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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 3 October 1894</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18941003</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, 3 October 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>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18941003</dc:date>
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                <p>
the place to <lb />
Buy your <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
STATIONERY <lb />
IS <lb />
AT <lb />
Reflector Bookstore. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIII. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1894. <lb />
NO. <lb />
FOR GOOD <lb />
JOB PRINTING <lb />
OFFICE<lb />
PITT FEMALE SEMINARY <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Session Opens September 5th, 1891, Closes June, 1895. <lb />
HON. R. B. GLENN. <lb />
Makes a Rousing Speech In Green- <lb />
Audience <lb />
The Democracy of old Pitt <lb />
is bard to in fact it has <lb />
it saves <lb />
cents on every dollar of our <lb />
chases and that is the kind of a <lb />
we poor people <lb />
need- the rich <lb />
to the Republican party Butler <lb />
hopped about so much like a flea <lb />
that it was to get a finger <lb />
on him, and the only way I could <lb />
catch him was to get a <lb />
to down one of his <lb />
Full Corps of Teachers. Complete English Course. Ancient and Modern Languages. <lb />
Advantages in Music and Art. For full particulars apply to <lb />
B. ES. GOODE, Principal. <lb />
FREE ENGLISH SCHOLARSHIP will be given two young ladies who preparing <lb />
to teach in the Public Schools of Pitt and Tuition will be required advance, but <lb />
will be refunded to the applicants who make fie highest average on the regular examinations at the <lb />
close of the session. Candidates must enter not later than October 1st <lb />
EXPENSES. music Use of Piano o.- Organ, one <lb />
Weeks. hour each day, <lb />
Primary T K , <lb />
, Course. 20.00 Latin, Greek. French and Ger- <lb />
Academic. . man, <lb />
Intermediate,. 12-50 in on a i <lb />
Collegiate. <lb />
Board, <lb />
20-00 <lb />
and <lb />
DEMOCRATIC NOMINEES. <lb />
FOR STATE <lb />
S. TATE. <lb />
of Burke <lb />
CHIEF <lb />
JAMES E. SHEPHERD, <lb />
of Beaufort <lb />
ASSOCIATE l. <lb />
WALTER CLARK, of Wake county. <lb />
JAMES C. of Cumberland. <lb />
of <lb />
FOR COURT, <lb />
3rd <lb />
4th District, WILLIAM R. ALUM. <lb />
Kill District. F. <lb />
Di-t. WILLIAM X. MEBANE. <lb />
10th Di.-t B. <lb />
Di. H. OM CARTER. <lb />
For list., <lb />
WILLIAM A. B. <lb />
of Beaufort county. <lb />
For Solicitor Mai District. <lb />
E. <lb />
of county. <lb />
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb />
fob <lb />
r. G. JAMES. <lb />
FOR OF <lb />
D. COX. <lb />
s. m. <lb />
CLERK <lb />
WILLIS B. WILLIAMS, <lb />
RICHARD W. KING. <lb />
FOR REGISTER OB <lb />
HENRY HARDING. <lb />
FOR <lb />
c. <lb />
for <lb />
t. B. KILPATRICK. <lb />
Senator Jams, in his speech <lb />
at forcibly alluded to <lb />
the strange alliance the Populists <lb />
and Republicans had formed. <lb />
He challenged any man in the <lb />
State to put his finger on one <lb />
clause n the State Constitution <lb />
that the Republicans did not <lb />
late when they <lb />
the government. The very man <lb />
who was at that period consenting <lb />
to all that now the <lb />
for Chief Justice on the <lb />
Republican ticket. He paid a <lb />
to Chief J notice Shepherd. <lb />
He said he had just as soon <lb />
of Boll to North <lb />
and putting in <lb />
charge of of the <lb />
State as to put on the <lb />
Supreme Court bench and call it a <lb />
partisan The <lb />
entire Supreme Court bench, as <lb />
it no-r stands, eulogized for <lb />
its purity and justice, and Sena- <lb />
tor Jar via earnestly appealed to <lb />
the not to tamper or trifle <lb />
with be <lb />
Sun-<lb />
Th. b-t Salve In the world for Cuts, <lb />
Ulcers, Salt Rheum, <lb />
Fever Chapped <lb />
Chilblains, . and ail <lb />
and positively or no <lb />
H required, is U <lb />
Of r-run led <lb />
Price box i or b <lb />
L. <lb />
FACTS. <lb />
The carpet bag constitution of <lb />
North Carolina limited <lb />
to cents on the of prop- <lb />
Ii 1889, the <lb />
Legislature coolly levied a tax of <lb />
thus violating organic <lb />
law. They collected more than <lb />
extra, and then wasted <lb />
it riotous living and wholesale <lb />
corruption. Give them a chance <lb />
would repeat their fully <lb />
and <lb />
When the Democrats finally <lb />
got the taxes were <lb />
ed, the burdens were lifted, <lb />
was restored <lb />
set in. Their fiat levy was <lb />
cents than that of the Radical <lb />
plunderers. Under the present <lb />
system, after the Democrats have <lb />
bad charge for more than twenty <lb />
years, the small of cents <lb />
on the of property I <lb />
seats nearly third of the State <lb />
levy for ordinary expenses, <lb />
schools, pensions, charitable in- <lb />
and interest on a large <lb />
public debt. At first the Demo- <lb />
inherited debt from the <lb />
robbers gone before and it took <lb />
several years to clean up the bad <lb />
inheritance. Since then there <lb />
has a steady reduction in <lb />
the rate of taxation. In 1874, it <lb />
was cents on of property <lb />
In 1880, it had fallen to cents. <lb />
In 1894, it is cents. This is <lb />
what faithful, capable Democrats <lb />
have done. But this is not all- <lb />
They have done this <lb />
great reduction, thus saving so <lb />
much to the people, while doing <lb />
a vast needed work for education <lb />
and benevolence. They have <lb />
completed no less than seven <lb />
public institutions, name- <lb />
The Western Insane Asylum; <lb />
the the Goldsboro <lb />
Insane Asylum for the colored; <lb />
the Agricultural and Mechanical <lb />
college for whites, and one for <lb />
the colored also; the Normal and <lb />
Industrial School for Young <lb />
Women- This speaks volumes- <lb />
Think of turning out a party who <lb />
could do these great, benevolent, <lb />
noble things and put in the <lb />
and wasters who did <lb />
but rob and oppress and <lb />
paralyze everything. <lb />
In addition, the Democrats <lb />
continue to help support the <lb />
humane Oxford Orphan Asylum <lb />
for white children, and also the <lb />
Oxford Orphan Asylum for col- <lb />
provide pensions <lb />
for Confederate soldiers and <lb />
expending nearly in <lb />
this beneficence- <lb />
Lastly, they paid for the <lb />
cation of both races for the year <lb />
the sum of 1830,690.81. <lb />
The amount is large, but the <lb />
to do more. The Dem- <lb />
show they are not <lb />
to education and to <lb />
and to the interest of <lb />
the people- the tax payers. <lb />
Wilmington Messenger. <lb />
boils I oilier humors of <lb />
the Woe i arc liable f- out in <lb />
Prevent it by <lb />
bean and Third party leaders <lb />
reached that point that it can't have money enough and don't speeches and make a copy of <lb />
it Two years age said <lb />
the tariff did not amount to any- <lb />
thing but if we only get an <lb />
income tax it would accomplish <lb />
Under the f <lb />
be downed. If a two days burs-; consider the saving of on the <lb />
and flood fails to stop hundred anything What do <lb />
war horses from turning out to . , ,. , <lb />
. , ., , ,. , . ,., ,, yon all say about that Does <lb />
bugle call, it don t look like the . <lb />
t, -r, . . ii ., saving that much amount to any- <lb />
Rep-Pop aggregation with all the . . <lb />
,, I thing to <lb />
could I,,. <lb />
fusion and co-operating <lb />
ever succeed in causing its down-1 <lb />
law farm implements <lb />
fall. And it never will. No j <lb />
about that. <lb />
Cob Glenn was advertised to <lb />
speak in Greenville last Thurs- <lb />
day. In selecting that day for <lb />
him Chairman had no idea <lb />
that addition to sending him <lb />
down here to the home of the <lb />
the <lb />
ho was bucking Glenn an <lb />
equinoctial storm. But is <lb />
one those fellows who fears not <lb />
the world, the flesh, nor <lb />
were IS per <lb />
every worth of farm <lb />
and toe Is you bought cost <lb />
you That has been repeal- <lb />
led, yet say it is no <lb />
saving to tho Hits were <lb />
taxed par the Demo, <lb />
bill reduced it to <lb />
shawls were reduced from to <lb />
Bagging a tax of <lb />
per cent- ea it. ties cent, <lb />
salt and now these come in to <lb />
I us as free tax as the air we <lb />
breathe. Do these differences <lb />
desired. Now we <lb />
have got the income tax and the <lb />
Democratic party gave it to <lb />
If Butler was honest ha and every <lb />
Third party man would <lb />
vote the Democratic ticket- <lb />
Mr. Glenn also talked at length <lb />
the question of pensions <lb />
and stowed the saving the Demo- <lb />
had made He he did <lb />
not want to be mi understood, <lb />
that he the <lb />
of every worthy soldier who <lb />
fought for the Union, his <lb />
only regret was tho Confederates <lb />
who fought so could not <lb />
Rep-Pop. sideshow with a whole any If have a too- <lb />
thrown <lb />
in, so he they do not, you believe tho <lb />
right here- It did look, though, I <lb />
from the way the rain descended <lb />
Run <lb />
County in Debt. <lb />
of die Charlotte Observer. <lb />
Sept. <lb />
met in Newton to-day, and <lb />
of necessity authorized the <lb />
commissioners t borrow <lb />
payable April 1st and June <lb />
1st, 1895- This is to meet arrear- <lb />
ages in county expenses for 18.12 <lb />
1893. An entire Populist <lb />
board of county commissioners, <lb />
who pose as exports in finance <lb />
have, so say the magistrates, <lb />
brought the county of Catawba. <lb />
which ever had money <lb />
in its treasury to meet its current <lb />
expenses, to the humiliating con- <lb />
of having to create a debt, <lb />
while it has heretofore been the <lb />
pride of Democratic Catawba to <lb />
say that she didn't owe a dollar. <lb />
Commenting ca the above the <lb />
Observer <lb />
It indeed, be humiliating <lb />
to Catawba county, which has <lb />
before been in debt, to <lb />
be to such straits in her <lb />
county government through a <lb />
board of Third party commission- <lb />
The will have many <lb />
sympathizers, whose earnest wish <lb />
will be that she may be delivered <lb />
from the curse of these curb- <lb />
stone financiers, these farmers <lb />
without these would be <lb />
The lesson is plain. The warn- <lb />
must not be lost sight of. It <lb />
is a picture in miniature of what <lb />
the State would become under <lb />
Populist control. Under a Dem- <lb />
State administration <lb />
North Carolina is the best gov- <lb />
State in the Union. Our <lb />
State debt is funded. Our are <lb />
at par. Our laws are just- There <lb />
is no spot the ermine of <lb />
our judges. Our taxes are light <lb />
Our deaf, our dumb, our blind, <lb />
our all of God's <lb />
poor within our <lb />
are carefully provided for, both <lb />
in mind and body. Capital is <lb />
entering our borders from abroad- <lb />
Any North can now <lb />
stand up confidently and say to <lb />
all the is a <lb />
But how long would this be <lb />
true if bands were to <lb />
administer our affairs Under <lb />
such a regime North Carolina <lb />
would be Catawba county <lb />
Did anyone ever hear of <lb />
any financiering that <lb />
succeeded f Was there ever an <lb />
Alliance store that didn't break <lb />
We have only to point to the <lb />
most undertakings of <lb />
this kind in this State which <lb />
have gone under. Was there <lb />
ever a State under entire Populist <lb />
control that did not bring odium <lb />
upon itself and drive capital from <lb />
out its borders We have mere <lb />
to point to Colorado and Kan- <lb />
The story of Catawba county I should be protected, <lb />
and the flood came all <lb />
day night and Thursday morn- <lb />
that nobody would be able to <lb />
get here. Big Joe Fleming was <lb />
the first to drive in town and <lb />
brought a big stick with which <lb />
he like to knocked a hole in the <lb />
Court House floor applauding <lb />
Glenn. Fallowing him came <lb />
others, and they continued com- <lb />
from sections of the <lb />
from or miles <lb />
away, bad as the weather was. <lb />
The Court House bell rang at <lb />
one o'clock and when Capt. John <lb />
King finished his brief but hand- <lb />
some introduction of Mr. Glenn <lb />
there were about three hundred <lb />
people in the audience, and <lb />
came in during the speaking- <lb />
Mr. Glenn started out by address- <lb />
his audience as <lb />
said he did that because he <lb />
was here two years ago on a <lb />
mission and many of <lb />
those before him, and besides the <lb />
people of the Eastern <lb />
are so courteous and hospitable, <lb />
they come out so well and give <lb />
such close attention to what is <lb />
said to them, even a stranger can <lb />
feel that every one is his friend. <lb />
I was glad that the committee in <lb />
making the appointments put me <lb />
at Greenville, for I remembered <lb />
pleasantly my former visit here <lb />
and wanted to come again. <lb />
I suppose, Mr. Glenn <lb />
that there are some of all <lb />
parties before Demo- <lb />
some Republicans and some <lb />
I want to say to <lb />
you in the outset that I have not <lb />
come to any one, but shall <lb />
do some plain talking. Neither <lb />
have I come to make any <lb />
for the Democratic <lb />
needs none- In the two years it <lb />
has been in power it has done <lb />
more than was ever accomplished <lb />
by other party to the <lb />
of the party that <lb />
ceded it. While I differ with <lb />
him in some respects, I am not <lb />
here either to defend or <lb />
for President Cleveland- <lb />
Not a man since Washington has <lb />
been grander, more honest or <lb />
more patriotic than he. I hare <lb />
no apologies to make but glory <lb />
in what the Democracy has done- <lb />
The pledges the Democratic <lb />
party made in 1892 have been <lb />
filled- It said it would repeal the <lb />
bill. The tariff is an <lb />
indirect tax upon what eve.-y man <lb />
eats, wears has him. <lb />
It is a dry question, and I expect <lb />
if somebody was to shoot me for <lb />
talking tariff the jury <lb />
would return a verdict that it was <lb />
justifiable. But I am going to <lb />
talk about it and want you all to <lb />
listen and think about it. <lb />
then used several illustrations to <lb />
show how the tariff was levied <lb />
and applied to <lb />
The Republicans who enacted <lb />
this robber tariff said it was to <lb />
protect our infant <lb />
The people interested these in- <lb />
industries represent one- <lb />
fifteenth of the country and own <lb />
three-fourths of the wealth, so it <lb />
looks like these infants ought <lb />
to be able to protect themselves. <lb />
The Democrats believe other <lb />
of the people <lb />
who are taxed to keep up these <lb />
infants are the ones who <lb />
therefore <lb />
to be put back, <lb />
go vote the Republican ticket; <lb />
if they do save you anything, <lb />
then go like an honest man and <lb />
the Democratic ticket. <lb />
Oh little fellow <lb />
Coming down to Stale politics <lb />
speaking of our admirable <lb />
State administration that could <lb />
not be improved upon he said the <lb />
Republicans and Populists have <lb />
given two reasons for fusing to- <lb />
and wanting to carry the <lb />
don toll it all-you put sugar State. Their first reason was <lb />
back on the dutiable list- Yes, I they wanted a election <lb />
am going to tell it all-sugar is ; i fair These fellows do <lb />
back the dutiable list and of about <lb />
fur it. But I will and fair before the <lb />
how it there. The election but you don't hear <lb />
to give you after the election. If <lb />
sugar free while it was giving; know of frauds at elections <lb />
the sugar trust a bounty of somebody I <lb />
cents a pound which was paid out, I nave heard of two men <lb />
of the United States Treasury being caught in any frauds at <lb />
and hence came from the last of them <lb />
of the people- Tho Democratic J was a Republican who bogged so <lb />
bill cut off this bounty and con- that ho was let off, and the <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report. <lb />
Baking <lb />
Powder <lb />
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb />
to the hands of tho Republicans <lb />
Mr- Glenn spoke for an hour <lb />
and a half and the is only <lb />
a brief synopsis that does not do <lb />
justice to such a great speech, as <lb />
it only touches some of the best <lb />
points here and there. He told <lb />
several good jokes in illustrating <lb />
his points and was followed by <lb />
round after round of applause <lb />
The Democracy was enthused <lb />
and encouraged to go forward in <lb />
the work before it and achieve <lb />
the greatest victory in its history. <lb />
An it will do it no question <lb />
about that- <lb />
the error <lb />
YOUR WAY. <lb />
OF <lb />
The Populists will find most of <lb />
their embodied the <lb />
Democratic platforms State and <lb />
National. It is true tho Demo- <lb />
have not accomplished all <lb />
they desired in legislation in the <lb />
last but tho fight has <lb />
commenced and the battle will <lb />
not be ended until every pledge <lb />
made to the people is redeemed. <lb />
There good men within the <lb />
Populist party who were deluded <lb />
from the Democratic party by the <lb />
cry of It really seen <lb />
Writ en for or. <lb />
BRNO. <lb />
Ono by one the leaves return. <lb />
To enrich mother ; <lb />
Vet men forget <lb />
set <lb />
Ry for sin i <lb />
Let who take heed, <lb />
Poor Mortal, lie fall; <lb />
SI ill sways <lb />
Of justice <lb />
How h with leaves, as men, <lb />
Ion's head is tall. <lb />
But pi He met rot <lb />
In the lowest <lb />
For the top leaf first must fall. <lb />
But death prepares a piano on <lb />
No rival powers dispute ; <lb />
Contentions cease. <lb />
For all is <lb />
The grave, thank is mute. <lb />
Beyond the grave trust in Him. <lb />
Who sees the sparrows fall ; <lb />
For Calvary's <lb />
Poured out he <lb />
all. <lb />
When Populists nominated a <lb />
straight Populist ticket and ad- <lb />
Populist policies, how- <lb />
ever visionary, they presented a <lb />
spectacle of at least trying to <lb />
cure measures of reform. But <lb />
when they go in with the Rads <lb />
to get a few offices, ignore all <lb />
ed to them that this now patty j their professed principles, and <lb />
was the for ever, ill j show that they office more <lb />
tho country was heir to and that I than reform as they are doing <lb />
tinned sugar on tho free list, a Third patty <lb />
then, were the two Louisiana holder who plead that he I <lb />
Senators and or two other better he, let <lb />
traitors who threatened to off- So you the <lb />
was made t frauds in elections come from. <lb />
free, so in order to get the other These fellows are <lb />
through a small to get beaten so commence <lb />
tax was put on But here <lb />
