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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 25 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>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18940725</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, 25 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>18940725</dc:date>
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                <p>
v A <lb />
DO <lb />
NO <lb />
the place to <lb />
Buy your <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
-AND- <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
STATIONERY <lb />
IS <lb />
AT <lb />
Reflector Bookstore. <lb />
STATE NEWS <lb />
Things Mentioned in our State Ex- <lb />
changes that are of General Interest. <lb />
Cream of the News <lb />
Durham is a dry town. <lb />
Mike a white <lb />
of about years, committed <lb />
suicide at Lenoir, oil Tuesday, by <lb />
drinking bottles of Jamaica <lb />
ginger. <lb />
Scotland Neck Mr. <lb />
W. A- Price exhibited in town <lb />
Saturday a that weighed <lb />
pounds. The seed was planted <lb />
in April. <lb />
Pittsboro Mi. L- D. <lb />
Holland, of township, in- <lb />
forms us that he has a bunch of <lb />
oats that heads and <lb />
that will average grains to the <lb />
head, that is tho product of one <lb />
grain. This will give <lb />
to one. grain sown. <lb />
Wilmington A colored <lb />
man by the name of William <lb />
aged about or <lb />
years, was found dead in his bed <lb />
morning on Sixth, between <lb />
Ann and Nun He was <lb />
well-known as driver for the fur- <lb />
of Messrs. E- H. <lb />
Co., and was at work <lb />
as usual. <lb />
Bryan, colored, New- <lb />
born, tied his mule to the railroad <lb />
track Sunday. Seeing a special <lb />
engine coming he to <lb />
fasten his mule, which broke <lb />
loose and but Bryan was <lb />
struck and that he <lb />
died next day. It was very fool- <lb />
to fasten tin animal to the <lb />
railroad This engineer <lb />
tried to stop the but <lb />
could not do so time. <lb />
Free During <lb />
a heavy thunderstorm Sunday <lb />
struck the <lb />
storage warehouse at Goldsboro, <lb />
igniting it and about bales of <lb />
cotton. Mr. T- D- Gully owned <lb />
bales and lost nearly <lb />
no insurance. The storage com- <lb />
lost about on <lb />
bales insured. Tho damage to <lb />
tho is about <lb />
covered by insurance. <lb />
Burl News Revenue <lb />
raiders captured an illicit still <lb />
about miles southwest of this <lb />
place one day last week that was <lb />
a novelty, and all made at home- <lb />
It held over gallons, and con- <lb />
of sheet iron bottom and <lb />
top, wooden sides and ends, with <lb />
a wooden cap and straight in <lb />
spout for a worm, which pissed <lb />
through a cooling trough. They <lb />
cut it up and destroyed a large <lb />
lot of beer that was ready for <lb />
running again- <lb />
H. C tells us of the <lb />
most wonderful specimen of a <lb />
chicken that we have heard of. <lb />
It is at Mr. John and <lb />
was hatched out last The <lb />
little chick has four distinct feet, <lb />
and almost two bodies- The sec- <lb />
body which is attached to <lb />
tho main body by something like <lb />
a tube, lacks a head neck n <lb />
being complete. Tho chick is <lb />
alive and doing well, and walks <lb />
around just any other chick <lb />
would, says the Wilkesboro <lb />
Chronicle. <lb />
Charlotte A white <lb />
man, Thomas Smith, was shot <lb />
and killed by John B. <lb />
also a white map, at Murdock <lb />
Smith's residence, at Rowland, a <lb />
little station eighteen miles from <lb />
Lumberton. Both men were well <lb />
resp and it is a sad <lb />
for their Both <lb />
were drinking- is <lb />
the same man who was tried for <lb />
the killing of a mulatto man at <lb />
the place four years ago, at <lb />
the house of a disreputable <lb />
tin or half breed, but he claimed <lb />
and was acquitted. <lb />
has not yet been <lb />
arrested. <lb />
On last <lb />
while going from Gus <lb />
Honey's where he was living to <lb />
Children's Day exercises at <lb />
Welborn Luther met with <lb />
a tragic death Mrs. Jane <lb />
He was riding in <lb />
a cart and the horse in going <lb />
down a slant ran away throwing <lb />
him out of tho cart, breaking and <lb />
bruising his back head. Mrs- <lb />
and her daughter <lb />
went out whore was and found <lb />
him in a dying condition He <lb />
stopped breathing in a few min- <lb />
Che deceased was a young <lb />
man of high character and <lb />
promise of making a useful <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. TERMS 1.00 per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIII. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1894. <lb />
NO. <lb />
FOR GOOD <lb />
I JOB PRINTING <lb />
CALL AT <lb />
REFLECTOR OFFICE. <lb />
THE NEGRO IN THE NORTH. <lb />
Governor Hogg, of me- <lb />
observant good humor- <lb />
ed, has been around a <lb />
little in the North. He has seen <lb />
several that attracted his <lb />
attention, and noted tho absence <lb />
of others that aroused his <lb />
In New York the other day he <lb />
asked a Sun reporter <lb />
why it is that there are no <lb />
sitting as members of tho <lb />
constitutional convention. The <lb />
reporter scratched his head and <lb />
asked for the time to file an an- <lb />
Whereupon the genial <lb />
governor of Texas lifted his eye- <lb />
brows and made this <lb />
is it that there are no <lb />
your Legislature, and <lb />
I understand are none in <lb />
the Legislature of Massachusetts. <lb />
Yet from this New England <lb />
try comes all the complaints that <lb />
tho is not having a fair <lb />
show. If he is a good man to <lb />
make the laws in the Southern <lb />
States why isn't he a good <lb />
to send to tho Legislature of <lb />
Northern States for the same <lb />
pose <lb />
It is very funny about the <lb />
North and tho he <lb />
is out of down South, <lb />
for is an object of <lb />
great sympathy and <lb />
but when ho is on <lb />
ally in evidence, as it is <lb />
something less than a cipher. <lb />
Politically he holds the balance <lb />
of power between the two parties <lb />
in several of the Northern States, <lb />
but he is not allowed to hold any <lb />
political office. He has demon <lb />
that he is a good artisan <lb />
and a pretty fair is <lb />
not permitted to come <lb />
with white men at the <lb />
North. <lb />
Only in one particular does he <lb />
receive the same treatment in <lb />
both sections. When he makes a <lb />
beastly assault on a white woman <lb />
at the North he is lynched with as <lb />
much certainty and celerity as he <lb />
is at the South. <lb />
But in all other matters the <lb />
treatment the receives in <lb />
the two sections is entirely <lb />
In the South all trades, <lb />
callings and professions are open <lb />
to him. and he is elect- <lb />
ed to office and installed therein. <lb />
No wonder Governor Hogg was <lb />
Constitution- <lb />
THE SOUTHERN OUTLOOK NOW. <lb />
Tongue Twisters, <lb />
Six thick thistle sticks- <lb />
High roller, low-roller, rower- <lb />
A growing gleam glowing green- <lb />
Flesh of fried flying <lb />
fish. <lb />
The sea and it <lb />
us- <lb />
A box of mixed biscuits, a mix- <lb />
ed biscuit box. <lb />
The bleak breeze blighted, the <lb />
blight broom blossoms. <lb />
Strict strong Stephen Stringer <lb />
snared slickly six sickly silky <lb />
snakes. <lb />
Swan over the sea ; swim <lb />
swan, swim; swam swan back <lb />
again, well swum, swan. <lb />
It is a shame, Sam ; these are <lb />
the same. Sam- all a sham, <lb />
Sam, a shame it is to sham <lb />
so, Sam. <lb />
Susan shines shoes and so ; <lb />
socks and shoes Susan. <lb />
She shining shoes and <lb />
socks, for shoes and socks <lb />
Susan. <lb />
Robert rolled a round <lb />
roll round a re roll Robert <lb />
rolled round ; where roll- <lb />
ed the round roll Robert Rowley <lb />
rolled round. <lb />
Oliver ogled an owl <lb />
and oyster. Did Oliver Ogle- <lb />
ogle an owl and oyster <lb />
Where are the owl and oyster <lb />
Oliver ogled f <lb />
Sammy saw a shriek- <lb />
Did Sammy Shoe- <lb />
smith see a shrieking songster <lb />
If Sammy saw a <lb />
shrieking songster Sammy Shoe- <lb />
s saw t <lb />
Hobbs meets Snobs and <lb />
bobs to Snobs and <lb />
Hobbs with Snobs and robs <lb />
fob. <lb />
worse for <lb />
and Snobs <lb />
change. <lb />
Morganton We learn <lb />
that Messrs. <lb />
and Silver are about to close a <lb />
sale of their Black Mountain <lb />
Alum and Iron Springs property <lb />
to a Northern drug firm, who in- <lb />
tend to erect a large plant to <lb />
manufacture the product <lb />
The South is growing and in <lb />
several particulars- It is growing <lb />
and in several particulars. It is <lb />
growing in population. It has <lb />
but few of the Hungarian, Turk- <lb />
Italian and Polish kind, and <lb />
it is the better off. The South <lb />
does not desire this class of <lb />
migrants, but it prefers the North- <lb />
and Northwestern people <lb />
who understand free institutions, <lb />
are frugal, industrious, and many <lb />
have means with which to start. <lb />
Tho South is growing steady <lb />
in its products of the farm, in its <lb />
in its man- <lb />
in railroad con- <lb />
It is not flourishing <lb />
so much as it did a few years <lb />
back, but tho whole world is <lb />
It is better off than the <lb />
rich North. is no doubt of <lb />
this. The St. Louis Republic <lb />
says <lb />
business is at a stand- <lb />
still at a different points <lb />
the North, tho wheels of <lb />
try commerce are running <lb />
whore South of Mason's <lb />
line. More now in- <lb />
establishments have been <lb />
sot on foot within the last three <lb />
months in tho South than were <lb />
started there in any quarter since <lb />
1892. The number reported by <lb />
the Record, of <lb />
Baltimore, is against for <lb />
the preceding quarter, and for <lb />
the last quarter of 1893- This <lb />
record has been beaten only two <lb />
or throe times in tho his- <lb />
of tho <lb />
That is a good showing. Then <lb />
the South is at has not <lb />
been cursed much with violence <lb />
among strikers. Tho capital <lb />
tho South is steadily, surely in- <lb />
creasing. The people are <lb />
adding to their own resources, <lb />
and more of capital from other <lb />
sections is being invested among <lb />
our people. <lb />
Take one industry as to in- <lb />
crease. The actual number of <lb />
woodwork establishments that <lb />
have been erected in the South <lb />
this year aggregate about <lb />
Then there have been built, or <lb />
arrangements have been made to <lb />
build, cotton mills in 1894- <lb />
Then look at Southern exports. <lb />
The Messenger recently <lb />
some instructive figures showing <lb />
in part what had been done with- <lb />
in a year or loss. From Southern <lb />
ports the exports amounted to <lb />
increase. <lb />
We give the cities, as we find <lb />
them stated in an article in the <lb />
Baltimore Sun of some two weeks <lb />
ago Baltimore's exports <lb />
gated those of <lb />
Charleston, Ga <lb />
ton, Orleans, <lb />
; Newport News, <lb />
; Norfolk and Portsmouth, <lb />
Pensacola, <lb />
Richmond, <lb />
Wilmington, <lb />
Those totals, as re- <lb />
some of these ports, are <lb />
surprising. The rates of increase <lb />
over last year are also surprising. <lb />
Baltimore's increase was <lb />
that of Savannah, ; <lb />
of Newport News, of <lb />
Now Orleans, of <lb />
I Charleston, <lb />
Tho results are chiefly secured <lb />
by the personal judgment, tact, <lb />
energy and business qualities of <lb />
the Southern people- They have <lb />
shown in peace the great <lb />
ties that distinguished them in <lb />
self-reliance, deter- <lb />
steady industry, <lb />
to surroundings, <lb />
enterprise, and economy. These <lb />
have won the day. The Sun well <lb />
says cl the South that its <lb />
have not shared largely in the <lb />
plums and largesses bestowed by <lb />
federal legislation upon the North <lb />
and West. Paying, not receiving <lb />
has been role The com- <lb />
comes in the <lb />
of a sturdy self respect, self- <lb />
reliance, steady industry and <lb />
economy. Character has not <lb />
been demoralized. Industry has <lb />
found a solid basis, and such <lb />
progress as has been made is <lb />
sure. The law-abiding and con- <lb />
habits of the Southern <lb />
people contrast favorably just <lb />
now with the recent record of <lb />
certain sections of our <lb />
Let the South take hope, stand <lb />
together for the right, the honest, <lb />
the true, the pure, the safe, the <lb />
patriotic, the genuine, and for all <lb />
enters into the civilization of <lb />
a great, free, hardy, liberty-living <lb />
people- Wilmington Messenger. <lb />
NORTH DEVELOP- <lb />
Whatever may the condition <lb />
of national affairs there is a la- <lb />
want of material and in- <lb />
in all sec- <lb />
of our <lb />
Take the State of North Caro- <lb />
Heaven has wonderfully <lb />
blessed our State. She has a <lb />
mate soft and balmy as that of <lb />
Italy, and a soil as rich as any in <lb />
the Valley of the Nile. <lb />
mountains are store-house of j <lb />
mineral wealth, and eastern j <lb />
shore is the native home of <lb />
fruits and <lb />
Whatever has been accomplished <lb />
in the past is as nothing to tho <lb />
that spread out before i <lb />
us. <lb />
Suppose tho agricultural re- <lb />
sources of North Carolina <lb />
fully developed, what a spectacle <lb />
it would present <lb />
Our barns would overflow <lb />
our surplus commodities become <lb />
tributary to communities. <lb />
Then, consider the result of our <lb />
mineral development. <lb />
Tho treasurers that are hid <lb />
our mountain are <lb />
enough to pay all the expenses of <lb />
bring comfort <lb />
and luxury to homo- <lb />
What shall say of individual<lb />
We have men of wisdom, men <lb />
of renowned, in all <lb />
tho walks of life. Yet, not one of <lb />
them has experienced the full <lb />
development of his powers, <lb />
all around us is the vast multitude <lb />
of unwise and unlettered men, <lb />
and a mighty host absolute <lb />
ignorance. <lb />
It is useless to dream of <lb />
as long as there <lb />
is an absence of individual <lb />
There must be mind to <lb />
work on the <lb />
of one is the necessary <lb />
precursor of the development of <lb />
the other. <lb />
If there is one thing more de- <lb />
in North Carolina than <lb />
any other it is education. We do <lb />
not mean alone the training of <lb />
tho the training of <lb />
all the powers as will make them <lb />
the highest interests <lb />
of society and accomplish tho <lb />
greatest good to country, home <lb />
and <lb />
is very much of education <lb />
that every one must acquire for <lb />
himself. <lb />
are aids, assistants, all <lb />
along, but every man must be a <lb />
teacher to himself, and so impress <lb />
upon himself the lesson of <lb />
as to make the wise <lb />
man more respected than <lb />
the learned collegiate <lb />
who knows nothing cf practical <lb />
blessings and tho <lb />
by which they are acquired. <lb />
New Journal. <lb />
last <lb />
