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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 6 March 1895</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
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          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18950306</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>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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            <mods:physicalLocation>Joyner NC Microforms</mods:physicalLocation></mods:location>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 6 March 1895</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
          <dc:creator></dc:creator>
          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18950306</dc:date>
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          <dc:identifier>17735</dc:identifier>
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                <p>
. . .<lb />
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
pared to do all work <lb />
in this line <lb />
NEATLY, <lb />
QUICKLY, and <lb />
IN BEST STYLE. <lb />
Plenty of new mate- <lb />
rial and the best <lb />
of Stationery. <lb />
To Reach New England <lb />
Cotton Mills. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIV. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH <lb />
You Ned <lb />
The Reflector this year. <lb />
It will give the news <lb />
every week for <lb />
a year. <lb />
Reflector and Atlanta <lb />
Constitution a yr. <lb />
Reflector, <lb />
. . and twice-a-week <lb />
NO. World all for <lb />
a year. <lb />
In Growing Disposition of Americans to <lb />
L on the Government. <lb />
MODERN GALLEY SLAVES. <lb />
It is Lot to that <lb />
the cotton of N- w England <lb />
will be to the S <lb />
-M ; of the 1- ; cotton mill <lb />
must build <lb />
large mills South in order <lb />
to hold their foreign trade, just <lb />
as the and <lb />
and a few others are <lb />
to The co will in- <lb />
of New however <lb />
may be expected to make large <lb />
investments in Southern cotton <lb />
manufacturing. In some ease-, <lb />
tins w be done by <lb />
z of distinctively New <lb />
companies to operate hi the <lb />
South in other cases it will be by <lb />
New England people joining <lb />
Southern men the of <lb />
mills. order to present the <lb />
advantaged to lead <lb />
lug people of New who <lb />
are already investors cotton <lb />
mills, the Record <lb />
proposes to shortly issue a Spec- <lb />
Mill Supplement. <lb />
The advantages of the South <lb />
general and of particular <lb />
ties in detail will carefully <lb />
issue. It id intended <lb />
to send a copy to each director of <lb />
every cotton mill New <lb />
Tims for the time the cotton <lb />
mill situation of the South will be <lb />
full v Bad comprehensively put be <lb />
fore the leading people of New <lb />
cotton mills. <lb />
It is a v.-r. simple matter to <lb />
sent the advantages of the South <lb />
to the New mills, but it <lb />
is a comprehensive <lb />
undertaking to it to every <lb />
director of New mills <lb />
and also to investors- <lb />
the Manufacturer Record <lb />
propose do. <lb />
Any information desired re- <lb />
to this be had by <lb />
addressing the Manufacturer <lb />
hath <lb />
daughters crying, give, <lb />
Americans appear to grow more <lb />
disposed to illustrate <lb />
by living u the government. Of <lb />
course the whole theory of rota <lb />
in appointive and <lb />
cal officers is that the party in <lb />
power a right to pay for the <lb />
private services of its followers <lb />
out of public treasury. A i <lb />
Governor the Stain New <lb />
York put bold <lb />
est form be a <lb />
. to pay <lb />
off his u expenses, <lb />
ordinary stale of to <lb />
is low- A few <lb />
mouths ago a distinguished s-d <lb />
.-t. <lb />
fended the n of h man who <lb />
was drawing p total <lb />
disability while an active r <lb />
of United States Senate. <lb />
said lie, no ills <lb />
it does th <lb />
of by <lb />
physically <lb />
it was objected, not the <lb />
look at the ma <lb />
as <lb />
as well say that I have no right <lb />
that the <lb />
general. The discussion ceased <lb />
at this but the wonder re <lb />
that of wealth and <lb />
station spirit should <lb />
take payment for their own <lb />
I is no effective pub- <lb />
against <lb />
pension fraud-. what <lb />
would a be es- <lb />
teemed gave information <lb />
a widow who had married <lb />
again and drew her pension <lb />
Yet any of us would unify <lb />
police if he saw the same woman <lb />
stealing u at a counter <lb />
Albert Hurl, <lb />
in <lb />
Awfully Lonesome. <lb />
Washington, D. C <lb />
An ovation was given Senator j <lb />
Hansom in the Metropolitan <lb />
Hotel. When the New Mexican <lb />
Minister walked toe <lb />
room the applause and cheers <lb />
that greeted deafen- <lb />
There bat in the j <lb />
large dining ball did <lb />
show bis -is his ; <lb />
one arose and <lb />
congratulated the Senator except; <lb />
one- Even the strangers j <lb />
who were a day so <lb />
the National Capitol c me for <lb />
ward introduce themselves <lb />
that they might show that they <lb />
really were glad f bis appoint ; <lb />
But this one. with his; <lb />
head bowed over his was <lb />
busily engaged with tin key i <lb />
cranberries- he did not even <lb />
look <lb />
It was one of the drummers j <lb />
seat ed at a table near the door <lb />
and who arose and shook <lb />
hand of the handsome j <lb />
that called attention to what <lb />
going on. be asKed <lb />
said a fellow <lb />
that's Harry Skinner, the; <lb />
present from <lb />
North <lb />
Mr. Skinner looked very lone <lb />
some, but his looks brought him <lb />
no company. <lb />
After dinner was over Mr Skin <lb />
congratulated Senator <lb />
upon <lb />
North to this the <lb />
drummer, who is as well known <lb />
in North Carolina as any man <lb />
there, replied. might <lb />
be glad to be depot from <lb />
North Carolina, after turn <lb />
of George by <lb />
the <lb />
all <lb />
George replied Mr. <lb />
Skinner, <lb />
in the <lb />
they said the Knight <lb />
of grip, that's first <lb />
time I heard of it being <lb />
called a well regulated family, <lb />
being headed by such as <lb />
yourself. The first great mistake <lb />
was that such a patriotic as <lb />
If should gone over to <lb />
regulate <lb />
and Observer. <lb />
Instead of Cotton. <lb />
The Mexican Financier has an <lb />
interesting description of the <lb />
crop, which is becoming <lb />
important Texas, Arizona and <lb />
New Mexico. the Pecos Val- <lb />
Tex., farmers are going out <lb />
of cotton into with de- <lb />
profit- The plant will grow <lb />
almost everywhere in the cotton <lb />
belt, may become an import- <lb />
ant crop further east than <lb />
Cultivation increases th- <lb />
product lo thirty tons of <lb />
green roots, which shank to <lb />
. tons when dry- The roots <lb />
yield from to per cent, of <lb />
a id, while oak and hem <lb />
lock yield from to <lb />
per cent. Prices of dried can <lb />
r -re from to p-r ton <lb />
in the rough. In Europe <lb />
to per ton is paid, it is <lb />
staled, the demand for ex <lb />
the supply. The crop <lb />
acre is said to be worth <lb />
to while the cost of <lb />
planting and cultivating is about <lb />
the same as that of a sweet potato <lb />
crop. The acid <lb />
is said to be exception <lb />
ally valuable for tunning <lb />
Sue and fancy leathers. <lb />
It is used also as a dyestuff. It <lb />
the attention of our <lb />
farmers, who can obtain useful <lb />
suggestions as to cultivation <lb />
from Agricultural <lb />
l W <lb />
The will of Mrs. Mary S <lb />
of Raleigh, bequeathed <lb />
to the University of North <lb />
Carolina, at Chapel Hill; <lb />
the Episcopal Diocese of North <lb />
Carolina; to the Diocese of <lb />
East Carolina for Missionary <lb />
purposes; to Christ church, <lb />
and to the Cathedral of the <lb />
Good Shepherd, in Raleigh. <lb />
Salve. <lb />
lie best Salve In the world for Cuts <lb />
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum <lb />
Fever C Hands <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, all Skin <lb />
and positively cure. or no <lb />
pay required. It guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect satisfaction or money refunded <lb />
Price cents per box. For sale by <lb />
I. Woolen. <lb />
Entire stock of<lb />
and Dry Goods <lb />
at less than Cost. <lb />
Lays Down Its Hand. <lb />
The Caucasian is d-s- <lb />
effort break the force <lb />
the Fred Douglas incident by <lb />
denying the Legislature had <lb />
refused to adjourn honor of the <lb />
birthdays of and Washing- <lb />
ton. The Observer <lb />
however, gets its file of <lb />
itself and shows from <lb />
it that the House voted to adjourn <lb />
on Lee's birthday but the Senate <lb />
refused to concur thereupon <lb />
the House tabled its <lb />
and both bodies remained in <lb />
session. House also voted <lb />
to on <lb />
in order that the members <lb />
might attend the fair <lb />
that was the ground upon <lb />
the proposition was <lb />
the Senate refused to con <lb />
cur and again both blanches <lb />
remained in session. These are <lb />
the facts as they were stated in <lb />
the columns at the <lb />
time. upon main <lb />
point, that paper throws up <lb />
spouse, it role as <lb />
and says its issue of Sun- <lb />
day Caucasian has <lb />
to otter in defense of the Leg- <lb />
for adjourning <lb />
j of Fred Douglas. It thinks that <lb />
the action was an <lb />
No denial upon the <lb />
main point; no defense. Even <lb />
the strong stomach <lb />
revolts at that <lb />
Observer. <lb />
They Bun the Workhouse Perry <lb />
In New York <lb />
Scandinavians in America. <lb />
DARKNESS <lb />
The total number of Scandinavians <lb />
in this country is about <lb />
but. instead of being, distributed <lb />
throughout the various states, they <lb />
are to be found almost exclusively <lb />
the northwest. Norwegians are <lb />
most numerous in Minnesota, where <lb />
the total Scandinavian body amounts <lb />
to about double <lb />
of Germans and eight times <lb />
more than the Irish. Swedes are <lb />
most numerous in Illinois, where <lb />
they number more than ninety thou- <lb />
sand in a total Scandinavian <lb />
of about In the city <lb />
of Chicago there are more than <lb />
Swedish, more than Nor- <lb />
and more than 2.500 Danish <lb />
voters. The Danes, smallest of the <lb />
groups of Scandinavian voters in the <lb />
country, are most numerous Iowa. <lb />
turn, of the Pauper Boat Man <lb />
and City <lb />
The Autocratic Commander. <lb />
In these days of steam's <lb />
and in this great center of <lb />
American civilization it is curious to <lb />
find a regularly-established ferry <lb />
with muscle for a motive <lb />
power, says the New York Herald. <lb />
It carries the thoughts back some <lb />
t thousand or more years to the <lb />
time when galley slaves <lb />
to their scats and oars, for, <lb />
the ferry boat which plies daily be- <lb />
this city and <lb />
id is of modern design, the row- <lb />
are no less slaves than were <lb />
those who manned the banks of great <lb />
royal trireme. <lb />
These modern galley slaves are not <lb />
chained lo their oars, it is true, but, <lb />
they are unwilling prisoners, who <lb />
toil from dawn to dusk and from <lb />
dusk to nearly midnight for no other <lb />
pay than the coarse clothes they <lb />
wear and the cheap food their official <lb />
masters furnish them. <lb />
This ferry is one of those which <lb />
the commissions of charities and <lb />
on operate between the public <lb />
institutions on and the <lb />
city. It runs from the workhouse <lb />
dock two-thirds of the way up <lb />
island, across the East <lb />
river t a little boat landing at the <lb />
foot of East Seventy-eighth street. <lb />
The boat leaves the island every <lb />
hour from six in the morning until <lb />
eleven at night, and after making <lb />
its land returns at It is a <lb />
very picturesque little ferry, and <lb />
when the tide is running races <lb />
through the deep, narrow channel <lb />
the voyage is one apt to bring a <lb />
flush the cheek of a nervous pas- <lb />
used to the steady safety of <lb />
steam transportation. <lb />
The boat is a long, heavy hull, <lb />
of anything but grace. It is <lb />
operated by six stalwart, rowers <lb />
from the workhouse, chosen for their <lb />
weight and muscle, for they have to <lb />
contend with the stiffest tides which <lb />
flow about Manhattan island, now <lb />
that the perils of Hell Gate have <lb />
been removed. They wear the <lb />
coarse, gray uniform of the work- <lb />
house, and in stormy weather don <lb />
picturesque yellow oilskins and fore <lb />
and aft cap. <lb />
A keeper in uniform and brass <lb />
buttons commands the craft and sits <lb />
in the stern with one hand on the <lb />
tiller. No grizzled sea captain ever <lb />
handled his tiller with more lordly <lb />
air than the commander of the work- <lb />
house ferry, or delivered his orders <lb />
in sterner and more emphatic tones <lb />
than ho. It is a joy to witness the <lb />
magnificence of authority with which <lb />
be yells the order to <lb />
and curses the wretched slave who <lb />
does not get his boat hook out at the <lb />
nick of time. <lb />
The dock is perhaps a <lb />
mile farther south than the city <lb />
landing, and that makes things in- <lb />
when the tide is foaming <lb />
its full career. <lb />
yells the keeper, and the <lb />
galley slaves lean over and put all <lb />
their muscle into the hearty strokes. <lb />
The swirling water bubbles into the <lb />
bow and stern, and the big waves in <lb />
the wake of the great sound steamer <lb />
that has just passed rock the clumsy <lb />
craft until the water dashes over <lb />
amidships. By the time the rowers <lb />
have fetched the boat across the <lb />
rushing tide has carried it north <lb />
quite opposite Seventy-ninth street, <lb />
and all that remains to be done is to <lb />
seize the timbers of the landing with <lb />
the boat hook and pull up alongside. <lb />
snaps the keeper, and the <lb />
rowers, blowing with their efforts, <lb />
pull in their heavy oars. The pas- <lb />
are disembarked, and those <lb />
waiting to go over to the island, after <lb />
showing their passes, get aboard <lb />
and crouch together in the stern. <lb />
About 1,500 employees of the <lb />
Carnegie Steel Works, at Home- <lb />
stead. Pa-, have been thrown out <lb />
of employment by shutting <lb />
down of several departments of <lb />
the plant. Scarcity of orders is <lb />
the cause. <lb />
Also a hill line of Hats, <lb />
Hardware, Groceries, <lb />
Crockery, At Cost. <lb />
BROWN HOOKER. <lb />
Broke It Gently. <lb />
At a recent meeting of the Boston <lb />
Scientific society Mr. Sawyer, the <lb />
banker-astronomer, rose to speak on <lb />
some favorite starry subject, and <lb />
began by ab- <lb />
of our Dr. <lb />
Chandler, you will be obliged to put <lb />
up with some of us smaller <lb />
Boston Transcript. <lb />
MABEL <lb />
It was a very cold and a very dark <lb />
morning in midwinter that it hap- <lb />
Chester Crane came <lb />
do. n the <lb />
always a lantern in <lb />
one hand and a tin pail in the other. <lb />
The snow was deep, and it was too <lb />
early for snowplows to be out. It <lb />
seemed to Chester that no one in the <lb />
big city was up yet but himself. <lb />
Even the dim light in the little <lb />