is the the <lb />
all went tats the pockets of <lb />
the now the money <lb />
talking before the election about <lb />
elections fair <lb />
in order to make some for <lb />
defeat. Claude Bernard told me <lb />
, there was nothing to be but <lb />
to join the Populist party ; but <lb />
these good men can surely see <lb />
where the party has drifted. A <lb />
party tariff and <lb />
reform has joined hands with <lb />
a patty directly opposite to its and Observer. <lb />
every principle. This unholy j <lb />
wedlock has boon by The <lb />
traitors who have sold their <lb />
this year, they need not be <lb />
prised that honest who want <lb />
more than will <lb />
repudiate the party. Honest <lb />
men bound to repudiate it to <lb />
be News <lb />
loves a <lb />
by tho small tax goes into last at that he expected to be <lb />
the treasury to help run the goV- but not et the <lb />
eminent. what did the office-that enough voles would <lb />
House do As soon as this tar- o in to elect him but they would <lb />
bill was through it immediate- not come out he <lb />
passed free sugar, free la come but he find <lb />
and free coal bills and sent them Woodard on top of him with the <lb />
to the Senate. What became of biggest kind of a majority, <lb />
them They killed by the j Their second reason for fusion <lb />
Republicans and these same few is that they wanted a non <lb />
traitors, the Populist Senators judiciary. North Carolina <lb />
also voting with them. If has as good and as pure men on <lb />
and Allen had stood by her Supreme Court bench and to <lb />
and Ransom in this, sugar would preside over the lower courts as <lb />
i-ave been on the free list to day. be found anywhere. And <lb />
And some of these Third party the headed <lb />
fellows say the Democratic party their ticket with Old Furches. <lb />
brought the hard times. A big- Do you think he is a non <lb />
was never told. It asked his reason <lb />
the hard times brought the i for fusion he said he would <lb />
Democratic party and gave it the with a dog or anything <lb />
biggest majority ever received by to beat the I <lb />
any party. Under Democratic repeated this statement to Claude <lb />
rule the wave of prosperity l Bernard last night and ho said <lb />
has already set in and is forcing would I told him that was <lb />
its way throughout the country, j owing to a fellow's taste for his <lb />
Yes, these fellows say the Demo- associates. But, my friends do <lb />
party is responsible for the you call that non-partisan Do <lb />
low price of cotton, and that it is j you think that men who had <lb />
the cause of the strikes. Why, rather see dogs that good <lb />
they will be charging us in office are fit to <lb />
bringing the cyclones and earth- adorn your courts t <lb />
for the love of office. The j fa no gin w <lb />
rank and file not responsible ft M the <lb />
t is the leaders who , u wreck <lb />
for the sale; <lb />
desire the office- <lb />
A who votes tho <lb />
ticket is only voting to put into <lb />
power a set of men who have <lb />
shown by advocating both <lb />
list and Republican principles <lb />
that they are not honest. The <lb />
question is will the people <lb />
fooled longer by the cry of <lb />
from this <lb />
combination of political office <lb />
Herald. <lb />
tho universe. <lb />
o. <lb />
r. W. Fuller, of N. Y-. <lb />
that he always keeps Dr. <lb />
New Discovery in the house and hi <lb />
found tin very heat j <lb />
results follow its use ; that lie <lb />
net without it, it procurable. <lb />
WANTED. <lb />
All kinds of Watches, Clocks, and <lb />
Jewelry for repairs. <lb />
Main Springs to Me. Cleaning <lb />
to Specs mid Gold Rings to <lb />
mend to <lb />
Fine work a specialty. All work <lb />
guaranteed <lb />
Z. F. <lb />
Watchmaker Jeweler, <lb />
X. C. <lb />
Cards <lb />
Druggist, Catskill, N. Y., <lb />
says that Dr. New Discover- It <lb />
the Best Cough remedy ; <lb />
that he has used it in his family Tor <lb />
light years, and it has never failed to <lb />
that is claimed for it. Why not <lb />
try a so long tried and tested <lb />
trill free at J. I. <lb />
Drug Store. Regular size and 1.00. <lb />
He Lonesome. <lb />
IT p. <lb />
AND Civil. <lb />
Greenville, X. C. <lb />
Office at the House. <lb />
and its Populist commissioners j this robber tariff cut down <lb />
is a sad one, but the moral they might get the <lb />
not be lost- Let it be placed of life <lb />
high on the sign boards, that he But the Third party say the <lb />
who runs may read. <lb />
quakes first thing you know. <lb />
here explained the of <lb />
the Pullman strike and showed <lb />
the heroic part President Cleve- <lb />
land took in quelling the riot <lb />
which followed and forcing Pull- <lb />
man to <lb />
There is one thing we did <lb />
not promise you <lb />
passed the income tax. Hereto- <lb />
fore the bondholder, the <lb />
rations and the trusts paid no tax <lb />
but now they must step up and <lb />
pay their part. And you Third <lb />
party fellows, what did your man <lb />
one you are ail will- <lb />
to swear about this <lb />
bill Did he vote for it t No. <lb />
Did he to put any tax on <lb />
the rich bondholder, the corpora- <lb />
the trusts and the <lb />
with big incomes Mot a <lb />
Then what did he do T He <lb />
ally introduced a bill to let all <lb />
those other things go free of tax <lb />
and to raise every dollar needed <lb />
to run this government by tax on <lb />
laud. Go with me to Washing <lb />
l i and you can find the original <lb />
bill that he introduced to this <lb />
And how about Butler, <lb />
the man yon are letting pall yon <lb />
by the nose here in <lb />
The big secret of this fusion <lb />
movement is that Marion Butler <lb />
wants to be Senator and he has <lb />
sold the Populists to help put <lb />
Pritchard in the Senate to get <lb />
the Republicans to help pat him <lb />
there. Do you think Marian <lb />
Butler a fit man to be your <lb />
Senator He smart, and <lb />
shrew it. but take the big brain <lb />
from Jarvis or Ransom's head <lb />
and put it in Butler's and his <lb />
head would split in a hundred <lb />
pieces. You don't need any such <lb />
men as Pritchard and Butler in <lb />
the Senate They are opposed <lb />
to each other on the tariff, on the <lb />
income tax and on every question <lb />
of importance and would just be <lb />
killing each others votes- <lb />
Mr. then went back and <lb />
pictured the dark days of <lb />
under Republicanism, showed <lb />
how they had collected money <lb />
for the purpose of building <lb />
lams and railroads and conduct <lb />
schools, which instead of <lb />
using those purposes they <lb />
had wasted in debauchery; he <lb />
went over the days of carpet bag <lb />
and scalawag reign, contrasted <lb />
this with the condition of affairs <lb />
under Democratic control, and <lb />
asked if the people were ready to <lb />
-J DENTIST, <lb />
N, C <lb />
Capt Kitchin has never felt at <lb />
home in his new co-partnership, <lb />
with which he has never been in <lb />
even half way sympathy. He re- <lb />
about one-half their <lb />
ed card in principles, and <lb />
doesn't attempt to conceal his <lb />
contempt for some of the men <lb />
with whom he is affiliating a <lb />
perfunctory way, and his disgust <lb />
at their methods- a disgust which <lb />
has intensified by their <lb />
alliance with the black-and-tao <lb />
party which Capt. Kitchin hoe <lb />
time and again for twenty <lb />
denounced as the <lb />
of all political villainy. He is <lb />
out of place and feels lonesome <lb />
where he is; his sympathies are <lb />
with his old associates and with <lb />
the Democratic party from which <lb />
he parted in a moment of pique <lb />
We would <lb />
make a small-sized wager that if <lb />
the question of his going was <lb />
undecided four stout mules <lb />
and a hawser couldn't pull him <lb />
into the Populist <lb />
Star. <lb />
Jas. K. I. Moons, <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
HI AW, <lb />
. N. C <lb />
under Opera House. Third St. <lb />
L. FLEMING,<lb />
N. U. <lb />
Prompt attention to <lb />
at Tucker A old <lb />
U W. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
G H El N N C. <lb />
all the collection a <lb />
in <lb />
A BLOW, <lb />
LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
in all the <lb />
A TYSON, <lb />
B. r. <lb />
Democratic tariff bill is jar. a and sell you oat go and give State over ad Observer <lb />
Has any Populist or <lb />
on the stump or elsewhere, <lb />
shown how, by the success of the <lb />
the State government <lb />
of North Carolina could be <lb />
And yet they say r <lb />
object is to heat the Democrat <lb />
and they declare themselves <lb />
willing to do to <lb />
their News <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
attention given to collection <lb />
I. <lb />
AM <lb />
R, <lb />
k ROM at- Law, <lb />
B n i<lb />
HOTEL NICHOLSON, <lb />
WASHINGTON, N. C. <lb />
Geo. A. Spencer, Mgr. <lb />
II <lb />
attention to Commercial Man,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017713_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
for the Legislature, re- <lb />
i a vote in the convention <lb />
; that was indeed <lb />
Mr. is from Bethel town- <lb />
1.1 Editor f H <lb />
was reared on the ram, living <lb />
with father until attaining his <lb />
1804. <lb />
at Greenville, <lb />
N. C, matter. <lb />
OUR NOMINEES. <lb />
As the nominees of the Demo- <lb />
party are to begin the can- <lb />
cf the county tomorrow, the <lb />
deems it not out of <lb />
place to give them a brief intro- <lb />
to the people before <lb />
whom they are to appear and <lb />
whose suffrages they ask, though <lb />
they may already be well known <lb />
to every one- Space does not <lb />
permit our mentioning all the <lb />
candidates in one issue, so we <lb />
give sketches to-day of the <lb />
ticket and will continue <lb />
the others in next issue. The <lb />
Democracy of the county is to be <lb />
congratulated upon selecting <lb />
such an admirable ticket. It is <lb />
composed of men and <lb />
upright, against whoso lives and <lb />
characters not of re- <lb />
can be truthfully uttered, <lb />
men of good business <lb />
who are in every way <lb />
of filling the offices with <lb />
it to themselves and their <lb />
majority, when he went to work <lb />
for himself. He chose farming as <lb />
bis occupation is one of the <lb />
few who made a success at tilling <lb />
the soil. The secret of the <lb />
did success he has made lies in <lb />
his good judgment, excellent man- <lb />
close attention to <lb />
and indomitable <lb />
Mr. Jones received a fair com- <lb />
school education, <lb />
being principally under Mr. <lb />
N. M. of Bethel, who, <lb />
beside being a hue scholar, in- <lb />
stilled into many a boy those ex- <lb />
qualities that make a man <lb />
of him- He married early in life <lb />
and has an interesting family of <lb />
five children. He is a man of ex- <lb />
habits, sterling qualities <lb />
strictest integrity- <lb />
Mr. Jones was one of the early <lb />
joiners of the Alliance in this <lb />
county. He has ever held a strong <lb />
belief in the fundamental <lb />
of that always con- <lb />
tended that it should be strictly <lb />
non-political non-partisan. <lb />
We have heard express the <lb />
opinion that but for the course of <lb />
Marian the order would <lb />
have more than double its <lb />
in North Carolina to day- <lb />
He is now President of Bethe <lb />
Alliance and is also a prominent <lb />
Odd Fellow. While he has all <lb />
along been one of the <lb />
of Democrats and a good party <lb />
worker, he has never before <lb />
a candidate for any office, though <lb />
ho was many times earnestly so. <lb />
by those who knew his <lb />
ability and qualities to allow his <lb />
name to be carried In fore the <lb />
convention- <lb />
J. B. CHERRY. <lb />
J. R MOTE. <lb />
J. G MOTE. <lb />
TAKE GREAT PLEASURE IV TO THEIR <lb />
MANY FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS THEIR <lb />
FALL WINTER <lb />
Things changing, <lb />
The folks up the country used to <lb />
be afraid to come in the <lb />
eastern part of the State, <lb />
this season of the year, be. <lb />
cause they imagined a big chill <lb />
was hid behind every stump and <lb />
fence corner ready to spring on <lb />
them. But the Charlotte <lb />
last week said there was an <lb />
epidemic of chills and <lb />
among the operatives of nil the <lb />
cotton mills there, that there <lb />
was trouble of same sort in <lb />
several other places Taken all <lb />
around cast is the healthiest <lb />
best part of the State. <lb />
Dr. P. L- Reid, president of <lb />
Greensboro Female College died <lb />
in that city last week. The news <lb />
of his death was a shock to bis <lb />
many throughout the <lb />
State, as it was not known that he <lb />
was sick. Dr. Reid was <lb />
only years old. He was for <lb />
several years editor of the Chris <lb />
turn the organ of the <lb />
Methodist denomination of the <lb />
State, gave up this <lb />
only a year or more ago to accept <lb />
the presidency of the college at <lb />
Greensboro. His death is indeed <lb />
a loss to the State. <lb />
FOB THE SENATE-I- JAMES. <lb />
This gentleman who is. our <lb />
for the Senate, was born in <lb />
county, in 1857, came <lb />
to Greenville with his parents at <lb />
the ago of eleven years, and has <lb />
that time resided He <lb />
was prepared for college at Green <lb />
ville Academy, and entered the <lb />
University in Two years <lb />
later he Judge Pearson's <lb />
law school, completed his legal <lb />
training under Judge Strong, and <lb />
was admitted to the bar 1879. <lb />
In his profession he mot with a <lb />
practice <lb />
Mr. James was elected Mayor <lb />
of Greenville in 1882 and held that <lb />
office for eleven years, his long <lb />
signifying his faith <lb />
and efficiency in <lb />
his official duties. Two years <lb />
ago ha was given, unsought, the <lb />
nomination for the Senate. At <lb />
first he declined, but at the earn <lb />
est solicitation of friends and the <lb />
continued call of the convention <lb />
ho accepted and was elected by a <lb />
handsome majority, In the Sen- <lb />
ate he took a high stand among <lb />
his fellow Senators, served on <lb />
era committees and was active <lb />
energetic worker- Ho returned <lb />
to his people to receive the <lb />
it of a faithful representative, and <lb />
their pleasure at his course and <lb />
confidence in him is further at <lb />
tested in his receiving a <lb />
nation unanimously by <lb />
Mr. James is a speak- <lb />
and will make himself felt in <lb />
the canvass. <lb />
rOB THE I- COX <lb />
S. M. JONES. <lb />
John D- Cox was Pitt <lb />
county February 5th. and <lb />
worked on the farm until years <lb />
of age, after which he determined <lb />
to educate himself, for as yet he October, 1st 1894. <lb />
had not even received the no hi in <lb />
mental principles of an education town last Sunday. Rev. J. L. <lb />
He became a pupil of Mrs. Mary I Keen and Presiding Elder <lb />
Smith and the late John O. El held quarterly meeting at <lb />
who was noted for his math Edwards Chapel, <lb />
linguistic attain- Miss Ella Bland is visiting her <lb />
under whom he was sister Mrs. <lb />
pared to college. The sawyer of the Nottingham <lb />
the as a freshman half Wrenn mill came down last <lb />
advanced and remained there only Saturday night. The former<lb />
Sunday a week ago the <lb />
Star closed its <lb />
year and entered upon <lb />
its fifty-fifth half yearly volume. <lb />
This is a good age for a daily <lb />
paper, and during all years <lb />
the Star has never been out of <lb />
the editorial management and <lb />
ownership of its founder, Mr- W. <lb />
H. Bernard. The Star is an ex- <lb />
paper and we wish it <lb />
tinned prosperity. <lb />
con- <lb />
Tho Democrats of New York <lb />
have Senator D- B- <lb />
Hill for Governor. He will carry <lb />
the State. <lb />
sawyer had the sad misfortune of <lb />
losing an eye and has gone to <lb />
the hospital for treatment. <lb />
Mr. G. W. Stancill returned <lb />
Monday night from an extended <lb />
trip in the middle and western <lb />
parts of the State. <lb />
Miss Lucy Brooks has taken <lb />
charge of a school at <lb />
Messrs. John Harvey and Guy <lb />
Webb, of Kinston came over this <lb />
afternoon on bicycles. <lb />
We were glad to see Col. <lb />
out again after a severe at- <lb />
, tack of feyer. <lb />
in 1891 and advocated and <lb />
worked for a Railroad i Johnson returned last <lb />
introduced several bills and a at Greenville. <lb />
one year as his health at <lb />
would not admit his staying long- <lb />
He taught school from then <lb />
until the winter of 1885. when he <lb />
married and settled down on his <lb />
farm, and has been prosperous as <lb />
a ever since- <lb />
Mr. Cox was a member of the <lb />
Boa id of Education from <lb />
1889 to January 1891, always <lb />
attending the meetings of the <lb />
Board and evincing an active in- <lb />
in the cause of education- <lb />
He was a member of the <lb />
which has been selected with special reference to the trade in <lb />
this locality. It includes the pick of the market, in Fresh <lb />
Fall Winter Styles end not less astonishing than the <lb />
goods, will be the low prices put on them. We <lb />
here to compete with <lb />
Dollar list Dollar. <lb />
We are after your patronage and expect to get it by giving <lb />
value received; we do not want it on terms We pro- <lb />
pose to inaugurate the rarest bargain season we have ever <lb />
sided over. A half-hour spent in looking over our stock will <lb />
give you some idea of the popular styles and we can only hope <lb />
that it will be as much pleasure for you to see as for us to show <lb />
our goods. <lb />
REMEMBER THAT WE<lb />
and to fit all. <lb />
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Trunks and Valises, Crockery, Glass- <lb />
ware. Wood and Hardware, Guns, Shot and Pow- <lb />
Gun Implements, Tinware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings to <lb />
fit, Harness, Groceries and Flour. <lb />
frank mm <lb />
LUGE and <lb />
WIN THE DAY. <lb />
Hear Me <lb />
I AM PUSHING <lb />
We still lead in this line, having the largest and best selected <lb />
stock ever carried in our town. We have six thousand <lb />
and seventy-five square feet of floor space <lb />
to this one line, and when you want <lb />
anything in the Furniture line <lb />
-----consisting of----- <lb />
for all it in In all my experience have never carried <lb />
u a beautiful line of Fall and Winter Goods. They consist of <lb />
BLACK, BLUE, BROWN and OXFORD MIXTURES, in CLAY <lb />
WORSTED. WORSTED and CHEVIOTS- They are worn <lb />
in either SACK. DOVE TAIL. CUTAWAYS or PRINCE <lb />
My goods are of the best quality latest tho <lb />
speak for themselves. We can tit the Man, Middle-Aged Mm . <lb />
Young Man, or Boy- <lb />
Overcoat <lb />
The re you have struck me exactly i I have in stock nil grades <lb />
and can suit young and old either heavy or light Weights. <lb />
