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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
C i <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/>
THE NEWS CONDENSED. <lb/>
straw <lb/>
Wilmington is shipping <lb/>
berries by car load- <lb/>
All truck crops in tidewater <lb/>
section of Virginia are reported a <lb/>
little late. <lb/>
A cyclone in Iowa killed a <lb/>
people devastated <lb/>
towns. <lb/>
New is flipping guinea- <lb/>
pigs, rats, mice from the pot <lb/>
farm of P. E. A Go. <lb/>
Another colony of about --0 <lb/>
will leave Savannah, Ga- <lb/>
in a few days for Liberia. <lb/>
bad a <lb/>
vicious fight Island- <lb/>
The later was out in <lb/>
-1st round- <lb/>
Twelve hundred of <lb/>
Illinois Steel Company, at <lb/>
Chicago, are out on a strike for <lb/>
higher wages. <lb/>
The Florida Senate passed the <lb/>
anti-Prize Fight bill. It now <lb/>
House where it will <lb/>
meet no opposition. <lb/>
Comptroller has author- <lb/>
First National Bank of <lb/>
Washington to begin business- <lb/>
The capital stock is <lb/>
A Baltimore woman, acting as <lb/>
her own dentist, gouged out a <lb/>
troublesome tooth with a pair of <lb/>
scissors. She died of lockjaw. <lb/>
State Treasury of Texas <lb/>
has become insolvent, there <lb/>
of being enough on <lb/>
baud to pay the warrants <lb/>
against the State- <lb/>
Two fell a distance of <lb/>
feet while out a furnace <lb/>
stack at Va-, one of <lb/>
in escaped unhurt The other <lb/>
was badly bruised. <lb/>
John B. Hussey. private <lb/>
to Senator Marion Butler <lb/>
and who is the Washington <lb/>
the Caucasian has <lb/>
brought a suit for criminal libel <lb/>
the News Observer. <lb/>
the storm yesterday <lb/>
afternoon lightning struck the <lb/>
dairy in Mr. E- W. yard <lb/>
set on it tire. A man <lb/>
on the place put out the blaze by <lb/>
pouring milk <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
The workmen in the coal mines <lb/>
long the hue of the Norfolk A <lb/>
Western in Virginia <lb/>
out on a strike and are <lb/>
much trouble- Several military <lb/>
have to the <lb/>
mines- <lb/>
There are now nearly twenty <lb/>
prisoners Halifax jail- Eight <lb/>
of are white four of <lb/>
whom are quite desperate. Jail- <lb/>
keeps the jail guarded <lb/>
day and night and is quite <lb/>
how he passes near the <lb/>
Neck Democrat. <lb/>
Hon. M. E- Carter, Collector of <lb/>
Internal Revenue of the Western <lb/>
District of this State, died at <lb/>
Asheville Monday morning- Ex <lb/>
Congressman John S. Henderson <lb/>
of Salisbury, Chas. N. Vance <lb/>
of Asheville, are candidates for <lb/>
the vacancy. <lb/>
Dr. D- M. Bowie, of <lb/>
ton- D- C-, died very suddenly <lb/>
the northbound mail <lb/>
Wilson He was <lb/>
company With bis daughter Mrs. <lb/>
George Walker, was returning <lb/>
from Florida, where he had been <lb/>
account of illness- <lb/>
Mr- Washington Duke, who is <lb/>
a member of the board of trustees <lb/>
of Trinity College who has <lb/>
heretofore made such magnificent <lb/>
to the college, proposed <lb/>
to give toward the <lb/>
fund of the college con- <lb/>
that be raised from <lb/>
other sources within the State- <lb/>
His proposition will be made the <lb/>
special subject of consideration <lb/>
at the of the board in <lb/>
June- <lb/>
The Mallory Cheroot Co-, who <lb/>
also make cigars, are on a <lb/>
Orders have b -en pouring <lb/>
them at a rapid rate until now, <lb/>
that they are <lb/>
about forty thousand cigars be- <lb/>
hind their three <lb/>
employed <lb/>
some three or four new cigar <lb/>
makers who will begin work <lb/>
mediately- This is gratifying <lb/>
news- We wish them continued <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector <lb/>
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
You Need <lb/>
VOL. XIV. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1895. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
The Reflector this rear. <lb/>
It will give the news <lb/>
every week for <lb/>
a year. <lb/>
THE CHILD'S PRAYER. <lb/>
The following verse.-, writ- <lb/>
ton over forty years ago by the late <lb/>
Hodges Heed, are reprinted from the <lb/>
Bo-ton <lb/>
Into her chamber went <lb/>
A lilt e one day. <lb/>
Ami a chair she knelt <lb/>
pray <lb/>
my eye I close <lb/>
Thy form t sec; <lb/>
If thou ire near hear me. Lord, <lb/>
I thee to <lb/>
A still small voice she heard her <lb/>
soul, <lb/>
What is it, t heal <lb/>
Me <lb/>
pray Thee. said. <lb/>
wilt condescend <lb/>
To tarry i my heart <lb/>
And ever be my <lb/>
path of life is dark <lb/>
would not go astray ; <lb/>
Ob. let have hand <lb/>
To lead me in <lb/>
Fear will leave thee, child <lb/>
She thought she felt a band <lb/>
her own. <lb/>
tell roe. Lord, that ill <lb/>
The living; pass <lb/>
The soon must die. <lb/>
And i children may. <lb/>
Oh. let my parents live <lb/>
Till I a woman grow; <lb/>
For if die, what can <lb/>
A orphan do <lb/>
not, my child whatever ills may <lb/>
I'll not bring th e <lb/>
player was <lb/>
And from her chamber, now. <lb/>
She passed forth, with the light <lb/>
her brow. <lb/>
-Mother. I've die <lb/>
band in mine I fell, <lb/>
And, oh. heard him say, <lb/>
A-on my chair I knelt. <lb/>
not. child, whatever ills may <lb/>
MENTAL. IMAGES. <lb/>
THE BLESSED BABIES. <lb/>
In <lb/>
And <lb/>
not thee <lb/>
till I bring thee <lb/>
A NEVER-MIND FELLOW. <lb/>
it s <lb/>
rain conversing in How are Cared for <lb/>
says Emerson his essay other Lands. <lb/>
lie watch bis in-1 . <lb/>
process, will find that T . wrapped to <lb/>
a maternal more or let I bung <lb/>
luminous, arises ,., Ins mind con- I carried on moth. <lb/>
with every thought, , , , , , <lb/>
.,;,., . s He bas Plaything to tho <lb/>
CURSED THE THUNDER. <lb/>
Was Suddenly Stricken <lb/>
With Apoplexy. <lb/>
Down <lb/>
PUBLISHED IN MID-OCEAN <lb/>
which furnishes tho of <lb/>
tho <lb/>
Some weeks ago n white man <lb/>
named Edward with i <lb/>
out friends, was taken sick and j <lb/>
having place to go, was sent <lb/>
He was able <lb/>
if he cries, no seems to to walk about his room and con- <lb/>
This power of mental <lb/>
mind it much. verse with those who visited him <lb/>
i attended to his wants- <lb/>
images appears to strength I America some of the Saturday, April 27th. <lb/>
among individuals to a consider- cradles are made of palm leaves. , setting m chair in <lb/>
A single leaf turned up at the we of bis room, when a <lb/>
degree. Naturally we should <lb/>
expect to find it powerful poets <lb/>
and lists. Charles Dickens has j <lb/>
himself told us that he actually j <lb/>
creations as he wrote, , <lb/>
edge holds the baby. This era <lb/>
die is often up a tree, and <lb/>
the wind rocks the baby to sleep <lb/>
Africa the <lb/>
thunder storm came up. At <lb/>
he was very profane and <lb/>
cursed the thunder. Suddenly <lb/>
toppled over from his <lb/>
chair the floor as though <lb/>
mother carries ,, , . <lb/>
I he been struck down by a <lb/>
.,. . assistance <lb/>
When she gets the unfortunate man was <lb/>
M- mentions a painter j the baby in a leather pouch slung thunderbolt <lb/>
who only looked at an objection her back. <lb/>
while lie sketched its j tired of this way. she makes a j found to have sustained a stroke <lb/>
was able to till the colors from j hole in the sand, under some Ho was taken to his <lb/>
. . . i . ii where he lay until Monday <lb/>
the linage of it m his mind. On bush shrub, and tucks th breathed his I <lb/>
the other hand, there me people baby it. having spoken a word from <lb/>
An Eskimo baby is tucked up the attack. <lb/>
of equal intelligence who, bailiff <lb/>
unable to see such mental images <lb/>
themselves, have doubted their <lb/>
existence, and Mr. <lb/>
has th it habits of <lb/>
thought, such as men of science <lb/>
ii was an Englishman <lb/>
in his mothers hood- It is birth and had beer, in this <lb/>
warm travelers say community six years, a-id <lb/>
their chubby little faces look j is said to have a mill opera- <lb/>
very good cat a red and happy i . As stated above, he had <lb/>
When the child comes out of the <lb/>
and philosophers are ,,. . <lb/>
apt to weaken the capacity of big ; and draws the Register. <lb/>
together like a pudding- <lb/>
bag, keeping him safe warm. <lb/>
forming <lb/>
Mr- Kirkpatrick of Winona, <lb/>
Minn , an experimental <lb/>
gist, has made a series of <lb/>
this with <lb/>
the help of his classes The <lb/>
scholars were asked to write <lb/>
just what came into their <lb/>
minds when certain familiar <lb/>
such as <lb/>
were called out, and the <lb/>
ans were carefully <lb/>
They Were Roosters. <lb/>
In the cradle is a <lb/>
of wood, shaped like a ca- <lb/>
and hollowed out until it is <lb/>
very light. A quantity of <lb/>
is put this soft bed <lb/>
tho baby laughs, sleeps plays other d carrying <lb/>
with his simple toys all the long chickens. The <lb/>
days. <lb/>
is said to have <lb/>
occurred a thousand miles <lb/>
from <lb/>
A bashful country girl came <lb/>
a grocery store the <lb/>
some <lb/>
had their <lb/>
When mother goes <lb/>
, , . . escape tho young in <lb/>
church, she leaves outside to J placed on the <lb/>
keep warm in a bole made the counter Now the young clerk is <lb/>
mini the <lb/>
many a tree <lb/>
Is its in a sh w- <lb/>
know the arc where , <lb/>
honeysuckles grow, lie found that the , faithful dog to drive for bis polite manners, but <lb/>
students formed is not always <lb/>
; of the objects correspond , j he Are <lb/>
words, the rest children set such a sure they lay there I <lb/>
i i- . , set up , n-u she stammered, <lb/>
formed images, with a to disturb the meeting. , blushing, are all <lb/>
few exceptions, who seem to have , tR, clerk recovered <lb/>
indulged in philosophical I American <lb/>
The word ex- I it is sprinkled with , <lb/>
salt, left to itself for nearly j a Dog Chews Gum. <lb/>
mind lie it's sum- <lb/>
mer, seem <lb/>
To pull together dream, <lb/>
dream, dream <lb/>
For the roses roll around hi a perfect <lb/>
foam <lb/>
the good runs tie weather, an <lb/>
it's alike lo me <lb/>
ample, called up visions cf a Bi- <lb/>
win dictionary, a novel, all <lb/>
I never in <lb/>
well. see <lb/>
A dozen happy lace twin I the but a few scholars, who thought <lb/>
. , , , for the or <lb/>
An I s . an, I <lb/>
the thoughts of some <lb/>
word was represented, by <lb/>
; some of tree, more especially <lb/>
I'm a <lb/>
Atlanta Constitution. <lb/>
suits that most people are <lb/>
thinking, while a few <lb/>
are The ten- <lb/>
to form distinct images <lb/>
was very conspicuous among the <lb/>
female students, and both sexes below. <lb/>
THE LITTLE HAND. <lb/>
Your little baud. <lb/>
So soft, so to touch <lb/>
gentlest stroke I understand-- <lb/>
-o much, so much <lb/>
long day <lb/>
worry, toil and heat. <lb/>
That g while I <lb/>
stray <lb/>
Through many a pathway sweet <lb/>
Through the deep night, <lb/>
When shadows have shut out <lb/>
tilings that be. <lb/>
That little hand doth touch my <lb/>
sight. <lb/>
And wondrous sights I see. <lb/>
the long years. <lb/>
Of shattered days and holies that I <lb/>
have planned. <lb/>
I shall be gently led through smiles and which, it been other- <lb/>
tears <lb/>
By dear little <lb/>
There's nothing this Boating world <lb/>
Of which a man can think. <lb/>
Thai i to bring him business, <lb/>
Like the use of printer's ink. <lb/>
A LITTLE WHILE. <lb/>
such a little while walk <lb/>
along life's <lb/>
weary feet that Inside us <lb/>
falter Hack passing <lb/>
Dear that greet us in the morn- <lb/>
vanish e'er it is noon. <lb/>
lender voices melt away in silence <lb/>
a broken tune. <lb/>
We long to see i he dear familiar faces, <lb/>
but all in vain; <lb/>
The that kept pace with ours <lb/>
so bravely come not again; <lb/>
the echo of a grown <lb/>
lent, and afar; <lb/>
A dim, white face gleams t among <lb/>
the shadows like pale <lb/>
Th a while for loving kind- <lb/>
or disdain- <lb/>
To smooth the way for weary <lb/>
falter cause them <lb/>
while and it were unavailing <lb/>
kin words lo say. <lb/>
For those who walked be- <lb/>
side us have passed away. <lb/>
Lizzie Clark Hardy in <lb/>
hours. This is done to hard u A pet all the <lb/>
it- The baby is tied its chewing gum he can around <lb/>
and little feet are left wire owned by a family in <lb/>
. .-. . ti, He has to <lb/>
even in coldest weather. u ft h <lb/>
eyebrows H earnestness that he <lb/>
eyelashes; a little girls chews for all world like <lb/>
are pierced rings often the from whom be <lb/>
cherry tree which . . steaM it that when be <lb/>
Washington cut a day old. and always b <lb/>
The word evoked I are d it is not stated whether be slicks <lb/>
a picture of some church the i The day a baby is <lb/>
vicinity, but of the it is called year old- <lb/>
it on chairs like others <lb/>
who masticate it or leave it the <lb/>
. j floor or ground as the case may <lb/>
thought of a When the next New <lb/>
It is evident from his re- comes, even if it happens to be <lb/>
day after it is born, it is two <lb/>
years old; thereafter every <lb/>
New Year's day is its birthday. <lb/>
The winter cradle is shaped like <lb/>
Not superstitious. <lb/>
He seemed preoccupied- <lb/>
so thoughtful she ask- <lb/>
ed, while with born of <lb/>
i reserve <lb/>
hour-glass, above o a drugstore complexion <lb/>
The waist holds <lb/>
abnormal develop ; child in, hands are left <lb/>
about the ages of and free to play with <lb/>
or the period of <lb/>
rattles If the baby is a boy, the <lb/>
top of his head is shaved when <lb/>
wise observed, is also of ex be is four weeks old, and after <lb/>
A Newspaper That la Printed on <lb/>
Board an American Cruiser. <lb/>
A newspaper on shipboard. <lb/>
On the rolling decks of a man-of-war, <lb/>
out. at sea, the reach of <lb/>
win- or post. <lb/>
An editor whose desk is in tho <lb/>
narrow space below decks, known <lb/>
to sailors as the port brig, whose <lb/>
glimpse of the outside world is <lb/>
through a little round glass port in <lb/>
the ship's side, looking out over a <lb/>
waste of waters. <lb/>
Such is the Ocean Wave, pub- <lb/>
the interests of all good <lb/>
around the <lb/>
and for particular instruction <lb/>
and amusement of the officers and <lb/>
men of the North Atlantic squad- <lb/>
The paper is edited and print- <lb/>
ed on tho flagship New York. Sub- <lb/>
it is stated In big letters <lb/>
on the first page, are payable in <lb/>
gold, silver or jewels. No potatoes <lb/>
or garden truck are taken in ex- <lb/>
change. <lb/>
The Wave has six pages, each of <lb/>
which contains throe columns of <lb/>
reading matter, it is printed in <lb/>
four black, green ; <lb/>
purple. A line photo engraving of <lb/>
the flagship Baltimore, of the Chi- <lb/>
station, is printed, showing that <lb/>
vessel lying off a port. Cop- <lb/>
of the paper received in this <lb/>
city were printed while the squad- <lb/>
was at in the <lb/>
island of Trinidad. The features are <lb/>
a story of the West Indies, some <lb/>
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report <lb/>
Baking <lb/>
Powder <lb/>
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb/>
ail in Leavening <lb/>
Who is wholly free of <lb/>
we mean- Who like <lb/>
to hear at night mournful <lb/>
howl of which the dog is capable <lb/>
Who listens to a screech owl. <lb/>
