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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 3 July 1895</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
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          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <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>18950703</dc:date>
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                <p>
IX <lb />
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
pared to do all <lb />
in this Una <lb />
NEATLY, <lb />
QUICKLY, and <lb />
IN BEST STYLE. <lb />
Plenty of new mate- <lb />
rial and the <lb />
of Stationery. <lb />
Careful What You Say <lb />
Never believe of one <lb />
until you that the evil <lb />
exists We should never say <lb />
anything about which is <lb />
in a joke ; for <lb />
our words are often <lb />
a id if they reach the ears f the <lb />
one of whom <lb />
may do harm- <lb />
I think it a plan to re <lb />
from saying about <lb />
others, we Can speak in <lb />
their favor- It does good to <lb />
tell the faults and short <lb />
of other people; bur, on the con- <lb />
it is too apt to make us <lb />
and fault-finding-. None <lb />
of us are not one- <lb />
If your neighbor has fault which <lb />
you have not, you have others, <lb />
perhaps, which are quite as bad. <lb />
we dwell upon the virtues in <lb />
stead of the of oar <lb />
ate, we shall find that it is much <lb />
tor us, and certainly <lb />
much better for them- We are <lb />
certainly conscious of our own <lb />
defects they <lb />
are much discomfort to us; but <lb />
how much worse we should feel <lb />
if we that everybody no- <lb />
them, even spoke of <lb />
them to others. Now, instead of <lb />
talking of faults, <lb />
I'll Jim a better plan, <lb />
And one that works quite <lb />
try defect to cure. <lb />
Kit m of others tell. <lb />
I though we sometimes hope to be <lb />
worse than sonic we know. <lb />
On- own short comings bill in let <lb />
faults of <lb />
Railroad Statistics. <lb />
According to the report of the <lb />
U. S- Railroad the <lb />
total railway in the <lb />
try on June 1894, was <lb />
miles, an increase during the <lb />
year of miles. The in <lb />
crease during the previous year <lb />
was 4.897 miles. The percent <lb />
of during the year <lb />
1893-9. it is stated, was less than <lb />
for preceding year for which <lb />
reports have been made to the <lb />
Commission. <lb />
The ventures the <lb />
that it is probable <lb />
that the year ending June <lb />
1895, will shew much improve <lb />
merit that respect. In Penn- <lb />
the addition the <lb />
months to 1891, is <lb />
reported to have been 300-20 <lb />
miles, Florida miles, in <lb />
North Dakota 195-51 miles, in <lb />
Ohio 181.02 miles, in Georgia <lb />
162.71 miles, 125.00 miles <lb />
in Missouri miles, in West <lb />
Virginia miles, in Minne- <lb />
116.49 miles, while the States <lb />
of Kansas, <lb />
setts, Nevada, New <lb />
North Vermont and <lb />
and the Territory of <lb />
show slight in mile- <lb />
age, due to <lb />
abandonment of lines. <lb />
The report makes the total of <lb />
railway capital June 1891, <lb />
an increase of <lb />
over the year pieced <lb />
the total <lb />
was stock and debt. <lb />
Of the debt was <lb />
bonds, miscellaneous <lb />
obligations, income <lb />
bonds, equipment <lb />
trusts current <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIV. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1895. <lb />
NO. <lb />
You Need <lb />
SABBATH DESECRATION. <lb />
Like all the other laws of the <lb />
Decalogue, the command to ob <lb />
serve the is <lb />
the very of the <lb />
for whose benefit it was in- <lb />
It is no rule <lb />
laid down the caprice <lb />
of a powerful being, as an <lb />
of his superiority, but one <lb />
of of a nature <lb />
which project themselves, by <lb />
itself, into the form of a <lb />
statute. Taking this view of it, <lb />
the says; law is <lb />
just and holy and THe <lb />
Sabbath was made for man, and <lb />
never was a greater confer- <lb />
red man than when this <lb />
act, the Great Author of all good, <lb />
provided a the <lb />
of secular <lb />
life labor. Nothing is half <lb />
so good for poor, tired, <lb />
aged, heart sick toilers as to stop <lb />
the wheels of busy life, <lb />
to the voice which <lb />
speaks softly in the silence, s <lb />
still, and know that I <lb />
am <lb />
How can have the benefit <lb />
of this while the avenues of <lb />
travel and pleasure are <lb />
open to our people, with special <lb />
to follow them up <lb />
RAM'S HORN BLASTS. <lb />
j Warning Notes Calling Wicked <lb />
to Repentance. <lb />
God is mi alarmist, but <lb />
when there is ahead ho <lb />
wants us to know it. <lb />
A Perilous Precedent Averted. <lb />
The p of Judge <lb />
political decision in the <lb />
St. nth registration <lb />
CREDITS <lb />
When a borrower in Wall street <lb />
The Reflector this year <lb />
It will give the news <lb />
every week for <lb />
a year; <lb />
.-------- <lb />
IN THE STATE. <lb />
of Matters cf General <lb />
for the of Appeals <lb />
Christ went about doing Richmond is a fortunate cir <lb />
He sit down in a i for it will pat a stop <lb />
obtains a he takes it in the <lb />
form of a check nu the lender's . <lb />
bank, which he deposits in his i Mr- B- C Hackney his sold the <lb />
case bank to his own account, I recorder to Al. Fair- <lb />
Not will the thoughtless <lb />
multitudes, upon whom tho <lb />
churches have little or grasp, <lb />
be led away from all thought of <lb />
God, but the of em- <lb />
mast doomed to a <lb />
slavery i death. Is it <lb />
not true of railroad to <lb />
say nothing of many other em- <lb />
multitude <lb />
number, that they rest not <lb />
day nor night What is to be- <lb />
come of a generation, swept along <lb />
by such a resistless tide of forces <lb />
inevitable Will the friction <lb />
of a life a charge <lb />
of nervous excitement sufficient <lb />
to it It does <lb />
seem that such will be the result. <lb />
Our honest is that <lb />
railroads ought not to be operated <lb />
on Sunday. To say nothing of <lb />
place and talk about it. <lb />
As long as the devil handle <lb />
our money he don't care how <lb />
much we make church. <lb />
If God answered all prayers, <lb />
the heavens would always be rain- <lb />
fire on somebody's head. <lb />
The who is not religious at <lb />
me. wants to be <lb />
extra pious church. <lb />
Some people waste a good deal <lb />
of time praying for who <lb />
are not willing to become <lb />
There are too many people who <lb />
claim to love the Lord, who put <lb />
rotten apples in the bottom of the <lb />
basket. <lb />
It takes some people a whole <lb />
to find out that dollar <lb />
is big enough to give hour's <lb />
happiness <lb />
th convicted sinner say.--, <lb />
the devil feels <lb />
that it will s for him to sleep <lb />
,. week. <lb />
no man who at every- <lb />
thing through money is more <lb />
half convinced that the <lb />
is a gentleman. <lb />
No matter what <lb />
may be, God is always the side <lb />
of I ho man who does right and <lb />
to suffer for it. <lb />
Many a man fails to have access <lb />
to God private because he has <lb />
been too much trumpet <lb />
blowing in public. <lb />
That man is not needed as a <lb />
missionary in heathen lands who <lb />
has married for years and <lb />
never talks with his wife. <lb />
Tho devil is very close <lb />
to the Christian who persuades <lb />
that Ins work is more <lb />
to God that of some- <lb />
body else. <lb />
not thy left hand <lb />
what thy right hand The <lb />
moral law, and the law of God as hands should be <lb />
The Gum Swamp Parson. <lb />
The ship that carries a great <lb />
people to success is kin- <lb />
ship- <lb />
A promise once broken can <lb />
never be repaired. <lb />
The mule is a necessary adjunct <lb />
to farm life, but the plowshare's <lb />
the labor also- <lb />
Politics keeps the army of <lb />
tramps down to its minimum size. <lb />
No matter how and <lb />
truthful a witness is, he is regard- <lb />
ed as a questionable character. <lb />
Big feet are more desirable <lb />
than the big head, for they can <lb />
be placed out of the <lb />
sight. <lb />
The soda fount is a sample of <lb />
enunciated in the Bible <lb />
the law of and a wise <lb />
economy forbids a whole- <lb />
sale disregard of human <lb />
Railroads would be as pro- <lb />
the would be as <lb />
full cf wealth, the people <lb />
would be infinitely happier, if all <lb />
the were suspended <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
But aside from what railroad <lb />
authorities should or should not <lb />
do, it is certain that Christians <lb />
no business Sunday <lb />
trains. Let all Christians <lb />
to patronize the Sunday train, <lb />
it will bi a long step toward <lb />
the reform which is needed. <lb />
Christian <lb />
A Shame. <lb />
The practice of sub-lotting the <lb />
star route, or overland carrying <lb />
of the mails, is a disgrace to our <lb />
form cf government. <lb />
It is caused by that <lb />
custom which allows those star <lb />
routers to lie around Washington <lb />
secure the coo tracts for these <lb />
mail routes, at very low figures, <lb />
then make those in the local- <lb />
where the route is, who want <lb />
it, take it ft a mere pittance- <lb />
The pay received by star <lb />
routers would be sufficient to <lb />
carry on the business, but when <lb />
scaled down it is hardly sufficient <lb />
to the animals engaged <lb />
in the service. <lb />
Our system of letting these <lb />
contracts should be so conducted <lb />
as to preclude the possibility of <lb />
these fellows having a monopoly <lb />
in these Sun. <lb />
Even the bravest grow faint, <lb />
hearted at times are tempted <lb />
to look back despite the fate of <lb />
Let's wife- The head of a big <lb />
firm who had seen his business <lb />
built up by advertising, and know <lb />
that his success was directly at <lb />
to it, needed to be told <lb />
occasionally that <lb />
paid- <lb />
Dan of Australia, <lb />
whipped Billy of and together <lb />
ton in six rounds at Boston- <lb />
so busy for God that they <lb />
have no time for gossip. <lb />
kept <lb />
will <lb />
Deafness be Cured- <lb />
By local applications, as they cannot <lb />
reach the diseased portion of the ear. <lb />
There is only one way to cure Deafness, <lb />
Mid that is by constitutional remedies. <lb />
Deafness is caused by an inflamed con- <lb />
of the mucous lining the <lb />
When this tube <lb />
inflamed you have a rumbling or <lb />
hearing, and when it Is en- <lb />
closed Deafness is the result, <lb />
mill inflammation can be <lb />
this restored Io its <lb />
normal condition, hearing will be de- <lb />
forever ; nine ease out of ten <lb />
are caused by catarrh, which Is <lb />
but an condition of the <lb />
mucous surfaces. <lb />
will give Hundred Dollars <lb />
any case Deafness by <lb />
that cannot lie cured <lb />
Catarrh Cure. Send for circular. <lb />
P. J. CO. O. <lb />
by Druggists, <lb />
to a pernicious of <lb />
opinion toward a support of such <lb />
quasi judicial interference with <lb />
State election The brief <lb />
statement of the conclusions of <lb />
the court deals with the <lb />
question of jurisdiction the <lb />
procedure, but a fall <lb />
opinion by Chief Justice Fuller <lb />
is promised, it is to hoped <lb />
that it deal with the <lb />
mental of Federal inter- <lb />
If the power assumed by Judge <lb />
Goff wore to be sustained the <lb />
States courts would become <lb />
the most potent political factor <lb />
the interposing by <lb />
to control <lb />
State elections a judge <lb />
found the laws of the <lb />
with his interpretation of <lb />
the Federal Constitution or so ex <lb />
edited , in his opinion, to <lb />
abridge the rights of citizens <lb />
Judge decision was not has <lb />
ed so much upon the provisions <lb />
of the South Carolina law as upon <lb />
the manner in which tho were <lb />
alleged to been applied. <lb />
The decision of the West <lb />
politician whom President <lb />
Harrison put on tho bench when <lb />
he failed to be elected Governor <lb />
of the State was partisan in its <lb />
whole tone <lb />
most mischievous in its <lb />
and it is that the con <lb />
of politic j in South <lb />
and the pestilent conduct of <lb />
such mi as Tillman and Evans <lb />
should befog the public judgment <lb />
on this subject. Tb question at <lb />
the bottom of tho case is too <lb />
to be determined by any <lb />
passing exigency State politics <lb />
however important for the mo <lb />
No doubt, gross wrongs <lb />
have been committed under the <lb />
election laws of South Carolina <lb />
of many other States, <lb />
New York, but that does <lb />
afford a ground for taking from <lb />
States tho control of elections. <lb />
The idea that, a citizen <lb />
alleges that he has not been <lb />
lowed to register as a voter or <lb />
that the provisions of a State law <lb />
put obstacles the way of <lb />
so, a Federal judge may issue <lb />
to the hold- <lb />
of an is so <lb />
that it is amazing that any in- <lb />
person should give it <lb />
York <lb />
A newspaper reports a farmer <lb />
as certain townsmen on <lb />
being far behind him <lb />
edge of the financial problem. It <lb />
is not a joke. Those last three <lb />
years the people in the country <lb />
have studying political is- <lb />
sues, particularly financial <lb />
while the townsman has <lb />
been content to leave it to his <lb />
party leaders. late, however, <lb />
the wave has broken over the cit- <lb />
now when the farmer <lb />
comes to town, he finds merchants <lb />
ready to dispute or agree with <lb />
him intelligently. for <lb />
the first time the history of the <lb />
country, the people all over the <lb />
laud are pretty well informed on <lb />
a single political issue, it can <lb />
not be said that they are inform- <lb />
ed on the question as problem of <lb />
political It is hard to <lb />
find a farmer who cannot sustain <lb />
himself in good company in ad- <lb />
j of free coinage of silver, <lb />
laud one cannot be found who has <lb />
no opinion of bis own on the <lb />
Humorists make more money <lb />
than Nye <lb />
earns now about a week, . <lb />
.,. j- t . course his party ought to pursue, <lb />
Milton got Lost . . , . . J <lb />
while Mark Twain received <lb />
for Josh <lb />
Billings received for his <lb />
magazine work alone, and his lit- <lb />
profits ran into the <lb />
reds of thousands. Josh Billings <lb />
sold his first venture, the <lb />
on the for Tom <lb />
received for years for the <lb />
comic part of his nature as it <lb />
MM out through the end of his <lb />
Mr. W. H. Norwood is the own- <lb />
of twin chickens-both hatch- <lb />
ed from the same egg. They <lb />
are weeks old, almost exactly <lb />
all the <lb />
Gleaner. <lb />
which latter is something entire- <lb />
new, greatly to the <lb />
of party leaders. It is a good <lb />