grocer's shop at the foot of the court <lb />
was missing. <lb />
should think it was not morn- <lb />
if I did not said Chester <lb />
to himself. <lb />
The wind blew so hard, and it was <lb />
so cold and so dark, that he <lb />
eluded to go back and wait until the <lb />
shop was open. He did not whistle <lb />
on his way back. He was cold, and <lb />
his short ached pushing through <lb />
the snow; and the court was so lonely <lb />
with its two rows of high tenement <lb />
houses looking gigantic in the flick- <lb />
light. It was very very <lb />
hard on him, Chester thought, to be <lb />
obliged to go to the grocer's twice <lb />
such a morning. <lb />
It was a kitten's cry, and half <lb />
smothered and half frozen Chester <lb />
thought the poor thing was by <lb />
the faint, cracked voice. <lb />
Chester swung his lantern this way <lb />
and that, wondering where the little <lb />
thing could be. Nothing but the <lb />
unbroken snow could be seen. Ho <lb />
on swinging his lantern and <lb />
kitty, <lb />
and finally he thought he saw <lb />
the snow move not far from him, <lb />
and the poor, little, cracked <lb />
came nearer. <lb />
Chester stooped down with <lb />
tern close to the ground and walked <lb />
toward the moving snow. Suddenly <lb />
be dipped down his hand and pulled <lb />
out a mite of a Maltese kitten. <lb />
The look the mite gave him went <lb />
straight to his heart. He gave <lb />
a shake to get rid of the snow, and <lb />
popped her up on his shoulder, <lb />
where she clung with all her might. <lb />
When Chester opened the door <lb />
into the kitchen sister Emma was <lb />
standing before the clock, her hands <lb />
half outstretched and with a very <lb />
surprised face. <lb />
it's stopped It isn't <lb />
four o'clock; it's twenty minutes <lb />
past twelve. Now I know why things <lb />
seemed so queer. Why, you darling <lb />
This to kitty, whom she spied and <lb />
seized, and began to hug. <lb />
Kitty had been purring delighted- <lb />
she was so glad to be found. She <lb />
was greatly confused by this sudden <lb />
flurry, and her funny blink and her <lb />
cracked set Emma to <lb />
laughing. <lb />
believe the clock was stopped <lb />
a purpose so that you would get up <lb />
before it was morning and go out <lb />
and find this said Emma, <lb />
when she had heard the story. <lb />
The next time Chester went to <lb />
the grocer's the familiar light was <lb />
in the window, and lights here and <lb />
there in back windows, and early <lb />
risers here and there in street at <lb />
the head of the court, and Chester <lb />
found that he had started out at <lb />
three o'clock instead of four. <lb />
said Emma that night, <lb />
when Chester came home to supper, <lb />
kitty was sent here to keep <lb />
me company. It's so lonely, with <lb />
mother at the hospital and you at the <lb />
store. what a queer kitty a <lb />
drab kitty is. I never saw a drab <lb />
kitty <lb />
cried Chester, <lb />
ever heard of a cat It's <lb />
know just what to name <lb />
said Emma. have been <lb />
thinking all day, and no name I <lb />
could think of suited her. She shall <lb />
be <lb />
said Chester, disdain- <lb />
fully; girl's name. I can <lb />
think of a cuter name than that. <lb />
Spot would be good, only she hasn't <lb />
any <lb />
He began whistling <lb />
thoughtfully. Jinks, <lb />
he said aloud. that's <lb />
It. come here <lb />
said Emma. <lb />
come <lb />
Kitty sat down between the two <lb />
children and blinked at one and then <lb />
the other, in such a funny way that <lb />
they both sat down beside her and <lb />
had a good laugh. <lb />
will tell you how we will settle <lb />
said Emma; can have two <lb />
names as well as folks; she can be <lb />
proved to be a very <lb />
kitten, and as full of <lb />
pranks as any kitten you ever saw. <lb />
such a habit of sitting up in <lb />
shady corners and letting the <lb />
hunt the house over while she <lb />
sat blinking at them, being so <lb />
near the color of the dark they could <lb />
not see her, that they gave her an- <lb />
other name, and call her <lb />
Darkness. <lb />
When kitty wanted Emma to hold <lb />
her she would walk round and round <lb />
the chair where she sat sewing. <lb />
Then St encouraged she would <lb />
into Emma's lap. and keep <lb />
jumping up as fast as she war; put <lb />
down, until she got a shaking and a <lb />
scolding. After that she would <lb />
curl up in Emma's No <lb />
other basket or box or anything <lb />
would do; it was Emma's work- <lb />
basket. <lb />
One evening there was a solemn <lb />
discussion carried on across the <lb />
Chester sat on one <lb />
side of the table with an account <lb />
book, and Emma sat on the other side <lb />
sewing. Darkness had <lb />
tired herself out in a frolic, war- <lb />
curled up in basket. <lb />
can possibly spare any- <lb />
thing out of he rent and <lb />
said Emma; have spared every- <lb />
thing we <lb />
That was the trouble; and Chester <lb />
needed a new pair of boots <lb />
. did think Uncle Ben would give <lb />
us a little of sighed <lb />
Emma. <lb />
won't give us a said <lb />
Chester, we didn't take his <lb />
advice and give up the <lb />
as if we said <lb />
Emma; mother told us to try <lb />
and keep together, and be ready for <lb />
her to come <lb />
might have taken a little oil <lb />
the said Chester; a <lb />
stingy old <lb />
mustn't call him <lb />
said Emma. <lb />
Chester. <lb />
just what he <lb />
The next day Emma sat at her <lb />
sewing, and Darkness <lb />
was jumping up and being put down, <lb />
in a most trying manner. At last, <lb />
Emma threw a spool to get rid of <lb />
kitty. Kitty liked that, and in <lb />
minute or two thought she would <lb />
like another; so she jumped up on <lb />
the table, pushed a spool out with <lb />
her paw, rolled it over the edge of <lb />
the table, and jumped down after it. <lb />
This was such fun that she came <lb />
back and pawed out another spool, <lb />
and then another. This play con- <lb />
In the bas- <lb />
had been taken out except a <lb />
piece of paper that she could not <lb />
get hold of. Walking round and <lb />
the basket and trying to paw, <lb />
without success, kitty at last gave <lb />
it a spiteful dab and turned It upside <lb />
herself. <lb />
Emma had been watching curious- <lb />
to see this cunning kitty-play, <lb />
and she laughed softly when the <lb />
basket capsized and made a prisoner <lb />
of and wondered what she <lb />
would do next. <lb />
What she did next was to keep as <lb />
still as a , Emma did not <lb />
disturb the basket until it was time <lb />
to pick up the things and begin to <lb />
get. supper for Chester. She raised <lb />
the basket carefully, and there was <lb />
Darkness asleep. <lb />
Emma took out, the paper that had <lb />
defied kitty. She gave a glance of <lb />
surprise at the first, look, then read <lb />
it with great interest, then waved <lb />
it round and round her and <lb />
shouted just boy. <lb />
Darkness woke up <lb />
with a start, and in a great fright <lb />
set up her back and hissed at the <lb />
object spinning about the <lb />
room. <lb />
Emma caught sight of kitty, and <lb />
seizing her in her arms hugged her <lb />
and laughed over her until she cried. <lb />
Chester noticed when he came <lb />
home that night how lightly Emma's <lb />
feet stepped over the floor and how <lb />
easily she smiled when she talked; <lb />
kept smiling she wasn't saying <lb />
anything to smile at. <lb />
When he sat down to supper there <lb />
was a strip of paper with printing <lb />
and writing on it, laid across his <lb />
plate. He glanced at it, took It up <lb />
and examined It his eyes growing <lb />
round and his face growing red as <lb />
he read. <lb />
check, he almost <lb />
whispered, he was so afraid it wasn't <lb />
true. <lb />
Uncle said Chester, <lb />
a little louder. <lb />
fifty cried Emma, <lb />
clapping her hands. old <lb />
Uncle <lb />
a said Chester, <lb />
first-class, A No. <lb />
Then Emma told him how she <lb />
found the check, and that Uncle Ben <lb />
must have put-it in there the day ho <lb />
called on them. <lb />
is a brick, <lb />
said Chester, when the story was <lb />
They hunted the house over to find <lb />
her. and at last discovered her sit- <lb />
ting on the shelf before the looking- <lb />
glass admiring Y. In- <lb />
dependent. <lb />
The Real Objection. <lb />
yon think that <lb />
manners are very <lb />
What makes them really <lb />
objectionable is that they're <lb />
Star. <lb />
Age It Great Teacher. <lb />
Jinks I understand you were <lb />
pretty well off before you were <lb />
married. <lb />
but I didn't know it. <lb />
Illustrated Monthly. <lb />
Her Teat. <lb />
do you know that he has <lb />
ceased to love <lb />
he never makes a fuss <lb />
when I dance with other <lb />
Y. World. <lb />
COLLECTION OF <lb />
The United States Trying Secure a <lb />
Specimen of Every Issue. <lb />
The post office department has be- <lb />
gun I collection of stamps of all <lb />
the foreign countries of the world, <lb />
as well as those of the United States. <lb />
Capt. Brooks, superintendent of the <lb />
foreign mail service, has two large <lb />
stamp albums, containing places <lb />
for every stamp issued, and makes <lb />
requests of the various nations for <lb />
a set of their stamps or specimens. <lb />
There am in all about <lb />
stamps issued, and up to date about <lb />
have been secured. A great <lb />
difficulty in securing a complete sot <lb />
arises from the fact that certain <lb />
principalities of Europe, now in- <lb />
In the domains of nations, <lb />
continue the use of their individual <lb />
stamps. For instance, says a Wash- <lb />
correspondent of New <lb />
York Times, and <lb />
in Germany, use the same <lb />
stamps did when governed by <lb />
their grand dukes. These puss only <lb />
in the principalities named and are <lb />
not good even over the rest of Ger- <lb />
many. This foot causes much con- <lb />
fusion, and extra expense to tourists <lb />
traveling on the continent. If an <lb />
American in buys a <lb />
stamp of that principality and mails <lb />
it In Berlin, or even <lb />
to anyone in America, the letter <lb />
reaches its destination, but an extra <lb />
charge of cents is made before <lb />
delivery. <lb />
A dozen years ago each depart- I <lb />
of the United States had a dis- <lb />
issue of stamps, which, since <lb />
use of the penalty frank on en- <lb />
have to all appearances <lb />
gone completely out of existence. <lb />
Those that have not been destroyed <lb />
have found their way in the hands of <lb />
stump dealers and stamp collectors. <lb />
There ore but few complete sets <lb />
left. <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report. <lb />
Baking <lb />
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb />
THE COLLECTING MANIA. <lb />
Just Now the Contemporary, Poster is <lb />
Chief Attraction. <lb />
Anyone who has ever suffered at <lb />
any time from the mania for collect- <lb />
in any of its forms, must feel it <lb />
in these days a constant lax his <lb />
powers of self-restraint to keep his <lb />
hands off of the contemporary poster. <lb />
The posters in particular with which ; <lb />
some of the publishers announce the <lb />
new numbers of magazines, and <lb />
sometimes new books, are a constant <lb />
temptation. Anyone who has ever <lb />
Collected anything must feel that j <lb />
they are too fascinating to be neg- <lb />
and that not to gather them <lb />
as they appear is a neglect of <lb />
that is almost criminal. <lb />
For the solace of persons who have <lb />
this impulse and refuse to yield to i <lb />
it. it is a pleasure to point out that, <lb />
after all, the collector is a slave to <lb />
his hobby, and the more things he <lb />
collects the more masters he puts <lb />
over himself. To be able to see <lb />
pretty things, and not to be bitten <lb />
with the desire to take them home <lb />
and salt them down, even when they <lb />
can had for the asking, is an at- <lb />
which promises to be quite <lb />
as ratable for its rarity as most of <lb />
the things that ordinary collectors <lb />
acquire. When see the awful <lb />
length to which the postage-stamp <lb />
mania has and the prodigious <lb />
accumulations of photographs which <lb />
overwhelm most contemporary <lb />
lies, we may surely justify ourselves <lb />
in sou v stiffening of our resolution <lb />
not to drift into the habit of hoard- <lb />
even pretty things that we do <lb />
not really want. It is SO easy to be- <lb />
gin Collecting, and so unsatisfactory <lb />
to stop after one has once started <lb />
Let us be of us, <lb />
maintain that to be <lb />
a collector is a distinction, just as it <lb />
is not to have had one's picture in <lb />
the Weekly. <lb />
AN ARTIST'S MEASUREMENTS. <lb />
He Considers a Perfect Model <lb />
of the Female Form. <lb />
An artist is authority for the fol- <lb />
lowing which be <lb />
claims arc for a perfect <lb />
model of physical I of the <lb />
male meet the require- <lb />
of a classic he rays, a <lb />
woman should be feet four and <lb />
three-quarter tall, thirty-two <lb />
inches bust measure, twenty-four <lb />
inches around the waist, nine inches <lb />
from armpit to waist, long arms and <lb />
A queenly woman, however, <lb />
must be feet five inches tall, <lb />
thirty-six inches bust, twenty-six <lb />
and a half inches waist, thirty-five <lb />
inches over the hips, eleven and a <lb />
half inches around the ball of the <lb />
arm, six and a half inches around <lb />
the wrist, hands and feet not too <lb />
A similar authority lays down the <lb />
rule that no colors should be worn <lb />
save those which have a duplicate In <lb />
the hair, eyes or complexion, and he <lb />
claims that a we with blue-gray <lb />
a thin, neutral-tinted com- <lb />
never looks so well as when <lb />
dressed in blue shades which are <lb />
mixed with gray. A brunette should <lb />
wear cream color, as this produces <lb />
the tints of her skin; while florid <lb />
complexions look well In plum and <lb />
heliotrope, also in dove gray, as these <lb />
contain a hint of pink, and so <lb />
well with the face in which <lb />
there is a deal of <lb />
WELL, COMPANY'S <lb />
Now Popular Train Robberies <lb />
Can Be Circumvented. <lb />
It may safely be assumed that the <lb />
of is the engine and <lb />
then the express car, Why, then, <lb />
not separate them as much as <lb />
by putting the express car the <lb />
last in the train Have alarm bells <lb />
in each coach and sleeper, which can <lb />
be rung by the express messenger <lb />
when he Is directed or requested, at <lb />
this unusual time and place, to open <lb />
the door of his car. In each coach <lb />
and sleeper have, in a glass front <lb />
case, similar to those now in use for <lb />
and saw, two repeating shot- <lb />
guns, each magazine containing five <lb />
buckshot cartridges, thus giving <lb />
from six to twelve most effective <lb />
weapons into the hands of the train <lb />
crew and passengers. The alarm <lb />
bells should be electric, though it is <lb />
believed that the ordinary cord bell <lb />
could be made to serve the <lb />
pose. <lb />
When the messenger sounds his <lb />
tocsin of war, there would soon be a <lb />
sufficient force of brave men at the <lb />
express car to give the robbers a <lb />
warm welcome. For the latter to <lb />
cover the engine cab and each door <lb />
side of each coach and sleeper, <lb />
would require a force of men too <lb />
great in numbers to make <lb />