perched on a limb his win- <lb/>
without having thoughts of <lb/>
uncanny tilings creep over him <lb/>
The first article in the May For- <lb/>
um is one by Col. Theodore A- <lb/>
Dodge on Bismarck, whom he <lb/>
characterizes as strongest <lb/>
personality since <lb/>
properly so characterizes, no <lb/>
doubt. Yet he tells us that <lb/>
is rather superstitious <lb/>
in a mild way. He put th <lb/>
completion of <lb/>
one day because <lb/>
would not sign them on the 14th <lb/>
of October, of <lb/>
He be <lb/>
in the influence of the <lb/>
moon the growth of <lb/>
original poems contributed by u . . i . ,. <lb/>
, Ho is stated not to like <lb/>
of the ships company, a story . . , <lb/>
of the visit made to Santa Cruz, do- thirteen at table, to under <lb/>
scribing the hospitable manner in take important Fridays <lb/>
which the islanders received ho himself this. <lb/>
Americans and showed them over, believes that <lb/>
their sugar plantations, and an ac- .,. supernatural <lb/>
count of the international <lb/>
,.,.,, i- u i . If these things be <lb/>
held at in which boats; , . . <lb/>
from tho American ships Now York, of g man, <lb/>
Cincinnati. Raleigh and Essex took the remainder of need hardly <lb/>
part. blush for our superstitious <lb/>
The jolly tars on board the ships are born them, any way, <lb/>
led proud of their little paper, and ;,, ., <lb/>
every issue is carefully preserved to <lb/>
Bend home to friends. There is a <lb/>
true <lb/>
LOCAL DIRECTORY. <lb/>
COUNT <lb/>
Superior Clerk, B. a. <lb/>
Sheriff. <lb/>
or Deeds, M. <lb/>
Treasurer. J. L. Little. <lb/>
Coroner, Dr. C. <lb/>
Surveyor,<lb/>
Leonidas Fleming, T. K. L. <lb/>
Smith and S. <lb/>
Health, Dr. W. II. Bagwell. <lb/>
County Home. W. Smith. <lb/>
Board Kiln- R. <lb/>
F. Ward and B. C. t <lb/>
Ins., W. H. <lb/>
Mayor, Fleming. <lb/>
Clerk, ti. B. Harris. <lb/>
Treasurer, S. Smith. <lb/>
Police-W. n. chief. T. R. <lb/>
Moore, ant; <lb/>
S. Smith, Ii. <lb/>
L. II. Fender, W. J. T. <lb/>
A. <lb/>
do it quite eradicate them. <lb/>
humorist on the staff, and the funny <lb/>
column is full of sally jokes which <lb/>
smack of the sea. <lb/>
For the printing of this little pa- <lb/>
per the ship's printer, Michael <lb/>
of the admiral's staff, is re- <lb/>
He is a thorough-going <lb/>
i Chat lotto Observer. <lb/>
We published, the other day. a <lb/>
dispatch giving Treasury figures <lb/>
which showed that the per capita <lb/>
circulation of money in the <lb/>
as well as printer, and can I ed at this is <lb/>
I pa and The period during <lb/>
which this c enjoyed the <lb/>
greatest degree of healthy pros <lb/>
has to be lashed to prevent it from I it has over was <lb/>
breaking N. Y. which per capita <lb/>
time. Most of the <lb/>
done while th <lb/>
at sea, and at such times tin <lb/>
work is I <lb/>
ship is <lb/>
press <lb/>
Free Medical Aid. <lb/>
M. Felix has decided that <lb/>
all the state and other domestics at <lb/>
the and their families are to <lb/>
receive medical assistance gratis, <lb/>
says the London Daily News. The <lb/>
cost is to be paid out of his own <lb/>
purse. All the ushers and other <lb/>
servants employed there by tho <lb/>
state have been nearly thirty years <lb/>
at the They have been <lb/>
kept on longer than they might <lb/>
have been, because it would be so <lb/>
difficult to find men so fit for their <lb/>
places. They cannot be <lb/>
before a certain number of <lb/>
service has given them a right to a <lb/>
pension. Since visited <lb/>
Paris, in they have often <lb/>
j ranged about Some <lb/>
thing more than a large volume <lb/>
of is necessary to a <lb/>
people prosperous, W e read <lb/>
the New York of Monday, <lb/>
that is still flowing from <lb/>
the interior to that city, <lb/>
there is already an idle surplus <lb/>
of twenty seven And <lb/>
I is what is matter- The <lb/>
Baptist. Services every Sunday <lb/>
ii Prayer <lb/>
night. c. M. <lb/>
pastor. Sunday School fl-30 <lb/>
A. If. r. ii. <lb/>
No regular services. <lb/>
Services every fourth Sun- <lb/>
morning A. <lb/>
Hector. School at <lb/>
A. II. W. II. Sup t. <lb/>
Methodist. Services every Similar <lb/>
morning and i Prayer <lb/>
night. Rev ti. K. Smith, <lb/>
pa-tor. Sunday at a. M. A. <lb/>
it Ellington, Sept. <lb/>
Presbyterian. 1st and <lb/>
morning <lb/>
meeting night Kev. Archie <lb/>
School at <lb/>
D. <lb/>
Covenant So. I. o. F-, <lb/>
Dr. W. II. <lb/>
Bagwell, X. u. <lb/>
Ledge A. F. A A. <lb/>
M. and third Monday <lb/>
W. If. W. M. <lb/>
Z. <lb/>
good rapid <lb/>
The tendency is further <lb/>
checked or fostered by <lb/>
Mag- <lb/>
saved by Kick of a Horse. <lb/>
The Mr. M- L- <lb/>
west of city, was saved from <lb/>
destruction by fire yesterday <lb/>
a way. Mrs. Harris was <lb/>
at the house. Mr- liar <lb/>
was the and his son <lb/>
was in a field No one <lb/>
else was on tho premises. John <lb/>
that is shaved once a week. <lb/>
India, the baby is rocked <lb/>
a swing- The mother takes a <lb/>
long cloth ties the two ends <lb/>
together over a small rafter in <lb/>
I the low roof the home, and <lb/>
she did come too him. <lb/>
he said, directing <lb/>
intense gaze her, <lb/>
you have already had twelve <lb/>
Throwing her lo tho from that illness, and, being j out It is afraid <lb/>
winds, she came kissed <lb/>
but I am not a <lb/>
III. <lb/>
Watchmaker A Jeweler. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
masses the people are pressed Sew lot Spectacles and <lb/>
for ready cash while the vaults of <lb/>
the and trust companies of <lb/>
money are bursting <lb/>
with it. It lies there idle, wait- <lb/>
safe and remunerative invest- <lb/>
does it not <lb/>
I. L. <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
in m. <lb/>
bit <lb/>
Free Pills. <lb/>
Send your address to U. K. <lb/>
and get a free sample <lb/>
, box of Dr. King's New Pills. A <lb/>
puts the baby fold of tho trial will convince you of their merits, <lb/>
Hum am out to i These pills are easy and are <lb/>
go out in the cur.- of <lb/>
work field, he cloth is constipation end Sick Headache. For <lb/>
fastened to the branch of some Malaria and troubles they bays <lb/>
.,,, . . . been proved invaluable. They are <lb/>
tree. hen it gets sick, the to be free from <lb/>
mother thinks some of the gods j every deleterious substance and to <lb/>
, ., ., . , , . .- purely vegetable. They do not weaken <lb/>
or devils that the family worship their action, but by giving tone lo <lb/>
must be ; and so she calls <lb/>
a sacred who wears a yellow <lb/>
cloth pretends to tell <lb/>
stomach bowels greatly invigorate <lb/>
the system. Regular size pet box. <lb/>
Soul by John L. Wooten <lb/>
One <lb/>
the latter part of last <lb/>
wees the catch of fish here was <lb/>
unusually large- The steamers <lb/>
carried into the factories about <lb/>
one million fish that were ground <lb/>
up and made into scrap. This is <lb/>
a very nice catch and we an glad <lb/>
to see fish <lb/>
They Ate Wild Onions <lb/>
Observer several days ago <lb/>
reported the death of three <lb/>
of a named Black, in <lb/>
Steel Creek, and the illness of <lb/>
others, stating that the deaths <lb/>
were due to poisoning- The <lb/>
mother and one of the children <lb/>
were in a dying condition <lb/>
day. father is lame and <lb/>
very poor. The children went <lb/>
out to get something to cook as <lb/>
and got wild onions. <lb/>
All who ate of the dish have <lb/>
died or will Ob- <lb/>
server. <lb/>
The of this paper will lie pleas <lb/>
to learn that is at least one <lb/>
dreaded disease tint has been <lb/>
able lo cure in all its stages, and that is <lb/>
Catarrh, Hall's Cure is the <lb/>
only positive known to the medical <lb/>
fraternity. Catarrh being a <lb/>
disease, requires a constitutional <lb/>
Hall's Catarrh Cure U <lb/>
taken internally, acting directly the <lb/>
blood and mucous, surfaces of the sys- <lb/>
thereby destroying the foundation <lb/>
of the disease, and giving the patient <lb/>
strength by building up the <lb/>
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 case <lb/>
that it fails to cure. Send for list of <lb/>
F. J. CO. <lb/>
Sold <lb/>
A well-known minister sent <lb/>
South to labor among the colored <lb/>
people was received with many <lb/>
demonstrations of joy- At <lb/>
first meeting which he held, one <lb/>
colored preacher prayed for him <lb/>
with great earnestness, <lb/>
Lord bless <lb/>
v. lint's come down de <lb/>
to preach de to us. <lb/>
him the kerosene of <lb/>
j shun, and set him on <lb/>
Harris, the young who j mat- <lb/>
was kicked the , He <lb/>
by the He to m. o <lb/>
house to get some to j , on <lb/>
ply to the wound, as be repeating <lb/>
of <lb/>
bear they say. <lb/>
tho house was tire blazing <lb/>
briskly- He bis father quick <lb/>
procured a ladder sue <lb/>
in extinguishing the fire- <lb/>
kick of a horse undoubtedly <lb/>
saved that house from <lb/>
Charlotte Newt. <lb/>
Salve- <lb/>
he best the world for Outs <lb/>
Bruises, Sores, Salt j <lb/>
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands <lb/>
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin j <lb/>
t ions, and positively cure Piles, or no <lb/>
pay required, is guaranteed to give I <lb/>
perfect or money refunded <lb/>
Price cents per box. For sale by <lb/>
John It. Wooten, Druggist <lb/>
Then be tells tho woman she has <lb/>
given her offerings properly, <lb/>
and n s her go a <lb/>
few pennies, u little rice, and even <lb/>
a chicken. These he takes for <lb/>
himself and goes away, telling <lb/>
her the child will get well.--Little <lb/>
Julia Jackson <lb/>
Little Julia Jackson Christian, <lb/>
the sis year old daughter of Mr. <lb/>
W. Christian, will unveil the <lb/>
Confederate Monument on the <lb/>
20th. Little Julia is <lb/>
child of the illustrious soldier, <lb/>
Why the Dogs Disappeared. <lb/>
people in neighbor <lb/>
hood couldn't tell <lb/>
what became of their dogs until a <lb/>
pug pup disappeared a <lb/>
vigilant bunt found his skin <lb/>
tacked up to dry in of <lb/>
an adopted citizen the <lb/>
Fat he i land, who was arrested and <lb/>
admitted that in the last few <lb/>
months he and his wife bad eaten <lb/>
dogs, and didn't care <lb/>
how his-h beef wont, for it wasn't <lb/>
Stonewall Jackson- It was a. <lb/>
selection on the part of the circumstance to nice, fat dog <lb/>
ladies-it could not have <lb/>
more Press. <lb/>
It is said that during tho rack- <lb/>
et between Japan China <lb/>
Japanese divers were <lb/>
down lo remove some torpedoes, <lb/>
Chinese divers sent <lb/>
to stop that business. <lb/>
There was a submarine tight with <lb/>
knives, and as <lb/>
couldn't run there <lb/>
did them up and removed <lb/>
torpedoes. That's first <lb/>
tight of that kind on record, <lb/>
the proved that they could <lb/>
not only tight on water, but under <lb/>
Mr- Pullman's <lb/>
gets another bard thrust from a <lb/>
committee of clergymen <lb/>
who have been it. The <lb/>
Rev. Dr- Rusk is a <lb/>
whited filled with dead <lb/>
men's bones. Without it is fair <lb/>
to look upon, but alter you pass <lb/>
the imposing front there is much <lb/>
to be condemned. We went <lb/>
through the alleged <lb/>
and found that a ramshackle <lb/>
affair on the top floor rented for <lb/>
Why, in tho sheds at <lb/>
yards, which company <lb/>
denies are used as habitations, <lb/>
the squalid creatures who inhabit <lb/>
them showed us rent receipts for <lb/>
a month, signed by the Pull- <lb/>
man <lb/>
old, had often lo seek medical as <lb/>
As heir salaries are not <lb/>
high, they thought this was hard, <lb/>
and so also thinks the president. <lb/>
M. has named Capt. <lb/>
to look after them and to be their <lb/>
spokesman. <lb/>
SPEED OF DUCKS AND GEESE. <lb/>
The Ducks Made Sixty-Six and Two- <lb/>
Thirds Miles an Hour. <lb/>
Of all the migratory birds tho <lb/>
American wild pigeon and black <lb/>
duck are well up toward the front as <lb/>
regards long and rapid flight. The <lb/>
speed of the pigeons can only be es- <lb/>
while that of the ducks can <lb/>
be established by observation. Some <lb/>
years ago the writer and a scientific <lb/>
friend measured off on the shore of <lb/>
B large western river a line exactly <lb/>
three miles long, and each took a <lb/>
station at opposite ends of the line. <lb/>
The object was to note, by means of <lb/>
signals, the time a <lb/>
flock of wild ducks took in passing <lb/>
up or down the river near the <lb/>
During three hours on the morn- <lb/>
of a bright October day <lb/>
were noted of the times of pass- <lb/>
big the stations of nine different <lb/>
locks. Upon comparing watches <lb/>
was found that the average time was <lb/>
two minutes and forty-two seconds, <lb/>
thus showing the speed per hour to <lb/>
be sixty-six and two-thirds miles, or <lb/>
one mile In seconds. As <lb/>
showing how uniform was their <lb/>
a difference was found of only <lb/>
five seconds between the greatest <lb/>
and the least intervals of time. <lb/>
As numerous flocks of wild geese <lb/>
were daily flying in the same neigh- <lb/>
observations were also taken <lb/>
to test their hourly speed. Two <lb/>
points, twenty-nine one-third <lb/>
miles apart, were selected, both of <lb/>
which were connected by telegraph. <lb/>
We succeeded in identifying four <lb/>
out of seven flocks which passed over <lb/>
both places during the four days we <lb/>
were on the watch. The mean hourly <lb/>
speed was found to be a fraction <lb/>
over fifty-four miles. The wild goose <lb/>
has been long supposed to be the <lb/>
swiftest of all water fowl, but this <lb/>
experiment shows that he is far be- <lb/>
hind the wild Y. World. <lb/>
DR. H. A. JOYNER. <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
All Free. <lb/>
Thorn aha have King's New <lb/>
Know value, and those <lb/>
who have nut, have now <lb/>
to try It Free, tall on the advertised I n. o. <lb/>
Dr and get a Trial Bottle, Free, j up stairs over <lb/>
Send name and address lo II. E. j Hardware .-tore. <lb/>
Co. Chicago, and <lb/>
sample box of Dr. King's New Life, <lb/>
Pills Five, as well as a copy of Guide <lb/>
Health and Household Instructor. <lb/>
Free. All of which is guaranteed to do <lb/>
yon good and cost you at John <lb/>
I,. Drugstore. <lb/>
OR <lb/>
One Can Be <lb/>
NO WRINKLES. <lb/>
K. 1- Moons. <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
under Opera House. Third St. <lb/>
Smooth and Yet Not <lb/>
of the new electrical <lb/>
for removing pro- <lb/>
duce remarkable said a New <lb/>
York physician other day, <lb/>
they are too dangerous to receive the <lb/>
commendation of any reputable <lb/>
physician, and sit a matter of fact, <lb/>
the result, though so remarkable, is <lb/>
not at all what victim hopes. <lb/>
There is Mrs.-----, she has really <lb/>
had her wrinkles removed, but yon <lb/>
would hardly notice it, except as she <lb/>
told you so. The curious thing <lb/>
that she does not look a year young- <lb/>
I say but it is only so <lb/>
to a person who has not correctly <lb/>
analyzed the look of age. Wrinkles <lb/>
may be the most obvious thing <lb/>
about It, out they are not the main <lb/>
thing. What makes anyone look <lb/>
old is first, the change, the decline of <lb/>
all tho chief modelings of the face, <lb/>
the falling of the chocks, the <lb/>
or the of the <lb/>
