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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 5 June 1895</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18950605</dc:date>
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                <p>
, , <lb />
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
pared to do all wort <lb />
n this line <lb />
NEATLY, <lb />
QUICKLY, and <lb />
STYLE. <lb />
Plenty of new mate- <lb />
rial and the best <lb />
of Stationery. <lb />
FIT FOR DARK AGES. <lb />
Not For the Enlightened Present. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIV, <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1895. <lb />
NO. <lb />
There been the <lb />
earliest history of man in <lb />
bis benighted pilgrimage along <lb />
tan banks of the and up to I North Carolinian <lb />
North Carolina and the Civil <lb />
The following the War <lb />
Records Office of War De- <lb />
as printed by the <lb />
Times facts that will <lb />
be read with by every <lb />
the time, to a certain ox <lb />
tout, a streak of credulity <lb />
in the human family. <lb />
Sta to-day as we are tho <lb />
greatest and most mighty of <lb />
people since t lie earliest history <lb />
of tho world, having attained the <lb />
highest degree of intelligence <lb />
enlightenment of any of our prod- <lb />
it is to upon <lb />
the imagination gaze far <lb />
d v I id of by <lb />
the aid of contemplation <lb />
bring ourselves to a full <lb />
of the many, many ridiculous <lb />
forms and customs engaged by <lb />
our early forefathers. Our en <lb />
lightened civilization of modern <lb />
times not think of <lb />
m oar more <lb />
acute souse of refinement and <lb />
rebel gladiatorial <lb />
f an ancient Ba <lb />
man The high de- <lb />
of enlightenment of this age <lb />
with such <lb />
in with pant ages, I <lb />
so far a- progress lit- <lb />
and high moral <lb />
com that w lose bight of <lb />
the fast that of us is <lb />
carrying some of those same old <lb />
ii nature that were <lb />
six thousand years <lb />
I actually today a <lb />
lief in spiritualism among some <lb />
of oar people who have had op- <lb />
and advantages which <lb />
if had been properly em- <lb />
ployed would have elevated <lb />
fir above this channel super- <lb />
credulity. There is some <lb />
thing connected with this so- <lb />
spiritualism this writer <lb />
called to name it <lb />
w aid call it a human, not super- <lb />
magnetic electrical which <lb />
appeals not to the higher senses <lb />
but lo the very lowest faculty of <lb />
and if tho higher <lb />
of practical reason does not <lb />
come o tho rescue there is <lb />
telling where this idea will lead <lb />
SOME FUSION JUSTICE. <lb />
You Need <lb />
The Reflector tin's year. <lb />
It will give the news <lb />
every week for <lb />
a year. <lb />
Wasted in Printing. <lb />
THE MODEST VIOLET. <lb />
A correspondent writes us from j Secretary C. Brown, of the j <lb />
Myrtle that a few days ago a Railroad Coin sic u, speaking j <lb />
gang of three the outrageous charges made; <lb />
Davis, his mother and sister by Brothers, public I <lb />
went to the homo, after tors, for recent work turned out, <lb />
been forbidden the premises, of; said as far as the Report of the <lb />
A. A- a white man Commission was <lb />
health, assaulted his it would take him thirty <lb />
daughter with rock weighing days to read the proof of the <lb />
three or four pounds, broke open book, as it had to read by <lb />
his stable door took off a cow-, him, the expense and trouble of a <lb />
A warrant out before i mouth's stay in Winston was <lb />
Esq. the in all the mess of having <lb />
were arrest taken put the contract at this distance <lb />
him for They mails from Raleigh- Moreover, work <lb />
that they get justice i for all parties here had to bear <lb />
at his hands and had the case re- j the additional expense of express <lb />
moved to F. L- Freeman, charges to this and Mr. J <lb />
of This Most <lb />
of tho <lb />
It shows North Carolina stood <lb />
and foremost in the late <lb />
war. Read it and you <lb />
see the facts as stated by these <lb />
Records. <lb />
but tie has been <lb />
j a in concerning the work of <lb />
the War Records Office of the <lb />
War Department, yet this has <lb />
been a tremendous task. I Birds. a practical printer, <lb />
volumes of nearly a Atom i, who t-ed WM, <lb />
sand pages each, are completed, <lb />
and furnish the most accurate <lb />
history ever published of a <lb />
internecine war. The work <lb />
has been impartially done. Be <lb />
the five Union officers em- <lb />
ployed, two Confederate Gen <lb />
era officers have also been <lb />
engaged in editing the war <lb />
chives of the dead <lb />
most <lb />
of the work is an exhaustive <lb />
compilation from official records <lb />
of the on both sides <lb />
in the war. Here are facts, not <lb />
opinions. It will be made plain <lb />
beyond all room for <lb />
in this much i <lb />
the hardest fighting of the war <lb />
between the army of the <lb />
Potomac and the Army of North <lb />
em Virginia, and the figures in <lb />
this volume will show that the <lb />
infantry regiments from the <lb />
Eastern States did the hardest <lb />
fighting in the Union Army. <lb />
They also prove that the Con- <lb />
succumbed by the ex- <lb />
of Lee's army. <lb />
table of death and <lb />
wounds that are given measure <lb />
actual lighting as nothing <lb />
else can. One thing clearly <lb />
shown is the overshadowing <lb />
of the battles of Get- <lb />
and the <lb />
If any sensible man will seriously greatest battles the <lb />
of his practical <lb />
and listen to tho dictates of his <lb />
sober judgment the question will <lb />
not- be a one. <lb />
New this writer dots not want <lb />
to offend any citizen of the <lb />
led States claims protection <lb />
under its constitution in a com <lb />
Although the guilt of the I would cost the State <lb />
was clearly more than the last, <lb />
by tho testimony of a As to the which a <lb />
number of white persons, the; bill was coolly made at treble <lb />
fusion magistrate dismissed ice, the acting Auditor, Mr. <lb />
cases against them upon their Palmer when the bill <lb />
paying the costs- was presented, promptly and <lb />
Our correspondent, who is one properly refused to issue a war- <lb />
of good men led off into for tho manifestly over- <lb />
fusion movement last year, says work. Thus <lb />
been waiting, hoping, Stewart Brothers will have to <lb />
trusting praying that the pick their ; mean <lb />
fusion party go something j while, tho whole matter been <lb />
honorable, but he has boon bit- put in the hands of a competent <lb />
telly farther committee of practical printers <lb />
writes that he is of, who will look into tho matter <lb />
such a mockery of and of their investigations <lb />
ashamed that ho r helped to will doubtless interesting <lb />
bring about such a state of for the public if not for <lb />
says he, the public Newt <lb />
always errors, but, Observer. <lb />
think God, He is faithful and jest I <lb />
to forgive if are faithful What Mr. Has Lost. <lb />
to confess and forsake our <lb />
The Chicago Times Herald Las <lb />
Our correspondent assorts, and following <lb />
his assertion is borne out by the , ,, ,. , . <lb />
I, ., , ., Mr. rarely on a <lb />
I facts, that the magistrate was in- without losing an <lb />
in his high-handed and umbrella or an overcoat or <lb />
I outrageous action by the fact I a night shirt in a sleeping oar- <lb />
that tho prisoners wore Wt c, <lb />
and Republicans, while their there is mt to ha said the <lb />
time were decent white people Besides umbrellas, <lb />
and Democrats. ; overcoats and various articles of <lb />
Now, these who j has recent- <lb />
we learn are of bad H,; <lb />
actor, go to house of an reputation for con <lb />
lid and defenseless white man he . <lb />
commit an assault a deadly Ma lost <lb />
weapon a white of <lb />
ate and Union armies ever <lb />
gill; breakdown his stable door <lb />
people, his <lb />
fought. Hie losses in these en-1 i his old frankness <lb />
take of a cow <lb />
I though our correspondent , <lb />
much , , , .,. ,, , ,, <lb />
fiercer was the lighting in these <lb />
batiks than it was before or <lb />
and <lb />
was again between the two <lb />
people of course armies engaged during the war. <lb />
do not know that every American heroic valor of the North <lb />
ho be a crank or a <lb />
is entitled to protection, <lb />
but if this epistle should miss its <lb />
mark and trample any one's <lb />
toes all we have to say the <lb />
up is we are very sorry that <lb />
he United States has a citizen <lb />
naturalized that is hero, while the <lb />
slowly sinking sun of nineteen <lb />
centuries of civilization is reflect <lb />
its golden brilliance across <lb />
the unclouded sky of a nation's <lb />
greatest in <lb />
and art, try to force <lb />
down tho mental of an <lb />
enlightened and people <lb />
the belief in device caked <lb />
spiritualism. Junior, Sit- <lb />
Four Big Successes. <lb />
Having the Deeded to more than <lb />
all advertising claimed <lb />
for them, the following four remedies <lb />
have reached phenomenal ale. r. <lb />
Dr. King's New Discovery, for <lb />
and Cold, each bot- <lb />
Bitters, the <lb />
great remedy for Liver, Stomach and <lb />
Kidneys. Salve, the <lb />
heel in Dr. King's New <lb />
which ore a public t ill- All <lb />
those are to do <lb />
just what Is claimed for ilium the <lb />
whose name i here- <lb />
with will be to tell you more of <lb />
them. John I,. Drag <lb />
Store. <lb />
Experience is Against It. <lb />
A contemporary, <lb />
financial question, rises to <lb />
mark the people cannot be <lb />
That editor perhaps <lb />
never saw the hustling of <lb />
some cure-all performing on the <lb />
street corner and shoving out <lb />
at cents a bottle, or there- <lb />
abouts. We would like to be- <lb />
in the solid sense and <lb />
judgment of the mass of mankind <lb />
but tho experience of the world <lb />
is against it The people cannot <lb />
only be fooled but have been <lb />
are fooled and will con <lb />
to be while so many <lb />
fellows are going with <lb />
limber jaws whose special <lb />
is to fool <lb />
Star. <lb />
Carolina troops excites the high <lb />
est admiration, <lb />
which lost more in kill- <lb />
ed and wounded, in proportion <lb />
to the number of the troops, <lb />
than any Northern State, can <lb />
well send sting to North Ca <lb />
whose soldiers at Get- Court passed sentence, <lb />
did the hardest fighting , <lb />
on the other side, over the hap- <lb />
of the present year. <lb />
is the book of revelations <lb />
as to both sides of tho civil war. <lb />
the Confederate North <lb />
Carolina lost more soldiers killed <lb />
than any other Southern State. <lb />
The following was the total loss <lb />
killed and mortally wounded <lb />
of of the Southern States ; <lb />
North Carolina, Virginia, <lb />
South Carolina, <lb />
Georgia, ; Mississippi, ; <lb />
Louisiana, North Carolina <lb />
heads the e number that <lb />
wound of bur <lb />
sous of disease <lb />
military population <lb />
was but furnished Several years ago the <lb />
to tho Confederate cause. Hg.,, mistaken <lb />
Tho percentage of lost, killed abolished capital pun- <lb />
wounded was greater in the Con- in but the <lb />
not state so specifically that the do <lb />
cow had been everything that he has lost for <lb />
whipped o justice. that para. <lb />
The fact the were j that lie <lb />
guilty of two grave crimes, the by <lb />
assault with a deadly weapon and Constitution. <lb />
forcible trespass was clearly <lb />
by reputable witnesses- <lb />
Tho magistrate had <lb />
in either case. His only <lb />
function was to investigate and <lb />
bind over to the Superior court- <lb />
But he arrogated to himself the <lb />
power of a judge of tho Superior <lb />
it is more than we <lb />
expected from the cattle elevated <lb />
to tho magistracy by the Fred <lb />
Douglas <lb />
From a letter written Rev. J. <lb />
of Mich., we <lb />
are permitted to make this <lb />
have no hesitation in <lb />
Dr. King's New Discovery, as the re- <lb />
were almost marvelous in the <lb />
ease of wile. While I was pastor of <lb />
the Baptist Church at Rives Junction <lb />
she wot brought down with Pneumonia <lb />
succeeding with I-a Grippe. Terrible <lb />
of would la-t <lb />
hours with little Interruption and it <lb />
seemed if she c not survive them. <lb />
A recommended Dr. King's New <lb />
Discovery; it was quick in its work and <lb />
I highly in Trial <lb />
North Car-1 hurtles In at John i <lb />
Store. <lb />
Deafness Cannot Cured- <lb />
By local as they cannot <lb />
reach the portion of ear. <lb />
There is only one way Deafness, <lb />
and that is by constitutional <lb />
Deafness is caused by an i eon- <lb />
of the mucous lining <lb />
When this tube gets <lb />
inflamed yon have a rumbling or <lb />
Imperfect bearing, and when it is en- <lb />
Biased Deafness is the result, <lb />
and unless can be <lb />
token out and this restored to its <lb />
no; condition, hearing will lie de- <lb />
forever ; nine case of ten <lb />
ate caused by catarrh, which is <lb />
hut an ed condition of <lb />
mucous surfaces. <lb />
We will give One Hundred Dollars <lb />
am any ease o Deafness <lb />
that cannot he cured by Hall's <lb />
Catarrh Cure. for circulars, free <lb />
V. . CO. Toledo, O <lb />
by Druggists, <lb />
Hottest Day for Twenty-five Years <lb />
federate armies tho Union <lb />
armies- At Gettysburg the <lb />
North Carolina, or <lb />
Salve. <lb />
Salve in the world for Cuts <lb />
Salt Rheum <lb />
Fever Sore, Chained Hands <lb />
Chilblain. and all skin Bran <lb />
and Pile, or no <lb />
required. It is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect or money refunded <lb />
S per For <lb />
J elm l;. i <lb />
change effected no good purpose <lb />
other hand it had the effect of <lb />
now at <lb />
brigade, went into action with I is being made to undo the <lb />
over men lost in kill-1 unwise action of a former <lb />
the State having <lb />
voted for the passage of a bill to <lb />
restore capital in <lb />
certain Sun. <lb />
ed and wounded- The North <lb />
Carolina had only men left <lb />
for duty when it went into Long- <lb />
street's assault on the third day, <lb />
on the following day but <lb />
eighty left. On the first day <lb />
Capt. Tut went into <lb />
action with three officers and <lb />
All the officers of <lb />
the men were killed or wounded. <lb />
On the same day Company C, of <lb />
Chicago, May re- <lb />
cords of tho weather bureau do <lb />
not show a hotter day this <lb />
one May for the lust <lb />
Drug five years. The oldest <lb />
with keen memories do <lb />
as hot a day in about <lb />
Chicago tor the time of the year. <lb />
Thermometers down town ranged <lb />
in the afternoon from to de- <lb />
glees, the official reading being <lb />
tho face of these remark- <lb />
able changes in temperature <lb />
last three weeks the <lb />
prophet gives warning of a <lb />
wave which will arrive from <lb />
the Northwest in the next hours <lb />
may drop the mercury de- <lb />
The Newton Enterprise of <lb />
a small sized in Lincoln <lb />
county who at one sitting last <lb />
week ate fourteen cans of <lb />
dines and a pound of soda crack- <lb />
A few nights afterwards a <lb />