Custom Made Suits <lb />
Come in, look <lb />
my and let <lb />
me take your <lb />
A tit guaranteed <lb />
GENTS FURNISHING GOODS. <lb />
I defy the I am in the swim on the above goods and can suit <lb />
tho meet fastidious. Call and sec me and be made happy. <lb />
FRANK WILSON. <lb />
COTTONSEED. <lb />
I i M tarnished W WANT <lb />
Bros. Co. Mm- Ion <lb />
Cotton and <lb />
Below <lb />
prices <lb />
of Norfolk <lb />
Good Middling <lb />
Middling <lb />
Middling <lb />
Good Ordinary <lb />
PEANUTS. <lb />
Prime <lb />
Extra <lb />
Pane; <lb />
v- <lb />
; 3-16 <lb />
T-i <lb />
If <lb />
highest price, either <lb />
in small or largo lots. We also have lot <lb />
Cotton Coed Meal and Hulls. <lb />
Will <lb />
nail c <lb />
MANY <lb />
Medium Price Marble Top Suits. <lb />
Oak Suits, Marble lop Bureaus, <lb />
Wood Top Bureaus <lb />
Tables, <lb />
Extension Dining Table, Side Boards, Tin Safes, Mattresses <lb />
Bed Spring, Children's Beds and Cribs, Parlor Suits, Hall <lb />
Racks, Wardrobes, Lace Curtains, Poles, Floor Oil <lb />
Cloths, yard, yard and a half and two wide, and Door <lb />
Mats, call on us. <lb />
had them passed, among which <lb />
were two bills scale <lb />
for the Clerk and Regis- <lb />
of Heeds, to the <lb />
people from tea to twenty per <lb />
cent, on papers registered. <lb />
Mr- Cox is still a farmer, and <lb />
has held the office of President of <lb />
the Alliance for two <lb />
a week of bad <lb />
one could hardly express his <lb />
appreciation of the to <lb />
day. <lb />
We have some rare bargains in all lines, <lb />
defy competition. We are here to stay, <lb />
can and will sell as low as any one. <lb />
We <lb />
We <lb />
-WE HAVE A FINE LINE OF------ <lb />
No matter how dark things <lb />
look, if God is lending we Are en <lb />
the way to bright. <lb />
The kind giving upon which <lb />
promises a blessing is the <lb />
I giving that is willing to give <lb />
Solomon M Jones was of its own blood- j <lb />
from which you can select a carpet and we can <lb />
have it cut to fit your room, and if desired <lb />
can have the same made up for you. <lb />
Your friends, <lb />
DENTISTRY. <lb />
DR. ll. A. a graduate of the <lb />
Baltimore College of Dental Surgery <lb />
win locate i Greenville about Oct. <lb />
Dr. bat had the practical <lb />
of several years Id his profession <lb />
and guarantee his work to give <lb />
The location of hi office Will he <lb />
Riven in a future issue. <lb />
IX <lb />
to Tax Payers. <lb />
Tax List Of the town of <lb />
l ville for tin- year is ha- been <lb />
in my hand for collection, and as <lb />
am required to make prompt settlement <lb />
notice is hereby given to tax <lb />
or the town to earl settlement <lb />
with me. Yon can save both yourself <lb />
and tho collector trouble not over- <lb />
looking this. . K. <lb />
Town Tax Collector. <lb />
have received their new stock sod can <lb />
very latest <lb />
designs, styles and colon for fall and <lb />
winter. <lb />
Oar New Pattern Hats <lb />
are beauties, while our Ribbons. <lb />
Laces and all other good will <lb />
be sure to please you. <lb />
examine, our stock. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
H qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county us <lb />
Administrator of the estate f B. Ty- <lb />
on, deceased, notice is hereby given <lb />
all indebted to the estate to <lb />
make payment the under- <lb />
signed, all persona having claims <lb />
against said estate must present the <lb />
same for payment on or before lUst <lb />
day of October, 1805, or ibis notice will <lb />
be plead In bar of recovery. <lb />
This l.-t day of Oct. 1804. <lb />
W. B. <lb />
of II. Tyson. <lb />
am pleased to state that since <lb />
from my recent sickness I have visited <lb />
the northern markets to purchase <lb />
i.<lb />
GOODS <lb />
and am now prepared to show yon <lb />
-------site line of------ <lb />
Dry <lb />
HATS, <lb />
FURNISHING <lb />
Ton will And all my goods strictly <lb />
Come to see me and -t me show what I can do. <lb />
WILEY BROWN, <lb />
GREENVILLE. IV. C. <lb />
BOSWELL. Sf COMFY <lb />
COTTON BUYERS, <lb />
AND DEALERS IN <lb />
GENERAL A <lb />
To deal fair and square with our friends and patrons and by L- m HOCK <lb />
BOTTOM PRICKS on Goods and Top Prices for i Made. <lb />
We moil a <lb />
Specialty o <lb />
FINE ill MM CLOTHING . , <lb />
I line of <lb />
on hand <lb />
ins <lb />
-1.10 <lb />
on <lb />
ii <lb />
-sins fie <lb />
fr- <lb />
J mot p M<lb />
pus<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017713_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
HONORED. <lb />
i Boy's Long-Stand- <lb />
luff Due Bill on a Chicago Firm. <lb />
Ticket C for Just <lb />
and for <lb />
Year la <lb />
u Calm. <lb />
A due bill for cents <lb />
against a certain Chicago firm was <lb />
collected recently, says the Chicago <lb />
Tribune. Ii had been credited to a <lb />
boy by the firm over fourteen years <lb />
ago. <lb />
In the winter of a <lb />
boy decided to Invest his <lb />
in a pair of skates. He sot a <lb />
sum of money to a Chicago firm and <lb />
received In return the skates and <lb />
with them a letter, stating that <lb />
cents too much had been <lb />
remitted and that the amount was <lb />
credited to the boy on the books of <lb />
the firm. A blue slip of paper <lb />
which bore the Information <lb />
that the firm whose signature was <lb />
attached would <lb />
Pay to the or order tho sum of <lb />
cents cent on demand. <lb />
The boy forgot the due bill and <lb />
wore out and outgrew the skates. <lb />
But bis old mother found the faded <lb />
paper in an old jacket-pocket among <lb />
the fish-hooks, dried worms, dried <lb />
apples, etc., and laid it carefully <lb />
away, <lb />
may go to Chicago some <lb />
The boy joined the busy ranks of <lb />
men who pain a livelihood in the <lb />
picturesque western counties of the <lb />
state by extracting petroleum <lb />
from the bowels of the earth. He <lb />
reached the years and average <lb />
of manhood, little having occurred <lb />
In the meantime to distinguish <lb />
or his life from the ordinary boy or <lb />
the average boyhood. Finally he <lb />
was induced to study law. Failing <lb />
in that he became discouraged <lb />
began to travel. He went to <lb />
Louis, thence to the Rockies. He <lb />
dug ditch on the snow-clad side of <lb />
Carbonate hill. He ct- <lb />
in the valley of the Arkansas, <lb />
ran a faro bank in Salt Lake City, <lb />
umped water out of a silver <lb />
n and nearly died of <lb />
fever In Pueblo. <lb />
to Pennsylvania, where his old <lb />
mother nursed him back to life <lb />
health and gave him money enough <lb />
to go to Ohio and start anew. He <lb />
labored one long year fur the <lb />
Oil company in the swamps of <lb />
Wood county. At the end of the <lb />
year ho had one suit of clothes, <lb />
to the amount of four <lb />
dollars, and <lb />
fever and ague. Then he stud- <lb />
medicine years <lb />
worked year at night-watch in <lb />
lunatic asylum. Finally he drift- <lb />
ed into Chicago and the newspaper <lb />
business. <lb />
In the course of time his mother <lb />
wrote she was coming to visit her <lb />
boy. Then she went to tho china <lb />
closet in the corner and took from <lb />
the top shelf the yellow sugar bowl <lb />
with gilt stripes and from It the <lb />
blue slip of paper placed there by <lb />
her own hand fourteen years before. <lb />
She collected the money, which <lb />
was given her in the shape of a <lb />
twenty-five-cent piece bearing tho <lb />
date 1893. She placed the bright, <lb />
coin in her wandering hand. <lb />
RAILWAY FIGURES. <lb />
Some Interesting Ones Gathered by <lb />
a German Publication. <lb />
The latest number of the railway <lb />
journal published by the German <lb />
government, the <lb />
prints a tabular state- <lb />
of the features of the <lb />
railways of the world at the end of <lb />
the year which at that time <lb />
had a total length of miles. <lb />
While the value of the minuteness <lb />
with which the length is given may <lb />
be open to question, the care taken <lb />
in the collection and compilation of <lb />
the statistics Is generally considered <lb />
to warrant the acceptance of these <lb />
German figures as fairly exact. Of <lb />
the total length, America is credited <lb />
with miles and with <lb />
miles. In Asia, Africa and <lb />
Australia the railway systems are <lb />
still comparatively insignificant, for <lb />
in Africa there are but <lb />
in Asia miles, of which <lb />
miles are in British India and 1.875 <lb />
in Japan; in Australia, miles. <lb />
The year showed a decrease in rail- <lb />
way construction compared with the <lb />
preceding ones, the figures being as <lb />
1889, mile <lb />
1691, miles; i <lb />
miles. Among the countries <lb />
of Europe Germany takes the lead <lb />
with miles, followed by <lb />
France with Great <lb />
Britain Ireland with <lb />
Russia with 19.640 miles and <lb />
with <lb />
The greatest length of <lb />
square miles of are <lb />
the an <lb />
where <lb />
miles; in <lb />
were are <lb />
-n Germany as a whole, 13.2 <lb />
y per <lb />
in any of <lb />
. is iii <lb />
ion i 29.6 <lb />
there are 27.4 <lb />
. as a whole, <lb />
f. la 11.6 miles. <lb />
ft of Early Risers. <lb />
Some of the cottagers on one of <lb />
the less thickly settled islands in <lb />
the harbor report the peculiar <lb />
tom of a native farmer's family that <lb />
lives close by. Until they got ac- <lb />
to it, they were awakened <lb />
every morning between four and <lb />
five o'clock by this farmer his <lb />
family of four children, who begin <lb />
be day's labors at that time. The <lb />
father is troubled with Insomnia and <lb />
cannot after two p. in. here- <lb />
fore he has established the custom <lb />
of beginning the day at this time of <lb />
year just as soon as it is light <lb />
enough to sea. His boys are <lb />
about eleven awl years old. <lb />
and the oldest is fourteen <lb />
gears. He gets up and gets break- <lb />
last for them, but wife doesn't <lb />
get until she to. which is <lb />
much later The children their <lb />
in milking the of which <lb />
there about a and driving <lb />
them to then carrying <lb />
the about the island. <lb />
other morning tho cottagers heard <lb />
the to his children to <lb />
get up. They heard <lb />
it Is clock and the day <lb />
most gone, we ain't Bone a <lb />
of rt <lb />
Tie children take a nap <lb />
he day. The other morning one <lb />
st the little boys went off shooting <lb />
prows between throe four <lb />
-i Pram <lb />
The Reflector mi Constitution <lb />
HISTORICAL FAMINES. <lb />
WILL YOU HELP <lb />
In the great contest which is to be fought between now and the nest presidential election for <lb />
THE PEOPLE'S Coinage of both Gold and Silver, without discrimination, which means the <lb />
free coinage of both as opposed to the policy of contraction, which is being dictated by England, and <lb />
which levies tribute on every product of the farm, on valuations of all kinds and on all compensation for <lb />
labor. <lb />
The Great nOW the double standard against the single use of both gold and <lb />
silver as standard money metals, against tho organized to hold the currency of the country strictly <lb />
to the gold basis. <lb />
THE ATLANTA <lb />
WEEKLY CONSTITUTION <lb />
published at ATLANTA, GA., and having <lb />
A CIRCULATION MORE THAN chiefly among the farmers of the <lb />
Country, and going to more homes than any weekly newspaper published on the face of the earth is <lb />
The Leading Champion Of the People in this as well as in other great contests in which <lb />
they are engaged against the exactions of monopoly. <lb />
By special arrangement with The Constitution the paper publishing this announcement is prepared to make <lb />
A REMARKABLE CLUBBING OFFER, by which both this paper and The Constitution <lb />
will be offered for one year at almost the price of a year's subscription to one paper. <lb />
5-3-4-0-1-0-7-8 <lb />
BOTH PAPERS FOR <lb />
ii <lb />
THE CONSTITUTION IS THE BIGGEST AND BEST WEEKLY NEWS- <lb />
PAPER published America, covering the news of the world, having correspondents in every city <lb />
in America, and in the capitals of Europe, and reporting in full the details of debates congress on <lb />
all questions of public interest. It is <lb />
THE GREAT SOUTHERN WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, and as the exponent of southern <lb />
and the purveyor of southern news it has no equal on the continent. <lb />
THE CONSTITUTION'S SPECIAL FEATURES <lb />
are such as are not to be found in any other paper in America. <lb />
THE FARM AND FARMER'S DEPARTMENT, <lb />
THE WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT, <lb />
THE CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT, <lb />
are all under able direction and are specially attractive to those to whom these departments arc addressed. <lb />
Under the editorial of Clark Howell, its special contributors are writers of such world-wide <lb />
reputation as Mark Twain, Bret Frank R. Stockton, Joel Chandler Harris, <lb />
of others, while it oilers weekly service from such writers as Bill Sarge <lb />
Wallace P. Reed, Frank L. Stanton, and others, who give its literary features a peculiar Southern <lb />
flavor that commends it to every fireside from to Texas, from Missouri to California. <lb />
DO Not Delay, but send your name now. If you are already a subscriber to your home paper, and you <lb />
want The Constitution only, communicate with The Constitution direct, and send One Dollar for <lb />
one year's subscription with your guess in the prize contest. You can got your home paper, however, <lb />
publishing this, and The Constitution, for almost the price of one, and remember that all clubbing <lb />
subscriptions must be sent to this paper and not to The Constitution. <lb />
THE CONSTITUTION k among the few great newspapers publishing daily editions on the side of <lb />
the people against European Domination of our money system, and it heartily <lb />
1st. The Free Coinage of Silver, <lb />
Believing that the establishment of a single gold standard will wreck the prosperity of the great masses <lb />
of the people, though it may the few who have already grown rich by federal protection and federal <lb />
subsidy. <lb />
Tariff Reform, <lb />
Believing that by throwing our ports open to the markets of the world and levying only enough import <lb />
duties to pay the actual expenses of the government, the people will be better served than by making <lb />
them pay double prices for protection's sake. <lb />
An Income Tax, <lb />
Believing that those who have much property should bent the burdens of government in the same pro- <lb />
portion to those who have little. <lb />
Two Thousand Dollars in Gash Prizes <lb />
To those who take advantage of this clubbing offer The Constitution will distribute Two Thousand <lb />
Dollars in CASH PRIZES, by the following We have placed in a sealed envelope <lb />
in the keeping of the Treasurer of the State of Georgia, and locked in the great vaults of <lb />
the State, a legal tender note, which like all federal paper currency is numbered, each note of every <lb />
denomination issued by the government having its own number. The number on this particular note is <lb />
composed of eight figures, and on the arrangement of these figures as they appear the note <lb />
depends the distribution Of the two thousand dollars in prizes offered. <lb />
The following figures compose <lb />
the number of the j <lb />
though of course they arc not given here in the order in which they appear on the note. <lb />
To those who in sending with their subscriptions a rearrangement of these figures so as to give the number as it <lb />
is on the note, will distribute prizes as <lb />
IN CASH to the person who gives the number of the note. <lb />
CASH to the person who, not giving the exact number, comes nearest doing so. <lb />
person who comes nearest. <lb />
IN CASH to the person who comes third nearest. <lb />
IN CASH to the person who comes fourth nearest. <lb />
to the person who comes fifth nearest. <lb />
CASH to the person who comes sixth nearest. <lb />
S O IN CASH lo the person who comes seventh nearest. <lb />
CASH the person coming eighth nearest <lb />
IN CASH to the person coming ninth nearest. <lb />
CASH to the person coming tenth nearest. <lb />
H to the person coming eleventh nearest. <lb />
coining twelfth nearest. <lb />
IN CASH to the person coming thirteenth nearest. <lb />
IN CASH to the person coming fourteenth nearest. <lb />
IN to the person coming fifteenth nearest. <lb />
IN CASH to the person coming sixteenth nearest. <lb />
Each of these prizes will he delivered in cash, subject to the following Each guess <lb />
accompany a dubbing subscription to the paper publishing this announcement and The Constitute <lb />
the above announced clubbing rate, which must be in cash. All clubbing subscriptions must <lb />
sent through the paper making this publication and not to The Constitution. This offer is to <lb />
closed on the first of May, 1895, and guesses received with subscriptions after that time will not be <lb />
counted bathe distribution of these prizes. Should there be any ties in the guesses, the prizes <lb />
will be divided. Every new or renewal subscription to either of the two papers will be entitled to <lb />
a guess with every subscription. <lb />
must <lb />
at <lb />
be <lb />
THE CONSTITUTION <lb />
advocates an <lb />
OF THE <lb />
Until there is enough of it in circulation to do the business of the country. <lb />
If you wish to help in shaping legislation to these ends, GIVE THE CONSTITUTION YOUR ASSIST- <lb />
lend it a helping hand in the fight, and remember that by so doing you will help yourself, help <lb />
your neighbors, and help country <lb />
AS A <lb />
THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION has no equal in America Its news reports cover the world, <lb />
its correspondents and agents arc to be found in almost every in the Southern and Western <lb />
States. <lb />
AS A <lb />
It prints more such matter as is ordinarily found the great magazines of the country than can be gotten <lb />
even from the bait of them. <lb />
AS AN It is a school house within itself, a year's reading of THE <lb />
is a liberal education to any one. <lb />
AS A FRIEND AND It brings comfort to the fireside every week, <lb />
is eagerly sought by the children, contains valuable information for the mother, and is an <lb />
of instruction for every member of the household. <lb />
TOUR <lb />
WITH <lb />
LE<lb />
GET NOTCH PRICES. <lb />
O. L. JOYNER, Proprietor, Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Many Yours When Thousands <lb />
Died of Starvation. <lb />
Recent At- <lb />
lo of <lb />
Ancient Day Terr I hie Days of <lb />
In <lb />
The recent Russian famine has <lb />
drawn public attention to other <lb />
terrible disasters of former times <lb />
says an exchange. were <lb />
formerly much more common than <lb />
during tho last half century, and <lb />