Two Saved. <lb />
Mrs. Phoebe Thomas, of Junction <lb />
City. was told by her doctors she <lb />
had Consumption and that there was <lb />
no hope for her, but two bottles Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery completely cured <lb />
her and she says it saved her life. Mr. <lb />
Florid i St. San Fran- <lb />
guttered from a dreadful cold, <lb />
Consumption, tried without <lb />
result everything else then bought one <lb />
bottle of Dr. New Discovery and <lb />
In two weeks was cured. He is naturally <lb />
thankful. It is such results, of which <lb />
these samples, that prove the <lb />
efficacy of this in <lb />
Colds. Free trial bottles at <lb />
Store. Regular <lb />
and <lb />
ULTIMATE FIGURES <lb />
AGREED. <lb />
I would like to you <lb />
in the library on a matter of <lb />
well- Viola-come along. <lb />
Now, then, what is <lb />
you are aware that <lb />
Harry has been <lb />
paying me his attention for the <lb />
past <lb />
and I've felt like kicking <lb />
him The idea of a <lb />
mer daring to aspire to the hand <lb />
of a <lb />
has asked me to his <lb />
scoundrel Why, I'll <lb />
maul the tar out of <lb />
I've almost <lb />
she placidly continued. <lb />
What My daughter <lb />
marry a with <lb />
a week Never Go to your <lb />
room while I seek this base ad- <lb />
I want to talk straight <lb />
business with she interrupt- <lb />
ed- you are aware, this is <lb />
tho State of <lb />
you soon tho vital <lb />
of the State for tho <lb />
year <lb />
of not I Tho idea <lb />
of that Jim skulk- <lb />
around after <lb />
According to the <lb />
this State has <lb />
males more than males. <lb />
are more marriageable <lb />
girls than can find husbands, to <lb />
say nothing of widows <lb />
who are very anxious for a <lb />
The number of young <lb />
men in the State earning over <lb />
a week and in the market is only <lb />
22,107- There are camped on the <lb />
trail of these young men exactly <lb />
young <lb />
widows. Three out of every five <lb />
children are girls. Death <lb />
removes two young men to one <lb />
married man or old <lb />
The old man turned pale and <lb />
grasped a chair for support. <lb />
After a pause she continued. <lb />
June to October over <lb />
marriageable young women <lb />
visit your watering <lb />
places and it is estimated that <lb />
of them catch husbands, <lb />
thus further reducing the chances <lb />
of a resident. Father, take this <lb />
pencil and figure out your Viola's <lb />
chances of catching another man. <lb />
is she lots Harry <lb />
canter <lb />
ho gasped, <lb />
for ft moment. your <lb />
chances are only one <lb />
as I figured it out- What <lb />
shall I say to him this <lb />
Say why tell him you'll <lb />
have him and be mighty glad of <lb />
the chance and don't let him draw <lb />
a long breath before you add that <lb />
the ceremony can take place right <lb />
after breakfast to-morrow morn- <lb />
and that I'm to give a wed- <lb />
ding present of in <lb />
LIKE THE JUMPING FROG STORY. <lb />
John the mining mil- <lb />
has in his employ at <lb />
Carson, Nevada, an export named <lb />
Maurice who always of- <lb />
to back his opinion by bet <lb />
ting. This annoys Mr. <lb />
who, according to Tho Million, <lb />
not like to be disputed, and <lb />
is further fretted by tho fact that <lb />
usually proves to be in <lb />
the right. One day <lb />
was playing with an enormous <lb />
grasshopper. It could jump <lb />
twenty and he <lb />
you Mr. <lb />
dot you can't find a hopper to <lb />
beat <lb />
sent a trusted emissary <lb />
down to Carson Valley to secure <lb />
a contestant. The man spent <lb />
nearly a week catching hoppers, <lb />
and reported tho best gait any of <lb />
them made was seventeen <lb />
He doubted if a bigger jumper <lb />
could be anywhere. The <lb />
next day he arrived with about a <lb />
dozen hoppers and gave <lb />
thorn quarters in his rooms as <lb />
would stable his stud. <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report <lb />
Baking <lb />
Powder <lb />
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb />
SOME HOME REMEDIES. <lb />
Each had <lb />
rat box to himself, <lb />
A Farewell Sermon. <lb />
Old papers for sale at this office. <lb />
The following spicy <lb />
discourse, says <lb />
was recently given us by a worthy <lb />
brother pastor who was forcibly <lb />
struck with the sentiments of the <lb />
retiring pastor. <lb />
Brethren the hour has <lb />
come for the severance of the tie <lb />
which binds us. This is my fare- <lb />
well sermon. I must bid you <lb />
adieu. During my pastorate with <lb />
you I don't think the Lord has <lb />
loved you many of <lb />
you have died. Neither do I <lb />
think you loved each other much, <lb />
not many of you have married- <lb />
Neither do I think you love me <lb />
all my salary has been <lb />
paid, and what you did pay was <lb />
in and <lb />
peaches, and yon know the <lb />
Scriptures Bay their fruits <lb />
ye shall know I shall now <lb />
leave you, I am invited to a better <lb />
field, I have been called as chap- <lb />
lain to the penitentiary. Let not <lb />
hearts be troubled, I e-o to <lb />
prepare a place for <lb />
Corn is scarce in <lb />
county and selling for per <lb />
bushel. <lb />
For a sting, make a paste <lb />
of earth and water. Cover the <lb />
stung place with it, bind it on and <lb />
it will soon give relief. <lb />
When a felon first begins to <lb />
pear cut off the end of a lemon <lb />
put the finger in it and it <lb />
there as long as it can borne. <lb />
For a sore throat, try a frequent <lb />
gargles of salt and water. If a <lb />
little is it will allay the <lb />
irritation, dense the throat and <lb />
do no harm. <lb />
For stains on tho hands <lb />
is better than salt moistened <lb />
with lemon juice. Bub the spots <lb />
well with the mixture, then wash <lb />
off clean water- <lb />
It is said that a good remedy <lb />
for strengthening and clearing <lb />
j the is to beat the white of <lb />
an egg with the of a lemon <lb />
and it well with sugar <lb />
and use as needed. <lb />
To cure round shoulders, sloop j <lb />
perfectly is, I <lb />
without any bolster or pillow. <lb />
The habit can be acquired ; <lb />
of sleeping thus, and the round <lb />
and every morning they were <lb />
out and put through their <lb />
paces. It was impossible, how- <lb />
ever, to net one to jump over <lb />
eighteen feet. was in <lb />
despair; but one morning a hop- <lb />
sniffed at a of ammonia on <lb />
the table and immediately jump- <lb />
ed thirty feet. Next day j <lb />
announced to that he <lb />
was ready for tho match. The <lb />
expert came an hour before the <lb />
time, with his pet hopper- Not <lb />
finding in, he noticed the <lb />
of ammonia. A light broke j shoulders will soon be Straight-1 <lb />
upon him. Grabbing the bottle, <lb />
he rushed to a drug-store threw <lb />
away the ammonia, and ordered <lb />
to be filled with chloroform. <lb />
soon arrived with half a <lb />
dozen mining superintendents, <lb />
whom he invited to see him have <lb />
some fun with They <lb />
were hardly seated when <lb />
came in with the hopper in a <lb />
cigar box under his arm. <lb />
For a cough, boil an ounce of j <lb />
whole in a pint of <lb />
strain and add a little honey, tho <lb />
juice of two lemons and an ounce <lb />
of rock candy. Stir together and <lb />
bod a few minutes. Drink hot. <lb />
Hadn't Missed Hit Car. <lb />
Tho wind was blowing a gale, <lb />
and the rain was pattering <lb />
against the window panes at the <lb />
homo of a prominent Camden <lb />
physician. The clock had just <lb />
tolled the hour past midnight, <lb />
when tho physician was aroused <lb />
by tho ringing of his door-bell. <lb />
He jumped out of bed, put on his <lb />
dressing gown, went to the win- <lb />
raised the sash and aw a <lb />
man, muffled to the ears, standing <lb />
on his front step. He asked. <lb />
do you want at this <lb />
hour V <lb />
Mr- was the answer. <lb />
go homo. I am not <lb />
responsible if you did miss a car. <lb />
Why did you stay out so late <lb />
The window went down with a <lb />
bang, and the doctor wont back to <lb />
bod. <lb />
The boll rang again, tho <lb />
put his head out of the window <lb />
and saw the same man on the <lb />
step. <lb />
doctor I'm Mr. <lb />
if you did miss your car, <lb />
what have I to do with <lb />
doctor, Carr. Don't you <lb />
understand <lb />
do you take me for, a <lb />
conductor <lb />
no, doctor. Mrs. Carr, my <lb />
wife, your patient, is very ill and <lb />
requires <lb />
that's you, Carr, is it <lb />
Wait a minute and I'll be with <lb />
Press. <lb />
Heaping; Insults Upon Injury. <lb />
At the last term of the Wake <lb />
was a late. Mr. Mack- county, Superior Court, at <lb />
but I'm hero hopper I the following facts <lb />
and <lb />
He laid down tho money which <lb />
was covered promptly. <lb />
got behind somebody and let his <lb />
hopper sniff at the ammonia bot- <lb />
which held <lb />
form- Time being called, tho <lb />
were placed side by side <lb />
on tho piazza, and at the word <lb />
each one was touched on <lb />
tho back with a straw. <lb />
entry scored twenty-four <lb />
gave a lazy lurch of j The bull ball <lb />
some four inches, and folding his <lb />
leg's fell fast asleep. <lb />
The Victorious Pipe. <lb />
If we are to believe the <lb />
advocates of <lb />
co will be as important in the <lb />
next great war as medical <lb />
dance. In the Franco German <lb />
war it was the pipe against the <lb />
cigarette. The German's pipe is <lb />
large enough to hold an ounce of <lb />
tobacco; the Frenchman's cigar- <lb />
is a mere pinch; and tho <lb />
French were often without this <lb />
small amount of nerve food <lb />
consolation. <lb />
The German authorities were <lb />
not more anxious to give their <lb />
troops plenty of food than they <lb />
were to provide them with an ever <lb />
full pipe- The Daily News <lb />
respondent related how a maimed <lb />
soldier, lying amid the dead and <lb />
dying before asked for but <lb />
one cigar. <lb />
General yon at a <lb />
critical moment of a great <lb />
saw one of his men coolly <lb />
and firing at close quarters. <lb />
me a shouted the <lb />
General. The soldier obeyed <lb />
with a smile, and the next mo- <lb />
the General, inspired by the <lb />
of his subordinate, <lb />
up his shaken battalion and <lb />
led forward his half decimated <lb />
forces to victory. The Daily <lb />
Telegraph correspondent related <lb />
that while firing was going on at <lb />
a party of <lb />
wick hussars came into <lb />
the fray smoking their cigars, <lb />
just as if the French were twenty <lb />
miles away. <lb />
Electric <lb />
This remedy is becoming so <lb />
known and CO popular as to <lb />
special mention. All who have and <lb />
Bitters sing the same song of <lb />
purer medicine does not <lb />
j and it is guaranteed to do ad that is <lb />
claimed. Electric Hitters will cure all <lb />
d of the Kidneys, will <lb />
; remove Pimples, Boils, Salt <lb />
other caused by impure <lb />
Malaria the <lb />
system and prevent as well as cure all <lb />
Malarial cure of <lb />
ache. Constipation and try <lb />
satisfaction <lb />
guaranteed or money <lb />
and 81.00 per bottle at John L. <lb />
i Wooten's <lb />
The Dog <lb />
The proprietor of a Third Ave- <lb />
store owns a little black kit- <lb />
ten that cultivates a habit of <lb />
squatting on its haunches, like a <lb />
bear or a kangaroo, and then <lb />
sparring with its forepaws as if it <lb />
had taken lessons from a pugilist. <lb />
A gentleman took into the store <lb />
the other evening an enormous <lb />
dog, halt Newfoundland, <lb />
half collie, fat, good-natured and <lb />
intelligent. The tiny black kitten, <lb />
instead of bolting at once for <lb />
shelter, retreated a few paces, sat <lb />
erect on its hind logs, and <lb />
its in an attitude of defiance. <lb />
The contrast in size between the <lb />
two was intensely amusing. It <lb />
reminded one of Jack the Giant <lb />
Killer preparing to demolish a <lb />
giant. <lb />
Slowly and without a sign of <lb />
excitability the huge dog walked <lb />
as far as his chain would allow <lb />
him, and intently at the <lb />
kitten and its odd posture- Then, <lb />
as the comicality of the situation <lb />
him, he turned his head <lb />
and shoulders around to the spec- <lb />
and if an animal ever <lb />
laughed in the world that dog as- <lb />
did so, then and there. <lb />
He neither barked nor growled, <lb />
but indulged in a low chuckle, <lb />
while eyes and mouth beamed <lb />
with York <lb />
gram. <lb />
i little half-grown bull <lb />
was on the railway track. Ho an- <lb />
the whistle of an approach- <lb />
train with a bellow of defiance <lb />
and a toss of gravel over his <lb />
shoulder. A tramp who happen- <lb />
ed to be close behind him stepped <lb />
off the track and waited to see <lb />
the The engine struck the <lb />
little bull doubled him up <lb />
like a ball, and sent him twenty- <lb />
feet as if shot from a catapult- <lb />
made a line shot <lb />
the tramp into a <lb />
little pond near the road- When <lb />
the engineer backed the train to <lb />
take stock of the damage done, <lb />
the tramp was crawling up on a <lb />
no log out of his involuntary bath. <lb />
Under advice of learned <lb />
in the law, action was brought <lb />
against tho railway corporation <lb />
for the personal injuries and in- <lb />
dignity inflicted. On the trial, to <lb />
tho surprise and intense disgust <lb />
of the plaintiff, the verdict went <lb />
against him. To a sympathizing <lb />
he placidly remarked <lb />
that he had over <lb />
into a pond by a little <lb />
bull, and that a doz <lb />
en jackasses had kicked him out <lb />
of the court <lb />
American. <lb />
Salve- <lb />
The Salve In the world for Cuts, <lb />
Heists, Sores, Ulcer, Salt <lb />
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin <lb />
and positively Piles, or no <lb />
pay required. It is guaranteed to Rive <lb />
perfect satisfaction or money refunded <lb />
cents per box. For sale by <lb />
John L. Wooten, Hi <lb />
Reduced pi Ices in <lb />
Watch Repairing <lb />
Have your Watches Cleaned for Si <lb />
cents. Main Springs cents, all other <lb />
work as cheap In proportion. <lb />
Call on me at corner store near post- <lb />
office. Z. F. <lb />
Greenville, X. C. <lb />
IT F. PRICE, <lb />
LAND <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
Office at the House. <lb />
I,. <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
II. G <lb />
The reader of paper will <lb />
ed to learn that there is at least one <lb />
dreaded disease that has been <lb />
able lo cure in all its stages, and that is <lb />
Catarrh, Hall's Cure is the. <lb />
only positive cure known to the medical <lb />
fraternity. Catarrh being a <lb />
disease, requires a constitutional <lb />
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is <lb />
taken internally, acting directly on the <lb />
blood and mucous, surfaces of the sys- <lb />
thereby destroying the foundation <lb />
of the disease, and giving the patient <lb />
strength by up <lb />
and assisting nature in doing its <lb />
work. The proprietors have so much <lb />