profitable. Besides, the <lb />
greater number of accomplices or <lb />
principals, the greater the chances <lb />
of capture and the possibilities of <lb />
some one turning <lb />
Under such an arrangement in the <lb />
make-up of a train, should the rear <lb />
or express car be the sole point of <lb />
attack, then the first step would be <lb />
to cut this car loose from the train, <lb />
and then loot it. The automatic air <lb />
brake would give the alarm to the <lb />
engineer, and he, in turn, lo the <lb />
coaches; or, better still, the con- <lb />
electric wire could be so <lb />
ranged as to -sound the alarm when <lb />
the car parted from the I rain. <lb />
Should the engine, as in the past, be <lb />
the first point of attack, then the <lb />
crew and passengers have <lb />
advantage of being between the <lb />
forces of robbers, and, with every <lb />
probability, can throw the greater <lb />
number in the tight, and, <lb />
like, repulse or defeat in detail. <lb />
First Lieut. J. T. Knight, United <lb />
States army, in North American <lb />
Review. <lb />
CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL. <lb />
A Few Figures Showing the Amount <lb />
Per Head In Various Countries. <lb />
In 1885 the consumption of beer <lb />
in England was gallons per head <lb />
in Scotland, and in Ireland. <lb />
the consumption of cider in Eng- <lb />
land, 0.4, and none at all in the <lb />
other two countries; the <lb />
of spirits in England, 0.8; in <lb />
Scotland. 1.9; in Ireland, con <lb />
of In England, 0.5 <lb />
in Scotland and 0.2 in Ireland. The <lb />
English drinker's partiality for beer <lb />
and the Scotch and the Irish drink <lb />
preference for spirits is clearly <lb />
shown. <lb />
When these amounts are convert <lb />
ed into their equivalents of alcohol, <lb />
we see that Ireland consumes least <lb />
1.4 gallons per head, Scotland <lb />
comes next with and England <lb />
heads the list with 2.13 gallons of <lb />
alcohol for each man, woman <lb />
child of the population; this, by a <lb />
curious and undesigned coincidence, <lb />
is just under one ounce a day per <lb />
head, the quantity which so many <lb />
medical authorities assume can be <lb />
safely taken the physiological <lb />
quantity which the country has <lb />
heard so much of late years. <lb />
Children seldom touch alcohol, <lb />
most women take little, and many <lb />
men do not take any at all; so that <lb />
the habitual consumers of alcohol. <lb />
whether they drink to excess or riot, <lb />
get through three or four times the <lb />
amount which the leading medical <lb />
authorities assert should not be ex- <lb />
the Year Round. <lb />
Paul Grave. <lb />
This Newsboy Grateful. <lb />
A condition of moral degeneracy <lb />
is commonly attributed to newsboys, <lb />
but there are exceptions. <lb />
A physician who recently moved <lb />
up town into the eighties took an <lb />
evening paper from a small news- <lb />
boy and dived into his pocket for the <lb />
change. <lb />
all right, remarked <lb />
the little chap. won't take no <lb />
money. Don't you remember <lb />
Jimmie you cured last winter with <lb />
the <lb />
Then the physician recognized in <lb />
the tall and sturdy boy a little chap <lb />
whom he had pulled through a fever <lb />
without any payment. <lb />
that's all right, he <lb />
said, you must certainly let <lb />
me nay you for the <lb />
said the boy, won't. <lb />
Where are you living up here. Doc <lb />
want to come and see <lb />
He hasn't yet turned up to see the <lb />
doctor, but every morning and even- <lb />
he slips a paper under the door, <lb />
and to have a proper understanding <lb />
in the beginning with the first paper <lb />
he scribbled a little <lb />
Doc, accept these papers from <lb />
Y. Herald. <lb />
Almost an Accident. <lb />
of narrow <lb />
observed Mr. reaching <lb />
for his second cup of coffee, I <lb />
tell you that I was on a train the <lb />
Other day that came within three <lb />
feet of being run into by another <lb />
train going at full <lb />
mercy sakes, exclaimed <lb />
Mrs. did it <lb />
train that came so near run- <lb />
into he rejoined, butter- <lb />
a biscuit, on the other <lb />
track and going the other <lb />
It was several before Mrs. <lb />
broke loose, but when <lb />
she did she made up for lost time. <lb />
Chicago Tribune. <lb />
seldom cause death, but <lb />
victim t on<lb />
all stomach troubles. <lb />
Card <lb />
Watchmaker A Jeweler. <lb />
lot Spectacles and <lb />
K. PRICK, <lb />
AND <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Office at the <lb />
DR. H. A. JOYNER, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
KT. O. <lb />
Office in stairs over S. K, A <lb />
liar store. <lb />
TYSON. <lb />
N. O. <lb />
u given to <lb />
I.<lb />
V. C <lb />
under Third St. <lb />
Daniel W. Howland, of Boston, <lb />
wrote a letter to the navy depart- <lb />
asking information as to the <lb />
whereabouts of the grave of John <lb />
Paul Jones. Secretary Me <lb />
tells Mr. Howland that the <lb />
famous sea fighter was probably <lb />
buried in the Protestant graveyard <lb />
of Paris, back of the Hotel <lb />
that in 1851 the United States ship <lb />
St, Lawrence was ordered to South- <lb />
to bring his body to this <lb />
country for interment, and that it <lb />
was then ascertained that the <lb />
ancient graveyard had been sold and <lb />
devoted to other uses. Whether the <lb />
bones were dumped in a pit or dis- <lb />
posed of in the catacombs of Paris <lb />
the department docs know <lb />
u E H V ILL E. t. <lb />
in all the mats. Collection <lb />
J. II. J. L. <lb />
FLEMING. <lb />
n. c. <lb />
iii all the Courts. <lb />
-w harry; a <lb />
AT <lb />
100-100 <lb />
at <lb />
cents on the Dollar.<lb />
l.<lb />
S BLOW, <lb />
N. C, <lb />
Courts. <lb />
John E. F. C. Harding. <lb />
Wilson, N. Greenville, N. C. <lb />
HARDING. <lb />
A N AT- <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
attention given to collections <lb />
and .-el claims. <lb />
Call early and get your <lb />
pick of the goods. <lb />
BROWN HOOKER. <lb />
mom<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017735_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
This passed oat <lb />
. existence yesterday at o'clock. <lb />
If a better one was coming in no <lb />
one would regret its demise, but <lb />
lad be no improvement <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Entered at the Greenville <lb />
N. C., as second-class mail matter. <lb />
MARCH Ufa, <lb />
The seems to have <lb />
disbanded. May be they grew <lb />
ashamed of what their Douglas <lb />
gang was doing and left to <lb />
pull along as best they could <lb />
hereafter. <lb />
Pearson got the better of Lin- <lb />
and had Mitchell <lb />
transferred from the eight to ninth <lb />
congressional district- One Pop- <lb />
told the legislature never to <lb />
anything again Demo- <lb />
for political <lb />
purposes- <lb />
On account of the higher rate <lb />
of postage, it is feared that <lb />
Ransom's North Carolina <lb />
will not hear from him by <lb />
after he goes to the City of Mex <lb />
with the promptness and fie <lb />
which characterize <lb />
his correspondence since he has <lb />
been in <lb />
Observer- <lb />
This is the unkindest cut of all <lb />
at the man who was never know <lb />
to answer a letter. <lb />
Two North Carolina editors <lb />
died last week. They were Mr- <lb />
J. P. Perry, of the <lb />
Pupa who died on Thursday, <lb />
Dr. B. F. Long, of the <lb />
Record, whose death <lb />
ed Friday. <lb />
Queen and a dozen or <lb />
more of her principal men of <lb />
Island Lave been con- <lb />
The Queen was given five <lb />
years imprisonment and a tine of <lb />
tire thousand dollar. Some of <lb />
followers were given thirty <lb />
five years and fined thousand <lb />
dollars. <lb />
The election bill passed the <lb />
Senate without amendment. It <lb />
was thought that the Populists <lb />
would demand some changes but <lb />
they did not. It is amusing to <lb />
see how some days they assert <lb />
their before the <lb />
next day comes the Republicans <lb />
have given them a dose which <lb />
brings them at once back into <lb />
harmony they move on as <lb />
one party with but one thought. <lb />
They indeed exhibit a poor <lb />
of manhood. Nothing need <lb />
be expect d Iron <lb />
has resigned as <lb />
Post Master There will <lb />
be no sorrow felt in the South at <lb />
this- It would been better <lb />
for the party if lie had never <lb />
ed at all- All are glad that W- <lb />
L. Wilson of West Virginia has <lb />
been appointed in his place. Mr <lb />
Wilson is one of first men of <lb />
the United States and will fill well <lb />
any place within the gift of the <lb />
nation. There will be few <lb />
Pest Misters i 3.1 he has <lb />
been in a while- <lb />
It is that the Populists in <lb />
the Legislature a caucus a <lb />
few nights at which it was <lb />
agreed that it is thus to call a <lb />
halt with this Legislature or <lb />
would be swallowed up body and <lb />
soul by the Republicans. It is <lb />
said to have been agreed, <lb />
from now until the close of the <lb />
session they vote for no more bad <lb />
legislation just to the Re <lb />
publicans If they will do this <lb />
the people may yet be saved from <lb />
having placed upon them some <lb />
exceedingly bad don't <lb />
believe they will. <lb />
The Democrats have shown up <lb />
the bad legislation win h was <lb />
being attempted to placed <lb />
upon the people by the <lb />
until the Senate has resorted <lb />
to gag law to being <lb />
They have limited all <lb />
speeches to five minutes. Think <lb />
of a man having to discuss the <lb />
Election till the County Gov- <lb />
bill in initiates. It <lb />
does look as if there Bight be a <lb />
full free of <lb />
matters which the <lb />
ate vitally <lb />
There arc three good places to <lb />
be filled by the present Leg- <lb />
Railroad Commissioner, <lb />
Commissioner of <lb />
Principal of the Blind Institution. <lb />
The Populists wait all three <lb />
places, Wilson is <lb />
for the first, for <lb />
second and editor <lb />
of the few the <lb />
Of course the Republic ins don't <lb />
object to having a part, <lb />
sail that they p make <lb />
at <lb />
aside for men. <lb />
has been the milk <lb />
all the tine- <lb />
say that no one ever <lb />
saw such I ridiculous spectacle <lb />
of as was exhibited in <lb />
the Legislature tie bill <lb />
reference to Magistrates. The <lb />
provided for increasing the <lb />
number each township by <lb />
pointing six additional ones <lb />
not to furnish them any laws by <lb />
which they might be able to know <lb />
how to decide cases. who <lb />
voted the bill actually got up <lb />
immediately and said we <lb />
played the fool And everybody <lb />
said yes. They reconsidered the <lb />
bill, reduced the n am to three <lb />
and gave them books <lb />
A man who since the advent of <lb />
Populism in Pitt county has <lb />
one of its prominent agitators, on <lb />
Saturday expressed himself as <lb />
and disgusted at the <lb />
course of the Legislature. He <lb />
he voted the ticket with the <lb />
of reforms en- <lb />
acted, but sees that absolutely <lb />
nothing has been done in that <lb />
Ho said further that <lb />
many men left the Democratic <lb />
THE LEGISLATURE. <lb />
MONDAY- <lb />
I ills were introduced the <lb />
Senate to amend the charter of <lb />
New to prevent the sale <lb />
of flour and meal; to <lb />
raise revenue for public schools. <lb />
Bills passed u incorporate the <lb />
Carolina and Northwestern Rail- <lb />
way ; to allow school districts to <lb />
vote special in aid of <lb />
schools; to allow Guaranty Com- <lb />
to make bonds for State <lb />
county and other officers, and <lb />
for other persons for whom bonds <lb />
are required. <lb />
Unfavorable report was made <lb />
in House on bill to reduce <lb />
commissions of State <lb />
and County officers. <lb />
Resolution was introduced that <lb />
the Legislature adjourn March <lb />
Bills were introduced to provide <lb />
for of the <lb />
; to allow the sale of timber <lb />
trees before ; to regulate <lb />
Superior court terms in second <lb />
and third districts ; <lb />
Norfolk Camden Railway. <lb />
A bill passed requiring <lb />
scrip or checks to <lb />
redeem these in cash at the op- <lb />
of the holder. <lb />
TUESDAY. <lb />
The most important new bills <lb />
introduced in the Legislature <lb />
to day To incorporate the <lb />
and Camden railway ; <lb />
to make appropriation far Odd <lb />
at <lb />
to abolish the appropriation to <lb />
the State University ; to <lb />
ate the Orphanage in <lb />
to repeal the <lb />
act creating tho Bureau of La <lb />
Statistics ; to reduce <lb />
ea of the Agricultural Depart- <lb />
; to provide for and pro- <lb />
mote the oyster industry- <lb />
The revenue machinery <lb />
act was also introduced. It <lb />
names as the tax rate, <lb />
this being the as pres- <lb />
The Senate passed bills trans- <lb />
Mitchell county to the <lb />
Ninth Congressional District; <lb />
amending the charter of <lb />
Notwithstanding <lb />
there <lb />
have <lb />
party because of the idea that a I been several beautiful, warm <lb />
law bosses led and controlled that j gentleman told us Wed- <lb />
. that there was still much <lb />
party, bat admitted that the pies-. spots in the <lb />
Legislature was the worst country <lb />
boss ridden body ever saw. <lb />
He also frankly the The session of the Senate today <lb />
belief that he had a mistake i occupied by the discussion of <lb />
i., i i a the bill to create a criminal circuit <lb />
in the be had <lb />
and said many others in the Hanover, Craven, <lb />
who supported the populist Wayne, and Forsyth. <lb />
ticket were of the same opinion. This had been agreed on by the <lb />
Fusion caucus. Two Populists <lb />
We are sure that the report bolted that caucus, and opposed <lb />
th t the in the the ., amendment was <lb />
. i . n iii.- l adopted, striking out Wake, <lb />
tore ha v called a halt not . and <lb />
because their actions for fag Vance. Root son. and Warren <lb />
the past few days has shown The bill passed, <lb />
this helped the Democrats were introduced to <lb />
Kill the bill to change the charter be insurance to amend <lb />
charter of the Atlantic and <lb />
so the <lb />
over to the control Of the I to protect tobacco growers <lb />
They also voted some to amend the <lb />
to the County Government of ; to <lb />
. . , . , . I rates railways, <lb />
bill which it less first-class cents per <lb />
able than it was in its original j mile and second-class fare 1-2 <lb />
shape- It is said that they will j cents i j children nuder W <lb />
also demand some amendment Penalty for <lb />
the election law. They should; ft A ,. <lb />
, A bill was introduced to so <lb />
look well to this The article of the <lb />
cans this bill passed so that the Legislature, in <lb />
. ., ., . -rT , . -the charter of the Atlantic <lb />
of the city Raleigh which North Carolina railway, s <lb />
have turned the Capitol Legislature will appoint due <lb />
that they control the election <lb />
in this The bill as it is <lb />
will give them this power it <lb />
behooves any who loves <lb />
North Carolina to do what he <lb />
can to save the States from the <lb />
clutches of a party that has been <lb />
tried and always found wanting. <lb />
Everybody thought the <lb />
had reached the lowest <lb />
depths of infamy they <lb />
to adjourn in honor of Fred <lb />
