <lb />
experience has taught <lb />
to expect considerable delay <lb />
in tariff conferences between the <lb />
Senate and the House. Let <lb />
patient folk make a note of that. <lb />
Representative of <lb />
is at the of the sub- <lb />
committee of the Democratic <lb />
Congressional Campaign Com- <lb />
that is charged with com- <lb />
piling a text book to be used by <lb />
Democratic speakers in the Con <lb />
Campaign. The work <lb />
is progressing, but cannot be <lb />
until tariff bill has <lb />
finally been disposed of by Con- <lb />
The choice of Mr. Bynum <lb />
to direct this work was a happy <lb />
one. He will be certain to in- <lb />
in the book everything that <lb />
can help tho stump speaker in his <lb />
arguments, as he believes that <lb />
stump speaker is always ahead of <lb />
the literary bureau as a vote get- <lb />
because the average man will <lb />
listen to a clever speech while he <lb />
will not read pamphlets, however <lb />
cleverly they may be prepared. <lb />
President Cleveland is com- <lb />
mended on all sides for the <lb />
promptness with which he de- <lb />
and ordered that Federal <lb />
troops should be used to prevent <lb />
the mail service of the country <lb />
being interfered with by railroad <lb />
strikers and to back up <lb />
of U- S- Court officials. <lb />
The President is kept thoroughly <lb />
posted, through Attorney Gene- <lb />
Postmaster General <lb />
Secretary Lamont, <lb />
every phase of the strike, <lb />
being in constant telegraph- <lb />
communication with their <lb />
subordinates- <lb />
Representatives Catchings, <lb />
Miss., who is a member of the <lb />
House Committee on and <lb />
therefore in a position to know, <lb />
says he does not consider it <lb />
for Congress to adjourn as <lb />
early as the first of August, but is <lb />
certain that it will do so very <lb />
shortly after this date. <lb />
Bethel Items. <lb />
July 9th, 1894. <lb />
Mr- N. B. Dawson, of Conetoe, <lb />
is in town to day. <lb />
County Commissioner S. A. <lb />
Gainer went to Greenville to-day <lb />
on business. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. T. T. Cherry <lb />
went up in Halifax to <lb />
see Mrs. Cherry's mother who is <lb />
quite sick- <lb />
Miss Jenkins, of Hamil- <lb />
ton, who has been visiting <lb />
in Bethel returned home <lb />
last Thursday. <lb />
Miss Jennie Bunting, of Cone- <lb />
toe, and Miss Taylor have <lb />
been visiting Mrs J. R, Bunting <lb />
the past week. <lb />
Misses Mary <lb />
Annie Ross, of Halifax, who have <lb />
been visiting Mrs. T. T. Cherry <lb />
the past two weeks returned home <lb />
Saturday morning. <lb />
The following Officers of Bethel <lb />
Lodge No. I. O. O. F. were <lb />
installed July 2nd. M. G. <lb />
Bryan, N. G., W. O. Barnhill, V- <lb />
G-, S. A- Gainer, R. Sec, W. J. <lb />
Rollins, F. Sec, M. O- Blount, <lb />
Rev. W. A. Forbes happened <lb />
to a sad accident last Wednesday <lb />
morning o'clock at Ward <lb />
and Barnhill mill. One of the <lb />
tracks at or near the dry kiln <lb />
fell on him and broke one of <lb />
his ribs. He has been in a <lb />
cal condition ever since, but it is <lb />
thought that be will recover and <lb />
has the prayer of the entire coin- <lb />
for his speedy recovery <lb />
that he may his <lb />
labor. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By of two <lb />
ed to the by J. K. <lb />
Cobb Lama Colin his wife, dated <lb />
and recorded in the <lb />
office of the Restate of Deeds of Pitt <lb />
County In pages <lb />
and Wand the oilier executed by W, <lb />
H. Dunn, dated 4th ISM and <lb />
molded hi the said office in <lb />
Book page I will on Friday. <lb />
July Ism, sell at public sale before <lb />
the Court House door in to <lb />
the highest for oath, a certain piece or <lb />
parcel of laud in County situated <lb />
on the waters of Meadow ad- <lb />
joining the of O. Cobb, Ben- <lb />
M. Woolen and other, <lb />
acres mow or less. This the 6th <lb />
day June I. <lb />
VINES. <lb />
Mortgagee. <lb />
WE WANT ORDERS <lb />
On last Wednesday night July, <lb />
4th as been previously an- <lb />
Col. Jno. F. of <lb />
Wilson a public lecture <lb />
in the Methodist Church on <lb />
to a large and <lb />
attentive audience He spoke <lb />
about one hour a quarter and <lb />
was given attention <lb />
through his entire speech which <lb />
was one of the most eloquent and <lb />
logical speeches it has been our <lb />
pleasure to listen many a day. <lb />
Our people were pleased <lb />
with Burton, and his visit and ad <lb />
-s has made a listing- <lb />
We will fill them QUICK <lb />
We will fill them CHEAP I <lb />
We will fill them WELL <lb />
Rough Heart Framing, <lb />
Rough Sap Framing, ; <lb />
Rough Sap Inches <lb />
Rough Sap Hoards, A Inches, <lb />
Wail days for our Pinning Mill and <lb />
we will furnish yon Dressed Lumber <lb />
as <lb />
Wood delivered your door for <lb />
cents a load. <lb />
Terror. <lb />
Thanking for past patronage. <lb />
iron <lb />
X. C. <lb />
IF YOU INTERESTED in COOKING FOR <lb />
BARGAINS <lb />
to go straight to them, their stock is now complete, their store <lb />
full of <lb />
Merchandise <lb />
From which genuine bargain ho had. <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. We dread no comparison of <lb />
stork, quality and prices. Our i- the <lb />
place for you to buy goods at light price-, <lb />
for following reasons We buy for <lb />
Cash. We leek for quality and durability. <lb />
We deal squarely with you. We carry <lb />
largest stock to lie found In our <lb />
from which to make your We <lb />
do seek to take advantage of yon. <lb />
lire responsible for all error-or mi-lake- I ha I <lb />
may on our part. We do not <lb />
a . of Job Iota Inferior <lb />
goods n ml off you tiling you do not <lb />
want, once our i Mm will remain <lb />
our visit <lb />
our atom, buy their right <lb />
RAMBLER <lb />
It carefully <lb />
prepared by experienced <lb />
from f <lb />
Dandelion, Man- <lb />
. drake, <lb />
Juniper other well known <lb />
vegetable remedies. The Combination, Pro- <lb />
portion and Process are Peculiar to Hood's <lb />
giving it strength and curative <lb />
power to Itself, not <lb />
by other medicines. Hood's <lb />
Cures Scrofula, Salt Sores, Boils, <lb />
and all other affections by <lb />
impure blood; Dyspepsia, Sick <lb />
Headache, Indigestion, Debility, Catarrh, <lb />
Rheumatism, Kidney and Liver Com- <lb />
plaints. It is Not What <lb />
we Say, but what Hood's <lb />
Sarsaparilla Does, that <lb />
Tells the Story Hood's <lb />
an Will with pi go home <lb />
the same thing and receive your Worth. <lb />
Now why don't yon do <lb />
One hundred cents on the dollar <lb />
mm n. <lb />
X. C. <lb />
The RAMBLER look live of the high- <lb />
est awards at the World's and <lb />
holds World's Records. The <lb />
pion rider of the South rides tho Ram- <lb />
make at reduced price. 1894 <lb />
make all strictly highest <lb />
grade. We <lb />
Tobacco Finer, Sell Stoves, tare, k, <lb />
and do all kind- of Tin work, <lb />
S. E. PENDER CO. <lb />
Look hero did know that yon could buy from 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 Children <lb />
Oxfords, Men's Fine and Heavy Shoes, Crockery Glassware, <lb />
Tinware, Hardware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings, Groceries, <lb />
Mattings, Curtain Poles Lace <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 />
Hood's Pills vs mild mil <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Letters of administration upon the <lb />
of Belcher deceased <lb />
to the undersigned, on <lb />
the 4th day of June 1801, by Clerk <lb />
of Superior Court of County, <lb />
notice is hereby Riven to all persons <lb />
claims against laid estate to <lb />
present them to the on or <lb />
before, the 18th day of Jana ISM or this <lb />
notice will plead in bar of their re- <lb />
All persons indebted to said <lb />
estate are requested to make immediate <lb />
l-i- to me. This the 13th day of <lb />
June 1894. W. K. <lb />
X of Belcher. <lb />
PIANOS <lb />
To Our North Carolina Patrons <lb />
Von iv- III Hit- <lb />
We tell <lb />
at It i<lb />
Southern<lb />
RELIABLE, <lb />
Take a look at our stock it will cost you <lb />
save you dollars. We are agents for A P, <lb />
COTTON at jobbers prices. <lb />
nothing and may <lb />
SPOOL <lb />
Come One. Come All. <lb />
o I <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1888. <lb />
Room <lb />
N. C. <lb />
We have In Mock and to arrive <lb />
so<lb />
SO <lb />
Hold in<lb />
In <lb />
h y<lb />
Notice of Dissolution. <lb />
Notice hereby given that the <lb />
of Ellington proprietors of <lb />
the Iron Works, was dis- <lb />
by mutual consent on the 14th <lb />
day of June. 1894. James Brown be- <lb />
sole purchaser of the business, <lb />
a-- all indebtedness of the <lb />
and all bills due the firm are payable to <lb />
him. Those owing the firm are re- <lb />
quested to settle at once. <lb />
A. B. <lb />
JAMES BROWN. <lb />
This 19th, 1891. <lb />
RALEIGH BRANCH, <lb />
J. <lb />
yon know<lb />
Nut i i- , our . A <lb />
direct <lb />
in it x <lb />
r V <lb />
nut mm T <lb />
am . <lb />
term, in X <lb />
era. Our m- Ii A <lb />
to your J <lb />