faith in its curative powers, that they <lb />
offer One Hundred Dollars for any ease <lb />
that It fails to cure. Send for list <lb />
testimonials. <lb />
Address, F. J. CO., <lb />
Sold by Druggist, Toledo, O <lb />
Jas. E. Moore. Ii. I. <lb />
Williamston. Greenville. <lb />
MOORE. <lb />
N E A XV, <lb />
N. C <lb />
Office under Opera House. Third <lb />
J. <lb />
L. FLEMING, <lb />
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW <lb />
N. O. <lb />
Prompt attention to <lb />
at Tucker old stand. <lb />
The <lb />
As an exchange Bays, go bury <lb />
the croaker in the woods in a <lb />
beautiful hole in the ground, <lb />
where the bumble bee bumbles, <lb />
and pecks, and the <lb />
big bugs around. He's <lb />
no good to the city of push, too <lb />
unpractical, stingy and dead, but <lb />
he wants the whole earth and all <lb />
of the crust, and the stars that <lb />
shine over his head. Then <lb />
him off to the place of the <lb />
dead and bury him deep in the <lb />
ground ; he's do use to us here, <lb />
get him out of the way, and make <lb />
for the man that is sound. <lb />
W G. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, X l. <lb />
Practice all the courts. Collections a <lb />
L. <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
all the Courts. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
B. F. TYSON <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
Prompt attention given to collection <lb />
L. C. LATHAM. MARRY <lb />
N. C. <lb />
HOTEL NICHOLSON, <lb />
WASHINGTON, N. C- <lb />
Geo. A. Spencer, Mgr. <lb />
IR RESPECT <lb />
Special attention to Commercial Men, <lb />
Free Hue.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017703_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
USES, Editor and Proprietor <lb />
WEDNESDAY. JULY 1394. <lb />
Entered at at G <lb />
N. C, as second-class mail matter. <lb />
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTIONS. <lb />
Pitt county convention. <lb />
Thursday, July <lb />
Judicial convention. Third Dis- <lb />
Rocky Mount, Wednesday, <lb />
August 1st. <lb />
State convention, Raleigh, <lb />
Wednesday, August 8th- <lb />
Congressional convention, First <lb />
District, Wednesday, <lb />
August 15th. <lb />
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC <lb />
A convention of the Democratic <lb />
party of Pitt County will held <lb />
at the Court House in Greenville <lb />
on Thursday, July 26th, at <lb />
o'clock, M-, for the purpose of <lb />
pointing delegates to the State. <lb />
Congressional and Judicial Con- <lb />
Each township will be 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 I votes- <lb />
is entitled to votes- <lb />
is entitled to <lb />
votes. <lb />
Falkland is entitled to votes. <lb />
Farmville 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. 1804. 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 />
ft. Williams, 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 moot at Rocky <lb />
Mount, August 1st, <lb />
1894, at o'clock P. M- <lb />
By order of committee, <lb />
F- S- Chairman. <lb />
CONGRESSIONAL CONVENTION <lb />
The Democratic Convention of <lb />
the First Congressional District <lb />
will meet at Greenville, on Wed- <lb />
August 15th. 1804. at <lb />
o'clock the purpose of <lb />
a for Congress. <lb />
The Committees <lb />
are requested to call County Con <lb />
to select delegates to said <lb />
Convention. <lb />
By order of the Executive Com- <lb />
L. W- Chairman. <lb />
DOINGS AT OCRACOKE. <lb />
A Large Crowd on the <lb />
and Bathing The P <lb />
Steamer Meeting <lb />
K Sad Accident. <lb />
are many others here besides <lb />
these and every boat brings new <lb />
arrivals to take the place of those <lb />
who leave. The House <lb />
and several of the private houses <lb />
also have a number of guests and <lb />
there are some families who have <lb />
their own cottages here for the <lb />
summer- Altogether they make <lb />
the island a lively place and give <lb />
the natives and the sail-boats a <lb />
profitable business. <lb />
Fishing the past week has not <lb />
been as good as a few weeks ago, <lb />
but there have been some very <lb />
fine catches- Three gentlemen <lb />
from Tarboro who left <lb />
day took home thirty-five large <lb />
sheep-head which they caught at <lb />
the pier right in of the <lb />
hotel. The Greenville folks never <lb />
come in behind any other boats <lb />
when go out after trout and <lb />
have brought in several large <lb />
of them. Col- W. E- <lb />
of who has <lb />
been the champion fisherman <lb />
here for several seasons is keep- <lb />
up his reputation for big fish. <lb />
bathing and sailing are de- <lb />
The proprietor of the hotel has <lb />
had no experience in this line be- <lb />
fore, and his help all being new <lb />
hands at the business causes the <lb />
management to run along less <lb />
smoothly than it will after he be- <lb />
comes mere experienced- The <lb />
hotel will hereafter be kept open <lb />
all the year through and be a re- <lb />
sort for sportsmen in winter as <lb />
well as for pleasure seekers in <lb />
summer- There is no reason why <lb />
should not become the <lb />
most famous resort on the coast <lb />
and if proper efforts are made it <lb />
will be- <lb />
Capt- David Hill with his charm- <lb />
little steamer Gazelle, is doing <lb />
the passenger traffic <lb />
He makes three <lb />
between here and <lb />
The Gazelle is a <lb />
water as <lb />
The <lb />
this season- <lb />
trips a week <lb />
Washington. <lb />
boat and rides the <lb />
as a swan. <lb />
pie enjoy traveling on such a safe <lb />
steamer and with so courteous a <lb />
captain. <lb />
A camp meeting will begin on <lb />
the island August 8th- It will be <lb />
a very interesting occasion. <lb />
A sad accident near <lb />
the island a few days ago. A <lb />
young native named Ben <lb />
was returning home from New <lb />
Bern on a schooner. When a <lb />
few miles from shore he. went <lb />
down in the cabin, dressed a <lb />
new suit of clothes and got his <lb />
effects ready to go ashore- Com- <lb />
back out of the cabin he <lb />
made a fell overboard <lb />
and was drowned before assist- <lb />
could reach him. This <lb />
curred within sight of his mothers <lb />
door. His body was recovered <lb />
three days later where he <lb />
was drowned. could <lb />
have been further from mind <lb />
at tho time of dressing in his new <lb />
clothing than that he was <lb />
his own shroud. <lb />
We have just a copy <lb />
of Evening of <lb />
It is a newsy, neat sheet and de- <lb />
serves the support of the Wilson <lb />
people. Mr. T- H. Per. cock is <lb />
editor. <lb />
The Observe, of <lb />
was sold last week for <lb />
to J. L. Holding. It will be con- <lb />
as a <lb />
and many improvements be <lb />
made. <lb />
CLEVELAND TO WILSON. <lb />
has been well <lb />
at the past two <lb />
weeks and we find It's delightful <lb />
holding Its Una season, <lb />
as to number of people pres <lb />
the to be had <lb />
From the point of numbers this <lb />
has been the most successful sea <lb />
son for several years. Sine July <lb />
came ii room in the <lb />
has bee l and among the <lb />
guests Many prominent <lb />
from sections of the <lb />
State. Besides those <lb />
from in last Reflector <lb />
our pa has been joined by J. <lb />
B- and Bruce Cotton. I <lb />
here also from Washing- <lb />
ton J. H. Small and family, J. B. <lb />
Fowle and family, F. V. Rowe <lb />
wife, C. E. and family, <lb />
T- Harvey wife, Mi. <lb />
N. Harding and daughter. T. W- <lb />
and family and many <lb />
others; from Wilson A. P. <lb />
Branch and wife, P. B- Deans <lb />
and family, P. M. Williams. R. G <lb />
B. J. T Wig <lb />
gins, Lat Williams <lb />
from Tarboro Dr. M- B. <lb />
Pitt, R. B. H. B. <lb />
and R- H- Williams; from Swan <lb />
Quarter H. W. and Geo. <lb />
from Salisbury J. R. <lb />
Whichard and family. M- <lb />
Quinn and ; from Newborn <lb />
H-1 Gibbs and family. There <lb />
We publish below Mr. Clove <lb />
land a letter to Chairman Wilson. <lb />
The letter speaks for itself and <lb />
needs little comment at our hands- <lb />
Mr- leaves no doubt as <lb />
to whore ho stands upon the <lb />
tariff question. His action in <lb />
reference to tho strike, and this <lb />
letter to Mr. Wilson make him as <lb />
one of the first if not the first <lb />
man in this union- Mb man has <lb />
eyer grown as much with the <lb />
people as ho has in the past <lb />
thirty Read this letter. <lb />
Mansion, <lb />
Washington-. July 1894 <lb />
Mm. L. <lb />
Peak <lb />
that a conference will be ordered <lb />
between the two of Con <lb />
for the purpose of adjust- <lb />
differences on the subject of <lb />
tariff legislation, makes it also <lb />
certain that you will be again <lb />
called to do hard service in the <lb />
cause of tariff reform. <lb />
public life Las been so <lb />
closely related to the subject, I <lb />
Lave so for its accomplish <lb />
and have so often prom <lb />
its realization to my fellow <lb />
countrymen as a result of their <lb />
trust confidence the Demo <lb />
party- that I hope excuse <lb />
is necessary for my earnest <lb />
peal to you that this crises you <lb />
insist upon party hon- <lb />
and good faith and a sturdy <lb />
adherence to Democratic <lb />
I believe these absolutely <lb />
necessary conditions to the con <lb />
of <lb />
rid myself of the <lb />
i that this conference will <lb />
present the best, if not the only <lb />
hope of true Democracy. <lb />
cations point to its action the <lb />
reliance of those who desire the <lb />
genuine fruition of Democratic <lb />
effort, the of Democrat- <lb />
pledges the redemption of <lb />
to the <lb />
pie- To reconcile differences v <lb />
the details comprised within the <lb />
fixed and well denned lines of <lb />
principle will not be the sole task <lb />
of the conference; but, as it <lb />
seems to me, its members will also <lb />
have in charge the question <lb />
whether Democratic principles <lb />
themselves are to be saved or <lb />
abandoned. <lb />
is no excuse for <lb />
or apprehending the feeling <lb />
or temper of the rank and file of <lb />
the Democracy. They are down- <lb />
cast under the assertion that their <lb />
party fails in ability to manage <lb />
the Government, and they are <lb />
apprehensive that efforts to bring <lb />
about tariff reform may fail; but <lb />
they are much more downcast <lb />
and apprehensive in their fear <lb />
that Democratic principles may <lb />
be surrendered. <lb />
these circumstances they <lb />
cannot do otherwise than look <lb />
with confidence to you and to <lb />
those who with you have <lb />
and sincerely championed <lb />
the cause of tariff reform within <lb />
Democratic lines and guided by <lb />
Democratic principles. This <lb />
confidence is vastly augmented <lb />
by the action under your leader <lb />
ship of the House of <lb />
upon the bill now pending. <lb />
true Democrat and <lb />
every sincere tariff reformer <lb />
knows that this bill, in its present <lb />
form and as it will submitted <lb />
to the conference, falls far short <lb />
of the consummation for which <lb />
we have long labored, for which <lb />
we have suffered defeat without <lb />
discouragement, which, in its <lb />
anticipation, gave us a rallying <lb />
cry in our day of triumph, and <lb />
which, in its promise of its ac- <lb />
is so interwoven <lb />
with Democratic pledges and <lb />
Democratic success, that our <lb />
abandonment of the cause or the <lb />
principles upon which it rests, <lb />
means party perfidy and party <lb />
dishonor. <lb />
One topic will be submitted to <lb />
the conference which embodies <lb />
Democratic principals so directly <lb />
that it cannot be compromised. <lb />
We have in our platforms and in <lb />
every way possible declared in <lb />
favor of the free importation of <lb />
raw materials. We have again <lb />
and again promised that this <lb />
should be accorded to our people <lb />
our manufacturers as soon <lb />
as the Democratic party was in- <lb />
vested with the power to deter- <lb />
mine the tariff policy of the <lb />
country. The party now has that <lb />
power. We are as certain to-day <lb />
as we have ever been of the great <lb />
benefit that would accrue to the <lb />
country from the inauguration of <lb />
this policy, and nothing has <lb />
curred to release us from our ob- <lb />
ligation to secure this advantage <lb />
to our people. It must be admit <lb />
that no tariff measure can ac- <lb />
cord with Democratic principles <lb />
and promises, or bear a genuine <lb />
Democratic badge, that does not <lb />
provide for free raw material- <lb />
Under these circumstances it may <lb />
well excite our wonder that Dem- <lb />
are willing to depart from <lb />
this, the most Democratic of all <lb />
tariff principles, and that the in- <lb />
consistent absurdity of such a <lb />
proposed departure should be <lb />
emphasized by the suggestion <lb />
that the wool of the farmer be <lb />
put on the free list, and the pro- <lb />
of tariff taxation be <lb />
ed around the iron ore and coal <lb />
of corporations and capitalists. <lb />
How can we face the people after <lb />
indulging in such outrageous dis- <lb />
and violations of <lb />
principle <lb />
is quite apparent that this <lb />
question of free raw material does <lb />
not admit of adjustment on any <lb />
rate of tariff taxation, great or <lb />
small, is alike violative of Demo- <lb />
principles and Democratic <lb />
good faith. <lb />
hope that you will not con- <lb />
sider it if I say some- <lb />
thing in relation to another sub- <lb />
which can hardly fail to be <lb />
troublesome to the conference. <lb />
I to the adjustment of tariff <lb />
taxation on sugar. Under our <lb />
party platform and in accordance <lb />
with our declared party purposes, <lb />
sugar is a legitimate and logical <lb />
article of revenue taxation. <lb />
fortunately, however, incidents <lb />
have accompanied certain stages <lb />
of the legislation which will be <lb />
submitted to the conference, that <lb />
have aroused, in connection with <lb />
this subject, a natural Democratic <lb />
animosity to tho methods and <lb />
manipulations of trusts and com- <lb />
I confess to sharing <lb />
in this yet it seems <lb />
to me we ought, if possibly, to <lb />
sufficiently tree ourselves from <lb />
prejudice to enable us coolly to <lb />
weigh the considerations which, <lb />
in formulating tariff legislation, <lb />
ought to guide our treatment of <lb />
sugar as a article. While <lb />
no tenderness should be enter- <lb />
for trusts, and while I am <lb />
decidedly opposed to granting <lb />
them, under the guise of. tariff <lb />
taxation, any opportunity to <lb />
further their peculiar methods, <lb />
I suggest that we ought not to be <lb />
driven away tho Democratic <lb />
principles policy which load <lb />
to the taxation of sugar, by the <lb />
fear, quite likely exaggerated, <lb />
that carrying out this principle <lb />
and policy we may indirectly and <lb />
inordinately, a <lb />
nation of sugar refining interests. <lb />
I know that in present conditions <lb />
this is a delicate subject and I <lb />