Douglas. The disgrace was <lb />
such that ail over the South this <lb />
body was held up in ridicule. <lb />
But it is possible for them to fur- <lb />
disgrace themselves the <lb />
State they represent this <lb />
they did Monday. They kept <lb />
silent until the Boss spoke. In <lb />
Sunday's Caucasian Mr. Boss <lb />
said he did not approve of the <lb />
the Legislature and <lb />
pronounced it an <lb />
Therefore M today <lb />
Mr. Lusk was up with a <lb />
to try and get the poor fol- <lb />
out of the difficulty. His <lb />
resolution was a he fro u begin <lb />
t end was so shown by <lb />
Mr. Ray. If body can <lb />
lower than to deliberately en- <lb />
to make its records <lb />
speak lies are a cable to con- <lb />
of it. Mr. resolution <lb />
denies that they adjourned <lb />
for the beloved Fred, and was so <lb />
false that many of the <lb />
asked to be excused from voting. <lb />
Think of a Legislature know <lb />
spreading lies <lb />
upon its records Poor, pitiful <lb />
men, they merit are receiving <lb />
the contempt of all <lb />
men regardless of party. <lb />
The people were so much <lb />
aroused at the failure of the Leg <lb />
to lend the Ladies Memo <lb />
rial Association tern <lb />
to complete the monument to <lb />
the Confederate dead that two <lb />
or three plans have already been <lb />
put foot to raise the money at <lb />
once and show to this Fred <lb />
Douglas Legislature that they <lb />
cannot prevent North Carolina <lb />
her distinguished dead <lb />
If there was such a a <lb />
capacity to feel shame the <lb />
hearts of the in the <lb />
present Legislature would <lb />
feel that the one congenial place <lb />
for them henceforth would be <lb />
either Africa or Liberia. <lb />
Bethel Items. <lb />
Bethel- N. C Feb. 27th <lb />
Col. Jno- Roberson was town <lb />
yesterday. <lb />
Mr. B. R- King, brother of <lb />
Sheriff W. King, was town <lb />
to day. <lb />
Mr- A L Blow, of Greenville, <lb />
spent Tuesday town legal <lb />
business. <lb />
tho <lb />
of the bride's father, Mr. <lb />
G- H- Bethel to day, <lb />
Mr. R L- Nelson was married to <lb />
Miss Rosa Andrews, Elder G. D <lb />
Roberson Th- re were <lb />
five in attendance- After <lb />
tho the p u t-v ft <lb />
for the home of the groom <lb />
Martin near R <lb />
where an entertainment was <lb />
en to the invited guest. <lb />
enacting laws for registration, <lb />
only prescribe taking of an <lb />
oath to support the Constitution <lb />
and laws of the United States <lb />
and of North Caroline, no <lb />
other requirement be pro- <lb />
scribed. Other new bills are to <lb />
reduce salaries of officers, <lb />
faculty of he State <lb />
to prevent preferences <lb />
in assignments. <lb />
Both houses voted for officers <lb />
of the new Criminal Circuit of <lb />
Buncombe, Madison, Hay wood, <lb />
and Henderson counties. They <lb />
elected H. G- Ewart Judge R- S- <lb />
Solicitor, W H- <lb />
son Clerk <lb />
THURSDAY. <lb />
Iii Mr. Grant intro- <lb />
a bill to complete the Con- <lb />
federate Monument by <lb />
The bill passed <lb />
second reading, ayes nays <lb />
The County Government bill <lb />
came up as special order. An <lb />
amendment was adopted <lb />
for the appointment the <lb />
Judge of two members of the <lb />
Board of Finance of different <lb />
politics for Commissioners, four <lb />
votes, out of live to be necessary <lb />
for a measure- There <lb />
was a hot debate. The bill <lb />
passed to <lb />
Bills were introduced in the <lb />
To incorporate the <lb />
Southport Western Railway, <lb />
to amend the Coda regarding <lb />
false pretenses, to establish the <lb />
13th Judicial district. <lb />
Bills were passed giving the <lb />
White A. M- College <lb />
the Colored College <lb />
annually <lb />
A bill was passed reducing the <lb />
of Railway Commissioners <lb />
to This is to take t <lb />
at the expiration of J. W. Wilson's <lb />
term. <lb />
The bill passed requiring Fire <lb />
Insurance Companies to pay full <lb />
value of policies case of total <lb />
loss. <lb />
FRIDAY. <lb />
The most important new bills <lb />
introduced in the Legislature to- <lb />
day were to allow the i- <lb />
to purchase the Caledonia <lb />
the Roanoke river; to <lb />
punish bribery in political con- <lb />
to require all railway <lb />
trains to stop one minute at ail <lb />
towns of inhabitants; to de- <lb />
fine and punish train robbing. <lb />
The contract and bond of <lb />
Stewart Brothers, of Winston, a,; <lb />
State printers, were <lb />
with a majority report, stating <lb />
that their bid was tho lowest, and <lb />
a minority report, stating that <lb />
the bid of Ed Broughton <lb />
of Raleigh, was It <lb />
also said that, the eh airman <lb />
of tho committee , said be <lb />
fore any bids were filed that he <lb />
would award the contract to <lb />
Stewart Brothers. The majority <lb />
report was adopted <lb />
The election-law bill passed by <lb />
a strict party vote of to <lb />
The bill passed providing for <lb />
the election of justices of the <lb />
peace by this Legislature and for <lb />
their in by the <lb />
people. Not only are the <lb />
filled, but a large of <lb />
additional magistrates to be <lb />
appointed at once. <lb />
The to appropriate <lb />
for the Confederate monument <lb />
passed third reading by one ma- <lb />
The House the rev- <lb />
bill in Committee of the <lb />
Whole, an adopted the more <lb />
sections. The poll tax <lb />
is ; State tax, ; <lb />
tax, school tax <lb />
The most pot taut u. v bills <lb />
introduced in the Legislature to- <lb />
day To amend the <lb />
laws by giving protection <lb />
fraudulent companies; <lb />
to abolish free tuition at the <lb />
State University; to render per- <lb />
sous ineligible to hold offices <lb />
more than two terms; to <lb />
it inmates of the Home <lb />
from pensions. <lb />
Bills passed the Senate <lb />
the annual <lb />
for tho white and colored <lb />
cultural and mechanical colleges , <lb />
creating a Code Commission of <lb />
three members at the <lb />
establishment of a reformatory <lb />
for young criminals, and <lb />
annually, maintenance. <lb />
The election law bill passed, <lb />
every amendment offered by the <lb />
two Democrats -the Senate <lb />
being voted down- The vote on <lb />
its passage noes, <lb />
Populists having bolted <lb />
the fusion caucus and voted for <lb />
it. Four other Populists voted <lb />
for it under protest. <lb />
The House considered the rev <lb />
bill in Committee of the <lb />
Whole. A great effort was made <lb />
to out the license- <lb />
tax on all drummers, it was <lb />
retained. It was decided that <lb />
whiskey distilleries could sell <lb />
by the quart instead of <lb />
by <lb />
m mi ill GREENE. <lb />
Sunday School Convention. <lb />
township <lb />
S School <lb />
will meet iii the Baptist church in <lb />
on second Lord's day <lb />
March at o'clock. <lb />
The following program will be <lb />
carried out; <lb />
Devotional exercises. <lb />
Minutes of last meeting. <lb />
Address by the President- <lb />
Object of convention- <lb />
Reports from individual schools. <lb />
A two minutes talk from each <lb />
Superintendent on the condition <lb />
and needs of his school. <lb />
Our field i is it fully planted and <lb />
cultivated by Prof. <lb />
Are there all the Sunday- <lb />
Schools the. township that are <lb />
necessary V <lb />
Plans for the future. <lb />
House to house visitation. <lb />
How may homo help the Sun- <lb />
day Schools, b- Maj. H. Harding, <lb />
of Greenville. <lb />
How to reach and hold young <lb />
men, Prof. of Green- <lb />
ville. <lb />
services. <lb />
Each Sunday School in the <lb />
township is requested to send <lb />
representatives. P. Pres <lb />
A few shad were caught in the <lb />
river ere last night and night <lb />
before. We did not hear who <lb />
caught the Brat one <lb />
your produce to <lb />
J. C. Jr., Co. <lb />
Factors <lb />
-AND- <lb />
Commission <lb />
NORFOLK VA. <lb />
Personal Attention given to <lb />
Weights and Counts. <lb />
They quote Uh following as Monday's <lb />
Norfolk prices on produce <lb />
Middling cotton, lo <lb />
Irish Potatoes, Old Chickens, <lb />
Sweet to <lb />
to Peas, to <lb />
Corn. to <lb />
GROVES <lb />
CHILL <lb />
IS JUST AS FOR ADULTS. <lb />
WARRANTED. PRICE SO <lb />
ILLS., NOT. 1693. <lb />
Co., St. Louts, Mo, <lb />
of <lb />
TASTELESS TONIC and bate <lb />
three already this year. In all oar ex- <lb />
of In tho nave <lb />
never an article that gave such universal <lb />
a your Tonic <lb />
CO. <lb />
Sold guaranteed John L. <lb />
Druggist. <lb />
Prevention <lb />
better than cure. Liver <lb />
PiUs will not only cure, but if <lb />
taken in time will prevent <lb />
Sick Headache. <lb />
dyspepsia, biliousness, malaria, <lb />
constipation, jaundice, torpid <lb />
fiver and diseases. <lb />
Over PILLS <lb />
The planting season is again at hand and the <lb />
question that is of most interest to you is what <lb />
shall T plant, where shall I plant it, and how <lb />
shall I plant it. After what to plant j <lb />
and to plant, it equally as much <lb />
how yon plant and cultivate. From past <lb />
experience it is conceded by all that no land <lb />
will make a good crop unless properly <lb />
and that a judicial use of commercial Fer- <lb />
pays on the lands in this section. It is <lb />
with much pleasure and satisfaction that we offer <lb />
for sale the following High Grade and Reliable <lb />
Brands of Fertilizers named below. The past <lb />
results from their use being endorsed by the <lb />
leading farmers in this section justify us in say- <lb />
they are all well adapted to our soil. We <lb />
will sell for cash or on time upon usual terms, <lb />
and we believe we can give you a better grade <lb />
of goods as cheap or cheaper than you can buy <lb />
elsewhere. We otter for your consideration <lb />
and choice the following well established brands <lb />
National Tobacco Fertilizer. <lb />
As a moderate priced fertilizer is equaled by <lb />
few and excelled by none. These goods have <lb />
been thoroughly tested the past four seasons for <lb />
Tobacco and in no case has it failed to give entire <lb />
satisfaction. It is also good for Potatoes. <lb />
Capital Tobacco Fertilizer. <lb />
Not including a few brands of fertilizer made <lb />
especially for early truck, this is the richest, <lb />
highest grade brand of goods offered for sale in <lb />
the State and is made especially for Tobacco. <lb />
Farmers Alliance Official. <lb />
It is useless to speak of the merits of this <lb />
well-known brand as it was made by a formula <lb />
selected by some of the leading farmers of the <lb />
State and has been thoroughly tested. We can <lb />
sell you these goods for cash or per cent, <lb />
interest November 1st. A reasonable <lb />
discount for spot cash in car lots. <lb />
Guano. <lb />
It is too well-known all over the State to need <lb />
any recommendation at our hands. It has been <lb />
tested on all crops and never found wanting. It <lb />
is one of the best Potato fertilizer on the market <lb />
and for Cotton it stands at the head of the list. <lb />
Beef, Blood Bone Fertilizer <lb />
This brand of goods as its name implies is <lb />
composed of animal flesh, blood and bone and all <lb />
farmers know these contain the best fertilizing <lb />
properties of anything known. <lb />
FREEMAN'S HIGH GRADE <lb />
IRISH POTATO GROWER. <lb />
This goods is for trucking and contains per <lb />
cent, and for reference you may ask <lb />
most any potato planter east, for all who have <lb />
tried it wish it again. <lb />
DURHAM BULL FERTILIZER. <lb />
A new fertilizer that comes in this section <lb />
highly endorsed by tobacco men from Winston <lb />
and other sections of this State and is <lb />
by the Durham Fertilizer <lb />
PERUVIAN MIXTURE <lb />
FERTILIZER. <lb />
Everyone knows what the old Peruvian <lb />
Guano used to be and this is largely composed <lb />
of genuine Peruvian, containing 1-2 to per <lb />
cont. ammonia. <lb />
TRAVER'S PER CENT. TRUCK. <lb />
This is one of the high grade brand of goods of- <lb />
for Truck in this section and you will do <lb />
well to try it. It is adapted for early truck and <lb />
Irish Potatoes and will grow nice tobacco. <lb />
ACID PHOSPHATE <lb />
For sale, containing and per cent, of <lb />
available acid. <lb />
GERMAN <lb />
This is without doubt good for Cotton. <lb />
Lime and Cotton Seed Meal for <lb />
Purposes. <lb />
This is in great demand in some sections and <lb />
Don't forget we can give you best figures. <lb />
Write us and we will come to see you, and <lb />
will take pleasure in naming you low figures. <lb />
To individuals or clubs wanting a car load <lb />
more we will will make special figures. Don't <lb />
forge that we are headquarters for Fertilizers. <lb />
truly., yours, <lb />
Office at Flutters Warehouse, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
IN NEW YORK<lb />
BUYING <lb />
Watch for my <lb />
CLOTHING. <lb />
SHIP YOUR <lb />
gutter and <lb />
OTHER PRODUCE TO <lb />
. . . . DAVIS HILL CO <lb />
10th Street N. W. WASHINGTON, D. C. <lb />
You will receive highest Cash Prices. We buy outright or <lb />
bundle on <lb />
Sales and Prompt Commission <lb />
live per cent. for our Price <lb />
Get Your <lb />
Flues You Can Get <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
-----have a large lot of cleanest lies<lb />
you w AM headquarters for Tobacco Fines. We make them a <lb />
cheap as the cheapest guarantee our work in every <lb />
S. K. Pender Co., <lb />
Dealers in Stoves. and Mowing Machine <lb />
ESTABLISHED S. <lb />
T. <lb />
FL. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Just Received Cars Rock Lime. <lb />
KEGS NAILS, SIZES <lb />
B Ca-cs Sardines, <lb />
so Bread Preparation. <lb />
Soap. <lb />
Star Lye- <lb />
Boxes Cakes and <lb />
Stick Candy. <lb />
Cases Matches, <lb />
O Dust. <lb />
Good Luck Baking Powder. <lb />
Sacks <lb />
Bids Molasses, <lb />
Tons Shot, <lb />
Kegs Powder. <lb />
Cars Flour. <lb />
Meat. <lb />
Hay, <lb />
Lard, <lb />
Bids Granulated Sugar, <lb />
V. <lb />
so Gall Ax Bonn, <lb />
K. It. Mills Snug. <lb />
Three Snuff, <lb />
Boxes Tobacco. <lb />
Dukes V. M. P. Cigarettes. <lb />
Oil Va. Cheroots, <lb />
cases <lb />
Inn Ag <lb />
N. C <lb />
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current rates. <lb />
AGENT FOB FIRE PROOF SAFE<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017735_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
Mm <lb />
Is Week.<lb />
HOOKER <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
March- <lb />
C wet k. <lb />
Third Month. <lb />
This is the month for kites. <lb />
Car lord Flour, just in <lb />
D. W. <lb />
Orinoco is <lb />
of the Golden <lb />
Seed for Cash <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Orinoco Guano is <lb />
King cf the Belt. <lb />
Be very careful about fires <lb />
when the March <lb />
cheap Oak Sets, <lb />
stairs, Old Brick Store- <lb />
This month baa five Fridays, <lb />
five Saturdays five Sundays. <lb />
D- M. Ferry's New Garden Seed <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
This is the first spring month, <lb />
but we must see how <lb />
much spring it brings. <lb />
Remember I can your <lb />
and nave you a suit of <lb />
clothes made to order. Fit <lb />
Frank Wilson. <lb />
The mail service between Ayden <lb />
and begins Tuesday. It <lb />
will make three trips a week <lb />
Just received Iron Drive <lb />
and feet Galvanized <lb />
pipe- D- Haskett- <lb />
Buy Seed <lb />