to select fronts -ii i. n <lb />
from v i . i . . w <lb />
n t-n will yon. <lb />
if <lb />
Bread Preparation, <lb />
Soap, <lb />
Star Lye. <lb />
Cakes and Crackers, <lb />
Slick Candy. <lb />
Matches. <lb />
Dust, <lb />
Good Luck Baking Powder. <lb />
Sacks <lb />
SO Molasses. <lb />
Tons Shot, <lb />
Kegs <lb />
Car- Flour, <lb />
Meal.<lb />
SO Tubs <lb />
urn mil d Sugar, <lb />
P. <lb />
call t as Snuff, <lb />
It. Mill- Snug. <lb />
j., Three Thistle Snuff, <lb />
Boxes Tobacco, <lb />
V. M. Cigarettes, <lb />
Old Va. demote, <lb />
Ca s r-. <lb />
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb />
-IN- <lb />
-lid your for Haul<lb />
nil tilt I. hI in.; <lb />
Any In the tint<lb />
i our <lb />
It cub m. i-.-y. <lb />
I BATES. <lb />
A L Music House. <lb />
Main Eon,, , Savannah, Z <lb />
I. <lb />
N.<lb />
T.-iii,.; New Or- j <lb />
n. nil our . <lb />
e s el <lb />
I. L NUMBER'S <lb />
---------DEALER IN l <lb />
Boilers, Saw Hills <lb />
DEALER IN AND REPAIRER OF- <lb />
kind of <lb />
O. <lb />
Machinery <lb />
Cotton and Peanuts. <lb />
Below are Norfolk price of cotton <lb />
and peanuts for yesterday, furnished <lb />
by Cobb Bros. A Co., Commission Mer- <lb />
chants of <lb />
Good Middling <lb />
Middling <lb />
Low Middling; <lb />
Good Ordinary <lb />
Prime <lb />
Extra Prime <lb />
Spanish <lb />
Tone-dull. <lb />
1-10 <lb />
; 1.-5-16 <lb />
Celebrated <lb />
Machinery. <lb />
THE BEST IN THE WORLD. <lb />
Latest Improved Revolving Head. <lb />
THE BROWN COTTON GIN. <lb />
Write for and prices. <lb />
lo my and Customer,, of Pitt and <lb />
I that I have rude nous <lb />
HEAD MATERIAL and propose <lb />
smooth which will prevent or your when Packing <lb />
Also I have made special to use best split Hoop- ma <lb />
Oak The special have In my own limber places me In a <lb />
to meet all I cheerfully promise you Unit I will strive to <lb />
make It to your Interest to my and can at any <lb />
either at my factory or at the Eastern Tobacco N. C. <lb />
Sawing, <lb />
And Turned Trimming for a <lb />
It rack cm or In <lb />
I am prepared to do any kind of Scroll for in <lb />
Piazza-, or <lb />
any kind, Belling, and would be pleated to name you <lb />
In the above application. <lb />
GENERAL REPAIR WORK <lb />
done on short notice. you your past I <lb />
future pat and kindly ask you me a trial <lb />
to meet your <lb />
here. <lb />
Winterville, N. <lb />
COBB BROS. CO. <lb />
AM <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA <lb />
Consignments and Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
of and surrounding counties, of the <lb />
not to be excel led I nth Is market. And all guaranteed to be fir t-elM <lb />
pure straight goods. DRY of all kinds, NOTIONS. <lb />
GOODS. HATS and HOOTS. LA <lb />
and CHILDREN'S FURNITURE, HOUSE H RN <lb />
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH. BLINDS. and <lb />
plows and plow casting, leather of <lb />
Gin and Mil l Hat, Rock or Paris, Fist <lb />
Hair, Harness, Bridles and <lb />
HEAVY A <lb />
Agent O. N. T. Spool Cotton h I offer to the trade at Wholes <lb />
jobbers cents per per for <lb />
ration and Lye at Jobbers Prices. <lb />
I Red Oil. Varnishes and Paint umber Wood Pun. and Wood <lb />
I Willow Ware. Give a call <lb />
Lead Is <lb />
Wood <lb />
e a call<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017701_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Rejections <lb />
Personal <lb />
We the first cantaloupe of <lb />
the yesterday. <lb />
In stock Boxes at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
The cloudy weather after the <lb />
rains is beneficial to crops. <lb />
Oblique cents at <lb />
Selector Book Store. <lb />
Postal Dotes are no longer used <lb />
the money order having taken <lb />
their place. <lb />
Be rare that you go on the <lb />
moonlight excursion Friday night <lb />
For good reliable Shoes go to <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
The ordinance of <lb />
was observed by the Baptist con- <lb />
Sunday morning. <lb />
James Long makes the best <lb />
drink of Coca Cola. Try a glass. <lb />
Standard Music only cents <lb />
a copy at Reflector Book Store- <lb />
June received Fresh <lb />
Grass Butter per lb at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Thermometers, Tobacco Knives, <lb />
at D D. <lb />
To-morrow and next day are <lb />
examination days for the public <lb />
school teachers of the county. <lb />
If you wish Id save MONEY <lb />
to Lang's store, he is selling <lb />
Clothing at Cost. <lb />
The Atlanta <lb />
Constitution both a year for <lb />
bakery caught fire <lb />
on the roof, yesterday morning, <lb />
but was put out without damage. <lb />
July cents per pound <lb />
Grass Butter at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Everybody can have Ice Cream <lb />
now. Ice Cream Freezers are so <lb />
cheap at D. Haskett <lb />
cents gets the Reflector <lb />
until the of January- <lb />
Mr- H- C Edwards is having <lb />
lumber hauled preparatory to <lb />
training a dwelling in <lb />
Now assortment Bibles from <lb />
American B. S-, just received. <lb />
Wiley Depositor. <lb />
T- C- Manning will open <lb />
a writing class here this afternoon. <lb />
AH wishing to take lessons should <lb />
he present. <lb />
If you vast a pleasant time go <lb />
the moonlight excursion Fri- <lb />
day night. <lb />
Our Summer stock is the best <lb />
in tn-m. prices are Come <lb />
to us. Lang. <lb />
A little girl looking at the new <lb />
Wednesday evening, <lb />
her papa where was the <lb />
Other piece of it. <lb />
Genuine Atlas. Boy <lb />
Dixie, Stonewall and Climax <lb />
Plows and Castings for sale by J. <lb />
B- A- Co- <lb />
Prices and of Victor <lb />
bicycles can be had at <lb />
office. <lb />
A door key, tied with scrap of <lb />
cloth, was near <lb />
bridge. Owner call at <lb />
office pay for this notice. <lb />
Soda water, lemonade, sherbet, <lb />
coca cola and other refreshing <lb />
summer drinks at James Long's. <lb />
I just received car load fresh <lb />
Flour, the cheapest ever brought <lb />
to Greenville. Call and examine <lb />
price and quality- D. W. <lb />
S mm of our citizens are being <lb />
troubled with vegetables thieves. <lb />
They have cleaned out the editors <lb />
patch and have set in on <lb />
his collards- <lb />
The largest best assorted <lb />
line of General Merchandise in <lb />
Pitt county, is offered for sale by <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
Sewing machines from to <lb />
Latest improved New Home <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
will be a moonlight <lb />
excursion on steamer Myers Fri- <lb />
day eight Tickets for sale by <lb />
Misses Bessie Jarvis and Myra <lb />
Skinner. <lb />
Policeman Moore had a <lb />
rail pot on the bridge <lb />
way; for way children <lb />
to fall off now they climb <lb />
the <lb />
, Mechanics and Labor- <lb />
of ad professions, when in <lb />
need of goods of any call on <lb />
your friends. J. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
Just- received a new lot of <lb />
C images and Cribs- <lb />
J. B- Cherry Co. <lb />
When in want of good shoes to to <lb />
B. Chen V o. <lb />
T. Id Mens and By <lb />
hoes the bet. For sale by J. U. <lb />
Cher- v A Co <lb />
Go to it. Cherry Co when in <lb />
Of and <lb />
sell at prices yea. <lb />
A large stack of nice Furniture <lb />
at the OM Brick S ore. <lb />
Remember I pay for Chicken <lb />
Eggs and K the Old <lb />
Brick Stem. <lb />
line of Dry Goods at <lb />
Wiley Brown's. <lb />
cents the very best Ten <lb />
blended with Fired Japans, <lb />
Basked Fired Japans. <lb />
Gunpowder, <lb />
Formosa <lb />
at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
The editor and had the I <lb />
office all to <lb />
Friday. Coot was sick in bed <lb />
an the other boys were off on <lb />
the excursion to Scotland <lb />
Mr. James has gone to <lb />
South <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. F. are <lb />
at Panacea Springs. <lb />
Mr. J. B. Cherry, Jr., left yes <lb />
for <lb />
Mr. Mrs. C. T. <lb />
left yesterday for Ocracoke. <lb />
Mr. T. White spent two days <lb />
of last week at Seven Springs. <lb />
Rey. A. and family <lb />
have been spending some days at <lb />
Ocracoke. <lb />
Mr. J. D. Williamson returned <lb />
home Saturday from his visit to <lb />
Mr. J. E- Adams, of Michigan, <lb />
is visiting his sister Mrs. S. C. <lb />
, Hamilton. <lb />
Rev. J. C. left yesterday <lb />
to attend the Conference <lb />
at Fairfield. <lb />
Miss Rosalind Rountree is <lb />
visiting Miss Nannie Fleming, in <lb />
the country- <lb />
Miss Hortense Forbes is visit- <lb />
her sister, Mrs M- <lb />
at Kinston. <lb />
Mr. J. J. Cherry and Master <lb />
John Ivey Smith to <lb />
coke Saturday. <lb />
Mr. T. S- of Granville <lb />
county, is bis brother, <lb />
Prof. W- H. <lb />
Mrs. G. H, Little, of <lb />
has been spending a few days <lb />
visiting Miss Lena Harris. <lb />
Mr. H. A. Sutton and Master <lb />
Hugh Sheppard left Monday to <lb />
visit relatives in Lenoir county. <lb />
Mrs. Warren and children, <lb />
of Penny Hill, are visiting her <lb />
parents, Mr- and Mrs. S. B. Wilson- <lb />
Miss Williams, of <lb />
Greene county, spent part of last <lb />