crowd of boys agreed to buy all <lb />
the 11th North Carolina, lost two j the he could eat, <lb />
and of men Alter finishing up fifteen cans the <lb />
killed or wounded. Bird <lb />
of this company, and the four re <lb />
men went into what <lb />
boys broke the contract and <lb />
would go no further, and the <lb />
to that he had not <lb />
is called Picket's Charge. The yet reached his capacity, bought <lb />
bearer was shot, and Capt i can himself and after <lb />
Bird brought out the flag himself. eating it announced that having <lb />
This was the severest regiments j no more money, he would have <lb />
loss during the j quit hungry. <lb />
Stub Ends cf Thought. <lb />
A witless woman is a mistake <lb />
of creation. <lb />
Now is but atom of thought. <lb />
Credit takes the of money, <lb />
but cannot keep it, <lb />
is the health of the <lb />
it. <lb />
Every man is a book, every <lb />
book is not worth <lb />
No man can be happy without <lb />
sharing it with <lb />
Prudence is a cf <lb />
An army is a great monster with <lb />
a head, but no heart- <lb />
Cupid is a physician who never <lb />
takes his own medicine. <lb />
It is a I Tariff In February <lb />
Tim n- Flower a. <lb />
In the <lb />
Capital. <lb />
Never violets so fashionable <lb />
in New York as for the latter part I <lb />
of winter and early spring just past, j <lb />
says the New York Herald. One <lb />
dollar was not unusually charged for j <lb />
a small bunch of these modest little j <lb />
flowers that grew by the myriads In <lb />
fields and woods, hiding themselves <lb />
by dozens under a fluttering leaf, just <lb />
like young chicks under tho pro- <lb />
wing of a mother hen. <lb />
Not only do women wear violets <lb />
on hats, in bodices and belts; they <lb />
have bunches fastened to their muffs, <lb />
and when they are raised toward the <lb />
face they soften the brilliancy of the <lb />
complexion and serve to make more <lb />
attractive those who would other- <lb />
wise pass unnoticed. <lb />
In Paris where spring comes ear- <lb />
lier than in New York, the <lb />
arc beautified by masses of <lb />
fresh violets sold from flower stands <lb />
in the open air. During the second <lb />
empire the residents of the American <lb />
quarter, walking on Washington's <lb />
birthday Under S brilliant sunshine <lb />
ill gay attire, wore bunches of <lb />
lets fastened by ribbons of red, <lb />
white and blue. <lb />
They did so because the violet was <lb />
I ho Napoleonic flower, and <lb />
cans were quite at home in Paris and <lb />
at court during the reign of <lb />
III. The emperor retained a <lb />
warm friendship for those whom he <lb />
bad known when he resided in the <lb />
vicinity of street, in New <lb />
York city. The Posts, <lb />
and many <lb />
were well received in court cir- <lb />
During Lent it was good form <lb />
for men in evening dress to wear a <lb />
black tie and a small of <lb />
violets with a green leaf and a small <lb />
of white hyacinth or lilies of <lb />
I he valley. And now, every j <lb />
of tho last emperor's death, <lb />
a funeral service is held in the Church i <lb />
of St. Paris. I <lb />
is usually filled with people in mourn- j <lb />
all wearing small bouquets of <lb />
violets, thus declaring themselves <lb />
in sympathy with the aspirations, or i <lb />
at least with the sorrows, of this i <lb />
family. <lb />
In the morning of March 1815, <lb />
Napoleon, who had been banished <lb />
by the allies to the island of Elba, <lb />
upon returning suddenly to Paris <lb />
for his reign of days was <lb />
by the women of Paris with <lb />
showers of violets. In memory of <lb />
this attention on the part of <lb />
the Parisians Empress Eugenie <lb />
adopted the violet as the Napoleonic <lb />
Violets thus became <lb />
in the times of the <lb />
empire to such an extravagant ex- <lb />
that were eaten as a <lb />
and Marquis, the widely known con- <lb />
invented tho sugared <lb />
let as a bonbon. But not only was <lb />
the purple violet a la mode, but the <lb />
pale violet from Italy, as <lb />
well. Alphonse the <lb />
novelist and retired to <lb />
Nice, where he devoted himself to <lb />
the culture of flowers. He raised <lb />
Indian violets in such a <lb />
that he supplied every morning <lb />
the principal flower stores of the <lb />
capital with immense boxes covered <lb />
with wadding, in which flow- <lb />
arrived as fresh as when <lb />
from his gardens. <lb />
HER TRANSLATION. <lb />
How a Young Lover the Or- <lb />
of His Colonel. <lb />
A young English officer In India <lb />
left his regiment on a sick leave and <lb />
went to a hotel, where, It happened, <lb />
a lovely girl was staying, says <lb />
Youth's Companion. They became <lb />
engaged, and the wedding was set. <lb />
The colonel, however, disapproved of <lb />
the sub-lieutenant's getting married, <lb />
and particularly of the in <lb />
question. As he happened to be a <lb />
friend of the young man's father, he <lb />
thought he might prevent the mar- <lb />
by sending a peremptory <lb />
gram couched In <lb />
at Tho lover was in despair. <lb />
He presented himself before his <lb />
with the fatal missive in his <lb />
hand and anything but a look of <lb />
pleasure on his countenance; but tho <lb />
lady was equal to the occasion. With <lb />
a blush of maiden simplicity she <lb />
she cast her eyes upon the ground <lb />
and <lb />
me, T am glad your colonel <lb />
approves of tho match I But what a <lb />
hurry ho is In I don't think I car. <lb />
get ready so soon; but I'll do my <lb />
best; because, of course, his com- <lb />
must <lb />
Tho young warrior was puzzled. <lb />
you ho said, this <lb />
message puts a stopper on our plans <lb />
You don't seem to understand tho <lb />
telegram. Ho says, <lb />
at <lb />
The lady's blushes redoubled but <lb />
with a look of simplicity she raised <lb />
lovely eyes to face and re- <lb />
Is you, my darling, who don't <lb />
seem to understand. Your colonel <lb />
says at by <lb />
which, of course, he means get mar- <lb />
immediately. What else pan, <lb />
he A of <lb />
replaced tho air bewilderment on <lb />
the young man's Ho accepted <lb />
the explanation and was enabled to <lb />
answer the colonel's telegram forty- <lb />
eight hours, afterward In these <lb />
words orders were obeyed. <lb />
We were Joined at <lb />
THE <lb />
Something of j <lb />
Short But Interesting <lb />
Row the <lb />
The Little <lb />
with the I Ii I. <lb />
Ilia <lb />
A horse was ridden long before he <lb />
Was shod, and until it was learned <lb />
how to put shoes upon him his great- <lb />
est usefulness was not achieved. It <lb />
is cause for comment, says the <lb />
Horseman, that the ancients did not <lb />
really to shoe him before <lb />
they did. They did put coverings <lb />
upon the feet of animals used for <lb />
burden. These coverings <lb />
were made of leather, and even <lb />
plaited shoes of hemp were put upon <lb />
mules, which, by were <lb />
oftener ridden In olden times than <lb />
horses were. By and by these were <lb />
made of metal, not as the animal's <lb />
foot is faced with iron to-day, but a <lb />
metal shoe was made into which the <lb />
horse's foot was placed. The mules <lb />
that drew Nero's chariot were shod <lb />
with silver shoes, while those for his <lb />
wife's were of gold. The <lb />
shape thereof saith <lb />
An old historian tolls us a <lb />
living in Asia used to draw socks <lb />
over the feet of the horses when the <lb />
snow lay deep upon the ground, and <lb />
way oil in they cover <lb />
the feet of the dogs in the same way. <lb />
It seems as if all ancient shoes <lb />
put upon the horse and held there <lb />
by some sort of lacing or strapping. <lb />
War horses not shod any <lb />
for Alexander once is said to <lb />
have marched until the feet of his <lb />
horses were broken, while in another <lb />
expedition of ancient days the <lb />
was left behind because the <lb />
hoofs of the horses were in bad con- <lb />
The nearest thing we Bud to the <lb />
horseshoe to-day was found in <lb />
grave of an old king of France who <lb />
died in There four nail <lb />
holes in the shoe, and this is the first <lb />
mention of nailing on a shoe. It <lb />
might be well lo notice just here I he <lb />
fact that tin- horseshoe evil <lb />
spirits even us long ago in <lb />
the days of this old king, fifteen <lb />
years and was doubtless <lb />
placed on his for this purpose. <lb />
A writer in Philadelphia Times <lb />
superstition that <lb />
the horseshoe with luck is very <lb />
old, and prevails all through <lb />
and in southern Asia. Nobody can <lb />
seem to settle whether it is I lie iron <lb />
of which is made or its shape <lb />
brings good luck. The ancients be- <lb />
that iron had wonderful pow- <lb />
and when Arabs arc overtaken <lb />
by great storms they <lb />
which they do to propitiate <lb />
the evil spirits charge of the <lb />
storm. As to its shape a <lb />
crescent was a form mm h favored <lb />
by all nations. The Chinese build <lb />
tombs in this shape, and so do the <lb />
It was to hare a <lb />
horse around in olden times, and so <lb />
the writer sums up the luck of a <lb />
horseshoe as found in three <lb />
ties which it is made <lb />
of iron, it is the shape of a crescent, <lb />
and it has been worn by a <lb />
So we find them gilded and berth- <lb />
boned in lady's and <lb />
rusty and red above the stable door, <lb />
and all for the sake of the phantom <lb />
or to drive away the <lb />
of our own invention. A shoe <lb />
for should never be hung up <lb />
with the open end down, because <lb />
then the will run <lb />
In the ninth century they began <lb />
to shoe horses, but, strange to say, <lb />
only in time of frost. King William <lb />
I. Introduced horseshoeing into Eng- <lb />
land, and six horseshoes are on the <lb />
coat of arms of the descendants pt <lb />
the man to whom he gave vast <lb />
estates for caring for his horses in <lb />
this way. No has been <lb />
made in horseshoes for years. Bet- <lb />
iron has been used and better <lb />
nails, but no change has come in <lb />
shape or putting them on. <lb />
made of Made of <lb />
horseshoe iron. A better class of <lb />
iron than is used for other things, <lb />
and is often made of old horseshoes <lb />
melted down. Good nails Yes, the <lb />
and the what <lb />
we like. Size There's a quarter <lb />
of an inch in difference. That <lb />
That's a mule's shoo. Mr. Mule has <lb />
n narrower and smaller foot than a <lb />
horse. Everybody knows that. Cut <lb />
their toe nails Yes, every lime we <lb />
Shoe A man that owns a good <lb />
horse don't trust much a roadside <lb />
blacksmith. He ought to have his <lb />
own just as he has his own <lb />
And that's the way <lb />
with boss horses. I like to <lb />
shoe the same horse rather than shoe <lb />
after some one else. We fellows <lb />
never shoe just exactly alike, and <lb />
when I get a horse I like to <lb />
keep him. <lb />
i New woman- Again. <lb />
your wife still doing <lb />
own cooking <lb />
no; we found a new <lb />
woman yesterday. <lb />
cook <lb />
Why <lb />
thought the new woman <lb />
aspired ha higher than <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
How Did It Happen <lb />
ex- <lb />
the <lb />
was his <lb />
the point of a joke in three <lb />
minutes; their time limit is five or <lb />
Francisco Chic. <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Report <lb />
Absolutely pure <lb />
a Victim of etiquette. <lb />
I of Almost <lb />
Killed a Man. <lb />
The rigid etiquette which prevails <lb />
in Cores as to the ceremonious ban- <lb />
is inconvenient for strangers, <lb />
whose untrained appetites are <lb />
scarcely up to the standard. <lb />
An artist making a slay in Seoul <lb />
was bidden to a royal feast at tho <lb />
king's palace, to his mingled joy <lb />
and despair. Ignorant of native <lb />
customs, he appealed to Mr. G------, <lb />
tho English consul, to guide him <lb />
through the ordeal. The one thing <lb />
impressed upon him was is <lb />
a great Insult to refuse what is <lb />
offered you at table, and a <lb />
insult rot to eat all that is on <lb />
ail sat down and tho <lb />
feast began. All the products of tin; <lb />
country seems to have been cooked <lb />
and put before including meats, <lb />
fish, s . vegetables and <lb />
sauce--, of which, mind you, we had <lb />
to cat piled on our <lb />
plates. pi iii the puppy <lb />
slate, were also I lure, and were <lb />
much appreciated by my princely <lb />
entertainers. <lb />
was hut halfway through, <lb />
however, not being provided with an <lb />
ever-expanding digestive apparatus, <lb />
like my friends really <lb />
felt as if I were <lb />
raised my eyes pleadingly to <lb />
Mr. but he shook his head <lb />
Tho servants, seeing mo <lb />
hesitate, plied busily with <lb />
toes, barley, millet, and at least <lb />
half a bushel of beans. <lb />
vainly praying <lb />
and dexterity to slide the <lb />
food under laid I made <lb />
ate inroads heaped-up <lb />
vegetables. again I rolled my <lb />
eyes dumb entreaty Inward <lb />
Consul, who once again shook his <lb />
head, I hi with grin, <lb />
which untie mo determined to gel <lb />
through the feast somehow, but in <lb />
silence. <lb />
this was treated to lily <lb />
bulbs and radishes dipped in the <lb />
Vilest Ranees, besides a large portion <lb />
of puppy-pig roasted and in <lb />
profusion, with foreign and native <lb />
wines. At length, when I felt that <lb />
with my next mouthful I should <lb />
groan aloud, the end was reached. <lb />
That unhappy meal began at noon <lb />
and was to a close at seven <lb />
p. m. <lb />
those who appreciate tho <lb />
pleasure of eating let me recommend <lb />
a royal dinner. No pen can <lb />
describe the agonies I endured as I <lb />
was carried home in my green sedan <lb />
chair. For days scarcely ate a <lb />
mouthful and lo this day the sight <lb />
ti ; is <lb />
The Pacific mail steamship <lb />
was wrecked on the 27th <lb />
persons are supposed to <lb />
have lost their lives. <lb />
LOCAL DIRECTORY. <lb />
COUNTY <lb />
Superior Clerk, E. A. <lb />
Sheriff, B. W. King. <lb />
Register of Heeds, W. M. King. <lb />
Treasurer, J. I. Little. <lb />
Coronet, Dr. C. Laughing- <lb />
owe. <lb />
Leonidas T. K. 1- <lb />
Smith and S. U. Jones. <lb />
Health, W. II. Bagwell. <lb />
county Home, W. Smith, <lb />
Board K R. <lb />
Ward and R. C. <lb />
rub. Ins., w. ii. <lb />
OFFICERS. <lb />
Mayor, Ola Forbes- <lb />
Clerk, C. C. Furors <lb />
Treasurer, W. T. Godwin. <lb />
W. Perkins, chief, Fred. <lb />
S. W. Murphy, night. <lb />
II. Smith. L. <lb />
brown, T. Godwin. T. A. <lb />
Julius <lb />
Baptist. every Sunday <lb />
morning and night. Prayer <lb />
meeting night. Rev. M. <lb />
pastor. Sunday School at <lb />
A. M. I. <lb />
Catholic. No regular service-. <lb />
Episcopal. Services every fourth <lb />
and night. Rev. A. <lb />
Hector. Sunday School <lb />
A. W. B. t. <lb />
Methodist. Services every Sunday <lb />
morning i <lb />
Wednesday night. Rev O. F. Smith, <lb />
pastor. Sunday School at A. M. A. <lb />
u. aunt, <lb />
1st an <lb />
Sunday morning Prayer <lb />
night Rev. Archie <lb />
Sunday School at <lb />
IA.<lb />
Covenant Lodge No. I. O. O, F-, <lb />
i meets every Tuesday night. Dr. II. <lb />
I Bagwell, N. <lb />
No. SB I A. A. <lb />
M., meets and third Monday <lb />
i W. M. W. M. <lb />
As to Wedding Present. <lb />