Bliss Triumph Potatoes at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Remember I you cash for Chicken <lb />
Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick <lb />
received car load of best <lb />
Flour, lowest prices- <lb />
D- W- <lb />
your cotton seed to <lb />
Sheppard, buy your <lb />
Meal Hulls- Car load of each <lb />
gust arrived sale cheap. <lb />
A large of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at ON Brick Store. <lb />
A G. Cox has ordered a car <lb />
load of Iron for Tobacco Flues <lb />
and to make <lb />
ville headquarters for best To- <lb />
Flues- Those in need of <lb />
Flues this season will do well to <lb />
this- <lb />
First of the <lb />
Spring Oats, Cheap at the <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
N C-, Feb <lb />
Mr. F- S. Royster, Tarboro. N. C- <lb />
Dear I will take forty- <lb />
five tons of your Orinoco Tobacco <lb />
Guano. Twenty-one tons to be <lb />
at or Enfield; <lb />
the balance of twenty four tons <lb />
delivered at C. I <lb />
can buy other goods for less <lb />
money but I want Orinoco- <lb />
Very truly yours, <lb />
J. B. Phillips.<lb />
At Least Their Are, O Make<lb />
Mr. S. V Joyner, of is <lb />
here. <lb />
Mr. C. W. of Baltimore, <lb />
is <lb />
Mrs. eh is quite sick <lb />
with <lb />
Mr. L has gone to Co- <lb />
to a few days. <lb />
Mr. J. H Blount arrived from <lb />
Hertford Tuesday night- <lb />
Mr. Frank Wilson has <lb />
North to buy his spring stock. <lb />
Miss Moselle Pollock, of Kins- <lb />
ton, is visiting Mrs. J- L. <lb />
Mr. E H. and Master <lb />
John returned Thursday <lb />
from Richmond. <lb />
Mr. B. Cherry, Jr. has <lb />
to lo a course in a <lb />
business college <lb />
j Mr- Lassiter, of <lb />
passed through this <lb />
to Norfolk. <lb />
W. U. Brown and children <lb />
loft last wees visit her par- <lb />
near Portsmouth, Va. <lb />
The of Rev. L H. Joyner, <lb />
pastor of circuit, is <lb />
quite sick at the <lb />
Mr. Charles Wilkinson of Farm- <lb />
ville, has a position as <lb />
clerk with Mr. Charles Cobb. <lb />
Rev. C- M. Billings arrived <lb />
Monday evening will preach in <lb />
Baptist church Thursday <lb />
night. <lb />
Mrs. C T. returned <lb />
from Wilson Saturday night. <lb />
Miss Bertha Savage accompanied <lb />
her home- <lb />
Mrs. T. C Whitaker, <lb />
who was visiting her mother, <lb />
Mis. Murray, returned home Fri- <lb />
day evening. <lb />
H. E Shaw, of <lb />
T. C Wooten. of Hill, are <lb />
visiting attorneys at Court <lb />
Mrs L. Branson, of Raleigh, <lb />
who was visiting the family of <lb />
H. Harding, left for her <lb />
Lome Monday <lb />
Raises the Record <lb />
A few days ago Mr. T- L <lb />
of killed it hog <lb />
that weighed pounds net. <lb />
This is the heaviest hog that has <lb />
been reported to us. Mr. Tar <lb />
to take the hog Jo <lb />
th Newborn fair, but the weather <lb />
the week was so bad that <lb />
he gave up the idea. <lb />
Col. Harry Skinner has return- <lb />
ed to The work of the <lb />
Big seems to he of more <lb />
importance than Pitt Court. <lb />
Judge and Mis. A- L. Coble <lb />
lived Monday evening and are <lb />
stopping at the House. His <lb />
Honor opened Court this morn <lb />
Mrs. O- II- and sou, of <lb />
Scotland Neck, and Mrs. B. Slier- <lb />
rod, son, sisters Mr. R. Hy- <lb />
returned to their homes Fri- <lb />
day after a brief visit here. <lb />
Mr. L. W. Stark, auctioneer for <lb />
the Warehouse, left <lb />
Thursday for his home Ox- <lb />
ford, will return next sea- <lb />
sou up for the <lb />
boys. <lb />
Mr. W. B and Masters <lb />
Walter and came home <lb />
night from Baltimore, <lb />
lie says specialist whom ho <lb />
went, to see thinks Walter's eyes <lb />
can be readily cured. <lb />
Public school for this district <lb />
begins Monday- Pupils can <lb />
tablets, ink, pens, <lb />
slats, paper, Reflector Book <lb />
Store. Our large <lb />
tablet takes the lead. <lb />
Mr. James L. Little tendered <lb />
his official bond as Treasurer to <lb />
the Board of County <lb />
They found it gilt-edged <lb />
administered the oath of <lb />
office to him. <lb />
Agent J. R. Moore just <lb />
completed two more neat cottages <lb />
on his property near the depot. <lb />
make nine dwelling houses <lb />
in all that he has built out there. <lb />
For the length of time that he has <lb />
been hi Mr. Moore <lb />
has done more in the way of <lb />
than any man <lb />
here- <lb />
TWO BROTHERS FIGHT. <lb />
One of Them Dead and the Other <lb />
Badly Hurt. <lb />
Frank and Peter <lb />
were two brothers who <lb />
lived together with their sisters <lb />
in Swift township. <lb />
day the boys went to Ayden, <lb />
on the way back home <lb />
as they rode together. <lb />
There were no eye witnesses to <lb />
what o curred along the way, but <lb />
a man passing the same road <lb />
later the evening Ben <lb />
up to his neck in water in <lb />
the swamp. The man pulled Ben <lb />
out of the water and found that he <lb />
had a very cut in the <lb />
abdomen. Ben told that his <lb />
brother Peter stabbed him and <lb />
when he fell out of the cart drove <lb />
off and left him. The man car <lb />
Ben on home. Peter had <lb />
been there left his horse but <lb />
disappeared. <lb />
was seen of him Saturday <lb />
night, but he put in appear- <lb />
at the house <lb />
said he a private talk <lb />
with They had the talk and <lb />
after that Ben told a different tale <lb />
about how the cutting <lb />
saying that fell on his <lb />
Peter's bead was badly beaten up <lb />
and he says that done it with <lb />
a cart died this <lb />
morning Peter is in <lb />
a critical condition from the <lb />
wounds on his head- <lb />
These are particulars gathered <lb />
from people town flay from <lb />
the neighborhood in which the <lb />
brothers lived and who were at <lb />
the house yesterday. Dr. Laugh <lb />
Coroner, went down <lb />
and held an ii quest, the verdict <lb />
of the jury is as follows That <lb />
Besides came to his death <lb />
from a knife wound inflicted by <lb />
Peter The Utter was <lb />
committed to jail bail. <lb />
At Bethel. <lb />
The editor spent very pleas <lb />
day at Bethel Thursday and <lb />
some good work for the <lb />
The were <lb />
a quiet day, owing to the <lb />
people in the <lb />
advantage of the pretty weather <lb />
farm work, and they had <lb />
plenty of time to talk to us. They <lb />
all expressed hope of a good <lb />
trade this spring. A number of <lb />
the young men were <lb />
in. a thirty <lb />
pound maul. Mr. J. R- Bunting <lb />
was the could <lb />
it further any else. Be- <lb />
sides our chats with the mer- <lb />
chants we spent pleasant <lb />
brief with Rev. W. A. <lb />
Forbes, the family of Dr. ii. J- <lb />
Grimes, Col. N. M. Hammond at <lb />
the depot, Postmaster S. A- Gain- <lb />
and Mayor D- C. Moore, Prof. <lb />
reports a <lb />
school, is a good town <lb />
and we appreciate the way they <lb />
like the <lb />
KINSTON IN ASHES. <lb />
Fire Entire Business <lb />
of the Between <lb />
to <lb />
Kinston, N. C , March <lb />
most destructive fire that <lb />
visited this town occurred <lb />
day afternoon and nearly the <lb />
entire business portion of the <lb />
is away. <lb />
could the mad career of the <lb />
flames handsome build- <lb />
were swept away as though <lb />
had been built of tinder. <lb />
CAUSED BY CIGARETTES. <lb />
tire commenced about <lb />
o'clock in B M. Field's stables. <lb />
origin unknown, bu it is <lb />
reported to have by <lb />
boys cigarettes in the <lb />
barn setting tire to a lot of hay- <lb />
THE FIRE SPREADS. <lb />
From the stables where the <lb />
Started the flames spread rapidly, <lb />
burning B. N- Field's <lb />
office and store J. A <lb />
residence, two stores <lb />
warehouse; stores occupied <lb />
by If. Marks Pi Cox <lb />
stables of S. H. Loftin; the <lb />
House under which were <lb />
Phillip's billiard room, <lb />
bar, the Jute Press office, <lb />
Dr. Harper's dental office ; <lb />
Bros, store warehouse . <lb />
block occupied by S- H <lb />
as residence store, the <lb />
bank J. T. Einstein <lb />
Bros, double store warehouse. <lb />
Hotel Toll under which was A. S- <lb />
book store; Dr. <lb />
residence and office ; J. W- Col- <lb />
house occupied by S. <lb />
barber chop, barroom of <lb />
L. J- J. W- <lb />
hardware store ; J. T. Hall's store <lb />
and S. H. Abbott's <lb />
story brick holding <lb />
pied by Abbott store <lb />
house of Alex Fields; building of <lb />
S. H. occupied by J B- <lb />
Perry under which were officer of <lb />
S- H. Jr. J. F. <lb />
; brick building <lb />
by H- as <lb />
C. Crabtree as shop and <lb />
; two frame build- <lb />
occupied by W. R. Bond as <lb />
butcher shop and J. C- Wagner <lb />
beer bottling works; the large <lb />
hardware store of B- Canady <lb />
and three wood buildings in rear ; <lb />
livery stables of W. D- ; <lb />
residences of S. M. Miss <lb />
Mary A. J. Dr. W- <lb />
A-J Pollock, A- Harvey and <lb />
D. Sutton. <lb />
BLOCKS SWEPT <lb />
Every house on the squares on <lb />
which stood Hotel <lb />
Bros., store is <lb />
One two story and two <lb />
smaller ones occupied by <lb />
were burned in another part of <lb />
the town. <lb />
other buildings caught <lb />
fire out were The <lb />
fire was got under control about <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
The loss is estimated between <lb />
The <lb />
amount of is mot yet <lb />
but is small comparison <lb />
with the loss. <lb />
LOSSES AND <lb />
J. L. Nelson on buildings in- <lb />
W. Crabtree on stock no <lb />
H. V. Brewer on <lb />
B. cash <lb />
no insurance. <lb />
F. on office, fixtures <lb />
insurance 822.5. <lb />
Bounties, -Tr., office fixtures <lb />
and flour <lb />
B. W. Canady on buildings and stock <lb />
only Insurance. <lb />
J. C. Wagner on buildings and stock <lb />
insurance <lb />
R. Bond on and <lb />
insurance <lb />
C. Fields on buildings in- <lb />
Bros, on stock <lb />
no insurance. <lb />
II. U. Harrison's no <lb />
He saved part of his ck- <lb />
A. J. Phillips billiard room, cash and <lb />
furniture, <lb />
safe of II. C. Harrison was sett open <lb />
and over was burned. <lb />
W. U. lost worth Of <lb />
goods, no owned <lb />
G. H. valued at <lb />
lot Insurance <lb />
Building owned by J. A. <lb />
who lost on and <lb />
Stores his <lb />
on furniture , <lb />
H. Marks insurance <lb />
Fields, on stables, storehouse, <lb />
office and residence insurance <lb />
E- drug <lb />
SHOO , insured. <lb />
Einstein Bros, loss, buildings, <lb />
insurance ; <lb />
T. Skinner ; no <lb />
H. loss on buildings, <lb />
and furniture about <lb />
insurance. <lb />
Bros, in- <lb />
; stock <lb />
About worth of <lb />
saved. <lb />
Dr. H. D. Harper, dental chair and <lb />
insurance <lb />
Free Press office <lb />
Alex building no,<lb />
S. H. o bidding no <lb />
j insurance, Abbott and <lb />
lodge no <lb />
j Fellows no The <lb />
their entire <lb />
T. Ball on building and stock <lb />
His hands were <lb />
badly burned by rolling his <lb />
J, W. Collins on store <lb />
no insurance. Oil dwelling occupied <lb />
by S. no insurance. <lb />
I. J. Whaley on no in- <lb />
J. Q. no insurance, <lb />
Dr. II. hotel, office, <lb />
residence and <lb />
A. S. under Hotel Tail, on <lb />
stock, insurance <lb />
J. furniture, etc, in <lb />
Hotel <lb />
S. Einstein, f unit <lb />
II. II. son, on furniture no <lb />
insurance. <lb />
Dr. A. J. buildings and <lb />
fin it <lb />
A. residence about , <lb />
no <lb />
buildings <lb />
about Insurance <lb />
Mrs. B. <lb />
by S. <lb />
For March. <lb />
Prophet Harsh <lb />
to give us three severe storms <lb />
by very cold <lb />
One will the 3rd <lb />
6th, one about the 18th to <lb />
14th, one about tho 56th- It <lb />
will be well enough to keep on <lb />
the lookout for bad weather. <lb />
IV. <lb />
D. s ables, about <lb />
The New Warehouse. <lb />
continues to go for- <lb />
ward in the line of improvements- <lb />
Messrs. C. D. <lb />
and Wiley Brown have <lb />
formed a to build <lb />
operate another tobacco <lb />
house. They have just purchased <lb />
from Mr Alfred Forbes the <lb />
cant two acre lot the north <lb />
side of Ninth street, just in the <lb />
rear of the premises occupied by <lb />
Maj Harding- Work will begin <lb />
on the he use about the first of <lb />
April i, will be x feet <lb />
size, it will be completed <lb />
readiness for the next tobacco <lb />
The warehouse will be <lb />
the in ii ii ii of Messrs <lb />
Bonn tree Brown, who <lb />
both excellent business men- The <lb />
location for their warehouse is a <lb />
desirable one and <lb />
AYDEN IN A STIR. <lb />
Two Letters Explain the Situation. <lb />
No <lb />
Here's a Go Some smart Alex <lb />
has discovered that is not <lb />
the name of this town, <lb />
and now some of our are <lb />
stirring up at a lively <lb />
so the name can be changed <lb />
fore the Legislature adjourns. I <lb />
true and proper name begins arriving every and train. <lb />
with and ends with an <lb />
and don't you forget it. <lb />
ample room for prize <lb />
Chas F. dwelling all other necessary <lb />
by A. Harvey, insurance streets <lb />
Harvey's from <lb />
damage covered by I avenue and Evans street so as to <lb />
make their lot a all <lb />
sides. <lb />
It briskly for an hour <lb />
or-two early Sunday but <lb />
the rain every- <lb />
so wet that the snow <lb />
pot stick. <lb />
J. S <lb />
FranK dwelling, no in- <lb />
Eliza Patrick, dwelling, no in- <lb />
The dwelling and of C. <lb />
Harget was about <lb />
Covered by <lb />
There is much damage to furniture <lb />
moved out dwellings in other <lb />
of <lb />
NOTES. <lb />
H H, Wilson, postal clerk, lost <lb />
all his household effects. While <lb />
endeavoring to save some <lb />
Mrs. Wilson narrowly escaped <lb />
losing her life- Parties rushed in j <lb />
and rescued her from the i <lb />
building. i their <lb />
The Baptist parsonage build-j <lb />
occupied by M. H. trade that <lb />
whose Mrs. Alfred <lb />
and Miss Florence Williams, of j the <lb />
were <lb />
escaped. All the furniture <lb />
was moved out. <lb />
Many other building in <lb />
such danger that the contents <lb />
were moved out. The streets <lb />
are scattered full of furniture and <lb />
merchandise and some of the <lb />
people have nowhere to place the <lb />
few effects they <lb />
from the fire. <lb />
A message for was <lb />
sent to and the tire <lb />
company with their engine <lb />
rived by special train at 7.15, but <lb />
the tire was control. <lb />
TO NOTIFY <lb />
friends and the <lb />
they have <lb />
When the old ass brays the <lb />
ones follow. All hands aboard; <lb />
off f or <lb />
Letter. No <lb />
A sens lion sprang up among <lb />
the citizens of Tuesday, es- <lb />
the merchants and DOsi <lb />
men- A petition was going <lb />
around to ask the Legislature to <lb />
change the of this place to <lb />
Harris ton. The petition was start <lb />
m night good <lb />
were signed to it, but <lb />
Tuesday tho matter leaked out <lb />
spread like wild tire <lb />
mi opposition petition <lb />
was and the tide turned <lb />
many who had signed the first <lb />
taking their names and sign- <lb />
against the change- <lb />
The new mime suggested is <lb />
honor of Mr. H. Harris. <lb />
When the town was first started <lb />
this name was suggested, Mr. <lb />
then objected to its being <lb />
named for him- Now after <lb />
pie have come here and built up <lb />
a town, Mr. comes forward <lb />
to change the name de- <lb />
moralize things. It is too <lb />
late now to make a All <lb />