week visiting Mrs. W. H. White. <lb />
Mr- A. B- Ellington left <lb />
day for Petersburg to join his <lb />
wife who is visiting relatives there. <lb />
Mrs. S- A- Cherry has been sick <lb />
several weeks. Her many friends <lb />
are glad to know she is much <lb />
better. <lb />
Mr. W. B. Brown and family <lb />
returned home last week, from <lb />
visiting Mrs. Brown's parents in <lb />
Virginia. <lb />
Mr. W. S- Christian, a young <lb />
man from Georgia, has located In <lb />
Greenville and taken a position <lb />
with the Index. <lb />
Notice <lb />
The competitive examination <lb />
for the appointment to the A. and <lb />
M. College will be held in the <lb />
town of Greenville on Saturday, <lb />
July 1894. This county will <lb />
I be entitled to one appointment. <lb />
j Those who desire to compete will <lb />
j present at o'clock on the <lb />
above day. H. <lb />
Co. lust. <lb />
Miss Clio spent a few <lb />
days of the past week with the <lb />
Misses Higgs and left yesterday <lb />
for Scotland <lb />
Rev. Mr. Taylor, who was pas- <lb />
tor of the Baptist church here <lb />
sixteen years ago, spent Monday <lb />
and yesterday with friends in <lb />
town. <lb />
Mr. L- H. Pender returned <lb />
home Friday evening from Hen <lb />
where he had been to <lb />
take Mrs. Pender and his little son <lb />
who will spend several weeks in <lb />
the mountains. <lb />
Some one left an umbrella on <lb />
the the day of the Baptist <lb />
excursion and they can get same <lb />
by calling on Mr. C. M- Bernard <lb />
and describing it- <lb />
The work of rebuilding the <lb />
large pi that was blown clown <lb />
two weeks ago is progressing rap- <lb />
idly. Contractor tells us <lb />
he will have it completed in good <lb />
time. <lb />
There are big times around <lb />
Morehead again this week. The <lb />
second and fourth regiments of <lb />
the State Guard are in camp there <lb />
and crowds from all sections are <lb />
going down. <lb />
Miss Florence Perkins, of <lb />
Washington, was married in that <lb />
town on last Tuesday evening to <lb />
Mr. Harry Webb, of Charlotte. <lb />
The bride is a native of this <lb />
county and has many friends <lb />
here. <lb />
The Democratic Congressional <lb />
Committee of this dis- <lb />
met here last night to select <lb />
the time and place for the con- <lb />
convention. The Re- <lb />
was printed before the <lb />
meeting and will report in <lb />
next issue. <lb />
We call attention to the new <lb />
advertisement of W. L. Douglas <lb />
Shoe. We have every <lb />
assurance from the manufacturer <lb />
that the recent improvements in <lb />
style and quality will give more <lb />
satisfaction than ever to the wear- <lb />
s of these poi shoes. <lb />
You must look over this issue <lb />
and fin Bo well, Co's <lb />
advertisement. They open up <lb />
their mid summer sale this morn- <lb />
and clean out their large <lb />
stock t- make room for fall goods. <lb />
Prices have been put down and <lb />
they are offering splendid bar- <lb />
gains. <lb />
The Board of County <lb />
were in session <lb />
day to hear complaints of <lb />
tax valuation- Chairman <lb />
Damon us they had very <lb />
few complaints to investigate, <lb />
and Harding said the <lb />
tax lists had been taken so well <lb />
this year that there would be very <lb />
few corrections to make. <lb />
The sentence for t u <lb />
missing word j contest for <lb />
July and August reads as follows; <lb />
crept to his and waited <lb />
a favorable opportunity. It came <lb />
at once, for the keen ears of the <lb />
guard heard some sound <lb />
as crouched the <lb />
. The sentence this <lb />
time is for two months instead of <lb />
one- <lb />
O. O. F. Installation. <lb />
Covenant Lodge No. I. O- O. <lb />
on Tuesday night of last week in- <lb />
stalled the following officers for <lb />
the ensuring term. <lb />
N. G W. R Smith. <lb />
V. H Bagwell. <lb />
R. D Rountree. <lb />
F L B own. <lb />
Notice to Old Veterans. <lb />
The Pitt county As- <lb />
will have their annual <lb />
picnic on the 28th of July at the <lb />
College grounds near Greenville. <lb />
All the old Veterans are cordially <lb />
invited and those who can do so <lb />
are requested to bring their bask- <lb />
well filled and turn them over <lb />
to the table committee. Speakers <lb />
have been invited and a good <lb />
time is anticipated. All Veterans <lb />
are invited, and all who desire to <lb />
become members of the State <lb />
Veterans, Association can do so by <lb />
giving their names to the <lb />
and paying the membership <lb />
fee of <lb />
By order Executive Committee. <lb />
B- F. President. <lb />
E. A. Move, Secretary. <lb />
Steamer Gazelle. <lb />
This splendid steamer, Capt. <lb />
David Hill master, has com- <lb />
her regular summer <lb />
schedule between Washington <lb />
and Ocracoke. leaving Washing <lb />
ton on Thursday and <lb />
Saturday nights of each week <lb />
mediately after arrival of trains, <lb />
returning leaves Ocracoke on <lb />
days. The Gazelle is <lb />
splendidly equipped for <lb />
is a fast and safe steamer, <lb />
and makes quick runs <lb />
Washington and Ocracoke. <lb />
Those wishing to visit Ocracoke <lb />
this season make a more <lb />
delightful trip than on the Ga- <lb />
as all who have taken pas- <lb />
sage on her in the past will <lb />
There is no more obliging <lb />
accommodating master than <lb />
Capt Hill and those who go with <lb />
him may depend upon making the <lb />
trip comfortably, safely and quick- <lb />
Be sure that you go on the <lb />
Gazelle. <lb />
A Bad Man Caught. <lb />
One afternoon last week <lb />
B. T- King went oat in <lb />
the county to arrest Arch James, <lb />
colored, who was wanted in <lb />
son county for bigamy. When <lb />
the officer found his and <lb />
went to take him custody the <lb />
defied him and struck an <lb />
attitude of resistance, saying he <lb />
could not be arrested by any one <lb />
white man. Knowing that he had <lb />
a desperate character to deal with <lb />
King shot him through <lb />
the forearm to disable him. The <lb />
wound frightened the so <lb />
that lie started toward the officer <lb />
to surrender, and the latter think- <lb />
he was advancing for an at- <lb />
tack presented his pistol again, <lb />
telling him another step <lb />
and I'll kill To this the <lb />
replied <lb />
Sheriff, already dead, <lb />
take me He <lb />
was brought to jail without fur- <lb />
trouble and was carried on <lb />
to Wilson next day. <lb />
Pitt Female Seminary, <lb />
Prof. B. E. Goode, Principal <lb />
of Pitt Female Seminary, <lb />
has issued his prospectus for the <lb />
fall session to open September <lb />
5th. His assistants are Mrs. <lb />
Goode, Miss Lettie and <lb />
Miss Bettie Warren. The pros- <lb />
contains a number of the <lb />
very strongest testimonials of the <lb />
of the ability of Prof. Goode and <lb />
each of the assistants. We are <lb />
also glad to note the improve- <lb />
that he is making in the <lb />
college property. The grounds <lb />
have been enclosed and he is <lb />
having the building repainted in- <lb />
side and out, adding very much <lb />
to the appearance. These <lb />
the earnestness <lb />
with which he has entered into <lb />
the preparation for the opening <lb />
of the Seminary, are viewed with <lb />
a great deal satisfaction by our <lb />
people, for they see in Prof. <lb />
Goode a man of such ability, en- <lb />
and perseverance as will <lb />
be sure to make his school a <lb />
Base Ball. <lb />
The first game of ball played <lb />
in Greenville this season was be <lb />
tween the Greenville and Kinston <lb />
clubs last Wednesday afternoon. <lb />
The playing was ordinary and <lb />
both sides made many errors, the <lb />
score resulting in in favor <lb />
of Greenville. The Kinston boys <lb />
were well entertained and had a <lb />
pleasant day here. We hope the <lb />
clever young gentlemen will come <lb />
over again. <lb />
The Greenville boys went up to <lb />
Halifax last Friday to play a <lb />
game of ball with the club of <lb />
that town. Our boys got beaten <lb />
badly, the score being to in <lb />
favor of Halifax, but they came <lb />
back home feeling that they had <lb />
done well to make even two runs, <lb />
considering that the Halifax team <lb />
was largely made up of players <lb />
from the college teams of Wake <lb />
Forest, Chapel Hill- Trinity and <lb />
Oak Ridge. There were bets be- <lb />
fore the game that <lb />
would not make a run, but the <lb />
scores by Dancy and Erwin <lb />
showed better. If the Greenville <lb />
boys are going out to play they <lb />
ought to practice some together. <lb />
Dwelling Burned. <lb />
On Thursday night of last week <lb />
Mr. J. R. Warren, near Falkland, <lb />
lost his dwelling house and <lb />
kitchen by tire- When first dis- <lb />
covered between and o'clock, <lb />
one corner the roof of the <lb />
kitchen were burning rapidly and <lb />
could not be extinguished. <lb />
the kitchen the lire was quickly <lb />
communicated to the <lb />
house and both destroyed. <lb />
at all was saved from the <lb />
kitchen very little of the fur- <lb />
could gotten out of the <lb />
house, most of the personal <lb />
of the family being lost <lb />