throat, the settling of flesh <lb/>
the mouth. The pain that is given <lb/>
in removing wrinkles increases all <lb/>
this, and is likely to count more <lb/>
than the ameliorative Cleo <lb/>
says, in the play, that she is <lb/>
wrinkled, and Shakespeare was prob- <lb/>
ably a good judge of beauty. She, <lb/>
to his mind, kept hers and her youth- <lb/>
because she was so vital, so <lb/>
well, so alive, that her face had tho <lb/>
general contours of youth. Women <lb/>
are on the wrong road when they do <lb/>
anything painful to make them look <lb/>
V . <lb/>
all Collection a <lb/>
specialty- <lb/>
D K. TYSON, <lb/>
Attorney and Counselor <lb/>
Greenville, County, <lb/>
Practices in nil the <lb/>
Civil and Criminal Sol <lb/>
Makes a special of fraud <lb/>
ages, actions lo recover laud, and col- <lb/>
Prompt and careful attention given <lb/>
all business. <lb/>
Money to loan on approved Security. <lb/>
Terms easy. <lb/>
J. H. I . J. L. <lb/>
A FLEMING <lb/>
K. C. <lb/>
Practice in all the Courts. <lb/>
-C. LATHAM <lb/>
SKINNER, <lb/>
N. a <lb/>
J. <lb/>
A BLOW, <lb/>
t. a. <lb/>
it. nil the Courts. <lb/>
John E. Woodard. F. C. Harding, <lb/>
Wilson, N. C. Greenville, N. C <lb/>
A HARDING. <lb/>
Special attention given to <lb/>
and settlement of <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017745_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
. I, f <lb/>
Entered at the c at <lb/>
N. C as second-class I matter. <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1805. <lb/>
The Greensboro Daily Re <lb/>
cord has enlarged from a to a <lb/>
column paper. The Record <lb/>
is a bustling and shows <lb/>
signs of a liberal patronage. <lb/>
There is much speculation as <lb/>
to who will succeed <lb/>
Carter in the Western District <lb/>
of this State. There are <lb/>
and moat of them <lb/>
hare strong backing. <lb/>
The Supreme Court of North <lb/>
Carolina in the case of Ewart <lb/>
Jones for the of <lb/>
the Western Criminal Court <lb/>
has rendered decision <lb/>
the place to Ewart who was <lb/>
elected by the Legislature as <lb/>
against Jones appointed by the <lb/>
Governor. The court was an <lb/>
in its opinion as to <lb/>
Ewart's right to the office but <lb/>
Justice Avery dissents from the <lb/>
proposition announced by the <lb/>
Chief Justice that there is no <lb/>
vacancy between the ratification <lb/>
of the act and the election of the <lb/>
The case Cook vs. <lb/>
Meares has been argued before <lb/>
the court but a decision has <lb/>
not yet been rendered. This <lb/>
case is different from the Ewart <lb/>
case in that Cook was elected <lb/>
before the act was ratified. <lb/>
Mayor Russ, of Raleigh, cast <lb/>
some good Democratic votes <lb/>
the other day in the of <lb/>
officers before the Alderman of <lb/>
that city. He did not hesitate <lb/>
to untie with a good deal of <lb/>
zest the various ballots all of <lb/>
which nearly were a tie. Unless <lb/>
we are mistaken Bill Russ can <lb/>
be the city <lb/>
of Raleigh Democratic, pure <lb/>
and simple <lb/>
The Southern Baptist Con- <lb/>
met in Washington <lb/>
City Friday. There are <lb/>
about three thousand delegates <lb/>
and visitors present. This is <lb/>
the largest delegated <lb/>
body in the world. There <lb/>
are many noted men present. <lb/>
Several important measures are <lb/>
to come before the body, <lb/>
among which are the Baptist <lb/>
Young Peoples Societies, and <lb/>
the question of union with the <lb/>
Northern Convention- <lb/>
The State of South Carolina <lb/>
is in a state of excitement and <lb/>
indignation. The registration <lb/>
laws of the State been de <lb/>
null and in con <lb/>
sequence the ballot box is open <lb/>
to every one regardless of <lb/>
Governor Evans de- <lb/>
that he will not call the <lb/>
Legislature together to enact <lb/>
new ones. Then, too, the court <lb/>
has decided that the dispensary <lb/>
law is unconstitutional so far as <lb/>
it relates to liquor being sent <lb/>
into the State, and that any- <lb/>
body who wants to can send as <lb/>
much liquor as they please into <lb/>
its borders. Governor Evans <lb/>
says he will pay no attention to <lb/>
the decision will continue <lb/>
to seize the liquor so that a case <lb/>
may get into the Supreme Court <lb/>
of the United States These <lb/>
things are creating some excite- <lb/>
mixed with indignation <lb/>
in the Palmetto State. <lb/>
Written for Reflector. <lb/>
A LONELY LAMENT, <lb/>
OLD BOY. <lb/>
Lost friendship it blighted bud <lb/>
On every Eden's bough. <lb/>
And Mi-ting stamps the sign of grief <lb/>
In furrows on the brow. <lb/>
But brings her fairy train <lb/>
To such a soul <lb/>
And whispers what <lb/>
They lull not him to rest. <lb/>
They talk of one I'll know no more, <lb/>
My always trusty friend; <lb/>
Who gave me or gave me joy. <lb/>
Or strangely made them blend. <lb/>
Attended me to all the shows. <lb/>
And tn k me out to tea; <lb/>
And gave belle at many a lull <lb/>
To her f miles on <lb/>
No friend like this e'er suffice <lb/>
To drive away the blues. <lb/>
Who paid alike my barber bill <lb/>
And my religious dues. <lb/>
Ami me welcome, made me <lb/>
Of and <lb/>
Or rated me to a millionaire <lb/>
When the like I drank. <lb/>
lint that time how things <lb/>
changed <lb/>
This friend has passed away ; <lb/>
How bitterly I mourn the truth <lb/>
That must <lb/>
I hear the old men sigh for <lb/>
Old maids their first love <lb/>
But. ask but one <lb/>
Oil, give me back my cash <lb/>
The Executive Committee of <lb/>
the State Fair met in Raleigh <lb/>
on the evening of the 8th. It <lb/>
was declared that no fair could <lb/>
be held unless a sufficient sum, <lb/>
which is could be raised <lb/>
to pay premiums. Secondly, <lb/>
that the Raleigh people should <lb/>
raise this amount. Col. J. S. <lb/>
C the President, subscribed <lb/>
of the amount. A com- <lb/>
was appointed to raise <lb/>
amount and see if the rail- <lb/>
roads would give a rate of one <lb/>
cent Tier <lb/>
COMMISSIONER'S MEETING. <lb/>
The income tax has been re <lb/>
heard and the argument ha <lb/>
closed. The court will prob <lb/>
ably render its decision tins <lb/>
It was heard before a <lb/>
fall court. Justice Jackson has <lb/>
sufficiently recovered to be <lb/>
sent. He was sick during the <lb/>
first hearing and the court was <lb/>
a tie on several important <lb/>
of the bill. This cannot <lb/>
occur this time so the case will <lb/>
be definitely settled. e <lb/>
hoped they may not declare the <lb/>
law unconstitutional. <lb/>
Whenever an evil exists or is <lb/>
to exist us it is <lb/>
the duty of every who loves <lb/>
to speak on; against it. <lb/>
Such opportunity is present <lb/>
with us We thought the <lb/>
beginning that Beet <lb/>
that were held in Green- <lb/>
ville were for and <lb/>
in consequence referred only in <lb/>
We see <lb/>
that it is different th at there <lb/>
has been a <lb/>
evil our town. So long as <lb/>
voting people were just having a <lb/>
few for their <lb/>
we saw no <lb/>
reason to very <lb/>
though this ought not to <lb/>
; but when people of <lb/>
thought, and even Christian pen <lb/>
are being assembled right <lb/>
after by a <lb/>
and from his conversation <lb/>
infidel, <lb/>
and when the said individual <lb/>
to come among us not only <lb/>
with his false and demoralizing <lb/>
teachings but even dares to <lb/>
Greenville, N- C, May 6th, <lb/>
The Board of Commissioners <lb/>
for Pitt county met this day, pres <lb/>
O Dawson, chairman, T E <lb/>
Keel, Leonidas <lb/>
Smith, S. M Jones. <lb/>
The following orders PI pan <lb/>
were issued. <lb/>
Martha Nelson B D Smith <lb/>
Jacob SO, <lb/>
Moore Susan Briley <lb/>
Lucinda Smith I Henry <lb/>
Harris U John and Hettie An <lb/>
Kenneth Henderson <lb/>
Eliza Edwards Carlos <lb/>
Gorham J H <lb/>
Henry S Sam and Ann <lb/>
Cherry I Fannie <lb/>
J O Proctor Alice Corbett <lb/>
Easter Vines Alex <lb/>
Winifred Taylor <lb/>
Staton John Ham <lb/>
W H Parker J G <lb/>
son Winnie Chapman <lb/>
Polly Adams W Crisp <lb/>
W F Williams John Crisp <lb/>
for wife Jas Long ft <lb/>
Amelia Edwin Had <lb/>
dock R E Ma <lb/>
Thomas Chas <lb/>
and wife J W Crisp <lb/>
The following orders for gen- <lb/>
county purposes were <lb/>
Charles Skinner M B <lb/>
Baker Allen <lb/>
-I L Little <lb/>
L A White II F Keel <lb/>
John H T <lb/>
King W E Proctor J <lb/>
W Smith J Jones I , J <lb/>
B B M Stat <lb/>
W R Parker J A Bullock <lb/>
IS R N <lb/>
Mo- O.-t. Coke W C <lb/>
J L <lb/>
J II W M Brown <lb/>
John II King E A <lb/>
R W King R <lb/>
W King R W King <lb/>
W H Bagwell S R <lb/>
E A O M Ber- <lb/>
R W M R T <lb/>
Hodge B W Edwards , <lb/>
Levi W J Parker J <lb/>
L Fleming B S Sheppard <lb/>
i-12, J J J J <lb/>
Elks Joy Smith Jason <lb/>
Hemby L B V C <lb/>
Smith W <lb/>
J A Lang <lb/>
Killebrew Holliday <lb/>
LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO <lb/>
JOTTINGS. <lb/>
BY O- L, <lb/>
Mr- returned Mon- <lb/>
day from a trip to Oxford and <lb/>
Durham. <lb/>
There are seventeen Sides in <lb/>
the Union that produced <lb/>
of tobacco tho <lb/>
value of which last year was <lb/>
Of this pro <lb/>
pounds value <lb/>
f Virginia at <lb/>
a value of and North <lb/>
Carolina produced at a <lb/>
value of <lb/>
There are numbers of f <lb/>
all the now about <lb/>
through transplanting tobacco <lb/>
and they Lave a most favor- <lb/>
able time to do that work this <lb/>
year, for nearly every day for the <lb/>
past two weeks it has rained. It <lb/>
would be a good idea for those <lb/>
who set early to give <lb/>
it a deep and thorough plowing <lb/>
just as soon as the land is <lb/>
dry to permit it, because <lb/>
there has been so very much rain <lb/>
that the land has become sodded <lb/>
and compact and in order for the <lb/>
tobacco to thrive the land must be <lb/>
soft and mellow. It would be <lb/>
well to note carefully also that <lb/>
the ground is thoroughly broken <lb/>
close around the shank of the <lb/>
thus preventing it from be- <lb/>
hard running up <lb/>
If this is not <lb/>
to strictly the certain result will <lb/>
be an end button and a poor <lb/>
crop. <lb/>
THE NEWS CONDENSED <lb/>
A MODEL FARMER. <lb/>
Elizabeth people have had <lb/>
a meeting and subscribed <lb/>
for a cotton factory. <lb/>
Mr. E. B. Boll, of Lake Com <lb/>
fort, has rented the Ocracoke <lb/>
Hotel for this year, and will open <lb/>
it about Juno <lb/>
Gazette- <lb/>
There are eight candidates for <lb/>
the vacant of the <lb/>
Fifth North Carolina District, <lb/>
with John 8- <lb/>
Henderson probably in the lead. <lb/>
Mr. Jonas has a Maltese <lb/>
cat, that not only catches rats but <lb/>
snakes. Yesterday she caught <lb/>
four in his yard. Two she killed <lb/>
and two she carried in the , <lb/>
to play Observer-1 pack houses whore we examined <lb/>
mu i j nu i , I large lot of tobacco. Mr. Gotten <lb/>
The colored Odd Fellows had <lb/>
a Friday They par <lb/>
the streets this afternoon <lb/>
headed by Smith's baud, seventy <lb/>
Odd Fellows regalia being in <lb/>
line- Ex-Congressman <lb/>
delivered an to them. <lb/>
Some visiting ledges were here. <lb/>
It was the writer's pleasure on <lb/>
the 22nd of April to visit <lb/>
dale and farms be- <lb/>
longing to Mr R- R- Gotten, of <lb/>
Falkland township. I stopped <lb/>
first at the farm <lb/>
at the ringing the door bell was <lb/>
met that estimable lady, Mis. <lb/>
Gotten, who North Carolina feels <lb/>
to own. She represented <lb/>
our State as one of the committee <lb/>
at the Worlds Fair 1893. After <lb/>
a very pleasant conversation <lb/>
drove to the center of the <lb/>
farm where found Mr. Cotten <lb/>
giving overseer some of his <lb/>
excellent ideas about the <lb/>
of some tobacco lauds. <lb/>
then drove to one of his several <lb/>
There's No Mystery <lb/>
About It. <lb/>
-0- <lb/>
truth is I am doing a rushing May <lb/>
Lively scenes about the store. People <lb/>
appreciate my superb styles and low prices. <lb/>
o-- <lb/>
Mr. ii- H. Hayes, who has boon <lb/>
very closely with the <lb/>
market for the <lb/>
two years, after finishing up <lb/>
his work and getting off his stock <lb/>
left last Saturday to <lb/>
a few days with his family <lb/>
and ft ii Chase City, Va. <lb/>
From there he will extend- <lb/>
ed trip across the continent and <lb/>
spend the most of his hummer <lb/>
amongst the of the <lb/>
Ho will to <lb/>
Colorado, there he <lb/>
he wants to go to some ac- <lb/>
where he can take an <lb/>
active part in the rough western <lb/>
For time past he has <lb/>
had an idea that his were <lb/>
weak and has hastened to get <lb/>
with his work here <lb/>
to spend a and <lb/>
get the benefit of the hard dry <lb/>
of the frontier. He will <lb/>
return about 15th to his <lb/>
Virginia home will this <lb/>
place about September 1st. Mean <lb/>
while the market opens here <lb/>
in August he will have a man to <lb/>
buy for him he comes. <lb/>
Raleigh's Monument Unveiling. <lb/>
The unveiling of the <lb/>
The Legislature ad <lb/>
without electing a Sena- <lb/>
tor, ballots having been taken <lb/>
during the session- prior to <lb/>
adjournment the Speaker of the <lb/>
declared H- A- <lb/>
elected, which cause a con- <lb/>
test in the States Senate. <lb/>
Kev. W. H. H. Lawhon owns a <lb/>
horse, 2- years old, that he has <lb/>
been driving since in travel- <lb/>
to his appointments, and in <lb/>
that time has traveled over 40.000 <lb/>
miles- The horse, <lb/>
his age, is apparently as good <lb/>
as ever and can travel miles a <lb/>
A runaway horse dashed into <lb/>
the Battery Park Bank at <lb/>
ville and did damage to the office <lb/>
furniture to the extent of about <lb/>
United States Senator <lb/>
Pritchard was in the bank <lb/>
at the time, and a slight <lb/>
cut on the wrist from glass <lb/>
and a painful kick on bis right <lb/>
Tho horse was severely- <lb/>
cut, and had to taken to a vet- <lb/>
surgeon. <lb/>
Georgia has acres <lb/>
of hind to a colony of <lb/>
northern settlers- The Empire <lb/>
State is keeping pace with the <lb/>
times. Why can't North Caro- <lb/>
induce a colony of two to <lb/>
take of valuable and <lb/>
cheap fanning lands They are <lb/>
All we need is to let <lb/>
the what have, <lb/>
and citizens of the cold, barren <lb/>
and blizzard swept northwest Will <lb/>
flock to our <lb/>
Time- <lb/>
Monday about <lb/>
o'clock, while tho train <lb/>
on I be Wilmington and <lb/>
running Faison, <lb/>
Mr John Cook, a resident there, <lb/>
saw some of his hogs on the track, <lb/>
and his attempt to drive them <lb/>
off, stumbled and fell. The en- <lb/>
saw his peril did all <lb/>
he could to stop the train, but <lb/>
before the unfortunate man <lb/>
was run over and his body literally <lb/>
cut two. He was about <lb/>
years old and leaves a family. <lb/>
Mr. G- W. Dunn, Gulf town- <lb/>
ship, informs us that as ho was <lb/>
U one of the most farm- <lb/>
the State, and also the <lb/>
largest tobacco grower of the <lb/>
Wilmington Railroad- <lb/>
His farm has a big <lb/>
canal which runs through the <lb/>
of it carries the waters <lb/>
tho Tar river, a of <lb/>
three mile. He has a nice pas- <lb/>
this canal where he keeps <lb/>
his sheep, goats and hogs. <lb/>
His is so completely <lb/>
raced and ditched that the water <lb/>
fall is feet to the wile. He <lb/>
runs -0 plows tobacco <lb/>
barns, plants acres in tobacco, <lb/>