It is a surprise to note that a j <lb />
question has arisen it Camden, N. <lb />
J., as to whether wedding presents j <lb />
belong to the bride or groom. Cam- <lb />
den is near New York, and in Now <lb />
York bride generally owns <lb />
everything and the groom <lb />
gets what he can induce her to give <lb />
him. Aside from that, however, <lb />
there should be no question ii, In <lb />
wedding presents. They are given <lb />
to the bride and the groom gets <lb />
her. If he cannot keep her, how <lb />
can he expect to keep the presents <lb />
In the Camden case the groom <lb />
was unable to keep the bride, and <lb />
she took presents with her when <lb />
she left. He has begun suit to re- <lb />
cover them, but not to recover her. <lb />
In fact, he plainly intimates that he <lb />
does not want her. It is doubtful if <lb />
he has good grounds for his action. <lb />
He got them with her; can he <lb />
separate them now They were all <lb />
drawn as one prize in <lb />
lottery. Can he discard her <lb />
part of that prize and keep the rest <lb />
It seems only seasonable to suppose <lb />
that ho must keep all or nothing. <lb />
Chicago Evening Post. <lb />
R. U. L. JAMES, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
N. C <lb />
DR. II. A. JOYNER <lb />
DENTIST. <lb />
O. <lb />
up stairs Co <lb />
Hardware Store. <lb />
E. Ii. <lb />
Greenville <lb />
ill GORE MOORE. <lb />
N. C <lb />
tinder Opera House. Third St. <lb />
LI H. <lb />
E N V I L I. B, c. <lb />
all the courts, s a <lb />
A Fastidious Miss. <lb />
A short time ago a young woman j <lb />
of fashion in Washington went to <lb />
one of the taxidermists of the <lb />
Smithsonian institution mid wanted I <lb />
a favor. Rho had with her a bright <lb />
Canary bird, alive and chirruping, <lb />
she much desired the <lb />
mist to kill and stuff the bird for <lb />
her. She went on to say that she <lb />
had all over the city for a <lb />
bird of just this because <lb />
wanted the plumage to match in <lb />
color a new gown which she was <lb />
having made. Tho bird that she <lb />
brought she wanted stuffed for an <lb />
haw <lb />
Explaining a <lb />
Two girls were riding in a Pitts- <lb />
burgh cable car, and one of them <lb />
was reading a comic paper. <lb />
don't sec the point to this <lb />
said the reader, as she displayed to <lb />
her companion a picture. It <lb />
a In his shirt sleeves <lb />
With a tiny baby on his lap, and was <lb />
New <lb />
The other girl was thoughtful for <lb />
a few moments, and then <lb />
that's plain enough. The baby <lb />
is a girl, and of course it's quit <lb />
new. Don't you <lb />
F. TYSON, <lb />
Attorney and Counselor at-Law <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
Practices In all the <lb />
Civil and Criminal Business Solicited. <lb />
Makes a special of fraud <lb />
ages, actions recover laud, and col- <lb />
Prompt and careful attention given <lb />
all business. <lb />
Money lo loan on approved security. <lb />
Terms easy. <lb />
J. II. J. L. <lb />
BLOUNT FLEMING <lb />
k at-Law, <lb />
VI N. <lb />
Practice in all the Courts. <lb />
L. C. LATHAM. <lb />
I SKINNER, <lb />
A AT-1 W, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
J. JARVIS. <lb />
A BLOW, <lb />
I. <lb />
LA W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
It, the Courts. <lb />
John E. Wizard. F. ;. Harding. <lb />
Wilson, N. C. Greenville, N. C. <lb />
WOODARD A HARDING, <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
Special attention given to collect ions, <lb />
and settlement el claims.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017748_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
I. <lb />
Entered at the st <lb />
X. C as second-class m i matter. <lb />
The offices of the S. A. L. <lb />
railroad are to be changed from <lb />
Atlanta to Portsmouth, Va. <lb />
The buildings for this road in <lb />
the latter city are very <lb />
and costly and are not yet <lb />
completed. <lb />
JUNE 5th, <lb />
The Missouri State Democrat- <lb />
Executive Committee has <lb />
called a convention of the Dem- <lb />
party of the State to <lb />
express itself upon the money <lb />
question. <lb />
The Democrats in Kansas and <lb />
Missouri have declared for free <lb />
silver and the fight is going on. <lb />
Raleigh and are get- <lb />
ting a hump on about the State <lb />
Fair, and if Raleigh don't look <lb />
out Durham is going to get it. <lb />
The question now is who <lb />
succeed Secretary <lb />
Don Hoke Smith <lb />
are among the first mentioned <lb />
for the place <lb />
It is said that the nineteenth <lb />
reply has just been issued to <lb />
There will probably <lb />
be as many more before the <lb />
next election. The money <lb />
question is the burning issue of <lb />
the day. <lb />
Collector Rogers has been <lb />
sworn in and has taken charge <lb />
of the office as successor to the <lb />
late Collector Carter. There <lb />
will be no changes in the <lb />
as made by the <lb />
former Collector. <lb />
This and next week will wit <lb />
commencement exercises <lb />
at all of our colleges and the <lb />
University. International feasts <lb />
promised at most of them <lb />
and will doubtless be realized. <lb />
LOCAL <lb />
NOTES AND <lb />
JOTTINGS. <lb />
TOBACCO <lb />
BX O. I-. <lb />
On June <lb />
birthday, a collection for the <lb />
be erected <lb />
will be taken all the South- <lb />
the monument to <lb />
over his a <lb />
Clayton who was charged <lb />
with being accessory to the <lb />
murder of Dave at <lb />
Asheville has been released as <lb />
the evidence was not sufficient <lb />
to justify holding him for trial <lb />
The remains of Secretary <lb />
Gresham were taken to for <lb />
mer home for interment after <lb />
appropriate ceremonies the <lb />
capitol. An immense concourse <lb />
of people attended the services. <lb />
The grand jury in New York <lb />
has returned true bills in the <lb />
indictments of the following well <lb />
known for selling <lb />
Co <lb />
dale Bros, Simpson, Crawford <lb />
Co., Macy <lb />
A Co , learn Son, <lb />
Hilton, Hughes Co , <lb />
Brothers, Jamison Co., Dan <lb />
ft Co. <lb />
The Republican convention of <lb />
Ohio has nominated Bushnell <lb />
for Governor. Senator Sherman <lb />
The first permanent tribute of <lb />
respect to Senator Vance in <lb />
North Carolina is a memorial <lb />
window at Salem Female Col- <lb />
It was formally present <lb />
ed to trustees during the pres <lb />
commencement exercises. <lb />
Hon. J. C. Huston presented it <lb />
Bishop accept- <lb />
ed it on the part of the trustees. <lb />
Both made able speeches. Mrs <lb />
Vance was present, together <lb />
with many of the admirers of <lb />
the late lamented <lb />
If any one will read Justice <lb />
opinion on of <lb />
vs. Coke in reference to <lb />
the mortgage law he will be <lb />
convinced that there is still <lb />
power in the courts to <lb />
gate fraud and that the people <lb />
can and ought to get relief <lb />
through the courts. Justice <lb />
A very says the decision of the <lb />
majority of the court gives <lb />
to wrong doers and en- <lb />
to others to at- <lb />
tempt like frauds in the future. <lb />
Mr II. II. Bryant, of Cam- <lb />
bridge, Mass., has been held in <lb />
a bail for writing the fol- <lb />
lowing postal card to the <lb />
of the Supreme Court at <lb />
Washington since their <lb />
ion upon the income <lb />
Alf-r Judas bad done his <lb />
man- <lb />
bribe <lb />
Lot every farmer come out next <lb />
Saturday. The tobacco growers <lb />
meet the Court House. <lb />
Lumber is being placed on tho <lb />
lot for of <lb />
as, work will commence right <lb />
a way- <lb />
Messrs- Forbes are <lb />
of building a <lb />
during the Let us have <lb />
just as us possible. The <lb />
lack of prize room is all that has <lb />
held Greenville back for lo, these <lb />
many years. <lb />
Wu from the To- <lb />
Journal that has <lb />
organized a stock co. for the <lb />
pose of building a tobacco ware- <lb />
house- Mr. J- W- Granger is <lb />
president- warehouse is to <lb />
be CO x 17-3 feet- This will main <lb />
a commodious building and if <lb />
building up a tobacco market was <lb />
Dot such up hill business success <lb />
would crown the efforts of <lb />
business men- <lb />
Mr- G. F. Evans will <lb />
with Mr- O L in <lb />
the conduct of the Eastern Ware- <lb />
house, Greenville. N. C, next sea- <lb />
son- These two gentlemen make <lb />
exceptionally strong team. <lb />
Their warehouse will be enlarged <lb />
to nearly double its present size, <lb />
a loaf factory will erected <lb />
in connection with the building. <lb />
Southern Tobacco <lb />
An Editors Plaint. <lb />
Editing a paper is a <lb />
pleasant thing. If it contains too <lb />
much political matter people <lb />
won't have it- <lb />
If it contains too little they <lb />
won't have it at all. If the type is <lb />
large it dies not contain enough <lb />
reading matter, and if the t is <lb />
smaller can t read it- If e nut <lb />
in a few jokes they say we are an <lb />
old fossil. <lb />
If publish original matter, <lb />
they condemn us for not giving <lb />
selections; if we give them <lb />
people say are If <lb />
give id an a <lb />
notice, are censured tor being <lb />
if we do not, all hands <lb />
say we are a bore. <lb />
If we insert an article which <lb />
pleases the ladies, men are <lb />
; if we not cater to their <lb />
wishes the paper is not tit to be <lb />
seen in the house <lb />
If we attend say it <lb />
is only for effect; if we do net <lb />
they denounce us as deceitful <lb />
desperately wicked. If we <lb />
speak well of act, folks say we <lb />
dare not to do otherwise. <lb />
If we censure, call us trait- <lb />
ors. If we protect th <lb />
from scandalmongers, they say <lb />
we are bought off; if we don't, <lb />
ought lo be dealt with- <lb />
If in our office and <lb />
spoke. At every mention of job he had enough <lb />
sound money there was applause hold left lo his bribe <lb />
it i ; , i and then himself <lb />
and when he mentioned ; <lb />
as Ohio's candidate for the of your serious <lb />
Presidency, and for <lb />
the next Senator the convention <lb />
was wild with enthusiasm. <lb />
There was a dedication a <lb />
Items, <lb />
N. C-, <lb />
Potato shipping has begun. <lb />
Mrs. S- E wont u <lb />
Saturday. <lb />
Master Pa Brooks t sister, <lb />
Miss m mt to <lb />
day to visit mother. <lb />
Mr Joe -f E <lb />
attention. Private income from I spent a days here last week <lb />
land is unmixed injustice, visiting Mrs- J-P. <lb />
same springs public <lb />
attend to our business, folks say <lb />
we too proud to mingle with our <lb />
fellows; if we go out, a bit, <lb />
say had better stay at home <lb />
and get on with, our office work. <lb />
If cannot p our <lb />
promptly folks say are not to <lb />
trusted i if we do <lb />
where we got our<lb />
A FACT. <lb />
The longer live the more <lb />
we become impressed with the <lb />
almost unlimited power of kind- <lb />
It is a potent lever and <lb />
gains marvelous victories. The <lb />
man who pleads with his fellow- <lb />
men, from a heart overflowing <lb />
with love and does <lb />
more good one speech, than <lb />
the man who uses abuse ac- <lb />
in a life time- <lb />
In church, Si ale, society and <lb />
home the solid, substantial and <lb />
satisfactory victories are those <lb />
that emanate from kindness- <lb />
There are men who drive <lb />
wives into unfaithfulness and <lb />
their children away from home <lb />
into lives of through <lb />
a dictatorial bossism that <lb />
itself in words deeds of <lb />
bitterness and There <lb />
are ministers of the gospel who <lb />
repel rather attract, who <lb />
drive men away from thorn <lb />
the church because they show a <lb />
spirit of bit- <lb />
in the pulpit and abuse <lb />
all who do not agree with their <lb />
way of thinking- There <lb />
are politicians who make men <lb />
vote them the <lb />
party to which they belong be- <lb />
cause indulge in vilification <lb />
rather than convincing <lb />
have a right to their <lb />
opinions and no has a right <lb />
to abuse his because <lb />
he can't agree with him. There <lb />
is no place in this world where <lb />
dictatorial assumption of author- <lb />
indulging in bitterness <lb />
Kindness attracts i abuse <lb />
repels. Kindness builds <lb />
abuse destroys. Kindness wins ; <lb />
abuse defeats. Kindness pro- <lb />
love; abuse produces <lb />
hatred. Kindness is a that <lb />
brings about reforms elevates <lb />
mankind, abuse is a force that <lb />
degrades inaugurates <lb />
movements for bettering the con- <lb />
of the human <lb />
Observer. <lb />
DROPS OF <lb />
That the Reflector Lost Hunting <lb />
These Items. <lb />
Gems From the Markets. <lb />
In a short while peaches <lb />
be ripening- <lb />
A moonlight excursion would <lb />
be enjoyable now. <lb />
What is more beautiful <lb />
those bright June nights <lb />
Tho river is a pi ice <lb />
with the boys these evenings- <lb />
Never call some men a dog. <lb />
Tho dog can't defend himself- <lb />
The Public School for this dis- <lb />
closed Monday on account <lb />
of tho warm <lb />
Alter the Lord saw how help- <lb />
less man was he m a woman to <lb />
wait on him. <lb />
This is feeling weather for <lb />
folks, but it a on <lb />
effect on the crops. <lb />
Tho voice of the June bug is <lb />
added to tho of tho mos- <lb />
and buzz of the <lb />
The spiritual missionary has <lb />
departed. It seems that tho <lb />
weather here was getting too hot <lb />
for him- <lb />
A Charlotte Observer <lb />
referring to Juno as tax <lb />
listing time, calls it month <lb />
of <lb />
Wilmington held a meeting <lb />
Tuesday night, adopting <lb />
in favor of free coinage <lb />
the ratio of lo to I, and appoint- <lb />
ed delegates to a free silver con- <lb />
to be Held Memphis <lb />
11th. <lb />
Richard and wife, living <lb />
near county, g into <lb />
a While he was beat- <lb />
her over tho head she seized <lb />
him. by the and bit. it <lb />
Off. He picked up his lip, walked <lb />
four miles to a physician, had <lb />
it sewed back. <lb />
There's No Mystery <lb />
About It. <lb />
The truth is I am doing a rushing May <lb />
Lively scenes about the store. People <lb />
appreciate my superb styles and low prices. <lb />
I ask no man to buy a <lb />
worth here who feels he <lb />
can do better elsewhere, but <lb />
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 amount in <lb />
o- <lb />
MEN'S BOY'S <lb />
A Forward Step at Florence, S. C. <lb />
The <lb />
but <lb />
sigh <lb />
effort, and is beyond the reach <lb />
private endeavor. No doubt <lb />
at millionaires needed to sup <lb />
monument to the Confederate port their lordly establishments <lb />
dead in Chicago on the 80th of various parts of the world <lb />
May Gen. Wade <lb />
delivered the address. <lb />
luxurious harems <lb />
. float upon the seas. But mil- <lb />
. . you've always been <lb />
a grand and eloquent appeal g .,,, times <lb />
it <lb />
bury all sectional animosities <lb />
and jealousies There were <lb />
many distinguished soldiers <lb />
present, both from the North <lb />
Southern army. <lb />
Senator Morgan scores Sec- <lb />
for his course <lb />
upon the money question. He <lb />
was in the Senate with him and <lb />
heard his utterances in <lb />
of the free coinage of silver. <lb />
He gives Mr. Cleveland a pass- <lb />