with the building. Mr. Warren <lb />
had no insurance at all and the <lb />
loss is very heavy upon him. He <lb />
is a hard working, industrious <lb />
man, and much sympathy has <lb />
been for him and his <lb />
family. It is believed the <lb />
en was set on fire by incendiaries <lb />
as there had been no fire in use <lb />
about the cook room dinner <lb />
on Thursday, and members of the <lb />
family up late that night were <lb />
about the dining room and <lb />
have discovered file had there <lb />
been any. Mr. and Mrs. Warren <lb />
were town and told us <lb />
their neighbors and the people <lb />
generally had been exceedingly <lb />
kind to them since their great <lb />
misfortune, for which they de-l <lb />
sired us to return their sincere i <lb />
thanks through the Reflector. <lb />
Their loss was about <lb />
items. <lb />
July 9th. 1894. <lb />
Miss Florence Greene, <lb />
is visiting Miss Lula Carr. <lb />
Miss Dora James is <lb />
friends in and around <lb />
Mr. George is spend- <lb />
some time at Seven Springs. <lb />
Mr. B. F. Sugg, of Greenville, <lb />
was in town one day last <lb />
Miss Sal lie Carr returned homo <lb />
last Sunday after a long visit in <lb />
Greene. <lb />
Rev. J. R. Tingle filled his reg- <lb />
appoint hero en last <lb />
Lord's day. <lb />
Mr. R- M. Spier, of <lb />
spent a part of last week visiting <lb />
relatives here. <lb />
Miss Myrtle Cox Mr. Lewis <lb />
Cox, Jr., of spent <lb />
Sunday in town. <lb />
Capt. R. E. Pittman came out <lb />
smiling this morning. an- <lb />
other says he. <lb />
Miss Ada Mr. <lb />
Tom Griffin left last Thursday <lb />
for Washington to visit friends. <lb />
Misses Worth and Hodges, of <lb />
Raleigh, Sutton, of Kinston. <lb />
of Greene, are Miss Lucy <lb />
Brooks. <lb />
Our section was last <lb />
week by several heavy rains, <lb />
though crops seem to good <lb />
condition. <lb />
Miss Meta Chestnut, who for <lb />
the past five years has been teach- <lb />
school in the Indian Territory, <lb />
returned to her home last <lb />
day, to the delight of her many <lb />
friends. <lb />
OBITUARY. <lb />
Mr. James L. Tyson, son of <lb />
and Mary J. Tyson, depart- <lb />
ed this life Tuesday, the <lb />
inst, at o'clock, a. m. He was <lb />
born on the 2nd day of May, 1871, <lb />
consequently had just entered <lb />
upon his 23rd year. <lb />
Jim mil as he was familiarly <lb />
called, was a son, and in <lb />
many respects a most excellent <lb />
young man. On the 26th of June <lb />
he was taken violently sick with <lb />
that dreadful disease, <lb />
from which he suffered most <lb />
intensely until death came to his <lb />
relief. Ho was cared for in his <lb />
last by kind friends who <lb />
were at all times by his bedside. <lb />
His remains were interred in the <lb />
I family graveyard at Mill, <lb />
the inst, in the presence of <lb />
a host of warm friends and <lb />
I Funeral services by th <lb />
Rev. T. T. Phillips, of Marlboro. <lb />
The parents have <lb />
our sympathy in this their sad <lb />
bereavement. J. W. S- <lb />
University of <lb />
North Carolina. <lb />
the the <lb />
the LAW SCHOOL, the <lb />
AL SCHOOL and the <lb />
SCHOOL for Teachers. College <lb />
year; hoard to <lb />
a month. Sept. <lb />
I Address President Winston. Chanel <lb />
Hill, X. C. <lb />
Sunday School Excursion. <lb />
On Friday morning, July 6th, <lb />
1894. the Greenville Baptist Sun- <lb />
day school, over one hundred in <lb />
number left the depot at <lb />
o'clock, on an excursion to Scot- <lb />
laud Neck, which place we reach- <lb />
ed after a few hours run. On <lb />
leaving the cars the procession <lb />
marched to the Baptist church, <lb />
where we were welcomed <lb />
by Mr. E. E- Hilliard, editor of <lb />
the Scotland Neck Democrat <lb />
After remaining in church a short <lb />
while, to sweet singing, <lb />
and a speech of response by Mr. <lb />
Bernard, of Greenville's <lb />
successful lawyers, we were con- <lb />
ducted to a beautiful grove, <lb />
where we found every preparation <lb />
for our comfort and pleasure <lb />
male. At o'clock P. M. we <lb />
bade the shady town and its <lb />
hospitable people and <lb />
found ourselves <lb />
the balmy air, made so cooling by <lb />
the refreshing showers of the <lb />
day. homeward; each <lb />
the other over a delightful <lb />
trip, successful excursion, and <lb />
that through <lb />
entire day to mar our pleasure. <lb />
view of the many courtesies <lb />
extended us by the Scotland Neck <lb />
Baptist Sunday school, while in <lb />
their midst, <lb />
Resolved 1st. That this Sun- <lb />
day school unanimously <lb />
its appreciation -f all kind <lb />
shown while on the <lb />
both to the Scotland Neck <lb />
and the railroad for re- <lb />
rates. <lb />
2nd. That we extend to the <lb />
Baptist people of Scotland Neck <lb />
a hearty invitation to come to see <lb />
us an a similar visit. <lb />
3rd. That those be <lb />
the Scotland Demo- <lb />
and the Eastern Reflector <lb />
for publication. <lb />
Greenville Baptist <lb />
School <lb />
Tb above was unanimously <lb />
adopted by Greenville Baptist <lb />
Sunday School, July <lb />
Falkland Items. <lb />
July 9th, 1894. <lb />
Henry Blow was here to-day. <lb />
Miss Ellen Parker is visiting <lb />
Mrs. John King- <lb />
Bruce Ly man Cotten visited <lb />
Tarboro the past week. <lb />
Mrs. R. R. Cotten left Saturday <lb />
for Park N. J-, to attend <lb />
educational convention- <lb />
The dwelling house of Mr. J. <lb />
R. Warren was burned I <lb />
day night, cause of the tire is J <lb />
unknown. No insurance. <lb />
The young ladies returned <lb />
home and two of our men <lb />
look forlorn and sell goods with <lb />
less animation than generally. <lb />
the 4th of July <lb />
in Falkland township at the <lb />
of the bride's father, Mr. <lb />
Joe Walston, Mr. Nelson <lb />
and Miss Hannah Walston were <lb />
united in marriage. <lb />
Dr. O. S. Harman. <lb />
Office of M- D., <lb />
Goldsboro, N. C, April 6th, <lb />
To whom it may concern <lb />
This is to certify that Dr. D. S. <lb />
Harmon has given general <lb />
faction the practice of his pro- <lb />
as has always <lb />
conducted himself gentleman <lb />
Hill. It D. <lb />
W. J. Jones, M. <lb />
J. T. Miller, M. D. <lb />
Geo. N. Kirby, M. D. <lb />
This sworn to and subscribed <lb />
before mo this 12th day of April, <lb />
1893- W. <lb />
Notary <lb />
Dr. Harmon is at the Atlantic <lb />
Hotel, Morehead City, where he <lb />
will remain during July. After <lb />
completing his stay there he will <lb />
leave North Carolina fur the <lb />
pose of locating permanently in <lb />
Norfolk. Persons wishing to con <lb />
suit him before he leaves the <lb />
State should call on him at More- <lb />
head. <lb />
ATLANTIC HOTEL, <lb />
MOREHEAD CITY, X. C. <lb />
This Famous Resort i Sow Open for <lb />
the Reception of Guests. <lb />
The Atlantic ha accommodation for <lb />
over and is exempt from <lb />
Hies and <lb />
Surf and f-rill water bathing and <lb />
The celebrated Whiting orchestra of <lb />
Chicago furnish concert and <lb />
music. <lb />
Terms For rates and <lb />
pamphlet, apply to <lb />
B. L. PERRY, Proprietor. <lb />
Wake Forest College. <lb />
WAKE FOREST X. C. <lb />
COLLEGE embracing <lb />
ten Academic and the pro- <lb />
School of Law. A select <lb />
of volumes. A large <lb />
well furnished Reading Room. <lb />
Thoroughly equipped and <lb />
Laboratories, Literary Societies <lb />
In the Sooth. No secret <lb />
I nit lea allowed among the students. <lb />
c tuition to ministers and the sons <lb />
of ministers. Loans for the needy. <lb />
Board from ix to ten dollars per month. <lb />
A complete system of water-works with <lb />
ample bathing facilities. session <lb />
begins Sept. Summer Law School <lb />
opens July 2nd, For further <lb />
. address. <lb />
C. K. Taylor, <lb />
GOT THE FIGURE <lb />
-ALSO THE- <lb />
Items. <lb />
July 9th, 1894. <lb />
Miss Annie Harding spent a <lb />
few days in Kinston last week- <lb />
Miss Minnie spent last <lb />
week in visiting <lb />
Misses Annie and Essie Brooks. <lb />
Messrs. L. H. Cox and Geo. <lb />
Kilpatrick attended the Masonic <lb />
picnic at Vanceboro last <lb />
day- <lb />
Miss Maggie Laughinghouse <lb />
returned home last Saturday after <lb />
spending a week visiting relatives <lb />
in Grifton. <lb />
After spending a few days with <lb />
Miss Gertie Pittman, Miss <lb />
Daniel returned to her home <lb />
yesterday in Greenville. <lb />
Mrs. Betty Mosley and <lb />
Mrs. Clyde, of Hookerton, <lb />
spent last Sunday night at Mr. <lb />
E- A- Johnson's and returned <lb />
home yesterday. <lb />
Weaver Dam Items. <lb />
July 7th, <lb />
I will again make another feeble <lb />
attempt to give yon a few items <lb />
for your most excellent paper, <lb />
from Beaver Dam. <lb />
Mr. Benjamin Crawford one of <lb />
the oldest citizens of this county, <lb />
is quite sick week. He was <lb />
born in 1300, which makes <lb />
him old. <lb />
Tin- Free Will am <lb />
mi i called today Ht <lb />
Grove for the purpose of <lb />
revising their church list. The at- <lb />
is very large. <lb />
One of the heaviest rain and <lb />
wind storms of the season passed <lb />
over our section last night. Farm <lb />