-50 in torn, in oats and in <lb/>
potatoes. He also keeps up with <lb/>
the lain fall during the year. He <lb/>
Beys is January the rainfall was <lb/>
TO inches, February was very <lb/>
light, March and April GIL <lb/>
Mr. is decidedly one of <lb/>
the best farmers our <lb/>
edge. Tho farmers of Pitt would <lb/>
do Well to consult with him <lb/>
some of his excel ideas. <lb/>
Ola Founts. <lb/>
T ask no man to buy a <lb/>
worth here who feels he <lb/>
can do better elsewhere, but <lb/>
I do ask all men to <lb/>
gate the broad claim we make <lb/>
and the truth or falsity on <lb/>
which we stand or fall, and <lb/>
that is that we give better <lb/>
values on a given amount in <lb/>
Nays it i- <lb/>
go the woods <lb/>
loaded for ticks. <lb/>
dangerous to <lb/>
are <lb/>
i ate monument at on the i plowing in of bis fields on <lb/>
this mouth will be plowed up a <lb/>
ed one of the grandest demon <lb/>
insultingly to one of our minis- <lb/>
we that it is an outrage J D Cox <lb/>
In Monday the <lb/>
Democrats seem to have almost <lb/>
made a clean sweep of the <lb/>
State, the <lb/>
where the Legislature changed <lb/>
the charters and there was a <lb/>
lighting chance the Democrats <lb/>
were victorious. Major Grant <lb/>
worked day and night to put <lb/>
Goldsboro under Republican <lb/>
rule when he was getting his <lb/>
through the Legislature <lb/>
but she still remains Deni <lb/>
Raleigh had been <lb/>
placed, as Shaffer, Young Co. <lb/>
thought, under the same role, <lb/>
she too Democratic city <lb/>
still, and so on throughout the <lb/>
State. This is a pointer tor <lb/>
1896. Our people will not stand <lb/>
such government as has been <lb/>
put us by a fusion <lb/>
According to a table recently <lb/>
published, showing the value of <lb/>
taxable in all of the <lb/>
States of the Union for the years <lb/>
189-3 and 1894. there was a <lb/>
falling in the asses- <lb/>
valuation of property last <lb/>
year in most of the States. The <lb/>
heaviest decline of values took <lb/>
place in far off Washington, <lb/>
where it amounted to more than <lb/>
fifty-seven millions dollars, while <lb/>
Wisconsin stood second on the <lb/>
list, with a decline of fifty <lb/>
millions. The largest falling <lb/>
values of occurred in tho West, <lb/>
every State west of the western <lb/>
border of Pennsylvania except <lb/>
Minnesota and Missouri showing <lb/>
Five States in the South <lb/>
North Carolina, <lb/>
Caroline. Florida and Louisiana <lb/>
showed an increase, the <lb/>
gains were in tho Middle <lb/>
States and in New the <lb/>
States in those sections <lb/>
which our people as a whole <lb/>
not to be slow to condemn, <lb/>
both man let him so <lb/>
severely alone that he would have <lb/>
to seek other quarters to <lb/>
falsehoods where there would be <lb/>
more congeniality than would be <lb/>
found among ti- enlightened <lb/>
people of Greenville- We de- <lb/>
the whole thing as <lb/>
worthy the thoughts and <lb/>
of sensible people and call <lb/>
upon all who love the right and <lb/>
hate the false to unite <lb/>
this effort to corrupt the <lb/>
and the faith of our people- A <lb/>
man who is fighting <lb/>
Christ is fighting you, is <lb/>
worthy the least of your <lb/>
Bethel Items. <lb/>
N- C-, May 13th, 1895. <lb/>
J. C. Wynn. has been <lb/>
spending some with her pa- <lb/>
rents, Mr. and Mrs. . H- <lb/>
left for her home in Durham last <lb/>
Friday morning. <lb/>
Mr. John Jenkins left this <lb/>
morning as a representative from <lb/>
Bethel Lodge I. O- O- F. to the <lb/>
meeting of the Grand Lodge at <lb/>
Greensboro. <lb/>
Boo W. O- Howard, of <lb/>
Hon- F- G- James and Mayor <lb/>
J- L Fleming, of <lb/>
all town to day on legal <lb/>
now. <lb/>
RESOLUTIONS OF <lb/>
At a meeting the Sunday School in <lb/>
the at <lb/>
X. C, May the following res- <lb/>
were <lb/>
1st. whereas it <lb/>
pleased Almighty God to remove from <lb/>
our ii i i Mm. S. C. Hamilton, that <lb/>
while we accept the dispensation f <lb/>
i- Hi- who nil <lb/>
things well, we her loss to <lb/>
the school, her endeavor welfare <lb/>
and her zeal for the fir of every <lb/>
looking to the interest o the <lb/>
church. <lb/>
Resolved 2nd. That we extend <lb/>
heartfelt sympathy to the of <lb/>
the deceased and broke in his behalf <lb/>
that sustaining grace which may prove <lb/>
in his bereavement a <lb/>
swell of water springing into <lb/>
everlasting life. <lb/>
3rd. That a copy of these <lb/>
resolutions be spread on the of <lb/>
j the Sunday School and fiat a i-e <lb/>
Massachusetts Prof. B. K. BOOM, <lb/>
Hiss Nannie Ki <lb/>
A. R. <lb/>
New York, <lb/>
Maine. <lb/>
Com. <lb/>
E F Foreman Dr B T Cos <lb/>
of its character ever <lb/>
in the of North <lb/>
Caro An elaborate and <lb/>
most interesting has <lb/>
D.- C arranged for the occasion, <lb/>
J A Lang Wm Smith <lb/>
D J Whichard J F Mil <lb/>
Edwards <lb/>
W B Wilson CO M <lb/>
King C Dawson W, T E <lb/>
Keel Fleming <lb/>
Jesse L Smith S M Jones <lb/>
30- <lb/>
Swift CreeK and <lb/>
Stock Law <lb/>
White A R Holton <lb/>
J L Smith and L Fleming were <lb/>
as committee to settle <lb/>
with Sheriff. <lb/>
Ordered that Skinner and Lath <lb/>
am be release-1 from payment of <lb/>
taxes on the J L land in <lb/>
Greenville township, L A <lb/>
land, one town lot known <lb/>
as lot, Corbett land in <lb/>
Falkland township, Spain land in <lb/>
township, Walston land <lb/>
crowds will be in attendance <lb/>
from all over the State. <lb/>
So honor the of North <lb/>
Carolina, or for that matter, the <lb/>
people of the entire South, could <lb/>
pay the memory of North bow Hotel, in Greensboro, haul <lb/>
Urge rock, an as such a thing <lb/>
was miner in that part of <lb/>
his farm ho thought he would <lb/>
examine into the matter, and <lb/>
upon lifting it partly from its <lb/>
place, discovered and <lb/>
exhumed of a human <lb/>
ton. How long it had Iain <lb/>
Ii. whose it was or how it <lb/>
came there he does not know <lb/>
K. so which pulls a car <lb/>
en the depot the Ben- <lb/>
heroes of the Lost Cane <lb/>
would be an <lb/>
of their valor, devotion, and <lb/>
patriotism. None appreciate this <lb/>
more than the with <lb/>
whom the North State troops <lb/>
stool shoulder to on <lb/>
many battle-fields from to <lb/>
military representation to <lb/>
the and doubt <lb/>
less do so but for the fact that <lb/>
car up town, broke loose <lb/>
from it and the single tree fell <lb/>
down on his heels, frightening <lb/>
him so that up the <lb/>
street at a fearful rate of speed. <lb/>
Being blind, ho into two <lb/>
horses hitched to a hack, broke <lb/>
the tongue of the back, then <lb/>
then rushed on into old wall <lb/>
near the hotel with a fearful crash <lb/>
Virginia ought to send a driving a large of board <lb/>
into his breast and killing him- <lb/>
self- <lb/>
in tow.,;, nod Reason owing to the Pocahontas mining <lb/>
land; the following of most of her citizen , The parents name <lb/>
Latham k were reduced are either in active the children Ruth, Esther, an <lb/>
vi <lb/>
or orders to <lb/>
as follows Jordan Cherry land <lb/>
to Ballard Jams land to <lb/>
Corbett laud tract to ready for such service, and there- <lb/>
and the other to and <lb/>
that A J be released from <lb/>
taxes on same. <lb/>
Ordered that the land of E. T- <lb/>
Savage be reduced from to <lb/>
Ordered that Fred Cox be re- <lb/>
leased from payment of taxes <lb/>
one horse and charged to <lb/>
in Swift Creek township. <lb/>
Ordered that laud of H. C <lb/>
in township be re <lb/>
from to <lb/>
Ordered that Samuel <lb/>
be released from payment of tax- <lb/>
es on of land in Con- <lb/>
township, the same being <lb/>
listed paid by M. E. Cannon- <lb/>
Zeno and Don Gilliam <lb/>
tor W- 8- Forbes were allowed to <lb/>
list taxes for 1894- <lb/>
Ordered that Wm. Smith be <lb/>
paid for a cow sold by <lb/>
Higgs Bros- and paid on <lb/>
them to the Treasurer, this <lb/>
amount being the excess for dam <lb/>
ages on said cow. <lb/>
Ordered that the pauper order <lb/>
of J- W. Crisp and wife be mode <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The undersigned having duly <lb/>
before the Superior Court Clerk of <lb/>
Pitt county as administratrix of Wini- <lb/>
May, deceased, notice is hereby <lb/>
given to ail persons holding <lb/>
estate t present to <lb/>
the undersigned for collection on or be- <lb/>
fore the 6th day of May or this <lb/>
notice will be plead In bar for I heir re- <lb/>
aid all persona indebted to saW <lb/>
estate will male ate payment. <lb/>
This May 1895. <lb/>
MRS. O. CANNON. <lb/>
of Mr <lb/>
fore not In position to make <lb/>
preparations for a trip to Raleigh. <lb/>
As it is, however, a large veteran <lb/>
and civic delegation from <lb/>
will participate in the e <lb/>
monies- <lb/>
Raleigh is making extensive <lb/>
preparations to entertain <lb/>
visiting organizations, and that <lb/>
she will entertain them hand- <lb/>
and that the <lb/>
will be imposing in all of its <lb/>
details not be told any <lb/>
who the hospitality <lb/>
of tho city while tho Davis <lb/>
train was <lb/>
weeks ago there was <lb/>
to Mr. and Mrs. Albert <lb/>
ed <lb/>
be Frances A neighbor of <lb/>
wrote to President Cleveland, <lb/>
informing him of the facts, and <lb/>
Monday the father of the children <lb/>
received a draft from the <lb/>
dent for to be used for the <lb/>
education of the children. Don't <lb/>
all name your babies <lb/>
and Frances, now, and on the <lb/>
strength it try to pull the Sher <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
the greatest strength. There <lb/>
are no weak spots and yet <lb/>
there is not an ounce of super- <lb/>
metal. They are made <lb/>
for service and speed, and are <lb/>
fully guaranteed. AH styles <lb/>
are the same A <lb/>
handsome descriptive catalog <lb/>
may be bad for the asking. <lb/>
X ., I <lb/>
o c. <lb/>
In <lb/>
NOTHING BUT <lb/>
but the young r <lb/>
grieves <lb/>
Over a prospect dim. <lb/>
Last night to his dear one he tried <lb/>
propose, <lb/>
so sweet on his whit <lb/>
lip- froze. <lb/>
For ah she seemed to him <lb/>
Nothing but sleeves. <lb/>
Nothing hut the young <lb/>
grieves <lb/>
Over a life. <lb/>
his love may be <lb/>
and fast <lb/>
Warranted for six months to last <lb/>
How he have a wife <lb/>
Nothing but sleeves <lb/>
Perfect Health. <lb/>
Keep the system in perfect or- <lb/>
by the occasional use of <lb/>
Liver Pills. They reg- <lb/>
the bowels and produce <lb/>
A Vigorous Body. <lb/>
For sick headache, malaria, <lb/>
constipation and kin- <lb/>
diseases, an absolute cure <lb/>
Liver PILLS <lb/>
Adam; <lb/>
Hood's is Good <lb/>
it <lb/>
Makes Pure Blood <lb/>
Scrofula Thoroughly Eradicated. <lb/>
I. Hood ts Co., Lowell, <lb/>
ii that I give you the details <lb/>
of our sickness and her return to <lb/>
health by tho use of Hood's She <lb/>
was taken down with <lb/>
Fever and a Bad <lb/>
Following tin a sore on her right side be- <lb/>
tween the two lower ribs. In a short time an- <lb/>
oUter broke on left side. would take <lb/>
of sore mouth and when had <lb/>
el this she would with at <lb/>
tacks high and expel bloody looking <lb/>
corruption. Her head was and matter <lb/>
oozed from her ears. After each attack she be- <lb/>
Cures <lb/>
worse and all treatment failed to Rive bee <lb/>
until we began to use Hood's <lb/>
After she had taken one-half bottle we could see <lb/>
that she was better. We continued until she <lb/>
had taken three bottles. Now she looks like <lb/>
. The Bloom of Health <lb/>
and Is fat a pig. We feel grateful, and <lb/>
say too of <lb/>
Mks. A. Inman, Tennessee. <lb/>
Hood's Pills easily, yet promptly and <lb/>
on the liver bowels. <lb/>
MEN'S BOYS <lb/>
CLOTHING I <lb/>
Hats, Caps, <lb/>
SHOES <lb/>
men, women, misses. <lb/>
J. C. LANIER CO. <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
IV <lb/>
MARBLE. <lb/>
Wire and Iron Fencing <lb/>
sold. First-class work <lb/>
and prices reasonable. <lb/>
Marble on c old <lb/>
lot, on the as i <lb/>
WALL PAPER. <lb/>
I Wall to <lb/>
tO and <lb/>
a lot of samples. <lb/>
Come tin arc <lb/>
The best you <lb/>
ever hail to lion. <lb/>
a small cost. Pries low as <lb/>
three cent, a roll of <lb/>
A. B. ELLINGTON. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
Carolina, Martin <lb/>
Sn; Court, Before X. S. <lb/>
Simmons, <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
W A II F <lb/>
iv Ho Sophie K <lb/>
Hunter, K Taylor, and wife, Anna <lb/>
K Balance, l II <lb/>
fatter and wife. V Carter. J O <lb/>
; nth lie -ml wife. Jessie M <lb/>
and II W S Trustee. John f <lb/>
Heed. W I Heed. C O Reed, Sophie I <lb/>
Martin, Maggie Simmons. M <lb/>
Mary E <lb/>
W Hayes. Mary <lb/>
L W de- <lb/>
The will lake notice that <lb/>
the plaintiff has begun an action against <lb/>
them In this court for the purpose of <lb/>
selling for a division that Swamp prop- <lb/>
in Martin in which said <lb/>
plant and defendants are tenants in <lb/>
common, as <lb/>
con- <lb/>
of a track of swamp land con- <lb/>
e ii ii Him live thousand <lb/>
acres, and a lot of canoe, and the said <lb/>
defendants are required to appear <lb/>
my office In on 3rd day <lb/>
of June ISM answer or to <lb/>
the complaint petition in said action. <lb/>
will that <lb/>
If to answer or de- <lb/>
Io said or the <lb/>
relief demanded said plaintiffs will <lb/>
be granted. Witness my hand <lb/>
and seal at office In Williamston, N. C, <lb/>
this April 1st 1895. X. S. <lb/>
Clerk Martin <lb/>
for maid, wife, mother,<lb/>
than any competing concern anywhere. <lb/>
is more varied, my styles higher, my <lb/>
prices lower and my methods more modern, <lb/>
more liberal, more <lb/>
my business is greater and growing larger. <lb/>
Come and see and I will treat right <lb/>
FRANK WILSON, <lb/>
THE KING CLOTHIER <lb/>
Get Your Tobacco Fines Can Gel the Best. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. . <lb/>
have of the cleanest and<lb/>
ever arc IVe t <lb/>
heap as the cheapest and guarantee our in <lb/>
S. E. Pender Co, <lb/>
in Stoves. and Mowing Machine. <lb/>
ESTABLISH J J <lb/>
X- -A- Andrews. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. C. <lb/>
Just Received Cars Rock Lime. <lb/>
H MAILS, <lb/>
and <lb/>
GO Sardines. <lb/>
II in. <lb/>
Soap. <lb/>
Star <lb/>
Boxes Cakes and Crackers. <lb/>
Bid- k <lb/>
Cases Matches, <lb/>
Id Dost,<lb/>
too Backs <lb/>
In Bills Molasses, <lb/>
S Tons <lb/>
I Cars Floor. <lb/>
Meal. <lb/>
May. <lb/>
Lara, <lb/>
Granulated <lb/>
j P. <lb/>
Rail A A <lb/>
; M R- It. Mills Sim. <lb/>
t, Three Thistle <lb/>
Boxes Tobacco, <lb/>
v. M. P. . <lb/>
O d Va. f <lb/>
Cases <lb/>
CT. <lb/>
Al <lb/>
N. c. <lb/>
AT HOUSE. <lb/>
All Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At current <lb/>
AGENT FOB. FIRST-GLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Ship your produce to <lb/>
Factors <lb/>
The undersigned having t p Ii. <lb/>
pointed the Clerk of th Superior , J , <lb/>
of Pitt a administrator of <lb/>
George W. Hellen deceased and hiving <lb/>
as such on day of <lb/>
April notice Is given to all <lb/>
persons holding claims against es- <lb/>
of said George to <lb/>
to the undersigned for pay- <lb/>
on or before the 1st day of May. <lb/>
Commission <lb/>
or this will be plead In bar <lb/>
of their recovery. <lb/>
All persons to said estate j <lb/>
will make Immediate to <lb/>