notice also and says that <lb />
the President would not weep <lb />
much if the Democratic party <lb />
should be hopelessly divided <lb />
a deadly and far reaching rot <lb />
to the entire gamut of morals, <lb />
both public and private. You <lb />
illustrate one phase of that <lb />
It is said that Ran- <lb />
is to come home on the re- <lb />
quest of the President and <lb />
some say it means a <lb />
cabinet position. This is hard- <lb />
probable though as Mr. Ran- <lb />
has just been appointed to <lb />
the position he now holds If <lb />
lie is to return it is more than <lb />
probable that it is on <lb />
of his health. <lb />
The work heretofore done by <lb />
the Hoard of Education went <lb />
into the of the County <lb />
Commissioners to-day. The <lb />
retiring Board has served the <lb />
county well and faithfully. <lb />
The education, interests of Pitt <lb />
has prospered under their <lb />
No Board in the <lb />
State was more careful and con. <lb />
in the discharge of <lb />
their duties. The entire <lb />
will unite saying <lb />
done, good and faithful <lb />
The Board was com <lb />
posed of Messrs. J. R. <lb />
ton, F. Ward and R. C. Cannon <lb />
Mr- Meyer Rice tried Sunday <lb />
night- Bis remains were buried <lb />
at the family burying ground yes <lb />
Miss Handing <lb />
home Wednesday after spending <lb />
-Miss <lb />
Lee accompanied her <lb />
and will spend some tune visiting <lb />
friends. <lb />
It was warmer here last <lb />
than known for some <lb />
time The thermometer reached <lb />
one hundred in tho shade. <lb />
Beware of fruit. <lb />
trait help being green <lb />
you can <lb />
Before marriage, swains <lb />
for a lass, and after marriage it is <lb />
las. <lb />
Charity a multitude of <lb />
sins, but that is not its regular <lb />
business <lb />
Some of the best blood the <lb />
land Bow tho mos- <lb />
Many a man has ruined bis eye- <lb />
sight sitting n look <lb />
lag for work. <lb />
Noah is doubt loss <lb />
aha bi s seen n full <lb />
nothing but pairs. <lb />
Onions are the <lb />
that yon <lb />
don't oat yourself. <lb />
only man <lb />
house <lb />
vegetable <lb />
when yon <lb />
A Great Occasion. <lb />
The following thoughts from <lb />
the address of Dr. C. E- Taylor at <lb />
the at Littleton <lb />
Business College week are <lb />
worthy of tho earnest <lb />
of our boys young men <lb />
A boy makes of himself what <lb />
he wills, not forgetting inheritance <lb />
and environment. The end of ed- <lb />
is the development of <lb />
The latest prediction of <lb />
es likely to occur in the cabinet <lb />
on account of the death of Sec- <lb />
Gresham is that Attorney character. man is a <lb />
, , , . , animals there is instinct. <lb />
General will <lb />
Hoke Smith or W. L. in the lion's carcass, construct <lb />
Wilson will go to the depart- <lb />
of justice and Don M. <lb />
Dickinson either to the <lb />
of Interior or to <lb />
the position of Postmaster <lb />
General. The appointments <lb />
will be made in a few <lb />
days. <lb />
Tho coming session the <lb />
which be <lb />
tho of Juno will be <lb />
the most attractive one in its <lb />
history. addition to the <lb />
it has been <lb />
pared with groat o by tho <lb />
Committee, there will present <lb />
a number of prominent educators <lb />
Bel Water. <lb />
A. prominent has do- <lb />
th it b t w H w <lb />
friend- It will car- <lb />
if t o f V i and <lb />
will sh. <lb />
co-lies in th i cold- I will <lb />
stage- It will nervous <lb />
headache instant relief <lb />
to tired and ayes. It is <lb />
most for sprains <lb />
braises frequently stop <lb />
tho flow of blood from a wound. <lb />
It a sovereign remedy for <lb />
and, conclusion, <lb />
the doctor asserts, flee <lb />
from it black heads vanish <lb />
before its constant <lb />
Monday hist a very <lb />
meeting of tho Florence <lb />
County, C-, Tobacco <lb />
Association was hold at Florence. <lb />
About seventy-five leading plant- <lb />
present cud the discus <lb />
of various topics tobacco <lb />
culture occupied about three <lb />
hours- A largo of now <lb />
planters enrolled their names, <lb />
the represented at <lb />
meeting aggregated <lb />
acres. <lb />
On Monday night important <lb />
of the business men was <lb />
held, the Florence Board of <lb />
Trade was organized with over <lb />
The object of this <lb />
association is to assist in putting <lb />
the tobacco market at Florence <lb />
on a sound footing. In this <lb />
movement all the business men <lb />
are taking a and it is safe <lb />
to say the Florence market will <lb />
a success <lb />
A company has organized <lb />
to build another warehouse, <lb />
which will at once. <lb />
The lot has been purchased and <lb />
lumber ordered, the house <lb />
will ready tor tho now crop. <lb />
Negotiations pending for the <lb />
lease of tho two warehouses, and <lb />
Florence likely to lie a very <lb />
active market and a bidder <lb />
for the big South Carolina crop <lb />
mow growing. Ev <lb />
Mr. Henry tho real <lb />
estate agent, has informed us that <lb />
the Eastern Warehouse Company <lb />
have purchased a lot <lb />
south street of Mr. S M- <lb />
at front foot, and <lb />
it was not a corner lot at that. <lb />
How is that real estate in <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
Miss Susie daughter <lb />
of Col. who resides <lb />
near Grin X. C had the <lb />
misfortune to fail down stairs yes- <lb />
bruising herself very bad- <lb />
and breaking hi r nose. Dr. D. <lb />
T- Tayloe was called hear <lb />
hail to extract several pieces of <lb />
bone. n hone she will soon re- <lb />
Hats, Caps, <lb />
SHOES <lb />
men, women, misses. <lb />
Secretary of State Walter Q. <lb />
Gresham died yesterday morn- <lb />
His illness began May <lb />
1st with acute A few <lb />
days ago it became acute <lb />
from which his death <lb />
resulted. He was a little more <lb />
than sixty five years old and <lb />
had a record as a soldier, jurist <lb />
and statesman. It is thought <lb />
that his work had been so <lb />
for the past twelve <lb />
months that this was incident <lb />
the cause of his death. He <lb />
was a man honored and re- <lb />
by every one who knew <lb />
him. <lb />
their hives to-day on the same <lb />
plan, but possibilities cf in- <lb />
are unbounded. <lb />
ideas are discarded. Prof. Drum <lb />
instructions to <lb />
of the Medical <lb />
of Edinburgh University to store <lb />
away every volume ten years old. <lb />
was a requirement of the ago. <lb />
sow seed of bad <lb />
character. They to life amid <lb />
storms temptations. Acts <lb />
form habit, habit shapes destiny- <lb />
be unmindful of a sound <lb />
body. Tho country youth is to be <lb />
congratulated this training be <lb />
i the handles, college <lb />
athletics with moderations are to <lb />
be encouraged. <lb />
your own professions <lb />
for the Gods make us do, <lb />
they make us what to <lb />
yourselves with <lb />
what has been done and what is to <lb />
be done in the world of thought <lb />
and invention. Ability should not <lb />
be overestimated. We are wise <lb />
in proportion as we know our- <lb />
selves. We are amidst a <lb />
cent revival of learning in North <lb />
Carolina. Education is <lb />
to every youth of tho State. <lb />
Heed the <lb />
and lecturers from other States, <lb />
including Dr. President <lb />
of Martha's Summer School; Dr. <lb />
editor of New England <lb />
Journal of Mr. Polk <lb />
Miller, the Sooth's favorite <lb />
s Virginia <lb />
a charming poet and <lb />
Tho oratorical and <lb />
cal contest will be particularly <lb />
tine there are a larger <lb />
of entries than over before. <lb />
One of the attractive new features <lb />
of the assembly this summer will <lb />
be the general reception held by <lb />
the officers and committee the <lb />
ball-room of the hotel the 1st <lb />
day of the 19- The <lb />
railroads made the usual <lb />
low rates for the assembly, and <lb />
tho attendance is going to be very <lb />
large- A number of parties have <lb />
been organized in Virginia, South <lb />
Carolina Georgia to visit the <lb />
assembly. <lb />
In an address before the Eng- <lb />
Newspaper Society recently <lb />
Mr. Balfour, in speaking of civil- <lb />
dependence upon ad- <lb />
said that general nows <lb />
and comment and ail the other <lb />
machinery of in- <lb />
formation lo the public are really <lb />
not of more importance to the <lb />
community at largo than the <lb />
power of communication by ad- <lb />
fact that this <lb />
power is being more widely <lb />
plied before shows that <lb />
the community is to <lb />
its exercise, and, therefore, <lb />
of its importance; and <lb />
yet it is safe to say that its future <lb />
potentialities can scarcely be <lb />
dreamed of at this time even by <lb />
the liveliest imagination. <lb />
do I a <lb />
young wife who stood before her <lb />
husband dressed to attend a <lb />
party with him. <lb />
As his eyes from the pa- <lb />
per he was reading, looked t her <lb />
and <lb />
right. You'll <lb />
Her heart sunk her lips <lb />
quivered, but ho did cot know it. <lb />
She was conscious of looking her <lb />
best, and wanted a word of <lb />
praise, of admiration, from her <lb />
husband, and she failed to re- <lb />
it- <lb />
Why was he so of his <lb />
praise. Ask the average man <lb />
who answers his wife in that way <lb />
when she asks his opinion, as she <lb />
does, and ho will tell <lb />
you that she always looks well- <lb />
dressed m good taste above <lb />
criticism. But why doesn't ho say <lb />
that to her or, rather, why does <lb />
ho not make a little lover-like <lb />
speech for such occasion <lb />
Even the courteous remarks he <lb />
would bestow on costume of <lb />
an ordinary acquaintance are <lb />
withheld from his own wife- <lb />
There was a is <lb />
dead used to say to his <lb />
wife dear, you are looking <lb />
this or, I love <lb />
you best that blue dress of <lb />
lie was a poor stick of a <lb />
man in the way of success, <lb />
his widow canonized him for <lb />
just those loving tributes, given <lb />
to her with a lover's deference <lb />
after many years of life. <lb />
said a disappointed <lb />
man, would like to be a <lb />
just to show what a good <lb />
baud I could <lb />
Stricken Dumb From <lb />
A report comes from the neigh- <lb />
of Boomer of a peculiar <lb />
c of how true we are <lb />
not One day last week <lb />
there a Severn hail storm in <lb />
that section- The of Andy <lb />
Laws was damaged <lb />
angered Laws and be cursed <lb />
the storm and Him who sent it- <lb />
Laws after went to bed and <lb />
has not been able to speak since. <lb />
Wisdom of <lb />
Lead not by violence <lb />
but by law a-id equity. <lb />
Good people shine from <lb />
like snowy mountains ; bad <lb />
are not seen, like arrows shot <lb />
y night <lb />
Let a overcome auger by <lb />
love, let him overcome evil by <lb />
good, let him overcome the <lb />
greedy by liberality, the liar by <lb />
truth. <lb />
than living a hundred <lb />
years, not seeing the highest re <lb />
is one day the life of a <lb />
man who sees the highest <lb />
An deed is better <lb />
done, for a man wilt repent of it <lb />
afterward; a good deed is bettor <lb />
done, for having done it will <lb />
not repent. <lb />
The fault of others is easily <lb />
perceived, that of oneself is <lb />
difficult to perceive. A win- <lb />
nows neighbor's faults like <lb />
but his own faults he hides <lb />
as a cheat bides tho false die <lb />
from the gambler. <lb />
Important to <lb />
Heretofore, only the widows of <lb />
these soldiers who died the <lb />
war or within one year after the <lb />
war, could draw pensions. <lb />
The last Legislature passed a law <lb />
granting pensions to all widows <lb />
whose husbands have from <lb />
wounds received or disease con- <lb />
in the war, it matters not <lb />
how long tho war they <lb />
lived. Bear in mind that all new <lb />
applications for pensions must be <lb />
filed with the Board of County <lb />
Commissioners on or before the <lb />
1st Monday July next, or <lb />
will draw pensions this year. <lb />
Also that all those who <lb />
now drawing pensions, must <lb />
file an affidavit with the clerk of <lb />
the Superior Court on or before <lb />
1st Monday in July next, or <lb />
they will not get this year's pen- <lb />
Those who read this will <lb />
do a kindness to the old soldiers <lb />
and widows, who will <lb />
not have a to read this, <lb />
by calling their attention to those <lb />
facts. <lb />
Tho Board of County <lb />
made an increase of -i <lb />
valuation in levying <lb />
taxes Monday. <lb />
STYLES <lb />
Bicycles <lb />
one price on <lb />
Ramblers. is enough for the <lb />
best bicycle that was ever built, <lb />
More than is too much. <lb />
Rambler are made to combine <lb />
lightness, strength, speed, case <lb />
and durability. You can break <lb />
them if you try, but ordinary wear <lb />
has no perceptible effect. You <lb />
are groping in the dark if you buy <lb />
without seeing a Rambler catalog, <lb />
will bring it. <lb />
JEFFERY MFG. CO. <lb />
WASHINGTON. D. C. <lb />
for maid, wife, mother<lb />
Hum any competing concern anywhere. <lb />
stock 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 crowing larger. <lb />
Conic and see me and I will treat right <lb />
THE KING K. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
-------DEALER <lb />
MARBLE. <lb />
Wire and Iron Fencing <lb />
sold. First-class work <lb />
and prices reasonable. <lb />
Marble Yard erected or the old <lb />
lot, the M <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
undersigned having duly <lb />
before the Superior Court Clerk of <lb />
Pitt county u administratrix Wini- <lb />
deceased, notice l hereby <lb />
given to all holding claims <lb />
estate to them to <lb />
t-he undersigned for collection or be- <lb />
fore the day of May or this <lb />
notice will be in bar for their re <lb />
every, and all persons Indebted to <lb />
estate will make immediate payment. <lb />
This the day or May 1805. <lb />
s. <lb />
of Winifred <lb />
Au ice struck town Sun- <lb />
day in midst of tins hot <lb />
weather. Nat hit field says tho <lb />
like will not occur this <lb />
season. <lb />
is to <lb />
phone exchange <lb />
Lave a <lb />
The <lb />
an invitation to the commence- <lb />
exercises of Bethel High <lb />
School, Thursday, June 13th- <lb />
NOTICE. <lb />
North Carolina, Martin County <lb />
Court, j Before N. S. Peel Ck <lb />
Dennis Simmons, plaintiff, <lb />
vs. <lb />
C W A F I. <lb />
w and wife, Sophie E <lb />
Hunter. VI Taylor, and wife, Anna <lb />
E Taylor, Elizabeth Balance, II <lb />
wife. V W Carter. J <lb />
wife. Jessie M Outline <lb />
and II S Trustee. John K <lb />
Heed. W T C O Reed, Sophie E <lb />
Martin, Simmons, Sidney M <lb />
John H Mary E <lb />
J W Hayes, Mary <lb />
Moves, and I. W de- <lb />
The defendants will take notice that <lb />
the plaintiff begun an action against <lb />
them In this court for the purpose of <lb />
for a division that Swamp prop- <lb />
in Martin county in which said <lb />
plant and defendants are tenants in <lb />
common, commonly known as the <lb />
Grandy con- <lb />
of a track swamp land con- <lb />
by e live thousand <lb />
acres, of canoes, and the said <lb />
defendants are required to appear at <lb />
my office In on the 3rd day <lb />