is at a standstill is lilt. <lb />
to so for some <lb />
Politics are all right. We will <lb />
carry our county in spite of the <lb />
Third party and Republicans- <lb />
We are not afraid of them if they <lb />
do consolidate. All that we <lb />
is a good ticket which will <lb />
victory. <lb />
Mr. W. W- an <lb />
overseer on the State farm near <lb />
Weldon, was at home part of this <lb />
week- He came to attend the <lb />
funeral of bis nephew, Mr. J. L <lb />
Tyson, and returned on the 5th <lb />
inst to his post of duty. Bill <lb />
a whole-souled, fellow, and <lb />
we are glad to know that he has <lb />
made many friends in his new <lb />
HUT. <lb />
FINE CLOTHING <lb />
A few more o For the nest o on our sum- o they can- <lb />
of those nice o thirty days o o not be ex- <lb />
fitting and o we will make o For fit, o celled. See <lb />
cheap suits, o special price o and o and it. <lb />
DRY GOODS, <lb />
I suit, mm, j <lb />
f Gents Furnishing Goods j <lb />
r- o- <lb />
I M I <lb />
o o <lb />
o A S GOES WITH OUT <lb />
o SAYING THAT WE <lb />
o HAVE THE LARGEST <lb />
o AND MOST STYLISH <lb />
STOCK IN TOWN. <lb />
o o o <lb />
o e o <lb />
Give us a call and look for yourself and you cannot go away <lb />
without buying. <lb />
FRANK WILSON, <lb />
THE LEADING CLOTHIER. <lb />
E AT <lb />
On Wednesday, July <lb />
We will be our first i Sale Mid offer the <lb />
r I -ft e f . In order to s we <lb />
offer k OF SUMMER CLOTHING <lb />
gr- its e <lb />
Men Silts worth o. D HUH Boy's Suits worth 1.2 for N <lb />
pair Pants from cents u . <lb />
BA INS worth cents for cent. <lb />
BIG REDUCTION Goods. Lace, d y. <lb />
Own Checked for ms worth its for G cents <lb />
We are in Greenville for Low P <lb />
i cents Sim" c lit. Tobacco cents, Misses and <lb />
Oxford Ties, shoo will be sold at a big reduction. We have a <lb />
this opportunity making <lb />
MONEY for Mon- y i- on y and hen yon commence us our <lb />
fair dealings will US. <lb />
ft <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
They Mast So, Shall Go <lb />
Look at these Starvation Prices <lb />
in White Lawn cents, regular price cents. <lb />
Satin Stripe cents, regular price cents. <lb />
Check and Stripe White Goods cents, regular price cents. <lb />
FRUIT OF THE LOOM BLEACHING cents. <lb />
Cambric only cent, prices elsewhere and cents- <lb />
Percales, Fast Colors cents, prices elsewhere and cent <lb />
Get our prices. Goods we have got, money must have, so come <lb />
along good people and bring the Hard Cash, we will do the balance <lb />
Yours anxious to please. <lb />
C. T.<lb />
-I HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF- <lb />
SPRING GOODS <lb />
NOVELTIES, <lb />
and would earnestly solicit your examination. <lb />
SHOES Shoes <lb />
Embroideries, White Goods <lb />
and Laces. <lb />
I need not say anything about except that I have received a now <lb />
line. Prices lower than over. I thank you for your past favors <lb />
and if close prices will avail me anything I will merit a continuance <lb />
Sewing Machines from up. New Homo latest improved 135.00 <lb />
WILEY BROWN, <lb />
New Home Sewing Machines and Depositor for American Bible So <lb />
j. l <lb />
GREENVILLE, N- C <lb />
OFFICE AT THIS COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AGENT FOR FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE <lb />
Don't <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
Mies chance to get <lb />
CHEAP <lb />
MILLINERY <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
I am celling; <lb />
Leghorn and White <lb />
Chipped Hats <lb />
at greatly reduced prices. <lb />
Have also just received a new line of <lb />
Moire ribbons. Laces, Insertions, <lb />
ill be cheap. All these goods <lb />
arc very desirable you <lb />
early if you wish to the benefit t <lb />
the low prices. <lb />
M, T. <lb />
Notice to farmers. <lb />
If all prison will want i <lb />
MILLS and next <lb />
fall will Hie their orders me an <lb />
early day. I will be aide to the <lb />
Mills at a liberal discount by ordering; <lb />
all at oner and will the purchaser <lb />
the benefit of the discount. <lb />
H. HARMING, <lb />
Agent. <lb />
AND BUY <lb />
their year's will <lb />
their interest our prices before <lb />
Our-I is complete <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR. <lb />
RICE, TEA, <lb />
west <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Mann en <lb />
you to buy at one <lb />
stock <lb />
always on hand and mid at price- <lb />
the l goods are all bought and <lb />
sold for CASH therefore, having <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. <lb />
N, <lb />
WILLIAMSON, <lb />
-MANUFACTURER OF- <lb />
Glib k Dim <lb />
-ALL OF- <lb />
REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE <lb />
Only and material allowed in my shops. The many <lb />
who have used my work will testify to the beauty and durability of i <lb />
turned out at my -hops. Every vehicle guaranteed. <lb />
HARNESS WHIPS,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017701_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
VICTORS are Standard Value. <lb />
The standard price of Bicycles is 15.00. No deviation, <lb />
and Victor riders arc guaranteed against cut rates the current year. <lb />
rates <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL. CO. <lb />
BOSTON. <lb />
NEW YORK. <lb />
PHILADELPHIA. <lb />
CHICAGO. <lb />
SAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
DETROIT. <lb />
DENVER. <lb />
WILMINGTON A WELDON R. R. <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD. <lb />
Condensed Schedule. <lb />
TRAINS SOOTH. <lb />
Dated <lb />
May <lb />
1894. <lb />
o a o <lb />
Leave Weldon <lb />
Ar. <lb />
A. XI. <lb />
c a <lb />
A. M. <lb />
HERBERT <lb />
TONSORIAL PARLORS, <lb />
Opera House, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Lt Tarboro <lb />
Rocky Mt <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Lt Selma <lb />
Lt <lb />
Ar. Florence<lb />
0-11<lb />
Call in you want good work. <lb />
Lt <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington <lb />
V.- <lb />
v. <lb />
0--. <lb />
V- <lb />
MM <lb />
A. <lb />
A. M.<lb />
Dated <lb />
May <lb />
Lt Florence <lb />
Lt <lb />
Lt <lb />
Ar <lb />
A. M-<lb />
IS u.<lb />
For NEWSPAPERS and <lb />
Advertising <lb />
Record. Indexed <lb />
RECORD. I through to enter on <lb />
the left hand page the Advertiser's name <lb />
alphabetically. Agent, commission, <lb />
space, position, rate, number of <lb />
data beginning, date ending, <lb />
amount, when payable. The right <lb />
hand page, opposite, the months <lb />
wide space fir monthly, intervening <lb />
spaces for weekly, and spaces down for <lb />
daily, to check when an begins <lb />
and ends. pages, or one <lb />
loaf to the letter, flexible, <lb />
pages. leaves to a letter, halt roan <lb />
pages, pages, 81.00; <lb />
pages. Size <lb />
v. i. <lb />
Ly Wilmington; <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
at Wilson <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar Rocky <lb />
P. M.<lb />
s. <lb />
XI P. XI.<lb />
0.-, <lb />
Ar <lb />
Rocky <lb />
Ar<lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. Halifax 1.00 <lb />
arrives Scotland Neck lit 4.5 p. <lb />
n. Greenville 6.37 p. m., 7.-- <lb />
p. m. Returning, leaves Kinston <lb />
a. m. Greenville a. Arriving <lb />
Halifax at a. m., Wei Ion 11.20 a. <lb />
m., daily except <lb />
Trains on Washington Blanch leave <lb />
Washington 7.00 a. arrives <lb />
8.40 a. m., Tarboro 0.90; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.50 . in. 6.10 <lb />
p. m arrives Washington 7.35 p. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Scotland Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro. N C, via <lb />
Appointments for Greenville Circuit. <lb />
Salem on the Brat Sunday at eleven <lb />
o'clock and Chapel at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
Shad- Grove on second Sunday at <lb />
o'clock and School <lb />
House at <lb />
Ayden on third Sunday at eleven <lb />
o'clock and Tripp's at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
Bethlehem on the fourth Sunday at <lb />
eleven o'clock, and Lang's School <lb />
House at three o'clock. <lb />
Everybody invited to attend. <lb />
Smith. <lb />
J. C. <lb />
Baptist Services. <lb />
Below are the regular appointment <lb />
of Rev. J. H. pastor of the <lb />
Baptist church <lb />
At and fourth Sun- <lb />
days in each month, morning and night, <lb />
every Thursday night. <lb />
At Sunday in each <lb />
mouth, morning and night. <lb />
Ai Person <lb />
Sunday in each mouth and Saturday be- <lb />
fore. <lb />
Episcopal Services. <lb />
Below are the regular appointments <lb />
of Rev. A. Rector <lb />
and third Sundays in <lb />
each month, morning and evening. <lb />
Sunday in each <lb />
month, morning evening. <lb />
vices all other Sunday mornings.; <lb />
St. Johns, Sun- <lb />
day in each mouth, morning evening <lb />
Innocents, Lenoir <lb />
Sunday morning. <lb />
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb />
O- L. Proprietor <lb />
LOCAL NOTES AND <lb />
JOTTINGS. <lb />
after the tobacco crop <lb />
be connected with the <lb />
Warehouse this fall- <lb />
He will <lb />