the business men have stationery <lb />
with Ayden printed on it, the <lb />
place is already tho rail <lb />
road schedule rate cards, and <lb />
the commercial agencies have <lb />
ready made up their for <lb />
Ayden, so that a at this <lb />
late day would loss to <lb />
many, would give tho business of <lb />
the a general set-back, and <lb />
greatly displease all who have <lb />
any business dealings here. The <lb />
i should remain as it is <lb />
Racket Store and <lb />
will engage in the gen- <lb />
Oil <lb />
-OUR IMMENSE STOCK OF <lb />
SPRING GOODS <lb />
f boat and train. Received <lb />
this <lb />
I lot Suiting, suitable for <lb />
wear. lot All-Wool Serges; per cent, less <lb />
than last season. lot Silk and Wool <lb />
cents. lot Hamburgs, Insertions, <lb />
lot Serpentine Crepes, all shades. <lb />
Our Spring line of <lb />
Fine Shoes are <lb />
the prettiest ever shown. <lb />
All width and toes <lb />
known trade, <lb />
F. Shoes, <lb />
or Men. Every pair is <lb />
warranted. <lb />
ill <lb />
f. <lb />
BUILD UP HOME <lb />
it <lb />
tty <lb />
Home Enterprise. <lb />
and Clothing business. <lb />
We are receiving <lb />
AGAIN IN <lb />
Fire Destroys Worth <lb />
cf Work of <lb />
Incendiaries. <lb />
to <lb />
Kinston, N. O, Mar. 5th. <lb />
About one o'clock this morning <lb />
fire was discovered in J. B. Cam <lb />
m in it's livery and also be <lb />
tween the stores of Star Hicks <lb />
and C- F. Dunn, both colored, <lb />
about fifty yards distant- It was <lb />
evidently the work of a fire-fiend, j <lb />
as kerosene had been thrown on <lb />
buildings and the night <lb />
heard some one strike a <lb />
match just before the flames were <lb />
discovered. The fire spread to <lb />
other buildings and in a min- <lb />
the whole west side of Queen <lb />
street, in the section of the town <lb />
as were in <lb />
flames. By heroic efforts J. B. <lb />
brick store just north <lb />
of the burning block, and Dr. J. <lb />
A. Pollock's just south <lb />
of it, were saved. <lb />
The heaviest losers by fire <lb />
are G-E. J- B. <lb />
L. J- O. Bee- <lb />
ton, Dr. J. A- Pollock, R. 0- Hay, <lb />
W- F. Moore, Mrs. Matilda Cum- <lb />
Dawson Bros-, C. F. <lb />
Star Hicks and Adam Singleton, <lb />
the last three being colored. <lb />
Eight horses were burned in J. <lb />
B- stables. <lb />
The total loss amounts to about <lb />
which there is not <lb />
more than or in- <lb />
A light shower of rain in the <lb />
early part of the night saved the <lb />
town from a much heavier loss. <lb />
Some of the parties out <lb />
this time were losers by the fire <lb />
of last Thursday and had just <lb />
moved what goods they had saved <lb />
into other stores. <lb />
of in N. c, <lb />
Hue <lb />
roots <lb />
Their brands are <lb />
OF <lb />
a a Nickel, hand inane <lb />
Havana until. <lb />
a very Hue. <lb />
Riled, band made. <lb />
Named in honor of Col. buck <lb />
well,<lb />
u line live cent Wrapper <lb />
j made. II filled, u sure win- <lb />
Naomi In honor of S. <lb />
i cf Durban, To- <lb />
. Co. <lb />
SADIE <lb />
I Ten c <lb />
THE CLOTHIER. <lb />
Next to Tyson Rawls, Bankers. <lb />
Ii II <lb />
to be found in Greenville. Comprising <lb />
goods at reasonable prices. <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions. Shoes, Hats and Caps, <lb />
Furnishing Goods, Crockery, Wood <lb />
and and <lb />
Agricultural Implements. A full line of <lb />
Heavy Groceries, Sugar, Molasses, Meat, <lb />
Flour a specialty. The largest and most com- <lb />
be found in Pitt county. Ladies, men, children, <lb />
Everybody invited to <lb />
all and see us. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
HICKS, TAFT k CO. <lb />
,. farmers, mechanics and laboring people of any <lb />
I and every profession come to see us and get <lb />
T. prices fixed in your minds before you <lb />
OLD CHINKS <lb />
live fur line. I smoke for <lb />
Hie <lb />
NORTH <lb />
I Three tor S cents, u that i a c; to <lb />
Was pi. uses. j try to buy elsewhere. Black and Spring Oats <lb />
stick to home a,. us or-1 on hand and to arrive.<lb />
CHEROOT CO. J B CHERRY CO. <lb />
Durham, n.<lb />
Vs I have decided to change my business I am now offering my stock of- <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions, Hats, Caps, Shoes, <lb />
Furnishing Goods <lb />
------in fact my entire stock of Merchandise<lb />
This does not mean per cent, added to bill, but means strictly AT COST FOR CASH. <lb />
I have new Spring Goods bought at the lowest prices. Here are some of the low figures <lb />
I am offering Yard-wide Homespun to Checked Homespun 1-2 to 3-4, Fruit yard- <lb />
wide Bleaching 1-2, Barker's Bleaching 7-8, Best Calicoes to 1-2, Simpson Calico <lb />
Mrs. J. n. Wade <lb />
w. . <lb />
A Helpless Invalid <lb />
Kidney and Liver Trouble <lb />
end Nervous Debility <lb />
Years of Suffering Ended by <lb />
Taking Hood's. <lb />
Hood Co., Lowed, <lb />
affects of Hood's In my ease <lb />
bars bean truly marvelous. It tar surpasses <lb />
other I bars taken. For <lb />
years was troubled with torpid liver, kidney <lb />
trouble and nervous debility, and was <lb />
A Helpless Invalid. <lb />
I been taking for <lb />
and I feel that I am cured. I feel better <lb />
now <lb />
I have a reliable line of Shoes and will sell all odd numbers even below cost. <lb />
Notions. Notions. <lb />
one knows these arc sold at cost that reduction is great. <lb />
i a la i <lb />
sold at cents per dozen you can now get at 1-2 <lb />
to Novelties in Cotton Goods very cheap, goods <lb />
Buttons that <lb />
-2 to those selling at cents are now 1-2 <lb />
formerly selling at 1-2, now <lb />
God <lb />
. <lb />
mended It to all my neighbors and Of <lb />
them are Hood's<lb />
Mrs. E. Stonewall. Teen. <lb />
Meed's LEm <lb />
prices are quoted that reading people may know I mean what say. I desire to <lb />
close out the entire stock by June and will give you bargains in order do wait <lb />
but come while you can get a good assortment. I thank friends for their liberal pat- <lb />
in past years, and am glad to now offer them goods at first cost in these hard times <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
LET <lb />
Ii<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017735_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
This <lb />
Hit You <lb />
The management of the <lb />
Equitable Life Assurance <lb />
Society in the Department of <lb />
the Carolinas, wishes to <lb />
cure a few Special Resident <lb />
Agents. Those who are fitted <lb />
for this work will find this <lb />
A Rare Opportunity <lb />
I It however, and those I <lb />
who succeed best in it possess <lb />
J character, mature judgment, <lb />
tact, perseverance, and the j <lb />
I respect of their community. <lb />
I Think this matter over care- j <lb />
fully. There's an unusual <lb />
j opening for somebody. If it j <lb />
fits you, it will pay you. Fur- <lb />
I information on request. <lb />
W. J. Manager, I <lb />
Rock Hill, S. C. <lb />
In <lb />
Poor <lb />
Health <lb />
means so much more than <lb />
you and <lb />
fatal diseases result from <lb />
trifling ailments neglected. <lb />
Don't play with Nature's <lb />
greatest <lb />
THE GREENVILLE <lb />
IRON <lb />
JAMES BROWN, Pro <lb />
Manufacturer of <lb />
plow, Stove and Brass <lb />
castings, andirons, <lb />
And in <lb />
Pumps, Pipe. Valves, Fit Maps <lb />
fee. <lb />
i ; i attention given iv- <lb />
oil. I <lb />
tor sale at lowest price.<lb />
If you art <lb />
out of sorts, weak <lb />
and generally ex- <lb />
nervous, <lb />
have no appetite <lb />
and can't <lb />
begin at once <lb />
the most J <lb />
strengthening <lb />
is <lb />
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb />
A few bot- <lb />
comes from the <lb />
very first <lb />
stain your J <lb />
teeth, and it's <lb />
pleasant to take. <lb />
it Cures <lb />
Dyspepsia. Kidney and Liver <lb />
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb />
Constipation, Bad Blood <lb />
Malaria, Nervous ailments <lb />
Women's complaints. <lb />
Get only the has crossed red <lb />
lines on the wrapper. All others are sub- <lb />
On of two stamps we <lb />
will send set of Ten Beautiful World's <lb />
Fair Views and <lb />
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MD. <lb />
Its Owner Also Possessed the Only <lb />
Other Like It. <lb />
WILMINGTON WE I. R <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
FLORENCE ROAD. <lb />
O Schedule. <lb />
Administrators Notice. <lb />
Having M administrator of <lb />
the estate of R. B. Morgan, deceased, <lb />
notice is hereby given to all persons <lb />
having against said to <lb />
sent them me properly authenticated, <lb />
ea or before the day of <lb />
or this notice will lie plead in bar of <lb />
their recovery. Parties indebted to tin <lb />
estate are requested to make prompt <lb />
payment. <lb />
This Feb. . <lb />
F. M. HODGES <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having qualified before the So <lb />
Court Clerk of county as <lb />
Administrator of the estate of J. L. <lb />
W. Nobles, deceased, notice i- hereby <lb />
given to all person indebted to the es- <lb />
to make payment to the <lb />
and all persons <lb />
claims against .-aid mu-t <lb />
the tor payment on of before the <lb />
7th of January or this notice will <lb />
be in bar recovery. <lb />
W. Ii. <lb />
of J. L. W. <lb />
This day<lb />
M. M <lb />
-l ii <lb />
Ar. <lb />
Rocky<lb />
Ar. <lb />
Ar H in <lb />
M. M<lb />
v e s<lb />
M. <lb />
Floret<lb />
Ar <lb />
M. <lb />
Ar<lb />
M. M,<lb />
Ar Rocky <lb />
Ar <lb />
Rocky <lb />
Ar <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having <lb />
lied e the Superior o <lb />
as administrator of William <lb />
Warren Am d, no ice is hi given to <lb />
all s indebted to of the <lb />
mi d i e i it to make immediate y <lb />
to tin all per <lb />
its I i lain s ; is <lb />
nil at present mum th <lb />
day Deer or <lb />
will he in bar of recovery. <lb />
W. R <lb />
of v Woven, <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having inly <lb />
as Administrator de mm of <lb />
A. Atkinson d notice i.- b <lb />
by given all is the <lb />
of tit e lent d <lb />
ate to the undesigned and <lb />
nil persons having claims against the <lb />
said estate must present the a me before <lb />
January this notice will be <lb />
in of <lb />
This 1885. <lb />
F. II. -W RICHARD. <lb />
de non of A die. <lb />
This I Not the Story or But of <lb />
a Young- Woman Who Had Forty- <lb />
Seven Corn and Two <lb />
Two or three weeks a stranger <lb />
put up at a little hotel at Milton, Pa., <lb />
Hid out a sign informing the <lb />
inhabitants of the place that he was <lb />
I DR. ANTON<lb />
and that his mission was the pain- <lb />
less removal of corns, and <lb />
other abnormal annoying things <lb />
from the feet of persons who were <lb />
afflicted with them. If Dr. Anton <lb />
had not stopped at Milton <lb />
that lively village might always have <lb />
remained in ignorance of the fact <lb />
that there walked its <lb />
body but the owner of knows <lb />
how much pair of <lb />
feet that undoubtedly were world <lb />
beaters in the way of corns, writes a <lb />
correspondent of the New York <lb />
belonged to the daughter of <lb />
the leading of Milton. She <lb />
was the first patient that Dr. Col- <lb />
had. When she took off her <lb />
right shoe and stocking the doctor <lb />
was amazed. It took him a long <lb />
time to get through with it, for he <lb />
had to remove twenty-five corns and <lb />
a bunion from the foot. <lb />
is most Dr. <lb />
was moved to say. <lb />
replied the patient, who <lb />
evidently had read <lb />
is only one other foot like that any- <lb />
left <lb />
From the left foot Dr. <lb />
separated twenty-two corns and a <lb />
bunion. <lb />
your bill to said <lb />
the patient, as she tripped away. <lb />
Dr. sent his bill to father, <lb />
and it was through that bill that the <lb />
fact became known that Milton had <lb />
the champion corn raiser. The bill <lb />
was for two hundred and thirty-five <lb />
corns and two <lb />
dollars per corn, the <lb />
bunions seeming to have been over- <lb />
looked. When the leading citizen, <lb />
father of the girl with the amazing <lb />
feet, read the bill he said something <lb />
like <lb />
Jackson, <lb />
Ann Why don't you go into the <lb />
business for the market <lb />
This is more than- I got for the hull <lb />
ding crop this farm last <lb />
And he refused to pay the <lb />
Then Dr. sued him for the <lb />
amount and then the revelation was <lb />
made that Milton held the record on <lb />
corns. The lawsuit was heard be- <lb />
fore Justice of the Peace Osborne. <lb />
There were no precedents to go <lb />
by, as the market price of corns had <lb />
never before been made a question <lb />
of legal adjudication, but, having a <lb />
few corns himself, and calculating <lb />
what their absence would be worth <lb />
to him, the justice assessed the <lb />
value of the leading citizen's <lb />
feelings owing to the removal <lb />
of her groups of corns and bunions <lb />
accordingly, and gave Dr. <lb />
judgment for twenty-four dollars <lb />
and fifty cents, or just four shillings <lb />
a corn and a bunion. The doctor <lb />
seemed satisfied and the bill was <lb />
paid. <lb />
THE ENGLISH LIKE THEM. <lb />
THE EXPERIMENT STATICS <lb />
Notice of Dissolution. <lb />
The m or J. A. Ricks A Co . trading <lb />
as l h Furniture Racket Store, was <lb />
this day by n consent. J. <lb />
A. Kicks purchasing the interest of C . <lb />
I. The will be con- <lb />
by J. A. to whom all per- <lb />
sons Indented to the will make <lb />
A. KICKS. <lb />
C T. <lb />
This Sand of Jany <lb />
Train on Scotland Heck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. m. Halifax . <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland Meek at p <lb />
Greenville 6.37 p. in., Kinston <lb />
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston i <lb />
a. m. Greenville . m. <lb />
Halifax at a. m., Weldon . <lb />
., daily except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on V Bram-h leave <lb />
Washington 7.00 a, m., arrives <lb />
8.40 p. m. Tarboro <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m. 6.10 <lb />
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via Alle- <lb />
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Son- <lb />
CO p. m. P. <lb />
arrive Plymouth P. M., 5.20 p. m. <lb />
Mining leaves Plymouth daily <lb />
5.30 a. m., Sunday 0.30 a m. <lb />
arrive Tarboro 10.25 a. and <lb />
a m. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday. a- <lb />
m. a m. R- <lb />
leaves Smithfield, S a. <lb />
a- Goldsboro. a. in. <lb />
Trains on Nashville Branch leaves <lb />
Mount at 4.30 p. m., arrive <lb />
Nashville S p. m-. Spring Hope SO. <lb />
p. m. Returning leaves Spring Hope <lb />
a. m Nashville 8.85 a. arrives <lb />
at Mount m., daily except <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence R <lb />
R. eaves 6.50 p. arrive Dun <lb />
bar 8.00 p. m. Returning leave Dun <lb />
bar a. arrive Latta 8.00 a. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War- <lb />
for Clinton daily, except Sunday <lb />
at II a. in. Returning ton <lb />
at at Warsaw with <lb />
main line trains. <lb />
No. makes close connect ion <lb />
at Weldon for all points North daily, all <lb />
via Richmond, and daily exec, l <lb />
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line <lb />
also at Mount with Norfolk . <lb />
railroad for Norfolk daily d <lb />