appreciate the depth and strength <lb />
of the f. which its treatment <lb />
has aroused. I do not believe <lb />
we should do evil that good may <lb />
come but it to me that <lb />
we should not forget that aim <lb />
is tho completion of a bill, <lb />
and that in taxing sugar for pro <lb />
per purposes and within reason <lb />
able bounds, whatever else may <lb />
be said of out action, are in <lb />
no danger of counter to <lb />
Democratic principles. With all <lb />
there is at stake, there must be <lb />
the treatment of this article some <lb />
ground upon which we are all <lb />
to stand, whore <lb />
and conciliation may be allowed <lb />
to solve the problem, without de- <lb />
the entire surrender of <lb />
fixed and conscientious <lb />
ought not to prolong this <lb />
letter. If what I have written is <lb />
ii K I beg you to believe <lb />
my good intentions. <lb />
the conclusions of the con- <lb />
touching the numerous <lb />
items which will be considered, <lb />
the people are not afraid that <lb />
their interests will be neglected. <lb />
They know that the general re- <lb />
so far as these are concerned <lb />
will be to place home necessaries <lb />
and comforts easier within their <lb />
reach, and then insure better and <lb />
surer compensation to those who <lb />
toil. <lb />
all know that a tariff, <lb />
all the varied interest and <lb />
conditions of a country as vast as <lb />
ours, must of necessity be largely <lb />
the result of honorable adjust- <lb />
and honorable compromise. <lb />
J expect very few of as can say <lb />
when our measure is perfected <lb />
that all its features are entirely <lb />
as we would prefer. You <lb />
how much I deprecated the i <lb />
into the proposed bill of <lb />
the income tax feature- In mat- <lb />
of this kind, however, which <lb />
do not violate a fixed and <lb />
Democratic doctrine, we <lb />
are willing to defer to the <lb />
of a majority of our Demo- <lb />
brethren. I think there is <lb />
a agreement that this is <lb />
party duty. This is more <lb />
apparent when we realize that <lb />
the business of our country timid- <lb />
stands and watches for the re- <lb />
of to perfect tariff <lb />
legislation; that a quick and <lb />
return of prosperity waits <lb />
upon a wise adjustment and that <lb />
a confiding people still trust in <lb />
our hands their prosperity and <lb />
well being. <lb />
The Democracy of the land <lb />
pleads most earnestly for the <lb />
speedy completion of the tariff <lb />
legislation which their <lb />
have undertaken; but they <lb />
demand not less earnestly that no <lb />
stress of necessity shall tempt <lb />
those they trust to the abandon- <lb />
of Democratic principles. <lb />
Tours very truly,<lb />
That <lb />
Tired Feeling <lb />
So common at this season, is a serious <lb />
condition, liable to lead to disastrous <lb />
results. It Is a sure sign of <lb />
health tone, and that the blood is <lb />
and impure. The best and <lb />
most successful remedy is found in <lb />
HOOD'S <lb />
Sarsaparilla <lb />
Which makes rich, healthy blood, and <lb />
thus gives strength to the nerves, <lb />
to the muscles, vigor to the brain <lb />
and health to the -whole body, la <lb />
truth, Hood's Sarsaparilla <lb />
Makes the <lb />
Weak Strong <lb />
Be sure to get Hood's and only <lb />
Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, per- <lb />
harmless, always reliable and <lb />
University of <lb />
North Carolina. <lb />
Brick Brick <lb />
Delivered at M Road on <lb />
short notice. Quality and <lb />
made s <lb />
S. B. ABBOTT, <lb />
and <lb />
Kinston, K. C, 1804 <lb />
RAMBLER <lb />
For sale by <lb />
the COLLEGE, the <lb />
the LAW SCHOOL, the <lb />
and the SUMMER <lb />
SCHOOL for Teachers. College <lb />
a year; board 87.00 to <lb />
a month. Session begins Sept. 6th. <lb />
Address President Winston, Chapel <lb />
mil, n. c. <lb />
KINSEY SEMINARY <lb />
LaGRANGE, n. c, <lb />
A Boarding School for Girls Young Ladies <lb />
Full of Teachers. <lb />
LITERARY, ART MUSIC DEPARTMENTS <lb />
Not only competes with but excels <lb />
in prices any school offering similar <lb />
advantages. <lb />
LOCATION HEALTHY. <lb />
State Chemist in examination of water <lb />
says have probably never exam- <lb />
a better For <lb />
giving full write to <lb />
KINSEY, P <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Letters of administration upon the <lb />
estate of Sherrod Belcher deceased <lb />
been issued to the undersigned, on <lb />
the 4th day of June 1804. by the Clerk <lb />
of the Superior Court of Pitt County, <lb />
notice is hereby given to all persons <lb />
haying claims against said estate to <lb />
present them to the undersigned on or <lb />
before the 13th day of June 1893 or this <lb />
notice will be plead in bar of their re- <lb />
All persons indebted to said <lb />
estate are requested to make immediate <lb />
payment to me. This the 13th day of <lb />
June 1894. W. E. BELCH Kit, <lb />
A of Sherrod Belcher. <lb />
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOB <lb />
We will fill them QUICK <lb />
We will fill them CHEAP <lb />
We will fill them WELL <lb />
-o- <lb />
CAROLINA <lb />
College of <lb />
Agriculture and <lb />
Mechanic Arts. <lb />
OfTer- Three Technical Courses <lb />
The Course in Agriculture, <lb />
The Course in Science, <lb />
The Course in Mechanical and <lb />
. . Civil Engineering, <lb />
and with each a good academic <lb />
Each course is broad and <lb />
and the institution is now equipped <lb />
for excellent work. Expenses very <lb />
moderate. Session opens September <lb />
0th. For address <lb />
Q. HOLLADAY, <lb />
Pres. Raleigh, N. C. <lb />
Rough Heart Framing, 80.00 <lb />
Rough Sap Framing, ; <lb />
Rough Sap Boards, r inches <lb />
Rough Sap Boards, inches, <lb />
Wait days for our Planing Mill and <lb />
we will furnish you Dressed Lu <lb />
as <lb />
Wood delivered to door for <lb />
cents a load. <lb />
Terms cash. <lb />
Thanking you for past patronage. <lb />
Wake Forest College. <lb />
WAKE FOREST N. C. <lb />
A CHRISTIAN COLLEGE embracing <lb />
ten Academic Schools and the pro- <lb />
School of Law. A select <lb />
of volumes. A large <lb />
and well furnished Reading Room. <lb />
Thoroughly equipped and <lb />
Laboratories. Literary Societies <lb />
passed in the South. No secret <lb />
allowed among the students. <lb />
Free tuition to ministers and the sons <lb />
of ministers. Loans for the needy. <lb />
Board from six to ten dollars per month. <lb />
A complete system of water-works with <lb />
ample bathing facilities. Next session <lb />
begins Sept. 5th. Summer Law School <lb />
opens July 2nd. For farther <lb />
address. <lb />
Rev. C. E. Taylor, Pres <lb />
Administrators Notice <lb />
Letters of administration upon the <lb />
estate of Eugenia Nelson, deceased, <lb />
having been issued to the undersigned, <lb />
on the 14th day of July, 1894, by the <lb />
Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt <lb />
notice is given to all per- <lb />
sons having claims against said estate <lb />
to present them to the undersigned on <lb />
or before the 14th day of July or <lb />
this notice will be plead in bar of their <lb />
recovery. All persons indebted to said <lb />
estate are requested to make <lb />
ate payment me. <lb />
This the 14th day of July, 1894. <lb />
J. M. C. NELSON, <lb />
of Nelson. <lb />
To Our North Carolina <lb />
Yon want the BEST for the <lb />
We <lb />
at It .-ii m-i-r <lb />
50.000 In <lb />
known <lb />
that our <lb />
RELIABLE, <lb />
DURABLE, <lb />
PERFECT, <lb />
and at lowest<lb />
RALEIGH BRANCH <lb />
What you know r had <lb />
there . <lb />
Not n mt our <lb />
antler our direct control, <lb />
In Its <lb />
not Rolling on <lb />
All u. <lb />
price,<lb />
Agent <lb />
em. Our <lb />
very door. to-k <lb />
to select from. AM new <lb />
from Write <lb />
will <lb />
Send your for Mimic <lb />
Rook <lb />
String, and nil <lb />
Any in United <lb />
Mate <lb />
our I- . <lb />
It can you money. <lb />
BATES <lb />
Southern Music House. <lb />
main House, Savannah, Ga. <lb />
tram-lien In V i- . . <lb />
;.; <lb />
N. C; Tenn.; New Or- <lb />
all under our direct man- <lb />
-DEALER IN AND REPAIRER OF <lb />
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills Machinery <lb />
PEN <lb />
n. c. <lb />
The took five of the high- <lb />
est awards at the World's Fair and <lb />
holds World's Records. The <lb />
pion rider of the South rides the Ram- <lb />
make at reduced price. 1894 <lb />
all are strictly highest <lb />
grade. make <lb />
Tobacco fines, Sell tee, <lb />
and do all of Tin work, Roofing, <lb />
Guttering, <lb />
S. E. PENDER CO. <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 />
PITT FEMALE SEMINARY <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Session Opens September 5th, 1894, Closes June, 1895.<lb />
Full Corps of Teachers. Complete English Course. Ancient and Modern Languages. Special <lb />
Advantages in Music and Art. For full particulars apply to <lb />
Principal. <lb />
FREE ENGLISH SCHOLARSHIP will be given two young ladies who are preparing <lb />
to teach in the Public Schools of Pitt and adjoining counties. Tuition will be required in advance, but <lb />
will be refunded to the applicants who make the highest average on tho regular examinations at the <lb />
of the session, must enter not later than October 1st. <lb />
ASK<lb />
IF YOU INTERESTED IN LOOKING FOR <lb />
BARGAINS <lb />
to go straight to them, their stock is now complete, their store <lb />
full of choice selected--------- <lb />
Merchandise <lb />
From which genuine bargains can he 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, dread no comparison of <lb />
stock, quality and prices. Our store is the <lb />
place for yon to buy goods at right prices, <lb />
for the following reasons buy for <lb />
Cash. We seek for quality and durability. <lb />
We deal squarely with you. We carry the <lb />
largest stock to be found in our county <lb />
from to make your selections. <lb />
do not seek to take advantage of you. <lb />
are responsible for all errors or mistakes that <lb />
may occur on our pan. We do not carry <lb />
a cheap John stock of job lots and Inferior <lb />
goods and push you things you do not <lb />
want. Once our customer you will remain <lb />
our friend. Hundreds of customers visit <lb />
our store, buy their goods at right prices <lb />
arc well pleased with their purchases, go home satisfied. why don't you do <lb />
the same thing and receive your money's worth. One hundred cents on the dollar <lb />
Look here did you know that you could buy us almost any <lb />
article you may need in the following lines <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions, Hats, <lb />
Goods, <lb />
Caps, Shoes for Everybody, Ladies, Misses and <lb />
Oxfords, Men's Fine and Heavy Shoes, Crockery and Glassware, <lb />
Tinware, Hardware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings, Groceries, <lb />
and Flour, Mattings, Curtain Poles and Lace Curtains. <lb />
Furniture Furniture, <lb />
Cheap and Medium Grades, Chairs, Bedsteads, Lounges, Tables, <lb />
Sideboards, Tin Safes, Mattresses, Bed Springs, Children's Beds, <lb />
Cradles, Bureaus and Full Suits of Bed Boom Furniture. <lb />
Take a look at our stock it will cost you nothing and may <lb />
you dollars. We are agents for P. SPOOL <lb />
COTTON at jobbers prices. <lb />
Come One. Come All. <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE. <lb />
---------IS STILL AT THE WITH A LINE-------- <lb />
fORTY YEARS EXPERIENCE taught me that the best b the cheap st. <lb />
Hemp Rope. Building Pumps, Farming Implements, and every- <lb />
ting necessary for Millers, Mechanics and general purposes, as well M <lb />
Clothing, Hats, Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods I have always on hand. Am head- <lb />
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and jobbing agent O. N. T. Spool <lb />
Cotton, and keep courteous and attentive <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
-j k<lb />
., <lb />
,,<lb />
O O U<lb />
gnus OB<lb />
Minus<lb />
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb />
-IN- <lb />
my Friends and Customers of Pitt and adjoining <lb />
I wish to that I have made special preparation in preparing HOGS <lb />
MATERIAL and propose with inside dressed <lb />
smooth which will prevent or your Tobacco when parking <lb />
Also have made special arrangements to use best split Hoops made White <lb />
Scroll Sawing, Making <lb />
And Turned for a Specialty. <lb />
am prepared any kind of Scroll Sawing Brackets or anything In <lb />
or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, Picked for Stairways. Mendings of <lb />
any kind, including Piazza Railing, and would lie pleased to name you prices on <lb />
anything the above upon application. <lb />
GENERAL REPAIR WORK <lb />
done on short notice. Thanking you lot your past patronage, lam willing to <lb />
to meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you me a trial before <lb />
elsewhere. <lb />
Winterville, N. <lb />
COBB BROS. CO. <lb />
AND <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA <lb />
and Solicited,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017703_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections <lb />
plentiful. <lb />
Just received barrels of <lb />
flour cheap at J. L. Starkey Co. <lb />
Just received car load Rock <lb />
Lime. J- A. Andrews. <lb />
White duck trousers are all the <lb />
rage. <lb />
Fresh groceries arriving week- <lb />
at J. S- Smith Son's. <lb />
Shirts-two collars <lb />
must go, at Frank Wilson's. <lb />
Green Tea from to cents <lb />
per pound at J- S- Smith Son's. <lb />
Watermelons are getting very <lb />
cheap. <lb />
In stock Boxes Lemons at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
U- S- good smokes <lb />
for cents at D. S. Smith's. <lb />
Car load Rock Lime for sale <lb />
by J. A. Andrews. <lb />
Clearance sale of all stock to <lb />
make room for fall stock F Wilson. <lb />
Bob White is the best cents <lb />
Cigar in town at D. S- Smiths. <lb />
Banana will clean tan shoes as <lb />
well as regular dressing- <lb />
Try those fresh Graham <lb />
Wafers and Soda Crackers at J. S. <lb />
Smith A Son's. <lb />
Oblique cents at <lb />
Reflector Book Store. <lb />
For good reliable Shoes go to <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
Standard Music only cents <lb />
a copy at Reflector Book Store- <lb />
Fresh lot Canned Peached, <lb />
Pears, Cherries, Pineapples at D- <lb />
S- Smith's. <lb />
Many bill collectors believe <lb />
they are in tho land of promise. <lb />
Coca Cola and Ice drinks a <lb />
ice drinks put up <lb />
at the fountain of James Long. <lb />
The Reflector and Atlanta <lb />
Constitution both a year for <lb />
Mr- W. R. Parker will open an <lb />
ice in a few days- <lb />
Buy your Rook Lime of J. A.<lb />
The hammocks that are selling <lb />
the best a -e those that hold just <lb />
two. <lb />
Just received Fresh Rice at <lb />
cents per at D. S- Smith's. <lb />
A beetle can draw twice its <lb />
weight. So a mustard <lb />
plaster. <lb />
Frank Wilson is soiling Sum- <lb />
mer Clothing at reduced <lb />
prices- <lb />
If sassafras bark is sprinkled <lb />