of June 1895 and answer or demur to <lb />
the complaint or petition said action. <lb />
The defendants will notice that <lb />
if they fall to appear and answer or de- <lb />
to said complaint or petition the <lb />
relief demanded by said plaintiffs <lb />
granted. Witness my hand <lb />
seal at in N. C. <lb />
this April 1st N. S. <lb />
Clerk Sup. Court, Martin County, <lb />
TOBACCO <lb />
Ready for <lb />
BY <lb />
Pender Co. <lb />
-x- <lb />
Prices greatly reduced. Same price to <lb />
Terms Cash. <lb />
B. <lb />
Opposite Drugstore. <lb />
ESTABLISH <lb />
T. A. <lb />
El. <lb />
C. <lb />
Just Received Cars Rock Lime. <lb />
KEGS NAILS, ALL SIZES. <lb />
Cases Sardine. Cars Flour, <lb />
BO Bread j <lb />
Soap. <lb />
Star Lye. <lb />
Boxes Cakes and Cracker. <lb />
Bout Stick Candy, <lb />
Cases Matches, <lb />
Gold Oust. <lb />
Good Luck Baking <lb />
Sacks Coffee, <lb />
Molasses, <lb />
Tons Shot, <lb />
Kegs Powder. <lb />
Lard, <lb />
inn <lb />
Build, <lb />
BO A Ax Snuff, <lb />
K. Mills Snug. <lb />
Thistle Snuff, <lb />
Boxes Tobacco, <lb />
Dukes V. M. P. Cigarette <lb />
Oil Va. <lb />
Cases Oysters, <lb />
J. Ti. <lb />
ill Fin Apt <lb />
GREENVILLE, X. C. <lb />
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lower current rates. <lb />
AGENT FOB. FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The Undersigned having been <lb />
pointed by the Clerk of the Superior <lb />
of county as administrator of <lb />
George W. deceased and having <lb />
duly as such on Hie day of <lb />
April 1885, notice Is hereby given to all <lb />
persons holding claims against the es- <lb />
of said George W. to <lb />
sent them to the undersigned for pay- <lb />
or before the 1st day of May, <lb />
or this notice will be plead in bar <lb />
of their recovery. <lb />
All persons indebted to said estate <lb />
will make Immediate payment to the <lb />
undersigned and thereby save costs. <lb />
This 20th of April, <lb />
of W. <lb />
A Attorneys. <lb />
Ship your to <lb />
J U Meekins, Jr., Cot <lb />
Factors<lb />
Commission <lb />
NORFOLK VA. <lb />
Personal Attention to <lb />
Weights and Counts.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017748_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
DRY GOODS<lb />
June. <lb />
Sixth <lb />
Warm weather. <lb />
Strawberry about <lb />
It is now to your <lb />
taxes- <lb />
wore in market <lb />
i o day. <lb />
For thin, cool Dress Goods <lb />
to Land's. <lb />
Five Saturdays five Sun- <lb />
days this month- <lb />
The fly crop <lb />
promise to abundant this Boa- <lb />
son. <lb />
Last week, <lb />
week, dusters. All the same we <lb />
prefer the latter. <lb />
Ladies, now is the to buy <lb />
Slippers, at <lb />
H. G- is <lb />
making some additions to the <lb />
residence of the editor. <lb />
Tho Bernard buildings on <lb />
comer of Evans and Third streets Washington Saturday to visit rel- <lb />
THESE FOLKS <lb />
Came or Went and Their Names Got <lb />
in Print <lb />
Mr- R. L- Humber has moved <lb />
into his new house. <lb />
Miss Mattie Hearne returned <lb />
Friday from Littleton. <lb />
G- F. Smith returned <lb />
Monday evening from Tarboro. <lb />
Miss May Harris, cf Falkland, <lb />
is Miss Bessie Jarvis. <lb />
Miss Forbes returned <lb />
from Kinston Saturday morning. <lb />
Mr. Zeb Johnson returned Fri- <lb />
day evening from Scotland Neck <lb />
Miss Eva Fleming, of <lb />
spent Saturday and Sunday here. <lb />
Mrs. Dixon, of Greene <lb />
county, is visiting Mrs. J. L. <lb />
Miss Mattie Russell, of Wash- <lb />
is visiting Miss <lb />
Jarvis. <lb />
Mr. W. B- Burgess to <lb />
The New Law. <lb />
Last Monday the Board of Ed <lb />
passed out of existence, <lb />
the duties heretofore performed <lb />
by them falling on the County <lb />
Commissioners. The <lb />
sinners will also have to levy the <lb />
county taxes by themselves, the <lb />
Magistrates having no voice in <lb />
this matter any more. <lb />
A full mid complete <lb />
line of all the latest <lb />
shades and makes <lb />
of lovely <lb />
Silks, Sicilians, <lb />
Mohair, Silk Warp Hen- <lb />
Serges, <lb />
Lawns, <lb />
Sateens, <lb />
Organdies, Ducks, <lb />
and <lb />
in Dress Goods just re- <lb />
and would he <lb />
pleased to have the la- <lb />
dies call and examine. <lb />
line of <lb />
Men and Boys <lb />
are being given a new roof. <lb />
Maj. II. Harding will deliver the <lb />
address at tho of <lb />
Peals school, Jamesville, June 6th. <lb />
The Youth's Companion, <lb />
greets its readers with <lb />
pleasant surprises. The Memo- <lb />
rial Day edition was a beauty. <lb />
Warren there are <lb />
not any soft in the River- <lb />
side fish pond, lint tho bull frogs P <lb />
are making merry music there- -Miss Mary has returned <lb />
Out I. A. Sugg delivered the j Seminary, La- <lb />
HATS, <lb />
Gents Goods, <lb />
DRY GOODS, <lb />
Mr. Allen Warren left Monday <lb />
for a visit to Wilson Rocky <lb />
Mount- <lb />
Mr. R J. Proctor and family <lb />
returned Monday from a visit to <lb />
Kinston. <lb />
Miss Lucy Nobles has returned <lb />
from School, La- <lb />
address t School com- <lb />
at <lb />
Ho says a large warn out <lb />
As rivers to the flow to <lb />
spend their gathered prizes, so do <lb />
the streams of buyers go to him <lb />
who Observer- <lb />
We are glad to U. A. <lb />
White out from his recent spell of <lb />
sickness. <lb />
Prof. Nathan Toms, of Ply- <lb />
mouth, spent Saturday Sun- <lb />
here. <lb />
When this of weather <lb />
the gills find a visit to ins <lb />
comfortable <lb />
than sleeves. <lb />
To keep cool buy summer <lb />
and Vests at <lb />
Mr. Allen Warren has returned <lb />
in <lb />
Washington. <lb />
Mr. S- J Hamilton returned <lb />
Friday evening from a trip to <lb />
Philadelphia, <lb />
Miss Bettie Tyson returned <lb />
Friday evening from <lb />
on the <lb />
A colored woman professing <lb />
conversion wag imparting the <lb />
glad news to several sisters as <lb />
they passed along to their re- <lb />
places of work early Mon- <lb />
day. As they came near the <lb />
Methodist church quite a number <lb />
of them had congregated and <lb />
they indulged in a season of re- <lb />
together. <lb />
A Hot House Sure. <lb />
seemed to <lb />
with each other on Sunday <lb />
to see which could make the <lb />
highest score. While at different <lb />
around town they were re- <lb />
ported from to <lb />
the thermometer in tho green <lb />
house at Riverside Nurseries <lb />
made s scoop on all the others by <lb />
climbing up to <lb />
It is that Sir. George W. <lb />
Vanderbilt has already spent <lb />
on bis estate near Ashe-j Academy. <lb />
and expects to spend about ,, . . , . , <lb />
. A and child, of <lb />
is risking her mother, <lb />
acknowledges I Dr. Williams. <lb />
from Messrs. ii. and R. W- Smith <lb />
an to the Christian Col j Messrs. L C. Latham J. H. <lb />
at to Washington <lb />
June 5th i 6th. <lb />
Contractor W. J. has <lb />
Already much interest <lb />
Notions, Boots A Shoes. <lb />
here on the h of July. <lb />
H. C. Hooker <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
day to court. <lb />
Miss Mary Bernard arrived <lb />
commenced the Hooker evening from <lb />
Bernard prize house Mint visit her mother. <lb />
came so near being wrecked I . , . ,, ,, ,, , , ,. <lb />
i i . . , i O. M. Bernard left <lb />
wind a ago. . f ,,., . , <lb />
i for W to <lb />
present at court week. <lb />
Mr. J M. <lb />
came down Friday <lb />
lo spend here. <lb />
Tin re will <lb />
some <lb />
tine <lb />
of d. <lb />
The i rand jury if the S. <lb />
Court found a true hill <lb />
against C L. Murphy, the postal <lb />
An. F. C hit Monday <lb />
for Chapel Hill to attend <lb />
the commencement. <lb />
U u Washington branch, Mr. A . C. Taylor to <lb />
I for opening a registered I to visit his par- <lb />
. ; i I outs and returned this morning- <lb />
Two Old Men Pass Away. <lb />
Mr. Meyer Rice, a good citizen <lb />
of the portion of the <lb />
county, died at his home near <lb />
Sunday night. He <lb />
was 7- years old and was <lb />
near Dresden, Germany. <lb />
Mr. Warren Tucker, an excellent <lb />
u of this township, died Sun- <lb />
day at his home two miles <lb />
from Greenville. He was <lb />
old leaves a large family <lb />
Morehead. <lb />
The famous Atlantic Hotel at <lb />
Morehead City will for <lb />
guests Saturday, Jane 1st. Tho <lb />
new proprietor, Mr. Wink Taylor, <lb />
has many imp <lb />
about the has put it in <lb />
shape for season. This <lb />
is a popular resort with Green- <lb />
ville folks, and if the railroad <lb />
people be induced to give us <lb />
at Kinston it <lb />
great will from hero this <lb />
summer. <lb />
Harried.<lb />
o'clock this morning at the home <lb />
of Mr. in Greene <lb />
county, Mr. J. O- Proctor, a pros <lb />
porous merchant cf Grimesland, <lb />
was married to Miss Bettie S- <lb />
Johnson. Rev. D. W. Davis <lb />
The attendants were Mr. <lb />
J- V. Johnson and Miss <lb />
Mr. D. S. Smith and Miss <lb />
Olivia Johnson- The couple took <lb />
the morning train ; t Ayden for <lb />
an extended bridal tour. They <lb />
received a large number of very <lb />
handsome presents. <lb />
Serious Cutting <lb />
Tuesday evening Constable J. <lb />
H. Eubanks, of township, <lb />
brought a white man named Sam <lb />
Shelly to Greenville and commit <lb />
him to jail. Sunday night at <lb />
a house of questionable repute in <lb />
the Gum Swamp neighborhood, <lb />
Shelly had a difficulty with an <lb />
other white man named <lb />
dangerously <lb />
the latter across tho back. In de- <lb />
fault of bail ho was committed to <lb />
jail. Shelly hails from Halifax <lb />
county and papers <lb />
up there to secure bond for him- <lb />
Sunday School Excursion. <lb />
Two extra coaches were attach- <lb />
ed to the north bound train Wed- <lb />
for the of the <lb />
dist Sunday School, of Grifton, <lb />
which was having an excursion <lb />
Rocky Mount. But it seems the <lb />
railroad missed it in their <lb />
calculation as to bow the people <lb />
of would turn out on an <lb />
excursion, for the crowd was so <lb />
urge that not only the extra <lb />
coaches were filled, but the <lb />
coaches were crowd, <lb />
ed and had to stand in the <lb />
Town <lb />
The Town Council had a meet- <lb />
Friday night, the full Board <lb />
being present- <lb />
motion of Councilman <lb />
ins the office of Town <lb />
was created at <lb />
last meeting and to which <lb />
was was <lb />
abolished- <lb />
J. L. Langley was elected Tax <lb />
Lister for the town, receiving <lb />
votes and F. J. Johnson Tho <lb />
was allowed for this <lb />
service. <lb />
Henry Sheppard, real estate <lb />
agent, appeared presented to <lb />
the Board a deed from Mrs. A. <lb />
M. Clark for ex <lb />
tending from Pitt street to tho <lb />
railroad, to used for a public <lb />
street. motion the deed was <lb />
accepted. <lb />
It was decided that tho regular <lb />
meetings of tho Board shall <lb />
the first Monday night in each <lb />
month <lb />
The following committees were <lb />
On and <lb />
Godwin, to report at next meet <lb />
On Brown <lb />
and Jenkins. <lb />
On Wells-Smith, <lb />
On for <lb />
white and Jenkins for colored- <lb />
The Town Council hold its <lb />
monthly meeting <lb />
night, the full Bond being pres- <lb />
Tho usual in accounts <lb />
Were allowed orders for their <lb />
payment issued on Treasurer. <lb />
Councilman who is also <lb />
Treasurer, offered a resolution tho <lb />
s of which to allow <lb />
For the next days I am deter- <lb />
mined to make a reduction of <lb />
per cent, on all goods. <lb />
CLOTHING. <lb />
Special Sale of White Goods, <lb />
Embroideries. <lb />
O. <lb />
Next Door to Bank. <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 />
aisle on platforms. The j b ration cheapest W these times of depression and <lb />
seemed bent on <lb />
rood day's pleasure aid from the Board <lb />
sure they done so. The <lb />
weather was all that could be ask- <lb />
ed for an excursion. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Don't complain about its being <lb />
hot now. Less thin so <lb />
were wishing for this <lb />
kind of weather. <lb />
Remember I pay for Beeswax, <lb />
best <lb />
one f Contractor hands <lb />
Mi- buildings and <lb />
two of the workmen the mill <lb />
gave out and had to quit work. <lb />
lo s, don't forget Lang's Wash <lb />
Suits, they keep you cool. <lb />
One of tor largest grocery mer- <lb />
and chants tells that in the last <lb />
at Buck Store. , . , . . i j <lb />
j twenty days Hour has advanced <lb />
No, the don't take per barrel. And the end of <lb />
overcoats on subscription now, the advance IS not in sight. <lb />
but would not object to trailing ,,,. ,. ., , <lb />
, ii i t; this mouth will be remembered <lb />
for a block of ice ,, . . ,, <lb />
tho May on record. <lb />
A large cheap he calls on Mr. E. <lb />
OM Brick Store. to send us word how much <lb />
., . . ii., . the rainfall for the mouth was. <lb />
bile putting sky lights in <lb />
now warehouse, Friday, Mr. L- P-j Pat Foley was exhibiting a <lb />
Lawrence cut his hand right had 15-foot Saturday, that <lb />
with ii piece of glass. captured just below town. It <lb />
was of the species called <lb />
have taken the for the <lb />
New Home Sewing <lb />
will beep a supply of machines, <lb />
needles and attachments at II. C. <lb />
Hooker's store. <lb />
Fob bushels <lb />
known Peas, J. L Starkey <lb />
Co <lb />
Cad. ts J- J. M. <lb />
ore came homo Friday even- <lb />
from School, Oxford- <lb />
Prof. D- <lb />
pal of School, and <lb />
Airs- spent Saturday <lb />
hero. <lb />
Mr. O C Joy nor, a student of <lb />
the University, came home Thurs- <lb />
day evening. Claude looks as <lb />
jolly as ever. <lb />
Sheriff B. W. Edwards and <lb />
Messrs. R. B. Carr P. S. B. <lb />
Harper, of Greene county, were <lb />
town <lb />
Mr- Billie Tucker sisters <lb />
Misses Elia and Tucker, <lb />
returned home Friday from Holly <lb />
school. <lb />
Kinder Mixed. <lb />
Friday evening while Mi- <lb />
Walter Ponder was coming in <lb />
from the on his wheel, <lb />
he was attacked by two very <lb />
dogs and as his attention <lb />
I in off <lb />
dugs he lost control of wheel <lb />
he run bead-on into a <lb />
and there was a conglomeration <lb />
of wheel, dog. fence and Fender. <lb />
i Walter says what saved him from <lb />
bit by dogs w s that <lb />
he rod n Columbia. <lb />
Coining It <lb />
It is reported that this <lb />
a short ago, a and <lb />
wife disagreed- The broach be <lb />
tween them widened, until a <lb />
was effects a cash <lb />
basis, c being <lb />
cash, paid th husband by <lb />
the wife for. him to Lave <lb />
never return, except got his <lb />
bold offset. were <lb />
in <lb />
tho <lb />
orders of th present Board shall <lb />
paid There was a motion to <lb />
table this n, the vote <lb />
which was a tie, and Mayo- Forbes <lb />
decided in favor of tabling- <lb />
The committee on ordinances <lb />
made their report. The <lb />
es were read through and adopt- <lb />
ed as a whole. There wore very <lb />
few amendments to <lb />
already in existence. One of I <lb />
the prohibits the riding <lb />
of bicycles any of tho <lb />
of the town. <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 />
eater, <lb />
alive- <lb />
snake was caught <lb />
J. A- preached <lb />
sermons the <lb />
. Sunday, and return <lb />
bes has pi iced a Tarboro to-day. <lb />
A Rowing Party <lb />