all points North via Norfolk, daily ex <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
v JOHN DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
Manager. <lb />
f ,, Mai-ager. <lb />
NOTICE. <lb />
North Carolina, Superior Court <lb />
Mai tin Co. before <lb />
Dennis and Joseph Early <lb />
vs. <lb />
Z. P. Vincent and Lacy F. Vine a. <lb />
The defendants will take notice that <lb />
the plaintiffs have an a lion <lb />
again-t in this court for the <lb />
pose of selling for a division that tract <lb />
of land in this county of which said <lb />
aid defendants are tenants in <lb />
common, known as die Williams <lb />
and the said defendants are re- <lb />
quired to appear i-t my office in <lb />
on the 9th day of March, <lb />
and answer or demur to tie complaint <lb />
in said ion. Tin i will <lb />
take notice that if to ear <lb />
and answer or o d complaint <lb />
the relief demanded by -ad <lb />
will I anted. <lb />
W my official hand and <lb />
at office in X. C-. this 28th <lb />
of January, <lb />
X. S. PEEL, <lb />
Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
The Charlotte <lb />
North <lb />
FORE MOST X E W SP A PICK <lb />
DAILY <lb />
Our Western Stories Please the Brit- <lb />
People Immensely. <lb />
Stories of our frontier seem <lb />
have a peculiar fascination for the <lb />
English. Following Bret Harte's <lb />
success, a recent book, entitled, <lb />
and Other <lb />
by Frank Harris, has attracted the <lb />
favorable comment of many of the <lb />
English critics. One of them picks <lb />
out the following <lb />
paragraph to discourse <lb />
many civilized and constitutionally <lb />
cowardly he begins, am <lb />
very fond of blood. Violence at a <lb />
reasonable distance fascinates me, <lb />
and I am recklessly indifferent to <lb />
human life. If our theaters were <lb />
given up to gladiatorial combats I <lb />
should like to be a dramatic critic. <lb />
When, therefore, I read of scenes in <lb />
the of the far of men <lb />
potting one another out of their <lb />
pockets, throwing glasses <lb />
in one another's faces and that sort <lb />
of thing, feel my bosom <lb />
spoke <lb />
Johnson, you sent for me, and I've <lb />
The sheriff answered, firm- <lb />
Their hands went up. <lb />
and crack crack crack in quick <lb />
succession, three or four or live re- <lb />
don't know how many. At <lb />
the first the sheriff fell for- <lb />
ward on his Williams started <lb />
to run along the sidewalk; the <lb />
groups of men at through <lb />
whom he must pass, closed together; <lb />
then came another report, and at <lb />
the same moment he stopped, turned <lb />
slowly half round and sank down in <lb />
a heap like an empty sack. <lb />
good shot Took him in the <lb />
back of the head. Jarvis kin <lb />
that was an interest- <lb />
Post. <lb />
AT RALEIGH. <lb />
for ; <lb />
Cotton Seed Feed, Ox Fly. <lb />
and <lb />
February 1805. <lb />
AND <lb />
WEEKLY. <lb />
Independent and fearless ; Mutt and <lb />
more attractive than ever, it will In- an <lb />
Invaluable visitor to the the <lb />
the or the work <lb />
HIE DAILY OBSERVER. <lb />
All of the news of the Com- <lb />
Dally from the State <lb />
and National Capitols. a <lb />
THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. <lb />
A perfect family journal. All the <lb />
news of the week. The <lb />
the Legislature a special. Fen- <lb />
fire. tin Ob- <lb />
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. <lb />
Send for sample copies Address <lb />
THE OBSERVER, <lb />
c. <lb />
It Hay So at Much for <lb />
Mr. Fred Miller, of Irving, III., writes <lb />
chat he had a Severe Kidney <lb />
for many years, with pains in <lb />
his back and that his bladder was <lb />
lie tried many so called <lb />
Kidney cures but without any good <lb />
result. About a ye r ago he began use <lb />
of Electric Bitters found relief at <lb />
once. Bitters is especially <lb />
adapted to cure of all ant Liver <lb />
troubles and often given almost instant <lb />
relief. One trial will prove our state- <lb />
Price only for large bottle, <lb />
At John L. Drug Store, <lb />
Hen era, <lb />
The render of this paper will <lb />
ed to learn that there Is at least one <lb />
dreaded disease that has been <lb />
able lo ears in all its stages, and that is <lb />
Catarrh, Hall's Cure Is the <lb />
only positive cure known to the medical <lb />
fraternity. Catarrh being a <lb />
disease, requires a constitutional <lb />
Hall's Catarrh Cure is <lb />
taken internally, acting directly on the <lb />
blood arid mucous, surfaces of the sys- <lb />
thereby the foundation <lb />
of the disease, and giving <lb />
strength by building up the <lb />
lion assisting nature in doing Its <lb />
work. The proprietors have so much <lb />
in its curative powers, that they <lb />
offer One Hundred Dollars for any else <lb />
that it fails to cure. Send tor list of <lb />
F. J. ft CO. <lb />
Sold <lb />
The Experiment Station Bulletins. <lb />
The offer is made to send <lb />
the bulletins of the station to nil in the <lb />
state who really desire to receive them. <lb />
They are specially prepared to be <lb />
as far as possible to <lb />
farmer. Thousands of Tamers <lb />
have already taken of this <lb />
offer. Unless really it to be <lb />
please do not apply them <lb />
as we have none to throw away. If you <lb />
desire to read them, write or. postal <lb />
card to U. I. Rattle, Director. <lb />
Raleigh. X. C. <lb />
Fertilizer for 1805. <lb />
has already been issued by <lb />
the experiment station till which <lb />
give in detail the standing of all fer- <lb />
brands on sale in North Carolina <lb />
in as determined by analyses of <lb />
samples taken by official inspectors. <lb />
This bulletin is issued in advance of the <lb />
new analyses which are issued every <lb />
two weeks during the season of <lb />
The of these bi-weekly analyses <lb />
will appear on Feb. A special <lb />
application is needed for this series. <lb />
Apply to Dr. H. B. Battle. Director. <lb />
Raleigh, X. C. <lb />
The valuations of the unmixed in- <lb />
at the seaboard have been <lb />
Sized at cents for <lb />
phosphoric acid, cents per <lb />
for ammonia, and cents per <lb />
pound for potash. The phosphoric acid <lb />
is rated one-half cent lower and <lb />
ammonia one cent per pound lower <lb />
than for past seasons. The reprint- <lb />
e i analyses of are calculated on <lb />
the basis of valuations. <lb />
Hog; <lb />
A correspondent you <lb />
jive me anything that will prevent hug <lb />
or that we could use as a cure <lb />
numbers of hogs ore dying here <lb />
with it daily. Please tell me if there is <lb />
any remedy or a The <lb />
answer to this in substance <lb />
There are preventive measures which <lb />
may be used and which may ward off <lb />
the disease in a large number of cases. <lb />
Indeed, some breeders claim to lie able <lb />
to cure cholera if they can get to the <lb />
animals before the appetite is gone, but <lb />
not after food is refused. This remedy <lb />
or preventive is carbolic acid. How little <lb />
will or how much the patient <lb />
can bear I am not informed, but about <lb />
drops would be a dose for an adult <lb />
and less for younger swine. <lb />
The better way to feed and <lb />
medicine with food would be to <lb />
pare all food immediately before feed- <lb />
stir as much medicine as needed <lb />
for the pigs being fed. Then clean up <lb />
and disinfect afterward. Clean all <lb />
foul places to which pigs have access. <lb />
Keep sleeping places warm and dry. <lb />
Try to prevent buzzards from visiting <lb />
pig runs and feeding places. Bury the <lb />
dead, or better cremate dead <lb />
disinfect with carbolic or so- <lb />
or with a cheap solution made <lb />
by suspending a coarse bag containing <lb />
pounds of <lb />
in a barrel of soft water. After a little <lb />
time the solution can be used as wanted <lb />
more water added until the cop- <lb />
is gone from the bag. <lb />
The health of the pig may be pro- <lb />
by keeping a mixture, made as <lb />
follows, where the pigs can get i. at <lb />
peck hard wood pint <lb />
salt. peck charcoal. This recipe might <lb />
lie extended by adding lb. <lb />
lb. black antimony and I lbs. <lb />
of iron, pulverized. <lb />
dependence should be placed <lb />
on prompt destruction of dead <lb />
and proper disinfection immediately <lb />
afterward, accompanied by the <lb />
of carbolic acid with this mix- <lb />
kept where pigs can eat it if they <lb />
are inclined to do E. Emery, <lb />
Agriculturist, N. C. Experiment Sta- <lb />
The or Heel Fly. <lb />
One of the most destructive pests of <lb />
domestic animals is the ox-warble or <lb />
botfly, This para- <lb />
site, while probably not very painful to <lb />
the animal infested, is expensive to the <lb />
owner of the animal since hides or <lb />
skins showing warble holes are docked <lb />
one-third of their value. The presence <lb />
of the maggots further decreases the <lb />
amount and quality of the animal's <lb />
flesh so that on the for a two <lb />
year-old steer, the loss is apt to be <lb />
above or <lb />
The fly which causes this damage is <lb />
about the size of and very much re- <lb />
a honey bee. It deposits its <lb />
eggs in spring, during the period of <lb />
shedding of hair, on the legs, tail and <lb />
belly of cattle, preferably By <lb />
licking these parts the eggs are taken <lb />
into the animal's gullet where the mag- <lb />
got hatches and clings to the walls. It <lb />
soon bores into the tissues and <lb />
the succeeding fall or <lb />
its way to the animal's <lb />
back where it forms a tumor just be- <lb />
neath the skin. Here it rests for some <lb />
time and completes its growth as a <lb />
maggot. tumor, if closely ex- <lb />
will show a small pore through <lb />
which the maggot obtains air. <lb />
When full grown the maggot <lb />
enlarges this pore and through <lb />
it comes out and drops to the ground <lb />
into which it enters and remains <lb />
as a for about six weeks. It <lb />
then comes forth as a perfect fly to lay <lb />
it s eggs as before. <lb />
the period of hair <lb />
shedding, horned cattle should have <lb />
the tail, belly and the <lb />
parts just above the two <lb />
or three times a with a mixture <lb />
of kerosene or fish oil and powdered <lb />
In and February <lb />
the hacks of cattle be carefully <lb />
examined for the which are. <lb />
readily seen or felt just beneath the <lb />
j skin and the enclosed maggot squeezed <lb />
j out and killed. A little crude carbolic <lb />
I acid or mercurial ointment should be <lb />
I then rubbed on the spot. If the mag-, <lb />
got can not be squeezed out the oil or <lb />
ointment should be well rubbed in so <lb />
as to close up the breaking pore in the <lb />
tumor thus smothering the maggot. <lb />
The warble fly is not a great <lb />
and if all the maggots infesting cattle <lb />
. on farm are killed in January or <lb />
February that farm will be nearly or <lb />
quite free from the parasite for some <lb />
years unless introduced with new stock. <lb />
Killing the maggots in the tumors is <lb />
the easiest and surest way of getting rid <lb />
of this expensive intruder. Gerald <lb />
C. Experiment Station. <lb />
I How Par Ton Bra <lb />
lated for and How Thar <lb />
Can Ra Farmer. <lb />
It may be of interest to some to know <lb />
ton values are using <lb />
the seaboard valuations for the <lb />
ed constituents of a fertilizer. The <lb />
amount or percentage of either of these <lb />
constituents present in the fertilizers is <lb />
given by the analysis This represents <lb />
parts per The percentage is ac- <lb />
multiplied by the valuation <lb />
per pound to get value per pounds. <lb />
This is now multiplied by to deter- <lb />
mine the value per ton <lb />
This is done for all three constituents, <lb />
and the three amounts are added to- <lb />
to at the value per ton. <lb />
The following s an <lb />
or lbs per Fer Per ton <lb />
Available Acid at.<lb />
Ammonia at per M <lb />
MB Pol ash per 8.03 <lb />
Total value. WM <lb />
The per ton as here given rep- <lb />
resents the market price per ton at the <lb />
of the <lb />
For interior railroad freights to <lb />
those points must be added. <lb />
The values per ton represent unmixed <lb />
ingredients. They show what would be <lb />
the approximate cost of the Ingredients <lb />
to a farmer in case he bought them <lb />
himself for mixing. The cost is, as <lb />
stated, on the basis of cash in small lots <lb />
than five in Lags, at the sea- <lb />
board. By a comparison of these values <lb />
as given by the Experiment Station, a <lb />
farmer can see how much he Is being <lb />
charged over and above the actual cost <lb />
J of the raw materials. The <lb />
baa to allow Jot <lb />
inn the i <lb />
handling, fixed charges, agent's coin- i <lb />
missions, profits, etc., together with <lb />
freight to the interior point. The cos. <lb />
of mixing, sacking and branding the <lb />
bags will not vary greatly from 82.00 <lb />
per ton. <lb />
Considering all items, the price of a , <lb />
mixed fertilizer at an in- <lb />
town, ought not to be more than . <lb />
to per cent, greater than the j <lb />
relative seaboard value per ton of in- I <lb />
as given in the tables found <lb />
y analysis, with, of course, the freight <lb />
from the seaboard to the interior p lint <lb />
B, Battle. Experiment , <lb />
Station. <lb />
Cotton Seed <lb />
A correspondent X. <lb />
N. Will you kindly write me , <lb />
your opinion in to the value of <lb />
seed as prepared at the <lb />
mills as an economical food compare <lb />
with other foods raised on the <lb />
Do you think it will do to feed it to <lb />
horses and mules <lb />
Cotton seed meal is one of the <lb />
valuable and cheapest foods for stock <lb />
we have on the market. Its now <lb />
fed in small quantities to the Sta- <lb />
mules relished <lb />
by them. <lb />
Cotton see hulls are a course I con- <lb />
little digestible matter They <lb />
arc. however, an excellent medium for <lb />
dividing fine meal in the animal <lb />
stomach. note paces to <lb />
of which bears directly on <lb />
your question. <lb />
See also articles to V in Bulletin <lb />
The digestibility of cotton seed <lb />
hulls as laid down in the latter has <lb />
been reduced by later work. <lb />
seed of the mills corresponds <lb />
nearly to rations numbered and <lb />
page of Bulletin <lb />
lbs. hulls to lb. <lb />
use for stock depends on price <lb />
of straw and its pi With <lb />
straw or corn stalks on hand no one <lb />
can afford to waste either to bay hulls <lb />
ready mixed with meal. It will pay <lb />
farmers as well to follow <lb />
in saving stalks and thus mix their own <lb />
feed as cotton pays the oil <lb />
mill men. <lb />
Our cotton seed feed rations contained <lb />
the following amounts of digestible <lb />
nutrients per ton of <lb />
. t C . i. .- <lb />
g i <lb />
is<lb />
E E<lb />
iii <lb />
o so <lb />
Sill <lb />
-3 -3 <lb />
a -z <lb />
e i <lb />
c o o o c <lb />
II<lb />
c o i <lb />
j a. a p <lb />
t. a u <lb />
S J I <lb />
t-5 <lb />
The clover hay and corn <lb />
meal are added to compare with these <lb />
rations. <lb />
The heat equivalent is obtained by <lb />
adding to the sum of the <lb />
and protein 2.27 times the E. <lb />
Agriculturist, N. C. Experiment <lb />
Station. <lb />
and <lb />
The Station will be glad to extend its <lb />
usefulness by answering 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 N. C. <lb />
Experiment Station, Raleigh, X. <lb />
C Replies will be written as early as <lb />