among dried fruit it will keep out <lb />
the worms. <lb />
Best Vermont Butter kept fresh <lb />
all the time at cents at J. S- <lb />
Smith Son. <lb />
Lookup tho advertisement of <lb />
S- H. Abbott's this issue, he has <lb />
brick for sale- <lb />
New assortment of Bibles from <lb />
American B. S-, just received. <lb />
Wiley Brown, Depositor. <lb />
There were lots of chickens in <lb />
market last week and they were <lb />
selling reasonable. <lb />
for <lb />
at <lb />
Go to J. S. Smith A Son's <lb />
in the flour <lb />
prices to suit. <lb />
Now is the time to sow turnip <lb />
seed. This is an excellent crop to <lb />
stock and table use. <lb />
Go to Cory's and get your <lb />
Shoes, Trunks and <lb />
repaired. <lb />
There was a terrible <lb />
of rain the Farmville section <lb />
last week, the largest known in <lb />
years. <lb />
Prices and of Victor <lb />
bicycles can be had at Reflector <lb />
office. <lb />
One way to preserve your <lb />
health and that of your neighbors <lb />
is to clean your premises and <lb />
keep them <lb />
machines from to <lb />
Latest New Home <lb />
Brown- <lb />
The encampment of the third <lb />
and fourth regiments at More- <lb />
head broke last Thursday. Every <lb />
soldier had a good <lb />
Choice and <lb />
Tea from the <lb />
din Tea estate of India, which we <lb />
offer to the trade for cents a <lb />
pound, this Tea bought to <lb />
sell for is pure Tea, <lb />
Co. <lb />
Mr- A- J- the <lb />
Reflector with the first Concord <lb />
grapes of the season. They were <lb />
fine ones and were much enjoyed. <lb />
A large of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Brick <lb />
J. S. Smith Sou guarantee <lb />
all groceries bought from en <lb />
as being and pure- <lb />
Item, I pay you for Chicken <lb />
and Country Product- at the Old <lb />
St-re. <lb />
lino of Dry Goods at <lb />
Wiley Brown's. <lb />
Cheap, New Grass Butter <lb />
cents per pound. Best Blended <lb />
Tea cents per pound. Import- <lb />
ed Macaroni cents. Cream <lb />
Cheese at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
There will be preaching at <lb />
Tripp's Chapel next Sunday <lb />
morning at o'clock, and at <lb />
night. <lb />
at Lang's <lb />
House in the new church <lb />
Sunday morning at o'clock and <lb />
in the afternoon it o'clock. <lb />
G. F. Smith, <lb />
J. C- <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mr. J. W. Morgan returned last <lb />
week. <lb />
Mr. J. C- Greene, of Norfolk, is <lb />
visiting his mother- <lb />
Miss Mamie Hines, of Wilson, <lb />
is visiting Miss Etta <lb />
Miss House, of House, is <lb />
visiting Miss Martha <lb />
Mr. Joe Cotten, of <lb />
made a flying trip here last <lb />
Mr. Ed. H. Taft, of Plymouth, <lb />
returned Monday to visit friends <lb />
Miss Mary Bynum left last Fri- <lb />
day morning for Panacea Springs- <lb />
Mrs. E. M- Williams was visit- <lb />
in the country part of last <lb />
week- <lb />
Mr. Moore returned lest <lb />
Thursday from a trip to Falling <lb />
Greek <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Cherry returned last <lb />
week from a sojourn at Panacea <lb />
Springs. <lb />
Miss of Martin <lb />
county, is visiting Mrs- J. S. G <lb />
Benjamin. <lb />
Mrs. Susan Sparks, of <lb />
is visiting her daughter, Mrs- R. <lb />
J. Proctor. <lb />
Lawrence, the 11-year old son <lb />
of Mr. Joshua Tripp, is very sick <lb />
with fever. <lb />
Miss Nellie Skinner, of <lb />
ford, is visiting relatives and <lb />
friends hero- <lb />
Miss Mollie Braswell, of <lb />
is visiting her Mrs. <lb />
Andrew Joy nor- <lb />
Miss Emily Latham, of Wash- <lb />
is visiting the family of <lb />
Mr. L. W. Lawrence. <lb />
Miss Mamie of Tar- <lb />
is visiting the family of Mr. <lb />
Samuel M. Schultz. <lb />
Mr. T. S- of <lb />
ville county, is in town and will <lb />
locate hero permanently- <lb />
Mrs. Mary E- of Mar- <lb />
tin county, is visiting her <lb />
Mrs. J- S- C- Benjamin. <lb />
Senator F. G. James and family <lb />
returned from a visit to Wrights- <lb />
ville and Wilmington last week. <lb />
Mr- G- B. King, of Washington <lb />
City, arrived home Friday night <lb />
on a visit to friends and relatives. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. R. M. <lb />
came up from Washington last <lb />
Wednesday to visit Mrs. <lb />
parents. <lb />
Mr- W. S. Rawls was called to <lb />
Ivor Station, Va., Saturday to the <lb />
bedside of his mother, who is <lb />
very sick. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. C T. <lb />
and Roy. <lb />
family returned from Ocracoke <lb />
last Tuesday. <lb />
Messrs. Aaron Morris and Louis <lb />
of Tarboro, down <lb />
Sunday to spend tho day with <lb />
Mr. Larry <lb />
We pained to learn of tho <lb />
continued serious illness of Mr. <lb />
Joe Joyner. His many friends <lb />
here are anxious for his recovery- <lb />
We were pleased to have a call <lb />
from Mr. Samuel King, of Falk- <lb />
land, who has just returned from <lb />
a three week's stay in Washing- <lb />
ton City- <lb />
Misses Lillie and Myrtle <lb />
son, accompanied by four of Mr. <lb />
W. B. Wilson's sons, went to <lb />
Plymouth Saturday to visit Mrs- <lb />
Arthur Barden- <lb />
Mrs. M- and <lb />
Masters Willie and <lb />
and Mrs. A- M. Powell, of <lb />
Raleigh, are visiting the family <lb />
of Maj. H- Harding. <lb />
Mrs- Caroline Cherry returned <lb />
home last week from a visit to her <lb />
daughter, M--S. Eva of <lb />
who her <lb />
to spend a her sis- <lb />
Mrs. W- B- Greene. <lb />
Mr. Ed. Adams, of <lb />
who has up in the State of <lb />
Maine attending school during the <lb />
past year, and who previously <lb />
resided New with his <lb />
law, C- Hamilton, <lb />
is visiting friends in the city <lb />
New Journal. <lb />
Good Work. <lb />
Prof. W. H. Supt <lb />
Pub. lest for this county spent <lb />
last week visiting the <lb />
and if the reports we hear in <lb />
reference to him are true he is <lb />
a noble work for public <lb />
education in Pitt county. The <lb />
big rains have prevented his <lb />
continuing this week but ho will <lb />
out again in a few days. <lb />
The Storm. <lb />
A severe electric storm passed <lb />
over this section Saturday night. <lb />
The flashes of lightening and <lb />
crashes of thunder, accompanied <lb />
by almost a deluge of rain was <lb />
terrific in the extreme- At House <lb />
station the lightning struck the <lb />
gin-house of Mr. D. E. House set- <lb />
ting fire to it and consuming it <lb />
with bales of cotton. <lb />
On Sunday and Sunday night, at <lb />
down-pour continued <lb />
and it is afraid that cotton and <lb />
tobacco may be damaged serious- <lb />
We learn that the barn on <lb />
Mr. House's place blew down <lb />
Monday evening. <lb />
Female <lb />
In this issue appears a cut and <lb />
the of Female <lb />
Seminary. As be seen <lb />
school will on September <lb />
It be observed that <lb />
R of- Goode fee to <lb />
two ladies who tray be <lb />
p to torch <lb />
adjoining are <lb />
not fewer than a dozen <lb />
ladies in this who <lb />
to compote for this <lb />
Prof. Goode is a <lb />
equipped educator and in this <lb />
manifests his interest in the <lb />
educational progress of the <lb />
and the young ladies who are <lb />
endeavoring to prepare them- <lb />
selves to do better work in the <lb />
Public Schools- We we <lb />
can safely say that the <lb />
to be offered in Pitt Female <lb />
Seminary during is ad <lb />
sessions will rot bit- <lb />
passed, if in any e <lb />
school in Eastern North <lb />
Let tie people of section <lb />
rally to the support, of en- <lb />
and we have a <lb />
school that will rot be the <lb />
pride of this of the <lb />
but of all who appreciate tho <lb />
highest standard of female <lb />
Died. <lb />
Mrs- Guilford Harris, <lb />
about three miles from town on <lb />
old Newborn road, had a <lb />
stroke of paralysis on last Wed- <lb />
about o'clock. Mrs. <lb />
is about SO years old and <lb />
fears are entertained for her re- <lb />
Since the above was <lb />
written Mrs. Harris has died. <lb />
The sad intelligence reached <lb />
on Saturday of the death of <lb />
Cornelia, tho year-old daughter <lb />
of Mr. R. M- Kennedy, who lives <lb />
Greenville, which occurred <lb />
Friday, July 20th, at Bridge- <lb />
water, N- C., She left Kinston on <lb />
Monday of last week in <lb />
good health, was taken with <lb />
scarlet soon after her arrival <lb />
and died as stated above. It is a <lb />
sad case and the sympathy of the <lb />
Reflector and the whole section <lb />
is extended to Mr. Kennedy. She <lb />
was buried on Saturday at <lb />
Bridgewater. <lb />
Mr. James E- Tucker, son of <lb />
William D- deceased, died <lb />
on last Saturday at o'clock after <lb />
haying been sick with typhoid <lb />
fever for the past three weeks. <lb />
Mr. Tucker was a promising <lb />
young man of only years old- <lb />
Ho seemed to have a fine pros- <lb />
and a long life before him <lb />
but the angel of death came and <lb />
he passed from among us. He <lb />
was an active member of the <lb />
Odd Fellow Lodge at this place, <lb />
and was buried with the <lb />
of this order on Sunday <lb />
afternoon at the old family bury- <lb />
ground. Messrs. W- H. <lb />
and E- A. read <lb />
impressively the beautiful <lb />
ceremony. It is sad to chronicle <lb />
the death of one, as Mr- Tucker <lb />
just in the prime of life, and <lb />
highly respected by all who knew <lb />
him. The Reflector extends <lb />
sympathies to the bereaved ones. <lb />
The following members of the <lb />
Lodge acted as pall <lb />
James Brown, R. L. Humber, R <lb />
L. William Savage, T- <lb />
R- Moore, E. M. <lb />
The Halifax base ball club <lb />
played the nice some- <lb />
ago, had two last <lb />
week with Hali- <lb />
fax team beat both games, with a <lb />
score of to ; to <lb />
P of. Joseph of La- <lb />
Female Seminary, drop- <lb />
to see us Saturday. He <lb />
says the prospects for school <lb />
are excellent- See advertisement <lb />
in this issue- <lb />
We had the pleasure of listen- <lb />
to a beautiful duet sung Son- <lb />
day morning the Methodist <lb />
church, entitled Faith Looks <lb />
up to by Mrs. J. B Cherry <lb />
and Mrs- Georgia Pearce. <lb />
The of the Reflector <lb />
are extended to the Managers, <lb />
Messrs. C L. Wilkinson, W. C. <lb />
Askew and D- Jr., <lb />
for an invitation to attend the <lb />
basket picnic, at Barret's Grove <lb />
to-day. <lb />
We notice the King House <lb />
nearing completion will be <lb />
finished by the 15th of August. <lb />
It will have more rooms and <lb />
will make a very handsome <lb />
add-- much to the <lb />
looks of Evans street- <lb />
A delightful party was had at the <lb />
residence of Mrs. M. Williams, <lb />
on last Wednesday evening, given <lb />
by Misses Florence Williams and <lb />
Forbes. It was an en- <lb />
affair and a very pleasant <lb />
evening was spent by all. <lb />
No in the State has <lb />
ever grown more rapidly than <lb />
the Agricultural and Mechanical <lb />
College. Its success shows that <lb />
the times are ripe for its work, <lb />
and that our young men need and <lb />
are seeking such an education <lb />
it offers. See its advertisement <lb />
in this issue. <lb />
Edge- <lb />
F. B- <lb />
THE PRIMARIES. <lb />
Each of the townships in the <lb />
county held its primary on Sat- <lb />
to send delegates to the <lb />
Democratic County Convention <lb />
which meets in Greenville to- <lb />
morrow. There were large <lb />
crowds in attendance at <lb />
meeting and perfect harmony <lb />
fire Below are the reports <lb />
the several townships as <lb />
furnished the Reflector, <lb />
Meeting called to order by <lb />
electing J. E. Randolph chair- <lb />
man, T. A. Thigpen, secretary. <lb />
Tho following were appointed <lb />
delegates <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
Delegates. <lb />
J- E. Randolph, <lb />
W H. Rives, <lb />
T- A Thigpen <lb />
D. W. Cobb <lb />
Samuel Andrews. <lb />
Alternates. <lb />
Hugh Cobb, <lb />
J- R- Rives, <lb />
R. S- Shelton <lb />
J- E. Hardy <lb />
Seth Hicks. <lb />
BETHEL- <lb />
Meeting called to order a-id S. <lb />
A. Gainer, was elected chairman, <lb />
and B. M. Whitehurst, secretary. <lb />
The following delegates were <lb />
Delegates. Alternates. <lb />
S- A. Z- D- <lb />
S. M. Jones, W- C Nelson, <lb />
F. L. Brown, W. D. Manning, <lb />
B. W. James, A- M. Whitehurst, <lb />
A. B. Cherry. G Bullock. <lb />
BEAVER DAM- <lb />
Meeting called to order and G- <lb />
T. Tyson was chosen <lb />
W. C- Joyner, secretary. <lb />
The following delegates were <lb />
appointed <lb />
Delegates. Alternates- <lb />
J. F- Allen, AV-S. Manning, <lb />
F. M. Smith, Tyson, <lb />
H. S- Hardy, J. W- Smith <lb />
Amos G T. Tyson. <lb />
Meeting called to order with J. <lb />
R. Forbes, chairman, C- Dawson, <lb />
The following delegates were <lb />
appointed <lb />
Delegates. Alternates. <lb />
G- E. Jackson, Jesse Braxton, <lb />
Jesse Cannon, J. R. Carroll, <lb />
B. H. Ives, Biggs Harrington, <lb />
L- H. Charles Kittrell, <lb />
C- Dawson, Chas. <lb />
J. J. Jackson, A. C. Tucker, <lb />
R- C Cannon, L- A- Cobb, <lb />
Lorenzo <lb />
R. R. Jackson, <lb />
0- L. Patrick, J. R. Forbes, <lb />
A. L. Harrington, J. D. Cox, <lb />
W. S. Tripp, Dr. C. A. <lb />
J. J. May, J- M. C. Nelson, <lb />
A. G. Cox, J. A. Harrington, <lb />
John E. E- Hart. <lb />
CAROLINA. <lb />
Mooting called to order by W. <lb />
II. Williams who was made chair- <lb />
man, J. L- Roberson, secretary. <lb />
The following delegates were <lb />
appointed <lb />
Delegates. Alternates. <lb />
H. N. Gray, W- D- Keel, <lb />
S- R Ross, J. R. Bullock, <lb />
D. B. A- Mooring, <lb />
G. T- House, M. R. <lb />
W. H. Williams. J. L. Roberson, <lb />
W- W. Thomas- J- H- Highsmith. <lb />
Bethel Items. <lb />
July 1894. <lb />
W. Z. Morton, of <lb />
was in town Friday on business. <lb />
Mr. L- V- Bassett, of Rocky <lb />
Mount, Thursday night in <lb />
Bethel. <lb />
Miss Etta Knight, of <lb />
is visiting Mrs. <lb />
Knight. <lb />
Miss Mamie Pierce, of Falk- <lb />
land, has been visiting Mrs. B. F. <lb />
Bryan the past two weeks. <lb />
Prof- Z- D. Mr. M- <lb />
C. and Dr. R. J. Grimes <lb />
wont to Greenville last Thursday. <lb />
We are glad to see Rev. W. A- <lb />
Forbes able to be out again and <lb />
that he will soon finally recover <lb />
from bis received a few <lb />
weeks ego. <lb />
Rev. J. W- Powell assisted by <lb />
L- R- Carrol have been holding a <lb />
series of meetings in the Baptist <lb />
church the past week and will <lb />
continue we learn through this <lb />
week. <lb />
We had the rains and <lb />
thunder storm of the season Sat- <lb />
night and We <lb />
learn that a fine hog was killed <lb />
by lightning on the Staton farm <lb />
and three for Mr. W. H, Brighton <lb />
near town Saturday night, and <lb />
several people came near being <lb />
killed at the depot Sunday even- <lb />
Mr. J. R- Bell had his pants <lb />
leg burned and it affected several <lb />
others. <lb />
Miss Maggie Thomas, youngest <lb />
daughter of Mr. Jesse Thomas, <lb />
died Sunday morning at the home <lb />
of her father, one and a half mile <lb />
from town. Funeral Services <lb />
were conducted there this even- <lb />