Eastern <lb />
tobacco to avoid in the lives of their <lb />
I children- Getting- back to the <lb />
I farm we make the broad <lb />
order to meet <lb />
highest success, the <lb />
has more direct need of <lb />
an education than the profession- <lb />
man of any other calling in <lb />
life, because he has to contend <lb />
with plant life of every <lb />
animal life of every <lb />
and in fact the whole field <lb />
of nature comes direct under his <lb />
observation and in contact with <lb />
his interest. Unless he is <lb />
pared to take hold and dispose <lb />
of these perplexing problems <lb />
that daily present themselves in <lb />
an intelligent way, how on earth <lb />
can success be accomplished t <lb />
Such general knowledge is not <lb />
required in the life of the <lb />
man, the lawyer, the doctor, <lb />
the preacher, the mechanic, <lb />
in fact every other profession- <lb />
It is only one course of study <lb />
and reasoning that brings the pro- <lb />
man to the object of his <lb />
aim, though there may be many <lb />
perplexities entanglements <lb />
coming under this one study <lb />
while the scientific agriculturists <lb />
are called on daily to dispose of <lb />
many varieties of nature's <lb />
questions- Having started <lb />
out with the Disposition that the <lb />
farmer has more need of an <lb />
cation than any other class of <lb />
men, we will now try to show the <lb />
necessity of and benefits derived <lb />
from scientific methods employed <lb />
in farm life. <lb />
That the wheels of commercial <lb />
progress are rolling rapidly on re- <lb />
of the lethargy and care- <lb />
of any man or profession <lb />
is an indisputable fact. Time <lb />
and tide waits for no man. Then <lb />
why should the farming <lb />
drag behind and not keep <lb />
abreast with other professions. <lb />
If it should do so it will be the <lb />
fault only of the men engaged in <lb />
the profession. From a sense of <lb />
moral pride every man engaged <lb />
in agriculture should feel it a <lb />
At last one of the prettiest <lb />
rains that we ever saw fall, com- <lb />
the last of June and con- <lb />
tinned for three days. A slow, <lb />
gentle, drizzle the very <lb />
thing needed for the crop. <lb />
J- A. K. Tucker, <lb />
put in two barns of <lb />
primings last week- This is <lb />
rather early for curing, still we <lb />
have heard that the Sheriffs is <lb />
one of the most early and best <lb />
crops in tho county. We are ex <lb />
glad to know this, for <lb />
Sheriff Tucker is a hard working <lb />
man a very good farmer. <lb />
Mr. E- H. Hays who has been <lb />
spending the summer at his old <lb />
home in Chase City, Va., returned <lb />
a few days ago to inspect the <lb />
eastern crop. Ho says the pros- <lb />
for good substantial <lb />
is better than he has ever seen it. <lb />
A good many speculators have <lb />
unloaded and will of course be on <lb />
the market this year. His talk <lb />
makes us feel good but it is only <lb />
in Hue with our writing. <lb />
In last week's issue there were <lb />
two errors in tho local notes. <lb />
The first was the agreement be- <lb />
tween J. W. Gorman and O. <lb />
Joyner. This was written on the <lb />
outside of the copy was mis- <lb />
taken by the printers for what <lb />
was to be published. <lb />
This however was so much of <lb />
an error as the following. <lb />
who are unaccustomed to having <lb />
money will think Mr. C A- <lb />
an extravagant It <lb />
should have been those who are <lb />
unaccustomed to heavy manuring. <lb />
Last week we traveled through <lb />
several portions of the county <lb />
and while crops on an average <lb />
are so large as they were at <lb />
The Eight Big Words. <lb />
Here are the eight largest <lb />
words in the English language at <lb />
Incomprehensibleness, <lb />
THE CHINAMAN'S QUEUE. <lb />
Why Goo Sing Can Never Return <lb />
to Hie Native Land. <lb />
The royalties of Europe <lb />
the bicycle with as much <lb />
energy as the boys of America <lb />
The King of the Belgians <lb />
upon one daily, little Queen <lb />
rides one when she <lb />
is at her castle of and <lb />
the Princes Waldemar <lb />
and Carl of Den mark, and <lb />
George and Nicolas of Greece, <lb />
are all cyclists. The bicycle of <lb />
the of Egypt is a <lb />
machine, almost entirely <lb />
covered with silver <lb />
sense of duty to do all in his <lb />
time last year they are look-1 power to raise the standard of the <lb />
We profession to a higher plain of <lb />
usefulness and perfection. <lb />
. . A. r <lb />
Sunday. 5.30 a. in. Sunday a. m. <lb />
10.26 a. m., and 11.15 <lb />
. m. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves; <lb />
a. I <lb />
Re-; <lb />
m. <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, at p. Sunday . Services, <lb />
arrive Plymouth M-. p. m. i Every Brat morning and <lb />
Returning leaves Fly mouth daily alternating between J. X. <lb />
II. and Rev. J. W. <lb />
Every third Sabbath, morning and <lb />
m- night, J. W- <lb />
Sunday School every Sabbath <lb />
Goldsboro daily except a- D. IS. Evans <lb />
m. a m. <lb />
leaves a <lb />
wive Goldsboro. S <lb />
Trains on Nashville leave-. <lb />
Rocky Mount at 4.-0 p. in., arrive j <lb />
Nashville p. m-. Spring Hope <lb />
S. m. Returning leaves Spring Hope <lb />
a. m. Nashville a. in., <lb />
at Rocky Mount m., dally except <lb />
Trains on Branch, Florence R. <lb />
R. p. m. arrive Dun- <lb />
bar 8.00 p. in. Returning leave Hun- <lb />
bar 0.30 a. m. arrive Latta 8.00 a. m. <lb />
Daily <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War- <lb />
saw for Clinton daily, except Sunday, <lb />
at a. in. Returning leave Clinton <lb />
at m., connoting at Warsaw with <lb />
main line trains. <lb />
Train No. makes close connection <lb />
at Weldon for points North daily, all <lb />
rail via Richmond, and daily except <lb />
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line <lb />
about Mount with Norfolk <lb />
railroad for Norfolk daily an <lb />
all points North via Norfolk, daily ex <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
DIVINE. <lb />
General <lb />
J. R. KENLY, Manager. <lb />
T. V, EMERSON Manage- <lb />
JACKSON <lb />
Furniture <lb />
COMPANY <lb />
JACKSON, <lb />
strong vigorous, <lb />
are told by a good many who <lb />
observed the seasons in 1890 <lb />
that this is a repetition of that <lb />
year. June was very dry with <lb />
about the same of rain <lb />
that have had this year <lb />
nearly all remember than was <lb />
a better wrapper year that we <lb />
have had since. May it be re- <lb />
in this crop. <lb />
Prospects for a large increase <lb />
in tho sales of tho Greenville to- <lb />
market for the coming <lb />
year are exceedingly flattering- <lb />
Every year since the market open <lb />
ed it has largely increased its <lb />
sales for every year that the <lb />
market has run two additional <lb />
houses have built. There <lb />
are now eight large convenient <lb />
houses on the market. We have <lb />
forced attention from the best <lb />
manufacturers leaf dealers all <lb />
over tho country as a <lb />
have a strong corpse of as <lb />
good buyers as any market in the <lb />
State, and last but not least, <lb />
Tyson and Bawls and the tobacco <lb />
people say they have plenty of <lb />
money to move tho crop. <lb />
No man, or set of men, has the <lb />
right to override the wishes of <lb />
the people. They rule. They <lb />
are clamoring for an opportunity <lb />
to express themselves as to the <lb />
choice of a Senator, and they will <lb />
be heard. The party <lb />
must provide a for set- <lb />
this matter before tho people. <lb />
Mecklenburg Times. <lb />
Every one in the world can <lb />
teach us the greatest <lb />
men have generally been the <lb />
most eager learners, and have de- <lb />
no source which might <lb />
supply the want. <lb />
The United States manufactures <lb />
more iron, steel, copper, and lead <lb />
than any other country on the <lb />
globe, Great Britain being a little <lb />
ahead on zinc and tin. <lb />
The new Lakeside City <lb />
for 1884, to be issued about <lb />
July will announce Chicago's <lb />
population as about <lb />
It takes one hundred gallons of <lb />
oil a year to keep a large-sized <lb />
locomotive in running order. <lb />
A Locomotive. <lb />
SCIENCE IN FARMING. <lb />
MANUFACTURERS OF <lb />
this were done by every man it <lb />
would only be a of a very <lb />
short Some wit says the difference <lb />
some professions of to-day, would between canine and quinine is a <lb />
be an honor to the man who fol- j question of bark. <lb />
lowed it instead of the man who ,., <lb />
who followed it honoring tho pro- of warn weather, you need a good <lb />
The necessity of tonic and blood like <lb />
, . x it. <lb />
cal, systematic farm management <lb />
should be realized by every far- <lb />
mer and the sooner it is done the <lb />
better it will be tor the <lb />
for unless farmers study for <lb />
I the protection of their own inter- <lb />
it, like anything else that is <lb />
will dwarf and succor <lb />
other more vigorous interests by <lb />
which it is surrounded with <lb />
which it comes in contact. Aside <lb />
from the actual necessity of <lb />