sign when people become inform- <lb />
ed and show that they are think- <lb />
corder. <lb />
To not drink, that is <lb />
the question- nay drink- <lb />
water is so impregnated with <lb />
bacteria as to be unfit for use. <lb />
Prohibitionists wine <lb />
and beer. It is urged that tea <lb />
produces insanity, and coffee <lb />
and insomnia ; while it is <lb />
declared poison lurks even in <lb />
innocent lemonade. But the world <lb />
will keep on using all of these <lb />
His Confidence shaken. <lb />
said the small boy. <lb />
fishing the one thing that most <lb />
men live for <lb />
not, <lb />
all girls sweet when they <lb />
there may be <lb />
they invariably write fool <lb />
their <lb />
boys that go to college <lb />
forget everything they ever learn- <lb />
ed except how to row a boat and <lb />
play foot-ball <lb />
course <lb />
hawing against it checks as his brother, <lb />
needs require The persons who j p. of Chicago, <lb />
receive these checks deposit them i , . <lb />
in their hanks in turn, thus manager cf insurance <lb />
the entire sum is split up and , for the Southern Western <lb />
passed from hand to hand with- States, died Asheville, N C-, of <lb />
I consumption, <lb />
of a dollar of <lb />
Within a year Raleigh's six <lb />
richest men have S. <lb />
Tucker, W. H. J. M- <lb />
Heck, E. G- W. J. Haw- <lb />
kins and R. S. <lb />
out the use, except on special <lb />
actual cir <lb />
dilating medium It is true that <lb />
tho borrower has the right to ex- <lb />
act legal tender money for either <lb />
the check he takes or for the <lb />
cheeks Bo draws himself, but this <lb />
right is exercised rarely- The <lb />
bank credit is so completely j c t j H of <lb />
to that it is treated , , , . , . , . . <lb />
as money by everybody. a rat-killing on his place <lb />
This explains, too, what about were shun, <lb />
puzzler the how the ; Of these were killed in one <lb />
banks of this city, with only Gleaner. <lb />
of specie and legal ten- <lb />
in their vaults, can Shelby, the Aurora says, has <lb />
deposits to the amount of over boys, all under years of <lb />
and like man-1 age. whose aggregate weight is <lb />
the total deposits of all the ,.,,. , ., i .;. . ii <lb />
i n i pounds. heaviest weight <lb />
in the United States footed K <lb />
up, according to the latest report pounds, the Who <lb />
of the Comptroller of the i can beat it <lb />
although their <lb />
stock of specie paper <lb />
was but The <lb />
credits given to borrowers are I <lb />
as money of equal value <lb />
with specie and notes, and, <lb />
v. they serve equally well the <lb />
needs of the It h. <lb />
only panics such as that of; <lb />
1803, when confidence the <lb />
of the fails, and <lb />
Now comes weather forecaster <lb />
Herman with the depressing <lb />
news that a not wave is about to <lb />
invade us. Ho says it will be a <lb />
Keep your eye on the <lb />
Near Monday even- <lb />
while Judge Hoke and his <lb />
all at the same time, j sister, Mis Sal lie, were taking a <lb />
to clamor for actual in-1 drive the the horse be- <lb />
stead of certified checks, that the frightened ran away, <lb />
difference becomes apparent- At j The were thrown from <lb />
other periods people hardly ever ; . . . , . <lb />
reflect, when they take checks <lb />
in of debts or for prop- The had his right arm <lb />
sold, that checks considerably shaken <lb />
tie to actual money- They u,,, <lb />
deposit them in their banks <lb />
are satisfied with the entry of the I . <lb />
amount their ; The Work f <lb />
York Sun- <lb />
Two mules belonging <lb />
The Passing of the Horse. <lb />
to <lb />
Air. C- M. Pollock near Pollocks- <lb />
sale of well-bred killed by lightning in <lb />
Saturday's thunder storm. They <lb />
were mules that cost for the <lb />
pair. <lb />
Across Neuse river not far <lb />
At a recent <lb />
trotting horses this State three- <lb />
year-olds were sold as low as i <lb />
apiece, the highest prices <lb />
cured for was At these <lb />
prices it does not pay Io raise i, , <lb />
the breeders who made a flock cf sheep <lb />
the sale did so to got out of wore struck by the <lb />
business no longer profitable. in the storm previous <lb />
Their case is but one of to and every one <lb />
The horse is being rapidly super belonged to <lb />
Cable traction, trolleys neighbors who were letting them <lb />
other device are together- There was also a <lb />
greatly the for struck m the same neigh- <lb />
horse service in but no special harm <lb />
Journal. <lb />
sadly and said <lb />
you needn't bung me <lb />
home, any more cf these comic <lb />
papers. I'm kind of losing faith <lb />
Star. <lb />
Left It to the Lord. <lb />
There is a band of colored <lb />
men Durham who claim that <lb />
they live by leave <lb />
every thing to the Lord. Some <lb />
of them do washing. A Durham <lb />
lady employed one- When ask- <lb />
ed what she would charge, the <lb />
colored woman said she would <lb />
leave it with tho Lord- When <lb />
the wash came in it was <lb />
The next week the same question <lb />
was and the same answer <lb />
given. When the second wash <lb />
came in it was <lb />
said the lady, <lb />
leave it to the Lord any more. <lb />
He is charging too <lb />
Durham <lb />
The Charlotte News had been <lb />
troubled with rats for some time <lb />
and were big that they <lb />
whipped out the cats. The rats <lb />
suddenly disappeared on <lb />
looking for the cause it was found <lb />
cities but in small towns <lb />
roads <lb />
all well-populated <lb />
The time c be far oft <lb />
cable or electric railroad will <lb />
begin to carry freight as well Mi. has <lb />
as thus doing j big life insurance to the remark- <lb />
drays, trucks country a re is <lb />
wagons to a very huge extent- . . ,. ., . , <lb />
The bicycle the place the most heavily insured <lb />
of the saddle-horse with all man in America, and possibly <lb />
the rich w o like horseback ex- the world. John B Stetson, of <lb />
and in it as a, Philadelphia, has policies on his <lb />
, for and Hamilton <lb />
The recent exhibitions or horse ;. , n <lb />
less carriages in France indicate for <lb />
that our broughams and M- is said to be insured <lb />
cabs will presently be driven.; for the who <lb />
Without and when these hustles to the <lb />
last to the Chinese custom of ex- forced to marvel <lb />
horses entirely from the lesion News and Courier. <lb />
streets of cities. I <lb />
on farms the steam I A who lives to the limit of <lb />
the steam thresher and the like if <lb />
health and of average p. <lb />
petite, will have eaten in that <lb />
time about pounds of meat <lb />
about 10.000, pounds of bread <lb />
and vegetables, about eggs <lb />
and of fish, chicken <lb />
and game. He will also have <lb />
consumed about gallons of <lb />
s fluids, or a lake <lb />
four blocks in extent two feet <lb />
deep. In other words, he will <lb />
to a York <lb />
Her Age. <lb />
what is your age, mad- <lb />
am C was the attorney's <lb />
she answered <lb />
The youngster shook his head promptly. <lb />
mean how old are <lb />
am not old, with in <lb />
beg your pardon, madam, eaten fourteen tons of solid <lb />
I mean how many years drank barrels of liquid <lb />
you <lb />
The <lb />
have <lb />
have <lb />
years <lb />
passed me <lb />
many of them <lb />
passed <lb />
I never heard of them <lb />
you must answer <lb />
my question. I want to know <lb />
your <lb />
don't know the ac <lb />
is desired by the <lb />
other <lb />
don't see why you insist <lb />
upon refusing to answer my <lb />
said the attorney. <lb />
sure I would tell how old <lb />
I was if I were <lb />
nobody would ask you, <lb />
for everybody knows yon are <lb />
old enough to know better than <lb />
to be asking a woman her age. <lb />
So <lb />
And the attorney passed on <lb />
the next <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
A Georgia judge warned his <lb />
people in regard to coming into <lb />
court intoxicated, and used these <lb />
wish, to put every- <lb />
that a big black snake bad made JEWS hat <lb />
s . , . , i into tins courtroom while I am <lb />
the News office his Luting on this bench drunk, they <lb />
era. had better <lb />
refreshment-Ex. <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S.<lb />
Powder <lb />
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb />
Bright and Queer Items Clip- <lb />
Promiscuously. <lb />
In march, 1865, buttermilk sold <lb />
Richmond, Va-, at a gallon <lb />
and eggs at a dozen, <lb />
money. <lb />
J. W. city treasurer of <lb />
South St. Paul, Minn., is short <lb />
He says Ins <lb />
will make it good. <lb />
A force of are said <lb />
to have been employed constantly <lb />
for in building the <lb />
Canal of China <lb />
A. R. Holman, a lawyer of <lb />
Valley, Minn., is missing <lb />
with upward, of of tax <lb />
money entrusted to him. <lb />
A terrific storm in the vicinity <lb />
of Ky-, did great dam- <lb />
age, tho wheel <lb />
crop where it was not cut. <lb />
It is estimated that this count- <lb />
pays England a <lb />
year interest profits <lb />
investments this country. <lb />
There is a stone bridge at La- <lb />
China, which is six miles <lb />
in length and is composed of <lb />
arches, each in height- <lb />
Tho next annual meeting of tho <lb />
State Alliance is to <lb />
held at Cary, county. The <lb />
date is the second Tuesday in <lb />
August. <lb />
Adolph Mercer, a Gorman tan- <lb />
of England, has lately <lb />
expelled from Union <lb />
for tho crime of tanning a <lb />
man skin- <lb />
Two testing New <lb />
York law forbidding <lb />
were admitted to a <lb />
hotel all tho fashion- <lb />
able s in <lb />
At It there is a tomb bear <lb />
this inscription lies <lb />
of, <lb />
Florence, the of <lb />
May God his bins <lb />
The Delaware rolling mills, i <lb />
of Philadelphia, and the John <lb />
Steel Company, of <lb />
Ohio, increased the wages of <lb />
employees to and per <lb />
cent, respectively. <lb />
Tho Treasury gold reserve, as <lb />
the result of the ; <lb />
syndicate paying in <lb />
of intact again for the first <lb />
time since December 14th, <lb />
It stands at <lb />
There is still owing from syn- <lb />
in gold. <lb />
The director of the United <lb />
States mint gives the world's pro- <lb />
of gold in 1805 as <lb />
; and of silver, at coinage <lb />
value of to <lb />
shows increase of in <lb />
gold production over 1893, <lb />
increased pro- <lb />
silver. <lb />
The friends of General Solicitor <lb />
George B. Peck, of the Santa Fe <lb />
railroad, have started a move- <lb />
to make him a candidate <lb />
for the Republican nomination <lb />
for President. <lb />
LOCAL DIRECTORY. <lb />
Superior Clerk, E <lb />
Sheriff. It. <lb />
Register of Deeds, W. M. King. <lb />
J. L. Little. <lb />
Coroner, <lb />
Dr. V. Laughing- <lb />
Surveyor, <lb />
Dawson, <lb />
T. K. Keel, Jesse 1- <lb />
M. Jones. <lb />
Dr. II. Bagwell. <lb />
Home. J. W. Smith. <lb />
Examiner of <lb />
W. II. <lb />
TOWN OFFICE Its. <lb />
Ola <lb />
Clerk, C. C. Forbes. <lb />
Treasurer, w. T. Godwin. <lb />
W. Perkins, chief, Fred. <lb />
Cox, I. W. Murphy, night, <lb />
II. Smith. W. L. <lb />
Brown, W. T. Godwin. T. A. <lb />
Jenkins. <lb />
Baptist, Services every Similar <lb />
night. Prayer <lb />
meeting Thursday night. c. Al. <lb />
pastor. Sunday School at ft-M <lb />
A. M. C. D. <lb />
Catholic. No regular services. <lb />
Sen-ices every fourth Sun- <lb />
morning and night, A, <lb />
Hector. Sunday <lb />
A. -M. w. Brown, Supt. <lb />
Methodist. Services every Sunday <lb />
am light. Prayer meeting <lb />
night, U. F. Smith, <lb />
Sunday at A. M. A. <lb />
B. Supt. <lb />
Presbyterian. Is and <lb />
lid Sunday morning and <lb />
meeting I night Rev. Archie <lb />
pastor. Sunday School at <lb />
A. D. <lb />
LODGES. <lb />
Covenant Lodge Mo. I. F., <lb />
meets every Tuesday night. Dr. II. <lb />
Bagwell, N . G. <lb />
Greenville Lodge A. F. A. <lb />
vests and third Monday nights <lb />
W. M. King, W. M <lb />
D. L. JAMES, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
DR. H. A. JOYNER <lb />
DENTIST. <lb />
One decoration day speaker has <lb />
at last had the grace, says the <lb />
Norfolk to tell the <lb />
truth as to what the Confederate <lb />
soldiers fought for, while <lb />
them on their courage. <lb />
At the meeting in Carnegie Hall, <lb />
New York, Mayor Strong said i <lb />
was a remarkable war. But I <lb />
will say there was no heroism in <lb />
history that anybody <lb />
can be prouder of than we are of <lb />
that of our Southern <lb />
so nobly defended their <lb />
in that <lb />
A tall with a mus- <lb />
is going around the <lb />
try claiming to be John the <lb />
We would warn our readers <lb />
against trusting him on that ac <lb />
as he is what he <lb />
tends to be. We have taken the <lb />
pains to look the matter up, <lb />
as a result of our <lb />
that John tho Baptist is <lb />
Independent. <lb />
O. <lb />
Office up stairs over S. E. A C <lb />
Hardware store. <lb />
Jas. K. It. L <lb />
Greenville <lb />
N. O. <lb />
Office under Opera House. Third St. <lb />
GREENVILLE. t . <lb />
all the court. Collection <lb />
specialty. <lb />
B. <lb />
F. TYSON, <lb />
If a tax incomes is <lb />
we should think the <lb />
tax on State banks is <lb />
certainly unconstitutional. Why <lb />
is it not tested the courts <lb />
Free <lb />
The Landmark has <lb />
made its as a semi- <lb />
weekly. It maintains all its bright- <lb />
excellence, and coming <lb />
oat twice as often as before will <lb />
please its readers all the more. <lb />
to it. <lb />
No word is more frequently <lb />
misapplied economy. It is <lb />
not the most penurious <lb />
of public affairs that is the <lb />
most economical. A close-fisted <lb />
policy may result in the most <lb />
waste, while a more liberal <lb />
may prove to be economy in the <lb />
true sense of the <lb />
Sun. <lb />
A Denver preacher has declared <lb />
that thousand people are <lb />
going to hell which <lb />
leads a thoughtless <lb />
to remark is a mighty <lb />
small percentage of accidents <lb />
considering the number of <lb />
on the <lb />
Attorney and Counselor at-Law <lb />
Greenville, lilt County, <lb />
Practices all the Court. <lb />
CiVil and Criminal Business Solicited. <lb />
Makes a special of fraud <lb />
ages, actions to recover land, and col- <lb />
Prompt and careful attention given <lb />
all business. <lb />
Money to loan on approved security. <lb />
Terms easy. <lb />
J. H. BLOUNT. J. t. <lb />
FLEMING <lb />
M. C. <lb />
Practice in all the Courts. <lb />
U C. LATHAM. <lb />
A I II <lb />
Si<lb />
X, JARVIS. <lb />
IS ft BLOW, <lb />
I. HI ow <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Ml the <lb />
A- W- As-new, president of the <lb />
First National Bank of <lb />
Fla., has been indicted on charges <lb />
of embezzlement, abstraction and <lb />
misapplication of the funds of the <lb />
bank to the amount of <lb />
John E. F. Harding, <lb />
N. U. Greenville, N. C. <lb />
WOOD A HARDING. <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