many notable calamities of this <lb />
are mentioned by historians. <lb />
Not the seven <lb />
in Egypt, mentioned in the Old <lb />
Testament, the first great famine <lb />
noted in history was in Italy, It. C. <lb />
Thousands of Demons, driven <lb />
I mad by want, threw themselves into <lb />
j the sea and rivers to escape from <lb />
suffering. In A. there <lb />
was a great, famine In Egypt and <lb />
another In and the vicinity in <lb />
A. D. In famine prevailed <lb />
over tho British Islands and people <lb />
a to grass, roots the bark of <lb />
trees; thousands died in Scotland <lb />
privation In A. D. over <lb />
j thirty thousand perished in <lb />
. Britain four years later. A. D. <lb />
famine prevailed all over tho <lb />
south of Europe, raging worst <lb />
Italy, where parents ate their <lb />
in England and Wales <lb />
were again ravaged; also In <lb />
; when thousands starved, and in <lb />
I when the crops failed for four <lb />
i years. an awful <lb />
famine raged throughout ail Europe, <lb />
land again from to when <lb />
crop failures caused terrible suffer- <lb />
j tug. In England and France the <lb />
people ate the flesh of dogs and cats, <lb />
and many cases of cannibalism were <lb />
recorded. There were famines In <lb />
England 1861,1316,1330, 1318 and <lb />
and general distress prevailed <lb />
also In both England and in <lb />
1748, and 1705. The great <lb />
Irish famines of 1814, 1810, 1822, <lb />
1831 and 1840 were In consequence of <lb />
the failure of the potato crop, and <lb />
no doubt In each thousands of per- <lb />
sons starved to death. European <lb />
calamities of this kind, however, <lb />
dwindled into Insignificance when <lb />
compared with the colossal <lb />
of famine in the crowded <lb />
countries of Asia. In 1837 over <lb />
eight hundred thousand human be- <lb />
starved to death In northwest- <lb />
India, and In 1800 another <lb />
live hundred thousand. <lb />
In one million people were sup- <lb />
posed to have starved Bengal and <lb />
and in 1808 tho death roll <lb />
from famine exceeded <lb />
one million five hundred thousand. <lb />
Even as late as 1877 about five <lb />
thousand perished in Bombay, <lb />
Madras and Mysore. Tho worst <lb />
calamity of this ever recorded <lb />
took place in the years 1877 and 1878, <lb />
in China. Complete crop failure <lb />
took place in all the northern prov- <lb />
and the number of those who <lb />
Perished from want of food was <lb />
mated at nine million five hundred <lb />
thousand. As the internal <lb />
of a country are improved <lb />
the danger of wholesale starvation <lb />
is much lessened. It is not likely <lb />
that, save in Russia, Persia and <lb />
China, there will again such dread- <lb />
loss of life as has been <lb />
from the failure of the <lb />
HE THE PIANO. <lb />
The Carpenter Was Given a Job and <lb />
He Did His Work Too Well. <lb />
A family changed <lb />
their residence from one street to <lb />
another a few days since. Among <lb />
household effects was a hand- <lb />
some square piano, the cover of <lb />
which had In process of <lb />
been slightly cracked. When <lb />
the tuner came ho noticed the <lb />
cracked cover, and told the lady of <lb />
house that he knew of a man <lb />
who could repair It so that it would <lb />
not be noticed. There was a car- <lb />
working about the house, <lb />
and as the cost of moving had been <lb />
considerable the lady decided to <lb />
have the carpenter do the work, and <lb />
informed the tuner that he need not <lb />
send his expensive Calling <lb />
the carpenter, she showed him the <lb />
damaged cover, informed him <lb />
he could easily fix it with glue. <lb />
carpenter set about his task <lb />
and the lady paid no further <lb />
to him. <lb />
A day or t ago she had com- <lb />
and was requested to play <lb />
upon the piano. Having found it, <lb />
she learned that her surmise was In- <lb />
correct. Failing, after repeated <lb />
and strenuous efforts to lift the lid, <lb />
she was compelled to the <lb />
pleasure of entertaining her guests <lb />
in this way. When her husband <lb />
came home he exercised his muscle, <lb />
but to no avail. After three or four <lb />
trials he began an examination and <lb />
found that the carpenter had labored <lb />
under the mistaken notion that the <lb />
lid ought not to rise, and had ac- <lb />
placed a coating of <lb />
glue between it and that part of the <lb />
piano upon which it touched. To <lb />
the job undeniably complete, <lb />
he further secured by driving a <lb />
ten Pi nail if. <lb />
Chinese Hospitality. <lb />
few people have any Idea of <lb />
the great hospitality of the <lb />
laid n Pittsburgh celestial recently. <lb />
coming to this <lb />
try retain their Ideas of Oriental <lb />
hospitality, and keep open <lb />
doors any of race who nay <lb />
shell r. A Chinaman arriving <lb />
in with tut money would <lb />
never want for a boarding place. lie <lb />
would simply go to the first Chinese <lb />
laundry or residence, feeling assured <lb />
that he would find a welcome there. <lb />
If, after staying a couple of days, he <lb />
should find that the circumstances <lb />
of his host were such that the latter <lb />
could not. well afford to keep him. <lb />
would move away, making his home <lb />
with another Chinaman. He would <lb />
continue doing this, dividing him- <lb />
self, so to speak, until be was able <lb />
to get work and support himself. <lb />
Of course, such wanderers usually <lb />
endeavor to find the wealthy <lb />
Chinamen become their <lb />
I have known son of the legation <lb />
in Pittsburgh v ten <lb />
transient I could not <lb />
them<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017713_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
J, <lb />
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Editor and <lb />
OCTOBER 3rd, <lb />
Pases. <lb />
, he <lb />
two <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular correspondent. <lb />
Washington, D. C, Sept., <lb />
A quorum of the cabinet <lb />
been in Washington this week- <lb />
but not all at one time- <lb />
Smith only in town three <lb />
days and Secretary Lamont has <lb />
just arrived. Sectaries Gresham <lb />
and Herbert have been at their <lb />
desks all the week and Secretary <lb />
has not been able to get <lb />
even a three-clay vacation since <lb />
Congress There is <lb />
considerable gossip here over <lb />
the of Secretary La <lb />
being nominated for gov- <lb />
of New York by the demo <lb />
although lie isn't saying a <lb />
word himself. is no doubt <lb />
that Secretary Lamont would <lb />
make a strong candidate per <lb />
haps stronger any man who <lb />
has been mentioned in <lb />
with the nomination, except <lb />
ex-Secretary Whitney, and the <lb />
impression is that he will not <lb />
because, like Whitney <lb />
would be acceptable to the <lb />
factions into which the party in <lb />
New York is unfortunately <lb />
ed, he having managed to keep <lb />
the good will of them all. Demo- <lb />
hero recognize the <lb />
of Mr. Morton to have been <lb />
about the that the re- <lb />
publicans could have made <lb />
and they believe that a <lb />
strong democrat will be needed to <lb />
beat him, under existing <lb />
stances. <lb />
Senator Faulkner has decided <lb />
that he can be of more benefit to <lb />
the party by giving his undivided <lb />
attention to managing the Con- <lb />
campaign committee, <lb />
of which he is chairman, than by <lb />
going on the stump consequent- <lb />
he will make no speeches, but will <lb />
remain constantly at the commit- <lb />
tee headquarters. He sent Pres- <lb />
Cleveland a copy of the <lb />
campaign Text Book, this week, <lb />
with the compliments of the com- <lb />
Although no official announce <lb />
has been made to that <lb />
and none is expected, it has been <lb />
understood for some time that <lb />
Treasury officials regarded <lb />
men a failure as high grade <lb />
clerks in that department con- <lb />
there was little surprise <lb />
when it was learned that a con- <lb />
percentage of the <lb />
clerks dismissed <lb />
far in the reorganization of <lb />
department, now under way <lb />
accordance with a law enacted <lb />
THE <lb />
thus <lb />
that <lb />
in <lb />
at <lb />
the last session of Congress, <lb />
high grade women clerks. There <lb />
are more high grade women <lb />
clerks that is women drawing <lb />
more than a the <lb />
Treasury than in any other de- <lb />
and, according to state <lb />
to those over them, there <lb />
are numerous reasons why men <lb />
are preferred to them. It is said <lb />
no more women will be appointed <lb />
to or promoted to clerkship <lb />
th grade in the <lb />
Treasury department. Although <lb />
it is strictly a matter of business, <lb />
who have dismissed <lb />
are raising as great a howl as <lb />
though they hail been deprived <lb />
of something in which they had a <lb />
proprietary interest, and the howl <lb />
is likely to increase in volume as <lb />
soon as those who m trying to <lb />
get reinstated become convinced <lb />
that they cannot succeed. <lb />
Owing largely to the dullness <lb />
in political news, a regular <lb />
in a has been <lb />
made out of the resignation of <lb />
Mr. Supervising Ar- <lb />
of the Treasury, at the re- <lb />
quest of Secretary by <lb />
the Washington correspondents- <lb />
It is a very simple case, without <lb />
of tin elements of a <lb />
Mi. failed to run <lb />
the of his office as <lb />
smoothly as Secretary <lb />
thought it ought to be run, rather <lb />
from lack of adaptability than <lb />
lack of ability, and his <lb />
was asked for, and <lb />
accepted. That's all. <lb />
One of the best campaign <lb />
sent out by the Democratic <lb />
Campaign Committee is a list of <lb />
the new enterprises inaugurated <lb />
and of ones which have re <lb />
work since the new tariff <lb />
became a law. It answers better <lb />
than pages of argument could <lb />
do the Republican <lb />
charge that tariff reform would <lb />
injure American industries <lb />
Splendid line of tablets and box <lb />
paper at Reflector Book Store. <lb />
and views at <lb />
B fl, Store. <lb />
lot of novels at Reflector <lb />
Book Store. <lb />
AT WORTH <lb />
Why Your Cora Fodder Curing Cow <lb />
Pa Vines of Corn and Cob <lb />
of Onions <lb />
Question. Bad <lb />
September <lb />
The Experiment Station <lb />
The standing offer is made to send the <lb />
bulletins of the station to all in the <lb />
state who really desire to receive them. <lb />
Thousands of farmers have already <lb />
ken advantage of this offer. you <lb />
really want to be benefited by them, <lb />
please do not apply for them. If <lb />
desire to read them, write on <lb />
card to Dr. II. Battle, Director, Ra- <lb />
H. C. <lb />
Title Chanced. <lb />
The title page of the bulletins of the <lb />
North Carolina Agricultural <lb />
Station has been somewhat <lb />
changed in appearance. Now the sub- <lb />
of the publication is given the <lb />
prominent part no that the readers can <lb />
easily see what the bulletins contain. <lb />
The Chestnut and Ire <lb />
It is a well known fact that the weevil <lb />
damages to a great extent the chestnut <lb />
a a market crop. This is made <lb />
of bulletin of the North Carolina <lb />
Experiment Station. The life <lb />
of this annoying insect is <lb />
and how the parent beetle lays her eggs <lb />
in the immature husk or burr of the nut <lb />
when still on the tree. The eggs hatch <lb />
and if the nuts remain upon <lb />
the worms in about ten days bore their <lb />
way out and enter the ground to pass <lb />
finally into the adult state during the <lb />
coming spring. It is altogether <lb />
to prevent the beetle from laying <lb />
her eggs on the native chestnut trees in <lb />
the forests, but in cultivated orchards <lb />
of Spanish or Japanese chestnuts the <lb />
treatment would be the same as for the <lb />
plum For treating the nests, <lb />
the following plan successfully followed <lb />
by an experienced correspondent is <lb />
scald the nests by- <lb />
plating a bushel or so in a tub, pour <lb />
enough boiling water over them to <lb />
one or two inches. . Stir with a stick, <lb />
allow to remain about five minutes, and <lb />
the nuts come to the surface <lb />
and can be skimmed off and destroyed <lb />
or fed to hogs. Put the good nuts in <lb />
bags half full, and dry in the sun, <lb />
shake and manipulate freely to hasten <lb />
drying. The kernels thus treated re- <lb />
main soft and do not get flinty. <lb />
The Army <lb />
The weather this has been ex- <lb />
favorable to the army <lb />
worms of which we have two general <lb />
namely. the <lb />
southern army worm, and <lb />
the northern army worm. <lb />
This year the latter genus is the more <lb />
common but both are troublesome. <lb />
These worms prefer soft green millet, <lb />
corn, small grain, grass, and clovers. <lb />
The southern worm eats fruit and veg- <lb />
They do not molest cotton, <lb />
cow peas, peanuts, or nor can <lb />
they damage dry cured fodder, or <lb />
ripened gram shocked or standing in <lb />
field. They never damage fodder or <lb />
grain in barn. <lb />
When these worms at- <lb />
tack a grass or forage field cut the crop <lb />
at once and haul into barn or rake up <lb />
into windrows as soon as cut. Have a <lb />
man follow and spray or sprinkle with <lb />
kerosene emulsion, or pure kerosene <lb />
oil, or boiling hot water upon the worms <lb />
which will be found covering the <lb />
ground. The forage may then be cured <lb />
a. usual in field. To prevent advancing <lb />
worms from getting into a field, plow a <lb />
long, wide and deep furrow across their <lb />
line of or B feet outside the <lb />
field to be protected. The land side <lb />
must be towards the protected field, <lb />
and should lie cut under if practicable. <lb />
When the advancing worms have half <lb />
filled this furrow pile straw or dry pine <lb />
tags upon them and fire; or plow an- <lb />
other furrow just inside the last, throw- <lb />
the dirt upon the worms. or <lb />
stamp this hard. Repeat furrows as <lb />
often as necessary. When crossing <lb />
roads or bare ground the worms may be <lb />
crushed by driving a heavy roller over <lb />
them, or kerosene may be sprayed upon <lb />
them or dry straw or litter may be scat- <lb />
tired. They may be <lb />
by Paris green, but this remedy is not <lb />
desirable when the crop is to be utilized <lb />
as forage. As soon as full grown the <lb />
worms will enter the ground and <lb />
change to the dormant pupa slate in <lb />
which they will remain spring. <lb />
Fields in which the worms have worked <lb />
this fall should be plowed <lb />
rolled heavily or stamped as soon as the <lb />
worms are gone. This will bury <lb />
pupae so deeply they will not reach the <lb />
surface in spring. Fall crops may be <lb />
sown as soon the worms begin to dis- <lb />
appear. Gerald <lb />
gist North Carolina Experiment Sta- <lb />
Crimean Clover In 1894. <lb />
A crop of seed per acre. <lb />
It is worth while to spread the fact <lb />
to every that this clover can and <lb />
will bring dollars to him if he will but <lb />
grow it. <lb />
This crop starts and grows to full ma- <lb />
and dies between August and the <lb />
following June. It will start among corn, <lb />
cotton, or other crops and need not in- <lb />
with the crop for the latter part <lb />
of the season in which it is sown. <lb />
When the summer crop is gone, crimson <lb />
clover takes the soil and provided it is <lb />
not too poor, covers it with verdure and <lb />
increases its fertility while preventing <lb />
the unsightly washing which frequent- <lb />
occurs without its presence. It only <lb />
holds the ground for a short time in <lb />
spring against other crops. If grazed, <lb />
no delay need be experienced in plowing <lb />
for early crops but we would plow <lb />
other ground first, as the later this is <lb />
left more good it will do and <lb />
land, and the better it will be for the <lb />
following crop. <lb />
If it is made into hay the last of April <lb />
will see it harvested and the weather <lb />
will be propitious for In- <lb />
deed, it may well be questioned if it <lb />
would not be better, for a cotton crop, to <lb />
have the land in this clover for hay to <lb />
cut at the time when cotton has usually <lb />
hardly started in sickly yellow growth, <lb />
and then turn the land at once and <lb />
the cotton. The roots and stab- <lb />
will have mellowed the soil and <lb />
added a rich supply of plant food to <lb />
the cotton crop and save a heavy <lb />
ill for fertilizers. If the crop is late <lb />
it will doubtless make up the time in <lb />
more rapid growth and if it is not quite <lb />
so far advanced when bolls begin to <lb />
rot some years in August, it may be as <lb />
well for the crop. At any rate corn can <lb />
be planted after crimson clover has <lb />
baas cut for hay or seed, and will find <lb />
its best development after such a crop. <lb />
Now is the time to purchase seed and <lb />
start to this valuable crop. <lb />
Seed is cheaper than for years before <lb />
We would advise those who start to <lb />
least save their own seed. <lb />
To show some of the possibilities in <lb />
crop, a statement is appended of <lb />
the crop grown on the experiment <lb />
farm fas 1894. This is only what any <lb />
farmer may equal or exceed, but it <lb />
shows a profitable use of land for the <lb />
winter months. Of four acres in clover <lb />
were harvested in good order while <lb />
acres were storm-beaten when ripe. <lb />
The yield of seed in hulls on the unhurt <lb />
portion was 1487 pounds per acre, <lb />
valued at cents per pound, a total of <lb />
844.61 per acre. On the storm-beaten <lb />
portion the yield was pounds per <lb />
acre with a value of per <lb />
acre. This straw has been fed just as <lb />
though it were prime hay. and teams <lb />
have worked as usual on it with usual <lb />
food. Corn crop on the land is now <lb />
better because clover has been grown <lb />
there. After the clover off, the <lb />
land plowed well, although elsewhere <lb />
it was rather too dry to plow. The soil <lb />
was darker colored ore and <lb />
rowed easily to a fine seed bed. We <lb />
could but consider this soil permanent- <lb />
improved. <lb />
A great quantity of seed has been <lb />
grown in this year and grow- <lb />
are ad it for sale at very<lb />
The Weather North Carolina Daring- <lb />
The North Carolina Experiment Sta- <lb />
has just published the seventh an- <lb />
report of its meteorological <lb />
vision constituting the North Carolina <lb />
state weather service for This re- <lb />
port gives, in details, the various <lb />
meteorological conditions in various <lb />
parts of North Carolina during <lb />
The subjects treated list of <lb />
the publications during the <lb />
annual meteorological summary for the <lb />
state the sixty-six separate <lb />
whose reports were used for com- <lb />
piling it pres- <lb />