methods in agriculture in <lb />
order that the greatest success <lb />
may be accomplished from a <lb />
financial point of view, for the <lb />
sake of one's own comfort and the <lb />
pursuit of happiness, the beauties <lb />
and pleasures and charms of rural <lb />
life can never be realized so long <lb />
as old time methods and systems <lb />
are employed, that is to the <lb />
of the available <lb />
ties that the improvement of <lb />
modern times offer to every man. <lb />
AND OFFICE <lb />
ATLANTIC NORTH <lb />
R. R. TIME <lb />
In December 4th. <lb />
GOING EAST. <lb />
WEST. <lb />
Pa s. Daily <lb />
Ex Sun. <lb />
STATIONS <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Kinston <lb />
Newborn <lb />
Pass. Daily- <lb />
Ex Sun. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
A- M <lb />
A. M. <lb />
Schools and Churches seated <lb />
in the manner. Offices <lb />
Send for <lb />
OINTMENT<lb />
Train connects with j <lb />
train bound North, If I <lb />
11.55 a. m., and with i. <lb />
train West, p. <lb />
connects with <lb />
Danville train, arriving rt Goldsboro <lb />
p. m., and with W . train <lb />
the at m. <lb />
S. L. DILL. <lb />
Superintendent. <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK<lb />
Trade-Mark obtained and Pat-J <lb />
business for Fees. <lb />
On, is U, S. j <lb />
mi than u. <lb />
remote Washington. . i <lb />
Scud model, drawing or photo, with <lb />
lion. We if or no., free <lb />
fee not d till is secured J <lb />
Hew to Fauna, <lb />
Male in the U. S. and <lb />
sent free. Address, <lb />
Like everything else farming to <lb />
be made profitable must be made <lb />
systematic. Because some few <lb />
farmers have made comparative <lb />
success or rather made money <lb />
farming on a haphazard, half- <lb />
system it is no argument <lb />
against systematic and scientific <lb />
fanning. You frequently hear a <lb />
man say that education is of no <lb />
service to a farmer, that his <lb />
brother John or some one <lb />
else has made a success in life <lb />
without an education and it is <lb />
equally probable that the balance <lb />
of humanity can do likewise, that <lb />
Mr. A or Mr. B has a fine <lb />
and at farming he is a gloomy <lb />
failure- These arguments are of- <lb />
as proof that only the old <lb />
time way of farming is the right <lb />
way and that scientific agriculture <lb />
is bosh, when fact the truth of <lb />
the matter is simply The <lb />
man who has made a success, not <lb />
only at farming, but everything <lb />
else without some education is a <lb />
fortunate being indeed and is <lb />
gifted with many natural talents, <lb />
which if he had developed by <lb />
training would have made him <lb />
a superior man. One of the <lb />
strongest evidences and <lb />
that can be offered that <lb />
education is essential to the high- <lb />
est success in any <lb />
is the fact that almost with- <lb />
out an exception every man that <lb />
has gone through life and made <lb />
comparative success without an <lb />
education are the most <lb />
in their advocacy of an education <lb />
for their children- These people <lb />
KANSAS KINKS. <lb />
For Core of all Skin <lb />
This been In use <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know <lb />
been In steady demand. It has been en <lb />
by the leading physicians all <lb />
-be country, and has effected cures where <lb />
all remedies, with the attention <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for year This Ointment is <lb />
long and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained Is owing entirely <lb />
its as but little ha <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One , , , <lb />
Dollar. Ail Orders promptly at- see and truly appreciate the dis- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and advantages under which they <lb />
I labor and the mistake that has <lb />
Green J made Ml they want <lb />
A woman is as full of tears as a <lb />
raw onion- <lb />
Mothers get scared so easily <lb />
that doctors make considerable <lb />
money- <lb />
Cupid is always represented as <lb />
as baby because love never lives <lb />
to grow up- <lb />
A man gets so that an alarm <lb />
clock has no more effect on him <lb />
than his conscience. <lb />
Be polite to everybody. There <lb />
is no telling when you may have <lb />
something to sail- <lb />
No one seems to have as hard a <lb />
time earning money as the <lb />
man who marries for it. <lb />
The more elaborate the refresh- <lb />
are at a party the worse <lb />
the man feels next day. <lb />
There are a smaller number of <lb />
marriages than ever, but the <lb />
are as unhappy as ever. <lb />
When a girl burns her hand on <lb />
a curling iron, she tells the young <lb />
men she did it frying potatoes- <lb />
It the dish washing a girl <lb />
dislikes so much as the thought <lb />
that she is hiding her talents away <lb />
from the Globe. <lb />
Europe has produced many <lb />
locomotives, but among them all <lb />
there is probably none stranger <lb />
than that built for the Belgian <lb />
State railway by the St. <lb />
Leonard of Liege. In that country <lb />
the weight of the trains has in- <lb />
creasing very fast of and the <lb />
engines now used for fast <lb />
service arc required to haul a gross <lb />
load of tons up a grade of 0.5 <lb />
per cent, with a speed of fifty-six <lb />
miles an hour, without diminution <lb />
of steam pressure of tho level of <lb />
the water in tho boiler, for a dis- <lb />
of at least three <lb />
stiff requirements for European <lb />
practice. These specifications re- <lb />
in the construction of a loco- <lb />
motive with three boilers, which <lb />
have tho same fire-box, <lb />
and the same smoke-box in common. <lb />
The chimney looks like a big inverted <lb />
square cuspidor, such as grace the <lb />
barrooms of country hotels. The <lb />
area of this oddity is square <lb />
feet, and the total heating area of <lb />
the fire-box and tubes in the three <lb />
boilers is square feet; <lb />
large areas even in this <lb />
county. The fuel burned is the <lb />
poorest quality of slack coal, but <lb />
even with such Inferior stuff the <lb />
average evaporation in this <lb />
is said to be 5.61 pounds of water <lb />
per pound of coal. The cylinder <lb />
I used are 19.6 inches in diameter, <lb />
and have a stroke of 23.5 inches, <lb />
are connected to four coupled <lb />
wheels Inches in diameter. <lb />
The weight of the engine la 56.8 tons <lb />
and that of the tender Is 29.6 tons. <lb />
G lobe-Democrat.<lb />
Prince Bismarck explained to a <lb />
friend in recently <lb />
that he could stand on it but a few <lb />
minutes in succession. tho <lb />
recommendation of one of the <lb />
grand he said, <lb />
consulted a Russian doctor some time <lb />
I have since learned that he <lb />
an idle and Ignorant fellow <lb />
A an Important <lb />
Going to Sing <lb />
Courtroom <lb />
Mo Bin <lb />
When Gee Sing was sentenced in <lb />
the general sessions recently to four <lb />
imprisonment for stabbing <lb />
his cousin, Gee no sign of <lb />
stirred his placid features as he <lb />
was led into tho prisoner's box, and <lb />
he sat down on tho bench, leaned <lb />
back and closed his eyes <lb />
says tho New York Sun. To <lb />
all appearances he was the most <lb />
concerned of the prisoners. Another <lb />
prisoner who had been sent up for <lb />
robbery was bewailing his fate. Ho <lb />
was n good-looking young fellow <lb />
with a head of curly brown hair. <lb />
Running his fingers through his hair, <lb />
he said, <lb />
all have to come off <lb />
The Chinaman suddenly sat bolt <lb />
upright and looked at the speaker <lb />
with Interest. <lb />
you he demanded. <lb />
said that the Sing Sing barber <lb />
will be after all of returned the <lb />
young man. There won't <lb />
enough hair left on our heads to stuff <lb />
a pillow for a <lb />
Gee Sing clutched his queue with <lb />
both hands and walked over to <lb />
the speaker. <lb />
cut off he demand- <lb />
ed, hoarsely, tapping his pigtail. <lb />
was the reply. <lb />
It off short and throw it <lb />
The Chinaman walked back to his <lb />
sent, buried his face In his hands <lb />
rooked to and fro for a moment. <lb />
Then the courtroom was disturbed <lb />
the most unearthly sound that <lb />
ever echoed from its walls. Gee <lb />
Sing was crying. When n China- <lb />
man cries, and there are few men in <lb />
this country who have seen a China <lb />
man in tears, he cries hard, and the <lb />
sound of his lamentation is weird. <lb />
The court officials rushed into the <lb />
prisoner's pen and after a little <lb />
In quieting the weeping man. <lb />
Asked what made him burst out so <lb />
suddenly, he replied that lie was <lb />
forever shut off from friends and <lb />
relatives and his native land, <lb />
been sentenced to have his <lb />
queue cut off. <lb />
thought it was only to go to <lb />
he wailed. judge did <lb />
not tell me It was to cut my queue <lb />
He was taken away still weeping. <lb />
Inquiry In the Chinese quarter <lb />
showed that Gee Sing hod not over- <lb />
rat the weight of his misery. An <lb />
intelligent Chinaman said to a Sun <lb />
reporter in regard to <lb />