evening at o'clock <lb />
a party of through <lb />
invitation of Mr- J J. Cherry, <lb />
on a row up the Tar. They <lb />
wont us far as Goff Lauding <lb />
and barked partook <lb />
of a spread furnished <lb />
by the young ladies. O-i the re- <lb />
turn while floating down <lb />
stream, the gay voices could b- <lb />
heard in that sweet old song <lb />
Tho following <lb />
composed the party Misses <lb />
Delia Marshall. Bessie While, <lb />
Lillie Wilson, Blanche <lb />
Lizzie Blow Myrtle Wilson- <lb />
Uncle John Cherry was chaperon. <lb />
d with c was <lb />
him. H. T. King for 7-50. The l <lb />
for him to and merchants <lb />
opened, an Io res, It was ,,, u , c to Whom yOU Should Spend your Cash. Do <lb />
h 8- for the I J haS <lb />
in not to leave as per con department report if eon to tell yOU, but COme tO US and buy <lb />
tract. He didn't leave any more, been complied wit <lb />
is right good more. M. who was <lb />
one. we.-k AV <lb />
Weekly. <lb />
Prof. Goes <lb />
I Tax Collector having failed to <lb />
give bond and qualify, Cox <lb />
I was elected- <lb />
If Gil. Ii. M <lb />
Dress Goods, Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes, <lb />
Mr. u. j. Tue to Goods, Heavy Domestics, Bleached and <lb />
been Prof. assistant at j i session Wednesday Unbleached Sheetings and Shirtings, Hardware, <lb />
the c. m. i. for a season, leaves , f T plows and Castings, Nails, Shovels, spades and <lb />
; Axes, Tinware Pots, <lb />
Harding goes out on the retain crockery, <lb />
that be will here J Whenever yon heir a man find <lb />
again the fall, lie has soiling fault with n paper, open i; <lb />
force pump in the well in bis <lb />
yard has added Mrs. Lucy of Golds- <lb />
ho so to throw a stream over all down Wednesday oven- <lb />
the buildings connected with his to visit her father, Mr. Warren <lb />
residence. Tucker, near town- <lb />
Au old adage is that money <lb />
talks, but a curious circumstance <lb />
concerning it is, that when it's <lb />
tight, as at it's easily shut <lb />
UP- and govern themselves <lb />
Needles and Attachments <lb />
all makes of Sewing Machines Lot owners Hill <lb />
kept by James Brown at H. should not overlook the <lb />
Hooker's store. fact that Councilman Brown will <lb />
hands work there this <lb />
Seventy Five <lb />
One of the largest crowds <lb />
ever assembled on the banks <lb />
Tar river to witness a baptism <lb />
hero, turned oat Sunday morn- <lb />
to see Rev. H. M. <lb />
Mr-C. A. who has been <lb />
V i his brother. Mr. W. C who is conducting the great re <lb />
will bold its election of of-1 f. ls i,,,,.,,, ; m. . , . LT ., D .- . <lb />
The brethren will take no- at Sycamore Baptist <lb />
county church, colored, baptize <lb />
Ex Gov. Mrs. T. J. The actual time <lb />
left Saturday to spend a. few I tor consumed in this <lb />
s in and from there large was from <lb />
seed to j <lb />
Bring your cotton <lb />
Henry Sheppard, buy <lb />
Meal Hulls. Car load of each <lb />
buy Send somebody to clean <lb />
they will go to Tenn. <lb />
just arrived tor sale cheap. <lb />
If yon wish get full value for <lb />
the money you pay for the goods <lb />
you buy always so to those who <lb />
advertise. They are anxious to <lb />
sell their goods and they will sell. <lb />
That's the reason they advertise <lb />
Mr- J- C- Greene, who is hold <lb />
a wire for the N. it W. <lb />
railroad at Creek, Va., came <lb />
his <lb />
Parties contemplating attend- Saturday to see <lb />
the Sunday School <lb />
Juno 8th at Ayden <lb />
will take notice that the exercises j Mr. B. the kid drum <lb />
will held only tho after- mer of Norfolk, stopped over with <lb />
noons of those dates. <lb />
Men will always would, <lb />
Whether limes are bad or good- <lb />
Ne'er content with what they've <lb />
got. <lb />
The believes ice. <lb />
factory in Greenville would pay, j Take the seasons, as a rule <lb />
and we hope this will put When its hot they want it cool; <lb />
some of our folks to thinking When its cool want it hot <lb />
about We believe Nat <lb />
could talk one up. <lb />
Remember I can take your The commencement exercises <lb />
and have you a suit of of Pitt Female Seminary will take <lb />
clothes made to order. Fit place June 11th. Those who re- <lb />
Frank Wilson. invitations should save <lb />
l i them, as will be admitted <lb />
arrived at t <lb />
Washington. See us and get t door <lb />
prices. <lb />
Tobacco 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 />
Notice. We have just received <lb />
cur machinery and are expecting <lb />
several car loads of first class flue <lb />
a few days- We are <lb />
pared to make any and all kinds <lb />
of flues will guarantee first <lb />
class at reasonable prices. <lb />
Yours very truly, <lb />
O- L <lb />
his pie case here Thursday <lb />
and left on the evening for <lb />
Kinston. <lb />
Mrs. W. R. Home came over <lb />
Saturday morning from <lb />
where she had visiting, and <lb />
returned to her home in Farmville <lb />
this afternoon. <lb />
Miss returned <lb />
home Saturday from <lb />
school at Salem. Her Miss <lb />
Pitt, of Alabama, accompanied <lb />
her home for a visit here. <lb />
Mr. Bryant Gardner, of <lb />
ton, N. C, who has been visiting <lb />
Mi. W. H- Wilkerson, of Farm <lb />
told Monday that be has j the of Mr- Joel Thomas, <lb />
gone over much of Pitt, <lb />
Edgecombe, Greene Wilson <lb />
counties kept a close watch <lb />
for them in bis travels and has <lb />
seen only one blue bird- <lb />
The Durham p- caught <lb />
out in a shower tins was tho <lb />
result; <lb />
The ram upon the <lb />
plants, <lb />
And made them grow taller, <lb />
But when it struck our summer <lb />
pants <lb />
It made them grow smaller. <lb />
the time i In line of candidates <lb />
was formed in the <lb />
of the officers of the church <lb />
tells us that the revival had its <lb />
beginning from the of <lb />
a little girl in Sunday school <lb />
There were requests for pray- <lb />
at the Sunday night service. <lb />
The met will go on two weeks <lb />
only proved every way sat up, to In hr-s no <lb />
lo Prof. Baird, but has j in it; to ho never <lb />
inquisition the city many it o job of printing to do ; <lb />
Prof Baird says lie to does take piper ; <lb />
hopes to secure Mr. for to he is a subscriber ho is a <lb />
Observer, j delinquent ; odds that he <lb />
As great a North Carolina pa-1 does anything that will as- <lb />
. ,,, , ., . the publisher to run the pa- <lb />
per as the Charlotte V,,, ,. <lb />
it ought to better up Slate at <lb />
credit our i <lb />
boys to South Carolina. We The University and Trinity <lb />
haven't got enough young men are both this <lb />
like Will Harding to to see week. <lb />
them given away so to <lb />
sister Carolina Tue Observer <lb />
would have little more <lb />
also, if tin had been Bilious and Intermittent revers <lb />
Mr. V. F. <lb />
Doctors Say; <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 />
Hatting and Oil cloths, <lb />
Heavy Groceries, Meat, <lb />
Molasses, Salt, Oils, Flour <lb />
a specialty in high <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 />
which prevail in dis-; <lb />
a superintendent. j are invariably White Goods, Dimities and Lawns. To the <lb />
Under the new law tho office of, by derangements of the to buy our Reynold's Shoes, pair war- <lb />
County Superintendent of Public j Stomach Liver and ranted to be solid. To buyer we say <lb />
instruction passed out of Tue Secret of Health land see our stock. We will be pleased to show <lb />
with the first of Juno, and. ,. . we have to sell. We set the pace, others <lb />
the Super l The liver driving try to follow <lb />
for this county, closed in the mechanism of <lb />
up his work on that day. i has man, and when it is out of order, <lb />
tho position nearly a the whole system becomes de- <lb />
has in every re i ranged and disease is the result, <lb />
made an acceptable official- . . . <lb />
Liver Pills <lb />
to whom ho is related, returned <lb />
home Tuesday- Mr. Gardner is <lb />
about years old and is only <lb />
four feet four high- He is <lb />
physically well developed with <lb />
the exception of his arms and <lb />
legs being short for the sine and <lb />
length of his body, weighs <lb />
pounds. Mr. Gardner is in- <lb />
companionable and in- <lb />
in manner and made <lb />
quite a number of friends among <lb />
our people. This was his first vis- <lb />
it to Henderson but he says ho <lb />
does not expect it to be bis last. <lb />
Henderson Gold Leaf. <lb />
New Schedule on th <lb />
A schedule has gone into <lb />
effect on the A- N. C E. B- <lb />
which the regular mail and <lb />
train will males the run <lb />
from Morehead City to Goldsboro <lb />
an hour quicker than before, with <lb />
the same saving of time en the <lb />
return trip. The morning <lb />
leave Morehead an hour later <lb />
than under the old schedule, re <lb />
turning in the evening an hour <lb />
earlier. The arrival and depart <lb />
fro u G is about the <lb />
same hour as formerly. The <lb />
this ii male <lb />
by tho quicker running of <lb />
Thin will be a great <lb />
to people going to <lb />
Now if tho Coast Line authorities <lb />
would make a schedule over this <lb />
road to connect at with <lb />
the least twice a <lb />
week if would re <lb />
teachers of tho county were <lb />
highly pleased with his work and <lb />
often spoke of it terms of com- <lb />
while the members of the <lb />
Hoard of Education did not bes <lb />
to say the never had <lb />
Durham Cheroot Co, <lb />
Cure all Liver Troubles. <lb />
mm <lb />
By patronizing Home <lb />
Prof. R services as <lb />
Mr- E. A- <lb />
Superior Court Clerk, whom <lb />
the new law placed the duty of <lb />
appointing a County Examiner <lb />
to succeed the Superintendent, <lb />
Monday appointed him to that <lb />
In this Mr. <lb />
shows that he has the in- <lb />
of our public schools at <lb />
heart that he desired to <lb />
make the best selection possible <lb />
for this responsible position. <lb />
Tho the <lb />
of county will <lb />
approve Mr- <lb />
of Prof. <lb />
Capt. E. M Fee is quite a <lb />
at card writing gets <lb />
them up in nice style. He has <lb />
placed tho under ob- <lb />
the thanks of legations for i supply of cards for <lb />
along the line. the <lb />
of DURHAM, N. C, <lb />
Ate is line Cigars, Che- <lb />
roots and n can be fount on <lb />
the market. Their are <lb />
OF <lb />
a cigar for it M baud made. <lb />
Havana tilled. <lb />
a very tine Cigar, Sum <lb />
Havana hand mini <lb />
Named in honor of Col. Buck Black <lb />
well. <lb />
a line live cent Sumatra Wrapper <lb />
hand made, tilled, a -sure win- <lb />
Named in of Col. J. S. <lb />
of Blue; Durham To- <lb />
Ten cents.<lb />
Five for The flue, t smoke for <lb />
the <lb />
NORTH STATE <lb />
Three for cents, a hummer that <lb />
ways pleases. <lb />
Stick to and send or- <lb />
Special put up when tie- <lb />
aired. <lb />
MALLORY DURHAM CHEROOT CO- <lb />
i Durham, n. Q <lb />
Truck Barrels, Pumps <lb />
All Kinds of Machinery. <lb />
have opened a <lb />
the old <lb />
Moore store and are <lb />
prepared to furnish <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 done and sat- <lb />
guaranteed. <lb />
Place your on rs <lb />
for Flues with <lb />
in <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
WALL PAPER. <lb />
have removed my Wall to <lb />
to the Marcellus Moore s ore and <lb />
have added a lot of new samples. <lb />
Come before the <lb />
The best you <lb />
hat to beau y your at <lb />
a mall cost. Prices as low as <lb />
three cent a roll of yards. <lb />
A. B. ELLINGTON.<lb />
TASTELESS <lb />
CHILL <lb />
IS AS FOR ADULTS. <lb />
WARRANTED. PRICE <lb />
Ills., Not. <lb />
Co., Louis, Mo. <lb />
last year. bottle of <lb />
TONIC <lb />
three gross already this year. In nil ex <lb />
of years. In the hare <lb />
never sold an that such universal <lb />
M Tonic Sours <lb />
g b; J. L. WOOTEN<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017748_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
established 1875. <lb />
at tee <lb />
OLD BRICK STOKE <lb />
FARMERS AND BET <lb />
in their year's supplies will Una <lb />
their interest to get our prices before <lb />
is complete <lb />
n branches. <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICE, TEA, <lb />
at MARKET TRICES. <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF <lb />
we M direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one A <lb />
stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
always unhand and prices to suit <lb />
the times. goods an all bought <lb />
sold CASH therefore, no <lb />
to sell at a close <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. <lb />
N. C <lb />
The Charlotte <lb />
OBSERVER, <lb />
Carolina's <lb />
FORE MOST B B W <lb />
AND <lb />
WEEKLY. <lb />
Independent fearless; <lb />
more attractive than ever, it will be all <lb />
invaluable visitor home, the <lb />
office, the club or the work room. <lb />
THE DAILY OBSERVER. <lb />
All Of the news of the Com- <lb />
plate Daily reports from the State <lb />
National Capitols. M ear. <lb />
WEEKLY <lb />
A family journal. All the <lb />
news of week. The reports <lb />
from the Legislature a special. <lb />
Remember th Weekly Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
ONLY ONE A TEAK. <lb />
Send for sample copies. Address <lb />
THE OBSERVES, <lb />
Charlotte, N. C. <lb />
WILMINGTON R. R <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD. <lb />
Con <lb />
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb />
is Ignorance Bliss <lb />
There is a delusion that, with most <lb />
men, ignorance is woman's <lb />
charm. A man may not like his wife <lb />
or his sister to display more <lb />
edge than he himself has, but every <lb />
man does like Intellectual sympathy. <lb />
The most conservative man's ideal of <lb />
woman requires above all that she <lb />
be charming; that she should please, <lb />
there is something absurd in the <lb />
notion that education will interfere <lb />
with this ideal. But a girl's <lb />
is not thrown away, if she <lb />
should choose to quietly settle down <lb />
after graduation to be the guide of a <lb />
home circle. She may a greater <lb />
benefactor than one who becomes <lb />
famous through discovery. <lb />
The study and practical care of the <lb />
the needs and comforts of a <lb />
and the education of children is the <lb />
highest and grandest opportunity <lb />
yet afforded to woman. The worM <lb />
may take care of itself, but the home <lb />
cannot. Let the girl grow <lb />
we do the boy, and give her the <lb />
benefit of the broadening influence <lb />
of public spirit and responsibility. <lb />
Let her have- a share in all these <lb />
widening circles of duty in the home, <lb />
and then she will be meeting the <lb />
highest type of womanhood, <lb />
tent to meet any demands that may <lb />
made upon <lb />
Press. <lb />
A Good Scheme. <lb />
for mule- <lb />
nave a scheme <lb />
ins money <lb />
is It <lb />
am going to teach society <lb />
people how to pronounce the name <lb />
of the <lb />
In <lb />
Poor <lb />
Health <lb />
so much more than <lb />
and <lb />
Natal diseases result from <lb />
trifling ailments neglected. <lb />
Don't play with Nature's <lb />
greatest <lb />
I luted <lb />
J cave <lb />
Ar. Ml <lb />
It <lb />
. y, <lb />
A. M <lb />
5-1 <lb />
in <lb />
at <lb />
no <lb />
OS<lb />