possible by the member of the Station <lb />
staff most competent to do so. and when, <lb />
of general interest, will also <lb />
pear in these columns. The Station <lb />
desires in this way to enlarge its sphere <lb />
of usefulness and render immediate as- <lb />
to practical farmers. <lb />
Influence of the Moon. <lb />
The people here in my country are governed <lb />
by the moon in nearly all they lo. They <lb />
even wilt not make kraut, nor the old women <lb />
will not make the sign Is right. <lb />
Hears must be slaughtered or colts weaned ac- <lb />
cording to the moon. Please give any <lb />
or cite me to literature upon the above <lb />
c H. I. Farmers, N. C <lb />
by H. B. Battle, Director N. C. <lb />
Experiment <lb />
The belief that the moon has some <lb />
upon the growth of crops and <lb />
various other deeds of men is wide- <lb />
spread in certain regions. There can <lb />
be no reasonable claim that the moon <lb />
does really influence any thing upon <lb />
the earth in this way, and such <lb />
doubtless have descended from <lb />
our ancestors, who thought very much <lb />
more of natural objects and their <lb />
effect upon their actions than we in <lb />
this day. one reason why <lb />
this idea obtained credence is that <lb />
formerly those who considered such to <lb />
be the case were very observant and <lb />
very careful in their work, and hence <lb />
necessarily were more such <lb />
being the case they believed more than <lb />
before as to the cause of their success <lb />
and telling others of it caused them <lb />
also to become firm believers. <lb />
To give an illustration of this belief, <lb />
one part of the country may think that <lb />
a certain phase of the moon indicates <lb />
dry weather, whereas in other pa of <lb />
the country, others may believe that it <lb />
portends wet weather, or these <lb />
may be entertained by different parties <lb />
in the same region. Of course it is <lb />
possible for these various results to <lb />
cur at the same place and at the same <lb />
time. <lb />
Feeding; Cotton-Seed <lb />
A short time ago I received from the cotton <lb />
oil company a circular showing the protein <lb />
and fat constituents fifty American <lb />
materials with their rank in value. <lb />
I If their report la correct we can V <lb />
are not feeding the proper feeds to make <lb />
eight. I am feeding twenty-two <lb />
1.000 pounds weight this winter. Here is what <lb />
they are being fed. I would be pleased to have <lb />
your opinion on It. The first two weeks I had <lb />
ground together corn and wheat, one bushel <lb />
of each, and now take two bushels corn and <lb />
one bushel wheat them two and a half <lb />
bushels of this on top of eight s smooth <lb />
wheat chaff in the morning, then all the cut <lb />
corn fodder they will eat. At noon <lb />
two and a half bushels mixture with chuff <lb />
and in the evening two and a half bushels mix- <lb />
as before, with chaff followed by as much <lb />
out corn fodder as they will eat- Access to <lb />
water twice a day. All are and <lb />
loose. I herewith enclose the small circular <lb />
rank of feeding values. Would also like <lb />
to have your opinion of the cotton seed meal <lb />
and hull business. If it as good as they say. <lb />
It would pay to use It- Corn is worth here <lb />
cents per bushel; wheat. cents; oil meal <lb />
per ton; gluten meal per cotton <lb />
seed meal about and cotton seed hulls <lb />
If you have the time and will give me your <lb />
opinion on how I can make the most on <lb />
these steer I certainly will be greatly obliged. <lb />
I. A. E. York Pa. <lb />
by F. K. Emery, Agriculturist <lb />
N. C. Experiment <lb />
I find there is some <lb />
in the circular. For instance, the <lb />
figures given for cotton seed meal and <lb />
hulls are the extreme highest ones <lb />
found in a large number of analyses. <lb />
They represent composition and not <lb />
digestibility--two very different con- <lb />
Please consult table I pp <lb />
Bulletin North Carolina Ex- <lb />
Station on this question. <lb />
You can not go far wrong feeding a <lb />
good grain with coarse by-pro- <lb />
ducts made on the farm. Your corn <lb />
fodder believe it has the ears <lb />
husked out of It and to <lb />
distinguish it from that thick <lb />
and not allowed to produce Is bet- <lb />
than cotton seed hulls. Your <lb />
wheat chaff also worth more than <lb />
the hulls. Make your own comparisons <lb />
to price. <lb />
Now for your ration. It is too wide <lb />
in the rat of protein to carbohydrates. <lb />
I would not advise you to change your <lb />
proportion, of two corn to one of <lb />
Wheat but to feed only pounds of <lb />
it per day mixed with pounds of <lb />
cotton seed no-U- VA . <lb />
aw give stover the <lb />
same, all the steers will eat twice <lb />
I have assumed that this chaff <lb />
weighs pounds per bushel, <lb />
pounds daily and that the steers <lb />
would eat pounds of stover daily. <lb />
This ration would be about the stand- <lb />
ard for pounds live It <lb />
requires lbs. less of corn and wheat <lb />
mixture per day; or putting the <lb />
pounds of cotton seed meal in place of <lb />
of the mixture saves IDS pounds per <lb />
day and the steers are being fed a fat- <lb />
ration. Even if does not <lb />
seem to be increasing their weight so <lb />
fast, it to make flesh at a cheaper <lb />
rate per pound, hence a more <lb />
ration. <lb />
The change from mixture of corn and <lb />
wheat to to of corn to of wheat <lb />
only changes the protein 0.8 pound, <lb />
the 0.6 pound and fat <lb />
0.76 per day in the whole <lb />
for steers. It is. however, a <lb />
change in the right direction from <lb />
to fattening d. Two of corn <lb />
to one of wheat for and third <lb />
aim to for second would be a <lb />
good formula with the other articles as <lb />
fed to above steers. <lb />
T for <lb />
Please v e what think the best <lb />
thin lo lop- red in the of <lb />
stable Vi-ii rest inn eon <lb />
i u ii what is be-t to <lb />
sow in . . ponds tor earn to reed <lb />
noon. ii i c . P., <lb />
r. S . . <lb />
d by ii. Director, <lb />
A good top- Ires l- for clover would <lb />
be d <lb />
pounds to the acre. Acid <lb />
contains which <lb />
is of material benefit to be- <lb />
Ides the acid con- <lb />
in is a <lb />
addition also. Our <lb />
the following to <lb />
be planted around ponds for carp <lb />
for ponds are the fol- <lb />
lowing<lb />
While <lb />
, Yellow Pond <lb />
Pickerel v., l . c <lb />
Seeds of the above can probably lie <lb />
from any of the large seeds- <lb />
men. AH the above am native to this <lb />
state, very prolific and hardy rapid <lb />
growers and favorite food for <lb />
wherever they <lb />
a Silo. <lb />
to silo out of brick. I would <lb />
like to know if It would do built of bricks. <lb />
it bull and would common do <lb />
lo build it with or would it <lb />
The place I want to build it on is ground, <lb />
against burn. How do you put the- feed in <lb />
and do you salt it R. n. K. Durham. C. <lb />
by F. E. Emery. N. <lb />
c. Experiment <lb />
I have seen a brick silo in the ground <lb />
like a well which kept the silage Very <lb />
well. The trouble with a below ground <lb />
silo is the cost of excavating, while a <lb />
brick wall above ground strong enough <lb />
to resist the pressure at filling, would <lb />
probably cost too much. Your <lb />
is to the plans illustrated in <lb />
of this Station. The <lb />
round form is the best. A steel silo <lb />
can now lie purchased which would last <lb />
a life time. <lb />
is cat to or even or <lb />
inches long and run up into the silo on <lb />
a carrier attached to the cutting ma- <lb />
chine. If the ground is high and you <lb />
can drive on the uphill side it will be <lb />
best to do that; set the machine so the <lb />
silage will fall into the silo and dis- <lb />
with the carrier. No salt is used. <lb />
Simply keep the top leveled and tread <lb />
the sides and soft places in tilling so it <lb />
will settle even. <lb />
Oat for Feed. <lb />
Please let me know which would he the bet- <lb />
way to rut oats for feed to cut in a <lb />
state while straw Is or wail until <lb />
ripe. want them to feed us and am <lb />
the impression lo cur them would <lb />
lie R, Granite Hill. N. <lb />
by F. E. Emery. <lb />
N. O. Station. <lb />
Oats cut while yet early in the milk <lb />
stage will be best for hay. as the val- <lb />
food compounds will then be <lb />
largely distributed in the leaves and <lb />
stems. If left later the movement of <lb />
these compounds to the grain carries <lb />
much from those parts which remain <lb />
comparatively valueless straw, <lb />
the nourishment of the crop is largely <lb />
in the kernels. <lb />
DO YOU RIDE A VICTOR <lb />
The grandest outdoor sport i i cycling; the best bicycle is a Victor, <lb />
made in the largest and finest bicycle plant in the world. <lb />
BOSTON. <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
Makers of Victor Bicycles and Athletic Goods. <lb />
NEW YORK. <lb />
DETROIT. DENVER. <lb />
PACIFIC COAST. <lb />
CHICAGO. <lb />
SAN <lb />
LOS ANGELES. <lb />
PORTLAND. <lb />
DOUGLAS <lb />
SHOE <lb />
FIT FOR <lb />
A KING. <lb />
Over One Million People wear the <lb />
W. L. Douglas and Shoes. <lb />
All are satisfactory <lb />
Thy give the best value for the money. <lb />
They equal t mom in <lb />
Their i-t are <lb />
The urn uniform -stamped on Bole. <lb />
From to saved over other <lb />
If your dealer supply you <lb />
Calf and <lb />
Police Shoes. <lb />
and <lb />
W School Show <lb />
J-d <lb />
cannot supply <lb />
you, write for <lb />
W. L. Douglas, <lb />
l-as. <lb />
R. L. Davis Bro., Farm vi lie, N. C. <lb />
K. <lb />
Co . C. <lb />
;. O. Col b. <lb />
i-at Co. N. C. <lb />
skim <lb />
. N-C <lb />
COBB CO <lb />
FACTORS, <lb />
Commission Merchants <lb />
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA <lb />
be and Solicited. <lb />
ABLE <lb />
-IS AT FRONT WITH A INK-------- <lb />
Slights of <lb />
The Mate writes us <lb />
from <lb />
trying other medicines what seemed <lb />
to be a very obstinate couch In our two <lb />
Children we tried Dr. New Dis- <lb />
mid at the end two Jays the <lb />
left them. We will not <lb />
lie without it hereafter, n out expert <lb />
I proves that it cures where <lb />
other remedies F. W. <lb />
Stevens, State net give Mil <lb />
great medicine a trial, as it i- guaranteed <lb />
and trial are free at John I. <lb />
Drug Score. <lb />
I i i <lb />
L- <lb />
. v. . .- pi <lb />
Caveat, Trade-Marl.- and all Pat- <lb />
he Fits. <lb />
and we patent in less time than <lb />
emote from Washington. . . . <lb />
Send model, or photo., with <lb />
advise, it or not, free <lb />
Oar tea not patent secured. <lb />
A t Obtain <lb />
i . . L. . <lb />
II<lb />
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR <lb />
We will Jill them QUICK. <lb />
We will fill them CHEAP <lb />
We will fill them WELL <lb />
Rough Heart Framing, <lb />
Rough Sap Framing, ; <lb />
Rough Sap r Inches <lb />
Rough Sap Boards, IS inches. <lb />
Wait days for our Planing Mill and <lb />
we will furnish you Dressed Lumber <lb />
I as <lb />
I Wood delivered to your door for <lb />
cents a load. <lb />
Terms cash. <lb />
patronage, <lb />
B I tilt; Ii ii <lb />
YEARS has taught be-t Is the cheapest <lb />
Hemp Rope, Building Pumps, Farming Implements, and every <lb />
ting necessary for Millers, and general a well at <lb />
Clothing, Hats Shoos. Dress I have on hand. Am <lb />
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and agent for Clark's O. N. T. <lb />
Cotton, and keep courteous an I clerk <lb />
FORBES. <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The having be- <lb />
fore the Superior Court of <lb />
com the estate <lb />
Fernando Is <lb />
hereby given lo all s indebted to <lb />
tin i of said decedent to n <lb />
mediate payment lo the <lb />
and all persons having claims <lb />
th- said estate mu-t present the same <lb />
before the 86th day Dec. 1805, or <lb />
ill be plead Iii bar recovery. <lb />
20th <lb />
SYLVESTER <lb />
of Fernando Fleming. <lb />
oh <lb />
Real Estate <lb />
and <lb />
Rental Agent. <lb />
Houses and lot for Rent or for Sale <lb />
terms easy. Rents, Taxes, Insurance, <lb />
open accounts and any <lb />
Of debt in my hands for <lb />
collection aha have prompt attention, <lb />
Sail faction guaranteed. I solicit your <lb />
patronage. <lb />
SlED. <lb />
WANT ONE MILLION <lb />
ELS I SEED, <lb />
I the highest cash prices, ell baa <lb />
in or large lots. We have for <lb />
sale i Seed Meal and Hulls. <lb />
HERBERT <lb />
TONSORIAL PARLORS <lb />
Under Opera House, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
Call in when want work <lb />
A CAROLINA <lb />
R. It, TIME T <lb />
In December 4th. <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
MALE <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
The next Session of this w ill <lb />
begin on Tuesday the day of <lb />
and continue i weeks. <lb />
EAST. GOING M <lb />
Pas, Sun. Pass Dally Sun,<lb />
M. V P M KI n ii y M A. M. II in l-i ii A. M. <lb />
MONTH <lb />
18.00 <lb />
Primary English <lb />
Intermediate English <lb />
Higher English <lb />
Languages <lb />
The instruction will through. I <lb />
Discipline mild nut If necessary <lb />
an additional teacher will be employed. <lb />
Satisfaction guaranteed When pupils <lb />
enter early attend regularly. For <lb />
further information ply to <lb />
W. II. <lb />
DOMINION LINE. <lb />
Tran I connects Wilmington <lb />
Weldon train hound Ninth, having <lb />
Goldsboro a. in., and with R. <lb />
train West, . <lb />
GREENVILLE N. C <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK <lb />
for the Sirs of all Skis Bites. <lb />
This has use over <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know has <lb />
in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
e country, and has effected cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is of <lb />
standing and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained is owing entirely <lb />
its own as but little effort <lb />
ever made to bring It before tin <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. All Cash promptly at- <lb />
tended lo. Address all orders and <lb />
communications to <lb />
T. r. <lb />
K, <lb />
This <lb />
You every <lb />
in <lb />
month of <lb />
March that if <lb />
yon I ave <lb />
your Printing done <lb />
at the <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
JOB OFFICE. <lb />
It will he done right, <lb />
SERVICE- <lb />
Steamers leave <lb />
ville and Tarboro at all land j <lb />
on Tar River Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at A. M. -v. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro A. M. It Will in <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays j <lb />
Greenville A. M. same days. <lb />
These departures are subject to stage <lb />
of water on Tar River. <lb />
at with steam- <lb />
of The Norfolk, Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers should their good <lb />
via Dominion <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk A <lb />
more from <lb />
more. <lb />
Boston, <lb />
JNO. SON. Agent,<lb />
J. J. CHERRY, Agent, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
and it always suite. <lb />
These points are <lb />
well worth weighing <lb />
in any sort <lb />
of work, but <lb />
above all tilings in <lb />
Your Job Printing. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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