sure, maximum and minimum tempera- <lb />
precipitation, state of the weather, <lb />
direct ion. crop conditions <lb />
phenomena, normals for <lb />
North list of meteorological <lb />
stations, observers, and crop <lb />
work embraced in the monthly meteor- <lb />
bulletins and weekly <lb />
weather crop bull, also weather <lb />
and forecasts, cold wave <lb />
and frost warnings, and list of station <lb />
receiving them. A valuable feature of <lb />
the report is the table of comparison- <lb />
between principal points in North Caro- <lb />
and prominent places in the <lb />
United States and abroad. These com- <lb />
embrace normal precipitation <lb />
and temperature for the whole year, <lb />
for each of the four seasons, each <lb />
month of the year. <lb />
The pamphlet embraces sixty-three <lb />
pages, contains a well table of <lb />
contents and index, and is replete with <lb />
valuable information on weather <lb />
in North Carolina. It can lie pro <lb />
cured by application to Dr. II. Hat- <lb />
tie. Director. N. C. <lb />
Self-Sacking Cows. <lb />
Since the issue of our previous press <lb />
bulletin, on this subject, several com- <lb />
have been received and <lb />
two remedies proposed which our <lb />
respondents are sure has proven <lb />
in curing the habit, in at least <lb />
one ease for the method and <lb />
several for the slitted tongue. <lb />
handful of chips <lb />
be at any drug for several <lb />
in about one gallon of water. <lb />
Wash the cows teats in this after every <lb />
milking for ten days. Always wash <lb />
every time before milking, using a <lb />
gallon of clean water in which a spoon <lb />
of Marline has been dissolved. If <lb />
the milk tastes of feed it to the <lb />
pigs. The of the re- <lb />
mains in the cows memory and prevents <lb />
further trials at sucking after the ten <lb />
days. <lb />
he other method consists in slitting <lb />
the tongue near the point used to draw <lb />
up round the teat in the act of sucking. <lb />
Fasten the cow securely, and drawing <lb />
out the tongue slit it a little to one side <lb />
of the middle to I inches out to- <lb />
wards the front and near the point. <lb />
Then feed on soft bran mashes for a few <lb />
days until the wound heals and it will <lb />
be impossible for the cow to suck after <lb />
that. One correspondent tried chair <lb />
frames and side bars until tired out and <lb />
desperate, when the mutilated tongue <lb />
cured the habit. <lb />
still we should spend little time on <lb />
any cow we do not know to be a good <lb />
one. The time can be better employed. <lb />
F. E. Emery, Agriculturist, North Caro- <lb />
Experiment Station. <lb />
Advanced Summary of Meteorological <lb />
ports, for North Carolina, <lb />
1894. <lb />
The North Carolina state weather <lb />
service issues the following advanced <lb />
summary of the weather August. <lb />
1894, as compared with the correspond- <lb />
month of previous <lb />
mean for the <lb />
month was 74.7 degrees, which is 1.1 de- <lb />
below the normal. The highest <lb />
monthly mean was 78.6 degrees at <lb />
the lowest monthly mean was <lb />
85.8 degrees at Highlands. The highest <lb />
temperature was on the 9th at Saxon, <lb />
on the 10th at the lowest <lb />
is on the 5th at Book, on the <lb />
nth at The wannest <lb />
August during the past twenty-one <lb />
Years was in 1888, mean I he coldest <lb />
in 1874. mean 73.3. <lb />
Average for the <lb />
month 11.13 inches, which is 0.04 inches <lb />
above the normal. The greatest amount <lb />
was 14.99 at the least amount. <lb />
0.88 at Mt. Airy. The wettest August <lb />
occurred in 1887, average 9.39. The <lb />
in 1881 average 2.91. <lb />
direction, north- <lb />
cast. The normal direction for August <lb />
is southwest. Average hourly velocity <lb />
miles. Highest velocity. miles per <lb />
hour from northwest on the 13th at <lb />
Chattanooga, Tenn. <lb />
Miscellaneous Fogs <lb />
were frequent especially during the lat- <lb />
part of the month, and considerable <lb />
hazy occurred in upper sky. Thunder <lb />
storms occurred on day except <lb />
7th. -id. ad 24th. Hail occurred <lb />
15th and 19th. Loner <lb />
solar 11th <lb />
reported aurora, early morning of<lb />
Questions and Replies. <lb />
The station will be glad to extend its <lb />
usefulness by answering, as far as <lb />
questions on agricultural topics <lb />
sent by any one in North Carolina who <lb />
may desire to ask for information. Ad- <lb />
dress all questions to the Caro- <lb />
Agricultural Experiment Station. <lb />
Raleigh. N. C. Replies will be written <lb />
as early as possible by the of <lb />
the station staff most competent to do <lb />
so. and when of general interest, they <lb />
will . in <lb />
Can Bo <lb />
am emboldened by your former kindness <lb />
In for some Information concerning <lb />
grapes. There Is id abandoned vineyard near <lb />
here comprising several hundred <lb />
and two varieties of bunch grapes names <lb />
known. These vines have In most instances <lb />
fallen from the decayed trellises and lie in <lb />
; p- on the ground, a prey to goats and cattle. <lb />
Such as matures Is. of course, absorbed by <lb />
in the neighborhood. Now I wish to <lb />
ask if. In your Judgment, these old vines, after <lb />
ten years of neglect, could by pruning and ma- <lb />
be given a renewed life And could I <lb />
cross or graft to advantage O. W. S. <lb />
ton. S. <lb />
I Answered by W. F. Massey. Horticulturist. <lb />
th Carolina Experiment <lb />
The notion prevalent that the <lb />
grape and all the <lb />
class will not endure any pruning. <lb />
is an error. You can prune and get the <lb />
old up on a horizontal <lb />
trellis without much risk, but it will be <lb />
found that the branches have rooted <lb />
fast to the ground in all directions, and <lb />
it will probably pay better to select <lb />
strong young shoots with masses of <lb />
roots and detach them as independent <lb />
vines for planting, rather than bother <lb />
with the old stems. In such a mass of <lb />
vines as you describe yon can get <lb />
hundreds of strong young plants. <lb />
Bones as Fertilizers and to <lb />
Them. <lb />
am trying to make a study of <lb />
having lately in fruit growing in vi- <lb />
of Southern Pines. have much of It yet <lb />
to learn. would be glad to have you send me <lb />
any bulletins you may have on fertilizers. <lb />
am much pleased with the one you sent me on <lb />
fruits. I would thank you to give me <lb />
on the following <lb />
I. What Is the actual value of bone meal as <lb />
a fertilizer for fruits, especially grapes. Do <lb />
you think it would pay to buy bones at <lb />
per ton and grind them in a hand bone mill <lb />
Do you think It would impair the virtue of the <lb />
bone to char it before grinding How would <lb />
old blenched bones compare with fresh ones In <lb />
value Would it pay to simply break bones <lb />
and plant pieces near each vine About <lb />
would be the value of as a <lb />
t per ton Any information you may give <lb />
this connection will be very gratefully <lb />
received. Is there any of treating bones <lb />
with would be better and <lb />
grinding G. A. W., Wilmington. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
by H. B. Battle, Director. North <lb />
Carolina Experiment Station. <lb />
meal is a very valuable <lb />
for grapes, as well as other fruits. <lb />
Grapes especially require it and can be <lb />
greatly improved by its application. <lb />
The phosphoric acid present is the ma- <lb />
most utilized by the roots; there <lb />
is some nitrogenous material present <lb />
also, especially in fresh bones. It would <lb />
pay to buy bones at S 10.00 per ton and <lb />
grind them in a hand mill if the mill is <lb />
effective and grinding will not cost you <lb />
much. The charring of the bone <lb />
liberates the nitrogenous material and <lb />
hence some of the value is lost. The <lb />
same action results when bones are left <lb />
to bleach in the sun. It would pay to <lb />
break the bones as fine can be con- <lb />
done to be planted near the <lb />
vines, ft is not an uncommon thing to <lb />
find roots of the grape vine entwining <lb />
themselves completely around a piece <lb />
of bone in the soil. The in- <lb />
of are per cent, of <lb />
ammonia, and per cent, of <lb />
as i. U, <lb />
comparing values an given <lb />
ordinary this would equal <lb />
about 82.00 per ton. Treating <lb />
on the farm with acids to dissolve them <lb />
is not advisable because of the danger <lb />
the operation. A plan found <lb />
successful is the a deep <lb />
trench in not liable to leach, then <lb />
lay down a layer broken an <lb />
inch or t upon this lay similar layer <lb />
of hard wood ashes, repeat- <lb />
the process and layers <lb />
until the trench is tilled. It b <lb />
sell also to have stakes at certain points <lb />
in the so that they can be <lb />
withdrawn from time to time and water <lb />
poured in the holes. This will tend to <lb />
decompose tin- DOOM, but five or six <lb />
months will be needed. As the <lb />
position will depend son the quality <lb />
of the bone, after this time if the bones <lb />
are found not to lie thoroughly <lb />
posed you can fork over the material, <lb />
lay down again with more ashes and <lb />
wet the mixture and allow a longer <lb />
time. <lb />
Horn and Hollow Tall. <lb />
Please state what causes the disease of cattle <lb />
a-, -hollow and what is the rem- <lb />
Also to prevent the disease. H. C. <lb />
C. N. <lb />
by Dr. F. P. Williamson. Consult <lb />
Veterinarian, North Carolina <lb />
According to the popular idea, cows <lb />
have only two affections <lb />
and <lb />
The method of diagnosis between the <lb />
two is simply by exclusion. If the cow <lb />
is and the cause is not from <lb />
she is suffering from <lb />
If she is and <lb />
the cause is not from <lb />
she is suffering from It <lb />
furthermore seems as if the disease was <lb />
at the option of the diagnostician <lb />
either or <lb />
The popular treatment of these <lb />
diseases is simple, but radical. If <lb />
your is suffering with <lb />
cat off the horns, she will never <lb />
have again. If she, at <lb />
the mercy of her would-be helpers, is <lb />
said to have then it is <lb />
that one more cow is doomed to be a <lb />
without the means to defend <lb />
herself against the flies and insects <lb />
that pester in the spring and fall- <lb />
low off with the <lb />
low off with the tail The <lb />
is simple; the treatment secures <lb />
sure cure with no chance of recurrence. <lb />
We cite two cases in illustration to <lb />
the incorrectness of these com- <lb />
notions. <lb />
Case October 9th, Patient <lb />
cow, age unknown. Appearance <lb />
thrifty, dry staring coat, pulse small. <lb />
quick, breathing accelerated, tempera- <lb />
elevated. Had been running in <lb />
oak grove several days eating large <lb />
quantities of acorns. in charge <lb />
was unable to decide whether she was <lb />
from or <lb />
low It was plainly a case of <lb />
and a purgative dose was ad- <lb />
ministered, followed by digestive tonics. <lb />
The patient made quick recovery. <lb />
Caw April. 1894. <lb />
Jersey cow. age not known. <lb />
Had been treated for <lb />
some time before by a friend of the <lb />
owner, <lb />
febrile symptoms. Put on <lb />
and is doing well. <lb />
That it is possible for the tail of a <lb />
cow to suffer from many diseases that <lb />
flesh and heir of the <lb />
inflammation of the soft <lb />
skin diseases of many kinds, diseases <lb />
the hair and we readily <lb />
but to take away from a poor dumb <lb />
brute the only she has against <lb />
troublesome insect world for a fancied <lb />
cause that has no existence in reality, <lb />
is certainly unjust, if not barbarous. <lb />
As for the horns, it is probably a good <lb />
thing to take them off, u properly done. <lb />
Many dairy men have their entire herd <lb />
as they claim cows in state <lb />
of domestication have no need for this <lb />
mode of defense, that horns only cause <lb />
trouble by wounding udders and other <lb />
soft tissues. <lb />
A USEFUL PRANK. <lb />
THE <lb />
suppose, that your <lb />
being valedictorian of the class made <lb />
considerable study and preparation <lb />
necessary. <lb />
no indeed I left every- <lb />
thing to mother the dressmaker. <lb />
Traveler. <lb />
HE HIS BUSINESS. <lb />
Sequel to the Joke of a Party <lb />
of Yale Students. <lb />
A jolly of students <lb />
camped out in the Vermont woods, <lb />
near the border of the state, for <lb />
midsummer sport. Returning to <lb />
camp one afternoon along a lonely <lb />
road, they met a backwoods Can- <lb />
boy, who was jogging along <lb />
with a blind horse pulling a buck- <lb />
board. <lb />
must be a <lb />
a mischievous collegian. <lb />
us guy him by talking <lb />
As the boy approached, the wag <lb />
bowed ceremoniously, and delivered <lb />
sonorously a passage from Cicero <lb />
which he had once declaimed <lb />
school. His companions stood by <lb />
in silence, doing their best to look <lb />
like Roman senators. <lb />
The boy stopped his horse and <lb />
the group with astonish- <lb />
do not understand the <lb />
which the are he <lb />
finally stammered. <lb />
The orator continued his fierce In- <lb />
against an imaginary Cati- <lb />
line, while his companions solemnly <lb />
expressed their approval In such <lb />
ejaculations as <lb />
and <lb />
The boy, that they <lb />
were making a butt of him, drove <lb />
on, followed by a chorus of laughter <lb />
and a shout from the <lb />
your Latin about you the <lb />
next time you meet gentlemen <lb />
It was a foolish prank which the <lb />
collegians speedily forgot. Not one <lb />
of them had an Idea that anything <lb />
would come of it. <lb />
The Canadian lad Lad an errand <lb />
to do for his father at the nearest <lb />
village. He asked the owner of the <lb />
crossroads store a curious <lb />
you know <lb />
I may be burled in the <lb />
woods, but I am not a dead <lb />
Latin is a dead <lb />
dead as Julius <lb />
want to learn it. Have you <lb />
any Latin book in the <lb />
Strange to say there was an old <lb />
Latin grammar in a cupboard in the <lb />
storekeeper's house. It was an old- <lb />
fashioned text book. <lb />
can have said the store- <lb />
keeper, you will never read a <lb />
word of <lb />
The boy took the book and drove <lb />
home to his father's He never <lb />
aw the collegians again, but for <lb />
years that Latin grammar was his <lb />
constant companion. L some mys- <lb />
way; possibly by always <lb />
having It under pillow, he learned <lb />
to read It and conjugate the verbs. <lb />
A sportsman who learned his <lb />
story advised him to go across the <lb />
border, and earn his living In some <lb />
college town where he could continue <lb />
hit studies. <lb />
The lad went to Rochester, sup- <lb />
ported In a preparatory <lb />
school, and entered the university <lb />
there. What Is more, he became the <lb />
Latin remarkably pro- <lb />
in the made a <lb />
fine record for scholarship. He <lb />
studied law, and was successful in <lb />
his profession. <lb />
A random college prank turned <lb />
the current of a whole life. The <lb />
young early conquest <lb />
Latin a whim inspired by <lb />
On trifles light as this has <lb />
many a human destiny. <lb />
Judge What's business <lb />
profession is a <lb />
mind-reader. <lb />
you a chance <lb />
to prove your foment. What are my <lb />
thoughts the moment <lb />
I'm the big- <lb />
liar ever run up <lb />
Judge <lb />
is A JIFFY. <lb />
assure you. I cannot live with- <lb />
out your <lb />
you <lb />
THE WAT IT WORKS. <lb />
did you fall in love with <lb />
Mr. Clinker so suddenly <lb />
Corn -Father forbade him to to <lb />
the Life.<lb />
Brooklyn Life. <lb />
A HOT WEATHER <lb />
Two drains upon a single fount, <lb />
Two streams that flow as one. <lb />
THE HANGING COMMITTEE. <lb />
BOUND TO CUT A SHINE. <lb />
Dogs and Pictures. <lb />
That's Why Her Husband Haunts the Apropos of the recognition of <lb />
Office. i by dogs, I think you may be <lb />
A deputy assessor called at a in the two following facts <lb />
residence and asked the lady which under notice n few <lb />
of house to fill out her state- <lb />
of assessable properly. She <lb />
had never made out a statement be- <lb />
fore, this public duty having been <lb />
attended to by her husband in <lb />
years. <lb />
In some she was under the <lb />
Impression that the statement of <lb />
her effects would published in the <lb />
daily papers, was anxious to <lb />
let neighbors know what <lb />
had. <lb />
you a asked the <lb />
deputy assessor. <lb />
have, and a fine one, <lb />
is it <lb />
a cent less than <lb />
is your other household <lb />
furniture <lb />
least <lb />
The assessor glanced at the rag <lb />
carpet doubtfully, and put It down <lb />
at that. <lb />
see you have some <lb />
he said. <lb />
years ago. A sagacious but quite <lb />
educated old terrier come with his <lb />
master to call for me, and <lb />
himself on tho hearthrug <lb />
talked. Turning himself round la <lb />
the intervals of slumber, his eye <lb />
caught an oil painting just over his <lb />
head half length of a gen- <lb />
Ho sat up, <lb />
showed his teeth and growled, not <lb />
once but continually, as both angry <lb />
and mortified that neither eyes nor <lb />
nose had given him notice of the <lb />
rival of a stranger. Tho next in- <lb />
stance was similar, except that the <lb />
chief actor was a young, Intelligent <lb />
collie, who, on tho sudden discovery <lb />
of a man looking at him from the <lb />
wall, barked long and furiously. In <lb />
both instances, after their excite- <lb />
had subsided, I led the dogs to <lb />
look at another picture similar In <lb />
size, and also of a gentleman, but <lb />
neither of them would take the <lb />
smallest notice of It. I need only<lb />
There were a few cheap that the picture which <lb />
appreciated was painted by Sir <lb />
Henry the other was not. <lb />
Might not u few sagacious canine <lb />
members be a useful addition to the <lb />
Royal Academy hanging committee <lb />
London Spectator. <lb />
hanging on tho wall. <lb />
have nine oil paintings worth <lb />
you keep any <lb />
sir; I have about <lb />
are they <lb />
a very fine breed, and I <lb />
I wouldn't take less than one dollar a <lb />
ho repeated as <lb />
he filled out the blank. <lb />
you keep a cow or a <lb />
but I have a fine <lb />
do you value it <lb />
Nannie's better than <lb />
any <lb />
have no franchises to as- <lb />
have <lb />
responded, doubtfully. <lb />
I think my husband has three <lb />
or four. You can put them in at <lb />
apiece, can't <lb />
madam. Tho total is <lb />
might make it a round <lb />
Tho Democratic candidates for <lb />
Her husband has been haunting the Legislature and county offices <lb />
tho assessor's office ever since in an j will address the people at the <lb />
effort to convince that official that following times and <lb />
his wife was playing n joke on the Keel's Store, Thursday, <lb />