Special attention to <lb />
and settlement of claims.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017752_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Entered at the at Greenville <lb />
N. C., as second-class mail matter. <lb />
WEDNESDAY, JULY 3rd, 1801 <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
Four bicyclers made the trip <lb />
from Tenn., to <lb />
City, wiles iD <lb />
twelve days. <lb />
obtain better impressions from <lb />
the Lome paper than can be <lb />
had from other sources. The <lb />
home paper works day in and <lb />
day out for the town in which <lb />
it is published, while the out- <lb />
side paper has no interest in <lb />
the town beyond the pay it re- <lb />
for the write-up. Again <lb />
every dollar invested in the Treasury, now <lb />
home paper enables it to do j that the bond syndicate has made <lb />
just that much more work for fa inst payment on <lb />
our <lb />
1893. <lb />
No member of the <lb />
takes any stock in the ore- <lb />
dictions made in some <lb />
quarters concerning the probable <lb />
early that will be made on <lb />
The second session of <lb />
summer school opened <lb />
with teachers present. More <lb />
are expected to arrive. <lb />
On Thursday San <lb />
had the fire ever known <lb />
there. There were houses <lb />
and the lose amounted <lb />
to A number of <lb />
lives were lost <lb />
An excursion from Raleigh to <lb />
Wilmington, Wednesday, car- <lb />
1800 people There were <lb />
from to left on account <lb />
of the scarcity of room <lb />
were coaches. <lb />
There <lb />
A convention of the voters of <lb />
Maryland who are in of the <lb />
free coinage of silver at ratio <lb />
of to has been called to meet <lb />
Washington, D- C, on Friday <lb />
The new woman keeps clam <lb />
for the i to vote and <lb />
to hold office, out we have not <lb />
Heard a word from her yet about <lb />
wanting to step up like a man <lb />
and pay poll tax. <lb />
The bond syndicate <lb />
complied with their contract by <lb />
paying in the balance of the <lb />
purchase gold. Their contract <lb />
still requires then to protect <lb />
the treasury against gold ex- <lb />
ports until October- <lb />
-u <lb />
T- H. of North <lb />
Carolina. of the <lb />
United States at Shanghai, has <lb />
hid- another valuable and inter <lb />
report to the State Depart <lb />
on tho trade relations of this <lb />
country with the orient- It is <lb />
very highly complimented <lb />
Not a few North Carolinians <lb />
would be seeing our <lb />
modest girls dressed in bloom- <lb />
riding bicycles. Yet we are <lb />
told that they are coming. The <lb />
New York Sun thinks there is <lb />
nothing wrong in girls wearing <lb />
bloomers. Perhaps with is <lb />
not, but down this way we <lb />
still believe in the womanly <lb />
woman. <lb />
The Kentucky Democratic <lb />
convention met Wednesday, <lb />
after voting down a free silver <lb />
platform and <lb />
sound money and the <lb />
of President Cleveland <lb />
and nominated P. <lb />
Harden, the free silver <lb />
candidate on the first ballot. <lb />
R. P. Tyler was nominated for <lb />
t-Governor. <lb />
It is believed there will be <lb />
no bolting the Democratic tick- <lb />
et in Kentucky. The sound <lb />
money men like the idea <lb />
of having a free silver candidate <lb />
for Governor but they con- <lb />
soled by the fact that they <lb />
a platform that does not <lb />
declare for the free and <lb />
coinage of silver at the <lb />
of to The free silver <lb />
t like such a platform <lb />
as they have but they are won- <lb />
pleased at having a <lb />
who is an out and out <lb />
advocate of silver. This <lb />
ii the situation in the State <lb />
and the Democrats are confident <lb />
of winning. <lb />
ADVERTISING TOWNS. <lb />
All arrangements have been <lb />
made by certain parties of our <lb />
town, to furnish weekly an in- <lb />
letter of a column or <lb />
more in length, to four North <lb />
Carolina four North <lb />
Carolina weeklies, two North- <lb />
Journals of Commerce <lb />
Trade, and two Virginia <lb />
This is a good movement <lb />
and will receive the hearty <lb />
of all citizens Tar- <lb />
Southerner. <lb />
If the people of Tarboro <lb />
would put the amount they <lb />
will thus expend in their home <lb />
paper and send that broad-cast <lb />
over the country, it is our be- <lb />
lief that much better results <lb />
will be reached than by the <lb />
plan have mapped out <lb />
There is no better index to any <lb />
town than its home paper, and <lb />
good articles in that have <lb />
effect upon outsiders than <lb />
In distant I <lb />
People <lb />
the town. <lb />
We heard a distinguished cit <lb />
of Statesville say that he <lb />
was induced to make his home <lb />
there through reading copies of <lb />
the Landmark that chanced to <lb />
fall Into his hands, his <lb />
being that a town sending <lb />
out such a paper as the Land- <lb />
mark would be a good place to <lb />
live. This just one <lb />
among similar ones <lb />
that hare occurred. It is <lb />
home paper that talks for the <lb />
town, and to see the business <lb />
men standing by it shows that <lb />
they have confidence in their <lb />
town and believe in maintaining <lb />
e enterprises. <lb />
The following gives some little <lb />
insight into the politics of Ens- <lb />
laud at the present time i <lb />
The political character of a <lb />
now Parliament as determined by <lb />
an imperial forecast gives the <lb />
Unionists a solid majority. The <lb />
most sanguine liberal estimate as <lb />
published by the <lb />
Gazette admits that the Unionists <lb />
will gain seats, means <lb />
votes on a division and entails <lb />
a steady majority in Parliament <lb />
of 24- A thoroughly non-partisan <lb />
view assigns to tho Unionists a <lb />
majority of but <lb />
conservatives predict a majority <lb />
of but the latter figures are <lb />
ridiculous- Any how the Liberals <lb />
enter the lists with a feeling of <lb />
despondency and a conviction <lb />
that they will meet such a defeat <lb />
a will establish a Unionist <lb />
in power for the next <lb />
have not a ghost of a <lb />
said Sir <lb />
in an interview to day; <lb />
are curtain to secure a <lb />
solid vote which will keep them <lb />
in power for a long time to <lb />
The last hope of the home <lb />
rulers rested upon an appeal to <lb />
Mr- The leading <lb />
several staunch <lb />
English adherents to home rule <lb />
approached Mr- Glad <lb />
stone beseeching him to issue <lb />
a manifesto and also to engage in <lb />
some degree of active personal <lb />
intervention during the electoral <lb />
period, but they got negative re- <lb />
plies in every case, some times <lb />
directly from Mr. Gladstone, and <lb />
some times through Mrs. Glad- <lb />
stone, who declares that her <lb />
band must not be troubled with <lb />
reference to anybody <lb />
with tho political situation. She <lb />
is that the <lb />
mental disturbances arising from <lb />
political would <lb />
his health is <lb />
determined to keep him aloof <lb />
from all political agitation. For <lb />
this reason she will be over- <lb />
joyed get him back to <lb />
den. <lb />
The Tobacco Department <lb />
Conducted by O. L. Joyner, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse. <lb />
If they would look this <lb />
then over see that, <lb />
the exception of Morgan, <lb />
of Alabama, there is not in it a <lb />
man of the first order of ability <lb />
who is advocating the free coin- <lb />
age of Observer. <lb />
Senator Pugh, colleague of <lb />
Senator Morgan, is thought to <lb />
be a big enough man to be Chair- <lb />
man of the Committee <lb />
of the United States Senate ; Sen- <lb />
to Chairman of <lb />
the Committee of Finance ; Sen- <lb />
Daniel, Jones, Berry, Geo. <lb />
Butler of South <lb />
Carolina, BlacKburn, Cameron, <lb />
Coke, Roach, Gordon, Ba- <lb />
con, Call, <lb />
White cf California, Harris, Bate, <lb />
Vest and are justly <lb />
as among the ablest men <lb />
in the United States Senate. <lb />
certainly are the ablest <lb />
Democrats in that body, and some <lb />
of them are men of first <lb />
order of In tho House, <lb />
F- Crisp is regarded as the <lb />
leader of the forces, <lb />
and is one of the few men who <lb />
eyer declined a seat in the U. S- <lb />
He has been a judge, <lb />
and he is a man the first <lb />
order of if there are any <lb />
in the House- One of the strong <lb />
est leaders on the floor of the <lb />
House is Benton of <lb />
Tennessee and such men as <lb />
Richardson, Black, Bland, <lb />
Hutch, Williams. Hunt- <lb />
Wheeler and dozens of others <lb />
are thought to be pretty big men <lb />
in their States, and have come <lb />
to exert wide influence. <lb />
Besides, rampant <lb />
men as Sherman and Car- <lb />
lisle once favored silver. The <lb />
Asheville Citizen says that Pres- <lb />
Andrews, of <lb />
is for free coinage- <lb />
Most of the brains in the Mid- <lb />
and New England States are <lb />
opposed to free coinage. In the <lb />
balance of the country a large <lb />
majority of the men of the <lb />
order of ability favor of <lb />
free It is certainly <lb />
true in North Carolina in ho re <lb />
tie of to <lb />
The has <lb />
in progress in for some <lb />
time favor of a pay- <lb />
day and Saturday half holiday, <lb />
I appears to be making satisfactory J <lb />
f progress. The Chamber of Com . <lb />
added the weight of <lb />
its influence r of the move <lb />
and the now is <lb />
that in the Mir future the em-<lb />
ad of them, will have <lb />
with a vie- of locating there I half-holiday on the latter day. <lb />
account of <lb />
bonds purchased. On the con- <lb />
members of the <lb />
consider the outlook very <lb />
cheerful. The Treasury now has <lb />
a little more than in <lb />
gold, officials do not expect <lb />
that amount to be materially re- <lb />
during this year, and their <lb />
confidence has a solid <lb />
Gold only goes to Europe <lb />
when somebody can profit by its <lb />
shipment. The for the <lb />
shipment of agricultural pro <lb />
ducts to Europe is now almost <lb />
open, and those shipments <lb />
ways make the balance of trade <lb />
favor of the United States for <lb />
a time, and if it does bring <lb />
as European old it gives a <lb />
gold balance over there which <lb />
prevents our haying to send any <lb />
gold over for some time. Be- <lb />
sides, unless all tho big financiers <lb />
are mistaken, the demand for <lb />
American of all kinds <lb />
is once more on the in <lb />
Europe. Tho unloading of those <lb />
securities by European holders <lb />
has been one of the reasons for <lb />
sending American gold to Eu- <lb />
rope- There is no good reason <lb />
for the direful predictions which <lb />
have followed sensational state <lb />
as to the reason why the <lb />
bond syndicate made the last <lb />
payment on those bonds this <lb />
week, instead of waiting until <lb />
next ac contract <lb />
allowed them to do. The <lb />
probably closed at this time be- <lb />
cause the syndicate found it con- <lb />
to do so, and U i non- <lb />
in the opinion of Treasury <lb />
officials, to say that tho syndicate <lb />
has design upon the gold it has <lb />
paid Treasury. <lb />
Secretary is <lb />
very seriously of applying <lb />
examination methods to <lb />
the U. S- Consular service. So far <lb />
as their nomination to office is <lb />
concerned, of course they would <lb />
have o take their chances of be <lb />
confirmed by the Senate after <lb />
passing the examination and get- <lb />
ting nominated. It is admitted <lb />
by all travelers that the longer a <lb />
consul remains in office the more <lb />
useful he becomes to the country <lb />
ho represents, and European gov- <lb />
never think of <lb />
a consul, except for cause. <lb />
Secretary addition to <lb />
tho examination of consuls, would <lb />
like to see the <lb />
a permanent basis, so that young <lb />
men would take it up as a life <lb />
career. <lb />
Much is attached <lb />
by to an interview <lb />
with Cannon, of <lb />
Illinois, was published <lb />
Washington this wok- It wasn't <lb />
what Mr- said at <lb />
traded attention, as his talk is <lb />
not considered important-he does <lb />
too much of it . but what he did <lb />
say. He occupied nearly a <lb />
column the <lb />
possibilities of his party, men- <lb />
Heed, who he is supposed <lb />
to favor, Allison, <lb />
and <lb />
vis, but leaving out Mr- <lb />
min Harrison, notwithstanding <lb />
that gentleman's recent attempts <lb />
to have himself considered the <lb />
leading candidate for the <lb />
nation- As Mr. Cannon has just <lb />
returned from an eastern trip his <lb />
interview may be part of a plan <lb />
of men to kill the Harri- <lb />
son boom by ignoring it. <lb />
Great interest is felt in Wash- <lb />
in the change of <lb />
the <lb />
it may have on tho silver <lb />
question in this country- Lord <lb />
Salisbury, the new premier, is <lb />
friendly to silver and Mr. Balfour <lb />
a member of tho new cabinet, has <lb />
a parliamentary as a bi- <lb />
of the most advanced <lb />
type. It is natural therefore that <lb />
hopes should be indulged that <lb />
might change her <lb />
of opposition to silver and join <lb />
in a movement for international <lb />
bimetallism. It is just as well, <lb />
however, to remember when in- <lb />
such hopes that in <lb />
England the national finances <lb />
have never figured as an in <lb />
politics, and that, unless there is <lb />
a radical upheaval precedent <lb />
tho personal opinions of Lord Sal <lb />
Mr- Balfour will no <lb />
b sufficient to change the <lb />
c policy of that country- It is <lb />
quite however,, that if the <lb />
coming parliamentary elections <lb />
shall result in favor of the con- <lb />
party, to which the new <lb />
cabinet belongs, that a strong <lb />
fort will be made by the silver <lb />
ran of Europe America to <lb />
get England to declare favor <lb />
of bimetallism- But all previous <lb />
efforts in that line have been <lb />
balked by the mighty of <lb />
i of Lombard street <lb />
who lowed the adoption of the <lb />
gold who will <lb />
ail to the last ditch- <lb />
Crops are beginning need <lb />
rain. <lb />
Yesterday's rain will <lb />
the crops of every kind <lb />
for nearly all wore beginning <lb />
to need rain very much <lb />
Tobacco as a general crop is <lb />
looking much better than cotton <lb />
fact each year has to the <lb />
trade a little meaner crop than <lb />
the previous one, until the mar- <lb />
of the world are full of com <lb />
nondescript stuff. The <lb />
nil hits the nail plum on the head <lb />
in this article, if we had more <lb />
of this kind of literature we would <lb />
gain more general satisfaction in <lb />
or corn and that is not the finest the disposition of the crop. There <lb />
that we have ever had at sea- <lb />
sou of the year. <lb />
There is much made <lb />
this year by the farmers ac- <lb />
count of tobacco trenching. It is <lb />