at o'clock by the Rev. W. <lb />
A. Forbes. was buried at <lb />
the Cemetery near town, we ex- <lb />
tend our sympathy and condo- <lb />
to the bereaved father, <lb />
brother and sister. <lb />
No <lb />
FALKLAND. <lb />
Meeting organized by electing <lb />
Capt. John King, chairman and <lb />
R- Williams, secretary. <lb />
The following delegates were <lb />
appointed <lb />
Delegates- Alternates. <lb />
W- R. Williams, R. R. Cotten, <lb />
J. C Cook, J- S. Harris, <lb />
J. L. Fountain, F. G- Dupree, <lb />
R Williams, John King. <lb />
FARMVILLE- <lb />
Meeting called and organized <lb />
with W- H- Home, chairman, C- <lb />
L. Barrett, secretary, <lb />
The following delegates were <lb />
appointed <lb />
Delegates. Alternates- <lb />
R. L. Davis, Henry Moore, <lb />
B. M. Lewis, W. H. Wilkinson, <lb />
W. R- Home, C L. Barrett, <lb />
B. May. D. Horton. <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
Meeting to order by F. <lb />
G- James, chairman, Andrew Joy- <lb />
secretary. <lb />
The following delegates were <lb />
appointed. <lb />
Delegates. Alternates. <lb />
Nashville J. O- Briley <lb />
B. T. Smith, J. W. Tripp, <lb />
Noah Forbes, Jr., J. L. Cherry, <lb />
I. A. Sugg, H. F. Keel, <lb />
Marion Crawford, Aug. Forbes, <lb />
J. A- Briley, Tripp, <lb />
S. A. Dudley, J. T. Smith, <lb />
S- R. Ross, E- B- Dudley, <lb />
W. S. Fleming, D. H. Moore, <lb />
O. W. Harrington, <lb />
W. K. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington, D. C, July <lb />
He must be a queer sort of a <lb />
Democrat who can get any <lb />
faction out of the present tariff <lb />
situation. The report of a general ; <lb />
disagreement as the result of <lb />
nearly two weeks work on the <lb />
part of the House and Senate <lb />
conferences certainly does <lb />
encouraging, although some of <lb />
the gloom is lifted by tho <lb />
The Senate committee on <lb />
decided at its meeting <lb />
this week that although the Utah <lb />
bill first became a law Arizona <lb />
and New Mexico should be ad <lb />
mitt to the Union at the same <lb />
time, and directed that bills <lb />
ready by its <lb />
next meeting. <lb />
Representative Bland, of Mis- <lb />
proposes to put the newly- <lb />
found friendship for silver which <lb />
so many Republicans are pro <lb />
to the test, by getting his <lb />
bill for the coinage of <lb />
that while the disagreement , , <lb />
is for reasons satisfactory to the from the House Coinage <lb />
committee, if lie can manage to <lb />
got a quorum of the <lb />
conferees reported to be general <lb />
it is in fact only some half <lb />
a dozen of the Senate amend- <lb />
sugar, coal and <lb />
iron ore, the House conferees <lb />
insisting that they should go on <lb />
the free list, as in the Wilson bill <lb />
and the Senate conferees that <lb />
they shall remain as passed by <lb />
the Senate- It is not clear at <lb />
this time what the outcome is to <lb />
be, but I cannot believe that the <lb />
Democrats in Congress will be <lb />
willing to carry the disagreement <lb />
to the extent allowing the <lb />
law to remain in force, as <lb />
is now being jubilantly predicted <lb />
by the Republicans. It would <lb />
better if the conferees after <lb />
attempt fail to reach an agree- <lb />
to call in some prominent <lb />
Democrats from the outside and <lb />
let them arbitrate. The Demo- <lb />
has promised the <lb />
country a tariff law and it will be <lb />
suicidal for the Democrats in <lb />
Congress to fail to keep that <lb />
promise. <lb />
Representative Texas, <lb />
was made happy this week when <lb />
the House, by a vote of to <lb />
passed his voluntary bank- <lb />
bill. He has maintained <lb />
ever since the Torrey bankruptcy <lb />
bill was defeated that a majority <lb />
of tho House favored a national <lb />
bankruptcy law, and that it was <lb />
only because the Torry bill put it <lb />
in the power of creditors to force <lb />
a man into bankruptcy when <lb />
considered himself solvent that it <lb />
was defeated. Tho vote Mr. <lb />
Bailey's bill, which makes a <lb />
judge of his own solvency, <lb />
that his judgment was <lb />
who are favorable to the bill to- <lb />
soon. Owing to the ab <lb />
of and the near- <lb />
of the close of the session <lb />
the chances are against Mr. <lb />
succeeding. Another <lb />
thing that adds to the chances <lb />
against him is that a considerable <lb />
number of members of the House, <lb />
many of them Democrats, are <lb />
strongly opposed to any further <lb />
of the silver question at <lb />
this time, and still more opposed <lb />
to tho taking of a record vote on <lb />
the Bland bill. <lb />
Items. <lb />
July 24th, 1894. <lb />
Mr. Bob Johnson has a case of <lb />
typhoid foyer. <lb />
Mr. Stocks died yes- <lb />
after an illness of three <lb />
weeks. <lb />
Miss Georgie of New- <lb />
is visiting relatives in this <lb />
vicinity- <lb />
Mr. Howard Win field and sis- <lb />
Miss Ella, are visiting <lb />
here. <lb />
Mr. W. L Best and son, Will, <lb />
left yesterday to take in the Ashe- <lb />
ville excursion. <lb />
Mr. Clarence and <lb />
Mrs. Lydia spent the past <lb />
week in Lenoir county with <lb />
relatives. <lb />
Notice Dissolution. <lb />
Notice is hereby Riven that the firm <lb />
of Ellington Brown, proprietors of <lb />
the Greenville iron works, was dis- <lb />
solved by mutual consent on the 14th <lb />
day of June. 1804 James Brown be-, <lb />
conies sole purchaser of the business. <lb />
j assuming all indebtedness of the firm, <lb />
I and all bills due the firm are payable to <lb />
n , i I him. Those the are re- <lb />
Representative Springer, of Hi nested to settle atones. <lb />
was this given a I <lb />
hearing, by a subcommittee of the <lb />
House committee on Labor, on <lb />
his bill providing for compulsory <lb />
arbitration of all disputes be- <lb />
tween employer and <lb />
by a national board of arbitrators. <lb />
Mr. Springer claims that his bill <lb />
covers contingency <lb />
that may arise, and that if it <lb />
enacted into a law a long stop <lb />
will be taken towards tho solving <lb />
of the problem which has been <lb />
so troublesome of late. A <lb />
of bills dealing with tho s <lb />
subject are being considered by <lb />
tho subcommittee. <lb />
ELLINGTON, <lb />
JAMES BROWN. <lb />
June 1894. <lb />
ATLANTIC. HOTEL, <lb />
CITY, N. C. <lb />
This Famous Resort is Now Open for <lb />
the Reception of Guests, <lb />
The Atlantic has accommodation for <lb />
guests, and is exempt from <lb />
Hies and mosquitoes. <lb />
Surf and still water and fish- <lb />
The celebrated Whiting orchestra <lb />
Chicago furnish concert and dancing <lb />
music. <lb />
Terms For rates and <lb />
pamphlet, apply to <lb />
L. PERRY, Proprietor. <lb />
LEASING <lb />
-ALSO THE- <lb />
They Must Go, They Shall Go <lb />
Look at these Starvation Prices <lb />
40-in White Lawn cents, regular price cents. <lb />
Satin Stripe cents, regular price cents. <lb />
Check and Stripe Goods cents, regular price cents. <lb />
FRUIT OF LOOM BLEACHING cents. <lb />
Cambric only cent, prices and cents. <lb />
Percales, Fast Colors cents, prices elsewhere and cents <lb />
Get our prices. Goods we got, money must 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 RECEIVED A COMPLETE LINE OF- <lb />
SPRING GOODS <lb />
NOVELTIES, <lb />
and would earnestly solicit your examination. <lb />
SHOES <lb />
I always make <lb />
a specialty. <lb />
Shoes <lb />
Embroideries, White Goods <lb />
and Laces. <lb />
I not say anything about except that I have received a new <lb />
line. Prices ire lower than ever I thank you for your past favors <lb />
and if close prices will avail mo anything I will merit a continuance <lb />
Sowing Machines up. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
Now Home latest improved <lb />
FINE CLOTHING <lb />
A more <lb />
of those <lb />
fitting <lb />
cheap suits. <lb />
For tho next <lb />
thirty days <lb />
we will make <lb />
special price <lb />
on our Bum <lb />
For fit, style <lb />
and <lb />
they can- <lb />
not be ex- <lb />
celled. See <lb />
and it. <lb />
WILEY BROWN, <lb />
Now Homo Sewing Machines and Depositor for American So <lb />
Edgar Buck, <lb />
R. W. King, <lb />
James, <lb />
J. L. Fleming, <lb />
G. B. King, <lb />
John Flanagan, <lb />
W. H- Smith, <lb />
L. C Latham. <lb />
C- Skinner, <lb />
A. L. Blow, <lb />
Zeno Moore, <lb />
W. H. <lb />
W. S. Rawls, <lb />
R. Hyman, <lb />
J. L Sugg. <lb />
DRY GOODS, <lb />
SHIM ATS, <lb />
Gents Furnishing Goods <lb />
l ES I <lb />
AND GOES WITHOUT <lb />
SAYING THAT WE <lb />
HAVE THE LARGEST <lb />
AND MOST STYLISH <lb />
STOCK IN TOWN. <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 />
Meeting called to order by J. <lb />
R. Davenport. J. B- Little was <lb />
elected and G. Lit- <lb />
secretary. <lb />
The following delegates were <lb />
Delegates. Alternates- <lb />
J. B. Little, J. R. Davenport, <lb />
R R. Fleming, Abrams, <lb />
W. G Mizell- J. J. Mason. <lb />
SWIFT CREEK. <lb />
Meeting called to order by Job <lb />
Moore, who was elected chair- <lb />
man, L- B- elected sec- <lb />
The following delegates were <lb />
Delegates. <lb />
J. B. Kilpatrick, <lb />
H. J. Williams, <lb />
John Coward, <lb />
Job Moore, <lb />
R. H. Garris, <lb />
J. R <lb />
W. Q. Roach- <lb />
Alternates. <lb />
L. B. <lb />
J. A. Gardner, <lb />
J. A. Hardy, <lb />
C. . Gaskins, <lb />
A- B. Garris, <lb />
M. Smith, <lb />
E- A- Johnson, <lb />
J. J. Moore. <lb />
Sale <lb />
On Wednesday, July <lb />
We will our Mill-Summer Sale offer the PD <lb />
of the In order to reduce our mammoth we <lb />
offer our ENTIRE STOCK OF SUMMER CLOTHING t a <lb />
sacrifice. offer <lb />
Men's Suits worth for Suits worth for cents <lb />
Pants from cents u . <lb />
BARGAINS Ladies Dress Goods. <lb />
BIG REDUCTION in White Goods. Lace, and Embroidery. <lb />
Good Checked Homespun worth for etc Ginghams worth for Q cents <lb />
We are Headquarters in Greenville for Low Prices. <lb />
Coffee cents, Snuff cents, Tobacco cents, Ladles, Misses and <lb />
Oxford Ties, also Men's Shoe will be sold at a big reduction. have a <lb />
Li <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current rates. <lb />
AGENT FOE FIRST-GLASS FIRE PROOF <lb />
Don't <lb />
Miss this chance to get <lb />
CHEAP <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. Schultz. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK <lb />
MILLINERY f <lb />
MERCHANTS BUY <lb />
lag their year's supplies will find <lb />
their interest our prices before pm <lb />
chasing elsewhere. <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
I am selling the best <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 />
that will be sold cheap. All these goods <lb />
arc very desirable and yon should call <lb />
early if you wish to get the of j <lb />
the low prices. <lb />
M. T. Co. <lb />
Notice to Farmers. <lb />
It all pet sons who will want CANE <lb />
MILLS EVAPORATORS next <lb />
fall will tile their orders with me at an <lb />
early day, I will be able to get the <lb />
Mills at a liberal discount by ordering <lb />
all at once and will the purchaser <lb />
the of the discount. <lb />
II. HARDING, <lb />
Agent. <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
at Lowest <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF A. CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one A com <lb />
stock of <lb />
always hand and sold at priced <lb />
the times. Our goods arc all bought and <lb />
sold for therefore, having no <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
M. <lb />
N, <lb />
WILLIAMSON, <lb />
-MANUFACTURER OF- <lb />
-ALL KINDS OP- <lb />
COUNTER- DON'T MISS this opportunity of making <lb />
for Money saved is Monty made, and when you commence with us our <lb />
fair dealings will always hold your trade. TRY US. <lb />
Me <lb />
REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE <lb />
Only first-class workmen and material allowed my shops The many <lb />
who have used my work will testify to the beauty and durability of <lb />
turned out at my shops. Every vehicle guaranteed. I also carry a complete<lb />
GREEK VILLE, N. C <lb />
HARNESS WHIPS.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017703_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
There's No Choice in Bicycles. <lb />
The Victor Pneumatic tire has no <lb />
rival. It is more durable than any <lb />
other and the inner tube can be re- <lb />
moved in case of puncture in less <lb />
than five minutes. <lb />
The only inner tube removable <lb />
through the rim. <lb />
All Victor improvements are abreast <lb />
with the times and meet every re- <lb />
.-.-- <lb />
Victors <lb />
are <lb />
BEST. <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
NEW YORK. <lb />
PHILADELPHIA. <lb />
CHICAGO. <lb />
SAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
DETROIT. <lb />
DENVER, <lb />
WILMINGTON WELDON . R- <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD. <lb />
Condensed Schedule. <lb />
TRAINS GOING <lb />
Dated July x- <lb />
Leave Ar. M. M. <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Rocky Mi Wilson Lt Selma Lt Ar. OS I <lb />
Lt Wilson Lt Lt Magnolia Ar M. I in P. M. C. A. M.<lb />
Dated July S. Id a K <lb />
Lt Florence Lt Ar M. OS <lb />
Wilmington Magnolia Ar M. CO M. SB <lb />
a s. P. ML IS <lb />
Wilson Ar Rocky M. M <lb />
Ar Tarboro Tarboro Rocky Mt Ar Weldon <lb />
HERBERT <lb />
TONSORIAL PARLORS, <lb />
Under Opera House, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Call in when want good work. <lb />
and PERIODICALS. <lb />
Advertising <lb />
ADVERTISING Indexed <lb />
RECORD, to enter on <lb />
the left hand page the Advertiser's name <lb />
commission, <lb />
space, position, rate, number of <lb />
date beginning, date ending, <lb />
amount, when payable. right <lb />
band page, opposite, the months <lb />
wide space for monthly, intervening <lb />
spaces for weekly, and spaces down for <lb />
daily. t check when an begins <lb />
and ends. Prices, pages, or one <lb />
leaf to the letter, flexible, <lb />
pages, leaves to a letter, halt roan <lb />
pages, pages, <lb />
pages. 35.00. Size <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. in. Halifax 4.00 <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at 4.55 p. <lb />
m., p. m., Kinston 7.35 <lb />
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 <lb />
a. m., Greenville a. m. Arriving <lb />
Halifax at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. <lb />
in., daily except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb />
Washington 7.00 a, in., arrives Parmele <lb />
8.40 a. m., Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m., Parmele 6.10 <lb />
p. m,. arrives Washington 7.35 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Scotland Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, at p. m. Sunday P. M; <lb />
arrive Plymouth 9.20 M., 5.20 p. m. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily <lb />
Sunday, 5.30 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a. <lb />
arrive Tarboro 10.5 a. m., and 11.46 <lb />
a. m. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, a. <lb />
m. a. m. Re- <lb />
retuning leaves a. m. ; <lb />
arrive at Goldsboro. a. m. <lb />