deputy when she swore to that state- 4th. <lb />
PUBLIC SPEAKINGS. <lb />
following appointments of <lb />
in county have <lb />
been by the chairman of <lb />
the Democratic Executive <lb />
WALTER H- <lb />
black Jack, Thursday, Oct <lb />
A. M. <lb />
Friday, Oct 5th, M. <lb />
Greenville, Friday, Oct h. <lb />
HON. I. <lb />
Bethel, Saturday, Oct 6th. <lb />
County Canvass. <lb />
Francisco Post. <lb />
OF THE <lb />
Girls Should <lb />
MODERN <lb />
Held to Old <lb />
Friday, October 5th. <lb />
Bethel, Saturday, 0th. <lb />
School House, <lb />
day, October 10th. <lb />
Thursday, October, <lb />
11th. <lb />
May's Friday, October, <lb />
12th. <lb />
Falkland, Saturday, October, <lb />
Not Be <lb />
Standards. <lb />
arc we to do with our <lb />
distracted parents ask in- <lb />
The answer is easy <lb />
enough. Consider them, respect the i <lb />
needs of their nature, and do not q Wednesday, <lb />
require them to conform to the i-iv. <lb />
of the day before yesterday. I Haddocks X Roads, Thursday, <lb />
Parents who would do their duty by October <lb />
the modern girl should recognize i Calico, Friday. October, 19th. <lb />
the fact that the average of Grimesland, October, <lb />
genes is higher In her sex than it <lb />
used to be, that Is In-1 Parker's School Boom, Wed <lb />
voluntary, and that silence may con- 24th. <lb />
thought, but docs not stifle it. <lb />
The reasoning faculty Is there, and <lb />
will work Its own accord, but <lb />
probably all awry If not carefully <lb />
There are very few girls <lb />
who will not strive after an Ideal of Int. <lb />
Barney's. Friday, October, 20th. <lb />
Saturday, October, 27th <lb />
Stokes, Wednesday, October, <lb />
31st. <lb />
Thursday, November, <lb />
life if only It is offered to them <lb />
early. Girls are of a plastic nature.<lb />
Store, Friday, <lb />
t 2nd. <lb />
Their Inclinations for the most part Jack, Saturday, <lb />
tend toward refining Influences, but 3rd. <lb />
influences they must be, and if <lb />
there Is an absence of that which is <lb />
noble in the shape into which they <lb />
are first molded, then that which is <lb />
ignoble is apt to take its place. <lb />
There Is no more difficult or delicate <lb />
task in education than tho forming <lb />
of a young girl's character. If a <lb />
well-judged touch will on the one <lb />
hand produce the most beautiful re- <lb />
soon the other one that is ill- <lb />
judged will warp and disfigure. <lb />
North American Review. <lb />
Notice to <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk of county its <lb />
of the estate of <lb />
A. Moore, deceased, notice is hereby <lb />
given to all Persons indebted to the <lb />
estate to make immediate payment <lb />
to the undersigned, and all persons <lb />
having claims against said estate <lb />
the same payment on or be- <lb />
fore 17th day of September. 1805, or <lb />
this notice will be placed in bar of re- <lb />
This 17th flay Sept. <lb />
D. H MOORE. <lb />
cf A. Moore. <lb />
you think we could man- <lb />
age to live within your income <lb />
we would have to, for I <lb />
don't see how we could live without it. <lb />
Once a Week. <lb />
COTTON <lb />
At ts per Yard. <lb />
I am Ottering to the trade a handsome <lb />
Ragging which be retailed at <lb />
yard. The Is put DO In <lb />
bales of yards to a bale, weighing <lb />
and pounds to tin- yard. Tills <lb />
New York <lb />
Exchange and is preferred by <lb />
exporters. It is sale by R. Smith <lb />
A Ayden. and <lb />
Co , Greenville. <lb />
E. A. KEITH, Ayden, <lb />
Agent for <lb />
To the Tax payers <lb />
Pitt County. <lb />
Mr. E. Burne has long <lb />
been badly treated by the <lb />
There, confound they<lb />
I will attend at the following times and <lb />
places to collect the Taxes for the year 1894, <lb />
as the law directs. Everybody meet me, pay <lb />
and save trouble. <lb />
KEEL'S STORE, Thursday, October 4th, 1894. <lb />
Friday, October 5th, 1894. <lb />
BETHEL, Saturday, October 0th. 1804. <lb />
SCHOOL Wednesday, October 10th, 1894. <lb />
FARMVILLE. October 11th, 1891. <lb />
CHAPEL, Friday, October 12th, 1894 <lb />
FALKLAND, Saturday, October 1894. <lb />
GRIFTON, Wednesday, October 17th. 1894, <lb />
HADDOCK'S X ROADS. Thursday, October 18th, 1894. <lb />
CALICO, Friday, October 19th, 1894. <lb />
Saturday, October 20th, 1394. <lb />
PARKER'S SCHOOL HOUSE, Wednesday, October 24th, 1894 <lb />
Friday, October 26th, 1894. <lb />
AYDEN, Saturday, October, 27th, 1894. <lb />
STOKES, October 31-t, 1894 <lb />
Thursday, 1st. 1894. <lb />
COBB'S STORE. Friday. 2nd. 1894 <lb />
BLACK J Saturday, November 3rd, 1894. <lb />
R. W. <lb />
Sheriff of Pitt County. <lb />
for <lb />
on tho first Sunday st eleven <lb />
o'clock and at three <lb />
Shady on Sunday at <lb />
eleven and School <lb />
House O'clock. <lb />
Ayden on third Sunday at eleven <lb />
o'clock and Impel at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
the fourth Sunday at <lb />
eleven o'clock, and Lang's School <lb />
Home three o'clock. <lb />
Everybody Invited to attend. <lb />
P. Smith, <lb />
Baptist <lb />
Below arc the regular appoint <lb />
of J. II. pastor of the <lb />
Baptist <lb />
At and fourth Sun- <lb />
days In each month, morning and <lb />
and every night. <lb />
At Sunday In each <lb />
month, morning and night. <lb />
At Person <lb />
In month and Saturday be- <lb />
fore. <lb />
Episcopal Services. <lb />
lbs regular Appointments <lb />
of Her. A. Hector i <lb />
third in <lb />
month, morning evening. <lb />
Fourth Sunday In each <lb />
month, morning and evening. <lb />
nil other Sunday <lb />
St. Johns, Bun- <lb />
day In each month, morning evening <lb />
Holy Innocents, <lb />
Sunday- <lb />
Services. <lb />
morning <lb />
night, alternating between x, <lb />
H. Key. J. W. <lb />
Every third Sabbath, morning and <lb />
night, W- <lb />
Sunday School every Sabbath morn- <lb />
B o'clock, is. Brant <lb />
K. It <lb />
WILMINGTON <lb />
AND <lb />
AND FLORENCE ROAD. <lb />
Condensed Schedule. <lb />
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb />
Hated <lb />
July S. <lb />
Leave <lb />
Ar. Mt <lb />
8- <lb />
A. m,<lb />
Ar <lb />
in <lb />
Mt <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar. Florence <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington<lb />
i o u <lb />
to <lb />
o-a<lb />
or. <lb />
. M. <lb />
if <lb />
A. M. <lb />
A. M. <lb />
r, N<lb />
in <lb />
A. M. <lb />
NORTH. <lb />
Julys, <lb />
Am <lb />
A. <lb />
o JO <lb />
Selma <lb />
Ar <lb />
Vt <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar Mt <lb />
r T <lb />
Mt <lb />
Ar <lb />
OS<lb />
A. M. <lb />
it <lb />
P. <lb />
in<lb />
P. M.<lb />
M. If <lb />
Oft <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. m. Halifax. 4.00 <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at p. <lb />
in., p. m. Kin-ion 7.36 <lb />
p. m. Returning, leaves 7.20 <lb />
a. m. Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving <lb />
Halifax at II a. in . Weldon 11.20 a. <lb />
m., dally except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Washington leave <lb />
Vt 7.00 a, m., arrives <lb />
8.40 a. m Tarboro returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.80 . in . 6.10 <lb />
p. m,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
on Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N via <lb />
Raleigh It. R. dally except Sun- <lb />
p. m. a no P. M; <lb />
arrive Plymouth M-, 1.30 p. m. <lb />
leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
8.30 a. m., Sunday MO a. m., <lb />
arrive Tarboro a. m., and 11.46 <lb />
a. in. <lb />
Train on Midland N Branch leaves <lb />
except Sunday, a. <lb />
in. riving a in. Re- <lb />
leaves a. m.; <lb />
a SO <lb />
Trains on Nashville Branch leaves <lb />
Mount at 4.30 p. m., arrive <lb />
Nashville p. m-. Spring Hope 8.30. <lb />
p. in. Returning, leaves Spring Hope <lb />
i a. in., 8.36 a. m., arrives <lb />
it Rocky Mount m., dally except <lb />
Trains Latta Branch, Florence R- <lb />
R. Latta 0.80 P- m arrive Dun- <lb />
bar 8.00 Returning leave Duo. <lb />
bar a. is. arrive Latta 8.00 a. in. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves <lb />
n for Clinton except Sunday <lb />
II a. in. Returning leave <lb />
in., inn, t Warsaw with <lb />
line trains. <lb />
No. makes close connection <lb />
St Weldon for all points North dally, all <lb />
via Richmond, and daily except <lb />
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line <lb />
also Rocky Mount with Norfolk t <lb />
railroad tor Norfolk daily <lb />
ll points North via Norfolk, dally ex- <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
JOHN F. DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
J. R. KENLY, Manager. <lb />
. V, Manage <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA <lb />
l R. R. TIMETABLE. <lb />
In Effect December <lb />
GOING EAST. GOING <lb />
Pas. Ex Pass. Dally Ex <lb />
P. M. -29 P M as. P. Newborn M U A. . M. H A. M <lb />
Train connects with <lb />
train bound North, <lb />
a. m., and R. D <lb />
train Wet, <lb />
Train connects with <lb />
Danville arriving at <lb />
W A i <lb />
the Si <lb />
S. L.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017713_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections <lb />
Cotton cents. <lb />
Fob Sale A fine cow and one- <lb />
half heifer calf.<lb />
month. <lb />
j Disappeared and Drowned. MAY ; ; <lb />
Mrs. Elizabeth Hooker is sick The wife of Mr. Alfred Lee i <lb />
week. I who lives hi i miles below; May Minting, nu <lb />
H a . . , , herself in , i, , . <lb />
Mr. W. S. baa been nick; a fa was with <lb />
days. , bone, Wednesday night of The f was stand- <lb />
Rev. J. H. ; Mrs h-d been at twilight at the garden gate <lb />
the Union meeting at and night of her parents pretty residence. <lb />
Mount. I Mr bis j A horseman soon He <lb />
wife went there to set up, . , , . <lb />
Miss home of the neighbors going in every i as and smart, <lb />
last week from a visit in Greene night. was so , was He loved <lb />
-----Buy your Fall and Winter <lb />
county. <lb />
The Store Cat quietly by <lb />
and serenely at the happy <lb />
faces made so by H. C. <lb />
in the great bargains he is <lb />
offering them. <lb />
barrels best Flour just in at <lb />
J. L. Starkey t Cos. <lb />
Not quite throe months of <lb />
left. <lb />
For reliable shoes go to <lb />
Wilson. <lb />
V Morrill want <lb />
seed. advertisement. <lb />
Silk Velvets, Braids. f rd <lb />
Trimming's Silks at J. B. <lb />
well that after giving her May and she loved him. but he <lb />
Mr. A. S. Johnson of fin Fleming I had never made known his love. <lb />
been voting relatives here t i Ho ft visitor at <lb />
u,,. i i sitting up- Everything,. ,. . ,., , <lb />
the past week. , the Manning residence for nearly <lb />
Rev. J. N. H. will slumber his chair, and years had morn- <lb />
preach in Greenville next up a few minutes later j nerved himself to as-k that all <lb />
and evening. was amazed to find that Mrs. Leg- important question. re soon <lb />
was not on the bed. The <lb />
Mr t Mrs. S. M. Schultz and door to the stood ajar, and <lb />
family are visiting relatives in going out he the yard gate <lb />
Rocky ; open. The family was called <lb />
Rev. D- W. Davis of Washing-1 for her. Put <lb />
rived at the gate and gallantly <lb />
dolled his hat and shook <lb />
with May. She greeted him with <lb />
a smile and he saw ho was <lb />
The past week gave us some <lb />
weather that felt v much like <lb />
fall. <lb />
was in town last Wednesday could be learned of her and broached the <lb />
ZS rarest heart and was ac- <lb />
FIRST COME FIRST SERVED <lb />
with low priced goods- <lb />
H. C. <lb />
HOOKER <lb />
Buy your Winter Shoes of H. <lb />
C- Hooker <lb />
Happiness is never by <lb />
running after it. <lb />
Goods in <lb />
and prices at II. C. Hooker's. <lb />
Call bad see them. <lb />
One reason why people make <lb />
crooked paths is because they <lb />
keep looking back. <lb />
Get II. C- Hooker's Guaranteed <lb />
Boot for winter. <lb />
You can't beat us on Yard wide <lb />
cents Homespun. <lb />
Whenever the world comes face <lb />
to face with love it has <lb />
to stop and think. <lb />
I m still down the prices <lb />
and selling good s at <lb />
per pair- <lb />
It is seldom that a with a <lb />
big income is ever persecuted for <lb />
sake. <lb />
You can find all the above at <lb />
H. C Hooker's, next door to J. A. <lb />
grocery store. <lb />
A beautiful line of Hats <lb />
received today at M. T. Cow ell <lb />
k Cos. <lb />
The storms of the past <lb />
have been bad on I he <lb />
cotton.<lb />
amiss in her speech or man <lb />
Mr. Rufus Grimmer, of Edge had been noticed and no cause <lb />
county, last can be for the act. <lb />
He was a brother of Mr. J. L- an two weeks old. <lb />
Grimmer, of this <lb />
week <lb />
open <lb />
Latest style has at <lb />
Wilson's. <lb />
train was <lb />
Friday night <lb />
hears <lb />
Miss Smith left Monday <lb />
for Norfolk College. Her father, <lb />
her to <lb />
Norfolk and returned last night. <lb />
Items. <lb />
October, 1st 1694- <lb />
is selling for <lb />
Mrs. M. E Tripp is quite sick <lb />
Miss May is visiting <lb />
away <lb />
We are at the old stand <lb />
with a tine line of goods. Call be <lb />
fore buying elsewhere. Lang. <lb />
Very latest prettiest <lb />
of fail winter Hats at Mrs. M. <lb />
D. <lb />
Mondays, live <lb />
five <lb />
this <lb />
loom dwelling <lb />
house in Apply to <lb />
Misses Sugg, Ada <lb />
Tyson, Bettie Tripp, Mamie Ed <lb />
; wards and Sarah Harding leave relatives in Craven county, <lb />
two this week for the Normal In <lb />
College at Greensboro. Mr. Johnson made a <lb />
. to Pink Hill last week. <lb />
Hon. C. B. Aycock will speak <lb />
at Ayden next Monday at Mrs- Lydia and Miss <lb />
o'clock at Greenville L spent a <lb />
next Monday night at o'clock. Kinston last week <lb />
Mr. Aycock las in this I relatives, <lb />
county before will have i r. , i , .,, <lb />
crowds at both appointments. J-F. <lb />
He is one of the finest Home after <lb />
our people will have an <lb />
of hearing during the earn. Washington. <lb />
Car load <lb />
Bagging and Ties at J. C- <lb />
Sou's- <lb />
of <lb />
The residence and music hall <lb />
of Prof. W. H. of <lb />
bury, was almost destroyed by <lb />
i week. He has friends <lb />
i Greenville who hear of his mis- <lb />
The equinoctial storm was a fortune with regret, <lb />
few late but put in ti v i i <lb />
work when it did come. t <lb />
I the laud not to let people <lb />
a nice suit of clothes go to I contented to wait and take things <lb />
Frank s. as they come. The weather <lb />
prophets are already saying we <lb />
are to have a hard winter. <lb />
Saturday night a bull dog was <lb />
chasing a cat in Mr. R. M. Star <lb />
key's The cat jumped up <lb />
the well curb, the dogs <lb />
up after her both went down <lb />
the well together were <lb />
Don't forget that Hon. R. <lb />
Henry will speak in Greenville <lb />
Friday night. Give a good <lb />
crowd. <lb />
Full lino Ornaments, <lb />
fancy Pius, Tortoise Hair Pius <lb />
Side Combs, at Mrs. <lb />
Attention is called lo the <lb />
notice to creditors by B. m. , , ., , <lb />
Home, of J. B. Thursday and Friday of <lb />
Tyson. I week there will be preaching <lb />
i at Great Swamp. Elders Chick, <lb />
New Fall Millinery at Mrs. L- of Baltimore. Gold, of Wilson, <lb />
j other able ministers of the <lb />
G E tax collector will be <lb />
the town of Greenville, has a i <lb />
notice in this paper that tax pay- <lb />
should attention to. <lb />
J. B. Cherry A Co. sell Mens <lb />
Boots for <lb />
New Fall goods just received at <lb />
M- T. Cos. <lb />
A nice of spectacles at A. J- <lb />
the practical <lb />
and engraver. <lb />
For good reliable Shoos go to <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
First Cart Wheels with <lb />
Iron Axle, only a pair- <lb />
John Co. <lb />
New assortment of Bibles from <lb />
American B. S-, just received. <lb />
Wiley Depositor. <lb />
C. T. the Furniture <lb />
A- Racket Store, H. C Hooker <lb />
and M- T- A Co., all have <lb />
new advertisements to-day that <lb />
you should road- <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick <lb />
Mrs, L- Griffin gives a Fashion <lb />
Sheet to every purchaser of a hat. <lb />
Nice of Ladies Dress <lb />
Goods and Trimming's to match <lb />
at Cherry v. Co. <lb />
Goods to suit all from the fin <lb />
eat to the cheapest at M. T- Cow- <lb />
ell A Cos. <lb />
Sewing machines from to <lb />
Latest improved New Home <lb />
Wiley <lb />
i op stove <lb />
and a tore see that the <lb />
flue is all right- It may not be in <lb />
good condition after out of <lb />
use all summer- <lb />
Remember I you cash for Chicken <lb />
Eggs and Count v Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
Complete line of Dry Goods at <lb />
Wiley Brown's. <lb />
Cheap, New 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 />
will new be heard <lb />
of bad roads. They may be ex- <lb />
to get bad every wet spell <lb />
until there is an improved sys- <lb />
of keeping them up. <lb />
Mens good Shoes a pair, <lb />
Ladies Shoes at cents <lb />
J. L. Co. <lb />
Watches, clocks and jewelry <lb />
carefully repaired by the old ex- <lb />
and practical watch- <lb />
maker, A- J- Griffin. <lb />
Admiral Cigarettes a <lb />
thousand, jobbers price. <lb />
J. L. Starkey Co <lb />
L- M. Reynolds Co. Shoes give <lb />
satisfaction Bold by J- B- Cherry <lb />
Co. <lb />
J. B- Cherry k Co- want your <lb />
trade They deal fair and square. <lb />
Give them a call- <lb />
You get a six page <lb />
again today, every page filled <lb />
with attractive matter. In a live <lb />
paper the advertisements are in- <lb />
as well as the news <lb />
columns, and you should read all. <lb />
It takes pounds of paper to <lb />
this issue on. <lb />
The Ladies say J. B- Cherry <lb />
v Co have the prettiest Dress <lb />
Goods in Town. <lb />
See dental notice of Di. H- A- <lb />
Joyner, who will open an office <lb />
in Greenville about Oct. 20th. <lb />
Dr. Joyner is a native of Pitt <lb />
county, and after an absence of <lb />
ten years has decided to return <lb />
Dry Goods at among us. <lb />
A full line of <lb />
Pitt Female Seminary <lb />
Last Wednesday night's high to increase attendance, <lb />
wind blew down weather flag several new pupils coming in <lb />
pole Observer every week. Besides the regular <lb />
had nowhere to display his course of study now the scholars <lb />
i are getting extras without <lb />
t . i- i i i , , ,, additional cost. These are phys <lb />
Ladies hats from Mrs i u i i K.- <lb />
i . ,. culture, free hand drawing, <lb />
j. receive a i i i . i <lb />
., . elocution in class. <lb />
Owing to the good prices of <lb />
tobacco Reason there will <lb />
a big crop planted next year, <lb />
though some farmers in our sec- <lb />
have gone to work to make <lb />
another crop of cotton. <lb />
The cotton pickers in tins sec <lb />
lion are being better paid for <lb />
their work than ever known be- <lb />
fore. The farmers are actually <lb />