China a full-blooded China- <lb />
man Is nothing without his queue. <lb />
If in any way he loses it he loses his <lb />
caste with it. His family drive him <lb />
out, his friends repudiate him and <lb />
he becomes an outcast. I had a <lb />
friend whose uncle had his queue <lb />
torn from his head by an accident. <lb />
Rather than bring disgrace on him. <lb />
self and his family he seized It, tied <lb />
it about his throat and strangled <lb />
himself to death with it. So great, <lb />
is the regard In which it is hold. We <lb />
have an old Chinese <lb />
are reckoned as the dead, the blind, <lb />
the leper and the ind the <lb />
present generation might add to <lb />
this man who has lost his <lb />
When a Chinaman comes <lb />
to this country It is usually his in- <lb />
to amass a sum of money <lb />
and return. If by any chance he <lb />
loses his queue he is not allowed to <lb />
return, but must always be an ex- <lb />
Gee Sing has been shut off from <lb />
Ids life. He had hoped <lb />
to return rich honored and take <lb />
his place at the head of his <lb />
Now he must always stay hero. <lb />
There Is a society of Chinamen In <lb />
this city who call themselves tho Mo <lb />
Din Tons that is. tho Pigtail <lb />
club. They arc Americanized China- <lb />
men and take an oath always to <lb />
stay here, and they insure the keep- <lb />
of their vow by cutting off their <lb />
An Incident of Von <lb />
When the war <lb />
was declared, It Is said that Von <lb />
was awakened at midnight <lb />
and told of the fact. He said coolly to <lb />
the official who aroused to <lb />
the pigeon-hole number blank in my <lb />
safe and from it and tel- <lb />
as there directed to the <lb />
troops of the Ho <lb />
then turned over and went to sleep <lb />
and awoke at the usual hour In the <lb />
morning. <lb />
Everyone In Berlin was excited <lb />
about the war, but Von took <lb />
his morning walk as usual, and a <lb />
friend who met him <lb />
you seem to be taking it very easy. <lb />
Aren't you afraid of the <lb />
I should think you would be <lb />
replied Von <lb />
work far this time has been no <lb />
long beforehand, and everything <lb />
Sticks, <lb />
Small Jack's father docs not smoke, <lb />
and hence it was that when he saw <lb />
his uncle smoking a cigar he was <lb />
full of wonder. in a candy <lb />
shop, he asked for those <lb />
chocolate sticks what has smoke in <lb />
Young People. <lb />
An Interesting; Discovery. <lb />
A discovery has just been made la <lb />
the catacombs of Rome which prom- <lb />
to lie of singular importance in <lb />
the history of Christian worship and <lb />
a Mi- <lb />
archaeologist, has come upon <lb />
a cycle of four paintings of the very <lb />
earliest Christian art belonging o <lb />
the first half of tho second century, <lb />
one of which represents a <lb />
of the Eucharist. The paint- <lb />
wore found in a chapel of the <lb />
St. catacombs which has <lb />
open to Inspection for at least <lb />
a hundred years, and yet this in- <lb />
treasure has lain all that <lb />
time concealed and unsuspected. It <lb />
was hidden under a crust of <lb />
so that no trace of colors, and <lb />
certainly none of figures, was per- <lb />
to the ordinary observer. <lb />
however, declared <lb />
that he could discern signs of color- <lb />
and allowed to experiment <lb />
upon it. lie dissolved the stalactite <lb />
crust by n chemical process, and <lb />
was rewarded by the revelation of <lb />
the remarkable paintings, a full de- <lb />
of which is to be published. <lb />
Wei minster Gazette, <lb />
N c. Ask. VI <lb />
of <lb />
with the arms <lb />
II. Ill t lip lost k- H It i -in. <lb />
. . <lb />
A. P. BETTS. <lb />
T Mm n, <lb />
win s from <lb />
nil with no <lb />
we l l <lb />
powers, I, new In I n <lb />
w u. <lb />
Its <lb />
My <lb />
i.<lb />
mil of th <lb />
I I II <lb />
l W, <lb />
V c , MM-h <lb />
ft It m of l. <lb />
I- A <lb />
fitter of. I I. , i <lb />
Fever. <lb />
all f <lb />
WRITE US BOOK. <lb />
ATLANTIC CO., Washington, D. C. <lb />
-WHEN IT COMES TO- <lb />
STATIONERY <lb />
You miss it time if you fail to call <lb />
what you want in this line at the- <lb />
A Musical Misfortune. <lb />
a specialty of this class of goods and if <lb />
Quality, Quantity <lb />
count for anything with you, to us. <lb />
its a pack up- <lb />
Note Paper a quire up. <lb />
Letter, Fools Cap and <lb />
Legal Cap equally low. <lb />
Tablet from cent up. <lb />
Slate Pencils cents per <lb />
S dozen up. <lb />
Load Pencils doz. up. <lb />
Pen Points f re m cents <lb />
per dozen up- <lb />
fer <lb />
A SPECIALTIES <lb />
We are sole, agents for A <lb />
the very best for school <lb />
INKS <lb />
and <lb />
purposes. Our Cream Mucilage boats any <lb />
on the market. Our Diamond Glue <lb />
and Magic Cement will mend anything but broken <lb />
hearts- <lb />
the pianist, tells the fol- <lb />
lowing story of I remember <lb />
once a Miss M------playing a sonata, <lb />
by Bennett, a work of a <lb />
very prosy type, and certainly lack- <lb />
In anything like spontaneity or <lb />
poetry. Liszt was evidently not fa- <lb />
with it; so, after playing <lb />
some six or seven pages, he gently <lb />
tapped Miss M------on the arm and <lb />
would you <lb />
kindly name the piece you arc per- <lb />
she re- <lb />
plied; is the sonata, <lb />
of by William <lb />
Liszt, <lb />
a pity the original manuscript didn't <lb />
meet the same fate as tho <lb />
A Hint. <lb />
ago <lb />
was <lb />
She sat In quit t patience, <lb />
While the hours sped away; <lb />
a retiring <lb />
lie was constrained to say. <lb />
The very words he uttered <lb />
Seemed her weary heart to mock; <lb />
But she simply <lb />
And .-tared hard lit the clock. <lb />
tho head of a children's hospital In <lb />
St. Petersburg, where he killed off <lb />
three thousand patients annually. <lb />
He ruined my leg, and I have <lb />
rd the ever since. <lb />
Unless your envelopes state the <lb />
number of days yon wish letters <lb />
held, the postmaster, by a new <lb />
ruling, will hold them thirty days <lb />
instead of ten. This is <lb />
to men who do not wish their <lb />
letters, when not delivered, de- <lb />
or tea <lb />
Are tell-tale symptoms that blood <lb />
is not impurities, causing <lb />
and complexion. <lb />
A few bottles of ti. <lb />
oil foreign and impure waiter, <lb />
the blood thoroughly, and give a clear <lb />
His effect- <lb />
less. <lb />
Chas Laurel Street, fays <lb />
rosy complexion, <lb />
and entirely harmless. <lb />
years humor in <lb />
me die id to shave, as boils r <lb />
pimples would he cut, causing to <lb />
my face Is all smooth a; <lb />
It should ii <lb />
sleep well like u <lb />
foot race all f or the use of <lb />
OB blood ind <lb />
SWIFT Sf CO, Atlanta, Ga- <lb />
Every business man should have a <lb />
KER FOUNTAIN PENT <lb />
last a life and are sold nowhere else in <lb />
town. <lb />
Our Box Paper for polite correspondence arc <lb />
the prettiest in town. also Mourning <lb />
Paper. Then we have Slates, Blank Hooks, <lb />
Memorandum Books, Books, Erasers, Rub- <lb />
Bands, Pencil Holders. Automatic Pencils, <lb />
Sponge Cups, Ink Stands. Paper Cutters, Book <lb />
Marks, Pen Holders and lots of other thing. <lb />
BOOKS AND NOVELS. <lb />
If you want anything to read look over <lb />
our supply. Any book not on baud will or- <lb />
for you. <lb />
Now remember the the only place <lb />
at which you can get these goods at such low <lb />
prices. <lb />
BOOK STORK. <lb />
HEM POINTS.<lb />
W. L.<lb />
. CORDOVAN, <lb />
LADIES <lb />
S E ND OR<lb />
e. w-  <lb />
Because, we are the of <lb />
In the <lb />
he value by t He name <lb />
the bottom. protects <lb />
prices sud the V. profits <lb />
dealer cannot supply you, we can. sold <lb />
CO. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
It. I. <lb />
What is <lb />
Life <lb />
Assurance <lb />
An easy means of <lb />
your wife and family <lb />
against want in the <lb />
of your death. <lb />
A creditable means of <lb />
curing a better financial <lb />
standing in the business <lb />
world. <lb />
The most safe and profit- <lb />
able means of investing <lb />
your savings for use in <lb />
after years. <lb />
All Life Insurance is <lb />
good. The <lb />
Equitable Life <lb />
is the best <lb />
fer full particulars, add <lb />
N. c, RocK Hill, <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
Steamers leave Washington for <lb />
ville and touching at all Ian I <lb />
on Tar Rivet Monday, Wednesday <lb />
and Friday A. M. <lb />
leave Tarboro at A. <lb />
Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturday <lb />
A. M. tame <lb />
depart urea are subject <lb />
of water on Tar River. <lb />
Connecting at with steam <lb />
of The Norfolk, Newborn and <lb />
direct for Norfolk. <lb />
Philadelphia. New Turk and Boston. <lb />
Shippers order their <lb />
marked via Dominion fr- <lb />
New York. <lb />
Norfolk A <lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
more. Miners <lb />
JNO. SON. Agent, <lb />
N. <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, Agent. <lb />
N. C. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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