a great pity that some <lb />
cannot be discovered for this <lb />
disease. <lb />
Crops around <lb />
are looking much better than <lb />
crops in the vicinity of Green <lb />
ville, and we understand that <lb />
down below Greenville the to- <lb />
is even better than in the <lb />
Farmville and Falkland sections. <lb />
The lumber has been hauled <lb />
and work will commence soon on <lb />
the Eastern Warehouse. When <lb />
it is completed the sales floor will <lb />
contain feet and hold <lb />
of tobacco. The house at <lb />
present has only feet. The <lb />
addition will make it hold nearly <lb />
twice as much tobacco as at pres- <lb />
From now the crop begins <lb />
coming and later if necessary, <lb />
We shall endeavor to give the to- <lb />
farmers some good reading <lb />
matter- In each weekly issue we <lb />
hope to be able to give our read- <lb />
an original article direct from <lb />
the pen of some of our best farm- <lb />
on topic pertaining to <lb />
tobacco culture Besides we shall <lb />
endeavor to post ourselves <lb />
as to the growing crop <lb />
and the future outlook for prices. <lb />
other words from new until <lb />
Sept- 1st we shall endeavor to <lb />
the tobacco department <lb />
alone worth the sub- <lb />
of the paper- We <lb />
expect to on <lb />
the desk of nearly <lb />
North Carolina and Virginia <lb />
it is through this that we <lb />
hope to attract more attention to <lb />
this section than ever before. <lb />
A few days ago a gentleman <lb />
who had traveled over the <lb />
try from here to Raleigh, stopped <lb />
Greenville while here call- <lb />
ed upon Dr. C- J- Dr. <lb />
tells us that he said in a <lb />
very few years this would be a <lb />
thriving little city of several <lb />
thousand inhabitants. The Dr. <lb />
asked him on he based his <lb />
assertion, and he said, here <lb />
you have the very finest tobacco <lb />
lauds the world that is on <lb />
half, your people are begin- <lb />
to properly utilize the land <lb />
by growing tine He <lb />
said that tho same thing that <lb />
built up Durham, and <lb />
other towns in the State, would <lb />
in a short while be discovered <lb />
hem and that people would come <lb />
here and avail themselves of the <lb />
natural advantages of our climate <lb />
and soil. Greenville, he said, was <lb />
backed up by as fine a country as <lb />
any town in the State. <lb />
There ought to be a mutual in <lb />
between tho warehouseman <lb />
the tobacco farmer. The <lb />
houseman should be the far- <lb />
best friend and farmer look <lb />
upon him in the same light, yet <lb />
there are some farmers who seem <lb />
to think the warehouseman feels <lb />
no interest in them and is only at- <lb />
to them for the hope of <lb />
selling their tobacco. If this <lb />
had tobacco to sell and had <lb />
sufficient grounds to believe that <lb />
the extended by the <lb />
were not genuine, <lb />
he would certainly not sell his to- <lb />
There are some people <lb />
try to get up feelings be- <lb />
the warehouseman far- <lb />
mer. Such an exhibition was <lb />
manifested Saturday in the meet- <lb />
of the tobacco growers. One <lb />
man seemed to think the ware- <lb />
housemen were trying to run the <lb />
association, and by his remarks <lb />
endeavored to engender unkind- <lb />
between the warehouseman <lb />
and seller. The association was <lb />
organized for the benefit of the <lb />
farmers, and whatever is the far- <lb />
interest is certainly the <lb />
warehouseman's. We are of the <lb />
opinion, however, that there was <lb />
only one man present who had <lb />
such feelings, and happily no- <lb />
bod . who heard what he had to <lb />
say was changed mind. <lb />
are those who seem to think that <lb />
they must puff the crop <lb />
hazard and by this means they <lb />
must hope to leaf men to <lb />
come to in fact <lb />
it produces the opposite <lb />
Leaf men everywhere got <lb />
the idea that all the markets are <lb />
going to be full of fine tobacco <lb />
and hence they don't put their <lb />
men to buying the first offerings, <lb />
thinking to wait until the good <lb />
tobacco comes in- They wait and <lb />
finally learn that there is no good <lb />
tobacco. As a consequence the <lb />
farmers tobacco sells lower than <lb />
it the trade bad properly <lb />
and truthfully informed. The lea <lb />
men get an undesirable <lb />
probably their buyers the <lb />
good tobacco and let some one <lb />
else have it, and hence <lb />
faction is given all around- We <lb />
in conservatism in making <lb />
these reports. Let the trade know <lb />
just exactly what they may ex- <lb />
to get of the crop, and <lb />
when the offerings in they <lb />
will not be deceived and <lb />
pointed. Give the trade the facts <lb />
and get more satisfaction. <lb />
thought home, we shall hold <lb />
his memory in kind reverence. <lb />
Bis mind always seemed to <lb />
full of beautiful thoughts <lb />
his daily lectures in the school <lb />
room the weight of his discourse <lb />
always tended to the elevation of <lb />
mankind and the purification of <lb />
morals. On account of his age, <lb />
we suppose, at that time his <lb />
was smothered and <lb />
it any noticed on <lb />
the part of some of the pupils, <lb />
but when ha came to lecture <lb />
we always gave him our <lb />
ed with the result of <lb />
ways feeling after each <lb />
that had been benefited <lb />
than double the value of time em <lb />
ployed on our books. <lb />
Prof. Smith's life was a cam- <lb />
of education, so to speak, <lb />
tho thousands of young men <lb />
all over tho country that he has <lb />
aided acquiring a knowledge <lb />
of business are living monuments <lb />
to-day of his earthly labors. Ii <lb />
seems to us that the most <lb />
thought that gild the sun- <lb />
set of life, when the trials of <lb />
this world, with its vicissitudes <lb />
and sorrows are over, is to look <lb />
back upon tho stage of no- <lb />
and know that we have <lb />
done all that Scald toward <lb />
our a-d as little <lb />
as possible toward his <lb />
This could right- <lb />
fully claim- Ho devoted his <lb />
life to the elevation of young men <lb />
now he has gone to claim <lb />
There Is one thing that Green- <lb />
ville needs just at present more <lb />
than anything else, and that is a <lb />
first-class Board of Trade, <lb />
ting of the energetic <lb />
men. We have found sever- <lb />
letters in our box lately, direct- <lb />
ed Jo the Greenville Board, of <lb />
Trade, and thinking probably they <lb />
were intended for the <lb />
Board of Trade we opened thorn <lb />
and in every instance they <lb />
were about <lb />
our town if <lb />
we had Board of <lb />
who <lb />
would <lb />
Trade o <lb />
men generally, <lb />
take lotting the <lb />
world what we had and the <lb />
inducements we could offer to <lb />
visitors, could the more easily <lb />
impress home seekers and <lb />
men by united and concert- <lb />
ed action, than in the slip shod <lb />
manner in which it must <lb />
be done until we have an or <lb />
board of this kind. Again <lb />
what is everybody's business, and <lb />
matters of kind left to at- <lb />
tended to by and everybody <lb />
will most likely go unnoticed, and <lb />
hence in a great many instances <lb />
the town loses a good citizen, <lb />
when by prompt attention it might <lb />
saved one. There are <lb />
of towns this State with <lb />
not near so inhabitants as <lb />
and whose natural re- <lb />
sources are much more limited, <lb />
that have regular organized <lb />
Boards of Trade through which <lb />
medium are bringing them- <lb />
selves to the notice of the world <lb />
of trade thriving under con- <lb />
a groat deal less favorable <lb />
than mm <lb />
If the people of Greenville want <lb />
to induce capitalists to come <lb />
among us, if they want the <lb />
resources and latent industries <lb />
of our country opened up, if they <lb />
want to build up a live, hustling <lb />
town the of one of the <lb />
most God favored spots on earth, <lb />
let our first step in this direction <lb />
be the coming together of our <lb />
business men, young and old, and <lb />
organize a Greenville Board of <lb />
Trade. <lb />
By our heretofore <lb />
this particular, we have said to <lb />
those who might have come <lb />
among us, had the proper effort <lb />
been made, we don't want you, <lb />
and with this encouragement the <lb />
of citizens whom we would <lb />
like to have, have justly of <lb />
tense and without an <lb />
of our advantages and in <lb />
, caused by our <lb />
they have given us the go <lb />
by- <lb />
Prof. E W. Smith, President of the <lb />
Commercial College of Kentucky <lb />
University Has Away. <lb />
The Kong Were Singing. <lb />
Dixie land is <lb />
in-r- <lb />
tiling mills, <lb />
Bring mills. <lb />
Bring mills <lb />
want more mills In Dixie, <lb />
more mills III Dixie State, <lb />
to Weave the cotton <lb />
Hooray I <lb />
We want more mill in <lb />
Oh, cotton is u greater <lb />
But What we want i the cotton weaver <lb />
Bring in II l. <lb />
Hi I'm <lb />
Briny cotton mill- Dixie. <lb />
Oh, we want more mills in Dixie, <lb />
Hooray I <lb />
We want more for to turn <lb />
take at a out a noun- <lb />
book away <lb />
Cook away in Dixie <lb />
Frank I. <lb />
What . He Say <lb />
Even tho best regulated <lb />
families things sometimes <lb />
A man in our town sit <lb />
out the other day to celebrate his <lb />
little sou's birthday, went <lb />
cellar to make him a freezer <lb />
of ice cream. <lb />
lie wan going to afternoon <lb />
tea, had just minutes <lb />
which to freeze the cream- <lb />
Ho managed to crack the ice <lb />
and three of his fingers the <lb />
first five <lb />
Then he gouged r. the <lb />
palm of his hand with the <lb />
pick. He finally got tho freezer <lb />
packed, and at the crank with <lb />
bloody hands and made it revolve <lb />
at the rate of a million revolutions <lb />
an hour- <lb />
One can always tell by tho way <lb />
the freezer turns when the cream <lb />
is stiffening, but at the end of <lb />
twenty that freezer was <lb />
gyrating around as easily <lb />
when he began ; so he off <lb />
his coat, got a little madder, and <lb />
increased the number of <lb />
by a quarter of a million. <lb />
At the end of minutes the <lb />
thing was flying around with <lb />
no indications of <lb />
Finally he jerked off the lid <lb />
and then fell down the dead <lb />
faint, frothing at the mouth- <lb />
All that terrific effort had been <lb />
expended on absolutely empty <lb />
The cream was up stairs on <lb />
table. <lb />
It was a birthday a <lb />
occasion, and tho dignity of tho <lb />
head of Hi- family must main- <lb />
But he wan down collar <lb />
every movement, every <lb />
J idea, every transaction at <lb />
King Clothiers. It is the pulse of <lb />
the great business. Its vibrations are <lb />
felt in every department, every aisle, <lb />
and on every shelf. For every cent <lb />
expended Frank Wilson returns full <lb />
value. No discrimination is made be- <lb />
tween the small purchaser or the great, <lb />
the rich or the poor, the experienced <lb />
or the inexperienced. All have the <lb />
same advantages, and no one is given <lb />
concession, commission or discount. <lb />
I must make room for my fall stock and <lb />
will put prices down to a low notch so as <lb />
to clean them out. My stock of Fine <lb />
must be cut down as I intend to have <lb />
line this fall and do not want to <lb />
suit over. <lb />
carry a<lb />
Gents Furnishing Goods <lb />
T have knocked the bottom clean out and will <lb />
sell if you will come and look. <lb />
FRANK WILSON, <lb />
THE KING CLOTHIER. <lb />
To Farmers W <lb />
I have rented the old Greenville Warehouse <lb />
and and with Messrs. R. D. Evans and <lb />
A. H. Critcher, under the firm name of Evans <lb />
Co., will be in the warehouse business the com- <lb />
season. We earnestly solicit your patronage <lb />
With the best light in the State for showing your <lb />
tobacco, polite and competent assistants, plenty <lb />
of prize room, experience and ample means to <lb />
successfully conduct the business. We know we <lb />
can get as much for your tobacco as any house or <lb />
market in the State. Give us a trial and we will <lb />
try to please you. Respectfully, <lb />
L. F. EVANS. C. <lb />
TOBACCO <lb />
are low Ready for Delivery <lb />
m by w <lb />
S. E. Fender Co. <lb />
X- <lb />
Prices greatly reduced. <lb />
Terms Cash. <lb />
Same price all <lb />
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore. <lb />
The Danville <lb />
tin.-- week gives one of the heat <lb />
articles that we have seen in a <lb />
trade paper tho crop The <lb />
admonishes <lb />
giving high fly <lb />
enormity the crop, <lb />
says for the last four years <lb />
the trade been treated every <lb />
year. u the roost <lb />
per report about the largest and <lb />
crop of that <lb />
grew bat of the ground, when <lb />
We hive just learned of the <lb />
death of Prof. E. W. Smith, PreF- <lb />
of the College <lb />
of tho of at <lb />
his homo in <lb />
Five years ago tho writer en- <lb />
the College of <lb />
Kentucky our <lb />
first wore given by <lb />
Prof. E. W- Smith. At tint time <lb />
we bad never remained long from <lb />
home, naturally were blue <lb />
and <lb />
For the fatherly of <lb />
and cheer MM many <lb />
little jokes <lb />
he told to kill tho dull mo <lb />
and the eyer concentrate <lb />
id <lb />
T- <lb />
A. <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
Just Received Cars Rock Lime. <lb />
SO NAILS. AM. SIZES. <lb />
cl <lb />
A CLEAR HEAD; <lb />
good digestion; sound sleep; a <lb />
fine appetite and a ripe old age, <lb />
are some of the results of the use <lb />
of Liver Pills. A single <lb />
dose will convince you of their <lb />
wonderful effects and virtue. <lb />
A Known Fact <lb />
An absolute cure for sick head- <lb />
ache, dyspepsia, malaria, sour <lb />
constipation <lb />
bilious fever, piles, torpid liver <lb />
and all kindred diseases. <lb />
Liver Pills <lb />
so Cap Sardines, <lb />
It Bread <lb />
Beep. <lb />
; SO Star bye <lb />
mid Cracker. <lb />
Bbl Stick Candy, <lb />
Matches, <lb />
Hunt, <lb />
Powder. <lb />
Sacks Coffee. <lb />
Tons Shot. <lb />
Powder. <lb />
flour. <lb />
Meat. <lb />
Hay, <lb />
Tub <lb />
M P. <lb />
Ax <lb />
U. Tl. Mills <lb />
Three Thistle <lb />
Tobacco. <lb />
nuke v. M. P. <lb />
Old Va. <lb />
Cases Oysters, <lb />
J. X. <lb />
line Ii <lb />
N. C <lb />
KICK AT COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current, rates. <lb />
AGENT FOB FIRE PROOF<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017752_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
GREAT <lb />
JULY JUMBLES. <lb />
Served Crisp for Hot Weather. <lb />
IN<lb />
These goods will be sold <lb />
CENT. <lb />
DISCOUNT <lb />
to make room for my <lb />
fall stock. <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Rev. F. Smith mat to Be <lb />
Monday. <lb />
A little child of Mr. Wiley Brown Is <lb />