them of the <lb />
crop to pick it. <lb />
Sheet. <lb />
See J. C- Cobb Sou's <lb />
stock of Shoes and Boots- <lb />
fall <lb />
Pretty line of Ribbon, <lb />
Gloves, new style Collars <lb />
and at Mrs. M. D. <lb />
Prof. Goode deserves every en <lb />
in establishing this <lb />
school. <lb />
Dr. W. H. Bagwell was return- <lb />
from a professional visit in <lb />
country, Saturday morning, when <lb />
a wheel of his buggy in a <lb />
hole in the road and caused some <lb />
part of the harness to break. <lb />
This let the buggy run up on the <lb />
horse broke a shaft and the <lb />
The Rep. Pop. co-operation frightened animal began kicking <lb />
meets to-day to make public the vigorously. The doctor and Mr <lb />
In Dress Goods, Trimmings, <lb />
Cloaks Fancy Goods we still <lb />
lead. Lang. <lb />
county ticket they have selected <lb />
by going through the form of <lb />
nominating them. <lb />
Frank Wilson carries the largest <lb />
and best line of in town- <lb />
J. R- Cherry Co. have the <lb />
best selected stock of Shoes ever <lb />
carried our town. They sell <lb />
them cheap. <lb />
Our stock of Dry Goods and <lb />
Groceries are complete. Call <lb />
see us- J. C. Cobb <lb />
Every reader of this paper is <lb />
Amos Evans, who was riding with <lb />
him, jumped out and both were <lb />
slightly hurt. The buggy was <lb />
pretty badly demolished. <lb />
Object Lesson. <lb />
One day last week we saw Mr. <lb />
Alfred Forbes displaying some <lb />
Rogers pocket knives that he had <lb />
just received. He said can <lb />
sell these knives cents <lb />
now than I could before the <lb />
tariff bill Still you hear <lb />
some people say tariff reduction <lb />
does not save them anything, <lb />
asked not to look the fact j Go among our merchants and <lb />
that he can get the you will find articles that <lb />
can be bought cheaper now <lb />
Hems. <lb />
October, 1st, 1804. <lb />
Miss Randolph, of Hill, <lb />
is visiting Mrs- R. F. Gainer this <lb />
week. <lb />
Misses Lula and Mollie John- <lb />
sou spent a few days with Mi. <lb />
Win. Powell last week- <lb />
We were glad to see our friend <lb />
Mr. J. 8- Norman, of <lb />
in town day last week. <lb />
Misses Marie and Gay Sty ion, <lb />
of and Aurora, <lb />
graced our this afternoon. <lb />
Mr. J- A- Lawson returned to- <lb />
day from a visit to his mother and <lb />
sister, who are quite sick at <lb />
Tunis. <lb />
picnic in the as <lb />
some opponents called it. was in- <lb />
deed quite a failure, to eon <lb />
tinned rains. <lb />
Rev. W. A. Forbes, of Bethel, <lb />
preached an excellent sermon to I <lb />
the congregation <lb />
day afternoon. <lb />
Mr. Herbert Pope, of Williams <lb />
ton, has accepted a position as <lb />
the store of F- S- <lb />
Gardner Co. <lb />
planing mill of the P. <lb />
L. Co. stopped to-day at noon on <lb />
account of a break in the <lb />
Will resume work in a few <lb />
Capt. F- W. Samuels, the <lb />
bookkeeper of the P. E- L <lb />
Co., who has been in New York <lb />
several weeks, returned Saturday <lb />
Mr. C. R. formerly <lb />
of now of Jacksonville, <lb />
gladdened the hearts of many of <lb />
friends and around our village <lb />
by paying us a few days visit last <lb />
week. <lb />
Misses Lizzie and Sadie Roger <lb />
sod, of Williamston, and Misses <lb />
Lula Peal and Flowers, <lb />
of Bethel, also Mrs- Jas. Tweedy, <lb />
of were the of <lb />
Mrs. T- L. last week. <lb />
and Atlanta Constitution a whole <lb />
year for <lb />
Handsome and cheap Oak Sets, Overtaken <lb />
under the bill <lb />
up stairs, Old Brick Store- <lb />
assortment Pattern Hats <lb />
latest designs from both <lb />
more and New York, at Mrs. M. <lb />
D. <lb />
The stores of S. M- Schultz- <lb />
Old Brick Store and M. R. Lang <lb />
closed Monday on account Jewish <lb />
New Year- They will be closed <lb />
again Wednesday, 10th. <lb />
Just received barrels first <lb />
patent Flour, a barrel, at J. <lb />
L. Starkey Cos. <lb />
Guns. Call us when you <lb />
want a Gun. Breech Loading <lb />
Guns for at J. B. Cherry <lb />
Cos. <lb />
The latest style in Ribbons <lb />
vets, Silk and Fancy Feathers <lb />
Walking hats and etc, M. T. Cow- <lb />
ell A- Co. <lb />
A full line of Gents Macintosh <lb />
Water Proof overcoats just re- <lb />
Cheapest we ever had. <lb />
J. B. Co. <lb />
Lock Bracelets, Love Chains, <lb />
gold, silver and tortoise Hair Pins <lb />
and Side Combs, at M- T. <lb />
have opened a restaurant <lb />
next door to S. E. Fender's and <lb />
can serve fresh oysters meats <lb />
at all hours. Oysters cents a <lb />
plate, cents half plate- <lb />
sold by measure at lowest<lb />
Thursday night of last week a <lb />
named Frank Perry broke <lb />
into the depot at and <lb />
stole several articles from the <lb />
express office and agent. He was <lb />
arrested at Friday, <lb />
while trying to dispose of some <lb />
of the stolen articles, was brought <lb />
back to on Saturday <lb />
evening's train, had an <lb />
ate hearing before Esquire J- B. <lb />
Little, and before midnight Sher- <lb />
King had the jail keys turned <lb />
on him. <lb />
Republican Convention. <lb />
The Republicans of the county, <lb />
at least those who believed in <lb />
standing by there party and <lb />
were opposed to a fusion with the <lb />
Populists, under the call <lb />
chairman J. H. held a <lb />
convention here on Saturday and <lb />
nominated a straight out ticket. <lb />
The meeting was largely attended <lb />
and T. W. C Moore, the <lb />
pal speaker, was vociferously <lb />
by his followers. The <lb />
ticket was as follows. <lb />
For the J. B. Cox. <lb />
For House Representatives- <lb />
Lemuel Hayes and Ashley Moore. <lb />
Clerk Superior H <lb />
Barnhill. <lb />
Register of Deeds -B. M. W. <lb />
James. <lb />
A. <lb />
Constable N <lb />
They made no nomination for <lb />
or <lb />
RESOLUTIONS RESPECT. <lb />
Our Father in His <lb />
The next day Dr. Mon- <lb />
obtained the willing consent <lb />
of May's parents. The mother, <lb />
however, insisted that the mar- <lb />
should not take place in less <lb />
than four months. Dr. Monteith <lb />
had a wealthy friend, Capt. Sad- <lb />
who had a beautiful <lb />
The Captain's wife, <lb />
an invalid, was a patient of the <lb />
young doctor. <lb />
Who <lb />
with all her She confided <lb />
in her friend Helen Foster. <lb />
This girl proved a traitor. <lb />
She had fixed her love on Dr- <lb />
Monteith, May's engagement had <lb />
dashed the cup from her lips. <lb />
Gradually she poured <lb />
May's a most terrible false- <lb />
hood- <lb />
At last she so far succeeded as <lb />
to lead the poor girl to a spot <lb />
where she beheld the young doc- <lb />
tor and Lillian Sadler, seated <lb />
More in this, she saw <lb />
her r clasping the other <lb />
woman's bend earnest entreaty. <lb />
This, and the reports <lb />
Helen Foster did not fail to <lb />
eventually bung her, convinced <lb />
her as to the perfidy of her lover. <lb />
When next he called, she broke <lb />
off the engagement. Yes, she <lb />
east to the winds the man whom <lb />
she loved with all her heart, soul <lb />
body- <lb />
So far roster had <lb />
and the wore <lb />
rated. <lb />
The news flew round that Dr. <lb />
Monteith was about to sell his <lb />
practice and go abroad. The an- <lb />
aroused poor May's <lb />
suspicions as to the truth of <lb />
fails and she was determined to <lb />
make amends. <lb />
ask his forgiveness be- <lb />
fore he goes abroad and tell him <lb />
of she sobbed to <lb />
herself. <lb />
sat down and addressed a <lb />
note to Dr. Monteith he <lb />
hastened to her. <lb />
very stiff, cold, and very <lb />
stern; but he been for <lb />
half an hour in May's presence <lb />
all bad explained ; she had <lb />
asked his forgiveness for her <lb />
and he had granted it all <lb />
freely. <lb />
Nor was this for had <lb />
again vowed to become his <lb />
wife, and she faithfully kept <lb />
promise for they were to bu mar <lb />
the next month. <lb />
Preparations were entered into <lb />
to hr wedding out-fit <lb />
a cheap place to get it- May <lb />
her mother drove to <lb />
ville and at once began the tour. <lb />
As they were passing up Main <lb />
t they spied the lovely show <lb />
windows and met the smiling C. <lb />
T- at the door after <lb />
the morning greeting they went <lb />
inside astonishment was <lb />
plainly visible both faces as <lb />
they saw the beautiful display <lb />
and heard the low <lb />
prices. Mrs. Manning was heard <lb />
to exclaim, the low prices <lb />
have this store with both <lb />
She purchased a lovely <lb />
bridal dress of Shaggy. <lb />
bought two bolts of bleaching, <lb />
hosiery, buttons, laces, <lb />
dress <lb />
every kind at prices truly mar- <lb />
They also got two Ii i <lb />
es of that beautiful camels <lb />
until you bare looked at------ <lb />
STOCK <lb />
DON'T <lb />
-36 BUY YOUR FALL AND WINTER <lb />
Flannels, Hamburg s, Hosiery, <lb />
UNTIL YOU HAVE THE STOCK OF <lb />
DO YOU <lb />
WEAR <lb />
If so we can fit you both in Price and Quality.<lb />
Latest styles in Knox, Dunlap <lb />
HATS<lb />
My stock was bought with the hard cash thereby enabling me to <lb />
oiler you special prices. <lb />
NEXT DOOR TO BANK. <lb />
BO<lb />
i. <lb />
-5 <lb />
i s <lb />
his much beloved wife be <lb />
Resolved. 1st. That the members <lb />
of Covenant Lodge X . O. O. F . <lb />
deeply sympathize with our brother in <lb />
hi sad MM and direct lo our <lb />
who is win lo err and too <lb />
good to be unkind. May I -o <lb />
her In the sweet bye and <lb />
Resolved. 2nd, Thai a copy these <lb />
resolutions be up the minutes <lb />
of our Lodge and a copy sent to Bro. <lb />
Mo ye and to the ores for publication. <lb />
J. White, <lb />
W. H. <lb />
D. D. Haskett <lb />
com. <lb />
r. J <lb />
seen lit lo sorely afflict our much be-1 i ,,. <lb />
loved brother, E. A. Move, I. M. i d <lb />
in removing from his home and bosom the complete outfit for so small <lb />
amount that they said were <lb />
surely going to tell Dr. Monteith <lb />
so ho could get his outfit did <lb />
next day Dr. was <lb />
met the front door by Mr. <lb />
escorted through <lb />
bis mammoth store to look over <lb />
and select his wedding suit for <lb />
which he only paid and <lb />
Mr. gave him a <lb />
tee- He then passed him over to <lb />
Mr. Bo Cherry who fitted him <lb />
oat with shoes, collars, cuffs. <lb />
underwear, and threw <lb />
in a necKtie for a wedding gift. <lb />
Just before leaving Dr- Mon <lb />
h expressed a desire to find a <lb />
furniture store and Mr. <lb />
politely escorted him <lb />
two doors below to the <lb />
Packet Store where he was <lb />
dumbfounded at the beautiful <lb />
sight that met his eyes won <lb />
ow price of everything. <lb />
He purchased him a parlor <lb />
for A bed room suit i f <lb />
antique oak for Then hi <lb />
completely fitted up his house <lb />
in the way of rugs, pictures and <lb />
extension dining table at low <lb />
Small tables, carpets, <lb />
mattings, safe, tie <lb />
et ho fairly shouted at th <lb />
new and things be could <lb />
get for a mere He <lb />
chased crockery, tinware, glass <lb />
ware, table lace curtains, <lb />
poles, Ac, <lb />
and fitted his whole house. <lb />
One would that the doc <lb />
was broke this time but <lb />
not the goods were so cheap <lb />
that he hardly felt it. Yon g. <lb />
That <lb />
Tired Feeling <lb />
So common at this season. Is serious <lb />
condition, liable to lead to disastrous <lb />
results. It is a sure sign of declining <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 />
Which makes rich, healthy blood, and <lb />
thus strength to the nerves, <lb />
to the muscles, vigor to the brain <lb />
and health to the whole body, la <lb />
truth, Hood's <lb />
Makes the <lb />
Weak Strong <lb />
Be sure to get Hood's and only Hood's <lb />
Pills ,,., . <lb />
I harmless, always<lb />
sad<lb />
ft<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017713_tn_0006" n="6" />
                <p>
m- <lb />
Wholesale and Retail <lb />
GREENVILLE, V. C <lb />
Offers to the retail trade a choice line <lb />
Family Groceries, <lb />
TIN WAKE <lb />
Take Notice. <lb />
is hereby given that I will be <lb />
in the Court House on the first Monday <lb />
of September, October and November <lb />
for the purpose of testing your <lb />
scales. W. M. <lb />
Standard Keeper <lb />
To the wholesale trade I am prepared to <lb />
give jobbers prices on <lb />
MEATS, SI GAR, COFFEE OILS. <lb />
Molasses, Vinegar. Matches. Star Lye, <lb />
Lye, linking Paper <lb />
Wrapping Paper and Twine, <lb />
Car Flour, best brands. list received <lb />
Car load Bagging and Ties at bottom <lb />
of to lit everybody. <lb />
Call on me when you want goods at <lb />
the figures. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county as <lb />
Administrator of the MM of J. E. <lb />
Tucker, deceased, notice is hereby given <lb />
to all persons indebted to the estate to <lb />
make immediate payment to the under- <lb />
signed, and all persons having claims <lb />
against said estate are notified to lire- <lb />
sent the same for payment within <lb />
twelve months from the date of tills <lb />
it will be plead in of <lb />
This of August. 1894. <lb />
A. K. TUCKER, <lb />
of J. K. Tucker <lb />
RAMBLER <lb />
There's No Choice in Bicycles. <lb />
LOCAL NOTES AND <lb />
JOTTINGS <lb />
want Customers <lb />
You Want Goods. <lb />
Then call at my store and we both can <lb />
get our supplied. <lb />
I am prepared to furnish you <lb />
want from a complete stock of <lb />
I Merchandise <lb />
--------embracing-<lb />
For <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
Clothing, Dry Goods, Notions, <lb />
Shoes, Hats, Hardware, <lb />
Tinware, Crockery, Staple and <lb />
Groceries, <lb />
BOCK LIME in any <lb />
Car load BAGGING and TIES. <lb />
You will my goods all reliable <lb />
and prices low. <lb />
W. <lb />
WE WANT ORDERS FOR <lb />
T-The K AMULET took live of the <lb />
est awards at the World's Fall <lb />
holds World's The I <lb />
pion rider of the South rides the <lb />
ISM make at reduced price. I <lb />
and <lb />
The <lb />
ill <lb />
grade. We make <lb />
are strictly highest <lb />
Tobacco Tines, Sell Sieves. <lb />
and do all kind of Tin <lb />
Guttering. Ac <lb />
work. Roofing <lb />
We will fill <lb />
We will fill them CHEAT <lb />
We will them WELL <lb />
Hough Heart Framing, 60.00 <lb />
Rough Sap Framings 67.00 <lb />
Rough Sap 60.30 <lb />
Sap Boards lo <lb />
-o- <lb />
Wait M tor our Planing Mill and <lb />
we will tarnish you Dressed Lumber <lb />
Wood to your door for SO <lb />
cent- a load. <lb />
Terms cash. <lb />
Thanking you tor past patronage. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
II. <lb />
-J. O.- <lb />
GRIMESLAND N C. <lb />
splendid <lb />
Call your attention <lb />
line <lb />
to their <lb />
of <lb />
Fall iV Winter Woods. <lb />
a complete -lock of <lb />
Merchandise. <lb />
And car furnish <lb />
Everything yon need to wear. <lb />
Everything you need to eat. <lb />
Everything you need about the house. <lb />
Everything about kitchen. <lb />
Everything you need about the farm. <lb />
At prices just as low as can be bad <lb />
anywhere. <lb />
Highest prices paid for Cotton all <lb />
Country Produce. <lb />
Returning thanks for past favors, a con- <lb />
t of patronage is solicited. <lb />
j. o. proctor ft bro <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK STORE <lb />
FARMERS MERCHANTS <lb />
their year's supplies will <lb />
their Interest our prices before <lb />
Is complete <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICE, TEA, to. <lb />
at L west Fit ices. <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
Wing yon to buy at one profit. A cot <lb />
stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb />
the times. Our goods are all bought and <lb />
sold for CASH therefore, having no risk <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. <lb />
N, <lb />
THE GREENVILLE <lb />
IRON WORKS, <lb />
JAMES Prop. <lb />
Manufacturer of <lb />
plow, Stove and Brass <lb />
castings, andirons, ac. <lb />
dealer in <lb />
Pumps, Pipe, Fittings, <lb />
Machinery, <lb />
Prompt and careful given <lb />
pairing Sat- <lb />
guaranteed. Tobacco <lb />
tale at lowest pi ices. <lb />
K. C. <lb />
S. E. PENDER GO. <lb />
Real Estate <lb />
and <lb />
Rental Agent. <lb />
and lot for Bent or for Sale <lb />
terms easy. Bents, Taxes. <lb />
and open accounts and any other <lb />
of debt placed in my hands for <lb />
collection have prompt attention. <lb />
Sail faction guaranteed. solicit your <lb />
patronage. <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
WALK ACADEMY, <lb />
GREENVILLE, X. C. <lb />
The next Session of this <lb />
begin on Tuesday the 4th day of <lb />
and week. <lb />
TERMS MONTH <lb />
Primary English <lb />
Intermediate English <lb />
Higher English <lb />
Languages <lb />
The Instruction will <lb />
Discipline mild out firm. If <lb />
82.00 <lb />
82.50 <lb />
91.00 <lb />
through. <lb />
necessary <lb />
an additional teacher will b employed. <lb />
Satisfaction guaranteed when pupils <lb />
enter early and attend regularly. For <lb />
further information apply to <lb />
W. II. <lb />
Aug. 1804. <lb />
Henry Esq., of Dun- <lb />
ville, Va., was on the breaks lust <lb />
week. He seemed favorably <lb />
pressed with our tobaccos being <lb />
offered here- <lb />
Messrs. Coward, <lb />
of Greene county, were on Bale a <lb />
few days ago with a load of to- <lb />
They got good prices. <lb />
Come gentlemen. <lb />
We had a pleasant call last <lb />
Wednesday from Mr. J. W- Smith <lb />
of Virginia Mr. Smith is a <lb />
of the large concern, C- D- <lb />
Noel Co., of <lb />
Capt. Samuel C. Sugg, one of <lb />
Greene county's most prominent <lb />
and successful farmers, had some <lb />
nice tobacco in the Eastern on <lb />
last Tuesday. Notwithstanding <lb />
the dark day, he realized hand- <lb />
some prices- <lb />
Mr. C- C. Joyner, who for the <lb />
past two years has been <lb />
at the Eastern, left <lb />
last Tuesday morning to <lb />
the State University Chapel <lb />
Hill We wish a and <lb />
profitable two years slay. <lb />
D. A- Esq., of <lb />
Va-, of the <lb />
Alliance Warehouse of that <lb />
city, was sale last week- <lb />
He afforded considerable amount <lb />
amusement by auctioneering to <lb />
the tune of <lb />
had a pleasant call last <lb />
week from Mr- Jas. H. Wilson, <lb />
General Farmers <lb />
Alliance Warehouse Co., <lb />
Danville, Va. Mr. was <lb />
on a tour of the Eastern Carolina <lb />
counties in the interest of his <lb />
Loose- <lb />
Mr, B- Ernest of B. E. <lb />
Parham Co., is back <lb />
from Richmond several <lb />
markets. Ernest reports a <lb />
good time and business good. <lb />
We expect him and his clever <lb />
partner, Mr. Wiggins, to make <lb />
things lively on solo for the boys. <lb />
Jack, youngest sou of Maj <lb />
Peebles came out in a pretty new <lb />
buggy one day last week. We <lb />
some one <lb />
at its beauty and that they <lb />
too would like to have one. <lb />
Jack very promptly replied, <lb />