OS <lb />
I Sol <lb />
i . M.<lb />
I, <lb />
A. M <lb />
A V <lb />
bawd <lb />
1893. <lb />
GOING <lb />
Ar <lb />
A. M. P. SI- <lb />
HI <lb />
Sal <lb />
II is, <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar W <lb />
Ar <lb />
Rocky Mt <lb />
Ar <lb />
out of sorts, weak <lb />
and generally ex- <lb />
nervous, <lb />
have no appetite <lb />
and can't work, <lb />
begin at oner <lb />
strengthening <lb />
is <lb />
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb />
A few bot- <lb />
comes from the <lb />
very first <lb />
and it's <lb />
pleasant to take. J <lb />
It Cures <lb />
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver <lb />
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb />
Constipation, Bad Blood <lb />
Malaria, Nervous aliments <lb />
Women's complaints. <lb />
Get only the has crossed red <lb />
lines on the wrapper. All others are sub- <lb />
On receipt of two ac. stamps we <lb />
will send set of Ton Beautiful <lb />
Fair Views a-id <lb />
BROWN CHEM CM. CO. BALTIMORE, <lb />
This Reminds <lb />
You every day <lb />
in the month <lb />
May that if <lb />
you <lb />
have <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
Weldon p. m., Halifax 4.00 <lb />
p. in., arrives Neck at r <lb />
p. in., Kinston <lb />
p. in. Bel III leaves Kinston 7.2 <lb />
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving <lb />
Halifax at a. m., 11.20 am <lb />
daily except Sunday <lb />
Train on Brunch leave <lb />
Washington arrives <lb />
8.40 p. m. Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m 6.10 <lb />
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sim- <lb />
day, at S p. in., Sunday P. <lb />
arrive Plymouth 0.20 M., 5.20 p. in. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily <lb />
Sunday, 5.30 a. Sunday 0-tO a m. <lb />
arrive Tarboro a. m and 11.45 <lb />
a. in. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, a. <lb />
m. riving Smithfield, a m. Re- <lb />
leaves S a. <lb />
arrive Goldsboro. a. <lb />
Trains on Nashville Branch leave <lb />
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. m., arrive <lb />
Nashville S p. m. Spring Hope <lb />
p. m. Returning leaves Spring Hope <lb />
I a. m., Nashville 8.35 a. m., arrives <lb />
t Rocky Mount a. m. daily except <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch. Florence R <lb />
R. 6.50 p. in., arrive Dun <lb />
bar 8.00 Returning Dun <lb />
bar 6.30 a. arrive 8-00 a. m. <lb />
Daily <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War- <lb />
, for Clinton daily, except Sunday <lb />
at a. in. Returning leave Clinton <lb />
at m., at Warsaw with <lb />
line trains. <lb />
No. makes close, connection <lb />
a. Weldon for all points North daily, all <lb />
rail via Richmond, and daily <lb />
Sun lay via Portsmouth and Bay Line <lb />
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk A <lb />
railroad for Norfolk daily and <lb />
all points North via Norfolk, daily ex <lb />
cent Sunday. <lb />
General Supt <lb />
J. P. Manager. <lb />
T. M. EMERSON, <lb />
your <lb />
Printing <lb />
at the <lb />
one <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
JOB OFFICE. <lb />
It will be done <lb />
right, <lb />
The Tobacco Department <lb />
Conducted by L. Joyner, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse. <lb />
There is nothing more <lb />
soothing pleasant and refreshing <lb />
than to take our little potty <lb />
burn them up, so to <lb />
speak, at the end of a fine ha- <lb />
while leaning leisurely <lb />
back in easy rocker just after <lb />
a heartily relished meal. <lb />
SPOONING PARTIES. <lb />
Origin of a Used in Certain <lb />
Regions In a Romantic R <lb />
Apropos of the recent disturbance <lb />
in religious circles over the <lb />
of the Tennessee <lb />
version of It is <lb />
parties are popular in <lb />
some quarters. They take their <lb />
Capt. Pace that we can j from a good old English word, <lb />
safely say that will which was intended to ridicule the <lb />
least two new tobacco buyers on <lb />
this market nest season. <lb />
A TALE OF ALSACE. <lb />
several others intend coming to <lb />
this section on an inspection of <lb />
the crop trip in July, and if the <lb />
crop justifies it they will place <lb />
men to handle their <lb />
Mr W. R- Home, of <lb />
spent in town. He <lb />
gays tobacco seems to looking <lb />
better any other and <lb />
that while the excessive <lb />
weather has to some extent <lb />
the crop are good <lb />
hopes yet. He says further that <lb />
the patent looping system doesn't <lb />
trouble him for ho is n t of <lb />
a convert to the priming method <lb />
of curing way, but if <lb />
he was if there is a patent on it <lb />
ho would not it <lb />
are informed that or- <lb />
of the tobacco grow- <lb />
in and tho <lb />
section effected. Saturday <lb />
in the face of the rate. <lb />
a number were present <lb />
alleged fantastic actions of a young <lb />
man or a young woman Is In <lb />
For some reason, v no <lb />
one could ever explain, <lb />
pokes fun at the lover. In fact, that <lb />
unhappy character is never heroic <lb />
In real life, no matter what great <lb />
gobs of heroism are piled about him <lb />
on the stage and in the romantic <lb />
story books, The girl in love and <lb />
tho boy In love are said to be <lb />
When a spooning party is given <lb />
the committee in charge of the event <lb />
gets a spoon from each person who <lb />
attends, or else presents each guest <lb />
with a spoon. These are <lb />
fancifully dressed in male ant. female <lb />
attire, and are mated either by the <lb />
similarity of costume or by a dis- <lb />
ribbon. The girls and <lb />
boys whoso spoons are mates are <lb />
expected to take care of each other <lb />
during the continuance of the social <lb />
gathering, <lb />
Of course, the distribution of tho <lb />
spoons is made with the greatest <lb />
possible carefulness, aim being <lb />
to so place them as to properly fit <lb />
the case of the young people to whom <lb />
presented- The parties arc <lb />
usually given by tho young people <lb />
of some neighborhood where the per- <lb />
preference of each is <lb />
well known. They arc the source of <lb />
Quite <lb />
were entertained for a good while of It ls <lb />
by Pace- pleased they serve as aids to <lb />
and gratified to see tho farmers as and are therefore <lb />
in different sections taking commendable, avowal is <lb />
T. . , made more easy to a diffident swain <lb />
such steps. It like . h passim s not <lb />
is meant and the ; a hut that his weakness for a <lb />
to get anything out of tobacco maiden is known to his <lb />
culture is to go at it a friends and enemies on the <lb />
tee which dispenses the spoons. <lb />
lit <lb />
Greenville is almost on a j <lb />
forbid that it should j <lb />
form a co-partnership with <lb />
There is building going on <lb />
Greenville to-day than ever I <lb />
before and more than any town <lb />
in tho eastern part of the State <lb />
Only while ago Sheriff <lb />
White Prof <lb />
for them- <lb />
selves handsome residences, and <lb />
1st there has been <lb />
less new <lb />
buildings of different kinds <lb />
n Greenville. In a snort while <lb />
the of O. <lb />
Hooker will be in <lb />
and tho warehouse <lb />
will be built fifty feet long. r. <lb />
seems to be full of life <lb />
and and is only Me <lb />
thing that thus far t have <lb />
been neglected and that is there <lb />
is not variety of <lb />
trial enterprises- Our people arc- <lb />
not developing this <lb />
feature enough. W need <lb />
factories of different kinds to <lb />
to our idle <lb />
and unless our home <lb />
take hold of this tho time <lb />
coming and not far away when <lb />
tho out-side world will bound <lb />
to see our advantages and <lb />
come in and utilize them- We <lb />
have a letter from a Chicago <lb />
firm asking if we know of any <lb />
convenient industrial sites that <lb />
can had in this locality. <lb />
WORK TOBACCO NOW. <lb />
It may be mentioned that after the <lb />
spews been distributed among <lb />
the guests each couple retire fop con- <lb />
regarding the reasons <lb />
which the award of mated <lb />
spoons In their case. This <lb />
is known by the name of <lb />
Louis Republic. <lb />
WOMEN IN JOURNALISM. <lb />
The <lb />
to <lb />
It will lie done in style <lb />
and it always suits. <lb />
These points are <lb />
Or <lb />
well weighing <lb />
in any sort <lb />
of work, but <lb />
all things in <lb />
If there ever was a time when <lb />
young tobacco demanded extreme <lb />
attention it now. The Lifted <lb />
constant rains have run tho soil <lb />
together and unless it is loosened <lb />
up tobacco will begin to ran <lb />
button early- <lb />
A few evenings ago rode out <lb />
in the country, tho fair <lb />
and day have <lb />
had in man-, and along the road- <lb />
side we saw a field of tobacco that <lb />
had been set during the wet <lb />
weather. The plants looked <lb />
vigorous and so did <lb />
the in the field on <lb />
an old sand hill that had been <lb />
planted in corn we found the <lb />
owner of the tobacco patch- Ho <lb />
was zealously at work <lb />
his corn, under ordinary <lb />
circumstances could not have <lb />
produced more than two barrels <lb />
to the acre, was looking fairly <lb />
well under the circumstances. <lb />
asked him why it was that he <lb />
seemed so eager to work out his <lb />
eon which was not suffering <lb />
needed <lb />
English Aristocracy Seems <lb />
Be Well Represented. <lb />
All arc aristocrats; <lb />
hut, fortunately for those who have <lb />
a living to earn, all aristocrats are <lb />
not journalists, says an exchange. <lb />
Of those who are Lady Colin Camp- <lb />
bell, and Lady Violet stand <lb />
among the members of the <lb />
sex. Lady Campbell is <lb />
now editing the Realm, and she is a <lb />
constant contributor to several <lb />
older papers. violet ls also <lb />
well known as a writer of periodical <lb />
literature. Her style is excellent, <lb />
It is light and versatile and refined, <lb />
and her wide womanly sympathies <lb />
and keen perceptive powers add to <lb />
of her work. <lb />
Some of the English <lb />
write, occasionally, although they <lb />
only accept an honorarium for char- <lb />
objects. Princess Christian <lb />
has done a good deal of journalistic <lb />
work in her time, and always in a <lb />
straightforward and sensible man- <lb />
The countess of Aberdeen <lb />
writes on political social <lb />
subjects, and the countesses of <lb />
Munster and Mar all wield the <lb />
pen ably. <lb />
The duchess of Southerland ls a <lb />
really good short-story writer, and <lb />
Lady Henry Somerset is a weekly <lb />
contributor to her own paper, the <lb />
Woman's Signal. <lb />
Lady and the countess of <lb />
Warwick have occasionally written <lb />
articles, and among other titled <lb />
ladies who have taken up journalist <lb />
work may be mentioned Lady <lb />
The carriage was going at a <lb />
pace. The horses, unusually <lb />
excited by the white wine that had <lb />
been poured over their oats, dashed <lb />
through the air which whistled past <lb />
their ears. Their hoofs resounded <lb />
loudly on the hard frozen road. The <lb />
two carriage lanterns shone the <lb />
night like the eyes of some <lb />
huge, prehistoric <lb />
Tho mad, coarse in the <lb />
darkness had something strange <lb />
about it, something mysterious, sin- <lb />
and all the more so. perhaps, <lb />
that it was taking place in the an- <lb />
terrible year when <lb />
the Germans were in Alsace. <lb />
The carriage, like a vessel in dis- <lb />
tress on a racing sea, oscillated <lb />
from left to right and from right to <lb />
left. <lb />
When the vehicle, which had beer. <lb />
Hying down the slopes of the <lb />
raced through the village, passing <lb />
like an express train the houses with <lb />
their low roofs on which the <lb />
cast a silvery light, the good women, <lb />
suddenly frightened, made the sign <lb />
of the cross with a trembling of the <lb />
knees and a whispered prayer, <lb />
What Is going to be- <lb />
come of <lb />
The children crouched terrified <lb />
against the knees of the older per- <lb />
sons. Everywhere there was a sense <lb />
of depression and evil presentment <lb />
characteristic sign of <lb />
fires in the huge <lb />
white stoves were allowed to sink <lb />
low and go out, for no one thought <lb />
of keeping them alive. <lb />
The fact was the Prussians for <lb />
several weeks past had been cruelly <lb />
ravaging the country. <lb />
The flying carriage contained some <lb />
German officers who were the bear- <lb />
of secret orders to S. <lb />
they cried, <lb />
whipping up tho poor horses, which <lb />
were already breathing fire and <lb />
smoke out of their nostrils. The <lb />
wretched driver, terrified, obeyed <lb />
mechanically. <lb />
he growled. <lb />
horses will die when they reach their <lb />
stable If they do not break their <lb />
necks going round one pf these <lb />
steep And tho stroke of <lb />
tho whip redoubled and the dizzy <lb />
course became still more reckless. <lb />
The trees seemed to fly past. Na- <lb />
herself protested against the <lb />
wild, headlong career, for at this <lb />
moment moon hid her face behind <lb />
a cloud, as if she did not wish to be <lb />
a witness to the scene. And still <lb />
flew onward. <lb />
That afternoon Mm enemy had <lb />
taken possession of the village of <lb />
and, as their custom was, <lb />
had installed themselves in the <lb />
Four superior officers were <lb />
sat <lb />
there in the middle of the best <lb />
drawing-room, talking loudly in <lb />
their guttural jargon and smoking <lb />
their long pipes of porcelain while <lb />
they dried their boots at the hot fire <lb />
blazing the grate. <lb />
Their unwilling host, a tall old <lb />
man, with a white beard, served <lb />
them with drinks as graciously as <lb />
lie could. His passed from <lb />
one to the other, his venerable head <lb />
shaking melancholy, as if to <lb />
is the right of the strongest; <lb />
what ran one do against a <lb />
lie was recalled to the present by <lb />
a knock at the door and <lb />
most immediately afterwards he saw <lb />
in the porch the tall, powerful frame <lb />
of who was the foreman of the <lb />
mayor's servants and a modern Her- <lb />
He was agile as a deer and <lb />
strong as an ox, and could break a <lb />
sou between his fingers as he would <lb />
break an eggshell. <lb />
Tho neck of a bull rose out of a <lb />
flannel shirt, carelessly fastened <lb />
across the threat by a cotton neck- <lb />
He man terrible in anger, <lb />
but In repose as a lamb and <lb />
as docile. <lb />
is the <lb />
is this the another <lb />
Hon. Emily Lawless, Lady Lindsay, I officer wants to quarter himself up- <lb />
and in France the duchess on us here. Shall strangle <lb />
countess de <lb />
As a younger woman Lady <lb />
bury did a great deal of writing for <lb />
various papers and critical work for <lb />
the Saturday Review, while tho <lb />
marchioness <lb />
illustrations <lb />
periodicals. <lb />
These coming from such <lb />
lips made one shudder. <lb />
my old that <lb />
would do no good and would only <lb />
bring worse upon us. Let him in; <lb />
of provides he probably wishes to speak with his <lb />
for certain favored <lb />
IRON STOVES. <lb />
for <lb />
Dr. Franklin First Made Them <lb />
the Burning of Coal. <lb />