quite sick. <lb />
Ufa Becca I visiting <lb />
here. <lb />
lone May . of Farmville, In <lb />
Miss <lb />
The up again . . <lb />
not the Mon- <lb />
day bat it rained sure <lb />
at night. <lb />
The work on the draw at the <lb />
bridge has been completed and <lb />
people can now pass over. <lb />
The young men have sent <lb />
invitations for a big German here <lb />
on the evening of July 4th. <lb />
We told that a few days ago <lb />
Mr. Amos Evans, Jr., picked <lb />
worms off of tobacco leaf. <lb />
Contractor H. Jones com- <lb />
work to day on the <lb />
to the Eastern Warehouse. <lb />
The list takers of the several <lb />
townships made their returns to <lb />
the County Commissioners Mon- <lb />
day. <lb />
The man who wishes to climb <lb />
to the top of ladder can take <lb />
lessons from the thermometer <lb />
now. <lb />
Apples, peaches, plums and <lb />
plentiful- Now when the <lb />
conies will be all <lb />
right. <lb />
Some sections of the county <lb />
had a nice rain Friday evening, <lb />
but it was very light close to <lb />
town. <lb />
The is indebted to <lb />
Elder W. A- Ross for a sack of <lb />
nice apples which he sent <lb />
over Saturday. <lb />
The grass is not all dead yet, <lb />
buy some of my Hoes while they <lb />
are going cheap- <lb />
D. D- Haskett. <lb />
The Atlantic will <lb />
sell fourth of July tickets to ail <lb />
points on its roads at very low <lb />
rates. TicKets good from the 2nd <lb />
to the 7th- <lb />
lie in ember I pay you cash for <lb />
Beeswax, Chickens, Eggs <lb />
Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store- <lb />
The list takers for this town- <lb />
ship say that while there are some <lb />
delinquents this year the number <lb />
who failed to give their taxes <lb />
is smaller than usual- <lb />
Mr. J. J. Cory has started a <lb />
canning establishment and is put. train tare Thursday for <lb />
ling up We hope <lb />
Ins venture will load to a canning .,, . ,,., <lb />
factory on a large scale. ,,, <lb />
Sunday b playing at; <lb />
Cleveland, O, has been look the train <lb />
by an from a Circuit Saturday morning fir a visit to <lb />
Court Judge, who held that Hie <lb />
cheering made it a <lb />
Mr. C. M. Bernard home from <lb />
Housekeepers can hardly Monday evening. His fain- <lb />
a door or window open at night remain there. <lb />
ONWARD GO. New Officers. <lb />
Mr. W. S. fewer, of Baltimore, is In officers were <lb />
town. <lb />
The Beat Resort on the Coat <lb />
D. D. Haskett, N. U- <lb />
F. M. Hodges, G. <lb />
W. L. Brown, F. S. <lb />
D. W. Treas. <lb />
C. D- Sec. <lb />
Mr. W. H. Cox returned from Norfolk <lb />
Wednesday evening. I the business or professional life <lb />
Mr. W. B, Grimes, of of any town is always represented <lb />
Mr. J. is just buck <lb />
from his first to <lb />
and says the management of the <lb />
hotel this season is the best <lb />
hotel has been built- Messrs- <lb />
same Here. Bell and Harris, the proprietors, <lb />
Watch the advertisements in young men of enterprise, a-id <lb />
this paper and give your business j they leave undone for <lb />
to those who talk to you through the pleasure of guests. fare <lb />
columns. The beat there is in j as good as anybody could wish <lb />
in Tuesday evening. <lb />
returned Wednesday <lb />
evening from <lb />
Mr. J. J. Cherry Jr. went to <lb />
coke Saturday evening. <lb />
Mr. B. S. left <lb />
for a visit to Greensboro. <lb />
Rev. C. M. returned from <lb />
Carthage Thursday evening. <lb />
Mrs. Dr. II. A. Joyner left Saturday <lb />
to Visit relatives in <lb />
Mrs. W. M. has gone to <lb />
to d some time. <lb />
Mr. A. has gone to Gran- <lb />
county to spend a few weeks. <lb />
MUs Maggie Allen took the train here <lb />
Saturday for a visit near <lb />
Mrs. M. F. Dancy and Miss Dot Flan- <lb />
from Kinston Monti <lb />
Mr. and Mrs F. M. Hodges went to <lb />
Tarboro Saturday to spend a few days. <lb />
Miss Mamie U spending the <lb />
week with her untie, Mr. Zeno Moore. <lb />
Mis. I. K. Hooker. Of Hookerton. is <lb />
visiting bet daughter, Mrs. L, Wool- <lb />
en. <lb />
Mr. Collin Harding, of Washington, <lb />
is visiting the family of Maj. II. Hard- <lb />
Mr. home Friday <lb />
evening from his to Littleton <lb />
Mr. A. ha- returned to <lb />
Greenville and is now with C. Cobb <lb />
and Son, <lb />
Mrs. of Four Oaks, is visiting <lb />
the family o her brother, Mr. L- F. <lb />
Goodrich. <lb />
the <lb />
the <lb />
in the advertising of its <lb />
local paper Gazette. <lb />
Mrs. A. Charlotte has gone in <lb />
country to spend the remainder of <lb />
summer. <lb />
Mr. B of <lb />
The year is <lb />
Seventh mouth- <lb />
Blackberries are ripe. <lb />
Pooches to d <lb />
a peck- <lb />
has organized a <lb />
of Trade. <lb />
The days are now slowly grow <lb />
shorter. <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Passenger hour late <lb />
again Saturday night- <lb />
The potato crop in this section <lb />
is very nearly exhausted. <lb />
The party returned <lb />
home Saturday afternoon- <lb />
The County Examiner examined <lb />
several teachers Monday. <lb />
Neither the doctor nor the bill <lb />
collector expect you to return their <lb />
calls. <lb />
bushels <lb />
b J. L Starkey <lb />
Co <lb />
This month gives us five Mon- <lb />
days, five Tuesday and five Wed- <lb />
your cotton seed to <lb />
Henry Sheppard, and buy your <lb />
Meal Hulls- Car load of each <lb />
just arrived tor sale cheap. <lb />
The young people of Farmville <lb />
will have a bail on Thursday <lb />
night, July 11th. <lb />
Morris Meyer has added a <lb />
handsome soda fountain to his <lb />
confection <lb />
Foil well equipped <lb />
Shop, Black- <lb />
Shop and. Wood-working <lb />
Shop, with all necessary tools and <lb />
machinery. For terms apply to <lb />
James <lb />
Greenville, M. C-, June 1895. <lb />
for the bugs. We never them <lb />
more numerous they a <lb />
great fondness lamplight. <lb />
The Iowa claim <lb />
have sac upon General <lb />
Weaver their recent State <lb />
Convention. Then the Iowa <lb />
Populists should brush off the <lb />
seat of pants <lb />
If a tax on incomes is <lb />
we should think the <lb />
tax on banks is <lb />
certainly unconstitutional. Why <lb />
is it not tested before the courts <lb />
Free Press- <lb />
J. II. Joyner tells us the <lb />
new Methodist church at Grimes- <lb />
land is completed and the <lb />
service will be held in it next Sun- <lb />
day. It is a neat, pretty build- <lb />
Vegetable thieves, or thieves <lb />
after vegetables, are troubling the <lb />
gardens of some of our citizens. <lb />
Somebody is running a good <lb />
of getting or caught <lb />
in a steel trap. <lb />
Sunday the gin house of Mr. <lb />
Hardy near Kinston, was <lb />
struck by lightning and set on <lb />
tire. The building forty bales <lb />
of cotton were destroyed. There <lb />
was no insurance. <lb />
There is a lady in Greenville <lb />
who bought a paper of pins <lb />
years ago and has never <lb />
ed one since and has some of <lb />
them on hand now. They do not <lb />
rust, pull out or break off. <lb />
We learn that the Adams bridge <lb />
across creek, near the <lb />
Greene county lino, has been con- <lb />
as unsafe The bridge <lb />
should be put in order at once, <lb />
as it is a convenience to a large <lb />
number of people. <lb />
A citizen of Greene <lb />
remarked in our presence that <lb />
he thought every tobacco farmer <lb />
ought to take tin Reflector as its <lb />
columns more information <lb />
about handling <lb />
that crop than be had from <lb />
any other source. <lb />
The Teachers Assembly <lb />
at Morehead adjourned Sat- <lb />
The new officers elected <lb />
were J. Y. Joyner, President W. <lb />
Poteat, President; J. <lb />
Parker, Secretary and Treasurer. <lb />
The attendance this year was <lb />
Smaller than usual. <lb />
The oldest postmaster in the <lb />
States has died <lb />
This time he was John Dales- <lb />
man, aged for years <lb />
postmaster at West Milton, Pa. <lb />
He was appointed by President <lb />
Jackson 183-5 and held the of- <lb />
Cols of Pie. <lb />
One of his fellow-workmen tells <lb />
us that Charles Thorne, one of <lb />
the bands at the mill, put in his <lb />
Friday afternoon with <lb />
a pie about a foot <lb />
long, six inches wide and neatly <lb />
two inches thick. It took Charles <lb />
nearly an hour to get outside of <lb />
that pie. <lb />
House. <lb />
The you had a good <lb />
audience in the Opera House, <lb />
Friday to witness the <lb />
play for benefit of <lb />
Hope Fire Company- The play <lb />
was well rendered and the <lb />
highly pleased. About <lb />
was realized and turned to <lb />
the This helps the com- <lb />
fund quite <lb />
the Bars. <lb />
Monday Mr. C. F. White, g <lb />
as special deputy for Sh <lb />
went out and arrested a <lb />
colored man named Richard <lb />
Gowan, against whom there was <lb />
a warrant for taking too many <lb />
privileges with other people's <lb />
smokehouses Richard has the <lb />
reputation of being a bad man to <lb />
handle, but Mr. White was shrewd <lb />
enough to slip the on him <lb />
and laud him in the lock up. <lb />
Chance for the Girls. <lb />
Mr. W. H. White has counted <lb />
them up and tells us that from <lb />
the office to the Court <lb />
House on main street there are <lb />
marriageable men from -1 years <lb />
old and upwards. He did not <lb />
state high up the column the <lb />
ages run, as John Andrews, Dr. <lb />
Mack Ernul and Joe Blow, are <lb />
included in the With this <lb />
number of marriageable men on <lb />
two blocks it looks like the girls <lb />
ought to have a good chance. <lb />
Mis-cs Settle and <lb />
of Greene county, ace visiting <lb />
Misses A i. <lb />
Mrs. L. Murphy of Kinston, who <lb />
has visiting relatives near Farm- <lb />
ville, spent Tuesday here. <lb />
Mrs. John Flanagan has been sick for <lb />
some days. Her host of friends are glad <lb />
to know she Is now improving. <lb />
Little Miss Clara Latham who has <lb />
been visiting friends here, returned to <lb />
her home in Washington Saturday <lb />
Rev. and Mrs. II. B. Anderson, who <lb />
were the of Mr. D. D. <lb />
Haskett, here returned to <lb />
Miss and Masters <lb />
lieu of Mr. <lb />
Lovit Hines, are visiting relatives at <lb />
Dover. <lb />
Register of Deeds W. M. King return- <lb />
ed Wednesday evening Oxford <lb />
where he had been attending lbs Grand <lb />
Lodge of Masons. <lb />
Mrs. Elizabeth Hooker, who has <lb />
for <lb />
Panacea Springs, accompanied by her <lb />
daughters. Misses Mamie and <lb />
Hooker. <lb />
Mr. K. K. Cotton and son, Mr. Bruce <lb />
Gotten, of spent Thursday <lb />
here. The former, by <lb />
Cotten, will leave Saturday a <lb />
by steamer to New <lb />
Clever Capt. Hawks, of the <lb />
train, is on the sick list and lay off <lb />
Tuesday when his train reached <lb />
don. Capt. W. J. Hill, another very <lb />
courteous conductor, is temporarily on <lb />
the run. <lb />
Mr. H. S. Manager of the W, <lb />
U. Tel. Co. at S. C-, <lb />
lived Thursday evening to visit his par- <lb />
Mr. aid Mrs. S. B. Wilson. Bur. <lb />
teak his lessons on the wire in <lb />
tills and we arc glad to know of <lb />
his success. <lb />
Let Tram Through, <lb />
As long is the railroad is <lb />
such poor in fact <lb />
almost no connection at <lb />
their present freight train ached- <lb />
to enable people to go through <lb />
to Morehead without having to <lb />
lay over a day could <lb />
not they arrange to let the Booth <lb />
bound passenger train <lb />
through to Month ad Saturday <lb />
evenings and return Monday <lb />
mornings V This would give ops <lb />
port-unity for a delightful trip and <lb />
be appreciated by the seaside <lb />
seekers. <lb />
Mr. Charlie Forces is laying <lb />
off a nice tennis court near <lb />
his father's residence. <lb />
Mr- J. A Manning, near Grin- <lb />
reports a five-weeks old gos <lb />
line that weighs pounds. <lb />
Growers Attention. Warm is most <lb />
We have just received a -large upon the woman has to plan <lb />
quantity of tobacco flue iron o for the daily meals. The menu <lb />
good finality and clean. Parties becomes tiresome vexatious <lb />
h ordered flues from us j and she longs to gel away from <lb />
of <lb />
mouths ii for nothing <lb />
pan get them now any <lb />
S. E. it- Co- <lb />
regret very much to <lb />
that our order for floe <lb />
iron was misunderstood and <lb />
instead of getting what was <lb />
ordered, they sent us a heavy <lb />
iron that c be med It is <lb />
sq late, now. it is impossible <lb />
to get it in time for use this sea- <lb />
son- <lb />
U L-<lb />
else than to escape the endless <lb />
of meals. <lb />
J. L Starkey Co. have taken <lb />
the for the City Electric <lb />
Laundry, of Wilmington. This <lb />
Ian miry does the and best <lb />
work of any in the <lb />
State and is the equal of any city <lb />
work done in the See the <lb />
for prices them <lb />
work. <lb />
In Memoriam of Ruth <lb />
Wednesday, June as light <lb />
was drawing her curtain, came <lb />
and found strange beauty on that <lb />
cherub brow, and that sweet spirit took <lb />
its flight to heaven. Pure and transient <lb />
as the g dewdrops she passed <lb />
from her earthy suffering to rest in <lb />
sweet Her <lb />
is radiant with Heavenly light, and <lb />
sweet angel, we know her brow <lb />
is decked with an ermine of <lb />
Oil the gentle form of darling <lb />
slumbers In that pity the dead, but <lb />
her spirit U the bosom of God, <lb />
Mourn not but draw comfort from the <lb />
consoling thought, that your tender <lb />
plant, though nipped in its sweetest <lb />
has exchanged her suffering <lb />
to slug Onuses endless <lb />
eternity. <lb />
let the <lb />
of her sunny laugh, and sweet little <lb />
come like <lb />
from the sorrowful <lb />
Try to look forward to a day of <lb />
reunion when shall be the <lb />
first to welcome you to <lb />
sanctuary. <lb />
by one earth's arc <lb />
we see <lb />
pie hones fondly <lb />
How it is in Concord. <lb />
We trust that the riders of bi- <lb />
cycles in Concord will be careful <lb />
in riding the sidewalks, so as <lb />
to cause complaint from <lb />
It should be <lb />
that there is an ordinance <lb />
which makes it punishable by fine <lb />
or imprisonment to go by a lady <lb />
or a child except at a low rate of <lb />
speed. This ordinance should be <lb />
strictly enforced. <lb />
Let bicycles riders in all cases <lb />
when passing take the <lb />
extreme outside of the street. <lb />
When coming up on anyone from <lb />
behind ring your boll, unless it is <lb />
a lady- At night never go with- <lb />
out your lamp. In fact, exercise <lb />
common sense and show regard <lb />
for the rights of others, and all <lb />
will be well. do not believe <lb />
the town commissioners will <lb />
legislate the bicycles off the pave- <lb />
if the bicyclists will be- <lb />
have themselves. Concord Times <lb />
The law makers of Greenville <lb />
might take an idea from the above <lb />
Our People. <lb />
We have seen a copy of the <lb />