Trains on Nashville Branch leaves <lb />
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. m., arrive <lb />
Nashville S p. m-. Spring Hope 5.30. <lb />
p. m. Returning leaves Spring Hope <lb />
a. m. Nashville 8.35 a. in., arrives <lb />
at Rocky Mount a. m., daily except <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence R. <lb />
R. Latta 6.50 p. m. arrive Dun- <lb />
bar 8.00 p. m. Returning leave Dun- <lb />
bar 6.30 a. arrive Latta 8.00 a. m. <lb />
Daily <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War- <lb />
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, <lb />
at a. m. Returning leave Clinton <lb />
at m., at Warsaw with <lb />
main line trains. <lb />
No. makes close connection <lb />
at Weldon for all points North daily, all <lb />
Tia Richmond, and daily except <lb />
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line <lb />
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk ft <lb />
Carolina railroad for Norfolk daily and <lb />
all points via Norfolk, daily ex- <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
JOHN F. DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
KENLY, Manager. <lb />
T. V, EMERSON Manage- <lb />
Appointments for Greenville Circuit. <lb />
Salem on the first Sunday at eleven <lb />
o'clock and Jones Chapel at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
Shady Grove on second Sunday at <lb />
o'clock and School <lb />
House at o'clock. <lb />
on third Sunday at eleven <lb />
o'clock and Tripp's Chapel 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 />
G. F. SMITH, <lb />
Baptist Services. <lb />
Below are the regular appointments <lb />
of Rev. J. II. pastor of the <lb />
Baptist church <lb />
At and fourth Sun- <lb />
, days in each month, morning and night, <lb />
and every Thursday night- <lb />
At Sunday in each <lb />
j month, morning and night. <lb />
I At Person <lb />
Sunday in each month and Saturday be- <lb />
fore. <lb />
Episcopal Services. <lb />
Below are the regular <lb />
. of Rev. A. Rector <lb />
and third Sundays in <lb />
, each month, morning and ceiling. <lb />
Sunday in each <lb />
mouth, morning and evening. <lb />
vices all other Sunday <lb />
St. Johns, Sun- <lb />
day in each month, morning and evening <lb />
Holy Innocents, Lenoir <lb />
fifth Sunday morning. <lb />
Services. <lb />
Every first Sabbath morning and <lb />
night, alternating between Rev. J. N. <lb />
and Rev. J. W. <lb />
third Sabbath, morning and <lb />
night, Rev. J. W- <lb />
Sunday School every Sabbath morn- <lb />
at D. Evans <lb />
JACKSON <lb />
Office Furniture <lb />
COMPANY <lb />
JACKSON, urn <lb />
-MANUFACTURERS OF- <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA <lb />
R. R. TIME TABLE. <lb />
In Effect December 4th. 1893. <lb />
GOING EAST. <lb />
GOING WEST. <lb />
Pass. <lb />
Ex <lb />
P. M. <lb />
P. M. <lb />
Pass. Daily <lb />
STATIONS Ex Sun. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Kinston <lb />
A. M <lb />
A. M <lb />
A. M. <lb />
l-, <lb />
AND OFFICE <lb />
Schools and Churches seated <lb />
in best manner. Offices <lb />
Furnished. Send for <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
Train connects with Wilmington <lb />
Weldon train bound North, leaving <lb />
Goldsboro a. m., and with D. <lb />
train West, leaving Goldsboro 2.35 <lb />
Train S connects with Richmond <lb />
Danville train, arriving at Goldsboro <lb />
p. m. and with W. ft W. train <lb />
the at p. m. <lb />
S. L. DILL, <lb />
Superintendent. <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK <lb />
I Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained and all Pat-J <lb />
Cent business conducted for <lb />
Office is Opposite patent office J <lb />
and e can secure less lime than <lb />
from Washington. t <lb />
Send model, drawing or photo., with <lb />
We advise, if patentable or not, free <lb />
fee not due till patent is secured. <lb />
S A How to Obtain <lb />
of same in the V. S. and countries <lb />
free. Address, j <lb />
P. D. C. <lb />
For Cure of all Skis <lb />
This Preparation has been In use <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know ha <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en <lb />
by the leading physicians all <lb />
cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is <lb />
, long and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained is owing entirely <lb />
I x its efficacy, as but little effort ha <lb />
i ever been made to bring it the <lb />
. public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
i be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
communications to <lb />
T. t. CHRISTMAN, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb />
O- L. JO Eastern. <lb />
ACREAGE AND CONDITION OF <lb />
THE GROWING CROP. <lb />
Last week we published in <lb />
those pages letters from fifteen <lb />
wide awake correspondents of the <lb />
Southern Tobacco Journal, cover- <lb />
the most important tobacco <lb />
growing sections in the two <lb />
States. These letters care, <lb />
fully written by those who were <lb />
anxious to reflect the true con- <lb />
and the acreage of the new <lb />
tobacco crop and we know our <lb />
readers appreciated the <lb />
they conveyed. <lb />
A careful review of these letters <lb />
shows the following conclusion <lb />
In the eastern part of the State, <lb />
in what is now known as the <lb />
new bright the acreage <lb />
will be about the same as last <lb />
year. It has been the habit of <lb />
that section, however, to increase <lb />
its acreage and an aver- <lb />
age acreage this year means <lb />
really a facing off in tobacco <lb />
operations compared with other <lb />
yen--. We can safely look for an <lb />
average for <lb />
Rocky Mount, Louisburg and <lb />
Greenville, with conditions favor- <lb />
able for a very fine one. <lb />
Durham reports a off in <lb />
acreage of per cent, Warren- <lb />
ton per cent, Oxford per <lb />
cant, Burlington per cent and <lb />
In this, the golden <lb />
the recent rains have bad a <lb />
most helpful effect on the plants <lb />
and all of our correspondents <lb />
draw the conclusion that with <lb />
farther seasons the <lb />
crop will be an excellent on. <lb />
In this locality, taken Winston <lb />
as a center, the acreage has been <lb />
cut fully one-fourth. This <lb />
not a of choice with the <lb />
planters, however, but a matter <lb />
of necessity A worse spring for <lb />
starting a tobacco crop has rarely <lb />
been known, the dry and cool <lb />
weather being a constant menace <lb />
to The here looks <lb />
very fine and has taken a <lb />
did start, though f two weeks <lb />
The ground has been well <lb />
prepared and with anything like <lb />
seasons a good crop <lb />
is promised. <lb />
The trans-mountain section, <lb />
with as the a re- <lb />
acreage is also reported. <lb />
Plants suffered more severely <lb />
from late frosts and the has <lb />
a late owing to the very dry <lb />
weather which prevailed up to <lb />
late in June. This endangers <lb />
the crop from early fall cold and <lb />
the in the west is not <lb />
so promising as elsewhere in the <lb />
State. <lb />
In Virginia me two leading to <lb />
of Danville and <lb />
Lynchburg report a considerable <lb />
reduction, Danville's acreage be- <lb />
put at per cent of a crop <lb />
and Lynchburg's at per cent- <lb />
In the former section the <lb />
is reported good but in the <lb />
latter it is anything else than <lb />
promising. <lb />
The dark section a <lb />
responding reduction in acreage ; <lb />
Richmond falling off per cent <lb />
Farmville per cent. In <lb />
both these localities the <lb />
of the crops is not good <lb />
though late seasons can very <lb />
much improve it. <lb />
The letters of our correspond <lb />
show, in conclusion, that the <lb />
acreage for 1894 is very much re- <lb />
in both States, but the out- <lb />
look good, at this writing, for a <lb />
fine crop. And a good <lb />
is the only thing that will <lb />
bring the boys out of trouble <lb />
Southern Tobacco Journal, Win- <lb />
AMERICAN TOBACCO IN ENG- <lb />
LAND AND IRELAND, <lb />
In a recent letter to the State <lb />
Department United States Consul <lb />
at Belfast Ireland, James B- <lb />
among other <lb />
I beg to call the attention of <lb />
the Department to industrial pro- <lb />
which will shortly be com- <lb />
The erection <lb />
a large tobacco factory in this <lb />
city. In the same connection I <lb />
desire to call attention to the <lb />
status of the trade in this section, <lb />
with a hope of enlarging the <lb />
foreign market for American- <lb />
made goods- <lb />
Messrs. Thomas <lb />
Co., of Belfast, who are the pro- <lb />
of the enterprise, have <lb />
already a very large plant here. <lb />
Their new structure is to be of <lb />
brick and iron, and will cover <lb />
about three acres of ground on <lb />
York street, one of the principal <lb />
thoroughfares. The frontage will <lb />
be feet, the depth feet, <lb />
and the height feet, divided <lb />
into five stories. The firm owns <lb />
enough ground to increase the <lb />
frontage and depth to feet, if <lb />
required. It will be the largest <lb />
factory of sort in the Kingdom, <lb />
and the local press claim the <lb />
est in the world. The cost of the <lb />
building alone is estimated at <lb />
and when in fall work- <lb />
order it will employ in the <lb />
neighborhood of hands. <lb />
It occurs to me that with <lb />
energy and reasonable per- <lb />
severance the manufacturers of <lb />
tobacco in its several varieties <lb />
and grades in the United States <lb />
might largely increase their trade <lb />
in this section. There is very <lb />
little of the American made <lb />
article sold over the counters of <lb />
the retailers, although per <lb />
cent- of the leaf is grown i the <lb />
United States, principally Ken- <lb />
Virginia, the <lb />
and Missouri. The product of <lb />
the latter State is mostly used <lb />
for the manufacture of twist and <lb />
plug, or as it is called here, <lb />
tobacco. The goods made here <lb />
are mostly plug in its various <lb />
shapes, long cut smoking tobacco <lb />
is not and a <lb />
small quantity of cigarettes. <lb />
product is disposed of almost en- <lb />
in Great Britain and Ire- <lb />
land. Manufacturers here cannot <lb />
compete with continental count- <lb />
having a lesser rate of duty <lb />
or with France, where the Gov- <lb />
has control of the trade. <lb />
The duty on tobacco coming <lb />
into the is per <lb />
pound on leaf and per <lb />
pound on manufactured goods. <lb />
The are a large number of <lb />
in this country who smoke the <lb />
pipe. On the street, in the house, <lb />
or at work the pipe <lb />
is the constant companion of the <lb />
masses. I believe that at least <lb />
per cent, of the male <lb />
from eighteen of age <lb />
and upwards <lb />
pipes. A few smoke cigars, and <lb />
a large and increasing number <lb />
smoke cigarettes. <lb />
The cigarette habit is in its in- <lb />
fancy here, but it is rapidly <lb />
spreading. While the popularity <lb />
of the pipe is confined to no sec- <lb />
of the Kingdom, the people <lb />
of Ireland seem to be particularly <lb />
fond of it; therefore, the con- <lb />
of smoking tobacco is <lb />
enormous and the manufacturer <lb />
who can combine cheapness, <lb />
quality and flavor to the greatest <lb />
satisfaction of the smoking public <lb />
is assured of an excellent trade- <lb />
There are no official data upon <lb />
which to base figures, but as far <lb />
as I am able to learn not more <lb />
than per cent, of manufactured <lb />
smoking and chewing tobacco is <lb />
American. <lb />
The smoking tobacco largely <lb />
used in the cities is a quality <lb />
which retails at about seven to <lb />
eight cents per ounce, and about <lb />
ninety-six cents per pound. The <lb />
next better grade, which has a <lb />
good sale, sells from ten to twelve <lb />
cents per ounce, with a <lb />
discount in quantities. <lb />
In the country districts, a cheap <lb />
plug, or roll tobacco is the favor- <lb />
at about six cents per ounce. <lb />
The average profit of the retailers <lb />
of smoking tobacco is about <lb />
per cent. <lb />
The American-made cigarettes <lb />
are the favorite, and fully per <lb />
cent, of the consumption in this <lb />
district comes from the United <lb />
States. Of the remaining per <lb />
cent., Turkey and Egypt few <lb />
from get the bulk ; local <lb />
manufacturers get the remainder. <lb />
There is no distinction between <lb />
the Turkish and Egyptian brands. <lb />
It seems that the tobacco is all <lb />
raised in Turkey and the differ- <lb />
once is in the blending and <lb />
American cigarettes are sold at <lb />
an average of per while <lb />
the Turkish and brands <lb />
cost about The demand <lb />
for cigarettes, as already mention- <lb />
ed, is greatly on the increase, and <lb />
as the American brand is quite <lb />
popular, it behooves the <lb />
can trade to carefully watch and <lb />
protect its growing interests here. <lb />
One of the objects of the Messrs. <lb />
is to increase their fa- <lb />
for the manufacture of <lb />
cigarettes. <lb />
It Is important to keep the liver and <lb />
kidneys in good condition. Hood's <lb />
Sarsaparilla is the remedy for <lb />
these organs. <lb />
The great railroad is far <lb />
reaching in its effects. Even <lb />
here in Statesville it is felt to <lb />
some extent. Messrs. Wallace <lb />
Bros., who ship large quantities <lb />
of roots and herbs, to Chicago, <lb />
are unable to ship on account of <lb />
the strike, and Statesville mer- <lb />
chants who deal in Western flour <lb />
and meat find their supply run- <lb />
short. Meat has advanced <lb />
a cent a pound and only certain <lb />
kinds can be obtained at that <lb />
Landmark. <lb />
NOT DISCONCERTED. <lb />
The Exasperating of <lb />
Some Wedding Couples. <lb />
One Groom Wind Watch In the Midst <lb />
of the Solemn Ceremony The <lb />
Preacher's Dignity Did Not <lb />
Meet the Occasion. <lb />
is said a prom- <lb />
city clergyman to a New York <lb />
Tribune reporter, what non- <lb />
some bridegrooms go <lb />
through the ceremony. I don't <lb />
it, for when I was married <lb />
my knees wobbled so that I was pro- <lb />
because I had not strapped <lb />
them together before the terrifying <lb />
ordeal began. But the coolness and <lb />
complacency with which some of the <lb />
men who come to the to <lb />
be married go through the. thing <lb />
a revelation to me and make mo be- <lb />
that I had no at all. <lb />
he continued, <lb />
people who came to the <lb />
to be married generally of the <lb />
plain sort. They dress plainly, and <lb />
frequently have delightfully fresh <lb />
and original manners and ways of <lb />
doing things. But you must <lb />
acknowledge that even to a clergy- <lb />
man who has read the service over <lb />
hundreds of trembling couples, It is <lb />
rather startling to have the bride- <lb />
groom at the most solemn part take <lb />
out his Waterbury watch and begin <lb />
to wind it up in the most method- <lb />
way imaginable. But that is <lb />
just what happened here last week. <lb />
I was reading the formal charge to <lb />