undersigned and save costs. <lb/>
This 20th day April. ISM. <lb/>
K. <lb/>
of w- <lb/>
A Attorneys. <lb/>
NORFOLK VA <lb/>
Attention to<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017745_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
It <lb/>
DRY GOODS <lb/>
BAZAAR. <lb/>
A full and complete <lb/>
line of all the latest <lb/>
shades and makes <lb/>
of lovely <lb/>
Silks, Sicilians, <lb/>
Mohair, Silk Warp Hen- <lb/>
Jae- <lb/>
Lawns, <lb/>
Sateens. Pleases, <lb/>
Organdies, Ducks, <lb/>
and <lb/>
in Dress Goods just <lb/>
and would <lb/>
pleased to have the <lb/>
call and <lb/>
line of <lb/>
re- <lb/>
be <lb/>
la- <lb/>
examine. <lb/>
Men and Boys <lb/>
CLOTHING, <lb/>
HATS, <lb/>
Gents h Goods, <lb/>
DRY GOODS, <lb/>
Notions. Boots Shoes <lb/>
H. O. Hooker <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
HE REFLECTOR <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
op the rampage <lb/>
Jest a car lead of C <lb/>
Lily Flour- It is going <lb/>
L- A Co. <lb/>
Tue t. k is abroad <lb/>
the <lb/>
t. <lb/>
land. <lb/>
Cotton Seed wanted for <lb/>
at tie Old Store. <lb/>
Cash<lb/>
Remember I T lot Chicken <lb/>
Produce at the old <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
The shady side is most <lb/>
popular now. <lb/>
You will save money by cut <lb/>
ting feed for your horses and <lb/>
cows. D. has a first <lb/>
class feed cutter for <lb/>
A pump has placed the <lb/>
well near store. <lb/>
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb/>
t the Old <lb/>
Strawberries straw hats <lb/>
both trim. <lb/>
The White Mountain is the <lb/>
only Ice Cream Freezer that <lb/>
has three motions- D. D. Has <lb/>
has them from to <lb/>
quarts. <lb/>
I have taken the agency for the <lb/>
New Home Sowing Machine <lb/>
will keep a supply of <lb/>
net dies attachments at H. C- <lb/>
Hooker's store. James <lb/>
Riverside Nurseries had ripe <lb/>
lo day. <lb/>
Attachment for <lb/>
all makes of Sewing <lb/>
kept by James Brown at H. C. <lb/>
Hookers store. <lb/>
Bring your cotton seed to <lb/>
Sheppard, buy your <lb/>
Meal Car load of each <lb/>
just arrived tor sale cheap. <lb/>
Remember I can take your <lb/>
measure nave you a suit of <lb/>
clothes made to order. Fit <lb/>
Frank Wilson. <lb/>
just arrived at <lb/>
Washington- See us and get <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
Two colored Mary <lb/>
Jones and Mollie Staton, had a <lb/>
scrap and were fined and costs <lb/>
each by Mayor Fleming. <lb/>
Tobacco Growers Attention. <lb/>
We have just received a large <lb/>
quantity of tobacco flue iron o- <lb/>
good quality and clean. Parties <lb/>
who have ordered flues from us <lb/>
can get them now at any time <lb/>
S. E. Co. <lb/>
have just received <lb/>
our machinery and are <lb/>
sever car loads of Aral class flue <lb/>
f roil a days are <lb/>
pared to make any and all kinds <lb/>
of flues and will guarantee first <lb/>
class at reasonable prices- <lb/>
Youth very truly, <lb/>
O- L- <lb/>
Oscar Hooker- j <lb/>
THESE FOLKS <lb/>
I or Went and Their Name Got <lb/>
in Print <lb/>
Miss Mary Bynum is sick. <lb/>
Li. C Latham has gone to <lb/>
i Hyde court. <lb/>
I. Moore is a <lb/>
week at Whitakers. <lb/>
Col. I. A- Sugg to Kin <lb/>
Monday <lb/>
Mr. J. W. Wiggins came in on <lb/>
Monday evening's train- <lb/>
Mr. R. J. Cobb returned Fri- <lb/>
day evening from Norfolk. <lb/>
Mrs. Rosa Baker, of Suffolk, is <lb/>
visiting at the King House- <lb/>
Mr. II H. Hayes left Saturday <lb/>
morning for Chase City, Va. <lb/>
Mrs. W. M. L of Farm ville, <lb/>
is visiting Mrs. J. A- Lang. <lb/>
Miss Sophie Jarvis is visiting <lb/>
Miss Aylmer Sugg in the <lb/>
try. <lb/>
Mr. Morris Meyer returned <lb/>
Now York Thursday even- <lb/>
Mr- Luther returned <lb/>
Monday evening from Scotland <lb/>
Neck. <lb/>
Hue Novella <lb/>
home Monday evening from a <lb/>
visit in <lb/>
Mr. B. E- Parham returned <lb/>
Monday evening from a trip to <lb/>
Oxford and Durham. <lb/>
Mr J. K. Newton, of Tarboro, <lb/>
came down Monday evening and <lb/>
spent the night here. <lb/>
Miss Johnson, daughter <lb/>
of Mr. frank living just <lb/>
below is very sick. <lb/>
Mr. J. L- Sugg now occupies <lb/>
his Dew residence on Fifth street <lb/>
that just been completed. <lb/>
Mr. W- P. flail returned Mon- <lb/>
day evening His <lb/>
family remain awhile longer- <lb/>
Solicitor M- Bernard <lb/>
home Friday evening from Nash- <lb/>
ville where he had at court. <lb/>
Mrs J B- Cherry left Monday <lb/>
evening for to attend <lb/>
the Daughters <lb/>
Miss Annie Harding, f John- <lb/>
son's Mills, came up Thursday <lb/>
to visit family of Maj. ii. <lb/>
Harding <lb/>
Mrs- J. h. Jenkins and children <lb/>
and Miss Mat tie <lb/>
gene to Midway, Ya., to <lb/>
the sum nil r <lb/>
Miss Bessie shields, of Scot <lb/>
land Neck, arrived Wednesday <lb/>
to visit her <lb/>
B. Higgs. <lb/>
Meyer is making <lb/>
hid <lb/>
-laud in for the <lb/>
trade. <lb/>
Mr. F- J. the <lb/>
led artist, arrived m Mon- <lb/>
day evening, and is stopping at <lb/>
House. <lb/>
Mr G- W. canvasser <lb/>
for Hie celebrated artist, F. J. <lb/>
is town showing <lb/>
pies of his work. <lb/>
Mr. J. returned <lb/>
Friday evening, Mrs. <lb/>
mount with lam. She cordial <lb/>
welcomed to <lb/>
Dr. C J. came home <lb/>
Friday evening from Baltimore <lb/>
where he had been attending the <lb/>
National Medical Convention- <lb/>
Mr. W. T. returned <lb/>
Wednesday evening from <lb/>
He says the preparations <lb/>
for the of the <lb/>
are just immense. <lb/>
Mary's Hen. <lb/>
Mary had a little <lb/>
With feathers white as snow. <lb/>
The preacher paid a visit; then <lb/>
The chicken had to go. <lb/>
Inquirer. <lb/>
This <lb/>
We learn that Mr. T. B. Man- <lb/>
sowed a tobacco bed of <lb/>
square yards, and from it drew <lb/>
enough plants for three acres for <lb/>
himself, furnished Mr. J. W. Al- <lb/>
with enough for ten acres, <lb/>
and still has a good supply of <lb/>
plants left. <lb/>
Pitt's Representatives. <lb/>
The Ladies Monumental <lb/>
at Raleigh, have selected <lb/>
Mr. J- J- of <lb/>
as one of the marshals at <lb/>
the unveiling ceremonies on the <lb/>
20th. There will not be a hand- <lb/>
man in the procession. <lb/>
Ex Senator T- J- Jarvis is also <lb/>
one of the honorary marshals. <lb/>
Call Upon <lb/>
A prominent claimed to-be <lb/>
medium, who for several <lb/>
days has causing somewhat <lb/>
of a sensation here, received <lb/>
anonymous note this morning, ad- <lb/>
vising him to leave We beat <lb/>
that he got very mad over the <lb/>
note, but it strikes us that if he <lb/>
has any faith in his business a <lb/>
better way would be to cull up <lb/>
some of his spirits inquire <lb/>
struck Billy in <lb/>
other words who wrote that note <lb/>
Fertilizer Sales. <lb/>
We notice that a late report <lb/>
from the State Agricultural De- <lb/>
said there had <lb/>
considerable off in the <lb/>
sale of fertilizers the State this <lb/>
year. denier Green- <lb/>
ville us that this county <lb/>
section the sales for this sea <lb/>
sou show a large increase over <lb/>
last Pitt county is <lb/>
paring for big <lb/>
and tobacco especially. <lb/>
Marriage <lb/>
I ho last two weeks the Reg- <lb/>
of Deeds issued seven mar- <lb/>
licenses, only one being for <lb/>
a white couple, J. L. Taylor <lb/>
Virginia <lb/>
colored were Daniel <lb/>
and Sarah Moore, Forbes <lb/>
and Lucy Peyton. Henry Craw- <lb/>
ford and Hettie Ormond, V. H <lb/>
Miles and Busily Moore, Ben <lb/>
Lane and Alice Wilson. <lb/>
LIGHTNING. <lb/>
Death of Mr. B. Y. <lb/>
Philpot <lb/>
Bethel, N- e., May 10th 1895. <lb/>
Mr- John L- Taylor was mar- <lb/>
to Miss Virginia M- Philpot <lb/>
on Wednesday evening at the <lb/>
brides father, Mr- W. W- Philpot, <lb/>
D. C- Moore, Esq., officiating. <lb/>
There w.-re six couples in <lb/>
dance. A reception was held at <lb/>
the groom's father in Bethel. <lb/>
Mr. B- F- ex-post master <lb/>
at Bethel after a long and linger <lb/>
illness with consumption, <lb/>
died at Ids home on -lames street j <lb/>
Tuesday night. Funeral services j <lb/>
were in the Methodist church <lb/>
of which he had been a faithful <lb/>
member for more thirty <lb/>
years, by Rev. W- A. Forbes Wed- <lb/>
evening at o'clock. He <lb/>
was buried by the O- O. in <lb/>
the presence of a large concourse <lb/>
of people- He leaves a widow <lb/>
four children. May the good <lb/>
Lord guide, protect and comfort <lb/>
this their sad hour of <lb/>
bereavement- <lb/>
The little son of Mr. G- B- <lb/>
Whitfield, years old, <lb/>
was killed by lightning yesterday <lb/>
evening, and its mother and a <lb/>
young man by the name of Willie <lb/>
Thorn were both knocked down <lb/>
by the shock and came near being <lb/>
killed. Mrs. con- <lb/>
is thought to be critical. <lb/>
Dr. Grimes says she will probably <lb/>
recover- Mr. Thorne is much bet- <lb/>
to-day. The little boy <lb/>
buried this evening, funeral <lb/>
vices conducted by Rev. W- A. <lb/>
Forbes at Mr. <lb/>
NEW BOARD. <lb/>
They Meet and <lb/>
elected. <lb/>
MAT MOONSHINE. <lb/>
A Few of the Bays Caught Before <lb/>
They Faded. <lb/>
Commencement season is draw- <lb/>
on. <lb/>
Drop a line to the fish and you <lb/>
are answered with a pull. <lb/>
of young men are <lb/>
shedding <lb/>
Spring and Summer Clothing <lb/>
Less Cost at LANG'S. <lb/>
The colored pie had <lb/>
big baptizing at the river Sun- <lb/>
day morning. <lb/>
The colored folks had a big <lb/>
a little <lb/>
while <lb/>
playing with a hairpin <lb/>
struck it down her tin oat, and for <lb/>
a short while caused excitement <lb/>
to the family. <lb/>
Mr. W C- is building a <lb/>
house near the Market for the <lb/>
new fire engine to kept in- <lb/>
The in which the hook and <lb/>
ladder is kept will also be <lb/>
repaired and pale <lb/>
We are requested to urge all of <lb/>
the of Co. O- 8th reg- <lb/>
to go to Raleigh to the <lb/>
veiling of the Confederate <lb/>
It cost 1240 for the <lb/>
round trip. You leave here Sat <lb/>
Ex-Treasurer John Flanagan <lb/>
ASSIGNEE SALE <lb/>
The Dry Goods and Notion concern of E. J. <lb/>
Co , of Broadway, N. Y., went into <lb/>
the hands of a receiver days and <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
the lucky buyer, happened there in time to in <lb/>
the great plums, always having the interest of his <lb/>
patrons at heart, he is now able to offer some of the <lb/>
greatest bargains heard of under the such as <lb/>
festival out at the Planters Ware- was talking about land being too <lb/>
Friday night. <lb/>
The Catholic Bishop will visit <lb/>
Greenville next Wednesday, 22nd, <lb/>
and will hold services at <lb/>
prettiest garden we have noticed <lb/>
in town. His corn is over a foot <lb/>
high- <lb/>
Another large raft of logs got <lb/>
hung in the river bridge Sunday, <lb/>
and most of the day was used in <lb/>
getting it out. <lb/>
For <lb/>
The has been talk- <lb/>
some of the fertilizer <lb/>
dealers to got ids i of the <lb/>
quantity sold in county this <lb/>
season, and the estimate arrived <lb/>
at is i tons of <lb/>
goods, besides and lime- <lb/>
The cost o- quantity of for <lb/>
round numbers is <lb/>
about which <lb/>
goes out of Pitt county for this <lb/>
item alone. The farmers will <lb/>
have, to good crops to be <lb/>
able to pay such a large sum. <lb/>
Large crops are for <lb/>
we hope will come fully <lb/>
lip to pee Cation. <lb/>
She Knew it Was a Man. <lb/>
A little girl in Greenville was <lb/>
studying her lessens, an evening <lb/>
or two ago, and after completing <lb/>
task in tho room where <lb/>
i lie older members of the family <lb/>
were gathered, asked <lb/>
who is <lb/>
he replied <lb/>
her Mama, pointing to the head <lb/>
of the family with a smile. <lb/>
told sister it was a as- <lb/>
the little Miss positively, <lb/>
I saw in my grammar that <lb/>
is the thief of <lb/>
The joke was such a good one <lb/>
on the old man that he almost <lb/>
exploded with laughter- <lb/>
Rev- Mr. Smith who is <lb/>
the at the <lb/>
church is a <lb/>
All who fail to hear <lb/>
assist-<lb/>
preacher. <lb/>
him miss <lb/>
Mr. S- T. Hooker, <lb/>
of Covenant Lodge L O. O- F- <lb/>
Mr. W. L. Brown, Grand <lb/>
Herald, left Monday morning to <lb/>
attend the at Greens <lb/>
Sheriff G. L. Hodges, <lb/>
came over Wednesday <lb/>
morning, drove through to Wash- <lb/>
and got the Ben <lb/>
White, who had arrested <lb/>
there, and returned to ville <lb/>
in time to take th train <lb/>
for Kinston. <lb/>
Mr Larry left Thurs- <lb/>
day for New York to accept <lb/>
a position make his home in <lb/>
that city. We very much regret <lb/>
departure from Greenville, <lb/>
Invitations. <lb/>
The commencement exorcise <lb/>
of Military School, at Ox- <lb/>
ford, will take place Friday. May, <lb/>
The Reflector <lb/>
edges an invitation. <lb/>
We thank Miss Ada Tyson for <lb/>
an invitation to the commence- <lb/>
exercises of the State Nor- <lb/>
and Industrial <lb/>
May 22nd and 23rd <lb/>
The Reflector acknowledges <lb/>
an invitation to the commence- <lb/>
exercises of <lb/>
Female Institute, at <lb/>
during the week beginning May <lb/>
27th- <lb/>
Messrs- S. W. Erwin and C- <lb/>
Forbes send us beautiful <lb/>
to Trinity College com- <lb/>
Durham, -Tune 2nd to <lb/>
4th. The name of Mr. Forbes <lb/>
appears as one of the managers. <lb/>
We acknowledge receipt of an <lb/>
invitation to the An- <lb/>
of the University of <lb/>
North Carolina, June 5th. There <lb/>
will be a reunion of all the classes <lb/>
and believe this is the sentiment and an interesting is <lb/>
of every one here. early in preparation. <lb/>
d he has lived in th s <lb/>
town with his uncle, Mr- M, R. <lb/>
Lung, and has won the highest <lb/>
esteem of the entire community. <lb/>
We wish him much success in his <lb/>
new home and business <lb/>
Flies have put in their appear <lb/>
in large numbers. <lb/>
Some of our young attorneys <lb/>
have investing in type writ- <lb/>
Barnes has <lb/>
taking views of several buildings <lb/>
in town. <lb/>
Pender received another hand- <lb/>
some wood rim Rambler bicycle <lb/>
to day. <lb/>
The ice man smiles over this <lb/>
weather, whether anybody else <lb/>
does or not- <lb/>
A man is never too mean be <lb/>
loved by a dog, never too <lb/>
poor to own one. <lb/>
Some one has said this would <lb/>
be an awfully dull world if all the <lb/>
fools were killed- <lb/>
The bad wash near <lb/>
Dickerson avenue, <lb/>
has been repaired. <lb/>
Shoes, Slippers and Fur- <lb/>
reduced rates <lb/>
at LANG'S. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Notice what the Richmond <lb/>
Dispatch says Mr. <lb/>
Frank the <lb/>
talented portrait painter, who has <lb/>
making portraits in Rich <lb/>
for several weeks, is <lb/>
possessed of the genius of <lb/>
the true artist. We have <lb/>
more perfect reproductions <lb/>
of faces by pure hand work <lb/>
Mr. secures <lb/>
in his portraits. Not only <lb/>
physical of his <lb/>
subjects accurately copied in <lb/>
On the morning after the <lb/>
the four Republican Conn <lb/>
oilmen elect of the T- <lb/>
Godwin. T- A- Julius Jen- <lb/>
kins the last <lb/>
three a meeting, <lb/>
called in Justice J. A- Lang to <lb/>
administer the oath to them, and <lb/>
adjourned until to v. <lb/>
The two Democratic, <lb/>
elect were not in it- <lb/>
At o'clock this morning Hip <lb/>