, Journal of June <lb />
containing a full account of a <lb />
very brilliant entertainment ten- <lb />
by Mrs- <lb />
Lawrence D- Tyson to ex Govern- <lb />
or Mrs. T. J- Jarvis during <lb />
their recent visit to that city. <lb />
The Journal pronounced it the <lb />
most brilliant social function of <lb />
the week, and the most elegant <lb />
of the entertainments ten- <lb />
to the distinguished guests <lb />
Lieutenant Tyson was a Pitt <lb />
boy, and took especial de- <lb />
light thus honoring old time <lb />
friends of himself parents. <lb />
Oakley <lb />
IA K l PEOPLE WOT IN IT. <lb />
The Town Council on <lb />
and <lb />
on the License <lb />
Tho Council had a full <lb />
of the Board at their <lb />
meeting Monday night and they <lb />
a breezy in <lb />
keeping with the stormy weather <lb />
that prevailed The <lb />
w in so bad that the <lb />
had reporter present, and we <lb />
have to depend on what can be <lb />
gathered outside as to what was <lb />
done. <lb />
The matters of most importance <lb />
that occupied the attention of tho <lb />
was action on two <lb />
before them. One of these <lb />
petitions was In-half of the <lb />
of the town that they <lb />
be allowed to ride bicycles on the <lb />
sidewalks except the <lb />
Court House and Five Points on <lb />
Evans street- This had <lb />
between signature, <lb />
many of the leading citizens of <lb />
the town being among the sign <lb />
but it was ignored by the <lb />
Board tabled by a vote of <lb />
to <lb />
The other petition was against <lb />
the granting of to sell liq- <lb />
near the tobacco warehouses <lb />
This petition also had a largo <lb />
number of signatures, nearly <lb />
names being to it. The question <lb />
warmly sod when <lb />
a rote resulted in a tie, <lb />
Councilman Brown, Smith <lb />
to grunt tho license <lb />
Godwin, <lb />
Jenkins against the license. <lb />
Mayor took the side of the <lb />
citizens and cast his vote <lb />
against tanning th license. <lb />
The usual monthly bills wore <lb />
allowed. <lb />
THE WAYS OF A MULE. <lb />
Wouldn't Pull Made to do <lb />
So. <lb />
Mr. Bryant has had a <lb />
time getting a load of tobacco <lb />
flues out home- He came <lb />
try a week or longer at Ocracoke- Monday afternoon with a mule <lb />
and cart to carry them out. The <lb />
The Musical Contest <lb />
From tho Morehead <lb />
dent of the Newborn Journal we <lb />
clip the following about tho <lb />
before the <lb />
Assembly <lb />
PLAIN FACTS. <lb />
for, as these dishes on <lb />
the bill of fare for will <lb />
Ham cabbage, roast <lb />
turkey with oyster dressing, bar- <lb />
sheep head, fresh <lb />
fish, oysters, loaf bread, <lb />
vegetables, pickles and <lb />
three kind . of desert- <lb />
Bath houses have just been <lb />
built by the pier in front of the <lb />
hotel for bathing also <lb />
on tho beach for surf bathing. <lb />
The fishing is just immense, par- <lb />
ties bringing in trout and blues <lb />
by the hundred. A good baud of <lb />
music is <lb />
Mr. has made <lb />
with the Dominion <lb />
Steamship Co. for an excursion <lb />
to be from to <lb />
week during the <lb />
season- The steamer Myers will <lb />
leave Greenville every Saturday <lb />
morning at o'clock, connecting <lb />
at Washington with tho steamer <lb />
Virginia Dare which arrives at <lb />
Ocracoke o'clock Sunday <lb />
Tho Virginia Dare will leave <lb />
Ocracoke every afternoon <lb />
at o'clock, connecting with the <lb />
Myers at pas- <lb />
back by <lb />
VI o'clock <lb />
here knows the Myers and the <lb />
pleasures of a trip on the Tar <lb />
with jolly Capt. Bill The <lb />
Virginia Dare is an elegant new <lb />
steamer, perfectly seaworthy and <lb />
to carry -50 pas- <lb />
Tho gallant Capt- Dave <lb />
Hill is command of this <lb />
ed steamer, and if you don't have <lb />
a pleasant trip with him you can't <lb />
enjoy anything. Get ready and <lb />
DRY GOODS. <lb />
Price. Regular Price. <lb />
Scotch Lawns <lb />
Satin Stripped Mitts . <lb />
Silk and Wool <lb />
Colored Dotted Swiss <lb />
Colored <lb />
Cloths fl <lb />
French Sateens <lb />
Dotted Swiss <lb />
Crinkled Cloths . <lb />
White Goods rents up. <lb />
La Vest Scents, former price <lb />
1.25 La d, <lb />
Pile. <lb />
8-cent cents. <lb />
10-cent . cents. <lb />
cents. <lb />
20-cent cents. <lb />
cents. <lb />
cents. <lb />
Shirt Waists. <lb />
Our Shirt Waist. . now <lb />
Our Shirt Waist,. now <lb />
SI Shirt <lb />
Our Shirt <lb />
STRAW HATS. <lb />
Our Dollar <lb />
Our <lb />
Our <lb />
Our If <lb />
styles to from. <lb />
Shirts, Collars and Cuffs, Gauze <lb />
Underwear, and <lb />
at panic prices. <lb />
CLOTHING. <lb />
Men, Youth and Boys <lb />
go to make room for fall stock. <lb />
PANTS GOODS. <lb />
Our <lb />
Our 49-cent <lb />
Our <lb />
Our lite. <lb />
Remember to get these juices it takes the <lb />
Cash down and don't yon forget it. <lb />
Tours for business, <lb />
C. T. <lb />
flood were placed the cart and <lb />
the started for homo- Not <lb />
a yards had been gone <lb />
lover before that to <lb />
how at the <lb />
I of the fines, with a hump <lb />
laud a jump he let out, <lb />
At night tho musical contest, around the A-a grove, <lb />
postponed from yesterday, <lb />
, . ,. . The idea of the load <lb />
lace, the matter <lb />
posed of in short and when Mr. <lb />
be used by came back a barrel of <lb />
Secretary liar- flour to take instead, the mule<lb />
ARE THE PEOPLE <lb />
-Who want your trade on <lb />
B- <lb />
gas companies <lb />
said he h id twelve <lb />
to enter the contest, lying <lb />
his table, only one of the <lb />
applicants had put in an appear- <lb />
walked off as as a lamb. <lb />
To day Mr- came back <lb />
for the flues with another <lb />
driver coming along with the <lb />
mule also. And tho horse would <lb />
so I hey had determined to j not pull flues, either, but as soon <lb />
as the load was put on cart he <lb />
scattered them all over Five <lb />
let this one play her part, that is <lb />
her piece, award her tho <lb />
medal, which seemed common <lb />
to be a very proper thing <lb />
to do. <lb />
A spirited piece was next play- <lb />
ed by Miss Sophia Martin, M. D. <lb />
but those ominous letters don't <lb />
signify, as have <lb />
sometimes heard them <lb />
She can't ruin a <lb />
doz u hearts before she cures <lb />
one. just mean our petite, <lb />
lively musical who <lb />
moves so quick plays s j rap- <lb />
id, she ought to reckon her ago <lb />
by springs not summers. <lb />
Then the contestant, Miss <lb />
Sheppard, of came <lb />
forward, with her pet piece fa- <lb />
down to her finger ends, <lb />
which was received with <lb />
applause- <lb />
Miss Sheppard played her sec- <lb />
which had never <lb />
at random from a <lb />
as readily and <lb />
well as tho first. Den- <lb />
sou presented her with tho As <lb />
beautiful gold medal in <lb />
a neat and happy little speech, <lb />
the cheered their <lb />
satisfaction. <lb />
Points. It was concluded to give <lb />
mule another trial. He was <lb />
led up, at tho first rattle <lb />
of a flue ho to tho <lb />
The fun attracted all the clerks <lb />
in the neighborhood they <lb />
up their minds to load that <lb />
cart- Enough of Hie boys got <lb />
around that to hold him <lb />
down the loading <lb />
They rattled flues the mule <lb />
squirmed and twisted, the <lb />
boys got bettor of it. By the <lb />
lime git through tho mule <lb />
was ready to down to <lb />
business walk off home. <lb />
Greenville <lb />
Corrected by S. at tin- <lb />
Butter, per to in <lb />
Western to <lb />
Sugar cured to la <lb />
to <lb />
Corn to SO <lb />
Flour, too <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
per to <lb />
to <lb />
Eggs <lb />
Beeswax, per <lb />
to <lb />
per <lb />
Cotton Seed <lb />
to Ii <lb />
BREAD YEARS OLD <lb />
Mr. <lb />
While on a to the homo of <lb />
Mr. T- A. a few days ago, <lb />
I v,. shown a family relic by <lb />
Mrs. Nichols. It was a of <lb />
cotton cloth and wrapped in it <lb />
were two well preserved biscuits <lb />
These biscuits were made and <lb />
cocked by Mrs mother, <lb />
Mrs. Baker, the wife of <lb />
Elder Billy B the 17th <lb />
day of Oct.-, for supper- Be- <lb />
e the morning had the <lb />
death angel had visited that heme <lb />
and Mrs spirit had taken <lb />
its everlasting Mrs. <lb />
V- let, as then a beautiful <lb />
we see <lb />
Brighten but to pass away. <lb />
One by one hopes grow brighter <lb />
As we near the shining shore. <lb />
For we know the river <lb />
the gone <lb />
mm A i <lb />
accord all agree that <lb />
the fare at the Hotel <lb />
equals or any other i. <lb />
sort in the State. All who have <lb />
been down say and the <lb />
was never <lb />
I. H. Little and wire spent <lb />
Sunday here. <lb />
Mr. W. J. Little rant sister, <lb />
attended the union at <lb />
Green <lb />
Mr. W. H Williams made a <lb />
business trip to, Fri- <lb />
day night. <lb />
fir. Little returned <lb />
last week from the coast. <lb />
He is looking well and <lb />
a pleasant <lb />
Saturday P M. tun <lb />
sad news reached this place or <lb />
of the death of Mr. B. O. Flem- <lb />
He was a member of th <lb />
Disciple, clutch, lie had been <lb />
a year. He leaves no <lb />
J near relatives but many friends <lb />
to mourn death. <lb />
Cotton and -in-its. <lb />
Below are Norfolk prices of rotten <lb />
peanuts for yesterday, as fin <lb />
by Cobb Bros, To., Commission Mer- <lb />
chants Of Norfolk <lb />
Good Middling 1-10 <lb />
Middling <lb />
Low Middling B --1 <lb />
Ordinary<lb />
Extra Pi hue <lb />
Fancy <lb />
Spanish bu. <lb />
Finn. <lb />
It. E. 2.50 2.78 per bag. <lb />
damaged, 1.50 to 1.75.; <lb />
Black and Clay, to 1.00 do- bushel <lb />
a At.<lb />
Jelly TUMBLERS, <lb />
Tobacco Knives, <lb />
DRY GOODS, <lb />
Shoes, Groceries <lb />
FURNITURE. <lb />
We can soil very <lb />
Call on for lowest prices on all goods. <lb />
cheap. <lb />
inly took two beautiful <lb />
while loaves of bread, no nicely <lb />
pi by her mother, carefully <lb />
wrapped them this cloth <lb />
laid them away as a precious gem <lb />
of v to lier dead mother, <lb />
because it was tho last woe c f <lb />
h r hands The e <lb />
well preserved as <lb />
bread, that it la a <lb />
yellow by age- These loaves <lb />
bread will have been coo <lb />
years October. It t <lb />
most as good as fresh and <lb />
I have no doubt but is life <lb />
saving properties in the <lb />
T. T. <lb />
ail <lb />
STYLES <lb />
There U only one price <lb />
Ramblers. enough for the <lb />
best bicycle that ever built. <lb />
More than tic i too much. <lb />
Ramblers are made <lb />
lightness, strength, <lb />
and durability. You break <lb />
them if you try, <lb />
baa no perceptible effect. Yon <lb />
are groping in the dark if you buy <lb />
without seeing a Rambler catalog. <lb />
Festal will bring it. <lb />
a co. <lb />
O. <lb />
ruck Barrels, Pumps <lb />
All Kinds of Machinery. <lb />
have opened at <lb />
the <lb />
Moore store and are <lb />
prepared to furnish <lb />
any kind of <lb />
want. <lb />
Special attention given <lb />
to putting down <lb />
and repairing <lb />
PUMPS. <lb />
All kinds of Pip <lb />
work done sat- <lb />
lion guaranteed. <lb />
I'll your orders <lb />
for with <lb />
TASTELESS <lb />
ILL <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
WALL <lb />
I have removed my Wall to <lb />
to the Marcellus Moore mid <lb />
have a of <lb />
Come before the art <lb />
. best opportunity <lb />
had to your house at <lb />
a small cost. Priors as low as <lb />
three cents a roll of yard. <lb />
A. B. ELLINGTON. <lb />
TONIC <lb />
J U ST AS ADULT. <lb />
WARRANTED. PRICE eta. <lb />
O I. A. ILLS., Hot. M, <lb />
Mn- <lb />
last rear, of <lb />
TONIC and <lb />
already this In <lb />
Team. In toe hare <lb />
In <lb />
rose<lb />
A by J. I.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017752_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
o-<lb />
ABUT <lb />
. ill tint <lb />
before <lb />
a, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
always <lb />
TOBACCO <lb />
Day direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A <lb />
stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
always and sold at prices to suit <lb />
times. goods bought <lb />
sold for having no W <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. <lb />
N. C <lb />
The Charlotte <lb />
OBSERVER, <lb />
North Carolina's <lb />
FOREMOST NEWSPAPER <lb />
DAILY <lb />
AND <lb />
WEEKLY. <lb />
Independent and ; and <lb />
attractive than ever, it will be an <lb />
visitor to the home, the <lb />
the club or the work room. <lb />
TUB OBSERVER. <lb />
All of the news of the world. Com- <lb />
Daily from the State <lb />
and National Capitols. a ear. <lb />
THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. <lb />
A perfect family journal. All the <lb />
news of the week. The reports <lb />
f rem the Legislature a special. <lb />
Remember the Weekly Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. <lb />
Send for sample copies. Address <lb />
THE OBSERVER, <lb />
Charlotte, N. C <lb />
WILMINGTON WELDON R. Is. <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD. <lb />
Condensed Schedule. <lb />
Poor <lb />
Health <lb />
means so much more than <lb />
you and <lb />
fatal diseases result from <lb />
trifling ailments neglected. <lb />
Don't play with Nature's <lb />
greatest <lb />
Tho Red Record to <lb />
Night Victims. <lb />
Kan. In 1871 The <lb />
ll <lb />
Mm, No Know lion- <lb />
Many <lb />
If you <lb />
of sons, weak <lb />
and generally ex- <lb />
nervous, <lb />
have no appetite <lb />
and can't work, <lb />
begin at <lb />
the most <lb />
strengthening <lb />
cine, which is <lb />
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb />
A few bot- <lb />
cones from the <lb />
very first <lb />
stain your, <lb />
teeth, 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 ailments <lb />
Women's complaints. <lb />
Get only the u it has crossed red <lb />
line, o. the wrapper. All others are sub- <lb />
On receipt of two x. stamps we <lb />
will send set of Beautiful <lb />
Fair Views and <lb />
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MO. <lb />
J. C. LAMER CO. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
--------DEALER IX-------- <lb />
MARBLE. <lb />
Wire and Iron Fencing <lb />
sold. First-class work <lb />
and prices reasonable. <lb />
Marble Yard erected on Dane <lb />
lot, on the same Street as <lb />
Dated June ., x M. <lb />
Leave Weldon Ar. Beer M. <lb />
Rocky Mt Wilson Ar. 0-5 U SO o a <lb />
Lt Goldsboro Magnolia Ar M. IS . M j Ia-<lb />
June <lb />
Lt Ar M. IS SB it 3- <lb />
Wilmington Magnolia Goldsboro AX M. a or. M. <lb />
Lt Wilson Ar Rocky M M, <lb />
A r Tarboro Lt Tarboro Lt Rocky Mt Ar a <lb />
BUILD UP HOME <lb />
By patronizing Home Enterprise. <lb />
Mara <lb />
of DURHAM, N. C, <lb />
manufacturing is line Cigars, Che- <lb />
roots and a can be found on <lb />
market. Their i brands are <lb />
a dune cigar for a band made. <lb />
Havana tilled. <lb />
a fine Nick e Cigar, <lb />
Havana band mad <lb />