the man and woman, and reading it <lb />
in a way that I considered most <lb />
and awe-inspiring. The <lb />
bridegroom, who was a big lumber- <lb />
fellow, followed me for a time <lb />
with considerable interest. Then <lb />
he suddenly took out his watch <lb />
began to wind it. I let him go on <lb />
for a few seconds and then I real- <lb />
that it was one of those watches <lb />
that might wind through all the rest <lb />
of the ceremony. So I stopped short <lb />
and looked severely at the man. He <lb />
smiled at mo in a friendly sort of <lb />
way, but ho didn't comprehend at <lb />
all what was the all <lb />
this time the steady click-click of <lb />
the winder was to be heard. <lb />
was very mortifying to mo <lb />
that my dignity was not overwhelm- <lb />
enough to make that man stop <lb />
short, but he didn't, and I had to <lb />
speak to <lb />
The clergyman sighed as ho <lb />
thought of his trials. a pair <lb />
from tho country came here last <lb />
couple of bumpkins, green, <lb />
clumsy and good-natured. When I <lb />
man and woman may join <lb />
meaning, of course, they <lb />
were to join right hands, they <lb />
ply clasped hands as they stood side <lb />
by side and swung them back and <lb />
forth like a couple of little school <lb />
girls. <lb />
I said in a low <lb />
voice, but with considerable <lb />
sis. yes, of said tho <lb />
youth with a blush, and ho seized <lb />
the bride's hand and shook it most <lb />
cordially. <lb />
said before, I consider my- <lb />
self one of the most dignified clergy- <lb />
men in the city, but I am slowly <lb />
breaking down under the strain of <lb />
keeping my face duly solemn at such <lb />
moments as <lb />
THE THEATER HAT. <lb />
HARD TO LOCATE. <lb />
Remarkable Experience of a Boston <lb />
Newspaper Man. <lb />
Women wearing high hats at the- <lb />
are tho subject, and <lb />
mate- so, of much adverse <lb />
Funny stories without <lb />
are written on this subject by <lb />
witty but the high <lb />
hat. survives and surmounts the high <lb />
heads of high-minded women all the <lb />
same. <lb />
Perhaps women do not read tho <lb />
labored efforts of funny writers on <lb />
this topic; or perhaps they wouldn't <lb />
be influenced to wear low hats or to <lb />
take off the in places <lb />
of amusement if they did read all <lb />
that is written on the subject. Bo <lb />
that as it may, the writer had an <lb />
experience in Union hall while the <lb />
Harvard theatricals wore in <lb />
which softened some of the as- <lb />
of life and convinced him <lb />
that at least one young woman had <lb />
rend Che papers and that at <lb />
least one young woman was sweet- <lb />
and kind enough to de- <lb />
servo a good husband. <lb />
It was In the rear of the hall. The <lb />
play had opened. Tho writer <lb />
was craning his neck to catch a <lb />
view of the players. He was not ill- <lb />
tempered. He did not, for the mo- <lb />
think even of roiling at high <lb />
hats. He was resigned to his fate. <lb />
Suddenly a sweet-faced young <lb />
lady, sitting just in front of him, <lb />
without even a suggestion from any <lb />
one, turned around sag, in manner <lb />
so gracious, so full of the spirit of <lb />
loving kindness, <lb />
my hat annoy you, sir If <lb />
does I will remove <lb />
sweetness and <lb />
entitle you to wear any hat <lb />
you may was the writer's <lb />
response. <lb />
The young face was quickly turned <lb />
back to the stage, but In a few <lb />
minutes the hat was removed from <lb />
tho wealth of golden hair which en- <lb />
the head of ft <lb />
Surgical Diet. <lb />
What Is known as surgical diet Is <lb />
worth trying In awhile for the <lb />
comfort of the stomach and complex- <lb />
ion. It Includes milk and bread and <lb />
butter, broiled beef, old mutton, <lb />
eggs and prunes. Milk, butter and <lb />
eggs are regarded as the best <lb />
foods, because less force Is ex- <lb />
pended In their digestion, an <lb />
item in medical and surgical <lb />
Chester Sew. <lb />
Manifold <lb />
Disorders <lb />
Are occasioned by an impure and <lb />
condition of the blood. <lb />
if not corrected, Into <lb />
serious miladies, such as <lb />
SCROFULA, <lb />
ECZEMA, <lb />
RHEUMATISM <lb />
an other troublesome diseases. To cure <lb />
these is required a safe and reliable rem- <lb />
free from ; n harmful ingredients <lb />
an- purely Such I <lb />
It <lb />
f the and t <lb />
cleanses Thousands of . <lb />
cases of the worst of blood dis- <lb />
eases have been <lb />
, a. S. S. <lb />
Send for Treat.- I . l free <lb />
SWIFT CO., Atlanta, Ga. <lb />
Sound Which <lb />
Musical Instruments Awaken. <lb />
Vibration. Called <lb />
Soar-o of to <lb />
the <lb />
Teeth. <lb />
A. A. Knudson, in an article on <lb />
peculiar sound effects, throws a cu- <lb />
light on a subject which has <lb />
often been a source of embarrass- <lb />
and mystification. Mr. <lb />
son has made a hobby of locating the <lb />
or sympathetic vibrations <lb />
originating with musical notes. The <lb />
owner of a piano has been known to <lb />
summon a luckless tuner in <lb />
the second or third time to fix a note <lb />
that would Insist on giving a jar- <lb />
ring sound every time it was struck, <lb />
and the tuner has been driven to the <lb />
verge of distraction by being foiled <lb />
in every attempt to secure a smooth, <lb />
pure tone. The source of the <lb />
has in all probability been some ob- <lb />
in the room which has been ex- <lb />
cited by tho particular note into <lb />
sympathetic response. Almost any <lb />
kind of substance may cause the <lb />
mischief. Mr. Knudson tells how a <lb />
jangle in his own piano once defied <lb />
his wife, his tuner and himself, until <lb />
at last he located it in a glass globe, <lb />
a section of which had been cracked. <lb />
In another case a piano with a rebel- <lb />
note was made harmonious by <lb />
simply opening an inside shutter of <lb />
a bay window at the opposite side of <lb />
the parlor. The latch of one shut- <lb />
was lightly resting against the <lb />
edge of another and caused the vi- <lb />
when one particular note <lb />
was struck. Mr. Knudson says ho <lb />
is always on the lookout for these <lb />
peculiar sounds, and hears them <lb />
constantly in concert rooms and <lb />
churches. lie formed quite an at- <lb />
for one of these sound <lb />
in a church which lie used to at- <lb />
tend. The responsive note was high <lb />
up in one of the windows and he <lb />
looked for to respond every Sun- <lb />
day when the organist touched tho <lb />
proper key with every whit as much <lb />
interest as the congregation brought <lb />
to bear on their readings of the <lb />
service. Another time he noticed <lb />
that a remarkably discordant sound <lb />
came from the lips of an elderly lady <lb />
who was earnestly singing in front <lb />
of him. It was not so much tho <lb />
shrill quality of the Voice as a <lb />
ruggedness that attracted his at- <lb />
Eventually he found that <lb />
the voice and the jangle came from <lb />
the same place, and the explanation <lb />
of the discordance was that tho <lb />
lady's false teeth were loose. Tho <lb />
locating of these jangles is not <lb />
ways easy. Some practice is re- <lb />
quired before the ear becomes cap- <lb />
able of indicating the direction of <lb />
sounds of this kind with oven a mod- <lb />
degree of success. In a <lb />
test, which was given before an <lb />
audience to illustrate how difficult <lb />
it is to determine whence a sound <lb />
comes, a gentleman took his seat <lb />
upon the platform and was blind- <lb />
folded. A person who held a snap- <lb />
per sounder In one hand would pro- <lb />
duce the snap now directly over tho <lb />
head of the sitter, now to one side, <lb />
behind his back, etc. At each sound <lb />
of the snapper the sitter was re- <lb />
quested to point in the direction <lb />
from which the sound proceeded, <lb />
and in almost every case he pointed <lb />
in the wrong direction. In this <lb />
of telling the direction of sound, <lb />
man is at a disadvantage with long- <lb />
eared animals, and Mr. Knudson <lb />
speaks of the admirable way in <lb />
which the sense of hearing <lb />
serves him in this respect. is <lb />
pretty well known that the <lb />
does not wait to turn his head to <lb />
see if he has correctly located the <lb />
sound, but will let his heels By first <lb />
and look around afterward. The <lb />
rabbit, by reason of his long cars In <lb />
proportion to his size, has probably <lb />
the most correct sense of locating <lb />
sound of all <lb />
A Smoker's Fad. <lb />
An Enormous Cask. <lb />
The Heidelberg tun is completely <lb />
thrown into the shade, and is in fact <lb />
nothing better than a keg as com- <lb />
pared with the monster that has just <lb />
been turned out at the Paris <lb />
aux the largest emporium of <lb />
the juice of the grape in the <lb />
verse. <lb />
This huge cask has a capacity of <lb />
eighteen thousand seven hundred <lb />
and ten gallons and measures <lb />
throe feet In height. The <lb />
each made in one piece, are bound <lb />
tog- by sixteen Iron hoops. <lb />
But the chief peculiarity of this <lb />
masterpiece of coop consists in <lb />
Its internal arrangements. tun <lb />
of the wine vault is divided In- <lb />
to five sections of unequal her- <lb />
closed to one another, <lb />
which it to be filled <lb />
with five different descriptions of <lb />
wine without the slightest Inter- <lb />
mixture taking plate. <lb />
Tho filling is effected by means of <lb />
an pump construct- <lb />
ed on a now principle, which sucks <lb />
up the wine through enormous hose <lb />
pipes a ad conveys to its proper <lb />
A gives access to the small <lb />
doors or manholes in the sides of the <lb />
through which the workmen are <lb />
admitted for the purpose of cleaning <lb />
it out. When the cask weighs <lb />
about a tons, and ninety-six <lb />
tons after it is filled. <lb />
There are some who have <lb />
fads about smoking, and <lb />
some of those fads are curious <lb />
and I know a man <lb />
who believes <lb />
of tho ashes <lb />
cigar makes the cigar smoke hot <lb />
and taste better. He says if <lb />
he a rich man he would <lb />
smoke a cigar after the ashes <lb />
have fallen from it. <lb />
I attempted to persuade him <lb />
that a cigar that retained the ash <lb />
was possibly better because by <lb />
this it showed that it was more <lb />
evenly and closely rolled and <lb />
properly seasoned, but the knock- <lb />
of the ash from such a cigar <lb />
would not injure the flavor or the <lb />
smoking quality- But he would <lb />
not be convinced. He <lb />
tell the difference immediately. <lb />
And so he goes about carefully <lb />
guarding the ashes on tho of <lb />
his weed as long as possible <lb />
looking upon their accidental loss <lb />
as a temporary misfortune <lb />
Dispatch. <lb />
A Life. <lb />
It is worthy man's white <lb />
to study the important art of l <lb />
happily. Even poorest <lb />
man may by this means extract <lb />
that the retention an increased amount of joy ard <lb />
on the end of tho j blessing from life. Tho world <lb />
need not be a of <lb />
less ourselves will it so. We <lb />
have the command, to a great ex- <lb />
tent, over our own lot. At all <lb />
events our is our possessions <lb />
and can cherish happy memo- <lb />
there; can regulate and coo. <lb />
our dispositions to a <lb />
extent. can educate <lb />
and bring out tho bet- <lb />
part of our in <lb />
most is allowed sleep a <lb />
deep can read good <lb />
books, cherish pure thoughts <lb />
and lead lives of peace, temper- <lb />
virtue, so as to <lb />
tho respect of good men, and <lb />
transmit tho blessings of a faith- <lb />
example to our <lb />
Ex. <lb />
JUDGE WALTER CLARK <lb />
USES AND <lb />
p.<lb />
all clue <lb />
North Carolina Court. <lb />
WALTER CLARK, ASSOCIATE <lb />
Jan. J <lb />
We round tho <lb />
I dally for children. I one last and I am I . <lb />
i have saved lime Its cost already In <lb />
drug store bill. From my with It, and ob- , <lb />
tin <lb />
In <lb />
Investigation <lb />
FREE. <lb />
lean It. <lb />
Tour, truly. W<lb />
Co.,<lb />
Clark. <lb />
-.- YORK. <lb />
-WHEN IT COMES TO- <lb />
STATIONARY <lb />
You miss it time if you fail to call f <lb />
what want in this lino at the <lb />
make a specialty of this class of goods and if <lb />
prices, Quality, Quantity <lb />
count for anything with you, come to see us. <lb />
a pack up. <lb />
Note Paper a up. <lb />
Letter, Fools Cap and <lb />
Legal Cap equally low. <lb />
Tablet from cent up. <lb />
cents per <lb />
dozen up. <lb />
Lead Pencils up. <lb />
cents <lb />
per dozen up. <lb />
A Fit <lb />
sole <lb />
INKS <lb />
SPECIALTIES <lb />
f. <lb />
tho very best for school and <lb />
purposes- Our Cream Mucilage beats any <lb />
on tho market. Our Diamond Ohio <lb />
and Magic Cement will mend but broken <lb />
hearts. <lb />
Every business man should a A D <lb />
KER FOUNTAIN PEN <lb />
last a life time and sold nowhere else in <lb />
town. <lb />
Our Paper for polite correspondence <lb />
the prettiest in town. also keep Mourning <lb />
Paper. Thou have Slates, Blank Books, <lb />
Memorandum Books, Books, Erasers, Rub- <lb />
Bands, Pencil Holders. Automatic Pencils, <lb />
Cups, Ink Stands, Taper Cutters, Book <lb />
Marks, Pen Holders and lots of other things. <lb />
BOOKS AND NOVELS. <lb />
If you want anything to road come look over <lb />
our supply. Any book not on hand will or- <lb />
for you. <lb />
Now remember the the only place <lb />
at which you can got these goods at such low <lb />
prices. <lb />
REFLECTOR STARK.<lb />
km HIE POUTS.<lb />
W. L. <lb />
SHOE <lb />
CORDOVAN, <lb />
Soles. <lb />
LADIES <lb />
MASS. <lb />
can money T W. <lb />
on <lb />
middleman's <lb />
custom work In easy <lb />
dealer cannot supply you, <lb />
A CO. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
K. L. DAVIS BROS., <lb />
Farmville N. C. <lb />
shoe, in the world, <lb />
the value by stamping the name <lb />
the bottom, protect, you<lb />
out of employment, or <lb />
s a position that you do <lb />
I like Possibly the <lb />
Siting of Life Insurance is <lb />
your special forte. Many i <lb />
have, after trial, <lb />
surprised at theirs <lb />
fitness for it To all such; <lb />
Sit has proved a <lb />
genial and profitable <lb />
f Editable Life j <lb />
in the Department of the <lb />
desires to add <lb />
force, agents i <lb />
I of character and ability.- <lb />
s Write for information, i <lb />
I W, J. Manager, S <lb />
Rock Ma, C. <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE <lb />
SERVICE <lb />
Steamer lam for <lb />
and Tarboro touching at all Ian I <lb />
on Tar <lb />
Friday at A. M. <lb />
leave Tarboro at. A M <lb />
Thursdays and Saturday <lb />
A. days. <lb />
departures are to <lb />
of on Tr River. <lb />
Connecting at <lb />
of The Norfolk, <lb />
direct lino Norfolk. <lb />
Philadelphia. New York Bo ton. <lb />
Shippers <lb />
Dominion <lb />
New <lb />
Norfolk A <lb />
Merchants So <lb />
Boston. . <lb />
SON. <lb />
V. G <lb />
J. Agent., <lb />
N. C. <lb />
. .-J <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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