same met in the Mayor's <lb/>
hall for the purpose of organizing. <lb/>
Councilman Godwin called the <lb/>
meeting order when Council <lb/>
man Jenkins moved to make <lb/>
chairman <lb/>
carried. <lb/>
took the <lb/>
chair, making a few remarks that <lb/>
he thought bad waited long <lb/>
enough to organize, and declared <lb/>
nominations for in order <lb/>
nominate <lb/>
Obi two votes were east <lb/>
for him Than Councilman Godwin <lb/>
Chairman that <lb/>
he also was entitled to vote. <lb/>
Chairman cast his vote for <lb/>
Forbes and declared him elected <lb/>
Mayor. <lb/>
For Clerk Councilman Ruffin <lb/>
-d W. W. Humphrey, <lb/>
Council Jenkins nominated C C. <lb/>
Forbes, and Councilman Godwin <lb/>
read a petition from W. P. Nor- <lb/>
and placed him in <lb/>
Humphrey received one <lb/>
vote. three, and the latter <lb/>
was declared elected. <lb/>
Chairman that <lb/>
the Mayor and Clerk elect would <lb/>
now be installed before proceed- <lb/>
further. <lb/>
A messenger was sent to Town <lb/>
Clerk Harris for the record books. <lb/>
The messenger and re <lb/>
ported that Clerk Harris stated <lb/>
that he could not turn over the <lb/>
books to one until author <lb/>
to do so the old Board. <lb/>
Councilman Ruffin stated <lb/>
old Board has nothing to <lb/>
do with the books, they belong <lb/>
lo <lb/>
S P- Humphrey, an outsider, <lb/>
arose and <lb/>
men, tho law was <lb/>
rapped down by Chairman <lb/>
who declared don't care what <lb/>
the law says, we know enough <lb/>
about <lb/>
Justice J. A- Lang was sect for <lb/>
and administered the official oaths , <lb/>
to Forbes, when he briefly <lb/>
returned thanks for the honor of <lb/>
his election and took Hie chair. <lb/>
Nominations for Chief of Police <lb/>
were next in order. Councilman <lb/>
nominated J- W- <lb/>
who received a unanimous vote. <lb/>
For Assistant Police Council- <lb/>
man Ruffin nominated <lb/>
Councilman Jenkins <lb/>
Moses King. Councilman <lb/>
nominated Fred Cox and <lb/>
Councilman Godwin nominated <lb/>
Williams. received <lb/>
one vote. Cox three, and the lat <lb/>
was declared elected- <lb/>
Councilman nominated <lb/>
Councilman Godwin for <lb/>
and the vote for him was <lb/>
Then Councilman <lb/>
that the Policemen be <lb/>
sworn in and the meeting adjourn <lb/>
subject to a call of the Mayor to <lb/>
elect other officers. <lb/>
The old Board of <lb/>
will meet to-night to receive the <lb/>
report of committee appointed to <lb/>
the Treasurer's and Tax <lb/>
Collector's accounts, to close tip <lb/>
their business and turn the affairs <lb/>
of the town over to the new board. <lb/>
wet for planting cotton and said <lb/>
he told some hands on his place <lb/>
to adopt the Mississippi bottom <lb/>
plan, that is to drop the seed by <lb/>
hand and mash them in with their <lb/>
feet. <lb/>
Mr- W. EL Smith has about <lb/>
u. township, was in town Friday and <lb/>
told as the wet weather has <lb/>
injured the fruit prospects <lb/>
out in his neighborhood. The <lb/>
apple trees especially were getting <lb/>
full of blight or and he <lb/>
thought this crop would be a <lb/>
failure. <lb/>
,, , While returning from a visit In <lb/>
Pitt County were out for the Sunday afternoon, <lb/>
drill with twenty four men Dr c j lost a hand <lb/>
one that he had <lb/>
and get in a lively tap. forty He <lb/>
Friday Mr. the watch loose in <lb/>
brought us from Riverside land thinks in taking it out to get <lb/>
Nurseries a strawberry that mes time missed his pocket in <lb/>
six inches in circumference- it back. <lb/>
Mr, J. W- Morgan received a <lb/>
telegram from Asheville, Friday <lb/>
morning, announcing the death <lb/>
A crowd of boys a game of Miss Eva Morgan. <lb/>
of marbles can made more noise He has the sympathy of <lb/>
n flock of geese over a piece friends here in his bereavement. <lb/>
of melon. But a great many of has only a few months <lb/>
us were boys once our lives. he lest a brother. <lb/>
T r. ,, , , . I Mr- Frank J. an Artist <lb/>
recognized as the most talented <lb/>
church and U ever win <lb/>
double case gold the guest the King <lb/>
fee liberally rewarded by re- Go <lb/>
it to Dr. C O Hagan. yon y <lb/>
Saturday Mr. A- Tucker ed in oil, water or crayon, <lb/>
brought sample lot of his Ho is v native of Kentucky, well <lb/>
Silk Warp Embroideries, Laces, <lb/>
is none lacking in the <lb/>
apartment <lb/>
conic to see LANG for, <lb/>
your commencement <lb/>
year's cotton crop to town <lb/>
thirteen bales in the lot. <lb/>
Ho sold the through at 5.70. <lb/>
Mrs. S;. <lb/>
J. L- Smith <lb/>
Thursday <lb/>
of Messrs. B. S <lb/>
paid, and Mrs. J <lb/>
town. <lb/>
known by reputation here in <lb/>
North Carolina- Go and see him <lb/>
or receive his agent with samples <lb/>
of his work. He is the first Artist <lb/>
that ever visited Greenville that <lb/>
j,.,.,., c-in sit yon down and <lb/>
W Mi , . , . <lb/>
portrait without a photo. <lb/>
your pure an healthy an <lb/>
you will not have Hood's <lb/>
give the blood vitality <lb/>
where all shapes, colors and styles can always <lb/>
be found at rook bottom prices. we also <lb/>
carry a large line of <lb/>
IS <lb/>
These are facts and <lb/>
trial for spring trade. <lb/>
all we ask a <lb/>
c. T. <lb/>
Next <lb/>
Door to Bank. <lb/>
i i wife <lb/>
of <lb/>
Mr. <lb/>
died <lb/>
Shop- <lb/>
Smith of <lb/>
Mr. Frank . a <lb/>
of the great Statesman, Governor I in a Spring. <lb/>
Tom of O d , Secretary of we learn that on Thursday a <lb/>
the IT. S Treasury under Pr 3-year old child of Mr Crandall <lb/>
dent Pierce, Minister lo Mexico, I Li tile, of fell <lb/>
sic, an Artist that has not first in a soring and was <lb/>
gained a reputation second The child was out <lb/>
no in America, but an with n nurse and while the lat <lb/>
recognition in Europe, attention was directed else- <lb/>
will remain a the King House all where the little one wandered to <lb/>
The Leaders Say <lb/>
The eyes of the people are upon the merchants <lb/>
who can and will sell goods cheap, cheaper and <lb/>
cheapest in these times of depression and <lb/>
for the future condition and prosperity of our <lb/>
people. We claim to be the merchants of Green- <lb/>
ville for you to trade with, for the following <lb/>
sons We buy largely and buy for the cash, we <lb/>
buy at close figures because of these two facts. <lb/>
We sell for cash, we sell on credit. We help <lb/>
of our friends who appreciate it and in turn <lb/>
help us by telling their friends of our honest <lb/>
goods and honest business methods in dealing <lb/>
with all. We carry the the largest and best <lb/>
line of <lb/>
this week- <lb/>
of art. <lb/>
Go see his gems <lb/>
the spring and fell <lb/>
dead when found. <lb/>
to be found in our county. We invite your in- <lb/>
in, and comparison, dollars worth <lb/>
with dollars worth, quality against quality, <lb/>
with any other stock in Pitt county. The signs <lb/>
of the times point out plainly those merchants <lb/>
. with whom you should spend your cash. Do <lb/>
not be led away with what some other man has <lb/>
to tell you, but come to us and buy your <lb/>
Gentle spring comes with all t e sweet songs o <lb/>
the birds and lovely flowers and so <lb/>
does our our pretty <lb/>
-and line line of- <lb/>
Our goods are prettier and cheaper than ever <lb/>
and fast. quick. <lb/>
Leaders of Low Prices, <lb/>
Warned. <lb/>
On May 9th, near Mildred, N- <lb/>
C, at the residence of the bride's <lb/>
father. Mr- Ralph Mayo, by Rev. <lb/>
R. W. Hines, Mr. Henry G Bur <lb/>
ton, of of New <lb/>
Castle on Tyne, to Miss <lb/>
the. I Cora Lee Mayo, of Mildred- Ira- <lb/>
minutest the expression mediately after the ceremony the <lb/>
is quite as reproduced. couple left for Tarboro where <lb/>
TO NOTIFY <lb/>
Notice to Creditor. <lb/>
The having be- <lb/>
fore the Superior Court Clerk of Pitt <lb/>
I county the state <lb/>
i D. w. deceased, is <lb/>
hereby given to persons to <lb/>
estate of decedent to <lb/>
mediate payment lo the undersigned. <lb/>
nil having claims <lb/>
th- said must present the nine <lb/>
before the day or this <lb/>
notice will be plead III bar of recovery <lb/>
This 8th of Mar. <lb/>
LORENZO <lb/>
of D. W. <lb/>
Dress Hats and Boots and Shoes, <lb/>
Goods, Heavy Domestics, Bleached and <lb/>
Unbleached Sheetings and Shirtings, Hardware, <lb/>
Plows and Castings, Nails, Shovels, spades and <lb/>
Axes, Hollowware, Tinware, Pots, <lb/>
Furniture, Sets, <lb/>
es, Bedsteads, Bureaus, <lb/>
Lounges, Tables, Hall <lb/>
Racks, Cribs and Cradles, <lb/>
children's Carriages, <lb/>
Chairs of many kinds and <lb/>
styles from the cheapest <lb/>
to fine Plush Seat Rockers <lb/>
Matting and Oil cloths, <lb/>
Heavy Groceries, Meat, <lb/>
Molasses, Salt, Oils, Flour <lb/>
a specialty in high grades, <lb/>
Lard, Baking Powders. <lb/>
To the Ladies we would <lb/>
especially say do not fail <lb/>
to see our beautiful line of <lb/>
Ladies, Misses and Child- <lb/>
Slippers, Cotton and Wash Dress Goods, <lb/>
Laces, <lb/>
White Goods, Dimities and Lawns. To the <lb/>
men to buy our Reynold's Shoes, every pair war- <lb/>
ranted to be solid. To every buyer we say <lb/>
and see our stock. We will be pleased to show <lb/>
what we have to sell. We set the pace, others <lb/>
try to follow. <lb/>
BUILD UP HOME <lb/>
By patronizing Home Enterprise. <lb/>
on The finish of Mr. <lb/>
portraits is in <lb/>
with the other features of his work <lb/>
which shows to be an honest, <lb/>
conscientious artist, who values <lb/>
the approval of his patrons far <lb/>
higher than ho does the money he <lb/>
gets from them. made <lb/>
a life sized portrait of us in crayon <lb/>
which we do not think could be <lb/>
improved. It is equal to the best <lb/>
steel <lb/>
F. J. the well known <lb/>
artist is a guest of the King <lb/>
House- All those -wishing a high <lb/>
grade of portrait -work will have <lb/>
the opportunity to get tho same <lb/>
for the next t weeks. <lb/>
their friends and the <lb/>
trade that they have <lb/>
bought out the f <lb/>
CO., <lb/>
will engage in the n. c, <lb/>
Ate manufacturing as Hue Cigars, Che- <lb/>
i roots anti a be found on <lb/>
the market. Their leading brands are <lb/>
OF <lb/>
a dime cigar for a Nickel, hand made. <lb/>
Havana tilled. <lb/>
a very fine Cigar, <lb/>
All persons having claims I lie <lb/>
estate of the late IV. J. Higgs will pro <lb/>
them to me, administrator Mid <lb/>
estate on or before April and <lb/>
all persons owing said will please <lb/>
come forward and settle. <lb/>
10th <lb/>
J. W- <lb/>
they took the train for Norfolk to <lb/>
visit relatives of the groom. <lb/>
They have the best wishes of <lb/>
m any friends for a long and hap <lb/>
life. H. <lb/>
Will Go To Raleigh. <lb/>
their meeting even- <lb/>
the Pitt County de- <lb/>
to accept the to <lb/>
attend the unveiling ceremonies <lb/>
at Raleigh. If enough members <lb/>
report at a meeting to be held <lb/>
next the company will <lb/>
leave for Raleigh Saturday morn- <lb/>
ins. 18th. We learn that the <lb/>
Washington Light Infantry will <lb/>
tend. <lb/>
and Clothing business. <lb/>
We are receiving <lb/>
Everybody invited to <lb/>
all and see us. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
TAFT k CO., <lb/>
GREENVILLE, It. C <lb/>
Havana tilled, hand mad <lb/>
Named in honor of Col. Buck Black <lb/>
well. <lb/>
i a fine live cent Cigar, Sumatra Wrapper <lb/>
hand made, Havana filled, a sure win- <lb/>
Named in honor of Col. J. S. <lb/>
Can-, of Durham To- <lb/>
SADIE <lb/>
Ten lot cents. <lb/>
CHUNK <lb/>
Five for sent. The tine t smoke for <lb/>
the money. <lb/>
NORTH STATE <lb/>
Three for cents, a hummer that <lb/>
ways pleases. <lb/>
Stick to home and send us your or- <lb/>
Special brands put up when de- <lb/>
sired. Address <lb/>
MALLORY DURHAM CHEROOT CO- <lb/>
Dunn am, N. C <lb/>
Truck Barrels, Pumps <lb/>
All Kinds of Machinery. <lb/>
have opened at <lb/>
Moore store and are <lb/>
prepared to fun <lb/>
any kind of <lb/>
you may want. <lb/>
Special attention given <lb/>
to putting down <lb/>
and repairing <lb/>
PUMPS. <lb/>
All kinds of Pipe- <lb/>
work and sat- <lb/>
guaranteed. <lb/>
for Flues with <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
TASTELESS <lb/>
CHILL <lb/>
AS FOR ADULTS. <lb/>
WARRANTED. PRICE <lb/>
Not. K, <lb/>
Co., SI. Loots, Mo. <lb/>
sold Wat rev. SOD of <lb/>
GROVE'S TASTELESS TONIC sod bin <lb/>
In our ti- <lb/>
of In tho bars <lb/>
an article men <lb/>
Tonic <lb/>
a co- <lb/>
Sold guaranteed by J. <lb/>
druggist.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017745_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD BRICK STOKE <lb/>
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT <lb/>
i their year's supplies will find <lb/>
their interest to get our prices <lb/>
n all its branches. <lb/>
PORK <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, I <lb/>
RICK, TEA, <lb/>
at Lowest Market Trices. <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF A CIGARS <lb/>
we aired from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
always and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
the times. goods bought and <lb/>
sold for having no <lb/>
to sell at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
The Charlotte <lb/>
OBSERVER, <lb/>
North Carolina's <lb/>
FOREMOST NEWSPAPER <lb/>
Sold For Fifteen <lb/>
Rosa White face a young <lb/>
Indian maiden, a pupil of ho <lb/>
Indian School, has been <lb/>
sold by her father to her <lb/>
husband for ponies. The <lb/>
Indian whose wife she is to be- <lb/>
come is years old, and already <lb/>
has other wives. She is bet <lb/>
years of age- <lb/>
The girl has appealed to Pro <lb/>
Montgomery, of the <lb/>
School, to save her from such a <lb/>
fate, and he is exerting <lb/>
energy to assist her. He has <lb/>
made an appeal to the citizens of <lb/>
El Reno and a <lb/>
is being taken up in order to <lb/>
raise a sufficient sum to pay her <lb/>
traveling expenses to Washing- <lb/>
ton, where she desires to go that <lb/>
she may make a personal appeal <lb/>
to the President. <lb/>
The girl's father is <lb/>
and her aged lover insists upon <lb/>
the contract being carried out <lb/>
WEEKLY. <lb/>
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb/>
Dated it; K . <lb/>
Mar. <lb/>
Leave Weldon <lb/>
Ar. Mt <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
If. <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
Rocky Mt <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar. Florence <lb/>
hi <lb/>
ii<lb/>
IS <lb/>
; to <lb/>
It Goldsboro <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar Wilmington <lb/>
M. <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
0- <lb/>
A. If <lb/>
TRAINS <lb/>
Dated <lb/>
Mar. <lb/>
X,<lb/>
Flam <lb/>
Selma <lb/>
Ar n <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
IS<lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
M.<lb/>
Ar Rocky <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Train on Scotland Week Branch Road <lb/>
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. m. Halifax 4.00 <lb/>
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at 4.55 p <lb/>
0.37 p. m., Kit .-ton 7.35 <lb/>
u. in. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 <lb/>
a. m., Greenville a. tn. Arriving <lb/>
Halifax at a. m., 11.20 am <lb/>
daily except <lb/>