Named in honor of Col. buck Black <lb />
well. <lb />
a line live cent Sumatra Wrapper <lb />
band made, Havana filled, a sure win- <lb />
Named in of Col. J. S. <lb />
Cans of Durban To- <lb />
SADIE <lb />
IV n cents. <lb />
OLD <lb />
Five for The smoke for <lb />
Hie money. <lb />
NORTH STATE <lb />
Three for S cents, a hummer that <lb />
ways pleases. <lb />
Stick to borne and semi us your or <lb />
dent. Special brands put up de- <lb />
sired. Address <lb />
N. C <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
Weldon 3.40 p. m. Halifax 4.00 <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at p <lb />
o., Greenville 6.37 p. m., Kinston 7.35 <lb />
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 <lb />
a. in. Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving <lb />
Halifax at II.-00 a. m., Weldon 11.20 am <lb />
daily except <lb />
Trains on Branch leave <lb />
7.00 a, m., arrives Parmele <lb />
8.40 p. m. Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m. Parmele 6.10 <lb />
p. m arrives Washington 7.35 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Scotland Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro. N C, via <lb />
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, at p. m., P. M; <lb />
arrive 9.20 P. M., 5.20 p. m. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily <lb />
Sunday, 6.30 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a <lb />
arrive Tarboro 10.25 a. m and 11.45 <lb />
a. hi. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch <lb />
Goldsboro daily except a <lb />
m. arriving Smithfield, a. m. Re- <lb />
leaves Smithfield, a. n.; <lb />
arrive at Goldsboro, a. m. <lb />
Trains on Nashville Branch leaves <lb />
Rock Mount at 4.30 p. in., arrive <lb />
Nashville I p. no-. Spring Hope 6.30. <lb />
p. m. Returning leaves Spring Hope <lb />
a. m., Nashville 8.85 a. m., arrives <lb />
at Rocky Mount in., <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence R. <lb />
R. 6.60 p. m., arrive Dun- <lb />
8.00 p. m. leave Dun- <lb />
a. m. arrive Latta a. m., <lb />
Daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War- j <lb />
saw for Clinton dally, except <lb />
at II a a. in. Returning leave CI <lb />
at 1.00 p. m., conn-ting at Warsaw <lb />
line trains. <lb />
n No. makes close connection, <lb />
a- Weldon tor all points North dally. all <lb />
nil via Richmond, and except <lb />
Sun via Portsmouth and Bay Line <lb />
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk AT <lb />
railroad for Norfolk daily <lb />
ill points North via Norfolk, daily <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
JOHN F. DIVINE <lb />
Genera <lb />
T. H, Manager. <lb />
J. Traffic Manager. <lb />
War-j<lb />
This Reminds <lb />
You every day <lb />
in the month <lb />
June if <lb />
you have <lb />
your Printing done <lb />
at the <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
JOB OFFICE. <lb />
It will be done right, <lb />
It will be done in style <lb />
and it suits. <lb />
These points are <lb />
well worth weighing <lb />
in any sort <lb />
of work, but <lb />
way of prompt and deadly <lb />
nothing In all the <lb />
of homicide in fur west brats <lb />
I he record of the gambler at <lb />
Newton, Kan., made one in <lb />
said C. U. of <lb />
railroad had boon <lb />
built that point during the year <lb />
and a town had grown <lb />
up round the terminus to which <lb />
cattle drives that bad been <lb />
ti Abilene now came. With <lb />
tic and railroad <lb />
thronged street, it was <lb />
a pf where <lb />
hi and pistol <lb />
by day and night. <lb />
in <lb />
were In for <lb />
and cowboys were <lb />
of <lb />
had a grudge the <lb />
me town, mid so came in <lb />
I bat night prepared for trouble, <lb />
and set about making it straight <lb />
way. They killed the city marshal, <lb />
the deputy marshal, and <lb />
man early in the evening. Later <lb />
they poured into dance <lb />
hall to the twenty-five or <lb />
thirty. The three already <lb />
killed wore not enough to satisfy <lb />
them and they wanted more. Upon <lb />
a bench at the side of the room a <lb />
man was sitting with a girl on his <lb />
knee. One of cowboys walked <lb />
up to him, him Una <lb />
shoulder and <lb />
teach you to hold my girl in <lb />
your and shot him dead. <lb />
was in the dance hall and <lb />
the man just killed was a particular <lb />
friend of his. Without a word <lb />
stepped back in the big double doors <lb />
in the front of the saloon and closed <lb />
them. Placing his back against the <lb />
doors he drew a pair of revolvers <lb />
fell Io shooting, one man against <lb />
the crowd. Men tumbled left and <lb />
right and shots rang out. all over the <lb />
room in response to the drum-roll <lb />
cracking of Riley's pistols. Shots <lb />
perforated and splintered the door <lb />
about him, but he stood there fir- <lb />
until his pistols wore emptied. <lb />
Behind the bur which ran one <lb />
side of the room he knew where tho <lb />
armory was kept ready for <lb />
use. Leaping over a counter he <lb />
caught up a revolver that lay on a <lb />
shelf beneath and kept on with his <lb />
tiring. Before he had emptied the <lb />
that he had found behind the <lb />
bar, the men inside had forced the <lb />
front doors open, those that could <lb />
rushed out, and shot his last <lb />
man in too middle of the street, <lb />
When he came counting up losses It <lb />
was discovered there were thirteen <lb />
dead men in the town due to that <lb />
eight's of nine cow- <lb />
boys had fallen t Riley's hand. <lb />
How many wounded ones rode or <lb />
were carried away by their com- <lb />
to the cattle could only be <lb />
guessed at. <lb />
was one curious incident <lb />
of this fight not generally known. <lb />
it was supposed was unhurt in <lb />
the shooting. A doctor hastily sum- <lb />
to scene came to the side <lb />
of a who was <lb />
t door the <lb />
I to <lb />
poor <lb />
gut<lb />
-two <lb />
answered the doctor. <lb />
was not even <lb />
know better than said the <lb />
cowboy. know he was hit. I was <lb />
right by the side of him when ho shot <lb />
me, and before I fell I fired and hit <lb />
him under the arm. You examine <lb />
and you'll that he's wounded <lb />
the doctor got round to <lb />
he examined him, and sure <lb />
enough, found that he had received <lb />
a flesh wound under bis arm which <lb />
in the excitement of fighting he had <lb />
not noticed. left the town <lb />
after the inquest and did not <lb />
there again. No effort seems to <lb />
have been made to arrest or bring <lb />
him to trial for an act that was <lb />
generally held to be justifiable and <lb />
praiseworthy. <lb />
got a message sometime after- <lb />
ward from Kansas City saying that <lb />
was there and asking if I <lb />
wanted R. H. <lb />
of the land department of the <lb />
son, Santo Fe railroad, <lb />
who was mayor of Newton at tho <lb />
time of the killing. sent back <lb />
word they were perfectly <lb />
come to keep him there. We had <lb />
begun to build up a population in <lb />
Newton and we didn't need <lb />
Hard class to suit. <lb />
Patronizing of Swell <lb />
Swell Servants. <lb />
Kn. Say. Can II old <lb />
with Bat <lb />
with and <lb />
wonder if I'm more a snob <lb />
than most d little <lb />
Mrs. confidentiality, to the <lb />
New York Tribune man, I must <lb />
plead guilty to being dreadfully <lb />
afraid of smart servants. The only <lb />
set of individuals before whom I ac- <lb />
quail are the ladies <lb />
and the gentlemen. <lb />
With their masters or I <lb />
can hold my own fairly w their <lb />
wealth and grandeur do Dot over- <lb />
awe me a bit. But the dis- <lb />
depress and in a <lb />
me, for I feel so vexed with my- <lb />
self that I have so little self-respect, <lb />
as to mind them. Nevertheless, I <lb />
do, and I fancy a good many other <lb />
people do, too, if they would only <lb />
have the frankness to acknowledge <lb />
it. Tho other evening, for instance, <lb />
we were dining at the and <lb />
I began to feel uncomfortable as soon <lb />
as left the cab. <lb />
until we are inside of the <lb />
I said to the driver, feeling <lb />
guiltily conscious that wanted the <lb />
footman to that at least did <lb />
pot arrive in the <lb />
inquired my husband, <lb />
innocently are so stupid, they <lb />
never suffer from these aristocrats <lb />
of the <lb />
I answered, <lb />
haps it's the wrong night, or <lb />
Why can't he I exclaimed, <lb />
petulantly. <lb />
certainly, if you <lb />
want him to; I don't said poor <lb />
Jack, bewildered. <lb />
the <lb />
man and Mrs. own maid, <lb />
looked critically at my home-made <lb />
gown and shook out my skirts with <lb />
prowl humility. You know the <lb />
Midas house and how the room In <lb />
which they receive their dinner <lb />
guests is beyond the big drawing- <lb />
room; so, although I was longing to <lb />
ask Jack if my hair was all right <lb />
and the comforting <lb />
which ho always gives, dear <lb />
fellow, that I looked <lb />
felt rather than saw that the butler <lb />
was waiting patiently and reproach- <lb />
fully to usher us through the ante- <lb />
room and announce us. I <lb />
said to myself as my glove wouldn't <lb />
go on, and I felt that the battery of <lb />
observant, calmly critical eyes was <lb />
more than I could endure, re- <lb />
member, you snobbish little thing, <lb />
that you are as good as Mrs. <lb />
butler, and, rallying my <lb />
self-respect, I deliberately finished <lb />
buttoning my glove and swept <lb />
haughtily through the rooms. <lb />
Jove I said Jack, <lb />
afterward, looked like a regular <lb />
little queen of Sheba. What made <lb />
you so <lb />
was tho instinct of self- <lb />
I answered. <lb />
ply had to assert myself to keep from <lb />
feeling utterly <lb />
WHERE OLD CAR HORSES GO. <lb />
Many to Which Is Bur- <lb />
o with Hi Equine Population. <lb />
Just as we are getting rid of our <lb />
horses by substituting electric <lb />
on street railways, the <lb />
of European countries are <lb />
complaint lg that equine <lb />
is increasing beyond all <lb />
bounds, Kiel traction <lb />
has as yet made comparatively little <lb />
progress there, and we arc dumping <lb />
shores many of our worn- <lb />
out old car horses, to such an extent <lb />
that from one <lb />
an energetic protest has just gone <lb />
up. <lb />
In Franco they are no better off. <lb />
statistics show that that <lb />
country has no less than <lb />
horses, and that tho horse <lb />
of the cities is <lb />
continually increasing at a greater <lb />
rate than tho human population. <lb />
This, without doubt, is due to the <lb />
Increase of urban street-car lines, <lb />
which are making much progress In <lb />
France, especially in the smaller <lb />
cities. In Paris there were twenty- <lb />
five years ago horses, now <lb />
there are which travel, col- <lb />
everyday a distance equiv- <lb />
to two and one-half times the <lb />
circuit of the globe. <lb />
COSTLY AUTOGRAPHS. <lb />
all things <lb />
in <lb />
Your Job Printing. <lb />
Not to B Caught That Way. <lb />
I should ask you to marry <lb />
ho said, smiling softly and sweetly, <lb />
you say <lb />
dear responded <lb />
in a tone of gentle reproof, talk <lb />
to me if I were receiving my first <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
Io a Story Book. <lb />
The dowager empress of China has <lb />
bad a romantic history. She was <lb />
extremely beautiful girl, the <lb />
daughter of poor parents who lived <lb />
in the suburbs of Canton. When <lb />
the family was starving she, know- <lb />
her commercial value, persuaded <lb />
her parents to sell her as a slave- <lb />
She was purchased by a <lb />
general, who, delighted with her <lb />
beauty, disposition and general <lb />
adopted and educated her as <lb />
his daughter. When later the gen- <lb />
was summoned to Pelting, he <lb />
think of no finer gift to <lb />
is sovereign than his daughter., <lb />
he found her so charming <lb />
that be made her his wife. When her <lb />
husband died, in 1881, this slave- <lb />
empress became regent, the present <lb />
emperor being only seven years old. <lb />
She found China crippled <lb />
torn by internal rebellions, yet five <lb />
ago, when she handed over the <lb />
governing power to her son, peace <lb />
and prosperity reigned throughout <lb />
the vast <lb />
ft <lb />
Signature Brought <lb />
Francs at an Auction, <lb />
At a Paris autograph sale In De- <lb />
1890, the signature of Chris- <lb />
Columbus is, prob- <lb />
ably, one of the most fantastic sign <lb />
manuals ever brought <lb />
francs. The only existing piece of <lb />
manuscript in Titian's handwriting <lb />
was knocked down at francs, <lb />
and one with Cromwell's signature <lb />
attached brought in exactly half <lb />
that sum. Alfred Morrison, a great <lb />
English collector of autographs, was <lb />
present at the sale, and paid a sum <lb />
equal francs for the only let- <lb />
written by Corneille that has <lb />
ever been on tho market. The last <lb />
letter written by Napoleon to Em- <lb />
press Marie Louise, was disposed of <lb />
at the same sale bringing <lb />
francs, and several signatures of <lb />
Louis XIV. and Henry IV. fetched <lb />
1.000 <lb />
Some Hope. <lb />
said the sage, <lb />
hear you are about to be <lb />
are said the young <lb />
man. <lb />
young man, tho day will <lb />
when your will make the <lb />
discovery you do not <lb />
everything on earth. It will a <lb />
great shock to her feelings and your <lb />
supremacy. Still, there is hope <lb />
you. You, while cheerfully admit- <lb />
ting that you do not know it all, may <lb />
be able to persuade her that the <lb />
reason for that state of things is <lb />
that there is so much In the world <lb />
that is not worth <lb />
Breaks All Records. <lb />
A French conscript has broken <lb />
the record by claiming exemption on <lb />
the ground that he U, at the age of <lb />
twenty, father of living <lb />
children. <lb />
FLOWERS IN VASES. <lb />
Different Arrangements Are Varying- <lb />
Effective. <lb />
There is a choice in vases. All <lb />
flowers look better in vases of clear <lb />
crystal or pressed glass than in those <lb />
of china, however rare the ware or <lb />
artistic its decoration. Porcelain <lb />
vases of graceful form and coloring <lb />
are really completed ornaments In <lb />
themselves, and they detract from <lb />
the beauty of t be flower, while their <lb />
own conventional daintiness also <lb />
loses by the contact. Another <lb />
sou for choosing clear-glass vases <lb />
and jars is that through them we <lb />
can catch a glimpse of stems, and <lb />
this gives the flowers a more grace- <lb />
finished appearance. When <lb />
Enjoys C <lb />
To the friends of blind Julius Stern <lb />
his the billiard <lb />
ball and cue source of <lb />
amazement. <lb />
His in playing at <lb />
billiards is his acute de- <lb />
of sound and its location. <lb />
He also Is assisted the <lb />
most shots by bis accurate <lb />
sense of touch. simply locating <lb />