One of the very first attempts at <lb />
making an iron stove was by Count <lb />
or Cardinal of France, <lb />
early in the eighteenth century. <lb />
The. results of his efforts were <lb />
preposterous. Anyone <lb />
have read it in his mind would have <lb />
been shocked, terror stricken <lb />
While a farm hand the <lb />
horses to the carriage put a <lb />
saddle on an Arab horse, a <lb />
faithful animal which he loved and <lb />
cared for himself with his own hands. <lb />
He spoke to it as he spoke to a <lb />
friend, and seemed <lb />
to understand. When mount- <lb />
ed into the saddle he was trembling <lb />
with joy. <lb />
A mysterious seemed to <lb />
commence between the man and the <lb />
horse, which, suddenly sending the <lb />
sparks flying from beneath Its four <lb />
feet, into the darkness <lb />
like a phantom. <lb />
like some great <lb />
creature with wings, devoured <lb />
space. Her fine, nervous legs hardly <lb />
seemed to touch the earth, and <lb />
kept her going at her utmost speed. <lb />
At length they stopped. <lb />
was white with foam and <lb />
her with his cloak. He did not <lb />
feel the cold, for the awful thought <lb />
in his mind kept his whole body <lb />
warm and tingling. <lb />
is he said to himself <lb />
in a deep-voiced growl, is there <lb />
that they- are to <lb />
At this point the road made a sud- <lb />
den turn, and apparently came loan <lb />
abrupt end. As a matter of fact, <lb />
however, it did not terminate, but <lb />
continued in a steep, terrible slope. <lb />
On the right was a dark, <lb />
wood, and on the left a deep and <lb />
dizzy precipice such as are often seen <lb />
by mountain roads. <lb />
Children were afraid to pass it by. <lb />
The Gulf of Death, as it was <lb />
had its legend. Tho old folk said <lb />
that it was within its gloomy depths <lb />
the monsters lived that, ravaged the <lb />
country at night. <lb />
my calculations are <lb />
said in a low voice, will <lb />
be here In ton <lb />
Ho tied to a tree stem on <lb />
the border of the wood, and a strange <lb />
smile passed his lips. <lb />
Not a sound was to be heard in <lb />
the surrounding country. All seemed <lb />
dead or asleep. Only a murmur of <lb />
the wind it; tho pines, <lb />
placed his car to the ground, <lb />
as the Indians do in the wilderness, <lb />
and healing a faint sound of hoofs <lb />
in the distance striking the hard <lb />
road, he raised his head. His face <lb />
was transfigured <lb />
last I shall have my <lb />
he hissed. <lb />
Then he crouched down on his <lb />
hands and knees and waited. <lb />
A few seconds more and the car- <lb />
with the four German officers <lb />
would be upon him. <lb />
He uttered a terrible cry of <lb />
la to replied <lb />
with a joyful neigh. <lb />
The carriage, which had been <lb />
at tremendous speed, <lb />
came to a sudden stop, as if arrested <lb />
by an irresistible force, and remained <lb />
there standing. <lb />
had not moved an Inch. Ho <lb />
was not a man, but a stone wall. <lb />
He made a last and supreme <lb />
effort and raised himself upon his <lb />
legs. Then with a terrific heave <lb />
pushed over the dizzy brink horses, <lb />
carriage and men. <lb />
An awful noise rose on the still <lb />
night air; a sound of crashing, curs- <lb />
and horses screaming. Then <lb />
there heavy, complete, <lb />
tragic <lb />
The man rose and peered over tho <lb />
edge into the black gulf of death. <lb />
He saw nothing. Then he sprang <lb />
into his saddle and disappeared like <lb />
a shadow into the tho <lb />
French. <lb />
1895 VICTOR <lb />
A MODERN ADAM. <lb />
when his tobacco needed his j ,. iron fireplaces, constructed with <lb />
now more than any hearths and iron <lb />
or time in the word. Be laughed th only u <lb />
said t know why <lb />
., jambs; tho only improvement <lb />
over the old fireplace was in <lb />
but he just he would . g <lb />
u k out his com w bi <lb />
We told bin. <lb />
that if ho didn't know which crop <lb />
demanded his now, we <lb />
thought he was in the wrong place. <lb />
For three weeks the ground had <lb />
been so wet that work in the to- <lb />
patch was almost <lb />
and the very first day when he <lb />
had an opportunity of working <lb />
his tobacco absolutely neglected <lb />
it to a piece of corn that was <lb />
not worth at outside calculation <lb />
more than four dollars an acre- <lb />
This is a fair sample of some of <lb />
the farming tobacco in Pitt <lb />
county. This man question <lb />
was counts man and <lb />
professed to know all about <lb />
co- Now when the fall comes and <lb />
he gets ready to sell his tobacco, <lb />
as a matter of course he will not <lb />
be satisfied unless he gets a <lb />
more for his tobacco than other <lb />
men. <lb />
By all means now is the time to <lb />
stir the tobacco plants. Let <lb />
or inferior crops Your <lb />
co demands your attention <lb />
unless you give it your <lb />
when it is needed there is no use <lb />
applying the treatment when the <lb />
Your Job Printing, crop is hopeless. O. L. J <lb />
In the year <lb />
1716 Dr. of <lb />
proved the fireplaces to <lb />
such an extent that they could be <lb />
used for burning coal as well as <lb />
wood. <lb />
Dr. Franklin's stove, Invented In <lb />
the year 1745, was a great Improve- <lb />
on everything in the stove <lb />
line that had preceded it. The <lb />
principles upon which it was con- <lb />
were similar to the air- <lb />
tight stoves introduced many years <lb />
later. Indeed, It Is believed that <lb />
had it been possible at that time for <lb />
founders to make light-fighting <lb />
castings the Franklin experiment <lb />
would have been air-tight. About <lb />
the year 1775 Is some dispute <lb />
about the exact Dr. Franklin <lb />
improved his stove so as to make it <lb />
suitable to the consumption of com- <lb />
bituminous coal. In 1782 Ben- <lb />
Thompson <lb />
made several improvements on <lb />
Franklin's designs. In 1833 J. L. <lb />
Mott made the first stove that <lb />
would burn anthracite COaL Since <lb />
the last-named date, hundreds of in- <lb />
have taken part in bringing <lb />
the stove up to its present <lb />
Louis Republic. <lb />
did as his master told him, <lb />
much against his inclination. It <lb />
would have given him such a huge <lb />
amount of pleasure to twist one of <lb />
those German necks with his great <lb />
sinewy fingers. <lb />
The new arrival burst into tho <lb />
drawing-room. The four <lb />
officers uttered cries of surprise. <lb />
They rose at once, in a body, and <lb />
saluted with great respect the <lb />
stranger who had come to disturb <lb />
their peace. <lb />
seated and let us said <lb />
the new arrival in German, and in a <lb />
voice of command. <lb />
will set out at he <lb />
said, take this sealed message <lb />
to the Prince of <lb />
he drew out of the pocket of his long <lb />
military cloak, white with snow, a <lb />
large, white envelope, and handed <lb />
it to one of the officers. <lb />
all four of you, and <lb />
yourselves at the disposition of the <lb />
prince. Further orders will be given <lb />
to each of you later. You must get <lb />
horses and carriage and start at <lb />
Is it understood Then hast- <lb />
Then, turning to the host, he said <lb />
in French <lb />
these gentle- <lb />
men with a carriage and two fresh <lb />
horses. General's <lb />
who had remained standing <lb />
at the door during this scene, an- <lb />
his master's reply. <lb />
is well, monsieur I officer, you <lb />
shall be accommodated as de- <lb />
He spoke in a peculiar tone of <lb />
voice. Only his master, however, <lb />
noticed it. <lb />
A mad thought had been born in <lb />
bis brain, something, superhuman,<lb />
There arc sight Victor Models ladies and gentlemen, practically any height <lb />
frame Victors lead tho cycling world. S r I <lb />
BOSTON. <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
Makers of Victor Athletic <lb />
CHICAGO.<lb />
SAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
SHOE <lb />
Over One Million People wear <lb />
W. L. Douglas and Shoos. <lb />
All oar -line- Bit I a factory <lb />
They <lb />
FT FOR <lb />
R. L. Davis Bro., N. C. <lb />
. i he best for th . <lb />
equal t In fit.<lb />
The on Role, <lb />
to other <lb />
Y dealer cannot job can.<lb />
Police Shoes. <lb />
2.60 and <lb />
School <lb />
If your draW cannot <lb />
3-m, write for <lb />
W. L. Douglas, <lb />
. M <lb />
. <lb />
. X. C. <lb />
CO. Oat, <lb />
Or., X. C <lb />
Joshua <lb />
COBB BROS CO, <lb />
-AND----- <lb />
Commission Merchants <lb />
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited, <lb />
-IS AT TUB I A I INK- <lb />
dip merchandise., <lb />
YEARS has taught me that the best i- the <lb />
Hemp lo c, Building Farming every <lb />
ting necessary for Millers, Mechanic; general house s. well u <lb />
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods I have on hand. Am heed <lb />
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing agent for Clark's X. T. <lb />
Cotton, and beep courteous and attentive clerk. <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. <lb />
o. <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
MALE <lb />
ma <lb />
He Is a Native of the Western <lb />
Up in Bear two summers <lb />
I across a camp where a <lb />
thin, bearded, bronzed man of about <lb />
thirty was cutting wood before a <lb />
small tent. In the tent were <lb />
many scientific works, including a <lb />
sot of Encyclopedia <lb />
in conversation I <lb />
found he was a prospector who had <lb />
come in from the desert to let his <lb />
rest and fatten on the grass. <lb />
lie had come down from <lb />
valley across the burning desert in <lb />
the holiest part of the summer. <lb />
stopped at said lie, <lb />
made several locations, one of <lb />
which think will prove valuable, <lb />
but I got tired and moved on, and <lb />
am now on my way toward southern <lb />
I asked him how he liked the <lb />
and he replied that he liked it <lb />
than any other place. <lb />
said he as he flung open tho front of <lb />
his shirt, wear no clothing when <lb />
on the <lb />
His breast was deep copper color, <lb />
even to his armpits, and tally bore <lb />
out his Hi conversation <lb />
proclaimed him to be an educated <lb />
man, and he his books wore a <lb />
part of his camp outfit and <lb />
him wherever he went, lie <lb />
volunteered no other information <lb />
regarding himself and his bearing <lb />
was such as to preclude any <lb />
but I have often wondered <lb />
what could him to choose, <lb />
such a mode of life. Of one thing I <lb />
am will follow no other. <lb />
Los Times. <lb />
GREENVILLE, G. <lb />
The Session of tics School <lb />
begin on Tuesday the 4th day of <lb />
Continue -P weeks. <lb />
TERMS MONTH. <lb />
will <lb />
Sen- <lb />
Mm <lb />
Real <lb />
Estate <lb />
and <lb />
Rental <lb />
Agent. <lb />
Primary English <lb />
Intermediate <lb />
Higher English <lb />
Languages <lb />
ft no <lb />
Houses and lots for Rent or for <lb />
terms easy. Bents, <lb />
open accounts I other <lb />
of debt placed In my bawls for <lb />
have prompt attention.<lb />
The instruction will continue through. . . <lb />
Discipline mild out Arm. If necessary i <lb />
an additional teacher will be employed. <lb />
Satisfaction when pupils <lb />
enter early and attend regularly. For <lb />
information apply to <lb />
W. II. <lb />
Aug. c, i. <lb />
HERBERT <lb />
TONSORIAL PARLORS <lb />
Under Opera House, <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE.<lb />
Cull in when want work <lb />
A NORTH <lb />
TIMETABLE. <lb />
In Effect December 4th, M <lb />
Steamers leave Washington for Green <lb />
ville and Tarboro touching all Ian <lb />
on Tar River Monday. Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at G A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at A. M. <lb />
Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
Greenville same <lb />
These departures are subject to M. <lb />
of water on Tar River. <lb />
at with <lb />
of Norfolk, and Wash <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, ore <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers <lb />
marked via Dominion trim <lb />
York. from <lb />
Norfolk A Haiti, <lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
more. Merchants Miners <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. SON. Agent, <lb />
N. t <lb />
. J. , Agent, <lb />
fire <lb />
ram <lb />
Sen. <lb />
STATION'S<lb />
Ex I Ml, <lb />
, M. M <lb />
i Nil S <lb />
f m;. <lb />
P. M <lb />
Kinston <lb />
hem <lb />
ii <lb />
-J <lb />
ii <lb />
connects with Wilmington <lb />
Weldon train bound North, <lb />
Goldsboro a. m. and with R <lb />
train West, leaving Goldsboro S <lb />
of Himself. <lb />
Tho of Gen. Grant which <lb />
the joint committee on library of <lb />
refused to accept from the <lb />
Grand Army of the Republic, for a <lb />
place in Statuary hall still stands in <lb />
the rotunda and is the object of <lb />
much curiosity on tho part of visit- <lb />
ors. Its presence there recalled <lb />
an incident in the life of the <lb />
sculptor to a fellow-townsman of the <lb />
whose home was <lb />
Me. On one of his visits to his <lb />
birthplace he was showing a <lb />
of photographs to a <lb />
of the town, which led to a dis- <lb />
of the merits of various <lb />
artists in that line. Said tho <lb />
in our <lb />
branch of tho profession <lb />
and leadership on <lb />
tho part of certain artists, and I <lb />
the same is true of your <lb />
branch. Whom do you place at tho <lb />
head of sculptors In <lb />
repeated the <lb />
artist In stone, with <lb />
emotions indicated by the Inter- <lb />
of J <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK <lb />
For th. Cum of all <lb />
This been n use over <lb />
years, and wherever know <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
country, and has effected cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention <lb />
the most experienced physicians, <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment Is of <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which It has obtained is owing entirely <lb />
own as but little ha <lb />
ever been made to bring it lie lore the <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. All Cash Outers promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
communications lo <lb />
T. <lb />
N. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
Caveats, and obtained and all Pat- <lb />
for Free. <lb />
Our Office i Opposite u. <lb />
and we patent in tune than those <lb />
remote from Washington. <lb />
Send model, drawing or photo., with <lb />
We advise, if patentable or not, free of <lb />
charge. Our fee not due till patent is <lb />
A Pamphlet, How to Obtain with <lb />
cost tame m the U. S. and foreign countries <lb />
sent free. Address, <lb />
Opp. Office. Washington, p, c. <lb />
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR <lb />
We will fill them QUICK <lb />
will fill <lb />
We will them <lb />
Heart Framing, <lb />
Rough Sap Framing, ; <lb />
Rough Sap Inches <lb />
Rough Sap Hoards, inches <lb />
Wait days for nut riming Mill am <lb />
we will furnish you Dressed <lb />
licit of ore. <lb />
delivered to your door for <lb />
cents a load. <lb />
Terms <lb />
for pat patronage, <lb />
N, C. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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