Trains on V Brain h k-ave <lb/>
Washington a. Parmele <lb/>
8.40 p. m., Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb/>
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m., Parmele 6.10 <lb/>
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. m. <lb/>
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb/>
trains on Neck Branch. <lb/>
Train leave- Tarboro, N C, via <lb/>
ft Raleigh R. R. daily <lb/>
at p. m., Sunday P. M; <lb/>
arrive Plymouth 9.20 P. M-, 5.20 p. m. <lb/>
Returning leaves Plymouth daily <lb/>
m. Sunday 9.30 a m., <lb/>
arrive Tarboro 10.25 a. m and 11.45 <lb/>
a. m. <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb/>
Goldsboro dally except Sunday, a. <lb/>
in. riving a m. <lb/>
leaves Smith field, a. m. <lb/>
arrive at Goldsboro. a. m. <lb/>
Train- on Nashville Branch leaves <lb/>
Mount at 4.30 p. m., arrive <lb/>
Nashville S p. Spring Hope 5.30. <lb/>
p. m. Returning leaves Spring Hope <lb/>
a. m Nashville 8.85 a. m., arrives <lb/>
it Rocky Mount m., <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence R <lb/>
R. Latta 6.50 p. arrive Dull <lb/>
bar 8.00 p. m. Returning leave Dun <lb/>
bar a. m. arrive Latta 8.00 a. m. <lb/>
Daily except <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War- <lb/>
for Clinton daily, except Sunday <lb/>
at a. in. Returning leave Clinton <lb/>
at at Warsaw with <lb/>
line trains. <lb/>
No. makes close connection <lb/>
at Weldon for all points North daily, all <lb/>
via Richmond, and daily except <lb/>
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line <lb/>
also Rocky Mount with Norfolk A <lb/>
Carolina railroad for Norfolk daily and <lb/>
all points North via Norfolk, daily ex <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
JOHN F. DIVINE, <lb/>
General Sup t. <lb/>
. K, Manager. <lb/>
. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. <lb/>
Old Jaunt. <lb/>
A party in Colorado h is <lb/>
the intention of leaving there <lb/>
in the old fashioned <lb/>
ed North <lb/>
Carolina. They it is <lb/>
than paying railroad fare. They <lb/>
bring stock, and ether <lb/>
personal property- <lb/>
Independent and ; bigger and <lb/>
more attractive than ever, it will be an <lb/>
invaluable visitor to the home, the <lb/>
the club or the work room. <lb/>
THE DAILY <lb/>
All of the news of the world. Com-1 <lb/>
Daily report 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 reports <lb/>
from the Legislature a special. <lb/>
Remember the Weekly Ob- <lb/>
server. <lb/>
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. <lb/>
Send for sample copies. Address <lb/>
THE OBSERVER, <lb/>
Charlotte. N. C <lb/>
WELDON R. R <lb/>
AND BRANCHES. <lb/>
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD. <lb/>
Condensed Schedule. <lb/>
In <lb/>
Poor <lb/>
Health <lb/>
means so much more than <lb/>
you and j <lb/>
f fatal diseases result from <lb/>
trifling ailments <lb/>
Don't play with <lb/>
greatest <lb/>
If <lb/>
out of sorts, weak <lb/>
and generally ex- <lb/>
nervous, <lb/>
have no appetite <lb/>
and can't work, <lb/>
begin at <lb/>
strengthening <lb/>
is <lb/>
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb/>
A few bot- <lb/>
comes from the <lb/>
very first <lb/>
Won't year <lb/>
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 arc sub- <lb/>
On receipt of two ac. stamps we <lb/>
will send set Ten World's <lb/>
Fair Views and <lb/>
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, <lb/>
This Reminds <lb/>
You every day <lb/>
in the month <lb/>
May that if <lb/>
have <lb/>
your Printing done <lb/>
at the <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
JOB OFFICE. <lb/>
It will be done right, <lb/>
It will be done m style <lb/>
and it always suits. <lb/>
These are <lb/>
well worth weighing <lb/>
in any sort <lb/>
of work, but <lb/>
all things in <lb/>
The Tobacco Department <lb/>
Conducted by O. L. Joyner, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse. <lb/>
Your Job <lb/>
g- <lb/>
The Danville Tobacco on the Danville market there <lb/>
is reasonable competition on every <lb/>
grade tobacco, and among the <lb/>
most active sorts are bright to- <lb/>
suitable for cigarette man- <lb/>
The egotism of this pair of <lb/>
tors is sublime in the extreme. <lb/>
replies to Editors Harmon and <lb/>
Webster- The Danville man has <lb/>
got mad in his eye on account <lb/>
the position taken by the North <lb/>
Carolina editors. <lb/>
The Journal aroused the ire of <lb/>
a couple of North Carolina <lb/>
tors, in its account of the II doubtful if the former knows <lb/>
taken in this city in the a he and the <lb/>
Winston cigarette machine suit, latter is located on a mark t where <lb/>
recently. The more formidable bat a quantity of cigarette <lb/>
of tho two, Mr. Jno. R. Webster, tobacco is sold, yet they it their <lb/>
not a decedent of Daniel, however j judgment against the judgment of <lb/>
editor of Water's Weekly, in the gentlemen who <lb/>
CHINESE LAWS. <lb/>
Flowery Kingdom Is Well Gov- <lb/>
But Self-Ruled. <lb/>
Reidsville. Mr. Webster, <lb/>
ally speaking, is a <lb/>
and a writer <lb/>
on subjects with which he is fa- <lb/>
North Carolina politics, <lb/>
etc. But, at times <lb/>
he allows himself to become <lb/>
blinded by prejudice that ho goes <lb/>
far astray, as in the present m- <lb/>
The other irate editor is Mr. H. <lb/>
E Harmon, editor of tho Win <lb/>
Tobacco Journal. <lb/>
The Journal in the article refer- <lb/>
red to, gave a fair criticism of <lb/>
the evidence taken in Danville. <lb/>
Tho which did not meet <lb/>
with the approval of Messrs. <lb/>
Webster and is as fol <lb/>
lows <lb/>
It seems that the defendant is <lb/>
his cause more the <lb/>
hopes of proving the American <lb/>
Tobacco Company to be a trust, <lb/>
and the protection of <lb/>
the Government, than in the mer- <lb/>
its of his patent. <lb/>
The testimony taken here was <lb/>
for the purpose of showing that <lb/>
the formation of the <lb/>
can Tobacco Company cigarette <lb/>
tobacco has greatly depreciated <lb/>
value- consequence of this <lb/>
formation- The evidence, how- <lb/>
ever, proved the contrary That <lb/>
cigarette tobaccos were <lb/>
better prices than any other class <lb/>
tobacco except wrappers, and <lb/>
that if there is any difference in <lb/>
prices now and what they were <lb/>
before the formation of the com- <lb/>
the is that the <lb/>
average price is bettor now. <lb/>
Mr. Webster, with red-hot <lb/>
no discretion, distorts the <lb/>
first paragraph into a positive <lb/>
assertion on our part that the de- <lb/>
are basing their cause <lb/>
solely upon proving the <lb/>
to be a trust, Bad then rants <lb/>
the modern style, cal <lb/>
only by a select few of <lb/>
the editorial fraternity of <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
regard to the second para <lb/>
graph, he Graham <lb/>
the cake, when he says the <lb/>
evidence taken at Danville proves <lb/>
the price of cutters on that <lb/>
DOW are higher they <lb/>
were before the was <lb/>
Mr. Webster shows his wisdom <lb/>
in this regard by quoting the <lb/>
Winston Journal as authority <lb/>
that the American Tobacco Com- <lb/>
made one year per cent <lb/>
on the capital invested, and hence <lb/>
they must necessarily get their <lb/>
cheaper order to de- <lb/>
such a dividend. Harmon <lb/>
in this imposed upon too- <lb/>
ready credulity, Brother Webster <lb/>
If you follow his figuring so <lb/>
are very much concern- <lb/>
ed lest you will soon occupy the <lb/>
central cell in that straight jacket <lb/>
institution you refer to. if the <lb/>
entire cutter crop was given to <lb/>
the American Tobacco <lb/>
it could not declare any such <lb/>
dividend. <lb/>
Mr. Harmon, while more <lb/>
in his article than the <lb/>
other brother, is just as far astray <lb/>
He says <lb/>
Siding with the <lb/>
much to the surprise of every- <lb/>
body an editorial appeared in <lb/>
Danville Tobacco Journal last <lb/>
week giving comfort to the <lb/>
the enemy of its own as <lb/>
well as all other Southern leaf <lb/>
markets and tobacco <lb/>
It took sides with the <lb/>
American Tobacco Company in <lb/>
the suit of that concern against <lb/>
the Winston Cigarette <lb/>
Company, stating that it seems, <lb/>
etc. <lb/>
To this we have only to say <lb/>
that the Journal is published <lb/>
the interest of the tobacco trade <lb/>
as a whole, and if any individual, <lb/>
firm or branch of the trade is <lb/>
by the <lb/>
publication of facts as they <lb/>
pear in this we are not <lb/>
satisfied but gratified also. <lb/>
We cannot fabricate facts nor <lb/>
figures, neither can we act the <lb/>
ghoul in order to win trade. <lb/>
Mr. Harmon further says <lb/>
Any statement that cutters are <lb/>
selling higher now than before <lb/>
the birth of the American <lb/>
co is absurd- Nearly <lb/>
everybody outside of the trust or <lb/>
its influence says to the contrary. <lb/>
It stands to reason that with <lb/>
no competition on the mar- <lb/>
prices should drop. <lb/>
This may be true with <lb/>
Mr- Harmon is familiar with, <lb/>
regarding tho of cut- <lb/>
before and the <lb/>
of the American Tobacco <lb/>
who were <lb/>
speculators in these goods before <lb/>
the formation of the American <lb/>
Tobacco Co., and are now com- <lb/>
on this market for that <lb/>
class of whose char <lb/>
is above Yet this <lb/>
precious pair says it ain't so, be- <lb/>
cause it does not suit them for it <lb/>
to so. <lb/>
They were <lb/>
Winston nor <lb/>
editorial malcontents must re- <lb/>
member that this is the largest <lb/>
bright tobacco market the <lb/>
world, furnishes the golden <lb/>
to every inhabitable of <lb/>
the world, hence Danville prices <lb/>
cannot be by the smaller <lb/>
markets on any type of <lb/>
and especially cutters tine <lb/>
goods <lb/>
Farmers are not <lb/>
this year on account of dry <lb/>
for transplanting. <lb/>
Mr- J- J. Laughinghouse told <lb/>
us Friday that he bad set already <lb/>
about ninety acres of tobacco. <lb/>
Its the early bird that gets the <lb/>
worm- <lb/>
Capt- M. Pace is now making <lb/>
a thorough tour of the eastern <lb/>
counties in the interest of the <lb/>
new warehouse of Rountree, <lb/>
Brown Co- says that most <lb/>
of the farmers will be through <lb/>
setting by the 15th of May- <lb/>
has more natural <lb/>
advantages, better back <lb/>
and by the opening <lb/>
of the coming year will <lb/>
as good facilities for hand- <lb/>
ling tobacco after it is sold as <lb/>
any market in the eastern section. <lb/>
The North Carolina crop re- <lb/>
ports of the American <lb/>
says the tobacco acreage <lb/>
Rocky Mount will be in- <lb/>
creased to per cent, <lb/>
and reports the plants badly be- <lb/>
hind but growing since the <lb/>
warm of the pat few <lb/>
days. In our section of the <lb/>
for tho past few sunshine <lb/>
has been quite object but we <lb/>
have had plenty of warm weather <lb/>
in Tennessee. <lb/>
A traveling man thus describes a <lb/>
In <lb/>
of the men was mounted on a <lb/>
rawboned dapple gray, while the <lb/>
other nag was of a deep yellow, and <lb/>
looked much like a living, moving <lb/>
One was leading a mule <lb/>
and the other an old steed that <lb/>
looked like a broken-down car horse. <lb/>
Presently the man on the yellow <lb/>
horse said to the <lb/>
The answer <lb/>
you <lb/>
you <lb/>
and After dickering for <lb/>
some time a trade was effected, and <lb/>
one of them got a dollar to boot. <lb/>
We wandered about over the place <lb/>
and covered about an acre and a <lb/>
half until we grew tired, and then <lb/>
returned to the train. On the way <lb/>
back we heard two of the strangers <lb/>
talking. One of these said he was <lb/>
three and three dollars <lb/>
and twenty-five cents In <lb/>
ahead. were told that these <lb/>
swapping days are held once a <lb/>
month. The men meet at this place <lb/>
and swap anything, from a jack- <lb/>
knife to a farm, but trading In <lb/>
horses is the favorite fancy with <lb/>
Y. Tribune. <lb/>
of Shanghai Tells of Peculiar <lb/>
Methods of Administering <lb/>
Good Borne Bat Very <lb/>
Poor neuters. <lb/>
home life of the <lb/>
said William Russell, of Shanghai, <lb/>
to be little understood out- <lb/>
side the limits of the Flowery king- <lb/>
The most powerful <lb/>
In China is the family. The <lb/>
most remarkable attribute of the <lb/>
family is its ability to exercise <lb/>
powers upon its members. If <lb/>
a Chinaman commits a minor of- <lb/>
the law, as we term it, takes <lb/>
no cognizance of The <lb/>
takes upon itself the punishment <lb/>
of the offender by flogging or <lb/>
and the compensation <lb/>
of the injured party. It is only in <lb/>
the graver offenses, such as murder, <lb/>
that the culprit is handed over to <lb/>
authority. <lb/>
ability of the Chinese family <lb/>
to sustain its feudal prerogative is <lb/>
owing to its being part and parcel <lb/>
of the land itself. There are no land- <lb/>
lords in China. The land is the <lb/>
property of the state and the occur <lb/>
piers pay a small tax to the former <lb/>
for the use of it. This tax must be <lb/>
paid whether the land is cultivated <lb/>
or not; no family, therefore, makes <lb/>
itself responsible for more land than <lb/>
its members can care for. The state <lb/>
further reserves the right where the <lb/>
occupiers do not do justice to their <lb/>
holdings to dispossess them and <lb/>
it. This land tax ranges from <lb/>
twelve to forty cents per acre, and <lb/>
the average size of each holding is <lb/>
nine acres. Apart, from this <lb/>
each family has the inalienable right <lb/>
to two acres of land, which is strict- <lb/>
entailed upon the family and fur- <lb/>
the site of the homestead. <lb/>
The members of the family who in <lb/>
trying their luck in the adjacent <lb/>
cities fail to make a success have <lb/>
ways the ancestral home to fall back <lb/>
upon and the accompanying farm to <lb/>
work on and live by. A poor law is <lb/>
unknown in China, and failure is not <lb/>
to be found in the lexicon of the <lb/>
laboring class. Another point which <lb/>
younger nations might incorporate <lb/>
in their code is the respect paid to <lb/>
the aged in China. The old people <lb/>
are assigned the best rooms in the <lb/>
family home, and are not in any <lb/>
way looked upon as worn out or <lb/>
desirable relations. Such <lb/>
have obtained for hundreds of <lb/>
years, and suggest the thought that, <lb/>
wanting as the Chinese have of late <lb/>
been found in the fighting arena, as <lb/>
home rulers they can give points to <lb/>
the remainder of the <lb/>
French Iced Milk. <lb/>
The French Industry of icing milk <lb/>
Is an original departure In tinned <lb/>
commodities. The milk Is frozen <lb/>
and placed in block form in tins, and <lb/>
on the part of the purchaser requires <lb/>
to be melted previous to use. Being <lb/>
hermetically sealed, the commodity <lb/>
thus iced preserves its form until it <lb/>
Is required, when a minute's expos- <lb/>
to the sun's rays or to the beat <lb/>
of the fire is all that is necessary <lb/>
to reduce it to a liquid condition. <lb/>
Baby's Masterpiece. <lb/>
sure that baby is going to be <lb/>
a great said the fond mother. <lb/>
he rather young to evince <lb/>
any <lb/>
just where he shows his <lb/>
genius. I left him where he could <lb/>