the three balls or. the table, he is en- <lb />
to send the cue ball on its way <lb />
around the table, gently clicking <lb />
each of the ivories in succession, <lb />
most always as intended. <lb />
Stern delights in relating the <lb />
opaque vases are used, those in plain, i of his all-around- <lb />
A BLIND <lb />
He Is an <lb />
PASTIME. <lb />
Player and <lb />
dull color, which pottery dealers call <lb />
monotone, are the prettiest, a con- <lb />
tint to the main color of the <lb />
blossoms being selected. Imagine a <lb />
vase tilled with black-eyed <lb />
of the roadside, and you have <lb />
the idea. <lb />
There is, too, a choice In placing <lb />
tho vase. Large flowers of vivid <lb />
tints can be put further away from <lb />
the looker-on, and yet lose none of <lb />
their effectiveness or be unseen. But <lb />
a fine flower, like the forget-me-not <lb />
or a cluster of heliotrope, would be <lb />
lost on a mantel or high shelf. Put <lb />
the delicate blossoms where their <lb />
dainty color, form or perfume can <lb />
appeal to everyone, while tho massed <lb />
and gaudy splendor of large flowers <lb />
may serve to deck a dull corner or a <lb />
shady, somber room. <lb />
A pretty conceit is to put each <lb />
one's own room bouquet of the flow- <lb />
best loved. This is a small mat- <lb />
but in discovering these favor- <lb />
blossoms tho home decorators <lb />
will grow attentive and considerate, <lb />
and perhaps learn other ways of <lb />
to those to whom he or <lb />
she owes much. <lb />
Some flowers display themselves <lb />
best in low, or saucer, bouquets, and <lb />
often thoughtless persons will give <lb />
away the flowers almost bereft of <lb />
stems. Moist sand or moss is par- <lb />
good to place such Short- <lb />
stemmed flowers in, as they are bet- <lb />
kept in position. Rut the velvet <lb />
pansies, with their modest faces, <lb />
have an unexpected trick of curling <lb />
up their stems saucer bouquets. <lb />
They are better controlled in small <lb />
vases, the blossoms standing upright, <lb />
just as they to us from the gar- <lb />
den bed. <lb />
Place vases when arranged as <lb />
gracefully as possible before a <lb />
either on the mantel or dressing <lb />
case, or hang a small looking glass <lb />
or sconce behind tho table whereon <lb />
the flowers are put. A simple <lb />
of a half-dozen single scarlet <lb />
with long stems and their I <lb />
own leaves, a few daisies and sprays <lb />
of oats, reflected in a plain mirror, <lb />
makes a long-remembered double <lb />
picture of grace and beauty rarely <lb />
seen, even when costly roses and <lb />
ferns are to be had. <lb />
The Passion Is Said to De Abating <lb />
Somewhat. <lb />
According to a writer In the Lon- <lb />
don Spectator a change has come <lb />
over the minds of women in respect <lb />
to feathers; and while these pretty <lb />
ornaments continue to be worn the <lb />
objections to the wanton sacrifice of <lb />
birds in order to procure them have <lb />
so far prevailed that substitutes <lb />
have been found for those kinds to <lb />
obtain which birds were killed. <lb />
While tho egret finest <lb />
of these still <lb />
as an ornament, the mil- <lb />
liners say the ladies object to buy- <lb />
the article It is <lb />
and demand artificial <lb />
or are Contented with less <lb />
plumes; and sham <lb />
they are called, are in ways <lb />
is difficult to determine. <lb />
Some are fashioned from split quill <lb />
feathers of a larger heron. In <lb />
others even a microscope fails <lb />
show the process of manufacture. <lb />
Besides substitutes for the <lb />
all kinds of composite feather deco- <lb />
ration are now used for hats and <lb />
bonnets, and a naturalist in a <lb />
shop finds himself confronted <lb />
with a hundred varieties of plumage <lb />
never seen in nature but excellent in <lb />
art, for which it would puzzle any- <lb />
one but the or the tax- <lb />
to find a name. Tho era of <lb />
stuffed birds and natural wings <lb />
adorning headdresses Is almost over. <lb />
The One Crop System <lb />
of farming gradually exhausts the land, unless a Fertilizer containing a <lb />
high percentage of Potash is used. crops, a better soil, and a <lb />
larger bank account can only then be expected. <lb />
Write for our a 142-page illustrated book. It <lb />
is brim full of useful information for farmers. It will be sent free, and <lb />
will make and save you money. Address, <lb />
GERMAN WORKS, Nassau Street, New York. <lb />
shots, <lb />
etc. <lb />
clicking music of the balls <lb />
Stern instantly knows whether ho <lb />
made a successful shot. The <lb />
soft or loud of contact tells <lb />
Win where he may place his <lb />
to the preparatory to th j <lb />
shot. <lb />
Playing billiards is his pastime. <lb />
When a boy, before be became <lb />
he used to play a little, but he has <lb />
acquired his skill since he became <lb />
blind. Stern earns a living conduct- <lb />
a news stand. He is an expert <lb />
accountant, can detect the different <lb />
of coin instantly, <lb />
make change with astonishing rapid- <lb />
and delivers with accuracy <lb />
of newspapers, placing them <lb />
unerringly in the proper letter boxes <lb />
in flat houses. He has learned to <lb />
all this In spite of tho fact that he <lb />
has been blind almost since <lb />
Managing a Servant. <lb />
One of the most intrepid <lb />
peaking on the servant question, <lb />
said, with entire <lb />
have a fixed method of <lb />
or dismissing my servants and <lb />
I never vary from it. I am careful <lb />
not to seek them in domain, as <lb />
there rattle dishes while I <lb />
talk. always send for the offender <lb />
to come to me in. say, a quarter of <lb />
an gives them time to <lb />
lose their nerve and wonder what I <lb />
want. Then I always contrive be <lb />
writing at my desk as en tor my <lb />
room and I keep them standing <lb />
waiting while I finish my page. This <lb />
is wholesome also. By the time I <lb />
am ready I find my servant quite <lb />
subdued. All this sounds trilling <lb />
and it takes time but saves <lb />
friction In the Harper's <lb />
University of N. C., <lb />
Comprises the the Col- <lb />
the Law and Medical Schools, and <lb />
the Summer School for <lb />
K Teacher, Students. <lb />
President Winston. Chapel <lb />
mil, X. C. for and hand- <lb />
book on <lb />
Tax Notice. <lb />
The Board of Commissioners of Pitt <lb />
county will meet at the Court House in <lb />
on Monthly 8th, <lb />
the purpose of toe tax of <lb />
valuations reported to them. <lb />
At which time tho Board will hen- all <lb />
complaints concerning improper <lb />
or real or personal property or ex- <lb />
Any person having <lb />
such complaints to make will present <lb />
them in writing to said Board on said <lb />
lay with such evidence as they may <lb />
ha e. <lb />
By order of the Board. <lb />
w M. KING, Clerk. <lb />
GRADE <lb />
MADE <lb />
For beauty, strength, lightness, durability and easy <lb />
running qualities, no other bicycle can equal the Victor. <lb />
Buy a Victor and know you have the best. <lb />
BOSTON <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
Makers of Victor Bicycles and Athletic Goods. <lb />
YORK. <lb />
CHICAGO. <lb />
AN FRANCISCO. <lb />
PACIFIC COAST. <lb />
LOS ANGELES. <lb />
PORTLAND. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
duly qualified before <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county a. ex- <lb />
of the Last Will and Testament <lb />
of Warren Tucker, deceased, notice is <lb />
hereby given to nil persons indebted to <lb />
the estate to make immediate payment <lb />
to the undersigned, all persons <lb />
having claims against estate must <lb />
present for on or before <lb />
the day of or this no- <lb />
will lie plead in bar of recovery. <lb />
This 16th day of 1806. <lb />
E. TUCKER, <lb />
of Warren Tucker. <lb />
hereby <lb />
claims <lb />
is Without precedent. <lb />
The Refusal of a Barber to Cut a <lb />
Customer's Hair. <lb />
It was one of those hot May days <lb />
that precede a cold wave, and the <lb />
fat barber who had just finished <lb />
shaving a lean customer perspired <lb />
profusely. <lb />
have a little powder on <lb />
your face, hadn't he feebly <lb />
mopping his own face as <lb />
he spoke. a warm <lb />
answered the man in the <lb />
chair. it <lb />
The powder was applied, and the <lb />
operator ran his fingers through the <lb />
customer's hair in the usual way, <lb />
preparatory to combing and brush- <lb />
it. <lb />
does look pretty long, that's a <lb />
said the customer, <lb />
himself critically in the <lb />
guess you may cut <lb />
gasped <lb />
her. you come as well <lb />
Praise from English. <lb />
Here's praise fr an unexpected <lb />
source. An English periodical <lb />
undoubted- <lb />
surpasses our tn <lb />
and Before every meal blue <lb />
points are served on crushed ice. <lb />
To Cory person at table are placed <lb />
or seven little <lb />
china dishes containing dis- <lb />
benches, as <lb />
olives, pistachio nuts, crisped <lb />
nuts, anchovies, dressed <lb />
gherkins, etc. As you talk you <lb />
nibble pleasantries the <lb />
courses. The <lb />
drink much less wine we do at <lb />
meals, though they are not above <lb />
calling aloud for at <lb />
promiscuous hours of day. The <lb />
service at table is simply site. <lb />
Such dainty flowers <lb />
and oh the roses. Why do they <lb />
So much longer, <lb />
our own <lb />
potently <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
T lie having duly <lb />
before the Superior Court Clerk of <lb />
Pitt county as administratrix of Wini- <lb />
lay, deceased, notice is <lb />
all persons holding <lb />
against the. estate to present them to <lb />
the underpinned for collection on or be- <lb />
fore the day of May or this <lb />
notice will be plead in bar for their re- <lb />
and all persons indebted to said <lb />
will make immediate payment. <lb />
This the day of US. <lb />
MRS. S. G. <lb />
of Winifred May <lb />
DOUGLAS <lb />
SHOE <lb />
FIT FOR <lb />
A KING. <lb />
One Million wear the <lb />
W. L. Douglas and Shoes. <lb />
AM our arc <lb />
the value for tho money. <lb />
They equal custom In fit. <lb />
Their qualities are <lb />
The prices uniform stamped on sole. <lb />
supply you we can. <lb />
mid <lb />
Police Shoes. totes. <lb />
and <lb />
School Sheet <lb />
and <lb />
If dealer cannot supply <lb />
for <lb />
W. L. Douglas, <lb />
It. L. Bro., lie, N. <lb />
B. J. Cobb. <lb />
Pitt Co , X. C. <lb />
C, C. Cobb, <lb />
Co. X. C. <lb />
Skinner, <lb />
COBB BROS CO, <lb />
Commission Merchants <lb />
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA <lb />
and Solicited. <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE. <lb />
AT WITH A <lb />
YEARS baa taught me the is the <lb />
Rope, Building Pump, Farming and every <lb />
Mag necessary for Millers. Mechanics general house purpose, a well U <lb />
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Goods I have always on hand. Am head <lb />
quarter Heavy Groceries, and for Clark's O, N. T. <lb />
Cotton, and keep courteous and attentive <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. <lb />
LINE. <lb />
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb />
Steamers leave Washington for Gnu <lb />
ville and touching at all laud <lb />
on Tar Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave at A. M. <lb />
Tuesdays. Thursdays and <lb />
Greenville A. M. same days. <lb />
These departures to <lb />
of water oil Tar River. <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK <lb />
Tor toe Cure cf ill Skin <lb />
This Preparation has In use over <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know has <lb />
been In steady demand, been en- <lb />
by the over <lb />
has effected cures where <lb />
all other with the attention of <lb />
the most . physicians, have <lb />
for year tailed. This Ointment is of <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which It has obtained is Owing entirely <lb />
x its own as but little effort <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. AH Cash Orders promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
communications to <lb />
T. F. CHRISTMAN, <lb />
N. C <lb />
obtained and alt Pat- <lb />
foe fits. <lb />
m, <lb />
Hon. W if or not, of <lb />
fee not due till b <lb />
How to Obtain <lb />
V. S. and foreign <lb />
sent <lb />
. Of net, c. I <lb />
at steam- <lb />
of The Norfolk, Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, Baltimore <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers should order their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion <lb />
New York. from Phi la- j . <lb />
Norfolk <lb />
more Steamboat from Ball I j <lb />
more. Merchants Min <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. Agent, <lb />
Washington N. i <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, Agent, <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
Real <lb />
Estate <lb />
and <lb />
Rental <lb />
Agent. <lb />
Houses and lots for Rent sale <lb />
terms easy. Rents. Taxes. <lb />
and open accounts and any other <lb />
debt placed my r <lb />
collection shall have prompt attention. <lb />
guarantee. <lb />
patronage. <lb />
BERBER <lb />
TONSORIAL PARLORS <lb />
Under Opera<lb />
Call in when yon want Rood work <lb />
NORTH <lb />
R. R. TIME <lb />
In Effect December 4th. <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
MALE ACADEMY, <lb />
N. C <lb />
The next Session of this School <lb />
begin on Tuesday the 4th day of <lb />
and continue weeks. <lb />
TERMS MONTH. <lb />
Primary English <lb />
Intermediate English <lb />
Higher English <lb />
Languages <lb />
The instruction will continue through. <lb />
Discipline mild out If necessary <lb />
an additional teacher will be employed. <lb />
Satisfaction when pupils <lb />
early and attend For <lb />
informal ion apply to <lb />
W. If. <lb />
Aug. C. MM, <lb />
will<lb />
Pa. Dally <lb />
Ex Sun. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
P. M. <lb />
II <lb />
Hi<lb />
V M. <lb />
P. M. <lb />
P. M. <lb />
STATIONS <lb />
Pa. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
Kinston <lb />
A. M<lb />
A. M. <lb />
Dally <lb />
Sun. <lb />
A. M. <lb />
Train I connects Wilmington <lb />
Weldon train bound North, <lb />
Goldsboro a. in., and with R <lb />
train West, leaving Goldsboro p. m <lb />
WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR <lb />
We will them QUICK <lb />
We will rill them CHEAP <lb />
We will them WELL <lb />
Ship to <lb />
J. C. Jr., <lb />
Factors <lb />
Commission nU <lb />
NORFOLK VA. <lb />
Attention to <lb />
Weight <lb />
Rough Heart Framing, <lb />
Rough Sap Framing, ; <lb />
Rough in inches <lb />
Rough Sap Inches, <lb />
Wait for our Planing Mill and <lb />
e furnish you <lb />
as <lb />
Wood your door for <lb />
I cents a load. <lb />
Terms cash. <lb />
Thanking you for past patronage. <lb />
N. C <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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