yon raise fine tobacco and sell at <lb />
the Eastern yon ride in one <lb />
Good for Jack. <lb />
when people once become ac- <lb />
with such <lb />
, and their plan of their <lb />
influence and hold the <lb />
people are spent, but oftentimes <lb />
grant damage is done before this <lb />
is out. <lb />
The man who would tell you <lb />
Mr. farmer, that the Greenville <lb />
tobacco market could not pay <lb />
for tobacco because our banking <lb />
facilities are not adequate for <lb />
the demands and that the bank <lb />
was empty every Monday night, is <lb />
none too good to take any a <lb />
of you that time cir- <lb />
would allow. <lb />
The man who would to <lb />
such methods to induce you to <lb />
carry your tobacco to his market <lb />
will soon be learned and when <lb />
such is found out a thousand <lb />
times worse it will be for the <lb />
market he represents than if he <lb />
had never said anything. <lb />
Paid hirelings from any place <lb />
the of the earth may <lb />
travel the country and exhaust <lb />
all their vocabulary of sulphuric <lb />
epithets in an attempt to blow <lb />
up the Greenville tobacco mar- <lb />
yes they may go further and <lb />
manufacture the basest kind of <lb />
falsehoods that don't bear even <lb />
the semblance of truth, and <lb />
the brain of every to- <lb />
that is a patron of <lb />
the Greenville tobacco market, <lb />
and although for the time being <lb />
they may be enabled to delude a <lb />
few who have never had dealings <lb />
with such men, in the long <lb />
run when the escaping <lb />
at first made muddy the <lb />
atmosphere around the Green- <lb />
ville market has died away clear <lb />
and far above the poisonous <lb />
rows that were aimed to do <lb />
damage will stand forth the <lb />
Greenville tobacco market <lb />
harmed by the threatening blasts <lb />
are cracking away at us now <lb />
in almost every section of our <lb />
territory. <lb />
What an London Writer <lb />
Has to Say of the <lb />
The is served up <lb />
in this particularly ungallant <lb />
fashion in Jerome K. <lb />
paper, <lb />
the west end of London <lb />
there are plenty of vapid, brain- <lb />
loss, heartless, overdressed-in- <lb />
the afternoon and <lb />
the-evening little animals, that, <lb />
there being no other name at <lb />
present for, we have to call <lb />
men. They vicious, selfish <lb />
and idle- They sail themselves <lb />
for money and then do not carry <lb />
out tho terms of tho bargain- <lb />
They marry but they never <lb />
wives. They are blood-suckers <lb />
on the unfortunate men who have <lb />
been asses enough to undertake <lb />
the responsibility of feeding and <lb />
clothing them- They will ruin <lb />
them in their business and worry <lb />
them into early graves rather <lb />
than go without an extra dross. <lb />
They have children, but they are <lb />
not mothers ; they have not even <lb />
the instincts of the better-class <lb />
brutes. and <lb />
they drift through life, ever- <lb />
lastingly and posturing, <lb />
a bore to themselves and a curse <lb />
to everyone who knows thorn. <lb />
They cry that they are <lb />
stood, which would be the most <lb />
charitable thing that could hap- <lb />
pen to them, and they talk about <lb />
their soul with as much assurance <lb />
as it they really possessed one. <lb />
They take all they can get, they <lb />
do nothing it they are <lb />
never satisfied. But I should be <lb />
sorry to take them as typos of <lb />
their sex and talk about them as <lb />
the new women. They are pea <lb />
of nothing but a social <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 />
Victors <lb />
are <lb />
BEST. <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
BOSTON. <lb />
NEW YORK. <lb />
PHILADELPHIA. <lb />
CHICAGO. <lb />
SAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
DETROIT. <lb />
DENVER. <lb />
THE JOHN FLANAGAN <lb />
BUGGY <lb />
ARE STILL AT IT MAKING FIRST-CLASS <lb />
You- <lb />
out of employment, or in <lb />
a position that you do not <lb />
like Possibly the <lb />
siting of Life Insurance is <lb />
r your forte. Many <lb />
have, after trial, <lb />
been surprised at their <lb />
fitness for it. To all such <lb />
has proved a most con- <lb />
; genial and profitable <lb />
The Management<lb />
Equitable Life J <lb />
in the Department of <lb />
Carolinas, desires to <lb />
to its force, some agents <lb />
of character and ability. <lb />
v, <lb />
AND SELLING THE BEST <lb />
I I I <lb />
J. Manager I <lb />
Rock Hill, S. C.<lb />
old n urn <lb />
ONS, <lb />
HARNESS AND FARM <lb />
and doing all kinds of repairing to vehicles. We are also <lb />
-------Agents for the------- <lb />
and all Pat-J <lb />
for Fees. <lb />
Office is Opposite <lb />
can secure patent to time than those <lb />
from Washington. <lb />
bend model, drawing or with <lb />
advise, it or nut, free <lb />
charge. not due till patent is secured. <lb />
A to Obtain with <lb />
. of same in the U. S. and <lb />
free. Address <lb />
i------ . D. C. <lb />
THE EATON <lb />
BUSINESS COLLEGE <lb />
12th <lb />
Baltimore, Md. <lb />
Is prepared to i's Students the <lb />
benefit of Bank and Counting <lb />
House Practice in all their details. <lb />
Long and extensive experience hag per- <lb />
facilities such as cannot he- found <lb />
elsewhere. <lb />
Commercial branches. Shorthand, <lb />
Typewriting and Penmanship taught <lb />
by <lb />
free on application to <lb />
A. II. <lb />
Baltimore. Md. <lb />
L. II. <lb />
Washington, L. C <lb />
last Wednesday at the <lb />
Eastern Warehouse, Mr. W. H. <lb />
Hobgood sold lbs at <lb />
lbs at lbs at 32.90 lbs at <lb />
lbs at Total lbs for <lb />
80-17. Average of about <lb />
per hundred-. Mr Hobgood <lb />
says he has been following the <lb />
crowd to the Eastern, that he <lb />
ways gets good prices at head- <lb />
quarters. Hence he wants no <lb />
better market <lb />
nor no better warehouse than the <lb />
Eastern. <lb />
An incident occurred <lb />
the floor of the Eastern one <lb />
day last week- The Proprietor <lb />
was running a pile of tobacco <lb />
that belonged to Mt. G. E. <lb />
The tobacco was bringing <lb />
about its value- Mr. Harris was <lb />
so well pleased that he hurried to <lb />
the Proprietor saying For good- <lb />
sake quit that to- <lb />
I I am already pleased, for <lb />
gracious sake stop I stop its <lb />
high enough. We allowed the <lb />
auctioneer to knock it off. It is <lb />
useless to say Mr. Harris, like all <lb />
others who sell with the Eastern, <lb />
was highly pleased at prices. <lb />
GREENVILLE TOBACCO MARKET <lb />
REPORT. <lb />
QUOTATIONS-<lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to 10.00 <lb />
to 30.00 <lb />
to <lb />
to 7.00 <lb />
to 1500 <lb />
to 1200 <lb />
to 25.00 <lb />
Fine to <lb />
Specimen Cases. <lb />
S. II. Clifford, New Wis., was <lb />
troubled Neuralgia and <lb />
Ids Stomach was disordered, bis <lb />
Liver was affected to an alarming de- <lb />
appetite fell away, and be was <lb />
terribly reduced in flesh and Strength. <lb />
Three of Kilters cured <lb />
Edward Shepherd, ill., <lb />
had a sore on ids leg of eight <lb />
standing. Used three bottles of <lb />
and seven boxes of <lb />
and his tog is <lb />
sound and well. John Speaker, <lb />
had live large Fever Sores on his <lb />
leg, said lie was incurable. <lb />
One bottle Electric Bitters and one box <lb />
cured him en- <lb />
Sold J. L. Drug <lb />
ore. <lb />
The best <lb />
known <lb />
It will cut, <lb />
lift, turn, <lb />
el and <lb />
the land <lb />
all in one op- <lb />
We <lb />
have them in <lb />
all sizes from <lb />
to feet. <lb />
You can find us at the same old stand ready to serve you. <lb />
The John Flanagan Buggy Company. <lb />
SERVICE <lb />
Steamers Washington for <lb />
at all Ian I <lb />
on Tar Monday, We <lb />
Friday at ; A. M. <lb />
Hi leave A. M. <lb />
Thursdays and Saturday; <lb />
a. days. <lb />
These departure- ate <lb />
of wain in Tar River. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
A HE <lb />
HARK <lb />
Tor the Cure of all Skin <lb />
This has In use <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know ha <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en <lb />
by the leading physicians all <lb />
and cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained is owing entirely <lb />
its own efficacy, as but little effort h <lb />
ever been made to bring it before <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
communications to <lb />
T. F. CHRISTMAN, <lb />
C. <lb />
WANTED in each <lb />
for special work. Will <lb />
a month. W. CO., <lb />
Box 1767, Philadelphia, Pa. <lb />
T. <lb />
FOB THIN <lb />
PEOPLE. <lb />
It makes faces plump round <lb />
out It is the <lb />
for leanness. no <lb />
and GUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY <lb />
Price, prep id. per <lb />
box. Pamphlet, <lb />
Co, <lb />
A man who will intentionally <lb />
go about the maligning <lb />
abusing and misrepresenting <lb />
another man or because <lb />
the business happens to be the <lb />
same in which he is engaged, is <lb />
too low down and contemptible <lb />
to be even noticed by the dogs <lb />
of the land, and if they knew the <lb />
kind of human specimen that <lb />
they were at, there is <lb />
no doubt but that they would <lb />
lower their heads and crawl off <lb />
under the house in utter shame <lb />
and disgust and with pity for <lb />
their intruders. For the man <lb />
who uses nil his honorable means <lb />
in the interest of his employer <lb />
and for the furtherance of his <lb />
business, we have the profound- <lb />
est respect and admiration, <lb />
though he may be directly op- <lb />
posed our business interest- <lb />
But for the man who has <lb />
ed succor at your hands, taken <lb />
advantage of your liberality and <lb />
used it to the fullest extent, and <lb />
then because they can't pull you <lb />
for anything more, turn their <lb />
back on honor integrity in <lb />
order to get a job with some one <lb />
else and go about the country <lb />
telling every and any kind of <lb />
base falsehood about your <lb />
and town, every <lb />
Items. <lb />
N- O, Sept 29th, 1894 <lb />
Brick making and cotton pick- <lb />
are among the industries that <lb />
rank foremost at this place. <lb />
People are now talking about <lb />
religion, tobacco and politics. <lb />
The protracted meeting an- <lb />
to place in the M. <lb />
P. church this week failed to take <lb />
place on of some of Bro. <lb />
friends very sick. <lb />
Miss Cornelia com- <lb />
teaching school in the <lb />
public school at this place <lb />
on the 25th of September with an <lb />
attendance of It is a private <lb />
school and is an excellent place <lb />
to get an education, for these <lb />
The location of the <lb />
school house is out of reach of <lb />
any baneful surroundings. There <lb />
are two good churches within <lb />
one half bile. Tuition is cheap, <lb />
not exceeding cents per day. <lb />
The teacher is thoroughly com- <lb />
she being a graduate of <lb />
Western Maryland College. Miss <lb />
Dixon was raised in neigh- <lb />
86-Year-Old Twins Prep for Death, <lb />
Mr. Hector of <lb />
nett county, and his twin brother <lb />
were here today on a curious <lb />
mission. are tho oldest <lb />
twins in the State are <lb />
ed to each other. Both are <lb />
men of the <lb />
today had on a richly embroider- <lb />
ed vest which he has had for <lb />
years. <lb />
Although the brothers are in <lb />
good health they naturally think <lb />
a good deal about death de- <lb />
some time ago to be in- <lb />
in metal caskets. Being <lb />
economical, they hated to think <lb />
of squandering money on their <lb />
burial. A friend of theirs, who <lb />
has been employed as a copper <lb />
worker told them if they would <lb />
purchase tho he could <lb />
have a of caskets made <lb />
for them much cheaper than they <lb />
could be obtained from under- <lb />
taker- It was this that brought <lb />
them here and they purchased <lb />
the copper today. They <lb />
the caskets to be ready in a short <lb />
time. The Messrs. are <lb />
well known and respected <lb />
of Their many <lb />
friends hope they will have no <lb />
need for their caskets for many <lb />
years to Visitor. <lb />
N. C <lb />
AT COURT HOUSE. <lb />
Ail kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current <lb />
SENT FOE ASS FIRE PROOF F <lb />
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb />
To Friends and Customers of Pin and adjoining counties <lb />
f wish to say that I have made special preparation in preparing <lb />
MATERIAL and propose giving with inside dressed <lb />
smooth which will prevent cutting or scrubbing your Tobacco when <lb />
Also I have made special to use best spin hit <lb />
Oak. The special advantages I have to cutting my own timber places me ma <lb />
position to meet all competition. cheerfully promise you that will Strive to <lb />
make it t your interest to use my Hogsheads and you cm them at any time <lb />
Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, N. C. <lb />
either at factory or at the <lb />
Connecting <lb />
of The N <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, no re <lb />
Philadelphia. York an I J <lb />
Shippers r . -1- <lb />
marked via <lb />
York, <lb />
i. ., <lb />
more <lb />
Miner-1 <lb />
Boston. <lb />
ON. Agent, <lb />
J. J, Ag it. <lb />
k N. <lb />
SHOE <lb />
THE WEST. <lb />
NO <lb />
CORDOVAN, <lb />
3.5 SOLES. <lb />
LADIES<lb />
SEND <lb />
w. DOUGLAS, <lb />
MAS. <lb />
I'M can money In <lb />
In the world, <lb />
the value by stamping the name <lb />
the bottom; pi <lb />
prices r, V. . <lb />
w . v. . -v Pu <lb />
horn . <lb />
B, L. DAVIS <lb />
Jay Cooke, in 1806, told <lb />
following story day, when <lb />
I was patting government bonds <lb />
upon the market, I was greatly <lb />
annoyed by the clerks telling me <lb />
that there was an old man in the <lb />
office who would do no <lb />
with them, and must see me. To <lb />
get rid of him I went out. Said <lb />
he Cooke, I have got <lb />
in gold in this I can't <lb />
do anything with it in the town <lb />
where I live they ore circulating <lb />
checks and everything <lb />
else for money, and I am fright- <lb />
because I think I will be <lb />
cheated if I dispose of it. Will <lb />
yon tell me on your word of hon- <lb />
or if these bonds are sound <lb />
right r I replied they are <lb />
not right, nothing is right- I am <lb />
patting H I have in the world <lb />
into After further <lb />
the man concluded to take <lb />
them. denomination will <lb />
you have them I asked. <lb />
This was too for the man. <lb />
He had never heard that word <lb />
Deafness Cannot is Cared- <lb />
By local application, as they cannot <lb />
reach the diseased portion of ear. <lb />
There is only one way Deafness, <lb />
and that is by constitutional <lb />
is caused by an con- <lb />
of the mucous lining tho <lb />
When this tube <lb />
inflamed you have a rumbling or <lb />
imperfect hearing, and when it is en- <lb />
closed Deafness is the result, <lb />
and unless the inflammation can be <lb />
taken out and this tube restored to its <lb />
normal condition, hearing will be de- <lb />
forever ; nine cases out of ten <lb />
are caused by catarrh, is <lb />
but an i condition of the <lb />
mucous surfaces. <lb />
will give One Hundred Dollars <lb />
any case Deafness by <lb />
that cannot be cured by Hall's <lb />
Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. <lb />
P. A CO. Toledo, O. <lb />
by Druggists, <lb />
When you go to church to pray <lb />
for a revival don't wear shoes that <lb />
squeak- <lb />
Some very good people car. <lb />
never see any harm in sin while <lb />
it can wear good clothes and ride <lb />
in a coach. <lb />
COLD IN <lb />
HEAD. <lb />
used in connection with , <lb />
self re-1 He scratched his bead and <lb />
white man should have Ton may give me in Old <lb />
ELY'S CREAM <lb />
Is quickly absorbed, <lb />
Passages. Allays and <lb />
Heals the Sores, the <lb />
from additional Cold, ;. <lb />
the Senses Taste and Smell. <lb />
Directions for Using Cream Balm. <lb />
Apply a particle of Balm well up <lb />
to the nostrils. a moment draw <lb />
a .-., X. <lb />
And Turned Trimming for Home a Specialty. <lb />
I am prepared to do any kind of Scroll Sawing Brackets or anything In <lb />
line, or turning Balustrades for Pickets for Mending of <lb />
any kind. Including Plans Hailing, and would pleased to name you prices <lb />
anything In the above upon application. <lb />
REPAIR WORK <lb />
done on Short notice. Thanking you your past patronage. I am willing to <lb />
to meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you me a trial before <lb />
elsewhere. Respectfully, <lb />
A. COX, Winterville, N. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
T. -A.- Andrew f, <lb />
KT. C. <lb />
Just Received Cars Rock Lime. <lb />
nails, <lb />
SO Cases <lb />
no Bread <lb />
Soap. <lb />
Star Lye. <lb />
Boxes Cakes and Crackers, <lb />
Stick Candy, <lb />
Cases Matches. <lb />
Gold Past, <lb />
Good Luck Baking Powder. <lb />
Sacks Coffee, <lb />
Molasses. <lb />
Tors Shot, <lb />
K Powder. <lb />
Cars Flour. <lb />
Meat. <lb />
Hay, <lb />
Tubs <lb />
Bids Granulated Sugar. <lb />
P. Snuff.<lb />
R. K. Mills Snug. <lb />
Three Thistle Snuff, <lb />
Boxes Tobacco, <lb />
Dukes V. M. P. Cigarettes. <lb />
Old Va. Cheroots, <lb />
Cases Oysters, <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE. <lb />
S STILL AT THE FRONT WITH A I INK-------- <lb />
has taught me bast is the cheap t. <lb />
Hemp Rope, Building in mis, and every <lb />
necessary for Millers, Mechanics and general house purposes, as well W <lb />
Hats. Ladies Dress Goods I have always on Mad. Am head- <lb />
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and jobbing agent for Clark s O. N. <lb />
Cotton, and keep courteous an I attentive <lb />
N. <lb />
Co v <lb />
COBB BR CO. <lb />
strong h e tbs through the nose. <lb />
such m to even j School Presbyterian to please the I J <lb />
them as would a I old woman, but I will take the Pries cents at Druggists or bi mall. <lb />
animal. It heft it in Baptist t <lb />
spurn <lb />
poisonous <lb />
-AND- <lb />
Commission Merchants <lb />
STREET NORFOLK, VA <lb />
and <lb />
B a <lb />
1.1 <lb />
a S <lb />
Ct <lb />
R a m <lb />
HERBERT EDMONDS <lb />
TONSORIAL PARLORS <lb />
Opera<lb />
Call hi when j on want so d work.<lb />
HAIR BALSAM <lb />
S th <lb />
ft J <lb />
U. <lb />
Hair to Urn <lb />
Cures tip at heir <lb />
m I <lb />
Th. pit. <lb />
at k <lb />
Notice. <lb />
To the Tax layers of count <lb />
The year <lb />
been in my o-, the <lb />
i- Si for I <lb />
I am required law <lb />
in in of all charged the <lb />
I now tho tux payers <lb />
l am determined to <lb />
from all <lb />
by law for failure to <lb />
my duty, and in r to nave <lb />
an J it be best for <lb />
awing I <lb />
mentor shall pi ,.,. , n <lb />
allowed. Don't this. I m <lb />
It W KT <lb />
iota <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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