get some red ink on his fingers, and <lb/>
before I knew what he was doing he <lb/>
had decorated the library wall with <lb/>
one of the loveliest magazine post- <lb/>
you ever <lb/>
and the Farmer. <lb/>
Ex-Senator Palmer, of Michigan, <lb/>
tells a good story of an old Michigan <lb/>
farmer to whom he lent a volume of <lb/>
Shakespeare's works. After allow- <lb/>
time for a perusal of the book <lb/>
the senator asked the man one day <lb/>
what he thought of the book. <lb/>
said the Michigander <lb/>
Is some mighty good read <lb/>
tn it, and I see the old man has <lb/>
some of my N. Y. Hail and <lb/>
A Large Estate. <lb/>
Archduke Albrecht of Austria left <lb/>
of property. His landed <lb/>
estates go to his nephew, Archduke <lb/>
Frederick. They comprise <lb/>
acres In Hungary, Silesia, Bohemia, <lb/>
Bavaria and an extent of <lb/>
territory larger than that of more <lb/>
than half of the German states. His <lb/>
personal estate amounts to <lb/>
and goes to his daughter, Arch- <lb/>
duchess Maria Theresa, wife of Duke <lb/>
Philip of <lb/>
NO MONEY IN THEM. <lb/>
Sculptors Can't Sell Their Busts of <lb/>
Popular Frenchmen. <lb/>
The portrait of M. Felix <lb/>
president of France, has just been <lb/>
commenced by <lb/>
painter, and as this is a semi-official <lb/>
work, there is no doubt of the artist <lb/>
being fully compensated for it. Such <lb/>
is not the case, however, with the <lb/>
many painters and modelers in <lb/>
marble or clay who at each change <lb/>
in the French presidency have made <lb/>
many pictures or busts of the new <lb/>
chief executive or of other <lb/>
men, on the ready sale of which <lb/>
they have built their hopes of for- <lb/>
tune. <lb/>
The sale of pictures or buts does <lb/>
mt seem to follow any fixed rules. <lb/>
Even the individual popularity of <lb/>
the occupant of the presidential <lb/>
chair apparently has little to do <lb/>
with it. President for in- <lb/>
stance, was not particularly popular <lb/>
with the Parisians, yet images of <lb/>
him sold better than those of any <lb/>
succeeding president. On <lb/>
money I hand had an enormous <lb/>
I and enthusiastic personal following, <lb/>
yet his likenesses are not salable. <lb/>
Even though France has been and is <lb/>
fervent, in Its praises of Russia and <lb/>
her ruler, the statuettes of the czar <lb/>
an a drug on the market. <lb/>
A young woman modeler, whose <lb/>
work has several times found a place <lb/>
in the Salon, has at this moment on <lb/>
her hands an even hundred busts of <lb/>
The <lb/>
as a Frenchman would <lb/>
call In, came to her last fall to <lb/>
ion these images, and she finished <lb/>
the last of them two days before the <lb/>
resignation of her model, and his fall <lb/>
from public favor. <lb/>
Until President Carnot was as- <lb/>
copies of bust of <lb/>
him were little in demand; but the <lb/>
day after the tragedy at Lyons forty <lb/>
were sold in that city. <lb/>
Peculiarity of Man. <lb/>
He was leaving the crowd where <lb/>
the theater tickets for a big engage- <lb/>
were being sold. There was a <lb/>
happy look on which sud- <lb/>
vanished. He put his hand to <lb/>
his temple and then he <lb/>
guess I'll hunt up some quiet <lb/>
place and kick myself. That's what <lb/>
I'll <lb/>
the asked the <lb/>
friend who had overtaken him. <lb/>
have been letting the calcium <lb/>
light of mathematics into the <lb/>
mist of my he <lb/>
replied. <lb/>
do you <lb/>
just figured it out that I've <lb/>
stood out in the storm In line for <lb/>
five hours to pay ex money for a <lb/>
theater seat rather than stand up <lb/>
for three hours -at fie performance, <lb/>
MM <lb/>
A MODEST MILLIONAIRE. <lb/>
John D. Rockefeller Takes Life Free <lb/>
and Easy. <lb/>
I never saw a man take life less <lb/>
seriously than John B. Rockefeller. <lb/>
He has an easy way of saying and <lb/>
doing things that appeals to the <lb/>
nature. That <lb/>
suit brought by Lon Merritt is not <lb/>
costing him a wink of sleep. <lb/>
worries him, not all his millions. <lb/>
At times I have known John to seem <lb/>
dull. I have known people to take <lb/>
him for a soft, slow, stupid fellow <lb/>
instead of the hard, gliding, firm, <lb/>
rocky fellow that he is. He once <lb/>
had an a nervous, irritable <lb/>
young man, full of his own <lb/>
but, withal, a capable clerk. <lb/>
He occupied an office in which there <lb/>
was one of those pulling and lifting <lb/>
machines, and regularly every <lb/>
morning, about nine, when ho was <lb/>
immersed in figures or correspond- <lb/>
a small, man. <lb/>
quiet and diffident in manner, en- <lb/>
said walked <lb/>
on tiptoe to the corner and <lb/>
for a quarter of an hour. It <lb/>
became a bore to the clerk, who at <lb/>
last, unable to stand it longer, re- <lb/>
marked, with considerable heat and <lb/>
fireworks, to the Inoffensive but, <lb/>
annoying do you <lb/>
expect mo to do my work properly <lb/>
while you are fooling with that ma- <lb/>
chine I'm getting tired of It. <lb/>
Why don't you put it where it won't <lb/>
worry a person to death V The <lb/>
stranger replied with <lb/>
am very sorry if it annoys you. I <lb/>
will have It removed at A <lb/>
porter took It away within an hour. <lb/>
A few days later the clerk was sent <lb/>
for by Mr. whom he found <lb/>
in earnest conversation with the <lb/>
small, black-mustached man. Tho <lb/>
latter smiled at seeing him, gave <lb/>
some instructions and left <lb/>
the room. you tell me who <lb/>
that gentleman the young man <lb/>
asked, a light beginning to break <lb/>
upon him. was Mr. Rock- <lb/>
was the reply. With a <lb/>
gasp for breath, the clerk staggered <lb/>
back to his office to think. It was <lb/>
his first acquaintance with the <lb/>
Standard Oil Y. <lb/>
Press. <lb/>
COUNTRY CUSTOMERS. <lb/>
Growth in of a <lb/>
New Branch of Business. <lb/>
is an establishment in <lb/>
Chicago that employs nearly <lb/>
clerks and does a business of several <lb/>
million dollars a year, but which <lb/>
does not carry a dollar's worth of <lb/>
said Postmaster Seeing, of <lb/>
the Exposition city. long ago <lb/>
it sent out no less than <lb/>
to prospective customers. It is <lb/>
merely a purchasing agency for per- <lb/>
sons living outside of the city who <lb/>
need articles and do not find it con- <lb/>
to buy them in person. The <lb/>
concern will buy anything for any- <lb/>
body, according to a well-arranged <lb/>
system. All tho customer has to do <lb/>
is to send a description of the article <lb/>
wanted and the amount he is willing <lb/>
to pay for it, and it is gotten by an <lb/>
agent of the establishment and <lb/>
shipped to him at once. <lb/>
for instance, a man in <lb/>
a remote town wants an overcoat of <lb/>
blue cloth, with a velvet collar, for <lb/>
which lie will pay lie sends his <lb/>
breast and waist measurement and <lb/>
the money to the and in twenty <lb/>
minutes after his order is received <lb/>
the coat is bought and packed up <lb/>
and at the freight or express office. <lb/>
No charge is made to the customer, <lb/>
as the firm has an arrangement <lb/>
with numerous retail mercantile es- <lb/>
by which it gets a <lb/>
discount off from the market <lb/>
prices, and in this way makes heavy <lb/>
profits. I have been told that the <lb/>
discount ranges all the way from <lb/>
per cent., so it is easy to see <lb/>
how remunerative the business is. <lb/>
Absolute honesty characterizes all <lb/>
its dealings, and, consequently, very <lb/>
few articles are returned by custom-<lb/>
A WOMAN'S WAY. <lb/>
She Stood Up in the Car for Hr <lb/>
Little Son. <lb/>
That the ways of women are passing <lb/>
strange was again proved by an In- <lb/>
on a Main street car the <lb/>
other evening. A gentleman rose <lb/>
to offer his seat to a lady who had <lb/>
just entered with her little boy. <lb/>
Seeing the seat vacant she sent tho <lb/>
boy to occupy it, while she clung to <lb/>
a strap. She was evidently very <lb/>
tired and would have enjoyed a seat, <lb/>
but preferred to care for her son <lb/>
first. Presently a lady left the ear <lb/>
the one standing took her spat. <lb/>
Next to her was a serving maid <lb/>
with a pretty baby on her lap. The <lb/>
lady asked permission to hold it, <lb/>
and, the request being granted, she <lb/>
and talked and played with <lb/>
tho child for a half hour, utterly ob- <lb/>
of her own boy's jealous cries <lb/>
and frantic efforts to attract <lb/>
Lobster Beds Becoming Empty. <lb/>
Unless measures for their pres- <lb/>
are promptly taken <lb/>
fisheries of New England will <lb/>
soon be worthless. Fishermen them- <lb/>
selves who have in the literal sense <lb/>
been killing the lobster with the <lb/>
golden egg which provides them a <lb/>
livelihood, are beginning to feel <lb/>
alarmed tho rate that the supply <lb/>
of lobsters is diminishing. <lb/>
Wilhelm's Music. <lb/>
Not much success has <lb/>
to the German emperor for his new <lb/>
musical <lb/>
When it was performed in <lb/>
public it was pronounced pretty and <lb/>
correct, but not wholly original. <lb/>
am makes itself <lb/>
heard at the beginning; then follows <lb/>
a strain from Schubert's <lb/>
and a bit from an English <lb/>
ends the thing. <lb/>
An i <lb/>
At Ludlow, Vt., there is a curious <lb/>
looking tomb which has been erected <lb/>
by a well-known miller of that place. <lb/>
It is in the exact shape of a mill- <lb/>
stone and stands on four granite <lb/>
supports designed especially for that <lb/>
purpose. The owner, who expects <lb/>
to be buried in it sooner or later, is <lb/>
so proud of his monument that he <lb/>
exhibits an exact model of it every <lb/>
year at the county <lb/>
I product skilled <lb/>
workmen, and rank with <lb/>
Victor Bicycles in quality. <lb/>
I LL Ks We make; the best <lb/>
., balls, baseball bats, base- <lb/>
I gloves and mitts, tennis <lb/>
rackets, tennis balls, tennis <lb/>
nets, racket presses, racket cases, boxing gloves, footballs. <lb/>
football suits, football and gymnasium shoes, gymnasium <lb/>
supplies, sweaters, etc. We guarantee better goods for less <lb/>
money than asked by other manufacturers. If your local <lb/>
dealer does not keep Victor Athletic Goods, write for our <lb/>
illustrated <lb/>
BOSTON. <lb/>
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb/>
Makers of Victor and Athletic <lb/>
CHICAGO. <lb/>
NEW YORK. <lb/>
PACIFIC COST <lb/>
LOS <lb/>
FIT FOR <lb/>
A KING. <lb/>
Over Our Million <lb/>
W. L. Douglas and Shoes. <lb/>
All our eh or an re <lb/>
SHOE <lb/>
Thar Rive value for tho <lb/>
Tin y i In style and <lb/>
Their wearing qualities arc <lb/>
Tho are uniform stumped on . <lb/>
From SI t, over other <lb/>
dealer cannot supply you we can. <lb/>
and<lb/>
Md <lb/>
If your cannot supply <lb/>
for <lb/>
W. L. Douglas. <lb/>
Davis Farmville, N. C. <lb/>
R. J. <lb/>
Pitt ;. x. c. <lb/>
;. o. <lb/>
i x. c. <lb/>
Skinner. <lb/>
nil, <lb/>
COBB BROS CO, <lb/>
Commission Merchants <lb/>
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA <lb/>
and Solicited. <lb/>
OLD RELIABLE. <lb/>
--------IS STILL AT FRONT A I INK <lb/>
YEARS EXPERIENCE bus me the best la the cheap t <lb/>
Hemp c. Building Farming Implement, and every <lb/>
for Millers, Mechanics and general house purposes, as well a <lb/>
Clothing, Hals. Shoos. Ladies Dress I on hand. Am head <lb/>
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing agent for X. I. <lb/>
Cotton, and keep courteous and attentive clerk. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. V. <lb/>
The next Session will <lb/>
begin on Tuesday the day <lb/>
mid c Weeks. <lb/>
ITO MONTH. <lb/>
Primary English <lb/>
Intermediate English <lb/>
Higher English <lb/>
Languages<lb/>
. I <lb/>
The instruction will continue through. <lb/>
Discipline mild out firm. If necessary <lb/>
an additional teacher will be employed. <lb/>
Satisfaction when pupil <lb/>
enter early and attend regularly. <lb/>
further in formal ion apply to <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Aug. ism. <lb/>
Real <lb/>
Estate <lb/>
and <lb/>
Rental <lb/>
Agent. <lb/>
Homes and lots for Rent or for Hale. <lb/>
terms easy. Bents, Insurance <lb/>
open accounts and any other <lb/>
of debt placed my hands r <lb/>
collection have prompt attention. <lb/>
I your <lb/>
patronage. <lb/>
HERBERT <lb/>
TONSORIAL PARLORS <lb/>
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb/>
Under Opera House,<lb/>
Call in when want good work <lb/>
NORTH <lb/>
i R. it. TIME TABLE. <lb/>
In Effect <lb/>
GOING N <lb/>
GOING <lb/>
ST <lb/>
Pas. . Dally <lb/>
Bun. Ex Mm. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
SERVICE <lb/>
Steamers leave Washington for Green <lb/>
ville and Tarboro touching at all land <lb/>
lugs on Tar River Monday, Wednesday <lb/>
and Friday at A. M. <lb/>
Returning leave Tarboro at A. M. <lb/>
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb/>
Greenville A. M. same days. <lb/>
These departures are subject to <lb/>
of water on Tar River. <lb/>
with <lb/>
of The N and Wash- <lb/>
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore j <lb/>
Philadelphia. New York and Bo-ton. <lb/>
Shippers their <lb/>
marked via Dominion fr <lb/>
New York, from <lb/>
Norfolk Haiti. <lb/>
more Steamboat from Haiti i <lb/>
more. <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. SON- Agent. <lb/>
Washington N. <lb/>
J. , <lb/>
P. Al. P. M. <lb/>
i Mi <lb/>
M. <lb/>
OS <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
in II en <lb/>
K i -Is <lb/>
New <lb/>
it v <lb/>
IA. M <lb/>
A. M.<lb/>
t; a <lb/>
Train connects <lb/>
Weldon train North. <lb/>
Goldsboro a. in., and with <lb/>
train West, leaving Goldsboro <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
and obtained and all Pat- <lb/>
for Fret. <lb/>
it O, S. <lb/>
mid in lime than <lb/>
remote from Washington. <lb/>
Send model, drawing or photo., with <lb/>
We advise, U or not, free of <lb/>
charge. Our fee not due till patent is <lb/>
A Ht to Obtain with <lb/>
same in the If, S. and foreign <lb/>
sent free. Adds s, <lb/>
OPT. WASHINGTON, O. C. <lb/>
WE WANT YOUR FOR <lb/>
TRADE <lb/>
MARK <lb/>
For Cure ail Skin <lb/>
This has been In use over <lb/>
fifty years, and wherever know Las <lb/>
been in steady demand. It has been OB- <lb/>
by the leading physicians all over <lb/>
be country, and has effected cures where <lb/>
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb/>
the roost experienced physicians, have <lb/>
for years failed. This Ointment is of <lb/>
long standing and the high reputation <lb/>
It has obtained Is owing entirely <lb/>
its own efficacy, as but little effort ha <lb/>
ever been made to bring it before, the <lb/>
One bottle of this Ointment will <lb/>
sent to any address on receipt of One <lb/>
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at- <lb/>
tended to. Address all orders <lb/>
communications to <lb/>
T. P. <lb/>
We will fill them QUICK <lb/>
W will fill them CHEAP <lb/>
We will fill them WELL <lb/>
Rough Heart Framing, o <lb/>
Rough Sap Framing, ; <lb/>
Rough Sap <lb/>
Hough Sap inches, o <lb/>
. Wait days for our Planing Mill and <lb/>
will furnish you Dressed <lb/>
i as <lb/>
Wood delivered ., a-, a. <lb/>
cents a load. <lb/>
Terms cash. <lb/>
past <lb/>
. c. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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